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SCENE I.The Temple of Isis Enter SERAPION, MYRIS, Priests of Isis | |
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Serapion PORTENTS and prodigies have grown so frequent, | |
| That they have lost their name. Our fruitful Nile | |
| Flowed ere the wonted season, with a torrent | |
| So unexpected, and so wondrous fierce, | 5 |
| That the wild deluge overtook the haste | |
| Even of the hinds that watched it: Men and beasts | |
| Were borne above the tops of trees, that grew | |
| On the utmost margin of the water-mark. | |
| Then, with so swift an ebb the flood drove backward, | 10 |
| It slipt from underneath the scaly herd: | |
| Here monstrous phocæ panted on the shore; | |
| Forsaken dolphins there with their broad tails, | |
| Lay lashing the departing waves: hard by them, | |
| Sea horses floundering in the slimy mud, | 15 |
| Tossed up their heads, and dashed the ooze about them. | |
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Enter ALEXAS behind them | |
| Myr. Avert these omens, Heaven! | |
| Serap. Last night, between the hours of twelve and one, | |
| In a lone aisle of the temple while I walked, | 20 |
| A whirlwind rose, that, with a violent blast, | |
| Shook all the dome: the doors around me clapt; | |
| The iron wicket, that defends the vault, | |
| Where the long race of Ptolemies is laid, | |
| Burst open, and disclosed the mighty dead. | 25 |
| From out each monument, in order placed, | |
| An armed ghost starts up: the boy-king last | |
| Reared his inglorious head. A peal of groans | |
| Then followed, and a lamentable voice | |
| Cried, Egypt is no more! My blood ran back, | 30 |
| My shaking knees against each other knocked; | |
| On the cold pavement down I fell entranced, | |
| And so unfinished left the horrid scene. | |
| Alex. And dreamed you this? or did invent the story, [Showing himself. | |
| To frighten our Egyptian boys withal, | 35 |
| And train them up, betimes, in fear of priesthood? | |
| Serap. My lord, I saw you not, | |
| Nor meant my words should reach you ears; but what | |
| I uttered was most true. | |
| Alex. A foolish dream, | 40 |
| Bred from the fumes of indigested feasts, | |
| And holy luxury. | |
| Serap. I know my duty: | |
| This goes no further. | |
| Alex. Tis not fit it should; | 45 |
| Nor would the times now bear it, were it true. | |
| All southern, from yon hills, the Roman camp | |
| Hangs oer us black and threatening like a storm | |
| Just breaking on our heads. | |
| Serap. Our faint Egyptians pray for Antony; | 50 |
| But in their servile hearts they own Octavius. | |
| Myr. Why then does Antony dream out his hours, | |
| And tempts not fortune for a noble day, | |
| Which might redeem what Actium lost? | |
| Alex. He thinks tis past recovery. | 55 |
| Serap. Yet the foe | |
| Seems not to press the siege. | |
| Alex. Oh, theres the wonder. | |
| Mæcenas and Agrippa, who can most | |
| With Cæsar, are his foes. His wife Octavia, | 60 |
| Driven from his house, solicits her revenge; | |
| And Dolabella, who was once his friend, | |
| Upon some private grudge, now seeks his ruin: | |
| Yet still war seems on either side to sleep. | |
| Serap. Tis strange that Antony, for some days past, | 65 |
| Has not beheld the face of Cleopatra; | |
| But here, in Isis temple, lives retired, | |
| And makes his heart a prey to black despair. | |
| Alex. Tis true; and we much fear he hopes by absence | |
| To cure his mind of love. | 70 |
| Serap. If he be vanquished, | |
| Or make his peace, Egypt is doomed to be | |
| A Roman province; and our plenteous harvests | |
| Must then redeem the scarceness of their soil. | |
| While Antony stood firm, our Alexandria | 75 |
| Rivalled proud Rome (dominions other seat), | |
| And fortune striding, like a vast Colossus, | |
| Could fix an equal foot of empire here. | |
| Alex. Had I my wish, these tyrants of all nature, | |
| Who lord it oer mankind, should perish,perish | 80 |
| Each by the others sword; But, since our will | |
| Is lamely followed by our power, we must | |
| Depend on one; with him to rise or fall. | |
| Serap. How stands the queen affected? | |
| Alex. Oh, she dotes, | 85 |
| She dotes, Serapion, on this vanquished man, | |
| And winds herself about his mighty ruins; | |
| Whom would she yet forsake, yet yield him up, | |
| This hunted prey, to his pursuers hands, | |
| She might preserve us all: but tis in vain | 90 |
| This changes my designs, this blasts my counsels, | |
| And makes me use all means to keep him here. | |
| Whom I could wish divided from her arms, | |
| Far as the earths deep centre. Well, you know | |
| The state of things; no more of your ill omens | 95 |
| And black prognostics; labour to confirm | |
| The peoples hearts. | |
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Enter VENTIDIUS, talking aside with a Gentleman of ANTONYS | |
| Serap. These Romans will oerhear us. | |
| But whos that stranger? By his warlike port, | 100 |
| His fierce demeanour, and erected look, | |
| Hes of no vulgar note. | |
| Alex. Oh, tis Ventidius, | |
| Our emperors great lieutenant in the East, | |
| Who first showed Rome that Parthia could be conquered. | 105 |
| When Antony returned from Syria last, | |
| He left this man to guard the Roman frontiers. | |
| Serap. You seem to know him well. | |
| Alex. Too well. I saw him at Cilicia first, | |
| When Cleopatra there met Antony: | 110 |
| A mortal foe was to us, and Egypt. | |
| But,let me witness to the worth I hate, | |
| A braver Roman never drew a sword; | |
| Firm to his prince, but as a friend, not slave, | |
| He neer was of his pleasures; but presides | 115 |
| Oer all his cooler hours, and morning counsels: | |
| In short the plainness, fierceness, rugged virtue, | |
| Of an old true-stampt Roman lives in him. | |
| His coming bodes I know not what of ill | |
| To our affairs. Withdraw to mark him better; | 120 |
| And Ill acquaint you why I sought you here, | |
| And whats our present work. [They withdraw to a corner of the stage; and VENTIDIUS, with the other, comes forward to the front. | |
| Vent. Not see him; say you? | |
| I say, I must, and will. | |
| Gent. He has commanded, | 125 |
| On pain of death, none should approach his presence. | |
| Vent. I bring him news will raise his drooping spirits, | |
| Give him new life. | |
| Gent. He sees not Cleopatra. | |
| Vent. Would he had never seen her! | 130 |
| Gent. He eats not, drinks not, sleeps not, has no use | |
| Of anything, but thought; or if he talks, | |
| Tis to himself, and then tis perfect raving: | |
| Then he defies the world, and bids it pass, | |
| Sometimes he gnaws his lips, and curses loud | 135 |
| The boy Octavius; then he draws his mouth | |
| Into a scornful smile, and cries, Take all, | |
| The worlds not worth my care. | |
| Vent. Just, just his nature. | |
| Virtues his path; but sometimes tis too narrow | 140 |
| For his vast soul; and then he starts out wide, | |
| And bounds into a vice, that bears him far | |
| From his first course, and plunges him in ills: | |
| But, when his danger makes him find his faults, | |
| Quick to observe, and full of sharp remorse, | 145 |
| He censures eagerly his own misdeeds, | |
| Judging himself with malice to himself, | |
| And not forgiving what as man he did, | |
| Because his other parts are more than man. | |
| He must not thus be lost. [ALEXAS and the Priests come forward. | 150 |
| Alex. You have your full instructions, now advance, | |
| Proclaim your orders loudly. | |
| Serap. Romans, Egyptians, hear the queens command. | |
| Thus Cleopatra bids: Let labour cease; | |
| To pomp and triumphs give this happy day, | 155 |
| That gave the world a lord: tis Antonys. | |
| Live, Antony; and Cleopatra live! | |
| Be this the general voice sent up to heaven | |
| And every public place repeat this echo. | |
| Vent. Fine pageantry! [Aside. | 160 |
| Serap. Set out before your doors | |
| The images of all your sleeping fathers, | |
| With laurels crowned; with laurels wreath your posts, | |
| And strew with flowers the pavement; let the priests | |
| Do present sacrifice; pour out the wine, | 165 |
| And call the gods to join with you in gladness. | |
| Vent. Curse on the tongue that bids this general joy! | |
| Can they be friends of Antony, who revel | |
| When Antonys in danger? Hide, for shame, | |
| You Romans, your great grandsires images, | 170 |
| For fear their souls should animate their marbles, | |
| To blush at their degenerate progeny. | |
| Alex. A love, which knows no bounds, to Antony, | |
| Would mark the day with honours, when all heaven | |
| Laboured for him, when each propitious star | 175 |
| Stood wakeful in his orb, to watch that hour | |
| And shed his better influence. Her own birthday | |
| Our queen neglected like a vulgar fate, | |
| That passed obscurely by. | |
| Vent. Would it had slept, | 180 |
| Divided far from his; till some remote | |
| And future age had called it out, to ruin | |
| Some other prince, not him! | |
| Alex. Your emperor, | |
| Though grown unkind, would be more gentle, than | 185 |
| To upbraid my queen for loving him too well. | |
| Vent. Does the mute sacrifice upbraid the priest! | |
| He knows him not his executioner. | |
| Oh, she has decked his ruin with her love, | |
| Led him in golden bands to gaudy slaughter, | 190 |
| And made perdition pleasing: She has left him | |
| The blank of what he was. | |
| I tell thee, eunuch, she has quite unmanned him. | |
| Can any Roman see, and know him now, | |
| Thus altered from the lord of half mankind, | 195 |
| Unbent, unsinewed, made a womans toy, | |
| Shrunk from the vast extent of all his honours, | |
| And crampt within a corner of the world? | |
| O Antony! | |
| Thou bravest soldier, and thou best of friends! | 200 |
| Bounteous as nature; next to natures God! | |
| Couldst thou but make new worlds, so wouldst thou give them, | |
| As bounty were thy being! rough in battle, | |
| As the first Romans when they went to war; | |
| Yet after victory more pitiful | 205 |
| Than all their praying virgins left at home! | |
| Alex. Would you could add, to those more shining virtues, | |
| His truth to her who loves him. | |
| Vent. Would I could not! | |
| But wherefore waste I precious hours with thee! | 210 |
| Thou art her darling mischief, her chief engine, | |
| Antonys other fate. Go, tell thy queen, | |
| Ventidius is arrived, to end her charms. | |
| Let your Egyptian timbrels play alone, | |
| Nor mix effeminate sounds with Roman trumpets, | 215 |
| You dare not fight for Antony; go pray | |
| And keep your cowards holiday in temples. [Exeunt ALEXAS, SERAPION. | |
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Re-enter the Gentleman of M. ANTONY | |
| 2 Gent. The emperor approaches, and commands, | |
| On pain of death, that none presume to stay. | 220 |
| 1 Gent. I dare not disobey him. [Going out with the other. | |
| Vent. Well, I dare. | |
| But Ill observe him first unseen, and find | |
| Which way his humour drives: The rest Ill venture. [Withdraws. | |
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Enter ANTONY, walking with a disturbed motion before he speaks | 225 |
| Ant. They tell me, tis my birthday, and Ill keep it | |
| With double pomp of sadness. | |
| Tis what the day deserves, which gave me breath. | |
| Why was I raised the meteor of the world, | |
| Hung in the skies, and blazing as I travelled, | 230 |
| Till all my fires were spent; and then cast downward, | |
| To be trod out by Cæsar? | |
| Vent. [aside]. On my soul, | |
| Tis mournful, wondrous mournful! | |
| Ant. Count thy gains. | 235 |
| Now, Antony, wouldst thou be born for this? | |
| Glutton of fortune, thy devouring youth | |
| Has starved thy wanting age. | |
| Vent. How sorrow shakes him! [Aside. | |
| So, now the tempest tears him up by the roots, | 240 |
| And on the ground extends the noble ruin. [ANTONY having thrown himself down. | |
| Lie there, thou shadow of an emperor; | |
| The place thou pressest on thy mother earth | |
| Is all thy empire now: now it contains thee; | |
| Some few days hence, and then twill be too large, | 245 |
| When thourt contracted in thy narrow urn, | |
| Shrunk to a few ashes; then Octavia | |
| (For Cleopatra will not live to see it), | |
| Octavia then will have thee all her own, | |
| And bear thee in her widowed hand to Cæsar; | 250 |
| Cæsar will weep, the crocodile will weep, | |
| To see his rival of the universe | |
| Lie still and peaceful there. Ill think no more ont. | |
| Ant. Give me some music, look that it be sad. | |
| Ill soothe my melancholy, till I swell, | 255 |
| And burst myself with sighing. [Soft music. | |
| Tis somewhat to my humour; stay, I fancy | |
| Im now turned wild, a commoner of nature; | |
| Of all forsaken, and forsaking all; | |
| Live in a shady forests sylvan scene, | 260 |
| Stretched at my length beneath some blasted oak, | |
| I lean my head upon the mossy bark, | |
| And look just of a piece as I grew from it; | |
| My uncombed locks, matted like mistletoe, | |
| Hang oer my hoary face; a murmring brook | 265 |
| Runs at my foot. | |
| Vent. Methinks I fancy | |
| Myself there too. | |
| Ant. The herd come jumping by me, | |
| And fearless, quench their thirst, while I look on, | 270 |
| And take me for their fellow-citizen. | |
| More of this image, more; it lulls my thoughts. [Soft music again. | |
| Vent. I must disturb him; I can hold no longer. [Stands before him. | |
| Ant. [starting up]. Art thou Ventidius? | |
| Vent. Are you Antony? | 275 |
| Im liker what I was, than you to him | |
| I left you last. | |
| Ant. Im angry. | |
| Vent. So am I. | |
| Ant. I would be private: leave me. | 280 |
| Vent. Sir, I love you, | |
| And therefore will not leave you. | |
| Ant. Will not leave me! | |
| Where have you learnt that answer? Who am I? | |
| Vent. My emperor; the man I love next Heaven: | 285 |
| If I said more, I think twere scare a sin: | |
| Youre all thats good, and god-like. | |
| Ant. All thats wretched. | |
| You will not leave me then? | |
| Vent. Twas too presuming | 290 |
| To say I would not; but I dare not leave you: | |
| And, tis unkind in you to chide me hence | |
| So soon, when I so far have come to see you. | |
| Ant. Now thou hast seen me, art thou satisfied? | |
| For, if a friend, thou hast beheld enough; | 295 |
| And, if a foe, too much. | |
| Vent. Look, emperor, this is no common dew. [Weeping. | |
| I have not wept this forty years; but now | |
| My mother comes afresh into my eyes; | |
| I cannot help her softness. | 300 |
| Ant. By heavens, he weeps! poor good old man, he weeps! | |
| The big round drops course one another down | |
| The furrows of his cheeks.Stop them, Ventidius, | |
| Or I shall blush to death, they set my shame, | |
| That caused them, full before me. | 305 |
| Vent. Ill do my best. | |
| Ant. Sure theres contagion in the tears of friends: | |
| See, I have caught it too. Believe me, tis not | |
| For my own griefs, but thine.Nay, father! | |
| Vent. Emperor. | 310 |
| Ant. Emperor! Why, thats the style of victory; | |
| The conquring soldier, red with unfelt wounds, | |
| Salutes his general so; but never more | |
| Shall that sound reach my ears. | |
| Vent. I warrant you. | 315 |
| Ant. Actium, Actium! Oh! | |
| Vent. It sits too near you. | |
| Ant. Here, here it lies a lump of lead by day, | |
| And, in my short, distracted, nightly slumbers, | |
| The hag that rides my dreams. | 320 |
| Vent. Out with it; give it vent. | |
| Ant. Urge not my shame. | |
| I lost a battle, | |
| Vent. So has Julius done. | |
| Ant. Thou favourst me, and speakst not half thou thinkst; | 325 |
| For Julius fought it out, and lost it fairly. | |
| But Antony | |
| Vent. Nay, stop not. | |
| Ant. Antony | |
| Well, thou wilt have it,like a coward, fled, | 330 |
| Fled while his soldiers fought; fled first, Ventidius. | |
| Thou longst to curse me, and I give thee leave. | |
| I know thou camst prepared to rail. | |
| Vent. I did. | |
| Ant. Ill help thee.I have been a man, Ventidius. | 335 |
| Vent. Yes, and a brave one! but | |
| Ant. I know thy meaning. | |
| But I have lost my reason, have disgraced | |
| The name of soldier, with inglorious ease. | |
| In the full vintage of my flowing honours, | 340 |
| Sat still, and saw it prest by other hands. | |
| Fortune came smiling to my youth, and wooed it, | |
| And purple greatness met my ripened years. | |
| When first I came to empire, I was borne | |
| On tides of people, crowding to my triumphs; | 345 |
| The wish of nations, and the willing world | |
| Received me as its pledge of future peace; | |
| I was so great, so happy, so beloved, | |
| Fate could not ruin me; till I took pains, | |
| And worked against my fortune, child her from me. | 350 |
| And returned her loose; yet still she came again. | |
| My careless days, and my luxurious nights, | |
| At length have wearied her, and now shes gone, | |
| Gone, gone, divorced for ever. Help me, soldier, | |
| To curse this madman, this industrious fool, | 355 |
| Who laboured to be wretched: Prythee, curse me. | |
| Vent. No. | |
| Ant. Why? | |
| |
| Vent. You are too sensible already | 360 |
| Of what youve done, too conscious of your failings; | |
| And, like a scorpion, whipt by others first | |
| To fury, sting yourself in mad revenge. | |
| I would bring balm, and pour it in your wounds, | |
| Cure your distempered mind, and heal your fortunes. | 365 |
| Ant. I know thou wouldst. | |
| Vent. I will. | |
| Ant. Ha, ha, ha, ha! | |
| Vent. You laugh. | |
| Ant. I do, to see officious love, | 370 |
| Give cordials to the dead. | |
| Vent. You would be lost, then? | |
| Ant. I am. | |
| Vent. I say you are not. Try your fortune. | |
| Ant. I have, to the utmost. Dost thou think me desperate, | 375 |
| Without just cause? No, when I found all lost | |
| Beyond repair, I hid me from the world, | |
| And learnt to scorn it here; which now I do | |
| So heartily, I think it is not worth | |
| The cost of keeping. | 380 |
| Vent. Cæsar thinks not so; | |
| Hell thank you for the gift he could not take. | |
| You would be killed like Tully, would you? do, | |
| Hold out your throat to Cæsar, and die tamely. | |
| Ant. No, I can kill myself; and so resolve. | 385 |
| Vent. I can die with you too, when time shall serve; | |
| But fortune calls upon us now to live, | |
| To fight, to conquer. | |
| Ant. Sure thou dreamst, Ventidius. | |
| Vent. No; tis you dream; you sleep away your hours | 390 |
| In desperate sloth, miscalled philosophy. | |
| Up, up, for honours sake; twelve legions wait you, | |
| And long to call you chief: By painful journeys | |
| I led them, patient both of heat and hunger, | |
| Down form the Parthian marches to the Nile. | 395 |
| Twill do you good to see their sunburnt faces, | |
| Their scarred cheeks, and chopt hands: theres virtue in them. | |
| Theyll sell those mangled limbs at dearer rates | |
| Than you trim bands can buy. | |
| Ant. Where left you them? | 400 |
| Vent. I said in Lower Syria. | |
| Ant. Bring them hither; | |
| There may be life in these. | |
| Vent. They will not come. | |
| Ant. Why didst thou mock my hopes with promised aids, | 405 |
| To double my despair? Theyre mutinous. | |
| Vent. Most firm and loyal. | |
| Ant. Yet they will not march | |
| To succour me. O trifler! | |
| Vent. They petition | 410 |
| You would make haste to head them. | |
| Ant. Im besieged. | |
| Vent. Theres but one way shut up: How came I hither? | |
| Ant. I will not stir. | |
| Vent. They would perhaps desire | 415 |
| A better reason. | |
| Ant. I have never used | |
| My soldiers to demand a reason of | |
| My actions. Why did they refuse to march? | |
| Vent. They said they would not fight for Cleopatra. | 420 |
| Ant. What wast they said? | |
| Vent. They said they would not fight for Cleopatra. | |
| Why should they fight indeed, to make her conquer, | |
| And make you more a slave? to gain you kingdoms, | |
| Which, for a kiss, at your next midnight feast, | 425 |
| Youll sell to her? Then she new-names her jewels, | |
| And calls this diamond such or such a tax; | |
| Each pendant in her ear shall be a province. | |
| Ant. Ventidius, I allow your tongue free licence | |
| On all my other faults; but, on your life, | 430 |
| No word of Cleopatra: she deserves | |
| More worlds than I can lose. | |
| Vent. Behold, you Powers, | |
| To whom you have intrusted humankind! | |
| See Europe, Afric, Asia, put in balance, | 435 |
| And all weighed down by one light, worthless woman! | |
| I think the gods are Antonies, and give, | |
| Like prodigals, this nether world away | |
| To none but wasteful hands. | |
| Ant. You grow presumptuous. | 440 |
| Vent. I take the privilege of plain love to speak. | |
| Ant. Plain love! plain arrogance, plain insolence! | |
| Thy men are cowards; thou, an envious traitor; | |
| Who, under seeming honesty, hast vented | |
| The burden of thy rank, oerflowing gall. | 445 |
| O that thou wert my equal; great in arms | |
| As the first Cæsar was, that I might kill thee | |
| Without a stain to honour! | |
| Vent. You may kill me; | |
| You have done more already,called me traitor. | 450 |
| Ant. Art thou not one? | |
| Vent. For showing you yourself, | |
| Which none else durst have done? but had I been | |
| That name, which I disdain to speak again, | |
| I needed not have sought your abject fortunes, | 455 |
| Come to partake your fate, to die with you. | |
| What hindered me to have led my conquering eagles | |
| To fill Octavius bands? I could have been | |
| A traitor then, a glorious, happy traitor, | |
| And not have been so called. | 460 |
| Ant. Forgive me, soldier; | |
| Ive been too passionate. | |
| Vent. You thought me false; | |
| Thought my old age betrayed you: Kill me, sir, | |
| Pray, kill me; yet you need not, your unkindness | 465 |
| Has left your sword no work. | |
| Ant. I did not think so; | |
| I said it in my rage: Prythee, forgive me. | |
| Why didst thou tempt my anger, by discovery | |
| Of what I would not hear? | 470 |
| Vent. No prince but you | |
| Could merit that sincerity I used, | |
| Nor durst another man have ventured it; | |
| But you, ere love misled your wandering eyes, | |
| Were sure the chief and best of human race, | 475 |
| Framed in the very pride and boast of nature; | |
| So perfect, that the gods, who formed you, wondered | |
| At their own skill, and criedA lucky hit | |
| Has mended our design. Their envy hindered, | |
| Else you had been immortal, and a pattern, | 480 |
| When Heaven would work for ostentations sake | |
| To copy out again. | |
| Ant. But Cleopatra | |
| Go on; for I can bear it now. | |
| Vent. No more. | 485 |
| Ant. Thou darst not trust my passion, but thou mayst; | |
| Thou only lovst, the rest have flattered me. | |
| Vent. Heavens blessing on your heart for that kind word! | |
| May I believe you love me? Speak again. | |
| Ant. Indeed I do. Speak this, and this, and this. [Hugging him. | 490 |
| Thy praises were unjust; but, Ill deserve them; | |
| And yet mend all. Do with me what thou wilt; | |
| Lead me to victory! thou knowst the way. | |
| Vent. And, will you leave this | |
| Ant. Prythee, do not curse her, | 495 |
| And I will leave her; though, Heaven knows, I love | |
| Beyond life, conquest, empire, all, but honour; | |
| But I will leave her. | |
| Vent. Thats my royal master; | |
| And, shall we fight? | 500 |
| Ant. I warrant thee, old soldier. | |
| Thou shalt behold me once again in iron; | |
| And at the head of our old troops, that beat | |
| The Parthians, cry aloudCome, follow me! | |
| Vent. Oh, now I hear my emperor! in that word | 505 |
| Octavius fell. Gods, let me see that day, | |
| And, if I have ten years behind, take all: | |
| Ill thank you for the exchange. | |
| Ant. O Cleopatra! | |
| Vent. Again? | 510 |
| Ant. Ive done: In that last sigh she went. | |
| Cæsar shall know what tis to force a lover | |
| From all he holds most dear. | |
| Vent. Methinks, you breathe | |
| Another soul: Your looks are more divine; | 515 |
| You speak a hero, and you move a god. | |
| Ant. Oh, thou hast fired me; my souls up in arms, | |
| And mans each part about me: Once again, | |
| That noble eagerness of fight has seized me; | |
| That eagerness with which I darted upward | 520 |
| To Cassius camp: In vain the steepy hill | |
| Opposed my way; in vain a war of spears | |
| Sung round my head, and planted on my shield; | |
| I won the trenches, while my foremost men | |
| Lagged on the plain below. | 525 |
| Vent. Ye gods, ye gods, | |
| For such another honour! | |
| Ant. Come on, my soldier! | |
| Our hearts and arms are still the same: I long | |
| Once more to meet our foes; that thou and I, | 530 |
| Like Time and Death, marching before our troops, | |
| May taste fate to them; mow them out a passage, | |
| And, entering where the foremost squadrons yield, | |
| Begin the noble harvest of the field. [Exeunt. | |
| |