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Front Page Titles (by Subject) SCENE II. - The Works of Christopher Marlowe, vol. 2
SCENE II. - Christopher Marlowe, The Works of Christopher Marlowe, vol. 2 [1593]Edition used:The Works of Christopher Marlowe, ed. A.H. Bullen (London: John C. Nimmo, 1885). Vol. 2.
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SCENE II.
EnterGovernor of Malta, Knights, and Officers; met by Bassoes of the Turk, Calymath.
Gov.- Now, Bassoes, what demand you at our hands?
1 Bas.- Know, Knights of Malta, that we came from Rhodes,
- From Cyprus, Candy, and those other Isles
- That lie betwixt the Mediterranean seas.
Gov.- What's Cyprus, Candy, and those other Isles
- To us, or Malta? What at our hands demand ye?
Cal.- The ten years' tribute that remains unpaid.
Gov.- Alas! my lord, the sum is over-great,
- I hope your highness will consider us.
Cal.- I wish, grave governor, 'twere in my power
10 - To favour you, but 'tis my father's cause,
- Wherein I may not, nay, I dare not dally.
Gov.- Then give us leave, great Selim Calymath.
- [Consults apart with the Knights.
Cal.- Stand all aside, and let the Knights determine,
- And send to keep our galleys under sail,
- For happily we shall not tarry here;
- Now, governor,2 [say,] how are you resolved?
Gov.- Thus: since your hard conditions are such
- That you will needs have ten years' tribute past,
- We may have time to make collection
20 - Amongst the inhabitants of Malta for't.
1 Bas.- That's more than is in our commission.
Cal.- What, Callipine! a little courtesy.
- Let's know their time, perhaps it is not long;
- And 'tis more kingly to obtain by peace
- Than to enforce conditions by constraint.
- What respite ask you, governor?
Gov.
Cal.- We grant a month, but see you keep your promise.
- Now launch our galleys back again to sea,
- Where we'll attend the respite you have ta'en,
30 - And for the money send our messenger.
- Farewell, great governor1 and brave Knights of Malta.
Gov.- And all good fortune wait on Calymath!
- [ExeuntCalymathand Bassoes.
- Go one and call those Jews of Malta hither:
- Were they not summoned to appear to-day?
Off.- They were, my lord, and here they come.
- EnterBarabasand three Jews.
1 Knight.- Have you determined what to say to them?
Gov.- Yes, give me leave:—and, Hebrews, now come near.
- From the Emperor of Turkey is arrived
- Great Selim Calymath, his highness' son,
40 - To levy of us ten years' tribute past,
- Now then, here know that it concerneth us—
Bar.- Then, good my lord, to keep your quiet still,
- Your lordship shall do well to let them have it.
Gov.- Soft, Barabas, there's more 'longs to 't than so.
- To what this ten years' tribute will amount,
- That we have cast, but cannot compass it
- By reason of the wars that robbed our store;
- And therefore are we to request your aid.
Bar.- Alas, my lord, we are no soldiers:
50 - And what's our aid against so great a prince?
1 Knight.- Tut, Jew, we know thou art no soldier;
- Thou art a merchant and a moneyed man,
- And 'tis thy money, Barabas, we seek.
Bar.
Gov.- Thine and the rest.
- For, to be short, amongst you't must be had.
1 Jew.- Alas, my lord, the most of us are poor.
Gov.- Then let the rich increase your portions.
Bar.- Are strangers with your tribute to be taxed?
60
2 Knight.- Have strangers leave with us to get their wealth?
- Then let them with us contribute.
Bar.
Gov.- No, Jew, like infidels.
- For through our sufferance of your hateful lives,
- Who stand accursèd in the sight of Heaven,
- These taxes and afflictions are befallen,
- And therefore thus we are determinèd.
- Read there the articles of our decrees.
Reader.- First, the tribute-money of the Turks shall all be levied amongst the Jews, and each of them to pay one half of his estate.
70
Bar.- How, half his estate? I hope you mean not mine.
- [Aside.
Gov.
Reader.- Secondly, he that denies to pay shall straight become a Christian.
Bar.- How! a Christian? Hum, what's here to do?
- [Aside.
Reader.- Lastly, he that denies this shall absolutely lose all he has.
All 3 Jews.- O my lord, we will give half.
Bar.- O earth-mettled villains, and no Hebrews born!
- And will you basely thus submit yourselves
80 - To leave your goods to their arbitrament?
Gov.- Why, Barabas, wilt thou be christenèd?
Bar.- No, governor, I will be no convertite.
Gov.
Bar.- Why, know you what you did by this device?
- Half of my substance is a city's wealth.
- Governor, it was not got so easily;
- Nor will I part so slightly therewithal.
Gov.- Sir, half is the penalty of our decree,
- Either pay that, or we will seize on all.
Bar.- Corpo di Dio! stay! you shall have the half;
90 - Let me be used but as my brethren are.
Gov.- No, Jew, thou hast denied the articles,
- And now it cannot be recalled.
- [Exeunt Officers, on a sign from the Governor.
Bar.- Will you then steal my goods?
- Is theft the ground of your religion?
Gov.- No, Jew, we take particularly thine
- To save the ruin of a multitude:
- And better one want for the common good
- Than many perish for a private man:
- Yet, Barabas, we will not banish thee,
100 - But here in Malta, where thou gott'st thy wealth,
- Live still; and, if thou canst, get more.
Bar.- Christians, what or how can I multiply?
- Of naught is nothing made.
1 Knight.- From naught at first thou cam'st to little wealth,
- From little unto more, from more to most:
- If your first curse fall heavy on thy head,
- And make thee poor and scorned of all the world,
- 'Tis not our fault, but thy inherent sin.
Bar.- What, bring you scripture to confirm your wrongs?
110 - Preach me not out of my possessions.
- Some Jews are wicked, as all Christians are:
- But say the tribe that I descended of
- Were all in general cast away for sin,
- Shall I be tried by their transgression?
- The man that dealeth righteously shall live:
- And which of you can charge me otherwise?
Gov.- Out, wretched Barabas!
- Sham'st thou not thus to justify thyself,
- As if we knew not thy profession?
120 - If thou rely upon thy righteousness,
- Be patient and thy riches will increase.
- Excess of wealth is cause of covetousness:
- And covetousness, O, 'tis a monstrous sin.
Bar.- Ay, but theft is worse: tush! take not from methen,
- For that is theft! and if you rob me thus,
- I must be forced to steal and compass more.
1 Knight.- Grave governor, listen not to his exclaims.
- Convert his mansion to a nunnery;
- His house will harbour many holy nuns.
130
Gov.- It shall be so.
- Enter Officers.
- Now, officers, have you done?
Off.- Ay, my lord, we have seized upon the goods
- And wares of Barabas, which being valued,
- Amount to more than all the wealth in Malta,
- And of the other we have seizèd half.
Gov.- Then we'll take order for the residue.
Bar.- Well then, my lord, say, are you satisfied?
- You have my goods, my money, and my wealth,
- My ships, my store, and all that I enjoyed;
- And, having all, you can request no more;
140 - Unless your unrelenting flinty hearts
- Suppress all pity in your stony breasts,
- And now shall move you to bereave my life.
Gov.- No, Barabas, to stain our hands with blood
- Is far from us and our profession.
Bar.- Why, I esteem the injury far less
- To take the lives of miserable men
- Than be the causers of their misery.
- You have my wealth, the labour of my life,
- The comfort of mine age, my children's hope,
150 - And therefore ne'er distinguish of the wrong.
Gov.- Content thee, Barabas, thou hast naught but right.
Bar.- Your extreme right does me exceeding wrong:
- But take it to you, i' the devil's name.
Gov.- Come, let us in, and gather of these goods
- The money for this tribute of the Turk.
1 Knight.- 'Tis necessary that be looked unto:
- For if we break our day, we break the league,
- And that will prove but simple policy.
- [Exeunt, all exceptBarabasand the Jews.
Bar.- Ay, policy! that's their profession,
160 - And not simplicity, as they suggest.
- The plagues of Egypt, and the curse of Heaven,
- Earth's barrenness, and all men's hatred
- Inflict upon them, thou great Primus Motor!
- And here upon my knees, striking the earth,
- I ban their souls to everlasting pains
- And extreme tortures of the fiery deep,
- That thus have dealt with me in my distress.
1 Jew.- O yet be patient, gentle Barabas.
Bar.- O silly brethren, born to see this day;
170 - Why stand you thus unmoved with my laments?
- Why weep you not to think upon my wrongs?
- Why pine not I, and die in this distress?
1 Jew.- Why, Barabas, as hardly can we brook
- The cruel handling of ourselves in this;
- Thou seest they have taken half our goods.
Bar.- Why did you yield to their extortion?
- You were a multitude, and I but one:
- And of me only have they taken all.
1 Jew.- Yet, brother Barabas, remember Job.
180
Bar.- What tell you me of Job? I wot his wealth
- Was written thus: he had seven thousand sheep,
- Three thousand camels, and two hundred yoke
- Of labouring oxen, and five hundred
- She-asses: but for every one of those,
- Had they been valued at indifferent rate,
- I had at home, and in mine argosy,
- And other ships that came from Egypt last,
- As much as would have bought his beasts and him,
- And yet have kept enough to live upon:
190 - So that not he, but I may curse the day,
- Thy fatal birth-day, forlorn Barabas;
- And henceforth wish for an eternal night,
- That clouds of darkness may inclose my flesh,
- And hide these extreme sorrows from mine eyes:
- For only I have toiled to inherit here
- The months of vanity and loss of time,
- And painful nights, have been appointed me.
2 Jew.- Good Barabas, be patient.
Bar.- Ay, I pray, leave me in my patience.
200 - You that were ne'er possessed of wealth, are pleased with want;
- But give him liberty at least to mourn,
- That in a field amidst his enemies
- Doth see his soldiers slain, himself disarmed,
- And knows no means of his recovery:
- Ay, let me sorrow for this sudden chance;
- 'Tis in the trouble of my spirit I speak;
- Great injuries are not so soon forgot.
1 Jew.- Come, let us leave him; in his ireful mood
- Our words will but increase his ecstasy.
210
1 Jew.- On, then; but trust me 'tis a misery
- To see a man in such affliction.—
- Farewell, Barabas!
- [Exeunt.
Bar.- Ay, fare you well.
- See the simplicity of these base slaves,
- Who, for the villains have no wit themselves,
- Think me to be a senseless lump of clay
- That will with every water wash to dirt:
- No, Barabas is born to better chance,
- And framed of finer mould than common men,
- That measure naught but by the present time.
220 - A reaching thought will search his deepest wits,
- And cast with cunning for the time to come:
- For evils are apt to happen every day.—
- But whither wends my beauteous Abigail?
- EnterAbigail, the Jew's daughter.
- O! what has made my lovely daughter sad?
- What, woman! moan not for a little loss:
- Thy father hath enough in store for thee.
Abig.- Nor [not?] for myself, but agèd Barabas:
- Father, for thee lamenteth Abigail:
- But I will learn to leave these fruitless tears,
230 - And, urged thereto with my afflictions,
- With fierce exclaims run to the senate-house,
- And in the senate reprehend them all,
- And rend their hearts with tearing of my hair,
- Till they reduce the wrongs done to my father.
Bar.- No, Abigail, things past recovery
- Are hardly cured with exclamations.
- Be silent, daughter, sufferance breeds ease,
- And time may yield us an occasion
- Which on the sudden cannot serve the turn.
240 - Besides, my girl, think me not all so fond
- As negligently to forego so much
- Without provision for thyself and me.
- Ten thousand portagues, besides great pearls,
- Rich costly jewels, and stones infinite,
- Fearing the worst of this before it fell,
- I closely hid.
Abig.
Bar.
Abig.- Then shall they ne'er be seen of Barabas:
250 - For they have seized upon thy house and wares.
Bar.- But they will give me leave once more, I trow,
- To go into my house.
Abig.- That may they not:
- For there I left the governor placing nuns,
- Displacing me; and of thy house they mean
- To make a nunnery, where none but their own sect
- Must enter in; men generally barred.
Bar.- My gold! my gold! and all my wealth is gone!
- You partial heavens, have I deserved this plague?
- What, will you thus oppose me, luckless stars,
260 - To make me desperate in my poverty?
- And knowing me impatient in distress,
- Think me so mad as I will hang myself,
- That I may vanish o'er the earth in air,
- And leave no memory that e'er I was?
- No, I will live; nor loathe I this my life:
- And, since you leave me in the ocean thus
- To sink or swim, and put me to my shifts,
- I'll rouse my senses and awake myself.
- Daughter! I have it: thou perceiv'st the plight
270 - Wherein these Christians have oppressèd me:
- Be ruled by me, for in extremity
- We ought to make bar of no policy.
Abig.- Father, whate'er it be to injure them
- That have so manifestly wrongèd us,
- What will not Abigail attempt?
Bar.- Why, so;
- Then thus, thou told'st me they have turned my house
- Into a nunnery, and some nuns are there?
Abig.
Bar.- Then, Abigail, there must my girl
- Entreat the abbess to be entertained.
280
Abig.
Bar.- Ay, daughter, for religion
- Hides many mischiefs from suspicion.
Abig.- Ay, but, father, they will suspect me there.
Bar.- Let'em suspect; but be thou so precise
- As they may think it done of holiness.
- Entreat 'em fair, and give them friendly speech,
- And seem to them as if thy sins were great,
- Till thou hast gotten to be entertained.
Abig.- Thus, father, shall I much dissemble.
Bar.- Tush!
290 - As good dissemble that thou never mean'st,
- As first mean truth and then dissemble it,—
- A counterfeit profession is better
- Than unseen hypocrisy.
Abig.- Well, father, say [that] I be entertained,
- What then shall follow?
Bar.- This shall follow then;
- There have I hid, close underneath the plank
- That runs along the upper-chamber floor,
- The gold and jewels which I kept for thee.
- But here they come; be cunning, Abigail.
300
Abig.- Then, father, go with me.
Bar.- No, Abigail, in this
- It is not necessary I be seen:
- For I will seem offended with thee for't:
- Be close, my girl, for this must fetch my gold.
- [They draw back.
- Enter FriarJacomo, Friar Barnardine, Abbess, and a Nun.
F. Jac.- Sisters, we now are almost at the new-made nunnery.
Abb.- The better; for we love not to be seen:
- 'Tis thirty winters long since some of us
- Did stray so far amongst the multitude.
F. Jac.- But, madam, this house
- And waters of this new-made nunnery
310 - Will much delight you.
Abb.- It may be so; but who comes here?
- [Abigailcomes forward.
Abig.- Grave abbess, and you, happy virgins' guide,
- Pity the state of a distressèd maid.
Abb.
Abig.- The hopeless daughter of a hapless Jew,
- The Jew of Malta, wretched Barabas;
- Sometimes the owner of a goodly house,
- Which they have now turned to a nunnery.
Abb.- Well, daughter, say, what is thy suit with us?
Abig.- Fearing the afflictions which my father feels
321 - Proceed from sin, or want of faith in us,
- I'd pass away my life in penitence,
- And be a novice in your nunnery,
- To make atonement for my labouring soul.
F. Jac.- No doubt, brother, but this proceedeth of the spirit.
F. Barn.- Ay, and of a moving spirit too, brother; but come,
- Let us entreat she may be entertained.
Abb.- Well, daughter, we admit you for a nun.
Abig.- First let me as a novice learn to frame
330 - My solitary life to your strait laws,
- And let me lodge where I was wont to lie,
- I do not doubt, by your divine precepts
- And mine own industry, but to profit much.
Bar.- As much, I hope, as all I hid is worth.
- [Aside.
Abb.- Come, daughter, follow us.
Bar.- Why, how now, Abigail,
- What makest thou amongst these hateful Christians?
F. Jac.- Hinder her not, thou man of little faith,
- For she has mortified herself.
Bar.
F. Jac.- And is admitted to the sisterhood.
340
Bar.- Child of perdition, and thy father's shame!
- What wilt thou do among these hateful fiends?
- I charge thee on my blessing that thou leave
- These devils, and their damnèd heresy.
Abig.- Father, give me—
- [She goes to him.
Bar.- Nay, back, Abigail,
- (And think upon the jewels and the gold; [Whispers to her. The board is markèd thus that covers it.)
- Away, accursèd, from thy father's sight.
F. Jac.- Barabas, although thou art in misbelief,
- And wilt not see thine own afflictions,
350 - Yet let thy daughter be no longer blind.
Bar.- Blind friar, I reck not thy persuasions,
- (The board is markèd thus that covers it.)
- For I had rather die than see her thus.
- Wilt thou forsake me too in my distress,
- Seducèd daughter? (Go, forget not, go. )
- Becomes it Jews to be so credulous?
- (To-morrow early I'll be at the door.)
- No, come not at me; if thou wilt be damned,
- Forget me, see me not, and so be gone.
360 - (Farewell, remember to-morrow morning.)
- Out, out, thou wretch!
- [Exeunt, on one side Barabas, on the other side Friars,
- Abbess, Nun and Abigail; as they are going out,
- EnterMathias.
Math.- Who's this? fair Abigail, the rich Jew's daughter,
- Become a nun! her father's sudden fall
- Has humbled her and brought her down to this:
- Tut, she were fitter for a tale of love,
- Than to be tirèd out with orisons:
- And better would she far become a bed,
- Embracèd in a friendly lover's arms,
- Than rise at midnight to a solemn mass.
370 - EnterLodowick.
Lod.- Why, how now, Don Mathias! in a dump?
Math.- Believe me, noble Lodowick, I have seen
- The strangest sight, in my opinion,
- That ever I beheld.
Lod.
Math.- A fair young maid, scarce fourteen years of age,
- The sweetest flower in Cytherea's field,
- Cropt from the pleasures of the fruitful earth,
- And strangely metamorphos'd [to a] nun.
Lod.
Math.- Why, the rich Jew's daughter.
Lod.- What, Barabas, whose goods were lately seized?
- Is she so fair?
Math.- And matchless beautiful;
381 - As had you seen her 'twould have moved your heart,
- Though countermined with walls of brass, to love,
- Or at the least to pity.
Lod.- And if she be so fair as you report,
- 'Twere time well spent to go and visit her:
- How say you, shall we?
Math.- I must and will, sir; there's no remedy.
Lod.- And so will I too, or it shall go hard.
- Farewell, Mathias.
Math.
- Farewell, Lodowick.
- [Exeunt severally.
390
ACT THE SECOND.
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