The Complete Plays

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The Complete Plays Page 23

by Christopher Marlowe

90 But traitor to my name and majesty?

  He goes in [the tent] and brings him [CALYPHAS] out.

  Image of sloth and picture of a slave,

  The obloquy and scorn of my renown,

  How may my heart, thus firàd with mine eyes,

  Wounded with shame and killed with discontent,

  Shroud any thought may hold my striving hands

  From martial justice on thy wretched soul?

  THERIDAMAS

  Yet pardon him, I pray your majesty.

  TECHELLES AND USUMCASANE

  Let all of us entreat your highness’ pardon.

  [They kneel.]

  TAMBURLAINE

  Stand up, ye base, unworthy soldiers!

  100 Know ye not yet the argument of arms?

  AMYRAS

  Good my lord, let him be forgiven for once,

  And we will force him to the field hereafter.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Stand up, my boys, and I will teach ye arms

  And what the jealousy of wars must do.

  O Samarcanda, where I breathàd first

  And joyed the fire of this martial flesh,

  Blush, blush, fair city, at thine honour’s foil

  And shame of nature, which Jaertis’ stream,

  Embracing thee with deepest of his love,

  Can never wash from thy distainàd brows!

  110 Here, Jove, receive his fainting soul again –

  [He stabs CALYPHAS.]

  A form not meet to give that subject essence

  Whose matter is the flesh of Tamburlaine,

  Wherein an incorporeal spirit moves,

  Made of the mould whereof thyself consists,

  Which makes me valiant, proud, ambitious,

  Ready to levy power against thy throne,

  That I might move the turning spheres of heaven;

  For earth and all this airy region

  Cannot contain the state of Tamburlaine.

  120 By Mahomet, thy mighty friend, I swear,

  In sending to my issue such a soul,

  Created of the massy dregs of earth,

  The scum and tartar of the elements,

  Wherein was neither courage, strength, or wit,

  But folly, sloth, and damnèd idleness,

  Thou hast procured a greater enemy

  Than he that darted mountains at thy head,

  Shaking the burden mighty Atlas bears,

  Whereat thou, trembling, hidd’st thee in the air,

  130 Clothed with a pitchy cloud for being seen.

  And now, ye cankered curs of Asia,

  That will not see the strength of Tamburlaine

  Although it shine as brightly as the sun,

  Now you shall feel the strength of Tamburlaine,

  And by the state of his supremacy

  Approve the difference ’twixt himself and you.

  ORCANES

  Thou showest the difference ’twixt ourselves and thee,

  In this thy barbarous damnèd tyranny.

  JERUSALEM

  Thy victories are grown so violent

  140 That shortly heaven, filled with the meteors

  Of blood and fire thy tyrannies have made,

  Will pour down blood and fire on thy head,

  Whose scalding drops will pierce thy seething brains

  And with our bloods revenge our bloods on thee.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Villains, these terrors and these tyrannies,

  (If tyrannies war’s justice ye repute)

  I execute, enjoined me from above,

  To scourge the pride of such as heaven abhors;

  150 Nor am I made arch-monarch of the world,

  Crowned and invested by the hand of Jove,

  For deeds of bounty or nobility.

  But since I exercise a greater name,

  The scourge of God and terror of the world,

  I must apply myself to fit those terms,

  In war, in blood, in death, in cruelty,

  And plague such peasants as resist in me

  The power of heaven’s eternal majesty.

  Theridamas, Techelles, and Casane

  160 Ransack the tents and the pavilions

  Of these proud Turks, and take their concubines.

  Make them bury this effeminate brat,

  For not a common soldier shall defile

  His manly fingers with so faint a boy.

  Then bring those Turkish harlots to my tent,

  And I’ll dispose them as it likes me best.

  Meanwhile, take him in.

  SOLDIERS We will, my lord.

  [Exeunt SOLDIERS with the body of CALYPHAS.]

  JERUSALEM

  O damnèd monster, nay, a fiend of hell,

  170 Whose cruelties are not so harsh as thine,

  Nor yet imposed with such a bitter hate!

  ORCANES

  Revenge it, Rhadamanth and Aeacus,

  And let your hates, extended in his pains,

  Expel the hate wherewith he pains our souls!

  TREBIZOND

  May never day give virtue to his eyes,

  Whose sight, composed of fury and of fire,

  Doth send such stern affections to his heart!

  SORIA

  May never spirit, vein, or artier feed

  The cursèd substance of that cruel heart,

  But, wanting moisture and remorseful blood,

  180 Dry up with anger and consume with heat!

  TAMBURLAINE

  Well, bark, ye dogs. I’ll bridle all your tongues

  And bind them close with bits of burnished steel

  Down to the channels of your hateful throats,

  And with the pains my rigour shall inflict,

  I’ll make ye roar, that earth may echo forth

  The far-resounding torments ye sustain,

  As when an herd of lusty Cimbrian bulls

  Run mourning round about the females’ miss,

  And, stung with fury of their following,

  190 Fill all the air with troublous bellowing.

  I will, with engines never exercised,

  Conquer, sack, and utterly consume

  Your cities and your golden palaces,

  And with the flames that beat against the clouds,

  Incense the heavens and make the stars to melt,

  As if they were the tears of Mahomet

  For hot consumption of his country’s pride.

  And, till by vision or by speech I hear

  Immortal Jove say ‘Cease, my Tamburlaine’,

  200 I will persist a terror to the world,

  Making the meteors that, like armàd men,

  Are seen to march upon the towers of heaven,

  Run tilting round about the firmament,

  And break their burning lances in the air

  For honour of my wondrous victories.

  Come, bring them in to our pavilion.

  Exeunt.

  Scene 2

  [Enter] OLYMPIA alone.

  OLYMPIA

  Distressed Olympia, whose weeping eyes

  Since thy arrival here beheld no sun,

  But, closed within the compass of a tent,

  Hath stained thy cheeks and made thee look like death,

  Devise some means to rid thee of thy life

  Rather than yievld to his detested suit

  Whose drift is only to dishonour thee.

  And since this earth, dewed with thy brinish tears,

  Affords no herbs whose taste may poison thee,

  10 Nor yet this air, beat often with thy sighs,

  Contagious smells and vapours to infect thee,

  Nor thy close cave a sword to murder thee,

  Let this invention be the instrument.

  Enter THERIDAMAS.

  THERIDAMAS

  Well met, Olympia. I sought thee in my tent,

  But, when I saw the place obscure and dark

  Which with thy beauty thou wast wont to light,

/>   Enraged, I ran about the fields for thee,

  Supposing amorous Jove had sent his son,

  The wingàd Hermes, to convey thee hence.

  20 But now I find thee, and that fear is past.

  Tell me, Olympia, wilt thou grant my suit?

  OLYMPIA

  My lord and husband’s death, with my sweet son’s,

  With whom I buried all affections

  Save grief and sorrow, which torment my heart,

  Forbids my mind to entertain a thought

  That tends to love, but meditate on death –

  A fitter subject for a pensive soul.

  THERIDAMAS

  Olympia, pity him in whom thy looks

  Have greater operation and more force

  Than Cynthia’s in the watery wilderness,

  30 For with thy view my joys are at the full,

  And ebb again as thou depart’st from me.

  OLYMPIA

  Ah, pity me, my lord, and draw your sword,

  Making a passage for my troubled soul,

  Which beats against this prison to get out

  And meet my husband and my loving son.

  THERIDAMAS

  Nothing but still thy husband and thy son?

  Leave this, my love, and listen more to me.

  Thou shalt be stately queen of fair Argier,

  And, clothed in costly cloth of massy gold,

  40 Upon the marble turrets of my court

  Sit like to Venus in her chair of state,

  Commanding all thy princely eye desires;

  And I will cast off arms and sit with thee,

  Spending my life in sweet discourse of love.

  OLYMPIA

  No such discourse is pleasant in mine ears

  But that where every period ends with death

  And every line begins with death again.

  I cannot love to be an emperess.

  THERIDAMAS

  Nay, lady, then if nothing will prevail,

  50 I’ll use some other means to make you yield.

  Such is the sudden fury of my love,

  I must and will be pleased, and you shall yield.

  Come to the tent again.

  OLYMPIA

  Stay, good my lord! And, will you save my honour,

  I’ll give your grace a present of such price

  As all the world cannot afford the like.

  THERIDAMAS What is it?

  OLYMPIA

  An ointment which a cunning alchemist

  Distillèd from the purest balsamum

  60 And simplest extracts of all minerals,

  In which the essential form of marble stone,

  Tempered by science metaphysical

  And spells of magic from the mouths of spirits,

  With which if you but ’noint your tender skin,

  Nor pistol, sword, nor lance can pierce your flesh.

  THERIDAMAS

  Why, madam, think ye to mock me thus palpably?

  OLYMPIA

  To prove it, I will ’noint my naked throat,

  Which when you stab, look on your weapon’s point,

  70 And you shall see’t rebated with the blow.

  THERIDAMAS

  Why gave you not your husband some of it,

  If you loved him, and it so precious?

  OLYMPIA

  My purpose was, my lord, to spend it so,

  But was prevented by his sudden end.

  And for a present easy proof hereof,

  That I dissemble not, try it on me.

  THERIDAMAS

  I will, Olympia, and will keep it for

  The richest present of this eastern world.

  She anoints her throat.

  OLYMPIA

  Now stab, my lord, and mark your weapon’s point,

  80 That will be blunted if the blow be great.

  THERIDAMAS [stabs her throat]

  Here then, Olympia.

  What, have I slain her? Villain, stab thyself!

  Cut off this arm that murderèd my love,

  In whom the learned rabbis of this age

  Might find as many wondrous miracles

  As in the theoria of the world!

  Now hell is fairer than Elysium;

  A greater lamp than that bright eye of heaven

  From whence the stars do borrow all their light

  90 Wanders about the black circumference,

  And now the damned souls are free from pain,

  For every Fury gazeth on her looks.

  Infernal Dis is courting of my love,

  Inventing masques and stately shows for her,

  Opening the doors of his rich treasury

  To entertain this queen of chastity,

  Whose body shall be tombed with all the pomp

  The treasure of my kingdom may afford.

  Exit, taking her away.

  Scene 3

  [Enter] TAMBURLAINE, drawn in his chariot by [the kings of] TREBIZOND and SORIA with bits in their mouths, reins in his left hand, in his right hand a whip, with which he scourgeth them. TECHELLES, THERIDAMASJ USUMCASANE, AMYRAS, CELEBINUS; [ORCANES, King of] Natolia and [the King of] JERUSALEM led by with five or six common SOLDIERS.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Holla, ye pampered jades of Asia!

  What, can ye draw but twenty miles a day

  And have so proud a chariot at your heels

  And such a coachman as great Tamburlaine,

  But from Asphaltis, where I conquered you,

  To Byron here where thus I honour you?

  The horse that guide the golden eye of heaven

  And blow the morning from their nostrils,

  Making their fiery gait above the clouds,

  Are not so honoured in their governor

  10 As you, ye slaves, in mighty Tamburlaine.

  The headstrong jades of Thrace Alcides tamed,

  That King Aegeus fed with human flesh

  And made so wanton that they knew their strengths,

  Were not subdued with valour more divine

  Than you by this unconquered arm of mine.

  To make you fierce, and fit my appetite,

  You shall be fed with flesh as raw as blood

  And drink in pails the strongest muscadel.

  20 If you can live with it, then live, and draw

  My chariot swifter than the racking clouds.

  If not, then die like beasts and fit for nought

  But perches for the black and fatal ravens.

  Thus am I right the scourge of highest Jove,

  And see the figure of my dignity

  By which I hold my name and majesty.

  AMYRAS

  Let me have coach, my lord, that I may ride

  And thus be drawn with these two idle kings.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Thy youth forbids such ease, my kingly boy.

  30 They shall tomorrow draw my chariot

  While these their fellow kings may be refreshed.

  ORCANES

  O thou that swayest the region under earth,

  And art a king as absolute as Jove,

  Come as thou didst in fruitful Sicily,

  Surveying all the glories of the land!

  And as thou took’st the fair Proserpina,

  Joying the fruit of Ceres’ garden plot,

  For love, for honour, and to make her queen,

  So for just hate, for shame, and to subdue

  40 This proud contemner of thy dreadful power,

  Come once in fury and survey his pride,

  Haling him headlong to the lowest hell!

  THERIDAMAS [to TAMBURLAINE]

  Your majesty must get some bits for these,

  To bridle their contemptuous cursing tongues

  That like unruly never-broken jades

  Break through the hedges of their hateful mouths

  And pass their fixéd bounds exceedingly.

  TECHELLES

  Nay, we will break the hedges of their mo
uths

  And pull their kicking colts out of their pastures.

  USUMCASANE

  Your majesty already hath devised

  A mean as fit as may be to restrain

  50 These coltish coach-horse tongues from blasphemy.

  [CELEBINUS bridles ORCANES.]

  CELEBINUS

  How like you that, sir king? Why speak you not?

  JERUSALEM

  Ah, cruel brat, sprung from a tyrant’s loins,

  How like his curséd father he begins

  To practise taunts and bitter tyrannies!

  TAMBURLAINE

  Ay, Turk, I tell thee, this same boy is he

  That must, advanced in higher pomp than this,

  Rifle the kingdoms I shall leave unsacked

  If Jove, esteeming me too good for earth,

  60 Raise me to match the fair Aldebaran

  Above the threefold astracism of heaven

  Before I conquer all the triple world.

  Now fetch me out the Turkish concubines.

  I will prefer them for the funeral

  They have bestowed on my abortive son.

  The CONCUBINES are brought in.

  Where are my common soldiers now that fought

  So lion-like upon Asphaltis’ plains?

  SOLDIERS Here, my lord.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Hold ye, tall soldiers. Take ye queens apiece,

  70 (I mean such queens as were kings’ concubines.)

  Take them. Divide them and their jewels too,

  And let them equally serve all your turns.

  SOLDIERS We thank your majesty.

  TAMBURLAINE

  Brawl not, I warn you, for your lechery,

  For every man that so offends shall die.

  ORCANES

  Injurious tyrant, wilt thou so defame

  The hateful fortunes of thy victory

  To exercise upon such guiltless dames

  80 The violence of thy common soldiers’ lust?

  TAMBURLAINE

  Live content, then, ye slaves, and meet not me

  With troops of harlots at your slothful heels.

  CONCUBINES

  O, pity us, my lord, and save our honours!

  TAMBURLAINE

  Are ye not gone, ye villains, with your spoils?

  They [SOLDIERS] run away with the LADIES.

  JERUSALEM

  O, merciless, infernal cruelty!

  TAMBURLAINE

  ‘Save your honours’! ’Twere but time indeed,

  Lost long before you knew what honour meant.

  THERIDAMAS

  It seems they meant to conquer us, my lord,

  And make us jesting pageants for their trulls.

  TAMBURLAINE

  90 And now themselves shall make our pageant,

  And common soldiers jest with all their trulls.

  Let them take pleasure soundly in their spoils

  Till we prepare our march to Babylon,

  Whither we next make expedition.

 

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