THE
MOST LA-
mentable Romaine
Tragedie of Titus Andronicus:
As it was Plaide by the Right Ho-
nourable the Earle of Darbie, Earle of Pembrooke,
and Earle of Sussex their Seruants.
LONDON,
Printed by Iohn Danter, and are
to be sold by Edward White & Thomas Millington,
at the little North doore of Paules at the
signe of the Gunne.
1594.
The most Lamen-
table Romaine Tragedie of
Titus Andronicus: As it was Plaide by
the Right Honourable the Earle
of Darbie, Earle of Pembrooke,
and Earle of Sussex their
Seruants.
21 Enter the Tribunes and Senatours aloft: And then enter 32Saturninus and his followers at one dore, and Bassianus and 43his followers, with Drums and Trumpets. 75NOble
Patricians, Patrons of my Right,
86Defend the iu
stice of my cau
se with armes.
97And Countrimen my louing followers,
108Plead my
succe
ssiue Title with your
swords:
119I am his
fir
st borne
sonne, that was the la
st 1210That ware the Imperiall Diademe of Rome,
1311Then let my Fathers honours liue in me,
1412Nor wrong mine age with this indignitie,
1614Romaines, friends, followers, fauourers of my Right,
1715If euer
Bassianus Ceasars sonne,
1816Were gratious in the eyes of Royall Rome,
1917Keepe then this pa
ssage to the Capitoll,
2018And
su
ffer not di
shonour to approch,
2119The Imperiall
seate to vertue, con
secrate
A3
2220To iu
stice, continence, and Nobillitie:
2321But let de
sert in pure ele
ction
shine,
2422And Romaines
fight for freedome in your choice.
2523Marcus Andronicus with the Crowne. 2624Princes that
striue by fa
ctions and by friends,
2725Ambitiou
sly for Rule and Emperie,
2826Know that the people of Rome for whom we
stand
2927A
speciall Partie, haue by common voice,
3028In ele
ction for the Romaine Empery
3129Cho
sen
Andronicus,
surnamed
Pius:
3230For many good and great de
serts to Rome,
3331A Nobler man, a brauer
Warriour,
3432Liues not this day within the Cittie walls.
3533Hee by the Senate is accited home,
3634From weary warres again
st the barbarous
Gothes,
3735That with his
sonnes a terrour to our foes,
3836Hath yoakt a Nation
strong, traind vp in Armes.
3937Tenne yeares are
spent
since
fir
st he vndertooke
4038This cau
se of Rome, and cha
sti
sed with armes
4139Our enemies pride: Fiue times he hath returnd
4240Bleeding to Rome, bearing his valiant
sonnes,
4341In Co
ffins from the
field, and at this day,
43.142To the Monument of that
Andronicy 43.243Done
sacri
fice of expiation,
43.344And
slaine the Noble
st pri
soner of the
Gothes.
4445And now at la
st laden with honours
spoiles,
4546Returnes the good
Andronicus to Rome,
4647Renowned
Titus flouri
shing in Armes.
4748Let vs intreat by honour of his name,
4849Whom worthily you would haue now
succeede,
4950And in the Capitall and Senates Right,
5051Whom you pretend to honour and adore,
5152That you withdraw you, and abate your
strength,
5253Di
smi
sse your followers, and as
suters
should,
5354Pleade your de
serts in peace and humblenes.
Saturninus.
of Titus Andronicus.
5556How faire the Tribune
speakes to calme my thoughts.
58Marcus Andronicus, so I doe a
ffie,
5759In thy vprightnes and integritie,
5860And
so I loue and honour thee and thine,
5961Thy Noble brother
Titus and his
sonnes,
6062And her to whom my thoughts are humbled all,
6163Gratious
Lauinia, Romes rich ornament,
6264That I will here di
smi
sse my louing friends:
6365And to my fortunes and the peoples fauour,
6466Commit my cau
se in ballance to be waid.
Exit Soldiers. 6768Friends that haue beene thus forward in my right.
6869I thanke you all, and here di
smi
sse you all,
6970And to the loue and fauour of my Countrie,
7071Commit my
selfe, my per
son, and the cau
se:
7172Rome be as iu
st and gratious vnto me,
7273As I am con
fident and kinde to thee.
7374Open the gates and let me in.
7475Bassianus. Tribunes and me a poore Competitor.
7576 They goe vp into the Senate house. 7778Romaines make way, the good
Andronicus,
7879Patron of vertue, Romes be
st Champion:
7980Succesful in the battailes that he
fights,
8081With honour and with fortune is returnd,
8182From where he circum
scribed with his
sword,
8283And brought to yoake the enemies of Rome.
8384 Sound Drums and Trumpets, and then enter two of Titus 8485sonnes, and then two men bearing a Coffin couered with black, 8586then two other sonnes, then Titus Andronicus, and then Ta- 8687mora the Queene of Gothes and her two sonnes Chiron and Demetrius,
The most lamentable Tragedie
8788Demetrius, with Aron the More, and others as many as can 8989be, then set downe the Coffin, and Titus speakes. 9190Titus. Haile Rome, vi
ctorious in thy mourning weeds,
9291Lo as the Barke that hath di
schargd his fraught,
9392Returnes with pretious lading to the bay,
9493From whence at
fir
st shee wayd her anchorage;
9594Commeth
Andronicus, bound with Lawrell bowes,
9695To re
salute his Countrie with his teares,
9796Teares of true ioy for his returne to Rome,
9897Thou great defender of this Capitoll,
9998Stand gratious to the rights that we entend.
10099Romaines, of
fiue and twenty valiant
sonnes,
101100Halfe of the number that king
Priam had,
102101Behold the poore remaines aliue and dead:
103102The
se that
suruiue, let Rome reward with loue:
104103The
se that I bring vnto their late
st home,
105104With buriall among
st their aunce
stors.
106105Here
Gothes haue giuen me leaue to
sheath my
sword,
107106Titus vnkinde, and careles of thine owne,
108107Why
su
ffer
st thou thy
sonnes vnburied yet,
109108To houer on the dreadfull
shore of
slix,
110109Make way to lay them by their brethren.
112111There greete in
silence as the dead are wont,
113112And
sleepe in peace,
slaine in your Countries warres:
114113O
sacred Receptacle of my ioyes,
115114Sweete Cell of vertue and Nobilitie,
116115How many
sonnes ha
st thou of mine in
store,
117116That thou wilt neuer render to me more.
118117Lucius. Giue vs the prowde
st pri
soner of the
Gothes.
119118That we may hew his limbs and on a pile,
120119Ad manus fratrum,
sacri
fice his
fle
sh:
121120Before this earthy pri
son of their boanes,
122121That
so the
shadows be not vnappeazde,
Nor
of Titus Andronicus.
123122Nor we di
sturbde with prodegies on earth.
124123Titus. I giue him you the Noble
st that
suruiues,
125124The elde
st sonne of this di
stre
ssed Queene.
126125Tamora. Stay Romaine brethren, gratious Conque
-(rour,
127126Vi
ctorious
Titus, rue the teares I
shed,
128127A mothers teares in pa
ssion for her
sonne:
+
129128And if thy
sonnes were euer deare to thee,
130129Oh thinke my
sonne to be as deare to mee.
131130Su
fficeth not that we are brought to Rome
132131To beauti
fie thy triumphs, and returne
133132Captiue to thee, and to thy Romaine yoake:
134133But mu
st my
sonnes be
slaughtered in the
streets,
135134For valiant dooings in their Countries cau
se?
136135O if to
fight for king and common-weale,
137136Were pietie in thine, it is in the
se:
138137Andronicus,
staine not thy tombe with bloud.
139138Wilt thou draw neere the nature of the Gods?
140139Draw neere them then in being mercifull,
141140Sweete mercie is Nobilities true badge,
142141Thrice Noble
Titus,
spare my
fir
st borne
sonne.
143142Titus. Patient your
selfe Madam, and pardon me,
144143The
se are their brethren, whom your
Gothes beheld
145144Aliue and dead, and for their brethren
slaine,
146145Religiou
sly they aske a
sacri
fice:
147146To this your
sonne is markt, and die he mu
st,
148147T'appea
se their groning
shadowes that are gone.
149148Lucius. Away with him, and make a
fire
straight,
150149And with our
swords vpon a pile of wood,
151150Lets hew his limbs till they be cleane con
sumde.
152151 Exit Titus sonnes with Alarbus. 153152Tamora. O cruell irreligeous pietie.
154153Chiron. Was neuer Sythia halfe
so barbarous.
155154Demetrius. Oppo
se not Sythia to ambitious Rome,
156155Alarbus goes to re
st and we
suruiue,
157156To tremble vnder
Titus threatning looke,
B Then
The most Lamentable Tragedie
158157Then Madam
stand re
solud, but hope withall,
159158The
selfe
same Gods that armde the Queene of Troy
160159With opportunitie of
sharpe reuenge
161160Vpon the hracian yrant in his ent,
162161May fauour
amora the Queene of Gothes,
163162(
When Gothes were Gothes, and
amora was Queene,)
164163o quit the bloodie wrongs vpon her foes.
165164Enter the sonnes of Andronicus againe. 166165Lucius. See Lord and father how we haue performd
167166Our Romane rights,
Alarbus limbs are lopt,
168167And intrals feede the
sacri
fising
fire,
169168Who
se
smoke like incen
se doth perfume the skie,
170169Remaineth nought but to interre our brethren,
171170And with lowd larums welcome them to Rome.
172171Titus. Let it be
so, and let
Andronicus,
173172Make this his late
st farewell to their
soules.
175173Sound Trumpets, and lay the Coffin in the Tombe. 176174In peace and honour re
st you here my
sonnes,
177175Roomes readie
st Champions, repo
se you here in re
st,
178176Secure from worldly chaunces and mi
shaps:
179177Here lurks no trea
son, here no enuie
swels,
180178Here grow no damned drugges, here are no
stormes,
181179No noy
se, but
silence and eternall
sleepe,
182180In peace and honour re
st you here my
sonnes.
184182In peace and honour, liue Lord T
itus long,
185183My Noble Lord and father liue in fame:
186184Lo at this Tombe my tributarie teares,
187185I render for my brethrens ob
sequies:
exequies
188186And at thy feete I kneele, with teares of ioy
189187Shed on this earth, for thy returne to Rome,
190188O ble
sse me here with thy vi
ctorious hand,
191189Who
se fortunes Roomes be
st Citizens applaud.
192190Titus. Kinde Rome that ha
st thus louingly re
serude,
The
of Titus Andronicus.
194191The Cordiall of mine age to glad my hart,
195192L
auinia liue, outliue thy fathers daies,
196193And fames eternall date for vertues prai
se.
197194Marcus. Long liue Lord T
itus my beloued brother,
198195Gratious triumpher in the eies of Rome.
199196Titus. Thanks gentle Tribune, Noble brother
Marcus.
201197Marcus. And welcome Nephews from
succesfull wars
202198You that
suruiue, and you that
sleepe in fame:
203199Faire Lords, your fortunes are alike in all,
204200That in your Countries
seruice drew your
swords,
205201But
safer triumph is this funerall pompe,
206202That hath a
spirde to
Solons happines,
207203And triumphs ouer chaunce in honours bed.
208204T
itus Andronicus, the people of Rome,
209205Who
se friend in iu
stice thou ha
st euer beene,
210206Send thee by mee their Tribune and their tru
st,
211207This Palliament of white and
spotles
hue,
212208And name thee in ele
ction for the Empire,
213209With the
se our late decea
sed Emperours
sonnes:
214210Be
Candidatus then and put it on,
215211And helpe to
set a head on headles Roome.
216212Titus. A better head her glorious bodie
fits,
217213Than his that
shakes for age and feeblenes:
218214What
should I don this Roabe and trouble you?
219215Be cho
sen with Proclamations to daie,
220216To morrow yeeld vp rule, re
signe my life,
221217And
set abroad new bu
sines for you all.
222218Roome I haue beene thy
souldier fortie yeares,
223219And led my Countries
strength
succesfullie,
224220And buried one and twentie valiant
sonnes
225221Knighted in Field,
slaine manfullie in Armes,
226222In right and
seruice of their Noble Countrie:
227223Giue me a
sta
ffe of Honour for mine age,
228224But not a
scepter to controwle the world,
229225Vpright he held it Lords that held it la
st.
B2 Marcus.
The most Lamentable Tragedie
230226Marcus. T
itus thou
shalt obtaine & aske the Emperie.
231227Saturni. Proud and ambitious Tribune can
st thou tell.
232228Titus. Patience Prince
Saturninus.
233229Saturninus. Romaines doe me right.
234230Patricians draw your
swords and
sheath them not,
235231Till
Saturninus be Romes Emperour:
236232Andronicus would thou were
shipt to hell,
237233Rather than robbe me of the peoples harts.
238234Lucius. Prowd
Saturnine, interrupter of the good,
239235That noble minded T
itus meanes to thee.
240236Titus. Content thee Prince, I will re
store to thee
241237The peoples harts, and weane them from them
selues.
242238Bassianus. Andronicus I doo not
flatter thee,
243239But honour thee and will doo till I die:
244240My fa
ction if thou
strengthen with thy friends
245241I will mo
st thankefull be, and thanks to men
246242Of Noble minds, is honourable meede.
247243Titus. People of Rome, and peoples Tribunes here,
248244I aske your voyces and your
su
ffrages,
249245Will yee be
stow them friendly on
Andronicus.
250246Tribunes. To grati
fie the good
Andronicus,
251247And gratulate his
safe returne to Rome,
252248The people will accept whom he admits.
253249Titus. Tribunes I thanke you, and this
sute I make,
254250That you create our Emperours elde
st sonne,
255251Lord S
aturnine: who
se vertues will I hope,
256252Re
fle
ct on Rome as Tytus Raies on earth,
257253And ripen iu
stice in this Commonweale:
258254Then if you will ele
ct by my adui
se,
259255Crowne him and
say,
Long liue our Emperour.
260256Marcus An. With voyces and applau
se of euery
sort,
sort
261257Patricians and
Plebeans, we create
262258Lord
Saturninus Romes great Emperour,
263259And
say
Long liue our Emperour Saturnine.
265260Saturnine. T
itus Andronicus, for thy fauours done,
To
of Titus Andronicus.
266261To vs in our ele
ction this day,
267262I giue thee thankes in part of thy de
serts,
268263And will with deeds requite thy gentlenes:
269264And for an on
set
Titus to aduance,
270265Thy name and honourable familie,
271266Lauinia will I make my Empre
sse,
272267Romes Royall Mi
stris, Mi
stris of my hart,
273268And in the
sacred Pathan her e
spou
se:
274269Tell me
Andronicus doth this motion plea
se thee.
275270Titus. It doth my worthie Lord, and in this match,
276271I hold me highly Honoured of your Grace,
277272And here in
sight of Rome to
Saturnine,
278273King and Commander of our commonweale,
279274The wide worlds Emperour, doe I con
secrate
280275My
sword, my Chariot, and my Pri
soners,
281276Pre
sents well worthy Romes imperious Lord:
282277Receiue them then, the tribute that I owe,
283278Mine honours En
signes humbled at thy feete.
284279Saturnine. Thankes Noble
Titus Father of my life,
285280How proude I am of thee and of thy gifts
286281Rome
shall record, and when I doe forget
287282The lea
st of the
se vn
speakeable de
serts,
288283Romans forget your Fealtie to me.
289284Titus. Now Madam are you pri
soner to an Emperour.
290285To him that for your honour and your
state,
291286Will v
se you Nobly, and your followers.
292287Saturnine. A goodly Lady tru
st me of the hue,
293288That I would choo
se were I to choo
se a new:
294289Cleare vp faire Queene that cloudy countenance,
295290Though change of war hath wrought this change of chear
297291Thou com
st not to be made a
scorne in Rome.
298292Princely
shall be thy v
sage euerie waie
299293Re
st on my word, and let not di
scontent,
300294Daunt all your hopes, Madam he comforts you,
301295Can make you greater than the Queene of
Gothes,
B3 Lauinia.
The most Lamentable Tragedie
302296L
auinia you are not di
splea
sde with this.
303297Lauinia. Not I my Lord,
sith true Nobilitie,
304298Warrants the
se words in Princely curte
sie.
305299Saturnine. Thanks
sweete L
auinia, Romans let vs goe,
306300Raun
somles here we
set our pri
soners free,
307301Proclaime our Honours Lords with Trumpe and Drum.
308302Bassianus. Lord T
itus by your leaue, this maid is mine.
309303Titus. How
sir, are you in earne
st then my Lord?
310304Bascianus. I Noble T
itus and re
solude withall,
311305To doo my
selfe this rea
son and this right.
312306Marcus. Suum cuiqum is our Romane iu
stce,
313307This Prince in iu
stice ceazeth but his owne.
314308Lucius. And that he will, and
shall if L
ucius liue.
315309Titus. Traitors auaunt, where is the Emperours gard?
316310Trea
son my Lord, L
auinia is
surprizde.
317311Saturnine. Surprizde, by whom?
318312Bascianus. By him that iu
stly may,
319313Beare his betrothde from all the world away.
320314Mutius. Brothers, helpe to conuay her hence away,
321315And with my
sword Ile keepe this doore
safe.
322316Titus. Follow my Lord, and Ile
soone bring her backe.
323317Mutius. My Lord you pa
sse not here.
324318Titus. What villaine boy, bar
st me my way in Rome?
325319Mutius. Helpe L
ucius, helpe.
326320Lucius. My Lord you are vniu
st, and more than
so,
327321In wrongfull quarrell you haue
slaine your
sonne.
328322Titus. Nor thou, nor he, are any
sonnes of mine,
329323My
sonnes would neuer
so di
shonour me,
330324Traitor re
store L
auinia to the Emperour.
331325Lucius, Dead if you will, but not to be his wife,
332326That is anothers lawfull promi
st loue.
333327Enter aloft the Emperour with Tamora and her two 334328sonnes and Aron the moore. 335329Emperour. No T
itus, no, the Emperour needes her not,
336330Nor her, nor thee, nor any of thy
stocke:
Ile
of Titus Andronicus.
337331Ile tru
st by ley
sure, him that mocks me once,
338332Thee neuer, nor thy traiterous hawtie
sonnes,
339333Confederates all thus to di
shonour mee.
340334Was none in Rome to make a
stale
341335But S
aturnine? Full well
Andronicus 342336Agree the
se deeds, with that prowd bragge of thine,
343337That
said
st I begd the Empire at thy hands.
344338Titus O mon
strous, what reprochfull words are the
se?
345339Saturn. But goe thy waies, goe giue that changing piece,
346340To him that
flori
sht for her with his
sword:
347341A valiant
sonne in law thou
shalt inioy,
348342One
fit to bandie with thy lawle
sse
sonnes,
349343To ru
ffle in the Common-wealth of Rome.
350344Titus. The
se words are ra
sors to my wounded hart.
351345Satur. And therfore louely T
amora Queene of Gothes,
352346That like the
statelie
Thebe mong
st her Nymphs,
353347Do
st ouer
shine the gallan
st Dames of Rome,
354348If thou be plea
sde with this my
sodaine choi
se,
355349Behold I choo
se thee
Tamora for my Bride,
356350And will create thee Empere
sse of Rome.
357351Speake Queene of Gothes do
st thou applaud my choi
se?
358352And here I
sweare by all the
Romane Gods,
359353Sith Prie
st and holy water are
so neere,
360354And tapers burne
so bright, and euerything
361355In readines for
Hymeneus stand,
362356I will not re
salute the
streets of Rome,
363357Or clime my Pallace, till from forth this place,
364358I lead e
spow
sde my Bride along with mee.
365359Tamora. And here in
sight of heauen to
Rome I
sweare,
366360If S
aturnine aduaunce the Queene of Gothes,
367361Shee will a handmaide be to his de
sires,
368362A louing Nur
se, a Mother to his youth.
369363Sat. A
scend faire Queene: Panthean Lords accompany
371364Your Noble Emperour and his louelie Bride,
372365Sent by the Heauens for Prince S
aturnine,
Whose
The most Lamentable Tragedie
373366Who
se wi
sdome hath her Fortune conquered,
374367There
shall wee con
summate our
spou
sall rites.
376369Titus. I am not bid to wait vpon this bride,
377370Titus when wert thou wont to walke alone,
378371Di
shonoured thus and challenged of wrongs.
379372Enter Marcus and Titus sonnes. 380373Marcus. O
Titus see: O
see what thou ha
st done
381374In a bad quarrell
slaine a vertuous
sonne.
382375Titus. No fooli
sh Tribune, no: No
sonne of mine,
383376Nor thou, nor the
se, confederates in the deede,
384377That hath di
shonoured all our Familie,
385378Vnworthy brother, and vnworthy
sonnes.
386379Lucius. But let vs giue him buriall as becomes,
387380Giue
Mucius buriall with our bretheren.
388381Titus. Traitors away, he re
sts not in this toombe:
389382This monument
fiue hundreth yeares hath
stood,
390383Which I haue
sumptuou
slie reedi
fied:
391384Here none but
souldiers and Romes
seruitors
392385Repo
se in fame: None ba
sely
slaine in braules.
393386Burie him where you can he comes not here.
394387Marcus. My Lord this is impietie in you,
395388My Nephew
Mutius deedes doo plead for him,
396389He mu
st be buried with his brethren.
397390Titus two sonnes speakes. 398391And
shall or him wee will accompanie.
399392Titus. And
shall. what villaine was it
spake that word?
401394He that would vouch it in any place but here.
402395Titus. What would you burie him in my de
spight?
403396Marcus. No Noble T
itus, but intreat of thee.
404397To pardon
Mutius and to bury him.
405398Titus. Marcus: Euen thou ha
st stroke vpon my Cre
st.
406399And with the
se boyes mine honour thou ha
st wounded,
407400My foes I doe repute you euerie one,
So
of Titus Andronicus.
408401So trouble me no more, but get you gone.
4094023. Sonne. He is not with him
selfe, let vs withdraw.
4104032. Sonne. Not I till
Mutius bones be buried.
411404The brother and the sonnes kneele. 412405Marcus. Brother, for in that name doth nature pleade.
4134062. sonne. Father, and in that name doth nature
speake.
414407Titus. Speake thou no more, if all the re
st will
speede.
415408Marcus. Renowmed
Titus, more than halfe my
soule.
416409Lucius. Deare father,
soule and
sub
stance of vs all.
417410Marcus Su
ffer thy brother
Marcus to interre,
418411His Noble Nephew here in vertues ne
st,
419412That died in honour and
Lauinias cau
se.
420413Thou art a Romane, be not barbarous:
421414The Greeks vpon adui
se did burie
Ayax 422415That
slew him
selfe: and wi
se
Laertes sonne,
423416Did gratiou
slie plead for his Funeralls:
424417Let not young
Mutius then that was thy ioy,
425418Be bard his entrance here.
426419Titus. Ri
se
Marcus, ri
se,
427420The di
smal
st day is this that ere I
saw,
428421To be di
shonoured by my
sonnes in Rome:
429422Well burie him, and burie me the next.
430423they put him in the tombe. 431424Lucius. There lie thy bones
sweete
Mutius with thy(friends,
432425Till wee with Trophees doo adorne thy tombe:
433426they all kneele and say, 434427 No man
shed teares for Noble
Mutius,
435428He liues in fame, that dide in vertues cau
se.
436429 Exit all but Marcus and Titus. 430Marcus. My Lord to
step out of the
se dririe dumps,
437431How comes it that the
subtile Queene of
Gothes,
438432Is of a
sodaine thus aduaunc'd in Rome.
439433Titus. I know not M
arcus, but I know it is.
440434(
Whether by deui
se or no, the heauens can tell.)
441435Is
shee not then beholding to the man,
C That
The most Lamentable Tragedie
442436That brought her for this high good turne
so farre.
445437 Enter the Emperour, Tamora 438and her two sonnes, with the Enter at the other doore
447Bascianus and Lauinia, with others.
448440Saturnine. So
Bascianus, you haue plaid your prize,
449441God giue you ioy
sir of your gallant Bride.
450442Bascianus. And you of yours my Lord, I
say no more,
451443Nor wi
sh no le
sse, and
so I take my leaue.
452444Saturnine. Traitor, if Rome haue law, or we haue power,
453445Thou and thy fa
ction
shall repent this Rape.
454446Bassianus. Rape call you it my Lord to ceaze my owne,
455447My true betrothed loue, and now my wife:
456448But let the lawes of Rome determine all,
457449Meanewhile am I po
sse
st of that is mine.
458450Saturnine. Tis good
sir, you are verie
short with vs.
459451But if we liue, weele be as
sharpe with you.
460452Bascianus. My Lord what I haue done as be
st I may,
461453An
swere I mu
st, and
shall doo with my life,
462454Onely thus much I giue your Grace to know,
463455By all the dueties that I owe to Rome,
464456This Noble Gentleman Lord
Titus here,
465457Is in opinion and in honour wrongd,
466458That in the re
scue of L
auinia,
467459With his owne hand did
slay his younge
st sonne,
468460In zeale to you, and highly moude to wrath,
469461To be controwld in that he frankelie gaue.
470462Receaue him then to fauour
Saturnine,
471463That hath expre
st him
selfe in all his deeds,
472464A father and a friend to thee and Rome.
473465Titus. Prince
Bascianus leaue to pleade my deeds,
474466Tis thou, and tho
se, that haue di
shonoured me,
475467Rome and the righteous heauens be my iudge,
476468How I haue loude and honoured
Saturnine.
Tamora,
of Titus Andronicus.
477469Tamora. My worthy Lord, if euer T
amora,
478470Were gratious in tho
se Princelie eies of thine,
479471Then heare me
speake indi
fferently for all:
480472And at my
sute (
sweete) pardon what is pa
st.
481473Saturnine. What Madam be di
shonoured openly,
482474And ba
selie put it vp without reuenge.
483475Tamora. Not
so my Lord, the Gods of Rome forfend.
485476I
should be Authour
to di
shonour you.
486477But on mine honour dare I vndertake,
487478For good Lord
Titus innocence in all,
488479Who
se furie not di
ssembled
speakes his griefes:
489480Then at my
sute looke gratiou
slie on him,
490481Loo
se not
so noble a friend on vaine
suppo
se,
491482Nor with
sowre looks a
ffli
ct his gentle hart.
492483 My Lord: Be rulde by me, be wonne at la
st,
493484Di
ssemble all your griefes and di
scontents,
494485You are but newlie planted in your Throne,
495486Lea
st then the people, and Patricians too,
496487Vpon a iu
st suruay take
Titus part,
497488And
so
supplant you for ingratitude,
498489Which Rome reputes to be a hainous
sinne.
499490Yeeld at intreats: and then let me alone,
500491Ile
find a day to ma
ssacre them all,
501492And race their fa
ction and their familie,
502493The cruell father, and his traiterous
sonnes,
503494To whom I
sued for my deare
sonnes life.
504495And make them know what tis to let a Queene,
505496Kneele in the
streets and begge for grace in vaine.
506497Come, come
sweete Emperour, (come
Andronicus:)
507498Take vp this good old man, and cheare the hart,
508499That dies in tempe
st of thy angrie frowne.
509500Saturnine. Ri
se
Titus ri
se, my Empre
sse hath preuaild.
511501Titus. I thanke your Maie
stie, and her my Lord,
513502The
se words, the
se looks, infu
se new life in me.
515503Tamora. T
itus I am incorporate in Rome,
C2 A
The most Lamentable Tragedie
516504A Roman now adopted happilie,
517505And mu
st adui
se the Emperour for his good,
518506This day all quarrels die
Andronicus.
519507And let it be mine honour good my Lord,
520508That I haue reconciled your friends and you.
521509For you Prince
Bassianus I haue pa
st 522510My word and promi
se to the Emperour,
523511That you will be more milde and tra
ctable.
524512And feare not Lords, and you
Lauinia,
526513By my adui
se all humbled on your knees,
527514You
shall aske pardon of his Maie
stie.
528515Wee doo, and vowe to Heauen and to his Highnes,
530516 +
That what wee did, was mild ie as we might,
531517Tendring our
sisters honour and our owne.
532518Marcus. That on mine honour here doo I prote
st.
533519Saturnine. Away, and talke not, trouble vs no more.
534520Tamora. Nay, nay
sweet Emperor, we mu
st all be friends,
535521The Tribune and his Nephews kneele for grace,
537522I will not be denied,
sweetehart looke backe.
538523Saturnine. Marcus, for thy
sake, and thy brothers here,
540524And at my louelie
Tamoras intreats,
541525I doo remit the
se young mens hainous faults,
542526Stand vp:
Lauinia though you left me like a Churle,
543527I found a friend, and
sure as death I
swore,
544528I would not part a Batchiler from the Prie
st.
545529Come if the Emperours Court can fea
st two Brides,
546530You are my gue
st L
auinia and your friends:
547531This daie
shall be a loue-daie T
amora.
548532Titus. To morrow and it plea
se your Maie
stie,
549533To hunt the Panther and the Hart with me,
550534 +
With horne and hound, weele giue your grace
boniour.
552535Saturnine. Be it
so
Titus and gramercie too.
Exeunt. 553536sound trumpets, manet Moore. 555537Aron. Now climeth T
amora Olympus toppe,
556538Safe out of fortunes
shot, and
sits aloft,
Secure
of Titus Andronicus.
557539Secure of thunders cracke or lightning
fla
sh,
558540Aduaunc'd aboue pale enuies threatning reach,
559541As when the golden
suune
salutes the morne,
560542And hauing gilt the Ocean with his beames,
561543Gallops the Zodiacke in his gli
stering Coach,
562544And ouer-looks the highe
st piering hills.
564546Vpon her wit doth earthly honour wait,
565547And vertue
stoops and trembles at her frowne,
566548Then
Aron arme thy hart, and
fit thy thoughts,
567549To mount aloft with thy Emperiall Mi
stris,
568550And mount her pitch, whom thou in triumph long
569551Ha
st pri
soner held, fettred in amourous chaines,
570552And fa
ster bound to
Arons charming eies,
571553Than is
Prometheus tide to
Caucasus.
572554Away with
slaui
sh weedes and
seruile thoughts,
573555I will be bright and
shine in pearle and golde,
574556To wait vpon this new made Empere
sse.
575557To wait
said I? to wanton with this Queene,
576558This Godde
sse, this Semerimis, this Nymph,
577559This Syren that will charme Romes S
aturnine,
578560And
see his
shipwracke, and his Common-weales.
579561Hollo, what
storme is this?
580562Enter Chiron and Demetrius brauing. 581563Demetrius. Chiron thy yeares wants wit, thy wits wants(edge,
582564And manners to intrude where I am grac'd,
583565And may for ought thou knowe
st a
ffe
cted bee.
584566Chiron. Demetrius, thou do
st ouerweene in all,
585567And
so in this, to beare me downe with braues,
586568Tis not the di
fference of a yeare or two
587569Makes me le
sse gratious, or thee more fortunate:
588570I am as able and as
fit as thou,
589571To
serue, and to de
serue my Mi
stris grace,
590572And that my
sword vpon thee
shall approue,
C3 And
The most Lamentable Tragedie
591573And plead my pa
ssions for L
auinias loue.
592574Moore. Clubs, Clubs, the
se louers will not keepe the(peace.
593575Demetrius. Why boy, although our mother (vnaduizd)
594576Gaue you a daun
sing Rapier by your
side,
595577Are you
so de
sperate growne to threat your friends:
596578Goe too: haue your lath glued within your
sheath,
597579Till you know better how to handle it.
598580Chiron. Meanewhile
sir, with the little skill I haue,
599581Full well
shalt thou perceiue how much I dare.
600582Demetrius. I boy, grow yee
so braue?
they drawe. 601583Moore. Why how now Lords?
602584So neere the Emperours Pallace dare yee drawe,
603585And maintaine
such a quarrell openlie?
604586Full well I wote the ground of all this grudge,
605587I would not for a million of gold,
606588The cau
se were knowne to them it mo
st concernes,
607589Nor would your Noble Mother for much more,
608590Be
so di
shonoured in the Court of Rome.
610592Demetrius. Not I till I haue
sheathd,
611593My Rapier in his bo
some, and withall
612594Thru
st tho
se reprochfull
speeches downe his throat,
613595That he hath breathd in my di
shonour here.
614596Chiron. For that I am prepard, and full re
solude,
615597Fowle
spoken Coward, that thundre
st with thy tongue,
617598And with thy weapon nothing dar
st performe.
619600Now by the Gods that warlike
Gothes adore,
620601This pettie brabble will vndoo vs all:
621602Why Lords, and thinke you not how dangerous
622603It is to iet vpon a Princes right?
623604What is
Lauinia then become
so loo
se,
624605Or
Bascianus so degenerate,
625606That for her loue
such quarrels may be brocht,
626607Without controulement, iu
stice, or reuenge.
Young
of Titus Andronicus.
627608Young Lords beware, and
should the Empre
sse know,
628609This di
scords ground, the mu
sicke would not plea
se.
629610Chiron. I care not I, knew
shee and all the world,
630611I loue L
auinia more than all the world.
631612Demetrius. Yongling learne thou to make
some meaner(choi
se,
633613L
auinia is thine elder brothers hope.
634614Moore. Why are ye mad? or know yee not in Rome,
635615How furious and impatient they bee,
636616And cannot brooke competitors in loue?
637617I tell you Lords, you doo but plot your deaths,
639619Chiron. Aron, A thou
sand deaths would I propo
se,
640620To atchiue her whom I loue.
641621Aron. To atchiue her how?
642622Demetrius. Why makes thou it
so
strange?
643623Shee is a woman, therefore may be woode,
644624Shee is a woman, therefore may be woonne,
645625Shee is L
auinia, therefore mu
st be loude.
646626What man, more water glideth by the mill
647627Than wots the Miller of, and ea
sie it is,
648628Of a cut loafe to
steale a
shiue we know:
649629Though
Bascianus be the Emperours brother,
650630Better than he haue worne
Vulcaens badge.
651631Moore. I and as good as S
aturninus may.
652632Demetrius. Then why
should he di
spaire that knows to(court it,
653633With words, faire looks, and liberalitie.
654634What ha
st not thou full often
stroke a Doe,
655635And borne her cleanlie by the Keepers no
se?
656636Moore. Why then it
seemes
some certaine
snatch, or
so
657637Would
serue your turnes.
658638Chiron. I
so the turne were
serued.
659639Demetrius. Aron thou ha
st hit it.
660640Moore. Would you had hit it too,
661641Then
should not we be tirde with this adoo.
662642Why harke ye, harke ye, and are you
such fooles
To
The most Lamentable Tragedie
663643To
square for this: would it o
ffend you then
665646Demetrius. Nor me
so I were one.
666647Aron. For
shame be friends, and ioine for that you iar,
667648Tis pollicie and
stratageme mu
st doo
668649That you a
ffe
ct, and
so mu
st you re
solue,
669650That what you cannot as you would atchiue,
670651You mu
st perforce accompli
sh as you may:
671652Take this of mee, L
ucrece was not more cha
st 672653Than this L
auinia,
Bascianus loue.
673654A
speedier cour
se this lingring langui
shment
674655Mu
st we pur
sue, and I haue found the path:
675656My Lords a
solemne hunting is in hand,
676657There will the louelie Romane Ladies troope:
677658The forre
st walks are wide and
spatious,
678659And many vnfrequented plots there are,
679660Fitted by kinde for rape and villanie:
680661Single you thither then this daintie Doe,
681662And
strike her home by force, if not by words,
682663This waie or not at all,
stand you in hope.
683664Come, come, our Empre
sse with her
sacred wit
684665 +
To villanie and vengeance con
secrate,
685666Will we acquaint withall what we intend,
686667And
shee
shall
file our engines with adui
se,
687668That will not
su
ffer you to
square your
selues,
688669But to your wi
shes hight aduaunce you both.
689670The Emperours Court is like the hou
se of fame,
690671The Pallace full of tongues, of eies, and eares:
691672The woods are ruthles, dreadfull, deafe, and dull:
692673There
speake, and
strike braue boies, and take your turns,
693674There
serue your lu
st shadowed from heauens eie,
694675And reuell in L
auinias trea
surie.
695676Chiron. Thy coun
sell Lad
smels of no cowardize.
696677Demetrius. Sit fas aut nefas, till I
finde the
streame,
To
of Titus Andronicus.
697678To coole this heate, a charme to calme the
se
fits,
698679Per Stigia, per manes Vehor.
699681Enter Titus Andronicus, and his three sonnes. 700682making a noise with hounds & hornes. 701683Titus. The hunt is vp the Moone is bright and gray,
702684The
fields are fragrant, and the woods are greene,
703685Vncouple here, and let vs make a bay,
704686And wake the Emperour, and his louelie Bride,
705687And rowze the Prince, and ring a Hunters peale,
706688That all the Court may eccho with the noi
se.
707689Sonnes let it be your charge, as it is ours,
708690To attend the Emperours per
son carefullie:
709691I haue beene troubled in my
sleepe this night,
710692But dawning day new comfort hath in
spirde.
712693 Here a crie of Hounds, and wind hornes in a peale: then 713694enter Saturninus, Tamora, Bascianus, Lauinia, Chiron, 714695Demetrius, and their Attendants. 715696Titus. Many good morrowes to your Maie
stie,
716697Madam to you as many, and as good,
717698I promi
sed your Grace a Hunters peale.
718699Saturnine. And you haue rung it lu
stilie my Lords,
719700Somewhat too earlie for new married Ladies.
720701Bascianus. L
auinia, how
say you?
721702Laui. I
say no: I haue been broad awake, two howres &(more.
723703Saturnine. Come on then, hor
se and Chariots let vs haue,
724704And to our
sport: Madam, now
shall ye
see,
726706Marcus. I haue Dogges my Lord,
727707Will rouze the prowde
st Panther in the Cha
se,
728708And clime the highe
st promontarie topp.
729709Titus. And I haue hor
se will follow where the game
D Makes
The most Lamentable Tragedie
730710Makesway, and runnes like
swallowes ore the plaine.
731711Demetrius. Chiron we hunt not we, with hor
se nor hound
732712But hope to plucke a daintie Doe to ground.
Exeuut. 734714Moore. He that had wit, would thinke that I had none,
735715To burie
so much gold vnder a tree,
736716And neuer after to inherit it.
737717Let him that thinks of me
so abie
ctlie,
738718Know that this gold mu
st coine a
stratageme,
739719Which cunninglie e
ffe
cted will beget,
740720A verie excellent peece of villanie:
741721And
so repo
se
sweet gold for their vnre
st,
742722That haue their almes out of the Empre
sse Che
st.
743723Enter Tamora alone to the Moore. 744724Tamora. My louelie
Aron, wherefore look
st thou
sad,
746725When eueriething dorh make a gleefull bo
st?
747726The birds chaunt melodie on euerie bu
sh,
748727The
snakes lies rolled in the chearefull
sunne,
749728The greene leaues quiuer with the cooling winde,
750729And make a checkerd
shadow on the ground:
751730Vnder their
sweet
shade,
Aron let vs
sit,
752731And whil
st the babling eccho mocks the hounds,
753732Replying
shrillie to the well tun'd hornes,
754733As if a double hunt were heard at once,
755734Let vs
sit downe and marke their yellowing noy
se:
756735And after con
fli
ct such as was
suppo
sde
757736The wandring Prince and
Dido once inioyed,
758737When with a happie
storme they were
surpri
sde,
759738And curtaind with a coun
saile-keeping Caue,
760739We may each wreathed in the others armes,
761740(Our pa
stimes done,) po
sse
sse a golden
slumber,
762741Whiles hounds and hornes, and
sweete mellodious birds
763742Be vnto vs as is a Nurces
song
764743Of Lullabie, to bring her Babe a
sleepe.
Moore,
of Titus Andronicus.
765744Moore. Maddam, though
Venus gouerne your de
sires,
767745S
aturne is dominator ouer mine:
768746What
signi
fies my deadlie
standing eie,
769747My
silence, ann my clowdie melancholie,
770748My
fleece of wollie haire that now vncurles,
771749Euen as an Adder when
shee doth vnrowle,
772750To doo
some fatall execution.
773751No Maddam, the
se are no veneriall
signes,
774752Vengeance is in my hart, death in my hand,
775753Blood and reuenge are hammering in my head.
776754Harke
Tamora the Empre
sse of my
soule,
777755Which neuer hopes more heauen than re
sts in thee,
778756This is the daie of doome for
Bassianus,
779757His
Philomel mu
st loo
se her tongue to daie,
780758hy
sonnes make pillage of her cha
sttitie,
781759And wa
sh their hands in
Bascianus blood.
782760See
st thou this letter? take it vp I pray thee,
783761And giue the king this fatall plotted
scrowle.
784762Now que
stion me no more we are e
spied,
785763Here comes a parcell of our hopefull
bootie,
786764Which dreads not yet their liues de
stru
ction.
787765Enter Bascianus, and Lauinia. 788766Tamora. Ah my
sweete M
oore,
sweeter to me than life.
790767Moore. No more great Empre
sse,
Bascianus comes,
791768Be cro
sse with him, and Ile goe fetch thy
sonnes
792769To backe thy quarrels what
soere they bee.
793770Bascianus. who haue we here? Romes Royall Empre
sse,
795771Vnfurni
sht of her well be
seeming troope?
796772Or is it
Dian habited like her,
797773Who hath abandoned her holie groues,
798774To
see the generall hunting in this Forre
st?
799775Tamora. Sawcie controwler of my priuate
steps,
800776Had I the powre that
some
say
Dian had,
801777Thy temples
should be planted pre
sentlie,
D2 With
The most Lamentable Tragedie
802778With hornes as was
Acteons, and the hounds,
803779Should driue vpon thy new transformed limbes,
804780Vnmannerly intruder as thou art.
805781Lauinea. Vnder your patience gentle Empre
sse,
806782Tis thought you haue a goodly gift in horning,
807783And to be doubted that your
Moore and you,
808784Are
singled forth to trie thy experimens:
809785Ioue
sheeld your husband from his hounds today,
810786Tis pittie they
should take him for a Stag.
811787Bassianus. Beleeue me Queene your
swartie Cymerion,
812788Doth make your honour of his bodies hue,
813789Spotted, dete
sted, and abhominable.
814790Why are you
seque
stred from all your traine,
815791Di
smounted from your
snow white goodly
steede,
816792And wandred hither to an ob
sure plot,
817793Accompanied but with a barbarous
Moore,
818794If foule de
sire had not condu
cted you?
819795Lauinia. And being intercepted in your
sport,
820796Great rea
son that my Noble Lord be rated
821797For
sau
sines, I pray you let vs hence,
822798And let her ioy her Rauen culloured loue,
823799This valie
fitts the purpo
se pa
ssing well.
824800Bass. The King my brother
shall haue notice of this.
825801Lauinia I, for the
se
slips haue made him noted long,
826802Good King to be
so mightily abu
sed.
827803Queene. Why I haue patience to indure all this.
828804Enter Chiron and Demetrius. 829805Demet. How now deare
soueraigne, and our gratious(Mother,
831806Why doth your highnes looke
so pale and wan?
832807Queene. Haue I not rea
son thinke you to looke pale,
833808The
se two haue ticed me hither to this place,
834809A barren, dete
sted vale you
see it is,
835810The trees though
summer yet forlorne and leane,
836811Ouercome with mo
sse and balefull mi
sselto.
837812Here
neuer
shines the
sunne, here nothing breeds,
Vnlesse
of Titus Andronicus.
838813Vnle
sse the nightly Owle or fatall Rauen:
839814And when they
showd me this abhorred pit,
840815They told me here at dead time of the night,
841816A thou
sand feends, a thou
sand hi
ssing
snakes,
842817Ten thou
sand
swelling toades, as manie vrchins,
843818Would make
such fearefull and confu
sed cries,
844819As any mortall body hearing it
845820Should
strait fall mad, or els die
suddainely.
846821No
sooner had they told this helli
sh tale,
847822Bu
strait they told me they would binde me here,
848823Vnto the body of a di
small Ewghe,
849824And leaue me to this mi
serable death.
850825And then they calde me foule adultere
sse,
851826Lauicious Goth, and all the bittere
st tearmes,
852827That euer eare did heare to
such e
ffe
ct.
853828And had you not by wondrous
fortune come,
854829This vengeance on me had they executed:
855830Reuenge it as you loue your Mothers life,
856831Or be yee not henceforth cald my Children,
857832Demetrius. This is a witnes that I am thy
son.
stab him. 858833Chi And this for me
struck home, to
shew my
strength.
860834Lauinia. I come
Semeranis, nay barbarous T
amora,
861835For no name
fits thy nature but thy owne.
862836Tamora. Giue me the poynard, you
shall know my boies,
863837Your Mothers hand
shall right your Mothers wrong.
864838Demetrius. Stay Madame here is more belongs to her,
865839Fir
st thra
sh the corne, then alter burne the
straw:
866840This minion
stood vpon her cha
stitie,
867841Vpon her Nuptiall vow, her loyaltie,
868842And with that painted hope, braues your mightenes,
869843And
shall
she carrie this vnto her graue.
870844Chiron. And if
she doe, I would I were an Euenuke,
872845Drag hence her husband to
some
secret hole,
873846And make his dead trunke pillow to our lu
st.
874847Tamora. But when yee haue the honie we de
sire,
D3 Le
The most Lamentable Tragedie
875848Let not this wa
spe outliue vs both to
sting.
876849Chiron. I warrant you maddame we will make that
sure:
877850Come Mi
stris now perforce we will enioy,
878851That nice pre
serued hone
stie of yours.
879852Lauinia. Oh T
amora, thou beare
st a womans face.
880853Tamora. I will not heare her
speake awaie with her.
881854Lauinia. Sweet Lords intreat her heare me but a word.
882855Demetrius. Li
sten faire Maddame let it be your glory
883856To
see her teares, but be your hart to them:
884857As vnrelenting Flint to drops of raine.
885858Lauinia. When did the Tigers young ones teach the(dam,
886859Oh doe not learne her wrath:
she taught it thee,
887860The Milke thou
suck
st from her did turne to Marble,
888861Euen at thy teat thou had
st thy tyrranie,
889862Yet euerie Mother breeds not
sonnes a like,
890863Doe thou intreat her
shew a womans pittie.
891864Chiron. What would
st thou haue me proue my
selfe a(ba
stard?
893865Lauinia. Tis true the Rauen doth not hatch a Larke,
895866Yet haue I hard, Oh could I
finde it now,
896867The Lion moued with pittie did indure,
897868To haue his Princelie pawes parde all away:
898869Some
say that Rauens fo
ster forlorne children,
899870The whil
st their owne birds fami
sh in their ne
sts:
900871Oh be to me though thy hard hart
say no,
901872Nothing
so kinde but
something pittifull.
902873Tamora. I know not what it meanes, away with her.
903874Lauinia. Oh let me teach thee for my Fathers
sake,
904875That gaue thee life when well he might haue
slaine thee,
905876Be not obdurate, open thy deafe yeares.
906877Tamora. Had
st thou in per
son nere o
ffended mee,
907878Euen for his
sake am I pittile
sse.
908879Remember boyes I powrd forth teares in vaine,
909880To
saue your brothet from the
sacri
fice,
910881But fearce
Andronicus would not relent,
911882Therefore away with her, and v
se her as you will,
The
of Titus Andronicus.
912883The wor
se to her the better lou'd of mee.
913884Lauinia. Oh T
amora be calld a Gentle Queene,
915885And with thine owne hands kill me in this place,
916886For tis not life that I haue begd
so long,
917887Poore I was
slaine when
Bascianus dide.
918888Tamora. What beg
st thou then fond woman let me(goe?
919889Lauinia. Tis pre
sent death I beg, and one thing more,
920890That woman-hood denies my tong to tell,
921891Oh keepe me from there wor
se than killing lu
st,
922892And tumble me into
some loth
some pit,
923893Where neuer mans eye may behold my bodie,
924894Doe this and be a charitable murderer.
925895Tamora. So
should I rob my
sweet
sonnes of their fee,
926896No let them
sati
sfiee their lu
st on thee.
927897Demetrius. Away for thou ha
st staide vs here too long.
929898Lauinia. No grace, no womanhood, ah bea
stly creature,
931899The blot and enemie to our generall name,
933901Chiron. Nay then Ile
stop your mouth, bring thou her(hu
sband,
935902This is the hole where
Aron bid vs hide him.
936903Tamora. Farewell my
sons,
see that you make her
sure,
937904Nere let my hart know merry cheare indeede,
938905Till all the
Andronicie be made away:
939906Now will I hence to
seeke my louely M
oore,
940907And let my
spleenfull
sonnes this Trull de
floure.
941908Enter Aron with two of Titus sonnes. 942909Come on my Lords the better foot before,
943910Straight will I bring you to the loth
some pit,
944911Where I e
spied the Panther fa
st a
sleepe.
945912Quintus. My
sight is verie dull what ere it bodes.
946913Mart. And mine I promi
se you, were it not for
shame,
947914Well could I leaue our
sport to
sleepe a while.
948915Quintus. What art thou fallen what
subtill hole is this,
950916Who
se mouth is couered with rude growing briers,
Vpon
The most Lamentable Tragedie
951917Vpon who
se leaues are drops of new
shed blood,
952918As fre
sh as morning dew di
stild on
flowers,
953919A verie fatall place it
seemes to mee,
954920Speake brother ha
st thou hurt thee with the fall?
955921Martius. Oh brother with the di
smal
st obie
ct hurt,
957922That euer eie with
sight made hart lament.
958923Aron. Now will I fetch the King to
finde them here,
959924That he thereby may haue a likely ge
sse,
Exit. 960925How the
se were they, that made away his brother.
962926Martius. Why do
st not comfort me and help me out
963927From this vnhollow, and blood
stained hole.
964928Quintus. I am
surpri
sed with an vncouth feare,
965929A chilling
sweat oreruns my trembling ioynts,
966930My hart
su
spe
cts more than mine eie can
see.
967931Martius. To proue thou ha
st a true diuining hart,
968932Aron, and thou looke downe into this den,
969933And
see a fearefull
sight of blood and death.
970934Quintus. Aron is gone, and my compa
ssionate hart,
972935Will not permit mine eyes once to behold,
973936The thing whereat it trembles by furmi
se:
974937Oh tell me who it is, for nere till now,
975938Was I a child to feare I know not what.
976939Martius. Lord
Bassianus lies bereaud in blood,
MS 'heere reav'd of lyfe'
977940All on a heape like to a
slaughtered Lambe,
978941In this dete
sted darke blood drinking pit.
979942Quintus. If it be darke how do
st thou know tis hee.
980943Martius. Vpon his bloody
finger he doth weare
981944A pretious ring, that lightens all this hole:
982945Which like a taper in
some monument,
983946Doth
shine vpon the dead mans earthy cheekes,
984947And
shewes the ragged intrals of this pit:
985948So pale did
shine the Moone on Priamus,
986949When he by night lay bathd in Maiden blood,
987950O Brother help me with thy fainting hand,
988951If feare hath made thee faint as me it hath,
Out
of Titus Andronicus.
989952Out of this fell deuouring receptacle,
990953As hatefull as
Ocitus mi
stie mouth.
991954Quint. Reach me thy hand, that I may helpe thee out,
992955Or wanting
strength to doe thee
so much good,
993956I may be pluckt into the
swallowing wombe,
994957Of this deepe pit, poore
Bassianus graue:
995958I haue no
strength to plucke thee to the brinck,
996959Martius. Nor I no
strength to clime without thy help.
997960Quint. Thy hand once more, I will not loo
se againe,
998961Till thou art here aloft or I belowe:
999962Thou can
st not come to me, I come to thee.
1000963Enter the Emperour and Aron, 1001965Saturninus. Along with me, Ile
see what hole is here.
1002966And what he is that now is leapt into it.
1003967Say who art thou that lately did
st de
scend,
1004968Into this gaping hollow of the earth.
1005969Martius. The vnhappie
sonnes of old
Andronicus,
1006970Brought hither in a mo
st vnluckie houre,
1007971To
finde thy brother
Bassianus dead.
1008972Saturninus. My brother dead, I know thou do
st but(ie
st,
1009973He and his Ladie both are at the lodge,
1010974Vpon the north
side of this plea
sant cha
se,
1011975Tis not an houre
since I left them there.
1012976Mart. We know not where you left them all aliue,
1013977But out alas, here haue we found him dead.
1014978Enter Tamora, Andronicus, and Lucius. 1015979Tamora. Where is my Lord the King?
1016980King. Here
Tamora, though griude with killing griefe.
1017981Tamora. Where is thy brother
Bassianus?
1018982King. Now to the bottome do
st thou
search my wound,
E Poore
The most Lamentable Tragedie
1019983Poore
Bassianus here lies murthered.
1020984Tamora. Then all too late I bring this fatall writ.
1021985The complot of this timele
sse Tragedie,
1022986And wonder greatly that mans face can fold,
1023987In plea
sing
smiles
such murderous tyrranie.
1024988She giueth Saturnine a letter. 1025989Saturninus reads the letter. And if wee misse to meete him handsomelie,
1027991Sweet huntsman, Ba
ssianus
tis we meane,
1028992Doe thou so much as dig the graue for hi
m,
1029993Thou knowst our meaning looke for thy reward,
1030994Among the Nettles at the Elder tree,
1031995Which ouershades the mouth of that same pit,
1032996Where we decreed to burie Ba
ssianus,
1033997Doe this and purchase vs thy lasting friends.
1034998King. Oh
Tamora was euer heard the like,
1035999This is the pit, and this the Elder tree,
10361000Looke Sirs if you can
finde the hunt
sman out,
10371001That
should haue murthered
Bassianus here.
10381002Aron. My gratious Lord here is the bag of gold.
10391003King. Two of thy whelps, fell curs of bloody kinde,
10401004Haue here bereft my brother of his life:
10411005Sirs drag them from the pit vnto the pri
son,
10421006There let them bide vntill we haue deui
sd,
10431007Some neuer hard of tortering paine for them.
10441008Tam. What are they in this pit, Oh wondrous thing!
10461009How ea
sily murder is di
scouered.
10471010Titus. High Emperour, vpon my feeble knee,
10481011I beg this boone, with teares not lightly
shed,
10491012That this fell fault of my accur
sed
sonnes,
10501013Accur
sed, if the faults be proud in them.
10511014King. If it be proude, you
see it is apparant,
who
of Titus Andronicus.
10521015Who found this letter, T
amora was it you?
10531016Tamora. Andronicus him
selfe did take it vp.
10541017Titus. I did my Lord, yet let me be their baile,
10561018For by my Fathers reuerent toombe I vowe,
10571019They
shall be ready at your highnes will,
10581020To an
swere their
su
spition with their liues.
10591021King. Thou
shalt not baile them,
see thou follow me.
10601022Some bring the murthered body,
some the murtherers,
10611023Let them not
speake a word the guilt is plaine,
10621024For by my
soule, were there wor
se end than death,
10631025That end vpon them
should be executed.
10641026Tamora. Andronicus I will intreat the King,
10651027Feare not thy
sonnes, they
shall doe well enough.
10661028Titus. Come L
ucius come,
stay not to talke with them.
10681029Enter the Empresse sonnes with Lauinia, her handes 10691030cut off, and her tongue cut out, & rauisht. 10701031Deme. So now go tell and if thy tongue can
speake,
10711032Who twas that cut thy tongue and raui
sht thee.
10721033Chi. Write downe thy minde bewray thy meaning
so,
10731034And if thy
stumpes will let thee play the
scribe.
10741035Deme. See how with
signes and tokens
she can
scrowle.
10751036Chi. Goe home, call for
sweet water wa
sh thy hands.
10771037Demet. She hath no tongue to call, nor hands to wa
sh'
10781038And
so lets leaue her to her
silent walkes.
10791039Chi. And twere my cau
se, I
should goe hang my
selfe.
10801040Dmet. If thou had
st hands to helpe thee knit the corde.
10841043Who is this, my Neece that
flies away
so fa
st,
10851044Co
sen a word, where is your hu
sband:
10861045If I doe dreame would all my wealth would wake me.
E2 I
The most Lamentable Tragedie
10871046If I doe wake
some Plannet
strike me downe,
10881047That I may
slumber an eternall
sleepe.
10891048Speake gentle Neece, what
sterne vngentle hands,
10901049 +
Hath lopt, and hewde, and made thy body bare,
10911050Of her two branches tho
se
sweet Ornaments,
10921051Who
se cyrcling
shadowes, Kings haue
sought to
sleepe(in,
10931052And might not gaine
so great a happines
10941053As halfe thy loue:
Why do
st not
speake to me?
10951054Alas, a crim
son Riuer of warme blood,
10961055Like to a bubling Fountaine
stirde with winde,
10971056Doth ri
se and fall betweene thy Ro
sed lips,
10981057Comming and going with thy honie breath.
10991058But
sure
some
Tereus hath de
flowred thee,
11001059And le
st thou
should
st dete
ct them cut thy tongue.
11011060Ah now thou turn
st awaie thy face for
shame,
11021061And notwith
standing all this lo
sse of blood,
11031062As from a Conduit with their i
ssuing
spouts,
11041063Yet doe thy cheekes looke red as
Titans face,
11051064Blu
shing to be encountred with
a Clowde.
11061065Shall I
speake for thee,
shall I
say tis
so.
11071066Oh that I knew thy hart, and knew the bea
st,
11081067That I might raile at him to ea
se my minde.
11091068Sorrow concealed like an Ouen
stoppt,
11101069Doth burne the hart to cinders where it is.
11111070Faire
Philomela, why
she but lo
st her tongue,
11121071And in a tedious
sampler
sowed her minde.
11131072But louely Neece, that meane is cut from thee,
11141073A craftier
Tereus, Co
sen ha
st thou met,
11151074And he hath cut tho
se prettie
fingers o
ff,
11161075That could haue better
sowed than
Philomel.
11171076Oh had the mon
ster
seene tho
se Lillie hands,
11181077Tremble like a
spen leaues vpon a Lute,
11191078And make the
silken
strings delight to ki
sse them,
11201079He would not then haue tucht them for his life.
11211080Or had he heard the heauenly Harmonie,
Which
of Titus Andronicus.
11221081Which that
sweete tongue hath made,
11231082He would haue dropt his knife and fell a
sleepe,
11241083As
Cerberus at the Thracian Poets feete.
11251084Come let vs goe, and make thy father blind,
11261085For
such a
sight will blind a fathers eie.
11271086One houres
storme will drowne the fragrant meades,
11281087What wlll whole months of teares thy fathers eies?
11291088Doe not drawe backe, for we will mourne with thee,
11301089Oh could our mourning ea
se thy mi
serie.
11321091 Enter the Iudges and Senatours with Titus two sonnes 11331092bound, passing on the Stage to the place of execution, and Ti- 11351094Titus. Heare me graue Fathers, Noble Tribunes
stay,
11361095For pittie of mine age, who
se youth was
spent
11371096In dangerous warres, whil
st you
securelie
slept.
11381097For all my blood in Roomes great quarrell
shed,
11391098For all the fro
stie nights that I haue watcht,
11401099And for the
se bitter teares which now you
see,
11411100Filling the aged wrincles in my cheeks,
11421101Be pittifull to my condemned
sonnes,
11431102Who
se
soules is not corrupted as tis thought.
11441103For two and twentie
sonnes I neuer wept,
11451104Becau
se they died in honours loftie bed,
11461105Andronicus lieth downe, and the Iudges passe by him. 11471106For the
se, Tribunes, in the du
st I write
11481107My harts deepe languor, and my
soules
sad teares:
11491108Let my teares
staunch the earths drie appetite,
11501109My
sonnes
sweete blood will make it
shame and blu
sh:
11511110O earth I will befriend thee more with raine,
11521111That
shall di
still from the
se two auntient ruines,
11531112Than youthfull Aprill
shall with all his
showres.
E3 In
The most lamentable Tragedie
11541113In
summers drought, Ile drop vpon thee
still,
11551114In winter with warme teares Ile melt the
snow,
11561115And keepe eternall
springtime ou
thy face,
11571116So thou refu
se to drinke my deare
sonnes blood.
11581117Enter Lucius with his weapon drawne. 11591118Oh reuerent
Tribunes, Oh gentle aged men
11601119Vnbinde my
sonnes, reuer
se the doome of death,
11611120And let me
say, (that neuer wept before)
11621121My teares are now preuailing Oratours.
11631122Lucius. Oh Noble Father you lament in vaine,
11641123The
Tribunes heare you not, no man is by,
11651124And you recount your
sorrowes to a
stone.
11661125Titus. Ah
Lucius, for thy brothers let me plead,
11671126Graue T
ribunes, once more I intreat of you.
11681127Lucius. My gratious Lord, no T
ribune heares you
speak.
11691128Titus. Why tis no matter man, if they did heare
11701129They would not marke me, if they did marke,
11711130They would not pittie me, yet pleade I mu
st,
11721132Therefore I tell my
sorrowes to the
stones,
11731133who though they cannot an
swere my di
stre
sse,
11741134Yet in
some
sort they are better than the T
ribunes,
11751135For that they will not intercept my tale:
11761136when I doe weepe, they humblie at my feete
11771137Receiue my teares, and
seeme to weepe with me,
11781138And were they but attired in graue weeds,
11791139Rome could a
fford no T
ribunes like to the
se:
11801140A
stone is
soft as waxe, T
ribunes more hard than
stones:
11821141A
stone is
silent, and o
ffendeth not,
11831142And T
ribunes with their tongues doome men to death.
11841143But wherefore
stand
st thou with thy weapon drawne?
11851144Lucius To re
scue my two brothers from their death,
11861145For which attempt the Iudges haue pronounc
st,
11871146My euerla
sting doome of bani
shment.
11881147Titus. O happie man, they haue befriended thee:
why
of Titus Andronicus.
11891148why fooli
sh Lucius, do
st thou not perceiue
11901149That Rome is but a wildernes of tygers?
11911150Tygers mu
st pray, and Rome a
ffords no pray
11921151But me and mine, how happie art thou then,
11931152From the
se deuourers to be bani
shed.
11941153But who comes with our brother
Marcus here?
11961155Marcus. Titus, prepare thy aged eies to weepe,
11971156Or if not
so, thy Noble hart to breake:
11981157I bring con
suming
sorrow to thine age.
11991158Titus. will it con
sume mee? Let me
see it then.
12021161Lucius. Ay mee, this Obie
ct kils mee.
12031162Titus. Faint-harted-boy, ari
se and looke vpon her.
12041163Speake
Lauinea, what accur
sed hand,
12051164Hath made thee handles in thy fathers
sight?
12061165what foole hath added water to the
sea?
12071166Or brought a faggot to bright burning
Troy?
12081167My griefe was at the height before thou cam
st,
12091168And now like
Nylus it di
sdaineth bounds.
12101169Giue me a
sword Ile choppe o
ff my hands too,
12111170For they haue fought for Rome, and all in vaine:
12121171And they haue nur
st this woe, in feeding life:
12141172In bootle
sse praier haue they beene held vp,
12151173And they haue
serude me to e
ffe
ctles v
se.
12161174Now all the
seruice I require of them,
12171175Is that the one will helpe to cut the other,
12181176Tis well L
auinia that thou ha
st no hands,
12191177For hands to doe Rome
seruice is but vaine.
12201178Lucius. Speake gentle
sister, who hath martred thee.
12211179Marcus. Oh that delightfull engine of her thoughts,
12221180That blabd them with
such plea
sing eloquence,
Is
The most Lamentable Tragedie
12231181Is torne from forth that prettie hollow cage,
12241182Where like a
sweete mellodious bird it
sung,
12251183Sweete varied notes inchaunting euerie eare.
12261184Lucius. Oh
say thou for her, who hath done this deed?
12281185Marcus. Oh thus I found her
straying in the Parke,
12291186Seeking to hide her
selfe, as doth the Deare
12301187That hath receaude
some vnrecuring wound.
12311188Titus. It was my Deare, and he that wounded her,
12331189Hath hurt me more than had he kild me dead:
12341190For now I
stand as one vpon a rocke,
12351191Inuirond with a wildernes of
sea,
12361192Who markes the waxing tide, grow waue by waue,
12381193Expe
cting euer when
some enuious
surge,
12391194Will in his brini
sh bowels
swallow him.
12401195This way to death my wretched
sonnes are gone,
12411196Here
stands my other
sonne a bani
sht man,
12421197And here my brother weeping at my woes:
12431198But that which giues my
soule the greate
st spurne
12441199Is deare
Lauinia, dearer than my
soule.
12451200Had I but
seene thy pi
cture in this plight,
12461201It would haue madded me: what
shall I doo,
12471202Now I behold thy liuelie bodie
so?
12481203Thou ha
st no hands to wipe away thy teares,
12491204Nor tongue to tell me who hath martred thee:
12501205Thy husband he is dead, and for his death
12511206Thy brothers are condemnde, and dead by this.
12521207Looke
Marcus, Ah
sonne L
ucius looke on her,
12531208When I did name her brothers, then fre
sh teares
12541209Stood on her cheeks, as doth the honie dew,
12551210Vpon a gathred Lillie almo
st withered.
12561211Marcus. Perchance
shee weepes becau
se they kild her(husband,
12581212Perchance, becau
se
shee knowes them innocent.
12591213Titus. If they did kill thy husband then be ioyfull,
12601214Becau
se the Law hath tane reuenge on them.
12611215No, no, they would not doo
so fowle a deede,
Witnes
of Titus Andronicus.
12621216Witnes the
sorrow that their
sister makes.
12631217Gentle
Lauinia, let me ki
sse thy lips,
12641218Or make
some
signe how I may doe thee ea
se:
12651219Shall thy good Vncle, and thy brother L
ucius,
12661220And thou, and I,
sit round about
some Fountaine,
12671221Looking all downewards to behold our cheekes,
12681222How they are
staind like meadowes yet not drie,
12691223With mierie
slime left on them by a
flood?
12701224And in the fountaine
shall wee gaze
so long,
12711225Till the fre
sh ta
st be taken from that clearenes,
12721226And made a brine pit with our bitter teares?
12731227Or
shall we cut away our hands like thine?
12741228Or
shall we bite our tongues? and in dumbe
showes
12751229Pa
sse the remainder of our hatefull daies?
12761230What
shall we doe? Let vs that haue our tongues,
12771231Plot
some deui
se of further mi
serie,
12781232To make vs wonderd at in time to come.
12791233Lucius. Sweete father cea
se your teares, for at your grief
12801234See how my wretched
sister
sobs and weepes.
12811235Marcus. Patience deare niece, good
Titus dry thine eies.
12821236Titus. Ah M
arcus, M
arcus, Brother well I wote,
12841237Thy napkin cannot drinke a teare of mine,
12851238For thou poore man, ha
st drownd it with thine owne.
12861239Lucius. Ah my L
auinia, I will wipe thy cheekes.
12871240Titus. Marke M
arcus, marke, I vnder
stand her
signes,
12881241Had
shee a tongue to
speake, now would
shee
say
12891242That to her Brother, which I
said to thee.
12901243His napking with her true teares all bewet,
12911244Can doe no
seruice on her
sorrowfull cheekes,
+
12921245Oh what a
simpathie of woe is this,
12931246As farre from helpe, as Lymbo is from bli
sse.
12951248Moore. Titus Andronicus, My Lord the Emperour,
12961249Sends thee this word, that if thou loue thy
sonnes,
12971250Let M
arcus, L
ucius, or thy
selfe olde T
itus,
F Or
The most Lamentable Tragedie
12981251Or any one of you, chop o
ff your hand
12991252And
send it to the King, he for the
same,
13001253will
send thee hither both thy
sonnes aliue,
13011254And that
shall be the raun
some for their fault.
13021255Titus. Oh gratious Emperour, Oh gentle
Aron,
13031256Did euer Rauen
sing
so like a Larke,
13041257That giues
sweete tidings of the Sunnes vpri
se?
13051258With all my hart, Ile
send the Emperour my hand,
13061259Good
Aron wilt thou helpe to chop it o
ff?
13071260Lucius. Stay father, for that Noble hand of thine,
13081261That hath throwne downe
so many enemies,
13091262Shall not be
sent: my hand will
serue the turne,
13101263My youth can better
spare my bloud than you,
13111264And therefore mine
shall
saue my brothers liues.
13121265Marcus. which of your hands hath not defended Rome,
13131266And reard aloft the bloudie Battleaxe,
13141267wrighting de
stru
ction on the enemies Ca
stle?
13151268Oh none of both, but are of high de
sert:
13161269My hand hath beene but idle, let it
serue
13171270To raun
some my two Nephews from their death,
13181271Then haue I kept it to a worthie ende.
13191272Moore. Nay come agree who
se hand
shall goe along,
13201273For feare they die before their pardon come.
13221275Lucius. By heauen it
shall not goe.
13231276Titus. Sirs
striue no more,
such withred hearbs as the
se
13241277Are meete for plucking vp, and therefore mine.
13251278Lucius. Sweete father, if I
shall be thought thy
sonne,
13261279Let me redeeme my brothers both from death.
13271280Marcus. And for our fathers
sake, and mothers care,
13281281Now let me
show a brothers loue to thee.
13291282Titus. Agree betweene you, I will
spare my hand.
13301283Lucius. Then Ile goe fetch an Axe.
13311284Marcus. But I will v
se the Axe.
Exeunt. 13321285Titus. Come hither
Aron, Ile deceiue them both,
Lend
of Titus Andronicus.
13331286Lend me thy hand, and I will giue thee mine.
13341287Moore. If that be calde deceit, I will be hone
st,
13351288And neuer whil
st I liue deceiue men
so:
13361289But Ile deceiue you in another
sort,
13371290And that youle
say ere halfe an houre pa
sse.
13401293Titus. Now
stay your
strife, what
shall be, is di
spatcht.
13411294Good
Aron giue his Maie
stie my hand,
13421295Tell him it was a hand that warded him
13431296From thou
sand dangers, bid him burie it,
13441297More hath it merited, that let it haue:
13451298As for my
sonnes,
say I account of them
, 13461299As iewels purcha
sde at an ea
sie price,
13471300And yet deare too, becau
se I bought mine owne.
13481301Aron. I goe
Andronicus, and for thy hand,
13491302Looke by and by to haue thy
sonnes with thee.
13501303Their heads I meane: Oh how this villanie,
13511304Doth fat me with the verie thoughts of it.
13521305Let fooles doe good, and faire men call for grace,
13531306Aron will haue his
soule blacke like his face.
Exit. 13541307Titus. Oh here I lift this one hand vp to heauen,
13551308And bow this feeble ruine to the earth,
13561309If any power pitties wretched teares,
13571310To that I call: what would
st thou kneele with mee?
13581311Doe then deare hart, for heauen
shall heare our praiers,
13591312Or with our
sighs wele breath the welkin dimme,
13601313And
staine the
sunne with fogge, as
sometime clowds,
13611314When they doe hug him in their melting bo
somes.
13621315Marcus. Oh Brother
speake with po
ssibilitie,
13631316And doe not breake into the
se deepe extreames.
13641317Titus. Is not my
sorrow deepe hauing no bottome?
F2 Then
The most Lamentable Tragedie
13651318Then be my pa
ssions bottomle
sse with them.
13661319Marcus. But yet let rea
son gouerne thy lament.
13671320Titus. If there were rea
son for the
se mi
series,
13681321Then into limits could I binde my woes:
13691322When heauen doth weepe, doth not the earth ore
flow?
13701323If the winds rage, doth not the
sea waxe mad,
13711324Threatning the welkin with his big
swolne face?
13721325And wilt thou haue a rea
son for this coile?
13731326I am the
sea. Harke how her
sighs doth
flow:
13741327Shee is the weeping welkin, I the earth:
13751328Then mu
st my
sea be mooued with her
sighs,
13761329Then mu
st my earth with her continuall teares,
13771330Become a deluge: ouer
flowed and drownd:
13781331For why, my bowels cannot hide her woes,
13791332But like a drunkard mu
st I vomit them.
13801333Then giue me leaue, for loo
sers will haue leaue,
13811334To ea
se their
stomacks with their bitter tongues.
13821335Enter a messenger with two heads and a hand. 13831336Messenger. Worthy
Andronicus, ill art thou repaid,
13841337For that good hand thou
sent
st the Emperour:
13851338Here are the heads of thy two Noble
sonnes,
13861339And heres thy hand in
scorne to thee
sent backe:
13871340Thy griefe, their
sports: Thy re
solution mockt:
13881341That woe is me to thinke vpon thy woes,
13891342More than remembrance of my fathers death.
13901343Marcus. Now let hote
AEtna coole in Cycilie,
13911344And be my hart an euerburning hell:
13921345The
se mi
series are more than may be borne.
13931346To weepe with them that weepe doth ea
se
some deale,
13941347But
sorrow
flowted at, is double death.
13951348Lucius. Ah that this
sight
should make
so deepe a wound
13961349And yet dete
sted life not
shrinke thereat:
13971350That euer death
should let life beare his name,
Where
of Titus Andronicus.
13981351Where life hath no more intere
st but to breath.
13991352Marcus. Alas poore hart, that ki
sse is comfortle
sse,
14001353As frozen water to a
starued
snake.
14011354Titus. When will this fearefull
slumber haue an end?
14021355Mar. Now farewell
flattrie, die
Andronicus,
14031356Thou do
st not
slumber,
see thy two
sonnes heads,
14041357Thy warlike hand, thy mangled Daughter heere:
14051358Thy other bani
sht
sonne with this deere
sight,
14061359Strucke pale and bloodle
sse, and thy brother I,
14071360Euen like a
stony image cold and numme.
14081361Ah now no more will I controwle thy greefes,
14091362Rent o
ff thy
siluer haire, thy other hand,
14101363Gnawing with thy teeth, and be this di
small
sight
14111364The clo
sing vp of our mo
st wretched eies:
14121365Now is a time to
storme, why art thou
still?
14141367M. Why do
st thou laugh? It
fits not with this houre.
14151368Titus. Why I haue not another teare to
shed;
14161369Be
sides this
sorrow is an enemie,
14171370And would v
surpe vpon my watrie eies,
14181371And make them blinde with tributarie teares.
14191372Then which way
shall I
find Reuenges Caue,
14201373For the
se two heads doe
seeme to
speake to mee
14211374And threat me, I
shall neuer come to bli
sse,
14221375Till all the
se mi
schiefes be returnd againe,
14231376Euen in their throats that hath commited them.
14241377Come let me
see what taske I haue to doe,
14251378You heauie people cirkle me about.
14261379That I may turne mee to each one of you,
14271380And
sweare vnto my
soule to right your wrongs,
14281381The vow is made. Come brother take a head,
14291382And in this hand the other will I beare,
14301383And L
auinia thou
shalt be imployde in the
se Armes,
14311384Beare thou my hand
sweet wench betweene thy teeth:
14321385As for thee boy, goe get thee from my
sight,
F3 Thou
The most Lamentable Tragedie
14331386Thou art an Exile, and thou mu
st not
stay,
14341387Hie to the
Gothes and rai
se an armie there,
14351388And if yee loue me as I thinke you doe,
14361389Lets ki
sse and part for we haue much to doe.
14381391Lucius. Farewell
Andronicus my Noble Father,
14391392The woeful
st man that euer liude in Rome:
14401393Farewell proud Rome till L
ucius come againe,
14411394He loues his pledges dearer than his life:
14421395Farewell L
auinia my Noble
sister,
14431396O would thou wert as thou tofore ha
st beene,
14441397But now nor L
ucius nor L
auinia liues,
14451398But in obliuion and hatefull greefes:
14461399If L
ucius liue, he will requite your wrongs,
14471400And make proud
Saturnine and his Empere
sse,
14481401Beg at the gates like T
arquin and his Queene.
14491402Now will I to the
Gothes and rai
se a powre,
14501403To bee reuengd on Rome and
Saturnine.
15411405Enter Lucius sonne and Lauinia running after him, and 15421406the Boy flies from her with his Bookes vn- 15441409Puer. Help Grand
sier helpe, my Aunt L
auinia,
15451410Followes me euerie where I know not why.
15461411Good Vnckle M
arcus see how
swift
shee comes,
15471412Alas
sweet Aunt I know not what you meane.
15481413Marcus. Stand by me L
ucius, doe not feare thine Aunt.
15491414Titus. She loues thee boy too well to doe thee harme.
15501415Puer. I when my Father was in Rome
she did.
15511416M. What meanes my Neece L
auinia by the
se
signes.
15521417Tit. Feare her not L
ucius,
somewhat doth
she meane,
See
of Titus Andronicus.
15531418See L
ucius see, how much
she makes of thee:
15541419Some whither would
she haue thee goe with her.
15551420A boy,
Cornelia neuer with more care,
15561421Red to her
sonnes than
she hath red to thee,
15571422Sweet Poetrie and Tullies Oratour:
15581423Can
st thou not ge
sse wherefore
she plies thee thus.
15591424Puer. My Lord I know not I, nor can I ge
sse,
15601425Vnle
sse
some
fit or frenzie do po
sse
sse her:
15611426For I haue heard my Grand
sier
say full oft,
15621427Extremitie of greeues would make men mad.
15631428And I haue red that
Hecuba of Troy,
15641429Ran mad for
sorrow, that made me to feare,
15651430Although my Lord I know my Noble Aunt,
15661431Loues me as deare as ere my Mother did,
15671432And would not but in furie fright my youth,
15681433Which made me downe to throwe my bookes and
flie
15691434Cau
seles perhaps, but pardon me
sweet Aunt,
15701435And Maddam if my Vnckle M
arcus goe,
15711436I will mo
st willinglie attend your Lady
ship.
15731438Titus. How now
Lauinia,
Marcus what meanes this?
15741439Some booke there is that
she de
sires to
see:
15751440Which is it gyrle of the
se, open them boy,
15761441But thou art deeper read and better skild,
15771442Come and take choi
se of all my Lybrarie,
15781443And
so beguile thy
sorrow, till the heauens
15791444Reueale the damn'd contriuer of this deede.
15811445Why lifts
she vp her Armes in
sequence thus?
15821446M. I thinke
she meanes that there were more than one
15831447Confederate in the fa
ct, I more there was
: 15841448Or el
se to heauen,
she heaues them for reuenge.
15851449Titus. L
ucius what booke is that
shee to
sseth
so.
15861450Puer. Grand
sier tis Ouids Metamorpho
sis,
15881452Marcus. For loue of her thats gone,
Perhaps
The most lamentable Tragedie
15891453Perhaps
shee culd it from among the re
st.
15901454Titus. Soft
so bu
silie
she turnes the leaues,
15911455Help her, what would
she
finde? L
auinia shal I read?
15921456This is the tragicke tale of
Philomel,
15931457And treats of
Tereus trea
son and his rape,
15941458And rape I feare, was roote of thy annoie,
15951459Marcus. See brother
see, note how
she coats the leaues,
15961460Titus. L
auinia wert thou thus
surpriz'd
sweet gyrle?
15971461Raui
sht and wrongd as
Phlomela was,
15981462Frocd in the ruthle
sse Va
st and gloomie woods;
15991463See,
see, I
such a place there is where we did hunt,
16001464(O had we neuer, neuer hunted there,)
16011465Patternd by that the Poet here de
scribes,
16021466By nature made for murthers and for rapes,
16031467Mar. O why
should nature build
so fowle a den.
16041468Vnle
sse the Gods delight in Tragedies,
16051469Titus. Giue
signes
sweet gyrle, for here are none but(friends,
16061470What Romaine Lord it was dur
st doe the deed?
16071471Or
slonke not S
aturnine as
Tarquin er
st,
16081472That left the Campe to
sinne in L
ucrece bed
16091473Marc. Sit downe
sweet Neece, brother
sit downe by(mee,
16101474Appollo,
Pallas,
Ioue or
Mercurie,
16111475In
spire me that I may this trea
son
finde,
16121476My Lord looke here, looke here L
auinia,
16131477He writes his name with his staffe and guides it 16151479This
sandie plot is plaine, guide if thou can
st 16161480This after me, I haue writ my name,
16171481Without the help of any hand at all.
16181482Cur
st be that hart that forcd vs to this
shift:
16191483Write thou good Neece, and here di
splay at la
st,
16201484What God will haue di
scouered for reuenge,
16211485Heauen guide thy pen to print thy
sorrowes plaine,
That
ofTitus Andronicus.
16221486That we may know the traytors and the truth,
16231487Shee takes the staffe in her mouth, and guides it with her 16251489Oh doe yee read my Lord what
she hath writ,
16271491Marcus. What, what, the lu
stfull
sonnes of
Tamora,
16281492Performers of this haynous bloody deede.
16301494Tam lentus audis scelera, tam lentus vides?
16311495Marcus. Oh calme thee gentle Lord, although I know
16321496There is enough written vpon this earth,
16331497To
stir a mutinie in the milde
st thoughts,
+
16341498And arme the mindes of infants to exclaimes,
16351499My Lord kneele downe with me, L
auinia kneele,
16361500And kneele
sweet boy, the Romaine He
ctors
h op
16371501And
sweare with me as with the wofull feere,
16381502And father of that cha
st di
shonoured Dame,
16391503Lord
Iunius Brutus sweare for
Lucrece rape,
16401504That we will pro
secute by good aduice
16411505Mortall reuenge vpon the
se Traiterous
Gothes,
16421506And
see their blood or die with this reproch.
16431507Titus. Tis
sure enough, and you knew how,
16441508But if you hunt the
se Beare whelpes then beware,
16451509The Dam will wake and if
she winde yee once,
16461510Shee's with the Lion deepely
still in league,
16471511And luls him whil
st shee plaieth on her backe.
16481512And when he
sleepes, will
shee doe what
she li
st.
16491513You are a young hunt
sman
Marcus, let alone,
16501514And come I will goe get a leafe of bra
sse,
16511515And with a gad of
steele will write the
se words,
16521516And lay it by: the angry northen wind
16531517Will blow the
se
sands like
Sibels leaues abroad,
16541518And wheres our le
sson then, boy what
say you?
16551519Puer. I
say my Lord that if I were a man,
GTheir
The most Lamentable Tragedie
16561520Their mothers bed-chamber
should not be
safe,
16571521For the
se ba
se bond-men to the yoake of Rome.
16581522Marcus I thats my boy, thy father hath full oft,
16591523For his vngratefull Countrie done the like.
16601524Puer. And Vnkle
so will I, and if I liue.
16611525Titus. Come goe with me into mine Armorie,
16621526Lucius Ile
fit thee, and withall my boy
16631527Shall carrie from me to the Empre
sse
sonnes,
16641528Pre
sents that I intend to
send them both:
16651529Come, come, thoult doe my me
ssage wilt thou not?
16661530Puer. I with my dagger in their bo
somes Grand
sier.
16671531Titus. No boy not
so, Ile teach thee another cour
se,
16681532Lauinia come, M
arcus looke to my hou
se,
16691533Lucius and Ile goe braue it at the Court,
16701534I marrie will we
sir, and weele be waited on.
Exeunt. 16711535Marcus. O heauens, can you heare a goodman grone
16721536And not relent, or not compa
ssion him?
16731537M
arcus attend him in his exta
sie,
16741538That hath more
scars of
sorrow in his hart,
16751539Than foe-mens marks vpon his battred
shield,
16761540But yet
so iu
st, that he will not reuenge,
16771541Reuenge the heauens for olde
Andronicus.
Exit. 16781542 Enter Aron, Chiron, and Demetrius at one doore, and at 16791543the other doore young Lucius, and another with a bundle of 16801544weapons, and verses writ vpon them. 16811545Chiron Demetrius, her's the
sonne of L
ucius,
16821546He hath
some me
ssage to deliuer vs.
16831547Aron. I
some mad me
ssage from his mad Grandfather.
16841548Puer. My Lords, with all the humblenes I may,
16851549I greete your Honours from
Andronicus;
16861550And pray the Romane Gods confound you both.
16871551Demetrius. Gramarcie Louelie L
ucius, whats the news.
1687.11552Puer. That you are both di
scipherd, thats the newes,
For
of Titus Andronicus.
16881553For villaines markt with rape. May it plea
se you,
16891554My Grand
sier well adui
sde hath
sent by me,
16901555The goodlie
st weapons of his Armorie,
16911556To grate
fie your honourable youth
16921557The hope of Rome, for
so he bid me
say:
16931558And
so I doe, and with his gifts pre
sent
16941559Your Lord
ships, wheneuer you haue neede,
16951560You may be armed and appointed well,
16961561And
so I leaue you both: Like bloudie villaines.
Exit. 16971562Demetri. what's here? a
scrole, and written round about,
Integer vitae scelerisque purus, non eget mauri iaculis nec arcu.
17011565Chiron. O tis a ver
se in
Horace I know it well,
17021566I read it in the Grammer long agoe.
17031567Moore. I iu
st, a ver
se in
Horace, right you haue it,
17041568Now what a thing it is to be an A
sse.
17051569Her's no
sound iea
st, the olde man hath found their gilt,
17061570And
sends them weapons wrapt about with lines,
17071571That wound beyond their feeling to the quicke:
17081572But were our wittie Empre
sse well afoote,
17091573Shee would applaud
Andronicus conceit,
17101574But let her re
st in her vnre
st awhile.
17111575And now young Lords, wa
st not a happie
starre,
17121576Led vs to Rome
strangers, and more than
so
17131577Captiues, to be aduaunced to this height:
17141578It did me good before the Pallace gate,
17151579To braue the
Tribune in his brothers hearing.
17161580Demetrius. But me more good to
see
so great a Lord,
17171581Ba
selie in
sinuate and
send vs gifts.
17181582Aron. Had he not rea
son Lord
Demetrius,
17191583Did you not v
se his daughter very friendlie?
17201584Demetrius. I would we had a thou
sand Romane Dames
17211585At
such a bay, by turne to
serue our lu
st.
17221586Chiron. A charitable wi
sh, and full of loue.
17231587Aron. Here lacks but your mother for to
say Amen.
G2 Chiron.
The most Lamentable Tragedie
17241588Chiron. And that would
she for twenty thou
sand more.
17251589Deme. Come let vs goe and pray to all the Gods,
17261590For our beloued mother in her paines.
17271591Aron. Pray to the deuills, the Gods haue giuen vs ouer.
17291593Demet. Why do the Emperours trumpets
flouri
sh(thus.
17301594Chi. Belike for ioy the Emperour hath a
sonne.
17321596Enter Nurse with a blackamoore childe. 17331597Nurse. God morrow Lords, O tell me did you
see
Aron(the M
oore.
17351598Aron. Well, more or le
sse, or nere a whit at all,
17361599Here
Aron is, and what with
Aron now.
17371600Nurse. Oh gentle
Aron we are all vndone,
17381601Now helpe, or woe betide thee euermore.
17391602Aron. Why what a catterwalling do
st thou keepe,
17401603what do
st thou wrap and fumble in thy armes?
17411604Nur. O that which I would hide from heauens eye,
17421605Our Empre
sse
shame and
stately Romes di
sgrace,
17431606Shee is deliuered Lords
she is deliuered.
17451608Nur. I meane
she is brought abed.
17461609Aron. Well god giue her good re
st, what hath he
sent(her?
17491611A. Why then
she is the deuils Dam, a ioyfull i
ssue,
17501612N. A Ioyles, di
small, blacke, and
sorrowfull i
ssue,
17511613Here is the babe as loath
some as a toade,
17521614Among
st the fairefa
st breeders of our clime,
17531615The Empre
sse
sends it thee, thy
stampe, thy
seale,
17541616And bids thee chri
sten
it with thy daggers point.
17551617A. Zounds ye whore, is blacke
so ba
se a hue?
17561618Sweete blow
se you are a beautious blo
ssome
sure.
17571619Deme. Villaine what ha
st thou done?
17581620A. That which thou can
st not vndoe.
17591621Chiron. Thou ha
st vndone our mother.
Aron
of Titus Andronicus.
17601623Deme. And therein helli
sh dog thou ha
st vndone her,
17611624Woe to her chaunce, and damde her loathed choice,
17621625Accur
st the o
ffspring of
so foule a
fiend.
17651628Nurse. Aron it mu
st, the mother wils it
so.
17661629Aron. What mu
st it Nur
se? then let no man but I,
17671630Doe execution on my
fle
sh and blood.
17681631Demet. Ile broach the tadpole on my Rapiers point,
17691632Nur
se giue it me, my
sword
shall
soone di
spatch it.
17701633Aron. Sooner this
sword
shall plow thy bowels vp,
17711634Stay murtherous villaines will you kill your brother?
17721635Now by the burning tapors of the skie,
17731636That
shone
so brightly when this boy was got,
17741637He dies vpon my Semitars
sharpe point,
17751638That touches this my
fir
st borne
sonne and heire:
17761639I tell you yonglings, not
Enceladus,
17771640With all his threatning band of
Typhons broode,
17781641Nor great
Alciades, nor the God of warre,
17791642Shall ceaze this pray out of his fathers hands:
17801643What, what, yee
sanguine
shallow harted boies,
17811644Yee whitelimde walles, yee ale-hou
se painted
signes,
17821645Cole-blacke is better than another hue,
17831646In that it
scornes to beare another hue:
17851648Can neuer turne the
swans blacke legs to white,
17861649Although
shee laue them howrely in the
flood:
17871650Tell the Empre
sse from mee I am of age
17881651To keepe mine owne, excu
se it how
shee can.
17891652Demetrius. Wilt thou betray thy Noble Mi
stris thus.
17901653Aron. My Mi
stris is my Mi
stris, this my
selfe,
17911654The vigour, and the pi
cture of my youth:
17921655This before all the world doe I preferre,
17931656This mauger all the world will I keepe
safe,
G3 Or
The most Lamentable Tragedie
17941657Or
some of you
shall
smoke for it in Rome.
17951658Demetrius. By this our mother is foreuer
shamde.
17961659Chiron. Rome will de
spi
se her for this foule e
scape.
17971660Nurse. The Emperour in his rage will doome her death.
17981661Chiron. I blu
sh to thinke vpon this ignomie.
17991662Aron. Why ther's the Priuiledge your beautie bears:
18001663Fie trecherous hue, that will betraie with blu
shing
18011664The clo
se ena
cts and coun
sels of thy hart:
18021665Her's a young Lad framde of another leere,
18031666Looke how the blacke
slaue
smiles vpon the father,
18041667As who
should
say, olde Lad I am thine owne.
18051668Hee is your brother Lords,
sen
siblie fed
18061669Of that
selfe bloud that
fir
st gaue life to you,
18071670And from your wombe where you impri
soned were,
18081671Hee is infraunchi
sed, and come to light:
18091672Nay hee is your brother by the
surer
side,
18101673Although my
seale be
stamped in his face.
18111674Nurse. Aron, what
shall I
say vnto the Empre
sse.
18121675Demetrius. Adui
se thee
Aron, what is to be done,
18131676And we will all
sub
scribe to thy adui
se:
18141677Saue thou the childe,
so wee may all be
safe.
18151678Aron. Then
sit we downe and let vs all con
sult,
18161679My
sonne and I will haue the winde of you:
18171680Keepe there, now talke at plea
sure of your
safetie.
18181681Demetrius. How many women
saw this childe of his?
18191682Aron. why
so braue Lords, when we ioine in league
18201683I am a Lambe, but if you braue the M
oore,
18211684The chafed Bore, the mountaine Lione
sse,
18221685The Ocean
swels not
so as Aron
stormes:
18231686But
saie againe, how manie
saw the childe.
18241687Nurse. Cornelia the Midwife, and my
selfe,
18251688And no one els but the deliuered Empre
sse.
18261689Aron. The Empre
sse, the Midwife, and your
selfe,
18271690Two may keepe coun
sell when the third's away:
18281691Goe to the Empre
sse, tell her this I
said.
He kils her. weeke,
of Titus Andronicus.
18291692Weeke, weeke,
so cries a Pigge prepared to the
spit.
18301693Deme. what mean
st thou Aron, wherfore did
st thou this?
18321694Aron. O Lord
sir, tis a deede of pollicie,
18331695Shall
shee liue to betraie this gilt of ours?
18341696A long tongude babling Go
ssip, No Lords, no:
18351697And now be it knowne to you my full intent.
18361698Not farre, one M
uliteus my Countriman
18371699His wife but ye
sternight was brought to bed,
18381700His childe is like to her, faire as you are:
18391701Goe packe with him, and giue the mother gold,
18401702And tell them both, the circum
stance of all,
18411703And how by this their childe
shall be aduaun
st,
18421704And be receiued for the Emperours Heire,
18431705And
sub
stituted in the place of mine,
18441706To calme this tempe
st whirling in the Court,
18451707And let the Lmperour dandle him for his owne.
18461708Harke yee Lords, you
see I haue giuen her Phi
sicke,
18471709And you mu
st needs be
stow her Funerall,
18481710The
fields are neere, and you are gallant Groomes:
18491711This done,
see that you take no longer daies,
18501712But
send the Midwife pre
sentlie to mee.
18511713The Midwife and the Nur
se well made away,
18521714Then let the Ladies tattle what they plea
se.
18531715Chi. A
ron, I
see thou wilt not tru
st the aire with
secrets.
18541716Demetrius. For this care of T
amora,
18551717Her
selfe, and hers, are highlie bound to thee.
Exeunt. 18561718Aron. Now to the
Gothes as
swift as
swallow
flies,
18571719There to di
spo
se this trea
sure in mine armes,
18581720And
secretlie to greete the Empre
sse friends:
18591721Come on you thicke-lipt-
slaue, Ile beare you hence,
18601722For it is you that puts vs to our
shifts:
18611723Ile make you feede on berries, and on roots,
18621724And feede on curds and whay, and
sucke the Goate,
18631725And cabbin in a Caue, and bring you vp,
18641726To be a warriour and commaund a Campe.
Exit. Enter
The most Lamentable Tragedie
18651727 Enter Titus, olde Marcus, young Lucius, and other gen- 18661728tlemen with bowes, and Titus beares the arrowes with letters 18681730Titus. Come
Marcus, come, kin
semen this is the way,
18691731Sir boy let me
see your Archerie,
18701732Looke yee draw home inough and tis there
straight,
18711733Terras Astrea reliquit, be you remembred
Marcus,
18721734Shees gone,
shees
fled,
sirs take you to your tooles,
18731735You Co
sens
shall goe
sound the Ocean,
18741736And ca
st your nets, happilie you may catch her in the
sea,
18751737Yet ther's as little iu
stice as at land:
18761738No
Publius and
Sempronius, you mu
st doe it,
18771739Tis you mu
st dig with mattocke and with
spade,
18781740And pierce the inmo
st Center of the earth,
18791741Then when you come to
Plutoes Region,
18801742I pray you deliuer him this petition,
18811743Tell him it is for iu
stice and for aide,
18821744And that it comes from olde A
ndronicus 18831745Shaken with
sorrowes in vngratefull Rome.
18841746Ah Rome, well, well, I made thee mi
serable,
18851747What time I threw the peoples
su
ffrages
18861748On him that thus doth tyrrannize ore mee.
18871749Goe get you gone, and pray be carefull all,
18881750And leaue you not a man of warre vn
searcht,
18891751This wicked Emperour may haue
shipt her hence,
18901752And kin
semen then we may goe pipe for iu
stice.
18911753Marcus. O
Publius, is not this a heauie ca
se
18921754To
see thy Noble Vnkle thus di
stra
ct?
18931755Publius. Therefore my Lords it highly vs concernes,
18941756By daie and night t'attend him carefullie:
18951757And feede his humour kindly as we may,
18961758Till time beget
some carefull remedie.
18971759Marcus. Kin
smen his
sorrowes are pa
st remedie
But
of Titus Andronicus.
18981760Ioine with the
Gothes, and with reuengefull warre,
18991761Take wreake on Rome for this ingratitude,
19001762And vengeance on the traitour
Saturnine.
19011763Titus. Publius how now, how now my Ma
sters,
19031765Publius. No my good Lord, but
Pluto sends you word,
19041766If you will haue reuenge from hell you
shall,
19051767Marrie for Iu
stice
shee is
so imploid,
19061768He thinks with
Ioue in heauen, or
somewhere el
se,
19071769So that perforce you mu
st needs
staie a time.
19081770Titus. He doth me wrong to feede me with delaies,
19091771Ile diue into the burning lake belowe,
19101772And pull her out of Acaron by the heeles.
19111773M
arcus we are but
shrubs, no Cedars wee,
19121774No big-boand-men framde of the Cyclops
size,
19131775But mettall M
arcus,
steele to the verie backe,
19141776Yet wrung with wrongs more than our backs can beare:
19151777And
sith ther's no iu
stice in earth nor hell,
19161778We will
sollicite heauen and moue the Gods,
19171779To
send downe Iu
stice for to wreake our wrongs:
19181780Come to this geare, you are a good Archer M
arcus,
19201782Ad Iouem, thats for you, here
ad Apollonem,
19221784Here boy to
Pallas, here to M
ercurie,
19231785To
Saturnine, to
Caius, not to
Saturnine,
19241786You were as good to
shoote again
st the winde.
19251787Too it boy, M
arcus loo
se when I bid,
19261788Of my word I haue written to e
ffe
ct,
19271789Ther's not a God left vn
sollicited.
19281790Marcus. Kin
semen,
shoot all your
shafts into the Court,
19291791Wee will a
ffli
ct the Emperour in his pride.
19301792Titus. Now Ma
sters draw, Oh well
said L
ucius,
19311793Good boy in
Virgoes lappe, giue it
Pallas.
19321794Marcus. My Lord, I aime a mile beyond the Moone,
H Your
The most Lamentable Tragedie
19331795Your letter is with
Iubiter by this.
19341796Titus. Ha, ha,
Publius, Publius, what ha
st thou done?
19351797See,
see, thou ha
st shot o
ff one of
Taurus hornes.
19361798Marcus. This was the
sport my Lord, when
Publius shot
19371799The Bull being galde, gaue
Aries such a knocke,
19381800That downe fell both the Rams hornes in the Court,
19391801And who
should
finde them but the Empre
sse villaine:
19401802Shee laught, and tolde the M
oore hee
should not choo
se,
19411803But giue them to his Ma
ster for a pre
sent.
19421804Titus. Why there it goes, God giue his Lord
ship ioy.
19431805Enter the Clowne with a basket and two pidgeons in it. 19441806Clowne. Newes, newes from heauen,
19461808Titus. Sirra what tidings, haue you any letters,
19471809Shall I haue iu
stice, what
saies
Iubiter?
19481810Clowne. Ho the Gibbetmaker? Hee
saies that he hath
19491811taken them downe againe, for the man mu
st not be hangd
19511813Titus. But what
saies
Iubiter I aske thee?
19521814Clowne. Alas
sir, I know not
Iubiter,
19531815I neuer dranke with him in all my life.
19541816Titus. Why villaine art not thou the Carrier.
19551817Clowne. I of my pidgeons
sir, nothing els.
19561818Titus. Why did
st thou not come from heauen?
19571819Clowne. From heauen, alas
sir, I neuer came there,
19581820God forbid I
should be
so bolde, to pre
sse to heauen in my
1822Why I am going with my pidgeons to the tribunall
19601823 Plebs, to take vp a matter of brawle betwixt my Vncle,
19621825Marcus. Why
sir, that is as
fit as can bee to
serue for
19631826 your Oration, and let him deliuer the pidgeons to the
Titus.
of Titus Andronicus.
19651828Titus. Tell mee, can you deliuer an Oration to the Em
- 19671830Clowne. Nay truelie
sir, I could neuer
say grace in all
19691832Titus. Sirra come hither, make no more adoo,
19701833But giue your pidgeons to the Emperour,
19711834By mee thou
shalt haue iu
stice at his hands,
19721835Hold, hold, meanewhile here's money for thy charges,
19741837Sirra, can you with a grace deliuer vp a Supplication?
19761839Titus. Then here is a Supplication for you, and when you
19771840come to him, at the
fir
st approch you mu
st kneele, then
19781841ki
sse his foote, then deliuer vp your pidgeons, and then
19791842looke for your reward. Ile bee at hand
sir,
see you doe it
19811844Clowne. I warrant you
sir, let me alone.
19821845Titus. Sirra ha
st thou a knife? Come let me
see it.
19831846Here
Marcus, fold it in the Oration,
19841847For thou ha
st made it like an humble Suppliant.
19851848And when thou ha
st giuen it to the Emperour,
19861849Knocke at my doore, and tell me what he
saies.
19871850Clowne. God be with you
sir, I will.
Exit. 19881851Titus. Come
Marcus let vs goe,
Publius follow mee.
19901853 +
Euter Emperour and Empresse and her two sonnes, the 19911854Emperour brings the Arrowes in his hand 19931856Saturnine. Why Lords what wrongs are the
se, was euer(
seene,
19951857An Emperour in Rome thus ouerborne,
19961858Troubled, confronted thus, and for the extent
19971859Of
egall iu
stice, v
sde in
such contempt.
H2 My
The most Lamentable Tragedie
19981860My Lords you know the mightfull Gods,
19991861How euer the
se di
sturbers of our peace
20001862Buz in the peoples eares, there nought hath pa
st 20011863But euen with law again
st the wilfull
sonnes
20021864Of old
Andronicus. And what and if
20031865His
sorrowes haue
so ouerwhelmde his witts?
20041866Shall we be thus af
fli
cted in his wreakes,
20051867His
fits, his frencie, and his bitternes?
20061868And now he writes to heauen for his redre
sse,
20071869See heres to
Ioue, and this to
Mercurie.
20081870This to
Apollo, this to the God of warre:
20091871Sweete skrowles to
flie about the
streets of Rome,
20101872Wha
ts this but libelling again
st the Senate,
20111873And blazoning our vniu
stice eueriewhere,
20121874A goodly humor is it not my Lords?
20131875As who would
say in Rome no iu
stice were.
20141876But if I liue his fained exta
sies
20151877Shall be no
shelter to the
se outrages,
20161878But he and his
shall know that iu
stice liues
20171879In S
aturninus health, whome if he
sleepe,
20181880Hele
so awake as he in furie
shall,
20191881Cut o
ff the proud'
st con
spiratour that liues.
20201882Tamora. My gratious Lord, my louely S
aturnine,
20211883Lord of my life, commander of my thoughts,
20221884Calme thee and beare the faults of
Titus age,
20231885The'
ffe
cts of
sorrow for his valiant
sonnes,
20241886Who
se lo
sse hath pear
st him deepe and skard his hart,
20251887And rather comfort his di
stre
ssed plight,
20261888Than pro
secute the meane
st or the be
st 20271889For the
se contempts: why thus it
shall become
20281890Hie witted
Tamora to glo
se with all.
20291891But T
itus I haue touched thee to the quicke,
20301892Thy lifeblood out: if
Aron now be wi
se,
20311893Then is all
safe, the Anchor in the port.
Enter
of Titus Andronicus.
20331895How now good fellow would
st thou
speake with vs?
20341896Clowne. Yea for
sooth & your Mi
stri
ship be Emperiall,
20351897Tamora. Empre
sse I am, but yonder
sits the Emperour.
20361898Clow. Tis he, God and
Saint
Steuen giue you Godden,
20371899I haue brought you a letter and a couple of pigeons here.
20391901Satur. Goe take him away and hang him pre
sently?
20401902Clow. How much money mu
st I haue.
20411903Tamora. Come
sirra you mu
st be hanged.
20421904Clowne. Hangd be Lady, then I haue brought vp a neck
20441907Satur. Di
spightfull and intollerable wrongs,
20451908Shall I endure this mon
strous villanie?
20461909I know from whence this
same deui
se proceeds.
20471910May this be borne as if his traitorous
sonnes,
20481911That dide by law for murther of our brother,
20491912Haue by my meanes bin butchered wrongfully.
20501913Goe dragge the villaine hither by the haire,
20511914Nor age, nor honour,
shall
shape priueledge,
20521915For this proud mocke, Ile be thy
slaughterman,
20531916Sly franticke wretch, that holp
st to make me great,
20541917In hope thy
selfe
should gouerne Rome and me.
20561919Satur. What newes with thee
Emillius?
20571920Emillius. Arme my Lords, Rome neuer had more cau
se,
20581921The Gothes haue gathered head and with a power
H3 Of
The most Lamentable Tragedie
20591922Of high re
solued men, bent to the
spoile,
20601923They hither march amaine, vnder condu
ct 20611924Of L
ucius,
sonne to old
Andronicus,
20621925Who threats in cour
se of this reuenge, to doe
20641927King. Is warlike L
ucius Generall of the
Gothes,
20651928The
se tidings nip me, and I hang the head
20661929As
flowers with fro
st, or gra
sse beat downe with
stormes.
20671930I now begins our
sorrowes to approch,
20681931Tis he the common people loue
so much,
20691932My
selfe hath often heard them
say,
20701933When I haue walked like a priuate man,
20711934That
Lucius bani
shment was wrongfullie,
20721935And they haue wi
sht that L
ucius were their Emperour.
20731936Tamora. why
should you feare, is not your Citie
strong?
20741937King. I but the Citizens fauour L
ucius,
20751938And will reuolt from me to
succour him.
20761939Tamora. King Be thy thoughts imperious like thy name,
20771940Is the
sunne dimde, that Gnats doe
flie in it,
20781941The Eagle
su
ffers little birds to
sing,
20791942And is not carefull what they meane thereby,
20801943Knowing that with the
shadow of his winges,
20811944He can at plea
sure
slint their mrlodie.
20821945Euen
so maie
st thou the giddie men of Rome,
20831946Then cheare thy
spirit for know thou Emperour,
20841947I will inchaunt the old
Andronicus,
20851948With words more
sweete and yet more dangerous
20861949Then baites to
fish, or honnie
stalkes to
sheepe,
20871950When as the one is wounded with the bait,
20881951The other rotted with delicious
seede.
20891952King. But he will not intreat his
sonne for vs.
20901953Tamora. If
Tamora intreat him than he will,
20911954For I can
smooth and
fill his aged eares,
20921955With golden promi
ses, that were his hart
20931956Almo
st impregnable, his old yeares deafe,
Yet
of Titus Andronicus.
20941957Yet
should both eare and hart obay my tongue.
20951958Goe thou before to be our Amba
ssador,
20961959Say that the Emperour reque
sts a parlie,
20971960Of warIike L
ucius, and appoint the meeting,
2097.11961Euen at his Fathers hou
se the old
Andronicus.
20981962King. Emillius doe this me
ssage honourably,
20991963And if he
stand in ho
stage for his
saftie,
21001964Bid him demaund what pledge will plea
se him be
st.
21011965Emillius. Your bidding
shall I doe e
ffe
ctually.
21021967Tamora. Now will I to that old A
ndronicus,
21031968And temper him with all the Art I haue,
21041969To plucke proude L
ucius from the warlike
Gothes.
21051970And now
sweet Emperour be blith againe,
21061971And burie all thy feare in my deui
ses,
21071972Saturnine. Then goe
suce
ssantly and plead to him.
21091974Enter Lucius with an Armie of Gothes with 21111976Lucius. Approued warriours, and my faithfull friends,
21121977I haue receaued letters from great Rome,
21131978Which
signi
fies what hate they beare their Emperour,
21141979And how de
sirous of our
sight they are.
21151980Therefore great Lords bee as your titles witnes,
21161981Imperious, and impatient of your wrongs,
21171982And wherein Rome hath done you any skath,
21181983Let him make treable
satisfa
ction.
21191984Goth, Braue
slip
sprong from the great
Andronicus,
21201985Who
se name was once our terrour, now our comfort,
21211986Who
se high exployts and honourable deeds,
21221987Ingratefull Rome requites with foule contempt,
21231988Be bold in vs weele follow where thou lead
st,
Like
The most lamentable Tragedie
21241989Like
stinging Bees in hotte
st summers day,
21251990Led by their Ma
ster to the
flowred
fields,
21261991And be aduengde on cur
sed
Tamora: 21271992And as he
saith,
so
say we all with him.
21281993Lucius. I humblie thanke him and I thanke you all,
21291994But who comes here led by a lu
stie
Gothe?
21301995Enter a Goth leading of Aron with his child 21321997Goth. Renowmed L
ucius from our troupes I
straid,
21331998To gaze vpon a ruinous Mona
sterie,
21341999And as I earne
stly did
fixe mine eye,
21352000Vpon the wa
sted building
suddainely,
21362001I heard a child crie vnderneath a wall,
21372002I made vnto the noi
se, when
soone I heard,
21382003The crying babe controld with this di
scour
se:
21392004Peace tawnie
flaue, halfe me, and halfe thy Dame,
21402005Did not thy hue bewray who
se brat thou art,
21412006Had nature lent thee but thy mothers looke,
21422007Villaine thou might
st haue bin an Emperour.
21432008But where the bull and Cow are both milkewhite,
21442009They neuer doe beget a coleblacke Calfe:
21452010Peace Villaine peace, euen thus he rates the babe,
21462011For I mu
st beare thee to a tru
stie
Goth,
21472012Who when he knowes thou art the Empre
sse babe,
21482013Will hold thee dearely for thy mothers
sake.
21492014With this my weapon drawen I ru
sht vpon him
21502015Surpri
sde him
suddainely, and brought him hither
21512016To v
se as you thinke needefull of the man.
21522017Lucius. Oh worthie
Goth this is the incarnate diuell,
21532018That robd
Andronicus of his good hand,
21542019This is the Pearle that plea
sd your Empre
sse eye,
21552020And her's the ba
se fruit of her burning lu
st,
21562021Say wall-eyd
slaue whither would
st thou conuay,
This
of Titus Andronicus.
21572022This growing image of thy
fiendlike face,
21582023Why doo
st not
speake? what deafe, not a word?
21592024A halter Souldiers, hang him on this tree,
21602025And by his
side his fruite of Ba
stardie.
21612026Aron. Touch not the boy, he is of Roiall bloud.
21622027Luc. Too like the
sier for euer being good,
21632028Fir
st hang the child that he may
see it
sprall,
21642029A
sight to vex the fathers
soule withall.
21652030Aron. Get me a ladder,
Lucius saue the child,
21662031And beare it from me to the Empre
sse:
21672032If thou do this, ile
shew thee wondrous things,
21682033That highly may aduantage thee to heare,
21692034If thou wilt not, befall what may befall,
21702035Ile
speake no more, but vengeance rotte you all.
21712036Lucius. Say on, and if it plea
se me which thou
speak
st,
21722037Thy child
shall liue, and I will
see it nouri
sht.
21732038Aron. And if it plea
se thee? why a
ssure thee L
ucius,
21742039Twill vexe thy
soule to heare what I
shall
speake:
21752040For I mu
st talke of murthers, rapes, and ma
ssakers,
21762041A
cts of black night, abhominable deeds,
21772042Complots of mi
schiefe, trea
son, villanies,
21782043Ruthfull to heare, yet pitteou
sly performde,
21792044And this
shall all be buried in my death,
21802045Vnle
sse thou
sweare to me my child
shall liue.
21812046Lucius. Tell on thy minde, I
say thy child
shall liue.
21832047Aron. Sweare that he
shall, and then I will begin.
21842048Luci. Who
should I
sweare by, thou beleeue
st no God,
21862049That graunted, how can
st thou beleeue an oath.
21872050Aron. What if I doe not, as indeed I do not,
21882051Yet for I know thou art religious,
21892052And ha
st a thing within thee called con
science,
21902053With twenty popi
sh tricks and ceremonies,
21912054Which I haue
seene thee carefull to ob
serue,
21922055Therefore I vrge thy oath, for that I know,
21932056An ideot holds his bauble for a God,
I And
The most Lamentable Tragedie
21942057And keepes the oath which by that God he
sweares,
21952058To that ile vrge him, therefore thou
shalt vow,
21962059By that
same God, what God
so ere it be
21972060That thou adore
st, and ha
st in reuerence,
21982061To
saue my boy, to nouri
sh and bring him vp,
21992062Or el
se I will di
scouer nought to thee.
22002063Lucius. Euen by my God I
sweare to thee I will.
22012064Aron. Fir
st know thou, I begot him on the Empre
sse.
22032065Lucius. Oh mo
st in
satiate and luxurious woman.
22042066Aron. Tut L
ucius, this was but a deed of charitie,
22052067To that which thou
shalt heare of me anon,
22062068Twas her two
sonnes that murdered
Bassianus,
22072069They cut thy Si
sters tongue, and raui
sht her,
22082070And cut her hands, and trimd her as thou
sawe
st.
22092071Luc. Oh dete
stable villaine, call
st thou that trimming,
22102072Aron. Why
she was wa
sht, and cut, and trimd,
22122073And twas trim
sport for them which had the doing of it.
22132074Luc. Oh barberous bea
stlie villaines like thy
selfe.
22142075Aron. Indeed I was their tutor to in
stru
ct them,
22152076That codding
spirit had they from their mother,
+
22162077As
sure a card as euer wonne the
set:
22172078That bloodie minde I thinke they learnd of me,
22182079As true a Dog as euer fought at head:
22192080Well let my deeds be witnes of my worth,
22202081I traind thy brethren to that guilefull hole,
22212082where the dead corpes of
Bassianus laie:
22222083I wrote the letter that thy Father found,
22232084And hid the gold within that letter mentioned,
22242085Confederate with the Queene and her two
sonnes.
22252086And what not done, that thou ha
st cau
se to rue,
22262087wherein I had no
stroke of mi
schiefe in it,
22272088I plaid the cheater for thy fathers hand,
22282089And when I had it drew my
selfe apart,
22292090And almo
st broke my hart with extreame laughter,
22302091I pried me through the creuice of a wall,
when
of Titus Andronicus.
22312092when for his hand he had his two
sonnes heads,
22322093Beheld his teares and laught
so hartelie,
22332094That both mine eyes were raynie like to his:
22342095And when I tolde the Empre
sse of this
sport,
22352096Shee
sounded almo
st at my plea
sing tale,
22362097And for my tidings gaue me twentie ki
sses.
2099What can
st thou
say all this and neuer blu
sh.
2101I like a blacke Dog, as the
saying is.
2103Art thou
not
sorrie for the
se hainous deeds.
2105I that I had not done a thou
sand more,
22412106Euen now I cur
se the day and yet I thinke
22422107Fewe come within the compa
sse of my cur
se,
22432108wherein I did not
some notorious ill.
22442109As kill a man, or els deui
se his death,
22452110Raui
sh a maide, or plot the waie to doe it,
22462111Accu
se
some innocent, and for
sweare my
selfe,
22472112Set deadly enmitie betweene two friends,
22482113Make poore mens cattle breake their necks,
22492114Set
fire on barnes and hay
stalks in the night,
22502115And bid the owners quench them with their teares:
22512116Oft haue I digd vp dead men from their graues,
22522117And
set them vpright at their deare friends dore,
22532118Euen when their
sorrowes almo
st was forgot,
22542119And on their skinnes as on the barke of trees,
22552120Haue with my knife carued in Romaine letters,
22562121Let not your
sorrow die though I am dead.
I2 But
The most Lamentable Tragedie
22572122But I haue done a thou
sand dreadfull things,
22582123As willingly as one would kill a
flie,
22592124And nothing grieues me hartelie indeede,
22602125But that I cannot doe ten thou
sand more.
22612126Lucius. Bring downe the Diuell for he mu
st not die,
22622127So
sweet a death as hanging pre
sently.
22632128Aron. If there be Diuels would I were a Diuel,
22642129To liue and burne in euerla
sting
fire,
22652130So I might haue your companie in hell,
22662131But to torment you with my bitter tongue.
22672132Luci. Sirs
stop his mouth and let him
speake no more.
22692134Goth. My Lord there is a me
ssenger from Rome,
22702135De
siers to be admitted to your pre
sence.
22722137Welcome
Emillius, what's the newes from Rome?
22732138Emil. Lord L
ucius, and you Princes of the
Gothes,
22742139The Romaine Emperour greets you all by me,
22752140And for he vnder
stands you are in Armes,
22762141He craues a Parley at your fathers hou
se,
22772142Willing you to demaund your ho
stages,
22782143And they
shall be immediatly deliuered.
22802145Luci. Emillius, let the Emperour giue his pledges,
22812146Vnto my Father and my Vnkle
Marcus,
22832148Enter Tamora and her two sonnes disguised. 22842149Tamora. Thus in this
strange and
sad habilliament,
22852150I will encounter with
Andronicus,
22862151And
say I am reuenge
sent from belowe,
22872152To ioyne with him and right his hainous wrongs,
Knocke
of Titus Andronicus.
22882153Knocke at his
studie where they
say he keepes,
22892154To ruminate
strange plots of diere reuenge,
22902155Tell him reuenge is come to ioyne with him,
22912156And worke confu
sion on his enemies.
22922157They knocke and Titus opens his studie doore. 22932158Titus. Who doth mole
st my contemplation?
22942159Is it your tricke to make me ope the dore,
22952160That
so my
sad
decrees may
flie away,
22962161And all my
studie be to no e
ffe
ct.
22972162You are deceiude, for what I meane to doe,
22982163See here in bloodie lines I haue
set downe.
22992164And what is written
shall be executed.
23002165Tamora. T
itus, I am come to talke with thee.
23012166Titus. No not a word, how can I grace my talke,
23022167Wanting a hand to giue that accord,
23032168Thou ha
st the odds of me therefore no more.
23042169Tamora. If thou did
st know me thou would
st talk with(me.
23062170Titus. I am not mad, I know thee well enough,
23072171Witnes this wretched
stump, witnes the
se crim
son lines,
23092172witnes the
se trenches made by greefe and care,
23102173witnes the tiring day and heauie night,
23112174witnes all
sorrow that I know thee well
23122175For our proud Empre
sse, mighty T
amora:
23132176Is not thy comming for my other hand.
23142177Tamora. Know thou
sad man, I am not T
amora,
23152178Shee is thy enemie, and I thy friend,
23162179I am Reuenge
sent from th'infernall Kingdome,
23172180To ea
se the gnawing vulture of thy minde,
23182181By working wreakfull vengeance on thy foes:
23192182Come downe and welcome me to this worlds light,
23202183Conferre with me of murder and of death,
23212184Ther's not a hollow Caue or lurking place,
I3 No
The most Lamentable Tragedie
23222185No va
st ob
scuritie or mi
stie vale,
23232186Where bloodie murther or dete
sted rape,
23242187Can couch for feare but I will
finde the mout,
23252188And in their eares tell them my dreadfull name,
23262189Reuenge which makes the foule o
ffender quake.
23272190Titus. Art thou Reuenge? and art thou
sent to mee,
23282191To be a torment to mine enemies.
23292192Tamora. I am, therefore come downe and welcome mee
23302193Titus. Doe me
some
seruice ere I come to thee,
23312194Lo by thy
side where Rape and Murder
stands,
23322195Now giue
some
surance that thou art reuenge,
23332196Stab them, or teare them on thy Chariot wheeles,
23342197And then Ile come and be thy wagoner,
23352198And wherle along with thee about the Globes.
23362199Prouide thee two proper palfrays, black as iet,
23372200To hale thy vengefull waggon
swift away,
23382201And
finde out murder in their guiltie cares.
23392202And when thy Car is loaden with their heads,
23402203I will di
smount and by thy waggon wheele,
23412204Trotte like a
seruile footeman all day long,
23422205Euen from
Epeons ri
sing in the Ea
st,
23432206Vntill his verie downefall in the Sea.
23442207And day by day Ile do this heauie taske,
23452208So thou de
stroy Rapine and Murder
there.
23462209Tamora. The
se are my mini
sters and come with me.
23472210Titus. Are them thy mini
sters, what are they calld?
23482211Tamora. Rape and Murder, therefore called
so.
23492212Cau
se they take vengeance of
such kinde of men.
23502213Tit. Good Lord how like the Empre
sse
sonnes they are,
23512214And you the Empre
sse, but we wordlie men
23522215Haue mi
serable mad mi
staking eies:
23532216Oh
sweete Reuenge, now doe I come to thee,
23542217And if one armes imbracement will content thee,
23552218I will imbrace thee in it by and by.
23562219Tamora. This clo
sing with him
fits his Lunacie,
what
of Titus Andronicus.
23572220What ere I forge to feede his braine-
sicke humors,
23582221Doe you vphold and maintaine in your
speeches,
23592222For now he
firmelie takes me for Reuenge,
23602223And being credulous in this mad thought,
23612224Ile make him
send for L
ucius his
sonne,
23622225And whil
st I at a banket hold him
sure,
23632226Ile
finde
some cunning
pra
cti
se out of hand,
23642227To
scatter and di
sper
se the giddie
Gothes,
23652228Or at the lea
st make them his enemies:
23662229See here he comes, and I mu
st plie my theame.
23672230Titus. Long haue I bin forlorne and all for thee,
23682231welcome dread Furie to my woefull hou
se,
23692232Rapine and Murther you are welcome too:
23702233How like the Empre
sse and her
sonnes you are,
23712234well are you
fitted, had you but a
Moore,
23722235Could not all hell a
fford you
such a Diuell?
23732236For well I wot the Empre
sse neuer wags,
23742237But in her companie there is a
Moore.
23752238And would you repre
sent our Queene aright,
23762239It were conuenient you had
such a Diuell:
23772240But welcome as you are, what
shall wee doe?
23782241Tamora. what would
st thou haue vs doe
Andronicus?
23792242Demet. Show me a murtherer Ile deale with him.
23802243Chi. Show me a villaine that hath done a rape,
23812244And I am
sent to be reuengde on him.
23822245Tamora. Show me a thou
sand that hath done thee wrong,
23832246And I will be reuenged on them all.
23842247Titus. Looke round about the wicked
streets of Rome,
23852248And when thou
find
st a man that's like thy
selfe,
23862249Good murther
stab him, hee's a murtherer.
23872250Goe thou with him, and when it is thy hap,
23882251To
finde another that is like to thee,
23892252Good Rapine
stab him, he is a raui
sher.
23902253Goe thou with them, and in the Emperours Court,
23912254There is a Queene attended by a M
oore,
Well
The most Lamentable Tragedie
23922255Well
shalt thou know her by thine owne proportion,
23932256For vp and downe
she doth re
semble thee,
23942257I pray thee doe on them
some violent death,
23952258They haue bin violent to me and mine.
23962259Tamora. Well ha
st thou le
ssond vs, this
shall we doe,
23972260But would it plea
se thee good
Andronicus,
23982261To
send for
Lucius thy thrice valiant
sonne,
23992262Who leades towards Rome a band of warlike
Gothes,
24002263And bid him come and banquet at thy hou
se,
24012264When he is here euen at thy
solemne fea
st,
24022265I will bring in the Empre
sse and hir
sonnes,
24032266The Emperour him
selfe and all thy foes,
24042267And at thy mercie
shall they
stoope and kneele,
24052268And on them
shalt thou ea
se thy angry hart:
24062269What
sayes
Andronicus to this deui
se.
24082271Titus. Marcus my brother, tis
sad T
itus calles,
24092272Goe gentle M
arcus to thy nephew L
ucius,
24102273Thou
shalt enquire him out among the
Gothes,
24112274Bid him repaire to me and bring with him,
24122275Some of the chiefe
st Princes of the
Gothes,
24132276Bid him encampe his Souldiers where they are.
24142277Tell him the Emperour and the Empre
sse too
24152278Fea
st at my hou
se, and he
shall fea
st with them,
24162279This doe thou for my loue, and
so let him,
24172280As he regards his aged Fathers life.
24182281Marcus. This will I doe, and
soone returne againe.
24192282Tamora. Now will I hence about thy bu
sines,
24202283And take my mini
sters along with me.
24212284Titus. Nay, nay, let rape and murder
stay with me,
24222285Or els Ile call my brother backe againe,
24232286And cleaue to no reuenge but L
ucius.
24242287Tamora. What
say you boyes will you abide with(him,
whiles
of Titus Andronicus.
24252288Whiles I goe tell my Lord the Emperour,
24262289How I haue gouernd our determind ie
st,
24272290Yeeld to his humor,
smooth and
speake him faire,
24282291And tarrie with him till I turne againe.
24292292Titus. I knew them all though they
suppo
sd me mad,
24302293And willl orereach them in their owne deui
ses,
24312294A paire of cur
sed hellhounds and their Dame.
24322295Deme. Maddam depart at plea
sure, leaue vs
here.
24332296Tamora. Farewell
Andronicus, Reuenge now goes,
24342297To lay a complot to betray thy foes.
24352298Titus. I know thou do
st and
sweet Reuenge farewell.
24362299Chiron. Tell vs old man how
shall we be imploid,
24372300Titus. Tut I haue worke enough for you to doe
24382301Publius, come hither,
Caius, and
Valentine.
24412304Pub. The Empre
sse
sonnes I take them,
Chiron.
Deme-(
trius.
24432305Titus. Fie,
Publius fie, thou art too much deceaude,
24442306The one is Murder and Rape is the others name,
24452307And therefore binde them gentle
Publius,
24462308Caius and
Valentine, lay hands on them,
24472309Oft haue you heard me wi
sh for
such an houre,
24482310And now I
finde it therefore binde them
sure,
2448.12311And
stop their mouthes if they begin to crie.
24492312Chiron. Villaines forbeare we are the Empre
sse
sons.
24502313Pub. And therefore doe we what we are commanded,
24512314Stop clo
se their mouthes let them not
speak a word,
24522315Is he
sure bound, looke that you bind them fa
st.
24532316 Enter Titus Andronicus, with a knife, and Lauinia, with 24552318Titus. Come, come, L
auinia looke thy foes are bound,
24562319Sirs
stop their mouthes let them not
speake to me,
24572320But let them heare what fearefull words I vtter.
24582321Oh villaines
Chiron and
Demetrius,
K Here
The most Lamentable Tragedie
24592322Here
stands the
spring whome you haue
staind with mud,
24602323This goodly
sommer with your winter mixt,
24612324You kild her hu
sband, and for that vild fault,
24622325Two of her brothers were condemnd to death,
24632326My hand cut o
ff and made a merrie ie
st,
24642327Both her
sweete hands, hir tongue, and that more deare
24652328Than hands or tongue, her
spotle
sse cha
stitie,
24662329Inhumane traitors you con
straind and for
st.
24672330What would you
say if I
should let you
speake?
24682331Villaines for
shame you could not beg for grace.
24692332Harke wretches how I meane to marter you,
24702333This one hand yet is left to cut your throats,
24712334Whiles that L
auinia tweene her
stumps doth hold,
24722335The ba
son that receaues your guiltie blood.
24732336You know your Mother meanes to fea
st with me,
24742337And calles her
selfe Reuenge and thinks me mad.
24752338Harke villaines I will grinde your bones to du
st,
24762339And with your blood and it Ile make a pa
ste,
24772340And of the pa
ste a co
ffen I will reare,
24782341And make two pa
sties of your
shamefull heades,
24792342And bid that
strumpet your vnhallowed Dam,
24802343Like to the earth
swallow her owne increa
se.
24812344This is the fea
st that I haue bid her too,
24822345And this the banket
she
shall
surfet on,
24832346For wor
se than
Philomell you v
sde my daughter,
24842347And wor
se than
Progne I will be reuengd.
24852348And now prepare your throats, L
auinia come,
24862349Receaue the blood, and when that they are dead,
24872350Let me goe grinde their bones to powder
small,
24882351And with this hatefull liquour temper it,
24892352And in that pa
ste let their vile heades be bakt,
24902353Come, come, be euerie one o
fficius,
24912354To make this banket which I wi
sh may proue
24922355More
sterne and bloodie than the Centaurs fea
st,
24942357So now bring them in for Ile play the Cooke,
And
of Titus Andronicus.
24952358And
see them readie again
st their Mother comes,
24962360Enter Lucius, Marcus, and the Gothes. 24972361Lucius. Vnckle
Marcus,
since tis my Fathers minde,
24982362That I repaire to Rome I am content.
24992363Got. And ours with thine, befall what Fortune will.
25002364Luci. Good Vnckle take you in this barberous
Moore,
25012365This rauenous tiger, this accur
sed diuell,
25022366Let him receaue no
su
stnance, fetter him,
25032367Till he be brought vnto the Empre
sse face,
25042368For te
stemonie of her foule proceedings,
25052369And
see the Ambu
sh of our friends be
strong,
25062370I feare the Emperour meanes no good to vs.
25072371Moore. Some diuell whi
sper cur
ses in my eare,
25082372And prompt me that my tongue may vtter forth,
25092373The venemous mallice of my
swelling hart.
25102374Lucius. Away inhumane dogge vnhallowed
slaue.
25112375Sirs help our vnckle to conuay him in,
25122376The trumpets
shewe the Emperour is at hand.
25132377 Sound Trumpets. Enter Emperour and Empresse with Tri- 25152379King. What hath the
firmament mo
sunnes than one?
25162380Lucius, What boots it thee to call thy
selfe a
sunne?
25172381Mar. Romes Emperour and Nephew break the Parle,
25182382The
se quarrels mu
st be quietly debated,
25192383The fea
st is ready which the carefull
Titus,
25202384Hath ordainde to an honorable end,
25212385For peace, for loue, for league and good to Rome,
25222386Plea
se you therefore, draw nie and take your places.
25252388 Trumpets sounding, Enter Titus like a Cooke, placing the 25262389dishes, and Lauinia with a vaile ouer her face. 25272390Titus. Welcome my Lord, welcome dread Queene,
K2 welcome
The most Lamentable Tragedie
25292391Welcome yee warlike
Gothes, welcome L
ucius,
25302392And welcome all although the cheare be poore,
25312393Twill
fill your
stomacks, plea
se you eate of it.
25322394King. Why art thou thus attired
Andronicus?
25332395Titus. Becau
se I would be
sure to haue all well,
25342396To entertaine your highnes and your Empre
sse.
25352397Tamora. We are beholding to you good
Andronicus,
25362398Titus. And if your highnes knew my hart you were,
25372399My Lord the Emperour re
solue me this,
25382400Was it well done of ra
sh Viginius 25392401To
slay his daughter with his owne right hand
25402402Becau
se
she was enfor
st,
stainde, and de
flowrde?
25432405King. Becau
se the girle
should not
suruiue her
shame,
25442406And by her pre
sence
still renewe his
sorrowes.
25452407Titus. A rea
son mighty,
strong, and e
ffe
ctuall,
25462408A patterne pre
sident, and liuelie warrant,
25472409For me mo
st wretched to performe the like,
25482410Die, die,
Lauinia and thy
shame wirh thee,
25492411And with thy
shame thy Fathers
sorrow die.
25512412King. What ha
st thou done, vnnaturall and vnkinde.
25522413Tit. Kild her for whom my teares haue made me blind.
25532414I am as woefull as
Virginius was,
25542415And haue a thou
sand times more cau
se than he,
25552416To doe this outrage, and it now is done.
25562417King. What was
she raui
sht, tell who did the deede.
25572418T. Wilt plea
se you eate, wilt plea
se your highnes feed.
25582419Tam. Why ha
st thou
slaine thine only Daughter thus?
25592420Titus. Not I, twas
Chiron, and
Demetrius,
25602421They Raui
sht her and cut away her tongue,
25612422And they, twas they, that did her all this wrong.
25622423King, Goe fetch them hither to vs pre
sently.
25632424Titus. Why there they are both baked in this Pie.
25642425Whereof their Mother daintilie hath fed,
25652426Eating the
fle
sh that
shee her
selfe hath bred,
Tis
of Titus Andronicus.
25662427Tis true, tis true, witnes my kniues
sharpe point.
25682429Emperour. Die franticke wretch for this accur
sed deede,
25692430Lucius. Can the
sonnes eie behold his father bleede?
25702431Ther's meede for meede, death for a deadly deede.
25712432Marcus. You
sad facde men, people and
sons of Rome
25722433By vprores
seuerd as a
flight of fowle,
25732434Scatterd by winds and high tempe
stuous gu
sts,
25742435Oh let me teach you how to knit againe,
25752436This
scattered corne into one mutuall
shea
ffe,
25762437The
se broken limbs againe into one bodie.
25772438Romane Lord. Let Rome her
selfe bee bane vnto her(
selfe.
25782439And
shee whome mightie kingdomes cur
sie too,
25792440Like a forlorne and de
sperate ca
staway,
25802441Doe
shamefull execution on her
selfe.
25812442But if my fro
stie
signes and chappes of age,
25822443Graue witne
sses of true experience,
25832444Cannot induce you to attend my words,
25842445Speake Roomes deare friend as er
st our Ance
stor,
25852446when with his
solemne tongue he did di
scour
se
25862447To loue
sicke Didoes
sad attending eare,
25872448The
storie of that balefull burning night,
25882449When
subtile Greekes
surprizd King Priams Troy.
25892450Tell vs what Sinon hath bewicht our eares,
25902451Or who hath brought the fatall engine in
25912452That giues our Troy, our Rome the ciuill wound.
25922453My hart is not compa
ct of
flint nor
steele,
25932454Nor can I vtter all our bitter greefe,
25942455But
flouds of teares will drowne my Oratorie,
25952456And breake my vttrance euen in the time,
25962457When it
should moue yee to attend me mo
st,
25982459Her's Romes young Captaine let him tell the tale,
25992460While I
stand by and weepe to heare him
speake.
26002461Lucius. Then gratious auditorie be it knowne to you,
26012462That
Chiron and the damn'd
Demetrius,
K3 were
The most Lamentable Tragedie
26022463Were they that murdred our Emperours brother,
26032464And they it were that raui
shed our
sister,
26042465For their fell faults our brothers were beheaded,
26052466Our Fathers teares di
spi
sde, and ba
sely cou
send,
26062467Of that true hand that fought Romes quarrell out,
26072468And
sent her enemies vnto the graue.
26082469La
stly my
selfe vnkindely bani
shed,
26092470The gates
shut on me and turnd weeping out,
26102471To beg reliefe among Romes enemies,
26112472Who drownd their enmetie in my true teares,
26122473And opt their armes to imbrace me as a friend,
26132474I am the turned forth be it knowne to you,
26142475That haue pre
serude her welfare in my blood,
26152476And from her bo
some tooke the enemies point,
26162477Sheathing the
steele in my aduentrous body.
26172478Alas you know I am no vaunter I,
26182479My
scars can witnes dumb although they are,
26192480That my report is iu
st and full of truth,
26202481But
soft, methinkes I doe digre
sse too much,
26212482Cyting my worthles prai
se, Oh pardon me
26222483For when no friends are by, men prai
se them
selues.
26232484Marcus. Now is my turne to
speake, behold the child,
26252486The i
ssue of an irreligious M
oore,
26262487Chiefe archite
ct and plotter of the
se woes,
26272488The villaine is aliue in
Titus hou
se,
26282489And as he is to witnes this is true,
26292490Now iudge what cour
se had
Titus to reuenge.
26302491The
se wrongs vn
speakeable pa
st patience,
26312492Or more than any liuing man could beare,
26322493Now haue you heard the truth, what
say you Romaines?
26332494Haue we done ought ami
sse,
shew vs wherein,
26342495And from the place where you behold vs pleading,
26352496The poore remainder of
Andronicie,
26362497Will hand in hand, all headlong hurle our
selues,
26372498And on the ragged
stones beat forth our
soules,
An
of Titus Andronicus.
26382499And make a mutuall clo
sure of our hou
se,
26392500Speake Romans
speake, and if you
say wee Shall,
26402501Lo hand in hand L
ucius and I will fall.
26412502Emillius. Come come thou reuerent man of Rome,
26422503And bring our Emperour gently in thy hand,
26432504Lucius our Emperour for well I know,
26442505The common voice doe cry it
shall be
so.
26452506Marcus. Lucius, all haile Romes royall Emperour.
26462507Goe goe into old T
itus sorrowfull hou
se,
26472508And hither hale that misbelieuing
Moore,
26482509To be adiudge
some dyrefull
slaughtring death,
26492510As puni
shment for his mo
st wicked life.
26502511L
ucius all haile Romes gratious gouernour.
26512512Lucius. Thankes gentle Romanes may I gouerne
so,
26522513To heale Romes harmes, and wipe away her woe,
26532514But gentle people giue me ayme a while,
26542515For nature puts me to a heauie ta
ske,
26552516Stand all aloofe but vnckle draw you neare,
26562517To
shed ob
sequious teares vpon this trunke,
+
26572518Oh take this warme ki
sse on thy pale cold lips,
26582519The
se
sorrowfull drops vpon thy blood
slaine face,
26592520The la
st true duties of thy noble
sonne.
26602521Marcus. Teare for teare, and louing ki
sse for ki
sse,
26612522Thy brother
Marcus tenders on thy lips,
26622523Oh were the
summe of the
se that I
should pay,
26632524Countle
sse and in
finite, yet would I pay them.
26642525Lucius. Come hither boy come, come and learne of vs
26652526To melt in
showers, thy Grand
sire lou'd thee well,
26662527Many a time hee daun
st thee on his knee,
26672528Song thee a
sleepe his louing bre
st thy pillow,
26682529Many a
storie hath he told to thee,
26692530And bid thee bare his prettie tales in minde,
26702531And talke of them when he was dead and gone.
26712532Marcus. How manie thou
sand times hath the
se poore(lips,
26722533When they were liuing warmd them
selues on thine,
26732534Oh now
sweete boy giue them their late
st ki
sse,
Bid
The most Lamentable Tragedie
26742535Bid him farewell commit him to the graue,
26752536Doe them that kindnes and take leaue of them.
26762537Puer. Oh Grand
sire, Grand
sire, eu'n with all my hart,
26772538Would I were dead
so you did liue againe,
26782539O Lord I cannot
speake to him for weeping,
26792540My teares will choacke me if I ope my mouth.
26802541Romane. You
sad
Andronicie haue done with woes,
26812542Giue
sentence on this execrable wretch,
26822543That hath bin breeder of the
se dyre euents.
26832544Lucius. Set him bre
st deepe in earth and fami
sh him,
26842545There let him
stand and raue and crie for foode.
26852546If
anyone releeues or pitties him,
26862547For the o
ffence he dies, this is our doome,
26872548Some
stay to
see him fa
stned in the earth.
26882549Aron. Ah why
should wrath be mute and furie dumb,
26892550I am no babie I, that with ba
se prayers
26902551I
should repent the euils I haue done,
26912552Ten thou
sand wor
se than euer yet I did
26922553Would I performe if I might haue my will,
26932554If one good deed in all my life I did
26942555I doe repent it from my verie
soule.
26952556Lu. Some louing friends conuay the Emperour hence,
26962557And giue him buriall in his fathers graue,
26972558My Father and L
auinia shall forthwith,
26982559Be clo
sed in our hou
sholds monument,
26992560As for that rauinous tiger T
amora,
27002561No funerall right, nor man in mourning weede,
27012562No mournefull bell
shall ring her buriall
27022563But throw her forth to bea
sts and birds to pray,
27032564Her life was bea
stlie and deuoide of pittie,
27042565And being dead let birds on her take pittie.
27092567Finis the Tragedie of Titus Andronicus.