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Tamburlaine the Great, Part II
act iii   Scene I.
Christopher Marlowe
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       Enter the KINGS OF TREBIZON and SORIA, one bringing a sword and the other a sceptre; next, ORCANES king of Natolia, and the KING OF JERUSALEM with the imperial crown, after, CALLAPINE; and, after him, other LORDS and ALMEDA. ORCANES and the KING OF JERUSALEM crown CALLAPINE, and the others give him the sceptre.
       ORCANES
       Callapinus Cyricelibes, otherwise Cybelius, son and
       successive heir to the late mighty emperor Bajazeth, by the aid
       of God and his friend Mahomet, Emperor of Natolia, Jerusalem,
       Trebizon, Soria, Amasia, Thracia, Ilyria, Carmania, and all the
       hundred and thirty kingdoms late contributory to his mighty
       father,--long live Callapinus, Emperor of Turkey!
       CALLAPINE
       Thrice-worthy kings, of Natolia and the rest,
       I will requite your royal gratitudes
       With all the benefits my empire yields;
       And, were the sinews of th' imperial seat
       So knit and strengthen'd as when Bajazeth,
       My royal lord and father, fill'd the throne,
       Whose cursed fate hath so dismember'd it,
       Then should you see this thief of Scythia,
       This proud usurping king of Persia,
       Do us such honour and supremacy,
       Bearing the vengeance of our father's wrongs,
       As all the world should blot his dignities
       Out of the book of base-born infamies.
       And now I doubt not but your royal cares
       Have so provided for this cursed foe,
       That, since the heir of mighty Bajazeth
       (An emperor so honour'd for his virtues)
       Revives the spirits of all true Turkish hearts,
       In grievous memory of his father's shame,
       We shall not need to nourish any doubt,
       But that proud Fortune, who hath follow'd long
       The martial sword of mighty Tamburlaine,
       Will now retain her old inconstancy,
       And raise our honours to as high a pitch,
       In this our strong and fortunate encounter;
       For so hath heaven provided my escape
       From all the cruelty my soul sustain'd,
       By this my friendly keeper's happy means,
       That Jove, surcharg'd with pity of our wrongs,
       Will pour it down in showers on our heads,
       Scourging the pride of cursed Tamburlaine.
       ORCANES
       I have a hundred thousand men in arms;
       Some that, in conquest of the perjur'd Christian,
       Being a handful to a mighty host,
       Think them in number yet sufficient
       To drink the river Nile or Euphrates,
       And for their power enow to win the world.
       KING OF JERUSALEM
       And I as many from Jerusalem,
       Judaea, Gaza, and Sclavonia's bounds,
       That on mount Sinai, with their ensigns spread,
       Look like the parti-colour'd clouds of heaven
       That shew fair weather to the neighbour morn.
       KING OF TREBIZON
       And I as many bring from Trebizon,
       Chio, Famastro, and Amasia,
       All bordering on the Mare-Major-sea,
       Riso, Sancina, and the bordering towns
       That touch the end of famous Euphrates,
       Whose courages are kindled with the flames
       The cursed Scythian sets on all their towns,
       And vow to burn the villain's cruel heart.
       KING OF SORIA
       From Soria with seventy thousand strong,
       Ta'en from Aleppo, Soldino, Tripoly,
       And so unto my city of Damascus,
       I march to meet and aid my neighbour kings;
       All which will join against this Tamburlaine,
       And bring him captive to your highness' feet.
       ORCANES
       Our battle, then, in martial manner pitch'd,
       According to our ancient use, shall bear
       The figure of the semicircled moon,
       Whose horns shell sprinkle through the tainted air
       The poison'd brains of this proud Scythian.
       CALLAPINE
       Well, then, my noble lords, for this my friend
       That freed me from the bondage of my foe,
       I think it requisite and honourable
       To keep my promise and to make him king,
       That is a gentleman, I know, at least.
       ALMEDA
       That's no matter, sir, for being a king;
       or Tamburlaine came up of nothing.
       KING OF JERUSALEM
       Your majesty may choose some 'pointed time,
       Performing all your promise to the full;
       'Tis naught for your majesty to give a kingdom.
       CALLAPINE
       Then will I shortly keep my promise, Almeda.
       ALMEDA
       Why, I thank your majesty.
       [Exeunt.]
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本书目录

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