您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Tamburlaine the Great, Part I
act iii   Scene II.
Christopher Marlowe
下载:Tamburlaine the Great, Part I.txt
本书全文检索:
       Enter ZENOCRATE, AGYDAS, ANIPPE, with others.
       AGYDAS
       Madam Zenocrate, may I presume
       To know the cause of these unquiet fits
       That work such trouble to your wonted rest?
       'Tis more than pity such a heavenly face
       Should by heart's sorrow wax so wan and pale,
       When your offensive rape by Tamburlaine
       (Which of your whole displeasures should be most)
       Hath seem'd to be digested long ago.
       ZENOCRATE
       Although it be digested long ago,
       As his exceeding favours have deserv'd,
       And might content the Queen of Heaven, as well
       As it hath chang'd my first-conceiv'd disdain;
       Yet since a farther passion feeds my thoughts
       With ceaseless and disconsolate conceits,
       Which dye my looks so lifeless as they are,
       And might, if my extremes had full events,
       Make me the ghastly counterfeit of death.
       AGYDAS
       Eternal heaven sooner be dissolv'd,
       And all that pierceth Phoebus' silver eye,
       Before such hap fall to Zenocrate!
       ZENOCRATE
       Ah, life and soul, still hover in his breast,
       And leave my body senseless as the earth,
       Or else unite you to his life and soul,
       That I may live and die with Tamburlaine!
       Enter, behind, TAMBURLAINE, with TECHELLES, and others.
       AGYDAS
       With Tamburlaine! Ah, fair Zenocrate,
       Let not a man so vile and barbarous,
       That holds you from your father in despite,
       And keeps you from the honours of a queen,
       (Being suppos'd his worthless concubine,)
       Be honour'd with your love but for necessity!
       So, now the mighty Soldan hears of you,
       Your highness needs not doubt but in short time
       He will, with Tamburlaine's destruction,
       Redeem you from this deadly servitude.
       ZENOCRATE
       Leave to wound me with these words,
       And speak of Tamburlaine as he deserves:
       The entertainment we have had of him
       Is far from villany or servitude,
       And might in noble minds be counted princely.
       AGYDAS
       How can you fancy one that looks so fierce,
       Only dispos'd to martial stratagems?
       Who, when he shall embrace you in his arms,
       Will tell how many thousand men he slew;
       And, when you look for amorous discourse,
       Will rattle forth his facts of war and blood,
       Too harsh a subject for your dainty ears.
       ZENOCRATE
       As looks the sun through Nilus' flowing stream,
       Or when the Morning holds him in her arms,
       So looks my lordly love, fair Tamburlaine;
       His talk much sweeter than the Muses' song
       They sung for honour 'gainst Pierides,
       Or when Minerva did with Neptune strive:
       And higher would I rear my estimate
       Than Juno, sister to the highest god,
       If I were match'd with mighty Tamburlaine.
       AGYDAS
       Yet be not so inconstant in your love,
       But let the young Arabian live in hope,
       After your rescue to enjoy his choice.
       You see, though first the king of Persia,
       Being a shepherd, seem'd to love you much,
       Now, in his majesty, he leaves those looks,
       Those words of favour, and those comfortings,
       And gives no more than common courtesies.
       ZENOCRATE
       Thence rise the tears that so distain my cheeks,
       Fearing his love through my unworthiness.
       [TAMBURLAINE goes to her, and takes her away lovingly by
       the hand, looking wrathfully on AGYDAS, and says nothing.
       Exeunt all except AGYDAS.]

       AGYDAS
       Betray'd by fortune and suspicious love,
       Threaten'd with frowning wrath and jealousy,
       Surpris'd with fear of hideous revenge,
       I stand aghast; but most astonied
       To see his choler shut in secret thoughts,
       And wrapt in silence of his angry soul:
       Upon his brows was pourtray'd ugly death;
       And in his eyes the fury of his heart,
       That shone as comets, menacing revenge,
       And cast a pale complexion on his cheeks.
       As when the seaman sees the Hyades
       Gather an army of Cimmerian clouds,
       (Auster and Aquilon with winged steeds,
       All sweating, tilt about the watery heavens,
       With shivering spears enforcing thunder-claps,
       And from their shields strike flames of lightning,)
       All-fearful folds his sails, and sounds the main,
       Lifting his prayers to the heavens for aid
       Against the terror of the winds and waves;
       So fares Agydas for the late-felt frowns,
       That send a tempest to my daunted thoughts,
       And make my soul divine her overthrow.
       Re-enter TECHELLES with a naked dagger, and USUMCASANE.
       TECHELLES
       See you, Agydas, how the king salutes you!
       He bids you prophesy what it imports.
       AGYDAS
       I prophesied before, and now I prove
       The killing frowns of jealousy and love.
       He needed not with words confirm my fear,
       For words are vain where working tools present
       The naked action of my threaten'd end:
       It says, Agydas, thou shalt surely die,
       And of extremities elect the least;
       More honour and less pain it may procure,
       To die by this resolved hand of thine
       Than stay the torments he and heaven have sworn.
       Then haste, Agydas, and prevent the plagues
       Which thy prolonged fates may draw on thee:
       Go wander free from fear of tyrant's rage,
       Removed from the torments and the hell
       Wherewith he may excruciate thy soul;
       And let Agydas by Agydas die,
       And with this stab slumber eternally.
       [Stabs himself.]
       TECHELLES
       Usumcasane, see, how right the man
       Hath hit the meaning of my lord the king!
       USUMCASANE
       Faith, and, Techelles, it was manly done;
       And, since he was so wise and honourable,
       Let us afford him now the bearing hence,
       And crave his triple-worthy burial.
       TECHELLES
       Agreed, Casane; we will honour him.
       [Exeunt, bearing out the body.]
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Prologue.
Dramatis Personae.
act i
   Scene I.
   Scene II.
act ii
   Scene I.
   Scene II.
   Scene III.
   Scene IV.
   Scene V.
   Scene VI.
   Scene VII.
act iii
   Scene I.
   Scene II.
   Scene III.
act iv
   Scene I.
   Scene II.
   Scene III.
   Scene IV.
act v
   Scene I.