_Arn._ No; I will not.
I must not compromise my soul.
_Stran._ What soul, Worth naming so, would dwell in such a carcase?
_Arn._ "Tis an aspiring one, whate"er the tenement In which it is mislodged. But name your compact: Must it be signed in blood?
_Stran._ Not in your own.
_Arn._ Whose blood then?
_Stran._ We will talk of that hereafter.
But I"ll be moderate with you, for I see 150 Great things within you. You shall have no bond But your own will, no contract save your deeds.
Are you content?
_Arn._ I take thee at thy word.
_Stran._ Now then!-- [_The Stranger approaches the fountain, and turns to_ ARNOLD.
A little of your blood.[208]
_Arn._ For what?
_Stran._ To mingle with the magic of the waters, And make the charm effective.
_Arn._ (_holding out his wounded arm_). Take it all.
_Stran._ Not now. A few drops will suffice for this.
[_The Stranger takes some of_ ARNOLD"S _blood in his hand, and casts it into the fountain_.
Shadows of Beauty!
Shadows of Power!
Rise to your duty-- 160 This is the hour!
Walk lovely and pliant[cz]
From the depth of this fountain, As the cloud-shapen giant Bestrides the Hartz Mountain.[209]
Come as ye were, That our eyes may behold The model in air Of the form I will mould, Bright as the Iris 170 When ether is spanned;-- Such _his_ desire is, [_Pointing to_ ARNOLD.
Such _my_ command![da]
Demons heroic-- Demons who wore The form of the Stoic Or sophist of yore-- Or the shape of each victor-- From Macedon"s boy, To each high Roman"s picture, 180 Who breathed to destroy-- Shadows of Beauty!
Shadows of Power!
Up to your duty-- This is the hour!
[_Various phantoms arise from the waters, and pa.s.s in succession before the Stranger and_ ARNOLD.
_Arn._ What do I see?
_Stran._ The black-eyed Roman,[210] with The eagle"s beak between those eyes which ne"er Beheld a conqueror, or looked along The land he made not Rome"s, while Rome became His, and all theirs who heired his very name. 190
_Arn._ The phantom"s bald; _my_ quest is beauty. Could I Inherit but his fame with his defects!
_Stran._ His brow was girt with laurels more than hairs.[211]
You see his aspect--choose it, or reject.
I can but promise you his form; his fame Must be long sought and fought for.
_Arn._ I will fight, too, But not as a mock Caesar. Let him pa.s.s: His aspect may be fair, but suits me not.
_Stran._ Then you are far more difficult to please Than Cato"s sister, or than Brutus"s mother, 200 Or Cleopatra at sixteen[212]--an age When love is not less in the eye than heart.
But be it so! Shadow, pa.s.s on!
[_The phantom of Julius Caesar disappears_.
_Arn._ And can it Be, that the man who shook the earth is gone,[db]
And left no footstep?
_Stran._ There you err. His substance Left graves enough, and woes enough, and fame More than enough to track his memory; But for his shadow--"tis no more than yours, Except a little longer and less crooked I" the sun. Behold another! [_A second phantom pa.s.ses_.
_Arn._ Who is he? 210
_Stran._ He was the fairest and the bravest of Athenians.[213] Look upon him well.
_Arn._ He is More lovely than the last. How beautiful!
_Stran._ Such was the curled son of Clinias;--wouldst thou Invest thee with his form?
_Arn._ Would that I had Been born with it! But since I may choose further, I will _look_ further. [_The shade of Alcibiades disappears_.
_Stran._ Lo! behold again!
_Arn._ What! that low, swarthy, short-nosed, round-eyed satyr, With the wide nostrils and Silenus" aspect, The splay feet and low stature![214] I had better 220 Remain that which I am.
_Stran._ And yet he was The earth"s perfection of all mental beauty, And personification of all virtue.
But you reject him?
_Arn._ If his form could bring me That which redeemed it--no.
_Stran._ I have no power To promise that; but you may try, and find it Easier in such a form--or in your own.
_Arn._ No. I was not born for philosophy, Though I have that about me which has need on"t.
Let him fleet on.
_Stran._ Be air, thou Hemlock-drinker! 230 [_The shadow of Socrates disappears: another rises_.
_Arn._ What"s here? whose broad brow and whose curly beard And manly aspect look like Hercules,[215]
Save that his jocund eye hath more of Bacchus Than the sad purger of the infernal world, Leaning dejected on his club of conquest,[216]
As if he knew the worthlessness of those For whom he had fought.
_Stran._ It was the man who lost The ancient world for love.
_Arn._ I cannot blame him, Since I have risked my soul because I find not That which he exchanged the earth for.