PLACE—Audience room in the Papal Palace.
Enter HILDEBRAND, wearing his purple robe of state, and with him PETER
DAMIANI. Enter a Page.
Page. An amba**ador waits without, your Holiness.
HIL. From whence? Germany?
Page. Yea, my lord.
HIL. Ha, now, the tide went out, the tide comes in. 'Tis but the spray to mine own thunders. Now we'll hear his answer to the Papal curse [Page 290].
PET. Wilt thou receive a message from one accursed? He is no king, no ruler any more. This is no emba**y.
HIL. Perchance it may be prayer for pardon. Henry knoweth by this the power of Hildebrand.
Page. My lord, it be but a rude petitioner.
He tells no beads, nor maketh any prayers,
But rather stamps an' mutters, raves an' swears,
And sendeth Rome an' all her cardinals
To hell twice every minute.
PET. Hale him to prison, the loud, blaspheming hound.
The damp of some rock cell would bring him round
To proper reverence for thy holy office.
He may intend a murder on thy person;
Let him not in.
HIL. Nay, but I will. Like master, like his dog
I fain would see the issue of this cursing.
Yea, I would see this German foam at mouth.
Fear not, I'll match him. Call the cardinals in.
[Exit Page.
Enter Cardinals, who stand behind the Pope. Enter the Page, followed by the German Amba**ador, who remains standing.
HIL. (to Cardinals) On your lives keep peace whatever he doth do! Leave him to me. (to the Amba**ador) Kneel!
Amb. Nay, I'll not kneel to thee or other man
Till I have said my message.
A Cardinal. Kneel, impious man, 'tis the Lord Pope.
PET. Hale him out! German dog! blasphemer!
He hath insulted the Holy Father.
Amb. (draws) Come on, ye cowardly monks, I scorn ye all!
Were he a king, I'd bow my knee to him;
An emperor, an' I might buss his hand;
But only Pope! why, popes have bribed me vain
To slay your betters [Page 291].
HIL. Silence: am I Pope indeed? Why blame this man,
When ye, obedient, insult me with your clamors?
(to the Amba**ador) Hail you from Germany?
Amb. I do, proud priest; my name is Wolf of Bamburg,
Cradled in a nest that ne'er knew fear,
Bred of a breed that hath a joy of k**ing.
'Tis not a monk would make me tremble here.
My time is short, I would repeat my message.
HIL. What be thy message?
Amb. 'Tis to thee, proud priest, an' it doth come from Henry.
HIL. Speak!
Amb. Henry of Germany, whom in thine insolence,
Thou cursedst with thy foulest blasphemies,
Sendeth me, Wolf of Bamburg, unto thee,
To hurl thine arrogant curses in thy face,
And tell thee thou art no pope but a common priest,
Who stolest thy popedom.
PET. Hale him out, tear him to pieces!
[A great clamor rises. The Cardinals would attack him.
HIL. Silence! on your lives! This man is mine! (to Amba**ador) Speak on!
Amb. He further saith to thee, thou ba*tard Pope,
As Emperor of Rome, come down, come down!
And leave that chair thou foully hast usurped,
And I, his servant, say to thee, come down!
All Cardinals. Devil! German dog! Tear him to pieces!
[All rush forward.
HIL. (tears off his robe and throws it over the Amba**ador) Back! or fear my curse! Who strikes at that
Strikes me!
All. Nay, this is a devil [Page 292]!
HIL. Were he Satan himself, beneath that robe he were
As sacred as God's holiest angel!
(to Amba**ador) Go, man, and tell thy master, who is no king,
That Gregory hath one single word for him,
And that is pity. Let him ask his God
To pardon him as I do pardon him.
I lay no curse upon the innocent.
When he comes penitent to me in tears
I will receive him. Go! [Exit Amba**ador.
(to Cardinals) Have ye no reverence for Gregory that
Ye should revile revilings in this house?
God's ministers should ever be men of peace,
And not a maddened rabble. As our Lord,
In that last season of His great martyrdom,
Bade holy Peter sheathe the angry sword,
So I rebuke ye. Had he slain me here,
You'd not have touched him! [Exeunt Cardinals.
PET. Hildebrand, sometimes it thinketh me
Thou hast a magic; thou art the strangest Pope
Yet seen in Rome. That man, who came blaspheming,
Went out your slave.
HIL. Ah, Peter, know, we must meet fools with guile.
'Tis better to be subtle than be strong.
I sometimes dream the greatest innocence
Is but the mantle to the deepest guile,
And men but stab the deeper when they smile [Page 293].
CURTAIN.