您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Tamburlaine the Great, Part II
act iii   Scene IV.
Christopher Marlowe
下载:Tamburlaine the Great, Part II.txt
本书全文检索:
       Alarms within. Enter the CAPTAIN, with OLYMPIA, and his SON.
       OLYMPIA
       Come, good my lord, and let us haste from hence,
       Along the cave that leads beyond the foe:
       No hope is left to save this conquer'd hold.
       CAPTAIN
       A deadly bullet, gliding through my side,
       Lies heavy on my heart; I cannot live:
       I feel my liver pierc'd, and all my veins,
       That there begin and nourish every part,
       Mangled and torn, and all my entrails bath'd
       In blood that straineth from their orifex.
       Farewell, sweet wife! sweet son, farewell! I die.
       [Dies.]
       OLYMPIA
       Death, whither art thou gone, that both we live?
       Come back again, sweet Death, and strike us both!
       One minute and our days, and one sepulchre
       Contain our bodies! Death, why com'st thou not
       Well, this must be the messenger for thee:
       [Drawing a dagger.]
       Now, ugly Death, stretch out thy sable wings,
       And carry both our souls where his remains.--
       Tell me, sweet boy, art thou content to die?
       These barbarous Scythians, full of cruelty,
       And Moors, in whom was never pity found,
       Will hew us piecemeal, put us to the wheel,
       Or else invent some torture worse than that;
       Therefore die by thy loving mother's hand,
       Who gently now will lance thy ivory throat,
       And quickly rid thee both of pain and life.
       SON
       Mother, despatch me, or I'll kill myself;
       For think you I can live and see him dead?
       Give me your knife, good mother, or strike home:
       The Scythians shall not tyrannize on me:
       Sweet mother, strike, that I may meet my father.
       [She stabs him, and he dies.]
       OLYMPIA
       Ah, sacred Mahomet, if this be sin,
       Entreat a pardon of the God of heaven,
       And purge my soul before it come to thee!
       [She burns the bodies of her HUSBAND and SON, and then attempts to kill herself.]
       Enter THERIDAMAS, TECHELLES, and all their train.
       THERIDAMAS
       How now, madam! what are you doing?
       OLYMPIA
       Killing myself, as I have done my son,
       Whose body, with his father's, I have burnt,
       Lest cruel Scythians should dismember him.
       TECHELLES
       'Twas bravely done, and like a soldier's wife.
       Thou shalt with us to Tamburlaine the Great,
       Who, when he hears how resolute thou wert,
       Will match thee with a viceroy or a king.
       OLYMPIA
       My lord deceas'd was dearer unto me
       Than any viceroy, king, or emperor;
       And for his sake here will I end my days.
       THERIDAMAS
       But, lady, go with us to Tamburlaine,
       And thou shalt see a man greater than Mahomet,
       In whose high looks is much more majesty,
       Than from the concave superficies
       Of Jove's vast palace, the empyreal orb,
       Unto the shining bower where Cynthia sits,
       Like lovely Thetis, in a crystal robe;
       That treadeth Fortune underneath his feet,
       And makes the mighty god of arms his slave;
       On whom Death and the Fatal Sisters wait
       With naked swords and scarlet liveries;
       Before whom, mounted on a lion's back,
       Rhamnusia bears a helmet full of blood,
       And strows the way with brains of slaughter'd men;
       By whose proud side the ugly Furies run,
       Hearkening when he shall bid them plague the world;
       Over whose zenith, cloth'd in windy air,
       And eagle's wings join'd to her feather'd breast,
       Fame hovereth, sounding of her golden trump,
       That to the adverse poles of that straight line
       Which measureth the glorious frame of heaven
       The name of mighty Tamburlaine is spread;
       And him, fair lady, shall thy eyes behold.
       Come.
       OLYMPIA
       Take pity of a lady's ruthful tears,
       That humbly craves upon her knees to stay,
       And cast her body in the burning flame
       That feeds upon her son's and husband's flesh.
       TECHELLES
       Madam, sooner shall fire consume us both
       Than scorch a face so beautiful as this,
       In frame of which Nature hath shew'd more skill
       Than when she gave eternal chaos form,
       Drawing from it the shining lamps of heaven.
       THERIDAMAS
       Madam, I am so far in love with you,
       That you must go with us: no remedy.
       OLYMPIA
       Then carry me, I care not, where you will,
       And let the end of this my fatal journey
       Be likewise end to my accursed life.
       TECHELLES
       No, madam, but the beginning of your joy:
       Come willingly therefore.
       THERIDAMAS
       Soldiers, now let us meet the general,
       Who by this time is at Natolia,
       Ready to charge the army of the Turk.
       The gold and silver, and the pearl, ye got,
       Rifling this fort, divide in equal shares:
       This lady shall have twice so much again
       Out of the coffers of our treasury.
       [Exeunt.]
用户中心

本站图书检索

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.