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Sif. O God! my

heart

My heart-strings break!-Did not her dying words

Dwell on my name? Did not her latest sigh Breathe tenderness for me?-for me, the wretch, Whose rash suspicion, whose intemperate rage, Abandon'd her to shame!-Ha! gracious Heaven!

Does she not move? Does not returning light Dawn in her feeble eye? Her opening lips Breathe the sweet hope of life.

Cle. Where have I been?

What dreadful dreams have floated in my brain! Beauf. sen. How fares my child?

Cle. O faint! exceeding faint!

My father!-my dear father!-Do I wake?
And am I, am I in a father's arms?
My brother too! O happy!

Beauf. jun. My dear sister!

Sif. Transporting rapture! Will my love return To life, to reason too? indulgent Power!

Cle. What sound, what well-known voice is that I hear!

Support me, raise me to his long-lost arms!
It is my husband! my Sifroy! my love!
Alas, too faint-I never more shall rise.

Sif. Ah! do not wound me, do not pierce my heart

With any thought so dreadful. Art thou given
In mockery only to my longing arms?
Raise up thy head, my love, lean on my breast,
And whisper to my soul thou wilt not die.

Cle. How thy sweet accents sooth the pangs of death!

Witness, ye angels, thus in thy dear arms

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Bestows upon departed saints, be thine!

Cle. Farewell, my brother! comfort and support

Our father's feeble age---To heal his grief
Will give thy sister's dying moments ease.
Sif. Talk not of death!---We must not, must
not part!

Good Heaven, her dying agonies approach.

Cle. The keenest pang of death, is that I feel For thy surviving woe. Adieu, my love! I do entreat thee with my last, last breath, Restrain thy tears--nor let me grieve to think Thou feel'st a pain I cannot live to cure.

Sif. Might'st thou but live, how light were every pain

Fate could inflict!

Cle. It will not be !-I faint

My spirits fail-farewell-receive me, Heaven.

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lovely eyes

Are clos'd in death-no more to look on me! My fate is fix'd, and in this tortur'd breast Anguish--remorse-despair-must ever dwell.

Beauf. sen. Offended power, at length with pitying eyes

Look on our misery! Cut short this thread, That links my soul too long to wretched life!

And let mankind, taught by his hapless fate, Learn one great truth, experience finds too late; That dreadful ills from rash resentment flow, And sudden passions end in lasting woe.

[Exeunt.

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"Order your coach-conduct me safe to town"Give me my jewels-wardrobe-and my maid, "And pray take care my pin-money be paid: "Else know, I wield a pen-and, for his glory, "My dear's domestic feats may shine in story! "Then for the child-the tale was truly sad"But who for such a bantling would run mad? "What wife, at midnight hour inclin'd to roam, "Would fondly drag her little chit from home? "What has a mother with her child to do? "Dear brats-the nursery's the place for you."

Such are the strains of many a modish fair! Yet memoires-not of modern growth-declare The time has been, when modesty and truth Were deem'd additions to the charms of youth; Ere, in the dice-box, ladies found delight, Or swoon'd, for lack of cards, on Sunday-night; When women hid their necks, and veil'd their faces,

Nor romp'd, nor rak'd, nor star'd, at public places:

Nor took the airs of Amazons-for graces! When plain domestic virtues were the mode, And wives ne'er dreamt of happiness abroad, But cheer'd their offspring, shunn'd fantastic airs, And, with the joys of wedlock, mixt the cares. Such modes are past-yet sure they merit

praise;

For marriage triumph'd in those wassel days:
No virgin sigh'd in vain, no fears arose,
Lest holy wars should cause a dearth of beaux:
By chaste decorum, each affection gain'd;
By faith and fondness, what she won, maintain'd.
'Tis yours, ye fair! to mend a thoughtless age,
That scorns the press, the pulpit, and the stage.
To yield frail husbands no pretence to stray,
(Men will be rakes, if women lead the way.)
To sooth-But truce with these preceptive lays!
The muse, who, dazzled with your ancient praise,
On present worth, and modern beauty tramples,
Must own, she ne'er could boast more bright ex
amples.*

* Addressing the Boxes.

THE

ORPHAN OF CHINA.

BY

MURPHY.

PROLOGUE.

BY W. WHITEHEAD.

ENOUGH of Greece and Rome. The exhausted

store,

Of either nation, now can charm no more:
Even adventitious helps in vain we try,
Our triumphs languish in the public eye;
And grave processions, musically slow,
Here pass unheeded as a Lord Mayor's shew.
On eagle wings, the poet of to-night,
Soars for fresh virtues to the source of light,
To China's eastern realms; and boldly bears
Confucius' morals to Britannia's ears.
Accept th' imported boon, as echoing Greece
Received from wand'ring chiefs her golden fleece;
Nor only richer by the spoils become,

But praise th'advent'rous youth who brings them

home.

One dubious character, we own, he draws, A patriot, zealous in a monarch's cause!

Vice is the task the varying hand to guide,
And teach the blending colours to divide;
Where, rainbow-like, th' encroaching tints in-

vade

Each other's bounds, and mingle light with shade.
If then, assiduous to obtain his end,
You find too far the subject's zeal extend;
If undistinguished loyalty prevails,
Where nature shrinks, and strong affection fails,
On China's tenets charge the fond mistake,
And spare his error for his virtue's sake.

From noble motives our allegiance springs,
For Britain knows no right divine in kings.
From Freedom's choice that boasted right arose,
And through each line from Freedom's choice it
flows.

Justice, with mercy joined, the throne maintains; And in his people's hearts, our monarch reigns.

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SCENE I.

Enter MANDANE and MIRVAN.

ACT I.

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That hang o'er Zamti's house.

Mir. Alas! Mandane,

Amidst the general wreck who does not feel
The keen domestic pang?

Man. Yes, all.-We all

Must feel the kindred-touch; daily the cries
Of widows, orphans, father, son, and brother,
In vain are sent to heaven ;-the wasteful rage
Of these barbarians-these accursed invaders,
Burns with increasing fire ;-the thunder still
Rolls o'er our heads, threatening with hideous
crash

To fall at once, and bury us in ruin.

Man. Oh! there-there lies the thought
At which imagination starts, appalled
With horror at the scene her busy workings
Have coloured to my sight--there lies the
thought

That wakens all a mother's fears-alas!
I tremble for my son!

Mir. Your son-kind Heaven!

Have you not check'd his ardour ?-with your
tears,

Your soft authority, restrained the hero
From the alarms of war?

Man. Alas, good Mirvan,

Thou little know'st his danger!-but that truth
Must never pass these lips.

Mir. I hope, Mandane

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Thy truth and honour have been ever spotless. Besides thy wrongs, thy countless wrongs, the wounds

He gave your injured family and name

Mir. Alas! those wounds must still lie bleed-
ing here,

Untented by the hand of time-Not all
His lenient arts, his favours heaped upon me,
Shall cool the burning anguish of my soul.
What! he that slew my father!-dragged my
sister,

Mir. And quickly fall it must!-the hand of Blooming in years, to his detested bed!

heaven

Weighs this great empire down.

Man. Nay, tax not Heaven!

Almighty Justice never bares its arm

'Gainst innocence and truth. 'Tis Timurkan,
That fell barbarian-that insatiate waster-
May curses blast the Tartar!-he-'Tis he
Has bore down all, and still his slaughtering sword,
In yonder field of death, where Corea's troops
Made their last stand for liberty and China,
Crimsons the land with blood. This battle lost,
Oh! then farewell to all!-But, Mirvan, say,
How came the tidings?

As

Mir. From yon lofty tower,

my eyes, straining toward the distant plain, Sent forth an anxious look, through clouds of dust

The savage bands appeared; the western sun
Gleam'd on their burnished helms; and soon a
shout

From the glad multitude proclaimed the approach
Of Timurkan:-elated with new conquest,
The tyrant comes, and where his wrath will stop
Heaven only knows!

Yes, tyrant, yes :--thy unextinguished foe
Dwells in this bosom. Surely, then, to me
Mandane may reveal her griefs-her wrongs
Will add new fuel to my hidden fires,
And make them burn more fiercely.

Man. Urge no more—

My woes must rest concealed. Yet should the
tyrant

Learn from the captives of yon vanquished host,
That China's orphan breathes the vital air,
And, to himself unknown, within his breast
Unconscious bears the generous glowing flame
Of all the virtues of his royal line;

Oh! should they know that the dear youth
survives,

That for his righteous cause this war began,
Their fury then would kindle to a blaze,
Might wrap the world in flames, and in the ruin
My blameless son must perish!

Mir. Seek not thus

To multiply the ills that hover round you;
Nor from the stores of busy fancy add
New shafts to fortune's quiver. Zamti's care
Hath still deceived suspicion's wakeful eye;

And o'er the Mandarin, his manners pure,
And sacred function, have diffused an air
Of venerable awe, which e'en can teach
These northern foes to soften into men.

Man. Yes, Mirvan, yes--Religion wears a mien
In Zamti's person so severely mild,
That the fierce Scythian rests upon his spear,
And wonders what he feels! Such is the charm
Of heart-felt virtue; such is nature's force
That speaks abroad, and in rude northern hearts
Can stamp the image of an awful God.
From that source springs some hope:-Wretch
that I am!

Hope idly flutters on my trembling tongue,
While melancholy, brooding o'er her wrongs,
Lays waste the mind with horror and despair.
-What noise is that?-

Mir. Compose this storm of grief;
In every sound your fancy hears the Tartar-
Your husband this way bends-

Man. Celestial Powers!

What labouring sighs heave in his breast?-what

terror

Rolls in the patriot's eye?-haste, Mirvan, hence;
Again look out; gather the flying news,
And let me know each circumstance of ruin.
[Exit MIRVAN.

Enter ZAMTI.

Man. Zamti!

Zumti. Mandane!

Man. Ah! what hast thou seen?

More fatal e'en than that, which first beheld
This race accursed within these palace walls.
Since hope, that balm of wretched minds, is now
Irrevocably lost.

Zamti. Name not the day,

Which saw this city sacked-fresh stream my eyes,
Fresh bleeds my heart, whene'er the sad idea
Comes o'er my tortured mind. Why, cruel
Powers!

Why in that moment could not Zamti fall!

Man. Thy sanctity, the symbol of thy God,
Made even the conqueror suspend his blow,
And murmur soft humanity. High Heaven
Protected thee for its own great designs;
To save the royal child, the new-born babe,
From the dire slaughter of his ancient line.

Zamti. Yes, my Mandane, in that hour of car-
nage,

For purposes yet in the womb of time,

I was reserved. I was ordained to save
The infant boy; the dear, the precious charge,
The last of all my kings:-full twenty years
I've hid him from the world, and from himself;
And now I swear- -Kneel we together here;
While in this dreadful pause our souls renew
Their solemn purpose.-
[Both kneel.
Thou all-gracious Being,
Whose tutelary care hath watched the fate
Of China's Orphan, who hast taught his steps
The paths of safety, still envelop him

In sevenfold night, till your own hour is come;
Till your slow justice see the dread occasion

What hast thou heard?-Tell me--has fate To rouse his soul, and bid him walk abroad,

decreed

The doom of China?

Zamti. China is no more!

The eastern world is lost---this mighty empire
Falls with the universe beneath the stroke

Of savage force---falls from its towering hopes;
For ever, ever fallen!

Man. Yet, why, ye Powers!

Vicegerent of your power; and if thy servant,
Or this his soft associate, e'er defeat

By any word or deed the great design,
Then straight may all your horrible displeasure
Be launched upon us from your red right arm,
And in one ruin dash us both together,
The blasted monuments of wrath!
Man. That here

Why should a tyrant, trained to lust and murder, Mandane vows ne'er to betray his cause,

A lawless ravager from savage wilds,

Where cheerful day ne'er dawns, but lowering

heaven

For ever rolls a turbulence of clouds;

Why should a monster thus usurp the world,
And trample fair simplicity from ill
Beneath his ruffian feet?-

Zamti. Far hence, Mandane,
Those happy days, alas! are fled, when peace
Here nursed her blooming olives, and shed round
Her fostering influence.--In vain the plan
Of sacred laws, by hoary elders taught,
Laws founded on the base of public weal,
Gave lessons to the world. In vain Confucius
Unlocked his radiant stores of moral truth;
In vain bright science, and each tender muse,
Beamed every elegance on polished life—
Earbarian power prevails. Whate'er our sages
taught,

Or genius could inspire, must fade away,
And each fair virtue wither at the blast
Of northern domination,

Man. Fatal day!

Be it enrolled in the records of Heaven!

[Both rise. Zamti. And now my heart more lightly beats; methinks,

With strength redoubled I can meet the shock
Of adverse fate.

Man. And lo! the trial comes

-

For see where Etan mourns- -See where the

youth, Unknowing of the storm that gathers o'er him, Brings some new tale of woe.

Enter ETAN.

Etan. My honoured father,

And you, my helpless mother,-ah! where now,
Illustrious wretched pair, where will ye fly?
Where will your miseries now find a shelter?

Zamti. In virtue-I and this dear faithful

woman

We ask no more.

Man. Ah! quickly, Etan, say

What means that pallid look? What new event
Brings on the work of fate?

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