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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Juvenilia Act-3 Sc-1.htm
Act Three
SCENE I
Before Alaciel's House.
GUENDOLEN
But what you tell me is not credible.
Could Love at the prime vision slip your fence
And his red bees wing humming to your heart ?
What, at the premier interchange of eyes
Seed bulged into the bud, the bud to flower,
Bloom waxing into fruit ? can passion sink
Thus deep embedded in a maiden soil ?
Masks not your love in an unwonted guise ?
ALACIEL
Sweet girl, you are a casket yet unused,
A fair, unprinted page. These mysteries
Are alien to your grasp, until Love pen
His novel lithograph and write in you
Songs bubbling with the music of a name.
Oh, I am faster
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-5 Sc-7.htm
SCENE VII
The palace in Bassora.
Ibn Sawy, Ameena, Nureddene, Anice-Aljalice, Doonya, Ajebe.
IBN
SAWY
End, end embraces; they will last our life,
Thou dearest cause at once of all our woes
And their sweet ender! Cherish her, Nureddene,
Who saved thy soul and body.
NUREDDENE
Surely I'll cherish
My heart's queen!
ANICE-ALJALICE
Only your slave-girl.
DOONYA
You've got a King,
You lucky child! But I have only a Turk,
A blustering, bold and Caliph-murdering Turk
Who writes me silly letters, stabs my lovers
When they would run away with me, and makes
A general Turkish nuisance of h
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-2 Sc-2.htm
SCENE II
Ibn Sawy's house. A room in the women's
apartments.
Ameena, Doonya.
AMEENA
Has he come in ?
DOONYA
He has.
AMEENA
For three long days!
I will reprove him — call him to me, Doonya.
I will be stern.
DOONYA
That's right. Lips closer there!
And just try hard to frown. That's mildly grim
And ought to shake him. Now you spoil all by laughing.
AMEENA
Away, you madcap! Call him here.
DOONYA
The culprit
Presents himself unsummoned.
Enter Nureddene.
NUREDDENE
(at the door)
Ayoob, Ayoob!
A bowl of sherbet in my chamber.
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Juvenilia The Witch of Ilni.htm
JUVENILIA
THE WITCH OF ILNI
A Dream of the Woodlands
CHARACTERS
CORILLO
: prince of Ilm
VALENTINE
: a courtier
IMELANDER
: a sylvan poet
FORESTERS
: courtiers
ALACIEL
: the witch of Ilni
GUENDOLEN
: her sister
GIRLS OF THE FOREST
PERSONAE MUTAE
Page .– 1057
The Witch of Ilni
The Woodlands of Ilni.
Girls and youths dancing.
Song
Under the darkling tree
Who danceth with thee,
Sister, say ?
His hair is the sweet sunlight
His eyes a starry night
In May.
Under the leaf-wrought screen
Who crowns thee his queen
Kissing thee ?
His lips are a ru
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Vikramorvasie Act-5 Sc-1.htm
Act Five
SCENE I
Outside the King's tents near Pratisthana. In the background the
confluence of the river Ganges and Yamuna.
-Manavaka alone.
MANAVAKA
After long pleasuring with Urvasie
In Nandan and all woodlands of the Gods,
Our King's at last returned, and he has entered
His city, by the jubilant people met
With splendid greetings, and resumed his toils.
Ah, were he but a father, nothing now
Were wanting to his fullness. This high day
At confluence of great Ganges with the stream
Dark Yamuna, he and his Queen have bathed.
Just now he passed into his tent, and surely
His girls adorn him. I w
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Prince of Edur Act-2 Sc-5.htm
SCENE V
In the forest.
Pratap, Ruttan and Rajpoots.
OUTSIDE
Bappa! Bappa! Ho, Sheva Ekling!
An arrow descends and a Rajpoot/alls.
RUTTAN
Still upwards!
ICHALGURH
Upwards still! Death on the height
Seats crowned to meet us', downwards is to dishonour
And that's no Rajpoot movement. Brother Ruttan,
We're strangled with a noose intangible.
O my brave Rajpoots, by my headlong folly
Led to an evil death!
RUTTAN
What is this weakness,
Chouhan of famous Ichalgurh ? Remember
Thyself, my brother. But a little more
And we have reached their wasps'-nest on the hills.
ICHALGURH
Not
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Door at Abelard.htm
The Door at Abelard
THE
village of Streadhew lay just under the
hill, a collection of brown solid cottages straggling through the
pastures, and on the top of the incline Abelard with its gables
and antique windows watched the road wind and drop slowly to
the roofs of Orringham two miles away. For many centuries
the house and the village had looked with an unchanged face on
a changing world, and in their old frames housed new men and
manners, while Orringham beyond adapted itself and cast off
its mediaeval slough. The masters of Abelard lived with the
burden of a past which they could not change.
Stephen Abelard of Abelard, the last male of his line, had
lived i
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-3 Sc-1.htm
Act Three
SCENE I
Bassora.
Ibn Sawy's House.
A room in the outer apartments decorated for a banquet.
Doonya, Anice-Aljalice, Balkis.
DOONYA
Lord, how they pillage! Even the furniture
Cannot escape these Djinns. Ogre Ghaneem
Picks up that costly chain between his teeth
And off to his castle; devil Ayoob drops
That table of mosaic in his pocket;
Zeb sweeps off rugs and couches in a whirlwind.
What purse will long put up with such ill-treatment?
BALKIS
It must be checked.
DOONYA
'Tis much that he has kept
His promise to my uncle. Oh, he's sound!
These villains spoil him. Anice
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Vikramorvasie Act-2 Sc-2.htm
Act Two
Scene - I
MANAVAKA
Listen, you dreamer!
Are you deaf? I tell you I have found a way:
PURURAVAS
Speak on.
MANAVAKA
Woo sleep that marries men with dreams,
Or on a canvas paint in Urvasie
And gaze on her for ever.
URVASIE
(aside)
O sinking coward heart, now, now revive.
PURURAVAS
And either is impossible. For look!
How can I, with this rankling wound of love,
Call to me sleep who marries men with dreams ?
And if I paint the sweetness of her face,
Will not the tears, before it is half done,
Blurring my gaze with mist, blot the dear vision ?
CHITRA