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Tamburlaine the Great, Part I
act iv   Scene III.
Christopher Marlowe
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       Enter SOLDAN, KING OF ARABIA, CAPOLIN, and SOLDIERS,
       with streaming colours.

       SOLDAN
       Methinks we march as Meleager did,
       Environed with brave Argolian knights,
       To chase the savage Calydonian boar,
       Or Cephalus, with lusty Theban youths,
       Against the wolf that angry Themis sent
       To waste and spoil the sweet Aonian fields.
       A monster of five hundred thousand heads,
       Compact of rapine, piracy, and spoil,
       The scum of men, the hate and scourge of God,
       Raves in Aegyptia, and annoyeth us:
       My lord, it is the bloody Tamburlaine,
       A sturdy felon, and a base-bred thief,
       By murder raised to the Persian crown,
       That dare control us in our territories.
       To tame the pride of this presumptuous beast,
       Join your Arabians with the Soldan's power;
       Let us unite our royal bands in one,
       And hasten to remove Damascus' siege.
       It is a blemish to the majesty
       And high estate of mighty emperors,
       That such a base usurping vagabond
       Should brave a king, or wear a princely crown.
       KING OF ARABIA
       Renowmed Soldan, have you lately heard
       The overthrow of mighty Bajazeth
       About the confines of Bithynia?
       The slavery wherewith he persecutes
       The noble Turk and his great emperess?
       SOLDAN
       I have, and sorrow for his bad success;
       But, noble lord of great Arabia,
       Be so persuaded that the Soldan is
       No more dismay'd with tidings of his fall,
       Than in the haven when the pilot stands,
       And views a stranger's ship rent in the winds,
       And shivered against a craggy rock:
       Yet in compassion to his wretched state,
       A sacred vow to heaven and him I make,
       Confirming it with Ibis' holy name,
       That Tamburlaine shall rue the day, the hour,
       Wherein he wrought such ignominious wrong
       Unto the hallow'd person of a prince,
       Or kept the fair Zenocrate so long,
       As concubine, I fear, to feed his lust.
       KING OF ARABIA
       Let grief and fury hasten on revenge;
       Let Tamburlaine for his offences feel
       Such plagues as heaven and we can pour on him:
       I long to break my spear upon his crest,
       And prove the weight of his victorious arm;
       For fame, I fear, hath been too prodigal
       In sounding through the world his partial praise.
       SOLDAN
       Capolin, hast thou survey'd our powers?
       CAPOLIN
       Great emperors of Egypt and Arabia,
       The number of your hosts united is,
       A hundred and fifty thousand horse,
       Two hundred thousand foot, brave men-at-arms,
       Courageous and full of hardiness,
       As frolic as the hunters in the chase
       Of savage beasts amid the desert woods.
       KING OF ARABIA
       My mind presageth fortunate success;
       And, Tamburlaine, my spirit doth foresee
       The utter ruin of thy men and thee.
       SOLDAN
       Then rear your standards; let your sounding drums
       Direct our soldiers to Damascus' walls.--
       Now, Tamburlaine, the mighty Soldan comes,
       And leads with him the great Arabian king,
       To dim thy baseness and obscurity,
       Famous for nothing but for theft and spoil;
       To raze and scatter thy inglorious crew
       Of Scythians and slavish Persians.
       [Exeunt.]
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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.