登陆注册
15791300000029

第29章

CLEOPATRA. To death, if thou stir hence. Speak, if thou canst, Now for thy life, which basely thou wouldst save;While mine I prize at--this! Come, good Serapion.

[Exeunt CLEOPATRA, SERAPION, CHARMION, and IRAS.]

ALEXAS. O that I less could fear to lose this being, Which, like a snowball in my coward hand, The more 'tis grasped, the faster melts away.

Poor reason! what a wretched aid art thou!

For still, in spite of thee, These two long lovers, soul and body, dread Their final separation. Let me think:

What can I say, to save myself from death?

No matter what becomes of Cleopatra.

ANTONY. Which way? where?

[Within.]

VENTIDIUS. This leads to the monument.

[Within.]

ALEXAS. Ah me! I hear him; yet I'm unprepared:

My gift of lying's gone;

And this court-devil, which I so oft have raised, Forsakes me at my need. I dare not stay;Yet cannot far go hence.

[Exit.]

Enter ANTONY and VENTIDIUS

ANTONY. O happy Caesar! thou hast men to lead:

Think not 'tis thou hast conquered Antony;But Rome has conquered Egypt. I'm betrayed.

VENTIDIUS. Curse on this treacherous train!

Their soil and heaven infect them all with baseness:

And their young souls come tainted to the world With the first breath they draw.

ANTONY. The original villain sure no god created;He was a bastard of the sun, by Nile, Aped into man; with all his mother's mud Crusted about his soul.

VENTIDIUS. The nation is One universal traitor; and their queen The very spirit and extract of them all.

ANTONY. Is there yet left A possibility of aid from valour?

Is there one god unsworn to my destruction?

The least unmortgaged hope? for, if there be, Methinks I cannot fall beneath the fate Of such a boy as Caesar.

The world's one half is yet in Antony;

And from each limb of it, that's hewed away, The soul comes back to me.

VENTIDIUS. There yet remain Three legions in the town. The last assault Lopt off the rest; if death be your design,--As I must wish it now,--these are sufficient To make a heap about us of dead foes, An honest pile for burial.

ANTONY. They are enough.

We'll not divide our stars; but, side by side, Fight emulous, and with malicious eyes Survey each other's acts: So every death Thou giv'st, I'll take on me, as a just debt, And pay thee back a soul.

VENTIDIUS. Now you shall see I love you. Not a word Of chiding more. By my few hours of life, I am so pleased with this brave Roman fate, That I would not be Caesar, to outlive you.

When we put off this flesh, and mount together, I shall be shown to all the ethereal crowd,--Lo, this is he who died with Antony!

ANTONY. Who knows, but we may pierce through all their troops, And reach my veterans yet? 'tis worth the 'tempting, To o'erleap this gulf of fate, And leave our wandering destinies behind.

Enter ALEXAS, trembling VENTIDIUS. See, see, that villain!

See Cleopatra stamped upon that face, With all her cunning, all her arts of falsehood!

How she looks out through those dissembling eyes!

How he sets his countenance for deceit, And promises a lie, before he speaks!

Let me despatch him first.

[Drawing.]

ALEXAS. O spare me, spare me!

ANTONY. Hold; he's not worth your killing.--On thy life, Which thou may'st keep, because I scorn to take it, No syllable to justify thy queen;1

ALEXAS. Sir, she is gone.

Where she shall never be molested more By love, or you.

ANTONY. Fled to her Dolabella!

Die, traitor! I revoke my promise! die!

[Going to kill him.]

ALEXAS. O hold! she is not fled.

ANTONY. She is: my eyes Are open to her falsehood; my whole life Has been a golden dream of love and friendship;But, now I wake, I'm like a merchant, roused >From soft repose, to see his vessel sinking, And all his wealth cast over. Ungrateful woman!

Who followed me, but as the swallow summer, Hatching her young ones in my kindly beams, Singing her flatteries to my morning wake:

But, now my winter comes, she spreads her wings, And seeks the spring of Caesar.

ALEXAS. Think not so;

Her fortunes have, in all things, mixed with yours.

Had she betrayed her naval force to Rome, How easily might she have gone to Caesar, Secure by such a bribe!

VENTIDIUS. She sent it first, To be more welcome after.

ANTONY. 'Tis too plain;

Else would she have appeared, to clear herself.

ALEXAS. Too fatally she has: she could not bear To be accused by you; but shut herself Within her monument; looked down and sighed;While, from her unchanged face, the silent tears Dropt, as they had not leave, but stole their parting.

Some indistinguished words she only murmured;At last, she raised her eyes; and, with such looks As dying Lucrece cast--ANTONY. My heart forebodes--

VENTIDIUS. All for the best:--Go on.

ALEXAS. She snatched her poniard, And, ere we could prevent the fatal blow, Plunged it within her breast; then turned to me:

Go, bear my lord, said she, my last farewell;And ask him, if he yet suspect my faith.

More she was saying, but death rushed betwixt.

She half pronounced your name with her last breath, And buried half within her.

VENTIDIUS. Heaven be praised!

ANTONY. Then art thou innocent, my poor dear love, And art thou dead?

O those two words! their sound should be divided:

Hadst thou been false, and died; or hadst thou lived, And hadst been true--But innocence and death!

This shows not well above. Then what am I, The murderer of this truth, this innocence!

Thoughts cannot form themselves in words so horrid As can express my guilt!

VENTIDIUS. Is't come to this? The gods have been too gracious;And thus you thank them for it!

ANTONY. [to ALEXAS.] Why stayest thou here?

Is it for thee to spy upon my soul, And see its inward mourning? Get thee hence;Thou art not worthy to behold, what now Becomes a Roman emperor to perform.

ALEXAS. He loves her still:

His grief betrays it. Good! the joy to find She's yet alive, completes the reconcilement.

I've saved myself, and her. But, oh! the Romans!

Fate comes too fast upon my wit, Hunts me too hard, and meets me at each double.

[Aside.]

[Exit.]

VENTIDIUS. Would she had died a little sooner, though!

Before Octavia went, you might have treated:

Now 'twill look tame, and would not be received.

同类推荐
  • 法集要颂经

    法集要颂经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 少牢馈食礼

    少牢馈食礼

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 观无量寿经义疏

    观无量寿经义疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 达生编

    达生编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 幽梦续影

    幽梦续影

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 一日就是一天

    一日就是一天

    当今社会物价飞涨。钱难赚。如何赚?顾曦带你空间穿越去赚钱。
  • 悬幻爱恋

    悬幻爱恋

    也许这是一个梦,一个甜蜜的梦。“你爱我么?”他低头看着自己怀里的女孩。“爱。”男孩听到这个回答满意的笑了。“有多爱?”女孩沉默着没有回答。
  • 樵隐悟逸禅师语录

    樵隐悟逸禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • TFBOYS回首又见他

    TFBOYS回首又见他

    忘记的,是曾经我们爱情路上的甜蜜,而最深刻的,确是你带给我的伤害。。。。
  • 灵镇苍穹

    灵镇苍穹

    在灵战大陆上究竟有怎样不为人知的秘密,黑衣人?少女情怀?美男计?无上宝藏?看我们的男主角怎样从需要逃亡的少年成长为一手遮天的...................神!
  • 奇迹大喵

    奇迹大喵

    本文讲述武警战士夏灵灵在一次抓捕行动中不幸身受重伤……当她再次苏醒,莫名其妙的被一只名叫大喵的猫带到了千年之前。一个体弱多病,而且还是个痴傻的绝世小姐突然苏醒,欢喜了一群人,憎恶了一群人。双生兄弟一个温润如玉,一个我行我素,明里和气暗里勾心斗角……喵~……本书群号码:326964156
  • 笑面至尊

    笑面至尊

    一个生在巅峰世家的少年,天生拥有圣尊宝殿,却引起了别人的嫉妒,被人生生的将宝殿从体内剥夺并且用通天神通打入了下界,从此陈凡走上了一条不平凡的路。
  • 异界魔具纵横

    异界魔具纵横

    具者,以修炼魔具为目标的修炼者。具士,具师,具将,具王,具圣,具神。不一样的世界,不一样的精彩
  • 洪荒之帝皇证道

    洪荒之帝皇证道

    天地不仁,以万物为刍狗;圣人不仁,以百姓为刍狗。纷乱的洪荒,破碎的苍穹,璀璨的星空,无尽的宇宙,谁主沉浮?是天道鸿钧?地道轮回?亦或者是道门三清,佛门二圣?妖族诸皇,巫族祖巫?。。。。。。重生混沌,起凌云之志,立最强天庭,誓要建立一个人人如龙的洪荒大世界!
  • 浮声弑琴

    浮声弑琴

    苍天已老,大地待荒;凡恐五湖四海竭,仙惧九天十地乱;只是一次重生,他放弃了荣华富贵,放弃了自在无为,而是选择了扶摇直上,依靠智慧与胆识,直登青云;以琴弑燊,血染衣襟,走在与他人不同的路上,弹着琴,奏出了不同的浮生之路。要么浮生若梦,要么血染成暮。“我只是一名琴师而已......”