قراءة كتاب The Laws of Candy Beaumont & Fletcher's Works (3 of 10)
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The Laws of Candy Beaumont & Fletcher's Works (3 of 10)
a one Decius! I am miserable,
Beyond expression.
Decius
Fie, how unbecoming
This shews upon your day of fame!
Antinous
O mischief!
I must no more come near him; that I know,
And am assur'd on't.
Decius
Say you do not?
Antinous
True:
Put case I do not: what is Candy then
To lost Antinous? Malta, I resolve
To end my dayes in thee.
Decius
How's that?
Antinous
I'le trie
All humble means of being reconcil'd,
Which if deny'd, then I may justly say,
This day has prov'd my worst: Decius, my worst.
[Exeunt.
Enter Gonzalo, and Gaspero
Gaspero
Now to what you have heard; as no man can
Better than I, give you her Character;
For I have been both nurs'd, and train'd up to
Her petulant humours, and been glad to bear them,
Her Brother, my late Master, did no less:
Strong apprehensions of her beauty hath
Made her believe that she is more than woman:
And as there did not want those flatterers
'Bout the worlds Conquerour, to make him think,
And did perswade him that he was a god;
So there be those base flies, that will not stick
To buzze into her ears she is an Angel,
And that the food she feeds on is Ambrosia.
Gonzalo
She should not touch it then, 'tis Poets fare.
Gaspero
I may take leave to say, she may as well
Determine of her self to be a goddess,
With lesser flatterie than he a god:
For she does conquer more, although not farther.
Every one looks on her, dyes in despair,
And would be glad to do it actually,
To have the next age tell how worthily,
And what good cause he had to perish so:
Here beauty is superlative, she knows it,
And knowing it, thinks no man can deserve,
But ought to perish, and to dye for her:
Many great Princes for her love have languish'd,
And given themselves a willing sacrifice,
Proud to have ended so: And now there is
A Prince so madded in his own passions,
That he forgets the Royaltie he was born to,
And deems it happiness to be her slave.
Gonzalo
You talk as if you meant to winde me in,
And make me of the number.
Gaspero
Sir, mistake me not, the service that I owe ye
Shall plead for me: I tell you what she is,
What she expects, and what she will effect,
Unless you be the miracle of men,
That come with a purpose to behold,
And goe away your self.
Gonzalo
I thank you, I will do it: But pray resolve me,
How is she stor'd with wit?
Gaspero
As with beauty,
Infinite, and more to be admired at,
Than medled with.
Gonzalo
And walks her tongue the same gate with her feet?
Gaspero
Much beyond: what e're her heart thinks, she utters:
And so boldly, so readily, as you would judge
It penn'd and studied.
Enter Erota, Philander, Annophil, Hyparcha, Mochingo, Attendants
Gonzalo
She comes.
Gaspero
I must leave you then,
But my best wishes shall remain with you.
[Exit.
Gonzalo
Still I must thank you.
This is the most passionate,
Most pitifull Prince,
Who in the Caldron of affections,
Looks as he had been par-boy'ld.
Philander
If I offend with too much loving you,
It is a fault that I must still commit,
To make your mercy shine the more on me.
Erota
You are the self-same creature you condemn,
Or else you durst not follow me with hope
That I can pity you, who am so far
From granting any comfort in this kind,
That you and all men else shall perish first:
I will live free and single, till I find
Something above a man to equal me;
Put all your brave Heroes into one,
Your Kings and Emperours, and let him come
In person of a man, and I should scorn him:
Must, and will scorn him.
The god of love himself hath lost his eyes,
His Bow and Torch extinguish'd, and the Poets
That made him first a god, have lost their fire
Since I appear'd, and from my eyes must steal it.
This I dare speak; and let me see the man,
Now I have spoke it, that doth, dare deny;
Nay, not believe it.
Mochingo
He is mad that does not.
Erota
Have not all the nations of the Earth heard of me?
Most come to see me, and seeing me, return'd
Full of my praises? teaching their Chroniclers
To make their Stories perfect? for where the name,
Merely the word of fair Erota stands,
It is a lasting History to time,
Begetting admiration in the men,
And in my own Sex envie: which glorie's lost,
When I shall stick my beautie in a cloud,
And clearly shine through it.
Gonzalo
This woman's in the altitudes, and he must be
A good Astrologer shall know her Zodiack.
Philander
For any man to think
Himself an able purchaser of you,
But in the bargain there must be declar'd
Infinite bounty: otherwise I vow,
By all that's excellent and gracious in you,
I would untenant every hope lodg'd in me,
And yield my self up loves, or your own Martyr.
Erota
So you shall please us.
Philander
O you cannot be
So heavenly, and so absolute in all things,
And yet retain such cruel tyranny.
Erota
I can, I do, I will.
Gonzalo
She is in her
Moods, and her Tenses: I'le Grammer with you,
And make a trial how I can decline you:
By your leave (great Lady.)
Erota
What are you?
Gonzalo
A man, a good man, that's a wealthy;
A Proper man, and a proud man too; one
That understands himself, and knows, unless
It be your self, no woman on the Universe deserves him.
Nay, Lady, I must tell you too withal,
I may make doubt of that, unless you paint
With better judgement next day than on this;
For (plain I must be with you) 'tis a dull Fucus.
Erota
Knows any one here what this fellow is?
Attendants
He is of Venice (Madam) a great Magnifico,
And gracious with the Senate.
Erota
Let him keep then among them; what makes he here?
Here's state enough where I am: here's a