FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41  
42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>   >|  
ction show, If it end there, our weaknesse makes us know. _Flav_. Let children weepe and men seeke remedie. _Scevin_. Stoutly, and like a soldier, _Flavius_; Yet to seeke remedie to a Princes ill Seldome but it doth the Phisitian kill. _Flav_. And if it doe, _Scevinus_, it shall take But a devoted soule from _Flavius_, Which to my Countrey and the Gods of Rome Alreadie sacred is and given away. Deathe is no stranger unto me, I have The doubtfull hazard in twelve Battailes throwne; My chaunce was life. _Lucan_. Why doe we go to fight in Brittanie And end our lives under another Sunne? Seeke causelesse dangers out? The German might Enioy his Woods and his owne Allis drinke, Yet we walke safely in the streets of Rome; _Bonduca_ hinders not but we might live, Whom we do hurt. Them we call enemies, And those our Lords that spoyle and murder us. _Scevin_. Nothing is hard to them that dare to die. This nobler resolution in you, Lords, Heartens me to disclose some thoughts that I-- The matter is of waight and dangerous. _Lucan_. I see you feare us _Scaevinus_.[11] _Scevin_. Nay, nay, although the thing be full of feare. _Flav_. Tell it to faithfull Eares what eare it bee. _Scevin_. Faith, let it goe, it will but trouble us, Be hurtfull to the speaker and the hearer. _Lucan_. If our long friendship or the opinion-- _Scevin_. Why should I feare to tell them? Why, is he not a Parricide a Player? Nay, _Lucan_, is he not thine Enemie? Hate not the Heavens as well as men to see That condemn'd head? And you, O righteous Gods, Whither so ere you now are fled and will No more looke downe upon th'oppressed Earth; O severe anger of the highest Gods And thou, sterne power to whom the Greekes assigne Scourges and swords to punish proud mens wrongs, If you be more then names found out to awe us And that we doe not vainely build you alters, Aid that iust arme that's bent to execute What you should doe. _Lucan_. Stay, y'are carried too much away, _Scevinus_. _Scevin_. Why, what will you say for him? hath[12] he not Sought to suppresse your Poem, to bereave That honour every tongue in duty paid it. Nay, what can you say for him, hath he not Broacht his owne wives (a chast wives) breast and torne With Scithian hands his Mothers bowels up? The inhospitable _Caucasus_ is milde; The More, that in the boyling desert seekes With blood of strangers to imbrue his iawes, Upbraides the Roman now with barbarousn
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41  
42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Scevin

 

remedie

 
Flavius
 

Scevinus

 

sterne

 

severe

 

highest

 
Greekes
 

wrongs

 

punish


swords

 

opinion

 

assigne

 
Scourges
 
Parricide
 

Heavens

 

Whither

 
condemn
 

Enemie

 

righteous


Player
 

oppressed

 
Mothers
 

bowels

 

inhospitable

 

Scithian

 

Broacht

 

breast

 

Caucasus

 
Upbraides

barbarousn

 

imbrue

 

strangers

 
boyling
 

desert

 
seekes
 
tongue
 

execute

 

vainely

 
alters

bereave

 
honour
 
suppresse
 

Sought

 

carried

 

children

 

chaunce

 
hazard
 
twelve
 

Battailes