Titus Andronicus (Folio, 1623)
Not Peer Reviewed
The Tragedie of Titus Andronicus.
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¶But to torment you with my bitter tongue.
¶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,
2275And 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.
2280Luc. Emillius, let the Emperour giue his pledges
¶And we will come: march away.
Exeunt.
2285I will encounter with Andronicus,
¶To ioyne with him and right his hainous wrongs:
¶To ruminate strange plots of dire Reuenge,
2290Tell him Reuenge is come to ioyne with him,
¶And worke confusion on his Enemies.
¶Is it your tricke to make me ope the dore,
¶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.
2300Tam. 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.
2305Thou would'st talke with me.
¶Tit. I am not mad, I know thee well enough,
¶Is not thy comming for my other hand?
2315She 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,
2320Conferre with me of Murder and of Death,
¶Ther's not a hollow Caue or lurking place,
¶Where bloody Murther or detested Rape,
¶Can couch for feare, but I will finde them out,
2325And in their eares tell them my dreadfull name,
¶Reuenge, which makes the foule offenders quake.
¶To be a torment to mine Enemies?
¶Tam. I am, therefore come downe and welcome me.
¶Stab them, or teare them on thy Chariot wheeles,
¶And then Ile come and be thy Waggoner,
2335And 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,
2340I will dismount, and by the Waggon wheele,
¶Trot like a Seruile footeman all day long,
¶Vntill his very downefall in the Sea.
¶And day by day Ile do this heauy taske,
2345So thou destroy Rapine and Murder there.
¶Oh sweet Reuenge, now do I come to thee,
¶And if one armes imbracement will content thee,
2355I will imbrace thee in it by and by.
¶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,
2360And being Credulous in this mad thought,
¶Ile make him send for Lucius his Sonne,
2365Or 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,
¶Well are you fitted, had you but a Moore,
¶Could not all hell afford you such a deuill?
¶But in her company there is a Moore,
2375And would you represent our Queene aright
¶It were conuenient you had such a deuill:
¶But welcome as you are, what shall we doe?
¶Dem. Shew me a Murtherer, Ile deale with him.
2380Chi. Shew me a Villaine that hath done a Rape,
¶And I am sent to be reueng'd on him.
¶And Ile be reuenged on them all.
¶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,
2390Go 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,
¶I pray thee doe on them some violent death,
2395They haue bene violent to me and mine.
ee
Tamora.
