The Project Gutenberg EBook of Heliogabalus, by H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken and George Jean Nathan This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: Heliogabalus A Buffoonery in Three Acts Author: H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken George Jean Nathan Release Date: January 31, 2020 [EBook #61281] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HELIOGABALUS *** Produced by MFR, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) HELIOGABALUS OF THIS BOOK TWO THOUSAND COPIES HAVE BEEN PRINTED FROM TYPE AND THE TYPE DISTRIBUTED. THIS IS NUMBER 781 HELIOGABALUS _A BUFFOONERY IN THREE ACTS_ _by_ H. L. MENCKEN _and_ GEORGE JEAN NATHAN [Illustration] _NEW YORK_ ALFRED · A · KNOPF _MCMXX_ COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY H. L. MENCKEN _and_ GEORGE JEAN NATHAN All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign languages, including the Scandinavian. In its present form this play is dedicated to the reading public only, and no performances of it may be given without the permission of the authors who may be addressed in care of the publisher. Any piracy or infringement will be prosecuted in accordance with the penalties provided by the United States Statutes:-- SEC. 4966.--Any person publicly performing or representing any dramatic or musical composition, for which copyright has been obtained, without the consent of the proprietor of the said dramatic or musical composition, or his heirs or assigns, shall be liable for damages therefor, such damages in all cases to be assessed at such sum, not less than one hundred dollars for the first and fifty dollars for every subsequent performance, as to the Court shall appear to be just. If the unlawful performance and representation be wilful and for profit, such person or persons shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction be imprisoned for a period not exceeding one year.--U. S. Revised Statutes, Title 60, Chap. 3. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA DRAMATIS PERSONÆ VARIUS AVITUS BASSIANUS HELIOGABALUS: _Emperor of Rome_. PAULA: _His senior wife_. ANNIA FAUSTINA: } CÆLESTIS: } AQUILIA SEVERA: } _Junior wives_. ALINIA: } DACIA: } LUCIA THE GALATIAN: _A Christian maiden_. SIMON OF CAPPADOCIA: _A Christian clergyman_. CAIUS MACRINUS: _Commander of the Western fleet_. POLORUS: _A physician_. PISO: _A physician_. RUFINIUS: _Major-domo to_ HELIOGABALUS. HECATUS: _A Greek_. CORNELIA METELLI: _A public woman_. LUCIUS MACEDONICUS: _A pickpocket_. _Army Officers, Imperial Guards, Additional Wives of the Emperor, Dancing Girls, Slaves, etc._ ACT I: The atrium in the imperial palace. The night before New Year's Day, A.D. 221. ACT II: The imperial bed-chamber. Toward the middle of the year 221. ACT III: Antechamber and banquet hall in the palace. The evening of the following day. ACT I ACT I _The atrium in the imperial palace on the Palatine Hill. A splendid and even gorgeous apartment, perhaps fifty feet long and twenty broad. The spectator views it from one side, and one of the longitudinal walls thus constitutes the background. At the left of the spectator is the arched doorway that leads into the ostium, or entrance hallway. At the right are two doors giving into the peristyle, or garden. In the back are doors opening upon various apartments, among them, a small triclinium or banquet-room._ _The atrium has walls of Cipilino marble, and there are ornate pillars supporting each door-frame. In the centre of the floor is a small pool, perhaps six by eight feet, and flush with the floor. Above it, in the ceiling, is a skylight with movable bronze sashes, and gaudy silk blinds beneath. Despite the architectural magnificence of the apartment, its furniture, to modern eyes, seems meagre. To the spectator's right, between the garden doors, there is a solium--a high, stiff, ungainly chair, very wide, and upholstered in imperial purple, i.e., a colour rather like the crimson of today. In front of the solium stands a very ornate mensa, or table, with a few backless stools. There is nothing more. Light is furnished by Roman lamps on very tall candelabra. The moon filters through the skylight._ _It is the night before New Year's Day of the year_ 221 A.D. _As the curtain rises_, HELIOGABALUS' _atriensis, or major-domo_, RUFINIUS _by name, ushers in the two physicians_, PISO _and_ POLORUS. RUFINIUS _is a stout Gaul with a full red beard. He wears, of course, no toga, but there are chevrons of imperial purple on the short left sleeve of his tunic._ PISO _and_ POLORUS _wear the paenula--a long, plain cape, with a hood not unlike a monk's cowl_. PISO'S _paenula is black, but_ POLORUS' _shows the florid colours of a modern bathrobe_. PISO _is an old man and wears a long white beard_; POLORUS _is younger and wears his clipped, almost in the Van Dyke manner_. RUFINIUS, _as soon as the two doctors have come to anchor by the pool, offers them a salver on which stand two goblets of wine and a dish of peanuts_. RUFINIUS The Emperor will be out presently. The banquet is just ending. [_From within comes the sound of half-hearted mirth._] PISO [_Reaching for one of the goblets_] Very thoughtful of you, Rufinius: I need it. I was up all night with a confinement case. POLORUS [_Somewhat sniffishly_] Yes, my dear Doctor Piso, they are very tiresome. I'm glad I've been able to give them up. PISO [_Waspishly_] Give them up? _I_, Doctor Polorus, I _never_ give them up! I pull them through. POLORUS [_Rather floored; apologetically_] I don't mean patients; I mean cases. PISO [_Put into good humour by the success of his repartee_] But _I_ mean neither patients nor cases; I mean husbands. POLORUS [_Amiably, trying to make peace_] I suppose he was drunk, as usual. PISO Drunk? His very tears smelt like toddy. You could scarcely call him a husband in alcohol. He was an alcoholic _extract_ of husband. POLORUS It's astounding how much they get down when such things are going on in the house. PISO Yes, and the tighter they get, the more they want to kiss the baby. And if you let them do it, then you have two cases of delirium tremens on your hands--father and child. And the mother raising hell. [_Sounds of feeble, somewhat laborious mirth come from the banquet-room_] POLORUS What do you think of--? [_Nodding toward the banquet-room_] [PISO _takes a handful of peanuts and munches them during the following, now and then biting into a bad one and spitting it into the pool_] PISO What is _your_ idea? POLORUS It looks simple. I say diabetes. PISO Why? POLORUS Well, for one thing, he's always so thirsty. Then, his legs are beginning to trouble him. Thirdly-- PISO Nonsense! He was born with that thirst. As for his legs, they are simply overworked. The human leg was designed to carry a man, and nothing more. Add his clothes, his conscience, his artillery, and his jewelry, and then pile on a barrel of wine or so every day, and it begins to lose confidence in itself. POLORUS The Empress Paula tells me-- PISO Yes, I know all about the patent medicines he's swallowed and the quacks he's had here. There was that Syrian, for instance. He prescribed water-drinking. POLORUS She says he couldn't keep it on his stomach. PISO No wonder! I daresay his stomach wondered what it was. POLORUS What do you think of proposing? PISO Nothing could be simpler. If this were an ordinary man, say you or that fat poinsettia over there, [_indicating_ RUFINIUS] I'd simply put him to bed, give him a good big dose of castor oil, and then send in my bill. Maybe I'd add a mustard plaster, and a gargle in the morning. The next day, repeat the dose. And so on. PISO [_Uneasily_] But surely you're not going to--? POLORUS [_Horrified_] What! Prescribe castor oil for an emperor? The gods forbid! Where are your professional ethics? Besides, I've been in jail, and don't like it. And when I think of lions in the arena gumming this old epidermis--! [PAULA _enters from the peristyle, and the two physicians, catching sight of her at once, make low bows_] PISO AND POLORUS Majesty! PAULA [_To_ PISO, _gushingly_] Oh, doctor, I am so glad to see you! I have been _so_ worried! PISO [_In his best manner_] Be calm! This--[_indicating_ POLORUS] is Dr. Polorus, my--[_maliciously_] assistant. Doctor, you are honoured by the notice of the Empress Paula. PAULA [_Buttonholing_ PISO _tragically_] I surely hope you gentlemen can do something for the poor Emperor. You can't imagine what I have gone through. I think he's getting worse all the time. And those awful quacks he has had! PISO Yes, I have heard. It's common gossip. PAULA One of them put him on water! Like a horse! [_It gradually becomes evident that_ PAULA, _who is about 37 and rather chunky, is somewhat alcoholized and inclined to weep_] I thought he would die the first night. I was up the whole night. I wouldn't let any of the other ladies touch him. I suffered terribly. [_Succumbing to the martyr complex, she sobs boozily on_ PISO'S _shoulder_] PISO [_With professional tact_] And what seemed to be the symptoms? PAULA Just grief, I guess. The love of a pure woman. I still feel very faint. POLORUS Perhaps a goblet of wine-- PAULA [_Promptly motioning to_ RUFINIUS] And you, too. Pardon me for forgetting. I am all worn out. You doctors have to be up all night, and-- PISO [_Reaching for his goblet_] People simply _will_ send for one. I seldom get out of my clothes. [_The three drink_] POLORUS And you were saying that the Emperor-- PAULA Doctor, you'd hardly believe it. He's so changed I hardly know him--always complaining about his stomach-aches, and taking pills and things. You know how lively he used to be--always up to some pleasantry. Why, even when we had a quiet dinner here at home--just him and me and the other girls--he'd have in one of those dancers from Mesopotamia, and make him dance on a red-hot stove. Always something jolly. And how he would laugh and cut up! But now look at him! Even this New Year's Eve banquet is like a funeral. Think of it! He wouldn't let me go to it--and I've been sitting beside him at banquets for--well, ever since I was almost a child. And all the other girls barred out, too--all except Dacia. PISO [_Professionally_] Too bad, too bad! PAULA I say nothing against Dacia--not a word. She is a very nice girl. I was glad to see him marry her--that is, if he had to marry anybody. I thought he had wives enough. You can imagine what trouble it makes for _me_. But you don't want to hear _my_ afflictions. POLORUS Your Majesty was saying that the Emperor is depressed. PAULA Depressed? You'd think he had on damp underclothes! And he keeps on sending for those quacks--even those crazy dervishes and religious healers from Asia. PISO Religion? Aha! Mental symptoms! PAULA Why, yesterday I hear he actually had in one of those awful Jews--Christians, some of them now call themselves--the kind they burn at the circus. PISO Riff-raff! They actually say they can cure a sick man without medicine. [_To_ POLORUS] Your pardon, Doctor. POLORUS No offence at all, I assure you. My family is from Spain--Mendoza was the family name. I loathe these kikes as much as you do. PAULA [_Continuing_] So I sent for you doctors. I hear you do wonders. But you must be careful. No feeling of pulses or sticking out of tongues. Just say you have heard he is feeling poorly, and have dropped in as a matter of patriotism. Don't tell him I sent for you. He'll be here in a few moments, as soon as the _banquet_ [_she sniffs sarcastically_] is over. You'll see how sick he is the moment he comes in. POLORUS And as for the symptoms, Majesty: you say he complains of-- [_His speech is cut short by the entrance of a guest who comes from the triclinium supported by two slaves. He is very drunk and they drop him beside the pool and proceed to bathe his face_] PAULA Oh, the poor man! Something has disagreed with him. PISO Who is the gentleman? PAULA I don't know him. I think he is one of the generals from the colonies. [_To one of the slaves_] Who is he? THE SLAVE Caius Macrinus, Majesty. Commander of the Western Fleet. PISO Ah, a naval officer! [_To the slave_] Is he taken this way often? THE SLAVE [_Idiotically_] Only when he drinks. POLORUS I think it may be fits. Let's take a look at him. PAULA Shall I order some wine? PISO No. That is, not for the patient. [_As_ RUFINIUS _makes for the goblets_, PISO _and_ POLORUS _approach_ CAIUS _and shoulder the slaves away_. CAIUS _collapses at the edge of the pool, and before_ PISO, _who is aged and stiff, can grab his end, slides into the water, and out of_ POLORUS'S _hands. The slaves jump in after him and drag him ashore, and the two doctors proceed to revive him_] POLORUS Grab his arm and pump it up and down! PISO What do you take me for, a milk-maid? I am a physician! POLORUS I thought we'd try some artificial respiration. PISO Artificial respiration your grandmother! Slap him on the back: that'll fetch him. POLORUS Yes, and give him pneumonia. PISO Pneumonia, flapdoodle! A drunken man _never_ gets pneumonia! POLORUS Since when? PISO Since the time of Romulus and Remus. POLORUS Well, _I_ have seen it. PISO You _thought_ you saw it. The patient probably had cholera. Or maybe a fractured skull. POLORUS [_Sarcastically_] Palm-reader! PISO [_With equal sarcasm_] Barber! PAULA [_Brightly_] Why not roll him on a barrel? POLORUS Too late! He's getting over it. Besides, [_indicating the banquet room_] what barrels there are, are in there. [CAIUS _sits up and gazes about him weakly. Catching sight of_ PAULA, _he waves his hand at her feebly. He has forgotten where he is, and doesn't know that she is the Empress_] CAIUS [_Thickly_] Ah there, fair one! How about a little drink! PISO [_Horrified_] Sacrilege! PAULA [_Flattered by his apparent admiration_] Oh, let the poor commander alone. He's feeling badly. [_She approaches him, with a goblet_] There, that will make you better. CAIUS I remember you, little peppermint, but I can't place you. Didn't we meet in--Alexandria? PAULA [_Sympathetically_] Oh, don't worry your poor head. CAIUS It doesn't worry me. I remember you now. What's become of that little dark girl? PISO [_In alarm_] The Commander seems to be flighty. He imagines he's in a--er, a private house. RUFINIUS [_Taking charge of the situation_] I'd better help him out. [_He grabs_ CAIUS, _and with the two slaves, begins leading him out_] CAIUS [_Drunkenly_] But I haven't paid for the drink! Let me pay for the drink! I insist upon paying for the drink! I-- [_Exeunt_] POLORUS Delirium! PAULA [_Virtuously_] I can't imagine what he was talking about. PISO Oh, I have seen thousands of such cases. Most doctors make the mistake of-- [_He is cut short by an uproar in the triclinium. Trumpets sound. Suddenly three slaves appear at the door, crying_ "The Emperor!" PAULA _at once prepares to depart_] PAULA [_To the doctors_] Remember. Very careful! Don't ask him to stick out his tongue! [_As_ PAULA _slinks into the peristyle_, HELIOGABALUS _enters from the triclinium, with_ DACIA _on his arm. He is tall, sallow and apparently somewhat liquored; his bad humour is obvious. He stalks across the stage to the solium without a word, hands up_ DACIA, _and takes his seat beside her with a scowl. He wears a magnificent toga of imperial purple, with a wide band of cloth-of-gold at the bottom. He carries a small baton, with a gigantic ruby at one end. He is bareheaded_ [DACIA _is a very pretty blonde of, say, nineteen. It is plain that she admires_ HELIOGABALUS _vastly, but there is a touch of awe in her admiration, and it gives her a bit of stage-fright to be with him as here. She is dressed in the white garment of a Roman matron_ [_Following the two come several slaves, and two or three army officers. The latter have been guests at the banquet and are more or less tight_ [HELIOGABALUS, _seated upon the solium, claps his hand to his tummy and turns to_ DACIA] HELIOGABALUS There it is again--that grinding pain. DACIA I'm _so_ sorry, dear. Shall I send for something? HELIOGABALUS The oyster-soup, I dessay. [DACIA _pats his arm_] Or the speeches. [_He dismisses the subject and sweeps the atrium with his eye. It alights upon the two doctors, who immediately drop to their knees_] HELIOGABALUS [_Irascibly_] So there you are! Get up! [_They arise_] Well, what are _you_ doing in the Night Court? PISO May it please your Majesty, the thought occurred to us that it would be a favourable moment for--paying our respects. HELIOGABALUS Aha, the crows smell the carrion! So you heard that I was ill? PISO Not exactly ill, Majesty, but--well, one might say slightly indisposed. HELIOGABALUS Indisposed? A sweet word. Then a man who has had his head cut off is suffering from tonsillitis. [_Hypochondriacly_] I tell you my stomach has all gone to pieces. I can hardly digest the blush on a peach. PISO Your Majesty describes the symptoms very trenchantly. Half the doctor's work is done for him. HELIOGABALUS I haven't mentioned a damned symptom, you scurvy old body-snatcher. If I began to tell you all my symptoms I'd talk your ear off. POLORUS Perhaps your Majesty will favour us with, say a specimen or two. HELIOGABALUS [_He hesitates, but finally thinks well of the suggestion_] Well, if you are interested.... For example, what would you say of a sort of peculiar buzzing sensation at the pit of the stomach, an hour after meals? [_He makes elaborate circular motions with his fist_] And then a sour headache, with peculiar flashes of light before the eyes? Sometimes white; sometimes red; sometimes a sort of greenish purple, or pinkish yellow, or bluish-- [_He halts lugubriously_] POLORUS [_Judicially and with a profound frown_] I should call it hyperacidity. PISO [_Derisively_] What! Hyperacidity? Then where is your heart-burn? HELIOGABALUS [_Interrupting_] Sir, I said _nothing_ of any heart-burn. PISO Precisely. My learned friend here simply-- HELIOGABALUS [_Petulantly_] See here, who's sick, you or I? I tell you about stomach-ache, and you begin talking of heart-burn. POLORUS [_Virtuously_] _I_ didn't mention it, Majesty. HELIOGABALUS And it's lucky for you that you didn't mention it, Majesty! What is _your_ guess? POLORUS _I_ say hyperacidity. HELIOGABALUS Yes, that was your first guess. Now what is your second? POLORUS Cholelithiasis. HELIOGABALUS And then? What is number three? POLORUS Nervous dyspepsia. HELIOGABALUS [_In a sepulchral voice, gradually working himself into a rage_] And which one do you favour for the death-certificate? POLORUS [_Horrified_] Surely Your Majesty is joking! HELIOGABALUS [_Now thoroughly enraged, he leaps down from the solium and proceeds toward_ POLORUS _like a lion stalking a deer_] Joking? Is a coroner's inquest a joke? Is an autopsy a joke? [_He explodes with wrath and bawls for the guard_] Out with the jackass! Shove him into tier two and fatten him for the leopards! Out with him! [POLORUS _is hustled out, loudly protesting_. PISO _attempts a discreet sneak, but_ HELIOGABALUS _detects it_] HELIOGABALUS Grab the old one! Duck him in the pool! [_The slaves grab poor_ PISO _and throw him in. He comes up instantly and tries to scramble out_] PISO [_Sputtering_] Injustice! Injustice! HELIOGABALUS Again! [_They duck him_] PISO [_Coming up again_] I confess! Let me out! I admit everything! [_The slaves haul him out. He shakes himself like a wet dog_] HELIOGABALUS Now throw him out. [_They proceed to do it_] PISO Where is my stethoscope? I lost my stethoscope! I want my stetho-- [_Exit_] DACIA [_Sweetly, as_ HELIOGABALUS _returns to the solium and wearily reseats himself_] You excite yourself, dear. [_She caresses him as if he were a troubled child, but a bit timorously_] You should be calmer. That old quack isn't worth-- HELIOGABALUS Calm? How can I be calm with that dog-fight going on in my tummy? My sweet birdie, you underestimate the effects of matter on mind. I ought to have kissed you an _hour_ ago. It was my duty. Moreover, I inclined to it--the thought presented itself to me. But just then I was seized. I love you--but I am sick. DACIA [_Sentimentally_] If you love me, I am happy. HELIOGABALUS So am I--theoretically. But this---- [_He rubs his front sadly. Then he suddenly pulls himself together. To the assemblage_] Let us proceed to business. What is the first case? [_A slave comes forward with a scroll and writing materials and takes his place at the ornate table. He is the Clerk of the Night Court. Two armed guards stand to either side of him. The following scene is played very quickly_] THE CLERK Hecatus; 27 years old; attempted burglary. HELIOGABALUS Hecatus? Is he a Greek? THE CLERK Yes, your Majesty. HELIOGABALUS Then don't bother to bring him in. Have him thrown into the Tiber at once. Next case. THE CLERK Cornelia Metelli; 20 years old; soliciting. HELIOGABALUS Bring her in. [_The guard hauls in a bedraggled old wench, fully 45_] CORNELIA [_Beginning to protest from the moment she enters the door_] Your Majesty, I give you my word I never done anything whatsoever at all. I was just walking down the street, going to meet a friend, when that policeman come up and-- HELIOGABALUS Stop lying, my dear. I remember you very well. The last time, you held up a drunken pall-bearer on his way home from a funeral. CORNELIA Your Majesty, you have got me mixed up with some other lady. I give you my word I never-- HELIOGABALUS Silence! Now let's be friends. How is trade? CORNELIA Your Majesty, you do me wrong, I assure-- HELIOGABALUS Well, now, are we going to be friends, or do you want me to send you up at once? CORNELIA Don't send me up again! HELIOGABALUS Then answer my polite question. I asked you "How is trade?" I take it that it's not as good as it used to be. [CORNELIA _begins to sniffle_] I suppose the night has to be very dark for you to be--insulted. Or the stranger very soused. CORNELIA A poor girl ain't got a chance, Majesty. HELIOGABALUS Not after forty-five. Or fifty. [_To the assemblage in general_] Consider, gentlemen, the sad fate of this poor working girl. Think of her days of hope, of happiness. Of success. Think of the men she has charmed! Think of the old, sad romance of her betrayal! I dare say it was some gladiator, or an actor. Ah, the misery of the years! And now contemplate her beauty in its decay: the night must be very dark, or the stranger very soused. Observe that sepulchral wreck of what once was a human face. [CORNELIA _sobs_] No, my baby, I shall not send you up. Instead I am going to _do_ something for you. Day chases day: you need a comfortable home. I appoint you a Vestal Virgin. CORNELIA [_In horror_] Oh, my God! Oh, your Majesty! HELIOGABALUS Sheriff, do your duty! [_The guard drags her out, protesting raucously_] Next case! THE CLERK Lucius Macedonicus; aged 30; picking pockets. [_The prisoner is brought in_] HELIOGABALUS Guilty or not guilty? THE PRISONER Not guilty. HELIOGABALUS That is to say, guilty. THE PRISONER Believe me, your Majesty, I wouldn't lie to-- HELIOGABALUS [_To the clerk_] How many terms has he served? THE CLERK Twenty-seven, your Majesty. HELIOGABALUS I begin to doubt the efficacy of the modern jail system. Let me think. [_He meditates_] The sheriff is ordered to take the prisoner to the place of execution---- [_The prisoner yells, but is silenced by the guard, and_ HELIOGABALUS _goes on_]---- and there chop off the index finger of his right hand--with one clean blow of a well-honed sword--no amateurish butchering. THE CLERK Any further command? HELIOGABALUS On his recovery, he is to be given a place on the police force. THE CLERK [_In surprise_] The police force? HELIOGABALUS I said the police force. A pickpocket with the index finger of his right hand gone is harmless. And so is a policeman. Call the next case. [_The prisoner is hustled out_] HELIOGABALUS [_Calling after_] Bring me the finger, Sheriff. I admire it. [_To the Clerk_] What is the next case? THE CLERK Lucia the Galatian, alias Lucia the Christian; aged 21; blasphemy and inciting to riot. One of the soapbox cases, your Majesty. HELIOGABALUS Bring her in. [LUCIA _is brought in by the guard. She wears a simple white stola, the common dress of Roman women, with a cross embroidered in front. She is very pretty, and_ HELIOGABALUS _shows immediate signs that he has duly observed the fact. He settles his toga, wets his finger, smoothes his eyebrows, and assumes a mixture of amiable smile and judicial frown._ LUCIA _folds her arms and is silent_] DACIA [_To_ HELIOGABALUS] She is _very_ pretty. HELIOGABALUS [_Heavily_] Oh, yes--in a sense. DACIA It's a pity to see such a pretty girl in the hands of the police. HELIOGABALUS [_Grasping at the idea_] A pity? It's revolting! Darling, it shocks me to expose you to such a spectacle. I really can't permit it. My conscience would never let up on me. DACIA But-- HELIOGABALUS Exactly. Wifely duty, and all that. I understand. You love me. But I can't permit it, really. Moreover, it is getting very late. You must have your rest. [_He rises_] My arm. DACIA I am not sleepy at all, dear. HELIOGABALUS See. It has begun already! Insomnia from late hours. That's the way _I_ began. I promised your father to take care of you, to cherish you, to---- DACIA But-- HELIOGABALUS I positively refuse to let you sacrifice yourself. I hadn't noticed the time. Now, my dear. [_He offers his arm, and she dutifully takes it, though with obvious reluctance. They step down from the solium and proceed to the door of the peristyle. At the door_] You have been getting paler and paler for an hour. I noticed it but didn't say anything. Now right to bed, my little ginger snap. Don't forget that Heliogabalus loves you. [_He gives her a peck of a kiss_] I'll be with you anon. [_She goes out without a word. Immediately the door closes behind her_, HELIOGABALUS _makes his way back to the solium with noticeable haste. First he takes a precautionary look over his shoulder at the door; then he devotes himself to a long gaze at_ LUCIA] HELIOGABALUS [_Genially_] So this is Lucia! LUCIA [_Oratorically_] The peace of the Lord be with you, Cæsar! I am not afraid. HELIOGABALUS Well, surely not. I had no thought of harming you, my dear. LUCIA Ye who live by the sword shall perish by the sword. It is so written. HELIOGABALUS Perhaps you are right. But why did you kick up this disturbance on the street? LUCIA I made no disturbance, Cæsar. I obeyed the command. I preached the Son of God. HELIOGABALUS God? Which God? LUCIA The One God. HELIOGABALUS So there is only _one_ now? I heard the rumour only last week. But why get excited about it? Why stir up those poor country yokels at the market, and give the policemen trouble? LUCIA I came to preach the Word. I came to bring peace. Aye, even peace to you, Cæsar;--with the sin and blood upon your hands. HELIOGABALUS [_To the clerk_] Mr. Clerk, the defendant is in the shadow. Can't we move the lamps a bit? [_The clerk moves them experimentally_] HELIOGABALUS So; an inch or so to the left. That's better. [_To_ LUCIA] And now, my dear, about this blood upon my hands. Surely you have confused me with some one else. I am never violent. LUCIA It was by your decree that they died--burned alive, torn to pieces by wild beasts, butchered by gladiators--five hundred souls. HELIOGABALUS Oh-h, you mean those--what do you call them?--Christians! Well, surely you are not complaining of that. All _that_ is a mere matter of administrative routine. They practise magic; they claim to be able to heal the sick, even to raise the dead. The law is the law. LUCIA It is their faith that gives life; it is their faith that heals. And that faith [_touching her heart_] is here. HELIOGABALUS [_To the clerk_] I'll have to trouble you about the lights again. Bring that big lamp nearer to the prisoner. The rest of you stand back. [_The clerk so places the light that_ LUCIA'S _face is in the full glare of it_. HELIOGABALUS _views her with obvious and prolonged admiration_] HELIOGABALUS Thank you; now I can _hear_ her better. [_To_ LUCIA] And you were saying, my dear? LUCIA [_Striking her heart again_] My faith is here. The truth is here. The power of the spirit is here. HELIOGABALUS Yes, so far, so good. But surely you don't claim to be a magician like those other Christians. A pretty girl like you! LUCIA There is no magic! There is only the spirit. HELIOGABALUS But, my dear! What has the spirit to do with the belly-ache? How can the spirit help a man when he is doubled up? What could it do for _me_? LUCIA Even you, Cæsar. Even _you_ are not beyond the grace of the Lord. HELIOGABALUS [_Growing more interested_] Do you mean to say that I can be cured by this new magic, this so-called Christianity? LUCIA By Christianity, Cæsar, and by the spirit within. Even _you_ may be healed. HELIOGABALUS Do you mean without swallowing any more pills? LUCIA I know nothing of pills. I know only the work of the Lord. HELIOGABALUS But what I am getting at is: what is the _machinery_ of it? How do you set the Lord to _working_? Just how do you do it? LUCIA [_Simply_] We pray. HELIOGABALUS Is _that_ all? LUCIA We lay on hands. HELIOGABALUS [_Vastly interested_] So! You lay on hands? And do you yourself--that is to say, are you yourself a practitioner of this--this--laying on of hands? [_He leans over to glance cautiously at the door through which_ DACIA _has gone_] LUCIA My prayers have been answered. I take no reward. I would ask the Lord's mercies even for you, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS Well, all I have to say is that you are a very nice girl. First you accuse me of murdering your friends, and now you say you are willing to pray for me,--and even to lay on hands. LUCIA It is the command: forgive those who have ill-used you. HELIOGABALUS Oh, I say: now you are going too far. Imagine _me_ ill-using _you_. Sweet piece, you _wrong_ me. LUCIA [_In surprise_] I am not to be burned? HELIOGABALUS The idea! Burn _you_! The very thought of it revolts me. You have been misinformed, my dear. I am a very humane man--even a polite man. LUCIA But-- HELIOGABALUS Yes, I know what you are going to say. Now and then I am irritable--and maybe order a man or two, or a dozen or so, to the--that is, now and then, I let the law take its course. But when a man is in bad health--and always has the stomach-ache--he sometimes gets out of humour. Who wouldn't? You have no idea how much I have suffered, and what awful medicines I have taken. Not half an hour ago I had to have another of those quacks ducked in this very room. Well, the Christians have this easy cure--this way of curing by laying on hands--and yet they let me suffer. Is it any wonder that I sometimes lose my temper? Now you say that _you_ also know the trick, and I was wondering-- LUCIA I shall pray for you, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS Yes, by all means. But this laying on of hands--I have a notion that it might, er--fit my particular case even better. LUCIA [_Diffidently_] We could try. HELIOGABALUS So we could. But not here. I have a feeling that a crowd might be--well, unsympathetic. [_To the clerk_] The court recesses, Mr. Clerk. Clear the room! [_The guards proceed to drive every one out in headlong haste, leaving only_ HELIOGABALUS, LUCIA _and_ RUFINIUS] HELIOGABALUS [_To_ RUFINIUS] I shall cross-examine the witness in chambers. [_To_ LUCIA, _offering her his arm_] My dear. [_As they go out_, HELIOGABALUS _takes another precautionary look at the peristyle. They go into one of the rooms at the rear. The door closes._ RUFINIUS, _to whom the business is an old story, heaves a sigh, pours out two goblets of wine, and places them on the small table near the door. He then goes to the door of the ostium, and calls out to an unseen guard_] RUFINIUS [_In bored tones_] Better get the musicians ready, Sampinus. They'll probably be wanted presently. Are they all sober? [_The guard makes no reply, but the clank of his sword is heard. As_ RUFINIUS _turns back_, PAULA _enters from the peristyle. She is somewhat dishevelled_] PAULA The Emperor--where is the Emperor? RUFINIUS He has just stepped out, Majesty. PAULA Just stepped out? Where has he gone? RUFINIUS He hasn't gone anywhere, Majesty. PAULA Bosh. Either he is out or he is not out. Don't deceive me! [RUFINIUS, _stumped, answers nothing, but his eyes wander to the door_. PAULA _quickly notices_] PAULA So he's in _there_, is he? And who is it _this_ time? RUFINIUS A young woman, Majesty--a young Christian woman. [_There is a loud knock on the inside of the door, and_ RUFINIUS _steps to answer. He opens the door very slightly and pokes his head in_] RUFINIUS Majesty? HELIOGABALUS [_Within_] Music! [RUFINIUS _claps his hands, and instantly two musicians come in from the ostium. One has a Greek pipe and the other a lyre. The piper blows a loud blast and breaks into lively music. Suddenly there are again loud knocks on the inside of the door, and_ RUFINIUS _pokes in his head once more_] HELIOGABALUS [_Within_] Not so damned loud! Something soft--and dreamy! RUFINIUS [_To the musicians_] Turn off the air in that pipe! [HELIOGABALUS' _order appears ominous to both_ RUFINIUS and PAULA, _and they look at each other_] PAULA This looks serious. RUFINIUS I fear so, Majesty. PAULA You say she is a Christian girl--one of those ex-Jewesses who bawl and beat tambourines on the streets? What does she look like? RUFINIUS I regret to report-- PAULA Speak up! Is she good-looking? RUFINIUS [_Reluctantly_] In a sense, yes. PAULA That means she is very beautiful, doesn't it? Do I know any one she looks like? RUFINIUS [_With a heavy attempt at courtliness_] Your Majesty must consult your mirror. PAULA Enough of that blather! Do you think that I don't _know_ I'm--nearly twenty-eight? [_With bitterness_] If I were still what I used to be, I'd be in that room myself. [_Another knock on the inside of the door._ RUFINIUS _responds. Unintelligible words from within._ RUFINIUS _turns, empties the two goblets, takes another flask from the table, and refills them. The musicians keep droning softly_] PAULA What is that stuff? RUFINIUS The wine from Britain, brought to the Emperor by Caius Macrinus. PAULA You mean that stuff that tastes like smoke? Wine your grandpa! So he's going to try _that_ on that poor girl! The third degree! [RUFINIUS _passes in the two goblets_] RUFINIUS It _is_ somewhat heady. PAULA I should say it _is_. Why, the first time I tried it my head spun around like a ballet girl. Now tell me about this girl. Is it just a--you know--or is it--? RUFINIUS I'm afraid it is. PAULA Is what? [_Maudlinly_] Tell me, Rufinius! You wouldn't desert me! Tell me the truth! RUFINIUS I'm afraid it's serious. PAULA You mean--? RUFINIUS Well, he hasn't ordered any guard to take her away in the morning. PAULA [_Hysterically_] There! I knew it! He'll marry her, and then I'll have another on my hands. Eleven already--and now one more! I'll go crazy if he keeps this up. RUFINIUS [_Reassuringly_] Well, maybe I'm wrong, after all. Perhaps he's merely interested in her talk. PAULA [_Inconsolable_] Yes, that's the worst of it. If it was only her looks I wouldn't care. A man gets his fill of _looking_ in no time. But when he begins to _listen_ he's lost. [_Bursting into tears_] I think this is too much. I've tried to be a good chief wife to the Emperor. Have you ever heard me complain when he came home with a girl and--sent for the musicians? Never! But I'm getting tired of this _marrying_. When he marries another one _I_ have her on my hands. Who has to keep order among them? Who protects them when he gets into a bad humour and begins to talk of throwing half a dozen of them to the crocodiles? [_She blubbers_] RUFINIUS But maybe Your Majesty is too pessimistic. I have a feeling that-- [_A knock from within the door interrupts him. He goes to the door and the salver is handed out. On it are the two goblets. One is empty; the other is still full_] PAULA [_Rushing up, she immediately notes the full goblet_] Ha! One still full! [_Hysterically_] What did I tell you? This one is a wise one: she refuses to drink. Now he's done for! RUFINIUS [_Alarmed at last_] It looks pretty bad. PAULA Bad? I tell you it's all over! I got him that way myself--and so did most of the others. I know! [_Rising to martyrdom_] Oh, what have I done to deserve this! And a Christian, too--a common street woman, praying and bawling in the gutters! Imagine the palace with her around! Worse, imagine the Emperor! Here, give me the goblet. I feel faint! [_She downs the goblet_] [_A commotion inside. A hand on the knob of the door_] RUFINIUS [_In alarm_] Your Majesty had better-- PAULA Yes, yes. [_Starting off_] Let me know what happens. [_She sneaks out just as_ HELIOGABALUS _enters with the girl on his arm_] HELIOGABALUS [_To_ RUFINIUS] Kick these vermin out [_indicating the musicians_] They play bawdy music. [RUFINIUS _kicks them out_] HELIOGABALUS [_To_ LUCIA] And now, little dear, as I was saying-- [_His eye suddenly lights on the two goblets, and he notes that the second one has been emptied_] HELIOGABALUS Rufinius! RUFINIUS Majesty! HELIOGABALUS Who emptied this goblet? RUFINIUS [_In great confusion_] Your Majesty, I assure you-- HELIOGABALUS Silence! I don't want to hear any lies from you. So you have taken to the jug again--after all your promises? While I am hard at work, engaged in the administration of justice--labouring at affairs of state--you loll out here in the atrium in your cups! RUFINIUS [_At a loss_] Your Majesty, I-- HELIOGABALUS I have ordered you not to lie! If you tell me that it evaporated--in four minutes--to the galleys! If you say you gave it to a blind beggar--to the boa constrictors! If you say thieves broke in and stole it--I'll burn you like a--like a Christian! RUFINIUS [_Eager to shield the Empress, he takes the blame. He falls to his knees_] Majesty! I ask forgiveness! HELIOGABALUS Ha! You save your life! [_Irritably_] But this sort of thing has got to stop! I can't have drinking men about me. [_A pause while he meditates_] You must be punished. You must have your lesson. [_Another pause_] How would you like to lose those beautiful pink whiskers? RUFINIUS [_Horror-stricken, he falls flat on the floor_] Majesty! HELIOGABALUS That's it, exactly. Call in the guard and we'll chop them off at once--and maybe a slice of ear with them. LUCIA [_Protesting_] I hope your Majesty-- [_She is cut off by the entrance of_ PAULA, _who bounds in from the peristyle_. PAULA, _by now, is in the last stages of a crying drunk_] PAULA Stop! HELIOGABALUS [_Startled_] What? PAULA Rufinius is innocent! HELIOGABALUS Then it was-- PAULA Yes, _I_ drank it. I was feeling faint. I took it--medicinally. HELIOGABALUS Well, it seems to have medicated you, all right. PAULA I think I had _cause_ to be ill. HELIOGABALUS What had you been eating? PAULA Yes, laugh while I suffer! You never think of me! Here am I, so faint I can hardly walk--and you give banquets, and bring in women off the street, and turn the palace into a-- HELIOGABALUS [_Sternly_] My dear, you talk pish. This lady is Lucia. Lucia, the Empress. Lucia was arrested--by a grievous error--and brought before me--and we have been discussing certain problems--chiefly sociological. PAULA Yes, I know what your problems are--whether to make love to her and fill her with nonsense, or just grab her. HELIOGABALUS My dear, I forbid you. Such talk is libellous, and grossly licentious. You will make me believe that the wine has--affected you. PAULA [_To_ LUCIA] Don't you let him come over you with his soft-soap. That man could talk a woman into anything. Haven't I seen him do it, with one girl after another? He'll make you believe you are Venus and then, when you get to be as I am, he'll-- HELIOGABALUS What foolishness, my dear! Imagine this beautiful, this innocent, girl ever getting like you are! PAULA Wasn't I beautiful and innocent once? HELIOGABALUS Well, maybe _once_. PAULA [_Maudlin_] And when I think of those other poor girls. HELIOGABALUS [_To_ LUCIA] Unluckily, my sweet Venus, the Empress is not herself. I have noticed it for some time. About twenty years. [_To_ PAULA] Wouldn't it be better, darling, if you went to bed? Perhaps a good night's rest would help you. Or shall I send for Piso? PAULA Piso? Never! That dirty old fraud-- HELIOGABALUS And yet you sent for him to monkey with my stomach--my poor, sick stomach! Don't say you didn't. I know all about it. By this time, my dear, you should have more respect for my spy system. PAULA That's the way: You always put it on _me_! When _you_ have done something, you accuse _me_ of something. Oh, what-- HELIOGABALUS [_Humouring her_] But why go into that? You are--ill, and ought to be in bed. And besides, I have business. There is, for example, the matter of Rufinius' ear. It had better be attended to at once. RUFINIUS Oh, Majesty, Majesty! PAULA Rufinius is innocent. I drank the wine--all of it! HELIOGABALUS I believe you--but nevertheless, Rufinius _lied_ to me. Can I afford to let it get about that it is safe to lie to the Emperor of Rome? Surely not. Now, go to bed and get a good night's rest and let me attend to Rufinius' ear. He is tired of waiting. The longer we put off the matter of his ear, the longer it will take to heal. [_Taking her arm he pushes her out_] PAULA [_Going out blubbering_] What have I ever done to deserve such awful, such cruel, such-- [_She disappears_] HELIOGABALUS [_To_ RUFINIUS] Now get the guard, and bring in the tools. It'll be all over in a few minutes. RUFINIUS [_Screeching_] Pardon, Majesty, pardon! I-- HELIOGABALUS Silence! I have already pardoned you. This other business is a mere reminder, a souvenir. Go get the guard. I am busy. [RUFINIUS _staggers to his feet, and starts slowly toward the ostium_] LUCIA But surely, your Majesty, you are not-- HELIOGABALUS It won't take three minutes, I assure you. I'll do it myself--and I have a steady hand. Then we can resume our--studies-- LUCIA [_Clutching his arm_] But surely this is not necessary. "Vengeance is Mine, saith the Lord." I beg of you, Cæsar-- HELIOGABALUS Oh, I forgot. Your religion. Your Christianity. LUCIA We are forbidden to shed blood, even an enemy's. HELIOGABALUS But no one is asking _you_ to shed any blood, little pigeon. I'll do it myself. Besides, there won't be much. LUCIA Or to _see_ it shed. HELIOGABALUS Well, now, isn't that going rather far? Wouldn't it be fair to call that a rather _extreme_ view? LUCIA [_Her hands on him_] Cæsar, I beg of you, I implore you-- HELIOGABALUS [_Melting, he slips his arm around her_] Oh, if you put it on those grounds, why, of course--[_He strokes her hair_] Do you like me, Lucia, just a little bit? LUCIA I'd like you more, Cæsar, if-- HELIOGABALUS [_Sentimentally_] How much more? LUCIA [_Her eyes downcast_] Maybe a great deal more, if-- HELIOGABALUS Honest? You swear it? LUCIA We are forbidden to swear. "Let your Aye be Aye, and your Nay--" HELIOGABALUS Yes, but you _would_, wouldn't you? LUCIA I think I would, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS [_Calling to_ RUFINIUS] Rufinius, you may keep your ear. And your beautiful pink whiskers, too. RUFINIUS [_Turning at the ostium_] Your Majesty is good! HELIOGABALUS Moreover, you look tired! You have long hours. Suppose you take a little nap out in the ostium. I'll call you if I want you. I have a bit more--business--with this young lady. RUFINIUS At your Majesty's command. HELIOGABALUS And before you go out, you might as well dim some of these lights. They seem to me to be a bit glary, so to speak. How about putting out that big one over there? [RUFINIUS _extinguishes it_] So, that's better. Now run along. If I want you I'll call. But don't sit up for me. [_Exit_ RUFINIUS] HELIOGABALUS [_Approaching_ LUCIA _and eyeing her admiringly_] And now, my dear and very delightful Christian maiden, now that we are alone, let us sit down and have a cosy little chat. Oh, not on that stool; it will tire your back. Why not here? [_He mounts the solium_] See, I'll sit here in my regular place, and you--well, you sit so. [_He draws her to his knee_] How's that? Comfortable? LUCIA I am afraid, Cæsar. My people will be wondering where I am. HELIOGABALUS And a good joke on them, too. [_He laughs elaborately_] They'll think you are on your way to the lions--and here you are as safe as a bug in a rug--and converting the Emperor to this Christianity, as you call it. Now, about that Christian kiss you showed me--just how is it done? LUCIA [_Pecking at him modestly and very gingerly_] Like this. HELIOGABALUS [_Disappointed, shaking his head_] Um, kind o' short. Not like--but maybe--after a while, after a little while ... LUCIA [_Bashfully, but with art_] I'm afraid you won't respect me. HELIOGABALUS [_Looks at her sharply_] What's that? LUCIA I said I thought you would think I was-- HELIOGABALUS Pish-posh, little goose-liver. I never think such things. Don't mention them. LUCIA But you have a wife already. HELIOGABALUS A wife? I have eleven. LUCIA [_Horrified_] What! Eleven! HELIOGABALUS Eleven living. My poor, dear Marcia is dead--among others. Paula succeeded her. Dynastic reasons, my juicy plum: the merit system was unheard of in those days. Then there is Annia Faustina, with the red hair. And Cælestis. I married her in Gaul: I was very lonely. And then there is Aquilia Severa. And Falia. And dear little Dacia. That was Dacia who was with me when those scoundrels brought you in. You will like Dacia--that is, you _would_ like her if you knew her. And then there is Gestina. And-- [_He hesitates_] LUCIA That makes seven. HELIOGABALUS And Blenina, the blonde. And Alinia. And-- LUCIA That makes nine. HELIOGABALUS Well, let so much be considered the reading of the minutes. It would only bore you to go on. Besides, why do it? Put them beside _you_, my new baby--oh, my! You saw one of them--Paula. Imagine a cultivated man, a man of artistic tastes, swapping a real kiss with-- LUCIA But the Lord forbids. A man must cleave to one wife. HELIOGABALUS A sensible idea. In fact, a capital idea. If the rest of Christianity is like that, put down my name at once. But it's too late. LUCIA You have married all these women? HELIOGABALUS Every one of them, so far as I can make out. Including Paula. LUCIA Then you have broken the law of the Lord. Then you have sinned. HELIOGABALUS [_Snuggling close_] Oh, come now. Surely it is no sin to marry. I always thought that-- LUCIA Marriage is of the Lord. HELIOGABALUS Well, then, how do you make it out that I have sinned? If it's all right to marry one wife, why should it be a sin to marry another wife? LUCIA You are mocking me, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS Not at all, I assure you. I am quite serious. Just _why_ should it be a sin, as you call it, to marry more than one? LUCIA There are many reasons, Cæsar. The Lord has spoken. A man, in His eyes, can truly love but one woman. HELIOGABALUS Fiddlesticks, little prune cake. I have eleven wives, and I love no less than _four_ of them. LUCIA _Love_ them? HELIOGABALUS Well, more or less. At all events, I _did_ love them. Now-- LUCIA You loved them _truly_? HELIOGABALUS One of them for _two_ long years! LUCIA But marriage must endure unto death. HELIOGABALUS It did. It wasn't _my_ fault. But figure it for yourself: When I caught her with that gladiator, what could I do? It was a great shock to me. LUCIA You--? HELIOGABALUS It cut me to the heart. I almost felt like taking some of the poison myself. LUCIA [_Horrified_] You had her poisoned? HELIOGABALUS What was I to do? I went as far as I decently could. I invited the gladiator to dinner. They died in each other's arms. I even buried him at my own expense. LUCIA You are horrible. HELIOGABALUS I am a husband. LUCIA You are a pagan--an infidel! HELIOGABALUS And you? Isn't a Christian an infidel? You, too, are an infidel--but [_sentimentally_]--a very dear, sweet little infidel. Now, how about another of those Christian kisses--but this time a man's size one? LUCIA [_Not heeding him_] Could you share your love--or what you call your love--for me with any other woman? HELIOGABALUS [_Under the spell of her beauty_] You try my philosophy sorely. LUCIA [_Insistent_] Could you? HELIOGABALUS Well, I'm no longer as young as I used to be. LUCIA Could you? HELIOGABALUS Turn your head a bit, so that the light falls on your hair. Ah, the moon! There, that's better. Now, what was it you said? LUCIA Could you share your love for me with another woman? HELIOGABALUS [_A pause, during which he admires the picture. Emphatically_] No! LUCIA [_Radiant_] Ah, Cæsar, you see! Or you begin to see. The star of Bethlehem has begun to shine in Rome! HELIOGABALUS [_His arm about her_] I don't see any star, my dear, but the stars that shine in your amethyst eyes. Now, please--[_A kiss_] And now another. LUCIA What! Right away! HELIOGABALUS Don't be afraid of crowding them. I could stand millions of those stingy Christian kisses. A thousand of them would only make one real, honest Roman kiss. LUCIA No. HELIOGABALUS Yes. LUCIA No, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS I order you. LUCIA [_At once archly and coolly_] In whose name, Cæsar? HELIOGABALUS [_Desperately in her thrall_] In the name of your God, whose light I am beginning to see. LUCIA [_Now more persuaded_] Well, just a little one. [HELIOGABALUS _negotiates a long, strangling, gurgling buss_] LUCIA Oh, my! HELIOGABALUS Was it nice? LUCIA [_Coquettishly_] No. You are bad, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS What! Bad! LUCIA Bad, bad, Cæsar. [_A great crash in the ostium, with yells._ HELIOGABALUS _jumps to his feet and reaches for his sword, almost dropping_ LUCIA. _Presently a Christian comes bounding in, with_ RUFINIUS _and two guards hanging to him_. RUFINIUS _is in his undershirt and barefooted. The Christian is a man of gigantic stature, and the three have difficulty in holding him. But finally they pin his arms behind him_] THE CHRISTIAN I want to see Cæsar! I must face Cæsar! HELIOGABALUS [_Observing that the three have at last made him, fast. Folding his arms_] Let him speak. THE CHRISTIAN I accuse you, Cæsar, of debauchery. HELIOGABALUS What! You come here in the middle of the night to-- THE CHRISTIAN I call on you in the name of the Lord-- HELIOGABALUS [_To Lucia_] Do you know this gentleman? Who is he, and what does he want? THE CHRISTIAN I want you to liberate that poor, innocent girl--that lamb of the Lord. LUCIA He is Simon of Cappadocia. SIMON [_Still roaring_] Let her go! Release her from your loathsome embraces! HELIOGABALUS Listen to that! [_To Lucia_] Think of that, my dear! LUCIA [_Quietly_] You are wrong, Simon. The great Cæsar has done me no harm. HELIOGABALUS There, you see! SIMON He has not laid his hands on you? LUCIA No. That is-- SIMON [_Refusing to believe it_] You fear him. You are afraid to speak! [_To_ HELIOGABALUS] Cæsar, what are you doing to this maiden? HELIOGABALUS Doing to her? I am _admiring_ her. SIMON What are you _going_ to do to her? HELIOGABALUS [_Embarrassed_] Now, really--[_To_ LUCIA] Who did you say he is? LUCIA One of our pastors--Simon. [_Apologetically_] He is very-- HELIOGABALUS A pastor? That is, a clergyman? [_To_ SIMON] Are you in holy orders? SIMON I am a poor shepherd. I seek this strayed lamb. The wolves-- HELIOGABALUS Good enough. I respect you for it. So you are a clergyman? Well, that simplifies matters enormously. Get out your tools. [_Bells begin to ring out_] The New Year! SIMON [_In alarm_] Tools? HELIOGABALUS The things necessary for your ceremony of holy marriage. I assume that you carry them with you. [_The din increases_] It's the New Year--and I turn over a new leaf! LUCIA [_In astonishment; protesting_] But, Cæsar-- HELIOGABALUS Nonsense, my dear. Tomorrow it may be raining, or there may be a parade--[_To_ SIMON] And now, Doctor, you may begin. Do I stand here? [_The din still increases_] LUCIA [_Swept off her feet_] But, Cæsar, your other wives! HELIOGABALUS [_Himself completely gone_] I am _done_ with my other wives! LUCIA Done with them? HELIOGABALUS Henceforth and for ever! You shall be my _one_ wife! And your faith my faith! LUCIA [_Wide-eyed_] You mean--you mean, Cæsar, that through me, through love for me, you have come to see the light? HELIOGABALUS [_Swung along by the situation_] I mean, my fair maiden, that I have seen some kind of light in your beautiful eyes. I don't know just what it is, or exactly what it stands for, but I love you, adore you, want you--and am willing to follow it--blindly. SIMON [_To_ LUCIA, _in amazement_] Can you--do you--believe? LUCIA [_Taking the Emperor's hand, as the chimes swell to a great clamour_] The great Cæsar sees at last! HELIOGABALUS [_His eyes feasting upon her_] What wonderful hair! CURTAIN ACT II ACT II _Sometime in the middle of the year 221_ A.D. _The scene is the cubicula nocturna, or bedroom, of the Emperor in the Palace. Time: 10_ P.M. _A rather shallow and crowded apartment, with doors at the left and upper right, and a single window at the right. The Romans, of course, did not have beds of the sort we sleep in today. The thing they used was a sort of chaise-longue--that is, it had no foot-board._ HELIOGABALUS' _bed is to the left of the spectator, with its back against the back wall and its foot facing the footlights. Beside it, separated by a space of no more than two feet, is the huge bed of his wives. It is, in design, exactly like his own, but it is at least 20 feet wide. The bed-clothing stretches unbrokenly from side to side of it, but there are separate pillows--twelve of them, each embroidered with a large monogram in purple. The pillow with the "L"_ [_for_ LUCIA] _is nearest_ HELIOGABALUS' _bed. In the narrow space between this huge bed and_ HELIOGABALUS' _there is a small night table, and on it are a lamp and a bottle of water and goblet. This lamp furnishes the only light in the room. Twelve clothes-racks, piled with finery, are at the extreme right._ _As the curtain rises_, HELIOGABALUS _is propped up in bed, reading a scroll by the light of the lamp_. LUCIA _is the only occupant of the other bed. She is lying near the middle of it, and is thus about 10 feet from_ HELIOGABALUS. HELIOGABALUS, _still holding the scroll in one hand, reaches over, pours out a goblet of water, looks at it sourly, makes a face, heaves a sigh, and drinks it_. HELIOGABALUS What stuff! No wonder I've still got the stomach-ache. [_Slowly rolling up the scroll as he gives it a final scrutiny_] Hm--hm--hm-- ... LUCIA [_After a pause, sleepily_] What have you been doing, Cæsar? HELIOGABALUS Drinking that washing-water you make me drink, and reading. LUCIA Reading what? HELIOGABALUS Poetry. LUCIA [_Piously_] Poetry is corrupting. HELIOGABALUS I agree with you. Listen to this: [_Reading_] We shall meet beyond the Jordan In the heavenly fields so fair; We shall meet our loved and lost ones-- There will be no parting there. LUCIA [_Somewhat uncertainly_] Who wrote it? HELIOGABALUS One of your Christian poets--Commodianus. What you call a hymn writer. It sickens me. LUCIA [_Challengingly_] I like it. HELIOGABALUS Yes, and you also like the Song of Solomon. I blush for you, little sweetbread. The Song of Solomon is pretty raw stuff. It is astonishing what a few months of marriage will do to an otherwise modest girl. LUCIA [_Primly_] Solomon sang of Paradise. HELIOGABALUS Oh, did he? But he took good care to fill Paradise with cuties. He had the imagination of a sailor. If Paradise is actually full of that sort of thing--if such didoes go on there--then all I can say is that-- LUCIA Now don't start moralizing, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS Why not? I am moral: why shouldn't I moralize? Is it a crime for a cow to give milk? LUCIA [_An exclamation of disgust_] Oh, you always-- HELIOGABALUS I have been faithful to you, little pullet, for 180 days and, what's more, 180 _nights_. How's that for morals? I defy you to find me a Christian to match it, at any weight. Think of it! Here am I, still in the prime of life, Emperor of Rome, Pontifex Maximus and all the rest of it, and yet I am as virtuous as a convict in the death-house. Here am I without a glass of schnapps for six months. Here am I with twelve wives, at least five of them charming, and I lock eleven of them out, and-- LUCIA You must obey the Word. HELIOGABALUS Well, I have obeyed it. And what do I get for it? I still have my stomach-ache. And the one wife I have left rolls over about half a mile, and leaves me to shiver over bad poetry. [_He throws the scroll on the floor_] My dear, you must allow something to my training. I am used to society at night. Loneliness always starts up my dyspepsia. How many times have I suddenly wakened and cast my eye over that bed and watched the sweet girls as they slumbered, or whispered to one another, or nudged one another, or giggled in their more or less perfect innocence. There was always at least _one_ awake. And when she saw me sitting up wearily, tortured by some business of state, she would crawl over and pour me out a drink of the real stuff, and then snuggle into bed with me, and stroke my hair, and-- LUCIA There was always an Eye upon you. There was One who saw. HELIOGABALUS Well, if there was, then I call it damned bad form. Even the gods should have _some_ decency. LUCIA [_Horrified_] Decency? HELIOGABALUS Well, then, say good manners. LUCIA Now you blaspheme, Cæsar. You should pray. HELIOGABALUS I am willing. I have no objection to prayer--in its proper place. As you may recall, I was originally designed for the church: it was only accident that threw me into politics. But your proposal, now--your scheme of praying _here_ every evening--isn't it a bit vulgar? LUCIA What an idea! HELIOGABALUS Still, I can't rid myself of it. It haunts my conscience, so to speak. Just think of it a moment. Imagine praying in a--_bed_room! Don't you get a vague flavour of, say, impropriety? Isn't it a trifle--indelicate? LUCIA I think you are talking nonsense. HELIOGABALUS [_Reaching for the water-jug and pouring out another goblet_] Maybe I am. [_He takes a swallow, chokes and spits it out_] But isn't that precisely what a man seeks in marriage--a sort of virtuous nonsense? You forget the way I make a living, my cold little rabbit. My days are filled with gloomy duties. If I didn't look solemn as an owl the people would lose confidence in me. Say I go to the circus. There are twenty Jews in the arena, and the guards let out the lions. One Jew tries to climb up another Jew. Imagine the fun! LUCIA How you talk! HELIOGABALUS [_Rubbing his stomach, as if feeling a pain_] Nevertheless, it is actual fun, genuine humour--and I naturally want to squat on my little rearo, throw back my ears and yell. But I am the Emperor, and so I must keep my dignity. Every one else whoops and bawls, but if I go further than a snicker then it begins to be talked of in the barber-shops, and people say that I am drinking too much. [_He casts a self-pitying glance at the water-bottle_] Even as it is, a good many of them think that I am somewhat--flightier--than I ought to be. For example, consider my interest in you--especially my interest in your faith--this so-called Christianity of yours. Well, to _you_ it may be serious enough, but think how it must appear to the average respectable Roman. _He_ regards it as simply pishposh--and he thinks of _me_ much as he would think of me if he heard that I was interested in some sort of idiotic Egyptian sorcery. LUCIA [_Primly_] I see no possible connection. HELIOGABALUS Naturally not, little canary. You are not a Roman. Well, neither am I. I was born in Syria. I am hyphenated. But now to get to my point. First, my business all day is solemn; secondly, these little theological debates of ours in the evening are solemn. So you see what is the matter. I lack recreation. I lack--well, there is nothing to distract and mellow my mind. LUCIA [_With a touch of sarcasm_] Well, what do you suggest? HELIOGABALUS [_Brightening_] I suggest, first of all, little squash-pie, that you come over here and give your little papa a great big kiss. LUCIA [_Still primly_] You had better go to sleep. HELIOGABALUS What! At ten o'clock! That's another thing: this ten o'clock business. Really I-- LUCIA It is time. HELIOGABALUS Yes, it is time for a kiss. Plenty of time--time for a good, long, damp, sticky one. [_Wheedling, half rising_] Now, come on, Lucia! Be nice! [_She rolls one eye at him, but doesn't answer. He projects one leg out of bed_] HELIOGABALUS Shall I? [_She rolls the other eye indifferently_] Do you dare me? I double-dare you to dare me! [_She remains silent_] HELIOGABALUS [_Now completely out of bed, and standing in the narrow space between the beds_] Well, here goes etiquette! Strictly speaking, my gumdrop, you should come to _me_. Remember, I am Emperor, not to say Pontifex Maximus. But let it go. Do I get the kiss? LUCIA [_With a stiff coquetry_] _A_ kiss--perhaps. HELIOGABALUS Only perhaps. And only _a_ kiss? LUCIA [_Slightly unbending_] Well, then, maybe-- HELIOGABALUS Well, then maybe what? LUCIA Maybe _a_ kiss. HELIOGABALUS Hear, hear! Maybe _a_ kiss! And here I am Emperor, not to say Pontifex Maximus, not to say a husband! [_He climbs into the big bed and starts across toward_ LUCIA _on hands and knees. She begins to roll away from him_] Hey, there, little cocoanut, where are you going? [_He falls flat_] Halt! [_He gets in motion again_] Remember, sweet oyster: love, honour _and_ obey! [LUCIA _eludes him, and he descends to various monkey-shines by way of wheedling her. He grabs a pillow and hurls it at her and she flings it back at him. Finally, to the tune of her screeches, he reaches her. He grabs her arm._ [_At this instant there is a heavy knocking at the door._ HELIOGABALUS _leaps back, and listens on hands and knees, ears up, in the attitude of a cocker-spaniel_] HELIOGABALUS Thirty thousand oh-hells! LUCIA [_Covering her ears with pillows_] Cæsar! HELIOGABALUS [_He crawls out of the big bed very clumsily, and into his own bed again_] Who is it? [_An unintelligible voice is heard outside_] Who? [_Another blubber_] What? [_Another_] Who? [_Another_] LUCIA It must be Rufinius. HELIOGABALUS Ah, Rufinius! So it's Rufinius? And I told him I was--reading. [_He slides out of bed into the space between the two beds and grasps the heavy water-bottle by the neck_] LUCIA [_In alarm_] Don't hurt him! HELIOGABALUS Sh-h-h-h! [_The knock is repeated_] Sh-h-h-h! [_He takes a firm grip on the bottle_] Come in! [_As the door opens and_ RUFINIUS' _head appears_, HELIOGABALUS _lets fly with the bottle. It misses_ RUFINIUS _by a foot, but he ducks back and slams the door. A moment's silence_] HELIOGABALUS I bet it singed him, anyway. [_He climbs back into bed_] LUCIA You might have killed him. HELIOGABALUS _Might_ have killed him. I _ought_ to have killed him. I'll attend to it in the morning. LUCIA He thinks I made you throw that bottle at him. [_Pause_] He doesn't like me. HELIOGABALUS [_Wearily_] Nonsense. What makes you think so? LUCIA I just simply _know_ it. HELIOGABALUS [_Testily_] Hang this intuition! _How_ do you know it? What's the evidence? LUCIA [_Somewhat reluctantly_] Well, when I gave him a tract one day last week he wouldn't take it. HELIOGABALUS Why not? LUCIA He said he was a heathen, and proud of it. He said his father was a Gaulish prince and worshipped idols. I warned him of--hell-fire. HELIOGABALUS And what did he say to that? LUCIA He said--well, he said he had made up his mind to _go_ to hell. HELIOGABALUS [_Chuckling_] Good for old Rufinius! For that I'll have to let him off. Remind me _not_ to have him killed in the morning. LUCIA [_Querulously_] You seem to sympathize with him. HELIOGABALUS In a sense, yes. Things are not as they used to be--not as he likes them. Rufinius, you see, is getting old, and old fellows dislike changes. LUCIA Have I changed anything? HELIOGABALUS You surely have. The palace is not quite the--well, not quite what it used to be. LUCIA [_Defiantly_] The change is for the better, Cæsar! HELIOGABALUS Morally, yes. _Spiritually_, yes. But--er, _socially_, so to speak,--[_a pause_]--hardly. [_He climbs wearily into bed_] Almost I am persuaded-- LUCIA [_Sniffling_] You are longing for those awful women. You want them back. HELIOGABALUS [_Trying to convince himself of his own earnestness_] No, no. Really not, I assure you. I feel like--like a man who has come out of a lion's cage into a-- LUCIA Into a what? HELIOGABALUS [_At a loss_] Into a--er--into-- LUCIA [_Banally_] Into Paradise? HELIOGABALUS [_Quickly_] Well, surely not into Solomon's Paradise! [_Bitterly_] Har, har! LUCIA Still, you miss them. HELIOGABALUS Of course I do. Wouldn't a man miss--well, whatever he has become accustomed to? Wouldn't he miss his underdrawers? LUCIA There you go again! HELIOGABALUS What have I done _now_? Mentioned underdrawers! Well, if a man isn't to mention his underdrawers to his wife, who _is_ he to talk about them to? And if he doesn't talk about them in a bedroom, _where_ is he to talk about them? LUCIA [_Primly_] Why talk about them at all? HELIOGABALUS Why? Simply because they _have_ to be talked about. [_With growing irascibility_] Don't their buttons come off? Don't they get lost in the wash? Don't they shrink? Don't they split up the back? Don't they tickle? LUCIA Well, why didn't you let me know it? HELIOGABALUS Know what? LUCIA That their buttons were off, and-- HELIOGABALUS But they are _not_ off. I was merely arguing. I used an illustration. As we Christians say, I spoke in a parable. LUCIA I think you are exciting yourself for nothing. You are tired out. Why don't you go to sleep? HELIOGABALUS [_Wearily_] Yes, there seems to be nothing else to do. My trouble _used_ to be that I didn't get sleep _enough_. But now--! [_He composes himself heavily, and for a moment there is silence. He then tosses in bed and fusses with the bed-clothes, muttering under his breath and whining_] I've got a stomach-ache. LUCIA [_Raising herself and gazing at him_] Are you cold, Cæsar? HELIOGABALUS [_Bitterly_] Who'd care if I froze to death?... And why do you persist in always calling me _Cæsar_? It's so darned stiff and unbedroomy. My old wives used to call me pet names--like Helio and Gabby. LUCIA [_After a pause, archly_] Would you really like me to kiss you? HELIOGABALUS [_He sits up quickly, and stares at her_] Say that again. Louder. LUCIA Would you really like me to kiss you? HELIOGABALUS [_With a sigh_] You say it just as you might say, "Will you have another plate of fish-soup?" LUCIA But _would_ you? HELIOGABALUS [_Meditatively_] Well, I dare say it might make me forget my stomach-ache--if it was a real kiss. [_With elaborate manner_] Am I to understand that you have an itch in that direction? LUCIA [_Taken aback_] Itch? HELIOGABALUS Pardon an old soldier, little moonstone. I should say an inclination, an impulse--a prompting. LUCIA [_Getting out of bed_] Now I'll show you, Cæsar, that I do love you, with a Christian love. HELIOGABALUS [_Somewhat at a loss_] Positively, darling, you alarm me. [_She has got to_ HELIOGABALUS' _bed by now. She enters the space between the two beds, and he sits up and takes her by the waist_] LUCIA There! [_She kisses him--but very formally and briefly_] HELIOGABALUS Ah! LUCIA Now, Cæsar, you _know_ I love you. HELIOGABALUS No; so far I merely suspect it. What is needed is corroboration. Now for another, sweet icebox--and let it be a bit more easy and dreamy. Let yourself go a bit. Don't hold your breath. Don't--forgive me, little one--be so gol-darned Christian. [_A long one, during which, his arms about her_, LUCIA _tries to fight away from him. As they fall apart_ LUCIA _grasps the bed for support_] LUCIA [_Her hands to her face_] Oh! HELIOGABALUS You may well say "Oh!" Many a woman lives and _dies_ without ever getting _such_ a kiss. LUCIA [_Startled_] It took my breath. HELIOGABALUS [_Not without pride_] I dare say. [_Hospitably_] But aren't you chilly out there? Why not come in? LUCIA [_Suddenly covering her face with her hands_] Oh, those other women! Those awful women! HELIOGABALUS [_Patting her shoulder_] Forget them! I expunge them from the minutes! I'll get rid of them--all of them! [_At this_, PAULA, _who has been concealed under_ HELIOGABALUS' _bed, suddenly pops out her head_. HELIOGABALUS _and_ LUCIA, _of course, cannot see her. Her face mirrors the utmost indignation and she strains her head to hear better_] LUCIA All of them? Even that fat old Paula? HELIOGABALUS Purge your mind of all concern, darling. I'll have Paula poisoned in the morning. She has lived too long. LUCIA [_Horrified_] Oh, never! I won't have her poisoned. HELIOGABALUS Well, then, I'll marry her off to old Caius Macrinus--and ship them both to Persia. LUCIA But the others? HELIOGABALUS I'll marry off the whole crowd to Caius. The old souse deserves it. LUCIA [_Insinuatingly_] Even that pretty one--that Dacia? HELIOGABALUS Yes, either marry her off [_weakening_] or send her home to her mama. But enough of this. You'll catch your death of cold. LUCIA [_Without warmth, as if speaking to her father_] Is there room? HELIOGABALUS Oh, surely. [_He moves over and she climbs in_] Let me help you. [_He gives her a hand and she crawls under the covers. He then puts his arm around her, and they sit up together_] After all, confess that this _is_ better than the farm over there. Now isn't it? When I crawl in there I feel like a lost orphan. Do you remember how I mislaid you the other night? I thought you had fallen out of bed, but there you were all the while, eighteen feet away. And now-- [_Another kiss_] LUCIA Cæsar, you are so-- HELIOGABALUS [_Puffing out his chest_] I thought you'd like it. But it really takes me some time to get into form. Now tell me the truth: this is really nicer than praying, isn't it? LUCIA [_Tremulously_] I'm afraid it is--sometimes. HELIOGABALUS _Afraid_ it is? What are you afraid of? LUCIA [_Relapsing into the Christian_] We are taught that-- HELIOGABALUS Now there you go with that Christianity again! You are taught, are you? Well, I'll teach you something easier to learn. I am the old professor! Now to proceed with the lesson-- [_Another kiss. Toward its end there is a knock at the door._ HELIOGABALUS _draws back and glances over his shoulder, but quickly resumes the buss. Another knock_] HELIOGABALUS [_In a sudden rage_] Say, what do they think this is? A farce? If it's that old interrupting wheeze Rufinius again, off go both his legs! And both ears! And maybe a bud or two of nose! [LUCIA _in terror leaps from the bed and into her own bed. Another knock at the door_] LUCIA You had better let him in. If it wasn't important, he surely wouldn't risk his life. HELIOGABALUS [_Obviously impressed by the notion_] Maybe you are right. But let me take at least one more shot at him as he comes in. I won't kill him. All I want to do is to cripple him. [_Gets out of bed, but before he can find a missile, there is yet another knock, this time very urgent, and he gives it up_] Come in! [_The door opens ever so little._ RUFINIUS _thrusts his hand through the crack. When nothing strikes it, he follows with his head, very warily. As he comes in_ PAULA _draws in her head_] RUFINIUS Your Majesty's pardon! I ask pardon! HELIOGABALUS [_Severely_] Well, alarm clock? RUFINIUS A very important matter. [_He glances about him, his eyes alighting on_ LUCIA] For your Majesty's private ear. Perhaps it would be better-- HELIOGABALUS Let's hear it. RUFINIUS [_He comes closer_] I really think-- HELIOGABALUS [_Testily_] Go on with your story, kill-joy. [RUFINIUS _drops his voice so that his words are not audible. The purport of the dialogue must be revealed by_ HELIOGABALUS' _answers and exclamations. While it is elaborately going on, with the backs of both turned to the bed_, PAULA _pokes out her head and listens intently_. LUCIA, _sitting up in bed, also tries hard to hear, but it is improbable that she catches more than an occasional word_] HELIOGABALUS [_Aloud_] Make it short. I'm very busy. [RUFINIUS _whispers, and_ HELIOGABALUS _suddenly grows interested and somewhat alarmed_] What do they want?... I thought they were all sound asleep over in the North Wing.... She _isn't_? What! A riot--and Paula not in it? Then where _is_ she?... Go find her. I know she's behind it.... And get the rest to bed. Drunk or sober, get them to bed.... Tell them I absolutely order it. [_A noise outside, and a woman's scream_] LUCIA [_From the bed, in alarm_] What was that? HELIOGABALUS [_Over his shoulder, reassuringly_] Nothing, my dear. Stay in bed like a nice girl. LUCIA [_Half out_] You are having some one killed! HELIOGABALUS Bosh! Stay in bed! [_To_ RUFINIUS] Get them back in the North Wing, and post a guard at-- [_He is cut short by a terrific uproar outside. Women screaming. The sound of a bugle. The clank of swords. Loud and prolonged military orders. A man's voice_: "Let go!" _A woman's_: "Stick him in the eye!" [HELIOGABALUS _and_ RUFINIUS _turn toward the closed door and gape at it dumbfounded, apparently disinclined to open it and face the music. As they move toward it irresolutely_, PAULA _rolls from under the bed, leaps to her feet, dashes between them, blows a loud whistle, gets to the door, and throws it open_] PAULA Come in, girls! I am with you! [_At this_, LUCIA, _still in bed, screams shrilly, and_ HELIOGABALUS _and_ RUFINIUS _fall back. As the door swings open_ CÆLESTIS _bounds in with a Praetorian guard dragging behind her. At sight of the imperial bed-chamber, he is so far overcome that he lets go and rushes out again. In the doorway, he collides with_ AQUILIA SEVERA, ANNIA FAUSTINA _and_ ALINIA, _all in a great state of excitement. They knock him over, and leap into the room, glaring about them truculently_] PAULA [_Levelling a melodramatic forefinger at_ HELIOGABALUS] There he is! He was plotting to poison all of us! [_Obviously_, PAULA _strikes_ HELIOGABALUS _with a good deal of terror. He backs away from her, and keeps a safe distance while she declaims. She takes the centre of the stage at once, the other wives grouped behind her. After her accusation there is a moment of electric silence. She fixes_ HELIOGABALUS _with a glare_] HELIOGABALUS [_Weakly_] Oh, surely you exaggerate. I-- PAULA Me first, and then the rest of you. I heard it with my own ears. And I heard a lot besides. Such talk! I lay there under the bed blushing. LUCIA [_Sitting up in bed_] You _ought_ to blush, you--you--you-- [_She is overcome by indignation_] PAULA Out of my bed, you--you--you! LUCIA You--you--you--! PAULA No more of this Christian monkey-business! Into the street you go, where you came from! LUCIA Do you _dare_--! PAULA Yes, the street. I saw you myself. I saw you haranguing those loafers, and singing songs, and passing a soup-plate for coppers. LUCIA [_Leaping from bed_] I refuse to allow you to say that. I was preaching the Word. I was seeking souls. PAULA [_Moving toward her truculently_] Um-hum! I know what you were seeking. You had one eye on the Palace all the while. LUCIA [_In high indignation_] There is not a word of truth in it. It is infamous. PAULA Bah! THE OTHER WIVES Bah! Bah! LUCIA I was on my Master's business. PAULA And I am here on my _own_ business. I'll give you two minutes to get out of this room--and stay out. [HELIOGABALUS, _observing that both sides have forgotten him, gives a sardonic wink and tiptoes upstage toward his bed. He carefully and quietly crawls in, fixes the pillow behind him, and settles down to observe the row._ RUFINIUS _sneaks toward the door_] LUCIA Never in the world! This is _my_ room now. It has been sanctified! PAULA Sanctified nothing. It's _my_ room--_our_ room. You never were _legally_ married to the Emperor. You are nothing but a-- LUCIA Oh, what a lie! I was married by my own pastor. PAULA Yes, by one of your Christian street-preachers. I've seen him! He looks like a drum-major. But this is Rome, and-- LUCIA [_Explosively_] Well, when it comes to _that_, what of yourself? Where did _you_ come from? Doesn't everybody know that you were a chamber-maid in Alexandria? PAULA [_Sputtering_] I was nothing of the sort, you--! My father was a general in the army. ANNIA _My_ father was Governor of Macedonia. LUCIA [_Leaping at the chance_] Oh, _was_ he? And who was your first husband? [_The boaster is abashed_] LUCIA I'll tell you. His name was Pomponius Bassus--and he was _hanged_. [_The boaster begins to snivel, and_ PAULA _comes to the rescue_] PAULA [_Grandly_] And he deserved it. The way he treated that poor, dear-- LUCIA Yes, and he was hanged six weeks _after_ that hussy came here and tempted poor Cæsar. [HELIOGABALUS _turns over in the bed_] PAULA A thumping lie! I remember every detail of it. It wasn't six weeks at all.... And now you throw on your clothes and get out of here! Out with you! LUCIA I shall do absolutely nothing of the sort. PAULA This free love stuff has got to stop. And it's _my_ place to see that it-- LUCIA It's your place to turn all these heathen women out of the palace, and then turn yourself out, and so save the Emperor from such sinful-- PAULA You're a common man-teaser. LUCIA You are an old scare-crow! PAULA I'll have you thrown out of the door! LUCIA I'll have _you_ thrown out of the window! PAULA You are a loose woman! LUCIA You _used_ to be a loose woman! [_The shot injures poor old_ PAULA _so badly that she jumps at_ LUCIA _and grabs her by the arm, shaking her furiously_] PAULA I _dare_ you to say such a thing! LUCIA Let me go, you--you--infidel! I'll-- [_She wrests herself free and deals_ PAULA _a clout over the head_. PAULA _lunges at her with vast ferocity, but she quickly delivers another blow. A huge uproar._ HELIOGABALUS _stretches his neck to see it_. RUFINIUS _several times steps forward as if to interfere, but always thinks better of it_. PAULA _has the advantage of weight, but_ LUCIA _is by far the more agile. Various shrill exclamations_ "Oh, you will, will you? Take that! Ouch! Oh, my ear! Whoop!" etc. _To the extreme right, beyond the large bed, is the fleet of coat-racks, each enormously laden with feminine finery._ PAULA _backs_ LUCIA _into them, but straightway comes to grief herself, for_ LUCIA _upsets the nearest upon her, and, when she falls, heaves another after it_. PAULA, _completely buried in clothes, yells for help, and the three other wives, who have so far done no more than encourage her with shouts, now come to the attack_. LUCIA, _leaping behind another rack, pushes it at them, and it halts them. Then, seeing herself outdone by numbers, she calls for help herself_] LUCIA Oh, oh! Help! Help, Cæsar! Save me! HELIOGABALUS [_Crawling from the bed quietly and idiotically_] Did I hear you call? What's the trouble? Have you dropped something? LUCIA [_At the top of her lungs_] These filthy creatures are trying to kill me! PAULA [_Under the pile of clothes_] She _bit_ me! [_The other wives unearth_ PAULA _and stand her on her feet. It is seen that she has a black eye._ LUCIA _retreats to the door at the left and stands there at bay. The other wives haul_ PAULA _toward the centre of the stage_. HELIOGABALUS _crosses to a place between_ LUCIA _and the others_] LUCIA [_Hysterically_] That old washtub tried to stab me. PAULA [_Breaking from the others, her hand on her black eye_] It's a dirty lie! She kicked me in the-- LUCIA She called me awful names! CÆLESTIS I saw her draw a dagger! HELIOGABALUS Stop! Be quiet! What sort of bar-room row is this? Do you know where you are? PAULA I am in my own room. This room is mine. AQUILIA And ours. PAULA Yes, and theirs. LUCIA [_Furiously_] It's mine! HELIOGABALUS [_Decisively_] It's _mine_. [_Coolly, with judicial poise_] And it wouldn't be going too far, ladies, to say that I am scandalized by such proceedings. I really am. In all my experience, embracing many long years and the whole Roman empire, from Britain in the far North to Persia in the extreme-- PAULA [_Bursting into tears_] You bring in a woman off the streets-- LUCIA [_In tears, too_] You let an old unbelieving harridan, a disreputable old-- HELIOGABALUS As I was saying, ladies, in all my-- PAULA I demand that that creature be put out! LUCIA I demand my rights as your wife! HELIOGABALUS Really, my dear, you must excuse me. On this point the principles of jurisprudence are quite clear. A judge is plainly forbidden to sit in a case in which he has an interest. If he has an interest in _one_ side it is enough. If he has an interest in _both_ sides, then surely-- LUCIA Both sides? HELIOGABALUS Exactly. LUCIA Do you mean to say that you are interested in the side of this--this fat old--this--? HELIOGABALUS Rid your mind of prejudice, my dear. Observe the thing calmly and judicially. Granting all you say--though I am by no means granting it--the fact remains nevertheless that according to Roman--if not Christian--law, I am married to this lady--these ladies--and that that marriage--those marriages--is and are still legally binding. With the fact go certain obligations. I may deplore, as much as you do, their somewhat unwise and emotional appear-- LUCIA Oh, what a--! HELIOGABALUS All I ask is that you try to-- LUCIA Then you don't love me. ANNIA The idea! HELIOGABALUS I protest, my dear, that-- LUCIA [_Bursting into tears_] Then you don't love me! Then you told me a falsehood! You aren't a Christian! I--I--I-- [_Quite undone by her feelings, she suddenly hides her face in her hands, darts to the left-hand door, swings it open, runs out, and slams it after her_] HELIOGABALUS [_Starting toward the door after her_] My dear girl, I-- PAULA [_Resolutely_] Let her go! HELIOGABALUS But she'll catch cold out there. Remember, she has on a very light-- CÆLESTIS Very light nothing. It's flannel. Anyway, she deserves to catch cold. HELIOGABALUS Really, Cælestis, you are quite savage. PAULA Who wouldn't be, the way we have been treated? [_Conciliatingly_] But I say nothing against _you_. I know how you are when such a minx gets after you. HELIOGABALUS Let us not discuss it. PAULA [_Bitterly_] No; what's the use? I have had eighteen years of it--first in the East and now here in Rome. I know you can't help it, poor old dear. One glance at such a doll and you are gone. [_To the other wives_] And now let us try to forget it. It's getting late. [_Instantly they begin to take off their outer garments and let down their hair_] HELIOGABALUS [_In alarm_] What are you doing? PAULA [_Grimly_] Getting ready to go to bed. We are sleepy. HELIOGABALUS But, my dear--look, there is Rufinius still in the room! [_The wives glance at_ RUFINIUS, _scream and try to hide themselves_. RUFINIUS, _much embarrassed, ducks out of the door_] PAULA [_With a bitter grin_] Well, now he's gone. [_She continues disrobing_] HELIOGABALUS But, but--this is really quite irregular. Let us wait until we are all a bit less excited, as it were. Now be a good girl. [_Wheedlingly_] Go back to bed in the North Wing, and let me collect my thoughts a bit. PAULA Here I am, and here I stay. [_She throws her girdle over one of the coat-racks_] HELIOGABALUS But in a minute Lucia'll be coming back, and then-- [_He frantically begins dressing and racing against the undressers_] PAULA If she comes back, I'll bite her again. [_She kicks off her sandals_] AQUILIA [_Emerging in nothing save a short shift_] Do you think _we_ would sleep in a bed with such a creature? HELIOGABALUS [_Drawing his tunic over his head in wild alarm_] But the poor girl must sleep _somewhere_. PAULA Let her sleep out in the corridor. [_She drops her outer dress and stands forth in a grotesque chemise, decorated with little blue ribbons. The sight so far appals_ HELIOGABALUS _that disgust is converted into indignation and indignation into resolution_] HELIOGABALUS Very well, then. If _she_ must sleep out there, then _I_ sleep out there too! [_He is now pretty fully dressed and struggles into his sandals_] PAULA [_Somewhat shaken_] You're not going to leave us? HELIOGABALUS [_Adjusting his tunic_] I _am_ going to leave _us_! PAULA Leave us here all alone? HELIOGABALUS Aren't there four of you? PAULA But with not a man in the room? ANNIA [_Whimpering_] Suppose burglars should break in? HELIOGABALUS [_Sarcastically_] Paula can deal with them. PAULA [_In tears_] No, I can't! HELIOGABALUS Then let Rufinius come in. He can have my bed. PAULA [_With a yell_] The idea! Do you accuse me of-- HELIOGABALUS [_At the door to the extreme left_] I accuse you of nothing. [_Opening the door_] And now-- [_As he throws the door open_, LUCIA _is revealed. She has been eavesdropping and is much distraught_] LUCIA [_In a faint voice_] I am cold. HELIOGABALUS [_Uncertainly_] I was just coming out to-- LUCIA [_Catching sight of the wives_--PAULA _in the middle of the floor in her chemise and the other three in bed--she gives a scream and totters toward the centre of the stage. There she does a grand faint at_ PAULA'S _feet_] PAULA [_Leaping back_] Oh, my God! HELIOGABALUS [_Solemnly_] You have killed her. She has frozen to death. PAULA [_Alarmed_] I did nothing of the sort. She went out of her own free will. AQUILIA [_Jumping from bed_] Get her into bed, quick! HELIOGABALUS [_Reaching down and grabbing her under the arms_] Get her into _my_ bed. [_The other wives pile out, and help_ PAULA _and_ HELIOGABALUS _to carry her to his bed_] PAULA [_Snivelling_] I wouldn't have hurt her for the world. HELIOGABALUS Tell Rufinius to get those two doctors I pardoned. [PAULA, _still in her chemise, rushes to the door, flings it open and exits_] CÆLESTIS Rub her wrists. ANNIA Have you a key? Try a key at the back of her neck. HELIOGABALUS Cover her up! AQUILIA Try massaging her ears. HELIOGABALUS Go get some water. [AQUILIA _rushes to the door, flinging it open just in time to admit_ PISO _and_ POLORUS. _They come in at a gallop, followed by_ RUFINIUS, PAULA _and a slave pushing a wheeled table covered with huge bottles, rolls of plasters, etc. The scene must move at lightning speed_] PISO [_Idiotically, in great excitement_] Which is the patient? [_He looks from one wife to another, and then observes_ LUCIA _on the bed_] Ah! POLORUS [_Crowding to the front_] Pass me the brandy. PISO Brandy? On what theory? POLORUS This is no time for theories, idiot! The patient needs help. PISO Well, how are you going to help her until you establish the diagnosis? POLORUS What could be plainer? A horse-doctor could see that she has fainted. [_He proceeds to pour out a large drink of the brandy_] PISO [_Very learnedly_] Suppose it is _coma_? Suppose she has been _poisoned_? [PAULA _gives a shriek_] POLORUS Nonsense! Then where is your cyanosis? [_He proceeds to lift_ LUCIA'S _head and pour some of the brandy into her mouth_] PISO Stop! I forbid it! [_During this rapid dialogue the three other wives flutter about, and_ HELIOGABALUS _and_ PAULA _crowd close to the bed_] POLORUS [_Continuing with the brandy_] I stand on my Hippocratic oath. I insist on the brandy. PISO I appeal to your decency. Don't kill the patient. [PAULA _screams again_] Let me feel her pulse. POLORUS Stand back! You are suffocating her! HELIOGABALUS [_Losing patience_] Here, fools! Give me the goblet. [_He seizes it and pours half of its contents down_ LUCIA'S _throat. She gasps, coughs, gags and then gradually sits up. As she opens her eyes she sights_ PAULA] LUCIA [_An exclamation of terror_] Oh! Oh! Take her away! [PAULA _hops back in great confusion_] PAULA [_Ingratiatingly_] Don't be afraid, dearie. LUCIA [_Screams_] She tried to stab me! PAULA [_In great excitement_] The idea! I never did anything-- LUCIA I can see the devil standing behind her! [PAULA _swings about quickly to look behind her, loses her balance, throws up her arms, and falls down with a crash_] PAULA Help! POLORUS [_Rushing to the rescue_] Brandy! Brandy! [_A great hub-bub. The wives crowd around_] PISO [_Shrilly, over the tumult_] I forbid it! HELIOGABALUS Give her air! [POLORUS _applies the brandy jug to_ PAULA'S _lips and she begins to gurgle, gag and blubber_] PAULA [_Still gasping, and rising to a sitting position on the floor_] That Christian tried to put a spell on me. She has the evil eye. LUCIA [_Shrilly, from the bed_] There _are_ devils in her! She is like the Gadarene swine. PAULA [_Struggling to her feet, assisted by the doctors, the other wives and_ HELIOGABALUS] Liar! LUCIA She is possessed by demons, Cæsar. PAULA [_Again in great fright_] Let me out of here! I feel something coming over me! AQUILIA I feel it, too. I--I-- [_She flops across the big bed._ POLORUS _leaps to the rescue with the brandy-jug, but as he reaches her she sits up and knocks it out of his hand_] PISO [_Prancing about_] Where is the ammonia? Who has the ammonia bottle? [_He searches for it on the wheeled table, but can't find it_] PAULA Let me out! Let me out! POLORUS Ammonia your grandmother! Where are the sedatives? Who took the poppy-water? Where is the poppy-water? [_He makes a wild search for it_] HELIOGABALUS [_Quietly_] I think you're right. They need something to calm their nerves. [_He finds and seizes the bottle_] Ah, here it is! Ammonia would half kill them. PISO I protest! PAULA I want to get out of here. [RUFINIUS _tries to calm her_] HELIOGABALUS One second, darling. [_As_ POLORUS _offers her a goblet of the poppy-water_] Now be a nice little girl, and swallow this medicine. It will make you dream beautifully. PAULA [_Dubiously_] What is it, doctor? HELIOGABALUS Never ask a doctor what anything is. Remember your manners. He mightn't know. It will make you dream that you are seventeen, and in love with a gladiator. PAULA You're sure it won't hurt me? POLORUS Oh, absolutely no. PISO I-- HELIOGABALUS [_To_ PISO] Silence! [_To_ PAULA] Now down with it. [_She drinks it, and at once grows somewhat calmer. Gradually she succumbs, and by the time she goes out she is very sleepy_] PAULA [_Smacking her lips_] It tastes like--it tastes like-- POLORUS Exactly. And now for the other ladies. Who's next? HELIOGABALUS [_Sharply_] Cælestis! [_The wife on the bed struggles up and comes forward_] POLORUS [_The goblet in hand_] Ready? HELIOGABALUS Shut your eyes! [CÆLESTIS _swallows the dose without a word_] POLORUS [_Refilling the goblet_] Next! HELIOGABALUS Come, Aquilia. AQUILIA [_Doubtfully_] It won't make me fat? POLORUS Oh, surely not. AQUILIA You're positive? HELIOGABALUS Positive. Down with it. [_She swallows the dose_] And now little Annia. One, two, three! [POLORUS _fills the goblet again and it goes down immediately_] POLORUS Ah! So much for that! HELIOGABALUS [_Herding the wives toward the door_] And now you girls try to get some rest, and leave the doctors with poor Lucia. I'm afraid it may be a case for immediate operation. They'll have to examine her from head to foot. LUCIA [_From the bed_] I won't have any operation! I won't be examined from head to foot! The power of the spirit is enough. PISO Oh, hardly. LUCIA [_Petulantly_] I refuse to be cut up! HELIOGABALUS Now, now, be calm. Look at the other girls. [_To_ PAULA] And now try to get some rest. I'll come out to see you immediately after the operation. [_Moving her toward the door, the others following_] Take things easily for-- PAULA I feel so-- HELIOGABALUS Yes, yes, but you'll feel better presently. HELIOGABALUS [_To_ POLORUS _in a hoarse whisper_] Give them all another dose--a double dose. Especially Paula. She has the stomach of a policeman. [_The wives wobble out, followed by_ POLORUS, _the slave with the table of medicines, and_ RUFINIUS. _Only_ PISO _remains_] PISO [_Ingratiatingly_] Your Majesty's excellent suggestion of an operation is-- HELIOGABALUS [_Turning with great deliberation, and kicking_ PISO _in the rear_] Out! [PISO, _after an instant of amazement, leaps for the door and disappears_] LUCIA That Paula is an old hyena, Cæsar. She tried to bite me. HELIOGABALUS [_He seats himself on the edge of the big bed, his legs swinging in the open space between the two beds. His manner is that of weariness and resignation_] Yes, she's somewhat--explosive. I am afraid she's sometimes unwise in the use of--er, stimulants? LUCIA Afraid? She's been drunk for months--ever since-- HELIOGABALUS Yes, she's taken it very hard. LUCIA [_Somewhat oratorically_] Wine is a mocker. Strong drink is raging. HELIOGABALUS A mocker, yes--but also a consoler. Don't forget that poor old Paula must have time to get used to things. I daresay the new regulations rather oppress her. LUCIA You mean she longs for all those old dissipations--those banquets every night, and all that worldly carnality--and this room full of those awful women? HELIOGABALUS Exactly, though I doubt that she'd describe it in just that way. You see, she was brought up in Alexandria--a rather lively burg. It's all a matter of training. Here she had certain responsibilities, certain interesting duties-- LUCIA Yes, I know what those duties were. They were sinful in the sight of God. HELIOGABALUS Perhaps. Nevertheless, they occupied her mind. Let us be just to her. She was competent. She knew her business. I never had any trouble with those girls while _she_ was in charge of them. LUCIA Those scarlet women! HELIOGABALUS Now you are exaggerating. They are all quite respectable. My marriage to every one of them is, as I've told you, sound in Roman law. LUCIA But not in the eye of God. The Scripture says "A bishop shall have but one wife." HELIOGABALUS But I'm not a bishop. LUCIA Well, surely no one ought to be allowed more wives than a bishop. HELIOGABALUS Granted. But here they are. LUCIA Turn them away. Read the Word. HELIOGABALUS [_A bit irritated_] Yes, yes; I have read it. The theory is very lovely. It has affected me greatly; I have adopted it as you know. But here I have these girls legally on my hands, and surely you wouldn't ask me to-- LUCIA You should be glad to get rid of them. Such a pack of--of-- HELIOGABALUS Now, now, I must really forbid you. Paula, of course, is open to a certain criticism, at least æsthetically. And Cælestis is probably no stunner. But among the others there are certainly a number who-- LUCIA [_Tearfully_] You don't love me in the proper Christian way! HELIOGABALUS What nonsense! I love you to an extreme degree. [_He takes up and kisses her hand_] My affection for you is really colossal. But let us be just. Surely it's absurd to say that _all_ of them are--well, offensive. There are surely exceptions. LUCIA [_Resolutely_] Not one. HELIOGABALUS Oh, come now. For example, there is Dacia. I haven't seen her for these long months, but I remember her quite clearly. Surely Dacia has a certain charm. She is young, she has a good complexion, she sings very acceptably, and she-- LUCIA I see what is the matter. You are homesick for her and her kind. For her and the old infidel life. HELIOGABALUS Not at all. I merely remember her. That's all. I merely remember. A toothsome girl. But a lady. Her father was a philosopher in Athens ... she wasn't in that crowd. She is naturally affectionate. LUCIA And kissing all the time, I suppose. Never a moment for the things of the spirit. Always the flesh. HELIOGABALUS Oh, by no means. I really wouldn't have permitted it. I quite agree with you there. Such things may be overdone. At my age. LUCIA But you like it, don't you? HELIOGABALUS [_Looking at her sharply_] Yes--on occasion. But there is where I agree with you: that is the precise reason why the thing should be limited. [_A bit wistfully_] If one kissed too much, one would be too happy. And that, of course, wouldn't do at all. LUCIA The happiness of this life is as dust. HELIOGABALUS [_Grudgingly_] So you tell me. LUCIA The happiness to come is eternal. HELIOGABALUS Well, I hope so. But, you see, my trouble is old Paula's. I was brought up wrong. I suppose it is incurable. I notice, at times, an almost irresistible lasciviousness--what you call worldliness. [_Amorously_] When I see you there in your nightie I forget all about Christianity and can hardly resist the temptation to throw my arms around you and give you a hug. I know it's wrong, but there it is. LUCIA [_Somewhat shaken_] Well, I shouldn't call it lasciviousness. And it isn't exactly wrong. HELIOGABALUS [_Ironically_] No? LUCIA The Scriptures say-- HELIOGABALUS Ah? Then let us be glad they approve it, little pot-pie. It is pleasant to be virtuous--that is, more or less. LUCIA [_Demurely after a pause_] Do you want to kiss me? HELIOGABALUS [_He begins slowly to take off his tunic. As he answers, it is over his head_] I am perfectly willing. But, I warn you, I'm not going to stand any more Christian kisses. And what's more, if I'm interrupted any more by any low-comedy Palais Royal knocking on that dog-gone door just as I am on the point of-- [_He is duly cut short by a loud knocking on the door. He tries to get out of his tunic quickly, and then, thinking better of it, decides to let it down again_] HELIOGABALUS [_Wrathfully_] What is it now? [_An unintelligible answer from without_] Hey? [_Another mumble_] I can't hear you. Come in. [_Enter_ RUFINIUS. _He stops near the door and glances at_ LUCIA _dubiously_] RUFINIUS I came in, Majesty, to report-- [_He stops_] HELIOGABALUS [_Coming down toward_ RUFINIUS] What! I'm good and damn sick of this "I came in to report, Majesty," just as I'm about to--What's up? More trouble? RUFINIUS No, Majesty. The ladies are all asleep. HELIOGABALUS Hear, hear! And he "comes in to report, Majesty" just as Majesty is about to-- RUFINIUS The Empress Paula is breathing very heavily, Majesty. The doctors are trying to revive her. HELIOGABALUS [_In a sudden rage_] What! Revive her! Seven thousand loud damns. Tell them to give her another dose of the same--give them another dose all 'round. Tell those quacks that--the infernal boobies! Off go their toes if a single patient wakes--and both ears. Now quick, before they revive her! [_Pushes_ RUFINIUS _toward the door_] RUFINIUS As you order, Majesty. But there is another matter. HELIOGABALUS What is it, foul fool? RUFINIUS Another one of the ladies has come over from the North Wing--Dacia. HELIOGABALUS [_Softening_] Ah, Dacia! What does she want? Surely _she_-- RUFINIUS Oh, not at all. She asked me to inquire how her Majesty is, and if you yourself are feeling quite well. HELIOGABALUS Ah, very thoughtful of her. Tell her I am quite well. And don't forget to thank her. Remember, Rufinius, give her my thanks. RUFINIUS [_Going to the door_] As you order, Emperor. HELIOGABALUS Tell her not to neglect her music lessons. And--but just say I may want to see her for an instant tomorrow--some business--of state--that I had forgotten. RUFINIUS As ordered, Majesty. [_He goes out_] LUCIA You are still thinking of that heathen Dacia. HELIOGABALUS Nonsense, sweet potato. You are really quite absurd. [_Suddenly irritated_] Damn it all, a man must be polite. LUCIA [_Jealously_] But you used to love her before I converted you to the Faith. HELIOGABALUS [_Starting to take off his tunic again_] Ah, who knows? Love--what is it? A sort of optical delusion, an enchantment--almost alcoholic. [_He gets it over his head, and stands rubbing his bare arms and shoulders_] LUCIA Love comes from the soul. HELIOGABALUS Yes, even the soul takes a hack at it. [_He starts to climb into the small bed_] LUCIA [_Loudly_] Where _are_ you going? HELIOGABALUS [_His leg in mid-air, coaxing in baby-like tone_] Please! I don't want to sleep over there--[_indicating the big bed_]--in Siberia. It's so cold--and when I get cold it always gives me my stomach-ache. LUCIA No! One must not think of the flesh, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS But you're my wife, aren't you? You wouldn't have me freeze to death? LUCIA But not a pagan wife. I am a Christian wife. HELIOGABALUS Well, doesn't a Christian wife promise to cherish her husband? [_Still coaxing, and shivering_] Please! LUCIA No. HELIOGABALUS Please, please! LUCIA Again, no, Cæsar. HELIOGABALUS [_With a weary sigh, crawling into the big bed_] Lucia, I can't understand you or this Christianity either. What's the idea of trying to make people miserable by forbidding them to do what they want to, and then, when they're unhappy about it, telling them they're awfully happy but don't know it? [LUCIA _rolls over and does not reply_. HELIOGABALUS _sighs_] HELIOGABALUS Anyway, I don't seem to get used to this going to bed sober. [_He props himself up in bed, and rambles on without paying much heed to_ LUCIA] Now, you were saying that love is of the soul. But see what a conclusion it brings you to: then even old Paula must have a soul, for old Paula used to love me. LUCIA [_Sleepily_] Paula, too, has an immortal soul. HELIOGABALUS The gods forbid! [_Humorously_] But what of, er--what of, say Dacia, for example? LUCIA [_Yawning_] This Dacia, too, has a soul. HELIOGABALUS Nobly spoken. And much better news! [_Half dreamily_] But what is this so-called soul you speak of? Is it a gas? Has it got length, breadth, thickness? Is the soul in the body, or the body in the soul? When I used to cut a Christian into two halves, which half was the soul in? Was _it_ divided too? Well, then, suppose I had him run through a sausage cutter, and he came out, say, in four million pieces: was the soul in four million pieces, too? You say that the soul re-enters the body on the day of judgment. Well, suppose I take two Jews and cut off their heads, and put the head of A on the body of B, and vice versa. Does the soul of A go into the body of A or into the head of A, which is on the body of B? If it goes into the head, is it responsible for the sins of the body of B? [_He reaches over and, slyly watching_ LUCIA _out of the corner of his eye, pours out a goblet of the brandy which the doctors have left there, slowly sipping it with much lip-smacking as he goes on_] Do you follow me? LUCIA [_Half asleep_] Oh, how you talk, Cæsar! HELIOGABALUS Talk? Talking is my trade, little icicle. Talk is the heart's blood of politics.... And of love. I used to have even greater skill than I have today. He had a smooth and slippery tongue, had Heliogabalus. Years ago, when I was a lieutenant in the army, I used to--[_sighs_] Well, they were all willing: my conscience is perfectly clear. As the lawyers say, _Caveat emptor_. When a girl has a taste for epigrams she must be careful: a man of my wit is dangerous. I'll never forget my poor dear first wife--good old Marcia. It was an epigram that made her fall in love with me. I remember the circumstances perfectly. She was complaining that love was beyond her comprehension--that it was ineffable, indescribable, transcendental. "Love," _I_ replied, with droll perspicacity, "Love," I replied, "is the triumph of imagination over intelligence." [_He chuckles_] LUCIA [_Yawns audibly, and turns over_] HELIOGABALUS You interrupt me, cold darling. What I was about to say is that poor old Marcia laughed so hard she rolled clear out of bed. An old joke--as old as the Babylonians. But fact! You should have heard the bump when she landed on her--[_a sidelong glance_]--her upholstery. I had to haul her back into bed. [_He sips again_] Ah, love, indeed! A short preface to a long book! [_He pauses and waits for appreciation. No sound comes from_ LUCIA. _He goes on in a slightly louder voice_] Love is like war: easy to begin but very hard to stop. [_Another inquiring glance at_ LUCIA] When loves dies there is never any funeral: the corpse remains in the house. [_Another_] A woman in love is less modest than a man: she has less to be ashamed of. [_A longish pause. He takes a deep draught_] Love is the delusion that one woman differs from another. [LUCIA _is still silent. He lifts himself to his elbow and regards her contemplatively. He calls her softly_] Lucia! Sweet Lucia!... Asleep! [_A sigh_] Christianity is fatal to the--er--epigram. How Marcia used to giggle! And little Dacia! Dacia has a sense of humour. An intelligent girl, Dacia. And how her nose puckers when she is a bit--squiffed. Somehow, I--[_He empties the goblet and composes himself. The regular breathing of_ LUCIA _can be heard_] This Christianity may be all right in the daytime, but at night--[_Suddenly, from somewhere below the window there comes the soft, low sound of a girl's voice, raised in song. It is a song of love and passion, and_ HELIOGABALUS _sits up in bed to listen. Toward the end he glances at_ LUCIA, _scarcely concealing a rising aversion. The song ended, he settles himself, wets his lips, and smiles amorously_] HELIOGABALUS [_In a caressing whisper_] Dacia! CURTAIN ACT III ACT III _The next night._ _A corridor in the palace. It stretches longitudinally across the stage and is rather narrow. In the wall to the back there is a wide and high arch, covered with heavy hangings of imperial purple, showing two large embroidered H's, with wreaths above them, in gold. The solid wall of the corridor, seen to the two sides of the central hangings, is of coloured marble. The hangings conceal the state banquet hall, and the corridor is the emperor's means of getting to the latter from his private apartments. All decorations are simple, but of the utmost richness._ _During the whole act, down to the last scene, sounds of revelry come from the banquet hall--laughter, music and the clinking of goblets--now faintly and now loudly._ _As the curtain rises_ PISO _and_ POLORUS _enter, followed by a slave pushing their rolling table of medicines and instruments. They are in long white tunics, reaching below the knees, and with short sleeves--the early Roman equivalent of modern operating gowns._ PISO [_To the slave_] Here, Ambrose, shove it to this side. [_The slave runs the table to the left, halts it by the back wall, and exits_] POLORUS [_Officiously_] Where is the headache powder? PISO [_Reaching to the shelf beneath the table, he brings up a huge blue bottle_] Here you are. Do you think we have enough? POLORUS It's enough to kill them, but I doubt that it's enough to cure them, once they get started. PISO Well, if we run out of it, we can give them some cholera mixture. They'll never know the difference. POLORUS [_Busily arranging the bottles_] All this does me good, my boy. It makes me young again. PISO Do you think the moral movement is really over? POLORUS If it isn't, then why this good old-fashioned banquet? Why all the old crowd? Why all the old girls? I suspect that Paula arranged the whole thing. Have you seen the list of guests? PISO No. POLORUS Well, not a tank is missing. Every zinc-lined stomach and copper-plated kidney in Rome is here. By the way, have we got enough stomach-pumps? PISO [_Indicating them_] Here are six. POLORUS Maybe that will be enough. [_He roots among the medicines_] I have a feeling that this will finish the Christian wife. She'll never stand for an old-time banquet. PISO Then let us thank all the gods. If Christianity ever actually got on its legs, the doctoring business would go to pot. All this praying and fasting and going to bed at ten o'clock is fatal to pathology. The aim of medicine is to save a man from the just consequences of his own vices. If he gives up his vices, then-- POLORUS But he never does. All he ever comes to is the exchange of one vice for another. This praying that you mention is a vice. Fasting is a vice. Going to bed at ten o'clock is a vice. PISO Maybe so. But I am speaking medically. The medicine that _we_ studied was designed for certain ends. It supposes the existence of certain vices. You and I know, for example, how to treat a man who has eaten too much or who hasn't had sleep _enough_. But what of the man who has fasted, and at the same time got too _much_ sleep? There you stand medicine on its head. And I am too old to learn it all over again. POLORUS [_Argumentatively_] You make imaginary difficulties, Dr. Piso. Simply give him a dose of salts, say I, and trust to luck. You talk as if a physician had to _cure_ his patient. Nonsense. All he has to do is to _try_ to cure him. PISO [_Bridling_] Is _that_ so? Then how do you-- [_He is cut short by the entrance of_ CAIUS MACRINUS _from the left_. CAIUS _lumbers toward_ PISO _and is seen to be already far gone in liquor_] CAIUS Say, Doctor-- PISO Why, Commander! What brings you here? CAIUS Ain't this the night of the banquet? I thought this was the night of the banquet. If this ain't the night of the banquet, then I-- PISO Of course it is. But how did you get _here_? CAIUS Ain't this the palace? I thought this was the palace. I saw a lot of girls going in the basement and so I thought it was the palace. PISO So it is. But this is the Emperor's private corridor. You ought to have gone the other way, through the atrium. CAIUS Excuse me, gentleman. I apologize. [_He attempts a right-about-face_] Which way did you say? I thought I was in the palace. I saw a lot of cuties going into the basement and so I thought it was the palace. [_Suddenly pulling himself up_] But say, Doctor, I knew I wanted to see you about something. You are Dr. Piso, ain't you? PISO I am _the_ Dr. Piso. CAIUS I remember you that time I had that carbuncle. Where was it? Somewhere in Gaul. My, my! How the years do skip along! Here it's July again--[_He pauses uncertainly_] Is it? Is it July again? PISO [_Professionally_] You say you desire to consult me, Commander? CAIUS Doctor, you know what it is--this sea-faring life. I thought my legs would give out first. But it turns out to be my stomach. PISO You have indigestion? CAIUS No, sir! I can digest anything. I could eat an alligator. Tail and all. PISO But-- CAIUS [_Looking about him cautiously_] Shhhh! I'm coming to it! I can _eat_ anything, but--but-- [_His voice quavers_] PISO But you're not what you used to be at-- CAIUS [_He nods mournfully_] Half a dozen bottles of wine, and I'm not worth a damn. The fact is, I am almost a teetotaler--practically. I hardly drink a thing--scarcely. [_He sighs boozily_] Think of what's ahead of me tonight. They're all here--the military, the judiciary, the Senate. If I drink with all those gold-fish, then I'll be laid up tomorrow, and maybe die. And if I don't drink, then I disgrace the navy. PISO Too bad. But maybe I can help you. CAIUS That's what I was getting at, Doctor. I remember, out in Asia Minor, how those slick Persians would take a hooch of something or other, and then they were ready for anything. The point is, what _was_ it? PISO Olive oil. POLORUS Ammonia. PISO Ammonia your uncle! POLORUS [_Bitingly_] Yes, ammonia one's uncle! An ounce in a glass of milk, before _or_ after. CAIUS Could I take them both? PISO Yes, if you are crazy. POLORUS Why not? The ammonia will fix him, and the olive oil won't kill him. [_Busying himself at the table_] Let us mix them. [_He pours the olive oil and ammonia into a beaker, and starts to stir the mixture_] CAIUS [_Getting affectionate and placing his arm around_ POLORUS' _neck_] Oh, Doctor! Give me a big one! Don't tease me with a pony! POLORUS This is the regular size for elephants and gladiators. Now--there you are--down with it! [_He hands_ CAIUS _the beaker_. CAIUS _downs it at a fearful gulp, and comes up spluttering and rolling his eyes_] CAIUS [_Faintly_] Is there a chaser? PISO No. Let it alone. The fire will go out of itself. [CAIUS _attempts to speak, but achieves only an unintelligible whisper_] POLORUS [_Elbowing him toward the left_] Go out in the atrium, Commander, and stick your head in the pool. [CAIUS _again attempts to speak, but cannot, and waddles off_] PISO [_Calling after him_] Don't forget the professor! POLORUS [_Coming back_] That old soak is on his last legs. Practically a teetotaler! I wonder what he-- PISO [_At the table_] Where did you get that olive oil? POLORUS Out of the tall yellow bottle. PISO Well, you wasted four ounces of good turpentine liniment. POLORUS [_Examining the bottles_] Um, it's six of one and half a dozen of the other. But I _didn't_ waste any ammonia. I gave him ninety per cent. alcohol. PISO What are the odds? I once cured a case of chilblains with a couple of liver pills. POLORUS You ought to try some of those pills on the Emperor. PISO _Ought_ to try them? I have given him a keg of them. POLORUS Then it's no wonder _I_ can't cure him. PISO [_Irascibly_] _You?_ Do you ever _cure_ patients? Oh, my word! It's those infernal powders of yours that counteract the pills. No wonder he gets worse. I can never give him enough of _my_ pills to catch up with _your_ powders. If you-- [_He is interrupted by the sudden appearance of_ SIMON, _the Christian giant, from the right_. SIMON'S _eyes are staring, and he is evidently labouring under much excitement_] SIMON [_In a sepulchral voice_] God be with you! PISO [_Startled_] The same to you, Reverend. But what are _you_ doing here? SIMON [_Mysteriously_] I have business here. POLORUS Business here? Don't you know what's going on? SIMON I see preparations for debauchery--sin--venery--the devil's work. PISO Not so loud, old schooner. The _Emperor_ is giving this banquet. Remember the Espionage Act. SIMON My business is _with_ the Emperor. POLORUS [_Amazed and amused_] Surely you are not going to the banquet yourself? [PISO _haw-haws_] SIMON [_Solemnly_] I have come to--to--to--[_He hesitates_] I have come to-- PISO You have come to look them over? POLORUS You want to see whether the girls really _do_ take off their-- SIMON [_Cutting in_] Girls? Bah! I abhor the scarlet woman. My prayers are for one pure woman, for-- PISO The wife Lucia! POLORUS [_Nodding his head_] He's mashed on her. SIMON [_Indignantly_] I am old enough to be her father. PISO Yes, so is the Emperor. SIMON Let him have a care! Let him remember the wrath to come. POLORUS What! At a banquet? SIMON Even at a banquet. Even amid the flesh-pots. Even among the scarlet women. Let him remember his lawful wife. I hear talk that is terrible. PISO What do you hear? SIMON That he plans to cast her off. More, that he plans to--murder her. POLORUS [_Glancing about him_] Oh, I say! SIMON Even as he has murdered other poor women--trusting hearts--discarded wives. [_Suddenly infuriated_] But not the wife Lucia! The moment his slaves touch the anointed of the Lord--[_He draws a dagger_]--that moment I plunge this knife into his heathen heart! PISO [_Nervously_] My dear sir, calm yourself. This is awful talk. I positively refuse to listen to any such anarchism. SIMON I shall wait here. I am ready. I shall serve the Lord. POLORUS Suppose you let me have that knife. I am more used to such things. You are a clergyman. It may cut you. [_As he steps forward, there are noises outside, to the left. The band behind the curtain strikes up more loudly, and presently voices call_ "The Emperor! The Emperor!"] SIMON [_Flourishing the dagger_] Nay! I shall wait here! I am ready. [_More cries. The music grows louder._ PISO _and_ POLORUS _grow increasingly alarmed. Cries of_ "The Emperor! The Emperor!"] PISO [_In a panic_] What are we to do? POLORUS If we had time we could anæsthetize him. PISO Yes, if we had time we could hypnotize him. _But now?_ SIMON Pray to the Lord! POLORUS Yes, yes, but not now. Not here. I never miss the Day of Atonement. I promised my old mother. [_In full demoralization, to_ PISO] _You_ tackle him. PISO [_Panic-stricken, to_ SIMON] Why not go out and take a little walk and come back later? SIMON I stay here. I am set here to watch. An angel charged me to-- [_Shouts of_ "The Emperor!" _very near. The music grows louder still. Cheers behind the hangings_] POLORUS [_Pushing him back frantically_] But you're blocking up the passage-way. It is forbidden. Surely you don't want to _offend_ the Emperor. SIMON [_Idiotically_] Not unnecessarily. PISO Well, then-- POLORUS [_Inspired_] Ah, here! [_He shoves_ SIMON _behind the hangings at the extreme right, where they overlap the back wall_] PISO [_Greatly relieved_] Whew! POLORUS [_Coming back_] Just in time! [_Suddenly alarmed again_] But suppose he jumps out and-- [_He drops his voice_] PISO [_Resolutely_] Who? POLORUS [_In surprise_] Who? This blamed-- PISO _I_ didn't see anybody. Did _you_? POLORUS [_With a relieved wink_] No. I saw no one. PISO He must have sneaked in during the day. POLORUS Maybe the wife Lucia let him in. [_Cries of_ "The Emperor!" _just outside. With it an unexpected babble of women's voices._ PISO _and_ POLORUS, _at this new sound, look at each other in sudden astonishment as_ RUFINIUS _enters_] RUFINIUS His Imperial Majesty! [RUFINIUS _is followed by two centurions_. PISO _drops to one knee and_ POLORUS _follows suit_. HELIOGABALUS _stalks in with_ PAULA _hanging to one arm and_ CÆLESTIS _to the other. Behind the three, crowded closely, are_ ANNIA FAUSTINA, AQUILIA SEVERA, _and three or four other wives. Last of all comes_ DACIA. HELIOGABALUS _wears a magnificent toga of imperial purple, with gold borders very heavily embroidered, and a wreath of laurel. He moves to the centre of the stage without a word, and as if scarcely conscious of_ PAULA _and_ CÆLESTIS. _A murmur of confused speech among the other wives. Obviously, there has been an encounter outside._ PISO _and_ POLORUS _get to their feet, and move off discreetly toward the right, pushing their wheeled table ahead of them. Presently they go out._ RUFINIUS _takes station at the side of the archway leading into the banquet hall, directly before the place where_ SIMON _is concealed. The centurions go to the extreme right, and stand impassive. Throughout this scene, sounds of revelry come from the banquet hall_] HELIOGABALUS [_Suddenly shaking off_ PAULA _and_ CÆLESTIS, _and swinging 'round to face the other wives, his arms folded_] The answer is Yes and No! PAULA [_Melodramatically_] What! HELIOGABALUS Yes to question number one; no to question number two. THE OTHER WIVES [_Together_] Which is which?... Do we come back?... What can he mean?... Which question is number one?... He's going to put her out! PAULA [_Authoritatively_] Silence! Let me do the talking. [_To_ HELIOGABALUS, _bravely but a bit uneasily_] What do you mean ... darling? HELIOGABALUS Simply this, molasses jar. You all come back--but not together. THE OTHER WIVES [_In a babble, as before. They don't quite know whether to hail the news, or to protest_] Oh, we come back!... But what does _that_ mean?... I don't understand it at all.... Do you mean--? PAULA [_Sharply_] Silence! [_The babble is cut short instantly. A momentary silence._ HELIOGABALUS _stands with his arms folded. The wives look uneasy and a bit foolish_] PAULA [_To_ HELIOGABALUS, _quaveringly_] You are not going to--? HELIOGABALUS Carpenters are at work building a plain double-bed. I have ordered that farm taken out and burned. The double-bed will suffice until-- PAULA But I thought we were to come back. HELIOGABALUS You do--but you come back one by one. CÆLESTIS But where will the rest of us sleep? HELIOGABALUS Where you _have_ been sleeping--during the late revolution. Sleep wherever you please. If the palace isn't big enough, I'll have barracks built. PAULA [_Maudlinly_] Oh, my poor head! I can't understand a thing he says! HELIOGABALUS Let me explain. The old system had its advantages. I was used to it and strongly approved it. But the older I get, the more I learn. At ninety or a hundred I should be genuinely wise. _One_ thing I have learned is that the Christian system, too, has-- PAULA [_Hysterically_] He's deserting us for that street woman! [_The other wives set up a shrill protest of_ "Ohs"] HELIOGABALUS [_Talking them down_] The Christian system, too, has its advantages. It is lonesome, but peaceful. I sleep better. The ventilation is better. More air. Fewer breathing. PAULA I protest against it as immoral! We are your lawful-- HELIOGABALUS [_Sardonically_] Immoral? Hah, because it's pleasant! You, too, have become infected by this Christianity. PAULA Oh, what an insult! HELIOGABALUS But to resume. You take your turns one by one, quietly and in order. First, let us say--well, first one of you. To be selected by me. I have a system worked out. Each stays on until--until I feel like a change. Then the next. And so on. PAULA I see it all. It's a scheme to get that Christian hussy in--and then keep us out! HELIOGABALUS [_Darkly, rolling his eye over the group of wives_] The Christian girl will not be the first. She must take her turn. CÆLESTIS See! She remains. What did I tell you? [_The other wives babble_] HELIOGABALUS If you are my lawful wives, then she is my lawful wife. I must be just. As Pontifex Maximus I am the _incarnation_ of justice. PAULA I am against justice for Christians! HELIOGABALUS [_Humorously_] Exactly. There is always some one that justice doesn't apply to. CÆLESTIS You might take her in, and then keep her a year. HELIOGABALUS It's theoretically possible, but very improbable. No, my inclination to the Christian system has its limits. The girl must take her turn. I must suffer, say once a year. Where is she, by the way? PAULA Praying somewhere, I suppose. CÆLESTIS [_Maliciously_] Maybe she has run off with that old bed-tick of an evangelist. HELIOGABALUS I shall ask her to pray for _you_, Cælestis. CÆLESTIS [_Horrified_] Oh, oh! She'll put a spell on me! HELIOGABALUS Never fear. [_Wearily_] I have tried it. Her spells are nothing. She couldn't even cure my stomach-ache.... And now, off with you. I have important business. I am entertaining the Supreme Bench. PAULA [_Defiantly_] It is your duty to turn her out. CÆLESTIS It is your duty to-- ANOTHER WIFE It is your duty-- HELIOGABALUS [_Irritably_] Duty! Duty! Always my duty! Well, it is my duty to-- PAULA Do your duty and you'll be happy. HELIOGABALUS A fallacy, my dill pickle. Duty may make a man able to _stand_ a thing, but it never makes him _enjoy_ it. Now good-night. [_He shoos them toward the door, left_] PAULA I object! I protest! [_The other wives begin to babble, joining her protest_] HELIOGABALUS Enough! I order you--as Emperor! [_They grow silent and slink away_] Disobey, and--[_They start out_, HELIOGABALUS _following them, toward the door_] The name of the evening's nominee will reach you in due course. PAULA [_At the door_] I-- HELIOGABALUS [_Peremptorily_] Guards! [PAULA _runs out, and the others crowd after her. In the scuffle, one of the wives is pushed to one side, and finds herself inside after the door bangs. It is_ DACIA. HELIOGABALUS, _turning back toward the entrance to the banquet-room, notices her. She hasn't said a word during the preceding scene, but has noticeably hung back. Now, facing the Emperor, she is suddenly confused, and turns toward the door in alarm. But he halts her_] HELIOGABALUS What! Little Dacia! [_She nods shyly_] I didn't notice you. I didn't hear a word from you. DACIA [_Ingenuously_] I didn't say anything. HELIOGABALUS Not a word about duty? DACIA No. HELIOGABALUS [_Elaborately kissing her hand_] Thank you. DACIA I hope you are feeling much better. HELIOGABALUS Thank you again. If I saw more of you, Dacia, I'd soon be well. [_A pause_] I heard you singing last night. It was very sweet of you. DACIA [_Simply_] I thought you might like me to do it. HELIOGABALUS [_Now thoroughly interested_] Like it? I loved it! You gave me pleasant dreams. I dreamed that things were as--as they used to be, and that-- DACIA [_Snuggling into his arms_] Have you missed me? HELIOGABALUS Enormously! At first I wondered just what it was I missed so much, but then I knew. It was my little wifey. [_He kisses her gently_] Now she's never going to leave me again. DACIA [_With all the art of the cutie, but apparently simply_] If you want me. HELIOGABALUS I want you every minute. [_With elaborate tenderness_] I was so worried about you. How did your cold get? Better? You are sure you take care of yourself? I wish you would stop wearing those very thin stockings. [_Feeling of her frock_] And this dress! It's like a night-gown. DACIA [_Coyly, burying her face on his shoulder_] I have a new night-gown. HELIOGABALUS When am I to see it? DACIA You never notice such things. HELIOGABALUS What nonsense. Didn't I notice the pink one--the one you worked yourself--all those forget-me-nots? DACIA That was the first you ever saw. HELIOGABALUS [_Sentimentally_] I'll never forget it. Ah, those days! Those happy, happy days! [_During all this scene_ SIMON _has occasionally peeped out from behind the hangings, his eyes popping as_ HELIOGABALUS _grows more and more ardent_. RUFINIUS _has discreetly turned his back and the centurions are far to the right, also with their backs toward the centre. All the while noisy music and whoops have been coming from the banquet hall, with occasional bursts of applause. Now and then a definite voice may be heard--probably old_ CAIUS'S] DACIA You _do_ love me, don't you? HELIOGABALUS Don't you know it? DACIA I think so. But how much? HELIOGABALUS That much. [_An enormous kiss. Then_--HELIOGABALUS _straightens up, glances at the banquet-room entrance, and gives a weary sigh_] Well, I suppose I must go in. It's really important--a very serious affair--the first in months. You know why there has been none. I made a lamentable error. I hate bloodshed, but I really think I'd be justified in-- [SIMON _peeps from behind the hangings, his eyes popping_] DACIA But I'll see you soon? HELIOGABALUS I should surely hope so. I nominate you number one. And I'll make Paula number two, so there'll be no temptation to-- DACIA [_Very demurely_] You won't be long? HELIOGABALUS How could I be long? [_Kissing her briefly again_] And don't forget! [_He whispers to her, and, as if blushing, she hides her face on his shoulder_] You understand? DACIA [_Whispers_] I'll be there. HELIOGABALUS And now--[_Another kiss_] Wear that pink one. You know. Now I must--[_A sudden idea_] But why not simply stay? How idiotic of me not to have thought of it! You can sit right beside me as you used to do. I'll get away all the sooner. DACIA But it's a men's party! HELIOGABALUS Pish! You'd be welcome at _any_ men's party. Just watch how the judiciary gape at you! DACIA But my frock! This old thing! HELIOGABALUS It's perfect! Those old rats never look at the clothes; they look at the girl. [_He takes his laurel wreath from his head and puts it on_ DACIA'S _head_] There! The last touch! [DACIA _is still doubtful and hangs back to steal a glance at herself in a pocket-mirror, but_ HELIOGABALUS _takes her arm and they turn toward the entrance to the banquet hall_. RUFINIUS _claps his hands, trumpets ring out; the two centurions step forward and draw back the hangings. A scene of gaudy splendour is revealed. The banquet hall reaches to the back of the stage, with a floor three steps higher than that of the corridor. A superb flash of colour. There is a huge horse-shoe of a table, very low, and it is surrounded by the low couches on which the Romans reclined at meals. Around the horse-shoe are grouped the guests--senators, generals, ambassadors, judges and other magnificoes--chiefly elderly and grizzled men._ CAIUS _is to the left, and is quickly seen to be far gone in liquor_. HELIOGABALUS' _place is in front and to the right, so that when he rises to speak his profile is toward the audience in the theatre. In the centre of the horse-shoe is a small dancing floor, and exactly in the middle of it a tall fountain, with coloured lights playing upon it. The walls of the hall are richly decorated, and various barbaric banners show brilliant patches of colour. All the guests are in white togas, but on the shoulder of every one there is some coloured badge of rank. The musicians are far to the rear and their music is heard constantly, save when_ HELIOGABALUS _speaks. They play strange, levantine tunes, sometimes in the old Greek modes. Translated into modern tones, their music sounds as if made by two violins, a 'cello, a zither, an oboe and a snare-drum._ _As the hangings go back, and_ HELIOGABALUS, _with_ DACIA _on his arm, is revealed to the banqueters, there is a sudden silence. Then_ CAIUS _springs to his feet and shouts_ "Vivat Imperator!" _and the whole assemblage rises. The old boys stand unsteadily as he mounts the three steps and moves toward his place--it is evident that they have been dining very well. There is no cheer, but the chord of C major is sounded loudly by the musicians. This cuts off the dance that has been in progress. The dancer, half-naked, pauses irresolutely for a second, and then, full of stage-fright, leaps off the dancing floor, plunges through the standing guests to the left, and disappears. The guests all crane their necks to see_ DACIA] CAIUS [_Turning tipsily as the dancer makes off_] Hey, there! HELIOGABALUS [_Taking his place, with_ DACIA _beside him_] Let us sit. [_The guests settle down, some gracefully enough, but others with much difficulty. They all continue to steal stares at_ DACIA] CAIUS [_Rising unsteadily_] Majesty, the dancer took to the woods. I feel I ought to apologize. HELIOGABALUS [_Genially_] Maybe something struck her suddenly--conscience, or gallstones, or something. CAIUS Oh, no. I've known that little one for years--sound as a gladiator. Maybe--[_He winks_] I'd better go and--and-- [_He rises wobblingly_] HELIOGABALUS [_Cutting in_] And fetch her? CAIUS That's it--and fetch her. [_He winks elaborately again and wobbles off, stumbling once or twice over his toga_] HELIOGABALUS [_Rising in his best imperial manner. As he gets to his legs the musicians repeat the massive chord of C major_] Gentlemen, my apologies for my tardiness. The fact is, I didn't know until the last minute if my health would permit me to join you. I was brought here on a litter, attended by two physicians. They are out in the ante-chamber at this moment, mixing pills. [_With the sudden malignancy of the dyspeptic_] I shall take, say, 5,000 more pills. Then we'll see how far a doctor's neck can stretch--a curious scientific experiment--vivisection, so to speak. [_Recovering his former manner_] But this is no talk for a banquet. If I told you my symptoms you would fall into faints, with screams of horror. [_One of the guests struggles to his feet and makes as if to speak_] Yes, Senator, I have tried that Armenian lithia water. I don't doubt it cured your ringing in the ears, but it has only made my stomach-ache worse. No more water! I have got down enough water of late to float Caius' whole fleet. To the sewers with water! What have we here? [_He lifts up a goblet and sniffs at it_] Aha! Good red Terentum! Gentlemen, I pledge you! [_The whole assemblage rises, goblets in hand. Slaves elbow in with fresh jars of wine, placing them upon the table_] VARIOUS GUESTS Vivat Imperator! Vivat Elegabalus! HELIOGABALUS Gentlemen, let us all drink to Rome, the one perfect and immortal Empire--the model and despair of other states--the mother of justice--the guardian of civilization! Rome cannot die! Rome forever! GUESTS Rome forever! [_They drink stupendous drafts, some of them coming up quite out of breath._] [HELIOGABALUS _sits down, and offers a sip from his goblet to_ DACIA. _As the others tumble into their places, there is a turmoil to the left, and_ CAIUS' _voice is heard_] CAIUS [_In a hoarse voice, without_] Oh, come on, dearie! Don't be afraid! [_The guests snicker_] HELIOGABALUS [_Rising so that he can see_] Bring her in, Caius. [CAIUS _comes in with an almost naked dancing-girl. She is coal-black and very much abashed. The guests whoop and roar as they see her_] CAIUS This is a different one, Majesty. I couldn't find the other one. I hunted high and low. [_Again he winks elaborately_] This one is an Egyptian--her name is Irene. I take a fatherly interest in this one. A GUEST Dear old papa! ANOTHER GUEST [_Mimicking a baby_] Da-da! Da-da! HELIOGABALUS She seems bashful. CAIUS Just a little. Ain't used to dancing before ladies. [_An elaborate and idiotic bow to_ DACIA] She has her instructions: no rough stuff. Perhaps her Majesty-- HELIOGABALUS Let her display her art. This is a different "Her Majesty." CAIUS [_Very drunk_] Profound apologies. My error. No offence, Majesty, I assure you. My eyes--astigmatism-- HELIOGABALUS Now then! [_The music starts with a crash, and the dancer leaps into a wild dance. At first the guests regard her stolidly, but in a few seconds some of them begin to rise to see her better_] CAIUS [_Rising_] This is nothing, Majesty. This is just the start. HELIOGABALUS Very interesting. Has the dance any significance? Is it symbolical? CAIUS I should say it is. If you understand it, it brings tears to your eyes. Very affecting, indeed. I'll explain it. You observe that sort of flop-flop of the arms? Well, that signifies--[_The music drowns him out. To the musicians, over his shoulder_] Not so loud, professor. Where do you think you are? [_The music grows soft. The dancing girl now launches into a series of amazing wriggles, occasionally leaping into the air._ CAIUS, _very solemnly and unsteadily, explains as she goes on_. HELIOGABALUS, _while this is in progress, sips his wine, and gradually grows very mellow in humour. Now and then he laughs and claps his hands_] CAIUS Her dark complexion, gentlemen, signifies death. Wash them, and they are almost white. People think Egyptians are niggers--all a mistake. I knew a girl in Memphis--her name was Saidee--almost as white as anybody. [_The girl begins to shed veils_] There it is, plain enough. The man is dying. Casting off this mortal coil. Dying by inches. First his feet, then his arms, then his stomach, then his lungs, then his--and so on. [_The girl squats, and wriggles about_] Death struggles. Poor fellow doesn't want to go. Thinks he is too young. [_She leaps into the air_] Last gasp. You can almost hear it. [_She begins to whirl_] Getting dizzy. Scared. Sends for the priest. [_The music slackens a bit_] Prayers. [_Louder and faster again_] Too late. It's all up. [_A wild leaping about_] Throw out the reverend and send for the embalmers. [_She leaps into the fountain_] The soul takes flight. [_She is now almost naked. The water plays upon her_] Nothing left but the body. Hardly a stitch on. Have to strip 'em, of course, to pickle 'em. Very interesting process. They keep for ever. [_The girl now launches into her final cavortings_] This shows the soul in the Egyptian heaven. Very subtle symbolism. Every wriggle means something. I remember-- [_During this last speech_, LUCIA _has quietly slipped into the fore-scene, from the door to the right_. RUFINIUS, _of course, observes her at once, and is visibly startled and alarmed. But those in the banquet hall, at first, do not see her._ HELIOGABALUS _and_ DACIA _are watching the dancer, and chuckling over_ CAIUS' _exposition. The guests, with veil after veil coming off, see nothing else. It is_ CAIUS _whose eyes first take her in. He halts, glances swiftly at_ HELIOGABALUS, _and then at_ LUCIA _again. But before his eyes are followed by_ HELIOGABALUS, LUCIA _has spoken_] LUCIA [_In round, resonant tones_] For shame! [HELIOGABALUS _has been lolling with his arm around_ DACIA. _The words electrify him. He leaps to his feet, and stands there for a second as if thunderstruck and speechless_] LUCIA [_Her arms folded, standing firmly, as if defying the universe to move her_] For shame! [_The music stops and the dancer collapses._ CAIUS _grasps the table unsteadily. A dozen other guests leap to their feet. There is a dead silence_] HELIOGABALUS [_Taking a step forward_] Hell! LUCIA You may well say hell. There is nothing in hell itself-- HELIOGABALUS [_Conciliatingly, coming down the steps_] Now, now, my dear. Really, you must-- LUCIA Don't touch me, Beelzebub! HELIOGABALUS Oh, I say, darling! [_He is patently nonplussed. He turns 'round to his guests_] Gentlemen--[_A deprecating, apologetic gesture_] You will pardon me. My stomach, unluckily-- [_He comes down to the corridor floor, and the two centurions swiftly and discreetly draw the hangings. In doing so they accidentally uncover a corner of_ SIMON, _but it is only for an instant, and they don't notice it. Neither does_ RUFINIUS, _who has retired to the right_. DACIA _has come out with_ HELIOGABALUS, _but she slips quietly to the left and stands against the wall, silent during the ensuing scene_] LUCIA [_Oratorically_] For less than this the flames consumed Sodom and Gomorrah! That woman was naked! HELIOGABALUS [_Weakly_] But she was a _coloured_ woman, my dear. Didn't you notice? LUCIA This infamy must end! A scarlet woman naked before you--and a scarlet woman in your arms! HELIOGABALUS [_A sudden change of manner_] A what in my arms? LUCIA A scarlet woman! [_It takes a moment for the charge to soak in, but when it does_ HELIOGABALUS _is completely changed. No more conciliation. He is furiously angry and shows it_] HELIOGABALUS A scarlet woman? That "scarlet woman" is my wife! LUCIA [_Still resolutely, but somewhat alarmed by his rage_] _I_ am your wife. Your _one_ wife. HELIOGABALUS _Are_ you? Well, that is something to be remedied. That is a curable disease. A "scarlet woman"! Think of it! LUCIA [_Now beginning to realize that she has gone too far_] You would put me away? HELIOGABALUS Either you put that crazy Christian balderdash away, or I put _you_ away. Once and for all time, I have got enough of it. I am Emperor here, and I must live like an Emperor, not like a slave. This praying shakes my nerves; water has given me a terrible stomach-ache; I have chills at night. LUCIA [_Rather weakly_] The Word-- HELIOGABALUS Maybe, but not for me! Damn water! Damn the Christian style of kissing! Damn going to bed at ten o'clock! Damn-- LUCIA [_Her hands over her ears_] Get thee behind me, Satan! HELIOGABALUS Satan! So Dacia is a scarlet woman, and I am Satan! And I thought I was Emperor of Rome! [_Wildly, showing that there was wine in his goblet_] For less than this, I have-- [_His fists clenched, he pauses_] LUCIA You can't harm me. The Lord is with me. HELIOGABALUS [_This last defiance determines him_] Oh, _is_ he? Then we'll see what he'll do for you when the alligators begin to sniff you. Guards! [_As the centurions spring forward_, LUCIA _screams_] LUCIA [_In great terror_] Would you kill me? [_But before the centurions can reach her or_ HELIOGABALUS _can reply_, SIMON _leaps from behind the hangings, his dagger drawn_] SIMON Stop, tyrant! [HELIOGABALUS _steps back, startled, and for an instant the centurions hesitate in alarm_] LUCIA Help me, Simon! SIMON Lay a hand on this maiden and I'll-- [_He flourishes the dagger and makes at_ HELIOGABALUS, _but by this time the centurions have recovered their heads, and are immediately upon him_. RUFINIUS, _from the right, also leaps to the rescue, and in two seconds_ SIMON _is pinned from behind and his dagger is on the floor_. DACIA, _during all this, has screamed once or twice, but has not moved from her place. Sounds of music come from behind the hangings, and shouts of laughter--loud enough to show that the banqueters are very drunk, and do not hear the commotion in front_] HELIOGABALUS [_To_ SIMON] So there you are! SIMON [_Almost incoherently_] Murderer! You would send your lawful wife to the lions! Pagan! Heathen! [_Rolling his eyes upward_] O Lord, watch over Thy servant! O Lord, send Thy lightnings to blast this heretic! HELIOGABALUS Bosh! Save all that O Lord business until you need it more. It won't be long. [_To_ RUFINIUS] Take this man to the circus, and have him chained--arm, leg and neck. There will be orders about him tomorrow morning. I'll want the iron stake and a couple of barrels of whale-oil. [LUCIA _screams and rushes toward_ HELIOGABALUS _supplicatingly, but_ SIMON _drops on his knees in ecstasy. It gradually appears that he welcomes death--that he craves martyrdom_] SIMON [_His eyes rolling_] O Lord, I thank Thee! To die in Thy name! Lord, I thank Thee for this boon! HELIOGABALUS [_Astonished_] What! LUCIA I am to blame, not he. Let me-- SIMON [_Still happy_] O Lord, I thank Thee for this boon--this martyrdom! I thank Thee! HELIOGABALUS Silence! What is the idiot doing? LUCIA He is happy that he may die for the Faith. HELIOGABALUS The Faith? What has the Faith to do with it? He is to die for an attempt at assault and battery. LUCIA It is all one. HELIOGABALUS Do you mean to say that murder is a part of Christianity? LUCIA No, but martyrdom is. SIMON [_To the centurions and_ RUFINIUS] Brothers, let us pray. Let me pray for you. HELIOGABALUS Never in the world! I have heard enough praying to last me for ever. [_To_ LUCIA, _still not quite able to comprehend it_] So he actually _wants_ to be burned? LUCIA [_Preachily_] He thirsts for paradise. HELIOGABALUS [_Humorously_] _Solomon's_, I guess! Well, I'm surely not going to accommodate him. [_To_ SIMON] Get up. [_To_ RUFINIUS _and the centurions_] Let him go. [_To_ SIMON] You are reprieved. SIMON [_Blubbering_] Cæsar, I-- HELIOGABALUS Silence! I say you are reprieved. You are not going to get to paradise if _I_ can help it. [_To the centurions_] Take him out, give him a good cowhiding, and run him out of town. [_To_ SIMON] If you ever come back, off goes your Adam's apple. And I'll slice your nose flat with your face. Bear that in mind. LUCIA [_Heroically_] If he goes, then _I_ go too. HELIOGABALUS [_Overjoyed by the news, he is momentarily speechless; then_--] Oh, surely not! You don't mean to say that you-- LUCIA Then _I_ go too! HELIOGABALUS But that's really too much! [_Bracing up perceptibly_] It's really more than I deserve, fair gooseberry! LUCIA [_Rising to eloquence_] I turn my back on Nineveh. Out there in the West--[_her arms flung wide toward the audience_]--_there_ is my work. There I shall preach the Word. Far from these Roman cities and the sins of men. There lies the future harvest of the Lord. HELIOGABALUS [_Appraising the audience. Somewhat doubtfully_] Um--well--I wish you luck. [_Eagerly_] But could you get ready in time? You see, Simon is leaving at once. LUCIA I go with him. HELIOGABALUS But your clothes? It will take you some time to pack. LUCIA The Lord's work is not done in fine raiment. As I am, so shall I preach the Word. HELIOGABALUS [_Very eager to get her off_] Nobly spoken. If you need any money-- LUCIA I want no money. I shall pray for you. HELIOGABALUS [_In alarm_] But surely not here. This is no place for prayer. [_Indicating the banquet-room_] It's really rather too--er--riotous, isn't it? Pray for me after you get started. Pray for me out there--[_pointing in the direction of the audience_]--in the West. LUCIA I shall pray for you every day and every night. HELIOGABALUS Yes, yes--every night--out there--[_again pointing_]--in the West. And now I must get back to my guests. The centurions will see you off. I surely wish you every sort of luck. Let me hear from you now and then. Let me hear how your enterprise comes on. I'll send word that you are to be protected. A happy journey. LUCIA Fare you well! May the Lord keep you! HELIOGABALUS Thanks. Are you sure you don't need more clothes? LUCIA I need no worldly goods. My Faith, the Lord, are enough! HELIOGABALUS So you said. Well, then, good-bye and good luck! If you ever get into difficulties, don't hesitate to write to me. Simply "The Emperor, Rome," will reach me. LUCIA [_Going_] The Lord be with you. HELIOGABALUS Thank you. LUCIA The Lord forgive you! HELIOGABALUS Thank you. LUCIA The Lord bless you! HELIOGABALUS Thank you! [_She goes out slowly, and_ RUFINIUS _and the centurions follow with_ SIMON] SIMON [_At the door_] I suffer for the Faith. I-- HELIOGABALUS [_To_ RUFINIUS] Omit the cowhiding. [_As they go out_, HELIOGABALUS _turns back alone_. DACIA _has been concealed by the opened door at the left_. HELIOGABALUS, _observing_ SIMON'S _dagger on the floor, picks it up and looks at it reflectively. He runs his hands along the blade. He applies the point to his breast. He tries the effect of the cold steel on his throat. Loud music from within, and a great crash. Laughter and applause_] DACIA [_Stepping forward, somewhat alarmed by his toying with the knife_] Be careful! HELIOGABALUS [_He gives a start and turns quickly_] There you are! And I was wondering what had become of you! DACIA I was here all the while. HELIOGABALUS Here? DACIA Over in the corner. [_Snuggling close to him_] I was awfully scared. HELIOGABALUS [_Now grandly brave_] Don't let it worry you, tender baby. It's the trade risk. If this stomach-ache of mine fetches me, or those quacks poison me with their pills, I'll be the first Roman Emperor to die in bed for two hundred years. [_Amorously_] But we don't want to think of such things, do we? It was worth risking my life to get rid of that theologian. DACIA [_Coyly_] I thought you--liked her. HELIOGABALUS Bah! I work so hard that sometimes my mind wanders. Then there is my stomach-ache. I thought she could cure it with that Christian magic of hers--that praying, and O Lording, and so on. But it didn't work. DACIA Poor dear! And now you have to go back to the awful banquet. [_Yells from within_] HELIOGABALUS [_Tenderly_] Do you want me to go back? DACIA I? What have I to do with it? HELIOGABALUS You have everything to do with it. Do you want me to? DACIA [_Half a whisper_] No. [_There ensues a long kiss. The arm of coincidence provides a dreamy tune from the band behind the hangings_] HELIOGABALUS Let us cut the banquet! To hell with the banquet! What do you say? DACIA [_Like a naughty child_] To hell with the banquet! HELIOGABALUS [_Half to himself_] Imagine that Christian--[_taking her arm_] Come on! [_They sneak half-way across the stage. His eyes feast upon her. He halts a moment_] What wonderful hair! [_They tiptoe off like truants as_ THE CURTAIN FALLS THE END Transcriber's Note: Italics are shown as _italics_. End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Heliogabalus, by H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken and George Jean Nathan *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HELIOGABALUS *** ***** This file should be named 61281-8.txt or 61281-8.zip ***** This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/1/2/8/61281/ Produced by MFR, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will be renamed. Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark license, especially commercial redistribution. START: FULL LICENSE THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at www.gutenberg.org/license. Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. 1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the United States and you are located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United States. 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, copied or distributed: This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project Gutenberg-tm License. 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided that * You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." * You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm works. * You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of receipt of the work. * You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. 1.F. 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further opportunities to fix the problem. 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from people in all walks of life. Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact For additional contact information: Dr. Gregory B. Newby Chief Executive and Director gbnewby@pglaf.org Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt status with the IRS. The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who approach us with offers to donate. International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: www.gutenberg.org This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.