[Page 90]
BELSHAZZLAR: A SACRED DRAMA. PART I.
How art thou fallen from Heaven, O Lucifer, Son of the Morning! How art thou cut down to the ground, who didst weaken the nations!
ISAIAH.
SCENE, near the Palace of BABYLON.
DANIEL,
and captive JEWS.
DANIEL.
PARENT of life and light! sole source of good!
Whose
[...]der mercies thro' the tide of time,
In long successive order, have sustain'd,
And sav'd the sons of Israel! Thou, whose pow'r
Deliver'd righteou
[...] Noah from the flood,
The whelming flood, the grave of human kind!
[Page 91]Oh Thou! whose guardian care, and out-stretch'd hand,
Rescu'd young Isaac from the lifted arm,
Rais'd, at thy bidding, to devote a son,
An only son, doom'd by his sire to die.
(Oh, saving Faith, by such obedience prov'd!
Oh blest Obedience, hallow'd this by faith!)
Thou, who in mercy savd'st the chosen race,
In the wild desert; and didst there sustain them,
By wonder-working love, tho' they rebell'd,
And murmur'd at the miracles that sav'd them!
Oh, hear thy servant Daniel! hear, and help!
Thou! whose' almighty pow'r did after raise
Successive leaders to defend our race:
Who sentest vailant Joshua to the field,
Thy people's champion, to the conq'ring field;
Where the revolving planet of the night,
Suspended in her radiant round, was stay'd;
And the bright sun, arrested in his course,
Stuppenduosly stood still!
CHORUS
of JEWS.
I.
What aileth thee, that thou stood'st still,
O sun! nor' did thy flaming orb decline?
And thou, O moon! in Ajalon's dark vale,
Why did'st thuo long beyond thy period shine?
II.
Was it at Joshua's dread command,
The leader of the Israelitish band?
Yes —at a mortal bidding both stood still;
'Twas Joshua's word, but 'twas JEHOVAH's will.
[Page 92]III.
What all-controuling hand had force
To stop eternal Nature's constant course?
The wand'ring moon to one fix'd spot confine,
But He, whose fiat bade the planets shine?
DANIEL.
O Thou! who, when thy discontented host,
Tir'd of JEHOVAH'S rule, desir'd a king,
In anger grav'st them Saul; and then again
Didst wrest the regal sceptre from his hand,
To give it David—David, best belov'd!
Illustrious David! Poet, prophet, king!
Thou, who didst suffer Solomon his son,
To build a glorious temple to thy name!
Oh hear thy servants, and forgive them too,
If, by severe necessity complell'd,
We worship here—We have no temple now;
Altar or sanctuary, none is left.
CHORUS
of JEWS.
O Judah! let thy captive sons deplore,
Thy far-fam'd temple's now no more!
Fall'n is thy sacred fane, thy glory gone,
Fall'n is thy temple, Solomon.
Ne'er did Barbaric kings behold,
With all their shining gems, their burnish'd gold,
A fane so perfect, bright and fair;
For GOD himself was won't inhabit there:
Between the Cherubim his glory stood,
While the high-priest alone the dazzling splendor view'd.
[Page 93]How fondly did the Tyrian artist strive,
His name to latest time should live!
Such wealth the stranger wonder'd to behold:
Gold were the tablets, and the vases gold.
Of cedar such an ample store,
Exhausted Lebanon could yield no more.
Bending before the Ruler of the sky,
Well might the royal founder cry,
Fill'd with an holy dread, a rev'rend fear,
Will GOD in very deed inhabit here?
The heav'n of heav'ns beneath his feet,
Is for the bright inhabitant unmeet:
Archangels prostrate wait his high commands,
And will he deign to dwell in temples made with hands
DANIEL.
Yes, thou art ever present, Pow'r supreme!
Not circumscrib'd by time, nor fix'd to space,
Confin'd to altars, nor to temples bound.
In wealth, in want, in freedomn, or in chains,
In dungeons or on thrones, the faithful find thee!
Ev'n in the burning cauldron thou wast near
To Shadrach and the holy brotherhood;
The unhurt martyrs bless'd thee in the flames;
They sought, and found thee, call'd, and thou wast there.
First JEW.
How chang'd our state! Judah! thy glory's fall'n;
Thy joys for hard captivity exchang'd;
And thy sad sons breathe the polluted air
Of Babylon, where deitles obscene
Insult the living GOD; and to his servants,
[Page 94]The priests of wretched idols, made with hands,
Shew contumelious scorn.
DANIEL.
'Tis Heav'n's high will
Second JEW.
If I forget thee, O Jerusalem!
If I not fondly cherish thy lov'd image,
Ev'n in the giddy hour of thoughtless mirth;
If I not rather view thy prostrate walls
Than haughty Babylon's imperial tow'rs;
Then may my tougue refuse to frame the strains.
Of sweetest harmony; my rude right hand
Forget, with sounds symphonious, to accord
The harp of Jesse's son, to Sion's songs.
First JEW.
Ost, on Euphrates' ever verdant banks,
Where drooping willows form a mournful shade;
With all the pride which prosp'rous fortunes give,
And all th' unfeeling mirth of happy men,
Th' insulting Babylonians ask a song;
Such song as erst, in better days, were sung
By Korak's sons, or heav'n-taught Asaph set
To lof
[...]iest measures; then our bursting hearts
Feel all their woes afresh; the galling chain
Of bondage crushes then the free-born soul
With v
[...]inging anguish; from the treambling lip
Th' unfinish'd ca
[...]ence falls, and the big tear,
While it relieve, betrays the woe-fraught soul.
For who can view Euphrates' pleasant stream,
Its drooping willows, and its verdant banks,
[Page 95]And not to wounded memory recal
The piny groves of fertile Palaestine,
The vales of Solyma, and Jordan's stream?
DANIEL.
Firm faith, and deep submission to high Heav'n,
Will teach us to endure, without a murmur,
What seems so hard. Think what the holy host
Of patriarchs, saints, and prophets, have sustain'd
In the blest cause of Truth! And shall not we,
O men of Judah! dare what these have dar'd,
And boldly pass thro' the refining fire
Of fierce affliction? Yes, be witness, Heav'n!
Old as I am, I will not shrink at death,
Come in what shape it may, if GOD so will,
By peril to confirm and prove my faith.
Oh! I wou'd dare yon' den of hungry lions,
Rather than pause to fill the task assign'd,
By wisdom infinite. Nor think I boast,
Not in myself, but in thy strength I trust,
Spirit of GOD!
First JEW.
Prophet! thy words support,
And raise our sinking souls.
DANIEL.
Behold yon' palace,
Where proud Belshazzar keeps his wan
[...] on court!
I knew it once
[...] another lord,
Has alandfire
*, who subdued Jeholachin,
[Page 96]And Hither brought sad Judah's captive tribes;
Together with the rich and sacred relies
Of our fam'd temple; all the holy treasure,
The golden vases, and the sacred cups,
Which grac'd, in happier times, the sanctuary.
Second JEW.
May HE, to whose blest use they were devoted,
Preserve them from pollution; and once more,
In his own gracious time, restore the temple!
DANIEL.
I, with some favour'd youths of Jewish race,
Was lodg'd in his own palace, and instructed
In all the various learning of the east:
But HE, on whose great name our fathers call'd,
Preserv'd us from the perils of a court;
And warn'd us to avoid the tempting cates
Pernicious lux'ry offer'd to our taste.
Fell luxury! more perilous to youth
Than storms or quicksands, poverty or chains.
Second JEW.
He, who can guard 'gainst the low baits of sense,
Will find Temptation's arrows hurtless srike
Against the brazen shield of Temperance.
For 'tis th' inferior appetites en
[...]hrall
The man, and quench th' immortal light within him;
The senses
[...]ake soul an easy prey,
And sink th' imprison'd spirit in brute.
DANIEL.
[Page 97]
Twice
*, by the spirit of GOD, did I expound
The visions of the king; his soul was touch'd,
And twice did he repent, and prostrate fall
Before the GOD of Daniel: yet again,
Pow'r, flatt'ry, and prosperity, undid him.
When from the lofty ramparts of his palace,
He view'd the splendors of the royal city,
That magazine of wealth, which proud Euphrates
Wafts from each distant corner of the earth;
When he beheld the adamantine towers,
The brazen gates, the bulwarks of his strength,
The pendent gardens, art's stupendous work,
The wonder of the world!—The proud Chaldean,
Mad with the insolence of boundless wealth,
And pow'r supreme, conceiv'd himself a God.
"This mighty Babylon is mine," he cried,
"
My wondrous pow'r,
my godlike arm atchiev'd it.
I scorn submission, own no delty
"Above my own."—While the blasphemer spoke,
The wrath of Heav'n inflicted instant vengeance;
Stripp'd him of that bright reason he abus'd,
And drove him from the chearful ha
[...]nts of men,
A naked, wretched, helpless, senseless thing;
Companion of the brutes, his equals now.
First JEW.
Nor does his impious grandson, proud Belshazzar,
Fall short of his offences; nay, he wants
The valiant spirit, and
[...] soul,
[Page 98]Of his progenitor: for Pleasure's slave,
Though bound in flow'ry fetters, silky-soft,
Is more subdued, than is the casual victim
Of furious rage, and violent ambition.
Ambition is a fierce, but short-liv'd fire;
But Pleasure with a constant flame consumes.
War slays her thousands; but destructive pleasure,
More fell, more fatal, her ten thousands slays:
The young, luxorious king she fondly wooes
In every shape of am'rous blandishment;
With adulation smooth ensnares his soul,
With love betrays him, and with wine inflames.
She strews her magic poppies o'er his couch;
And with delicious opiates charms him down,
In fatal slumbers bound. Though Babylon
Is now invested by the warlike troops
Of the young Cyrus, Persia's valiant prince;
Who, in conjunction with the Median king,
Darius, fam'd for conquest, now prepares
To storm the city: not th' impending horrors
Which ever wait a siege, have power to wake
To thought, or sense, th' intoxicated king.
DANIEL.
Ev'n in this night of universal dread,
A mighty army threat'ning at the gates;
This very night, as if in scorn of danger,
The dissolute Belshazzar holds a feast
Magnificently impious, meant to honour
Belus, the fav'rite Babylonish idol.
Lewd parasites compose his
[...]nton court,
Whose impious flatt'ries sooth his monstrous crimes:
They, justify this vices, and extol
[Page 99]His boastful phrase, as if he were some god.
Whate'er he says, they say; what he commands,
Implicitly they do; they echo back
His blasphemies, with shouts of loud acclaim;
And when he wounds the tortur'd ear of Virtue,
They cry, All hail! Belshazzar live for ever!
To-night a thousand nobles fill his hall,
Princes, and all the dames who grace the court;
All but the virtuous queen, sage Nitocris;
Ah! how unlike the impious king her son!
She never mingles in the midnight fray,
Nor crowns the guilty banquet with her presence.
The royal fair is rich in every virtue
Which can adorn the queen, or grace the woman.
But for the wisdom of her prudent counsels
This wretched empire had been long undone.
Not fam'd Semiramis, Assyria's pride,
Cou'd boast a brighter mind, or firmer soul;
Beneath the gentle reign of
* Merodach,
Her royal lord, our nation tasted peace.
Our captive monarch, sad Jehoiachin,
Grown grey in a close prison's horrid gloom,
He freed from bondage; brought the hoary king
To taste once more the long-forgotten sweets
Of precious liberty, and chearful light;
Pour'd in his wounds the le
[...]ent balm of kindness,
And bless'd his setting hour of life with peace.
[Sound of trumpets is heard at a distance.
First JEW.
That sound proclaims the banquet is begun.
Second JEW.
[Page 100]
Hark! the licentious uproar grows more loud.
The vaulted roof resounds with shouts of mirth,
And the firm palace shakes! Retire, my friends;
This madness is not meet for sober ears.
If any of our race were found so near,
'Twou'd but expose us to the rude attack
Of ribaldry obscene, and impious jests,
From these mad sons of Belial, now inflam'd
To deeds of riot from the wanton fearst.
DANIEL.
Here part we then! but when again to meet,
Who knows save Heav'n? Yet, O, my friends! I feel
[...]
An impulse more than human stir my breast.
Rapt in prophetic
* vision I behold
Things hid as yet from mortal sight. I see
The dart of vengeance tremble in the air,
Ere long to pierce the impious king. Ev'n now
The fierce, destroying angel stalks abroad,
And brandishes aleft the two-edg'd sword
Of retribution keen; he soon will strike,
And Babylon shall weep as Sion wept.
Pass but a little while, and you shall see
This queen of cities prostrate on the earth.
This haughty mistress of the kneeling world,
How shall she sit dishonour'd in the dust,
In tarnish'd pomp and solitary woe!
How shall she should her glories in the dark,
And in opprobrious silence hide her head!
[Page 101]Lament, O virgin daughter of Chaldea!
For thou shalt fall, imperial queen! shalt fall!
No more Sidonian robes shall grace they limbs.
To purple garments, sackcloth shall succeed;
And sordid dust and ashes shall supply
The od'rous nard and cassia. Thou, who said'st,
I am, and there is none beside me: thou,
Ev'n thou, imperial Babylon! shalt fall:
Thy glory quite eclips'd! The pleasant sound
Of viol, and of harp, shall charm no more;
Nor song of Syrian damsels shall be heard,
Responsive to the lute's luxurious note.
But the loud bittern's cry, the raven's croak,
The bat's fell scream, the lonely owl's dull paint,
And every hideous bird with ominous shriek,
Shall scare affrighted Silence from thy walls.
While DESOLATION, snatching from the hand.
Of time the scythe of ruin, sits aloft,
In dreadful majesty and horrid pomp;
Glancing with sullen pride thy crumbling tow'rs,
Thy broken battlements, thy columns fall'n:
Then, pointing to the mischiefs she has made,
The fiend exclaims, This once was Babylon!
[Page 102]
BELSHAZZAR. PART II.
SCENE, The Court of
BELSHAZZAR. The King sated on a magnificent throne. Princes, Nobles and Attendants. Ladies of the Court. Music—A supberb Banquet.
First COURTIER.
Rises, and keels.
HAIL, mighty king!
Second COURTIER.
Belsnazzar, live for ever!
Third COURTIER.
Sun of the world, and light of kings, all hail!
Fourth COURTIER.
With lowest reverence, such as best becomes
The humblest creatures of imperial power,
Behold a thousand nobles bend before thee!
[Page 103]Princes far fam'd, and dames of high descent:
Yet all this pride of wealth, this boast of beauty,
Shrinks into nought before thine awful eye;
And lives, or dies, as the king frowns, or smiles!
BELSHAZZAR.
This is such homage, as becomes your love;
And suits the mighty monarch of mankind.
Fifth COURTIER.
The bending world shou'd prostrate thus before thee;
And pay, not only praise, but adoration!
BELSHAZZAR.
Rises, and comes forward.
Let dull philosophy preach self-denial;
Let envious poverty, and snarling age,
Proudly declaim against the joys they know not.
Let the deluded Jews, who fondly hope
Some fancied heav'n hereafter, mortify;
And lose the actual blessings of this world,
To purchase others which may never come.
Our Gods may promise less, but give us more.
Ill cou'd my ardent spirit be content
With meagre abstinence, and hungry hope.
Let those misjudging Israelites, who want
The nimble spirits, and the active soul,
Call their blunt feelings virtue: let them drudge,
In regular progression, thro' the round
Of formal duty, and of daily toil;
And, when they want the genius to be blest,
Believe their harsh austerity is goodness.
If there be Gods, they meant we shou'd be happy;
Why give us else these appetites to be so?
[Page 104]And why, the means to crown them with indulgence!
To burst the feeble bonds, which hold the vulgar,
Is noble daring.
First COURTIER.
And is therefore worthy
The high imperial spirit of Belshazzar.
Second COURTIER.
Behold a banquet, which the gods might share.
BELSHAZZAR.
To-night, my friends! your monarch shall be blest
With ev'ry various joy; to night is ours;
Nor shall the envious gods, who view our bliss,
And sicken as they view, to-night disturb us.
Bring all the richest spices of the East,
The od'rous cassia, and the dropping myrrh;
The liquid amber, and the fragrant gums;
Rob Gilead of its balms, Belshazzar bids,
And leave the Arabian groves without an odour.
Bring freshest flow'rs, exhaust the blooming spring,
Twine the green myrtle with the shor
[...]-liv'd rose;
And ever, as the blushing garland fades,
We'll learn to snatch the fugitive delight,
And grasp the flying joy ere
[...]t escape us.
Come—fill the smiling goblet for the king;
Belshazzar will not let a moment pass,
Unmark'd by some enjoyment! The full bowl
Let every guest partake!
[Countiers kneel, and drink.
First COURTIER.
[Page 105]
Here's to the king!
Light of the world, and glory of the earth,
Whose word is fate!
BELSHAZZAR.
Yes, we are likest gods,
When we have pow'r, and use it. What is wealth,
But the blest means to gratify desire?
I will not have a wish, a hope, a thought,
That shall not know fruition. What is empire?
The privilege to punish and enjoy;
To feel our pow'r in making others fear it;
To taste of pleasure's cup till we grow giddy,
And think ourselves immortal. This is empire!
My ancestors scarce tasted of its joys:
Shut from the sprightly world, and all its charms,
In cumbrous majesty, in sullen state,
And dull unsocial dignity they liv'd;
Far from the sight of an admiring world,
That world, whose gaze makes half the charms of greatness;
They nothing knew of empire but the name,
Or saw it in the looks of trembling slaves,
And all they felt royalty was care.
But I will
see, and know it of myself;
Youth, wealth, and greatness court me to be blest,
And Pow'r and Pleasure, draw with equal force
And sweet attraction: both I will embrace
With fond delight; but this is Pleasure's day;
Ambitious will have time to reign hereafter;
It is the proper appetite of age.
The lust of pow'r shall lord it uncontroul'd,
When all the gen'rous feelings grow obtuse,
[Page 106]And stern dominion holds, with rigid hand,
His iron rein, and sits and sways alone.
But youth is Pleasure's hour!
First COURTIER.
Perish the slave
Who, with officious counsel, wou'd oppose
The king's desire, whose slightest with is law!
BELSHAZZAR.
Now strike the loud-ton'd lyre, and softer lute;
Let me have music, with the nobler aid
Of poesy! Where are those cunning men,
Who boast, by chosen sounds, and measur'd sweetness,
To set the busy spirits in a flame,
And cool them at their will? who know the art
To call the hidden pow'rs of numbers forth,
And make that pliant instrument, the mind,
Yield to the pow'rful sympathy of sound,
Obedient to the master's artful band?
Such magic is in song! Then give me song;
Yet not at first such soul-dissolving strains,
As melt the soften'd sense; but such bold measures,
As may inflame my spirit to despise
The ambitious Persian, that presumptuous boy,
Who rashly dares ev'n now invest our city,
And menaces th' invincible Belshazzar.
A grand CONCERT
of MUSIC,
after which an ODE.
In vain shall Persian Cyrus dare
With great Belshazzar unequal war:
[Page 107]In vain Darius shall combine,
Darius, leader of the Median line;
While
[...] Euphrates' stream our walls protects,
And great Belshazzar's self our fate directs.
War and famine threat in vain,
While this demi-god shall reign!
Let P
[...]rsia's prostrate king confess his pow'r,
And Media's monarch
[...]pread his vengeful hour.
On Dona's
* ample p
[...]ain behold
Immortal
[...]lus
†, whom the nations own;
[...]blime he stands in burnish gold,
And richest offerings his bright altars crown.
To-night his deity, we here adore,
And due libations speak his mighty pow'r.
Yet Belus' self not more we own,
Than great Belshazzar on Chaldea's throne.
Great Belshazzar, like a god,
Rules the nations with a nod!
[Page 108]To great Belshazzar be, the goblet crown'd!
Belshazzar's name the echoing roofs rebound!
BELSHAZZAR.
Enough! the kindling rapture fires my brain,
A
[...] my heart dances to the flatt'ring sounds.
I feel myself a god! Why not a god?
What were great deities our fathers worshipp'd?
What was great Nimrod, our imperial founder?
What, greater Belas, to whose pow'r divine,
We raise to-night the banquet and the song;
But youthful heroes, mortal, like myself,
Who by their daring earn'd divinity?
They were but men: nay, some were less than men,
Tho' now rever'd as Gods. What was Anubis,
Whom Egypt's sapient sons adore? A dog!
And shall not I, young, valiant, and a king,
Dare more? do more? be greater than the rest?
I will indulge the thought.—Fill me more wine,
He drinks.
To cherish and exalt the young idea!
Ne'er did Olympian Jupiter himself
Quaff such immortal draughts.
First COURTIER.
What cou'd that Canaan,
That heaven in hope, that nothing a in possession,
That air-built bliss of the deluded Jews,
That promiss'd land of milk, and flowing honey;
What cou'd that fancied Paradise bestow
To match these generous juices?
BELSHAZZAR.
Hold—enough!
Thou hastrous'd a thought; by Heav'n I will enjoy it;
[Page 109]A glorious thought! which will exalt rapture
The pleasures of the banquet, and bestow
A yet unrasted relish of delight.
First COURTIER.
What means the king?
BELSHAZZAR.
The Jews! saidst the Jews
[...]
First COURTIER.
I spoke of that undone, that outcast people,
The tribulary creatures of thy pow'r,
The captives of thy will, whose very breath
Hang
[...] on the sov'reign pleasure of the king.
BELSHAZZAR.
When that abandon'd race was hither brought,
Were not the choicest treasures of their temple,
(Devoted to their God, and held most precious)
Among the spoils which grac'd
* Nebassar's triumph
And lodg'd in Babylon?
First COURTIER.
O king! they were.
Second COURTIER.
The Jews, with superstitious awe, behold
These sacred symbols of their ancient faith:
[Page 110]Nor has captivity abated ought
The rev'rend love they bear these holy reliques.
Tho' we deride their law, and scorn their persons,
Yet never have we yet to human use
Devoted these rich vessels, set apart
To sacred P
[...]ses.
BELSHAZZAR.
I Joy to hear it!
Go—fetch them hither. They shall grace our banquet.
Does no one stir? Belshazzar disobey'd?
And yet you live! Whence comes this strange reluctance?
This new-born rev'rence for the helpless Jews?
This fear to injuire those, who can't revenge it?
Send to the
[...]
[...]aste,
Let all be hither brought;—who answers, dies.
[They go out.
The mantling wine a higher joy will yield,
Pour'd from the precious flaggons which adorn'd
Their far-fam'd temple, now in ashes laid.
Oh! 'twill exalt the pleasure in to transport,
To gall those whining, praying Israelites!
I laugh to think what wild dismay will seize them,
When they shall learn the use that has been made
Of all their holy trumpery!
[The vessels are brought in
Second COURTIER.
It comes!
A goodly shew! how bright with gold and gems!
Far fitter for a youthful monarch's board,
Than the cold shrine of an unheeding God.
BELSHAZZAR.
[Page 111]
Fill me that massy goblet to the brim.
Now, Abraham! let thy wretched race expect
The fable of their faith to be fulfill'd;
Their second temple, and their promis'd king!
Now will they see, he's impotent to save;
For had he pow'r to help, he would have hinder'd
This profanation.
[
As the king is going to drink, thunder is heard; be starts from the throne, spies a hand, which writes on the wall these words; MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN.
He lets fall the goblet, and stands in an attitude of speechless horror. All start, and are terrified.]
First COURTIER,
after a long pause.
Oh, transcendent horror!
Second COURTIER.
What may this
[...]! The king is greatly mov'd!
Third COURTIER.
Nor is it strange—who unappall'd can view it?
Those sacred cups! I doubt we've gone too far.
First COURTIER.
Observe the fear-struck king! This starting eyes
Roll horribly. Thrice he essay'd to speak,
And thrice his tongue refuls'd.
BELSHAZZAR,
in a low trembling voice.
Ye mystic words!
Thou semblance of an hand! illusive forms!
[Page 112]Ye dire fantastic images, what are ye?
Dread shadows, speak! Explain your horrible meanings!
Ye will not answer me.—Yes, yes, I feel
I am a mortal now—My failing limbs
Refuse to bear men up. I am no god!
Gods do not tremble thus.—Support me, hold me;
These loosen'd joints, these knees which smite each other,
Betray I'm but a man—a weak one too!
First COURTIER.
In truth, 'tis passing strange, and full of horror!
BELSHAZZAR
Send for the learn'd magicians, every sage
Who deals in wizard spells and magic charms.
[Some go out.
First COURTIER.
How fares my lord the king?
BELSHAZZAR.
Am I a king?
What pow'r have I? Ye lying slaves, I am not.
Oh, soul-distracting sight! but is it real?
Perhaps 'tis fancy all, or the wild dream
Of mad distemperature the fames of wine!
I'll look upon no more!—So—now I'm well!
I am a king again, and know not fear.
And yet my eyes will seek that fatal spot;
And foundly dwell upon the sight, that blasts them!
Again, 'tis there! it is not fancy's work.
I see it still! 'tis written on the wall.
I see the writing, but the viewless writer,
Who, what is he? Oh, horror! horror! horror!
[Page 113]It cannot be the GOD of these poor Jews;
For what is He, that he can thus afflict?
Second COURTIER.
Let not my lord the king be thus dismay'd.
Third COURTIER.
Let not a phantom, an illusive shade,
Disturb the peace of him, who rules the world.
BELSHAZZAR.
No more, ye wretched sycophants! no more!
The sweetest note which flatt'ry now can strike,
Harsh and discordant grates upon my soul.
Talk not of power to one so full of fear,
So weak, so impotent? Look on that wall;
If thou wou'dst sooth my soul, explain the writing;
And thou shalt be my oracle, my God!
Tell me from whence it came, and what it means,
And I'll believe I am again a king!
Friends! princes! ease any troubled breast; and say,
What do the mystic characters portend?
First COURTIER.
'Tis not in us, O king! to ease thy spirit;
We are not skill'd in those mysterious arts
Which wait the midnight studies of the sage:
But of the deep diviners thou shalt learn,
The wise astrologers, the sage magicians;
Who, of events unborn, take secret note,
And hold deep commerce with the unseen world.
[Page 114]
Enter ASTROLOGERS, MAGICIANS,
&c &c.
BELSHAZZAR.
Approach, ye sages, 'tis the king commands!
[They kneel.
ASTROLOGERS.
Hail, mighty king of Babylon!
BELSHAZZAR.
Nay, rise:
I do not need your homage, but your help;
The world may worship, your must counsel me.
He, who declares the secret of the king,
No common honours shall await his skill;
Our empire shall be tax'd for his reward,
And he himself shall name the gift he wishes.
A splendid scarlet robe shall grace his limbs,
His neck a princely chain of gold adorn,
Meet honor for such wisdom; He shall rule
The third in rank throughout our Babylon.
[
Second ASTROLOGER.
Such recompence becomes Belshazzar's bounty.
Let the king speak the secret of his soul;
Which heard, his humble creatures shall unfold.
BELSHAZZAR,
points to the wall.
Be't so—Look there—behold those characters!
Nay, do not start, for I will known their meaning!
Ha! answer; speak, or instant death awaits you!
What, dumb! all dumb! where is your boasted skill;
[They confer together.
[Page 115]Keep them asunder—No confed'racy—
No secret plots to make your tales agree.
Speak, slaves, and dare to let the know the worst!
First ASTROLOGER.
[They kneel.
O, let the king forgive his faithful servants!
Second ASTROLOGER.
O mitigate our threaten'd doom of death;
If we declare, with mingled grief and shame,
We cannot tell the secret of the king,
Nor what these mystic characters portend!
BELSHAZZAR.
Off with their heads! Ye shall not live an hour!
Curse on your shallow arts, your lying science!
'Tis thus practise on the credalous world,
Who think you wise, because themselves are weak!
But, miscreants, ye shall die! the pow'r to punish
Is all that I have left me of a king.
First COURTIER.
Great Sir! suspend their punishment awhile.
Behold sage Nitocris, thy royal mother!
BELSHAZZAR.
My mother here!
Enter QUEEN.
QUEEN.
O my misguided son!
Well may'st thou wonder to behold me here:
[Page 116]For I have ever shunn'd this scene of riot,
Where wild Intemperance and dishonour'd Mirth
Hold festival impure. Yet, O Belshazzar!
I cou'd not hear the wonders which befel,
And leave thee to the workings of despair:
For, spite of all the anguish of my soul
At thy offences, I'm thy mother still!
Against the solemn purpose I had form'd
Never to mix in this unhallow'd crowd,
The wond'rous story of the mystic writing,
Of strange and awful import, brings me here;
If haply I may shew some likely means
To fathom, this dark mystery.
BELSHAZZAR.
Speak, O queen!
My listn'ning soul shall hang upon thy words,
And prompt obedience follow them!
QUEEN.
Then hear me
Among the captive tribes, which hither came
To grace Nebassar's triumph, there was brought
A youth nam'd Daniel, favour'd by high Heav'n
With pow'r to look into the secret page
Of dim futurity's mysterious volume.
The spirit of the holy Gods is in him;
No vision so obscure, no fate so dark,
No sentence so perplex'd, but he can solve it:
Can trace each crooked labyrinth of thought,
Each winding maze of doubt, and make it clear,
And palpable to sense. He twice explain'd
The monarch's mystic dream. The holy seer
[Page 117]Saw, with prophetic spirit, what befel
The king long after. For his wond'rous skill
He was rewarded, honour'd, and caress'd,
And with the rulers of Chaldea rank'd:
Tho' now, alas! thrown by; his services
Forgotten or neglected; such the meed
Which virtue finds in courts.
BELSHAZZAR.
Dispatch with speed.
A message, to command the holy man
To meet us on the instant.
NITOCRIS.
I already
Have sent to ask his presence at the palace;
And, lo! he comes.
Enter DANIEL.
BELSHAZZAR.
Welcome, thrice venerable sage! approach.
Art thou that Daniel, whom my great forefather
Brought hither with the captive tribes of Judah?
DANIEL.
I am that Daniel.
BELSHAZZAR.
Pardon, holy Prophet;
Nor let a just resentment of thy wrongs,
And long neglected merit, shut thy heart
Against a king's request, a suppliant king!
DANIEL.
[Page 118]
The GOD I worship teaches to forgive.
BELSHAZZAR.
Then let thy words bring comfort to my soul.
I've heard the spirit of the Gods is in thee;
That thou can'st look into the fates of men,
With prescience more than human!
DANIEL.
Hold, O king!
Wisdom is from above, 'tis GOD's own gift.
I of myself am nothing; but from Him
The little knowledge I possess, I hold:
To him be all the glory!
BELSHAZZAR.
Then, O Daniel!
If thou indeed dost boast that wond'rous gift,
That faculty divine; look there, and tell me!
O say, what mean those mystic characters?
Remove this load of terror from my soul;
And honours, such as kings can give, await thee:
Thou shalt he great beyond thy soul's ambition,
And rich above thy wildest dream of wealth:
Clad to the scarlet robe our nobles wear,
And grac'd with princely ensigns, thou shalt stand
Near our own throne, and third within our empire.
DANIEL.
O mighty king! thy gifts with thee remain,
And let thy high rewards on others fall.
The pricely ensign, nor the scarlet robe,
[Page 119]Nor yet to be the third within thy realm,
Can touch the soul of Daniel. Honour, fame,
All that the world calls great, thy crown itself,
Cou'd never satisfy the vast ambition
Of an immortal spirit, which aspires
To an eternal crown, a crown of glory!
First COURTIER.
[Aside.
Our priests teach no such notions.
DANIEL.
Yet, O king!
Tho' all unmov'd by grandeur, or by gift,
I will unfold the high decrees of Heav'n,
And strait declare the mystery.
BELSHAZZAR.
Speak, O Prophet!
DANIEL.
Prepare to hear, what kings have seldom heard;
Prepare to hear, what these have never told thee:
Prepare to hear the TRUTH. The mighty GOD,
Who rules the sceptres and the hearts of kings,
Gave thy renown'd
* forefather here to reign,
With such extent of empire, weight of pow'r,
And greatness of dominion, the wide earth
Trembled beneath the terror of his name,
And kingdoms stood or fell as he decreed.
Oh! dangerous pinnacle of pow'r supreme!
Who can stand safe upon its treach'rous top,
[Page 120]Behold the gazing prostrate world below,
Whom depth and distance into pigmies shrink,
And not grow giddy? Babylon's great king
Forgot he was a man, a helpless man,
Subject to pain, and sin, and death, like others!
But who shall fight against Omnipotence?
Or who hath harden'd his obdurate heart
Against the Majesty of Heav'n, and prosper'd?
The GOD he had insulted was aveng'd;
From empire, from the joys of social life,
He drove him forth; extinguish'd reason's lamp,
Quench'd that bright spark of deity within;
Compell'd him with the forest brutes, to roam
For scanty pasture; and the mountain dews
Fell, cold and wet, on his defenceless head:
Till he confess'd—Let men, let monarchs hear!—
Till he confess'd, PRIDE WAS NOT MADE FOR MAN!
NITOCRIS.
O, awful instance of divine displeasure!
BELSHAZZAR.
Proceed! My soul is wrapt in fix'd attention!
DANIEL.
O king! thy grandsire not in vain had sinn'd;
If, from his error, thou had'st learnt the truth.
The story of his fall thou oft hast heard,
But has it taught thee wisdom? Thou, like him,
Hast been elate with pow'r, and mad with pride.
Like him, thou hast desv'd the Living GOD.
Nay, to bold thoughts, hast added deeds more bold.
Thou hast out-wrought the pattern he bequeath'd thee,
[Page 121]And quite outgone example; hast prophan'd,
With impious hand, the vessels of the Temple:
Those vessels, sanctified to holiest use,
Thou hast polluted with unhallow'd lips,
And made the instruments of foul debauch.
Thou hast ador'd the gods of wood and stone,
Vile, senseless deities, the work of hands;
But HE, THE KING OF KINGS, AND LORD of LORDS,
In whom exists thy life, thy soul, thy breath,
On whom thy being hangs, thou hast deny'd.
First COURTIER.
[A side to the others.
With what an holy boldness he reproves him!
Second COURTIER.
Such is the fearless confidence of virtue!
And such the righteous courage those maintain,
Who plead the cause of truth! The smallest word,
He utters, had been death to half the court.
BELSHAZZAR.
Now let the mystic writing be explain'd,
Thrice venerable sage!
DANIEL.
O mighty king!
Hear then its awful import:
God has number'd
Thy days of royatly, and
soon will end them.
The All-wise has weigh'd thee in the even balance
Of his own holy law, and
finds thee wanting:
And last,
Thy kingdom shall be wrested from thee;
And know,
the Mede and Persian shall possess it.
BELSHAZZAR.
[Page 122]
[He starts up.
Prophet, when shall this be?
DANIEL.
In GOD's own time:
Here my commission ends; I may not utter
More than thou hast heard; but O! remember, king!
Thy days are number'd; here, repent, and live!
BELSHAZZAR.
Say, Prophet, what can penitence avail?
If Heav'n's decrees immutably are fix'd,
Can pray'rs avert our fate?
DANIEL.
They change our hearts,
And thus dispose Omnipotence to mercy.
'Tis man that alters, GOD is still the same.
Conditional are all Heav'n's covenants:
And when
[...]h' uplifted thunder is with-held,
'Tis pray'r that dep
[...]ecates th' impending bolt.
Good
* Hezekiah's days were number'd too;
But penitence and tears were mighty pleas;
At Mercy's throne they never plead in vain.
[He is going.
BELSHAZZAR.
Stay, Prophet, and receive thy promis'd gift:
The scarlet robe, and princely chain, are thine:
[Page 123]And let my heralds publish through the land,
That Daniel stands, in dignity and pow'r,
The third in Babylon. These just rewards
Thou well may'st claim, though sad thy prophecy!
QUEEN.
Be not deceiv'd, my son! nor let thy soul
Snatch an uncertain moment's treach'rous rest,
On the dread brink of that tremendous gulf
Which yawns beneath thee.
DANIEL.
O unhappy king!
Know What
must happen once,
may happen soon.
Remember, that 'tis terrible to meet
Great evils unprepar'd! and, O Belshazzar!
In the wild moment of dismay and death,
Remember thou wast warn'd! and, O! remember,
Warnings despis'd are condemnations then!
[Exeunt Daniel and Queen.
BELSHAZZAR.
'Tis well—my soul shakes off its load of care:
'Tis only the obscure is terrible.
Imagination frames events unknown,
In wild fantastic shapes of hideous rain;
And what it fears, creates!—
[...] know the worst;
And awful is that worst, as fear could seign:
But distant are the ills, I have to dread!
What is remote may be uncertain too!
Ha! Princes! hope breaks in!—This may not be!
Fist COURTIER.
[Page 124]
Perhaps this Daniel is in league with Persia;
And brib'd by Cyrus to report these horrors,
To weaken and impede the mighty plans
Of thy imperial mind!
BELSHAZZAR.
'Tis very like.
Second COURTIER.
Return we to the banquet.
BELSHAZZAR.
Dare me ventured
Third COURTIER.
Let not this dreaming Seer disturb the king.
Against the pow'r of Cyrus, and the Mede,
Is Babylon secure. Her brazen gates
Mock all attempts to force them. Proud Euphrates
[...]
A watry bulwark, guards our ample city
From all affailants. And within the walls
Of this stupendous capital are lodg'd
Such vast provisions, such exhaustless stores,
As a twice ten years siege could never waste!
BELSHAZZAR.
Embraces him.
My better genius! To the banquet then!
As they are going to resume their places at the banquet, a dreadful uproar is beard, tumultuous cries, and warlike sounds. All stand terrified. Enter soldier with their swords drawn, and wounded.
SOLDIER.
[Page 125]
Oh, helpless Babylon! Oh, wretched king!
Chaldea is no more, the Mede has conquer'd!
The victor Cyrus, like a mighty torrent,
Comes rushing on, and marks his way with ruin!
BELSHAZZAR.
Impossible! Villain and slave thou ly'st!
Euphrates and the brazen gates secure us.
While those remain, Belshazzar laughs at danger.
SOLDIER.
Euphrates is diverted from its course,
The brazen gates are burst, the city's taken,
Thyself a pris'ner, and thy empire lost.
BELSHAZZAR.
Oh, Prophet! I remember thee too soon!
[He runs out. They follow, in the utmost confusion
Enter several JEWS, MEDES,
and BABYLONIAS.
First JEW.
He comes, he comes! the long predicted prince,
Cyrus! the destin'd instrument of Heav'n,
To free our captive nation, ad restore
JEHOVAH'S Temple! Carnage marks his way,
And conquest sits upon his plume-crown'd helm!
Second JEW.
What noise is that?
Fist JEW.
[Page 126]
Hark! 'Tis Belshazzar's voice!
BELSHAZZAR.
[Without.
O Soldier! spare my life, and aid my flight;
Such treasures shall reward the gentle deed,
As Persia never saw! I'll be thy slave;
I'll yield my crown to Cyrus, I'll adore
His Gods and thine—I'll kneel and kiss thy feet,.
And worship thee—It is not much I ask—
I'll live in bondage, beggary, and pain,
So thou but let me live!
SOLDIER.
Die, tyrant die!
BELSHAZZAR.
O Daniel! Daniel! Daniel!
Enter SOLDIER.
SOLDIER.
Belshazzar's dead!
The wretched king breath'd out his furious soul
In that tremendous groan.
First JEW.
Belshazzar's dead!
Then, Judah! art thou free! The tyrant's fall'n!
Jerusalem, Jerusalem is free!