أنت هنا

قراءة كتاب The False One: A Tragedy

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
The False One: A Tragedy

The False One: A Tragedy

تقييمك:
0
لا توجد اصوات
المؤلف:
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

He is accepted of.

Achil. Vices, for him,

Make as free way as vertues doe for others.

'Tis the times fault: yet Great ones still have grace'd

To make them sport, or rub them o're with flattery,

Observers of all kinds.

Enter Photinus, and Septimius.

Ach. No more of him,

He is not worth our thoughts: a Fugitive

From Pompeys army: and now in a danger

When he should use his service.

Achil. See how he hangs

On great Photinus Ear.

Sep. Hell, and the furies,

And all the plagues of darkness light upon me:

You are my god on earth: and let me have

Your favour here, fall what can fall hereafter.

Pho. Thou art believ'd: dost thou want mony?

Sep. No Sir.

Pho. Or hast thou any suite? these ever follow

Thy vehement protestations.

Sep. You much wrong me;

How can I want, when your beams shine upon me,

Unless employment to express my zeal

To do your greatness service? do but think

A deed so dark, the Sun would blush to look on,

For which Man-kind would curse me, and arm all

The powers above, and those below against me:

Command me, I will on.

Pho. When I have use,

I'le put you to the test.

Sep. May it be speedy,

And something worth my danger: you are cold,

And know not your own powers: this brow was fashion'd

To wear a Kingly wreath, and your grave judgment,

Given to dispose of monarchies, not to govern

A childs affairs, the peoples eye's upon you,

The Souldier courts you: will you wear a garment

Of sordid loyalty when 'tis out of fashion?

Pho. When Pompey was thy General, Septimius,

Thou saidst as much to him.

Sep. All my love to him,

To Cæsar, Rome, and the whole world is lost

In the Ocean of your Bounties: I have no friend,

Project, design, or Countrey, but your favour,

Which I'le preserve at any rate.

Pho. No more;

When I call on you, fall not off: perhaps

Sooner than you expect, I may employ you,

So leave me for a while.

Sep. Ever your Creature. [Exit.

Pho. Good day Achoreus; my best friend Achillas,

Hath fame deliver'd yet no certain rumour

Of the great Roman Action?

Achil. That we are

To enquire, and learn of you Sir: whose grave care

For Egypts happiness, and great Ptolomies good,

Hath eyes and ears in all parts.

Enter Ptolomy, Labienus, Guard.

Pho. I'le not boast,

What my Intelligence costs me: but 'ere long

You shall know more. The King, with him a Roman.

Ach. The scarlet livery of unfortunate war

Dy'd deeply on his face.

Achil. 'Tis Labienus

Cæsars Lieutenant in the wars of Gaul,

And fortunate in all his undertakings:

But since these Civil jars he turn'd to Pompey,

And though he followed the better Cause

Not with the like success.

Pho. Such as are wise

Leave falling buildings, flye to those that rise;

But more of that hereafter.

Lab. In a word, Sir,

These gaping wounds, not taken as a slave,

Speak Pompey's loss: to tell you of the Battail,

How many thousand several bloody shapes

Death wore that day in triumph: how we bore

The shock of Cæsars charge: or with what fury

His Souldiers came on as if they had been

So many Cæsars, and like him ambitious

To tread upon the liberty of Rome:

How Fathers kill'd their Sons, or Sons their Fathers,

Or how the Roman Piles on either side

Drew Roman blood, which spent, the Prince of weapons,

(The sword) succeeded, which in Civil wars

Appoints the Tent on which wing'd victory

Shall make a certain Stand; then, how the Plains

Flow'd o're with blood, and what a cloud of vulturs

And other birds of prey, hung o're both armies,

Attending when their ready Servitors,

(The Souldiers, from whom the angry gods

Had took all sense of reason, and of pity)

Would serve in their own carkasses for a feast,

How Cæsar with his Javelin force'd them on

That made the least stop, when their angry hands

Were lifted up against some known friends face;

Then coming to the body of the army

He shews the sacred Senate, and forbids them

To wast their force upon the Common Souldier,

Whom willingly, if e're he did know pity,

He would have spar'd.

Ptol. The reason Labienus?

Lab. Full well he knows, that in their blood he was

To pass to Empire, and that through their bowels

He must invade the Laws of Rome, and give

A period to the liberty of the world.

Then fell the Lepidi, and the bold Corvini,

The fam'd Torquati, Scipio's, and Marcelli,

(Names next to Pompeys, most renown'd on Earth)

The Nobles, and the Commons lay together,

And Pontique, Punique, and Assyrian blood

Made up one crimson Lake: which Pompey seeing,

And that his, and the fate of Rome had left him

Standing upon the Rampier of his Camp,

Though scorning all that could fall on himself,

He pities them whose fortunes are embarqu'd

In his unlucky quarrel; cryes aloud too

That they should sound retreat, and save themselves:

That he desir'd not, so much noble blood

Should be lost in his service, or attend

On his misfortunes: and then, taking horse

With some few of his friends, he came to Lesbos,

And with Cornelia, his Wife, and Sons,

He's touch'd upon your shore: the King of Parthia,

(Famous in his defeature of the Crassi)

Offer'd him his protection, but Pompey

Relying on his Benefits, and your Faith,

Hath chosen Ægypt for his Sanctuary,

Till he may recollect his scattered powers,

And try a second day: now Ptolomy,

Though he appear not like that glorious thing

That three times rode in triumph, and gave laws

To conquer'd Nations, and made Crowns his gift

(As this of yours, your noble Father took

From his victorious hand, and you still wear it

At his devotion) to do you more honour

In his declin'd estate, as the straightst Pine

In a full grove of his yet flourishing friends,

He flyes to you for succour,

الصفحات