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Shall be most glad to see Madrid once more.

MONDECAR.

And will your majesty not be so, too?

Are you so grieved to quit Aranjuez?

QUEEN.

To quit-this lovely spot at least I am.

This is my world. Its sweetness oft and oft

Has twined itself around my inmost heart.

Here, nature, simple, rustic nature greets me,

The sweet companion of my early years-

Here I indulge once more my childhood's sports,

And my dear France's gales come blowing here.

Blame not this partial fondness-all hearts yearn

For their own native land.

EBOLI.

But then how lone,

How dull and lifeless it is here! We might

As well be in La Trappe.

QUEEN.

I cannot see it.

To me Madrid alone is lifeless. But

What saith our duchess to it?

OLIVAREZ.

Why, methinks,

Your majesty, since kings have ruled in Spain,

It hath been still the custom for the court

To pass the summer months alternately

Here and at Pardo,-in Madrid, the winter.

QUEEN.

Well, I suppose it has! Duchess, you know

I've long resigned all argument with you.

MONDECAR.

Next month Madrid will be all life and bustle.

They're fitting up the Plaza Mayor now,

And we shall have rare bull-fights; and, besides,

A grand auto da fe is promised us.

QUEEN.

Promised? This from my gentle Mondecar!

MONDECAR.

Why not? 'Tis only heretics they burn!

QUEEN.

I hope my Eboli thinks otherwise!

EBOLI.

What, I? I beg your majesty may think me

As good a Christian as the marchioness.

QUEEN.

Alas! I had forgotten where I am,-

No more of this! We were speaking, I think,

About the country? And methinks this month

Has flown away with strange rapidity.

I counted on much pleasure, very much,

From our retirement here, and yet I have not

Found that which I expected. Is it thus

With all our hopes? And yet I cannot say

One wish of mine is left ungratified.

OLIVAREZ.

Yon have not told us, Princess Eboli,

If there be hope for Gomez,-and if we may

Expect ere long to greet you as his bride?

QUEEN.

True-thank you, duchess, for reminding me!

[Addressing the PRINCESS.

I have been asked to urge his suit with you.

But can I do it? The man whom I reward

With my sweet Eboli must be a man

Of noble stamp indeed.

OLIVAREZ.

And such he is,

A man of mark and fairest fame,-a man

Whom our dear monarch signally has graced

With his most royal favor.

QUEEN.

He's happy in

Such high good fortune; but we fain would know,

If be can love, and win return of love.

This Eboli must answer.

EBOLI (stands speechless and confused, her eyes bent on the ground;

at last she falls at the QUEEN's feet).

Gracious queen!

Have pity on me! Let me-let me not,-

For heaven's sake, let me not be sacrificed.

QUEEN.

Be sacrificed! I need no more. Arise!

'Tis a hard fortune to be sacrificed.

I do believe you. Rise. And is it long

Since you rejected Gomez' suit?

EBOLI.

Some months-

Before Prince Carlos came from Alcala.

QUEEN (starts and looks at her with an inquisitive glance).

Have you tried well the grounds of your refusal?

EBOLI (with energy).

It cannot be, my queen, no, never, never,-

For a thousand reasons, never!

QUEEN.

One's enough,

You do not love him. That suffices me.

Now let it pass.

[To her other ladies.

I have not seen the Infanta

Yet this morning. Pray bring her, marchioness.

OLIVAREZ (looking at the clock).

It is not yet the hour, your majesty.

QUEEN.

Not yet the hour for me to be a mother!

That's somewhat hard. Forget not, then, to tell me

When the right hour does come.

[A page enters and whispers to the first lady, who

thereupon turns to the QUEEN.

OLIVAREZ.

The Marquis Posa!

May it please your majesty.

QUEEN.

The Marquis Posa!

OLIVAREZ.

He comes from France, and from the Netherlands,

And craves the honor to present some letters

Intrusted to him by your royal mother.

QUEEN.

Is this allowed?

OLIVAREZ (hesitating).

A case so unforeseen

Is not provided for in my instructions.

When a Castilian grandee, with despatches

From foreign courts, shall in her garden find

The Queen of Spain, and tender them--

QUEEN.

Enough! I'll venture, then, on mine own proper peril.

OLIVAREZ.

May I, your majesty, withdraw the while?

QUEEN.

E'en as you please, good duchess!

[Exit the DUCHESS, the QUEEN gives the PAGE a sign, who

thereupon retires.

SCENE IV.

The QUEEN, PRINCESS EBOLI, MARCHIONESS OF MONDECAR, and

MARQUIS OF POSA.

QUEEN.

I bid you welcome, sir, to Spanish ground!

MARQUIS.

Ground which I never with so just a pride

Hailed for the country of my sires as now.

QUEEN (to the two ladies).

The Marquis Posa, ladies, who at Rheims

Coped with my father in the lists, and made

My colors thrice victorious; the first

That made me feel how proud a thing it was

To be the Queen of Spain and Spanish men.

[Turning to the MARQUIS.

When we last parted in the Louvre, Sir,

You scarcely dreamed that I should ever be

Your hostess in Castile.

MARQUIS.

Most true, my liege!

For at that time I never could have dreamed

That France should lose to us the only thing

We envied her possessing.

QUEEN.

How, proud Spaniard!

The only thing! And you can venture this-

This to a daughter of the house of Valois!

MARQUIS.

I venture now to say it, gracious queen,

Since now you are our own.

QUEEN.

Your journey hither

Has led you, as I hear, through France. What news

Have you brought with you from my honored mother

And from my dearest brothers?

MARQUIS (handing letters).

I left your royal mother sick at heart,

Bereft of every joy save only this,

To know her daughter happy on the throne

Of our imperial Spain.

QUEEN.

Could she be aught

But happy in the dear remembrances

Of relatives so kind-in the sweet thoughts