Page:Oriental Sketches Dramatic Sketches and Tales.pdf/165

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
156

To view the light of day; it is too much,
Too much of happiness to see thee pine
And wither in this poisonous atmosphere?
And will they, can they tear thee from me, slake
Their hands in thy warm blood?

Geraldi.

                            My crime demands
The forfeit of my life, and I must bend
With meekness to the just decree—'tis hard,
'Tis painful to relinquish in my prime
The bliss that earth can give, to call thee wife—
To see my children hang about my knees—
Oh, Veronica, murderer as I am,
How dare I dream of such felicity?

Veronica.

    Alas! how pale and haggard is that brow,
So lofty once. Sorrow, my best beloved,
Has done the work of age: we should not long
Burthen this cruel world, our stricken hearts
Would break together. I could see thee die