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Tamburlaine the Great, Part I
act v   Scene I.
Christopher Marlowe
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       Enter the GOVERNOR OF DAMASCUS with three or four
       CITIZENS, and four VIRGINS with branches of laurel in
       their hands.

       GOVERNOR
       Still doth this man, or rather god of war,
       Batter our walls and beat our turrets down;
       And to resist with longer stubbornness,
       Or hope of rescue from the Soldan's power,
       Were but to bring our wilful overthrow,
       And make us desperate of our threaten'd lives.
       We see his tents have now been altered
       With terrors to the last and cruel'st hue;
       His coal-black colours, every where advanc'd,
       Threaten our city with a general spoil;
       And, if we should with common rites of arms
       Offer our safeties to his clemency,
       I fear the custom proper to his sword,
       Which he observes as parcel of his fame,
       Intending so to terrify the world,
       By any innovation or remorse
       Will never be dispens'd with till our deaths.
       Therefore, for these our harmless virgins' sakes,
       Whose honours and whose lives rely on him,
       Let us have hope that their unspotted prayers,
       Their blubber'd cheeks, and hearty humble moans,
       Will melt his fury into some remorse,
       And use us like a loving conqueror.
       FIRST VIRGIN
       If humble suite or imprecations
       (Utter'd with tears of wretchedness and blood
       Shed from the heads and hearts of all our sex,
       Some made your wives, and some your children,)
       Might have entreated your obdurate breasts
       To entertain some care of our securities
       Whiles only danger beat upon our walls,
       These more than dangerous warrants of our death
       Had never been erected as they be,
       Nor you depend on such weak helps as we.
       GOVERNOR
       Well, lovely virgins, think our country's care,
       Our love of honour, loath to be enthrall'd
       To foreign powers and rough imperious yokes,
       Would not with too much cowardice or fear,
       Before all hope of rescue were denied,
       Submit yourselves and us to servitude.
       Therefore, in that your safeties and our own,
       Your honours, liberties, and lives were weigh'd
       In equal care and balance with our own,
       Endure as we the malice of our stars,
       The wrath of Tamburlaine and power of wars;
       Or be the means the overweighing heavens
       Have kept to qualify these hot extremes,
       And bring us pardon in your cheerful looks.
       SECOND VIRGIN
       Then here, before the Majesty of Heaven
       And holy patrons of Aegyptia,
       With knees and hearts submissive we entreat
       Grace to our words and pity to our looks,
       That this device may prove propitious,
       And through the eyes and ears of Tamburlaine
       Convey events of mercy to his heart;
       Grant that these signs of victory we yield
       May bind the temples of his conquering head,
       To hide the folded furrows of his brows,
       And shadow his displeased countenance
       With happy looks of ruth and lenity.
       Leave us, my lord, and loving countrymen:
       What simple virgins may persuade, we will.
       GOVERNOR
       Farewell, sweet virgins, on whose safe return
       Depends our city, liberty, and lives.
       [Exeunt all except the VIRGINS.]
       Enter TAMBURLAINE, all in black and very melancholy,
       TECHELLES, THERIDAMAS, USUMCASANE, with others.

       TAMBURLAINE
       What, are the turtles fray'd out of their nests?
       Alas, poor fools, must you be first shall feel
       The sworn destruction of Damascus?
       They knew my custom; could they not as well
       Have sent ye out when first my milk-white flags,
       Through which sweet Mercy threw her gentle beams,
       Reflexed them on their disdainful eyes,
       As now when fury and incensed hate
       Flings slaughtering terror from my coal-black tents,
       And tells for truth submission comes too late?
       FIRST VIRGIN
       Most happy king and emperor of the earth,
       Image of honour and nobility,
       For whom the powers divine have made the world,
       And on whose throne the holy Graces sit;
       In whose sweet person is compris'd the sum
       Of Nature's skill and heavenly majesty;
       Pity our plights! O, pity poor Damascus!
       Pity old age, within whose silver hairs
       Honour and reverence evermore have reign'd!
       Pity the marriage-bed, where many a lord,
       In prime and glory of his loving joy,
       Embraceth now with tears of ruth and blood
       The jealous body of his fearful wife,
       Whose cheeks and hearts, so punish'd with conceit,
       To think thy puissant never-stayed arm
       Will part their bodies, and prevent their souls
       From heavens of comfort yet their age might bear,
       Now wax all pale and wither'd to the death,
       As well for grief our ruthless governor
       Hath thus refus'd the mercy of thy hand,
       (Whose sceptre angels kiss and Furies dread,)
       As for their liberties, their loves, or lives!
       O, then, for these, and such as we ourselves,
       For us, for infants, and for all our bloods,
       That never nourish'd thought against thy rule,
       Pity, O, pity, sacred emperor,
       The prostrate service of this wretched town;
       And take in sign thereof this gilded wreath,
       Whereto each man of rule hath given his hand,
       And wish'd, as worthy subjects, happy means
       To be investers of thy royal brows
       Even with the true Egyptian diadem!
       TAMBURLAINE
       Virgins, in vain you labour to prevent
       That which mine honour swears shall be perform'd.
       Behold my sword; what see you at the point?
       FIRST VIRGIN
       Nothing but fear and fatal steel, my lord.
       TAMBURLAINE
       Your fearful minds are thick and misty, then,
       For there sits Death; there sits imperious Death,
       Keeping his circuit by the slicing edge.
       But I am pleas'd you shall not see him there;
       He now is seated on my horsemen's spears,
       And on their points his fleshless body feeds.--
       Techelles, straight go charge a few of them
       To charge these dames, and shew my servant Death,
       Sitting in scarlet on their armed spears.
       VIRGINS
       O, pity us!
       TAMBURLAINE
       Away with them, I say, and shew them Death!
       [The VIRGINS are taken out by TECHELLES and others.]
       I will not spare these proud Egyptians,
       Nor change my martial observations
       For all the wealth of Gihon's golden waves,
       Or for the love of Venus, would she leave
       The angry god of arms and lie with me.
       They have refus'd the offer of their lives,
       And know my customs are as peremptory
       As wrathful planets, death, or destiny.
       Re-enter TECHELLES.
       What, have your horsemen shown the virgins Death?
       TECHELLES
       They have, my lord, and on Damascus' walls
       Have hoisted up their slaughter'd carcasses.
       TAMBURLAINE
       A sight as baneful to their souls, I think,
       As are Thessalian drugs or mithridate:
       But go, my lords, put the rest to the sword.
       [Exeunt all except TAMBURLAINE.]
       Ah, fair Zenocrate!--divine Zenocrate!
       Fair is too foul an epithet for thee,--
       That in thy passion for thy country's love,
       And fear to see thy kingly father's harm,
       With hair dishevell'd wip'st thy watery cheeks;
       And, like to Flora in her morning's pride,
       Shaking her silver tresses in the air,
       Rain'st on the earth resolved pearl in showers,
       And sprinklest sapphires on thy shining face,
       Where Beauty, mother to the Muses, sits,
       And comments volumes with her ivory pen,
       Taking instructions from thy flowing eyes;
       Eyes, when that Ebena steps to heaven,
       In silence of thy solemn evening's walk,
       Making the mantle of the richest night,
       The moon, the planets, and the meteors, light;
       There angels in their crystal armours fight
       A doubtful battle with my tempted thoughts
       For Egypt's freedom and the Soldan's life,
       His life that so consumes Zenocrate;
       Whose sorrows lay more siege unto my soul
       Than all my army to Damascus' walls;
       And neither Persia's sovereign nor the Turk
       Troubled my senses with conceit of foil
       So much by much as doth Zenocrate.
       What is beauty, saith my sufferings, then?
       If all the pens that ever poets held
       Had fed the feeling of their masters' thoughts,
       And every sweetness that inspir'd their hearts,
       Their minds, and muses on admired themes;
       If all the heavenly quintessence they still
       From their immortal flowers of poesy,
       Wherein, as in a mirror, we perceive
       The highest reaches of a human wit;
       If these had made one poem's period,
       And all combin'd in beauty's worthiness,
       Yet should there hover in their restless heads
       One thought, one grace, one wonder, at the least,
       Which into words no virtue can digest.
       But how unseemly is it for my sex,
       My discipline of arms and chivalry,
       My nature, and the terror of my name,
       To harbour thoughts effeminate and faint!
       Save only that in beauty's just applause,
       With whose instinct the soul of man is touch'd;
       And every warrior that is rapt with love
       Of fame, of valour, and of victory,
       Must needs have beauty beat on his conceits:
       I thus conceiving, and subduing both,
       That which hath stoop'd the chiefest of the gods,
       Even from the fiery-spangled veil of heaven,
       To feel the lovely warmth of shepherds' flames,
       And mask in cottages of strowed reeds,
       Shall give the world to note, for all my birth,
       That virtue solely is the sum of glory,
       And fashions men with true nobility.--
       Who's within there?
       Enter ATTENDANTS.
       Hath Bajazeth been fed to-day?
       ATTEND
       Ay, my lord.
       TAMBURLAINE
       Bring him forth; and let us know if the town be
       ransacked.
       [Exeunt ATTENDANTS.]
       Enter TECHELLES, THERIDAMAS, USUMCASANE, and others.
       TECHELLES
       The town is ours, my lord, and fresh supply
       Of conquest and of spoil is offer'd us.
       TAMBURLAINE
       That's well, Techelles. What's the news?
       TECHELLES
       The Soldan and the Arabian king together
       March on us with such eager violence
       As if there were no way but one with us.
       TAMBURLAINE
       No more there is not, I warrant thee, Techelles.
       ATTENDANTS bring in BAJAZETH in his cage, followed by ZABINA.
       Exeunt ATTENDANTS.
       THERIDAMAS
       We know the victory is ours, my lord;
       But let us save the reverend Soldan's life
       For fair Zenocrate that so laments his state.
       TAMBURLAINE
       That will we chiefly see unto, Theridamas,
       For sweet Zenocrate, whose worthiness
       Deserves a conquest over every heart.--
       And now, my footstool, if I lose the field,
       You hope of liberty and restitution?--
       Here let him stay, my masters, from the tents,
       Till we have made us ready for the field.--
       Pray for us, Bajazeth; we are going.
       [Exeunt all except BAJAZETH and ZABINA.]
       BAJAZETH
       Go, never to return with victory!
       Millions of men encompass thee about,
       And gore thy body with as many wounds!
       Sharp forked arrows light upon thy horse!
       Furies from the black Cocytus' lake,
       Break up the earth, and with their fire-brands
       Enforce thee run upon the baneful pikes!
       Vollies of shot pierce through thy charmed skin,
       And every bullet dipt in poison'd drugs!
       Or roaring cannons sever all thy joints,
       Making thee mount as high as eagles soar!
       ZABINA
       Let all the swords and lances in the field
       Stick in his breast as in their proper rooms!
       At every pore let blood come dropping forth,
       That lingering pains may massacre his heart,
       And madness send his damned soul to hell!
       BAJAZETH
       Ah, fair Zabina! we may curse his power,
       The heavens may frown, the earth for anger quake;
       But such a star hath influence in his sword
       As rules the skies and countermands the gods
       More than Cimmerian Styx or Destiny:
       And then shall we in this detested guise,
       With shame, with hunger, and with horror stay,
       Griping our bowels with retorqued thoughts,
       And have no hope to end our ecstasies.
       ZABINA
       Then is there left no Mahomet, no God,
       No fiend, no fortune, nor no hope of end
       To our infamous, monstrous slaveries.
       Gape, earth, and let the fiends infernal view
       A hell as hopeless and as full of fear
       As are the blasted banks of Erebus,
       Where shaking ghosts with ever-howling groans
       Hover about the ugly ferryman,
       To get a passage to Elysium!
       Why should we live?--O, wretches, beggars, slaves!--
       Why live we, Bajazeth, and build up nests
       So high within the region of the air,
       By living long in this oppression,
       That all the world will see and laugh to scorn
       The former triumphs of our mightiness
       In this obscure infernal servitude?
       BAJAZETH
       O life, more loathsome to my vexed thoughts
       Than noisome parbreak of the Stygian snakes,
       Which fills the nooks of hell with standing air,
       Infecting all the ghosts with cureless griefs!
       O dreary engines of my loathed sight,
       That see my crown, my honour, and my name
       Thrust under yoke and thraldom of a thief,
       Why feed ye still on day's accursed beams,
       And sink not quite into my tortur'd soul?
       You see my wife, my queen, and emperess,
       Brought up and propped by the hand of Fame,
       Queen of fifteen contributory queens,
       Now thrown to rooms of black abjection,
       Smeared with blots of basest drudgery,
       And villainess to shame, disdain, and misery.
       Accursed Bajazeth, whose words of ruth,
       That would with pity cheer Zabina's heart,
       And make our souls resolve in ceaseless tears,
       Sharp hunger bites upon and gripes the root
       From whence the issues of my thoughts do break!
       O poor Zabina! O my queen, my queen!
       Fetch me some water for my burning breast,
       To cool and comfort me with longer date,
       That, in the shorten'd sequel of my life,
       I may pour forth my soul into thine arms
       With words of love, whose moaning intercourse
       Hath hitherto been stay'd with wrath and hate
       Of our expressless bann'd inflictions.
       ZABINA
       Sweet Bajazeth, I will prolong thy life
       As long as any blood or spark of breath
       Can quench or cool the torments of my grief.
       [Exit.]
       BAJAZETH
       Now, Bajazeth, abridge thy baneful days,
       And beat the brains out of thy conquer'd head,
       Since other means are all forbidden me,
       That may be ministers of my decay.
       O highest lamp of ever-living Jove,
       Accursed day, infected with my griefs,
       Hide now thy stained face in endless night,
       And shut the windows of the lightsome heavens!
       Let ugly Darkness with her rusty coach,
       Engirt with tempests, wrapt in pitchy clouds,
       Smother the earth with never-fading mists,
       And let her horses from their nostrils breathe
       Rebellious winds and dreadful thunder-claps,
       That in this terror Tamburlaine may live,
       And my pin'd soul, resolv'd in liquid air,
       May still excruciate his tormented thoughts!
       Then let the stony dart of senseless cold
       Pierce through the centre of my wither'd heart,
       And make a passage for my loathed life!
       [He brains himself against the cage.]
       Re-enter ZABINA.
       ZABINA
       What do mine eyes behold? my husband dead!
       His skull all riven in twain! his brains dash'd out,
       The brains of Bajazeth, my lord and sovereign!
       O Bajazeth, my husband and my lord!
       O Bajazeth! O Turk! O emperor!
       Give him his liquor? not I. Bring milk and fire, and my blood
       I bring him again.--Tear me in pieces--give me the sword
       with a ball of wild-fire upon it.--Down with him! down with
       him!--Go to my child; away, away, away! ah, save that infant!
       save him, save him!--I, even I, speak to her.--The sun was
       down--streamers white, red, black--Here, here, here!--Fling the
       meat in his face--Tamburlaine, Tamburlaine!--Let the soldiers be
       buried.--Hell, death, Tamburlaine, hell!--Make ready my
       coach, my chair, my jewels.--I come, I come, I come!
       [She runs against the cage, and brains herself.]
       Enter ZENOCRATE with ANIPPE.
       ZENOCRATE
       Wretched Zenocrate! that liv'st to see
       Damascus' walls dy'd with Egyptians' blood,
       Thy father's subjects and thy countrymen;
       The streets strow'd with dissever'd joints of men,
       And wounded bodies gasping yet for life;
       But most accurs'd, to see the sun-bright troop
       Of heavenly virgins and unspotted maids
       (Whose looks might make the angry god of arms
       To break his sword and mildly treat of love)
       On horsemen's lances to be hoisted up,
       And guiltlessly endure a cruel death;
       For every fell and stout Tartarian steed,
       That stamp'd on others with their thundering hoofs,
       When all their riders charg'd their quivering spears,
       Began to check the ground and rein themselves,
       Gazing upon the beauty of their looks.
       Ah, Tamburlaine, wert thou the cause of this,
       That term'st Zenocrate thy dearest love?
       Whose lives were dearer to Zenocrate
       Than her own life, or aught save thine own love.
       But see, another bloody spectacle!
       Ah, wretched eyes, the enemies of my heart,
       How are ye glutted with these grievous objects,
       And tell my soul more tales of bleeding ruth!--
       See, see, Anippe, if they breathe or no.
       ANIPPE
       No breath, nor sense, nor motion, in them both:
       Ah, madam, this their slavery hath enforc'd,
       And ruthless cruelty of Tamburlaine!
       ZENOCRATE
       Earth, cast up fountains from thy entrails,
       And wet thy cheeks for their untimely deaths;
       Shake with their weight in sign of fear and grief!
       Blush, heaven, that gave them honour at their birth,
       And let them die a death so barbarous!
       Those that are proud of fickle empery
       And place their chiefest good in earthly pomp,
       Behold the Turk and his great emperess!
       Ah, Tamburlaine my love, sweet Tamburlaine,
       That fight'st for sceptres and for slippery crowns,
       Behold the Turk and his great emperess!
       Thou that, in conduct of thy happy stars,
       Sleep'st every night with conquest on thy brows,
       And yet wouldst shun the wavering turns of war,
       In fear and feeling of the like distress
       Behold the Turk and his great emperess!
       Ah, mighty Jove and holy Mahomet,
       Pardon my love! O, pardon his contempt
       Of earthly fortune and respect of pity;
       And let not conquest, ruthlessly pursu'd,
       Be equally against his life incens'd
       In this great Turk and hapless emperess!
       And pardon me that was not mov'd with ruth
       To see them live so long in misery!--
       Ah, what may chance to thee, Zenocrate?
       ANIPPE
       Madam, content yourself, and be resolv'd
       Your love hath Fortune so at his command,
       That she shall stay, and turn her wheel no more,
       As long as life maintains his mighty arm
       That fights for honour to adorn your head.
       Enter PHILEMUS.
       ZENOCRATE
       What other heavy news now brings Philemus?
       PHILEMUS
       Madam, your father, and the Arabian king,
       The first affecter of your excellence,
       Come now, as Turnus 'gainst Aeneas did,
       Armed with lance into the Aegyptian fields,
       Ready for battle 'gainst my lord the king.
       ZENOCRATE
       Now shame and duty, love and fear present
       A thousand sorrows to my martyr'd soul.
       Whom should I wish the fatal victory,
       When my poor pleasures are divided thus,
       And rack'd by duty from my cursed heart?
       My father and my first-betrothed love
       Must fight against my life and present love;
       Wherein the change I use condemns my faith,
       And makes my deeds infamous through the world:
       But, as the gods, to end the Trojans' toil,
       Prevented Turnus of Lavinia,
       And fatally enrich'd Aeneas' love,
       So, for a final issue to my griefs,
       To pacify my country and my love,
       Must Tamburlaine by their resistless powers,
       With virtue of a gentle victory,
       Conclude a league of honour to my hope;
       Then, as the powers divine have pre-ordain'd,
       With happy safety of my father's life
       Send like defence of fair Arabia
       [They sound to the battle within; and TAMBURLAINE enjoys
       the victory: after which, the KING OF ARABIA enters
       wounded.]

       KING OF ARABIA
       What cursed power guides the murdering hands
       Of this infamous tyrant's soldiers,
       That no escape may save their enemies,
       Nor fortune keep themselves from victory?
       Lie down, Arabia, wounded to the death,
       And let Zenocrate's fair eyes behold,
       That, as for her thou bear'st these wretched arms,
       Even so for her thou diest in these arms,
       Leaving thy blood for witness of thy love.
       ZENOCRATE
       Too dear a witness for such love, my lord!
       Behold Zenocrate, the cursed object
       Whose fortunes never mastered her griefs;
       Behold her wounded in conceit for thee,
       As much as thy fair body is for me!
       KING OF ARABIA
       Then shall I die with full contented heart,
       Having beheld divine Zenocrate,
       Whose sight with joy would take away my life
       As now it bringeth sweetness to my wound,
       If I had not been wounded as I am.
       Ah, that the deadly pangs I suffer now
       Would lend an hour's licence to my tongue,
       To make discourse of some sweet accidents
       Have chanc'd thy merits in this worthless bondage,
       And that I might be privy to the state
       Of thy deserv'd contentment and thy love!
       But, making now a virtue of thy sight,
       To drive all sorrow from my fainting soul,
       Since death denies me further cause of joy,
       Depriv'd of care, my heart with comfort dies,
       Since thy desired hand shall close mine eyes.
       [Dies.]
       Re-enter TAMBURLAINE, leading the SOLDAN; TECHELLES,
       THERIDAMAS, USUMCASANE, with others.

       TAMBURLAINE
       Come, happy father of Zenocrate,
       A title higher than thy Soldan's name.
       Though my right hand have thus enthralled thee,
       Thy princely daughter here shall set thee free;
       She that hath calm'd the fury of my sword,
       Which had ere this been bath'd in streams of blood
       As vast and deep as Euphrates or Nile.
       ZENOCRATE
       O sight thrice-welcome to my joyful soul,
       To see the king, my father, issue safe
       From dangerous battle of my conquering love!
       SOLDAN
       Well met, my only dear Zenocrate,
       Though with the loss of Egypt and my crown!
       TAMBURLAINE
       'Twas I, my lord, that gat the victory;
       And therefore grieve not at your overthrow,
       Since I shall render all into your hands,
       And add more strength to your dominions
       Than ever yet confirm'd th' Egyptian crown.
       The god of war resigns his room to me,
       Meaning to make me general of the world:
       Jove, viewing me in arms, looks pale and wan,
       Fearing my power should pull him from his throne:
       Where'er I come the Fatal Sisters sweat,
       And grisly Death, by running to and fro,
       To do their ceaseless homage to my sword:
       And here in Afric, where it seldom rains,
       Since I arriv'd with my triumphant host,
       Have swelling clouds, drawn from wide-gaping wounds,
       Been oft resolv'd in bloody purple showers,
       A meteor that might terrify the earth,
       And make it quake at every drop it drinks:
       Millions of souls sit on the banks of Styx,
       Waiting the back-return of Charon's boat;
       Hell and Elysium swarm with ghosts of men
       That I have sent from sundry foughten fields
       To spread my fame through hell and up to heaven:
       And see, my lord, a sight of strange import,--
       Emperors and kings lie breathless at my feet;
       The Turk and his great empress, as it seems,
       Left to themselves while we were at the fight,
       Have desperately despatch'd their slavish lives:
       With them Arabia, too, hath left his life:
       All sights of power to grace my victory;
       And such are objects fit for Tamburlaine,
       Wherein, as in a mirror, may be seen
       His honour, that consists in shedding blood
       When men presume to manage arms with him.
       SOLDAN
       Mighty hath God and Mahomet made thy hand,
       Renowmed Tamburlaine, to whom all kings
       Of force must yield their crowns and emperies;
       And I am pleas'd with this my overthrow,
       If, as beseems a person of thy state,
       Thou hast with honour us'd Zenocrate.
       TAMBURLAINE
       Her state and person want no pomp, you see;
       And for all blot of foul inchastity,
       I record heaven, her heavenly self is clear:
       Then let me find no further time to grace
       Her princely temples with the Persian crown;
       But here these kings that on my fortunes wait,
       And have been crown'd for proved worthiness
       Even by this hand that shall establish them,
       Shall now, adjoining all their hands with mine,
       Invest her here the Queen of Persia
       What saith the noble Soldan, and Zenocrate?
       SOLDAN
       I yield with thanks and protestations
       Of endless honour to thee for her love.
       TAMBURLAINE
       Then doubt I not but fair Zenocrate
       Will soon consent to satisfy us both.
       ZENOCRATE
       Else should I much forget myself, my lord.
       THERIDAMAS
       Then let us set the crown upon her head,
       That long hath linger'd for so high a seat.
       TECHELLES
       My hand is ready to perform the deed;
       For now her marriage-time shall work us rest.
       USUMCASANE
       And here's the crown, my lord; help set it on.
       TAMBURLAINE
       Then sit thou down, divine Zenocrate;
       And here we crown thee Queen of Persia,
       And all the kingdoms and dominions
       That late the power of Tamburlaine subdu'd.
       As Juno, when the giants were suppress'd,
       That darted mountains at her brother Jove,
       So looks my love, shadowing in her brows
       Triumphs and trophies for my victories;
       Or as Latona's daughter, bent to arms,
       Adding more courage to my conquering mind.
       To gratify the[e], sweet Zenocrate,
       Egyptians, Moors, and men of Asia,
       From Barbary unto the Western India,
       Shall pay a yearly tribute to thy sire;
       And from the bounds of Afric to the banks
       Of Ganges shall his mighty arm extend.--
       And now, my lords and loving followers,
       That purchas'd kingdoms by your martial deeds,
       Cast off your armour, put on scarlet robes,
       Mount up your royal places of estate,
       Environed with troops of noblemen,
       And there make laws to rule your provinces:
       Hang up your weapons on Alcides' post[s];
       For Tamburlaine takes truce with all the world.--
       Thy first-betrothed love, Arabia,
       Shall we with honour, as beseems, entomb
       With this great Turk and his fair emperess.
       Then, after all these solemn exequies,
       We will our rites of marriage solemnize.
       [Exeunt.]
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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.