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All For Love
Act V. Scene I
John Dryden
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       Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMION, and IRAS
       CHARMION
       Be juster, Heaven; such virtue punished thus,
       Will make us think that chance rules all above,
       And shuffles, with a random hand, the lots,
       Which man is forced to draw.
       CLEOPATRA
       I could tear out these eyes, that gained his heart,
       And had not power to keep it. O the curse
       Of doting on, even when I find it dotage!
       Bear witness, gods, you heard him bid me go;
       You, whom he mocked with imprecating vows
       Of promised faith!--I'll die; I will not bear it.
       You may hold me--
       [She pulls out her dagger, and they hold her.]
       But I can keep my breath; I can die inward,
       And choke this love.
       Enter ALEXAS
       IRAS
       Help, O Alexas, help!
       The queen grows desperate; her soul struggles in her
       With all the agonies of love and rage,
       And strives to force its passage.
       CLEOPATRA
       Let me go.
       Art thou there, traitor!--O,
       O for a little breath, to vent my rage,
       Give, give me way, and let me loose upon him.
       ALEXAS
       Yes, I deserve it, for my ill-timed truth.
       Was it for me to prop
       The ruins of a falling majesty?
       To place myself beneath the mighty flaw,
       Thus to be crushed, and pounded into atoms,
       By its o'erwhelming weight? 'Tis too presuming
       For subjects to preserve that wilful power,
       Which courts its own destruction.
       CLEOPATRA
       I would reason
       More calmly with you. Did not you o'errule,
       And force my plain, direct, and open love,
       Into these crooked paths of jealousy?
       Now, what's the event? Octavia is removed;
       But Cleopatra's banished. Thou, thou villain,
       Hast pushed my boat to open sea; to prove,
       At my sad cost, if thou canst steer it back.
       It cannot be; I'm lost too far; I'm ruined:
       Hence, thou impostor, traitor, monster, devil!--
       I can no more: Thou, and my griefs, have sunk
       Me down so low, that I want voice to curse thee.
       ALEXAS
       Suppose some shipwrecked seaman near the shore,
       Dropping and faint, with climbing up the cliff,
       If, from above, some charitable hand
       Pull him to safety, hazarding himself,
       To draw the other's weight; would he look back,
       And curse him for his pains? The case is yours;
       But one step more, and you have gained the height.
       CLEOPATRA
       Sunk, never more to rise.
       ALEXAS
       Octavia's gone, and Dolabella banished.
       Believe me, madam, Antony is yours.
       His heart was never lost, but started off
       To jealousy, love's last retreat and covert;
       Where it lies hid in shades, watchful in silence,
       And listening for the sound that calls it back.
       Some other, any man ('tis so advanced),
       May perfect this unfinished work, which I
       (Unhappy only to myself) have left
       So easy to his hand.
       CLEOPATRA
       Look well thou do't; else--
       ALEXAS
       Else, what your silence threatens.--Antony
       Is mounted up the Pharos; from whose turret,
       He stands surveying our Egyptian galleys,
       Engaged with Caesar's fleet. Now death or conquest!
       If the first happen, fate acquits my promise;
       If we o'ercome, the conqueror is yours.
       [A distant shout within.]
       CHARMION
       Have comfort, madam: Did you mark that shout?
       [Second shout nearer.]
       IRAS
       Hark! they redouble it.
       ALEXAS
       'Tis from the port.
       The loudness shows it near: Good news, kind heavens!
       CLEOPATRA
       Osiris make it so!
       Enter SERAPION
       SERAPION
       Where, where's the queen?
       ALEXAS
       How frightfully the holy coward stares
       As if not yet recovered of the assault,
       When all his gods, and, what's more dear to him,
       His offerings, were at stake.
       SERAPION
       O horror, horror!
       Egypt has been; our latest hour has come:
       The queen of nations, from her ancient seat,
       Is sunk for ever in the dark abyss:
       Time has unrolled her glories to the last,
       And now closed up the volume.
       CLEOPATRA
       Be more plain:
       Say, whence thou comest; though fate is in thy face,
       Which from the haggard eyes looks wildly out,
       And threatens ere thou speakest.
       SERAPION
       I came from Pharos;
       From viewing (spare me, and imagine it)
       Our land's last hope, your navy--
       CLEOPATRA
       Vanquished?
       SERAPION
       No:
       They fought not.
       CLEOPATRA
       Then they fled.
       SERAPION
       Nor that. I saw,
       With Antony, your well-appointed fleet
       Row out; and thrice he waved his hand on high,
       And thrice with cheerful cries they shouted back:
       'Twas then false Fortune, like a fawning strumpet,
       About to leave the bankrupt prodigal,
       With a dissembled smile would kiss at parting,
       And flatter to the last; the well-timed oars,
       Now dipt from every bank, now smoothly run
       To meet the foe; and soon indeed they met,
       But not as foes. In few, we saw their caps
       On either side thrown up; the Egyptian galleys,
       Received like friends, passed through, and fell behind
       The Roman rear: And now, they all come forward,
       And ride within the port.
       CLEOPATRA
       Enough, Serapion:
       I've heard my doom.--This needed not, you gods:
       When I lost Antony, your work was done;
       'Tis but superfluous malice.--Where's my lord?
       How bears he this last blow?
       SERAPION
       His fury cannot be expressed by words:
       Thrice he attempted headlong to have fallen
       Full on his foes, and aimed at Caesar's galley:
       Withheld, he raves on you; cries,--He's betrayed.
       Should he now find you--
       ALEXAS
       Shun him; seek your safety,
       Till you can clear your innocence.
       CLEOPATRA
       I'll stay.
       ALEXAS
       You must not; haste you to your monument,
       While I make speed to Caesar.
       CLEOPATRA
       Caesar! No,
       I have no business with him.
       ALEXAS
       I can work him
       To spare your life, and let this madman perish.
       CLEOPATRA
       Base fawning wretch! wouldst thou betray him too?
       Hence from my sight! I will not hear a traitor;
       'Twas thy design brought all this ruin on us.--
       Serapion, thou art honest; counsel me:
       But haste, each moment's precious.
       SERAPION
       Retire; you must not yet see Antony.
       He who began this mischief,
       'Tis just he tempt the danger; let him clear you:
       And, since he offered you his servile tongue,
       To gain a poor precarious life from Caesar,
       Let him expose that fawning eloquence,
       And speak to Antony.
       ALEXAS
       O heavens! I dare not;
       I meet my certain death.
       CLEOPATRA
       Slave, thou deservest it.--
       Not that I fear my lord, will I avoid him;
       I know him noble: when he banished me,
       And thought me false, he scorned to take my life;
       But I'll be justified, and then die with him.
       ALEXAS
       O pity me, and let me follow you.
       CLEOPATRA
       To death, if thou stir hence. Speak, if thou canst,
       Now for thy life, which basely thou wouldst save;
       While mine I prize at--this! Come, good Serapion.
       [Exeunt CLEOPATRA, SERAPION, CHARMION, and IRAS.]
       ALEXAS
       O that I less could fear to lose this being,
       Which, like a snowball in my coward hand,
       The more 'tis grasped, the faster melts away.
       Poor reason! what a wretched aid art thou!
       For still, in spite of thee,
       These two long lovers, soul and body, dread
       Their final separation. Let me think:
       What can I say, to save myself from death?
       No matter what becomes of Cleopatra.
       ANTONY
       Which way? where?
       [Within.]
       VENTIDIUS
       This leads to the monument.
       [Within.]
       ALEXAS
       Ah me! I hear him; yet I'm unprepared:
       My gift of lying's gone;
       And this court-devil, which I so oft have raised,
       Forsakes me at my need. I dare not stay;
       Yet cannot far go hence.
       [Exit.]
       Enter ANTONY and VENTIDIUS
       ANTONY
       O happy Caesar! thou hast men to lead:
       Think not 'tis thou hast conquered Antony;
       But Rome has conquered Egypt. I'm betrayed.
       VENTIDIUS
       Curse on this treacherous train!
       Their soil and heaven infect them all with baseness:
       And their young souls come tainted to the world
       With the first breath they draw.
       ANTONY
       The original villain sure no god created;
       He was a bastard of the sun, by Nile,
       Aped into man; with all his mother's mud
       Crusted about his soul.
       VENTIDIUS
       The nation is
       One universal traitor; and their queen
       The very spirit and extract of them all.
       ANTONY
       Is there yet left
       A possibility of aid from valour?
       Is there one god unsworn to my destruction?
       The least unmortgaged hope? for, if there be,
       Methinks I cannot fall beneath the fate
       Of such a boy as Caesar.
       The world's one half is yet in Antony;
       And from each limb of it, that's hewed away,
       The soul comes back to me.
       VENTIDIUS
       There yet remain
       Three legions in the town. The last assault
       Lopt off the rest; if death be your design,--
       As I must wish it now,--these are sufficient
       To make a heap about us of dead foes,
       An honest pile for burial.
       ANTONY
       They are enough.
       We'll not divide our stars; but, side by side,
       Fight emulous, and with malicious eyes
       Survey each other's acts: So every death
       Thou giv'st, I'll take on me, as a just debt,
       And pay thee back a soul.
       VENTIDIUS
       Now you shall see I love you. Not a word
       Of chiding more. By my few hours of life,
       I am so pleased with this brave Roman fate,
       That I would not be Caesar, to outlive you.
       When we put off this flesh, and mount together,
       I shall be shown to all the ethereal crowd,--
       Lo, this is he who died with Antony!
       ANTONY
       Who knows, but we may pierce through all their troops,
       And reach my veterans yet? 'tis worth the 'tempting,
       To o'erleap this gulf of fate,
       And leave our wandering destinies behind.
       Enter ALEXAS, trembling
       VENTIDIUS
       See, see, that villain!
       See Cleopatra stamped upon that face,
       With all her cunning, all her arts of falsehood!
       How she looks out through those dissembling eyes!
       How he sets his countenance for deceit,
       And promises a lie, before he speaks!
       Let me despatch him first.
       [Drawing.]
       ALEXAS
       O spare me, spare me!
       ANTONY
       Hold; he's not worth your killing.--On thy life,
       Which thou may'st keep, because I scorn to take it,
       No syllable to justify thy queen;
       Save thy base tongue its office.
       ALEXAS
       Sir, she is gone.
       Where she shall never be molested more
       By love, or you.
       ANTONY
       Fled to her Dolabella!
       Die, traitor! I revoke my promise! die!
       [Going to kill him.]
       ALEXAS
       O hold! she is not fled.
       ANTONY
       She is: my eyes
       Are open to her falsehood; my whole life
       Has been a golden dream of love and friendship;
       But, now I wake, I'm like a merchant, roused
       From soft repose, to see his vessel sinking,
       And all his wealth cast over. Ungrateful woman!
       Who followed me, but as the swallow summer,
       Hatching her young ones in my kindly beams,
       Singing her flatteries to my morning wake:
       But, now my winter comes, she spreads her wings,
       And seeks the spring of Caesar.
       ALEXAS
       Think not so;
       Her fortunes have, in all things, mixed with yours.
       Had she betrayed her naval force to Rome,
       How easily might she have gone to Caesar,
       Secure by such a bribe!
       VENTIDIUS
       She sent it first,
       To be more welcome after.
       ANTONY
       'Tis too plain;
       Else would she have appeared, to clear herself.
       ALEXAS
       Too fatally she has: she could not bear
       To be accused by you; but shut herself
       Within her monument; looked down and sighed;
       While, from her unchanged face, the silent tears
       Dropt, as they had not leave, but stole their parting.
       Some indistinguished words she only murmured;
       At last, she raised her eyes; and, with such looks
       As dying Lucrece cast--
       ANTONY
       My heart forebodes--
       VENTIDIUS
       All for the best:--Go on.
       ALEXAS
       She snatched her poniard,
       And, ere we could prevent the fatal blow,
       Plunged it within her breast; then turned to me:
       Go, bear my lord, said she, my last farewell;
       And ask him, if he yet suspect my faith.
       More she was saying, but death rushed betwixt.
       She half pronounced your name with her last breath,
       And buried half within her.
       VENTIDIUS
       Heaven be praised!
       ANTONY
       Then art thou innocent, my poor dear love,
       And art thou dead?
       O those two words! their sound should be divided:
       Hadst thou been false, and died; or hadst thou lived,
       And hadst been true--But innocence and death!
       This shows not well above. Then what am I,
       The murderer of this truth, this innocence!
       Thoughts cannot form themselves in words so horrid
       As can express my guilt!
       VENTIDIUS
       Is't come to this? The gods have been too gracious;
       And thus you thank them for it!
       ANTONY
       [to ALEXAS.] Why stayest thou here?
       Is it for thee to spy upon my soul,
       And see its inward mourning? Get thee hence;
       Thou art not worthy to behold, what now
       Becomes a Roman emperor to perform.
       ALEXAS
       He loves her still:
       His grief betrays it. Good! the joy to find
       She's yet alive, completes the reconcilement.
       I've saved myself, and her. But, oh! the Romans!
       Fate comes too fast upon my wit,
       Hunts me too hard, and meets me at each double.
       [Aside.]
       [Exit.]
       VENTIDIUS
       Would she had died a little sooner, though!
       Before Octavia went, you might have treated:
       Now 'twill look tame, and would not be received.
       Come, rouse yourself, and let's die warm together.
       ANTONY
       I will not fight: there's no more work for war.
       The business of my angry hours is done.
       VENTIDIUS
       Caesar is at your gates.
       ANTONY
       Why, let him enter;
       He's welcome now.
       VENTIDIUS
       What lethargy has crept into your soul?
       ANTONY
       'Tis but a scorn of life, and just desire
       To free myself from bondage.
       VENTIDIUS
       Do it bravely.
       ANTONY
       I will; but not by fighting. O Ventidius!
       What should I fight for now?--my queen is dead.
       I was but great for her; my power, my empire,
       Were but my merchandise to buy her love;
       And conquered kings, my factors. Now she's dead,
       Let Caesar take the world,--
       An empty circle, since the jewel's gone
       Which made it worth my strife: my being's nauseous;
       For all the bribes of life are gone away.
       VENTIDIUS
       Would you be taken?
       ANTONY
       Yes, I would be taken;
       But, as a Roman ought,--dead, my Ventidius:
       For I'll convey my soul from Caesar's reach,
       And lay down life myself. 'Tis time the world
       Should have a lord, and know whom to obey.
       We two have kept its homage in suspense,
       And bent the globe, on whose each side we trod,
       Till it was dented inwards. Let him walk
       Alone upon't: I'm weary of my part.
       My torch is out; and the world stands before me,
       Like a black desert at the approach of night:
       I'll lay me down, and stray no farther on.
       VENTIDIUS
       I could be grieved,
       But that I'll not outlive you: choose your death;
       For, I have seen him in such various shapes,
       I care not which I take: I'm only troubled,
       The life I bear is worn to such a rag,
       'Tis scarce worth giving. I could wish, indeed,
       We threw it from us with a better grace;
       That, like two lions taken in the toils,
       We might at last thrust out our paws, and wound
       The hunters that inclose us.
       ANTONY
       I have thought on it.
       Ventidius, you must live.
       VENTIDIUS
       I must not, sir.
       ANTONY
       Wilt thou not live, to speak some good of me?
       To stand by my fair fame, and guard the approaches
       From the ill tongues of men?
       VENTIDIUS
       Who shall guard mine,
       For living after you?
       ANTONY
       Say, I command it.
       VENTIDIUS
       If we die well, our deaths will speak themselves
       And need no living witness.
       ANTONY
       Thou hast loved me,
       And fain I would reward thee. I must die;
       Kill me, and take the merit of my death,
       To make thee friends with Caesar.
       VENTIDIUS
       Thank your kindness.
       You said I loved you; and in recompense,
       You bid me turn a traitor: Did I think
       You would have used me thus?--that I should die
       With a hard thought of you?
       ANTONY
       Forgive me, Roman.
       Since I have heard of Cleopatra's death,
       My reason bears no rule upon my tongue,
       But lets my thoughts break all at random out.
       I've thought better; do not deny me twice.
       VENTIDIUS
       By Heaven I will not.
       Let it not be to outlive you.
       ANTONY
       Kill me first,
       And then die thou; for 'tis but just thou serve
       Thy friend, before thyself.
       VENTIDIUS
       Give me your hand.
       We soon shall meet again. Now, farewell, emperor!--
       [Embrace.]
       Methinks that word's too cold to be my last:
       Since death sweeps all distinctions, farewell, friend!
       That's all--
       I will not make a business of a trifle;
       And yet I cannot look on you, and kill you;
       Pray turn your face.
       ANTONY
       I do: strike home, be sure.
       VENTIDIUS
       Home as my sword will reach.
       [Kills himself.]
       ANTONY
       Oh, thou mistak'st;
       That wound was not of thine; give it me back:
       Thou robb'st me of my death.
       VENTIDIUS
       I do indeed;
       But think 'tis the first time I e'er deceived you,
       If that may plead my pardon.--And you, gods,
       Forgive me, if you will; for I die perjured,
       Rather than kill my friend.
       [Dies.]
       ANTONY
       Farewell! Ever my leader, even in death!
       My queen and thou have got the start of me,
       And I'm the lag of honour.--Gone so soon?
       Is Death no more? he used him carelessly,
       With a familiar kindness: ere he knocked,
       Ran to the door, and took him in his arms,
       As who should say--You're welcome at all hours,
       A friend need give no warning. Books had spoiled him;
       For all the learned are cowards by profession.
       'Tis not worth
       My further thought; for death, for aught I know,
       Is but to think no more. Here's to be satisfied.
       [Falls on his sword.]
       I've missed my heart. O unperforming hand!
       Thou never couldst have erred in a worse time.
       My fortune jades me to the last; and death,
       Like a great man, takes state, and makes me wait
       For my admittance.--
       [Trampling within.]
       Some, perhaps, from Caesar:
       If he should find me living, and suspect
       That I played booty with my life! I'll mend
       My work, ere they can reach me.
       [Rises upon his knees.]
       Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMION, and IRAS
       CLEOPATRA
       Where is my lord? where is he?
       CHARMION
       There he lies,
       And dead Ventidius by him.
       CLEOPATRA
       My tears were prophets; I am come too late.
       O that accursed Alexas!
       [Runs to him.]
       ANTONY
       Art thou living?
       Or am I dead before I knew, and thou
       The first kind ghost that meets me?
       CLEOPATRA
       Help me seat him.
       Send quickly, send for help!
       [They place him in a chair.]
       ANTONY
       I am answered.
       We live both. Sit thee down, my Cleopatra:
       I'll make the most I can of life, to stay
       A moment more with thee.
       CLEOPATRA
       How is it with you?
       ANTONY
       'Tis as with a man
       Removing in a hurry; all packed up,
       But one dear jewel that his haste forgot;
       And he, for that, returns upon the spur:
       So I come back for thee.
       CLEOPATRA
       Too long, ye heavens, you have been cruel to me:
       Now show your mended faith, and give me back
       His fleeting life!
       ANTONY
       It will not be, my love;
       I keep my soul by force.
       Say but, thou art not false.
       CLEOPATRA
       'Tis now too late
       To say I'm true: I'll prove it, and die with you.
       Unknown to me, Alexas feigned my death:
       Which, when I knew, I hasted to prevent
       This fatal consequence. My fleet betrayed
       Both you and me.
       ANTONY
       And Dolabella--
       CLEOPATRA
       Scarce
       Esteemed before he loved; but hated now.
       ANTONY
       Enough: my life's not long enough for more.
       Thou say'st, thou wilt come after: I believe thee;
       For I can now believe whate'er thou sayest,
       That we may part more kindly.
       CLEOPATRA
       I will come:
       Doubt not, my life, I'll come, and quickly too:
       Caesar shall triumph o'er no part of thee.
       ANTONY
       But grieve not, while thou stayest,
       My last disastrous times:
       Think we have had a clear and glorious day
       And Heaven did kindly to delay the storm,
       Just till our close of evening. Ten years' love,
       And not a moment lost, but all improved
       To the utmost joys,--what ages have we lived?
       And now to die each other's; and, so dying,
       While hand in hand we walk in groves below,
       Whole troops of lovers' ghosts shall flock about us,
       And all the train be ours.
       CLEOPATRA
       Your words are like the notes of dying swans,
       Too sweet to last. Were there so many hours
       For your unkindness, and not one for love?
       ANTONY
       No, not a minute.--This one kiss--more worth
       Than all I leave to Caesar.
       [Dies.]
       CLEOPATRA
       O tell me so again,
       And take ten thousand kisses for that word.
       My lord, my lord! speak, if you yet have being;
       Sign to me, if you cannot speak; or cast
       One look! Do anything that shows you live.
       IRAS
       He's gone too far to hear you;
       And this you see, a lump of senseless clay,
       The leavings of a soul.
       CHARMION
       Remember, madam,
       He charged you not to grieve.
       CLEOPATRA
       And I'll obey him.
       I have not loved a Roman, not to know
       What should become his wife; his wife, my Charmion!
       For 'tis to that high title I aspire;
       And now I'll not die less. Let dull Octavia
       Survive, to mourn him dead: My nobler fate
       Shall knit our spousals with a tie, too strong
       For Roman laws to break.
       IRAS
       Will you then die?
       CLEOPATRA
       Why shouldst thou make that question?
       IRAS
       Caesar is merciful.
       CLEOPATRA
       Let him be so
       To those that want his mercy: My poor lord
       Made no such covenant with him, to spare me
       When he was dead. Yield me to Caesar's pride?
       What! to be led in triumph through the streets,
       A spectacle to base plebeian eyes;
       While some dejected friend of Antony's,
       Close in a corner, shakes his head, and mutters
       A secret curse on her who ruined him!
       I'll none of that.
       CHARMION
       Whatever you resolve,
       I'll follow, even to death.
       IRAS
       I only feared
       For you; but more should fear to live without you.
       CLEOPATRA
       Why, now, 'tis as it should be. Quick, my friends,
       Despatch; ere this, the town's in Caesar's hands:
       My lord looks down concerned, and fears my stay,
       Lest I should be surprised;
       Keep him not waiting for his love too long.
       You, Charmion, bring my crown and richest jewels;
       With them, the wreath of victory I made
       (Vain augury!) for him, who now lies dead:
       You, Iras, bring the cure of all our ills.
       IRAS
       The aspics, madam?
       CLEOPATRA
       Must I bid you twice?
       [Exit CHARMION and IRAS.]
       'Tis sweet to die, when they would force life on me,
       To rush into the dark abode of death,
       And seize him first; if he be like my love,
       He is not frightful, sure.
       We're now alone, in secrecy and silence;
       And is not this like lovers? I may kiss
       These pale, cold lips; Octavia does not see me:
       And, oh! 'tis better far to have him thus,
       Than see him in her arms.--Oh, welcome, welcome!
       Enter CHARMION and IRAS
       CHARMION
       What must be done?
       CLEOPATRA
       Short ceremony, friends;
       But yet it must be decent. First, this laurel
       Shall crown my hero's head: he fell not basely,
       Nor left his shield behind him.--Only thou
       Couldst triumph o'er thyself; and thou alone
       Wert worthy so to triumph.
       CHARMION
       To what end
       These ensigns of your pomp and royalty?
       CLEOPATRA
       Dull, that thou art! why 'tis to meet my love;
       As when I saw him first, on Cydnus' bank,
       All sparkling, like a goddess: so adorned,
       I'll find him once again; my second spousals
       Shall match my first in glory. Haste, haste, both,
       And dress the bride of Antony.
       CHARMION
       'Tis done.
       CLEOPATRA
       Now seat me by my lord. I claim this place,
       For I must conquer Caesar too, like him,
       And win my share of the world.--Hail, you dear relics
       Of my immortal love!
       O let no impious hand remove you hence:
       But rest for ever here! Let Egypt give
       His death that peace, which it denied his life.--
       Reach me the casket.
       IRAS
       Underneath the fruit
       The aspic lies.
       CLEOPATRA
       Welcome, thou kind deceiver!
       [Putting aside the leaves.]
       Thou best of thieves: who, with an easy key,
       Dost open life, and, unperceived by us,
       Even steal us from ourselves; discharging so
       Death's dreadful office, better than himself;
       Touching our limbs so gently into slumber,
       That Death stands by, deceived by his own image,
       And thinks himself but sleep.
       SERAPION
       The queen, where is she?
       [Within.]
       The town is yielded, Caesar's at the gates.
       CLEOPATRA
       He comes too late to invade the rights of death!
       Haste, bare my arm, and rouse the serpent's fury.
       [Holds out her arm, and draws it back.]
       Coward flesh,
       Wouldst thou conspire with Caesar to betray me,
       As thou wert none of mine? I'll force thee to it,
       And not be sent by him,
       But bring, myself, my soul to Antony.
       [Turns aside, and then shows her arm bloody.]
       Take hence; the work is done.
       SERAPION
       Break ope the door,
       [Within.]
       And guard the traitor well.
       CHARMION
       The next is ours.
       IRAS
       Now, Charmion, to be worthy
       Of our great queen and mistress.
       [They apply the aspics.]
       CLEOPATRA
       Already, death, I feel thee in my veins:
       I go with such a will to find my lord,
       That we shall quickly meet.
       A heavy numbness creeps through every limb,
       And now 'tis at my head: My eyelids fall,
       And my dear love is vanquished in a mist.
       Where shall I find him, where? O turn me to him,
       And lay me on his breast!--Caesar, thy worst;
       Now part us, if thou canst.
       [Dies.]
       [IRAS sinks down at her feet, and dies;
       CHARMION stands behind her chair, as dressing her head.]

       Enter SERAPION, two PRIESTS, ALEXAS bound, EGYPTIANS
       PRIEST
       Behold, Serapion,
       What havoc death has made!
       SERAPION
       'Twas what I feared.--
       Charmion, is this well done?
       CHARMION
       Yes, 'tis well done, and like a queen, the last
       Of her great race: I follow her.
       [Sinks down: dies.]
       ALEXAS
       'Tis true,
       She has done well: Much better thus to die,
       Than live to make a holiday in Rome.
       SERAPION
       See how the lovers sit in state together,
       As they were giving laws to half mankind!
       The impression of a smile, left in her face,
       Shows she died pleased with him for whom she lived,
       And went to charm him in another world.
       Caesar's just entering: grief has now no leisure.
       Secure that villain, as our pledge of safety,
       To grace the imperial triumph.--Sleep, blest pair,
       Secure from human chance, long ages out,
       While all the storms of fate fly o'er your tomb;
       And fame to late posterity shall tell,
       No lovers lived so great, or died so well.
       [Exeunt.]