<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> TAMBURLAINE THE GREAT—THE SECOND PART </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By Christopher Marlowe </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> Edited By The Rev. Alexander Dyce </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<h4>
This is Part II.
</h4>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<h2> THE PROLOGUE. </h2>
<p>The general welcomes Tamburlaine receiv'd,<br/>
When he arrived last upon the <SPAN href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1"<br/> id="linknoteref-1">1</SPAN> stage,<br/>
Have made our poet pen his Second Part,<br/>
Where Death cuts off the progress of his pomp,<br/>
And murderous Fates throw all his triumphs <SPAN href="#linknote-2"<br/>
name="linknoteref-2" id="linknoteref-2">2</SPAN> down.<br/>
But what became of fair Zenocrate,<br/>
And with how many cities' sacrifice<br/>
He celebrated her sad <SPAN href="#linknote-3" name="linknoteref-3"<br/> id="linknoteref-3">3</SPAN> funeral,<br/>
Himself in presence shall unfold at large.<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> DRAMATIS PERSONAE. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> <big><b>THE SECOND PART OF TAMBURLAINE THE
GREAT.</b></big> </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> <b>ACT I.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> SCENE I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> SCENE II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> SCENE III. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> <b>ACT II.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> SCENE I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> SCENE II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> SCENE III. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> SCENE IV. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> <b>ACT III.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> SCENE I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> SCENE II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> SCENE III. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> SCENE IV. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> SCENE V. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> <b>ACT IV.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> SCENE I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> SCENE II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> SCENE III. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> <b>ACT V.</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> SCENE I. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> SCENE II. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> SCENE III. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_NOTE"> NOTES: </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_FOOT"> FOOTNOTES: </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> DRAMATIS PERSONAE. </h2>
<p>TAMBURLAINE, king of Persia.<br/>
CALYPHAS, ]<br/>
AMYRAS, ] his sons.<br/>
CELEBINUS, ]<br/>
THERIDAMAS, king of Argier.<br/>
TECHELLES, king of Fez.<br/>
USUMCASANE, king of Morocco.<br/>
ORCANES, king of Natolia.<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON.<br/>
KING OF SORIA.<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM.<br/>
KING OF AMASIA.<br/>
GAZELLUS, viceroy of Byron.<br/>
URIBASSA.<br/>
SIGISMUND, King of Hungary.<br/>
FREDERICK, ]<br/>
BALDWIN, ] Lords of Buda and Bohemia.<br/>
CALLAPINE, son to BAJAZETH, and prisoner to TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
ALMEDA, his keeper.<br/>
GOVERNOR OF BABYLON.<br/>
CAPTAIN OF BALSERA.<br/>
HIS SON.<br/>
ANOTHER CAPTAIN.<br/>
MAXIMUS, PERDICAS, Physicians, Lords, Citizens, Messengers,<br/>
Soldiers, and Attendants.<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE, wife to TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
OLYMPIA, wife to the CAPTAIN OF BALSERA.<br/>
Turkish Concubines.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE SECOND PART OF TAMBURLAINE THE GREAT. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT I. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>Enter ORCANES king of Natolia, GAZELLUS viceroy of Byron,<br/>
URIBASSA, <SPAN href="#linknote-4" name="linknoteref-4" id="linknoteref-4">4</SPAN> and their train, with drums and trumpets.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Egregious viceroys of these eastern parts,<br/>
Plac'd by the issue of great Bajazeth,<br/>
And sacred lord, the mighty Callapine,<br/>
Who lives in Egypt prisoner to that slave<br/>
Which kept his father in an iron cage,—<br/>
Now have we march'd from fair Natolia<br/>
Two hundred leagues, and on Danubius' banks<br/>
Our warlike host, in complete armour, rest,<br/>
Where Sigismund, the king of Hungary,<br/>
Should meet our person to conclude a truce:<br/>
What! shall we parle with the Christian?<br/>
Or cross the stream, and meet him in the field?<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. King of Natolia, let us treat of peace:<br/>
We all are glutted with the Christians' blood,<br/>
And have a greater foe to fight against,—<br/>
Proud Tamburlaine, that now in Asia,<br/>
Near Guyron's head, doth set his conquering feet,<br/>
And means to fire Turkey as he goes:<br/>
'Gainst him, my lord, you must address your power.<br/>
<br/>
URIBASSA. Besides, King Sigismund hath brought from Christendom<br/>
More than his camp of stout Hungarians,—<br/>
Sclavonians, Almains, Rutters, <SPAN href="#linknote-5" name="linknoteref-5"<br/> id="linknoteref-5">5</SPAN> Muffs, and Danes,<br/>
That with the halberd, lance, and murdering axe,<br/>
Will hazard that we might with surety hold.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. <SPAN href="#linknote-6" name="linknoteref-6" id="linknoteref-6">6</SPAN> Though from the shortest northern parallel,<br/>
Vast Grantland, compass'd with the Frozen Sea,<br/>
(Inhabited with tall and sturdy men,<br/>
Giants as big as hugy <SPAN href="#linknote-7" name="linknoteref-7"<br/> id="linknoteref-7">7</SPAN> Polypheme,)<br/>
Millions of soldiers cut the <SPAN href="#linknote-8" name="linknoteref-8"<br/> id="linknoteref-8">8</SPAN> arctic line,<br/>
Bringing the strength of Europe to these arms,<br/>
Our Turkey blades shall glide through all their throats,<br/>
And make this champion <SPAN href="#linknote-9" name="linknoteref-9"<br/> id="linknoteref-9">9</SPAN> mead a bloody fen:<br/>
Danubius' stream, that runs to Trebizon,<br/>
Shall carry, wrapt within his scarlet waves,<br/>
As martial presents to our friends at home,<br/>
The slaughter'd bodies of these Christians:<br/>
The Terrene <SPAN href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10" id="linknoteref-10">10</SPAN> main, wherein Danubius falls,<br/>
Shall by this battle be the bloody sea:<br/>
The wandering sailors of proud Italy<br/>
Shall meet those Christians, fleeting with the tide,<br/>
Beating in heaps against their argosies,<br/>
And make fair Europe, mounted on her bull,<br/>
Trapp'd with the wealth and riches of the world,<br/>
Alight, and wear a woful mourning weed.<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. Yet, stout Orcanes, pro-rex of the world,<br/>
Since Tamburlaine hath muster'd all his men,<br/>
Marching from Cairo <SPAN href="#linknote-11" name="linknoteref-11"<br/> id="linknoteref-11">11</SPAN> northward, with his camp,<br/>
To Alexandria and the frontier towns,<br/>
Meaning to make a conquest of our land,<br/>
'Tis requisite to parle for a peace<br/>
With Sigismund, the king of Hungary,<br/>
And save our forces for the hot assaults<br/>
Proud Tamburlaine intends Natolia.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Viceroy of Byron, wisely hast thou said.<br/>
My realm, the centre of our empery,<br/>
Once lost, all Turkey would be overthrown;<br/>
And for that cause the Christians shall have peace.<br/>
Sclavonians, Almains, Rutters, Muffs, and Danes,<br/>
Fear <SPAN href="#linknote-12" name="linknoteref-12" id="linknoteref-12">12</SPAN> not Orcanes, but great Tamburlaine;<br/>
Nor he, but Fortune that hath made him great.<br/>
We have revolted Grecians, Albanese,<br/>
Sicilians, Jews, Arabians, Turks, and Moors,<br/>
Natolians, Sorians, <SPAN href="#linknote-13" name="linknoteref-13"<br/> id="linknoteref-13">13</SPAN> black <SPAN href="#linknote-14"<br/>
name="linknoteref-14" id="linknoteref-14">14</SPAN> Egyptians,<br/>
Illyrians, Thracians, and Bithynians, <SPAN href="#linknote-15"<br/>
name="linknoteref-15" id="linknoteref-15">15</SPAN><br/>
Enough to swallow forceless Sigismund,<br/>
Yet scarce enough t' encounter Tamburlaine.<br/>
He brings a world of people to the field,<br/>
]From Scythia to the oriental plage <SPAN href="#linknote-16"<br/>
name="linknoteref-16" id="linknoteref-16">16</SPAN><br/>
Of India, where raging Lantchidol<br/>
Beats on the regions with his boisterous blows,<br/>
That never seaman yet discovered.<br/>
All Asia is in arms with Tamburlaine,<br/>
Even from the midst of fiery Cancer's tropic<br/>
To Amazonia under Capricorn;<br/>
And thence, as far as Archipelago,<br/>
All Afric is in arms with Tamburlaine:<br/>
Therefore, viceroy, <SPAN href="#linknote-17" name="linknoteref-17"<br/> id="linknoteref-17">17</SPAN> the Christians must have peace.<br/>
<br/>
Enter SIGISMUND, FREDERICK, BALDWIN, and their<br/>
train, with drums and trumpets.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Orcanes, (as our legates promis'd thee,)<br/>
We, with our peers, have cross'd Danubius' stream,<br/>
To treat of friendly peace or deadly war.<br/>
Take which thou wilt; for, as the Romans us'd,<br/>
I here present thee with a naked sword:<br/>
Wilt thou have war, then shake this blade at me;<br/>
If peace, restore it to my hands again,<br/>
And I will sheathe it, to confirm the same.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Stay, Sigismund: forgett'st thou I am he<br/>
That with the cannon shook Vienna-walls,<br/>
And made it dance upon the continent,<br/>
As when the massy substance of the earth<br/>
Quiver[s] about the axle-tree of heaven?<br/>
Forgett'st thou that I sent a shower of darts,<br/>
Mingled with powder'd shot and feather'd steel,<br/>
So thick upon the blink-ey'd burghers' heads,<br/>
That thou thyself, then County Palatine,<br/>
The King of Boheme, <SPAN href="#linknote-18" name="linknoteref-18"<br/> id="linknoteref-18">18</SPAN> and the Austric Duke,<br/>
Sent heralds out, which basely on their knees,<br/>
In all your names, desir'd a truce of me?<br/>
Forgett'st thou that, to have me raise my siege,<br/>
Waggons of gold were set before my tent,<br/>
Stampt with the princely fowl that in her wings<br/>
Carries the fearful thunderbolts of Jove?<br/>
How canst thou think of this, and offer war?<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Vienna was besieg'd, and I was there,<br/>
Then County Palatine, but now a king,<br/>
And what we did was in extremity<br/>
But now, Orcanes, view my royal host,<br/>
That hides these plains, and seems as vast and wide<br/>
As doth the desert of Arabia<br/>
To those that stand on Bagdet's <SPAN href="#linknote-19" name="linknoteref-19"<br/> id="linknoteref-19">19</SPAN> lofty tower,<br/>
Or as the ocean to the traveller<br/>
That rests upon the snowy Appenines;<br/>
And tell me whether I should stoop so low,<br/>
Or treat of peace with the Natolian king.<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. Kings of Natolia and of Hungary,<br/>
We came from Turkey to confirm a league,<br/>
And not to dare each other to the field.<br/>
A friendly parle <SPAN href="#linknote-20" name="linknoteref-20"<br/> id="linknoteref-20">20</SPAN> might become you both.<br/>
<br/>
FREDERICK. And we from Europe, to the same intent; <SPAN href="#linknote-21"<br/>
name="linknoteref-21" id="linknoteref-21">21</SPAN><br/>
Which if your general refuse or scorn,<br/>
Our tents are pitch'd, our men stand <SPAN href="#linknote-22"<br/>
name="linknoteref-22" id="linknoteref-22">22</SPAN> in array,<br/>
Ready to charge you ere you stir your feet.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. So prest <SPAN href="#linknote-23" name="linknoteref-23"<br/> id="linknoteref-23">23</SPAN> are we: but yet, if Sigismund<br/>
Speak as a friend, and stand not upon terms,<br/>
Here is his sword; let peace be ratified<br/>
On these conditions specified before,<br/>
Drawn with advice of our ambassadors.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Then here I sheathe it, and give thee my hand,<br/>
Never to draw it out, or <SPAN href="#linknote-24" name="linknoteref-24"<br/> id="linknoteref-24">24</SPAN> manage arms<br/>
Against thyself or thy confederates,<br/>
But, whilst I live, will be at truce with thee.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. But, Sigismund, confirm it with an oath,<br/>
And swear in sight of heaven and by thy Christ.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. By Him that made the world and sav'd my soul,<br/>
The Son of God and issue of a maid,<br/>
Sweet Jesus Christ, I solemnly protest<br/>
And vow to keep this peace inviolable!<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. By sacred Mahomet, the friend of God,<br/>
Whose holy Alcoran remains with us,<br/>
Whose glorious body, when he left the world,<br/>
Clos'd in a coffin mounted up the air,<br/>
And hung on stately Mecca's temple-roof,<br/>
I swear to keep this truce inviolable!<br/>
Of whose conditions <SPAN href="#linknote-25" name="linknoteref-25"<br/> id="linknoteref-25">25</SPAN> and our solemn oaths,<br/>
Sign'd with our hands, each shall retain a scroll,<br/>
As memorable witness of our league.<br/>
Now, Sigismund, if any Christian king<br/>
Encroach upon the confines of thy realm,<br/>
Send word, Orcanes of Natolia<br/>
Confirm'd <SPAN href="#linknote-26" name="linknoteref-26" id="linknoteref-26">26</SPAN> this league beyond Danubius' stream,<br/>
And they will, trembling, sound a quick retreat;<br/>
So am I fear'd among all nations.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. If any heathen potentate or king<br/>
Invade Natolia, Sigismund will send<br/>
A hundred thousand horse train'd to the war,<br/>
And back'd by <SPAN href="#linknote-27" name="linknoteref-27"<br/> id="linknoteref-27">27</SPAN> stout lanciers of Germany,<br/>
The strength and sinews of the imperial seat.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. I thank thee, Sigismund; but, when I war,<br/>
All Asia Minor, Africa, and Greece,<br/>
Follow my standard and my thundering drums.<br/>
Come, let us go and banquet in our tents:<br/>
I will despatch chief of my army hence<br/>
To fair Natolia and to Trebizon,<br/>
To stay my coming 'gainst proud Tamburlaine:<br/>
Friend Sigismund, and peers of Hungary,<br/>
Come, banquet and carouse with us a while,<br/>
And then depart we to our territories.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter CALLAPINE, and ALMEDA his keeper.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Sweet Almeda, pity the ruthful plight<br/>
Of Callapine, the son of Bajazeth,<br/>
Born to be monarch of the western world,<br/>
Yet here detain'd by cruel Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. My lord, I pity it, and with my heart<br/>
Wish your release; but he whose wrath is death,<br/>
My sovereign lord, renowmed <SPAN href="#linknote-28" name="linknoteref-28"<br/> id="linknoteref-28">28</SPAN> Tamburlaine,<br/>
Forbids you further liberty than this.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Ah, were I now but half so eloquent<br/>
To paint in words what I'll perform in deeds,<br/>
I know thou wouldst depart from hence with me!<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. Not for all Afric: therefore move me not.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Yet hear me speak, my gentle Almeda.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. No speech to that end, by your favour, sir.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. By Cairo <SPAN href="#linknote-29" name="linknoteref-29"<br/> id="linknoteref-29">29</SPAN> runs—<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. No talk of running, I tell you, sir.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. A little further, gentle Almeda.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. Well, sir, what of this?<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. By Cairo runs to Alexandria-bay<br/>
Darotes' stream, <SPAN href="#linknote-30" name="linknoteref-30"<br/> id="linknoteref-30">30</SPAN> wherein at <SPAN href="#linknote-31"<br/>
name="linknoteref-31" id="linknoteref-31">31</SPAN> anchor lies<br/>
A Turkish galley of my royal fleet,<br/>
Waiting my coming to the river-side,<br/>
Hoping by some means I shall be releas'd;<br/>
Which, when I come aboard, will hoist up sail,<br/>
And soon put forth into the Terrene <SPAN href="#linknote-32"<br/>
name="linknoteref-32" id="linknoteref-32">32</SPAN> sea,<br/>
Where, <SPAN href="#linknote-33" name="linknoteref-33" id="linknoteref-33">33</SPAN> 'twixt the isles of Cyprus and of Crete,<br/>
We quickly may in Turkish seas arrive.<br/>
Then shalt thou see a hundred kings and more,<br/>
Upon their knees, all bid me welcome home.<br/>
Amongst so many crowns of burnish'd gold,<br/>
Choose which thou wilt, all are at thy command:<br/>
A thousand galleys, mann'd with Christian slaves,<br/>
I freely give thee, which shall cut the Straits,<br/>
And bring armadoes, from <SPAN href="#linknote-34" name="linknoteref-34"<br/> id="linknoteref-34">34</SPAN> the coasts of Spain,<br/>
Fraughted with gold of rich America:<br/>
The Grecian virgins shall attend on thee,<br/>
Skilful in music and in amorous lays,<br/>
As fair as was Pygmalion's ivory girl<br/>
Or lovely Io metamorphosed:<br/>
With naked negroes shall thy coach be drawn,<br/>
And, as thou rid'st in triumph through the streets,<br/>
The pavement underneath thy chariot-wheels<br/>
With Turkey-carpets shall be covered,<br/>
And cloth of arras hung about the walls,<br/>
Fit objects for thy princely eye to pierce:<br/>
A hundred bassoes, cloth'd in crimson silk,<br/>
Shall ride before thee on Barbarian steeds;<br/>
And, when thou goest, a golden canopy<br/>
Enchas'd with precious stones, which shine as bright<br/>
As that fair veil that covers all the world,<br/>
When Phoebus, leaping from his hemisphere,<br/>
Descendeth downward to th' Antipodes:—<br/>
And more than this, for all I cannot tell.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. How far hence lies the galley, say you?<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Sweet Almeda, scarce half a league from hence.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. But need <SPAN href="#linknote-35" name="linknoteref-35"<br/> id="linknoteref-35">35</SPAN> we not be spied going aboard?<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Betwixt the hollow hanging of a hill,<br/>
And crooked bending of a craggy rock,<br/>
The sails wrapt up, the mast and tacklings down,<br/>
She lies so close that none can find her out.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. I like that well: but, tell me, my lord,<br/>
if I should let you go, would you be as good as<br/>
your word? shall I be made a king for my labour?<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. As I am Callapine the emperor,<br/>
And by the hand of Mahomet I swear,<br/>
Thou shalt be crown'd a king, and be my mate!<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. Then here I swear, as I am Almeda,<br/>
Your keeper under Tamburlaine the Great,<br/>
(For that's the style and title I have yet,)<br/>
Although he sent a thousand armed men<br/>
To intercept this haughty enterprize,<br/>
Yet would I venture to conduct your grace,<br/>
And die before I brought you back again!<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Thanks, gentle Almeda: then let us haste,<br/>
Lest time be past, and lingering let <SPAN href="#linknote-36"<br/>
name="linknoteref-36" id="linknoteref-36">36</SPAN> us both.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. When you will, my lord: I am ready.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Even straight:—and farewell, cursed Tamburlaine!<br/>
Now go I to revenge my father's death.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Enter TAMBURLAINE, ZENOCRATE, and their three sons,<br/>
CALYPHAS, AMYRAS, and CELEBINUS, with drums and trumpets.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Now, bright Zenocrate, the world's fair eye,<br/>
Whose beams illuminate the lamps of heaven,<br/>
Whose cheerful looks do clear the cloudy air,<br/>
And clothe it in a crystal livery,<br/>
Now rest thee here on fair Larissa-plains,<br/>
Where Egypt and the Turkish empire part<br/>
Between thy sons, that shall be emperors,<br/>
And every one commander of a world.<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE. Sweet Tamburlaine, when wilt thou leave these arms,<br/>
And save thy sacred person free from scathe,<br/>
And dangerous chances of the wrathful war?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. When heaven shall cease to move on both the poles,<br/>
And when the ground, whereon my soldiers march,<br/>
Shall rise aloft and touch the horned moon;<br/>
And not before, my sweet Zenocrate.<br/>
Sit up, and rest thee like a lovely queen.<br/>
So; now she sits in pomp and majesty,<br/>
When these, my sons, more precious in mine eyes<br/>
Than all the wealthy kingdoms I subdu'd,<br/>
Plac'd by her side, look on their mother's face.<br/>
But yet methinks their looks are amorous,<br/>
Not martial as the sons of Tamburlaine:<br/>
Water and air, being symboliz'd in one,<br/>
Argue their want of courage and of wit;<br/>
Their hair as white as milk, and soft as down,<br/>
(Which should be like the quills of porcupines,<br/>
As black as jet, and hard as iron or steel,)<br/>
Bewrays they are too dainty for the wars;<br/>
Their fingers made to quaver on a lute,<br/>
Their arms to hang about a lady's neck,<br/>
Their legs to dance and caper in the air,<br/>
Would make me think them bastards, not my sons,<br/>
But that I know they issu'd from thy womb,<br/>
That never look'd on man but Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE. My gracious lord, they have their mother's looks,<br/>
But, when they list, their conquering father's heart.<br/>
This lovely boy, the youngest of the three,<br/>
Not long ago bestrid a Scythian steed,<br/>
Trotting the ring, and tilting at a glove,<br/>
Which when he tainted <SPAN href="#linknote-37" name="linknoteref-37"<br/> id="linknoteref-37">37</SPAN> with his slender rod,<br/>
He rein'd him straight, and made him so curvet<br/>
As I cried out for fear he should have faln.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
Well done, my boy! thou shalt have shield and lance,<br/>
Armour of proof, horse, helm, and curtle-axe,<br/>
And I will teach thee how to charge thy foe,<br/>
And harmless run among the deadly pikes.<br/>
If thou wilt love the wars and follow me,<br/>
Thou shalt be made a king and reign with me,<br/>
Keeping in iron cages emperors.<br/>
If thou exceed thy elder brothers' worth,<br/>
And shine in complete virtue more than they,<br/>
Thou shalt be king before them, and thy seed<br/>
Shall issue crowned from their mother's womb.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. Yes, father; you shall see me, if I live,<br/>
Have under me as many kings as you,<br/>
And march with such a multitude of men<br/>
As all the world shall <SPAN href="#linknote-38" name="linknoteref-38"<br/> id="linknoteref-38">38</SPAN> tremble at their view.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. These words assure me, boy, thou art my son.<br/>
When I am old and cannot manage arms,<br/>
Be thou the scourge and terror of the world.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Why may not I, my lord, as well as he,<br/>
Be term'd the scourge and terror of <SPAN href="#linknote-39"<br/>
name="linknoteref-39" id="linknoteref-39">39</SPAN> the world?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Be all a scourge and terror to <SPAN href="#linknote-40"<br/>
name="linknoteref-40" id="linknoteref-40">40</SPAN> the world,<br/>
Or else you are not sons of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. But, while my brothers follow arms, my lord,<br/>
Let me accompany my gracious mother:<br/>
They are enough to conquer all the world,<br/>
And you have won enough for me to keep.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Bastardly boy, sprung <SPAN href="#linknote-41"<br/>
name="linknoteref-41" id="linknoteref-41">41</SPAN> from some coward's loins,<br/>
And not the issue of great Tamburlaine!<br/>
Of all the provinces I have subdu'd<br/>
Thou shalt not have a foot, unless thou bear<br/>
A mind courageous and invincible;<br/>
For he shall wear the crown of Persia<br/>
Whose head hath deepest scars, whose breast most wounds,<br/>
Which, being wroth, sends lightning from his eyes,<br/>
And in the furrows of his frowning brows<br/>
Harbours revenge, war, death, and cruelty;<br/>
For in a field, whose superficies <SPAN href="#linknote-42"<br/>
name="linknoteref-42" id="linknoteref-42">42</SPAN><br/>
Is cover'd with a liquid purple veil,<br/>
And sprinkled with the brains of slaughter'd men,<br/>
My royal chair of state shall be advanc'd;<br/>
And he that means to place himself therein,<br/>
Must armed wade up to the chin in blood.<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE. My lord, such speeches to our princely sons<br/>
Dismay their minds before they come to prove<br/>
The wounding troubles angry war affords.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. No, madam, these are speeches fit for us;<br/>
For, if his chair were in a sea of blood,<br/>
I would prepare a ship and sail to it,<br/>
Ere I would lose the title of a king.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. And I would strive to swim through <SPAN href="#linknote-43"<br/>
name="linknoteref-43" id="linknoteref-43">43</SPAN> pools of blood,<br/>
Or make a bridge of murder'd carcasses, <SPAN href="#linknote-44"<br/>
name="linknoteref-44" id="linknoteref-44">44</SPAN><br/>
Whose arches should be fram'd with bones of Turks,<br/>
Ere I would lose the title of a king.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, lovely boys, ye shall be emperors both,<br/>
Stretching your conquering arms from east to west:—<br/>
And, sirrah, if you mean to wear a crown,<br/>
When we <SPAN href="#linknote-45" name="linknoteref-45" id="linknoteref-45">45</SPAN> shall meet the Turkish deputy<br/>
And all his viceroys, snatch it from his head,<br/>
And cleave his pericranion with thy sword.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. If any man will hold him, I will strike,<br/>
And cleave him to the channel <SPAN href="#linknote-46" name="linknoteref-46"<br/> id="linknoteref-46">46</SPAN> with my sword.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Hold him, and cleave him too, or I'll cleave thee;<br/>
For we will march against them presently.<br/>
Theridamas, Techelles, and Casane<br/>
Promis'd to meet me on Larissa-plains,<br/>
With hosts a-piece against this Turkish crew;<br/>
For I have sworn by sacred Mahomet<br/>
To make it parcel of my empery.<br/>
The trumpets sound; Zenocrate, they come.<br/>
Enter THERIDAMAS, and his train, with drums and trumpets.<br/>
Welcome, Theridamas, king of Argier.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. My lord, the great and mighty Tamburlaine,<br/>
Arch-monarch of the world, I offer here<br/>
My crown, myself, and all the power I have,<br/>
In all affection at thy kingly feet.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Thanks, good Theridamas.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Under my colours march ten thousand Greeks,<br/>
And of Argier and Afric's frontier towns<br/>
Twice twenty thousand valiant men-at-arms;<br/>
All which have sworn to sack Natolia.<br/>
Five hundred brigandines are under sail,<br/>
Meet for your service on the sea, my lord,<br/>
That, launching from Argier to Tripoly,<br/>
Will quickly ride before Natolia,<br/>
And batter down the castles on the shore.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well said, Argier! receive thy crown again.<br/>
Enter USUMCASANE and TECHELLES.<br/>
Kings of Morocco <SPAN href="#linknote-47" name="linknoteref-47"<br/> id="linknoteref-47">47</SPAN> and of Fez, welcome.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. Magnificent and peerless Tamburlaine,<br/>
I and my neighbour king of Fez have brought,<br/>
To aid thee in this Turkish expedition,<br/>
A hundred thousand expert soldiers;<br/>
]From Azamor to Tunis near the sea<br/>
Is Barbary unpeopled for thy sake,<br/>
And all the men in armour under me,<br/>
Which with my crown I gladly offer thee.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Thanks, king of Morocco: take your crown again.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. And, mighty Tamburlaine, our earthly god,<br/>
Whose looks make this inferior world to quake,<br/>
I here present thee with the crown of Fez,<br/>
And with an host of Moors train'd to the war, <SPAN href="#linknote-48"<br/>
name="linknoteref-48" id="linknoteref-48">48</SPAN><br/>
Whose coal-black faces make their foes retire,<br/>
And quake for fear, as if infernal <SPAN href="#linknote-49"<br/>
name="linknoteref-49" id="linknoteref-49">49</SPAN> Jove,<br/>
Meaning to aid thee <SPAN href="#linknote-50" name="linknoteref-50"<br/> id="linknoteref-50">50</SPAN> in these <SPAN href="#linknote-51"<br/>
name="linknoteref-51" id="linknoteref-51">51</SPAN> Turkish arms,<br/>
Should pierce the black circumference of hell,<br/>
With ugly Furies bearing fiery flags,<br/>
And millions of his strong <SPAN href="#linknote-52" name="linknoteref-52"<br/> id="linknoteref-52">52</SPAN> tormenting spirits:<br/>
]From strong Tesella unto Biledull<br/>
All Barbary is unpeopled for thy sake.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Thanks, king of Fez: take here thy crown again.<br/>
Your presence, loving friends and fellow-kings,<br/>
Makes me to surfeit in conceiving joy:<br/>
If all the crystal gates of Jove's high court<br/>
Were open'd wide, and I might enter in<br/>
To see the state and majesty of heaven,<br/>
It could not more delight me than your sight.<br/>
Now will we banquet on these plains a while,<br/>
And after march to Turkey with our camp,<br/>
In number more than are the drops that fall<br/>
When Boreas rents a thousand swelling clouds;<br/>
And proud Orcanes of Natolia<br/>
With all his viceroys shall be so afraid,<br/>
That, though the stones, as at Deucalion's flood,<br/>
Were turn'd to men, he should be overcome.<br/>
Such lavish will I make of Turkish blood,<br/>
That Jove shall send his winged messenger<br/>
To bid me sheathe my sword and leave the field;<br/>
The sun, unable to sustain the sight,<br/>
Shall hide his head in Thetis' watery lap,<br/>
And leave his steeds to fair Bootes' <SPAN href="#linknote-53"<br/>
name="linknoteref-53" id="linknoteref-53">53</SPAN> charge;<br/>
For half the world shall perish in this fight.<br/>
But now, my friends, let me examine ye;<br/>
How have ye spent your absent time from me?<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. My lord, our men of Barbary have march'd<br/>
Four hundred miles with armour on their backs,<br/>
And lain in leaguer <SPAN href="#linknote-54" name="linknoteref-54"<br/> id="linknoteref-54">54</SPAN> fifteen months and more;<br/>
For, since we left you at the Soldan's court,<br/>
We have subdu'd the southern Guallatia,<br/>
And all the land unto the coast of Spain;<br/>
We kept the narrow Strait of Jubalter, <SPAN href="#linknote-55"<br/>
name="linknoteref-55" id="linknoteref-55">55</SPAN><br/>
And made Canaria call us kings and lords:<br/>
Yet never did they recreate themselves,<br/>
Or cease one day from war and hot alarms;<br/>
And therefore let them rest a while, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. They shall, Casane, and 'tis time, i'faith.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. And I have march'd along the river Nile<br/>
To Machda, where the mighty Christian priest,<br/>
Call'd John the Great, <SPAN href="#linknote-56" name="linknoteref-56"<br/> id="linknoteref-56">56</SPAN> sits in a milk-white robe,<br/>
Whose triple mitre I did take by force,<br/>
And made him swear obedience to my crown.<br/>
]From thence unto Cazates did I march,<br/>
Where Amazonians met me in the field,<br/>
With whom, being women, I vouchsaf'd a league,<br/>
And with my power did march to Zanzibar,<br/>
The western part of Afric, where I view'd<br/>
The Ethiopian sea, rivers and lakes,<br/>
But neither man nor child in all the land:<br/>
Therefore I took my course to Manico,<br/>
Where, <SPAN href="#linknote-57" name="linknoteref-57" id="linknoteref-57">57</SPAN> unresisted, I remov'd my camp;<br/>
And, by the coast of Byather, <SPAN href="#linknote-58" name="linknoteref-58"<br/> id="linknoteref-58">58</SPAN> at last<br/>
I came to Cubar, where the negroes dwell,<br/>
And, conquering that, made haste to Nubia.<br/>
There, having sack'd Borno, the kingly seat,<br/>
I took the king and led him bound in chains<br/>
Unto Damascus, <SPAN href="#linknote-59" name="linknoteref-59"<br/> id="linknoteref-59">59</SPAN> where I stay'd before.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well done, Techelles!—What saith Theridamas?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. I left the confines and the bounds of Afric,<br/>
And made <SPAN href="#linknote-60" name="linknoteref-60" id="linknoteref-60">60</SPAN> a voyage into Europe,<br/>
Where, by the river Tyras, I subdu'd<br/>
Stoka, Podolia, and Codemia;<br/>
Then cross'd the sea and came to Oblia,<br/>
And Nigra Silva, where the devils dance,<br/>
Which, in despite of them, I set on fire.<br/>
]From thence I cross'd the gulf call'd by the name<br/>
Mare Majore of the inhabitants.<br/>
Yet shall my soldiers make no period<br/>
Until Natolia kneel before your feet.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Then will we triumph, banquet and carouse;<br/>
Cooks shall have pensions to provide us cates,<br/>
And glut us with the dainties of the world;<br/>
Lachryma Christi and Calabrian wines<br/>
Shall common soldiers drink in quaffing bowls,<br/>
Ay, liquid gold, when we have conquer'd him, <SPAN href="#linknote-61"<br/>
name="linknoteref-61" id="linknoteref-61">61</SPAN><br/>
Mingled with coral and with orient <SPAN href="#linknote-62"<br/>
name="linknoteref-62" id="linknoteref-62">62</SPAN> pearl.<br/>
Come, let us banquet and carouse the whiles.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT II. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>Enter SIGISMUND, FREDERICK, and BALDWIN, with their train.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Now say, my lords of Buda and Bohemia,<br/>
What motion is it that inflames your thoughts,<br/>
And stirs your valours to such sudden arms?<br/>
<br/>
FREDERICK. Your majesty remembers, I am sure,<br/>
What cruel slaughter of our Christian bloods<br/>
These heathenish Turks and pagans lately made<br/>
Betwixt the city Zula and Danubius;<br/>
How through the midst of Varna and Bulgaria,<br/>
And almost to the very walls of Rome,<br/>
They have, not long since, massacred our camp.<br/>
It resteth now, then, that your majesty<br/>
Take all advantages of time and power,<br/>
And work revenge upon these infidels.<br/>
Your highness knows, for Tamburlaine's repair,<br/>
That strikes a terror to all Turkish hearts,<br/>
Natolia hath dismiss'd the greatest part<br/>
Of all his army, pitch'd against our power<br/>
Betwixt Cutheia and Orminius' mount,<br/>
And sent them marching up to Belgasar,<br/>
Acantha, Antioch, and Caesarea,<br/>
To aid the kings of Soria <SPAN href="#linknote-63" name="linknoteref-63"<br/> id="linknoteref-63">63</SPAN> and Jerusalem.<br/>
Now, then, my lord, advantage take thereof, <SPAN href="#linknote-64"<br/>
name="linknoteref-64" id="linknoteref-64">64</SPAN><br/>
And issue suddenly upon the rest;<br/>
That, in the fortune of their overthrow,<br/>
We may discourage all the pagan troop<br/>
That dare attempt to war with Christians.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. But calls not, then, your grace to memory<br/>
The league we lately made with King Orcanes,<br/>
Confirm'd by oath and articles of peace,<br/>
And calling Christ for record of our truths?<br/>
This should be treachery and violence<br/>
Against the grace of our profession.<br/>
<br/>
BALDWIN. No whit, my lord; for with such infidels,<br/>
In whom no faith nor true religion rests,<br/>
We are not bound to those accomplishments<br/>
The holy laws of Christendom enjoin;<br/>
But, as the faith which they profanely plight<br/>
Is not by necessary policy<br/>
To be esteem'd assurance for ourselves,<br/>
So that we vow <SPAN href="#linknote-65" name="linknoteref-65"<br/> id="linknoteref-65">65</SPAN> to them should not infringe<br/>
Our liberty of arms and victory.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Though I confess the oaths they undertake<br/>
Breed little strength to our security,<br/>
Yet those infirmities that thus defame<br/>
Their faiths, <SPAN href="#linknote-66" name="linknoteref-66"<br/> id="linknoteref-66">66</SPAN> their honours, and religion, <SPAN href="#linknote-67" name="linknoteref-67" id="linknoteref-67">67</SPAN><br/>
Should not give us presumption to the like.<br/>
Our faiths are sound, and must be consummate, <SPAN href="#linknote-68"<br/>
name="linknoteref-68" id="linknoteref-68">68</SPAN><br/>
Religious, righteous, and inviolate.<br/>
<br/>
FREDERICK. Assure your grace, 'tis superstition<br/>
To stand so strictly on dispensive faith;<br/>
And, should we lose the opportunity<br/>
That God hath given to venge our Christians' death,<br/>
And scourge their foul blasphemous paganism,<br/>
As fell to Saul, to Balaam, and the rest,<br/>
That would not kill and curse at God's command,<br/>
So surely will the vengeance of the Highest,<br/>
And jealous anger of his fearful arm,<br/>
Be pour'd with rigour on our sinful heads,<br/>
If we neglect this <SPAN href="#linknote-69" name="linknoteref-69"<br/> id="linknoteref-69">69</SPAN> offer'd victory.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Then arm, my lords, and issue suddenly,<br/>
Giving commandment to our general host,<br/>
With expedition to assail the pagan,<br/>
And take the victory our God hath given.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter ORCANES, GAZELLUS, and URIBASSA, with their train.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Gazellus, Uribassa, and the rest,<br/>
Now will we march from proud Orminius' mount<br/>
To fair Natolia, where our neighbour kings<br/>
Expect our power and our royal presence,<br/>
T' encounter with the cruel Tamburlaine,<br/>
That nigh Larissa sways a mighty host,<br/>
And with the thunder of his martial <SPAN href="#linknote-70"<br/>
name="linknoteref-70" id="linknoteref-70">70</SPAN> tools<br/>
Makes earthquakes in the hearts of men and heaven.<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. And now come we to make his sinews shake<br/>
With greater power than erst his pride hath felt.<br/>
An hundred kings, by scores, will bid him arms,<br/>
And hundred thousands subjects to each score:<br/>
Which, if a shower of wounding thunderbolts<br/>
Should break out of the bowels of the clouds,<br/>
And fall as thick as hail upon our heads,<br/>
In partial aid of that proud Scythian,<br/>
Yet should our courages and steeled crests,<br/>
And numbers, more than infinite, of men,<br/>
Be able to withstand and conquer him.<br/>
<br/>
URIBASSA. Methinks I see how glad the Christian king<br/>
Is made for joy of our <SPAN href="#linknote-71" name="linknoteref-71"<br/> id="linknoteref-71">71</SPAN> admitted truce,<br/>
That could not but before be terrified<br/>
With <SPAN href="#linknote-72" name="linknoteref-72" id="linknoteref-72">72</SPAN> unacquainted power of our host.<br/>
<br/>
Enter a Messenger.<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER. Arm, dread sovereign, and my noble lords!<br/>
The treacherous army of the Christians,<br/>
Taking advantage of your slender power,<br/>
Comes marching on us, and determines straight<br/>
To bid us battle for our dearest lives.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Traitors, villains, damned Christians!<br/>
Have I not here the articles of peace<br/>
And solemn covenants we have both confirm'd,<br/>
He by his Christ, and I by Mahomet?<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. Hell and confusion light upon their heads,<br/>
That with such treason seek our overthrow,<br/>
And care so little for their prophet Christ!<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Can there be such deceit in Christians,<br/>
Or treason in the fleshly heart of man,<br/>
Whose shape is figure of the highest God?<br/>
Then, if there be a Christ, as Christians say,<br/>
But in their deeds deny him for their Christ,<br/>
If he be son to everliving Jove,<br/>
And hath the power of his outstretched arm,<br/>
If he be jealous of his name and honour<br/>
As is our holy prophet Mahomet,<br/>
Take here these papers as our sacrifice<br/>
And witness of thy servant's <SPAN href="#linknote-73" name="linknoteref-73"<br/> id="linknoteref-73">73</SPAN> perjury!<br/>
[He tears to pieces the articles of peace.]<br/>
Open, thou shining veil of Cynthia,<br/>
And make a passage from th' empyreal heaven,<br/>
That he that sits on high and never sleeps,<br/>
Nor in one place is circumscriptible,<br/>
But every where fills every continent<br/>
With strange infusion of his sacred vigour,<br/>
May, in his endless power and purity,<br/>
Behold and venge this traitor's perjury!<br/>
Thou, Christ, that art esteem'd omnipotent,<br/>
If thou wilt prove thyself a perfect God,<br/>
Worthy the worship of all faithful hearts,<br/>
Be now reveng'd upon this traitor's soul,<br/>
And make the power I have left behind<br/>
(Too little to defend our guiltless lives)<br/>
Sufficient to discomfit <SPAN href="#linknote-74" name="linknoteref-74"<br/> id="linknoteref-74">74</SPAN> and confound<br/>
The trustless force of those false Christians!—<br/>
To arms, my lords! <SPAN href="#linknote-75" name="linknoteref-75"<br/> id="linknoteref-75">75</SPAN> on Christ still let us cry:<br/>
If there be Christ, we shall have victory.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Alarms of battle within. Enter SIGISMUND wounded.<br/>
<br/>
SIGISMUND. Discomfited is all the Christian <SPAN href="#linknote-76"<br/>
name="linknoteref-76" id="linknoteref-76">76</SPAN> host,<br/>
And God hath thunder'd vengeance from on high,<br/>
For my accurs'd and hateful perjury.<br/>
O just and dreadful punisher of sin,<br/>
Let the dishonour of the pains I feel<br/>
In this my mortal well-deserved wound<br/>
End all my penance in my sudden death!<br/>
And let this death, wherein to sin I die,<br/>
Conceive a second life in endless mercy!<br/>
[Dies.]<br/>
<br/>
Enter ORCANES, GAZELLUS, URIBASSA, with others.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Now lie the Christians bathing in their bloods,<br/>
And Christ or Mahomet hath been my friend.<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. See, here the perjur'd traitor Hungary,<br/>
Bloody and breathless for his villany!<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Now shall his barbarous body be a prey<br/>
To beasts and fowls, and all the winds shall breathe,<br/>
Through shady leaves of every senseless tree,<br/>
Murmurs and hisses for his heinous sin.<br/>
Now scalds his soul in the Tartarian streams,<br/>
And feeds upon the baneful tree of hell,<br/>
That Zoacum, <SPAN href="#linknote-77" name="linknoteref-77"<br/> id="linknoteref-77">77</SPAN> that fruit of bitterness,<br/>
That in the midst of fire is ingraff'd,<br/>
Yet flourisheth, as Flora in her pride,<br/>
With apples like the heads of damned fiends.<br/>
The devils there, in chains of quenchless flame,<br/>
Shall lead his soul, through Orcus' burning gulf,<br/>
]From pain to pain, whose change shall never end.<br/>
What say'st thou yet, Gazellus, to his foil,<br/>
Which we referr'd to justice of his Christ<br/>
And to his power, which here appears as full<br/>
As rays of Cynthia to the clearest sight?<br/>
<br/>
GAZELLUS. 'Tis but the fortune of the wars, my lord,<br/>
Whose power is often prov'd a miracle.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Yet in my thoughts shall Christ be honoured,<br/>
Not doing Mahomet an <SPAN href="#linknote-78" name="linknoteref-78"<br/> id="linknoteref-78">78</SPAN> injury,<br/>
Whose power had share in this our victory;<br/>
And, since this miscreant hath disgrac'd his faith,<br/>
And died a traitor both to heaven and earth,<br/>
We will both watch and ward shall keep his trunk <SPAN href="#linknote-79"<br/>
name="linknoteref-79" id="linknoteref-79">79</SPAN><br/>
Amidst these plains for fowls to prey upon.<br/>
Go, Uribassa, give <SPAN href="#linknote-80" name="linknoteref-80"<br/> id="linknoteref-80">80</SPAN> it straight in charge.<br/>
<br/>
URIBASSA. I will, my lord.<br/>
[Exit.]<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. And now, Gazellus, let us haste and meet<br/>
Our army, and our brother[s] of Jerusalem,<br/>
Of Soria, <SPAN href="#linknote-81" name="linknoteref-81" id="linknoteref-81">81</SPAN> Trebizon, and Amasia,<br/>
And happily, with full Natolian bowls<br/>
Of Greekish wine, now let us celebrate<br/>
Our happy conquest and his angry fate.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE IV. </h2>
<p>The arras is drawn, and ZENOCRATE is discovered lying<br/>
in her bed of state; TAMBURLAINE sitting by her; three<br/>
PHYSICIANS about her bed, tempering potions; her three<br/>
sons, CALYPHAS, AMYRAS, and CELEBINUS; THERIDAMAS,<br/>
TECHELLES, and USUMCASANE.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Black is the beauty of the brightest day;<br/>
The golden ball of heaven's eternal fire,<br/>
That danc'd with glory on the silver waves,<br/>
Now wants the fuel that inflam'd his beams;<br/>
And all with faintness, and for foul disgrace,<br/>
He binds his temples with a frowning cloud,<br/>
Ready to darken earth with endless night.<br/>
Zenocrate, that gave him light and life,<br/>
Whose eyes shot fire from their <SPAN href="#linknote-82" name="linknoteref-82"<br/> id="linknoteref-82">82</SPAN> ivory brows, <SPAN href="#linknote-83"<br/>
name="linknoteref-83" id="linknoteref-83">83</SPAN><br/>
And temper'd every soul with lively heat,<br/>
Now by the malice of the angry skies,<br/>
Whose jealousy admits no second mate,<br/>
Draws in the comfort of her latest breath,<br/>
All dazzled with the hellish mists of death.<br/>
Now walk the angels on the walls of heaven,<br/>
As sentinels to warn th' immortal souls<br/>
To entertain divine Zenocrate:<br/>
Apollo, Cynthia, and the ceaseless lamps<br/>
That gently look'd upon this <SPAN href="#linknote-84" name="linknoteref-84"<br/> id="linknoteref-84">84</SPAN> loathsome earth,<br/>
Shine downwards now no more, but deck the heavens<br/>
To entertain divine Zenocrate:<br/>
The crystal springs, whose taste illuminates<br/>
Refined eyes with an eternal sight,<br/>
Like tried silver run through Paradise<br/>
To entertain divine Zenocrate:<br/>
The cherubins and holy seraphins,<br/>
That sing and play before the King of Kings,<br/>
Use all their voices and their instruments<br/>
To entertain divine Zenocrate;<br/>
And, in this sweet and curious harmony,<br/>
The god that tunes this music to our souls<br/>
Holds out his hand in highest majesty<br/>
To entertain divine Zenocrate.<br/>
Then let some holy trance convey my thoughts<br/>
Up to the palace of th' empyreal heaven,<br/>
That this my life may be as short to me<br/>
As are the days of sweet Zenocrate.—<br/>
Physicians, will no <SPAN href="#linknote-85" name="linknoteref-85"<br/> id="linknoteref-85">85</SPAN> physic do her good?<br/>
<br/>
FIRST PHYSICIAN. My lord, your majesty shall soon perceive,<br/>
An if she pass this fit, the worst is past.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Tell me, how fares my fair Zenocrate?<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE. I fare, my lord, as other empresses,<br/>
That, when this frail and <SPAN href="#linknote-86" name="linknoteref-86"<br/> id="linknoteref-86">86</SPAN> transitory flesh<br/>
Hath suck'd the measure of that vital air<br/>
That feeds the body with his dated health,<br/>
Wane with enforc'd and necessary change.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. May never such a change transform my love,<br/>
In whose sweet being I repose my life!<br/>
Whose heavenly presence, beautified with health,<br/>
Gives light to Phoebus and the fixed stars;<br/>
Whose absence makes <SPAN href="#linknote-87" name="linknoteref-87"<br/> id="linknoteref-87">87</SPAN> the sun and moon as dark<br/>
As when, oppos'd in one diameter,<br/>
Their spheres are mounted on the serpent's head,<br/>
Or else descended to his winding train.<br/>
Live still, my love, and so conserve my life,<br/>
Or, dying, be the author <SPAN href="#linknote-88" name="linknoteref-88"<br/> id="linknoteref-88">88</SPAN> of my death.<br/>
<br/>
ZENOCRATE. Live still, my lord; O, let my sovereign live!<br/>
And sooner let the fiery element<br/>
Dissolve, and make your kingdom in the sky,<br/>
Than this base earth should shroud your majesty;<br/>
For, should I but suspect your death by mine,<br/>
The comfort of my future happiness,<br/>
And hope to meet your highness in the heavens,<br/>
Turn'd to despair, would break my wretched breast,<br/>
And fury would confound my present rest.<br/>
But let me die, my love; yes, <SPAN href="#linknote-89" name="linknoteref-89"<br/> id="linknoteref-89">89</SPAN> let me die;<br/>
With love and patience let your true love die:<br/>
Your grief and fury hurts my second life.<br/>
Yet let me kiss my lord before I die,<br/>
And let me die with kissing of my lord.<br/>
But, since my life is lengthen'd yet a while,<br/>
Let me take leave of these my loving sons,<br/>
And of my lords, whose true nobility<br/>
Have merited my latest memory.<br/>
Sweet sons, farewell! in death resemble me,<br/>
And in your lives your father's excellence. <SPAN href="#linknote-90"<br/>
name="linknoteref-90" id="linknoteref-90">90</SPAN><br/>
Some music, and my fit will cease, my lord.<br/>
[They call for music.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Proud fury, and intolerable fit,<br/>
That dares torment the body of my love,<br/>
And scourge the scourge of the immortal God!<br/>
Now are those spheres, where Cupid us'd to sit,<br/>
Wounding the world with wonder and with love,<br/>
Sadly supplied with pale and ghastly death,<br/>
Whose darts do pierce the centre of my soul.<br/>
Her sacred beauty hath enchanted heaven;<br/>
And, had she liv'd before the siege of Troy,<br/>
Helen, whose beauty summon'd Greece to arms,<br/>
And drew a thousand ships to Tenedos,<br/>
Had not been nam'd in Homer's Iliads,—<br/>
Her name had been in every line he wrote;<br/>
Or, had those wanton poets, for whose birth<br/>
Old Rome was proud, but gaz'd a while on her,<br/>
Nor Lesbia nor Corinna had been nam'd,—<br/>
Zenocrate had been the argument<br/>
Of every epigram or elegy.<br/>
[The music sounds—ZENOCRATE dies.]<br/>
What, is she dead? Techelles, draw thy sword,<br/>
And wound the earth, that it may cleave in twain,<br/>
And we descend into th' infernal vaults,<br/>
To hale the Fatal Sisters by the hair,<br/>
And throw them in the triple moat of hell,<br/>
For taking hence my fair Zenocrate.<br/>
Casane and Theridamas, to arms!<br/>
Raise cavalieros <SPAN href="#linknote-91" name="linknoteref-91"<br/> id="linknoteref-91">91</SPAN> higher than the clouds,<br/>
And with the cannon break the frame of heaven;<br/>
Batter the shining palace of the sun,<br/>
And shiver all the starry firmament,<br/>
For amorous Jove hath snatch'd my love from hence,<br/>
Meaning to make her stately queen of heaven.<br/>
What god soever holds thee in his arms,<br/>
Giving thee nectar and ambrosia,<br/>
Behold me here, divine Zenocrate,<br/>
Raving, impatient, desperate, and mad,<br/>
Breaking my steeled lance, with which I burst<br/>
The rusty beams of Janus' temple-doors,<br/>
Letting out Death and tyrannizing War,<br/>
To march with me under this bloody flag!<br/>
And, if thou pitiest Tamburlaine the Great,<br/>
Come down from heaven, and live with me again!<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Ah, good my lord, be patient! she is dead,<br/>
And all this raging cannot make her live.<br/>
If words might serve, our voice hath rent the air;<br/>
If tears, our eyes have water'd all the earth;<br/>
If grief, our murder'd hearts have strain'd forth blood:<br/>
Nothing prevails, <SPAN href="#linknote-92" name="linknoteref-92"<br/> id="linknoteref-92">92</SPAN> for she is dead, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. FOR SHE IS DEAD! thy words do pierce my soul:<br/>
Ah, sweet Theridamas, say so no more!<br/>
Though she be dead, yet let me think she lives,<br/>
And feed my mind that dies for want of her.<br/>
Where'er her soul be, thou [To the body] shalt stay with me,<br/>
Embalm'd with cassia, ambergris, and myrrh,<br/>
Not lapt in lead, but in a sheet of gold,<br/>
And, till I die, thou shalt not be interr'd.<br/>
Then in as rich a tomb as Mausolus' <SPAN href="#linknote-93"<br/>
name="linknoteref-93" id="linknoteref-93">93</SPAN><br/>
We both will rest, and have one <SPAN href="#linknote-94" name="linknoteref-94"<br/> id="linknoteref-94">94</SPAN> epitaph<br/>
Writ in as many several languages<br/>
As I have conquer'd kingdoms with my sword.<br/>
This cursed town will I consume with fire,<br/>
Because this place bereft me of my love;<br/>
The houses, burnt, will look as if they mourn'd;<br/>
And here will I set up her stature, <SPAN href="#linknote-95"<br/>
name="linknoteref-95" id="linknoteref-95">95</SPAN><br/>
And march about it with my mourning camp,<br/>
Drooping and pining for Zenocrate.<br/>
[The arras is drawn.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT III. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>Enter the KINGS OF TREBIZON and SORIA, <SPAN href="#linknote-96"<br/>
name="linknoteref-96" id="linknoteref-96">96</SPAN> one bringing a<br/>
sword and the other a sceptre; next, ORCANES king of<br/>
Natolia, and the KING OF JERUSALEM with the imperial crown,<br/>
after, CALLAPINE; and, after him, other LORDS and ALMEDA.<br/>
ORCANES and the KING OF JERUSALEM crown CALLAPINE, and the<br/>
others give him the sceptre.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Callapinus Cyricelibes, otherwise Cybelius, son and<br/>
successive heir to the late mighty emperor Bajazeth, by the aid<br/>
of God and his friend Mahomet, Emperor of Natolia, Jerusalem,<br/>
Trebizon, Soria, Amasia, Thracia, Ilyria, Carmania, and all the<br/>
hundred and thirty kingdoms late contributory to his mighty<br/>
father,—long live Callapinus, Emperor of Turkey!<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Thrice-worthy kings, of Natolia and the rest,<br/>
I will requite your royal gratitudes<br/>
With all the benefits my empire yields;<br/>
And, were the sinews of th' imperial seat<br/>
So knit and strengthen'd as when Bajazeth,<br/>
My royal lord and father, fill'd the throne,<br/>
Whose cursed fate <SPAN href="#linknote-97" name="linknoteref-97"<br/> id="linknoteref-97">97</SPAN> hath so dismember'd it,<br/>
Then should you see this thief of Scythia,<br/>
This proud usurping king of Persia,<br/>
Do us such honour and supremacy,<br/>
Bearing the vengeance of our father's wrongs,<br/>
As all the world should blot his <SPAN href="#linknote-98"<br/>
name="linknoteref-98" id="linknoteref-98">98</SPAN> dignities<br/>
Out of the book of base-born infamies.<br/>
And now I doubt not but your royal cares<br/>
Have so provided for this cursed foe,<br/>
That, since the heir of mighty Bajazeth<br/>
(An emperor so honour'd for his virtues)<br/>
Revives the spirits of all <SPAN href="#linknote-99" name="linknoteref-99"<br/> id="linknoteref-99">99</SPAN> true Turkish hearts,<br/>
In grievous memory of his father's shame,<br/>
We shall not need to nourish any doubt,<br/>
But that proud Fortune, who hath follow'd long<br/>
The martial sword of mighty Tamburlaine,<br/>
Will now retain her old inconstancy,<br/>
And raise our honours <SPAN href="#linknote-100" name="linknoteref-100"<br/> id="linknoteref-100">100</SPAN> to as high a pitch,<br/>
In this our strong and fortunate encounter;<br/>
For so hath heaven provided my escape<br/>
]From all the cruelty my soul sustain'd,<br/>
By this my friendly keeper's happy means,<br/>
That Jove, surcharg'd with pity of our wrongs,<br/>
Will pour it down in showers on our heads,<br/>
Scourging the pride of cursed Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. I have a hundred thousand men in arms;<br/>
Some that, in conquest <SPAN href="#linknote-101" name="linknoteref-101"<br/> id="linknoteref-101">101</SPAN> of the perjur'd Christian,<br/>
Being a handful to a mighty host,<br/>
Think them in number yet sufficient<br/>
To drink the river Nile or Euphrates,<br/>
And for their power enow to win the world.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. And I as many from Jerusalem,<br/>
Judaea, <SPAN href="#linknote-102" name="linknoteref-102" id="linknoteref-102">102</SPAN> Gaza, and Sclavonia's <SPAN href="#linknote-103" name="linknoteref-103" id="linknoteref-103">103</SPAN> bounds,<br/>
That on mount Sinai, with their ensigns spread,<br/>
Look like the parti-colour'd clouds of heaven<br/>
That shew fair weather to the neighbour morn.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON. And I as many bring from Trebizon,<br/>
Chio, Famastro, and Amasia,<br/>
All bordering on the Mare-Major-sea,<br/>
Riso, Sancina, and the bordering towns<br/>
That touch the end of famous Euphrates,<br/>
Whose courages are kindled with the flames<br/>
The cursed Scythian sets on all their towns,<br/>
And vow to burn the villain's cruel heart.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF SORIA. From Soria <SPAN href="#linknote-104" name="linknoteref-104"<br/> id="linknoteref-104">104</SPAN> with seventy thousand strong,<br/>
Ta'en from Aleppo, Soldino, Tripoly,<br/>
And so unto my city of Damascus, <SPAN href="#linknote-105"<br/>
name="linknoteref-105" id="linknoteref-105">105</SPAN><br/>
I march to meet and aid my neighbour kings;<br/>
All which will join against this Tamburlaine,<br/>
And bring him captive to your highness' feet.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Our battle, then, in martial manner pitch'd,<br/>
According to our ancient use, shall bear<br/>
The figure of the semicircled moon,<br/>
Whose horns shell sprinkle through the tainted air<br/>
The poison'd brains of this proud Scythian.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Well, then, my noble lords, for this my friend<br/>
That freed me from the bondage of my foe,<br/>
I think it requisite and honourable<br/>
To keep my promise and to make him king,<br/>
That is a gentleman, I know, at least.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. That's no matter, <SPAN href="#linknote-106" name="linknoteref-106"<br/> id="linknoteref-106">106</SPAN> sir, for being a king;<br/>
or Tamburlaine came up of nothing.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. Your majesty may choose some 'pointed time,<br/>
Performing all your promise to the full;<br/>
'Tis naught for your majesty to give a kingdom.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Then will I shortly keep my promise, Almeda.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. Why, I thank your majesty.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter TAMBURLAINE and his three sons, CALYPHAS, AMYRAS, and<br/>
CELEBINUS; USUMCASANE; four ATTENDANTS bearing the hearse of<br/>
ZENOCRATE, and the drums sounding a doleful march; the town<br/>
burning.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. So burn the turrets of this cursed town,<br/>
Flame to the highest region of the air,<br/>
And kindle heaps of exhalations,<br/>
That, being fiery meteors, may presage<br/>
Death and destruction to the inhabitants!<br/>
Over my zenith hang a blazing star,<br/>
That may endure till heaven be dissolv'd,<br/>
Fed with the fresh supply of earthly dregs,<br/>
Threatening a dearth <SPAN href="#linknote-107" name="linknoteref-107"<br/> id="linknoteref-107">107</SPAN> and famine to this land!<br/>
Flying dragons, lightning, fearful thunder-claps,<br/>
Singe these fair plains, and make them seem as black<br/>
As is the island where the Furies mask,<br/>
Compass'd with Lethe, Styx, and Phlegethon,<br/>
Because my dear Zenocrate is dead!<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. This pillar, plac'd in memory of her,<br/>
Where in Arabian, Hebrew, Greek, is writ,<br/>
THIS TOWN, BEING BURNT BY TAMBURLAINE THE GREAT,<br/>
FORBIDS THE WORLD TO BUILD IT UP AGAIN.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. And here this mournful streamer shall be plac'd,<br/>
Wrought with the Persian and th' <SPAN href="#linknote-108"<br/>
name="linknoteref-108" id="linknoteref-108">108</SPAN> Egyptian arms,<br/>
To signify she was a princess born,<br/>
And wife unto the monarch of the East.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. And here this table as a register<br/>
Of all her virtues and perfections.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. And here the picture of Zenocrate,<br/>
To shew her beauty which the world admir'd;<br/>
Sweet picture of divine Zenocrate,<br/>
That, hanging here, will draw the gods from heaven,<br/>
And cause the stars fix'd in the southern arc,<br/>
(Whose lovely faces never any view'd<br/>
That have not pass'd the centre's latitude,)<br/>
As pilgrims travel to our hemisphere,<br/>
Only to gaze upon Zenocrate.<br/>
Thou shalt not beautify Larissa-plains,<br/>
But keep within the circle of mine arms:<br/>
At every town and castle I besiege,<br/>
Thou shalt be set upon my royal tent;<br/>
And, when I meet an army in the field,<br/>
Those <SPAN href="#linknote-109" name="linknoteref-109" id="linknoteref-109">109</SPAN> looks will shed such influence in my camp,<br/>
As if Bellona, goddess of the war,<br/>
Threw naked swords and sulphur-balls of fire<br/>
Upon the heads of all our enemies.—<br/>
And now, my lords, advance your spears again;<br/>
Sorrow no more, my sweet Casane, now:<br/>
Boys, leave to mourn; this town shall ever mourn,<br/>
Being burnt to cinders for your mother's death.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. If I had wept a sea of tears for her,<br/>
would not ease the sorrows <SPAN href="#linknote-110" name="linknoteref-110"<br/> id="linknoteref-110">110</SPAN> I sustain.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. As is that town, so is my heart consum'd<br/>
With grief and sorrow for my mother's death.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. My mother's death hath mortified my mind,<br/>
And sorrow stops the passage of my speech.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. But now, my boys, leave off, and list to me,<br/>
That mean to teach you rudiments of war.<br/>
I'll have you learn to sleep upon the ground,<br/>
March in your armour thorough watery fens,<br/>
Sustain the scorching heat and freezing cold,<br/>
Hunger and thirst, <SPAN href="#linknote-111" name="linknoteref-111"<br/> id="linknoteref-111">111</SPAN> right adjuncts of the war;<br/>
And, after this, to scale a castle-wall,<br/>
Besiege a fort, to undermine a town,<br/>
And make whole cities caper in the air:<br/>
Then next, the way to fortify your men;<br/>
In champion <SPAN href="#linknote-112" name="linknoteref-112"<br/> id="linknoteref-112">112</SPAN> grounds what figure serves you best,<br/>
For which <SPAN href="#linknote-113" name="linknoteref-113"<br/> id="linknoteref-113">113</SPAN> the quinque-angle form is meet,<br/>
Because the corners there may fall more flat<br/>
Whereas <SPAN href="#linknote-114" name="linknoteref-114" id="linknoteref-114">114</SPAN> the fort may fittest be assail'd,<br/>
And sharpest where th' assault is desperate:<br/>
The ditches must be deep; the <SPAN href="#linknote-115" name="linknoteref-115"<br/> id="linknoteref-115">115</SPAN> counterscarps<br/>
Narrow and steep; the walls made high and broad;<br/>
The bulwarks and the rampires large and strong,<br/>
With cavalieros <SPAN href="#linknote-116" name="linknoteref-116"<br/> id="linknoteref-116">116</SPAN> and thick counterforts,<br/>
And room within to lodge six thousand men;<br/>
It must have privy ditches, countermines,<br/>
And secret issuings to defend the ditch;<br/>
It must have high argins <SPAN href="#linknote-117" name="linknoteref-117"<br/> id="linknoteref-117">117</SPAN> and cover'd ways<br/>
To keep the bulwark-fronts from battery,<br/>
And parapets to hide the musketeers,<br/>
Casemates to place the great <SPAN href="#linknote-118" name="linknoteref-118"<br/> id="linknoteref-118">118</SPAN> artillery,<br/>
And store of ordnance, that from every flank<br/>
May scour the outward curtains of the fort,<br/>
Dismount the cannon of the adverse part,<br/>
Murder the foe, and save the <SPAN href="#linknote-119" name="linknoteref-119"<br/> id="linknoteref-119">119</SPAN> walls from breach.<br/>
When this is learn'd for service on the land,<br/>
By plain and easy demonstration<br/>
I'll teach you how to make the water mount,<br/>
That you may dry-foot march through lakes and pools,<br/>
Deep rivers, havens, creeks, and little seas,<br/>
And make a fortress in the raging waves,<br/>
Fenc'd with the concave of a monstrous rock,<br/>
Invincible by nature <SPAN href="#linknote-120" name="linknoteref-120"<br/> id="linknoteref-120">120</SPAN> of the place.<br/>
When this is done, then are ye soldiers,<br/>
And worthy sons of Tamburlaine the Great.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. My lord, but this is dangerous to be done;<br/>
We may be slain or wounded ere we learn.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Villain, art thou the son of Tamburlaine,<br/>
And fear'st to die, or with a <SPAN href="#linknote-121" name="linknoteref-121"<br/> id="linknoteref-121">121</SPAN> curtle-axe<br/>
To hew thy flesh, and make a gaping wound?<br/>
Hast thou beheld a peal of ordnance strike<br/>
A ring of pikes, mingled with shot and horse, <SPAN href="#linknote-122"<br/>
name="linknoteref-122" id="linknoteref-122">122</SPAN><br/>
Whose shatter'd limbs, being toss'd as high as heaven,<br/>
Hang in the air as thick as sunny motes,<br/>
And canst thou, coward, stand in fear of death?<br/>
Hast thou not seen my horsemen charge the foe,<br/>
Shot through the arms, cut overthwart the hands,<br/>
Dying their lances with their streaming blood,<br/>
And yet at night carouse within my tent,<br/>
Filling their empty veins with airy wine,<br/>
That, being concocted, turns to crimson blood,<br/>
And wilt thou shun the field for fear of wounds?<br/>
View me, thy father, that hath conquer'd kings,<br/>
And, with his <SPAN href="#linknote-123" name="linknoteref-123"<br/> id="linknoteref-123">123</SPAN> host, march'd <SPAN href="#linknote-124"<br/>
name="linknoteref-124" id="linknoteref-124">124</SPAN> round about the earth,<br/>
Quite void of scars and clear from any wound,<br/>
That by the wars lost not a drop <SPAN href="#linknote-125"<br/>
name="linknoteref-125" id="linknoteref-125">125</SPAN> of blood,<br/>
And see him lance <SPAN href="#linknote-126" name="linknoteref-126"<br/> id="linknoteref-126">126</SPAN> his flesh to teach you all.<br/>
[He cuts his arm.]<br/>
A wound is nothing, be it ne'er so deep;<br/>
Blood is the god of war's rich livery.<br/>
Now look I like a soldier, and this wound<br/>
As great a grace and majesty to me,<br/>
As if a chair of gold enamelled,<br/>
Enchas'd with diamonds, sapphires, rubies,<br/>
And fairest pearl of wealthy India,<br/>
Were mounted here under a canopy,<br/>
And I sat down, cloth'd with a massy robe<br/>
That late adorn'd the Afric potentate,<br/>
Whom I brought bound unto Damascus' walls.<br/>
Come, boys, and with your fingers search my wound,<br/>
And in my blood wash all your hands at once,<br/>
While I sit smiling to behold the sight.<br/>
Now, my boys, what think ye of a wound?<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. I know not <SPAN href="#linknote-127" name="linknoteref-127"<br/> id="linknoteref-127">127</SPAN> what I should think of it;<br/>
methinks 'tis a pitiful sight.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. 'Tis <SPAN href="#linknote-128" name="linknoteref-128"<br/> id="linknoteref-128">128</SPAN> nothing.—Give me a wound, father.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. And me another, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Come, sirrah, give me your arm.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. Here, father, cut it bravely, as you did your own.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. It shall suffice thou dar'st abide a wound;<br/>
My boy, thou shalt not lose a drop of blood<br/>
Before we meet the army of the Turk;<br/>
But then run desperate through the thickest throngs,<br/>
Dreadless of blows, of bloody wounds, and death;<br/>
And let the burning of Larissa-walls,<br/>
My speech of war, and this my wound you see,<br/>
Teach you, my boys, to bear courageous minds,<br/>
Fit for the followers of great Tamburlaine.—<br/>
Usumcasane, now come, let us march<br/>
Towards Techelles and Theridamas,<br/>
That we have sent before to fire the towns,<br/>
The towers and cities of these hateful Turks,<br/>
And hunt that coward faint-heart runaway,<br/>
With that accursed <SPAN href="#linknote-129" name="linknoteref-129"<br/> id="linknoteref-129">129</SPAN> traitor Almeda,<br/>
Till fire and sword have found them at a bay.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. I long to pierce his <SPAN href="#linknote-130"<br/>
name="linknoteref-130" id="linknoteref-130">130</SPAN> bowels with my sword,<br/>
That hath betray'd my gracious sovereign,—<br/>
That curs'd and damned traitor Almeda.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Then let us see if coward Callapine<br/>
Dare levy arms against our puissance,<br/>
That we may tread upon his captive neck,<br/>
And treble all his father's slaveries.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Enter TECHELLES, THERIDAMAS, and their train.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Thus have we march'd northward from Tamburlaine,<br/>
Unto the frontier point <SPAN href="#linknote-131" name="linknoteref-131"<br/> id="linknoteref-131">131</SPAN> of Soria; <SPAN href="#linknote-132"<br/>
name="linknoteref-132" id="linknoteref-132">132</SPAN><br/>
And this is Balsera, their chiefest hold,<br/>
Wherein is all the treasure of the land.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Then let us bring our light artillery,<br/>
Minions, falc'nets, and sakers, <SPAN href="#linknote-133"<br/>
name="linknoteref-133" id="linknoteref-133">133</SPAN> to the trench,<br/>
Filling the ditches with the walls' wide breach,<br/>
And enter in to seize upon the hold.— <SPAN href="#linknote-134"<br/>
name="linknoteref-134" id="linknoteref-134">134</SPAN><br/>
How say you, soldiers, shall we not?<br/>
<br/>
SOLDIERS. Yes, my lord, yes; come, let's about it.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. But stay a while; summon a parle, drum.<br/>
It may be they will yield it quietly, <SPAN href="#linknote-135"<br/>
name="linknoteref-135" id="linknoteref-135">135</SPAN><br/>
Knowing two kings, the friends <SPAN href="#linknote-136"<br/>
name="linknoteref-136" id="linknoteref-136">136</SPAN> to Tamburlaine,<br/>
Stand at the walls with such a mighty power.<br/>
[A parley sounded.—CAPTAIN appears on the walls,<br/>
with OLYMPIA his wife, and his SON.]<br/>
<br/>
CAPTAIN. What require you, my masters?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Captain, that thou yield up thy hold to us.<br/>
<br/>
CAPTAIN. To you! why, do you <SPAN href="#linknote-137" name="linknoteref-137"<br/> id="linknoteref-137">137</SPAN> think me weary of it?<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Nay, captain, thou art weary of thy life,<br/>
If thou withstand the friends of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. These pioners <SPAN href="#linknote-138" name="linknoteref-138"<br/> id="linknoteref-138">138</SPAN> of Argier in Africa,<br/>
Even in <SPAN href="#linknote-139" name="linknoteref-139" id="linknoteref-139">139</SPAN> the cannon's face, shall raise a hill<br/>
Of earth and faggots higher than thy fort,<br/>
And, over thy argins <SPAN href="#linknote-140" name="linknoteref-140"<br/> id="linknoteref-140">140</SPAN> and cover'd ways,<br/>
Shall play upon the bulwarks of thy hold<br/>
Volleys of ordnance, till the breach be made<br/>
That with his ruin fills up all the trench;<br/>
And, when we enter in, not heaven itself<br/>
Shall ransom thee, thy wife, and family.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Captain, these Moors shall cut the leaden pipes<br/>
That bring fresh water to thy men and thee,<br/>
And lie in trench before thy castle-walls,<br/>
That no supply of victual shall come in,<br/>
Nor [any] issue forth but they shall die;<br/>
And, therefore, captain, yield it quietly. <SPAN href="#linknote-141"<br/>
name="linknoteref-141" id="linknoteref-141">141</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
CAPTAIN. Were you, that are the friends of Tamburlaine, <SPAN href="#linknote-142" name="linknoteref-142" id="linknoteref-142">142</SPAN><br/>
Brothers of <SPAN href="#linknote-143" name="linknoteref-143"<br/> id="linknoteref-143">143</SPAN> holy Mahomet himself,<br/>
I would not yield it; therefore do your worst:<br/>
Raise mounts, batter, intrench, and undermine,<br/>
Cut off the water, all convoys that can, <SPAN href="#linknote-144"<br/>
name="linknoteref-144" id="linknoteref-144">144</SPAN><br/>
Yet I am <SPAN href="#linknote-145" name="linknoteref-145" id="linknoteref-145">145</SPAN> resolute: and so, farewell.<br/>
[CAPTAIN, OLYMPIA, and SON, retire from the walls.]<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Pioners, away! and where I stuck the stake,<br/>
Intrench with those dimensions I prescrib'd;<br/>
Cast up the earth towards the castle-wall,<br/>
Which, till it may defend you, labour low,<br/>
And few or none shall perish by their shot.<br/>
<br/>
PIONERS. We will, my lord.<br/>
[Exeunt PIONERS.]<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. A hundred horse shall scout about the plains,<br/>
To spy what force comes to relieve the hold.<br/>
Both we, Theridamas, will intrench our men,<br/>
And with the Jacob's staff measure the height<br/>
And distance of the castle from the trench,<br/>
That we may know if our artillery<br/>
Will carry full point-blank unto their walls.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Then see the bringing of our ordnance<br/>
Along the trench into <SPAN href="#linknote-146" name="linknoteref-146"<br/> id="linknoteref-146">146</SPAN> the battery,<br/>
Where we will have gallions of six foot broad,<br/>
To save our cannoneers from musket-shot;<br/>
Betwixt which shall our ordnance thunder forth,<br/>
And with the breach's fall, smoke, fire, and dust,<br/>
The crack, the echo, and the soldiers' cry,<br/>
Make deaf the air and dim the crystal sky.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Trumpets and drums, alarum presently!<br/>
And, soldiers, play the men; the hold <SPAN href="#linknote-147"<br/>
name="linknoteref-147" id="linknoteref-147">147</SPAN> is yours!<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE IV. </h2>
<p>Alarms within. Enter the CAPTAIN, with OLYMPIA, and his<br/>
SON.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Come, good my lord, and let us haste from hence,<br/>
Along the cave that leads beyond the foe:<br/>
No hope is left to save this conquer'd hold.<br/>
<br/>
CAPTAIN. A deadly bullet, gliding through my side,<br/>
Lies heavy on my heart; I cannot live:<br/>
I feel my liver pierc'd, and all my veins,<br/>
That there begin and nourish every part,<br/>
Mangled and torn, and all my entrails bath'd<br/>
In blood that straineth <SPAN href="#linknote-148" name="linknoteref-148"<br/> id="linknoteref-148">148</SPAN> from their orifex.<br/>
Farewell, sweet wife! sweet son, farewell! I die.<br/>
[Dies.]<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Death, whither art thou gone, that both we live?<br/>
Come back again, sweet Death, and strike us both!<br/>
One minute and our days, and one sepulchre<br/>
Contain our bodies! Death, why com'st thou not<br/>
Well, this must be the messenger for thee:<br/>
[Drawing a dagger.]<br/>
Now, ugly Death, stretch out thy sable wings,<br/>
And carry both our souls where his remains.—<br/>
Tell me, sweet boy, art thou content to die?<br/>
These barbarous Scythians, full of cruelty,<br/>
And Moors, in whom was never pity found,<br/>
Will hew us piecemeal, put us to the wheel,<br/>
Or else invent some torture worse than that;<br/>
Therefore die by thy loving mother's hand,<br/>
Who gently now will lance thy ivory throat,<br/>
And quickly rid thee both of pain and life.<br/>
<br/>
SON. Mother, despatch me, or I'll kill myself;<br/>
For think you I can live and see him dead?<br/>
Give me your knife, good mother, or strike home: <SPAN href="#linknote-149"<br/>
name="linknoteref-149" id="linknoteref-149">149</SPAN><br/>
The Scythians shall not tyrannize on me:<br/>
Sweet mother, strike, that I may meet my father.<br/>
[She stabs him, and he dies.]<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Ah, sacred Mahomet, if this be sin,<br/>
Entreat a pardon of the God of heaven,<br/>
And purge my soul before it come to thee!<br/>
[She burns the bodies of her HUSBAND and SON,<br/>
and then attempts to kill herself.]<br/>
<br/>
Enter THERIDAMAS, TECHELLES, and all their train.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. How now, madam! what are you doing?<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Killing myself, as I have done my son,<br/>
Whose body, with his father's, I have burnt,<br/>
Lest cruel Scythians should dismember him.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. 'Twas bravely done, and like a soldier's wife.<br/>
Thou shalt with us to Tamburlaine the Great,<br/>
Who, when he hears how resolute thou wert, <SPAN href="#linknote-150"<br/>
name="linknoteref-150" id="linknoteref-150">150</SPAN><br/>
Will match thee with a viceroy or a king.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. My lord deceas'd was dearer unto me<br/>
Than any viceroy, king, or emperor;<br/>
And for his sake here will I end my days.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. But, lady, go with us to Tamburlaine,<br/>
And thou shalt see a man greater than Mahomet,<br/>
In whose high looks is much more majesty,<br/>
Than from the concave superficies<br/>
Of Jove's vast palace, the empyreal orb,<br/>
Unto the shining bower where Cynthia sits,<br/>
Like lovely Thetis, in a crystal robe;<br/>
That treadeth Fortune underneath his feet,<br/>
And makes the mighty god of arms his slave;<br/>
On whom Death and the Fatal Sisters wait<br/>
With naked swords and scarlet liveries;<br/>
Before whom, mounted on a lion's back,<br/>
Rhamnusia bears a helmet full of blood,<br/>
And strows the way with brains of slaughter'd men;<br/>
By whose proud side the ugly Furies run,<br/>
Hearkening when he shall bid them plague the world;<br/>
Over whose zenith, cloth'd in windy air,<br/>
And eagle's wings join'd <SPAN href="#linknote-151" name="linknoteref-151"<br/> id="linknoteref-151">151</SPAN> to her feather'd breast,<br/>
Fame hovereth, sounding of <SPAN href="#linknote-152" name="linknoteref-152"<br/> id="linknoteref-152">152</SPAN> her golden trump,<br/>
That to the adverse poles of that straight line<br/>
Which measureth the glorious frame of heaven<br/>
The name of mighty Tamburlaine is spread;<br/>
And him, fair lady, shall thy eyes behold.<br/>
Come.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Take pity of a lady's ruthful tears,<br/>
That humbly craves upon her knees to stay,<br/>
And cast her body in the burning flame<br/>
That feeds upon her son's and husband's flesh.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Madam, sooner shall fire consume us both<br/>
Than scorch a face so beautiful as this,<br/>
In frame of which Nature hath shew'd more skill<br/>
Than when she gave eternal chaos form,<br/>
Drawing from it the shining lamps of heaven.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Madam, I am so far in love with you,<br/>
That you must go with us: no remedy.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Then carry me, I care not, where you will,<br/>
And let the end of this my fatal journey<br/>
Be likewise end to my accursed life.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. No, madam, but the <SPAN href="#linknote-153"<br/>
name="linknoteref-153" id="linknoteref-153">153</SPAN> beginning of your joy:<br/>
Come willingly therefore.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Soldiers, now let us meet the general,<br/>
Who by this time is at Natolia,<br/>
Ready to charge the army of the Turk.<br/>
The gold and <SPAN href="#linknote-154" name="linknoteref-154"<br/> id="linknoteref-154">154</SPAN> silver, and the pearl, ye got,<br/>
Rifling this fort, divide in equal shares:<br/>
This lady shall have twice so much again<br/>
Out of the coffers of our treasury.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE V. </h2>
<p>Enter CALLAPINE, ORCANES, the KINGS OF JERUSALEM, TREBIZON,<br/>
and SORIA, with their train, ALMEDA, and a MESSENGER.<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER. Renowmed <SPAN href="#linknote-155" name="linknoteref-155"<br/> id="linknoteref-155">155</SPAN> emperor, mighty <SPAN href="#linknote-156"<br/>
name="linknoteref-156" id="linknoteref-156">156</SPAN> Callapine,<br/>
God's great lieutenant over all the world,<br/>
Here at Aleppo, with an host of men,<br/>
Lies Tamburlaine, this king of Persia,<br/>
(In number more than are the <SPAN href="#linknote-157" name="linknoteref-157"<br/> id="linknoteref-157">157</SPAN> quivering leaves<br/>
Of Ida's forest, where your highness' hounds<br/>
With open cry pursue the wounded stag,)<br/>
Who means to girt Natolia's walls with siege,<br/>
Fire the town, and over-run the land.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. My royal army is as great as his,<br/>
That, from the bounds of Phrygia to the sea<br/>
Which washeth Cyprus with his brinish waves,<br/>
Covers the hills, the valleys, and the plains.<br/>
Viceroys and peers of Turkey, play the men;<br/>
Whet all your <SPAN href="#linknote-158" name="linknoteref-158"<br/> id="linknoteref-158">158</SPAN> swords to mangle Tamburlaine,<br/>
His sons, his captains, and his followers:<br/>
By Mahomet, not one of them shall live!<br/>
The field wherein this battle shall be fought<br/>
For ever term'd <SPAN href="#linknote-159" name="linknoteref-159"<br/> id="linknoteref-159">159</SPAN> the Persians' sepulchre,<br/>
In memory of this our victory.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Now he that calls himself the <SPAN href="#linknote-160"<br/>
name="linknoteref-160" id="linknoteref-160">160</SPAN> scourge of Jove,<br/>
The emperor of the world, and earthly god,<br/>
Shall end the warlike progress he intends,<br/>
And travel headlong to the lake of hell,<br/>
Where legions of devils (knowing he must die<br/>
Here in Natolia by your <SPAN href="#linknote-161" name="linknoteref-161"<br/> id="linknoteref-161">161</SPAN> highness' hands),<br/>
All brandishing their <SPAN href="#linknote-162" name="linknoteref-162"<br/> id="linknoteref-162">162</SPAN> brands of quenchless fire,<br/>
Stretching their monstrous paws, grin with <SPAN href="#linknote-163"<br/>
name="linknoteref-163" id="linknoteref-163">163</SPAN> their teeth,<br/>
And guard the gates to entertain his soul.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Tell me, viceroys, the number of your men,<br/>
And what our army royal is esteem'd.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. From Palestina and Jerusalem,<br/>
Of Hebrews three score thousand fighting men<br/>
Are come, since last we shew'd your <SPAN href="#linknote-164"<br/>
name="linknoteref-164" id="linknoteref-164">164</SPAN> majesty.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. So from Arabia Desert, and the bounds<br/>
Of that sweet land whose brave metropolis<br/>
Re-edified the fair Semiramis,<br/>
Came forty thousand warlike foot and horse,<br/>
Since last we number'd to your majesty.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON. From Trebizon in Asia the Less,<br/>
Naturaliz'd Turks and stout Bithynians<br/>
Came to my bands, full fifty thousand more,<br/>
(That, fighting, know not what retreat doth mean,<br/>
Nor e'er return but with the victory,)<br/>
Since last we number'd to your majesty.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF SORIA. Of Sorians <SPAN href="#linknote-165" name="linknoteref-165"<br/> id="linknoteref-165">165</SPAN> from Halla is repair'd, <SPAN href="#linknote-166" name="linknoteref-166" id="linknoteref-166">166</SPAN><br/>
And neighbour cities of your highness' land, <SPAN href="#linknote-167"<br/>
name="linknoteref-167" id="linknoteref-167">167</SPAN><br/>
Ten thousand horse, and thirty thousand foot,<br/>
Since last we number'd to your majesty;<br/>
So that the army royal is esteem'd<br/>
Six hundred thousand valiant fighting men.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Then welcome, Tamburlaine, unto thy death!—<br/>
Come, puissant viceroys, let us to the field<br/>
(The Persians' sepulchre), and sacrifice<br/>
Mountains of breathless men to Mahomet,<br/>
Who now, with Jove, opens the firmament<br/>
To see the slaughter of our enemies.<br/>
<br/>
Enter TAMBURLAINE with his three SONS, CALYPHAS, AMYRAS,<br/>
and CELEBINUS; USUMCASANE, and others.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. How now, Casane! see, a knot of kings,<br/>
Sitting as if they were a-telling riddles!<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. My lord, your presence makes them pale and wan:<br/>
Poor souls, they look as if their deaths were near.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Why, so he <SPAN href="#linknote-168" name="linknoteref-168"<br/> id="linknoteref-168">168</SPAN> is, Casane; I am here:<br/>
But yet I'll save their lives, and make them slaves.—<br/>
Ye petty kings of Turkey, I am come,<br/>
As Hector did into the Grecian camp,<br/>
To overdare the pride of Graecia,<br/>
And set his warlike person to the view<br/>
Of fierce Achilles, rival of his fame:<br/>
I do you honour in the simile;<br/>
For, if I should, as Hector did Achilles,<br/>
(The worthiest knight that ever brandish'd sword,)<br/>
Challenge in combat any of you all,<br/>
I see how fearfully ye would refuse,<br/>
And fly my glove as from a scorpion.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Now, thou art fearful of thy army's strength,<br/>
Thou wouldst with overmatch of person fight:<br/>
But, shepherd's issue, base-born Tamburlaine,<br/>
Think of thy end; this sword shall lance thy throat.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Villain, the shepherd's issue (at whose birth<br/>
Heaven did afford a gracious aspect,<br/>
And join'd those stars that shall be opposite<br/>
Even till the dissolution of the world,<br/>
And never meant to make a conqueror<br/>
So famous as is <SPAN href="#linknote-169" name="linknoteref-169"<br/> id="linknoteref-169">169</SPAN> mighty Tamburlaine)<br/>
Shall so torment thee, and that Callapine,<br/>
That, like a roguish runaway, suborn'd<br/>
That villain there, that slave, that Turkish dog,<br/>
To false his service to his sovereign,<br/>
As ye shall curse the birth of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Rail not, proud Scythian: I shall now revenge<br/>
My father's vile abuses and mine own.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. By Mahomet, he shall be tied in chains,<br/>
Rowing with Christians in a brigandine<br/>
About the Grecian isles to rob and spoil,<br/>
And turn him to his ancient trade again:<br/>
Methinks the slave should make a lusty thief.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Nay, when the battle ends, all we will meet,<br/>
And sit in council to invent some pain<br/>
That most may vex his body and his soul.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Sirrah Callapine, I'll hang a clog about<br/>
your neck for running away again: you shall not<br/>
trouble me thus to come and fetch you.—<br/>
But as for you, viceroy[s], you shall have bits,<br/>
And, harness'd <SPAN href="#linknote-170" name="linknoteref-170"<br/> id="linknoteref-170">170</SPAN> like my horses, draw my coach;<br/>
And, when ye stay, be lash'd with whips of wire:<br/>
I'll have you learn to feed on <SPAN href="#linknote-171"<br/>
name="linknoteref-171" id="linknoteref-171">171</SPAN> provender,<br/>
And in a stable lie upon the planks.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. But, Tamburlaine, first thou shalt <SPAN href="#linknote-172"<br/>
name="linknoteref-172" id="linknoteref-172">172</SPAN> kneel to us,<br/>
And humbly crave a pardon for thy life.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON. The common soldiers of our mighty host<br/>
Shall bring thee bound unto the <SPAN href="#linknote-173"<br/>
name="linknoteref-173" id="linknoteref-173">173</SPAN> general's tent [.]<br/>
<br/>
KING OF SORIA. And all have jointly sworn thy cruel death,<br/>
Or bind thee in eternal torments' wrath.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, sirs, diet yourselves; you know I<br/>
shall have occasion shortly to journey you.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. See, father, how Almeda the jailor looks upon us!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Villain, traitor, damned fugitive,<br/>
I'll make thee wish the earth had swallow'd thee!<br/>
See'st thou not death within my wrathful looks?<br/>
Go, villain, cast thee headlong from a rock,<br/>
Or rip thy bowels, and rent <SPAN href="#linknote-174" name="linknoteref-174"<br/> id="linknoteref-174">174</SPAN> out thy heart,<br/>
T' appease my wrath; or else I'll torture thee,<br/>
Searing thy hateful flesh with burning irons<br/>
And drops of scalding lead, while all thy joints<br/>
Be rack'd and beat asunder with the wheel;<br/>
For, if thou liv'st, not any element<br/>
Shall shroud thee from the wrath of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Well, in despite of thee, he shall be king.—<br/>
Come, Almeda; receive this crown of me:<br/>
I here invest thee king of Ariadan,<br/>
Bordering on Mare Roso, near to Mecca.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. What! take it, man.<br/>
<br/>
ALMEDA. [to Tamb.] Good my lord, let me take it.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Dost thou ask him leave? here; take it.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Go to, sirrah! <SPAN href="#linknote-175" name="linknoteref-175"<br/> id="linknoteref-175">175</SPAN> take your crown, and make up<br/>
the half dozen. So, sirrah, now you are a king, you must give<br/>
arms. <SPAN href="#linknote-176" name="linknoteref-176" id="linknoteref-176">176</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. So he shall, and wear thy head in his scutcheon.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. No; <SPAN href="#linknote-177" name="linknoteref-177"<br/> id="linknoteref-177">177</SPAN> let him hang a bunch of keys on his<br/>
standard, to put him in remembrance he was a jailor, that,<br/>
when I take him, I may knock out his brains with them,<br/>
and lock you in the stable, when you shall come sweating<br/>
from my chariot.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON. Away! let us to the field, that the villain<br/>
may be slain.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Sirrah, prepare whips, and bring my chariot<br/>
to my tent; for, as soon as the battle is done, I'll ride<br/>
in triumph through the camp.<br/>
Enter THERIDAMAS, TECHELLES, and their train.<br/>
How now, ye petty kings? lo, here are bugs <SPAN href="#linknote-178"<br/>
name="linknoteref-178" id="linknoteref-178">178</SPAN><br/>
Will make the hair stand upright on your heads,<br/>
And cast your crowns in slavery at their feet!—<br/>
Welcome, Theridamas and Techelles, both:<br/>
See ye this rout, <SPAN href="#linknote-179" name="linknoteref-179"<br/> id="linknoteref-179">179</SPAN> and know ye this same king?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Ay, my lord; he was Callapine's keeper.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, now ye see he is a king. Look to him,<br/>
Theridamas, when we are fighting, lest he hide his crown<br/>
as the foolish king of Persia did. <SPAN href="#linknote-180"<br/>
name="linknoteref-180" id="linknoteref-180">180</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
KING OF SORIA. No, Tamburlaine; he shall not be put<br/>
to that exigent, I warrant thee.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. You know not, sir.—<br/>
But now, my followers and my loving friends,<br/>
Fight as you ever did, like conquerors,<br/>
The glory of this happy day is yours.<br/>
My stern aspect <SPAN href="#linknote-181" name="linknoteref-181"<br/> id="linknoteref-181">181</SPAN> shall make fair Victory,<br/>
Hovering betwixt our armies, light on me,<br/>
Loaden with laurel-wreaths to crown us all.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. I smile to think how, when this field is fought<br/>
And rich Natolia ours, our men shall sweat<br/>
With carrying pearl and treasure on their backs.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. You shall be princes all, immediately.—<br/>
Come, fight, ye Turks, or yield us victory.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. No; we will meet thee, slavish Tamburlaine.<br/>
[Exeunt severally.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT IV. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>Alarms within. AMYRAS and CELEBINUS issue from the tent<br/>
where CALYPHAS sits asleep. <SPAN href="#linknote-182"<br/>
name="linknoteref-182" id="linknoteref-182">182</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Now in their glories shine the golden crowns<br/>
Of these proud Turks, much like so many suns<br/>
That half dismay the majesty of heaven.<br/>
Now, brother, follow we our father's sword,<br/>
That flies with fury swifter than our thoughts,<br/>
And cuts down armies with his conquering wings.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. Call forth our lazy brother from the tent,<br/>
For, if my father miss him in the field,<br/>
Wrath, kindled in the furnace of his breast,<br/>
Will send a deadly lightning to his heart.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Brother, ho! what, given so much to sleep,<br/>
You cannot <SPAN href="#linknote-183" name="linknoteref-183"<br/> id="linknoteref-183">183</SPAN> leave it, when our enemies' drums<br/>
And rattling cannons thunder in our ears<br/>
Our proper ruin and our father's foil?<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. Away, ye fools! my father needs not me,<br/>
Nor you, in faith, but that you will be thought<br/>
More childish-valourous than manly-wise.<br/>
If half our camp should sit and sleep with me,<br/>
My father were enough to scare <SPAN href="#linknote-184"<br/>
name="linknoteref-184" id="linknoteref-184">184</SPAN> the foe:<br/>
You do dishonour to his majesty,<br/>
To think our helps will do him any good.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. What, dar'st thou, then, be absent from the fight,<br/>
Knowing my father hates thy cowardice,<br/>
And oft hath warn'd thee to be still in field,<br/>
When he himself amidst the thickest troops<br/>
Beats down our foes, to flesh our taintless swords?<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. I know, sir, what it is to kill a man;<br/>
It works remorse of conscience in me.<br/>
I take no pleasure to be murderous,<br/>
Nor care for blood when wine will quench my thirst.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. O cowardly boy! fie, for shame, come forth!<br/>
Thou dost dishonour manhood and thy house.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. Go, go, tall <SPAN href="#linknote-185" name="linknoteref-185"<br/> id="linknoteref-185">185</SPAN> stripling, fight you for us both,<br/>
And take my other toward brother here,<br/>
For person like to prove a second Mars.<br/>
'Twill please my mind as well to hear, both you <SPAN href="#linknote-186"<br/>
name="linknoteref-186" id="linknoteref-186">186</SPAN><br/>
Have won a heap of honour in the field,<br/>
And left your slender carcasses behind,<br/>
As if I lay with you for company.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. You will not go, then?<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. You say true.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Were all the lofty mounts of Zona Mundi<br/>
That fill the midst of farthest Tartary<br/>
Turn'd into pearl and proffer'd for my stay,<br/>
I would not bide the fury of my father,<br/>
When, made a victor in these haughty arms,<br/>
He comes and finds his sons have had no shares<br/>
In all the honours he propos'd for us.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. Take you the honour, I will take my ease;<br/>
My wisdom shall excuse my cowardice:<br/>
I go into the field before I need!<br/>
[Alarms within. AMYRAS and CELEBINUS run out.]<br/>
The bullets fly at random where they list;<br/>
And, should I <SPAN href="#linknote-187" name="linknoteref-187"<br/> id="linknoteref-187">187</SPAN> go, and kill a thousand men,<br/>
I were as soon rewarded with a shot,<br/>
And sooner far than he that never fights;<br/>
And, should I go, and do no harm nor good,<br/>
I might have harm, which all the good I have,<br/>
Join'd with my father's crown, would never cure.<br/>
I'll to cards.—Perdicas!<br/>
<br/>
Enter PERDICAS.<br/>
<br/>
PERDICAS. Here, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS.<br/>
Come, thou and I will go to cards to drive away the time.<br/>
<br/>
PERDICAS. Content, my lord: but what shall we play for?<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. Who shall kiss the fairest of the Turks' concubines<br/>
first, when my father hath conquered them.<br/>
<br/>
PERDICAS. Agreed, i'faith.<br/>
[They play.]<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. They say I am a coward, Perdicas, and I fear<br/>
as little their taratantaras, their swords, or their cannons<br/>
as I do a naked lady in a net of gold, and, for fear I should be<br/>
afraid, would put it off and come to bed with me.<br/>
<br/>
PERDICAS. Such a fear, my lord, would never make ye retire.<br/>
<br/>
CALYPHAS. I would my father would let me be put in the front<br/>
of such a battle once, to try my valour! [Alarms within.]<br/>
What a coil they keep! I believe there will be some hurt done<br/>
anon amongst them.<br/>
<br/>
Enter TAMBURLAINE, THERIDAMAS, TECHELLES, USUMCASANE;<br/>
AMYRAS and CELEBINUS leading in ORCANES, and the KINGS<br/>
OF JERUSALEM, TREBIZON, and SORIA; and SOLDIERS.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
See now, ye <SPAN href="#linknote-188" name="linknoteref-188"<br/> id="linknoteref-188">188</SPAN> slaves, my children stoop your pride, <SPAN href="#linknote-189" name="linknoteref-189" id="linknoteref-189">189</SPAN><br/>
And lead your bodies <SPAN href="#linknote-190" name="linknoteref-190"<br/> id="linknoteref-190">190</SPAN> sheep-like to the sword!—<br/>
Bring them, my boys, and tell me if the wars<br/>
Be not a life that may illustrate gods,<br/>
And tickle not your spirits with desire<br/>
Still to be train'd in arms and chivalry?<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Shall we let go these kings again, my lord,<br/>
To gather greater numbers 'gainst our power,<br/>
That they may say, it is not chance doth this,<br/>
But matchless strength and magnanimity?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. No, no, Amyras; tempt not Fortune so:<br/>
Cherish thy valour still with fresh supplies,<br/>
And glut it not with stale and daunted foes.<br/>
But where's this coward villain, not my son,<br/>
But traitor to my name and majesty?<br/>
[He goes in and brings CALYPHAS out.]<br/>
Image of sloth, and picture of a slave,<br/>
The obloquy and scorn of my renown!<br/>
How may my heart, thus fired with mine <SPAN href="#linknote-191"<br/>
name="linknoteref-191" id="linknoteref-191">191</SPAN> eyes,<br/>
Wounded with shame and kill'd with discontent,<br/>
Shroud any thought may <SPAN href="#linknote-192" name="linknoteref-192"<br/> id="linknoteref-192">192</SPAN> hold my striving hands<br/>
]From martial justice on thy wretched soul?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Yet pardon him, I pray your majesty.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES and USUMCASANE.<br/>
Let all of us entreat your highness' pardon.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Stand up, <SPAN href="#linknote-193" name="linknoteref-193"<br/> id="linknoteref-193">193</SPAN> ye base, unworthy soldiers!<br/>
Know ye not yet the argument of arms?<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Good my lord, let him be forgiven for once, <SPAN href="#linknote-194"<br/>
name="linknoteref-194" id="linknoteref-194">194</SPAN><br/>
And we will force him to the field hereafter.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Stand up, my boys, and I will teach ye arms,<br/>
And what the jealousy of wars must do.—<br/>
O Samarcanda, where I breathed first,<br/>
And joy'd the fire of this martial <SPAN href="#linknote-195"<br/>
name="linknoteref-195" id="linknoteref-195">195</SPAN> flesh,<br/>
Blush, blush, fair city, at thine <SPAN href="#linknote-196"<br/>
name="linknoteref-196" id="linknoteref-196">196</SPAN> honour's foil,<br/>
And shame of nature, which <SPAN href="#linknote-197" name="linknoteref-197"<br/> id="linknoteref-197">197</SPAN> Jaertis' <SPAN href="#linknote-198"<br/>
name="linknoteref-198" id="linknoteref-198">198</SPAN> stream,<br/>
Embracing thee with deepest of his love,<br/>
Can never wash from thy distained brows!—<br/>
Here, Jove, receive his fainting soul again;<br/>
A form not meet to give that subject essence<br/>
Whose matter is the flesh of Tamburlaine,<br/>
Wherein an incorporeal <SPAN href="#linknote-199" name="linknoteref-199"<br/> id="linknoteref-199">199</SPAN> spirit moves,<br/>
Made of the mould whereof thyself consists,<br/>
Which makes me valiant, proud, ambitious,<br/>
Ready to levy power against thy throne,<br/>
That I might move the turning spheres of heaven;<br/>
For earth and all this airy region<br/>
Cannot contain the state of Tamburlaine.<br/>
[Stabs CALYPHAS.]<br/>
By Mahomet, thy mighty friend, I swear,<br/>
In sending to my issue such a soul,<br/>
Created of the massy dregs of earth,<br/>
The scum and tartar of the elements,<br/>
Wherein was neither courage, strength, or wit,<br/>
But folly, sloth, and damned idleness,<br/>
Thou hast procur'd a greater enemy<br/>
Than he that darted mountains at thy head,<br/>
Shaking the burden mighty Atlas bears,<br/>
Whereat thou trembling hidd'st thee in the air,<br/>
Cloth'd with a pitchy cloud for being seen.— <SPAN href="#linknote-200"<br/>
name="linknoteref-200" id="linknoteref-200">200</SPAN><br/>
And now, ye canker'd curs of Asia,<br/>
That will not see the strength of Tamburlaine,<br/>
Although it shine as brightly as the sun,<br/>
Now you shall <SPAN href="#linknote-201" name="linknoteref-201"<br/> id="linknoteref-201">201</SPAN> feel the strength of Tamburlaine,<br/>
And, by the state of his supremacy,<br/>
Approve <SPAN href="#linknote-202" name="linknoteref-202" id="linknoteref-202">202</SPAN> the difference 'twixt himself and you.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Thou shew'st the difference 'twixt ourselves and thee,<br/>
In this thy barbarous damned tyranny.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. Thy victories are grown so violent,<br/>
That shortly heaven, fill'd with the meteors<br/>
Of blood and fire thy tyrannies have made,<br/>
Will pour down blood and fire on thy head,<br/>
Whose scalding drops will pierce thy seething brains,<br/>
And, with our bloods, revenge our bloods <SPAN href="#linknote-203"<br/>
name="linknoteref-203" id="linknoteref-203">203</SPAN> on thee.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Villains, these terrors, and these tyrannies<br/>
(If tyrannies war's justice ye repute),<br/>
I execute, enjoin'd me from above,<br/>
To scourge the pride of such as Heaven abhors;<br/>
Nor am I made arch-monarch of the world,<br/>
Crown'd and invested by the hand of Jove,<br/>
For deeds of bounty or nobility;<br/>
But, since I exercise a greater name,<br/>
The scourge of God and terror of the world,<br/>
I must apply myself to fit those terms,<br/>
In war, in blood, in death, in cruelty,<br/>
And plague such peasants <SPAN href="#linknote-204" name="linknoteref-204"<br/> id="linknoteref-204">204</SPAN> as resist in <SPAN href="#linknote-205"<br/>
name="linknoteref-205" id="linknoteref-205">205</SPAN> me<br/>
The power of Heaven's eternal majesty.—<br/>
Theridamas, Techelles, and Casane, <SPAN href="#linknote-206"<br/>
name="linknoteref-206" id="linknoteref-206">206</SPAN><br/>
Ransack the tents and the pavilions<br/>
Of these proud Turks, and take their concubines,<br/>
Making them bury this effeminate brat;<br/>
For not a common soldier shall defile<br/>
His manly fingers with so faint a boy:<br/>
Then bring those Turkish harlots to my tent,<br/>
And I'll dispose them as it likes me best.—<br/>
Meanwhile, take him in.<br/>
<br/>
SOLDIERS. We will, my lord.<br/>
[Exeunt with the body of CALYPHAS.]<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. O damned monster! nay, a fiend of hell,<br/>
Whose cruelties are not so harsh as thine,<br/>
Nor yet impos'd with such a bitter hate!<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Revenge it, <SPAN href="#linknote-207" name="linknoteref-207"<br/> id="linknoteref-207">207</SPAN> Rhadamanth and Aeacus,<br/>
And let your hates, extended in his pains,<br/>
Excel <SPAN href="#linknote-208" name="linknoteref-208" id="linknoteref-208">208</SPAN> the hate wherewith he pains our souls!<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON. May never day give virtue to his eyes,<br/>
Whose sight, compos'd of fury and of fire,<br/>
Doth send such stern affections to his heart!<br/>
<br/>
KING OF SORIA. May never spirit, vein, or artier, <SPAN href="#linknote-209"<br/>
name="linknoteref-209" id="linknoteref-209">209</SPAN> feed<br/>
The cursed substance of that cruel heart;<br/>
But, wanting moisture and remorseful <SPAN href="#linknote-210"<br/>
name="linknoteref-210" id="linknoteref-210">210</SPAN> blood,<br/>
Dry up with anger, and consume with heat!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, bark, ye dogs: I'll bridle all your tongues,<br/>
And bind them close with bits of burnish'd steel,<br/>
Down to the channels of your hateful throats;<br/>
And, with the pains my rigour shall inflict,<br/>
I'll make ye roar, that earth may echo forth<br/>
The far-resounding torments ye sustain;<br/>
As when an herd of lusty Cimbrian bulls<br/>
Run mourning round about the females' miss, <SPAN href="#linknote-211"<br/>
name="linknoteref-211" id="linknoteref-211">211</SPAN><br/>
And, stung with fury of their following,<br/>
Fill all the air with troublous bellowing.<br/>
I will, with engines never exercis'd,<br/>
Conquer, sack, and utterly consume<br/>
Your cities and your golden palaces,<br/>
And, with the flames that beat against the clouds,<br/>
Incense the heavens, and make the stars to melt,<br/>
As if they were the tears of Mahomet<br/>
For hot consumption of his country's pride;<br/>
And, till by vision or by speech I hear<br/>
Immortal Jove say "Cease, my Tamburlaine,"<br/>
I will persist a terror to the world,<br/>
Making the meteors (that, like armed men,<br/>
Are seen to march upon the towers of heaven)<br/>
Run tilting round about the firmament,<br/>
And break their burning lances in the air,<br/>
For honour of my wondrous victories.—<br/>
Come, bring them in to our pavilion.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter OLYMPIA.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Distress'd Olympia, whose weeping eyes,<br/>
Since thy arrival here, behold <SPAN href="#linknote-212"<br/>
name="linknoteref-212" id="linknoteref-212">212</SPAN> no sun,<br/>
But, clos'd within the compass of a <SPAN href="#linknote-213"<br/>
name="linknoteref-213" id="linknoteref-213">213</SPAN> tent,<br/>
Have <SPAN href="#linknote-214" name="linknoteref-214" id="linknoteref-214">214</SPAN> stain'd thy cheeks, and made thee look like death,<br/>
Devise some means to rid thee of thy life,<br/>
Rather than yield to his detested suit,<br/>
Whose drift is only to dishonour thee;<br/>
And, since this earth, dew'd with thy brinish tears,<br/>
Affords no herbs whose taste may poison thee,<br/>
Nor yet this air, beat often with thy sighs,<br/>
Contagious smells and vapours to infect thee,<br/>
Nor thy close cave a sword to murder thee,<br/>
Let this invention be the instrument.<br/>
<br/>
Enter THERIDAMAS.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Well met, Olympia: I sought thee in my tent,<br/>
But, when I saw the place obscure and dark,<br/>
Which with thy beauty thou wast wont to light,<br/>
Enrag'd, I ran about the fields for thee,<br/>
Supposing amorous Jove had sent his son,<br/>
The winged Hermes, to convey thee hence;<br/>
But now I find thee, and that fear is past,<br/>
Tell me, Olympia, wilt thou grant my suit?<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. My lord and husband's death, with my sweet son's,<br/>
(With whom I buried all affections<br/>
Save grief and sorrow, which torment my heart,)<br/>
Forbids my mind to entertain a thought<br/>
That tends to love, but meditate on death,<br/>
A fitter subject for a pensive soul.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Olympia, pity him in whom thy looks<br/>
Have greater operation and more force<br/>
Than Cynthia's in the watery wilderness;<br/>
For with thy view my joys are at the full,<br/>
And ebb again as thou depart'st from me.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Ah, pity me, my lord, and draw your sword,<br/>
Making a passage for my troubled soul,<br/>
Which beats against this prison to get out,<br/>
And meet my husband and my loving son!<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Nothing but still thy husband and thy son?<br/>
Leave this, my love, and listen more to me:<br/>
Thou shalt be stately queen of fair Argier;<br/>
And, cloth'd in costly cloth of massy gold,<br/>
Upon the marble turrets of my court<br/>
Sit like to Venus in her chair of state,<br/>
Commanding all thy princely eye desires;<br/>
And I will cast off arms to <SPAN href="#linknote-215" name="linknoteref-215"<br/> id="linknoteref-215">215</SPAN> sit with thee,<br/>
Spending my life in sweet discourse of love.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. No such discourse is pleasant in <SPAN href="#linknote-216"<br/>
name="linknoteref-216" id="linknoteref-216">216</SPAN> mine ears,<br/>
But that where every period ends with death,<br/>
And every line begins with death again:<br/>
I cannot love, to be an emperess.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Nay, lady, then, if nothing will prevail,<br/>
I'll use some other means to make you yield:<br/>
Such is the sudden fury of my love,<br/>
I must and will be pleas'd, and you shall yield:<br/>
Come to the tent again.<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Stay now, my lord; and, will you <SPAN href="#linknote-217"<br/>
name="linknoteref-217" id="linknoteref-217">217</SPAN> save my honour,<br/>
I'll give your grace a present of such price<br/>
As all the world can not afford the like.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. What is it?<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. An ointment which a cunning alchymist<br/>
Distilled from the purest balsamum<br/>
And simplest extracts of all minerals,<br/>
In which the essential form of marble stone,<br/>
Temper'd by science metaphysical,<br/>
And spells of magic from the mouths <SPAN href="#linknote-218"<br/>
name="linknoteref-218" id="linknoteref-218">218</SPAN> of spirits,<br/>
With which if you but 'noint your tender skin,<br/>
Nor pistol, sword, nor lance, can pierce your flesh.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Why, madam, think you to mock me thus palpably?<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. To prove it, I will 'noint my naked throat,<br/>
Which when you stab, look on your weapon's point,<br/>
And you shall see't rebated <SPAN href="#linknote-219" name="linknoteref-219"<br/> id="linknoteref-219">219</SPAN> with the blow.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Why gave you not your husband some of it,<br/>
If you lov'd him, and it so precious?<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. My purpose was, my lord, to spend it so,<br/>
But was prevented by his sudden end;<br/>
And for a present easy proof thereof, <SPAN href="#linknote-220"<br/>
name="linknoteref-220" id="linknoteref-220">220</SPAN><br/>
That I dissemble not, try it on me.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. I will, Olympia, and will <SPAN href="#linknote-221"<br/>
name="linknoteref-221" id="linknoteref-221">221</SPAN> keep it for<br/>
The richest present of this eastern world.<br/>
[She anoints her throat. <SPAN href="#linknote-222" name="linknoteref-222"<br/> id="linknoteref-222">222</SPAN>]<br/>
<br/>
OLYMPIA. Now stab, my lord, and mark your weapon's point,<br/>
That will be blunted if the blow be great.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Here, then, Olympia.—<br/>
[Stabs her.]<br/>
What, have I slain her? Villain, stab thyself!<br/>
Cut off this arm that at murdered my <SPAN href="#linknote-223"<br/>
name="linknoteref-223" id="linknoteref-223">223</SPAN> love,<br/>
In whom the learned Rabbis of this age<br/>
Might find as many wondrous miracles<br/>
As in the theoria of the world!<br/>
Now hell is fairer than Elysium; <SPAN href="#linknote-224"<br/>
name="linknoteref-224" id="linknoteref-224">224</SPAN><br/>
A greater lamp than that bright eye of heaven,<br/>
]From whence the stars do borrow <SPAN href="#linknote-225"<br/>
name="linknoteref-225" id="linknoteref-225">225</SPAN> all their light,<br/>
Wanders about the black circumference;<br/>
And now the damned souls are free from pain,<br/>
For every Fury gazeth on her looks;<br/>
Infernal Dis is courting of my love,<br/>
Inventing masks and stately shows for her,<br/>
Opening the doors of his rich treasury<br/>
To entertain this queen of chastity;<br/>
Whose body shall be tomb'd with all the pomp<br/>
The treasure of my <SPAN href="#linknote-226" name="linknoteref-226"<br/> id="linknoteref-226">226</SPAN> kingdom may afford.<br/>
[Exit with the body.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Enter TAMBURLAINE, drawn in his chariot by the KINGS OF<br/>
TREBIZON and SORIA, <SPAN href="#linknote-227" name="linknoteref-227"<br/> id="linknoteref-227">227</SPAN> with bits in their mouths,<br/>
reins in his <SPAN href="#linknote-228" name="linknoteref-228"<br/> id="linknoteref-228">228</SPAN> left hand, and in his right hand a whip<br/>
with which he scourgeth them; AMYRAS, CELEBINUS, TECHELLES,<br/>
THERIDAMAS, USUMCASANE; ORCANES king of Natolia, and the<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM, led by five <SPAN href="#linknote-229"<br/>
name="linknoteref-229" id="linknoteref-229">229</SPAN> or six common SOLDIERS;<br/>
and other SOLDIERS.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Holla, ye pamper'd jades of Asia! <SPAN href="#linknote-230"<br/>
name="linknoteref-230" id="linknoteref-230">230</SPAN><br/>
What, can ye draw but twenty miles a-day,<br/>
And have so proud a chariot at your heels,<br/>
And such a coachman as great Tamburlaine,<br/>
But from Asphaltis, where I conquer'd you,<br/>
To Byron here, where thus I honour you?<br/>
The horse that guide the golden eye of heaven,<br/>
And blow the morning from their nostrils, <SPAN href="#linknote-231"<br/>
name="linknoteref-231" id="linknoteref-231">231</SPAN><br/>
Making their fiery gait above the clouds,<br/>
Are not so honour'd in <SPAN href="#linknote-232" name="linknoteref-232"<br/> id="linknoteref-232">232</SPAN> their governor<br/>
As you, ye slaves, in mighty Tamburlaine.<br/>
The headstrong jades of Thrace Alcides tam'd,<br/>
That King Aegeus fed with human flesh,<br/>
And made so wanton that they knew their strengths,<br/>
Were not subdu'd with valour more divine<br/>
Than you by this unconquer'd arm of mine.<br/>
To make you fierce, and fit my appetite,<br/>
You shall be fed with flesh as raw as blood,<br/>
And drink in pails the strongest muscadel:<br/>
If you can live with it, then live, and draw<br/>
My chariot swifter than the racking <SPAN href="#linknote-233"<br/>
name="linknoteref-233" id="linknoteref-233">233</SPAN> clouds;<br/>
If not, then die like beasts, and fit for naught<br/>
But perches for the black and fatal ravens.<br/>
Thus am I right the scourge of highest Jove;<br/>
And see the figure of my dignity,<br/>
By which I hold my name and majesty!<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Let me have coach, <SPAN href="#linknote-234" name="linknoteref-234"<br/> id="linknoteref-234">234</SPAN> my lord, that I may ride,<br/>
And thus be drawn by <SPAN href="#linknote-235" name="linknoteref-235"<br/> id="linknoteref-235">235</SPAN> these two idle kings.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Thy youth forbids such ease, my kingly boy:<br/>
They shall to-morrow draw my chariot,<br/>
While these their fellow-kings may be refresh'd.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. O thou that sway'st the region under earth,<br/>
And art a king as absolute as Jove,<br/>
Come as thou didst in fruitful Sicily,<br/>
Surveying all the glories of the land,<br/>
And as thou took'st the fair Proserpina,<br/>
Joying the fruit of Ceres' garden-plot, <SPAN href="#linknote-236"<br/>
name="linknoteref-236" id="linknoteref-236">236</SPAN><br/>
For love, for honour, and to make her queen,<br/>
So, for just hate, for shame, and to subdue<br/>
This proud contemner of thy dreadful power,<br/>
Come once in fury, and survey his pride,<br/>
Haling him headlong to the lowest hell!<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Your majesty must get some bits for these,<br/>
To bridle their contemptuous cursing tongues,<br/>
That, like unruly never-broken jades,<br/>
Break through the hedges of their hateful mouths,<br/>
And pass their fixed bounds exceedingly.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Nay, we will break the hedges of their mouths,<br/>
And pull their kicking colts <SPAN href="#linknote-237" name="linknoteref-237"<br/> id="linknoteref-237">237</SPAN> out of their pastures.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. Your majesty already hath devis'd<br/>
A mean, as fit as may be, to restrain<br/>
These coltish coach-horse tongues from blasphemy.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. How like you that, sir king? why speak you not?<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. Ah, cruel brat, sprung from a tyrant's loins!<br/>
How like his cursed father he begins<br/>
To practice taunts and bitter tyrannies!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Ay, Turk, I tell thee, this same <SPAN href="#linknote-238"<br/>
name="linknoteref-238" id="linknoteref-238">238</SPAN> boy is he<br/>
That must (advanc'd in higher pomp than this)<br/>
Rifle the kingdoms I shall leave unsack'd,<br/>
If Jove, esteeming me too good for earth,<br/>
Raise me, to match <SPAN href="#linknote-239" name="linknoteref-239"<br/> id="linknoteref-239">239</SPAN> the fair Aldeboran,<br/>
Above <SPAN href="#linknote-240" name="linknoteref-240" id="linknoteref-240">240</SPAN> the threefold astracism of heaven,<br/>
Before I conquer all the triple world.—<br/>
Now fetch me out the Turkish concubines:<br/>
I will prefer them for the funeral<br/>
They have bestow'd on my abortive son.<br/>
[The CONCUBINES are brought in.]<br/>
Where are my common soldiers now, that fought<br/>
So lion-like upon Asphaltis' plains?<br/>
<br/>
SOLDIERS. Here, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
Hold ye, tall <SPAN href="#linknote-241" name="linknoteref-241"<br/> id="linknoteref-241">241</SPAN> soldiers, take ye queens a-piece,—<br/>
I mean such queens as were kings' concubines;<br/>
Take them; divide them, and their <SPAN href="#linknote-242"<br/>
name="linknoteref-242" id="linknoteref-242">242</SPAN> jewels too,<br/>
And let them equally serve all your turns.<br/>
<br/>
SOLDIERS. We thank your majesty.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Brawl not, I warn you, for your lechery;<br/>
For every man that so offends shall die.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. Injurious tyrant, wilt thou so defame<br/>
The hateful fortunes of thy victory,<br/>
To exercise upon such guiltless dames<br/>
The violence of thy common soldiers' lust?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
Live continent, <SPAN href="#linknote-243" name="linknoteref-243"<br/> id="linknoteref-243">243</SPAN> then, ye slaves, and meet not me<br/>
With troops of harlots at your slothful heels.<br/>
<br/>
CONCUBINES. O, pity us, my lord, and save our honours!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Are ye not gone, ye villains, with your spoils?<br/>
[The SOLDIERS run away with the CONCUBINES.]<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. O, merciless, infernal cruelty!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Save your honours! 'twere but time indeed,<br/>
Lost long before ye knew what honour meant.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. It seems they meant to conquer us, my lord,<br/>
And make us jesting pageants for their trulls.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. And now themselves shall make our pageant,<br/>
And common soldiers jest <SPAN href="#linknote-244" name="linknoteref-244"<br/> id="linknoteref-244">244</SPAN> with all their trulls.<br/>
Let them take pleasure soundly in their spoils,<br/>
Till we prepare our march to Babylon,<br/>
Whither we next make expedition.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Let us not be idle, then, my lord,<br/>
But presently be prest <SPAN href="#linknote-245" name="linknoteref-245"<br/> id="linknoteref-245">245</SPAN> to conquer it.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. We will, Techelles.—Forward, then, ye jades!<br/>
Now crouch, ye kings of greatest Asia,<br/>
And tremble, when ye hear this scourge will come<br/>
That whips down cities and controlleth crowns,<br/>
Adding their wealth and treasure to my store.<br/>
The Euxine sea, north to Natolia;<br/>
The Terrene, <SPAN href="#linknote-246" name="linknoteref-246"<br/> id="linknoteref-246">246</SPAN> west; the Caspian, north northeast;<br/>
And on the south, Sinus Arabicus;<br/>
Shall all <SPAN href="#linknote-247" name="linknoteref-247"<br/> id="linknoteref-247">247</SPAN> be loaden with the martial spoils<br/>
We will convey with us to Persia.<br/>
Then shall my native city Samarcanda,<br/>
And crystal waves of fresh Jaertis' <SPAN href="#linknote-248"<br/>
name="linknoteref-248" id="linknoteref-248">248</SPAN> stream,<br/>
The pride and beauty of her princely seat,<br/>
Be famous through the furthest <SPAN href="#linknote-249"<br/>
name="linknoteref-249" id="linknoteref-249">249</SPAN> continents;<br/>
For there my palace royal shall be plac'd,<br/>
Whose shining turrets shall dismay the heavens,<br/>
And cast the fame of Ilion's tower to hell:<br/>
Thorough <SPAN href="#linknote-250" name="linknoteref-250" id="linknoteref-250">250</SPAN> the streets, with troops of conquer'd kings,<br/>
I'll ride in golden armour like the sun;<br/>
And in my helm a triple plume shall spring,<br/>
Spangled with diamonds, dancing in the air,<br/>
To note me emperor of the three-fold world;<br/>
Like to an almond-tree <SPAN href="#linknote-251" name="linknoteref-251"<br/> id="linknoteref-251">251</SPAN> y-mounted <SPAN href="#linknote-252"<br/>
name="linknoteref-252" id="linknoteref-252">252</SPAN> high<br/>
Upon the lofty and celestial mount<br/>
Of ever-green Selinus, <SPAN href="#linknote-253" name="linknoteref-253"<br/> id="linknoteref-253">253</SPAN> quaintly deck'd<br/>
With blooms more white than Erycina's <SPAN href="#linknote-254"<br/>
name="linknoteref-254" id="linknoteref-254">254</SPAN> brows, <SPAN href="#linknote-255" name="linknoteref-255" id="linknoteref-255">255</SPAN><br/>
Whose tender blossoms tremble every one<br/>
At every little breath that thorough heaven <SPAN href="#linknote-256"<br/>
name="linknoteref-256" id="linknoteref-256">256</SPAN> is blown.<br/>
Then in my coach, like Saturn's royal son<br/>
Mounted his shining chariot <SPAN href="#linknote-257" name="linknoteref-257"<br/> id="linknoteref-257">257</SPAN> gilt with fire,<br/>
And drawn with princely eagles through the path<br/>
Pav'd with bright crystal and enchas'd with stars,<br/>
When all the gods stand gazing at his pomp,<br/>
So will I ride through Samarcanda-streets,<br/>
Until my soul, dissever'd from this flesh,<br/>
Shall mount the milk-white way, and meet him there.<br/>
To Babylon, my lords, to Babylon!<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ACT V. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE I. </h2>
<p>Enter the GOVERNOR OF BABYLON, MAXIMUS, and others, upon<br/>
the walls.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. What saith Maximus?<br/>
<br/>
MAXIMUS. My lord, the breach the enemy hath made<br/>
Gives such assurance of our overthrow,<br/>
That little hope is left to save our lives,<br/>
Or hold our city from the conqueror's hands.<br/>
Then hang out <SPAN href="#linknote-258" name="linknoteref-258"<br/> id="linknoteref-258">258</SPAN> flags, my lord, of humble truce,<br/>
And satisfy the people's general prayers,<br/>
That Tamburlaine's intolerable wrath<br/>
May be suppress'd by our submission.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Villain, respect'st thou <SPAN href="#linknote-259"<br/>
name="linknoteref-259" id="linknoteref-259">259</SPAN> more thy slavish life<br/>
Than honour of thy country or thy name?<br/>
Is not my life and state as dear to me,<br/>
The city and my native country's weal,<br/>
As any thing of <SPAN href="#linknote-260" name="linknoteref-260"<br/> id="linknoteref-260">260</SPAN> price with thy conceit?<br/>
Have we not hope, for all our batter'd walls,<br/>
To live secure and keep his forces out,<br/>
When this our famous lake of Limnasphaltis<br/>
Makes walls a-fresh with every thing that falls<br/>
Into the liquid substance of his stream,<br/>
More strong than are the gates of death or hell?<br/>
What faintness should dismay our courages,<br/>
When we are thus defenc'd against our foe,<br/>
And have no terror but his threatening looks?<br/>
<br/>
Enter, above, a CITIZEN, who kneels to the GOVERNOR.<br/>
<br/>
CITIZEN. My lord, if ever you did deed of ruth,<br/>
And now will work a refuge to our lives,<br/>
Offer submission, hang up flags of truce,<br/>
That Tamburlaine may pity our distress,<br/>
And use us like a loving conqueror.<br/>
Though this be held his last day's dreadful siege,<br/>
Wherein he spareth neither man nor child,<br/>
Yet are there Christians of Georgia here,<br/>
Whose state he <SPAN href="#linknote-261" name="linknoteref-261"<br/> id="linknoteref-261">261</SPAN> ever pitied and reliev'd,<br/>
Will get his pardon, if your grace would send.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. How <SPAN href="#linknote-262" name="linknoteref-262"<br/> id="linknoteref-262">262</SPAN> is my soul environed!<br/>
And this eterniz'd <SPAN href="#linknote-263" name="linknoteref-263"<br/> id="linknoteref-263">263</SPAN> city Babylon<br/>
Fill'd with a pack of faint-heart fugitives<br/>
That thus entreat their shame and servitude!<br/>
<br/>
Enter, above, a SECOND CITIZEN.<br/>
<br/>
SECOND CITIZEN. My lord, if ever you will win our hearts,<br/>
Yield up the town, and <SPAN href="#linknote-264" name="linknoteref-264"<br/> id="linknoteref-264">264</SPAN> save our wives and children;<br/>
For I will cast myself from off these walls,<br/>
Or die some death of quickest violence,<br/>
Before I bide the wrath of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Villains, cowards, traitors to our state!<br/>
Fall to the earth, and pierce the pit of hell,<br/>
That legions of tormenting spirits may vex<br/>
Your slavish bosoms with continual pains!<br/>
I care not, nor the town will never yield<br/>
As long as any life is in my breast.<br/>
<br/>
Enter THERIDAMAS and TECHELLES, with SOLDIERS.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Thou desperate governor of Babylon,<br/>
To save thy life, and us a little labour,<br/>
Yield speedily the city to our hands,<br/>
Or else be sure thou shalt be forc'd with pains<br/>
More exquisite than ever traitor felt.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Tyrant, I turn the traitor in thy throat,<br/>
And will defend it in despite of thee.—<br/>
Call up the soldiers to defend these walls.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Yield, foolish governor; we offer more<br/>
Than ever yet we did to such proud slaves<br/>
As durst resist us till our third day's siege.<br/>
Thou seest us prest <SPAN href="#linknote-265" name="linknoteref-265"<br/> id="linknoteref-265">265</SPAN> to give the last assault,<br/>
And that shall bide no more regard of parle. <SPAN href="#linknote-266"<br/>
name="linknoteref-266" id="linknoteref-266">266</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Assault and spare not; we will never yield.<br/>
[Alarms: and they scale the walls.]<br/>
<br/>
Enter TAMBURLAINE, drawn in his chariot (as before) by the<br/>
KINGS OF TREBIZON and SORIA; AMYRAS, CELEBINUS, USUMCASANE;<br/>
ORCANES king of Natolia, and the KING OF JERUSALEM, led by<br/>
SOLDIERS; <SPAN href="#linknote-267" name="linknoteref-267"<br/> id="linknoteref-267">267</SPAN> and others.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. The stately buildings of fair Babylon,<br/>
Whose lofty pillars, higher than the clouds,<br/>
Were wont to guide the seaman in the deep,<br/>
Being carried thither by the cannon's force,<br/>
Now fill the mouth of Limnasphaltis' lake,<br/>
And make a bridge unto the batter'd walls.<br/>
Where Belus, Ninus, and great Alexander<br/>
Have rode in triumph, triumphs Tamburlaine,<br/>
Whose chariot-wheels have burst <SPAN href="#linknote-268"<br/>
name="linknoteref-268" id="linknoteref-268">268</SPAN> th' Assyrians' bones,<br/>
Drawn with these kings on heaps of carcasses.<br/>
Now in the place, where fair Semiramis,<br/>
Courted by kings and peers of Asia,<br/>
Hath trod the measures, <SPAN href="#linknote-269" name="linknoteref-269"<br/> id="linknoteref-269">269</SPAN> do my soldiers march;<br/>
And in the streets, where brave Assyrian dames<br/>
Have rid in pomp like rich Saturnia,<br/>
With furious words and frowning visages<br/>
My horsemen brandish their unruly blades.<br/>
Re-enter THERIDAMAS and TECHELLES, bringing in the<br/>
GOVERNOR OF BABYLON.<br/>
Who have ye there, my lords?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. The sturdy governor of Babylon,<br/>
That made us all the labour for the town,<br/>
And us'd such slender reckoning of <SPAN href="#linknote-270"<br/>
name="linknoteref-270" id="linknoteref-270">270</SPAN> your majesty.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Go, bind the villain; he shall hang in chains<br/>
Upon the ruins of this conquer'd town.—<br/>
Sirrah, the view of our vermilion tents<br/>
(Which threaten'd more than if the region<br/>
Next underneath the element of fire<br/>
Were full of comets and of blazing stars,<br/>
Whose flaming trains should reach down to the earth)<br/>
Could not affright you; no, nor I myself,<br/>
The wrathful messenger of mighty Jove,<br/>
That with his sword hath quail'd all earthly kings,<br/>
Could not persuade you to submission,<br/>
But still the ports <SPAN href="#linknote-271" name="linknoteref-271"<br/> id="linknoteref-271">271</SPAN> were shut: villain, I say,<br/>
Should I but touch the rusty gates of hell,<br/>
The triple-headed Cerberus would howl,<br/>
And make <SPAN href="#linknote-272" name="linknoteref-272" id="linknoteref-272">272</SPAN> black Jove to crouch and kneel to me;<br/>
But I have sent volleys of shot to you,<br/>
Yet could not enter till the breach was made.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Nor, if my body could have stopt the breach,<br/>
Shouldst thou have enter'd, cruel Tamburlaine.<br/>
'Tis not thy bloody tents can make me yield,<br/>
Nor yet thyself, the anger of the Highest;<br/>
For, though thy cannon shook the city-walls, <SPAN href="#linknote-273"<br/>
name="linknoteref-273" id="linknoteref-273">273</SPAN><br/>
My heart did never quake, or courage faint.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, now I'll make it quake.—Go draw him <SPAN href="#linknote-274" name="linknoteref-274" id="linknoteref-274">274</SPAN> up,<br/>
Hang him in <SPAN href="#linknote-275" name="linknoteref-275"<br/> id="linknoteref-275">275</SPAN> chains upon the city-walls,<br/>
And let my soldiers shoot the slave to death.<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Vile monster, born of some infernal hag,<br/>
And sent from hell to tyrannize on earth,<br/>
Do all thy worst; nor death, nor Tamburlaine,<br/>
Torture, or pain, can daunt my dreadless mind.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Up with him, then! his body shall be scar'd. <SPAN href="#linknote-276" name="linknoteref-276" id="linknoteref-276">276</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. But, Tamburlaine, in Limnasphaltis' lake<br/>
There lies more gold than Babylon is worth,<br/>
Which, when the city was besieg'd, I hid:<br/>
Save but my life, and I will give it thee.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE.<br/>
Then, for all your valour, you would save your life?<br/>
Whereabout lies it?<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Under a hollow bank, right opposite<br/>
Against the western gate of Babylon.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Go thither, some of you, and take his gold:—<br/>
[Exeunt some ATTENDANTS.]<br/>
The rest forward with execution.<br/>
Away with him hence, let him speak no more.—<br/>
I think I make your courage something quail.—<br/>
[Exeunt ATTENDANTS with the GOVERNOR or BABYLON.]<br/>
When this is done, we'll march from Babylon,<br/>
And make our greatest haste to Persia.<br/>
These jades are broken-winded and half-tir'd;<br/>
Unharness them, and let me have fresh horse.<br/>
[ATTENDANTS unharness the KINGS or TREBIZON and SORIA]<br/>
So; now their best is done to honour me,<br/>
Take them and hang them both up presently.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF TREBIZON.<br/>
Vile <SPAN href="#linknote-277" name="linknoteref-277" id="linknoteref-277">277</SPAN> tyrant! barbarous bloody Tamburlaine!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Take them away, Theridamas; see them despatch'd.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. I will, my lord.<br/>
[Exit with the KINGS or TREBIZON and SORIA.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Come, Asian viceroys; to your tasks a while,<br/>
And take such fortune as your fellows felt.<br/>
<br/>
ORCANES. First let thy Scythian horse tear both our limbs,<br/>
Rather than we should draw thy chariot,<br/>
And, like base slaves, abject our princely minds<br/>
To vile and ignominious servitude.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM. Rather lend me thy weapon, Tamburlaine,<br/>
That I may sheathe it in this breast of mine.<br/>
A thousand deaths could not torment our hearts<br/>
More than the thought of this doth vex our souls.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS.<br/>
They will talk still, my lord, if you do not bridle them.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Bridle them, and let me to my coach.<br/>
<br/>
[ATTENDANTS bridle ORCANES king of Natolia, and the<br/>
KING OF JERUSALEM, and harness them to the chariot.—<br/>
The GOVERNOR OF BABYLON appears hanging in chains<br/>
on the walls.—Re-enter THERIDAMAS.]<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. See, now, my lord, how brave the captain hangs!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. 'Tis brave indeed, my boy:—well done!—<br/>
Shoot first, my lord, and then the rest shall follow.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Then have at him, to begin withal.<br/>
[THERIDAMAS shoots at the GOVERNOR.]<br/>
<br/>
GOVERNOR. Yet save my life, and let this wound appease<br/>
The mortal fury of great Tamburlaine!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. No, though Asphaltis' lake were liquid gold,<br/>
And offer'd me as ransom for thy life,<br/>
Yet shouldst thou die.—Shoot at him all at once.<br/>
[They shoot.]<br/>
So, now he hangs like Bagdet's <SPAN href="#linknote-278"<br/>
name="linknoteref-278" id="linknoteref-278">278</SPAN> governor,<br/>
Having as many bullets in his flesh<br/>
As there be breaches in her batter'd wall.<br/>
Go now, and bind the burghers hand and foot,<br/>
And cast them headlong in the city's lake.<br/>
Tartars and Persians shall inhabit there;<br/>
And, to command the city, I will build<br/>
A citadel, <SPAN href="#linknote-279" name="linknoteref-279"<br/> id="linknoteref-279">279</SPAN> that all Africa,<br/>
Which hath been subject to the Persian king,<br/>
Shall pay me tribute for in Babylon.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES.<br/>
What shall be done with their wives and children, my lord?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Techelles, drown them all, man, woman, and child;<br/>
Leave not a Babylonian in the town.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. I will about it straight.—Come, soldiers.<br/>
[Exit with SOLDIERS.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Now, Casane, where's the Turkish Alcoran,<br/>
And all the heaps of superstitious books<br/>
Found in the temples of that Mahomet<br/>
Whom I have thought a god? they shall be burnt.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. Here they are, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well said! <SPAN href="#linknote-280" name="linknoteref-280"<br/> id="linknoteref-280">280</SPAN> let there be a fire presently.<br/>
[They light a fire.]<br/>
In vain, I see, men worship Mahomet:<br/>
My sword hath sent millions of Turks to hell,<br/>
Slew all his priests, his kinsmen, and his friends,<br/>
And yet I live untouch'd by Mahomet.<br/>
There is a God, full of revenging wrath,<br/>
]From whom the thunder and the lightning breaks,<br/>
Whose scourge I am, and him will I <SPAN href="#linknote-281"<br/>
name="linknoteref-281" id="linknoteref-281">281</SPAN> obey.<br/>
So, Casane; fling them in the fire.—<br/>
[They burn the books.]<br/>
Now, Mahomet, if thou have any power,<br/>
Come down thyself and work a miracle:<br/>
Thou art not worthy to be worshipped<br/>
That suffer'st <SPAN href="#linknote-282" name="linknoteref-282"<br/> id="linknoteref-282">282</SPAN> flames of fire to burn the writ<br/>
Wherein the sum of thy religion rests:<br/>
Why send'st <SPAN href="#linknote-283" name="linknoteref-283"<br/> id="linknoteref-283">283</SPAN> thou not a furious whirlwind down,<br/>
To blow thy Alcoran up to thy throne,<br/>
Where men report thou sitt'st <SPAN href="#linknote-284" name="linknoteref-284"<br/> id="linknoteref-284">284</SPAN> by God himself?<br/>
Or vengeance on the head <SPAN href="#linknote-285" name="linknoteref-285"<br/> id="linknoteref-285">285</SPAN> of Tamburlaine<br/>
That shakes his sword against thy majesty,<br/>
And spurns the abstracts of thy foolish laws?—<br/>
Well, soldiers, Mahomet remains in hell;<br/>
He cannot hear the voice of Tamburlaine:<br/>
Seek out another godhead to adore;<br/>
The God that sits in heaven, if any god,<br/>
For he is God alone, and none but he.<br/>
<br/>
Re-enter TECHELLES.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. I have fulfill'd your highness' will, my lord:<br/>
Thousands of men, drown'd in Asphaltis' lake,<br/>
Have made the water swell above the banks,<br/>
And fishes, fed <SPAN href="#linknote-286" name="linknoteref-286"<br/> id="linknoteref-286">286</SPAN> by human carcasses,<br/>
Amaz'd, swim up and down upon <SPAN href="#linknote-287" name="linknoteref-287"<br/> id="linknoteref-287">287</SPAN> the waves,<br/>
As when they swallow assafoetida,<br/>
Which makes them fleet <SPAN href="#linknote-288" name="linknoteref-288"<br/> id="linknoteref-288">288</SPAN> aloft and gape <SPAN href="#linknote-289"<br/>
name="linknoteref-289" id="linknoteref-289">289</SPAN> for air.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Well, then, my friendly lords, what now remains,<br/>
But that we leave sufficient garrison,<br/>
And presently depart to Persia,<br/>
To triumph after all our victories?<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Ay, good my lord, let us in <SPAN href="#linknote-290"<br/>
name="linknoteref-290" id="linknoteref-290">290</SPAN> haste to Persia;<br/>
And let this captain be remov'd the walls<br/>
To some high hill about the city here.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Let it be so;—about it, soldiers;—<br/>
But stay; I feel myself distemper'd suddenly.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. What is it dares distemper Tamburlaine?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Something, Techelles; but I know not what.—<br/>
But, forth, ye vassals! <SPAN href="#linknote-291" name="linknoteref-291"<br/> id="linknoteref-291">291</SPAN> whatsoe'er <SPAN href="#linknote-292"<br/>
name="linknoteref-292" id="linknoteref-292">292</SPAN> it be,<br/>
Sickness or death can never conquer me.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE II. </h2>
<p>Enter CALLAPINE, KING OF AMASIA, a CAPTAIN, and train,<br/>
with drums and trumpets.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. King of Amasia, now our mighty host<br/>
Marcheth in Asia Major, where the streams<br/>
Of Euphrates <SPAN href="#linknote-293" name="linknoteref-293"<br/> id="linknoteref-293">293</SPAN> and Tigris swiftly run;<br/>
And here may we <SPAN href="#linknote-294" name="linknoteref-294"<br/> id="linknoteref-294">294</SPAN> behold great Babylon,<br/>
Circled about with Limnasphaltis' lake,<br/>
Where Tamburlaine with all his army lies,<br/>
Which being faint and weary with the siege,<br/>
We may lie ready to encounter him<br/>
Before his host be full from Babylon,<br/>
And so revenge our latest grievous loss,<br/>
If God or Mahomet send any aid.<br/>
<br/>
KING OF AMASIA. Doubt not, my lord, but we shall conquer him:<br/>
The monster that hath drunk a sea of blood,<br/>
And yet gapes still for more to quench his thirst,<br/>
Our Turkish swords shall headlong send to hell;<br/>
And that vile carcass, drawn by warlike kings,<br/>
The fowls shall eat; for never sepulchre<br/>
Shall grace this <SPAN href="#linknote-295" name="linknoteref-295"<br/> id="linknoteref-295">295</SPAN> base-born tyrant Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. When I record <SPAN href="#linknote-296" name="linknoteref-296"<br/> id="linknoteref-296">296</SPAN> my parents' slavish life,<br/>
Their cruel death, mine own captivity,<br/>
My viceroys' bondage under Tamburlaine,<br/>
Methinks I could sustain a thousand deaths,<br/>
To be reveng'd of all his villany.—<br/>
Ah, sacred Mahomet, thou that hast seen<br/>
Millions of Turks perish by Tamburlaine,<br/>
Kingdoms made waste, brave cities sack'd and burnt,<br/>
And but one host is left to honour thee,<br/>
Aid <SPAN href="#linknote-297" name="linknoteref-297" id="linknoteref-297">297</SPAN> thy obedient servant Callapine,<br/>
And make him, after all these overthrows,<br/>
To triumph over cursed Tamburlaine!<br/>
<br/>
KING OF AMASIA. Fear not, my lord: I see great Mahomet,<br/>
Clothed in purple clouds, and on his head<br/>
A chaplet brighter than Apollo's crown,<br/>
Marching about the air with armed men,<br/>
To join with you against this Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
CAPTAIN. Renowmed <SPAN href="#linknote-298" name="linknoteref-298"<br/> id="linknoteref-298">298</SPAN> general, mighty Callapine,<br/>
Though God himself and holy Mahomet<br/>
Should come in person to resist your power,<br/>
Yet might your mighty host encounter all,<br/>
And pull proud Tamburlaine upon his knees<br/>
To sue for mercy at your highness' feet.<br/>
<br/>
CALLAPINE. Captain, the force of Tamburlaine is great,<br/>
His fortune greater, and the victories<br/>
Wherewith he hath so sore dismay'd the world<br/>
Are greatest to discourage all our drifts;<br/>
Yet, when the pride of Cynthia is at full,<br/>
She wanes again; and so shall his, I hope;<br/>
For we have here the chief selected men<br/>
Of twenty several kingdoms at the least;<br/>
Nor ploughman, priest, nor merchant, stays at home;<br/>
All Turkey is in arms with Callapine;<br/>
And never will we sunder camps and arms<br/>
Before himself or his be conquered:<br/>
This is the time that must eternize me<br/>
For conquering the tyrant of the world.<br/>
Come, soldiers, let us lie in wait for him,<br/>
And, if we find him absent from his camp,<br/>
Or that it be rejoin'd again at full,<br/>
Assail it, and be sure of victory.<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCENE III. </h2>
<p>Enter THERIDAMAS, TECHELLES, and USUMCASANE.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Weep, heavens, and vanish into liquid tears!<br/>
Fall, stars that govern his nativity,<br/>
And summon all the shining lamps of heaven<br/>
To cast their bootless fires to the earth,<br/>
And shed their feeble influence in the air;<br/>
Muffle your beauties with eternal clouds;<br/>
For Hell and Darkness pitch their pitchy tents,<br/>
And Death, with armies of Cimmerian spirits,<br/>
Gives battle 'gainst the heart of Tamburlaine!<br/>
Now, in defiance of that wonted love<br/>
Your sacred virtues pour'd upon his throne,<br/>
And made his state an honour to the heavens,<br/>
These cowards invisibly <SPAN href="#linknote-299" name="linknoteref-299"<br/> id="linknoteref-299">299</SPAN> assail his soul,<br/>
And threaten conquest on our sovereign;<br/>
But, if he die, your glories are disgrac'd,<br/>
Earth droops, and says that hell in heaven is plac'd!<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. O, then, ye powers that sway eternal seats,<br/>
And guide this massy substance of the earth,<br/>
If you retain desert of holiness,<br/>
As your supreme estates instruct our thoughts,<br/>
Be not inconstant, careless of your fame,<br/>
Bear not the burden of your enemies' joys,<br/>
Triumphing in his fall whom you advanc'd;<br/>
But, as his birth, life, health, and majesty<br/>
Were strangely blest and governed by heaven,<br/>
So honour, heaven, (till heaven dissolved be,)<br/>
His birth, his life, his health, and majesty!<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. Blush, heaven, to lose the honour of thy name,<br/>
To see thy footstool set upon thy head;<br/>
And let no baseness in thy haughty breast<br/>
Sustain a shame of such inexcellence, <SPAN href="#linknote-300"<br/>
name="linknoteref-300" id="linknoteref-300">300</SPAN><br/>
To see the devils mount in angels' thrones,<br/>
And angels dive into the pools of hell!<br/>
And, though they think their painful date is out,<br/>
And that their power is puissant as Jove's,<br/>
Which makes them manage arms against thy state,<br/>
Yet make them feel the strength of Tamburlaine<br/>
(Thy instrument and note of majesty)<br/>
Is greater far than they can thus subdue;<br/>
For, if he die, thy glory is disgrac'd,<br/>
Earth droops, and says that hell in heaven is plac'd!<br/>
<br/>
Enter TAMBURLAINE, <SPAN href="#linknote-301" name="linknoteref-301"<br/> id="linknoteref-301">301</SPAN> drawn in his chariot (as before)<br/>
by ORCANES king of Natolia, and the KING OF JERUSALEM,<br/>
AMYRAS, CELEBINUS, and Physicians.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. What daring god torments my body thus,<br/>
And seeks to conquer mighty Tamburlaine?<br/>
Shall sickness prove me now to be a man,<br/>
That have been term'd the terror of the world?<br/>
Techelles and the rest, come, take your swords,<br/>
And threaten him whose hand afflicts my soul:<br/>
Come, let us march against the powers of heaven,<br/>
And set black streamers in the firmament,<br/>
To signify the slaughter of the gods.<br/>
Ah, friends, what shall I do? I cannot stand.<br/>
Come, carry me to war against the gods,<br/>
That thus envy the health of Tamburlaine.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. Ah, good my lord, leave these impatient words,<br/>
Which add much danger to your malady!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Why, shall I sit and languish in this pain?<br/>
No, strike the drums, and, in revenge of this,<br/>
Come, let us charge our spears, and pierce his breast<br/>
Whose shoulders bear the axis of the world,<br/>
That, if I perish, heaven and earth may fade.<br/>
Theridamas, haste to the court of Jove;<br/>
Will him to send Apollo hither straight,<br/>
To cure me, or I'll fetch him down myself.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES.<br/>
Sit still, my gracious lord; this grief will cease, <SPAN href="#linknote-302"<br/>
name="linknoteref-302" id="linknoteref-302">302</SPAN><br/>
And cannot last, it is so violent.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Not last, Techelles! no, for I shall die.<br/>
See, where my slave, the ugly monster Death,<br/>
Shaking and quivering, pale and wan for fear,<br/>
Stands aiming at me with his murdering dart,<br/>
Who flies away at every glance I give,<br/>
And, when I look away, comes stealing on!—<br/>
Villain, away, and hie thee to the field!<br/>
I and mine army come to load thy back<br/>
With souls of thousand mangled carcasses.—<br/>
Look, where he goes! but, see, he comes again,<br/>
Because I stay! Techelles, let us march,<br/>
And weary Death with bearing souls to hell.<br/>
<br/>
FIRST PHYSICIAN. Pleaseth your majesty to drink this potion,<br/>
Which will abate the fury of your fit,<br/>
And cause some milder spirits govern you.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Tell me what think you of my sickness now?<br/>
<br/>
FIRST PHYSICIAN. I view'd your urine, and the hypostasis, <SPAN href="#linknote-303" name="linknoteref-303" id="linknoteref-303">303</SPAN><br/>
Thick and obscure, doth make your danger great:<br/>
Your veins are full of accidental heat,<br/>
Whereby the moisture of your blood is dried:<br/>
The humidum and calor, which some hold<br/>
Is not a parcel of the elements,<br/>
But of a substance more divine and pure,<br/>
Is almost clean extinguished and spent;<br/>
Which, being the cause of life, imports your death:<br/>
Besides, my lord, this day is critical,<br/>
Dangerous to those whose crisis is as yours:<br/>
Your artiers, <SPAN href="#linknote-304" name="linknoteref-304"<br/> id="linknoteref-304">304</SPAN> which alongst the veins convey<br/>
The lively spirits which the heart engenders,<br/>
Are parch'd and void of spirit, that the soul,<br/>
Wanting those organons by which it moves,<br/>
Cannot endure, by argument of art.<br/>
Yet, if your majesty may escape this day,<br/>
No doubt but you shall soon recover all.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Then will I comfort all my vital parts,<br/>
And live, in spite of death, above a day.<br/>
[Alarms within.]<br/>
<br/>
Enter a Messenger.<br/>
<br/>
MESSENGER. My lord, young Callapine, that lately fled<br/>
from your majesty, hath now gathered a fresh army, and,<br/>
hearing your absence in the field, offers to set upon <SPAN href="#linknote-305" name="linknoteref-305" id="linknoteref-305">305</SPAN> us<br/>
presently.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. See, my physicians, now, how Jove hath sent<br/>
A present medicine to recure my pain!<br/>
My looks shall make them fly; and, might I follow,<br/>
There should not one of all the villain's power<br/>
Live to give offer of another fight.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. I joy, my lord, your highness is so strong,<br/>
That can endure so well your royal presence,<br/>
Which only will dismay the enemy.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. I know it will, Casane.—Draw, you slaves!<br/>
In spite of death, I will go shew my face.<br/>
[Alarms. Exit TAMBURLAINE with all the rest (except the<br/>
PHYSICIANS), and re-enter presently.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Thus are the villain cowards <SPAN href="#linknote-306"<br/>
name="linknoteref-306" id="linknoteref-306">306</SPAN> fled for fear,<br/>
Like summer's vapours vanish'd by the sun;<br/>
And, could I but a while pursue the field,<br/>
That Callapine should be my slave again.<br/>
But I perceive my martial strength is spent:<br/>
In vain I strive and rail against those powers<br/>
That mean t' invest me in a higher throne,<br/>
As much too high for this disdainful earth.<br/>
Give me a map; then let me see how much<br/>
Is left for me to conquer all the world,<br/>
That these, my boys, may finish all my wants.<br/>
[One brings a map.]<br/>
Here I began to march towards Persia,<br/>
Along Armenia and the Caspian Sea,<br/>
And thence unto <SPAN href="#linknote-307" name="linknoteref-307"<br/> id="linknoteref-307">307</SPAN> Bithynia, where I took<br/>
The Turk and his great empress prisoners.<br/>
Then march'd I into Egypt and Arabia;<br/>
And here, not far from Alexandria,<br/>
Whereas <SPAN href="#linknote-308" name="linknoteref-308" id="linknoteref-308">308</SPAN> the Terrene <SPAN href="#linknote-309" name="linknoteref-309" id="linknoteref-309">309</SPAN> and the Red Sea meet,<br/>
Being distant less than full a hundred leagues,<br/>
I meant to cut a channel to them both,<br/>
That men might quickly sail to India.<br/>
]From thence to Nubia near Borno-lake,<br/>
And so along the Aethiopian sea,<br/>
Cutting the tropic line of Capricorn,<br/>
I conquer'd all as far as Zanzibar.<br/>
Then, by the northern part of Africa,<br/>
I came at last to Graecia, and from thence<br/>
To Asia, where I stay against my will;<br/>
Which is from Scythia, where I first began, <SPAN href="#linknote-310"<br/>
name="linknoteref-310" id="linknoteref-310">310</SPAN><br/>
Backward[s] and forwards near five thousand leagues.<br/>
Look here, my boys; see, what a world of ground<br/>
Lies westward from the midst of Cancer's line<br/>
Unto the rising of this <SPAN href="#linknote-311" name="linknoteref-311"<br/> id="linknoteref-311">311</SPAN> earthly globe,<br/>
Whereas the sun, declining from our sight,<br/>
Begins the day with our Antipodes!<br/>
And shall I die, and this unconquered?<br/>
Lo, here, my sons, are all the golden mines,<br/>
Inestimable drugs and precious stones,<br/>
More worth than Asia and the world beside;<br/>
And from th' Antarctic Pole eastward behold<br/>
As much more land, which never was descried,<br/>
Wherein are rocks of pearl that shine as bright<br/>
As all the lamps that beautify the sky!<br/>
And shall I die, and this unconquered?<br/>
Here, lovely boys; what death forbids my life,<br/>
That let your lives command in spite of death.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Alas, my lord, how should our bleeding hearts,<br/>
Wounded and broken with your highness' grief,<br/>
Retain a thought of joy or spark of life?<br/>
Your soul gives essence to our wretched subjects, <SPAN href="#linknote-312"<br/>
name="linknoteref-312" id="linknoteref-312">312</SPAN><br/>
Whose matter is incorporate in your flesh.<br/>
<br/>
CELEBINUS. Your pains do pierce our souls; no hope survives,<br/>
For by your life we entertain our lives.<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. But, sons, this subject, not of force enough<br/>
To hold the fiery spirit it contains,<br/>
Must part, imparting his impressions<br/>
By equal portions into <SPAN href="#linknote-313" name="linknoteref-313"<br/> id="linknoteref-313">313</SPAN> both your breasts;<br/>
My flesh, divided in your precious shapes,<br/>
Shall still retain my spirit, though I die,<br/>
And live in all your seeds <SPAN href="#linknote-314" name="linknoteref-314"<br/> id="linknoteref-314">314</SPAN> immortally.—<br/>
Then now remove me, that I may resign<br/>
My place and proper title to my son.—<br/>
First, take my scourge and my imperial crown,<br/>
And mount my royal chariot of estate,<br/>
That I may see thee crown'd before I die.—<br/>
Help me, my lords, to make my last remove.<br/>
[They assist TAMBURLAINE to descend from the chariot.]<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. A woful change, my lord, that daunts our thoughts<br/>
More than the ruin of our proper souls!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Sit up, my son, [and] let me see how well<br/>
Thou wilt become thy father's majesty.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. With what a flinty bosom should I joy<br/>
The breath of life and burden of my soul,<br/>
If not resolv'd into resolved pains,<br/>
My body's mortified lineaments <SPAN href="#linknote-315"<br/>
name="linknoteref-315" id="linknoteref-315">315</SPAN><br/>
Should exercise the motions of my heart,<br/>
Pierc'd with the joy of any dignity!<br/>
O father, if the unrelenting ears<br/>
Of Death and Hell be shut against my prayers,<br/>
And that the spiteful influence of Heaven<br/>
Deny my soul fruition of her joy,<br/>
How should I step, or stir my hateful feet<br/>
Against the inward powers of my heart,<br/>
Leading a life that only strives to die,<br/>
And plead in vain unpleasing sovereignty!<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Let not thy love exceed thine honour, son,<br/>
Nor bar thy mind that magnanimity<br/>
That nobly must admit necessity.<br/>
Sit up, my boy, and with these <SPAN href="#linknote-316"<br/>
name="linknoteref-316" id="linknoteref-316">316</SPAN> silken reins<br/>
Bridle the steeled stomachs of these <SPAN href="#linknote-317"<br/>
name="linknoteref-317" id="linknoteref-317">317</SPAN> jades.<br/>
<br/>
THERIDAMAS. My lord, you must obey his majesty,<br/>
Since fate commands and proud necessity.<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Heavens witness me with what a broken heart<br/>
[Mounting the chariot.]<br/>
And damned <SPAN href="#linknote-318" name="linknoteref-318"<br/> id="linknoteref-318">318</SPAN> spirit I ascend this seat,<br/>
And send my soul, before my father die,<br/>
His anguish and his burning agony!<br/>
[They crown AMYRAS.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Now fetch the hearse of fair Zenocrate;<br/>
Let it be plac'd by this my fatal chair,<br/>
And serve as parcel of my funeral.<br/>
<br/>
USUMCASANE. Then feels your majesty no sovereign ease,<br/>
Nor may our hearts, all drown'd in tears of blood,<br/>
Joy any hope of your recovery?<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Casane, no; the monarch of the earth,<br/>
And eyeless monster that torments my soul,<br/>
Cannot behold the tears ye shed for me,<br/>
And therefore still augments his cruelty.<br/>
<br/>
TECHELLES. Then let some god oppose his holy power<br/>
Against the wrath and tyranny of Death,<br/>
That his tear-thirsty and unquenched hate<br/>
May be upon himself reverberate!<br/>
[They bring in the hearse of ZENOCRATE.]<br/>
<br/>
TAMBURLAINE. Now, eyes, enjoy your latest benefit,<br/>
And, when my soul hath virtue of your sight,<br/>
Pierce through the coffin and the sheet of gold,<br/>
And glut your longings with a heaven of joy.<br/>
So, reign, my son; scourge and control those slaves,<br/>
Guiding thy chariot with thy father's hand.<br/>
As precious is the charge thou undertak'st<br/>
As that which Clymene's <SPAN href="#linknote-319" name="linknoteref-319"<br/> id="linknoteref-319">319</SPAN> brain-sick son did guide,<br/>
When wandering Phoebe's <SPAN href="#linknote-320" name="linknoteref-320"<br/> id="linknoteref-320">320</SPAN> ivory cheeks were scorch'd,<br/>
And all the earth, like Aetna, breathing fire:<br/>
Be warn'd by him, then; learn with awful eye<br/>
To sway a throne as dangerous as his;<br/>
For, if thy body thrive not full of thoughts<br/>
As pure and fiery as Phyteus' <SPAN href="#linknote-321" name="linknoteref-321"<br/> id="linknoteref-321">321</SPAN> beams,<br/>
The nature of these proud rebelling jades<br/>
Will take occasion by the slenderest hair,<br/>
And draw thee <SPAN href="#linknote-322" name="linknoteref-322"<br/> id="linknoteref-322">322</SPAN> piecemeal, like Hippolytus,<br/>
Through rocks more steep and sharp than Caspian cliffs: <SPAN href="#linknote-323" name="linknoteref-323" id="linknoteref-323">323</SPAN><br/>
The nature of thy chariot will not bear<br/>
A guide of baser temper than myself,<br/>
More than heaven's coach the pride of Phaeton.<br/>
Farewell, my boys! my dearest friends, farewell!<br/>
My body feels, my soul doth weep to see<br/>
Your sweet desires depriv'd my company,<br/>
For Tamburlaine, the scourge of God, must die.<br/>
[Dies.]<br/>
<br/>
AMYRAS. Meet heaven and earth, and here let all things end,<br/>
For earth hath spent the pride of all her fruit,<br/>
And heaven consum'd his choicest living fire!<br/>
Let earth and heaven his timeless death deplore,<br/>
For both their worths will equal him no more!<br/>
[Exeunt.]<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> NOTES: </h2>
<h3> [a] [From THE FIRST PART OF TAMBURLAINE THE GREAT] </h3>
<p>Tamburlaine the Great. Who, from a Scythian Shephearde<br/>
by his rare and woonderfull Conquests, became a most<br/>
puissant and mightye Monarque. And (for his tyranny,<br/>
and terrour in Warre) was tearmed, The Scourge of God.<br/>
Deuided into two Tragicall Discourses, as they were<br/>
sundrie times shewed vpon Stages in the Citie of London.<br/>
By the right honorable the Lord Admyrall, his seruauntes.<br/>
Now first, and newlie published. London. Printed by<br/>
Richard Ihones: at the signe of the Rose and Crowne<br/>
neere Holborne Bridge. 1590. 4to.<br/></p>
<p>The above title-page is pasted into a copy of the FIRST PART OF
TAMBURLAINE in the Library at Bridge-water House; which copy, excepting
that title-page and the Address to the Readers, is the impression of 1605.
I once supposed that the title-pages which bear the dates 1605 and 1606
(see below) had been added to the 4tos of the TWO PARTS of the play
originally printed in 1590; but I am now convinced that both PARTS were
really reprinted, THE FIRST PART in 1605, and THE SECOND PART in 1606, and
that nothing remains of the earlier 4tos, except the title-page and the
Address to the Readers, which are preserved in the Bridgewater collection.</p>
<p>In the Bodleian Library, Oxford, is an 8vo edition of both PARTS OF
TAMBURLAINE, dated 1590: the title-page of THE FIRST PART agrees verbatim
with that given above; the half-title-page of THE SECOND PART is as
follows;</p>
<p>The Second Part of The bloody Conquests of mighty<br/>
Tamburlaine. With his impassionate fury, for the death<br/>
of his Lady and loue faire Zenocrate; his fourme of<br/>
exhortacion and discipline to his three sons, and the<br/>
maner of his own death.<br/></p>
<p>In the Garrick Collection, British Museum, is an 8vo edition of both PARTS
dated 1592: the title-page of THE FIRST PART runs thus;</p>
<p>Tamburlaine the Great. Who, from a Scythian Shepheard,<br/>
by his rare and wonderfull Conquestes, became a most<br/>
puissant and mightie Mornarch [sic]: And (for his<br/>
tyrannie, and terrour in warre) was tearmed, The Scourge<br/>
of God. The first part of the two Tragicall discourses,<br/>
as they were sundrie times most stately shewed vpon<br/>
Stages in the Citie of London. By the right honorable<br/>
the Lord Admirall, his seruauntes. Now newly published.<br/>
Printed by Richard Iones, dwelling at the signe of the<br/>
Rose and Crowne neere Holborne Bridge.<br/></p>
<p>The half-title-page of THE SECOND PART agrees exactly with that already
given. Perhaps the 8vo at Oxford and that in the British Museum (for I
have not had an opportunity of comparing them) are the same impression,
differing only in the title-pages.</p>
<p>Langbaine (ACCOUNT OF ENGL. DRAM. POETS, p. 344) mentions an 8vo dated
1593.</p>
<p>The title-pages of the latest impressions of THE TWO PARTS are as follows;</p>
<p>Tamburlaine the Greate. Who, from the state of a<br/>
Shepheard in Scythia, by his rare and wonderfull<br/>
Conquests, became a most puissant and mighty Monarque.<br/>
London Printed for Edward White, and are to be solde<br/>
at the little North doore of Saint Paules-Church, at<br/>
the signe of the Gunne, 1605. 4to.<br/>
<br/>
Tamburlaine the Greate. With his impassionate furie,<br/>
for the death of his Lady and Loue fair Zenocrate: his<br/>
forme of exhortation and discipline to his three Sonnes,<br/>
and the manner of his owne death. The second part.<br/>
London Printed by E. A. for Ed. White, and are to be<br/>
solde at his Shop neere the little North doore of Saint<br/>
Paules Church at the Signe of the Gun. 1606. 4to.<br/></p>
<p>The text of the present edition is given from the 8vo of 1592, collated
with the 4tos of 1605-6.]</p>
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