The Tragedie of Titus
Andronicus
(First Folio)
by
William Shakespeare
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
Flourish. Enter the Tribunes and Senators aloft And then
enter
Saturninus
and his Followers at one doore, and Bassianus and his
Followers at
the
other, with Drum & Colours.
Saturninus. Noble Patricians, Patrons of my right,
Defend the
iustice of my Cause with Armes.
And Countrey-men, my louing
Followers,
Pleade my Successiue Title with your Swords.
I was the first
borne Sonne, that was the last
That wore the Imperiall Diadem of
Rome:
Then let my Fathers Honours liue in me,
Nor wrong mine Age with this
indignitie
Bassianus. Romaines, Friends, Followers,
Fauourers of my
Right:
If euer Bassianus, Cęsars Sonne,
Were gracious in the eyes of
Royall Rome,
Keepe then this passage to the Capitoll:
And suffer not
Dishonour to approach
Th' Imperiall Seate to Vertue: consecrate
To
Iustice, Continence, and Nobility:
But let Desert in pure Election
shine;
And Romanes, fight for Freedome in your Choice.
Enter Marcus
Andronicus aloft with the Crowne.
Princes, that striue by Factions, and by Friends,
Ambitiously for Rule and
Empery:
Know, that the people of Rome for whom we stand
A speciall Party,
haue by Common voyce
In Election for the Romane Emperie,
Chosen
Andronicus, Sur-named Pious,
For many good and great deserts to Rome.
A
Nobler man, a brauer Warriour,
Liues not this day within the City
Walles.
He by the Senate is accited home
From weary Warres against the
barbarous Gothes,
That with his Sonnes (a terror to our Foes)
Hath yoak'd
a Nation strong, train'd vp in Armes.
Ten yeares are spent, since first he
vndertooke
This Cause of Rome, and chasticed with Armes
Our Enemies pride.
Fiue times he hath return'd
Bleeding to Rome, bearing his Valiant
Sonnes
In Coffins from the Field.
And now at last, laden with Honours
Spoyles,
Returnes the good Andronicus to Rome,
Renowned Titus, flourishing
in Armes.
Let vs intreat, by Honour of his Name,
Whom (worthily) you would
haue now succeede,
And in the Capitoll and Senates right,
Whom you pretend
to Honour and Adore,
That you withdraw you, and abate your
Strength,
Dismisse your Followers, and as Suters should,
Pleade your
Deserts in Peace and Humblenesse
Saturnine. How fayre the Tribune speakes,
To calme my
thoughts
Bassia. Marcus Andronicus, so I do affie
In thy vprightnesse
and Integrity:
And so I Loue and Honor thee, and thine,
Thy Noble Brother
Titus, and his Sonnes,
And Her (to whom my thoughts are humbled
all)
Gracious Lauinia, Romes rich Ornament,
That I will heere dismisse my
louing Friends:
And to my Fortunes, and the Peoples Fauour,
Commit my
Cause in ballance to be weigh'd.
Exit Souldiours.
Saturnine. Friends, that haue beene
Thus forward in my Right,
I
thanke you all, and heere Dismisse you all,
And to the Loue and Fauour of my
Countrey,
Commit my Selfe, my Person, and the Cause:
Rome, be as iust and
gracious vnto me,
As I am confident and kinde to thee.
Open the Gates, and
let me in
Bassia. Tribunes, and me, a poore Competitor.
Flourish. They go vp into the Senat house.
Enter a Captaine.
Cap. Romanes make way: the good Andronicus,
Patron of Vertue, Romes
best Champion,
Successefull in the Battailes that he fights,
With Honour
and with Fortune is return'd,
From whence he circumscribed with his
Sword,
And brought to yoke the Enemies of Rome.
Sound Drummes and Trumpets. And then enter two of Titus
Sonnes;
After
them, two men bearing a Coffin couered with blacke, then two
other
Sonnes.
After them, Titus Andronicus, and then Tamora the Queene
of
Gothes, & her
two Sonnes Chiron and Demetrius, with Aaron the
Moore, and
others, as many
as can bee: They set downe the Coffin, and
Titus speakes.
Andronicus. Haile Rome:
Victorious in thy Mourning Weedes:
Loe
as the Barke that hath discharg'd his fraught,
Returnes with precious lading
to the Bay,
From whence at first she weigh'd her Anchorage:
Commeth
Andronicus bound with Lawrell bowes,
To resalute his Country with his
teares,
Teares of true ioy for his returne to Rome,
Thou great defender of
this Capitoll,
Stand gracious to the Rites that we intend.
Romaines, of
fiue and twenty Valiant Sonnes,
Halfe of the number that King Priam
had,
Behold the poore remaines aliue and dead!
These that Suruiue, let
Rome reward with Loue:
These that I bring vnto their latest home,
With
buriall amongst their Auncestors.
Heere Gothes haue giuen me leaue to sheath
my Sword:
Titus vnkinde, and carelesse of thine owne,
Why suffer'st thou
thy Sonnes vnburied yet,
To houer on the dreadfull shore of Stix?
Make way
to lay them by their Bretheren.
They open the Tombe.
There greete in silence as the dead are wont,
And sleepe in peace, slaine
in your Countries warres:
O sacred receptacle of my ioyes,
Sweet Cell of
vertue and Nobilitie,
How many Sonnes of mine hast thou in store,
That
thou wilt neuer render to me more?
Luc. Giue vs the proudest prisoner
of the Gothes,
That we may hew his limbes, and on a pile
Ad manus fratrum,
sacrifice his flesh:
Before this earthly prison of their bones,
That so
the shadowes be not vnappeas'd,
Nor we disturb'd with prodigies on earth
Tit. I giue him you, the Noblest that Suruiues,
The eldest
Son of this distressed Queene
Tam. Stay Romaine Bretheren, gracious Conqueror,
Victorious
Titus, rue the teares I shed,
A Mothers teares in passion for her
sonne:
And if thy Sonnes were euer deere to thee,
Oh thinke my sonnes to
be as deere to mee.
Sufficeth not, that we are brought to Rome
To
beautifie thy Triumphs, and returne
Captiue to thee, and to thy Romaine
yoake,
But must my Sonnes be slaughtred in the streetes,
For Valiant
doings in their Countries cause?
O! If to fight for King and
Common-weale,
Were piety in thine, it is in these:
Andronicus, staine not
thy Tombe with blood.
Wilt thou draw neere the nature of the Gods?
Draw
neere them then in being mercifull.
Sweet mercy is Nobilities true
badge,
Thrice Noble Titus, spare my first borne sonne
Tit. Patient your selfe Madam, and pardon me.
These are the
Brethren, whom you Gothes beheld
Aliue and dead, and for their Bretheren
slaine,
Religiously they aske a sacrifice:
To this your sonne is markt,
and die he must,
T' appease their groaning shadowes that are gone
Luc. Away with him, and make a fire straight,
And with our
Swords vpon a pile of wood,
Let's hew his limbes till they be cleane
consum'd.
Exit Sonnes with Alarbus.
Tamo. O cruell irreligious piety
Chi. Was euer Scythia halfe so barbarous?
Dem. Oppose
me Scythia to ambitious Rome,
Alarbus goes to rest, and we suruiue,
To
tremble vnder Titus threatning lookes.
Then Madam stand resolu'd, but hope
withall,
The selfe same Gods that arm'd the Queene of Troy
With
opportunitie of sharpe reuenge
Vpon the Thracian Tyrant in his Tent,
May
fauour Tamora the Queene of Gothes,
(When Gothes were Gothes, and Tamora was
Queene)
To quit the bloody wrongs vpon her foes.
Enter the Sonnes of
Andronicus againe.
Luci. See Lord and Father, how we haue perform'd
Our Romaine
rightes, Alarbus limbs are lopt,
And intrals feede the sacrifising
fire,
Whole smoke like incense doth perfume the skie.
Remaineth nought but
to interre our Brethren,
And with low'd Larums welcome them to Rome
Tit. Let it be so, and let Andronicus
Make this his latest
farewell to their Soules.
Flourish.
Then Sound Trumpets, and lay the Coffins in the Tombe.
In peace and Honour rest you heere my Sonnes,
Romes readiest Champions,
repose you heere in rest,
Secure from worldly chaunces and mishaps:
Heere
lurks no Treason, heere no enuie swels,
Heere grow no damned grudges, heere
are no stormes,
No noyse, but silence and Eternall sleepe,
In peace and
Honour rest you heere my Sonnes.
Enter Lauinia.
Laui. In peace and Honour, liue Lord Titus long,
My Noble Lord and
Father, liue in Fame:
Loe at this Tombe my tributarie teares,
I render for
my Bretherens Obsequies:
And at thy feete I kneele, with teares of
ioy
Shed on the earth for thy returne to Rome.
O blesse me heere with thy
victorious hand,
Whose Fortune Romes best Citizens applau'd
Ti. Kind Rome,
That hast thus louingly reseru'd
The
Cordiall of mine age to glad my hart,
Lauinia liue, out-liue thy Fathers
dayes:
And Fames eternall date for vertues praise
Marc. Long liue Lord Titus, my beloued brother,
Gracious
Triumpher in the eyes of Rome
Tit. Thankes Gentle Tribune,
Noble brother Marcus
Mar. And welcome Nephews from succesfull wars,
You that
suruiue and you that sleepe in Fame:
Faire Lords your Fortunes are all alike
in all,
That in your Countries seruice drew your Swords.
But safer Triumph
is this Funerall Pompe,
That hath aspir'd to Solons Happines,
And Triumphs
ouer chaunce in honours bed.
Titus Andronicus, the people of Rome,
Whose
friend in iustice thou hast euer bene,
Send thee by me their Tribune and
their trust,
This Palliament of white and spotlesse Hue,
And name thee in
Election for the Empire,
With these our late deceased Emperours Sonnes:
Be
Candidatus then, and put it on,
And helpe to set a head on headlesse Rome
Tit. A better head her Glorious body fits,
Then his that
shakes for age and feeblenesse:
What should I don this Robe and trouble
you,
Be chosen with proclamations to day,
To morrow yeeld vp rule, resigne
my life,
And set abroad new businesse for you all.
Rome I haue bene thy
Souldier forty yeares,
And led my Countries strength successefully,
And
buried one and twenty Valiant Sonnes,
Knighted in Field, slaine manfully in
Armes,
In right and Seruice of their Noble Countrie:
Giue me a staffe of
Honour for mine age,
But not a Scepter to controule the world,
Vpright he
held it Lords, that held it last
Mar. Titus, thou shalt obtaine and aske the Emperie
Sat. Proud and ambitious Tribune can'st thou tell?
Titus. Patience Prince Saturninus
Sat. Romaines do me right.
Patricians draw your Swords, and
sheath them not
Till Saturninus be Romes Emperour:
Andronicus would thou
wert shipt to hell,
Rather then rob me of the peoples harts
Luc. Proud Saturnine, interrupter of the good
That Noble
minded Titus meanes to thee
Tit. Content thee Prince, I will restore to thee
The peoples
harts, and weane them from themselues
Bass. Andronicus, I do not flatter thee
But Honour thee, and
will doe till I die:
My Faction if thou strengthen with thy Friend?
I will
most thankefull be, and thankes to men
Of Noble mindes, is Honourable
Meede
Tit. People of Rome, and Noble Tribunes heere,
I aske your
voyces and your Suffrages,
Will you bestow them friendly on
Andronicus?
Tribunes. To gratifie the good Andronicus,
And
Gratulate his safe returne to Rome,
The people will accept whom he admits
Tit. Tribunes I thanke you, and this sure I make,
That you
Create your Emperours eldest sonne,
Lord Saturnine, whose Vertues will I
hope,
Reflect on Rome as Tytans Rayes on earth,
And ripen Iustice in this
Common-weale:
Then if you will elect by my aduise,
Crowne him, and say:
Long liue our Emperour
Mar. An. With Voyces and applause of euery sort,
Patricians
and Plebeans we Create
Lord Saturninus Romes Great Emperour.
And say, Long
liue our Emperour Saturnine.
A long Flourish till they come downe.
Satu. Titus Andronicus, for thy Fauours done,
To vs in our Election
this day,
I giue thee thankes in part of thy Deserts,
And will with Deeds
requite thy gentlenesse:
And for an Onset Titus to aduance
Thy Name, and
Honorable Familie,
Lauinia will I make my Empresse,
Romes Royall Mistris,
Mistris of my hart
And in the Sacred Pathan her espouse:
Tell me
Andronicus doth this motion please thee?
Tit. It doth my worthy Lord,
and in this match,
I hold me Highly Honoured of your Grace,
And heere in
sight of Rome, to Saturnine,
King and Commander of our Common-weale,
The
Wide-worlds Emperour, do I Consecrate,
My Sword, my Chariot, and my
Prisoners,
Presents well Worthy Romes Imperiall Lord:
Receiue them then,
the Tribute that I owe,
Mine Honours Ensignes humbled at my feete
Satu. Thankes Noble Titus, Father of my life,
How proud I am
of thee, and of thy gifts
Rome shall record, and when I do forget
The
least of these vnspeakable Deserts,
Romans forget your Fealtie to me
Tit. Now Madam are you prisoner to an Emperour,
To him that
for your Honour and your State,
Will vse you Nobly and your followers
Satu. A goodly Lady, trust me of the Hue
That I would choose,
were I to choose a new:
Cleere vp Faire Queene that cloudy
countenance,
Though chance of warre
Hath wrought this change of
cheere,
Thou com'st not to be made a scorne in Rome:
Princely shall be thy
vsage euery way.
Rest on my word, and let not discontent
Daunt all your
hopes: Madam he comforts you,
Can make you Greater then the Queene of
Gothes?
Lauinia you are not displeas'd with this?
Lau. Not I my
Lord, sith true Nobilitie,
Warrants these words in Princely curtesie
Sat. Thankes sweete Lauinia, Romans let vs goe:
Ransomlesse
heere we set our Prisoners free,
Proclaime our Honors Lords with Trumpe and
Drum
Bass. Lord Titus by your leaue, this Maid is mine
Tit. How sir? Are you in earnest then my Lord?
Bass. I
Noble Titus, and resolu'd withall,
To doe my selfe this reason, and this
right
Marc. Suum cuiquam, is our Romane Iustice,
This Prince in
Iustice ceazeth but his owne
Luc. And that he will and shall, if Lucius liue
Tit. Traytors auant, where is the Emperours Guarde?
Treason
my Lord, Lauinia is surpris'd
Sat. Surpris'd, by whom?
Bass. By him that iustly
may
Beare his Betroth'd, from all the world away
Muti. Brothers helpe to conuey her hence away,
And with my
Sword Ile keepe this doore safe
Tit. Follow my Lord, and Ile soone bring her backe
Mut. My Lord you passe not heere
Tit. What villaine Boy, bar'st me my way in Rome?
Mut.
Helpe Lucius helpe. He kils him
Luc. My Lord you are vniust, and more then so,
In wrongfull
quarrell, you haue slaine your son
Tit. Nor thou, nor he are any sonnes of mine,
My sonnes would
neuer so dishonour me.
Traytor restore Lauinia to the Emperour
Luc. Dead if you will, but not to be his wife,
That is
anothers lawfull promist Loue.
Enter aloft the Emperour with Tamora and her
two sonnes, and
Aaron the
Moore.
Empe. No Titus, no, the Emperour needs her not,
Nor her, nor thee,
nor any of thy stocke:
Ile trust by Leisure him that mocks me once.
Thee
neuer: nor thy Trayterous haughty sonnes,
Confederates all, thus to dishonour
me.
Was none in Rome to make a stale
But Saturnine? Full well
Andronicus
Agree these Deeds, with that proud bragge of thine,
That
said'st, I beg'd the Empire at thy hands
Tit. O monstrous, what reproachfull words are these?
Sat. But goe thy wayes, goe giue that changing peece,
To him that flourisht
for her with his Sword:
A Valliant sonne in-law thou shalt enioy:
One, fit
to bandy with thy lawlesse Sonnes,
To ruffle in the Common-wealth of Rome
Tit. These words are Razors to my wounded hart
Sat. And therefore louely Tamora Queene of Gothes,
That like
the stately Thebe mong'st her Nimphs
Dost ouer-shine the Gallant'st Dames of
Rome,
If thou be pleas'd with this my sodaine choyse,
Behold I choose thee
Tamora for my Bride,
And will Create thee Empresse of Rome.
Speake Queene
of Goths dost thou applau'd my choyse?
And heere I sweare by all the Romaine
Gods,
Sith Priest and Holy-water are so neere,
And Tapers burne so bright,
and euery thing
In readines for Hymeneus stand,
I will not resalute the
streets of Rome,
Or clime my Pallace, till from forth this place,
I leade
espous'd my Bride along with me
Tamo. And heere in sight of heauen to Rome I sweare,
If
Saturnine aduance the Queen of Gothes,
Shee will a Hand-maid be to his
desires,
A louing Nurse, a Mother to his youth
Satur. Ascend Faire Queene,
Panthean Lords, accompany
Your
Noble Emperour and his louely Bride,
Sent by the heauens for Prince
Saturnine,
Whose wisedome hath her Fortune Conquered,
There shall we
Consummate our Spousall rites.
Exeunt. omnes.
Tit. I am not bid to waite vpon this Bride:
Titus when wer't thou
wont to walke alone,
Dishonoured thus and Challenged of wrongs?
Enter
Marcus and Titus Sonnes.
Mar. O Titus see! O see what thou hast done!
In a bad quarrell,
slaine a Vertuous sonne
Tit. No foolish Tribune, no: No sonne of mine,
Nor thou, nor
these Confedrates in the deed,
That hath dishonoured all our
Family,
Vnworthy brother, and vnworthy Sonnes
Luci. But let vs giue him buriall as becomes:
Giue Mutius
buriall with our Bretheren
Tit. Traytors away, he rest's not in this Tombe:
This
Monument fiue hundreth yeares hath stood,
Which I haue Sumptuously
re-edified.
Heere none but Souldiers, and Romes Seruitors,
Repose in Fame:
None basely slaine in braules,
Bury him where you can, he comes not heere
Mar. My Lord this is impiety in you,
My Nephew Mutius deeds
do plead for him,
He must be buried with his bretheren
Titus two Sonnes speakes. And shall, or him we will accompany
Ti. And shall! What villaine was it spake that word?
Titus sonne speakes. He that would vouch'd it in any place but
heere
Tit. What would you bury him in my despight?
Mar. No
Noble Titus, but intreat of thee,
To pardon Mutius, and to bury him
Tit. Marcus, Euen thou hast stroke vpon my Crest,
And with
these Boyes mine Honour thou hast wounded,
My foes I doe repute you euery
one.
So trouble me no more, but get you gone
1.Sonne. He is not himselfe, let vs withdraw
2.Sonne. Not I tell Mutius bones be buried.
The Brother and the sonnes kneele.
Mar. Brother, for in that name doth nature plea'd
2.Sonne. Father, and in that name doth nature speake
Tit. Speake thou no more if all the rest will speede
Mar. Renowned Titus more then halfe my soule
Luc. Deare Father, soule and substance of vs all
Mar. Suffer thy brother Marcus to interre
His Noble Nephew
heere in vertues nest,
That died in Honour and Lauinia's cause.
Thou art a
Romaine, be not barbarous:
The Greekes vpon aduise did bury Aiax
That slew
himselfe: And Laertes sonne,
Did graciously plead for his Funerals:
Let
not young Mutius then that was thy ioy,
Be bar'd his entrance heere
Tit. Rise Marcus, rise,
The dismall'st day is this that ere I
saw,
To be dishonored by my Sonnes in Rome:
Well, bury him, and bury me
the next.
They put him in the Tombe.
Luc. There lie thy bones sweet Mutius with thy friends.
Till we
with Trophees do adorne thy Tombe.
They all kneele and say.
No man shed teares for Noble Mutius,
He liues in Fame, that di'd in
vertues cause.
Enter.
Mar. My Lord to step out of these sudden dumps,
How comes it that
the subtile Queene of Gothes,
Is of a sodaine thus aduanc'd in
Rome?
Ti. I know not Marcus: but I know it is,
(Whether by deuise
or no) the heauens can tell,
Is she not then beholding to the man,
That
brought her for this high good turne so farre?
Yes, and will Nobly him
remunerate.
Flourish.
Enter the Emperor, Tamora, and her two sons, with the Moore at
one
doore.
Enter at the other doore Bassianus and Lauinia with others.
Sat. So Bassianus, you haue plaid your prize,
God giue you ioy sir
of your Gallant Bride
Bass. And you of yours my Lord: I say no more,
Nor wish no
lesse, and so I take my leaue
Sat. Traytor, if Rome haue law, or we haue power,
Thou and
thy Faction shall repent this Rape
Bass. Rape call you it my Lord, to cease my owne,
My true
betrothed Loue, and now my wife?
But let the lawes of Rome determine
all,
Meane while I am possest of that is mine
Sat. 'Tis good sir: you are very short with vs,
But if we
liue, weele be as sharpe with you
Bass. My Lord, what I haue done as best I may,
Answere I
must, and shall do with my life,
Onely thus much I giue your Grace to
know,
By all the duties that I owe to Rome,
This Noble Gentleman Lord
Titus heere,
Is in opinion and in honour wrong'd,
That in the rescue of
Lauinia,
With his owne hand did slay his youngest Son,
In zeale to you,
and highly mou'd to wrath.
To be controul'd in that he frankly
gaue:
Receiue him then to fauour Saturnine,
That hath expre'st himselfe in
all his deeds,
A Father and a friend to thee, and Rome
Tit. Prince Bassianus leaue to plead my Deeds,
'Tis thou, and
those, that haue dishonoured me,
Rome and the righteous heauens be my
iudge,
How I haue lou'd and Honour'd Saturnine
Tam. My worthy Lord if euer Tamora,
Were gracious in those
Princely eyes of thine,
Then heare me speake indifferently for all:
And at
my sute (sweet) pardon what is past
Satu. What Madam, be dishonoured openly,
And basely put it vp
without reuenge?
Tam. Not so my Lord,
The Gods of Rome
fore-fend,
I should be Authour to dishonour you.
But on mine honour dare,
I vndertake
For good Lord Titus innocence in all:
Whose fury not
dissembled speakes his griefes:
Then at my sute looke graciously on
him,
Loose not so noble a friend on vaine suppose,
Nor with sowre lookes
afflict his gentle heart.
My Lord, be rul'd by me, be wonne at
last,
Dissemble all your griefes and discontents,
You are but newly
planted in your Throne,
Least then the people, and Patricians too,
Vpon a
iust suruey take Titus part,
And so supplant vs for ingratitude,
Which
Rome reputes to be a hainous sinne.
Yeeld at intreats, and then let me
alone:
Ile finde a day to massacre them all,
And race their faction, and
their familie,
The cruell Father, and his trayt'rous sonnes,
To whom I
sued for my deare sonnes life.
And make them know what 'tis to let a
Queene.
Kneele in the streetes, and beg for grace in vaine.
Come, come,
sweet Emperour, (come Andronicus)
Take vp this good old man, and cheere the
heart,
That dies in tempest of thy angry frowne
King. Rise Titus, rise,
My Empresse hath preuail'd
Titus. I thanke your Maiestie,
And her my Lord.
These
words, these lookes,
Infuse new life in me
Tamo. Titus, I am incorparate in Rome,
A Roman now adopted
happily.
And must aduise the Emperour for his good,
This day all quarrels
die Andronicus.
And let it be mine honour good my Lord,
That I haue
reconcil'd your friends and you.
For you Prince Bassianus, I haue past
My
word and promise to the Emperour,
That you will be more milde and
tractable.
And feare not Lords:
And you Lauinia,
By my aduise all
humbled on your knees,
You shall aske pardon of his Maiestie
Son. We doe,
And vow to heauen, and to his Highnes,
That
what we did, was mildly, as we might,
Tendring our sisters honour and our
owne
Mar. That on mine honour heere I do protest
King. Away and talke not, trouble vs no more
Tamora. Nay, nay,
Sweet Emperour, we must all be
friends,
The Tribune and his Nephews kneele for grace,
I will not be
denied, sweet hart looke back
King. Marcus,
For thy sake and thy brothers heere,
And at
my louely Tamora's intreats,
I doe remit these young mens haynous
faults.
Stand vp: Lauinia, though you left me like a churle,
I found a
friend, and sure as death I sware,
I would not part a Batchellour from the
Priest.
Come, if the Emperours Court can feast two Brides,
You are my
guest Lauinia, and your friends:
This day shall be a Loue-day Tamora
Tit. To morrow and it please your Maiestie,
To hunt the
Panther and the Hart with me,
With horne and Hound,
Weele giue your Grace
Bon iour
Satur. Be it so Titus, and Gramercy to.
Exeunt.
Actus Secunda.
Flourish. Enter Aaron alone.
Aron. Now climbeth Tamora Olympus toppe,
Safe out of Fortunes shot,
and sits aloft,
Secure of Thunders cracke or lightning flash,
Aduanc'd
about pale enuies threatning reach:
As when the golden Sunne salutes the
morne,
And hauing gilt the Ocean with his beames,
Gallops the Zodiacke in
his glistering Coach,
And ouer-lookes the highest piering hills:
So
Tamora
Vpon her wit doth earthly honour waite,
And vertue stoopes and
trembles at her frowne.
Then Aaron arme thy hart, and fit thy thoughts,
To
mount aloft with thy Emperiall Mistris,
And mount her pitch, whom thou in
triumph long
Hast prisoner held, fettred in amorous chaines,
And faster
bound to Aarons charming eyes,
Then is Prometheus ti'de to Caucasus.
Away
with slauish weedes, and idle thoughts,
I will be bright and shine in Pearle
and Gold,
To waite vpon this new made Empresse.
To waite said I? To wanton
with this Queene,
This Goddesse, this Semirimis, this Queene.
This Syren,
that will charme Romes Saturnine,
And see his shipwracke, and his Common
weales.
Hollo, what storme is this?
Enter Chiron and Demetrius
brauing.
Dem. Chiron thy yeres wants wit, thy wit wants edge
And manners to
intru'd where I am grac'd,
And may for ought thou know'st affected be
Chi. Demetrius, thou doo'st ouer-weene in all,
And so in
this, to beare me downe with braues,
'Tis not the difference of a yeere or
two
Makes me lesse gracious, or thee more fortunate:
I am as able, and as
fit, as thou,
To serue, and to deserue my Mistris grace,
And that my sword
vpon thee shall approue,
And plead my passions for Lauinia's loue
Aron. Clubs, clubs, these louers will not keep the peace
Dem. Why Boy, although our mother (vnaduised)
Gaue you a
daunsing Rapier by your side,
Are you so desperate growne to threat your
friends?
Goe too: haue your Lath glued within your sheath,
Till you know
better how to handle it
Chi. Meane while sir, with the little skill I haue,
Full well
shalt thou perceiue how much I dare
Deme. I Boy, grow ye so braue?
They drawe.
Aron. Why how now Lords?
So nere the Emperours Pallace dare you
draw,
And maintaine such a quarrell openly?
Full well I wote, the ground
of all this grudge.
I would not for a million of Gold,
The cause were
knowne to them it most concernes.
Nor would your noble mother for much
more
Be so dishonored in the Court of Rome:
For shame put vp
Deme. Not I, till I haue sheath'd
My rapier in his bosome,
and withall
Thrust these reprochfull speeches downe his throat,
That he
hath breath'd in my dishonour heere
Chi. For that I am prepar'd, and full resolu'd,
Foule spoken
Coward,
That thundrest with thy tongue,
And with thy weapon nothing dar'st
performe
Aron. A way I say.
Now by the Gods that warlike Gothes
adore,
This pretty brabble will vndoo vs all:
Why Lords, and thinke you
not how dangerous
It is to set vpon a Princes right?
What is Lauinia then
become so loose,
Or Bassianus so degenerate,
That for her loue such
quarrels may be broacht,
Without controulement, Iustice, or reuenge?
Young
Lords beware, and should the Empresse know,
This discord ground, the musicke
would not please
Chi. I care not I, knew she and all the world,
I loue Lauinia
more then all the world
Demet. Youngling,
Learne thou to make some meaner
choise,
Lauinia is thine elder brothers hope
Aron. Why are ye mad? Or know ye not in Rome,
How furious and
impatient they be,
And cannot brooke Competitors in loue?
I tell you
Lords, you doe but plot your deaths,
By this deuise
Chi. Aaron, a thousand deaths would I propose,
To atchieue
her whom I do loue
Aron. To atcheiue her, how?
Deme. Why, mak'st thou it
so strange?
Shee is a woman, therefore may be woo'd,
Shee is a woman,
therfore may be wonne,
Shee is Lauinia therefore must be lou'd.
What man,
more water glideth by the Mill
Then wots the Miller of, and easie it is
Of
a cut loafe to steale a shiue we know:
Though Bassianus be the Emperours
brother,
Better then he haue worne Vulcans badge
Aron. I, and as good as Saturninus may
Deme. Then why should he dispaire that knowes to court
it
With words, faire lookes, and liberality:
What hast not thou full often
strucke a Doe,
And borne her cleanly by the Keepers nose?
Aron. Why
then it seemes some certaine snatch or so
Would serue your turnes
Chi. I so the turne were serued
Deme. Aaron thou hast hit it
Aron. Would you had hit it too,
Then should not we be tir'd
with this adoo:
Why harke yee, harke yee, and are you such fooles,
To
square for this? Would it offend you then?
Chi. Faith not me
Deme. Nor me, so I were one
Aron. For shame be friends, & ioyne for that you
iar:
'Tis pollicie, and stratageme must doe
That you affect, and so must
you resolue,
That what you cannot as you would atcheiue,
You must perforce
accomplish as you may:
Take this of me, Lucrece was not more chast
Then
this Lauinia, Bassianus loue,
A speedier course this lingring
languishment
Must we pursue, and I haue found the path:
My Lords, a
solemne hunting is in hand.
There will the louely Roman Ladies troope:
The
Forrest walkes are wide and spacious,
And many vnfrequented plots there
are,
Fitted by kinde for rape and villanie:
Single you thither then this
dainty Doe,
And strike her home by force, if not by words:
This way or not
at all, stand you in hope.
Come, come, our Empresse with her sacred wit
To
villainie and vengance consecrate,
Will we acquaint with all that we
intend,
And she shall file our engines with aduise,
That will not suffer
you to square your selues,
But to your wishes height aduance you both.
The
Emperours Court is like the house of Fame,
The pallace full of tongues, of
eyes, of eares:
The Woods are ruthlesse, dreadfull, deafe, and dull:
There
speake, and strike braue Boyes, & take your turnes.
There serue your
lusts, shadow'd from heauens eye,
And reuell in Lauinia's Treasurie
Chi. Thy counsell Lad smells of no cowardise
Deme. Sit fas aut nefas, till I finde the streames,
To coole
this heat, a Charme to calme their fits,
Per Stigia per manes Vehor.
Exeunt.
Enter Titus Andronicus and his three sonnes, making a noyse
with
hounds
and hornes, and Marcus.
Tit. The hunt is vp, the morne is bright and gray,
The fields are
fragrant, and the Woods are greene,
Vncouple heere, and let vs make a
bay,
And wake the Emperour, and his louely Bride,
And rouze the Prince,
and ring a hunters peale,
That all the Court may eccho with the
noyse.
Sonnes let it be your charge, as it is ours,
To attend the
Emperours person carefully:
I haue bene troubled in my sleepe this
night,
But dawning day new comfort hath inspir'd.
Winde Hornes.
Heere a cry of houndes, and winde hornes in a peale, then
Enter
Saturninus, Tamora, Bassianus, Lauinia, Chiron, Demetrius,
and
their
Attendants.
Ti. Many good morrowes to your Maiestie,
Madam to you as many and
as good.
I promised your Grace, a Hunters peale
Satur. And you haue rung it lustily my Lords,
Somewhat to
earely for new married Ladies
Bass. Lauinia, how say you?
Laui. I say no:
I haue
bene awake two houres and more
Satur. Come on then, horse and Chariots let vs haue,
And to
our sport: Madam, now shall ye see,
Our Romaine hunting
Mar. I haue dogges my Lord,
Will rouze the proudest Panther
in the Chase,
And clime the highest Promontary top
Tit. And I haue horse will follow where the game
Makes way,
and runnes likes Swallowes ore the plaine
Deme. Chiron we hunt not we,
with Horse nor Hound
But hope to plucke a dainty Doe to ground.
Exeunt.
Enter Aaron alone.
Aron. He that had wit, would thinke that I had none,
To bury so
much Gold vnder a Tree,
And neuer after to inherit it.
Let him that thinks
of me so abiectly,
Know that this Gold must coine a Stratageme,
Which
cunningly effected, will beget
A very excellent peece of villany;
And so
repose sweet Gold for their vnrest,
That haue their Almes out of the Empresse
Chest.
Enter Tamora to the Moore.
Tamo. My louely Aaron,
Wherefore look'st thou sad,
When euery
thing doth make a Gleefull boast?
The Birds chaunt melody on euery
bush,
The Snake lies rolled in the chearefull Sunne,
The greene leaues
quiuer, with the cooling winde,
And make a cheker'd shadow on the
ground:
Vnder their sweete shade, Aaron let vs sit,
And whil'st the
babling Eccho mock's the Hounds,
Replying shrilly to the well
tun'd-Hornes,
As if a double hunt were heard at once,
Let vs sit downe,
and marke their yelping noyse:
And after conflict, such as was
suppos'd.
The wandring Prince and Dido once enioy'd,
When with a happy
storme they were surpris'd,
And Curtain'd with a Counsaile-keeping
Caue,
We may each wreathed in the others armes,
(Our pastimes done)
possesse a Golden slumber,
Whiles Hounds and Hornes, and sweet Melodious
Birds
Be vnto vs, as is a Nurses Song
Of Lullabie, to bring her Babe
asleepe
Aron. Madame,
Though Venus gouerne your desires,
Saturne
is Dominator ouer mine:
What signifies my deadly standing eye,
My silence,
and my Cloudy Melancholie,
My fleece of Woolly haire, that now
vncurles,
Euen as an Adder when she doth vnrowle
To do some fatall
execution?
No Madam, these are no Veneriall signes,
Vengeance is in my
heart, death in my hand,
Blood, and reuenge, are Hammering in my
head.
Harke Tamora, the Empresse of my Soule,
Which neuer hopes more
heauen, then rests in thee,
This is the day of Doome for Bassianus;
His
Philomel must loose her tongue to day,
Thy Sonnes make Pillage of her
Chastity,
And wash their hands in Bassianus blood.
Seest thou this Letter,
take it vp I pray thee,
And giue the King this fatall plotted Scrowle,
Now
question me no more, we are espied,
Heere comes a parcell of our hopefull
Booty,
Which dreads not yet their liues destruction.
Enter Bassianus and
Lauinia.
Tamo. Ah my sweet Moore:
Sweeter to me then life
Aron. No more great Empresse, Bassianus comes,
Be crosse with
him, and Ile goe fetch thy Sonnes
To backe thy quarrell what so ere they
be
Bassi. Whom haue we heere?
Romes Royall
Empresse,
Vnfurnisht of our well beseeming troope?
Or is it Dian habited
like her,
Who hath abandoned her holy Groues,
To see the generall Hunting
in this Forrest?
Tamo. Sawcie controuler of our priuate steps:
Had
I the power, that some say Dian had,
Thy Temples should be planted
presently.
With Hornes, as was Acteons, and the Hounds
Should driue vpon
his new transformed limbes,
Vnmannerly Intruder as thou art
Laui. Vnder your patience gentle Empresse,
'Tis thought you
haue a goodly gift in Horning,
And to be doubted, that your Moore and
you
Are singled forth to try experiments:
Ioue sheild your husband from
his Hounds to day,
'Tis pitty they should take him for a Stag
Bassi. Beleeue me Queene, your swarth Cymerion,
Doth make
your Honour of his bodies Hue,
Spotted, detested, and abhominable.
Why are
you sequestred from all your traine?
Dismounted from your Snow-white goodly
Steed,
And wandred hither to an obscure plot,
Accompanied with a barbarous
Moore,
If foule desire had not conducted you?
Laui. And being
intercepted in your sport,
Great reason that my Noble Lord, be rated
For
Saucinesse, I pray you let vs hence,
And let her ioy her Rauen coloured
loue,
This valley fits the purpose passing well
Bassi. The King my Brother shall haue notice of this
Laui. I, for these slips haue made him noted long,
Good King,
to be so mightily abused
Tamora. Why I haue patience to endure all this?
Enter Chiron
and Demetrius.
Dem. How now deere Soueraigne
And our gracious Mother,
Why doth
your Highnes looke so pale and wan?
Tamo. Haue I not reason thinke you
to looke pale.
These two haue tic'd me hither to this place,
A barren,
detested vale you see it is.
The Trees though Sommer, yet forlorne and
leane,
Ore-come with Mosse, and balefull Misselto.
Heere neuer shines the
Sunne, heere nothing breeds,
Vnlesse the nightly Owle, or fatall
Rauen:
And when they shew'd me this abhorred pit,
They told me heere at
dead time of the night,
A thousand Fiends, a thousand hissing Snakes,
Ten
thousand swelling Toades, as many Vrchins,
Would make such fearefull and
confused cries,
As any mortall body hearing it,
Should straite fall mad,
or else die suddenly.
No sooner had they told this hellish tale,
But
strait they told me they would binde me heere,
Vnto the body of a dismall
yew,
And leaue me to this miserable death.
And then they call'd me foule
Adulteresse,
Lasciuious Goth, and all the bitterest tearmes
That euer eare
did heare to such effect.
And had you not by wondrous fortune come,
This
vengeance on me had they executed:
Reuenge it, as you loue your Mothers
life,
Or be ye not henceforth cal'd my Children
Dem. This is a witnesse that I am thy Sonne.
stab him.
Chi. And this for me,
Strook home to shew my strength
Laui. I come Semeramis, nay Barbarous Tamora.
For no name
fits thy nature but thy owne
Tam. Giue me thy poyniard, you shal know my boyes
Your
Mothers hand shall right your Mothers wrong
Deme. Stay Madam heere is more belongs to her,
First thrash
the Corne, then after burne the straw:
This Minion stood vpon her
chastity,
Vpon her Nuptiall vow, her loyaltie.
And with that painted hope,
braues your Mightinesse,
And shall she carry this vnto her graue?
Chi. And if she doe,
I would I were an Eunuch,
Drag hence her husband to
some secret hole,
And make his dead Trunke-Pillow to our lust
Tamo. But when ye haue the hony we desire,
Let not this Waspe
out-liue vs both to sting
Chir. I warrant you Madam we will make that sure:
Come
Mistris, now perforce we will enioy,
That nice-preserued honesty of yours
Laui. Oh Tamora, thou bear'st a woman face
Tamo. I will not heare her speake, away with her
Laui. Sweet Lords intreat her heare me but a word
Demet. Listen faire Madam, let it be your glory
To see her
teares, but be your hart to them,
As vnrelenting flint to drops of raine
Laui. When did the Tigers young-ones teach the dam?
O doe not
learne her wrath, she taught it thee,
The milke thou suck'st from her did
turne to Marble,
Euen at thy Teat thou had'st thy Tyranny,
Yet euery
Mother breeds not Sonnes alike,
Do thou intreat her shew a woman pitty
Chiro. What,
Would'st thou haue me proue my selfe a
bastard?
Laui. 'Tis true,
The Rauen doth not hatch a Larke,
Yet
haue I heard, Oh could I finde it now,
The Lion mou'd with pitty, did
indure
To haue his Princely pawes par'd all away.
Some say, that Rauens
foster forlorne children,
The whil'st their owne birds famish in their
nests:
Oh be to me though thy hard hart say no,
Nothing so kind but
something pittifull
Tamo. I know not what it meanes, away with her
Lauin. Oh let me teach thee for my Fathers sake,
That gaue
thee life when well he might haue slaine thee:
Be not obdurate, open thy
deafe eares
Tamo. Had'st thou in person nere offended me.
Euen for his
sake am I pittilesse:
Remember Boyes I powr'd forth teares in vaine,
To
saue your brother from the sacrifice,
But fierce Andronicus would not
relent,
Therefore away with her, and vse her as you will,
The worse to
her, the better lou'd of me
Laui. Oh Tamora,
Be call'd a gentle Queene,
And with thine
owne hands kill me in this place,
For 'tis not life that I haue beg'd so
long,
Poore I was slaine, when Bassianus dy'd
Tam. What beg'st thou then? fond woman let me go?
Laui. 'Tis present death I beg, and one thing more,
That womanhood denies my
tongue to tell:
Oh keepe me from their worse then killing lust,
And tumble
me into some loathsome pit,
Where neuer mans eye may behold my body,
Doe
this, and be a charitable murderer
Tam. So should I rob my sweet Sonnes of their fee,
No let
them satisfie their lust on thee
Deme. Away,
For thou hast staid vs heere too long
Lauinia. No Grace,
No womanhood? Ah beastly creature,
The
blot and enemy to our generall name,
Confusion fall-
Chi. Nay then
Ile stop your mouth
Bring thou her husband,
This is the Hole where Aaron
bid vs hide him
Tam. Farewell my Sonnes, see that you make her sure,
Nere let
my heart know merry cheere indeed,
Till all the Andronici be made
away:
Now will I hence to seeke my louely Moore,
And let my spleenefull
Sonnes this Trull defloure.
Enter.
Enter Aaron with two of Titus Sonnes.
Aron. Come on my Lords, the better foote before,
Straight will I
bring you to the lothsome pit,
Where I espied the Panther fast asleepe
Quin. My sight is very dull what ere it bodes
Marti. And mine I promise you, were it not for shame,
Well
could I leaue our sport to sleepe a while
Quin. What art thou fallen?
What subtile Hole is
this,
Whose mouth is couered with Rude growing Briers,
Vpon whose leaues
are drops of new-shed-blood,
As fresh as mornings dew distil'd on
flowers,
A very fatall place it seemes to me:
Speake Brother hast thou
hurt thee with the fall?
Martius. Oh Brother,
With the dismal'st
obiect
That euer eye with sight made heart lament
Aron. Now will I fetch the King to finde them heere,
That he
thereby may haue a likely gesse,
How these were they that made away his
Brother.
Exit Aaron.
Marti. Why dost not comfort me and helpe me out,
From this
vnhallow'd and blood-stained Hole?
Quintus. I am surprised with an
vncouth feare,
A chilling sweat ore-runs my trembling ioynts,
My heart
suspects more then mine eie can see
Marti. To proue thou hast a true diuining heart,
Aaron
and thou looke downe into this den,
And see a fearefull sight of blood and
death
Quintus. Aaron is gone,
And my compassionate heart
Will
not permit mine eyes once to behold
The thing whereat it trembles by
surmise:
Oh tell me how it is, for nere till now
Was I a child to feare I
know not what
Marti. Lord Bassianus lies embrewed heere,
All on a heape
like to the slaughtred Lambe,
In this detested, darke, blood-drinking pit
Quin. If it be darke, how doost thou know 'tis he?
Mart. Vpon his bloody finger he doth weare
A precious Ring, that lightens all
the Hole:
Which like a Taper in some Monument,
Doth shine vpon the dead
mans earthly cheekes,
And shewes the ragged intrailes of the pit:
So pale
did shine the Moone on Piramus,
When he by night lay bath'd in Maiden
blood:
O Brother helpe me with thy fainting hand.
If feare hath made thee
faint, as mee it hath,
Out of this fell deuouring receptacle,
As hatefull
as Ocitus mistie mouth
Quint. Reach me thy hand, that I may helpe thee out,
Or
wanting strength to doe thee so much good,
I may be pluckt into the
swallowing wombe,
Of this deepe pit, poore Bassianus graue:
I haue no
strength to plucke thee to the brinke
Martius. Nor I no strength to clime without thy help
Quin. Thy hand once more, I will not loose againe,
Till thou
art heere aloft, or I below,
Thou can'st not come to me, I come to thee.
Both fall in.
Enter the Emperour, Aaron the Moore.
Satur. Along with me, Ile see what hole is heere,
And what he is
that now is leapt into it.
Say, who art thou that lately did'st
descend,
Into this gaping hollow of the earth?
Marti. The vnhappie
sonne of old Andronicus,
Brought hither in a most vnluckie houre,
To finde
thy brother Bassianus dead
Satur. My brother dead? I know thou dost but iest,
He and his
Lady both are at the Lodge,
Vpon the North-side of this pleasant
Chase,
'Tis not an houre since I left him there
Marti. We know not where you left him all aliue,
But out
alas, heere haue we found him dead.
Enter Tamora, Andronicus, and Lucius.
Tamo. Where is my Lord the King?
King. Heere Tamora, though
grieu'd with killing griefe
Tam. Where is thy brother Bassianus?
King. Now to the
bottome dost thou search my wound,
Poore Bassianus heere lies murthered
Tam. Then all too late I bring this fatall writ,
The complot
of this timelesse Tragedie,
And wonder greatly that mans face can fold,
In
pleasing smiles such murderous Tyrannie.
She giueth Saturnine a Letter.
Saturninus reads the Letter. And if we misse to meete
him
hansomely,
Sweet huntsman, Bassianus 'tis we meane,
Doe thou so
much as dig the graue for him,
Thou know'st our meaning, looke for thy
reward
Among the Nettles at the Elder tree:
Which ouer-shades the mouth of
that same pit:
Where we decreed to bury Bassianuss
Doe this and purchase
vs thy lasting friends
King. Oh Tamora, was euer heard the like?
This is the pit,
and this the Elder tree,
Looke sirs, if you can finde the huntsman
out,
That should haue murthered Bassianus heere
Aron. My gracious Lord heere is the bag of Gold
King. Two of thy whelpes, fell Curs of bloody kind
Haue heere
bereft my brother of his life:
Sirs drag them from the pit vnto the
prison,
There let them bide vntill we haue deuis'd
Some neuer heard-of
tortering paine for them
Tamo. What are they in this pit,
Oh wondrous thing!
How
easily murder is discouered?
Tit. High Emperour, vpon my feeble
knee,
I beg this boone, with teares, not lightly shed,
That this fell
fault of my accursed Sonnes,
Accursed, if the faults be prou'd in them
King. If it be prou'd? you see it is apparant,
Who found this
Letter, Tamora was it you?
Tamora. Andronicus himselfe did take it
vp
Tit. I did my Lord,
Yet let me be their baile,
For by my
Fathers reuerent Tombe I vow
They shall be ready at your Highnes will,
To
answere their suspition with their liues
King. Thou shalt not baile them, see thou follow me:
Some
bring the murthered body, some the murtherers,
Let them not speake a word,
the guilt is plaine,
For by my soule, were there worse end then
death,
That end vpon them should be executed
Tamo. Andronicus I will entreat the King,
Feare not thy
Sonnes, they shall do well enough
Tit. Come Lucius come,
Stay not to talke with them.
Exeunt.
Enter the Empresse Sonnes, with Lauinia, her hands cut off and
her
tongue
cut out, and rauisht.
Deme. So now goe tell and if thy tongue can speake,
Who t'was that
cut thy tongue and rauisht thee
Chi. Write downe thy mind, bewray thy meaning so,
And if thy
stumpes will let thee play the Scribe
Dem. See how with signes and tokens she can scowle
Chi. Goe home,
Call for sweet water, wash thy hands
Dem. She hath no tongue to call, nor hands to wash.
And so
let's leaue her to her silent walkes
Chi. And t'were my cause, I should goe hang my selfe
Dem. If thou had'st hands to helpe thee knit the cord.
Exeunt.
Winde Hornes.
Enter Marcus from hunting, to Lauinia.
Who is this, my Neece that flies away so fast?
Cosen a word, where is your
husband?
If I do dreame, would all my wealth would wake me;
If I doe wake,
some Planet strike me downe,
That I may slumber in eternall sleepe.
Speake
gentle Neece, what sterne vngentle hands
Hath lopt, and hew'd, and made thy
body bare
Of her two branches, those sweet Ornaments
Whose circkling
shadowes, Kings haue sought to sleep in
And might not gaine so great a
happines
As halfe thy Loue: Why doost not speake to me?
Alas, a Crimson
riuer of warme blood,
Like to a bubling fountaine stir'd with winde,
Doth
rise and fall betweene thy Rosed lips,
Comming and going with thy hony
breath.
But sure some Tereus hath defloured thee,
And least thou should'st
detect them, cut thy tongue.
Ah, now thou turn'st away thy face for
shame:
And notwithstanding all this losse of blood,
As from a Conduit with
their issuing Spouts,
Yet doe thy cheekes looke red as Titans
face,
Blushing to be encountred with a Cloud,
Shall I speake for thee?
shall I say 'tis so?
Oh that I knew thy hart, and knew the beast
That I
might raile at him to ease my mind.
Sorrow concealed, like an Ouen
stopt.
Doth burne the hart to Cinders where it is.
Faire Philomela she but
lost her tongue,
And in a tedious Sampler sowed her minde.
But louely
Neece, that meane is cut from thee,
A craftier Tereus hast thou met
withall,
And he hath cut those pretty fingers off,
That could haue better
sowed then Philomel.
Oh had the monster seene those Lilly hands,
Tremble
like Aspen leaues vpon a Lute,
And make the silken strings delight to kisse
them,
He would not then haue toucht them for his life.
Or had he heard the
heauenly Harmony,
Which that sweet tongue hath made:
He would haue dropt
his knife and fell asleepe,
As Cerberus at the Thracian Poets feete.
Come,
let vs goe, and make thy father blinde,
For such a sight will blinde a
fathers eye.
One houres storme will drowne the fragrant meades,
What, will
whole months of teares thy Fathers eyes?
Doe not draw backe, for we will
mourne with thee:
Oh could our mourning ease thy misery.
Exeunt.
Actus Tertius.
Enter the Iudges and Senatours with Titus two sonnes bound,
passing
on
the Stage to the place of execution, and Titus going
before
pleading.
Ti. Heare me graue fathers, noble Tribunes stay,
For pitty of mine
age, whose youth was spent
In dangerous warres, whilst you securely
slept:
For all my blood in Romes great quarrell shed,
For all the frosty
nights that I haue watcht,
And for these bitter teares, which now you
see,
Filling the aged wrinkles in my cheekes,
Be pittifull to my condemned
Sonnes,
Whose soules is not corrupted as 'tis thought:
For two and twenty
sonnes I neuer wept,
Because they died in honours lofty bed.
Andronicus
lyeth downe, and the Iudges passe by him.
For these, Tribunes, in the dust I
write
My harts deepe languor, and my soules sad teares:
Let my teares
stanch the earths drie appetite.
My sonnes sweet blood, will make it shame
and blush:
O earth! I will be friend thee more with raine
Exeunt.
That shall distill from these two ancient ruines,
Then youthfull Aprill
shall with all his showres
In summers drought: Ile drop vpon thee
still,
In Winter with warme teares Ile melt the snow,
And keepe eternall
spring time on thy face,
So thou refuse to drinke my deare sonnes
blood.
Enter Lucius, with his weapon drawne.
Oh reuerent Tribunes, oh gentle aged men,
Vnbinde my sonnes, reuerse the
doome of death,
And let me say (that neuer wept before)
My teares are now
preualing Oratours
Lu. Oh noble father, you lament in vaine,
The Tribunes heare
not, no man is by,
And you recount your sorrowes to a stone
Ti. Ah Lucius for thy brothers let me plead,
Graue Tribunes,
once more I intreat of you
Lu. My gracious Lord, no Tribune heares you speake
Ti. Why 'tis no matter man, if they did heare
They would not
marke me: oh if they did heare
They would not pitty me.
Therefore I tell
my sorrowes bootles to the stones.
Who though they cannot answere my
distresse,
Yet in some sort they are better then the Tribunes,
For that
they will not intercept my tale;
When I doe weepe, they humbly at my
feete
Receiue my teares, and seeme to weepe with me,
And were they but
attired in graue weedes,
Rome could afford no Tribune like to these.
A
stone is as soft waxe,
Tribunes more hard then stones:
A stone is silent,
and offendeth not,
And Tribunes with their tongues doome men to death.
But
wherefore stand'st thou with thy weapon drawne?
Lu. To rescue my two
brothers from their death,
For which attempt the Iudges haue
pronounc'st
My euerlasting doome of banishment
Ti. O happy man, they haue befriended thee:
Why foolish
Lucius, dost thou not perceiue
That Rome is but a wildernes of
Tigers?
Tigers must pray, and Rome affords no prey
But me and mine: how
happy art thou then,
From these deuourers to be banished?
But who comes
with our brother Marcus heere?
Enter Marcus and Lauinia.
Mar. Titus, prepare thy noble eyes to weepe,
Or if not so, thy
noble heart to breake:
I bring consuming sorrow to thine age
Ti. Will it consume me? Let me see it then
Mar. This was thy daughter
Ti. Why Marcus so she is
Luc. Aye me this obiect kils me
Ti. Faint-harted boy, arise and looke vpon her,
Speake
Lauinia, what accursed hand
Hath made thee handlesse in thy Fathers
sight?
What foole hath added water to the Sea?
Or brought a faggot to
bright burning Troy?
My griefe was at the height before thou cam'st,
And
now like Nylus it disdaineth bounds:
Giue me a sword, Ile chop off my hands
too,
For they haue fought for Rome, and all in vaine:
And they haue nur'st
this woe,
In feeding life:
In bootelesse prayer haue they bene held
vp,
And they haue seru'd me to effectlesse vse.
Now all the seruice I
require of them,
Is that the one will helpe to cut the other:
'Tis well
Lauinia, that thou hast no hands,
For hands to do Rome seruice, is but
vaine
Luci. Speake gentle sister, who hath martyr'd thee?
Mar. O that delightfull engine of her thoughts,
That blab'd them with such
pleasing eloquence,
Is torne from forth that pretty hollow cage,
Where
like a sweet mellodius bird it sung,
Sweet varied notes inchanting euery
eare
Luci. Oh say thou for her,
Who hath done this deed?
Marc. Oh thus I found her straying in the Parke,
Seeking to hide herselfe as
doth the Deare
That hath receiude some vnrecuring wound
Tit. It was my Deare,
And he that wounded her,
Hath hurt
me more, then had he kild me dead:
For now I stand as one vpon a
Rocke,
Inuiron'd with a wildernesse of Sea.
Who markes the waxing
tide,
Grow waue by waue,
Expecting euer when some enuious surge,
Will
in his brinish bowels swallow him.
This way to death my wretched sonnes are
gone:
Heere stands my other sonne, a banisht man,
And heere my brother
weeping at my woes.
But that which giues my soule the greatest spurne,
Is
deere Lauinia, deerer then my soule.
Had I but seene thy picture in this
plight,
It would haue madded me. What shall I doe?
Now I behold thy liuely
body so?
Thou hast no hands to wipe away thy teares,
Nor tongue to tell me
who hath martyr'd thee:
Thy husband he is dead, and for his death
Thy
brothers are condemn'd, and dead by this.
Looke Marcus, ah sonne Lucius looke
on her:
When I did name her brothers, then fresh teares
Stood on her
cheekes, as doth the hony dew,
Vpon a gathred Lillie almost withered
Mar. Perchance she weepes because they kil'd
her
husband,
Perchance because she knowes him innocent
Ti. If they did kill thy husband then be ioyfull,
Because the
law hath tane reuenge on them.
No, no, they would not doe so foule a
deede,
Witnes the sorrow that their sister makes.
Gentle Lauinia let me
kisse thy lips,
Or make some signes how I may do thee ease:
Shall thy good
Vncle, and thy brother Lucius,
And thou and I sit round about some
Fountaine,
Looking all downewards to behold our cheekes
How they are
stain'd in meadowes, yet not dry
With miery slime left on them by a
flood:
And in the Fountaine shall we gaze so long,
Till the fresh taste be
taken from that cleerenes,
And made a brine pit with our bitter teares?
Or
shall we cut away our hands like thine?
Or shall we bite our tongues, and in
dumbe shewes
Passe the remainder of our hatefull dayes?
What shall we doe?
Let vs that haue our tongues
Plot some deuise of further miseries
To make
vs wondred at in time to come
Lu. Sweet Father cease your teares, for at your griefe
See
how my wretched sister sobs and weeps
Mar. Patience deere Neece, good Titus drie thine
eyes
Ti. Ah Marcus, Marcus, Brother well I wot,
Thy napkin cannot
drinke a teare of mine,
For thou poore man hast drown'd it with thine
owne
Lu. Ah my Lauinia I will wipe thy cheekes
Ti. Marke Marcus marke, I vnderstand her signes,
Had she a
tongue to speake, now would she say
That to her brother which I said to
thee.
His Napkin with her true teares all bewet,
Can do no seruice on her
sorrowfull cheekes.
Oh what a simpathy of woe is this!
As farre from helpe
as Limbo is from blisse,
Enter Aron the Moore alone.
Moore. Titus Andronicus, my Lord the Emperour,
Sends thee this
word, that if thou loue thy sonnes,
Let Marcus, Lucius, or thy selfe old
Titus,
Or any one of you, chop off your hand,
And send it to the King: he
for the same,
Will send thee hither both thy sonnes aliue,
And that shall
be the ransome for their fault
Ti. Oh gracious Emperour, oh gentle Aaron.
Did euer Rauen
sing so like a Larke,
That giues sweet tydings of the Sunnes vprise?
With
all my heart, Ile send the Emperour my hand,
Good Aron wilt thou help to chop
it off?
Lu. Stay Father, for that noble hand of thine,
That hath
throwne downe so many enemies,
Shall not be sent: my hand will serue the
turne,
My youth can better spare my blood then you,
And therfore mine
shall saue my brothers liues
Mar. Which of your hands hath not defended Rome,
And rear'd
aloft the bloody Battleaxe,
Writing destruction on the enemies Castle?
Oh
none of both but are of high desert:
My hand hath bin but idle, let it
serue
To ransome my two nephewes from their death,
Then haue I kept it to
a worthy end
Moore. Nay come agree, whose hand shall goe along
For feare
they die before their pardon come
Mar. My hand shall goe
Lu. By heauen it shall not goe
Ti. Sirs striue no more, such withered hearbs as these
Are
meete for plucking vp, and therefore mine
Lu. Sweet Father, if I shall be thought thy sonne,
Let me
redeeme my brothers both from death
Mar. And for our fathers sake, and mothers care,
Now let me
shew a brothers loue to thee
Ti. Agree betweene you, I will spare my hand
Lu. Then Ile goe fetch an Axe
Mar. But I will vse the Axe.
Exeunt.
Ti. Come hither Aaron, Ile deceiue them both,
Lend me thy hand, and
I will giue thee mine,
Moore. If that be cal'd deceit, I will be
honest,
And neuer whil'st I liue deceiue men so:
But Ile deceiue you in
another sort,
And that you'l say ere halfe an houre passe.
He cuts off Titus hand.
Enter Lucius and Marcus againe.
Ti. Now stay your strife, what shall be, is dispatcht:
Good Aron
giue his Maiestie my hand,
Tell him, it was a hand that warded him
From
thousand dangers: bid him bury it:
More hath it merited: That let it
haue.
As for my sonnes, say I account of them,
As iewels purchast at an
easie price,
And yet deere too, because I bought mine owne
Aron. I goe Andronicus, and for thy hand,
Looke by and by to
haue thy sonnes with thee:
Their heads I meane: Oh how this villany
Doth
fat me with the very thoughts of it.
Let fooles doe good, and faire men call
for grace,
Aron will haue his soule blacke like his face.
Enter.
Ti. O heere I lift this one hand vp to heauen,
And bow this feeble
ruine to the earth,
If any power pitties wretched teares,
To that I call:
what wilt thou kneele with me?
Doe then deare heart, for heauen shall heare
our prayers,
Or with our sighs weele breath the welkin dimme,
And staine
the Sun with fogge as somtime cloudes,
When they do hug him in their melting
bosomes
Mar. Oh brother speake with possibilities,
And do not breake
into these deepe extreames
Ti. Is not my sorrow deepe, hauing no bottome?
Then be my
passions bottomlesse with them
Mar. But yet let reason gouerne thy lament
Titus. If there were reason for these miseries,
Then into
limits could I binde my woes:
When heauen doth weepe, doth not the earth
oreflow?
If the windes rage, doth not the Sea wax mad,
Threatning the
welkin with his big-swolne face?
And wilt thou haue a reason for this
coile?
I am the Sea. Harke how her sighes doe flow:
Shee is the weeping
welkin, I the earth:
Then must my Sea be moued with her sighes,
Then must
my earth with her continuall teares,
Become a deluge: ouerflow'd and
drown'd:
For why, my bowels cannot hide her woes,
But like a drunkard must
I vomit them:
Then giue me leaue, for loosers will haue leaue,
To ease
their stomackes with their bitter tongues,
Enter a messenger with two heads
and a hand.
Mess. Worthy Andronicus, ill art thou repaid,
For that good hand
thou sentst the Emperour:
Heere are the heads of thy two noble sonnes.
And
heeres thy hand in scorne to thee sent backe:
Thy griefes, their sports: Thy
resolution mockt,
That woe is me to thinke vpon thy woes,
More then
remembrance of my fathers death.
Enter.
Marc. Now let hot aetna coole in Cicilie,
And be my heart an
euer-burning hell:
These miseries are more then may be borne.
To weepe
with them that weepe, doth ease some deale,
But sorrow flouted at, is double
death
Luci. Ah that this sight should make so deep a wound,
And yet
detested life not shrinke thereat:
That euer death should let life beare his
name,
Where life hath no more interest but to breath
Mar. Alas poore hart that kisse is comfortlesse,
As frozen
water to a starued snake
Titus. When will this fearefull slumber haue an end?
Mar. Now farwell flatterie, die Andronicus,
Thou dost not slumber, see thy
two sons heads,
Thy warlike hands, thy mangled daughter here:
Thy other
banisht sonnes with this deere sight
Strucke pale and bloodlesse, and thy
brother I,
Euen like a stony Image, cold and numme.
Ah now no more will I
controule my griefes,
Rent off thy siluer haire, thy other hand
Gnawing
with thy teeth, and be this dismall sight
The closing vp of our most wretched
eyes:
Now is a time to storme, why art thou still?
Titus. Ha, ha,
ha,
Mar. Why dost thou laugh? it fits not with this houre
Ti. Why I haue not another teare to shed:
Besides, this
sorrow is an enemy,
And would vsurpe vpon my watry eyes,
And make them
blinde with tributarie teares.
Then which way shall I finde Reuenges
Caue?
For these two heads doe seeme to speake to me,
And threat me, I
shall neuer come to blisse,
Till all these mischiefes be returned
againe,
Euen in their throats that haue committed them.
Come let me see
what taske I haue to doe,
You heauie people, circle me about,
That I may
turne me to each one of you,
And sweare vnto my soule to right your
wrongs.
The vow is made, come Brother take a head,
And in this hand the
other will I beare.
And Lauinia thou shalt be employd in these
things:
Beare thou my hand sweet wench betweene thy teeth:
As for thee
boy, goe get thee from my sight,
Thou art an Exile, and thou must not
stay,
Hie to the Gothes, and raise an army there,
And if you loue me, as I
thinke you doe,
Let's kisse and part, for we haue much to doe.
Exeunt.
Manet Lucius.
Luci. Farewell Andronicus my noble Father:
The woful'st man that
euer liu'd in Rome:
Farewell proud Rome, til Lucius come againe,
He loues
his pledges dearer then his life:
Farewell Lauinia my noble sister,
O
would thou wert as thou to fore hast beene,
But now, nor Lucius nor Lauinia
liues
But in obliuion and hateful griefes:
If Lucius liue, he will requit
your wrongs,
And make proud Saturnine and his Empresse
Beg at the gates
like Tarquin and his Queene.
Now will I to the Gothes and raise a
power,
To be reueng'd on Rome and Saturnine.
Exit Lucius
A Banket.
Enter Andronicus, Marcus, Lauinia, and the Boy.
An. So, so, now sit, and looke you eate no more
Then will preserue
iust so much strength in vs
As will reuenge these bitter woes of
ours.
Marcus vnknit that sorrow-wreathen knot:
Thy Neece and I (poore
Creatures) want our hands
And cannot passionate our tenfold griefe,
With
foulded Armes. This poore right hand of mine,
Is left to tirranize vppon my
breast.
Who when my hart all mad with misery,
Beats in this hollow prison
of my flesh,
Then thus I thumpe it downe.
Thou Map of woe, that thus dost
talk in signes,
When thy poore hart beates without ragious beating,
Thou
canst not strike it thus to make it still?
Wound it with sighing girle, kil
it with grones:
Or get some little knife betweene thy teeth,
And iust
against thy hart make thou a hole,
That all the teares that thy poore eyes
let fall
May run into that sinke, and soaking in,
Drowne the lamenting
foole, in Sea salt teares
Mar. Fy brother fy, teach her not thus to lay
Such violent
hands vppon her tender life
An. How now! Has sorrow made thee doate already?
Why Marcus,
no man should be mad but I:
What violent hands can she lay on her
life:
Ah, wherefore dost thou vrge the name of hands,
To bid Aeneas tell
the tale twice ore
How Troy was burnt, and he made miserable?
O handle not
the theame, to talke of hands,
Least we remember still that we haue
none,
Fie, fie, how Frantiquely I square my talke
As if we should forget
we had no hands:
If Marcus did not name the word of hands.
Come, lets fall
too, and gentle girle eate this,
Heere is no drinke? Harke Marcus what she
saies,
I can interpret all her martir'd signes,
She saies, she drinkes no
other drinke but teares
Breu'd with her sorrow: mesh'd vppon her
cheekes,
Speechlesse complayner, I will learne thy thought:
In thy dumb
action, will I be as perfect
As begging Hermits in their holy
prayers.
Thou shalt not sighe nor hold thy stumps to heauen,
Nor winke,
nor nod, nor kneele, nor make a signe;
But I (of these) will wrest an
Alphabet,
And by still practice, learne to know thy meaning
Boy. Good grandsire leaue these bitter deepe laments,
Make my
Aunt merry, with some pleasing tale
Mar. Alas, the tender boy in passion mou'd,
Doth weepe to see
his grandsires heauinesse
An. Peace tender Sapling, thou art made of teares,
And teares
will quickly melt thy life away.
Marcus strikes the dish with a knife.
What doest thou strike at Marcus with knife
Mar. At that that I haue kil'd my Lord, a Fly
An. Out
on the murderour: thou kil'st my hart,
Mine eyes cloi'd with view of
Tirranie:
A deed of death done on the Innocent
Becoms not Titus brother:
get thee gone,
I see thou art not for my company
Mar. Alas (my Lord) I haue but kild a flie
An. But? How: if that Flie had a father and mother?
How would
he hang his slender gilded wings
And buz lamenting doings in the
ayer,
Poore harmelesse Fly,
That with his pretty buzing melody,
Came
heere to make vs merry,
And thou hast kil'd him
Mar. Pardon me sir,
It was a blacke illfauour'd Fly,
Like
to the Empresse Moore, therefore I kild him
An. O, o, o,
Then pardon me for reprehending thee,
For
thou hast done a Charitable deed:
Giue me thy knife, I will insult on
him,
Flattering my selfe, as if it were the Moore,
Come hither purposely
to poyson me.
There's for thy selfe, and thats for Tamora: Ah sirra,
Yet I
thinke we are not brought so low,
But that betweene vs, we can kill a
Fly,
That comes in likenesse of a Cole-blacke Moore
Mar. Alas poore man, griefe ha's so wrought on him,
He takes
false shadowes, for true substances
An. Come, take away: Lauinia, goe with me,
Ile to thy
closset, and goe read with thee
Sad stories, chanced in the times of
old.
Come boy, and goe with me, thy sight is young,
And thou shalt read,
when mine begin to dazell.
Exeunt.
Actus Quartus.
Enter young Lucius and Lauinia running after him, and the Boy
flies
from
her with his bookes vnder his arme. Enter Titus and Marcus.
Boy. Helpe Gransier helpe, my Aunt Lauinia,
Followes me euery where
I know not why.
Good Vncle Marcus see how swift she comes,
Alas sweet
Aunt, I know not what you meane
Mar. Stand by me Lucius, doe not feare thy Aunt
Titus. She loues thee boy too well to doe thee harme
Boy. I when my father was in Rome she did
Mar. What meanes my Neece Lauinia by these signes?
Ti.
Feare not Lucius, somewhat doth she meane:
See Lucius see, how much she makes
of thee:
Some whether would she haue thee goe with her.
Ah boy, Cornelia
neuer with more care
Read to her sonnes, then she hath read to thee,
Sweet
Poetry, and Tullies Oratour:
Canst thou not gesse wherefore she plies thee
thus?
Boy. My Lord I know not I, nor can I gesse,
Vnlesse some fit
or frenzie do possesse her:
For I haue heard my Gransier say full
oft,
Extremitie of griefes would make men mad.
And I haue read that Hecuba
of Troy,
Ran mad through sorrow, that made me to feare,
Although my Lord,
I know my noble Aunt,
Loues me as deare as ere my mother did,
And would
not but in fury fright my youth,
Which made me downe to throw my bookes, and
flie
Causles perhaps, but pardon me sweet Aunt,
And Madam, if my Vncle
Marcus goe,
I will most willingly attend your Ladyship
Mar. Lucius I will
Ti. How now Lauinia, Marcus what meanes this?
Some booke
there is that she desires to see,
Which is it girle of these? Open them
boy,
But thou art deeper read and better skild,
Come and take choyse of
all my Library,
And so beguile thy sorrow, till the heauens
Reueale the
damn'd contriuer of this deed.
What booke?
Why lifts she vp her armes in
sequence thus?
Mar. I thinke she meanes that ther was more then
one
Confederate in the fact, I more there was:
Or else to heauen she
heaues them to reuenge
Ti. Lucius what booke is that she tosseth so?
Boy.
Grandsier 'tis Ouids Metamorphosis,
My mother gaue it me
Mar. For loue of her that's gone,
Perhaps she culd it from
among the rest
Ti. Soft, so busily she turnes the leaues,
Helpe her, what
would she finde? Lauinia shall I read?
This is the tragicke tale of
Philomel?
And treates of Tereus treason and his rape,
And rape I feare was
roote of thine annoy
Mar. See brother see, note how she quotes the leaues
Ti. Lauinia, wert thou thus surpriz'd sweet girle,
Rauisht and wrong'd as
Philomela was?
Forc'd in the ruthlesse, vast, and gloomy woods?
See, see,
I such a place there is where we did hunt,
(O had we neuer, neuer hunted
there)
Patern'd by that the Poet heere describes,
By nature made for
murthers and for rapes
Mar. O why should nature build so foule a den,
Vnlesse the
Gods delight in tragedies?
Ti. Giue signes sweet girle, for heere are
none but friends
What Romaine Lord it was durst do the deed?
Or slunke not
Saturnine, as Tarquin erst,
That left the Campe to sinne in Lucrece bed
Mar. Sit downe sweet Neece, brother sit downe by me,
Appollo,
Pallas, Ioue, or Mercury,
Inspire me that I may this treason finde.
My
Lord looke heere, looke heere Lauinia.
He writes his Name with his staffe, and guides it with feete
and
mouth.
This sandie plot is plaine, guide if thou canst
This after me, I haue writ
my name,
Without the helpe of any hand at all.
Curst be that hart that
forc'st vs to that shift:
Write thou good Neece, and heere display at
last,
What God will haue discouered for reuenge,
Heauen guide thy pen to
print thy sorrowes plaine,
That we may know the Traytors and the truth.
She takes the staffe in her mouth, and guides it with her
stumps
and
writes.
Ti. Oh doe ye read my Lord what she hath writ?
Stuprum, Chiron,
Demetrius
Mar. What, what, the lustfull sonnes of Tamora,
Performers of
this hainous bloody deed?
Ti. Magni Dominator poli,
Tam lentus
audis scelera, tam lentus vides?
Mar. Oh calme thee gentle Lord:
Although I know
There is enough written vpon this earth,
To stirre a
mutinie in the mildest thoughts,
And arme the mindes of infants to
exclaimes.
My Lord kneele downe with me: Lauinia kneele,
And kneele sweet
boy, the Romaine Hectors hope,
And sweare with me, as with the wofull
Feere
And father of that chast dishonoured Dame,
Lord Iunius Brutus sweare
for Lucrece rape,
That we will prosecute (by good aduise)
Mortall reuenge
vpon these traytorous Gothes,
And see their blood, or die with this
reproach
Ti. Tis sure enough, and you knew how.
But if you hunt these
Beare-whelpes, then beware
The Dam will wake, and if she winde you
once,
Shee's with the Lyon deepely still in league.
And lulls him whilst
she playeth on her backe,
And when he sleepes will she do what she
list.
You are a young huntsman Marcus, let it alone:
And come, I will goe
get a leafe of brasse,
And with a Gad of steele will write these
words,
And lay it by: the angry Northerne winde
Will blow these sands like
Sibels leaues abroad,
And wheres your lesson then. Boy what say
you?
Boy. I say my Lord, that if I were a man,
Their mothers
bed-chamber should not be safe,
For these bad bond-men to the yoake of
Rome
Mar. I that's my boy, thy father hath full oft,
For his
vngratefull country done the like
Boy. And Vncle so will I, and if I liue
Ti. Come goe with me into mine Armorie,
Lucius Ile fit thee,
and withall, my boy
Shall carry from me to the Empresse sonnes,
Presents
that I intend to send them both,
Come, come, thou'lt do thy message, wilt
thou not?
Boy. I with my dagger in their bosomes Grandsire:
Ti. No boy not so, Ile teach thee another course,
Lauinia come, Marcus looke
to my house,
Lucius and Ile goe braue it at the Court,
I marry will we
sir, and weele be waited on.
Exeunt.
Mar. O heauens! Can you heare a good man grone
And not relent, or
not compassion him?
Marcus attend him in his extasie,
That hath more scars
of sorrow in his heart,
Then foe-mens markes vpon his batter'd shield,
But
yet so iust, that he will not reuenge,
Reuenge the heauens for old
Andronicus.
Exit
Enter Aron, Chiron and Demetrius at one dore: and at another
dore
young
Lucius and another, with a bundle of weapons, and verses
writ
vpon them.
Chi. Demetrius heeres the sonne of Lucius,
He hath some message to
deliuer vs
Aron. I some mad message from his mad Grandfather
Boy. My Lords, with all the humblenesse I may,
I greete your
honours from Andronicus,
And pray the Romane Gods confound you both
Deme. Gramercie louely Lucius, what's the newes?
For
villanie's markt with rape. May it please you,
My Grandsire well aduis'd hath
sent by me,
The goodliest weapons of his Armorie,
To gratifie your
honourable youth,
The hope of Rome, for so he bad me say:
And so I do and
with his gifts present
Your Lordships, when euer you haue need,
You may be
armed and appointed well,
And so I leaue you both: like bloody villaines.
Exit
Deme. What's heere? a scrole, & written round about?
Let's
see.
Integer vitę scelerisque purus, non egit maury iaculis nec arcus
Chi. O 'tis a verse in Horace, I know it well.
I read it in
the Grammer long agoe
Moore. I iust, a verse in Horace: right, you haue it,
Now
what a thing it is to be an Asse?
Heer's no sound iest, the old man hath
found their guilt,
And sends the weapons wrapt about with lines,
That
wound (beyond their feeling) to the quick:
But were our witty Empresse well a
foot,
She would applaud Andronicus conceit:
But let her rest, in her
vnrest a while.
And now young Lords, was't not a happy starre
Led vs to
Rome strangers, and more then so;
Captiues, to be aduanced to this
height?
It did me good before the Pallace gate,
To braue the Tribune in
his brothers hearing
Deme. But me more good, to see so great a Lord
Basely
insinuate, and send vs gifts
Moore. Had he not reason Lord Demetrius?
Did you not vse his
daughter very friendly?
Deme. I would we had a thousand Romane
Dames
At such a bay, by turne to serue our lust
Chi. A charitable wish, and full of loue
Moore. Heere lack's but your mother for to say, Amen
Chi. And that would she for twenty thousand more
Deme. Come, let vs go, and pray to all the Gods
For our
beloued mother in her paines
Moore. Pray to the deuils, the gods haue giuen vs ouer.
Flourish.
Dem. Why do the Emperors trumpets flourish thus?
Chi. Belike
for ioy the Emperour hath a sonne
Deme. Soft, who comes heere?
Enter Nurse with a blacke a
Moore childe.
Nur. Good morrow Lords:
O tell me, did you see Aaron the
Moore?
Aron. Well, more or lesse, or nere a whit at all,
Heere
Aaron is, and what with Aaron now?
Nurse. Oh gentle Aaron, we are all
vndone.
Now helpe, or woe betide thee euermore
Aron. Why, what a catterwalling dost thou keepe?
What dost
thou wrap and fumble in thine armes?
Nurse. O that which I would hide
from heauens eye,
Our Empresse shame, and stately Romes disgrace,
She is
deliuered Lords, she is deliuered
Aron. To whom?
Nurse. I meane she is brought a
bed?
Aron. Wel God giue her good rest,
What hath he sent
her?
Nurse. A deuill
Aron. Why then she is the Deuils Dam: a ioyfull issue
Nurse. A ioylesse, dismall, blacke &, sorrowfull
issue,
Heere is the babe as loathsome as a toad,
Among'st the fairest
breeders of our clime,
The Empresse sends it thee, thy stampe, thy
seale,
And bids thee christen it with thy daggers point
Aron. Out you whore, is black so base a hue?
Sweet blowse,
you are a beautious blossome sure
Deme. Villaine what hast thou done?
Aron. That which
thou canst not vndoe
Chi. Thou hast vndone our mother
Deme. And therein hellish dog, thou hast vndone,
Woe to her
chance, and damn'd her loathed choyce,
Accur'st the off-spring of so foule a
fiend
Chi. It shall not liue
Aron. It shall not die
Nurse. Aaron it must, the mother wils it so
Aron. What, must it Nurse? Then let no man but I
Doe
execution on my flesh and blood
Deme. Ile broach the Tadpole on my Rapiers point:
Nurse giue it me, my sword shall soone dispatch it
Aron. Sooner this sword shall plough thy bowels vp.
Stay
murtherous villaines, will you kill your brother?
Now by the burning Tapers
of the skie,
That shone so brightly when this Boy was got,
He dies vpon my
Semitars sharpe point,
That touches this my first borne sonne and heire.
I
tell you younglings, not Enceladus
With all his threatning band of Typhons
broode,
Nor great Alcides, nor the God of warre,
Shall ceaze this prey out
of his fathers hands:
What, what, ye sanguine shallow harted Boyes,
Ye
white-limb'd walls, ye Ale-house painted signes,
Cole-blacke is better then
another hue,
In that it scornes to beare another hue:
For all the water in
the Ocean,
Can neuer turne the Swans blacke legs to white,
Although she
laue them hourely in the flood:
Tell the Empresse from me, I am of age
To
keepe mine owne, excuse it how she can
Deme. Wilt thou betray thy
noble mistris thus?
Aron. My mistris is my mistris: this my
selfe,
The vigour, and the picture of my youth:
This, before all the world
do I preferre,
This mauger all the world will I keepe safe,
Or some of you
shall smoake for it in Rome
Deme. By this our mother is for euer sham'd
Chi. Rome will despise her for this foule escape
Nur. The Emperour in his rage will doome her death
Chi. I blush to thinke vpon this ignominie
Aron. Why ther's the priuiledge your beauty beares:
Fie
trecherous hue, that will betray with blushing
The close enacts and counsels
of the hart:
Heer's a young Lad fram'd of another leere,
Looke how the
blacke slaue smiles vpon the father;
As who should say, old Lad I am thine
owne.
He is your brother Lords, sensibly fed
Of that selfe blood that
first gaue life to you,
And from that wombe where you imprisoned were
He
is infranchised and come to light:
Nay he is your brother by the surer
side,
Although my seale be stamped in his face
Nurse. Aaron what shall I say vnto the Empresse?
Dem.
Aduise thee Aaron, what is to be done,
And we will all subscribe to thy
aduise:
Saue thou the child, so we may all be safe
Aron. Then sit we downe and let vs all consult.
My sonne and
I will haue the winde of you:
Keepe there, now talke at pleasure of your
safety
Deme. How many women saw this childe of his?
Aron. Why
so braue Lords, when we ioyne in league
I am a Lambe: but if you braue the
Moore,
The chafed Bore, the mountaine Lyonesse,
The Ocean swells not so as
Aaron stormes:
But say againe, how many saw the childe?
Nurse.
Cornelia, the midwife, and my selfe,
And none else but the deliuered
Empresse
Aron. The Empresse, the Midwife, and your selfe,
Two may
keepe counsell, when the third's away:
Goe to the Empresse, tell her this I
said,
He kils her
Weeke, weeke, so cries a Pigge prepared to th' spit
Deme. What mean'st thou Aron?
Wherefore did'st thou
this?
Aron. O Lord sir, 'tis a deed of pollicie?
Shall she liue to
betray this guilt of our's:
A long tongu'd babling Gossip? No Lords
no:
And now be it knowne to you my full intent.
Not farre, one Muliteus my
Country-man
His wife but yesternight was brought to bed,
His childe is
like to her, faire as you are:
Goe packe with them, and giue the mother
gold,
And tell them both the circumstance of all,
And how by this their
Childe shall be aduaunc'd,
And be receiued for the Emperours heyre,
And
substituted in the place of mine,
To calme this tempest whirling in the
Court,
And let the Emperour dandle him for his owne,
Harke ye Lords, ye
see I haue giuen her physicke,
And you must needs bestow her funerall,
The
fields are neere, and you are gallant Groomes:
This done, see that you take
no longer daies
But send the Midwife presently to me.
The Midwife and the
Nurse well made away,
Then let the Ladies tattle what they please
Chi. Aaron I see thou wilt not trust the ayre with secrets
Deme. For this care of Tamora,
Her selfe, and hers are highly
bound to thee.
Exeunt
Aron. Now to the Gothes, as swift as Swallow flies,
There to
dispose this treasure in mine armes,
And secretly to greete the Empresse
friends:
Come on you thick-lipt-slaue, Ile beare you hence,
For it is you
that puts vs to our shifts:
Ile make you feed on berries, and on
rootes,
And feed on curds and whay, and sucke the Goate,
And cabbin in a
Caue, and bring you vp
To be a warriour, and command a Campe.
Exit
Enter Titus, old Marcus, young Lucius, and other gentlemen with
bowes,
and
Titus beares the arrowes with Letters on the end of them.
Tit. Come Marcus, come, kinsmen this is the way.
Sir Boy let me see
your Archerie,
Looke yee draw home enough, and 'tis there straight:
Terras
Astrea reliquit, be you remembred Marcus.
She's gone, she's fled, sirs take
you to your tooles,
You Cosens shall goe sound the Ocean:
And cast your
nets, haply you may find her in the Sea,
Yet ther's as little iustice as at
Land:
No Publius and Sempronius, you must doe it,
'Tis you must dig with
Mattocke, and with Spade,
And pierce the inmost Center of the earth:
Then
when you come to Plutoes Region,
I pray you deliuer him this
petition,
Tell him it is for iustice, and for aide,
And that it comes from
old Andronicus,
Shaken with sorrowes in vngratefull Rome.
Ah Rome! Well,
well, I made thee miserable,
What time I threw the peoples suffrages
On
him that thus doth tyrannize ore me.
Goe get you gone, and pray be carefull
all,
And leaue you not a man of warre vnsearcht,
This wicked Emperour may
haue shipt her hence,
And kinsmen then we may goe pipe for iustice
Marc. O Publius is not this a heauie case
To see thy Noble
Vnckle thus distract?
Publ. Therefore my Lords it highly vs
concernes,
By day and night t' attend him carefully:
And feede his humour
kindely as we may,
Till time beget some carefull remedie
Marc. Kinsmen, his sorrowes are past remedie.
Ioyne with the
Gothes, and with reuengefull warre,
Take wreake on Rome for this
ingratitude,
And vengeance on the Traytor Saturnine
Tit. Publius how now? how now my Maisters?
What haue you met
with her?
Publ. No my good Lord, but Pluto sends you word,
If you
will haue reuenge from hell you shall,
Marrie for iustice she is so
imploy'd,
He thinkes with Ioue in heauen, or some where else:
So that
perforce you must needs stay a time
Tit. He doth me wrong to feed me with delayes,
Ile diue into
the burning Lake below,
And pull her out of Acaron by the heeles.
Marcus
we are but shrubs, no Cedars we,
No big-bon'd-men, fram'd of the Cyclops
size,
But mettall Marcus steele to the very backe,
Yet wrung with wrongs
more then our backe can beare:
And sith there's no iustice in earth nor
hell,
We will sollicite heauen, and moue the Gods
To send downe Iustice
for to wreake our wrongs:
Come to this geare, you are a good Archer
Marcus.
He giues them the Arrowes.
Ad Iouem, that's for you: here ad Appollonem,
Ad Martem, that's for my
selfe,
Heere Boy to Pallas, heere to Mercury,
To Saturnine, to Caius, not
to Saturnine,
You were as good to shoote against the winde.
Too it Boy,
Marcus loose when I bid:
Of my word, I haue written to effect,
Ther's not
a God left vnsollicited
Marc. Kinsmen, shoot all your shafts into the Court,
We will
afflict the Emperour in his pride
Tit. Now Maisters draw, Oh well said Lucius:
Good Boy in
Virgoes lap, giue it Pallas
Marc. My Lord, I aime a Mile beyond the Moone,
Your letter is
with Iupiter by this
Tit. Ha, ha, Publius, Publius, what hast thou done?
See, see,
thou hast shot off one of Taurus hornes
Mar. This was the sport my Lord, when Publius shot,
The Bull
being gal'd, gaue Aries such a knocke,
That downe fell both the Rams hornes
in the Court,
And who should finde them but the Empresse villaine:
She
laught, and told the Moore he should not choose
But giue them to his Maister
for a present
Tit. Why there it goes, God giue your Lordship ioy.
Enter the
Clowne with a basket and two Pigeons in it.
Titus. Newes, newes, from heauen,
Marcus the poast is
come.
Sirrah, what tydings? haue you any letters?
Shall I haue Iustice,
what sayes Iupiter?
Clowne. Ho the Iibbetmaker, he sayes that he hath
taken
them downe againe, for the man must not be hang'd
till the next
weeke
Tit. But what sayes Iupiter I aske thee?
Clowne. Alas
sir I know not Iupiter:
I neuer dranke with him in all my life
Tit. Why villaine art not thou the Carrier?
Clowne. I
of my Pigions sir, nothing else
Tit. Why, did'st thou not come from heauen?
Clowne.
From heauen? Alas sir, I neuer came there,
God forbid I should be so bold, to
presse to heauen in my
young dayes. Why I am going with my pigeons to
the
Tribunall Plebs, to take vp a matter of brawle, betwixt
my Vncle, and
one of the Emperialls men
Mar. Why sir, that is as fit as can be to serue for
your
Oration, and let him deliuer the Pigions to the Emperour
from you
Tit. Tell mee, can you deliuer an Oration to the
Emperour
with a Grace?
Clowne. Nay truely sir, I could neuer say
grace in all
my life
Tit. Sirrah come hither, make no more adoe,
But giue your
Pigeons to the Emperour,
By me thou shalt haue Iustice at his hands.
Hold,
hold, meane while her's money for thy charges.
Giue me pen and
inke.
Sirrah, can you with a Grace deliuer a Supplication?
Clowne.
I sir
Titus. Then here is a Supplication for you, and when
you come
to him, at the first approach you must kneele,
then kisse his foote, then
deliuer vp your Pigeons, and
then looke for your reward. Ile be at hand sir,
see you do
it brauely
Clowne. I warrant you sir, let me alone
Tit. Sirrha hast thou a knife? Come let me see it.
Heere
Marcus, fold it in the Oration,
For thou hast made it like an humble
Suppliant:
And when thou hast giuen it the Emperour,
Knocke at my dore,
and tell me what he sayes
Clowne. God be with you sir, I will.
Enter.
Tit. Come Marcus let vs goe, Publius follow me.
Exeunt.
Enter Emperour and Empresse, and her two sonnes, the Emperour
brings
the
Arrowes in his hand that Titus shot at him.
Satur. Why Lords,
What wrongs are these? was euer seene
An
Emperour in Rome thus ouerborne,
Troubled, Confronted thus, and for the
extent
Of egall iustice, vs'd in such contempt?
My Lords, you know the
mightfull Gods,
(How euer these disturbers of our peace
Buz in the peoples
eares) there nought hath past,
But euen with law against the willfull
Sonnes
Of old Andronicus. And what and if
His sorrowes haue so ouerwhelm'd
his wits,
Shall we be thus afflicted in his wreakes,
His fits, his
frenzie, and his bitternesse?
And now he writes to heauen for his
redresse.
See, heeres to Ioue, and this to Mercury,
This to Apollo, this
to the God of warre:
Sweet scrowles to flie about the streets of
Rome:
What's this but Libelling against the Senate,
And blazoning our
Iniustice euery where?
A goodly humour, is it not my Lords?
As who would
say, in Rome no Iustice were.
But if I liue, his fained extasies
Shall be
no shelter to these outrages:
But he and his shall know, that Iustice
liues
In Saturninus health; whom if he sleepe,
Hee'l so awake, as he in
fury shall
Cut off the proud'st Conspirator that liues
Tamo. My gracious Lord, my louely Saturnine,
Lord of my life,
Commander of my thoughts,
Calme thee, and beare the faults of Titus
age,
Th' effects of sorrow for his valiant Sonnes,
Whose losse hath
pier'st him deepe, and scar'd his heart;
And rather comfort his distressed
plight,
Then prosecute the meanest or the best
For these contempts. Why
thus it shall become
High witted Tamora to glose with all:
Aside.
But Titus, I haue touch'd thee to the quicke,
Thy life blood out: If Aaron
now be wise,
Then is all safe, the Anchor's in the Port.
Enter Clowne.
How now good fellow, would'st thou speake with vs?
Clow. Yea
forsooth, and your Mistership be Emperiall
Tam. Empresse I am, but yonder sits the Emperour
Clo. 'Tis he; God & Saint Stephen giue you good den;
I
haue brought you a Letter, & a couple of Pigions heere.
He reads the Letter.
Satu. Goe take him away, and hang him presently
Clowne. How much money must I haue?
Tam. Come sirrah
you must be hang'd
Clow. Hang'd? ber Lady, then I haue brought vp a neck
to a
faire end.
Enter.
Satu. Despightfull and intollerable wrongs,
Shall I endure this
monstrous villany?
I know from whence this same deuise proceedes:
May this
be borne? As if his traytrous Sonnes,
That dy'd by law for murther of our
Brother,
Haue by my meanes beene butcher'd wrongfully?
Goe dragge the
villaine hither by the haire,
Nor Age, nor Honour, shall shape
priuiledge:
For this proud mocke, Ile be thy slaughter man:
Sly franticke
wretch, that holp'st to make me great,
In hope thy selfe should gouerne Rome
and me.
Enter Nuntius Emillius.
Satur. What newes with thee Emillius?
Emil. Arme my Lords,
Rome neuer had more cause,
The Gothes haue gather'd head, and with a
power
Of high resolued men, bent to the spoyle
They hither march amaine,
vnder conduct
Of Lucius, Sonne to old Andronicus:
Who threats in course of
this reuenge to do
As much as euer Coriolanus did
King. Is warlike Lucius Generall of the Gothes?
These tydings
nip me, and I hang the head
As flowers with frost, or grasse beat downe with
stormes:
I, now begins our sorrowes to approach,
'Tis he the common people
loue so much,
My selfe hath often heard them say,
(When I haue walked like
a priuate man)
That Lucius banishment was wrongfully,
And they haue wisht
that Lucius were their Emperour
Tam. Why should you feare? Is not our City strong?
King. I, but the Cittizens fauour Lucius,
And will reuolt from me, to succour
him
Tam. King, be thy thoughts Imperious like thy name.
Is the
Sunne dim'd, that Gnats do flie in it?
The Eagle suffers little Birds to
sing,
And is not carefull what they meane thereby,
Knowing that with the
shadow of his wings,
He can at pleasure stint their melodie.
Euen so
mayest thou, the giddy men of Rome,
Then cheare thy spirit, for know thou
Emperour,
I will enchaunt the old Andronicus,
With words more sweet, and
yet more dangerous
Then baites to fish, or hony stalkes to sheepe,
When as
the one is wounded with the baite,
The other rotted with delicious foode
King. But he will not entreat his Sonne for vs
Tam. If Tamora entreat him, then he will,
For I can smooth
and fill his aged eare,
With golden promises, that were his heart
Almost
Impregnable, his old eares deafe,
Yet should both eare and heart, obey my
tongue.
Goe thou before to our Embassadour,
Say, that the Emperour
requests a parly
Of warlike Lucius, and appoint the meeting
King. Emillius do this message Honourably,
And if he stand in
Hostage for his safety,
Bid him demaund what pledge will please him best
Emill. Your bidding shall I do effectually.
Enter.
Tam. Now will I to that old Andronicus,
And temper him with all the
Art I haue,
To plucke proud Lucius from the warlike Gothes.
And now sweet
Emperour be blithe againe,
And bury all thy feare in my deuises
Satu. Then goe successantly and plead for him.
Enter.
Actus Quintus.
Flourish. Enter Lucius with an Army of Gothes, with Drum
and
Souldiers.
Luci. Approued warriours, and my faithfull Friends,
I haue receiued
Letters from great Rome,
Which signifies what hate they beare their
Emperour,
And how desirous of our sight they are.
Therefore great Lords,
be as your Titles witnesse,
Imperious and impatient of your wrongs,
And
wherein Rome hath done you any scathe,
Let him make treble satisfaction
Goth. Braue slip, sprung from the Great Andronicus,
Whose
name was once our terrour, now our comfort,
Whose high exploits, and
honourable Deeds,
Ingratefull Rome requites with foule contempt:
Behold in
vs, weele follow where thou lead'st,
Like stinging Bees in hottest Sommers
day,
Led by their Maister to the flowred fields,
And be aueng'd on cursed
Tamora:
And as he saith, so say we all with him
Luci. I humbly thanke him, and I thanke you all.
But who
comes heere, led by a lusty Goth?
Enter a Goth leading of Aaron with his
child in his armes.
Goth. Renowned Lucius, from our troups I straid,
To gaze vpon a
ruinous Monasterie,
And as I earnestly did fixe mine eye
Vpon the wasted
building, suddainely
I heard a childe cry vnderneath a wall:
I made vnto
the noyse, when soone I heard,
The crying babe control'd with this
discourse:
Peace Tawny slaue, halfe me, and halfe thy Dam,
Did not thy Hue
bewray whose brat thou art?
Had nature lent thee, but thy Mothers
looke,
Villaine thou might'st haue bene an Emperour.
But where the Bull
and Cow are both milk-white,
They neuer do beget a
cole-blacke-Calfe:
Peace, villaine peace, euen thus he rates the babe,
For
I must beare thee to a trusty Goth,
Who when he knowes thou art the Empresse
babe,
Will hold thee dearely for thy Mothers sake.
With this, my weapon
drawne I rusht vpon him,
Surpriz'd him suddainely, and brought him
hither
To vse, as you thinke needefull of the man
Luci. Oh worthy Goth, this is the incarnate deuill,
That
rob'd Andronicus of his good hand:
This is the Pearle that pleas'd your
Empresse eye,
And heere's the Base Fruit of his burning lust.
Say
wall-ey'd slaue, whether would'st thou conuay
This growing Image of thy
fiend-like face?
Why dost not speake? what deafe? Not a word?
A halter
Souldiers, hang him on this Tree,
And by his side his Fruite of Bastardie
Aron. Touch not the Boy, he is of Royall blood
Luci. Too like the Syre for euer being good.
First hang the
Child that he may see it sprall,
A sight to vexe the Fathers soule
withall
Aron. Get me a Ladder Lucius, saue the Childe,
And beare it
from me to the Empresse:
If thou do this, Ile shew thee wondrous
things,
That highly may aduantage thee to heare;
If thou wilt not, befall
what may befall,
Ile speake no more: but vengeance rot you all
Luci. Say on, and if it please me which thou speak'st,
Thy
child shall liue, and I will see it Nourisht
Aron. And if it please thee? why assure thee Lucius,
'Twill
vexe thy soule to heare what I shall speake:
For I must talke of Murthers,
Rapes, and Massacres,
Acts of Blacke-night, abhominable Deeds,
Complots of
Mischiefe, Treason, Villanies
Ruthfull to heare, yet pittiously
perform'd,
And this shall all be buried by my death,
Vnlesse thou sweare
to me my Childe shall liue
Luci. Tell on thy minde,
I say thy Childe shall liue
Aron. Sweare that he shall, and then I will begin
Luci. Who should I sweare by,
Thou beleeuest no God,
That
graunted, how can'st thou beleeue an oath?
Aron. What if I do not, as
indeed I do not,
Yet for I know thou art Religious,
And hast a thing
within thee, called Conscience,
With twenty Popish trickes and
Ceremonies,
Which I haue seene thee carefull to obserue:
Therefore I vrge
thy oath, for that I know
An Ideot holds his Bauble for a God,
And keepes
the oath which by that God he sweares,
To that Ile vrge him: therefore thou
shalt vow
By that same God, what God so ere it be
That thou adorest, and
hast in reuerence,
To saue my Boy, to nourish and bring him vp,
Ore else I
will discouer nought to thee
Luci. Euen by my God I sweare to thee I will
Aron. First know thou,
I begot him on the Empresse
Luci. Oh most Insatiate luxurious woman!
Aron. Tut
Lucius, this was but a deed of Charitie,
To that which thou shalt heare of me
anon,
'Twas her two Sonnes that murdered Bassianus,
They cut thy Sisters
tongue, and rauisht her,
And cut her hands off, and trim'd her as thou
saw'st
Lucius. Oh detestable villaine!
Call'st thou that
Trimming?
Aron. Why she was washt, and cut, and trim'd,
And 'twas
trim sport for them that had the doing of it
Luci. Oh barbarous beastly villaines like thy selfe!
Aron. Indeede, I was their Tutor to instruct them
That Codding spirit had
they from their Mother,
As sure a Card as euer wonne the Set:
That bloody
minde I thinke they learn'd of me,
As true a Dog as euer fought at
head.
Well, let my Deeds be witnesse of my worth:
I trayn'd thy Bretheren
to that guilefull Hole,
Where the dead Corps of Bassianus lay:
I wrote the
Letter, that thy Father found,
And hid the Gold within the Letter
mention'd.
Confederate with the Queene, and her two Sonnes,
And what not
done, that thou hast cause to rue,
Wherein I had no stroke of Mischeife in
it.
I play'd the Cheater for thy Fathers hand,
And when I had it, drew my
selfe apart,
And almost broke my heart with extreame laughter.
I pried me
through the Creuice of a Wall,
When for his hand, he had his two Sonnes
heads,
Beheld his teares, and laught so hartily,
That both mine eyes were
rainie like to his:
And when I told the Empresse of this sport,
She
sounded almost at my pleasing tale,
And for my tydings, gaue me twenty
kisses
Goth. What canst thou say all this, and neuer blush?
Aron. I, like a blacke Dogge, as the saying is
Luci. Art thou not sorry for these hainous deedes?
Aron. I, that I had not done a thousand more:
Euen now I curse the day, and
yet I thinke
Few come within few compasse of my curse,
Wherein I did not
some Notorious ill,
As kill a man, or else deuise his death,
Rauish a
Maid, or plot the way to do it,
Accuse some Innocent, and forsweare my
selfe,
Set deadly Enmity betweene two Friends,
Make poore mens Cattell
breake their neckes,
Set fire on Barnes and Haystackes in the night,
And
bid the Owners quench them with the teares:
Oft haue I dig'd vp dead men from
their graues,
And set them vpright at their deere Friends doore,
Euen when
their sorrowes almost was forgot,
And on their skinnes, as on the Barke of
Trees,
Haue with my knife carued in Romaine Letters,
Let not your sorrow
die, though I am dead.
Tut, I haue done a thousand dreadfull things
As
willingly, as one would kill a Fly,
And nothing greeues me hartily
indeede,
But that I cannot doe ten thousand more
Luci. Bring downe the diuell, for he must not die
So sweet a
death as hanging presently
Aron. If there be diuels, would I were a deuill,
To liue and
burne in euerlasting fire,
So I might haue your company in hell,
But to
torment you with my bitter tongue
Luci. Sirs stop his mouth, & let him speake no
more.
Enter Emillius.
Goth. My Lord, there is a Messenger from Rome
Desires to be
admitted to your presence
Luc. Let him come neere.
Welcome Emillius, what the newes
from Rome?
Emi. Lord Lucius, and you Princes of the Gothes,
The
Romaine Emperour greetes you all by me,
And for he vnderstands you are in
Armes,
He craues a parly at your Fathers house
Willing you to demand your
Hostages,
And they shall be immediately deliuered
Goth. What saies our Generall?
Luc. Emillius, let the
Emperour giue his pledges
Vnto my Father, and my Vncle Marcus,
Flourish.
And we will come: march away.
Exeunt.
Enter Tamora, and her two Sonnes disguised.
Tam. Thus in this strange and sad Habilliament,
I will encounter
with Andronicus,
And say, I am Reuenge sent from below,
To ioyne with him
and right his hainous wrongs:
Knocke at his study where they say he
keepes,
To ruminate strange plots of dire Reuenge,
Tell him Reuenge is
come to ioyne with him,
And worke confusion on his Enemies.
They knocke and Titus opens his study dore.
Tit. Who doth mollest my Contemplation?
Is it your tricke to make
me ope the dore,
That so my sad decrees may flie away,
And all my studie
be to no effect?
You are deceiu'd, for what I meane to do,
See heere in
bloody lines I haue set downe:
And what is written shall be executed
Tam. Titus, I am come to talke with thee,
Tit. No not
a word: how can I grace my talke,
Wanting a hand to giue it action,
Thou
hast the ods of me, therefore no more
Tam. If thou did'st know me,
Thou would'st talke with me
Tit. I am not mad, I know thee well enough,
Witnesse this
wretched stump,
Witnesse these crimson lines,
Witnesse these Trenches made
by griefe and care,
Witnesse the tyring day, and heauie night,
Witnesse
all sorrow, that I know thee well
For our proud Empresse, Mighty
Tamora:
Is not thy comming for my other hand?
Tamo. Know thou sad
man, I am not Tamora,
She is thy Enemie, and I thy Friend,
I am Reuenge
sent from th' infernall Kingdome,
To ease the gnawing Vulture of the
mind,
By working wreakefull vengeance on my Foes:
Come downe and welcome
me to this worlds light,
Conferre with me of Murder and of Death,
Ther's
not a hollow Caue or lurking place,
No Vast obscurity, or Misty
vale,
Where bloody Murther or detested Rape,
Can couch for feare, but I
will finde them out,
And in their eares tell them my dreadfull
name,
Reuenge, which makes the foule offenders quake
Tit. Art thou Reuenge? and art thou sent to me,
To be a
torment to mine Enemies?
Tam. I am, therefore come downe and welcome
me
Tit. Doe me some seruice ere I come to thee:
Loe by thy side
where Rape and Murder stands,
Now giue some surance that thou art
Reuenge,
Stab them, or teare them on thy Chariot wheeles,
And then Ile
come and be thy Waggoner,
And whirle along with thee about the
Globes.
Prouide thee two proper Palfries, as blacke as Iet,
To hale thy
vengefull Waggon swift away,
And finde out Murder in their guilty
cares.
And when thy Car is loaden with their heads,
I will dismount, and
by the Waggon wheele,
Trot like a Seruile footeman all day long,
Euen from
Eptons rising in the East,
Vntill his very downefall in the Sea.
And day
by day Ile do this heauy taske,
So thou destroy Rapine and Murder there
Tam. These are my Ministers, and come with me
Tit. Are them thy Ministers, what are they call'd?
Tam. Rape and Murder, therefore called so,
Cause they take vengeance of such
kind of men
Tit. Good Lord how like the Empresse Sons they are,
And you
the Empresse: But we worldly men,
Haue miserable mad mistaking eyes:
Oh
sweet Reuenge, now do I come to thee,
And if one armes imbracement will
content thee,
I will imbrace thee in it by and by
Tam. This closing with him, fits his Lunacie,
What ere I
forge to feede his braine-sicke fits,
Do you vphold, and maintaine in your
speeches,
For now he firmely takes me for Reuenge,
And being Credulous in
this mad thought,
Ile make him send for Lucius his Sonne,
And whil'st I at
a Banquet hold him sure,
Ile find some cunning practise out of hand
To
scatter and disperse the giddie Gothes,
Or at the least make them his
Enemies:
See heere he comes, and I must play my theame
Tit. Long haue I bene forlorne, and all for thee,
Welcome
dread Fury to my woefull house,
Rapine and Murther, you are welcome
too,
How like the Empresse and her Sonnes you are.
Well are you fitted,
had you but a Moore,
Could not all hell afford you such a deuill?
For well
I wote the Empresse neuer wags;
But in her company there is a Moore,
And
would you represent our Queene aright
It were conuenient you had such a
deuill:
But welcome as you are, what shall we doe?
Tam. What
would'st thou haue vs doe Andronicus?
Dem. Shew me a Murtherer, Ile
deale with him
Chi. Shew me a Villaine that hath done a Rape,
And I am sent
to be reueng'd on him
Tam. Shew me a thousand that haue done thee wrong,
And Ile be
reuenged on them all
Tit. Looke round about the wicked streets of Rome,
And when
thou find'st a man that's like thy selfe,
Good Murder stab him, hee's a
Murtherer.
Goe thou with him, and when it is thy hap
To finde another that
is like to thee,
Good Rapine stab him, he is a Rauisher.
Go thou with
them, and in the Emperours Court,
There is a Queene attended by a
Moore,
Well maist thou know her by thy owne proportion,
For vp and downe
she doth resemble thee.
I pray thee doe on them some violent death,
They
haue bene violent to me and mine
Tam. Well hast thou lesson'd vs, this shall we do.
But would
it please thee good Andronicus,
To send for Lucius thy thrice Valiant
Sonne,
Who leades towards Rome a Band of Warlike Gothes,
And bid him come
and Banquet at thy house.
When he is heere, euen at thy Solemne Feast,
I
will bring in the Empresse and her Sonnes,
The Emperour himselfe, and all thy
Foes,
And at thy mercy shall they stoop, and kneele,
And on them shalt
thou ease, thy angry heart:
What saies Andronicus to this deuise?
Enter
Marcus.
Tit. Marcus my Brother, 'tis sad Titus calls,
Go gentle Marcus to
thy Nephew Lucius,
Thou shalt enquire him out among the Gothes,
Bid him
repaire to me, and bring with him
Some of the chiefest Princes of the
Gothes,
Bid him encampe his Souldiers where they are,
Tell him the
Emperour, and the Empresse too,
Feasts at my house, and he shall Feast with
them,
This do thou for my loue, and so let him,
As he regards his aged
Fathers life
Mar. This will I do, and soone returne againe
Tam. Now will I hence about thy businesse,
And take my
Ministers along with me
Tit. Nay, nay, let Rape and Murder stay with me,
Or els Ile
call my Brother backe againe,
And cleaue to no reuenge but Lucius
Tam. What say you Boyes, will you bide with him,
Whiles I goe
tell my Lord the Emperour,
How I haue gouern'd our determined iest?
Yeeld
to his Humour, smooth and speake him faire,
And tarry with him till I turne
againe
Tit. I know them all, though they suppose me mad,
And will
ore-reach them in their owne deuises,
A payre of cursed hell-hounds and their
Dam
Dem. Madam depart at pleasure, leaue vs heere
Tam. Farewell Andronicus, reuenge now goes
To lay a complot
to betray thy Foes
Tit. I know thou doo'st, and sweet reuenge farewell
Chi. Tell vs old man, how shall we be imploy'd?
Tit.
Tut, I haue worke enough for you to doe,
Publius come hither, Caius, and
Valentine
Pub. What is your will?
Tit. Know you these
two?
Pub. The Empresse Sonnes
I take them, Chiron, Demetrius
Titus. Fie Publius, fie, thou art too much deceau'd,
The one
is Murder, Rape is the others name,
And therefore bind them gentle
Publius,
Caius, and Valentine, lay hands on them,
Oft haue you heard me
wish for such an houre,
And now I find it, therefore binde them
sure,
Chi. Villaines forbeare, we are the Empresse Sonnes
Pub. And therefore do we, what we are commanded.
Stop close
their mouthes, let them not speake a word,
Is he sure bound, looke that you
binde them fast.
Exeunt.
Enter Titus Andronicus with a knife, and Lauinia with a Bason.
Tit. Come, come Lauinia, looke, thy Foes are bound,
Sirs stop their
mouthes, let them not speake to me,
But let them heare what fearefull words I
vtter.
Oh Villaines, Chiron, and Demetrius,
Here stands the spring whom
you haue stain'd with mud,
This goodly Sommer with your Winter mixt,
You
kil'd her husband, and for that vil'd fault,
Two of her Brothers were
condemn'd to death,
My hand cut off, and made a merry iest,
Both her sweet
Hands, her Tongue, and that more deere
Then Hands or tongue, her spotlesse
Chastity,
Inhumaine Traytors, you constrain'd and for'st.
What would you
say, if I should let you speake?
Villaines for shame you could not beg for
grace.
Harke Wretches, how I meane to martyr you,
This one Hand yet is
left, to cut your throats,
Whil'st that Lauinia tweene her stumps doth
hold:
The Bason that receiues your guilty blood.
You know your Mother
meanes to feast with me,
And calls herselfe Reuenge, and thinkes me
mad.
Harke Villaines, I will grin'd your bones to dust,
And with your
blood and it, Ile make a Paste,
And of the Paste a Coffen I will
reare,
And make two Pasties of your shamefull Heads,
And bid that strumpet
your vnhallowed Dam,
Like to the earth swallow her increase.
This is the
Feast, that I haue bid her to,
And this the Banquet she shall surfet
on,
For worse then Philomel you vsd my Daughter,
And worse then Progne, I
will be reueng'd,
And now prepare your throats: Lauinia come.
Receiue the
blood, and when that they are dead,
Let me goe grin'd their Bones to powder
small,
And with this hatefull Liquor temper it,
And in that Paste let
their vil'd Heads be bakte,
Come, come, be euery one officious,
To make
this Banket, which I wish might proue,
More sterne and bloody then the
Centaures Feast.
He cuts their throats.
So now bring them in, for Ile play the Cooke,
And see them ready, gainst
their Mother comes.
Exeunt.
Enter Lucius, Marcus, and the Gothes.
Luc. Vnckle Marcus, since 'tis my Fathers minde
That I repair to
Rome, I am content
Goth. And ours with thine befall, what Fortune will
Luc. Good Vnckle take you in this barbarous Moore,
This
Rauenous Tiger, this accursed deuill,
Let him receiue no sustenance, fetter
him,
Till he be brought vnto the Emperours face,
For testimony of her
foule proceedings.
And see the Ambush of our Friends be strong,
If ere the
Emperour meanes no good to vs
Aron. Some deuill whisper curses in my eare,
And prompt me
that my tongue may vtter forth,
The Venemous Mallice of my swelling heart
Luc. Away Inhumaine Dogge, Vnhallowed Slaue,
Sirs, helpe our
Vnckle, to conuey him in,
Flourish.
The Trumpets shew the Emperour is at hand.
Sound Trumpets. Enter Emperour and Empresse, with Tribunes
and others.
Sat. What, hath the Firemament more Suns then one?
Luc. What
bootes it thee to call thy selfe a Sunne?
Mar. Romes Emperour &
Nephewe breake the parle
These quarrels must be quietly debated,
The Feast
is ready which the carefull Titus,
Hath ordained to an Honourable end,
For
Peace, for Loue, for League, and good to Rome:
Please you therfore draw nie
and take your places
Satur. Marcus we will.
Hoboyes.
A Table brought in. Enter Titus like a Cooke, placing the meat
on
the
Table, and Lauinia with a vale ouer her face.
Titus. Welcome my gracious Lord,
Welcome Dread Queene,
Welcome
ye Warlike Gothes, welcome Lucius,
And welcome all: although the cheere be
poore,
'Twill fill your stomacks, please you eat of it
Sat. Why art thou thus attir'd Andronicus?
Tit.
Because I would be sure to haue all well,
To entertaine your Highnesse, and
your Empresse
Tam. We are beholding to you good Andronicus?
Tit. And
if your Highnesse knew my heart, you were:
My Lord the Emperour resolue me
this,
Was it well done of rash Virginius,
To slay his daughter with his
owne right hand.
Because she was enfor'st, stain'd, and deflowr'd?
Satur. It was Andronicus
Tit. Your reason, Mighty Lord?
Sat. Because the Girle,
should not suruiue her shame,
And by her presence still renew his
sorrowes
Tit. A reason mighty, strong, and effectuall,
A patterne,
president, and liuely warrant,
For me (most wretched) to performe the
like:
Die, die, Lauinia, and thy shame with thee,
And with thy shame, thy
Fathers sorrow die.
He kils her.
Sat. What hast done, vnnaturall and vnkinde?
Tit. Kil'd her
for whom my teares haue made me blind.
I am as wofull as Virginius
was,
And haue a thousand times more cause then he
Sat. What was she rauisht? tell who did the deed,
Tit.
Wilt please you eat,
Wilt please your Highnesse feed?
Tam. Why hast
thou slaine thine onely Daughter?
Titus. Not I, 'twas Chiron and
Demetrius,
They rauisht her, and cut away her tongue,
And they, 'twas
they, that did her all this wrong
Satu. Go fetch them hither to vs presently
Tit. Why there they are both, baked in that Pie,
Whereof
their Mother daintily hath fed,
Eating the flesh that she herselfe hath
bred.
'Tis true, 'tis true, witnesse my kniues sharpe point.
He stabs the Empresse.
Satu. Die franticke wretch, for this accursed deed
Luc. Can the Sonnes eye, behold his Father bleed?
There's
meede for meede, death for a deadly deed
Mar. You sad fac'd men, people and Sonnes of Rome,
By vprores
seuer'd like a flight of Fowle,
Scattred by windes and high tempestuous
gusts:
Oh let me teach you how, to knit againe
This scattred Corne, into
one mutuall sheafe,
These broken limbs againe into one body
Goth. Let Rome herselfe be bane vnto herselfe,
And shee whom
mightie kingdomes cursie too,
Like a forlorne and desperate castaway,
Doe
shamefull execution on her selfe.
But if my frostie signes and chaps of
age,
Graue witnesses of true experience,
Cannot induce you to attend my
words,
Speake Romes deere friend, as er'st our Auncestor,
When with his
solemne tongue he did discourse
To loue-sicke Didoes sad attending
eare,
The story of that balefull burning night,
When subtil Greekes
surpriz'd King Priams Troy:
Tell vs what Sinon hath bewicht our eares,
Or
who hath brought the fatall engine in,
That giues our Troy, our Rome the
ciuill wound.
My heart is not compact of flint nor steele,
Nor can I vtter
all our bitter griefe,
But floods of teares will drowne my Oratorie,
And
breake my very vttrance, euen in the time
When it should moue you to attend
me most,
Lending your kind hand Commiseration.
Heere is a Captaine, let
him tell the tale,
Your hearts will throb and weepe to heare him speake
Luc. This Noble Auditory, be it knowne to you,
That cursed
Chiron and Demetrius
Were they that murdred our Emperours Brother,
And
they it were that rauished our Sister,
For their fell faults our Brothers
were beheaded,
Our Fathers teares despis'd, and basely cousen'd,
Of that
true hand that fought Romes quarrell out,
And sent her enemies vnto the
graue.
Lastly, my selfe vnkindly banished,
The gates shut on me, and
turn'd weeping out,
To beg reliefe among Romes Enemies,
Who drown'd their
enmity in my true teares,
And op'd their armes to imbrace me as a
Friend:
And I am turned forth, be it knowne to you,
That haue preseru'd
her welfare in my blood,
And from her bosome tooke the Enemies
point,
Sheathing the steele in my aduentrous body.
Alas you know, I am no
Vaunter I,
My scars can witnesse, dumbe although they are,
That my report
is iust and full of truth:
But soft, me thinkes I do digresse too
much,
Cyting my worthlesse praise: Oh pardon me,
For when no Friends are
by, men praise themselues,
Marc. Now is my turne to speake: Behold
this Child,
Of this was Tamora deliuered,
The issue of an Irreligious
Moore,
Chiefe Architect and plotter of these woes,
The Villaine is aliue
in Titus house,
And as he is, to witnesse this is true.
Now iudge what
course had Titus to reuenge
These wrongs, vnspeakeable past patience,
Or
more then any liuing man could beare.
Now you haue heard the truth, what say
you Romaines?
Haue we done ought amisse? shew vs wherein,
And from the
place where you behold vs now,
The poore remainder of Andronici,
Will hand
in hand all headlong cast vs downe,
And on the ragged stones beat forth our
braines,
And make a mutuall closure of our house:
Speake Romaines speake,
and if you say we shall,
Loe hand in hand, Lucius and I will fall
Emilli. Come come, thou reuerent man of Rome,
And bring our
Emperour gently in thy hand,
Lucius our Emperour: for well I know,
The
common voyce do cry it shall be so
Mar. Lucius, all haile Romes Royall Emperour,
Goe, goe into
old Titus sorrowfull house,
And hither hale that misbelieuing Moore,
To be
adiudg'd some direfull slaughtering death,
As punishment for his most wicked
life.
Lucius all haile to Romes gracious Gouernour
Luc. Thankes gentle Romanes, may I gouerne so,
To heale Romes
harmes, and wipe away her woe.
But gentle people, giue me ayme
a-while,
For Nature puts me to a heauy taske:
Stand all aloofe, but Vnckle
draw you neere,
To shed obsequious teares vpon this Trunke:
Oh take this
warme kisse on thy pale cold lips,
These sorrowfull drops vpon thy
bloud-slaine face,
The last true Duties of thy Noble Sonne
Mar. Teare for teare, and louing kisse for kisse,
Thy Brother
Marcus tenders on thy Lips:
O were the summe of these that I should
pay
Countlesse, and infinit, yet would I pay them
Luc. Come hither Boy, come, come, and learne of vs
To melt in
showres: thy Grandsire lou'd thee well:
Many a time he danc'd thee on his
knee:
Sung thee asleepe, his Louing Brest, thy Pillow:
Many a matter hath
he told to thee,
Meete, and agreeing with thine Infancie:
In that respect
then, like a louing Childe,
Shed yet some small drops from thy tender
Spring,
Because kinde Nature doth require it so:
Friends, should associate
Friends, in Greefe and Wo.
Bid him farwell, commit him to the Graue,
Do
him that kindnesse, and take leaue of him
Boy. O Grandsire, Grandsire: euen with all my heart
Would I
were Dead, so you did Liue againe.
O Lord, I cannot speake to him for
weeping,
My teares will choake me, if I ope my mouth
Romans. You sad Andronici, haue done with woes,
Giue sentence
on this execrable Wretch,
That hath beene breeder of these dire euents
Luc. Set him brest deepe in earth, and famish him:
There let
him stand, and raue, and cry for foode:
If any one releeues, or pitties
him,
For the offence, he dyes. This is our doome:
Some stay, to see him
fast'ned in the earth
Aron. O why should wrath be mute, & Fury dumbe?
I am no
Baby I, that with base Prayers
I should repent the Euils I haue done.
Ten
thousand worse, then euer yet I did,
Would I performe if I might haue my
will:
If one good Deed in all my life I did,
I do repent it from my very
Soule
Lucius. Some louing Friends conuey the Emp[erour]. hence,
And
giue him buriall in his Fathers graue.
My Father, and Lauinia, shall
forthwith
Be closed in our Housholds Monument:
As for that heynous Tyger
Tamora,
No Funerall Rite, nor man in mournfull Weeds:
No mournfull Bell
shall ring her Buriall:
But throw her foorth to Beasts and Birds of
prey:
Her life was Beast-like, and deuoid of pitty,
And being so, shall
haue like want of pitty.
See Iustice done on Aaron that damn'd Moore,
From
whom, our heauy happes had their beginning:
Then afterwards, to Order well
the State,
That like Euents, may ne're it Ruinate.
Exeunt. omnes.
FINIS. The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus.