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The Tragedy of Locrine (Third Folio, 1664)
785Scena Sexta.
786Sound the Alarm. Enter Humber and his Soldiers.
788Darteth abroad the thunderbolts of warre,
789Beating down millions with his furious mood;
790And in his glory triumphs over all,
793As when Briareus armed with an hundred hands,
794Flung forth an hundred mountains at great Jove,
795And when the monstrous gyant Monichus
796Hurl'd mount Olimpus at great Mars his targe,
798How doth he overlook with haughty front
800Against us all that now do fear his force,
801Like as we see the wrathfull Sea from farre,
802In a great mountain heapt with hideous noyse,
804And tosse them in the Waves like Tennis Balls.
805Sound the Alarm.
807Sound again. Enter Albanact.
811That they may know the Britains force is more
812Than all the power of the trembling Hunnes.
814He that takes captive Humber or his Son,
815Shall be rewarded with a Crown of gold.
816Sound alarm, then let them fight, Humber give back
817Hubba enters at their backs, and kills Debon, let Strumbo
818fall down, Albanact run in, and afterwards enter wounded.
820Thus in the morning of my victories,
821Thus in the prime of my felicity
823Hadst thou no time thy rancour to declare,
824But in the spring of all my dignities?
827I that ere while did scare mine enemies,
829I that ere while full Lyon-like did fare
830Amongst the dangers of the thick throng'd pikes,
832By Humber's treacheries and fortunes spights:
834That doth delude the wayward hearts of men,
836Which never leaveth turning upside down.
837O gods, O heavens, allot me but the place
839I'le passe the Alpes to watry Meroe,
840Where fiery Phoebus in his charriot,
841 The wheeles whereof are dect with Emeralds,
844I'le overturn the mountain Caucasus,
850Do lie, like mountains in the congeal'd Sea,
852I'le pull the fickle wheele from out her hands,
854But all in vain I breathe these threatnings,
855The day is lost, the Hunnes are conquerors,
856Debon is slain, my men are done to death,
865The Scythians follow with great celerity,
868Sound the Alarm.
870That tremble at the name of fatall Mors,
t my decay,
876But oh my brethren if you care for me,
877Revenge my death upon his traiterous head.
878Et vos queis domus est nigrantis regia ditis,
879Qui regitis rigido stigios moderamine lucos:
880Nox cæci regina poli furialis Erinnis,
881Diique deæque omnes Albanum tollite regem,
882Tollite flumineis undis rigidaque palude
883Nunc me fata vocant, hoc condam pectore ferrum.
884Thrust himself through
885Enter Trumpart.
888Strum. Let me alone, I tell thee, for I am dead.
893 and is my Master dead?
894O you cockatrices, and you bablatrices,
895 that in the woods dwell:
897 come howle and yell.
898With howling and screeking, with wailing and weeping,
899 come you to lament.
900O Colliers of Croyden, and Rusticks of Royden,
901 and Fishers of Kent.
902For Strumbo the Cobler, the fine merry Cobler
903 of Cathnes town:
905 lies dead on the ground.
906O Master, thieves, thieves, thieves.
907Strum. Where be they? cox me tunny, bobekin,