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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Prince of Edur Act-1 Sc-4.htm
SCENE IV
The forest near Dongurh. By the •waterfall.
Enter Captain and soldiers escorting Comol Cumary, Coomood,
Nirmol and Ishany in palanquins.
ISHANY
(from her palanquin)
Set down the palanquins. Captain, make void
This region; here the princess would repose
Beside the murmuring waterfall awhile
And breathe into her heart the winds of Dongurh.
Exit Captain with soldiers and palanquin-
bearers. The girls leave their palanquins.
COMOL
CUMARY
Coomood, this is the waterfall we loved
To lean by, singing to the lyre the deeds
Our fathers wrought or listening silently
The soft continuous roar. Beyond
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Maid in the Mill Act-1 Sc-2.htm
SCENE II
A garden at the town-house of Count Beltran.
Antonio, Basil.
BASIL
I am abashed of¹ you. What, make a lady
Woo you, and she a face so excellent,
Of an address so admirably lovely
It shows a goddess in her — at each sentence
Let pause to give you opportunity
Then shame with the dead silence of the hall
For her continual answer. Fie, you're not
Antonio, you are not Beltran's issue. Seek
Your kindred in the snowdrifts of the Alps
Or call a post your father.
ANTONIO
I deserve
Your censure, Basil. Yet were it done again,
I know I should again be dumb. My tongue
Teems in imagina
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-4 Sc-2.htm
SCENE II
The Pavilion of Pleasure.
Anice-Aljalice, Nureddene, Shaikh Ibrahim on couches, by a table
set with dishes.
NUREDDENE
These kabobs are indeed good, and the conserves look sweet and
the fruit very glossy. But will you sit and eat nothing?
IBRAHIM
Verily, my son, I have eaten at midday. Allah forbid me from
gluttony!
ANICE-ALJALICE
Old father, you discourage our stomachs. You shall eat a morsel
from my fingers or I will say you use me hardly.
IBRAHIM
No, no, no, no. Ah well, from your fingers, from your small
slim rosy fingers. Allah! Only a bit, only a morsel: verily
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-4 Sc-1.htm
Act Four
Bagdad.
SCENE I
The gardens of the Caliph's Palace outside the Pavilion of Pleasure.
Anice-Aljalice, Nureddene.
ANICE-ALJALICE
This is Bagdad!
NUREDDENE
Bagdad the beautiful,
The city of delight. How green these gardens!
What a sweet clamour pipes among the trees!
ANICE-ALJALICE
And flowers! the flowers! Look at these violets
Dark blue like burning sulphur! Oh, rose and myrtle
And gillyflower and lavender; anemones
As red as blood! All spring walks here in blossoms
And strews the pictured ground.
NUREDDENE
Do you see the fruit,
Anice? Camphor and almond-apr
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Vikramorvasie Act-4 Sc-2.htm
SCENE II
Pururavas enters disordered, his eyes fixed on the sky.
PURURAVAS
(angrily)
Halt, ruffian, halt,! Thou in thy giant arms
Bearest away my Urvasie! He has
Soared up from a great crag into the sky
And wars me, hurling downward bitter rain
Of arrows. With this thunderbolt I smite thee.
He lifts up a clod and runs as to hurl it;
then pauses and looks upwards.
(pathetically)
Oh me, I am deceived! This was a cloud
Equipped for rain, no proud and lustful fiend,
The rainbow, not a weapon drawn to kill,
Quick-driving showers are these, not sleety rain
Of arrows; and that brilliant line like streak
Of gold upon a touchst
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Prince of Edur Act-1 Sc-3.htm
SCENE III
The forest near Dongurh.
Bappa, Sungram, Prithuraj.
BAPPA
It is the secret friend from whom in childhood
I learned to wing my mounting thoughts aloft
High as an eagle's flight. I know the hand,
Though yet his name is hid from me.
SUNGRAM
Let's hear
The very wording.
BAPPA
"To the Sun's child, from Edur.
Comol Cumary, Edur's princess, goes
With her fair sister and a knot of lances
To Dongurh. Bappa, young lion of the hills,
Be as the lion in thy ranging; prey
Upon earth's mightiest, think her princesses
Meant only for thy spoil and serving-girls,
Her kings thy subjects and h
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Viziers of Bassora Act-4 Sc-3.htm
SCENE III
The Gardens outside the Pavilion.
Haroun al Rasheed, Mesrour.
HAROUN
AL RASHEED
See, Mesrour; the Pavilion's all alight
.
'Tis as I said. Where is the Barmeky?
MESROUR
The Vizier comes, my lord.
Enter Jaafar.
JAAFAR
Peace be with thee,
Commander of the Faithful.
HAROUN
AL RASHEED
Where is peace,
Thou faithless and usurping Vizier ? Hast thou
Filched my Bagdad out of my hands, thou rebel,
And told me nothing?
JAAFAR
What words are these, O Caliph?
HAROUN
AL RASHEED
What mean these lights then ? Does another Caliph
Ho
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Prince of Edur Act-1 Sc-1.htm
PRINCE OF EDUR
PERSONS OF THE DRAMA
RANA
CURRAN, Prince of Edur, of the Rahtore clan.
VISALDEO, a Brahmin, his minister; formerly in the service of the
Gehelote Prince of Edur.
HARIPAL, a Rajpoot noble. General of Edur; formerly in the
service of the Gehelote Prince.
BAPPA, son of the late Gehelote Prince of Edur, in refuge among
the Bheels.
KODAL, a young Bheel, foster brother and lieutenant of Bappa.
TORAMAN, Prince of Cashmere.
CANACA, the King's jester of Cashmere.
PRATAP, Rao of Ichalgurh, a Chouhan noble.
RUTTAN, his brother.
A CAPTAIN OF
RAJPOOT
LANCES.
MENADEVI, wife of Curran; a Chouhan prin
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/The Maid in the Mill Act-1 Sc-4.htm
SCENE IV
A street in Madrid.
ANTONIO
This is the places
BASIL
'Tis farther.
ANTONIO
This, I know it.
Here's the square Velasquez. There in his saddle
Imperial Charles watches the silent city
His progeny could not keep. Where the one light
Stands beckoning to us, is Don Mario's dwelling.
O thou celestial lustre, wast thou kindled
To be her light who is my sun ? If so,
Thou art most happy. For thou dost inherit
The sanctuary of her dear sleep and art
The confidant of those sweet secrecies.
Though thou live for a night, yet is thy short
And noble ministry, more rich and costly,
Than ages of the sun. F
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Collected Plays Part-II_Volume-07/Prince of Edur Act-1 Sc-2.htm
SCENE II
The women's apartments in the palace at Edur.
Comol Cumary, Coomood Cumary.
COMOL
CUMARY
Tomorrow, Coomood, is the feast of May.
COOMOOD
CUMARY
Sweetheart, I wish it were the feast of Will.
I know what I would will for you.
COMOL COOMARY
What, Coomood ?
COOMOOD
CUMARY
A better husband than your father'll give you.
COMOL
CUMARY
You mean the Scythian ? I will not believe
That it can happen. My father's heart is royal;
The blood that throbs through it he drew from veins
Of Rajpoot mothers.
COOMOOD
CUMARY
But the brain's too politic.
A