GORBODUC, À TRAGEDY: BY THOMAS SACKVILLE, LORD BUCKHURST, AFTERWARDS EARL OF DORSET; AND THOMAS NORTON.
Whilst king Gorboduc in the presence of his councillors laments the death of his eldest son, Ferrex, whom Porrex, the younger son, has slain; Marcella, a court lady, enters and relates the miserable end of Porrex, stabbed by his mother in his bed.
GORBODUC, AROSTUS, EUBULUS, and others.
Gorb. What cruel destiny
What froward fate hath sorted us this chance? That ev'n in those where we should comfort find, Where our delight now in our aged days Should rest and be, even there our only grief And deepest sorrows to abridge our life, Most pining cares and deadly thoughts do grave. Arost. Your grace should now, in these grave years of Have found ere this the price of mortal joys, How full of change, how brittle our estate, How short they be, how fading here in earth, Of nothing sure, save only of the death, To whom both man and all the world doth owe Their end at last; neither should nature's In other sort against your heart prevail, Than as the naked hand whose stroke assays The armed breast where force doth light in vain. Gorb. Many can yield right grave and sage advice Of patient sprite to others wrapt in woe, And can in speech both rule and conquer kind', 1 Nature; natural affection.
Who, if by proof they might feel nature's force, Would show themselves men as they are indeed, Which now will needs be gods: but what doth mean The sorry cheer of her that here doth come?
Marc. Oh where is ruth? or where is pity now? Whither is gentle heart and mercy fled? Are they exiled out of our stony breasts, Never to make return? is all the world Drowned in blood, and sunk in cruelty? If not in women mercy may be found, If not, alas! within the mother's breast To her own child, to her own flesh and blood; If ruth be banish'd thence, if pity there May have no place, if there no gentle heart Do live and dwell, where should we seek it then? Gorb. Madam, alas! what means your woful tale ? Marc. O silly woman I, why to this hour
Have kind and fortune thus deferr'd my breath, That I should live to see this doleful day? Will ever wight believe that such hard heart Could rest within the cruel mother's breast, With her own hand to slay her only son? But out, alas! these eyes beheld the same, They saw the dreary sight, and are become Most ruthful records of the bloody fact. Porrex, alas! is by his mother slain, And with her hand, a woful thing to tell, While slumbering on his careful bed he rests, His heart stabb'd in with knife is reft of life. Gorb. O Eubulus, O draw this sword of ours, And pierce this heart with speed. O hateful light, O loathsome life, O sweet and welcome death. Dear Eubulus, work this we thee beseech. Eub. Patient, your grace, perhaps he liveth yet, With wound received but not of certain death.
Gorb. O let us then repair unto the place,
And see if Porrex live, or thus be slain.
Marc. Alas! he liveth not, it is too true,
That with these eyes, of him a peerless prince,
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