The loyal brother, or, The Persian prince a tragedy, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal by Their Majesties servants / by Thomas Southern. Southerne, Thomas, 1660-1746. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A60961 of text R12267 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing S4758). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish.This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 142 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 35 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A60961 Wing S4758 ESTC R12267 11911618 ocm 11911618 50840

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Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A60961) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 50840) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 514:10) The loyal brother, or, The Persian prince a tragedy, as it is acted at the Theatre Royal by Their Majesties servants / by Thomas Southern. Southerne, Thomas, 1660-1746. Dryden, John, 1631-1700. [8], 58, [2] p. Printed for William Cademan ..., London : 1682. Prologue and epilogue by John Dryden. Based on a novel called "Tachinas, prince of Persia", translated from the French by P. Porter. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.
eng shcnoThe Loyal Brother, or The Persian PrinceSoutherne, Thomas1682240931820000075.54D The rate of 75.54 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2002-08 Assigned for keying and markup 2002-10 Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-11 Sampled and proofread 2002-11 Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-12 Batch review (QC) and XML conversion

THE Loyal Brother OR THE PERSIAN PRINCE . A TRAGEDY As it is Acted at the THEATRE ROYAL by their Majesties Servants . By Thomas Southern .

I , fuge ; sed poteras tutior esse Domi. Mart.

LONDON , Printed for William Cademan at the Popes Head in the New Exchange in the Strand , 1682.

TO HIS GRACE The DUKE of RICHMOND , &c. Master of the Horse to His MAJESTY , and Knight of the most Noble Order of the Garter . SIR ,

WHEN things of this nature are presented to Persons of your high Rank , and Quality ; flattery is always suppos'd the Trade-wind , that carries the Author quite through the Dedication . But my design is wholly to offer to your Grace the first fruits of my Muse , that ( when pleasure lives , and serious thoughts come on ) I may excuse my folly , by laying my Maiden-head at your Door . Nor durst I have attempted thus far into the World , had not the Laureats own Pen secur'd me , maintaining the out-works , while I lay safe in�rencht within his Lines ; and malice , ill nature , and censure were forc'd to grinn at a distance . If I have not perform'd my part in this Piece ; the excuse of a young beginner will pass with the reasonable part of mankind : but when I look upon your Lordship , and joyn your Princely Birth , to the early promises of manly Vertue , which you daily give us ( if you communicate an influencing beam on me ) ( as you must shine on all ) I dare , without the gift of Prophesie , venture to say , the inspiration may refine my thoughts , to some more worthy offering . Cou'd my vanity carry me to the hopes of succeeding in things of this kind ; I am comfident my surest way wou'd be , to draw my Caracters from you , in whom the fairest Images of nature are shewn in little : Your Royal Fathers Greatness , Majestick Awfulness , Wit and Goodness , are promis'd all in yo� : Your Mothers conquering Beauty triumphs agen in you : Nature has blest you with a Royal Parentage , and Fortune been just to you , in a Pri��ely Education : And nothing is wanting now to Crown our h�pes , but time , to make you in England what Titus was in Rome , the Delight of mankind ; which that you may prove , shall ever be the Constant wish of

SIR , Your Graces most humbly devoted Servant . Thomas Southern .
THE PROLOGUE . POets , like Lawful Monarchs , rul'd the Stage , Till Criticks , like Damn'd Whiggs , debauch'd our Age. Mark how they jump : Criticks wou'd regulate Our Theatres , and Whiggs reform our State : Both pretend love , and both ( Plague rot 'em ) hate . The Critick humbly seems Advice to bring , The fawning Whigg Petitions to the King : But ones advice into a Satyr slides ; T'others Petition a Remonstrance hides . �hese will no Taxes give , and those no Pence : Criticks wou'd starve the P�et , Whiggs the Prince . The Critick all our troops of friends discards ; Iust so the Whigg wou'd fain pull down the Guards . Guards are illegal , that drive foes away , As watchful Shepherds , that fright beasts of prey . Kings , who Disband such needless Aids as these , Are safe � as long as e're their Subjects please . And that wou'd be till next Queen Besses night : Which thus , grave penny Chroniclers indite . Sir Edmond-berry first , in woful wise , Leads up the show , and Milks their Maudlin eyes . There 's not a Butcher's Wife but Dribs her part , And pities the poor Pageant from her heart ; Who , to provoke revenge , rides round the fire , And , with a civil congee , does retire . But guiltless blood to ground must never fall : There 's Antichrist behind , to pay for all . The punk of Babylon in Pomp appears , A lewd Old Gentleman of seventy years . Whose Age in vain our Mercy wou'd implore ; For few take pity on an Old-cast Whore. The Devil , who brought him to the shame , takes part ; Sits cheek by jowl , in black , to chear his heart : Like Thief and Parson in a Tiburn-Cart . The word is giv'n ; and with a loud Huzzaw They Miter'd Moppet from his Chair they draw : On the slain Corps contending Nations fall : Alas , what 's one poor Pope among 'em all ! He burns ; now all true hearts your Triumphs ring : And next ( for fashion ) cry , God save the King. A needful Cry in midst of such Alarms : When Forty thousand Men are up in Arms. But after he 's once sav'd , to make amends , In each succeeding Health they Damn his Friends : So God begins , but still the Devil ends . What if some one inspir'e with Zeal , shou'd call , Come let 's go cry , God save him at White-hall ? His best friends wou'd not like this over-care : Or think him e're the safer for that pray'r . Five praying Saints are by an Act allow'd : But not the whole Church-Militant , in crowd . Yet , should heav'n all the true Petitions drain Of Presbyterians , who wou'd Kings maintain ; Of Forty thousand , five wou'd scarce remain .
PERSONS REPRESENTED � SEliman , the Sophy of Persia. Mr. Goodman Tachmas his Brother . Mr. Clark Ismael , a Villanous favourite . Major Moon Arbanes , a disaffected General . Mr. Griffin Osman , a Captain to Tachmas . Mr. Saunders Several Officers . Citizens , and their Wives . Eunuchs , and Guards . WOMEN . Begona , Mother to Seliman , and Tachmas . Mrs. Cory Semanthe , belov'd and in Love with Tachmas . Mrs. Cook Sunamire , Sister to Arbanes . Mrs. Guin
THE Loyal Brother , OR , THE PERSIAN PRINCE .
ACT I.
SCENE I. A Chamber of State. Seliman , Ismael , Arbanes , Guards , Attendants . Selim. MY Lords , our Letters from our Brother shew The Enemy encampt on Gehun Banks ; Headed by that brave Tartar , that so long Has kept us warm for glory in the field : Their Number 's fifty thousand , ours but twenty , To poise their fate , or turn the Scale of War. O glorious odds ! and by our Prophets Soul , Worthy imperial Gamesters , worthy us , And the renown of this immortal Throne . Isma . Long have these tempests threatned from the North , To overturn the fate of Persia , And shrowd her glories in eternal night : But say , my Lords , What has their fury done ? Arban . Like Clouds , it vanish'd at our rising Sun , To the renown of royal Seliman : Let some report their Conquests to the World : They Provinces subdued , but under ground , And peopled Graves : They triumph'd too , but how ? In death they triumph'd , for they fell by you . Selim. There spoke the Voice of War ! Yes , we have conquer'd 'em and shall agen , Since Tachmas leads our Armies to the field . Thrice they the Gehun past , as oft thou know'st , Khohemus felt the wounds of Tartars Swords . Where was I then Arbanes ? stood I Idle ? For thou wert my Leiutenant in the War , Saw'st all my actions , therefore best canst speak ' em . Arban . The Grecian eloquence can never paint Your Victories ; ( to mention but the first ) How then shall I ? but my reflecting Soul Shows the past Scene of Glory to my veiw , And I can speak a Truth . Selim. You Gods ! a Truth ? I think my actions do disdain a lie To speak 'em brave . Arban . Dread Sir , you wrong my meaning . Selim. I am calm , proceed . Arban . A barbarous people , of a rougher clime , Invade our Fronteirs , burn our Villages , Unyoke our labouring Oxen from the Plow , Our Flocks destroy , and after them our Hinds : The fatal news enters our City Gates , And Ispahan appears one face of sorrow ! The Virgins shriek , the Matrons fear prevents The stroke of war ; old Bed-rid Age laments Its many Winters , or does wish 'em more , To have more strength to fight , or less , to dye . But then you rose , and Fortune could no more : War is proclaim'd , and you the General . Then to have heard your drooping Subjects shout To arm , to arms , all to the famous fields , The Sophy leads us on , and all must follow ; By the bright Sun was wonderful indeed . Our Virgins � who before� stood dumb as death , Now sing us on our way : The very Boys Act Victory at home : And coward Priests In Mosques with prayer battle with the Gods. But when we joyn'd the Foe . Selim. Ay then Arbanes ! Fierce as a Winter Storm upon the Main , I rang'd the Field ; whilst my affrighted Foes , Like Billows at the angry Neptunes frown , Successively did vanish from my sight . Did I not pour upon their foremost ranks , Sudden and fierce as lightning , rush among Their thickest Squadrons , and in glorious heat ( Like Thunder breaking from a teeming Cloud ) Make desolation wait upon my arms ? Isma . How vanity distorts him ! [ To Arbanes . Selim. With my drawn Sword I pointed out the paths Of dazling fame , which none but I could tread ; Mounting that stately Pyramid alone , Whilst all my Army lag'd , and you below Trembled , like Girls , to behold my daring . Isma . Now to fire him . Selim. Nay more ; when my too eager courage bore me Amidst a band of bold Tartarian horse ; No guard , but death , that hung upon my Sword To make it fatal , say , who brought me off ? By Mars the single vertue of this Arm Disperst their Troops , and sent 'em from the Field . Isma . So , he beat them all himself . Arban . Great Sir , your Royal Brother claims a share In that renowned day . Selim. Arbanes ! ha ! Arban . But all his glorious actions are your own ; Since you like streams , from the same Fountain run . Selim. I cannot talk of Feilds , of War , or Arms , Mention a Siege , or Battle , that I won ; But I am thought to Boast : I know your Idol ; You plant my Lawrel wreaths on Tachmas brow . And woud my Crown : By Heaven I know your hearts . Arban . Al�a forbid that you should think us Traytors . Isma . He 's strangely thoughtful . Arban . O it stings his Soul. Selim. Ismael thou art honest : dost thou think the Prince � Isma . What of the Prince , my Lord ? Selim. Why nothing now : 'T was but an Idle thought , and I dismiss it . Isma . Your Royal Mother , with the fair Semanthe Intend this way Selim. Then comes the brightest Star , the chastest glory , That ever waited on Diana's pride ; Light without heat , and youth without desire . Oh Ismael ! What courage can resist The raging torments of a hopeless love ? 'T is that in spight of all my Victories , My past renown , or Soldiers hardiness , That drives me , like a Coward , to the ground , Breathless , and pale before that scornful beauty . Isma . It goes as I would have it . [ aside Selim. Still as I woo'd , when at her feet I lay ; Begging the bounty of a Look to bl�ss me . Hadst thou but seen with what a modest pride , A Virgin innocence , and chaste reserv'dness , She took the humble offering of my love : How still in all the windings of my Passion , Through the high-Tide of vows , and strong temptations , She kept an equal mind , by Heaven I think , Hadst thou then seen the temperate Virgin stand , Cold to my flame , as Marble to the Sun , ( Not flusht , and haughty with her Conquest made , As other vainer of her Sex woud be ) Thou woud'st have lov'd her rigid vertue too . Isma . Take warmer Beauties to your breast , whose heat May melt that frozen image of a love . Selim. O thou mistak'st , nothing can drive her hence � Her rigorous beauty binds me for her Slave , Freezes the wandring current of my love , Which did she smile , woud loosely glide along Into the boundless Ocean of her Sex. Were she like other Women to be mov'd , Coming , and forward to believe our Vows , To drink our Tears , and melt within our Arms ; Then I should fl�ght the easie conquer'd prey : But of such different tempers we are fram'd , There 's such a contrariety between us , Like fighting qualities , each gathers force , And as she freezes , I consume , and burn With fiercer violence of raging love . Isma . My Lord , she enters . Enter Begona , Semanthe attended . S�lim . Hail beauteous Maid ! thou leading light of Heaven ! So near the Sun you shine , so bright your lustre ; We justly may mistake you for the morn , And pay our earlier devotion here . Seman . The Pomp and entertainments of the day Speak some high Festival : Perhaps your birth Has claim'd this Sun a sacrifice to jollity . While you the royal Lord , Conclude in lavishly bestowing praises . Selim. Take 'em as th' offering of excessive love ; The meaning of my soul. Sem. As they are meant , The effect of gallantry , I take 'em all . Selim. O! how Semanthe ? how shall I convin�e thee ? What shall I say , or how shall I pro�est , To conquer thy belief ? Coudst thou discern the workings of my soul , Pass through this bosome to my throbing heart ; O! there thou wouldst behold thy heavenly fo�m Deep writ , and never be to raz'd away . Why dost thou take the beauties from my Eies ? Like the Suns flower , my foulded glories �ade Perish , and die , unless thou shine upon me . Ha! weeping too ! what has my passion done ? O Mother ! beg her , on your knees implore , Entreat her for your poor offending Son ; Tell her I kneel , but dare not ask for pardon , Lest ev'n then my words shoud give offence . Bego . O rise my royal Lord ! Some secret grief Bedews her cheeks , which I cou'd never learn , Altho' I often prest her to discover . Enter an Eunuch . Eun. An Officer begs admittance from the Prince . Selim. Conduct him in . Sem. Did he not name the Prince ? my heart confirms it : For I have lost the weight of my afflictions , And am within a little world of joy . Isma . Methinks a suddain pleasure overcomes Your Mistris's sorrows . Selim. Ha! Isma . Was there ought , in what The Eunuch said , to work so quick a change ? S�lim . Nothing to her � but why that question ? Isma . Only a foolish doubt , � but I am satisfied . Selim. The manner of thy speech says not . Isma . Alas ! Age in a minute raises scruples , That years can't solve ; and this perhaps is one . But since you tell me she was not concern'd In what the Eunuch said , I 'le give it o're . Isma . He said , an Officer begs admittance from the Prince . Selim. He did my Lord : and as he nam'd the Prince , A suddain joy , like light'ning , dried her tears , And not a Cloud was seen in that bright Heaven . Selim. Ha! Ism�el ! �hy words have stun'd me more , Then the united force of heaven cou'd do . I fear thy friendship has been fatal to me , With an o�fici�us eye discovering , What , for my peace , had better been conceal'd . Enter Osman . Osm. Let Persia flourish , and its royal Lord , Be ever Master of the Asian World : And when fame calls your Armies to the field , May Tachmas lead 'em out , and still return As now , triumhant home , In all the glories of a famous War. Selim. Say , have we conquer'd then ? Relate the means How such prodigious odds were overthrown . Osm. Our Armies lay in view ; Gehun between Gently , as peace , in silver currents stream'd , Off'ring her store to quench the flame of War ; But all in vain : Shouts , Trumpets , drums , In dreadful eccho's , bid the battles join : We on our guard , and they expecting when To pour a purple deluge on our plain . Sem. How my heart beats with fear ! Osm. This was our posture ; when one solemn morn Riot began in the proud Tartars Tents , Nor ended with the Sun , for half the night Was given to sporting , luxury , and wine : Which , when the Prince perceiv'd ; silent , as sleep Stole on their reeling senses ; forth he drew His Army , and at their head he cried , If glory be your aim , now follow me : Then leap'd into the stream , And , like a Sea God mounted on a Wave ; Dash'd the strong tide , and lead a floating War : Which , when their out guards found , alarm'd the Camp ; But their confusion in a thousand shapes , Befriended us ; like Cadmus brood , they fell By each others Swords , and made our conquest easie . Selim. By Haly's soul 't was conduct for a God! And worth th' experience of an age of arms . O! now my Mother ! peace is doubly welcome , Not only in banishing my peoples fears , But as the glory of my brothers arms . Beg. Tachmas has copied what your sword first drew : You for your Father conquer'd , he for you . Selim. Said the Prince nothing of ��� ? Osm. My speed had been prevented . Had not some orders to the Army st��� him . But too morrows earliest Sun will see him here . Selim. A thousand Tumains for thy wel��m� n��s . Sem. Blessings for ever hang upon thy tong�� . Selim. Fly then , and through my Kingdoms , loud as �ame Can speak , proclaim an universal joy : Let plenty triumph in our streets , rich presents Be shar'd among our subj�cts , not a face Be seen in sorrow : Grief her self must smile , When Seliman appears to Crown the day . Let our soft Virgins now no longer mourn , But fly to every Meadow , Bower , and Grove , Supinely melting on the bed of love : For the glad day comes on , that will restore Their lovers to their Arms , and to my power , Confirm new blessings , ne're enjoy'd before Exeunt Omnes . Praet . I�h . Arb. Isma . ' Twice have I held the glories of a favourite ; And sway'd the Father once , as now the Son ; High , as ambition join'd with power cou'd raise me . Yet blasts have nipt my Summers blowing pride , Wither'd the glorious blossomes of my hop�s , And left me leafless to the threatning storms . Arb. When Sophy Cabas rul'd , most true my Lord , You shar'd some part of his divided favours : But safe in S�liman's breast you sleep secure , Far above envy , or a rivals reach . Isma . No , no , Arbanes , no ; thou' rt �hort ei'd here : There 's yet a C�dar , that out-tops my pride ; That grows too fast , and shades me from the Sun : 'T is Tachmas ; baneful name to all my hopes , Who by the Gian� weight of his deserts , Presses my fate , and keeps it strugling under . Arb. Ismael , in that name thou stab'st my soul With the remembrance of my former glory : Once I was great ; my hopes as flourishing , As now declind ; my fate erected high As victory could raise it ; till the Prince , That boy , my Scholar in the trade of Arms , By treachery despoil'd me of those plumes , My valour purchas'd with an Age of War. Isma . Why did you bear it ? Arb. Dost thou not know the fate of Souldiers ? Wee 'r but ambitious tools , to cut a way To her unlawful ends ; and when wee 'r worn , Hack'd , hewn with constant service , thrown aside To rust in peace ; or not in Hospitals . But tell me , Ismael ! nay feel these limbs , These arms , are they past wielding of a Sword ? By heaven I think not : or has my good old friend Forgot its killing virtue ? or has rust Bound up its fury ? neither ; see , it comes , [ drawes . And feels as keen , and looks as bright , and gay As the young Warriors , when he first appears In polisht steel , and marc�ing to the field . Then why am I lain by ? why am I not A general still ? Isma . Ay , there 's a question will admit debating . Arb. And not to be decided , till this sword Appears in blood agen : O Ismael ! Thou kind regarder of my fame , I swear , Were not thy stricter vertue to inspire A generous heat of action in my soul , I think 't wou'd settle almost to dishonour . Alas ! I was a conscientious fool , And durst not think of vengeance : all my wrongs Quite blotted from my memory , and lost ; But now they live again , and by my sword Shall be reveng'd at full . Isma Be calm , and hear me . Arb. Calm ! Ismael ! sure thou mock'st my patience : Why I 'm a Pidgeon hearted slave , a thing So overgrown with that poor sneaking vertue , I almost doubt my courage . Isma . Arbanes ! know I look upon the Prince , As a black Cloud , that rises on my glory ; I know it , and I hate him more then thou , Tho' with less noise , I have no Army lost , No titles of the War ; 't was not my province ; The Court has been my Sphear , Where , with the musick of my tongue in counsel I 've charm'd opinion after me , been thought The voice of fate , and e're my words cou'd mount , The Sophy's ear has stoopt to entertain 'em ; Where I have revel'd long , and whence I fear No banishment , unless outed by the Prince : His me�it flows fast as the Sophy's love , Which if I aim not wide , like meeting tides , May dash my fate , and sink my pride for ever . Thus tho' from different lines our wrongs proceed , They center in revenge . Arb. I 'le stab him in his triumph . Isma . The policy of Soldiers ! here is one Can't purchase a revenge , without being hand'd . A Statesman wou'd have found a thousand ways . But see , we are disturb'd . Enter Sunamire . Arb. My Sister Sunamire alone , and thoughtful ! Isma . I know her haughty spirit Resents an injury above her sex ; And has all the contrivance of a woman , In working of a revenge : wou'd she was ours . Arb. A plot without a Priest , or woman in 't , Had been a prodigy . Isma . Let us withdraw , I wou'd unseen observe her . Sun. Tachmas to morrow to return , and therefore Through Ispahan a general joy : goes it not there ! O tort�res ! furies ! hell ! ay , that 's the cause : No , Sunamire must curse his crowding triumphs : And when he comes , my wishes be his welcome : But if I must behold him ; may these Eies , These Eies that wanted fire to warm his heart , Flash fierce as Ba�ilisks , and dart him dead . Isma . Yet nigher � [ To Arbane� . Sun. Not that my fondness does exceed the bounds Of a Court Lady ; no , I can except Whate're a score of fond protesting things , In all their height of gallantry can say , And the next minute part with 'em for ever , If that were all : but to be scorn'd ! that that 's The hell of hells , the plague of woman kind ! Isma . Arbanes ! said she not scorn'd ? Arb. She did . Sun. Had I been born of vulgar parentage , Then unobserv'd I might retire , and in Some corner melt my sorrows into tears : But here at Court , Where each apartment is a Theatre , And all the World observers of our follies , For me to whine a tedious Scene of love , Is beyond patience : let my fancy work � Isma . O now she 's on the rack ! Sun. Ay , now the presence fills , I see the Prince In the bright circle , like a charmer stand , With all the beauties of the East around him : I hear his melting language , hear his Court , His soft Addresses , and his sighing Love ; Whilst my false senses , flattering my despair , Whisper through every Mansion of my soul , To Sunamire they 'r meant , they 'r meant to me : Then , then I can no longer bear the thought ; My eager joy works outward on my cheeks , And every E�e observes my wild concern : At which the Ladies laugh , and I too late The cause percieving , blushing fly the room , To mourn my past disgrace � My brother here ! Arb. Sister I 've heard your story , and am glad That your revenge points at the man I hate . Isma . Long have , I waited time , and now it comes , The Golden minute comes , that offers us A safe revenge , but mounted on the wing : Say Sunamire , Arbanes , shall it pass Unheeded like the common births of time ? Sun � Why is it made a ques�ion ? you are wrong'd , Else why revenge ? If so , why trifle you The hours in talk ? but coward man wou'd cool , Did not the shame , or publick tongue provoke him , More than the sense of honour , to revenge . Isma . O! you have rais'd a dire , provoking thought , Wou'd make a timerous Anchorite fearless , Run to the fatal steel , and stab his Prince : A�banes ! now he dies , a thousand wrongs Cry in the voice of Murder , for revenge : Thine , mine . � Arb. But what more sensibly does touch me � Is his proud scorn of thee . Sun. Brother , that word Wou'd paint shame for ever on my brow : But my fir'd spirit mounts ; and if I blush agen , Think it the scarlet trapping of my rage . Arb. 'T was like my sister spoke . Isma . You know the Sophy's of a nature hot , Vain , and ambitious ; yet withal most pli�nt , And easie for the flatterer to mould To any form ; so Jealous of his glory , That when you but oppos'd the Princes merit , Ambition broke through all the bonds of love , And shot his fiery soul out of his Eies . Arb. I mark'd � and hop'd for wonders from his passion : But Hell ! too soon he cool'd . Isma . And things that �oonest cool , are soonest hearted � 'T is not a suddain overflowing passion , But a just tide of rage , in ebbs , and flowes , Must perfect a revenge : and tho his vertues A while suppress his fears , yet they will rise , Engendring doubts , distrusts , and jealousies , Which of themselves will ne're be conjur'd down , But with the fall of him , who first begot ' em . We must foment his passion for Semanthe , Since that conduces most to our design . Sun. How that my Lord ? Isma . With my continual praises of her beauty , I 've blown his fame to such a raging height , That now he 'd brook a partner in his throne , Rather than in her heart . Sun. Alas ! unrival'd he may keep that seat : And if the beauties of the Pers�an Crown , Did not attract beyond Semanth's charms , Sure ev'n in that he might unenvi'd be . Isma . Tachmas thinks otherwise . Sun. Ha! nam'd you Tachmas ? Isma . Madam , I did the Prince . Sun. 'T is false ; Or if you did , yet �alser , if you say He casts one thought away upon Semanthe . Isma . Madam , let this speak for me ; 't is his hand , And to Semanthe written . [ Gives her a Letter � Sun. The burning Fever rages in my veins � But hold my h�ar� , ����rain the fury in , Which heaves me , like the fighting winds for vent . One question more , and like the stormy God , I 'le let you loose , to act it as you please , To shake me �nto Atoms , tear my brain , With a distraction that becomes revenge . Arb. She raves already . Sun. My Lord ! how came this Letter to your hands ? Isma . The Princes goodness wisely chose my Age , To be his confident in these amours ; And knowing me unfit for fiercer joys , Thinks I still love the sport , and therfore makes me The go� between , the pander to their loves . And I think I have so much of my office right , To hasten on their ruines . True , I make bold To taste their letters to 'em , as they pass Through my employment ( for to me they 'r all Enclos'd ) what serve my ends , I keep , the rest I am most faithful in delivering . Sun. Still he goes on , and every sound more soft , Tender , and melting than the former : hell ! And to Semanthe all ! O I cou'd tear My self , them , you , and all the world , like this Dumb piece of love ; loose him to her ! to her ! A poor , young , actless , indigested thing , Whose utmost pride can only boast of youth , And innocence ; whose Stature speaks her mind , And what fate meant her , a Plebeian Wife ; Whilst my erected head was rais'd to give A fuller Majesty to Crowns ; my years ( Rich with the Summer bloom of riper joys ) Design'd fit offerings to the God of love : But n�w no more : Since I am scorn'd , my nobler thoughts aspire To glorious actions , worthy female ' ire : Revenge , and death , and blood my working fancy fire . [ Exit . Ism� . Arbanes after her ; cool her if thou canst , Or storm her into calmness . [ Exit . Arbanes . Enter Ismael Solus . Isma . Vertue avaunt ! to villages be gone : But ha�nt the luxury of Courts no more ; Much less aspiring Statesmens nobler thoughts . Ambition is our Idol , on whose wings Great minds are carried only to extreams ; To be sublimely great , or to be nothing : And he who aims his actions at this mark , Must rush with Manly resolution on , Stopping at nothing when he has begun ; Still pass the shortest way , altho' untrod , Not loyter in the beaten , honest road : But let our Masters watch the heights we soar : A States-mans Loyalty is growing power , And we but watch occasion to devour . [ Exit .
ACT. II.
SCENE I. Tachma's Triumph usher'd in by Drums , and Trumpets ; and answer'd by Flutes , Hoe-boys , and voices from the other side of the Stage : Seliman meets Tachmas with a full Court. Selim. WElcome thou worthy partner of my fame ! From the rich Harvest of thy glorious toyl , Welcome my General , my Friend , and Brother ! Why art thou backward in thy part of Friendship ? Rise to my breast , for my impatient heart Awaits thee there ; my Arms thus fold thee in , Thus press thee to my Soul , where thou wilt meet A thousand Welcomes more than words can give thee . Tach. O my Imperial Lord ! my Godlike Master ! How has your Servant merited this Grace ? Permit me prostrate on the Earth to fall , And pay my Adoration to this goodness . Selim. I Swear it must not be � Brother , I read A longing in our gracious Mothers eye ; She claimes your knee , and duty . Tachmas kneels to Begona . Arb. Why all your projects are a ground already ; The Sophy doats upon the Prince . Isma . Be patient : His kindness is as short liv'd , as his anger . Bego . Thou second blessing , which the Gods enrich'd My fruitful youth with , comfort of my age , Our lives preserver , welcome from the War Welcome to me , and Ispahan . Tach. Is there a Joy in Victory beyond My Mothers safety ? protecting her , you Gods ! Has overpaid the little I have done ; My hours of blood , and I am still your debtor . �ego . Now I could bless these powers , that lengthned out My date of life , to this most happy day ; Once more to view the ancient Persian glory Shine out in these , my Sons ; once to behold The face of things serene , and fair agen ; The fruits of peace brooding through all the Land , And plenty smiling upon evry brow : This as the Mother of my Country , but The Spirit of my joy 's reserv'd for you , My Sons ; or let me call you by a nearer name , My self ; thus to behold you meet in friendship � To have my blood , altho' in different veins , Flow in one stream of love ; and what 's yet more , Tho' Empire stands between , like a huge rock , To break the current , and divide you ever . O! let it be my glory now , my Sons ! �o seal the bands of friendship , you have tied , To bless you thus , thus , in each others Arms , And as a worthy Sacrifice , to offer My stock of breath in Prayers for both your welfares . Ambo. Long live thou best of Mothers ! Selim. And mark me all my people ; nay sound our Trumpets To yon bright roof , and summon all the Gods , As witnesses to this great Stygian vow . By the Eternal God-head of the Sun , I glory more that I can call thee mine , My Friend , and Brother , than in wearing Crowns . Tach. Gods ! if there be a possibility To speak my thanks ; but that 's impossible : Or if there be a way to gratitude , Direct me to 't , tho' certain d�ath attend Me every step , I 'le on to serve the King. Selim. I know thou wouldst , yet Tachmas ! O my Br�t�er ! Great as I am in Arms , Tho' I have Conquer'd through the Asian world , And thou maintain'st my glory in the field ; Still there is wanting to compleat my bliss , Sem�nth's love ; � but that wise Heaven denies me , To show I am bu� man : Fo� had the Gods Granted me her , with this vast space of Empire , I 'de been their equal : not envi'd 'em the joys , They boast above , nor had a thought of heaven Beyond her beauty . � But private cares must not usurp this day . Lead to the banquet ; all must be our guests , 'T is Seliman invites you . Exeunt Omnes , Praeter Ismael , Semanthe . Ism. Madam I know the Princes soul abhors These forms , and ceremoni�s , that detain Him �rom your arms . I have not time to open all my thoughts ; I must attend the king : only pr�pare , If any storm shou'd fall , to scape it's fury . ( Exit . Sem. Alas ! what storm ? and how shou'd I beware ? What lover ever yet foresaw a danger ? The God himself is blind , and all that love , In midnight darkness to his temple move ; Like a tost bark at Sea , the Pilot gone , I 'm le�t expos'd to winds , and waves alone , And rocks on every hand to split upon : Yet there is one part fair in view , where I The fortune of my life , and love will try , My Tachmas's Arms , where I will live , or die . [ Exit .
SCENE a Street . Enter Citizens with their Wives . 1 Cit.

HOt work , Neighbours , very hot work ; Bells ringing , �on-fires flaming , Crackers flying . Conduits runing , Engines playing , and Buts of Wine tossing about , like Church buckets in a fire .

2 Cit.

Ay , ay ; 't will be a day of servi�e ; therefore I think it convenient our leaky vessels be lain by .

Omnes ,

Agreed , agreed .

1 Cit.

Yes Doxies , you must troop home like obedient Wives , and expect us as soon as we in our royal pleasure shall think fit to follow .

1 Wom.

O but Husband ! We have not seen the Fire works .

2 Wom.

And we never saw Fire-works sinc� we were marri'd .

� Cit.

And now for the hon�r of Matrimony , you wou'd meet with some red nos'd , engineering Corporal , and be squib'd for company .

2 Wom.

Besides 't is a Holi-day , and Citizens Wives shou'd be abroad on Holi-days .

1 Wom.

The King has proclaim'd it , and it may be Trea�on to go home before night .

1 Cit.

We your Representatives in the body politick , will stay till morning , and be loyally drunk for the King.

1 Wom.

And we your Cyphers ( if we can find any civil Gentlemen , as loyally affected , as our selves ) will do something else for the King before morning .

Omn. Wom.

So farewel husbands .

[ Ex�unt Women . 1 Cit.

So , now we have the day before us .

2 Cit.

The fear of Cuckoldome is removed , and we will be most obediently drunk at the Kings charges .

Omnes ,

Away , away , we lose time .

[ Ex. shooting � God bless the King. Enter Soldiers drunk with the former Women . 1 Sold.

The day is our own , the Town surrenders , and I must ravish .

� Wom.

O Lord ! Sir ! I am married .

1 Sold.

And I am a Cuckold-maker .

1 Wom.

O! but the sin of adultery is a double sin .

1 Sold.

And I love double sinning with all my heart : 't is a method we Soldiers use to cheat the Devil in counting : Fornication ! Pox ! 't is boys play , and Gown-men preach against it ; but justifie the reasonableness of Adultery by their own �xample .

[ He touzes her , while the others speak . 2 Sold. S'buds ! a Months pay is Nothing to thee : I cou'd kiss thee to pieces . 2 Wom.

Well ; if my husband knew of the ill customes you bring into his family , he 'd look as terrible �

2 Sold.

As a pair of horns can make him : but hang him Cuckold that must be , I nev�r fear an enemy , when I have won his Trenches . Come , come ; faith you must , faith you must � ha !

Enter former Citizens drunk , and singing , the women shrick , and run out , the Soldiers a�ter ' em . 1 Cit.

Our Counters rifled ! our Wives ravish'd , and we in the state of Cuckoldome agen ! I am drunk , desperate , and can fight for the honor of my vocati�n , and confusion of Cuckold-makers � � Scour , scour , scour . �

[ Exeunt .
SCENE changes to the Palace . Enter Ismael with several Lords . Isma . My Lords ! I never can enough return This Kingdoms thanks , for making him your care , Who is the life , and being of us all : Tachmas ! the general wish of Persia ! The peoples longing , and the Courtiers soul ! With what an eagerness the Sophy flew To meat your loves , and e're you cou'd demand him , Resign'd the Provinces of greatest trust Through his Dominions , to his brothers care ! Lord. My Lord ! his strange behaviour at the banquet , His start of passion , and abrupt departure , Provokes our wonder . Isma . Trust my experience in the Sophy's humour : The eye of time has seen him through , and through ; Trac'd him through every temper of his soul , And shewn him naked to my strictest view : And from my observation of his youth , Up to his riper years , I dare affirm His soul enrich'd with all those qualities , That can endear a Monarch to the world . � But see , he comes : within this hour , my Lords , I 'le wait you in th' apartment of Semanthe , Where I have something to propose ; that may Advantage the design . Lord. VVe will not fail . [ Exeunt . Ism. To lose your heads , if you be there . Enter Seliman . Selim. VVhy is my temper shaken with each breath Of fle�ting air , that 's form'd into voice ? VVhy have I not an equal mastery Over my passions , with the rest of men ? The Court is in an uproar with my follies Expos'd in publick ; all my Friends stand mute Before me , not a Counseller that dares Advise me , even flattery is dumb . � I 'le curb this folly . � Ha! Ismael here ! Isma . I find the poison works ; I 'le shew my self . Selim. My fit returns , and all my promises Vanish at sight of him : a thousand doubts Start in my soul , and press'd to be resolv'd From his oraculous tongue � � Yet why sh�u'd I Rashly endanger all my future peace , To be inquisitive in that , may prove A lasting torment , and at best can give But what I had before ? � I will retire , And so conceal my weakness , � yet that were But to betray it the more . � Isma . Great Sir ! to press upon your thoughtful hours , May prove my crime , 't is fit I wait at distance . Selim. No Ismael ! Nothing of moment entertains my thoughts : Only some few reflections on my late Deportment at the Banquet . Isma . The cause was sure important , that cou'd shock � Your temper so , and in that general Joy. Selim. The cause Ismael ! as thou lov'st my peace , Stop there ; tho' much I fear thou 'st gone too far : Thou 'st ignorantly toucht a jarring string , That quite untunes the orders of my soul : And all the rules of temperance I propos'd , I shall leap o're , if thus thou urge me on A second time . Isma . How Sir have I offended ? Selim. Thy questions still drive on to that discourse , That most offends me . Isma . Better I never spoke , than give you trouble . Selim. It were indeed . � Nay thou must bear with me ; I know thou wilt , Ismael ! therefore speak , And let thy thoughts flow freely to thy tongue ; As to my ear thy words . Is not Semanthe All can be wish'd in woman ? � Ha! Not answer ! Isma . I dare not , I shall give you a new disturbance . Selim. O now thou art too hard upon my follies : I know this theam provok'd me at the banquet , And truths in publick are resented , VVhich meet a fair reception in our closets . Isma . Then I dare speak my thoughts : if I respect Semanthe , as the Goddess of your vows , As one , rais'd by the merit of your love ; Then I must think the vertues of her Sex � ( For sure she has the beauties ) meet in her : But if as meerly woman I esteem her , Alli'd to imperfections , subject to Temptations , which her beauties will invite , And years allow off , with that tide of Youth Swelling through everie vein , sparkling desires , And circulating wishes to her heart : Pardon the freedom of my own experience , I think this fruit , that ripens on the bough , And mellows in the Sun-shine of the Court , Must somewhere fall . Selim. A thousand thoughts prey on my tortur'd soul , And whirling fancy turns my senses round : � Yet stay � 't was reason all he uttered to me , And solid sense ; and may perhaps be true . Semanthe is a woman ; And who can fathom that deceitful Sex ? But by the flaming God , that rides above , Had I a circumstance , a shew of truth , I wou'd not only drive the Sorceress hence , But sink her lover in the shades for ever . Isma . My Lord ! knowing your violent passion For Semanthe , and her unnatural coldness ; Hoping to find the cause of all , by bribes I wrought upon a slave in trust , who told me , How she in private entertains a lover . Selim. In private say'st thou ? sure it cannot be : She ! who like April months , still wept , and shone , Whose not one beauty was without a tear , Is she , Hell ! Furies ! Fiends ! and Plagues ! Unchast ? Isma . My Lord � Selim. She is , by Hell she is ; For all the tears she shed , were liquid fire , Hot scalding bubbles of descending lust , As Iupiter , rain'd down on Danae . Isma . The Gods can witness for me , I believe Semanthe chast ; as the untainted thoughts Of infancy ; Yet she is a woman ; and the nicest sure , That makes her modesty her boasted pride , May , when solicited with earnest vows Of honourable love , without a crime Believe , where her own fancy prompts her . Selim. What honourable love can story boast , Through the recorded pages of the dead , Equal to mine ? in all my flame of love , When wild desires beat thick upon my soul , And power ( the countenance of greatest crimes ) Urging me on , nay when my boiling blood Has blush'd to see me , for a womans coyness , Forgo my pleasures ; not even then I sw�ar , Had I a look , a thought beyond her vertue . Isma . I need not name your Brother , when I speak Your Rival master of the charms of youth , Beauty , and courage ; nay more than these : one learn'd � In the soft way of melting Ladi�s hearts , So artful in the story of his passion , That sure no woman can resist his tongue , More than his enemy his sword in battle . Selim. O! 't is impossible ! Isma . By Heaven 't is true ; 't is the alone Resolves the frosty weather in her soul ; And warms her into wishes . Selim. Then be forgotten ever The ties of blood , friendship , and humanity ; You 'r empty names , and perish all in him , No more my brother , but the worst of villains . I coud behold him seated in my throne , Disposing Crowns , and Kingdoms through the East , And pardon his ambition : � but my love . � Isma . He needs no pardon , who offends with power : And sho�ld the Prince with a strong hand maintain � His passion to the w�rld ; nay e�se your brow Of the Imperial load ; who can oppose him ? All offices a�e his , your sword is his , To be employ'd against your royal life ; If gratitude p�rmit : and who is he , In the w�ld transports of ambitious thoughts , And tossing on the billows of desire , That for a nic�ty of good , or ill , Wou'd quit the joys of Beauty , and a Crown ? Selim. No more Ismael ! tell me when , and where I may behold 'em : let thy working brain �ut guide me to the place . � Isma . That this does ; [ shewing a Key . This Key discloses to you the whole Scene Of their forbidden loves : within this hour They meet agen in her Apartment , where You may surprise ' em . Selim. Attend me at that time . O I cou'd curse my foolish , easie nature ! � But I am calm as yet , The figure of my fury 's lifeless drawn ; Rude , and unlike to what it shall be . O! thou shalt see the mendings of my rage : The manly dashes of stronger passion Shall paint the face of my revenge so ghastly , Nature shall start affrighted at the piece , And cry the work 's not mine . [ Exit . Isma . Full charg'd , and like a thunder bolt , destructive , The Sophy flies to all that shall oppose him : � Tachmas will stand between him , and Semanthe ; � But Seliman must pass through Tachmas to her : 'T is so resolv'd , and stands like Heavens fixt poles ! Come furies all , whip up my sleeping envy , Lash the lean , haggard Fiend , and make her foam ; Lend me your scorpions , reach the pois'nous bowl , That the green gall may stain my venom'd blood , And my inf�ction raise a mad combustion . Then from the Port I will behold the Storm , And laugh at ruins , that my plots perform . [ Exit .
SCENE Semanthe's Apartment . Enter Tachmas , Semanthe , Lords . Tach O! why Semanthe , why these falling tears ? I swear , my Love , not the last drops of life Just f�owing from my heart , are dearer to me , Than those rich pearls , that trickle from thy Eies . What on this joyful day ! it must not be : Give me thy g�iefs , pour all thy sorrows here , He�e �n my breast , and pant within my arms : Tho' f��tune frown , and every star conspire , Y�� w� may love , Semanthe ! Sem. O my Lord ! What S�n �hall see you mine ? Is there no power Assisting to our love ? Tach. My dearer sel� ! Let no sad thought poison this happy hour , The Gods have sent us to begin our joys . No , my Semanthe ! we will never part : For ever thus , thus in each others arms , Ages shall see us flourish . Sem. Yes you shall For ever be believed ; for my poor heart Wou'd fain be �onded with the hopes of rest . Yet there is something here presages ill : Were our loves Scene a blissful , sylvan Grove , And we , the happy tenants of its shade ; An humble rural pair , to all unknown , Plac't beneath Fortune's aim , we might be blest . But Oh! the storms , and tempests of a Court , The Rocks , the Quicksands , and tossing Seas , That love must venture through to gain its port , Foil the most resolute powers of my soul. Enter Seliman unseen with Ismael , and Arbanes . Selim. There needs no more ; Ismael , you retire , Whilst Arbanes attends me . [ Exit . Ismael . Sem. You know the Sophy long has sought my love ; And tho' I swear I never will be his , Nor change the passion I have vow'd you long , For more than earth can give , or heaven bestow ; Yet , O my Lord ! my fears are great for you : What horrid consequence , what rash effect Of wildest fury ought we not to dread From him , who when he knows his happy rival , Has power to execute his fatal will ? Tach. No my Semanthe ! we are now secure From all the darts of Fortune : these my friends , Soon as I march to my new Government , Shall be your guard , and privately conveigh you To Georgia , which Province your brave Father Had govern'd long , and but with death resign'd : 'T is now within my power , and I doubt not At sight of you , but we shall have those friends To join our cause , that my enable us To justifie our loves . Lords . In the publick name , We lay our lives , and fortunes at your feet , Selim. O! man me reason ; Res�rain the sallies of my starting passion , Which else will plung me in the gulph of madness . Sem. But if that gloomy minute shou'd approach , ( Avert it heaven ) when I am forc'd to loose you ; ( Forgive the Virgin fondness of my love ) Where shou'd your poor Semanthe run for succour ? Or shou'd I live to mourn your loss for ever ? Tach. O stop not here ! for ever bless my ears With the delightful story of thy love : My heart is ravish'd with excessive joy , Leaps in my breast , And dances to the musick of thy voice . O my Semanthe ! let me die with rapture , Thus sigh my soul out on thy Virgin bosome , Thus press thee still , for ever hold thee to me , Emplying the hoarded treasure of my love , Till life be spent , and I fall pale before thee . What shall I say to speak thy wondrous vertue ? My tongue forsakes me , when I wou'd go on , Uncapable to form my dazling thoughts , And I can only gaze , and still admire thee . Seliman coming forward . Selim. Gaze on , devour her all ; this look's thy last . Sem. O heavens ! we are betraid . Selim. O wondrous modesty of guilt discover'd ! Ingrateful Slave ! I will not stoop to tell thee , How thou hast basely wrong'd thy friend , and brother . I did design thy death ; but thank the powers , That have reviv'd expiring nature in me : But fly , be gone to death , or banishment ; And all the publick offices you held By our permission , here we take agen : The general staff , Arbanes , now is thine . Arb. My service best will speak my gratitude . Selim. As Traitors to our Crown , and Life , your Heads [ To the Lords Are forfeit to our Laws : but meet ignobler fates . Madam , your Sexes folly pleads your cause ; But think on him no more ; learn to forget A slave so much unworthy . Arbanes , thou attend upon Semanthe , And guard her , as thou wouldst thy life , away . [ Exit . Tach. If in my better fortune I have ever Deserv'd thy love , Grant me a parting minute with Semanthe ; And in return , my life Shall be too short , to shew my gratitude . Arb. My Lord ! the time requires a short farewel , And you must make it so : I know there are A thousand tender things for you to say , Unfit for me to hear : Therefore my Lord , the guards shall wait without . Exit . with �uards . Tach. Now my Semanthe ! Sem. O my most lov'd Lord ! Support me , for my spirits die within me , At the least mention of thy banishment . Tach. Look up my star , my shining happiness ; Dart through the gloomy Winter of our �ortune , And smile upon me : Let us deceive our miseries a while Talk of the joys of love , and never think Of parting ; grief wi�l come too fast upon us . Sem. Methinks already in some ba�barous wild , Like a benighted Traveller , I walk ; Vi�wing with watry Ei�s the sinking Sun , And night displaying her sad Ensigns round : No friendly Village near me , all before . A horrid maze of death , without a guide To chear my heavy steps ; despair , and death ! O wilt thou ne're return to glad my soul , And must we never , never meet agen ! Tach. My souls last treasure ! how I part from thee , How far above the world , I prize thy love , The Almighty searchers of the mind can tell : But since irrevocable fate has doom'd That I must ne're be happy ; O hear my wish For thy content , and future peace of mind ! � It matters not what shall become of me . When I am gone for ever from thy sight , Forget that wretched Tachmas �ver was ; O! think not on the wretch , for that will grieve thee : But give thy love to royal Seliman , Give him that Heart , that once was mine ; those vows , That spotless faith thou gav'st to me : which ( since 'T is for your peace ) you Gods ! I here resign ; Here on this Altar sigh you all away . [ Kissing her hand . Sem. O most unkind ! why do you use me thus ? Or wou'd you have me think you never lov'd , That thus you wish me from you ? Tach. My love ! My dearer self ! thou miracle of woman ! For what recorded story ever told One of thy Sex so fond of misery ? Let �s live wretched then , and ever love ; So truly love , that the relenting Gods At last in justice may redress our wrongs , And bring us safe unto each others arms . Sun. O! if I ever prove untrue to Tachmas ; May I resign my honor to a slave , Be branded a vile , common prostitute , And only known by the black marks of shame . Tach. O I cou'd hear thee ever : but thus resolv'd Let 's try to part . Sem. O you must first begin ; For my heart 's fond , and sure to say farewel , Wou'd break it quite . Tach. Farewel Semanthe ! witness all you Gods , To you I recommend this weighty charge : O guard her innocence , and secure her faith , ( For sure she will be strongly tempted from me ) That if our kinder stars shou'd guide me home , To these lov'd arms , our souls may meet in joy . Sem. My heart 's exceeding heavy : falling tears Dazle my sight , and won't let me see you : O do not leave me yet ! Tach. I must be gone : If I stay longer we are both undone ; My Eies wou'd ever on that object dwell ; � But we must part � farewel . Sem. Farewel � farewel . [ Exeunt .
ACT. III.
SCENE I. Enter Seliman following Semanthe . Selim. THe stubborn rocks are wor'n by pouring floods : But you , tho' cover'd with a constant dew , Like weeping marble , Give me no hopes , but are as hard as ever . Sem. Learn hope from widow'd Turtles , Or from the melancholy Philomel , Who percht all night alone in shady Groves , Tunes her soft voice to sad complaints of Love , Making her life one great harmonious wo. Selim. Cannot Pactolus strand , nor Tagus stream , Nor heaps of Pearl join'd with a Persian Crown , Bias your thoughts , or poise a Subjects love ? Sem. Tho' your wide Empire , with expanded Wings , Flew o're the East , farther than Cyrus led it ; Tho' the Sun tenanted his course from you , And the rich Indian world confess'd your sway ; I wou'd prefer my Tachmas , my lov'd Lord , To all the Pageantries of gaudy power . Tachmas ! whose name but mention'd , warms my heart ; Life of my hopes ! and charmer of my soul ! Selim. You were not form'd to run in natures herd , Sultry , and elbow'd in the crowd of slaves : These matchless beauties shou'd adorn a throne , Plac't eminently in a shining Orb , Dart life , or death in every awful look . Sem. O Tachmas ! didst thou know How my assaulted faith maintains the field , Sure thou wou'dst fly to my assistance . Selim. O Madam ! taste the pleasures of a Throne : The sweets of nature always blow around us : Fate cannot reach us : The ills she scatters through the Lower world , Like Vapours , vanish e're they gain our height : Joys flow untainted from the bounteous Gods , Which the poor Subject takes at second hand : No noise molests us but what musick makes ; Cool , gentle breezes fan our hotter hours , While we look down , and view the swea�ing worl� . See , at your feet I offer all my greatness , My Love , my Life , yet all too little far To purchase one dear look , one pitying smile . Sem. O rise my royal Lord ! why shou'd you kneel To me ? why do you hold me thus ? Selim. Why dost thou turn away ? Sem. I must be gone . Selim. What! not a look ! not one dear smile , to chear My famish'd love , m� sad despairing heart ! But my too happy rival will dispense With this � thus , thus I print my soul Kissing her hand she breaks from him . Ha! gone so soon ! nay then 't is time to speak : By all the pangs of love , if thus you leave me , Thus tortur'd with the violence of my passion , Your Lovers blood alone shall quench my rage . Sem. Ah! where shall constancy meet a reward ? Where shall that poor , abandon'd vertue flie ? For her 't is persecuted to undoing . Selim. 'T is not his banishment that shall suffice : That I appli'd , as a safe remedy , In hopes you wou'd forget him by degrees : But since I find th' infection spreads upon you , I must be quick , and snatch the sharpest cure : And since he only bars my happiness , His death shall guide me on my way to bliss . [ Exit . Sem. O leave me not with that destructive sound ! My Lord ! Oh stay ! O hear me , e're you go : � He 's gone , and may perhaps intend it too : Ah! No ; Hyr���ian Tigers woud not hurt my Love : � But a revengeful , furious Rival may . Tachmas and death ! O keep 'em distant Heaven ! For like destroying Planets , if they meet , My ruine's certain : Some God inspire my mind , In this wide maze of death , a path to find , That leads me to the means , how I may save My Love ; or that , that leads me to my Grave . [ Exit .
SCENE changes to the Country . Enter Osman with several Officers . Osm. FAr hence he cannot be ; And by the Villages discription , It must be the Prince , they saw . 1 Offi. 'T is strange that misery shoud be so silent : The birds in mournful Notes should share his griefs , Each Grove shou'd eccho the sad accents back , And every bark contain the fatal story . 2 Offi. Let 's separate ; he cannot scape our search . [ Exeunt . Enter Tachmas . Tach. Greatness ( the earnest of malicious fate For future woe ) was never meant a good ; Baited with gilded ruine , 't is cast out To catch poor easie man. What is 't to be a Prince ? To have a keener sense of our misfortunes : That 's all our wretched gain . The Vulgar think us happy ; and at distance , Like some fam'd ruinous pile , we seem to flourish : But we , who live at home , alone can tell The sad disquiets , and decays of peace , That always haunt the dwelling . O ambition ! How strangely dost thou charm the minds of men ! That they will choose to starve on mountain tops , Rather than taste the plenty of the Vale. Had my kind stars design'd my fortune here ; Bred among Swains , with my Semanthe by me , The conquering beauty of some neighbouring village ; What Ages of content might I have past , Till time had quencht both Life , and Love together ? But O! I never more must think of peace : Semanthe's gone for ever : O Semanthe ! [ Exit . Re-Enters with Officers . Tach. Co�e to my Arms , my Warriers ! these are they Who in the piercing Winter of our fortune . Cling to our saples sides , and keep us warm . Once more let me endear you to my heart : And now , my friends , part we like Soldiers here ; All to our several fates : fight for the King , As I have done , and may your services Be better paid . Osm. Oft have we seen fate hovering o're our Camp , In all the bloody horrors of a War ; Nor have we left our General at the view : And shall we here desert him basely ? here ? Where only hunger , or some trivial want , ( Which war has turn'd to nature in us ) threatens ? 1 Off. Fate cou'd not part our fortunes in the War , Nor shall she now . Osm. Were those soft slaves of leachery , and ease , To head an Army ; those who thus have wrong'd you : How wou'd they voice it o're and o're for Tachmas To come , and blunt the edge of War agen ! 2 Off. Base natures always hate , where they 'r oblig'd . Enter Arbanes with a Guard. Arban . My Lord ! I come empowr'd to take You Prisoner , as Traitor to the State. Tach. A Traitor ! Prethee forbear me that , and I resign My self to justice up , without the stain Of thy black blood upon my innocence . Arb. I come not here to talk . Osm. There 's not a Life here , Which fondly you esteem within your power , But must be sold at dearer rates of blood , Than you , and all your crowd of guards can pay . Tach. Yet hold , my generous friends ! I must not thus By disobedience to my Kings command , Rashly forgo my glory : if he think fit To take my life , or make it yet more wretched ; My loyalty ties up my forward Sword , And teaches silently to suffer all . And now a long farewel : live to enjoy A better fortune in your Princes favour . [ Exit . with Arbanes . 1 Off. Le ts to the Army , Where noble souls will not be wanting to Assist our cause , and turn the Princes fate . Osm. I 'le to Court , Where if kind Fortune favour my designs , I may prove serviceable . [ Exeunt severally .
SCENE the Pallace . Enter Seliman , Ismael . Selim. SInce fate has put the Traitor in my power ; My justice shall have Wings . Isma . The harmless beast bows to the sacred Knife , But 't is to keep off thunder from our crimes , And to make friends in heaven : but what ? Oh! what Can you propose by taking Tachmas Life ? Thus you not only throw your shield away From your unguarded Head , but do incite The long forbearance of the Gods against you . Selim. Has he not dar'd my Crown , as well as Love ? Has he not stol'n into My Armies hearts ? Nay more , when I had banish'd him my Court , Has he not countenanc't Rebellion in My disaff�cted Captains ? All this thou know'st , and yet would'st have me spare him . Isma . Only great Sophy , as he is your Brother : For by the Gods were he a private man , My Sword shou'd reach the Villain in his heart : But as he is the Prince , your Peoples Idol , And one that shares your blood , you may forgive . Selim. Since he is Great , and makes my Crown his aim , A politick justice does perswade his death : A Bramble ne're can spring up to a Cedar ; But a tall Pine , upon a Mountains top , May grow my Rival , and perhaps o're look me . He dies to night , by the bright God he does : A S�affold shall the Traitors Head recieve ; And publick justice send him to his Grave . [ Exit . Isma . Because I seem for Tachmas , therefore I love him ; Thus he con�ludes ; but the illation's false , As he might Guess by my faint Rhetorick : I wou'd as loath obtain the suit I move for , As Lawyers brib'd against the cause , they plead : � But thus I 'm unsuspect�d of his death . � O! there 's the pleasure , so to work the crowd , That their best thoughts , may C�own our villani�s , And frame us honest ev'n in the act �f mischief . Enter Sunamire to him . Sun. Thus far success has led our Plots along , And expectation been paid with interest : But shou'd these fail ( which wou'd be vain to fear ) . My teeming brain holds a Minerva still , T�at with unerring mischief wou'd supply me . Isma . Madam , there needs no more ; with wondro us skill You 've rais'd the antick machine up , and now Mov'd by an inward power , 't will act alone : Whilst we , like Sailers tacking for the wind , Mount on the deck at last , with full blown sails Drive onward to our Port , and proudly ride On dancing billows down the foaming . Sun. How are my spirits haunted by revenge ? � But I can more sustain : Nay , stab this breast , to plague my happy Rival , And that rash scorner of my proffer'd love . Isma . Semiramis no more shall be ador'd In Story ; f�male spirit never mention'd more : But Sunamire shall fill the checks of fame , And in the roll of women be the leading name . Sun. The hour grows big with fate . � but let 's away , And place a guard on every courtiers Eie , As Seamen watch in storms th' inconstant Skie . [ Exeunt .
The SCENE drawn shows Tachmas on a Scaffold , Guards , Spectators , &c. Tach. DEath we shou'd prize , as the best gift of nature ; As a safe Inn , where weary Travellers , When they have journied through a world of cares , May put off Life , and be at rest for ever ; If 't were in private , void of Pomp , and show : But groans , and weeping friends , and ghastly blacks Distract �s with their sad solemnity : The pr�paration is th' Executioner : For death unmask'd shews us a friendly face , And only is a terror at a distance : For as the Line of Life conducts us on To this great Court , the prosp�ct shows more fair . 'T is natur�s hospital , that 's always open To take us in , wh�n we have drain'd the swe�ts Of life , or worn our daies to Age , or wretchedness . Then why shou'd I delay ? or fondly fear To �mbrace this soft repose , this last retreat ? I ? who like blossomes withering on the bough , Died in my birth , and almost was born old . Enter Seliman , Ismael , Arbanes , Attendants . Isma . Yet Sir ! turn back ; altho a criminal , He is your brother ; and to see him bleed , ( So gentle is the temper of your soul ) Will raise your very thoughts in Arms against you : Nature and Justice , like contending tides , Will drive you from the calmness of your mind : And what the cons�quence may be ; how fatal To y��r peace , none knows , but all shou'd dread : Therefore , my Lord , I beg you . � Selim Urge no more : I tell thee Ismael , I 'l stand unm�v'd , Behold him fall a purple sacrifice To my Ambition ; and my injur'd Love , As unconcern'd , as 't were a common fate . Tach. Altho sufficient reasons urge my death ; Yet , O great Sir ! I never cou'd imagine It wou'd rejoice you to behold me bleed : Here I confess you have outgone my thoughts . Arb. By hell I read concern i' th' Sophy's looks : Isma . He 'l never stand it out . Tach. Yet e're this fleeting being disappears ; Before I leave the world , let me avow The loyalty , and firmness of my soul , Before this presence , to imperial power . And by th' expectance of eternal rest To all my past calamities , in death ; By all the thousand long�ngs of my soul , Now at my parting minute ; O! I swear , That through my Life , in all the Fields I fought , And conquer'd in your ca�se , I never bled With more content , and satisfaction ( When crimson conquest claspt me in her arms , And lawrel'd triumphs welcom'd my return ) Than now I empty all the springs of Life , Open each vein , and as the last great due ) Offer the scarlet treasure of my heart , In dread obedience to your high command . Selim. 'T is rebel Nature factions in my breast ; But 't is resolv'd , I am not to be mov'd . Tach. Since Fate ordain'd Semanthe's charms to be The fatal prize of our contending Loves ; Since I must loo�e her ; with my latest breath , That sacred Relique of my soul , that all The R�ches , Empire , that my heart rejoic'd in , I here resign to your eternal care . O take her Sir ! and be for ever blest , Be bl�st far far above all humane thought ; For endless joys are in that Heaven of Love. A thousand Cupids dance upon her smiles , Young , bathing Angels wanton in her Eies , Melt in her looks , and pant upon her breasts ; Each word is gentle , as a Western breeze , That fans the infant bosome of the spring , And every sigh more Rosie than the morn : � The thought inspires my soul ; but I have done : O! keep her close to the business of your Loves ; Impose a mighty task of pleasing toil Upon her ; give her not time to think on Tachmas ; For if she does sure she will give a tear ; And Oh! I woud not have Semanthe weep ; Tho' the dear dew wou'd make my ashes flourish in my tomb . Begona Enters attended , in great distraction . Beg. O horror ! horror ! torment to my Eies ! Why was I d��m'd to this unhappy day ? Why gave I not my s�lf to be devour'd With your great father , in his silent tomb , Rather than thus in my declining Life , Have my distracted bowels rent , and gash'd By two lov'd Sons , in an unnatural strife ? S�e where stript innocence , with brow August , Serenely bids defiance to the Ax ; As if his soul were School'd to suffer wrong ! Ah! have you Eies ? or are you marble turn'd ? No , no ; the marble weeps , yet has no Eies . � Ah! go not from me ; 't is a Mother begs , And as a Mother must not be re�us'd ; 'T is but an easie boon , my Tachmas Life ; A brothers Life , a Life less his than yours , But mine in chief : Then whither wou'd your rage ? Like Tullia triumph o're a Parents wounds ? Selim. My guards confine the Queen to her Apartment Till Execution's past . Arb. Curse on these Land Syrens ; what brave designs Have been undone , by listning to women ? Beg. Ah! must your Empires hopes , your peoples joys , The wishes of good men , be sacrifi�'d To a fantastick Idol , that usurps The heat of passion , to appear a God in , But in cool blood seems monstrous , as a fury ? Such is revenge : if so , then stop not here , Let your licentious fury sweep a long , And make a Mothers death compleat the Scene Of most triumphant murder : rip this womb , That for�'d him yet an Embrion , and gave Him being , to displease you : gash these veins , That rob'd themselves of vigor , to supply His infancy with strength to act against you ; Strike , stab , and drown this contest in my blood . Selim. Are my commands disputed ? [ The guards advance . Beg. Off you slaves ! Is there no filial duty to a parent ? No vertue in a Mothers tears , to stir Obedience in a Son ? then I will kneel , Thus , like a Vassal , follow on my knees , And never leave pursuing . Semanthe Enters in great disorder , and throws her self at his �eet . Selim. This face of fatal sorrow does confound me ; Nor can I stand this test . Bego . Sem. Ah! go not from us . [ Both hold him . Beg. Fast as a drowning wretch , I 'le grasp your knees To the last plunge of Li�e . Sem. Thus pale , and dying , With my dishevel'd Hair , I 'le bind you to me : Drag me you may , or dash me to the ground , Trample upon me ; yet I will not leave you , Till your wild rage shall spurn me to my grave . O! can you view the violence of my grief , That throws me groveling on the pavement thus , Torn with distraction , raving ; yet not give A look , a sigh , one tender pitying word To raise me from despair . � See , see , he turns away from my complainings , My sobs , my groans , and swoonings : O recal , Revoke the �igor of your dooming voice : Tho' you have said it , yet you have not sworn My utter ruine . Beg. If you persist to take your brothers Life , ( Oh hear what my presaging soul divines ! ) No History shall offer an excuse : Mothers shall curse your memory , Nurses fright Their crying Infants with your horrid Tale. But if it shall be said in after times , How in the height of madness , When nothing cou'd arrest your lifted hand , Your piety disarm'd you : What fair opinions then shall Crown your dust ? How bright will your example shine in story ? Your name will be invok'd , as a sure charm To excite obedience ; Mothers early teach Their children reverence , by reciting you : And is not this more worthy , than the fame Of that imperial paricide of Rome ? Sem. Mercy is still a vertue , and most priz'd , When hope of pardon leaves us : O! then speak , Speak in the voice of some relenting God ; Dispell the general consternation , That hangs , like night , upon the face of Persia , And be ador'd above the rising Sun. Beg. By all the hopes , that rip'ned in my womb , That sweetned the hard labour of my pains , And promis'd at thy birth , with infant smiles , A world of comfort to thy Mothers Age ! O! I conjure you pity my complainings , And give my Tachmas to these falling tears . Sem. By fame . Beg. By Nature , by your Fathers dust . Sem. By the bright Throne of Cyrus . Beg. By the Sun , And all those Stars , that ever blest this Land With their auspicious influence . Sem. He yields , he melts , I read it in his looks : A blush confus'dly wanders in his Cheeks ; And now he rurns away . O blessed change ! Beg. O matchless vertue ! happy , happy day ! Isma . Be pleas'd great Sir ! retire : Nature may turn the beam of justice . Selim. What! shall we turn Salvages in natures field ? O rise my Royal Mother ! rise Semanthe ! Yes you have conquer'd , and I blush to think , I cou'd so long resist such wondrous vertue . Beg. What tongue can speak the rapture of my soul ? I 'm lost in joy . Sem. You Gods ! that hoard up blessings to reward Transcendent vertue , here exhaust your store ; And if a Virgins prayers , or wishes can Add the least grain to the vast heap , O take 'em : Yet all will be too little , for this goodness . Arb. Hell ! Plagues ! and Death ! here 's your policy : Had I been heard , the business had been done , Without this Ceremony . [ To Ismael . ] Selim. Live Tachmas ! live ; come to thy brothers arms ; Think him no more a Monster , paricide , A Wolf , that lives upon the steam of blood : I 've lost my brutal nature , and am man Agen , merciful gentle as the first . Tach. What means my Royal Lord ? Selim. Ah! wound me not . With the remembrance of my hated actions , Which shun the light , and fain wou'd be forgotten . I wou'd compleat the general joy , And give the Crown of all , Semanthe to thy Love , But dare not , while a breath of passion stirs me : But Tachmas ! raise thy expectation high : Let fancy revel in a thousand forms Of joys , yet uninvented by mankind : For vertue wins apace upon my soul : My tossing thoughts will soon be rock'd in calms , And then Semanthe shall be wholy thine . Th�s at the last the beaten voyager , Having out-liv'd the storm , does homeward steer , Recounts his dangers , in a jocund vein , Presents to the life the fury of the main , Paints every Wave ; but ne're will out again : So since my vertue has the Conquest won ; The memory of what 's already done , Shall awe , and dash my rebel passions down . [ Exeunt Omnes .
ACT IV.
SCENE I. Enter Ismael , Sunamire , Arbanes . Sun. THus long with pains , and toil , we 've heav'd a stone To the hills top , and now it rumbles on us . Curse on those Plots , that gives us endless labour . Isma . Had our revenge set our low-pac'd , and easie , It had with equal might maintain'd the course , And reach'd untir'd the Goal of our designs : But a too violent speed has ruin'd all . As an unpractic'd Seaman , in a storm , Plies all his Sail to the unruly winds , To wing him to a Port , and never thinks That the uneven Vessel is o'repowr'd ; Till he too late laments his ignorance , And every billow offers him a Tomb. Arb. The Basis , on which all our designs were founded , Is overturn'd ; the Sophy's Love abates ; And now 't is rumour'd through the Court , that soon He 'l give Semanthe up to Tachmas arms . Sun. First let the frame of nature be dissolv'd ; L�t Sunamire be dust , and la�d in earth Deep as the Center ; else they are not safe From the contrivance of a rivals rage . Tho' I both hate his person , and his Love ; Yet but to see him in anothers arms , Wou'd give �e speedy death . What! shall Semanthe triumph in my spoils ? Shall she enjoy him all ? whilst I stand wishing , And like a spirit damn'd , am rob'd of hope ? O H�ll ! it mads my reason but to think on 't . I shall Become their May-game ; At their loose intervals of calmer Love , She 'l hang upon his lips , and beg him tell The story of my passion o're agen ; Which he relates , and with a scornful smile , Adds to my shame , to make the Girl more vain . And must this be whilst I have being ? no ; The thunder rages in my breast for vent ; Here , here it rouls to make its violent way ; And now it bursts : the flaming bolts are hurl'd : See , see ; the Lovers are dispers'd , and scatter'd , Whiskt up into the air , like Summers dust By whirlwinds . [ Exit . Isma . She grows big with new designs , And these dire pangs foretel their birth at hand . Arb. 'T is woman only helps us at a stand . [ Exeunt . Tachmas crossing the Stage . Tach. Where shall I fly to shun this solitude ? My melancholy haunts me every where : And not one kindly beam pierces the gloom Of my dark thoughts , to give a glimpse of comfort . Here , as in Eden once , tho' all things smile , Tho nature plays the prodigal , and gives Large handed , what our boundless wishes crave ; Yet discontentedly I roam about , And cannot taste the pleasures of the place . The Court seems all a crowded Wilderness , Where I appear , like the first man , forlorn ; Whilst each created being else enjoys , In happy paires , the fellowship of Life : And if his loanly State he did bemoan , And wish an Eve , when woman was unknown , What wou'd he have done , had he been forc'd from her , Soon as he found her fortunately fair ? [ Exit . Re-enter Sunamire with a Letter , Arbanes , Ismael . Sun. Brother , this Letter is your care ; And tho to me directed from the Prince , Yet it must fall into Semanthe's hands . Arban . A slave attendant on her person , Shall do the business . Sun. I 'le make a visit to Semanthe , and Prepare her by degrees to meet the news ; Which , when the finds confirm'd in this forg'd Letter , Must work effects proportion'd to our hopes . Isma . O you 'r the very spirit , and soul of plotting ! Nothing within the circuit of invention , Can scape your searching thoughts . Sun. Since nothing cou'd be hop'd for from the Sophy ; This , as the fittest way , I did propose , To work each others ruine from themselves . Isma . About it , Madam , loose not this present now ; This minute's worth a year of common hours , Arban . If this plot fail , then heaven ! the fault is yours . [ Exeunt Semanthe melaneholy in her Apartment . Sem. Did time but circumscribe my miseries , I 'de live upon the hopes of being blest , And travel chearful through my youth , to come In the evening of my Life , and die within his arms . � Has not the Sophy past his royal word To make us happy ? why then shou'd I fear ? � Alas ! my foolish heart ! how soon thou' rt wrought on ! No , no ; fond hopes , you flattering torments hence ; You smile upon me , to betray me on To new despairs , and here I cast you from me : For , Chymist like , I waste my tedious Life In vain expectance , and at last die poor . Enter Sunamire to her . Sun. Semanthe weeping ! what can fortune mean ? Now , when the Majesty of Persia comes , In all his royalties , and pomp of power , Like a descending God , to Court you to him , Thus to be seen in tears provokes my wonder . Sem. Alas ! is it so strange to view me in That garb of sorrow , which I daily wear , And never will put off , till my lov'd Lord , My Tachmas presence shall dispel these Clouds . Sun. O Madam ! he must be forgotten now : Let not his memory debar your thoughts , From all that Indian world , those golden joys , Which an Imperial Lover offers to you . Sem. Where wou'd thy language point me ? O my fears ! Sun. Tachmas no longer struggles with his fate , To force impossibilities ; and since Heaven has design'd you for the Sophy's bed ; He bows to th' immortal will , and has resolv'd ( Rather then rob your merits of a Crown ) To wean his heart for ever from your charms , And fix his wishes to some humbler Maid , Whose beauties , as they are not envi'd , Have store of happiness to feed content . Sem. Had I a Faith beyond the ignorant , I cou'd not credit this . O Sunamire ! recal The fle�ting air , that bears the sound away , Or from this h�ur ( tho the divinest truth Spoke in thy words ) ne're hope to be believ'd . Tho' we are wretched , it shall ne're be said , That fortune took the advantage of our crimes , To make us so . Tachmas has all the truth Of heaven ; so pure , so white , so innocent : No woman that has ever known the arts Of cozening man , will think him of the kind . Sun. Madam , I 'm sorry I shou'd be the first To bring unwelcome news . Sem. And yet my Sunamire ! thou wert my friend , My bosome friend ; and why shoud'st thou betray me ? Ah! no ; I find it now ; 't is all a truth , All that thou sayest : my Tachmas is o'recome By this last generous usage of the Sophy , And I am sold to ruine : And it was kind in thee , most like a friend To come , and give me all my fate at once , And not behold me languish in my pains . No Sunamire ! this poor forsaken Maid Shall not out-live her shame : yet e're I die , May I not know my happy rivals name ? Sun. Now all the subtilty of woman aid me . [ Aside . Alas ! how am I wrought into an error , A maze of folly by my indiscretion ! I cou'd not think you yet retain'd a thought Of Tachmas , therefore ignorantly prest too far . In me to answer , wou'd appear insulting : Therefore I beg you 'd spare my modesty The blush , my tongue the vanity to tell , What soon from every mouth will strike your ears . Sem. Insinuating fiend ! I see thee through That painted vizor of thy flattering friendship , With all thy devilish stratagems a going . Now I perceive , what I so long suspected , Thy love to Tachmas : and now thou com'st to raise My jealousie , on some sinister end . But to this point I 'm fixt : that shou'd the earth Depose his falshood in a general voice ; Nay , call the tongues of Angels to avouch it , I wou'd not think it of him . Sun. Know then as to the conquest of the Prince ; Whose inclinations you so firmly fixt ; 'T was got so easily , I do not think It worth a triumph , scarce of being vain ; For , like a slave , I found him on the ground , Groaning beneath the bondage of your Love , And begging liberty from any hand . Sem. O Heavens . � Sun. Let it never be said to shame our Sex , That any Lady in her youthful bloom , When beauty wanders in a thousand charms , And not a look can pass without a wound , That then she fulsomely detain'd a Lover Against his will , and cloyd him with her fondness : O! how I loath the sound ! against his will ! Sem. Sure thou hast drunk with Adders , that thy tongue Thus poisons every word it forms , and casts It's venome on my Tachmas constancy . Sun. There 's no such thing as constancy in nature : 'T is but a borrow'd name , for seeble beauties , Or stale decaying Virgins , to make use of . True Love shou'd be as wavering as the wind : For that remains but while the rapture lasts , And palls , when sunk to an indifference . Sem. You speak of that poor passion in your breast , Rais'd by an earthly fume of base desire ; The suddain fit of a distemper'd Love : Where the gross joy mounts not above the sense ; Not the Seraphick flame , that warms the soul : Such was the sacred fire , that light our Loves , That fir'd my Tachmas heart , and made him mine . Sun. Then be it so : Rave on in fond conceits Of aery promises of constancy : Swell your thin hopes with insubstantial food , Whilst I taste real feasts of flesh , and blood , And in your Tachmas arms reap thousand joys , Which dreams but ape , and fancy but destroys . Methinks already in some smiling Grove , I sit embracing the dear man I Love : We sigh , and kiss , and now our transports grow Tumultuous , but the thoughts of you , ( Tho Love be lost in Love ) Still lend us vigor , and our joys renew . [ Exit . Sem. How the insulting creature Lords it o're me ! And well she may , for such a conquest sure Might make the temperatest Victor proud : This may be malice , or a plot to try me ; That 's the last hope between me , and despair Enter and Eunu�h with a Letter . Eun. Madam , the trust I have been honour'd with In your service , gain'd me the Princes faith ; From whose hand this Letter I receiv'd For Sunamire with strict injunctions Of care , and secresie : at which mistrusting Some practices in hand against your Loves ; I 've brought it to you . Sem. I will reward your care . [ Reads the Letter . Sunamire ,

REsist no longer the propositions I made you , to place the Crown of Persia on your head ; if you will but make use of a project to rid us of Seliman : And do not think that I retain any longer the least thoughts . of Semanthe ; whom my Stars , and inclinations have never design'd for me ,

Tachmas .
Sem. Ah me ! where has my fortune left me now ? What unfrequented Coath am I thrown on , Naked , and helpless , to be made a prey To the next coming salvage of the field ? What Corner of the Earth will now afford A grave Grave to take me in ? what mountain hide Me , and my woes for ever from the world ? Undone ! thou most undone of woman kind ! [ Falling down drops the Letter . Here grean thy sorrows out , and let the winds . Whisper thy story through the Universe ; That never list'ning Virgin be agen Betray'd by the known perjuries of faithless men � � My spirits saint � sure 't is the hand of death Knocks at my heart ; I go , I hope , to rest . [ Swoon� away . Enter Seliman , Ismael , Arbanes . Selim. What do I see ? Semanthe on the ground , Breathless , and pale ! Arb. Some signs of strugling life Appear , call in her women to assist her . Enter Women . Isma . The train has taken fire ; now the blow Must follow soon . Selim. Gently , gently raise her : She breaths , she comes agen . Sem. Bless me ! where am I ? in Elizium sure ; I know it by this train of weeping Maids , Who died for Love , as I have done : stand off , We 'l walk , and tell sad stories round , Of injur'd women , and betraying men : But I must weep a while ; the tears will flow If I but think on Strephons cruelty : � O I wou'd sleep for ever . � Sinks into her womens arms , and is born off . Selim. Bear her to her bed : Rest may relieve her spirits . � Ha! this may Unriddle all . [ Finds the Letter . Isma . Now fortune play thy part . Arb. 'T is a design so full of mastery , 'T were womanish to doubt of the success . Selim. Ha! against my Life ? Isma . Your Majesty seems troubled ; have you ought Discover'd in that Letter ? Selim. Only this That I have fester'd here within my breasts A bosome Wolf , to lap my vital blood : Here Ismael ! read the foulest Treasons , That ever stain'd the innocence of Paper . Is then my mercy poison'd into sin ? And black ingratitude my punishment ? 'T is just , you God! this scourge upon my folly Shows infinite wisdome , and was timely sent To warn me of my fa�e . Isma . Yet sacred Sir � Selim. Appear not in his cause , nor dare to reason With my unalterable resolution : Shou'd mercy's self , with all her Virgin train , Melt at my feet ; by Haly's soul , 't were vain . Isma . What cou'd provoke the Prince ? Selim. The Fiends can tell : but now 't is busie time : Sweat at the A�vil of thy brain , and forge ( Quick as the Cyclops arm an angry God ) A thousand deaths to wait upon my will. Arbanes , thou secure him , till justice calls Him out , a sacrifice to my revenge . [ Exit . Arb. After him : Fix but his wavering temper to this point , And then the day 's our own . [ Exit Ismael . My fiery soul Disdains the timerous safety in revenge , Which Ismael persues . My forward sword , With resolution steel'd , shall guide me safe Through the most desperate attempts . Danger has been my Mistress ; death I 've met , On martial Plains , in every garb of fate . And shall he aw me now ? since I am in , And Fate works up the melancholy Scene , Fall Tachmas , nature perish , all things lie Con�ounded in deep Chaos , so that I Reveng'd may in the common ruin lie . [ Exit .
ACT. V.
SCENE I. Enter Ismael , Arbanes , at several Entrances . Isma . THou meet'st my wishes ; is the business done ? Arb. This Sun shall see it finish'd Isma . Give it o're ; would we had never medled . Arb. Curse on thy fear , that undermines thy wit. Isma . The Sophy does suspect us . Arb. Danger then Urges the Princes death ; for to defer , Betraies a conscious guilt , that may undo us : He dies this minute , that the next may better Advantage our escapes . Isma : I 've not thus long March'd hand in hand with mischief , spent my daies In Courts , forsworn my Conscience , studied all The knotty arts , and rules of policy ; Which wise men use to their own interests , Not to provide me with a ready plank , To bear me from the ruine , safe to shore . Arb. Thou canst not here be safe ; my Commission Allows a sure protection in the Army . Isma . I 'le steer a different course ; grow popular , And into the City ; Where Coblers square the Government to their Lasts , And Tinkers patch the State ; some friends I 've made Already there , brave factious , gifted Rogues , That Cant their Doctrine to their present wants , And Zealously , upon a fit of Conscience , Sin or Unsin Rebellion to the Croud : These are the fittest instruments to gull The easie people : hark , the Monster roars ! [ Shoots within The Rable is assembled to my wish ; This is the time , to work ' em . [ Exit � Enter Semanthe . Arb. Semanthe here ! then there is something still For me to finish . Sem. Why do I wander this wide barren waste , Forsaken , and forlorn ? when a fair prospect Of everlasting rest stands right in view ? This load of wo , that bends me to the ground , I can with Life put off ; yes I will rush Into the arms of death , and shelter there ; There sleep securely all my cares away ; Nor shall the noise of Empire , or of Love , Awake� me to wretchedness again . Arb. Talk not of dying , Madam , Heaven looks down , With a kind Eie upon your sufferings , And has inspir'd me with a Tenderness , May prove of service to you . Sem. Is there then A seat for pitty left in humane breasts ? Or is this but a visionary beam , Of comfort that thus lightens in my soul ? If it be so , oh ! let me still dream on , Arb. Madam , the Prince . � Sem. Ha! speak that yet again : Sweet , as the Syrens Song , those accents fall , And charm me to my ruine : tho' he has Undone me ever ; but to hear his name , Awakes my dying spirits from the grave , Dispels my grief , and charms me into joy . Oh! then speak on , Delude me from my miseries a while ; Tell me some story of my perjur'd Dear ; Tell me he lives , is happy , whilst I sigh My spirits out in thanks , and die in peace . Arb. Wou'd you not see him , Madam ? Sem. Oh in vain I wept , intreated , followed on my knees : For when I offer'd at a last Farewel , Once more to see my still Lov'd , faithless Tachmas , The Sophy , quite remorsless , fled the room ; And tho' I grasp'd him with the pangs of death , Burst from my arms , and left me on the floor . Arb. Yet , Madam , you shall see him ; Tachmas is Within my charge ; and only I , without The Kings command , can give you entrance to him : Which you shall have . Altho' my Life must answer it to the Sophy . Sem. All , all the Gods reward this wondrous pitty ! Oh lead me to that dear , protesting Creature ; That perfect Image of betraying man ; For he will swear , and talk such melting things , Sigh such a trembling story of his Love , Look such a soul of passion from his Eies , And all with such unpractic'd innocence ; That shou'd the Sex of woman-kind stand by , As Witnesses of my injurious usage , And but to hear him talk , as I have done ; The coldest sure would venture her undoing . [ Exeunt
SCENE changes to a Street . Enter a Rabble of Citizens . 1 Cit.

COme , Neighbours , hang these cheating Shop � countenances , they are marks , the world knows Cuckolds by ; and tho they be of credit in the City , yet , let me tell you , at this end o' th' Town , they strike no more awe into the beholders , than a Watch mans Lanthorn , after day break .

2 Cit.

Ay , my Wife told me , I had a sneaking look , and cou'd not huff my debtors : but now I 'm charg'd with bottle Ale , to rectifie the errors of my face : and let me see , what upstart Rascal , newly come to office , shall overlook me ; I 'l strut , and cock , and talk as big , as wind , and froth can make me � but I 'l home , while my courage lasts , ransack my shop � books , take account of my debts , and arrest in a direct Line , from the Lord , to the Footman .

1 Cit.

Of that in season � but now we are assembled , let us put on the gravity of authority , and seem , as we really are , the true Judges of the Nation .

Omn.

I a Judge ! I a Judge !

3 Cit.

A Tailor a Judge ! that 's fine I faith !

1 Cit.

Why , I tell you , Neighbours , a cross Leg'd Tailor is the very tipe of Justice ; he measures offences by the Yard , and with his sheers snaps off the Kingdoms vermin , I mean , those shreds , those remnants , those patches of a commonwealth , call'd Gamesters , Cuckold-makers , and disbanded Officers , that are good for nothing , but to make our Wives run a madding for forreign Languages , brass Swords , superannuated Wigs , and greazy Scarlet .

2 Cit.

Humph! a Judge say you ; very like : why , Neighbours , he has serv'd upon Juries , off and on , these twenty years , and the Devil 's in 't if he main't be free of Judges Hall by this time : � but then as to us � ay , there 's the question ; how we are � that is to say , how we may be ? � why thus , there 's none here but has exercis'd the Arbitrary function of a beadle in his respective Parish ; and as I take it , that must be a foot to the Chair of Government .

3 Cit.

Ay , ay ; we are all Judges , and Judges Children ; indeed deed I ever thought I was to be a great man , I was such a dull Rogue .

2 Cit.

Well , I was once a Justice itinerant in my precincts , which in the Vulgar Translation is no more than a Constable : but 't was a thriving time , Neighbours , a very thriving time : for the Parish bawds ( besides all underdealers , as procurers , and retailers of pleasure ) amount to � let me see � let me see , a parcel of � no , no , I 'm out � t is no matter for fractions , but bribes in abundance , to wink at copulation ; I Pimp'd by Commission and drank brandy at the cost of the sinners .

3 Cit.

Lord ! I 'm thinking how awkard , and slovenly I shall be in my new trappings for a day or to ; Ha! and if there be occasion for speeches , my Tongue will certainly founder : my Wife spoil'd my Oratory , when she broke my pate , for being sawcy .

2 Cit.

Better , and better still : few words promise a great deal of thinking , and that abundance of judicial understanding : Besides you see our City Justices , how they manage themselves upon the Bench : indeed a Nut crack , or some such conceited , Hyroglyphical Engine does well in the hand of a Magistrate , which having us'd a while , you strait grow Lethargick , nodo're the cause ; then start in amazment , and condemn at a venture .

1 Cit.

Ay , ay , ay ; ever while you live , ever while you live observe that : for look you , there 's no one but some time or other ther deserves hanging ; and tho' the prisoner be not yet a Rogue , soft and fair , all in good time , he may be one : therefore I say once agen condemn for prevention .

3 Cit.

Condemnation ! I 'le have nothing but condemnation in my Court , 't will clear the Kingdom of Idlers , and then we may father our own Children .

2 Cit.

Well , neighbour Ralph , I know you are a good Common wealths man , and understand property , and priviledge , as a man may say ; but Scholars , you know , are Infidels ; still at their quare's and their quomodo's , to show their Learning ; therefore I being somewhat letter'd , or so , wou'd fain know how we are these great conceal'd persons , you talk of ?

1 Cit.

Why thus ; when our betters are at variance , beyond the Arbitration of the bench , the suit is remov'd to the Court of Commonalty , and decided by the infallible knocks of black bill , and paring-shovel ; then to what ever side we lean , that is sure to be weighty .

3 Cit.

As if you had the cause in your false scales at home .

Ismael enters to ' em . 1 Cit.

But observe , here comes an Ambassador already ; give him Audience , I say ; state Affairs I 'le warrant you , Neighbours .

Isma . My worthy Country-men ! my fellow sufferers ! To you I come to weep this Kingdomes tears , To sigh its groaning sorrows out , and pour Into your ears its sad calamities : You ! who , like kind Physitians , always are Assisting with your utmost art , and care , To search its wounds , and with a healing hand , Unite its broken , and disjointed limbs . 1 Cit. Sure he takes me for a bone setter . Isma . I am , like you , a Persian ; all your good Proportionably mine , as are you ills ; Our hopes , and lives tied in one common interest ; Then wonder not that I stand forth , to head you , Against this barbarous , inhumane King , That grows in tyranny , And like a Torrent from a Mountain's fall , If not with speed diverted , will o'rewhelm us . 2 Cit. Now for Rebellion , I ne're Rebell'd in all my Life . Omn. All for Rebellon , all for Rebellion . Isma . If to defend your Lives , your Liberties , Your Laws , your Customes , and your ancient dues , Be to rebel , then this is rank Rebellion : But sure a just defence may hope a fairer name . 2 Cit.

Name me no name , Sir , it shall be nam'd Rebellion , or nothing .

Omn. Rebellion or nothing , Rebellion or nothing . Isma . Then be it so , methinks I see oppression Bestride your streets already , burning lust Pursue your daughters to your inmost rooms , While you stand weeping by , and cannot help ' em . Your shops forc'd open , and your goods expos'd To the wild rapine of licentious Soldiers , That live on spoil ; and all without redress , For justice is no more : speak , woud you this ? Omn. No , no ; we 'r all for Rebellion . Ism. 'T is what you must expect , if not prevented . Last night , O night never to be forgotten ! Tachmas , that model of our ancient glory , Tachmas , that fought your fields , and never thought His blood to rich , to buy his Countries peace , Was by the Tyrants order barbarously murder'd ; Murder'd , my Country men ! and when you hear The cause , I doubt not But as the story must provoke your tears , So they will stir you up to a revenge . 1 Cit. Alack-a-day ! I vow he makes me weep , good gentleman ! Isma . 'T was only this ; he was too good , too vertuous , A Lover of his Country ; therefore fell . He was your guard , your shield ; but now is gone : He fell because he Lov'd you , and will you Not solemnize his funeral , in blood ? Will you stand here , like statues , motionless , Weep o're his gaping wounds , and not revenge ' em ? No , no ; I see you only want a Leader ; And here I offer both my life , and fortune , To farther the design . 1 Cit.

Lead us on , lead us on ; we 'l fire the Palace , depose the Tyrant , and make you King.

2 Cit. Ay , ay ; a King of our own making ! Isma . O! you mistake me ; that is not my end . 2 Cit. No , 't is the beginning of your Reign , and that 's better . 1 Cit. We loose time , we loose time , now for a Coronation ! Omn. A Coronation ! A Coronation ! [ Exeunt shooting . Tachmas in Prison . Tach. I think , and therefore am : hard state of man ! That proves his being with an Argument , That speaks him wretched . Birds in Cages lose The freedome of their natures unconfin'd ; Yet they will sing , and bill , and murmur there As merrily , as they were on the Wing . But man , that reasoning favourite of Heaven , How can he bear it ? Tho the body finds Respight from torment , yet the mind has none : For thousand restless thoughts , of different kinds , Beat thick upon the soul , some are comparing The present with the past , how happy once I was , and now how wretched : some presenting My miseries by others happiness ; Whilst others , falsly flattering me to Life , Tell me my fortune ripens in the womb Of time , and I shall yet be happy . Enter Arbanes with Semanthe . Arb. Madam , behold the Prince alone , and thoughtful . Sem. Alas ! My Lord ! once I was thought a balm For every wound of Fortune ; but I fear My presence now will but torment him more . Tach. Ha! sure my fancy , revelling in a dream , Presents that form before me : see , she comes , Bright , as the Virgin blushes of the morn , Rising upon the darkness of my fate , And darts a day of comfort through my soul. O my best Life ! thou dearest ! O Semanthe ! I swear , while I have thee within my arms , I will not loose a thought on my misfortunes . Let me unbosome all my longings here . � She turns away ! what can this mean ? you Gods ! Art thou then alter'd too ? O speak Semanthe ! For tho' I thus behold thee cold , and chang'd , Yet there is something whispers to my soul , Thou never canst resolve on Tachmas ruin . Sem. O heaven ! so tenderly he melts my heart , I shall want power to tell him of his falshoods . Tach. Nay then by all the Gods , I know thee well : No , thou art still the same ; those languishings , Those eager looks , those sighs , and tears inform me , More than a thousand tongues thou lovest me still . Sem. Why is our Sex so easie to believe ? And coz'ning man so artful to decieve ? Tach. Why , my best Life ! why dost thou thus torment Thy self , and me ? � [ She goes from him . By all my hopes you must not leave me thus � I will pursue you ever with my prayers , Summon you with the gentle call of Love , Till you awake , and answer to my longings . My life ! my soul ! � [ following her . Sem. O! I can hold no longer : Thy tongue has softned me into desire , And I am all o're Love : my dearest Lord ! Let me for ever hide me in this bosome ; Here sigh the tenderest passion of my heart . The extasie comes on so fast upon me , That words are wanting to express my joy . Tach. Good Gods ! is 't possible ? hast thou at last My fair , offended Dear ! resolv'd to bless me ? Is it then true that thus I hold thee fast , Panting , and balmy to my bleeding heart ? My reason ebbs , and mighty transport sways , In full dominion , every corner here , And I cou'd rave for ever on my Love. Sem. And I cou'd hear you ever . Arb. O! that I coud run back into my youth , To ravish her before him : but 't is past ; And my revenge must lie another way . [ aside . Tach. A thought returns upon my memory , That bids me chide ; Semanthe ! O my Life ! How coud'st thou see me rack'd with impatience ? How coudst thou so dissemble with thy Love ? Was it to try how I cou'd bear it ? Sem. Ha! Stand off , I know thee now , thou art that false Betraying , perjur'd man , that has undone me . Tach. From thee , good Gods ! do I hear this from thee ? Sem. Alas ! my thoughts were all employed upon thee : My ears devour'd the musick of thy Love ; My wrongs were silenc'd , and my eies were charm'd : And had you but continued the soft Scene ; Had you still practic'd on my easiness , Tho with feign'd Love , flattering my womanish faith ; Joy wou'd have done the business of my grief , And I had died contented in your arms . Tach. What means my fate ? where wou'dst thou drive my thoughts ? Sem. 'T is true , I came to take my last farewel Of Life , and Love ; of thee , and all my cares : To tell thee of thy falshoods , not upbraid thee ; To sigh my story out without complaining ; To suffer on , nor murmur at my fate , Since you decreed it ; this was my fond resolve , Th' intention of this passionate , doting Fool : But now , O turn of temper ! thy hard usage Has run me from my reason , I am wild , Quite mad � distracted , and must rave a while : Rave till I burst , and sink down dead with pass�on . Tach. Alas ! I find it now ; thou art abus'd , And I betraid : some Villain has traduc'd My constancy ; but by the pangs of Love , By all the torments of a bleeding heart , I ever was most true , and still am thine . Sem. O Prince ! forbear ; if Sunamire shou'd hear . � Tach. Ha! Goes it there ? then there is mischief yet : That woman bears us most inveterate hate , And shou'd not be believ'd against our selves . Sem. But O! the Letter , Prince . � Tach. Riddles ! and doubts . Arb. I have a friend my Lord ! can best unfold 'em [ Goes to the door . Come forth , my Sister ; time has recompenc'd Our expectation with a full revenge . Enter Sunamire , and Osman disguis'd . Sem. Revenge ! alas ! that fatal word too late Explains my folly , and creates my fear . Tach. What shou'dst thou fear , my Love ? thy innocence Will shield thee ; and for me , the fear of death Flew from me , when my happiness took wing . Sun. Infuse the mortal drugs in the gilt bowls ; Be ready at my call . [ Exit . Osman . Arb. See where they stand , Lull'd in the arms of Love , and far remov'd From the apprension of that fatal minute , Comes posting to their ruin . Sun. The thought was lucky , With a pretended pity , to decoy Semanthe to the snare . Arb. To offer her In the first draught , the Nectar of her Love ; Will make the gall of our revenge more bitter . But see , they turn upon us . Sun. Sure 't is the error of my sense , that shows Semanthe here , that poor , forsaken thing : Alas ! I pity thee : but blush to see My Sexes fondness painted in those tears , Lost on a man that scorns thee . Sem. Why dost thou awaken me into despair ? Death is my wish , but I wou'd meet it here . [ To Tachmas . Sun. Nay now , my Lord ! I must become a pleader in this cause : The fatal purple rises in her cheeks , The Lillies wither , and the Roses fade ; Poor wretch ! see , see she lingers for a look ; Do not torment the quiet of her death ; Speak kindly to her ; bless her with a smile ; Nay I can see her take a farewel kiss , Without a Rivalls fear . Tach. Base cruel Woman ! But Oh! for my Semanthe's sake I will Forbear to curse thee by that gentle name . I know thou comest on mischief ; but I charge thee , If thou hast any part of thy soft Sex , Working to vertue in thy hard'ned soul , ( Howe're the Sophy , and the Gods doom me ) Beware how thou design'st against my Love. Sun. How Sir ! so hard'ned in this coz'ning trade ! First you betray Semanthe to your scorn , Then dare not justifie your Love to me : But Sir , the Letter speaks your falshood plain . Tach. What Letter ? speak ; if it be sent from Hell , Thou art its chief Commissioner ; inform me : Say , hast thou mortgag'd thy last hope of heaven , And in some fatal scroul , to take my Life , Or what 's yet worse , to ruine me with her , Subscrib'd thy self a servant to the Furies ? Sun. Were I not satisfied that my revenge Requires the secret from me , thou shoud'st still Remain in ignorance : yes , I forg'd the Letter , To raise her jealousie of you , in hopes ( A womans spirit working to revenge ) She might divulge your Treasons to the Sophy . Tach. My Treasons ! Arb. Yes , against the Sophy's Life : For nothing else cou'd put you in our power . Tach. I thought the Line of my aflictions carried But to the end of Life : but thou hast found A way to vex my quiet in the grave ; To sacrifice my fame to after times , And blot my story with a Traitors stain . Arb. I ow'd thee this , proud Prince , for this contempt , And insolence ; when , to the shame of arms , My wounds , and blood forgot , Tachmas was nam'd , To lead those Armies , I had bred in War. Tach. I know my latest hour comes on apace ; And now to curse thee , were to rob my soul Of this soft satisfaction in my death . Oh! let me hold thee fast , my only Life ! Here languish out a farewel to our Loves ; Gaze on those heavenly Eies , That , through the Grove of death , must light me on To the bright Mansions of their kindred stars . Sun. So unconcern'd ! the face of death will turn This Scene of Love : appear thou Minister Of Fate , come forth , and act thy tragick part . Enter Osman with four Bowls . Tach. What means this fatal pomp ? all this for me ? Or to be yet more cruel , wou'd you load My mounting spirit with your guilty souls ; And damn me with your company in death ? Sun. This is your bridal night ; and we your guests , Must wait upon the Ceremony : But know , my Lord ! the gilt bowls are prepar'd Only for you , and your fair bride , for they Are poison'd . Tach. Ha! thou can'st not mean her death : Or wou'dst thou in one Devilish act , outdo The eldest damn'd in Hell ? O! spare her Life , And I will bless thee with my latest breath , Nay , as I mount , report thee to the Gods , And tell 'em thou art good . Sem. My Lord ! forbear Solliciting , what granted , I refuse ; Life without you : By our immortal Loves I am resolv'd on this . Alas ! I swear I think this hour our first happiness , And to die thus together , is an earnest , Sent from the Gods , of worlds of joy to come : Sun. Yes Rival , thou shou'dst live , be forc'd to live , But that the fight of thee for ever wou'd Revive my shame , and lay his scorn before me ! Tach. Give me the fatal bowls : and now , Samanthd Since thou resolv'st , and Fate will have it so ; I here present thee with a cordial draught , That will preserve our Loves i' th' other world . Sem. Then chearfully , as birds salute the morn After a cold , long , stormy Winter night , We leave these solitary , dark abodes , And mount to mingle with the shining Gods. Tach. O! how I grude the Grave this heavenly form ! These beauties will inspire the arms of death , And warm the pale , cold tyrant into life . O I cou'd rave for ever � but farewel . [ All drink . Arb. 'T is to their meeting in the other world . [ To Sunamire . Osm. So ; to my knowledge , you will first meet there . [ Aside . Tach. 'T is done , the business of our fate is done : How fares my Love ? speak , for , in spight of death , Thy Eies still carry their resistless fires , And beauty fits in triumph on thy cheeks . Osman gives Tachmas asword . Arb. Now , Sunamire ! thus prosperous in revenge ; Let 's hug our selves , and laugh to see 'em fall . Osm. Stand on your guard , my Lord ! soon as he finds The poison work ; despair and madness will Enforce his hand to some damn'd bloody deed . Arb. Thou dost not feel the pleasures , that I have , To see these whining , constant Lovers die . � What means this dulness ? � ha ! thy Eies are fixt ; Thy lips too tremble to relate the cause . Sun. O! we are poorly caught in our own snare . The poison , we prepar'd for them , the slave Has given to us . [ Sinks down . Arb. Ha! poison'd ! � yes 't is here : I feel the Traitor working to my heart . But I have yet a sword , that shall prevent The turns of fate , and we will fall reveng'd . � What mean these shouts ? but I defer too long . � Ha! Tachmas arm'd ; Tach. Yes , Traitor , to thy ruine . Arb. Then thus I brave my Fate . They fight Arbanes falls . � O! I am slain . Sun. Speak brother , is he down ? then to my part , I 'le come , and triumph once over his heart : But see , my happy rival does appear , Trembling , and fainting in the arms of fear : Now strike , whilst nobly thus I conquer here . [ Dies Enter Seliman , Begona , attendants , Ismael bound , and guarded . Selim. He lives , he lives , you Gods ! Once more , with all the dearness of a brother , I fall upon thy breast , the haven , where My beaten mind rides safe , secure from restless Passions , which , like tempests on the main , Drive reason from the guidance of our lives , And leave us shipwrack'd on a barbarous Coast. Beg. I see , my son , the hands of Heaven , and Fate , Have been employ'd in thy deliverance . But say , my Tachmas ! speak the wondrous course , That Heaven pursu'd to rescue thee from death . Tach. That best my lifes preserver here can tell . [ To osman . Selim. Thy habit speaks a slave : yet in thy face Something appears familiar to my Eies , That I have often seen ; but when , and where , My memory has lost . Osm. Great Sir , I have been honour'd in your service ; Your Soldier from my youth ; Osman my name , Which you , Sir , must remember , since your favours Distinguish'd it first from the crowd . [ To Tachmas . Tach. My friend ! My Osman here ! then Heaven has sent the sword , And shield of all the War. O royal Sir ! Let me present a Captain to your knowledge , Worthy that noble Title . [ Osman kneels to Seliman . Selim. Rise to our favour : the perticulars How thou cam'st here disguis'd , and by what means Thy faith and gratitude have work'd their ends , A happier hour will claim . Remove these bodies ; And for that slave , such matchless Villanies He has confess'd , as mercy cannot pardon : Bear him to death , away with him . Isma . I go ; but first I make this hearty wish : May lame ambition ( for the publick good , Halting upon the crutches of the crowd ) Still fall : May Treason ever need the peoples swords , And may they valiantly compound for words ; And last , may all disturbers of the state , Grow blindly popular , and meet my fate . [ Is led off . Selim. Vertue shines out agen in its full blaze : And now not to reward thy sufferings , Wou'd speak me accessary to those crimes My ignorance committed : therefore here I give Semanthe to thy longing Love : Take her , and wear her ever in thy heart : Whilst I collected in my temper stand , And may succeeding Monarchs learn from me , How far to trust a Statesmans policy . FINIS .
THE EPILOGUE . A Virgin Poet was serv'd up to day ; Who till this hour , ne're cackled for a Play : He 's neither yet a Whigg nor Tory-Boy ; But , like a Girl , whom several wou'd enjoy , Begs leave to make the best of his own natural Toy . Were I to play my callow Author's game , The King's House wou'd instruct me , by the Name : There 's Loyalty to one : I wish no more : A Commonwealth sounds like a common Whore. Let Husband or Gallant be what they will , One part of Woman is true Tory still . If any factious spirit should rebell , Our Sex , with ease , can every , rising quell . Then , as you hope we shou'd your failings hide , An honest Iury for our play provide : Whiggs at their Poets never take offence ; They save dull Culpritts who have Murther'd Sense : Tho Nonsense is a nauseous heavy Mass , The Vehicle call'd faction makes it pass . Faction in Play 's the Commonwealths man's bribe : The leaden farthing of the Canting Tribe : Though void in payment Laws and Statutes make it , The Neighbourhood , that knows the Man , will take it . 'T is Faction buys the Votes of half the Pit ; Their's is the Pension-Parliament of wit. In City-Clubs their venom let 'em vent ; For there 't is safe , in its own Element : Here , where their madness can have no pretence , Let 'em forget themselves an hour in sense . In one poor Isle , why shou'd two Factions be ? Small diff'rence in your Vices I can see ; In Drink and Drabs both sides too well agree . Wou'd there were more Preferments in the Land ; If Places fell , the party cou'd not stand . Of this damn'd grievance ev'ry Whigg complains ; They grunt like Hogs , till they have got their Grains . Mean time you see what Trade our Plots advance , We send each year good Money into France : And they , that know what Merchandise we need , Send o're true Protestants , to mend our breed . FINIS .