The Tragedie of Alaham | ||
Actus secundus
Scena prima.
HALA alone.Hala.
I will no more smother confusedly
This inward warre, where modesty and shame
Would subiect sense to duties Tyrannie:
Wronged with doubt I liue; a wife to lust,
A stranger both to honor, loue, and trust.
My friends despis'd, my seruants made my spies;
No way, but by betraying me, to rise.
Is this the only right of womanhood?
Then know base Men, in whom all loue is lost,
That wit moues wit; power, feare; feare, hate;
No farther bondage hath a wiues estate.
While Mahomet, that faithlesse hypocrite,
Canker of loue, All-ill in one, that man
Shew'd loue to me;
Alaham was wroth, an husbands honour touch'd,
He vile, I worse: the eyes of Iealousie
Seeing her owne disease in him, and me.
But since this wretch, with his aspiring craft,
To Alaham hath falsly sold my shame,
My iniuries and dishonours are his fame:
And shall this traffike of ambition thriue,
And bury vs in modesty aliue?
No Caine: For thy example I resolue
To study spite, and practise cruelty:
Scorne else will grow their sport, our falls their fame,
That glory to deceiue, and ioy in shame.
This inward warre, where modesty and shame
Would subiect sense to duties Tyrannie:
Wronged with doubt I liue; a wife to lust,
A stranger both to honor, loue, and trust.
My friends despis'd, my seruants made my spies;
No way, but by betraying me, to rise.
Is this the only right of womanhood?
Then know base Men, in whom all loue is lost,
That wit moues wit; power, feare; feare, hate;
No farther bondage hath a wiues estate.
While Mahomet, that faithlesse hypocrite,
Canker of loue, All-ill in one, that man
Shew'd loue to me;
Alaham was wroth, an husbands honour touch'd,
He vile, I worse: the eyes of Iealousie
Seeing her owne disease in him, and me.
But since this wretch, with his aspiring craft,
To Alaham hath falsly sold my shame,
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And shall this traffike of ambition thriue,
And bury vs in modesty aliue?
No Caine: For thy example I resolue
To study spite, and practise cruelty:
Scorne else will grow their sport, our falls their fame,
That glory to deceiue, and ioy in shame.
But what means this? Alaham hasts to the Crowne;
He tries, moues, breakes all that will not be bowed;
Those only stand which helpe his father downe.
Wife is a priuate name: Ambitions wayes
Lie not within the bounds of loue, but vse:
When things are ripe, I must be ouerthrowne.
And shall I lose my selfe in idle lust?
Each Vassall is as great as Queenes in it.
Princes haue strength, they erre for Empire must.
What feare I then? Fame that is great, is good:
Hazard all men behold with reuerent eyes;
And must we only in remorse be wise?
No, no: My heart, and State doe more embrace:
Purple shall hide my lust, a Crowne my shame:
Passion with passions hath such vnity,
As one must euer be anothers frame.
Beyond the truth I am in louing Caine:
The monuments of lust are secrecy,
Suspition, shame, remorse, aduersity,
If Caine be King; the wayes to that are change,
Wrong, hazard, care, ruine, confusion, blood;
Poore thoughts, that fear, or rest, haue neuer good.
He tries, moues, breakes all that will not be bowed;
Those only stand which helpe his father downe.
Wife is a priuate name: Ambitions wayes
Lie not within the bounds of loue, but vse:
When things are ripe, I must be ouerthrowne.
And shall I lose my selfe in idle lust?
Each Vassall is as great as Queenes in it.
Princes haue strength, they erre for Empire must.
What feare I then? Fame that is great, is good:
Hazard all men behold with reuerent eyes;
And must we only in remorse be wise?
No, no: My heart, and State doe more embrace:
Purple shall hide my lust, a Crowne my shame:
Passion with passions hath such vnity,
As one must euer be anothers frame.
Beyond the truth I am in louing Caine:
The monuments of lust are secrecy,
Suspition, shame, remorse, aduersity,
If Caine be King; the wayes to that are change,
Wrong, hazard, care, ruine, confusion, blood;
Poore thoughts, that fear, or rest, haue neuer good.
My partie's strong: I build vpon the vice,
Question the yoke of Princes, husband, law;
My good successe breakes all the links of awe.
Then Chance! be thou my friend: Desire! my guide.
My heart extended is to great attempts,
Which, if they speed, eternize shall my fame;
If not, 'tis glory to excell in shame.
Question the yoke of Princes, husband, law;
My good successe breakes all the links of awe.
Then Chance! be thou my friend: Desire! my guide.
My heart extended is to great attempts,
Which, if they speed, eternize shall my fame;
If not, 'tis glory to excell in shame.
Loe where my Husband comes! Now reason must
Disguise these passions, lest I lose my end;
Who hides his minde is to himselfe a friend.
Disguise these passions, lest I lose my end;
Who hides his minde is to himselfe a friend.
25
Scena secunda.
Hala, Alaham.Hala.
King of my selfe! Redeemer of our fame!
What secret clouds doe ouercast your heart?
Counsell, and time doe both worke one effect,
And either cure, or cleare what we suspect.
Alah.
My wounds can haue no cure; my feares haue cast
Nature, and truth into afflictions moulds;
The workes of time, and counsell both are past.
When hearts once from themselues are runne astray,
Chance must their guide be, violence their way.
Hala.
Chance is not cast in moulds, like other Arts,
Her counsells but the hope of rashnesse be;
Aduice did neuer any man betray:
If truth be luckie, counsell is the way.
Alaham.
If counsell be the guide of vndertaking,
Our powers best with our owne wits doe agree,
Where both the meanes, and ends together be.
Hala.
Who trusts his passion multiplies his care;
All paines within, all cures without vs are.
Alaham.
If you captiued be I speake withall,
Then from my passion into yours I fall.
Hala.
My state of minde, good will, and homage is;
My being, reuerence; my end, your will;
Selfe-loue it selfe payes tribute vnto this.
Alah.
If loue haue power to leaue, and breake her vow;
How can I trust to that you promise now?
If loue change not; how can I trust, and know,
That you loue Mahomet, my ouerthrow?
Hala.
His place deseru'd respect, his vertue praise;
Our freedome, not inhibited by you,
Found many things indifferent to doe.
Alaham.
Forbidding is the prison of the thought,
A violence which on themselues they draw,
That inwardly of nothing stand in awe.
26
Then triumphs in thy once forsaken loue;
Proclaimes deceipt to be thy state of mind,
Vncompetible, vnpossible to finde.
So as if I should rule this glorious Throne,
You ruling me (as he assumes you doe)
The State and I at once were ouerthrowne.
Hala.
Good nature then (I see) is not the art,
With which a womans honor safe may goe
Through hollow seas of mans dissembling heart.
His faithlesnesse yet doth this good to me,
That I may freely hate all men, but thee.
Alaham.
Hate is the band of furie in the heart,
Without reuenge, no more but sense of smart.
Hala.
Hate is the print of iniurie violent,
Only in ruine, and reuenge content.
Alaham.
Reuenges, in your sex, dishonor be;
And in your strength, impossibilitie.
Impatience only doth with God make warre.
Hala.
Furie findes armes; wronghath ill destinie;
While God is, it is basenesse to despaire:
For right more credit hath than power there.
Alaham.
Yet God, and kings vse wisdome in their might,
Reward, and grace doe from their owne hands part;
They others vse for instruments of spite.
Hala.
Whom can we vse? Since he we hate is great,
And we disgrac'd: Who hazard will his State
With him, that for his owne good must intreat?
Alaham.
Aspirers are not voyd of riuall hate:
If any enuy him, or loue our right,
Reuenge lies there; their liues desire Art.
Hala.
Of God I aske it; and in men will moue,
As much as can be wrought with hope, or loue.
But men vncertaine are, blowne here, and there,
With loue, remorse, feares which in frayltie liue;
Who need forgiuenesse, easily doe forgiue.
The heart which feeles, most liuely can expresse
Reuenge, that picture of his guiltinesse.
Alaham.
Ruine, the power (not art) of Princes is:
27
Hala.
The wounds are mine; to me belongs reuenge;
Sense my aduiser is; you Sir, my end:
What needs a womans passion more to friend?
Alaham.
Mischiefe! now claime thy due. Malice! feare not,
To offer all thy sleights to wicked wits;
Ruine lights not amisse where ere it hits.
My engines worke, care is already past;
My hopes arise out of these Basshas blood:
If both, my wish; if either dye, my good.
To offer all thy sleights to wicked wits;
Ruine lights not amisse where ere it hits.
My engines worke, care is already past;
My hopes arise out of these Basshas blood:
If both, my wish; if either dye, my good.
Hala! Good fortunes are together linkt;
Thy faith stirres vp new light within my minde:
Behold, the Throne descends to take me vp.
Antiquitie, in her vnenuied wombe,
Now offers vs the fatall president
Of sixteene Kings, my Predecessors, all
Blinded, and then depos'd by Basshas hand:
So tickely vnworthinesse doth stand.
Thy faith stirres vp new light within my minde:
Behold, the Throne descends to take me vp.
Antiquitie, in her vnenuied wombe,
Now offers vs the fatall president
Of sixteene Kings, my Predecessors, all
Blinded, and then depos'd by Basshas hand:
So tickely vnworthinesse doth stand.
Doth wit, and courage only rest in slaues?
Hath hazard ought more horrible than scorne?
Haue I occasions sure, and shall I stay
To giue all, but my miserie, away?
Hath hazard ought more horrible than scorne?
Haue I occasions sure, and shall I stay
To giue all, but my miserie, away?
No Hala, No: Thy dowrie shall be fame;
Thy stile, a Crowne; thy prospect, reuerence:
The East shall doe thee honor in my name.
Out shall my fathers, and my brothers eyes;
Authority is only for the wise.
Thy stile, a Crowne; thy prospect, reuerence:
The East shall doe thee honor in my name.
Out shall my fathers, and my brothers eyes;
Authority is only for the wise.
But since these mighty workes haue many parts,
And I but one, which one cannot doe all;
Ile send thee Caine: keepe firme vpon your strengths.
Beauty, and honor, natures Scepters be,
And haue on mens desires authority.
And I but one, which one cannot doe all;
Ile send thee Caine: keepe firme vpon your strengths.
Beauty, and honor, natures Scepters be,
And haue on mens desires authority.
Exit.
Hala.
Now Hala, seeke thy sex; lend scorn'e thy wit,
To worke new patterns of Reuenges in.
Let rage despise to feed on priuate blood;
Her honor lies aboue, where danger is,
In Thrones of Kings; in vniuersall woe.
Worke that which Alaham may enuie at,
And men wish theirs, that Ill it selfe may tremble.
Monstrous, incredible, too great for words.
Keepe close, and adde to furie with restraint;
Doe not breake forth vntill thou breakest all.
To worke new patterns of Reuenges in.
Let rage despise to feed on priuate blood;
Her honor lies aboue, where danger is,
In Thrones of Kings; in vniuersall woe.
Worke that which Alaham may enuie at,
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Monstrous, incredible, too great for words.
Keepe close, and adde to furie with restraint;
Doe not breake forth vntill thou breakest all.
Is Wrong so proud? Shall Man once dare to fashion
A Womans ruine, in a womans passion?
Husband! most odious name: scorne of subiection.
Is loue to women but your rage of thoughts?
Are your desires let blood by your enioying? Ah fooles!
We see your lusts relent, you see not ours;
And from that change aduantage hath her powers.
But on: Still vse thy craft: Thy strength lies there.
Ignorance, that sometimes makes the hypocrite,
Wants neuer mischiefe; though it oft want feare:
For while thou thinkst faith made to answer wit,
Obserue the iustice that doth follow it.
A Womans ruine, in a womans passion?
Husband! most odious name: scorne of subiection.
Is loue to women but your rage of thoughts?
Are your desires let blood by your enioying? Ah fooles!
We see your lusts relent, you see not ours;
And from that change aduantage hath her powers.
But on: Still vse thy craft: Thy strength lies there.
Ignorance, that sometimes makes the hypocrite,
Wants neuer mischiefe; though it oft want feare:
For while thou thinkst faith made to answer wit,
Obserue the iustice that doth follow it.
Caine, Mahomet, and me thou hat'st alike,
For vnlike cause, and craftie wayes do'st take,
That each may ruin'd be for others sake.
Shall I, for thee, hazard Caines life I loue?
And weigh downe my affection with my hate?
Can highest thoughts haue any thing aboue?
For vnlike cause, and craftie wayes do'st take,
That each may ruin'd be for others sake.
Shall I, for thee, hazard Caines life I loue?
And weigh downe my affection with my hate?
Can highest thoughts haue any thing aboue?
Ah! but perchance my safety in the blood
Of Mahomet doth rest, the good of Caine:
Then were it losse to make occasion vaine.
Of Mahomet doth rest, the good of Caine:
Then were it losse to make occasion vaine.
And shall I looke but only to be safe?
Can Iniurie and Malice adde no more?
Ah coward sex! faint, shallow Passion
Farre from me be: A worke that no age dares
Allow, yet none conceale, I must attempt.
Furie! then spurre thy selfe, embedlam wit;
Poyson my thoughts, to make my reason see
Pleasure in crueltie, Glorie, in spite:
Rage to exceed examples doth delight.
Can Iniurie and Malice adde no more?
Ah coward sex! faint, shallow Passion
Farre from me be: A worke that no age dares
Allow, yet none conceale, I must attempt.
Furie! then spurre thy selfe, embedlam wit;
Poyson my thoughts, to make my reason see
Pleasure in crueltie, Glorie, in spite:
Rage to exceed examples doth delight.
Thoughts! doe you blush? To Alaham what's ill?
His death? O barren wit, and sandie rage!
No marble pillars, no enamells rich,
Buried in silence, worne away with age,
Are furies that no greater plagues deuise:
Horrors they be that haue eternities.
His death? O barren wit, and sandie rage!
No marble pillars, no enamells rich,
Buried in silence, worne away with age,
Are furies that no greater plagues deuise:
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What saith my heart? Grow millions out of one?
Doth passion leaue her infancie by vse?
And shall I, by the death of Mahomet,
More skill, at least more crueltie beget?
Then let him die. But can I venture Caine,
And leaue misfortune power ouer loue?
Triumphs to Alaham, if both be slaine?
Doth passion leaue her infancie by vse?
And shall I, by the death of Mahomet,
More skill, at least more crueltie beget?
Then let him die. But can I venture Caine,
And leaue misfortune power ouer loue?
Triumphs to Alaham, if both be slaine?
Ah sleepy Sexe! how slow is their progression,
That would exactly measure infinite,
By tender feares, or minutes of delight?
That would exactly measure infinite,
By tender feares, or minutes of delight?
Then Hala, leaue this circle of selfe-loue.
Beginne; goe on: hate must stride ouer feare.
Who are secure,
And nothing venture, all things must endure.
Beginne; goe on: hate must stride ouer feare.
Who are secure,
And nothing venture, all things must endure.
For Alaham, that traytors ouerthrow,
My rage is yet too yong to worke vpon:
What to resolue of him I dare not thinke,
Till this great frame, wherein our fortunes lie,
Be surer linkt vnto prosperitie.
Then shall occasion horrors strange deuise;
Fooles only lose their ends to tyrannize.
My rage is yet too yong to worke vpon:
What to resolue of him I dare not thinke,
Till this great frame, wherein our fortunes lie,
Be surer linkt vnto prosperitie.
Then shall occasion horrors strange deuise;
Fooles only lose their ends to tyrannize.
Scena Tertia.
Caine Bassha, Hala.Caine.
Princesse of me! I finde care in your face,
Woe smothered vp; I came to know your will;
Nothing which you command me can be ill.
Hala.
That which I least did feare is fall'n on me,
Wrong and mishap; which needing others loue,
Makes them vnlouely that vnhappy be.
From Kings themselues when fortune turnes her face;
Then need they most, yet least may vse their owne.
So dearly Mans vnthankfulnesse is knowne.
30
What is the cause that makes you thus accuse
The world of faults, your selfe of inward feare?
Hala.
The little faith which all the world doth vse;
The iniuries which strength of heart must beare:
Euui'd of all, if it be set aboue;
If humble, then too low for men to loue.
Caine.
Doe not forsake your selfe: For they that doe,
Offend, and teach the world to leaue them too.
Mortall our God shall be; the truth shall lie;
Darkenesse shall see her selfe; fame lose her voyce;
Er'e I will leaue my loue, or my loue you:
Afflictions wounds affection doe renew.
Hala.
Perchance you loue both those I hate, and me;
Affections then against affection be.
Perchance a vow, good turnes, and good beleefe
Are mists betweene your loue, and my releefe.
Caine.
You know I loue: speake plaine, and doe not feare,
That reason other is than kindnesse there.
Hala.
Then heare: and if my iudgement you disproue,
You shall haue cause to thinke I trust, and loue.
Mahomet the faultie is, his faults be these:
Enuious of thee, to my loue treacherous;
The King must lose his sight, his Crowne, his Sonne:
This wickednesse hath Mahomet begunne.
Caine.
O hell! and is thy seate in fleshly hearts?
Be mans ill thoughts his owne ill spirits become?
I well can thinke that Mahomet aspires;
For loue of greatnesse may with goodnesse goe:
But cannot thinke that he our death conspires.
Perchance he seekes to doe your brother Right,
Which makes our owne desires to doe vs spite.
Hala.
Mischiefe that may be help'd, is hard to know;
And danger going on still multiplies.
Caine.
Let care as fast then adde vnto her eyes.
Hala.
Where harme hath many wings, care armes too late:
Caine.
Hastie attempts make chance precipitate.
What shall I doe?
Hal.
Goe forward in thy feare:
Danger doth giue thee choice to doe, or beare.
31
My loue of him, and truth, doe make me loth
To thinke them wrong'd: And shall I wrong them both?
Hala.
The good beleefe of mankinde is a sea
Where honor drownes, iniquitie goes free;
Whose thoughts (like sailes) for euery weather be.
Caine.
With shaking thoughts no hands can draw aright:
True hearts, to doe vnnobly, haue no sp'rit.
Hala.
The feare of some, is guilt with honestie;
Others, with loue; thine, with false noblenesse.
Yet thinke not (Coward) wit can hide the shame
Of hearts, which while they dare not strike for feare,
Would make it vertue in them to forbeare.
Others, with loue; thine, with false noblenesse.
Yet thinke not (Coward) wit can hide the shame
Of hearts, which while they dare not strike for feare,
Would make it vertue in them to forbeare.
No Caine: In men we women, when we loue,
Aske faith, and heart. Our selues haue feare, and wit.
In loue how can thy soule, and mine agree?
I seeke reuenge, thou preachest pietie.
Aske faith, and heart. Our selues haue feare, and wit.
In loue how can thy soule, and mine agree?
I seeke reuenge, thou preachest pietie.
Caine.
More easie motions gentle hearts receiue:
His fault was great; yet you may haue redresse
In State, and honor, without such excesse.
Hala.
Excesse the reason is, and meane of loue;
And in the same excesse is malice ioy'd:
I would be safe, and yet haue him destroy'd.
Caine.
If leaue, or left the fate of kindnesse be,
By his example, what becomes of me?
Hala.
If blinde to all, but to it selfe, be loue;
Whence doe your vowes, or whence this question moue?
Since the true state of true affection is
Wonder, at others worth; Faith, without hire;
Vnwearied Paine; vnrecompens'd Desire.
Caine.
Great hearts thus giuen away, in prison are;
Their strength, their bands; and good beleefe, their smart:
Loue neuer seuers reason from the heart.
Hala.
My shame againe then unto me impart;
Restore my faith; and I doe render thee
Those faithlesse vowes, which thou hast made to me.
For since, I see, the spungie hearts of men
Their hollowes gladly fill with womens loue,
And nothing yeeld to them vncrusht againe:
What nature workes 'tis folly to complaine.
Restore my faith; and I doe render thee
Those faithlesse vowes, which thou hast made to me.
For since, I see, the spungie hearts of men
Their hollowes gladly fill with womens loue,
And nothing yeeld to them vncrusht againe:
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Mahomet, that wretch, hath done me iniurie;
He left my loue, and he my life hath sought:
Caine! Line at ease; fame is an idle breath;
My body is enough 'twixt thee, and death.
He left my loue, and he my life hath sought:
Caine! Line at ease; fame is an idle breath;
My body is enough 'twixt thee, and death.
Caine.
Distract I am: my reason (like a cloud,
Before a winters storme) rides here, and there:
Like reedes, my thoughts are straight and crooked too;
With diuers breaths, which diuers passions blow.
Against the streame of truth must loue still goe?
Resolv'd I am that Mahomet shall die.
Hala.
Shame spake this word: danger appeares not yet;
Time, like a med'cine, will asswage this paine,
And feare perchance bring backe good will againe.
Caine.
It is not I that liue in me, but you;
Whose will hath fashion'd all my thoughts anew.
Hala.
Then on: When thoughts vnite all care is ceas'd;
The heart, vnfetter'd and the hope increas'd.
Out of his death I see occasion borne,
To greater power than needs to couer scorne.
For he the Iustice rules, you rule the Warre;
His death diuided powers will vnite:
And in a broken course where dangers be,
Only the Crowne can put off miserie.
Caine.
Farre be it off, our hopes should be so vaine.
Our secret loue already tempteth God,
To warre him more with infidelity,
Would hasten vengeance, and make sharpe his rod.
Hala.
God made strict lawes for vertues exercise,
An idle word, a wish transgresseth them:
Yet in a Throne remorse hath glorious eyes.
Alaham doth vndermine the present State:
When he corrupted hath the peoples faith,
Thou hast the sword: authority makes way,
Her hand is next when Crownes become a prey.
Caine.
We God and man will first trie with the death
Of Mahomet: If that doe passe for good,
Hope easily makes occasion vnderstood.
Hala.
The end agree'd, the meane is yet in doubt.
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By sword.
Hala.
That will be easie to descrie;
Danger to misse; and hard to doe without.
Caine.
By poyson then; wherof though doubts may grow,
What one alone may doe, is hard to know.
Hala.
It often failes: For instruments are base;
Slaues haue too slauish hearts; a Basshas name
Is like a superstitious hallowed place.
Men must be forc'd, or wise that force the same.
Caine.
By these two hands, that will not faile their heart,
It shall be wrought.
If poyson misse, the sword shall compasse it:
When chances often scape, at last they hit.
Hala.
Fortune, and Loue! Both Gods of humane might,
You like aduenture, see it rightly plac'd:
You liue in kindnesse, see it not disgrac'd.
Exit.
Caine.
What I haue vow'd, both God, and Nature hate;
My heart misgiues; my soule doth prophecie,
That euill thoughts procure an euill fate.
But ah! my loue I gaue, and it gaue me.
The choice is past: Thoughts now must thinke to doe
Not what I freely am, but forc'd vnto.
Scena quarta.
Mahomet; Caine.Mahomet.
Who euer haue obseru'd the worke of spirits
May see how easily men slide downe to ill.
The world hath strange examples, false delights,
Which make our senses nets to catch our will.
Who then with men for euery fault falls out,
Must hate himselfe, and all the world about.
Behold! the man I speake of doth appeare:
Retire aside, stand close, marke what succeeds:
His owne destruction, or else mine he breeds.
May see how easily men slide downe to ill.
The world hath strange examples, false delights,
Which make our senses nets to catch our will.
Who then with men for euery fault falls out,
Must hate himselfe, and all the world about.
Behold! the man I speake of doth appeare:
Retire aside, stand close, marke what succeeds:
His owne destruction, or else mine he breeds.
34
Caine! what is it, that thus your minde distracts?
Counsells of honour alter not the face;
Hearts only thinke with paine of doubtfull acts.
Counsells of honour alter not the face;
Hearts only thinke with paine of doubtfull acts.
Caine.
In care they liue that must for many care;
And such the best, and greatest euer are.
Mah.
They purchase care vnto themselues, that know
The weight of care; and yet will it imbrace.
If care be grieuous, why vsurpe you so?
Caine.
I liue but to obey the Princes will.
Mahomet.
That is, to cherish Prince in their ill:
For they must flatter good, and euill too,
That vnder Princes all alone will doe.
Caine.
As sweetest vapors couet to the skie:
So faith, and dutie after Princes runne;
Ill nature neuer can indure a Sunne.
Mahomet.
Flatterie so like in all to dutie showes,
But finelier drest in diligence, and care,
As Kings best plea'sd, that most deceiued, are.
Caine.
Harsh spirit hates them, that do not hate with it,
Miscensures all the world to seeme seuere;
Bindes honestie and truth to haue no wit;
These ill-fac'd vertues not of nature be,
But peeuishnesse, true honors enemie.
Mahomet.
A iust, seuere, and vniuersall care
Of people, shorne by Princes fauorites,
To spies of Tyrannie vnpleasing is;
Which euer, like ambitious Adamants,
So fast from people draw to Princes States,
As in the end they must draw vp their hates.
Of people, shorne by Princes fauorites,
To spies of Tyrannie vnpleasing is;
Which euer, like ambitious Adamants,
So fast from people draw to Princes States,
As in the end they must draw vp their hates.
Caine! then take heed of your selfe-seeking plot,
Engrossing offices, aspiring all;
For it offends euen those it toucheth not.
Nor is it only this that hazards you;
Ill neuer goes alone, if fame say true.
Engrossing offices, aspiring all;
For it offends euen those it toucheth not.
Nor is it only this that hazards you;
Ill neuer goes alone, if fame say true.
Caine.
Is fame to censure vs that liue aboue,
And must sell iustice, if we purchase loue?
Mahomet.
Fame is the peoples voyce, to tell their griefe,
Appealing from inferiors to the chiefe.
If falsely you, and Hala, fame abuse;
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If fame speake truth, which you would not haue knowne,
Grieue to deserue, but not to beare your owne.
Caine.
What doe I, that the world can well reproue?
Mahomet.
Vniustly suffer, or vniustly loue.
Caine.
Suffer I doe; for infamie is there,
Where either malice, enuie is, or feare.
Loue I confesse I doe; And what is it,
But natures taxe, layd vpon good intent,
For right, and honor vnto excellent?
Mahomet.
Reason must iudge of loue, not loue of it;
Else shall loue ground of euery mischiefe be:
For murther, theft, adultery, and spite,
Are but loue of reuenge, and others right.
Else shall loue ground of euery mischiefe be:
For murther, theft, adultery, and spite,
Are but loue of reuenge, and others right.
Ah Caine! my heart is rackt with inward griefe,
Iustice hath partie there, and so hath loue:
They both haue wounds, and yet they both haue life;
The one suppressing what the other moues.
I will speake plaine: Hala, thou do'st abuse,
And stayn'st the Princes line with seruile lust:
Wherin proud courage, match'd with guiltinesse,
Adds wrong to wrong; and to or'e-build complaint,
Affects that greatnesse which makes faults seeme lesse.
Iustice hath partie there, and so hath loue:
They both haue wounds, and yet they both haue life;
The one suppressing what the other moues.
I will speake plaine: Hala, thou do'st abuse,
And stayn'st the Princes line with seruile lust:
Wherin proud courage, match'd with guiltinesse,
Adds wrong to wrong; and to or'e-build complaint,
Affects that greatnesse which makes faults seeme lesse.
Caine! weigh thy course: “Ambitions gilded spheres
“Are like to painted hells, which please the eyes,
“Euen while they shew the heart where horror lies.
Her gilded Throne built on the ruine is
Of Fame, of true Religion, and of Law:
The labor's great that all the world must draw.
The second place, which with this King you hold,
Yeelds feare vnfearfull, greatnesse well secur'd:
Who stand, or fall with Kings, stand well assur'd.
Where men that wrongfully aspire a Crowne,
While they looke vpward euer tumble downe.
Besides, thy bloudy plots discouer'd be
To worke my death; did not the Powers aboue
Restraine both ill mens malice, and their loue.
“Are like to painted hells, which please the eyes,
“Euen while they shew the heart where horror lies.
Her gilded Throne built on the ruine is
Of Fame, of true Religion, and of Law:
The labor's great that all the world must draw.
The second place, which with this King you hold,
Yeelds feare vnfearfull, greatnesse well secur'd:
Who stand, or fall with Kings, stand well assur'd.
Where men that wrongfully aspire a Crowne,
While they looke vpward euer tumble downe.
Besides, thy bloudy plots discouer'd be
To worke my death; did not the Powers aboue
Restraine both ill mens malice, and their loue.
Caine.
Let this beare witnesse: No false prophets know,
The time, or manner of their ouerthrow.
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Nay let thy life, in his power thou wouldst kill,
Proue, God giues seldome good successe to ill.
Behold! Euen Natures iust accusing spies
Now make thy face blush forth thy guiltinesse;
Remorse begets strange contrarieties:
Confusions warre of good, and ill, I see,
At once contending for the victorie.
Proue, God giues seldome good successe to ill.
Behold! Euen Natures iust accusing spies
Now make thy face blush forth thy guiltinesse;
Remorse begets strange contrarieties:
Confusions warre of good, and ill, I see,
At once contending for the victorie.
But Caine! hold fast these sparks, they be of truth.
These smokes will passe, and light appeare againe;
Shame past, is honor; Error is vertues booke,
Where knowledge doth aboue temptation looke:
These smokes will passe, and light appeare againe;
Shame past, is honor; Error is vertues booke,
Where knowledge doth aboue temptation looke:
Caine.
What vgly musicke inward discords make?
Thoughts layd asleepe of long doe now appeare;
Euen halfe my power coniures me for his sake.
What's this? Me hinkes I feele my shame grow deare.
Hate of my selfe, and desolation breed,
Where ioy, and pleasure I was wont to feed.
Mahomet.
Who lose their euils, lose their owne despaire;
Out of which losse new hopes of honor rise,
To show the world desire with better eyes.
Caine.
What can I hope? My fruit of better wit
Is but to know I fayl'd for lacke of it.
Shame is in that I leaue, and that I doe:
The fault is only mine; and onely I,
A sacrifice vnto you all, will die.
Mahomet.
Fauour thy selfe: Passions are desperate,
And tempt with vncouth woe, as well as ioy.
It euill is that glories to destroy;
Her, and her counsells kill, and I agree;
For she is foe alike to thee, and me.
Caine.
That is destroy my selfe; and I consent:
For all any thoughts to thee were euill bent.
Mahomet.
Caine! credit not those visions of the ill.
Faults are in flesh, as motes be in the Sunne,
Where light doth shew each little thing amisse.
Presumption, and despaire liue opposite,
As times false glasses, wherin frailties see,
Their faults too great, or else too little be.
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Alaham ambitious is, light, violent;
His end but to surprise his fathers state:
Vnto which end, no lets there are but we;
Who wonne, remou'd, or ruined must be.
He first tried me with riuall iealousie,
Shewing me hope, and honour in the start:
Besides reuenge, by thy death offering me,
Of our diuided powers an vnitie.
But I stood firme. While he no whit dismay'd,
Tempts thee more strongly, whom he hateth more;
Resolu'd who euer kills, shall killed be:
So much the faithlesse ioy in cruelty.
Caine.
“Mischiefe o'reflowes my thoughts; & like a sea,
“Deuoures the dewes, the raine, the snow, the springs,
“And all their sweetnesse to his saltnesse brings.
How should I ground a faith, that faithlesse know
My selfe to be? Or why should he mistrust,
On whom the worst that can befall is iust?
Mahomet.
Who liue distrusting, yet haue time to friend;
But who mistrusting die, make haste to goe
To that infernall Monarchie of feare,
Where worse things come to passe, than doubted were.
Caine.
Mahomet! Thou hast o'recome: I yeeld, by thee
To hold my life, as sentence of my fall;
Thy worths example, no life naturall.
Yet grant me thus-much more; to keepe thee close,
Till I thy death to Alaham impart;
Conceit it selfe doth ease a broken heart.
Mahomet.
Grant me againe, while secretly I liue,
You guard your selfe from Alahams treacherie;
Lest you haue harme; he, ioy; I, infamie.
Exit.
Caine.
Behold my state! bound to my enemies;
Of friends in doubt. To me euen good, and ill,
The one despayre, the other cowardize.
Hala I loue: O word beyond the right,
On which is built that false thought, Libertie,
Which makes great hearts in greatest ills delight.
I sought her loue through all the arts of lust;
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Mischiefe, affections proofe; and shame, her trust.
Hard, backe from ill, the way to goodnesse is,
By scorne, remorse, patience, and broken heart,
Impossible to them that doe amisse.
Then on: walke in this path of death, or shame;
Alaham is false, or Mahomet, or I;
Resolu'd I am, that one of vs shall die.
CHORVS SECVNDVS, Of Furie:
Malice. Crafte. Pride. Corrupt reason. Euill Spirit.
Malice.
Whence growes this fatall stay of our progression?
Who haue no friends are deafe to intercession?
What can withstand our power? Our ends are euill;
And so need feare no let from any Diuell.
Craft.
We diuerse are in works, though not in ends;
And thereby euery Furie findes some friends.
Besides, we ouer-act, and therein foyle
The ruine of Mankinde, wherein we toyle.
Malice.
Giue me one instance: wherein doe we fayle?
Craft.
In that we mankind vnto fame entayle.
Malice.
That breakes Religions bounds, and makes him ours,
By forming his God out of his owne powers:
For if by Conscience he did leaue, or take;
On that smooth face we could no wrinckle make.
Craft.
Yet fame keepes outward order, and supports:
For shame and honour are strong humane forts.
Whereas Confusion is an engine fit
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Malice.
Nay Craft! it is thy faint hypocrisie,
That mankinde is so long protected by.
Thy often changes many times appease
Those Furies, which would else destroy at ease.
Craft.
Fye Malice! It is you that vs deceiue,
Who but with violence only can bereaue.
For which you finde not many natures fit,
And so adde little to our Throne by it.
Where I passe thorough all the orbes of vice,
And forme in each mould Natures preiudice.
The Christian Church from me is not exempt;
Lawes haue by me both honour and contempt;
By me the Warre vpholds her reputation;
And lust, which leaues no certaine generation;
Enuy, that hates all difference of degree;
And selfe-loue, which hath no affinity;
Euen you, without me, cannot prosper well:
I am the mould, and Maiesty of hell.
Pride.
Craft, peace! thou cuttest euery threed so thin,
As it destroyes thy works ere they beginne.
Thy cobwebs, like th'Astrologers thinne line,
Fit for discourse, for vse are ouer-fine.
Thy state is nothing else but change and feare,
Weeds that no fruit, but fading blossomes beare,
Cloth'd with pied colours of hypocrisie,
Which like to all is, yet can nothing be.
In you no soule findes stayres to rise withall,
Descent to craft, change, feare, being naturall.
When I propound in grosse, you minutes play,
Which is the cause our Tragicke works thus stay.
My wheeles goe on at once, thine restlesse pause;
Of little works, with much adoe, the cause.
You euen in Hala sometimes breed remorse,
At least a doubt that euill hath no force.
Thou makest Caine in vndertaking slow,
Who must, to serue thy turne, like goodnesse show:
Those Scenes still tedious are, those Acts too long,
Where thy vnresolute Images be strong.
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I swallow all at once, with honors name.
Then glory not: since where thy links excell,
There we inlarge not, but contract our hell.
Corrupt reason.
Peace you base Subalterns! and striue no more,
That but the Carriers be of my rich store.
Perchance you thinke me th'obiect of you all,
And so no Furie, but the Furies thrall:
Where I giue forme, and stuffe to make you worse,
And so become your Lord, and not your Nurse.
I breake the banks of dutie, honor, faith;
And subiect am to no power, but to death:
Charge me; I grant, Delayes grow out of wit:
And are not all your false webs wrought by it?
To time I haue respect, to person, place;
I crosse my selfe to giue my owne acts grace.
I am Base to you all, and so the chiefe,
Equall with truth, where I finde good beleefe.
I beare the weight of feare, the rage of lust,
With selfe-loue, enuy, malice, left in trust.
I calme Mans windy pride, distempered rage,
Giuing to each a shape for euery age.
Wrong I attire in purple robes of might,
That State may helpe it to be infinite.
And who is fitter here to rule you all,
Than I, that giue you being, by my fall?
That but the Carriers be of my rich store.
Perchance you thinke me th'obiect of you all,
And so no Furie, but the Furies thrall:
Where I giue forme, and stuffe to make you worse,
And so become your Lord, and not your Nurse.
I breake the banks of dutie, honor, faith;
And subiect am to no power, but to death:
Charge me; I grant, Delayes grow out of wit:
And are not all your false webs wrought by it?
To time I haue respect, to person, place;
I crosse my selfe to giue my owne acts grace.
I am Base to you all, and so the chiefe,
Equall with truth, where I finde good beleefe.
I beare the weight of feare, the rage of lust,
With selfe-loue, enuy, malice, left in trust.
I calme Mans windy pride, distempered rage,
Giuing to each a shape for euery age.
Wrong I attire in purple robes of might,
That State may helpe it to be infinite.
And who is fitter here to rule you all,
Than I, that giue you being, by my fall?
Know therfore all you shadow-louing Spirits!
Who haue no being, but in mans demerits,
That infinite desires, and finite power,
At once, can neuer all mankinde deuoure.
Though men be all ours, and all we but one;
The vice yet cannot build, or stand alone.
Be it mans weaknesse that doth interrupt,
Or some power else that cannot be corrupt;
Or be there what there may be else aboue,
Which may, and will maintaine her owne by loue:
Yet haue we scope enough to marre this State;
And to the euer being, what is late?
Who haue no being, but in mans demerits,
That infinite desires, and finite power,
At once, can neuer all mankinde deuoure.
Though men be all ours, and all we but one;
The vice yet cannot build, or stand alone.
Be it mans weaknesse that doth interrupt,
Or some power else that cannot be corrupt;
Or be there what there may be else aboue,
Which may, and will maintaine her owne by loue:
Yet haue we scope enough to marre this State;
And to the euer being, what is late?
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As men in your names image vglinesse,
To checke beloued childrens wantonnesse,
When they would haue them doe things, or forbeare;
And call you when they know you are not there:
So I enammell your deformity,
Making all your excesses like to me.
And that you may beleeue this to be true;
We are not like: For what am I, but you?
To checke beloued childrens wantonnesse,
When they would haue them doe things, or forbeare;
And call you when they know you are not there:
So I enammell your deformity,
Making all your excesses like to me.
And that you may beleeue this to be true;
We are not like: For what am I, but you?
Euill Spirits.
Reason! You marre our Mart, by coueting
Not to be equall with vs, but our King.
For though you now like Romane Augurs be,
Who, but your staffe, haue no true mysterie;
Yet doe you striue to rule, adde, or diminish;
And idly so protract what we could finish.
Not to be equall with vs, but our King.
For though you now like Romane Augurs be,
Who, but your staffe, haue no true mysterie;
Yet doe you striue to rule, adde, or diminish;
And idly so protract what we could finish.
Else how could Alaham, or Hala stay
So long; from making to our ends a way?
Lusts open face this Age will easily beare,
And hope here currant is to all, but feare.
Wrong needs no veile, where times doe tyrannize;
And what, but lacke of heart, is then vnwise;
Age hath descri'd those toyes to be but name,
Which in the worlds youth did beare reall fame;
Iustice, Religion, Honour, Humblenesse;
Shaddowes, which not well mixt, make beauty lesse.
They helpe to smother, not inlarge our fire,
By putting painted maskes on mans desire;
And giue time to vnactiue Theorie,
Which rage it selfe would not doe, were it free.
So that we, Circe-like, change men to beasts,
Which beasts turne men againe: Too base a crest
For vs, that would quite banish doing well;
And so at once change heauen and earth, to hell.
So long; from making to our ends a way?
Lusts open face this Age will easily beare,
And hope here currant is to all, but feare.
Wrong needs no veile, where times doe tyrannize;
And what, but lacke of heart, is then vnwise;
Age hath descri'd those toyes to be but name,
Which in the worlds youth did beare reall fame;
Iustice, Religion, Honour, Humblenesse;
Shaddowes, which not well mixt, make beauty lesse.
They helpe to smother, not inlarge our fire,
By putting painted maskes on mans desire;
And giue time to vnactiue Theorie,
Which rage it selfe would not doe, were it free.
So that we, Circe-like, change men to beasts,
Which beasts turne men againe: Too base a crest
For vs, that would quite banish doing well;
And so at once change heauen and earth, to hell.
In which course, who doth well obserue each part,
Shall finde mankinde to haue so strange a heart;
As being all ill, yet no one ill serues
To worke him to that mischiefe he deserues:
Feare, hope, desire, loue, courage being mixt
So nicely in him, as none can be fixt.
Which is our glorie: as for euery state
To haue a Tempter fitted, and a fate.
A feare in Great men still, to lose their might;
And in the meane, ambition infinite;
Truth, in the witty held but as a notion;
Honor, the Old mans God; the Youths promotion.
All which opposing powers, yet doe agree
To worke corruption in humanity.
Then on: This time is ours: What need we haste?
Since till time ends, our raigne is sure to last.
Shall finde mankinde to haue so strange a heart;
As being all ill, yet no one ill serues
To worke him to that mischiefe he deserues:
Feare, hope, desire, loue, courage being mixt
So nicely in him, as none can be fixt.
Which is our glorie: as for euery state
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A feare in Great men still, to lose their might;
And in the meane, ambition infinite;
Truth, in the witty held but as a notion;
Honor, the Old mans God; the Youths promotion.
All which opposing powers, yet doe agree
To worke corruption in humanity.
Then on: This time is ours: What need we haste?
Since till time ends, our raigne is sure to last.
The Tragedie of Alaham | ||