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Liber 335 - Adonis An Allegory

An Allegory

By

Aleister Crowley
Inscribed to Adonis.

Persons Of The Allegory

The King Of Babylon,
tributary to the King of Greece

Hermes,
a Greek Physician

The Lady Psyche

The Count Adonis,
at first known as the Lord Esarhaddon

The Lady Astarte

The Warriors of the King of Babylon

Hanuman,
Servant to Hermes

Charis,+

Elpis, +
Attendants on Psyche

Pistis,+

Three Aged Women

Handmaidens and Slaves of Astarte

Adonis

Act I

Scene I:


The hanging gardens of Babylon. R., the House of the Lady
Astarte; L., a gateway; C., a broad lawn enriched with clustered flowers
and sculptures. The sun is nigh his setting. On a couch under the wall of
the city reposes the Lord Esarhaddon, fanned by two slaves, a negro boy
and a fair Kabyle girl, clad in yellow and blue, the boys robes being
covered with a veil of silver, the girls with a veil of gold.

They Are Singing To Him Softly:

The Boy

All crimson-veined is Tigris flood;

The sun has stained his mouth with blood.

The Girl

Orange and green his standards sweep.

The Boy

His minions keen.

The Girl

His maidens weep

The Boy

But thou, Lord, thou! The hour is nigh

When from the prow of luxury

Shall step the death of all mens hearts,

She whose live breath, a daggers darts,

A vipers vice, an adders grip,

A cockatrice twixt lip and lip,

She whose black eyes are suns to shower

Loves litanies from hour to hour,

Whose limbs are scythes like Deaths of whom

The body writhes, a lotus-bloom

Swayed by the wind of live, a crime

Too sweetly sinned, the queen of time,

The lady of heaven, to whom the stars,

Seven by seven, from their bars

Lean and do worship -- even she

Who hath given all her sweet self to thee,

The Lady Astarte!

The Girl

Peace, O peace!

A swan, she sails through ecstasies

Of air and marble and flowers, she sways

As the full moon through midnights haze

Of gauze -- her body is like a dove

And a snake, and live, and death, and love!

The Boy

Even as the twilight so is she,

Half seem, half subtly apprehended,

Ethereally and bodily.

The soul incarnate, the body transcended!

The Girl

Aching, aching passionately,

Insufferably, utterly splendid!

The Boy

Her lips make pale the setting sun!

The Girl

Her body blackens Babylon!

The Boy

Her eyes turn midnights murk to grey!

The Girl

Her breasts make midnight of the day!

The Boy

About her, suave and subtle, swims

The musk and madness of her limbs!

The Girl

Her mouth is magic like the moons.

The Boy

Her breath is bliss!

The Girl

Her steps are swoons!

[enter Astarte,
with her five handmaidens.

The Boy

Away, away!

The Girl

With hearts accord,

To leave his lady to our lord.

{They go out.

The Boy

Let him forget our service done

Of palm-leaves waved, that never tires,

In his enchanted Babylon

Of infinite desires!

[astarte
kneels at the foot of the couch, and
taking

the feet of Esarhaddon in her hands, covers them with kisses.

Astarte

Nay, never wake! unless to catch my neck

And break me up with kisses -- never sleep,

Unless to dream new pains impossible

To waking!

Girls! with more than dreams address,

Wake him with perfume till he smile, with strokes

Softer than moonbeams till he turn, and sigh,

With five slow drops of wine between his lips

Until his heart heave, with young thrills of song

Until his eyelids open, and the first

And fairest of ye greet him like a flower,

So that awakened he may break from you and turn to me who am all these
in one.

Ist Maiden

Here is the wealth

Of all amber and musk,

Secreted by stealth

In the domes of the dusk!

2nd Maiden

Here the caress

Of a cheek -- let it stir

The first liens of liesse

Not to me -- but to her!

3rd Maiden

Here the quintessence

Of dream and delight,

Evoking the presence

Of savour to sight!

4th Maiden

List to the trill

And the ripple and roll

Of a tune that may thrill

Thee through sense to the soul!

5th Maiden

Look on the fairest,

The masterless maid!

Ere thine eye thou unbarest,

I flicker, I fade.

All. Wake! as her garland is tossed in the air

When the nymph meets Apollo, our forehead is bare.

We divide, we disperse, we dislimn, we dissever,

For we are but now, and our lady for ever!

[They go out.

Esarhaddon

I
dreamed of thee!

Dreams beyond form and name!

It was a chain of ages, and a flash

Of lightning -- which thou wilt -- since -- Oh I see

Nothing, feel nothing, and am nothing -- ash

Of the universe burnt through!

Astarte

And I the flame!

Esarhaddon

Wreathing and roaring for an ageless aeon,

Wrapping the world, spurning the empyrean,

Drowning with dark despotic imminence

All life and light, annihilating sense --

I have been sealed and silent in the womb

Of nothingness to burst, a babes bold bloom,

Into the upper aethyr of thine eyes.

Oh! one grave glance enkindles Paradise,

One sparkle sets me on the throne above,

Mine orb the world.

Astarte

Nay, stir not yet. Let love

Breathe like the zephyr on the unmoved deep,

Sigh to awakening from its rosy sleep;

Let the stars fade, and all the east grow grey

And tender, ere the first faint rose of day

Flush it. Awhile! Awhile! Theres crimson bars

Enough to blot the noblest of the stars,

And bow for adoration ere the rim

Start like Gods spear to ware the world of Him!

Softly!

Esarhaddon

But kiss me!

Astarte

With an eyelash first!

Esarhaddon

Treasure and torture!

Astarte

Tantalising thirst

Makes the draught more delicions. Heaven were worth

Little without the purgatory, earth!

Esarhaddon

You make earth heaven.

Astarte

And heaven hell. To choose thee

Is to interpret misery "To lose thee."

Esarhaddon

Ay! death end all if it must end thy kiss!

Astarte

And death be all if it confirm lifes bliss!

Esarhaddon

And death come soon if death fill lifes endeavour!

Astarte

and if it spill lifes vintage, death come never!

Esarhaddon

The sun sets. Bathe me in the rain of gold!

Astarte

These pearls that decked it shimmering star-cold

Fall, and my hair falls, wreathes an aureole.

Even as thy love encompasses my soul!

Esarhaddon

I
am blinded; I am bruised; I am stung.

Each thread

Hisses.

Astarte

Theres life there for a thousand dead!

Esarhaddon

And death there for a million!

Astarte

Even so.

Life, death, new life, a web spun soft and slow

by love, the spider, in these palaces

That taketh hold.

Esarhaddon

Take hold.

Astarte

Keen joyaunces

Mix with the multitudinous murmurings,

And all the kisses sharpen into stings.

Nay! shall my mouth take hold? Beware! Once fain,

How shall it ever leave thy mouth again?

Esarhaddon

Why should it?

Astarte

Is not sleep our master yet?

Esarhaddon

Why must we think when wisdom would forget?

Astarte

Lest we in turn forget to fill the hour.

Esarhaddon

The pensive been leaves honey in the flower.

Astarte

Now the suns rim is dipped. And thus I dip

My gold to the horizon of thy lip.

Esarhaddon

Ah!...

Astarte

Theres no liquor, none, within the cup.

Esarhaddon

Nay, draw not back; nay, then, but lift me up.

I would the cup were molten too; Id drain

Its blasting agony.

Astarte

In vain.

Esarhaddon

In vain?

Nay, let the drinker and the draught in one

Blaze up at last, and burn down Babylon!

Astarte

All but the garden, and our bed, and -- see!

The false full moon that comes to rival me.

Esarhaddon

She comes to lamp our love.

[a
chime of bells without.

Astarte

Ill tire my hair.

The banquet waits. Girls, follow me.

[They go out, leaving Esarhaddon.

Esarhaddon

How fair

And full she sweeps, the buoyant barge upon

The gilded curves of Tigris. Shes the swan

That drew the gods to gaze, the fawn that called

Their passion to his glades of emerald,

The maid that maddened Mithras, the quick quiver

Of reeds that drew Oannes from the river!...

She is gone. The garden is a wilderness.

Oh for the banquet of the lioness,

the rich astounding wines, the kindling meats,

The music and the dancers! Fiery seats

Of empire of the archangels, let your wings

Ramp through the empyrean! Lords and Kings

Of the Gods, descend and serve us, as we spurn

And trample life, fill deaths sardonyx urn

With loves immortal -- how shall I endure

This moments patience? Ah, she comes, be sure!

Her foot flits on the marble.... Open, gate!

[The gate, not of the house but of the garden, opens. The
Lady Psyche appears. She is clothed in deep purple, as mourning, and her
hair is bound with a fillet of cypress and acacia. She is attended by three
maidens and three aged women.

What tedious guest arrives?

Psyche

white hour of fate!

I have found him!

Esarhaddon

Who is this?... Fair lady, pardon.

You seek the mistress of the garden?

Psyche

I
thought I had found the lord I seek.

Your pardon, lord. These eyes are weary and weak

With tears and my vain search.

Esarhaddon

Whom seek you then?

Psyche

My husband -- my sole miracle of men,

The Count Adonis.

[esarhaddon
staggers and falls on the couch.

Psyche

You know of him?

Esarhaddon

No.

I cannot tell what struck me so.

I never heard the name.

Psyche

Indeed, your eyes

Are liker his than wedded dragon-flies!

Your brows are his, your mouth is his --

Yet alls awry!

Esarhaddon

May be it is!

Psyche

Oh, pardon. Mine is but a mad girls glance

Adonis is this souls inheritance.

All else is madness.

Esarhaddon

Mad! Mad! Mad! Mad! Mad!

Why say you this? Who are you? Sad? Glad?

Bad?

Bad! Bad! Speak, speak! Bleak peak of mystery?

Weak cheek of modesty?

Psyche

Oh, pardon me!

I did not mean to move you thus.

Esarhaddon

I
am stirred

Too easily. You used a shameful word!

Psyche

Accept my sorrow. I am all alone

In this black night. My heart is stone,

My limbs are lead, mine eyes accurst,

My throat a hell of thirst....

My husband -- they suppose him dead....

They made me wear these weeds. Could I

In my heart credit half they said,

Not these funereal robes should wrap me round,

But the white crements of a corpse, and high

Upon a pyre of sandal and ebony,

Should dare through flame the inequitable profound!

But only these of all mine household come

In faith and hope and love so far from home,

And these three others joined me -- why, who knows?

But thou, lord, in whose face his likeness shows --

At the first glance -- for now, ifaith, tis gone! --

Hast thou dwelt away here in Babylon?

Esarhaddon

Now must I laugh -- forgive me in your sorrow!

My lifes not yesterday and not to-morrow.

I live; I know no more.

Psyche

How so?

Esarhaddon

I
fear

I know but this, that Im a stranger here.

The call me the Lord Esarhaddon -- name

Borrowed or guessed, I cannot tell! I came

Whence I know not -- some malady

Destroyed my memory.

Psyche

Oh, were you he! But yet I see you are not.

Had you no tokens from the life forgot?

Esarhaddon

Nay, I came naked into Babylon.

I live the starlight and sleep through the sun.

I am happy in love, I am rich, I eat and drink,

I gather goods, I laugh, I never think.

Know me the prince of perfect pleasure!

Psyche

Yet

Is there not something that you would forget?

some fear that chills you? While you talk to me

I see you glance behind you fearfully.

Esarhaddon

(with furtive fear amounting to horror)

You see the Shadow?

Psyche

No: slim shadows stretch

From yonder moon, and woo the world, and tech

With their fantastic melancholy grotesques

The earth -- mans destiny in arabesques.

Esarhaddon

You are blind! You are mad! See where he stands!

It is the King of Babylon,

Reeking daggers in his hands --

And black blood oozes, oozes, throbs and dips

From his eyes and nostrils to his lips

That he sucks, gnashing his fangs. Upon

His head is a crown of skulls, and monkeys new

And gibber and mop about him. Skew! Spew! Ugh!

Hu! Now! Now! Mow! they go -- cannot you hear them?

What? have you courage to go near them?

Psyche

Nothing is there.

Esarhaddon

Oh, but he has the haed

Of a boar, the black boar Night! All dead, dead, dead,

The eyes of girls that once were beautiful

Hang round his neck. Whack! Crack! he slaps a skull

For a drum -- Smack! Flack! Thwack! Back, Ill not attack.

Quack! Quack! theres ducks and devils on his back.

Keep him away. You want a man, you say?

Well, theres a king for you to-day.

Go, kiss him! Slobber over him! HIs ribs

Should be readily tickled. Wah! Wah! Wah! she jibs.

Ugh! there he came too close. Ill bite the dust;

Ill lick the slime of Babylon. Great lust,

Great god, great devil, gar-gra-gra-gra! Space me!

Take this wench, though she were the womb that bare me!

See! Did I tell you, hes the King, the King,

The King of Terrors. See me grovelling!

Yah! Ha!

Psyche

theres nothing there. Are you a man

To craze at naught?

Esarhaddon

Immitigable ban!

Immitigable, pitiful, profound --

Ban, can, fan, ran, and pan is underground,

Round, bound, sound -- Oh have pity!...

Who art thou

Whose coming thus unmans me? Not till now

Saw I, or felt I, or heard I, the King

So mumbling near; black bloods on everything.

Boo! Scow! Be off! Out! Vanish! Fly! Begone!

Out! Off! Out! Off! Im King of Babylon.

Oh no! Thy pardon. Spare me! Tis as a slip

O th lip. Now flip! rip! bawdy harlot, skip!

[He threatens her. She trembles, but holds her
ground.

Strip, yes, Ill strip you naked, strip your flesh

In strips with my lips, gnaw your bones like a dog.

Off, sow! Off, grumpet! Strumpet! Scum-pit! Flails to thresh

Your body! Clubs to mash your face in! Knives

To cut away your cats nine lives!

Astarte

(Entering hastily.) Whats this? Who are

you? What right have you to come

And make this havoc in the home?

Can you not see what wreck your tempest makes?

Begone! I have a fiery flight of snakes

To lash you hence!

Psyche

It may be mines the right.

It may be you are nothing in my sight.

It may be I have found my lord at last;

And you -- his concubine? May be out-cast.

This is the sure thing, that I chase thee. Slaves!

Hither your whips! that are more black with blood

Of such as this thing than your skins with kisses

Of your suns frenzy.

[The slaves run up.

Psyche

Thou vain woman! Now

I know him, lost, wrecked, mad, but mine, but mine,

Indissolubly dowered with me, my husband,

The Count Adonis!

Esarhaddon

Ah!

[He falls, but into the arms of Astarte.

Astarte

Ho! guard us now

And lash this thing from the garden!

[The slaves form in line between PSYCHE and
the others.

Psyche

Adonis!

Esarhaddon

Ah!

Astarte, theres some sorcery abroad.

Astarte

The spell is broken, dear my lord.

There is a wall of ebony and steel

About us.

Esarhaddon

What then do I feel

When that name sounds?

Astarte

A
trick of mind.

Things broken up and left behind

Keep roots to plague us when we least expect them.

The wise -- and thou art wise -- let naught affect them.

Let us to feast!

Esarhaddon

Ah no! I tremble still,

Despite my reason and despite my will.

Let me lie with thee here awhile, and dream

Upon thine eyes beneath the moon,

Whose slanted beam

Lights up thy face, that sends its swoon

Of languour and hunger through

The infinite space that severs two

So long as they cannot rise above

Into the unity of love.

However close lock hands and feet,

One lone moment may they meet;

When in the one pang that runs level

With death and birth, the royal revel,

The lover and the loved adore

The thing that is, when they are not.

Astarte

No more!

Bury thy face between these hills that threat

The heaven, their rosy spears (the gods that fret)

Tipping thine ears, and with my hair Ill hide thee;

And these mine handmaidens shall stand beside thee,

And mix their nightingale with lion

Of the guard that chorus and clash iron,

While as a river laps its banks

My fingertips caress thy flanks!

(Chorus.)

Men

Under the sun there is none, there is none

That hath heard such a word as our lord hath begun.

Women

Under the moon such a tune, such a tune

As his thought hath half caught in this heaven of June.

Men

Never hath night such a light, such a rite!

Women

Never had day such a ray, such a sway!

Men

Never had man, since began the earths plan,

Such a bliss, such a kiss, such a woman as this!

Women

Never had maid since God bade be arrayed

Earths bowers with his flowers, such a man to her powers!

Men

Mix in the measure,

Black grape and white cherry!

A passion, a pleasure,

A torment, a treasure,

You to be mournful an we to be merry!

Women

We shall be solemn

And grave and alluring,

You be the column

Upstanding, enduring.

We be the ivy and vine

To entwine --

My mouth on your mouth, and your mouth on mine!

Men

Burnish our blades

With your veils,

Merry maids!

Women

Sever their cords

With the scales

Of your swords!

Men

As a whirlwind that licks up a leaf

Let us bear

You, an aureate sheaf

Adrift in the air!

Women

As a butterfly hovers and flits,

Let us guide

To bewilder your wits

Bewitched by a bride!

Men

Now, as the stars shall

Encircle the moon,

Our ranks let us marshal

In time and in tune!

Women

Leading our lady and lord

To the feast,

Ere the night be abroad,

The black rose of the east!

Men And Women

Arise! arise! the feast is spread,

The wine is poured; the singers wait

Eager to lure and lull; the dancers tread

Impatient to invoke the lords of Fate.

Arise, arise! the feast delayed delays

The radiant raptures that must crown its ways.

Astarte

come now. Ah! still the pallor clings?

Wine will redeem the roses. Stretch the strings

Of thy slack heart! Still trembling? Lean on me!

This shoulder could hold up eternity.

[They go forth to the banquet.

Scene Ii.

The Hall Of The Palace Of Astarte.

Onyx, alabaster, porphyry and malachite are the pillars; and
the floor of mosaic. In the high seat is ASTARTE, on her right Hermes, A
Greek physician. He is a slight, old man, with piercing eyes and every mark
of agility and vigour. His dress is that of a Babhlonish physican.

Hermes

And now, polite preliminaries past,

Tell me, dear lady, what the little trouble is!

Astarte

It was quite sudden.

Hermes

Good; not like to last.

It bursts, such malady a brittle bubble is!

How is the pulse? Allow me!

Astarte

Not for me

Your skill. My husbands lost his memory.

Hermes

Yet he remembers you?

Astarte

O
quite, of course!

Hermes

Let it alone! dont flog the willing horse!

Were I to cure him by my magic spells,

The odds are hed remember someone else!

Astarte

Ah, but -- a month ago -- a woman came --

Hermes

Cool -- warm -- hot -- now were getting near the flame!

Astarte

And what she said or did who knows?

Hermes

These men!

Astarte

Yes! But hes never been the same since then!

Ive taken endless trouble not to fret him,

Done everything I could to please and pet him,

And now this wretched woman has upset him!

Hermes

Was he distressed much at the time?

Astarte

Distressed?

Mad as an elephant in spring!

Hermes. I
guessed

It. Think he took a fancy to the girl?

Astarte

Well, honestly, I dont. My minds a whirl

With worry. Shes a flimsy creature, rags

Of sentiment, and tears, and worn-out tags

Of wisdom.

Hermes

Yes, youve nothing much to fear

While you appear as... what you do appear.

Astarte

Well, there they stood, crying like butchered swine,

She and her maids. It seems shes lost her man,

Cant get another, wanted to claim mine.

I put a stopper on the pretty plan.

But ever since -- well, I cant say whats wrong,

But somethings wrong.

Hermes

Yes; yes. Now is it long?

Astarte

About a month.

Hermes

What physic have you tried?

Astarte

The usual things; young vipers skinned and dried

And chopped with rose-leaves; cows hoof stewed in dung,

One pilule four times daily, on the tongue;

Larks brains in urine after every meal,

With just a touch of salt and orange-peel.

Hermes

And yet he is no better?

Astarte

NOt a whit.

Oh yes, though, not I come to think of it,

Snails pounded up and taken after food

Did seem to do some temporary good.

Of course we kept him on a doubled diet.

Hermes

Have you tried change of air, and rest, and quiet?

Astarte

No; what a strange idea!

Hermes

As strange as new.

Yet there seems somehow something in it too!

Still, heres where silence is worth seven speeches --

I might get strangled by my brother leeches.

Now, are you sure you want him cured?

Astarte

Why, yes,

Why should I call you in?

Hermes

But none the less

It might be awkward his remembering more.

Astarte

I
simply want him as he was before.

Hermes

And if it should turn out, as I suspect,

He was this womans husband.

Astarte

Then select

A -- you know -- something suitable -- to put her

Where she wont worry me, or want a suitor.

Hermes

I
understand you; but Im old; your beauty

Might fail to make me careless of my duty.

Astarte

Ill take the risk.

Hermes

Then let me see the victim;

If bound, well loosen him; if loose, constrict him.

There, madam, in one phrase from heart to heart,

Lies the whole mystery of the healers art!

Where is the pathic?

Astarte

Hush! in Babylon

We say "the patient."

Hermes

Yes?

Astarte

Its often one.

for Babylonish is so quaint a tongue

One often goes too right by going wrong!

Ill call him from the garden.

[Goes out.

Hermes

(alone). Is there need

To see the man? Hes simply off his feed.

A child could see the way to make him hearty:

More exercise, less food -- and less Astarte!

[Enter Esarhaddon.

I
greet your lordship.

Esarhaddon

Greeting, sir!

Hermes

And so

Were not as healthy as a month ago?

The pulse? Allow me! Ah! Tut! Tut! Not bad.

The tongue? Thanks! Kindly tell me what you had

For dinner.

Esarhaddon

Nothing: practically nothing.

I seem to look on food with utter loathing.

Hermes

Just so; but you contrived to peck a bit?

Esarhaddon

Only a dozen quails upon the spit,

A little sturgeon cooked with oysters, wine,

Mushrooms and crayfish....

Hermes

That is not to dine.

Esarhaddon

Well, after that I toyed with pheasant pasty,

Sliced -- you know how -- with pineapple.

Hermes

Eat hasty?

Esarhaddon

No, not at all. Well, then a sucking-pig

Stuffed with grape, olive, cucumber, peach, fig,

And lemon. Then I trifled with a curry

Hermes

Youre sure you didnt eat it in a hurry?

Esarhaddon

Quite sure. The curry was simplicity

Itself -- plain prawns. Then there was -- let me see! --

A
dish of fruit, then a kid roasted whole,

Some venison fried with goose-liver, a roll

Of very tender spicy well-cooked veal

Done up with honey, olive oil, and meal,

Some sweets, but only three or four, and those

I hardly touched.

Hermes

But why now?

Esarhaddon

I
suppose

I wasnt hungry.

Hermes

Diagnosis right;

A simple case of loss of appetite!

Surely they tempted you with something else.

Esarhaddon

A
few live lobsters broiled within their shells.

I ate two only.

Hermes

That explains the tongue.

Now let me listen!

Sound in heart and lung.

(And I should think so!) Twas a sage that sung:

"Whom the Gods love, love lobsters; they die young."

And yet greater sage sublimely said:

"Look not upon the lobster when its red!"

Esarhaddon

A
Babylonish bard has said the same

Of wine.

Hermes

Ah, wine now? Out with it! Die game!

Esarhaddon

By fin and tail of great Oannes, I Am the mere model of sobriety.

Hermes

What did you drink for dinner?

Esarhaddon

Scarce a drop At any time -- four flagons, there I stop. With just a flask
of barley-wine to top.

Hermes

Just so becomes a nobleman of sense Whose moderation errs toward abstinence.

Esarhaddon

Abstinence! Thats the word I couldnt think of! Im an
abstainer. Everything I drink of Is consecrated by a melancholic Priest.

Hermes

Which prevents it being alcoholic!

Esarhaddon

Sir, you appear to understand my case As no one else has done. Appalling
face These quack have that crowd Babylon. Your fee? Though none can pay
the service done to me.

Hermes

One moment. What about your memory? Well, never mind, just follow my advice;
That will come back before you say "knife" twice. First, fire
your slaves, the rogues that thieve and laze: A slaves worse than
two masters now-a-days. Next, live on nothing but boiled beans and ripe,
With once a week a melon -- when theyre ripe. Next, sent the Lady
Astarte up the river; She looks to me to have a touch of liver. And you
must teach your muscles how to harden, So stay at home, and labour in the
garden!

Esarhaddon

You damned insulting blackguard! Charlatan! Quack! Trickster! Scoundrel!
Cheating medicine-man! You ordure-tasting privy-sniffing rogue, You think
because your humbug is thevogue You can beard me?

Hermes

Ill tell you just one thing. Disobey me, and -- trouble with the
King!

Esarhaddon

Ring-a-ling-ting! Ping! Spring! HERMES. Thats cooked his goose.
Ill tell Astarte, though its not much use. [He goes out. Its
only one more of lifes little curses -- The best of women make the
worst of nurses!

Scene Iii

The Consulting-room Of Hermes.

It has two parts, the first filled with stuffed crocodiles, snakes, astrolabes,
skeletons, lamps of strange shape, vast rolls of papyri, vases containing
such objects as a foetus, a mummied child, a six-legged sheep. Hands (obviously
those of criminals
) have been painted with phosphorus, and give light. Sculptures
of winged bulls and bricks inscribed with arrow-head characters are ranged
about the walls. A chain of elephants bones covered with its hide
contains the doctor, who is dressed as before in a long black robe covered
with mysterious characters. On his head is a high conical cap of black silk
dotted with gold stars. In his right hand is a wand of human teeth strung
together, in his left a "book" of square palm-l;eaves bound in
silver. at the back of the room is a black curtain completely veiling its
second portion. This curtain is covered with cabalistic characters and terrifying
images in white. [Enter the servant of HERMES, a negro uglier than an ape.
He is immensely long and lean; his body hangs forward, so that his arms
nearly touch the ground. He is clad in a tightly fitting suit of scarlet,
and wears a scarlet skull-cap. he makes deep obeisance.
]

Hermes

Speak, Hanuman!

Hanuman

A
lady. [HERMES nods gravely. Exit Hanuman.

Hermes

Abaoth! Abraxas! Pur! Put! Aeou! Thoth! [Enter the Lady Psyche with one
attendant. Ee! Oo! Uu! Iao Sabaoth! Dogs of Hell! Mumble spell! Up! Up!
Up! Sup! Sup! Sup! U! Aoth! Abaoth! Abraoth! Sabaoth! Livid, loath, Obey
the oath! Ah! [He shuts the book with a snap, You have come to me because
you are crossed In love.

Psyche

Most true, sir!

Hermes

Ah! youre Greek!

Psyche

As you yourself,sir.

Hermes

Then Ive lost My pains. I need not fear to speak. I took you for
a fool. Ho! veil, divide! [hanuman appears and lays his hand on a cord.
Things are much pleasanter the other side. [The doctor throws off his cloak
and cap, his straggling white hair and long pointed beard, appearing as
a youth dressed fashionably; at the same time the curtain pulled back shows
a room furnished with the luxury of a man of the world. A low balcony of
marble at the back gives a view of the city, and of the Tigris winding far
into the distance, where dim blue mountains rim the horizon.] [The doctor
conducts his client to a lounge, where they sit.

Hermes

Bring the old Chian, Hanuman! [The negro goes to obey. This joke Is the
accepted way of scaring folk; And if theyre scared, they may find
conficence Which is half cure. Most people have no sense. If only they would
sweat, and wash, eat slow, Drink less, think more, the leech would starve
or go. But they prefer debauchery, disease, Clysters, drugs, philtres, filth,
and paying fees! Now then, to business! PSYCHE. Tell me how you guessed
It was my heart that found itself distressed!

Hermes

I
always sing a woman just that song; In twenty years Ive never
once been wrong. Seeing me thus marvellously wise, Veneration follows on
surprise: Sometime they will do what I advise!

Psyche

I
see. You have real knowledge.

Hermes

Not to be learnt at college!

Psyche

Good; youre my man. I am come from Greece, Were the Gods live and
love us, sorrowing For my lost husband. I have found him here, But with
his memory gone, his mind distraught, Living in luxury with a courtesan
(I could forgive him that if he knew me), Filled with a blind unreasoning
fear of what Who knows? Hes haunted by a spectre king.

Hermes

Physicians must know everything: Half the night burn learnings candle,
Half the day devote to scandal. Heres the mischief of the matter That
I learn most from the latter! Yesterday I paid a visit To the fair... Astarte,
is it? Saw the kitchen and the closet, Deduced diet from deposit, Saw where
silkworm joined with swan To make a bed to sleep upon, Saw the crowd of
cringing knaves That have made their masters slaves, Saw Astarte -- diagnosed
What had made him see a ghost!

Psyche

Can you cure him?

Hermes

In my hurry (And a not unnatural worry At the name of lobster curry) I
so far forgot my duty As to mention to the beauty What... well! heres
the long and short of it! Just exactly what I thought of it. Tempests, by
Oannes fin!

Psyche

Sorry that hed called you in?

Hermes

So much so that Id a doubt If he wouldnt call me out!

Psyche

Then he will not hear your counsel?

Hermes

No; I bade him live on groundsel; But the little social friction Interfered
with the prescription.

Psyche

Theres no hope, then?

Hermes

Lend an ear! We may rule him by his fear! Somehow we may yet contrive
That he see the King, and live! Have you influence?

Psyche

At Court? Plenty, in the last resort. Letters from his suzerain!

Hermes

You are high in favour then?

Psyche

Ay, that needs not to be sworn; I am his own daughter born.

Hermes

In thy blood the spark divine Of Olympus?

Psyche

Even in mine!

Hermes

Hark, then! At the Hour of Fears When the lordly Lion rears In mid-heaven
his bulk of bane Violently vivid, shakes his mane Majestical, and Snake
and Bull Lamp the horizon, and the full Fire of the moon tops heaven, and
spurs The stars, while Mars ruddily burns, And Venus glows, and Jupiter
Ramps through the sky astride of her, Then, unattended, let the king Press
on the little secret spring That guards the garden, and entering Lay once
his hand upon him, even While in the white arms of his heaven He swoons
to sleep. That dreadful summons From the wild witchery his womans.
That shaft of shattering truth shall splinter The pine of his souls
winter. Then do thou following cry once His name; as from eclipse the suns
Supernal splendour springs, his sight Shall leap to light.

Psyche

Shall leap to light! Master, this wisdom how repay?

Hermes

I
am sworn unto thy father -- Nay! Weep not and kneel not! See, mine art
[The two other handmaidens are seen standing by their fellow.] Hath wrought
such wonder in thine heart That -- look!

Psyche

Ah! Pistis, Elpis! how Are you here? You were not with me now! You fled
me. Charis only came Through those dark dreams.

Hermes

Farewell! Proclaim For my reward my arts success. More than yourself
need happiness.

Psyche

Farewell and prosper greatly! [She goes out with her maidens.

Hermes

And thou, live high and stately In gory and gree tenfold That which thou
hadst of old! [He draws the curtain.

Scene Iv:

The Antechamber Of The Kings Palace.

It is a vast hall of black marble. At the corners four fountains play
in basins of coloured marble. At the back a narrow door pillared by vast
man-bulls in white marble. In mid-stage the Lady Psyche, seated on the ground,
her long hair unloosed, her robe of shining silver, mourns. With her are
the three handmaidens bowed and mourning at front of the stage R., C., and
L. the aged women are grouped in front of stage C., on the steps which lead
to the hall. No light comes save through the roves of the Lady Psyche from
the jewels that adorn her. Their glimmer is, however, such as to fill the
hall with moony radiance, misty dim, and lost in the vastness of the building.
Psyche.
Silence grows hateful; hollow is mine heart Here in the fateful
hall; I wait apart. Dimmer, still dimmer darkness veils my sight; There
is no glimmer heralding the light. I, the Kings daughter, am but serf
and thrall Where Time hath wrought her cobweb in the hall. this blood avails
not; wheres the signet ring Whose pussiance fails not to arouse the
King? Heir of his heart, I am uncrowned; then, one that hath no art or craft
in Babylon. I left my home and found a vassals house -- This lampless
dome of death, vertiginous! O for the foam of billows that carouse About
the crag-set columns! for the breeze That fans their flagging Caryatides!
For the gemmed vestibule, the porch of pearl, The bowers of rest, the silences
that furl Their wings upon mine amethystine chamber Whose lions shone with
emerald and amber! O for the throne whereon my fathers awe, Lofty
and lone, lets liberty love law! All justice wrought, its sword the healers
knife! All mercy, not less logical than life! Alas! I wait a widowed suppliant
Betrayed to fate, blind trampling elephant. I wait and mourn. Will not the
dust disclose The Unicorn, the Unicorn that goes About the gardens of these
halls of Spring, First of the wardens that defend the King? Wilt thou not
bring me to the Unicorn? [The Unicorn passes over. He has the swiftness
of the horse, the slimness of the deer, the whiteness of the swan, the horn
of the narwhal. He couches upon the right side of the Lady Psyche.] Hail!
thou that holdest thine appointed station, Lordliest and boldest of his
habitation, Silence that foldest over its creation! [The Lion passes over.
He is redder than the setting sun. He couches upon the left side of the
Lady Psyche.]
Hail! thou that art his ward and warrior, The brazen heart,
the iron pulse of war! Up start, up start! and set thyself to roar! [The
Peacock passes over. This peacock is so great that his fan, as he spreads
it on couching before the face of the Lady Psyche, fills the whole of the
hall.
] Hail! glory and light his majesty that hideth, Pride and delight
whereon his image rideth, While in thick night and darkness he abideth!
[The stage now darkens. Even the light shed by the jewels of the Lady Psyche
is extinguished. then, from the gate of the Palace between the man-bulls
there issueth a golden hawk. In his beak is a jewel which he drops into
the lamp that hangs from the height above the head of the Lady Psyche. this
lamp remains dark. During his darkness the Unicorn, the Lion, and the Peacock
disappear.] Love me and lead me through the blind abysses! Fill me and feed
me on the crowning kisses, Like flowers that flicker in the garden of glory,
Pools of pure liquor like pale flames and hoary That lamp the lightless
empyrean! Ah! love me! All space be sightless, and thine eyes above me!
Thrice burnt and branded on this bleeding brow, Stamp thou the candid stigma
-- even now! [The lamp flashes forth into dazzling but momentary radiance.
As it goes out a cone of white light is seen upon the head of The Lady Psyche,
And before her stands a figure of immense height cloaked and hooded in perfect
blackness.
] The King. Come! for the throne is hollow. The eagle hath cried:
Come away! The stars are numbered, and the tide Turns. Follow! Follow! Thine
Adonis slumbered. As a bride Adorned, come, follow! Fate alone is fallen
and wried. Follow me, follow! The unknown is satisfied. [The Lady Psyche
is lifted to her feet. In silence she bows, and in silence follows him as
he turns and advances to the gate while the curtain falls.
]

Scene V:

The Garden Of The Lady Astarte.

The Lord Esarhaddon
is lying on the couch with his mistress. Their arms
are intertwined. They and their slaves and maidens are all fallen into the
abysses of deep sleep. It is a cloudless night; and the full moon, approaching
mid-heaven, casts but the shortest shadows. The Murmur of the Breeze I am
the Breeze to bless the bowers, Sigh through the trees, caress the flowers;
Each folded bud to sway, to swoon, With its green blood beneath the moon
Stirred softly by my kiss; I bear The sort reply of amber air To the exhaled
sighs of the heat That dreams and dies amid the wheat, From the cool breasts
of mountains far -- Their serried crests clasp each a star! The earths
pulse throbs with mighty rivers; With her low sobs Gods heaven quivers;
The dew stands on her brow; with love She aches for all the abyss above,
Her rocks and chasms the lively strife Of her sharp spasms of lust, of life.
Hark! to the whisper of my fan, My sister kiss to maid and man. Through
all earths wombs, through all seas waves, Gigantic glooms, forgotten
graves, I haunt the tombs of kings and slaves. I hush the babe, I wake the
bird, I wander away beyond stars unstirred, Soften the ripples of the tide,
Soothe the bruised nipples of the bride, Help stars and clouds play hide-and-seek,
Wind seamens shrouds, bid ruins speak, Bring dreams to slumber, sleep
to dream Whose demons cumber nights extreme. And softer sped than
dream or death Quiet as the dead, or slain loves breath, I sigh for
loves that swoon upon The hanging groves of Babylon. Each terrace adds a
shower of scent Where lass and lad seduce content; Each vine that hangs
confirms the stress Of purer pangs of drunkenness; Each marble wall and
pillar swerves Majestical my course to curves Subtle as breasts and limbs
and tresses Of this caressed suave sorceresss That raves and rests
in wildernesses Whose giant gifts are strength that scars Her soul and lifts
her to the stars, Savage, and tenderness that tunes Her spirits splendour
to the moons, And music of passion to outrun The fiery fashion of
the sun. Hush! theres a stir not mine amid the groves, A foot divine
that yet is not like lives. Hush! let me furl my forehead! Ill
be gone To flicker and curl above great Babylon. [The Gate of the Garden
op ens. The Lady Psyche advances and makes way for The King Of Babylon.
He is attended by many companies of warriors in armour of burnished silver
and gold, with swords, spears, and shields. These take up position at the
back of the stage, in perfect silence of foot as of throat.] [the Lady Psyche
remains standing by the gate; The King Of Babylon advances with infinite
stealth, dignity, slowness, and power, toward the couch.
] Psyche. Life?
Is it life? What hour of fate is on the bell? Of this supreme ordeal what
issue? Heaven or hell? I am stripped of all my power now when I need it
most; I am empty and unreal, a shadow or a ghost. All the great stake is
thrown, even now the dice are falling. All deeds are locked in links, one
to another calling through time: from the dim throne the first rune that
was reed By God, the supreme Sphinx, determined the last deed. [the
King Of Babylon
reaches forth his hand and arm. It is the hand and arm of
a skeleton. He touches the forehead of the sleeping lord. Instantly, radiant
and naked, a male figure is seen erect.
]

Psyche

Adonis!

Adonis

Psyche!

[They run together and embrace.

Psyche

Ah! long-lost!

Adonis

My wife! Light, O intolerable! Infinite love! O life Beyond death!

Psyche

I
have found thee!

Adonis

I
was thine.

Psyche

I
thine From all the ages!

Adonis

To the ages!

Psyche

Mine!

[The KING passes over and departs. Chorus of Soldiers Hail to the Lord!
Without a spear, without a sword He hath smitten, he hath smitten, one stroke
of his worth all our weaponed puissiances. There is no helm, no hauberk,
no cuirass, No shield of sevenfold steel and sevenfold brass Resists his
touch; no sword, no spear but shivers Before his glance. Eternally life
quivers And reels before him; death itself, the hound of god, Slinks at
his heel, and licks the dust that he hath trod. [They follow their Lord,
singing. Psyche. I am a dewdrop focussing the sun That fires the forest
to the horizon. I am a cloud on whom the sun begets The iris arch, a fountain
in whose jets Throbs inner fire of the earths heart, a flower Slain
by the sweetness of the summer shower.

Adonis

I
am myself, knowing I am thou. Forgetfulness forgotten now! Truth, truth
primeval, truth eternal, Unconditioned, sempiternal, Sets the God within
the shrine And my mouth on thine, on thine.

[the Lady Astarte
wakes. In her arms is the corpse of the Lord Esarhaddon.]

Astarte

O
fearful dreams! Awake and kiss me! Awake! I thought I was crushed and
strangled by a snake. [She rises. The corpse falls. He is dead! He is dead!
O lips of burning bloom, You are ashen. [The jaw falls. The black laughter
of the tomb! Then let me kill myself! Bring death distilled From nightshade,
monkshood. Let no dawn regild this night. Let me not see the damnèd light
Of day, but drown in this black-hearted night! Ho, slaves! [ADONIS and Psyche
advance to her.

Adonis

Thyself a slave! What curse (unbated Till patient earth herself is nauseated)
Is worse than this, an handmaiden that creeps Into her mistress bed
while her lord sleeps, And robs her?

Astarte

And what worse calamity Than his revenge? But leave me, let me die! [She
falls prone at their feet.

Psyche

Add robbery to robbery! We need thee To serve us. Let us raise thee up
and feed thee, Comfort and cherish thee until the end, Less slave than child,
less servitor than friend.

Adonis

Rise! let the breath flow, let the lips affirm Fealty and love. To the
appointed term Within thy garden as belovèd guests Of thine, let us abide.
Now lips and breasts Touching, three bodies and one soul, the triple troth
confirm.

Psyche

The great indissoluble oath!

Astarte

Lift me!

[They raise her; all embrace. By him that ever reigns upon The throne,
and wears the crown, of Babylon, I serve, and love.

Psyche

This kiss confirm it!

Adonis

This!

Astarte

I
have gained all in losing all. Now kiss Once more with arms linked!

Adonis

The dawn breaks!

Astarte

Behold Loves blush!

Psyche

Lights breaking!

Adonis

Lives great globe of gold!

Astarte

Come! let us break our fast.

Psyche

My long fasts broken.

Adonis

Let us talk of love.

Psyche

Loves first-last word is spoken.

Adonis

Nay! but the tides of trouble are transcended. The words begun,
but never shall be ended. And through the sun forsake the maiden east, Life
be for us a never-fading feast. [They go towards the house, singing. ALL.
The Crown of our life is our love, The crown of our love is the light That
rules all the region above The night and the stars of the night; That rules
all the region aright, The abyss to abysses above; For the crown of our
love is the light, And the crown of our light is our love.
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