您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Tamburlaine the Great, Part II
act ii   Scene II.
Christopher Marlowe
下载:Tamburlaine the Great, Part II.txt
本书全文检索:
       Enter ORCANES, GAZELLUS, and URIBASSA, with their train.
       ORCANES
       Gazellus, Uribassa, and the rest,
       Now will we march from proud Orminius' mount
       To fair Natolia, where our neighbour kings
       Expect our power and our royal presence,
       T' encounter with the cruel Tamburlaine,
       That nigh Larissa sways a mighty host,
       And with the thunder of his martial tools
       Makes earthquakes in the hearts of men and heaven.
       GAZELLUS
       And now come we to make his sinews shake
       With greater power than erst his pride hath felt.
       An hundred kings, by scores, will bid him arms,
       And hundred thousands subjects to each score:
       Which, if a shower of wounding thunderbolts
       Should break out of the bowels of the clouds,
       And fall as thick as hail upon our heads,
       In partial aid of that proud Scythian,
       Yet should our courages and steeled crests,
       And numbers, more than infinite, of men,
       Be able to withstand and conquer him.
       URIBASSA
       Methinks I see how glad the Christian king
       Is made for joy of our admitted truce,
       That could not but before be terrified
       With unacquainted power of our host.
       Enter a Messenger.
       MESSENGER
       Arm, dread sovereign, and my noble lords!
       The treacherous army of the Christians,
       Taking advantage of your slender power,
       Comes marching on us, and determines straight
       To bid us battle for our dearest lives.
       ORCANES
       Traitors, villains, damned Christians!
       Have I not here the articles of peace
       And solemn covenants we have both confirm'd,
       He by his Christ, and I by Mahomet?
       GAZELLUS
       Hell and confusion light upon their heads,
       That with such treason seek our overthrow,
       And care so little for their prophet Christ!
       ORCANES
       Can there be such deceit in Christians,
       Or treason in the fleshly heart of man,
       Whose shape is figure of the highest God?
       Then, if there be a Christ, as Christians say,
       But in their deeds deny him for their Christ,
       If he be son to everliving Jove,
       And hath the power of his outstretched arm,
       If he be jealous of his name and honour
       As is our holy prophet Mahomet,
       Take here these papers as our sacrifice
       And witness of thy servant's perjury!
       [He tears to pieces the articles of peace.]
       Open, thou shining veil of Cynthia,
       And make a passage from th' empyreal heaven,
       That he that sits on high and never sleeps,
       Nor in one place is circumscriptible,
       But every where fills every continent
       With strange infusion of his sacred vigour,
       May, in his endless power and purity,
       Behold and venge this traitor's perjury!
       Thou, Christ, that art esteem'd omnipotent,
       If thou wilt prove thyself a perfect God,
       Worthy the worship of all faithful hearts,
       Be now reveng'd upon this traitor's soul,
       And make the power I have left behind
       (Too little to defend our guiltless lives)
       Sufficient to discomfit and confound
       The trustless force of those false Christians!--
       To arms, my lords! on Christ still let us cry:
       If there be Christ, we shall have victory.
       [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.