ACT IIISCENE I. Rome. A streetEnter the Judges and Senators, with Titus’ two sonsQuintusandMartiusbound, passing on the stage to the place of execution, andTitusgoing before, pleading.TITUS.Hear me, grave fathers; noble tribunes, stay!For pity of mine age, whose youth was spentIn dangerous wars whilst you securely slept;For all my blood in Rome’s great quarrel shed,For all the frosty nights that I have watched,And for these bitter tears, which now you seeFilling the aged wrinkles in my cheeks,Be pitiful to my condemned sons,Whose souls are not corrupted as ’tis thought.For two and twenty sons I never wept,Because they died in honour’s lofty bed.[Andronicuslieth down, and the Judges pass by him.][Exeunt with the prisoners asTituscontinues speaking.]For these, tribunes, in the dust I writeMy heart’s deep languor and my soul’s sad tears.Let my tears staunch the earth’s dry appetite;My sons’ sweet blood will make it shame and blush.O earth, I will befriend thee more with rainThat shall distil from these two ancient urns,Than youthful April shall with all his showers.In summer’s drought I’ll drop upon thee still;In winter with warm tears I’ll melt the snow,And keep eternal spring-time on thy face,So thou refuse to drink my dear sons’ blood.EnterLuciuswith his weapon drawn.O reverend tribunes! O gentle aged men!Unbind my sons, reverse the doom of death;And let me say, that never wept before,My tears are now prevailing orators.LUCIUS.O noble father, you lament in vain.The tribunes hear you not, no man is by;And you recount your sorrows to a stone.TITUS.Ah, Lucius, for thy brothers let me plead.Grave tribunes, once more I entreat of you—LUCIUS.My gracious lord, no tribune hears you speak.TITUS.Why, ’tis no matter, man. If they did hear,They would not mark me; if they did mark,They would not pity me, yet plead I must,And bootless unto them.Therefore I tell my sorrows to the stones,Who, though they cannot answer my distress,Yet in some sort they are better than the tribunes,For that they will not intercept my tale.When I do weep, they humbly at my feetReceive my tears, and seem to weep with me;And were they but attired in grave weeds,Rome could afford no tribunes like to these.A stone is soft as wax, tribunes more hard than stones;A stone is silent, and offendeth not,And tribunes with their tongues doom men to death.But wherefore stand’st thou with thy weapon drawn?LUCIUS.To rescue my two brothers from their death;For which attempt the judges have pronouncedMy everlasting doom of banishment.TITUS.O happy man, they have befriended thee.Why, foolish Lucius, dost thou not perceiveThat Rome is but a wilderness of tigers?Tigers must prey, and Rome affords no preyBut me and mine. How happy art thou then,From these devourers to be banished!But who comes with our brother Marcus here?EnterMarcuswithLavinia.MARCUS.Titus, prepare thy aged eyes to weep;Or if not so, thy noble heart to break.I bring consuming sorrow to thine age.TITUS.Will it consume me? Let me see it then.MARCUS.This was thy daughter.TITUS.Why, Marcus, so she is.LUCIUS.Ay me, this object kills me!TITUS.Faint-hearted boy, arise, and look upon her.Speak, Lavinia, what accursed handHath made thee handless in thy father’s sight?What fool hath added water to the sea,Or brought a faggot to bright-burning Troy?My grief was at the height before thou cam’st,And now like Nilus it disdaineth bounds.Give me a sword, I’ll chop off my hands too;For they have fought for Rome, and all in vain;And they have nursed this woe in feeding life;In bootless prayer have they been held up,And they have served me to effectless use.Now all the service I require of themIs that the one will help to cut the other.’Tis well, Lavinia, that thou hast no hands,For hands to do Rome service is but vain.LUCIUS.Speak, gentle sister, who hath martyred thee?MARCUS.O, that delightful engine of her thoughts,That blabbed them with such pleasing eloquence,Is torn from forth that pretty hollow cage,Where, like a sweet melodious bird, it sungSweet varied notes, enchanting every ear.LUCIUS.O, say thou for her, who hath done this deed?MARCUS.O, thus I found her straying in the park,Seeking to hide herself, as doth the deerThat hath received some unrecuring wound.TITUS.It was my dear, and he that wounded herHath hurt me more than had he killed me dead.For now I stand as one upon a rock,Environed with a wilderness of sea,Who marks the waxing tide grow wave by wave,Expecting ever when some envious surgeWill in his brinish bowels swallow him.This way to death my wretched sons are gone;Here stands my other son, a banished man,And here my brother, weeping at my woes.But that which gives my soul the greatest spurnIs dear Lavinia, dearer than my soul.Had I but seen thy picture in this plightIt would have madded me. What shall I doNow I behold thy lively body so?Thou hast no hands to wipe away thy tears,Nor tongue to tell me who hath martyred thee.Thy husband he is dead, and for his deathThy brothers are condemned, and dead by this.Look, Marcus! Ah, son Lucius, look on her!When I did name her brothers, then fresh tearsStood on her cheeks, as doth the honey-dewUpon a gathered lily almost withered.MARCUS.Perchance she weeps because they killed her husband;Perchance because she knows them innocent.TITUS.If they did kill thy husband, then be joyful,Because the law hath ta’en revenge on them.No, no, they would not do so foul a deed;Witness the sorrow that their sister makes.Gentle Lavinia, let me kiss thy lips,Or make some sign how I may do thee ease.Shall thy good uncle, and thy brother Lucius,And thou, and I, sit round about some fountain,Looking all downwards to behold our cheeksHow they are stained, like meadows yet not dry,With miry slime left on them by a flood?And in the fountain shall we gaze so longTill the fresh taste be taken from that clearness,And made a brine-pit with our bitter tears?Or shall we cut away our hands like thine?Or shall we bite our tongues, and in dumb showsPass the remainder of our hateful days?What shall we do? Let us that have our tonguesPlot some device of further misery,To make us wondered at in time to come.LUCIUS.Sweet father, cease your tears; for at your griefSee how my wretched sister sobs and weeps.MARCUS.Patience, dear niece. Good Titus, dry thine eyes.TITUS.Ah, Marcus, Marcus! Brother, well I wotThy napkin cannot drink a tear of mine,For thou, poor man, hast drowned it with thine own.LUCIUS.Ah, my Lavinia, I will wipe thy cheeks.TITUS.Mark, Marcus, mark! I understand her signs.Had she a tongue to speak, now would she sayThat to her brother which I said to thee.His napkin, with his true tears all bewet,Can do no service on her sorrowful cheeks.O, what a sympathy of woe is this,As far from help as limbo is from bliss.EnterAaronthe Moor, alone.AARON.Titus Andronicus, my lord the emperorSends thee this word, that, if thou love thy sons,Let Marcus, Lucius, or thyself, old Titus,Or any one of you, chop off your handAnd send it to the king; he for the sameWill send thee hither both thy sons alive,And that shall be the ransom for their fault.TITUS.O gracious emperor! O gentle Aaron!Did ever raven sing so like a larkThat gives sweet tidings of the sun’s uprise?With all my heart I’ll send the emperor my hand.Good Aaron, wilt thou help to chop it off?LUCIUS.Stay, father, for that noble hand of thine,That hath thrown down so many enemies,Shall not be sent. My hand will serve the turn.My youth can better spare my blood than you;And therefore mine shall save my brothers’ lives.MARCUS.Which of your hands hath not defended Rome,And reared aloft the bloody battle-axe,Writing destruction on the enemy’s castle?O, none of both but are of high desert.My hand hath been but idle; let it serveTo ransom my two nephews from their death;Then have I kept it to a worthy end.AARON.Nay, come, agree whose hand shall go along,For fear they die before their pardon come.MARCUS.My hand shall go.LUCIUS.By heaven, it shall not go!TITUS.Sirs, strive no more. Such withered herbs as theseAre meet for plucking up, and therefore mine.LUCIUS.Sweet father, if I shall be thought thy son,Let me redeem my brothers both from death.MARCUS.And for our father’s sake and mother’s care,Now let me show a brother’s love to thee.TITUS.Agree between you; I will spare my hand.LUCIUS.Then I’ll go fetch an axe.MARCUS.But I will use the axe.[ExeuntLuciusandMarcus.]TITUS.Come hither, Aaron; I’ll deceive them both.Lend me thy hand, and I will give thee mine.AARON.[Aside.] If that be called deceit, I will be honest,And never whilst I live deceive men so.But I’ll deceive you in another sort,And that you’ll say ere half an hour pass.[He cuts offTitus’shand.]EnterLuciusandMarcusagain.TITUS.Now stay your strife. What shall be is dispatched.Good Aaron, give his majesty my hand.Tell him it was a hand that warded himFrom thousand dangers, bid him bury it;More hath it merited, that let it have.As for my sons, say I account of themAs jewels purchased at an easy price;And yet dear too, because I bought mine own.AARON.I go, Andronicus; and for thy handLook by and by to have thy sons with thee.[Aside.] Their heads, I mean. O, how this villainyDoth fat me with the very thoughts of it!Let fools do good, and fair men call for grace,Aaron will have his soul black like his face.[Exit.]TITUS.O, here I lift this one hand up to heaven,And bow this feeble ruin to the earth.If any power pities wretched tears,To that I call! [To Lavinia.] What, wouldst thou kneel with me?Do, then, dear heart; for heaven shall hear our prayers,Or with our sighs we’ll breathe the welkin dim,And stain the sun with fog, as sometime cloudsWhen they do hug him in their melting bosoms.MARCUS.O brother, speak with possibility,And do not break into these deep extremes.TITUS.Is not my sorrow deep, having no bottom?Then be my passions bottomless with them.MARCUS.But yet let reason govern thy lament.TITUS.If there were reason for these miseries,Then into limits could I bind my woes.When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o’erflow?If the winds rage, doth not the sea wax mad,Threatening the welkin with his big-swol’n face?And wilt thou have a reason for this coil?I am the sea. Hark how her sighs doth flow!She is the weeping welkin, I the earth.Then must my sea be moved with her sighs;Then must my earth with her continual tearsBecome a deluge, overflowed and drowned;For why my bowels cannot hide her woes,But like a drunkard must I vomit them.Then give me leave, for losers will have leaveTo ease their stomachs with their bitter tongues.Enter aMessengerwith two heads and a hand.MESSENGER.Worthy Andronicus, ill art thou repaidFor that good hand thou sent’st the emperor.Here are the heads of thy two noble sons,And here’s thy hand, in scorn to thee sent back.Thy grief their sports, thy resolution mocked;That woe is me to think upon thy woes,More than remembrance of my father’s death.[Exit.]MARCUS.Now let hot Etna cool in Sicily,And be my heart an ever-burning hell!These miseries are more than may be borne.To weep with them that weep doth ease some deal,But sorrow flouted at is double death.LUCIUS.Ah, that this sight should make so deep a wound,And yet detested life not shrink thereat!That ever death should let life bear his name,Where life hath no more interest but to breathe![LaviniakissesTitus.]MARCUS.Alas, poor heart, that kiss is comfortlessAs frozen water to a starved snake.TITUS.When will this fearful slumber have an end?MARCUS.Now farewell, flattery; die, Andronicus;Thou dost not slumber. See thy two sons’ heads,Thy warlike hand, thy mangled daughter here;Thy other banished son with this dear sightStruck pale and bloodless; and thy brother, I,Even like a stony image, cold and numb.Ah, now no more will I control thy griefs.Rent off thy silver hair, thy other handGnawing with thy teeth; and be this dismal sightThe closing up of our most wretched eyes.Now is a time to storm; why art thou still?TITUS.Ha, ha, ha!MARCUS.Why dost thou laugh? It fits not with this hour.TITUS.Why, I have not another tear to shed.Besides, this sorrow is an enemy,And would usurp upon my watery eyes,And make them blind with tributary tears.Then which way shall I find Revenge’s cave?For these two heads do seem to speak to me,And threat me I shall never come to blissTill all these mischiefs be returned againEven in their throats that have committed them.Come, let me see what task I have to do.You heavy people, circle me about,That I may turn me to each one of you,And swear unto my soul to right your wrongs.The vow is made. Come, brother, take a head;And in this hand the other will I bear.And, Lavinia, thou shalt be employed in these arms.Bear thou my hand, sweet wench, between thy teeth.As for thee, boy, go, get thee from my sight;Thou art an exile, and thou must not stay.Hie to the Goths, and raise an army there.And if you love me, as I think you do,Let’s kiss and part, for we have much to do.[ExeuntTitus, MarcusandLavinia.]LUCIUS.Farewell, Andronicus, my noble father,The woefull’st man that ever lived in Rome.Farewell, proud Rome, till Lucius come again;He loves his pledges dearer than his life.Farewell, Lavinia, my noble sister;O, would thou wert as thou tofore hast been!But now nor Lucius nor Lavinia livesBut in oblivion and hateful griefs.If Lucius live, he will requite your wrongs,And make proud Saturnine and his empressBeg at the gates, like Tarquin and his queen.Now will I to the Goths, and raise a powerTo be revenged on Rome and Saturnine.[Exit.]SCENE II. Rome. A Room in Titus’s House. A banquet set outEnterTitus Andronicus, Marcus, Laviniaand the boyYoung Lucius.TITUS.So so; now sit; and look you eat no moreThan will preserve just so much strength in usAs will revenge these bitter woes of ours.Marcus, unknit that sorrow-wreathen knot.Thy niece and I, poor creatures, want our hands,And cannot passionate our tenfold griefWith folded arms. This poor right hand of mineIs left to tyrannize upon my breast;Who when my heart, all mad with misery,Beats in this hollow prison of my flesh,Then thus I thump it down.Thou map of woe, that thus dost talk in signs,When thy poor heart beats with outrageous beating,Thou canst not strike it thus to make it still.Wound it with sighing, girl, kill it with groans;Or get some little knife between thy teeth,And just against thy heart make thou a hole,That all the tears that thy poor eyes let fallMay run into that sink, and, soaking in,Drown the lamenting fool in sea-salt tears.MARCUS.Fie, brother, fie! Teach her not thus to laySuch violent hands upon her tender life.TITUS.How now! Has sorrow made thee dote already?Why, Marcus, no man should be mad but I.What violent hands can she lay on her life?Ah, wherefore dost thou urge the name of hands,To bid Æneas tell the tale twice o’erHow Troy was burnt and he made miserable?O, handle not the theme, to talk of hands,Lest we remember still that we have none.Fie, fie, how frantically I square my talk,As if we should forget we had no hands,If Marcus did not name the word of hands!Come, let’s fall to; and, gentle girl, eat this.Here is no drink! Hark, Marcus, what she says;I can interpret all her martyred signs.She says she drinks no other drink but tears,Brewed with her sorrow, meshed upon her cheeks.Speechless complainer, I will learn thy thought;In thy dumb action will I be as perfectAs begging hermits in their holy prayers.Thou shalt not sigh, nor hold thy stumps to heaven,Nor wink, nor nod, nor kneel, nor make a sign,But I of these will wrest an alphabet,And by still practice learn to know thy meaning.YOUNG LUCIUS.Good grandsire, leave these bitter deep laments.Make my aunt merry with some pleasing tale.MARCUS.Alas, the tender boy, in passion moved,Doth weep to see his grandsire’s heaviness.TITUS.Peace, tender sapling; thou art made of tears,And tears will quickly melt thy life away.[Marcusstrikes the dish with a knife.]What dost thou strike at, Marcus, with thy knife?MARCUS.At that that I have killed, my lord, a fly.TITUS.Out on thee, murderer! Thou kill’st my heart;Mine eyes are cloyed with view of tyranny;A deed of death done on the innocentBecomes not Titus’ brother. Get thee gone;I see thou art not for my company.MARCUS.Alas, my lord, I have but killed a fly.TITUS.“But”? How if that fly had a father and mother?How would he hang his slender gilded wingsAnd buzz lamenting doings in the air!Poor harmless fly,That with his pretty buzzing melody,Came here to make us merry, and thou hast killed him.MARCUS.Pardon me, sir; ’twas a black ill-favoured fly,Like to the empress’ Moor; therefore I killed him.TITUS.O, O, O!Then pardon me for reprehending thee,For thou hast done a charitable deed.Give me thy knife, I will insult on him,Flattering myself as if it were the MoorCome hither purposely to poison me.There’s for thyself, and that’s for Tamora.Ah, sirrah!Yet, I think, we are not brought so lowBut that between us we can kill a flyThat comes in likeness of a coal-black Moor.MARCUS.Alas, poor man, grief has so wrought on him,He takes false shadows for true substances.TITUS.Come, take away. Lavinia, go with me.I’ll to thy closet, and go read with theeSad stories chanced in the times of old.Come, boy, and go with me. Thy sight is young,And thou shalt read when mine begin to dazzle.[Exeunt.]
Enter the Judges and Senators, with Titus’ two sonsQuintusandMartiusbound, passing on the stage to the place of execution, andTitusgoing before, pleading.
TITUS.Hear me, grave fathers; noble tribunes, stay!For pity of mine age, whose youth was spentIn dangerous wars whilst you securely slept;For all my blood in Rome’s great quarrel shed,For all the frosty nights that I have watched,And for these bitter tears, which now you seeFilling the aged wrinkles in my cheeks,Be pitiful to my condemned sons,Whose souls are not corrupted as ’tis thought.For two and twenty sons I never wept,Because they died in honour’s lofty bed.
[Andronicuslieth down, and the Judges pass by him.]
[Exeunt with the prisoners asTituscontinues speaking.]
For these, tribunes, in the dust I writeMy heart’s deep languor and my soul’s sad tears.Let my tears staunch the earth’s dry appetite;My sons’ sweet blood will make it shame and blush.O earth, I will befriend thee more with rainThat shall distil from these two ancient urns,Than youthful April shall with all his showers.In summer’s drought I’ll drop upon thee still;In winter with warm tears I’ll melt the snow,And keep eternal spring-time on thy face,So thou refuse to drink my dear sons’ blood.
EnterLuciuswith his weapon drawn.
O reverend tribunes! O gentle aged men!Unbind my sons, reverse the doom of death;And let me say, that never wept before,My tears are now prevailing orators.
LUCIUS.O noble father, you lament in vain.The tribunes hear you not, no man is by;And you recount your sorrows to a stone.
TITUS.Ah, Lucius, for thy brothers let me plead.Grave tribunes, once more I entreat of you—
LUCIUS.My gracious lord, no tribune hears you speak.
TITUS.Why, ’tis no matter, man. If they did hear,They would not mark me; if they did mark,They would not pity me, yet plead I must,And bootless unto them.Therefore I tell my sorrows to the stones,Who, though they cannot answer my distress,Yet in some sort they are better than the tribunes,For that they will not intercept my tale.When I do weep, they humbly at my feetReceive my tears, and seem to weep with me;And were they but attired in grave weeds,Rome could afford no tribunes like to these.A stone is soft as wax, tribunes more hard than stones;A stone is silent, and offendeth not,And tribunes with their tongues doom men to death.But wherefore stand’st thou with thy weapon drawn?
LUCIUS.To rescue my two brothers from their death;For which attempt the judges have pronouncedMy everlasting doom of banishment.
TITUS.O happy man, they have befriended thee.Why, foolish Lucius, dost thou not perceiveThat Rome is but a wilderness of tigers?Tigers must prey, and Rome affords no preyBut me and mine. How happy art thou then,From these devourers to be banished!But who comes with our brother Marcus here?
EnterMarcuswithLavinia.
MARCUS.Titus, prepare thy aged eyes to weep;Or if not so, thy noble heart to break.I bring consuming sorrow to thine age.
TITUS.Will it consume me? Let me see it then.
MARCUS.This was thy daughter.
TITUS.Why, Marcus, so she is.
LUCIUS.Ay me, this object kills me!
TITUS.Faint-hearted boy, arise, and look upon her.Speak, Lavinia, what accursed handHath made thee handless in thy father’s sight?What fool hath added water to the sea,Or brought a faggot to bright-burning Troy?My grief was at the height before thou cam’st,And now like Nilus it disdaineth bounds.Give me a sword, I’ll chop off my hands too;For they have fought for Rome, and all in vain;And they have nursed this woe in feeding life;In bootless prayer have they been held up,And they have served me to effectless use.Now all the service I require of themIs that the one will help to cut the other.’Tis well, Lavinia, that thou hast no hands,For hands to do Rome service is but vain.
LUCIUS.Speak, gentle sister, who hath martyred thee?
MARCUS.O, that delightful engine of her thoughts,That blabbed them with such pleasing eloquence,Is torn from forth that pretty hollow cage,Where, like a sweet melodious bird, it sungSweet varied notes, enchanting every ear.
LUCIUS.O, say thou for her, who hath done this deed?
MARCUS.O, thus I found her straying in the park,Seeking to hide herself, as doth the deerThat hath received some unrecuring wound.
TITUS.It was my dear, and he that wounded herHath hurt me more than had he killed me dead.For now I stand as one upon a rock,Environed with a wilderness of sea,Who marks the waxing tide grow wave by wave,Expecting ever when some envious surgeWill in his brinish bowels swallow him.This way to death my wretched sons are gone;Here stands my other son, a banished man,And here my brother, weeping at my woes.But that which gives my soul the greatest spurnIs dear Lavinia, dearer than my soul.Had I but seen thy picture in this plightIt would have madded me. What shall I doNow I behold thy lively body so?Thou hast no hands to wipe away thy tears,Nor tongue to tell me who hath martyred thee.Thy husband he is dead, and for his deathThy brothers are condemned, and dead by this.Look, Marcus! Ah, son Lucius, look on her!When I did name her brothers, then fresh tearsStood on her cheeks, as doth the honey-dewUpon a gathered lily almost withered.
MARCUS.Perchance she weeps because they killed her husband;Perchance because she knows them innocent.
TITUS.If they did kill thy husband, then be joyful,Because the law hath ta’en revenge on them.No, no, they would not do so foul a deed;Witness the sorrow that their sister makes.Gentle Lavinia, let me kiss thy lips,Or make some sign how I may do thee ease.Shall thy good uncle, and thy brother Lucius,And thou, and I, sit round about some fountain,Looking all downwards to behold our cheeksHow they are stained, like meadows yet not dry,With miry slime left on them by a flood?And in the fountain shall we gaze so longTill the fresh taste be taken from that clearness,And made a brine-pit with our bitter tears?Or shall we cut away our hands like thine?Or shall we bite our tongues, and in dumb showsPass the remainder of our hateful days?What shall we do? Let us that have our tonguesPlot some device of further misery,To make us wondered at in time to come.
LUCIUS.Sweet father, cease your tears; for at your griefSee how my wretched sister sobs and weeps.
MARCUS.Patience, dear niece. Good Titus, dry thine eyes.
TITUS.Ah, Marcus, Marcus! Brother, well I wotThy napkin cannot drink a tear of mine,For thou, poor man, hast drowned it with thine own.
LUCIUS.Ah, my Lavinia, I will wipe thy cheeks.
TITUS.Mark, Marcus, mark! I understand her signs.Had she a tongue to speak, now would she sayThat to her brother which I said to thee.His napkin, with his true tears all bewet,Can do no service on her sorrowful cheeks.O, what a sympathy of woe is this,As far from help as limbo is from bliss.
EnterAaronthe Moor, alone.
AARON.Titus Andronicus, my lord the emperorSends thee this word, that, if thou love thy sons,Let Marcus, Lucius, or thyself, old Titus,Or any one of you, chop off your handAnd send it to the king; he for the sameWill send thee hither both thy sons alive,And that shall be the ransom for their fault.
TITUS.O gracious emperor! O gentle Aaron!Did ever raven sing so like a larkThat gives sweet tidings of the sun’s uprise?With all my heart I’ll send the emperor my hand.Good Aaron, wilt thou help to chop it off?
LUCIUS.Stay, father, for that noble hand of thine,That hath thrown down so many enemies,Shall not be sent. My hand will serve the turn.My youth can better spare my blood than you;And therefore mine shall save my brothers’ lives.
MARCUS.Which of your hands hath not defended Rome,And reared aloft the bloody battle-axe,Writing destruction on the enemy’s castle?O, none of both but are of high desert.My hand hath been but idle; let it serveTo ransom my two nephews from their death;Then have I kept it to a worthy end.
AARON.Nay, come, agree whose hand shall go along,For fear they die before their pardon come.
MARCUS.My hand shall go.
LUCIUS.By heaven, it shall not go!
TITUS.Sirs, strive no more. Such withered herbs as theseAre meet for plucking up, and therefore mine.
LUCIUS.Sweet father, if I shall be thought thy son,Let me redeem my brothers both from death.
MARCUS.And for our father’s sake and mother’s care,Now let me show a brother’s love to thee.
TITUS.Agree between you; I will spare my hand.
LUCIUS.Then I’ll go fetch an axe.
MARCUS.But I will use the axe.
[ExeuntLuciusandMarcus.]
TITUS.Come hither, Aaron; I’ll deceive them both.Lend me thy hand, and I will give thee mine.
AARON.[Aside.] If that be called deceit, I will be honest,And never whilst I live deceive men so.But I’ll deceive you in another sort,And that you’ll say ere half an hour pass.
[He cuts offTitus’shand.]
EnterLuciusandMarcusagain.
TITUS.Now stay your strife. What shall be is dispatched.Good Aaron, give his majesty my hand.Tell him it was a hand that warded himFrom thousand dangers, bid him bury it;More hath it merited, that let it have.As for my sons, say I account of themAs jewels purchased at an easy price;And yet dear too, because I bought mine own.
AARON.I go, Andronicus; and for thy handLook by and by to have thy sons with thee.[Aside.] Their heads, I mean. O, how this villainyDoth fat me with the very thoughts of it!Let fools do good, and fair men call for grace,Aaron will have his soul black like his face.
[Exit.]
TITUS.O, here I lift this one hand up to heaven,And bow this feeble ruin to the earth.If any power pities wretched tears,To that I call! [To Lavinia.] What, wouldst thou kneel with me?Do, then, dear heart; for heaven shall hear our prayers,Or with our sighs we’ll breathe the welkin dim,And stain the sun with fog, as sometime cloudsWhen they do hug him in their melting bosoms.
MARCUS.O brother, speak with possibility,And do not break into these deep extremes.
TITUS.Is not my sorrow deep, having no bottom?Then be my passions bottomless with them.
MARCUS.But yet let reason govern thy lament.
TITUS.If there were reason for these miseries,Then into limits could I bind my woes.When heaven doth weep, doth not the earth o’erflow?If the winds rage, doth not the sea wax mad,Threatening the welkin with his big-swol’n face?And wilt thou have a reason for this coil?I am the sea. Hark how her sighs doth flow!She is the weeping welkin, I the earth.Then must my sea be moved with her sighs;Then must my earth with her continual tearsBecome a deluge, overflowed and drowned;For why my bowels cannot hide her woes,But like a drunkard must I vomit them.Then give me leave, for losers will have leaveTo ease their stomachs with their bitter tongues.
Enter aMessengerwith two heads and a hand.
MESSENGER.Worthy Andronicus, ill art thou repaidFor that good hand thou sent’st the emperor.Here are the heads of thy two noble sons,And here’s thy hand, in scorn to thee sent back.Thy grief their sports, thy resolution mocked;That woe is me to think upon thy woes,More than remembrance of my father’s death.
[Exit.]
MARCUS.Now let hot Etna cool in Sicily,And be my heart an ever-burning hell!These miseries are more than may be borne.To weep with them that weep doth ease some deal,But sorrow flouted at is double death.
LUCIUS.Ah, that this sight should make so deep a wound,And yet detested life not shrink thereat!That ever death should let life bear his name,Where life hath no more interest but to breathe!
[LaviniakissesTitus.]
MARCUS.Alas, poor heart, that kiss is comfortlessAs frozen water to a starved snake.
TITUS.When will this fearful slumber have an end?
MARCUS.Now farewell, flattery; die, Andronicus;Thou dost not slumber. See thy two sons’ heads,Thy warlike hand, thy mangled daughter here;Thy other banished son with this dear sightStruck pale and bloodless; and thy brother, I,Even like a stony image, cold and numb.Ah, now no more will I control thy griefs.Rent off thy silver hair, thy other handGnawing with thy teeth; and be this dismal sightThe closing up of our most wretched eyes.Now is a time to storm; why art thou still?
TITUS.Ha, ha, ha!
MARCUS.Why dost thou laugh? It fits not with this hour.
TITUS.Why, I have not another tear to shed.Besides, this sorrow is an enemy,And would usurp upon my watery eyes,And make them blind with tributary tears.Then which way shall I find Revenge’s cave?For these two heads do seem to speak to me,And threat me I shall never come to blissTill all these mischiefs be returned againEven in their throats that have committed them.Come, let me see what task I have to do.You heavy people, circle me about,That I may turn me to each one of you,And swear unto my soul to right your wrongs.The vow is made. Come, brother, take a head;And in this hand the other will I bear.And, Lavinia, thou shalt be employed in these arms.Bear thou my hand, sweet wench, between thy teeth.As for thee, boy, go, get thee from my sight;Thou art an exile, and thou must not stay.Hie to the Goths, and raise an army there.And if you love me, as I think you do,Let’s kiss and part, for we have much to do.
[ExeuntTitus, MarcusandLavinia.]
LUCIUS.Farewell, Andronicus, my noble father,The woefull’st man that ever lived in Rome.Farewell, proud Rome, till Lucius come again;He loves his pledges dearer than his life.Farewell, Lavinia, my noble sister;O, would thou wert as thou tofore hast been!But now nor Lucius nor Lavinia livesBut in oblivion and hateful griefs.If Lucius live, he will requite your wrongs,And make proud Saturnine and his empressBeg at the gates, like Tarquin and his queen.Now will I to the Goths, and raise a powerTo be revenged on Rome and Saturnine.
[Exit.]
EnterTitus Andronicus, Marcus, Laviniaand the boyYoung Lucius.
TITUS.So so; now sit; and look you eat no moreThan will preserve just so much strength in usAs will revenge these bitter woes of ours.Marcus, unknit that sorrow-wreathen knot.Thy niece and I, poor creatures, want our hands,And cannot passionate our tenfold griefWith folded arms. This poor right hand of mineIs left to tyrannize upon my breast;Who when my heart, all mad with misery,Beats in this hollow prison of my flesh,Then thus I thump it down.Thou map of woe, that thus dost talk in signs,When thy poor heart beats with outrageous beating,Thou canst not strike it thus to make it still.Wound it with sighing, girl, kill it with groans;Or get some little knife between thy teeth,And just against thy heart make thou a hole,That all the tears that thy poor eyes let fallMay run into that sink, and, soaking in,Drown the lamenting fool in sea-salt tears.
MARCUS.Fie, brother, fie! Teach her not thus to laySuch violent hands upon her tender life.
TITUS.How now! Has sorrow made thee dote already?Why, Marcus, no man should be mad but I.What violent hands can she lay on her life?Ah, wherefore dost thou urge the name of hands,To bid Æneas tell the tale twice o’erHow Troy was burnt and he made miserable?O, handle not the theme, to talk of hands,Lest we remember still that we have none.Fie, fie, how frantically I square my talk,As if we should forget we had no hands,If Marcus did not name the word of hands!Come, let’s fall to; and, gentle girl, eat this.Here is no drink! Hark, Marcus, what she says;I can interpret all her martyred signs.She says she drinks no other drink but tears,Brewed with her sorrow, meshed upon her cheeks.Speechless complainer, I will learn thy thought;In thy dumb action will I be as perfectAs begging hermits in their holy prayers.Thou shalt not sigh, nor hold thy stumps to heaven,Nor wink, nor nod, nor kneel, nor make a sign,But I of these will wrest an alphabet,And by still practice learn to know thy meaning.
YOUNG LUCIUS.Good grandsire, leave these bitter deep laments.Make my aunt merry with some pleasing tale.
MARCUS.Alas, the tender boy, in passion moved,Doth weep to see his grandsire’s heaviness.
TITUS.Peace, tender sapling; thou art made of tears,And tears will quickly melt thy life away.
[Marcusstrikes the dish with a knife.]
What dost thou strike at, Marcus, with thy knife?
MARCUS.At that that I have killed, my lord, a fly.
TITUS.Out on thee, murderer! Thou kill’st my heart;Mine eyes are cloyed with view of tyranny;A deed of death done on the innocentBecomes not Titus’ brother. Get thee gone;I see thou art not for my company.
MARCUS.Alas, my lord, I have but killed a fly.
TITUS.“But”? How if that fly had a father and mother?How would he hang his slender gilded wingsAnd buzz lamenting doings in the air!Poor harmless fly,That with his pretty buzzing melody,Came here to make us merry, and thou hast killed him.
MARCUS.Pardon me, sir; ’twas a black ill-favoured fly,Like to the empress’ Moor; therefore I killed him.
TITUS.O, O, O!Then pardon me for reprehending thee,For thou hast done a charitable deed.Give me thy knife, I will insult on him,Flattering myself as if it were the MoorCome hither purposely to poison me.There’s for thyself, and that’s for Tamora.Ah, sirrah!Yet, I think, we are not brought so lowBut that between us we can kill a flyThat comes in likeness of a coal-black Moor.
MARCUS.Alas, poor man, grief has so wrought on him,He takes false shadows for true substances.
TITUS.Come, take away. Lavinia, go with me.I’ll to thy closet, and go read with theeSad stories chanced in the times of old.Come, boy, and go with me. Thy sight is young,And thou shalt read when mine begin to dazzle.
[Exeunt.]