André. Dunlap William

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André - Dunlap William


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as on former occasions, the members of the Old American Company have anxiously striven to oblige him.

      If this Play is successful, it will be a proof that recent events may be so managed in tragedy as to command popular attention; if it is unsuccessful, the question must remain undetermined until some more powerful writer shall again make the experiment. The Poem is now submitted to the ordeal of closet examination, with the Author's respectful assurance to every reader, that as it is not his interest, so it has not been his intention, to offend any; but, on the contrary, to impress, through the medium of a pleasing stage exhibition, the sublime lessons of Truth and Justice upon the minds of his countrymen.

W. Dunlap.

      New-York, April 4th, 1798.

      PROLOGUE

SPOKEN BY MR. MARTIN

      A native Bard, a native scene displays,

      And claims your candour for his daring lays:

      Daring, so soon, in mimic scenes to shew,

      What each remembers as a real woe.

      Who has forgot when gallant André died?

      A name by Fate to Sorrow's self allied.

      Who has forgot, when o'er the untimely bier,

      Contending armies paus'd, to drop a tear.

      Our Poet builds upon a fact tonight;

      Yet claims, in building, every Poet's right;

      To choose, embellish, lop, or add, or blend,

      Fiction with truth, as best may suit his end;

      Which, he avows, is pleasure to impart,

      And move the passions but to mend the heart.

      Oh, may no party-spirit blast his views,

      Or turn to ill the meanings of the Muse:

      She sings of wrongs long past, Men as they were,

      To instruct, without reproach, the Men that are;

      Then judge the Story by the genius shewn,

      And praise, or damn, it, for its worth alone.

      CHARACTERS

Scene, the Village of Tappan, Encampment, and adjoining Country. Time, ten hours

      ACT I

Scene I. A Wood seen by starlight; an Encampment at a distance appearing between the trees Enter MelvilleMelville

      The solemn hour, "when night and morning meet,"

      Mysterious time, to superstition dear,

      And superstition's guides, now passes by;

      Deathlike in solitude. The sentinels,

      In drowsy tones, from post to post, send on

      The signal of the passing hour. "All's well,"

      Sounds through the camp. Alas! all is not well;

      Else, why stand I, a man, the friend of man,

      At midnight's depth, deck'd in this murderous guise,

      The habiliment of death, the badge of dire,

      Necessitous coercion. 'T is not well.

      – In vain the enlighten'd friends of suffering man

      Point out, of war, the folly, guilt, and madness.

      Still, age succeeds to age, and war to war;

      And man, the murderer, marshalls out his hosts

      In all the gaiety of festive pomp,

      To spread around him death and desolation.

      How long! how long! —

      – Methinks I hear the tread of feet this way.

      My meditating mood may work me woe.

[Draws.

      Stand, whoso'er thou art. Answer. Who's there?

Enter BlandBland

      A friend.

Melville

      Advance and give the countersign.

Bland

      Hudson.

Melville

      What, Bland!

Bland

      Melville, my friend, you here?

Melville

      And well, my brave young friend. But why do you,

      At this dead hour of night, approach the camp,

      On foot, and thus alone?

Bland

      I have but now

      Dismounted; and, from yon sequester'd cot,

      Whose lonely taper through the crannied wall

      Sheds its faint beams, and twinkles midst the trees,

      Have I, adventurous, grop'd my darksome way.

      My servant, and my horses, spent with toil,

      There wait till morn.

Melville

      Why waited not yourself?

Bland

      Anxious to know the truth of those reports

      Which, from the many mouths of busy Fame,

      Still, as I pass'd, struck varying on my ear,

      Each making th' other void. Nor does delay

      The colour of my hasteful business suit.

      I bring dispatches for our great Commander;

      And hasted hither with design to wait

      His rising, or awake him with the sun.

Melville

      You will not need the last, for the blest sun

      Ne'er rises on his slumbers; by the dawn

      We see him mounted gaily in the field,

      Or find him wrapt in meditation deep,

      Planning the welfare of our war-worn land.

Bland

      Prosper, kind heaven! and recompense his cares.

Melville

      You're from the South, if I presume aright?

Bland

      I am; and, Melville, I am fraught with news?

      The South teems with events; convulsing ones:

      The Briton, there, plays at no mimic war;

      With gallant face he moves, and gallantly is met.

      Brave spirits, rous'd by glory, throng our camp;

      The hardy hunter, skill'd to fell the deer,

      Or start the sluggish bear from covert rude;

      And not a clown that comes, but from his youth

      Is trained to pour from far the leaden death,

      To climb the steep, to struggle with the stream,

      To labour firmly under scorching skies,

      And bear, unshrinking, winter's roughest blast.

      This, and that heaven-inspir'd enthusiasm

      Which ever animates the patriot's breast,

      Shall far outweigh the lack of discipline.

Melville

      Justice is ours; what shall prevail against her?

      Конец


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