Troilus and Cressida (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Hecter and Andromache.
3200Vnarme, vnarme, and doe not fight to day.
¶Hect. You traine me to offend you: get you gone.
¶By the euerlasting gods, Ile goe.
3205Cassa. Where is my brother Hector?
¶Consort with me in loud and deere petition:
¶Pursue we him on knees: for I haue dreampt
¶Of bloudy turbulence; and this whole night
¶Cass. O, 'tis true.
¶They are polluted offrings, more abhord
¶To hurt by being iust; it is as lawfull:
3220For we would count giue much to as violent thefts,
¶And rob in the behalfe of charitie.
¶Vnatme sweete Hector.
¶Mine honour keepes the weather of my fate:
¶Life euery man holds deere, but the deere man
¶Holds honor farre more precious, deere, then life.
¶
Enter Troylus.
3230How now yong man? mean'st thou to fight to day?
¶
Exit Cassandra.
¶I am to day ith'vaine of Chiualrie:
3235Let grow thy Sinews till their knots be strong;
¶And tempt not yet the brushes of the warre.
¶Vnarme thee, goe; and doubt thou not braue boy,
¶Ile stand today, for thee, and me, and Troy.
¶Troy. Brother, you haue a vice of mercy in you;
3240Which better fits a Lyon, then a man.
¶Hect. What vice is that? good Troylus chide me for it.
¶Troy. When many times the captiue Grecian fals,
¶Euen in the fanne and winde of your faire Sword:
¶You bid them rise, and liue.
3245Hect. O 'tis faire play.
¶Troy. Fooles play, by heauen Hector.
¶Hect. How now? how now?
¶Troy. For th'loue of all the gods
¶Let's leaue the Hermit Pitty with our Mothers;
3250And when we haue our Armors buckled on,
¶The venom'd vengeance ride vpon our swords,
¶Spur them to ruthfull worke, reine them from ruth.
¶Troy. Hector, then 'tis warres.
3255Hect. Troylus, I would not haue you fight to day.
¶Not fate, obedience, nor the hand of Mars,
¶Beckning with fierie trunchion my retire;
¶Not Priamus, and Hecuba on knees;
3260Their eyes ore-galled with recourse of teares;
¶Nor you my brother, with your true sword drawne
¶But by my ruine.
¶
Enter Priam and Cassandra.
¶Thou on him leaning, and all Troy on thee,
¶Fall all together.
¶Priam. Come Hector, come, goe backe:
3270Thy wife hath dreampt: thy mother hath had visions;
¶Am like a Prophet suddenly enrapt,
¶to tell thee that this day is ominous:
¶Therefore come backe.
3275Hect. Æneas is a field,
¶And I do stand engag'd to many Greekes,
¶Euen in the faith of valour, to appeare
¶This morning to them.
¶You know me dutifull, therefore deare sir,
¶Which you doe here forbid me, Royall Priam.
3285Cass. O Priam, yeelde not to him.
¶And. Doe not deere father.
¶Hect. Andromache I am offended with you:
¶Vpon the loue you beare me, get you in.
¶
Exit Andromache.
¶Makes all these bodements.
¶Cass. O farewell, deere Hector:
¶Looke how thou diest; looke how thy eye turnes pale:
¶Looke how thy wounds doth bleede at many vents:
3295Harke how Troy roares; how Hecuba cries out;
¶How poore Andromache shrils her dolour forth;
¶Behold distraction, frenzie, and amazement,
¶And all cry Hector, Hectors dead: O Hector!
3300Troy. Away, away.
Exit.
¶Hect. You are amaz'd, my Liege, at her exclaime:
¶Goe in and cheere the Towne, weele forth and fight:
3305Doe deedes of praise, and tell you them at night.
¶thee.
Alarum.
¶Troy. They are at it, harke: proud Diomed, beleeue
3310
Enter Pandar.
¶Pand. Doe you heare my Lord? do you heare?
¶Troy. What now?
¶Pand. Here's a Letter come from yond poore girle.
¶Troy. Let me reade.
¶what one thing, what another, that I shall leaue you one
¶o'th's dayes: and I haue a rheume in mine eyes too; and
¶there?
¶Troy. Words, words, meere words, no matter from
¶the heart;
¶Th'effect doth operate another way.
3325Goe winde to winde, there turne and change together:
¶But edifies another with her deedes.
¶Pand. Why, but heare you?
3330Pursue thy life, and liue aye with thy name.
¶
_ALarum. _Exeunt.
