The Jew of Malta by Christopher Marlowe (great books to read TXT) š
BARABAS. So that of thus much that return was made;And of the third part of the Persian shipsThere was the venture summ'd and satisfied.As for those Samnites,<17> and the men of Uz,That bought my Spanish oils and wines of Greece,Here have I purs'd their paltry silverlings.<18>Fie, what a trouble 'tis to count this trash!Well fare the Arabians, who so richly payThe things they traffic for with wedge of gold,Whereof a man may easily in a dayTell<19> that which may maintain him all his life.The needy groom, that never finger'd groat,Would make a miracle of thus much coin;But he whose steel-barr'd coffers are cramm'd full,And all his life-time hath been tired,Wearying his fingers' ends with telling it,Would in his age be loath to labour so,And for a pound to sweat himself to death.Give me the merchants of the Indian mines,That trade in metal of the purest mould;The wealthy Moor, that in the eastern rocksWithout control can pick his riches up,And in his hous
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BASSO. To you of Malta thus saith Calymath: The time you took for respite is at hand For the performance of your promise passād; And for the tribute-money I am sent.
FERNEZE. Basso, in brief, shalt have no tribute here, Nor shall the heathens live upon our spoil: First will we raze the city-walls ourselves, Lay waste the island, hew the temples down, And, shipping off our goods to Sicily, Open an entrance for the wasteful sea, Whose billows, beating the resistless banks,<118> Shall overflow it with their refluence.
BASSO. Well, governor, since thou hast broke the league By flat denial of the promisād tribute, Talk not of razing down your city-walls; You shall not need trouble yourselves so far, For Selim Calymath shall come himself, And with brass bullets batter down your towers, And turn proud Malta to a wilderness, For these intolerable wrongs of yours: And so, farewell.
FERNEZE. Farewell. [Exit BASSO.] And now, you men of Malta, look about, And letās provide to welcome Calymath: Close your port-cullis, charge your basilisks,<119> And, as you profitably take up arms, So now courageously encounter them, For by this answer broken is the league, And naught is to be lookād for now but wars, And naught to us more welcome is than wars. [Exeunt.]
Enter FRIAR JACOMO<120> and FRIAR BARNARDINE.
FRIAR JACOMO. O brother, brother, all the nuns are sick, And physic will not help them! they must die.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. The abbess sent for me to be confessād: O, what a sad confession will there be!
FRIAR JACOMO. And so did fair Maria send for me: Iāll to her lodging; hereabouts she lies. [Exit.]
Enter ABIGAIL.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. What, all dead, save only Abigail!
ABIGAIL. And I shall die too, for I feel death coming. Where is the friar that conversād with me?<121>
FRIAR BARNARDINE. O, he is gone to see the other nuns.
ABIGAIL. I sent for him; but, seeing you are come, Be you my ghostly father: and first know, That in this house I livād religiously, Chaste, and devout, much sorrowing for my sins; But, ere I cameā
FRIAR BARNARDINE. What then?
ABIGAIL. I did offend high heaven so grievously As I am almost desperate for my sins; And one offense torments me more than all. You knew Mathias and Don Lodowick?
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Yes; what of them?
ABIGAIL. My father did contract me to āem both; First to Don Lodowick: him I never lovād; Mathias was the man that I held dear, And for his sake did I become a nun.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. So: say how was their end?
ABIGAIL. Both, jealous of my love, envied<122> each other; And by my fatherās practice,<123> which is there [Gives writing.] Set down at large, the gallants were both slain.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. O, monstrous villany!
ABIGAIL. To work my peace, this I confess to thee: Reveal it not; for then my father dies.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Know that confession must not be revealād; The canon-law forbids it, and the priest That makes it known, being degraded first, Shall be condemnād, and then sent to the fire.
ABIGAIL. So I have heard; pray, therefore, keep it close. Death seizeth on my heart: ah, gentle friar, Convert my father that he may be savād, And witness that I die a Christian! [Dies.]
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Ay, and a virgin too; that grieves me most. But I must to the Jew, and exclaim on him, And make him stand in fear of me.
Re-enter FRIAR JACOMO.
FRIAR JACOMO. O brother, all the nuns are dead! letās bury them.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. First help to bury this; then go with me, And help me to exclaim against the Jew.
FRIAR JACOMO. Why, what has he done?
FRIAR BARNARDINE. A thing that makes me tremble to unfold.
FRIAR JACOMO. What, has he crucified a child?<124>
FRIAR BARNARDINE. No, but a worse thing: ātwas told me in shrift; Thou knowāst ātis death, an if it be revealād. Come, letās away. [Exeunt.]
ACT IV.
Enter BARABAS<125> and ITHAMORE. Bells within.
BARABAS. There is no music to<126> a Christianās knell: How sweet the bells ring, now the nuns are dead, That sound at other times like tinkersā pans! I was afraid the poison had not wrought, Or, though it wrought, it would have done no good, For every year they swell, and yet they live: Now all are dead, not one remains alive.
ITHAMORE. Thatās brave, master: but think you it will not be known?
BARABAS. How can it, if we two be secret?
ITHAMORE. For my part, fear you not.
BARABAS. Iād cut thy throat, if I did.
ITHAMORE. And reason too. But hereās a royal monastery hard by; Good master, let me poison all the monks.
BARABAS. Thou shalt not need; for, now the nuns are dead, Theyāll die with grief.
ITHAMORE. Do you not sorrow for your daughterās death?
BARABAS. No, but I grieve because she livād so long, An Hebrew born, and would become a Christian: Cazzo,<127> diabolo!
ITHAMORE. Look, look, master; here come two religious caterpillars.
Enter FRIAR JACOMO and FRIAR BARNARDINE.
BARABAS. I smelt āem ere they came.
ITHAMORE. God-a-mercy, nose!<128> Come, letās begone.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Stay, wicked Jew; repent, I say, and stay.
FRIAR JACOMO. Thou hast offended, therefore must be damnād.
BARABAS. I fear they know we sent the poisonād broth.
ITHAMORE. And so do I, master; therefore speak āem fair.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Barabas, thou hastā
FRIAR JACOMO. Ay, that thou hastā
BARABAS. True, I have money; what though I have?
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Thou art aā
FRIAR JACOMO. Ay, that thou art, aā
BARABAS. What needs all this? I know I am a Jew.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Thy daughterā
FRIAR JACOMO. Ay, thy daughterā
BARABAS. O, speak not of her! then I die with grief.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Remember thatā
FRIAR JACOMO. Ay, remember thatā
BARABAS. I must needs say that I have been a great usurer.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Thou hast committedā
BARABAS. Fornication: but that was in another country; And besides, the wench is dead.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Ay, but, Barabas, Remember Mathias and Don Lodowick.
BARABAS. Why, what of them?
FRIAR BARNARDINE. I will not say that by a forged challenge they met.
BARABAS. She has confessād, and we are both undone, My bosom inmate!<129> but I must dissemble.ā [Aside to ITHAMORE.] O holy friars, the burden of my sins Lie heavy<130> on my soul! then, pray you, tell me, Isāt not too late now to turn Christian? I have been zealous in the Jewish faith, Hard-hearted to the poor, a covetous wretch, That would for lucreās sake have sold my soul; A hundred for a hundred I have taāen; And now for store of wealth may I compare With all the Jews in Malta: but what is wealth? I am a Jew, and therefore am I lost. Would penance serve [to atone] for this my sin, I could afford to whip myself to death,ā
ITHAMORE. And so could I; but penance will not serve.
BARABAS. To fast, to pray, and wear a shirt of hair, And on my knees creep to Jerusalem. Cellars of wine, and sollars<131> full of wheat, Warehouses stuffād with spices and with drugs, Whole chests of gold in bullion and in coin, Besides, I know not how much weight in pearl Orient and round, have I within my house; At Alexandria merchandise untold;<132> But yesterday two ships went from this town, Their voyage will be worth ten thousand crowns; In Florence, Venice, Antwerp, London, Seville, Frankfort, Lubeck, Moscow, and where not, Have I debts owing; and, in most of these, Great sums of money lying in the banco; All this Iāll give to some religious house, So I may be baptizād, and live therein.
FRIAR JACOMO. O good Barabas, come to our house!
FRIAR BARNARDINE. O, no, good Barabas, come to our house! And, Barabas, you knowā
BARABAS. I know that I have highly sinnād: You shall convert me, you shall have all my wealth.
FRIAR JACOMO. O Barabas, their laws are strict!
BARABAS. I know they are; and I will be with you.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. They wear no shirts, and they go bare-foot too.
BARABAS. Then ātis not for me; and I am resolvād You shall confess me, and have all my goods.
FRIAR JACOMO. Good Barabas, come to me.
BARABAS. You see I answer him, and yet he stays; Rid him away, and go you home with me.
FRIAR JACOMO. Iāll be with you to-night.
BARABAS. Come to my house at one oāclock this night.
FRIAR JACOMO. You hear your answer, and you may be gone.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Why, go, get you away.
FRIAR JACOMO. I will not go for thee.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. Not! then Iāll make thee go.
FRIAR JACOMO. How! dost call me rogue?
[They fight.]
ITHAMORE. Part āem, master, part āem.
BARABAS. This is mere frailty: brethren, be content.ā Friar Barnardine, go you with Ithamore: You know my mind; let me alone with him.
FRIAR JACOMO. Why does he go to thy house? let him be gone.<133>
BARABAS. Iāll give him something, and so stop his mouth. [Exit ITHAMORE with Friar BARNARDINE.] I never heard of any man but he Malignād the order of the Jacobins: But do you think that I believe his words? Why, brother, you converted Abigail; And I am bound in charity to requite it, And so I will. O Jacomo, fail not, but come.
FRIAR JACOMO. But, Barabas, who shall be your godfathers? For presently you shall be shrivād.
BARABAS. Marry, the Turk<134> shall be one of my godfathers, But not a word to any of your covent.<135>
FRIAR JACOMO. I warrant thee, Barabas. [Exit.]
BARABAS. So, now the fear is past, and I am safe; For he that shrivād her is within my house: What, if I murderād him ere Jacomo comes? Now I have such a plot for both their lives, As never Jew nor Christian knew the like: One turnād my daughter, therefore he shall die; The other knows enough to have my life, Therefore ātis not requisite he should live.<136> But are not both these wise men, to suppose That I will leave my house, my goods, and all, To fast and be well whipt? Iāll none of that. Now, Friar Barnardine, I come to you: Iāll feast you, lodge you, give you fair<137> words, And, after that, I and my trusty Turkā No more, but so: it must and shall be done.<138>
Enter ITHAMORE.
Ithamore, tell me, is the friar asleep?
ITHAMORE. Yes; and I know not what the reason is, Do what I can, he will not strip himself, Nor go to bed, but sleeps in his own clothes: I fear me he mistrusts what we intend.
BARABAS. No; ātis an order which the friars use: Yet, if he knew our meanings, could he scape?
ITHAMORE. No, none can hear him, cry he neāer so loud.
BARABAS. Why, true; therefore did I place him there: The other chambers open towards the street.
ITHAMORE. You loiter, master; wherefore stay we thus? O, how I long to see him shake his heels!
BARABAS. Come on, sirrah: Off with your girdle; make a handsome noose.ā [ITHAMORE takes off his girdle, and ties a noose on it.] Friar, awake!<139> [They put the noose round the FRIARāS neck.]
FRIAR BARNARDINE. What, do you mean to strangle me?
ITHAMORE. Yes, ācause you use to confess.
BARABAS. Blame not us, but the proverb,āConfess and be hanged.āPull hard.
FRIAR BARNARDINE. What, will you have<140> my life?
BARABAS. Pull hard, I say.āYou would have had my goods.
ITHAMORE. Ay, and our lives too:ātherefore pull amain. [They strangle the FRIAR.] āTis neatly done, sir; hereās no print at all.
BARABAS. Then is it as it should be. Take him up.
ITHAMORE. Nay, master, be ruled by me a little. [Takes the body, sets it upright against the wall, and puts
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