Before the belching Whale; then is he yonder,And there the straying Greekes, ripe for his edge,Fall downe before him, like the mowers swath;Here, there, and euery where, he leaues and takes;Dexteritie so obaying appetite,
[3295]
That what he will, he does, and does so much,That proofe is call'd impossibility.Enter Vlisses.Vlis.Oh, courage, courage Princes: great
AchillesIs arming, weeping, cursing. vowing vengeance;Patroclus wounds haue rouz'd his drowzie
bloud,
[3300]
Together with his mangled
Myrmidons,
That noselesse, handlesse, hackt and chipt, come to him;Crying on
Hector. Aiax hath lost a friend,
And foames at mouth, and he is arm'd, and at it:Roaring for
Troylus; who bath done to day,
[3305]
Mad and fantasticke execution;Engaging and redeeming of himselfe.With such a carelesse force, and forcelesse care,As if that luck in very spight of cunning, bad him win all.
[Act 5, Scene 6]
Enter Aiax.Aia.
Troylus, thou coward
Troylus
Exit.Dio.
[3310]
I, there, there.
Nest.
So, so, we draw together.
Exit.Enter Achilles.Achil.Where is this
Hector?
Come, come, thou boy‑queller, shew thy face:Know what it is to meete
Achilles angry.
[3315]
Hector, wher's
Hector?
I will none but
Hector.
Exit.Enter Aiax.Aia.
Troylus, thou coward
Troylus, shew thy head.
Enter Diomed.Diom.
Troylus, I say, wher's
Troylus?
Aia.
What would'st thou?
Diom.
I would correct him.
Aia.
[3320]
Were I the Generall,Thou should'st haue my office,Ere that correction:
Troylus I say, what
Troylus?
Enter Troylus.Troy.Oh traitour
Diomed!
Turne thy false face thou traytor,
[3325]
And pay thy life thou owest me for my horse.Dio.
Ha, art thou there?
Aia.Ile fight with him alone, stand
Diomed.
Dio.He is my prize, I will not looke vpon.Troy.Come both you coging Greekes, haue at you
both.
Exit Troylus.Enter Hector.Hect.
[3330]
Yea Troylus? O well fought my yongest
Brother.
Enter Achilles.Achil.Now doe I see thee; haue at thee
Hector.
Hect.
Pause if thou wilt.
Achil.I doe disdaine thy curtesie, proud Troian;Be happy that my armes are out of vse:
[3335]
My rest and negligence befriends thee now,But thou anon shalt heare of me againe:Till when, goe seeke thy fortune.Exit.Hect.Fare thee well:I would haue beene much more a fresher man,
[3340]
Had I expected thee: how now my Brother?Enter Troylus.Troy.Aiax bath tane
Æneas; shall it be?
No, by the flame of yonder glorious heauen,He shall not carry him: Ile be tane too,Or bring him off: Fate heare me what I say;
I wreake not, though thou end my life to day.ExitEnter one in Armour.Hect.Stand,stand, thou Greeke,Thou art a goodly marke:No? wilt thou not? I like thy armour well,Ile frush it, and vnlocke the riuets all,
[3350]
But Ile be maister of it: wilt thou not beast abide?Why then flye on, Ile hunt thee for thy hide.Exit.
[Act 5, Scene 7]
Enter Achilles with
Myrmidons.
Achil.Come here about me you my
Myrmidons:
Marke what I say; attend me where I wheele:Strike not a stroake, but keepe your selues in breath;
[3355]
And when I haue the bloudy
Hector found,
Empale him with your weapons round about:In fellest manner execute your arme.Follow me sirs, and my proceedings eye;It is decreed,
Hector the great must dye.
Exit.Enter Thersites, Menelaus, and
Paris.
Ther.
[3360]
The Cuckold and the Cuckold maker are at it:
now bull, now
dogge, lowe;
Paris lowe; now my
dou
ble hen'd sparrow; lowe
Paris, lowe; the bull has the
game: ware hornes ho?
Exit Paris and
Menelaus.
Enter Bastard.Bast.
Turne slaue and fight.
Ther.
[3365]
What are thou?
Bast.
A Bastard Sonne of
Priams.
Ther.
I am a Bastard too, I loue Bastards, I am a Ba
stard
begot, Bastard instructed, Bastard in minde, Bastard
in valour,
in euery thing illegitimate: one Beare will not
[3370]
bite another,
and wherefore should one Bastard? take
heede, the quarrel's
most ominous to vs: if the Sonne of a
whore fight for a whore,
he tempts iudgement: farewell
Bastard.
Bast.
The diuell take thee coward.
Exeunt.
[Act 5, Scene 8]
Enter Hector.Hect.
[3375]
Most putrified core so faire without:Thy goodly armour thus hath cost thy life.Now is my daies worke done; Ile take good breath:Rest Sword, thou hast thy fill of bloud and death.Enter Achilles and his
Myrmidons.
Achil.Looke
Hector how the Sunne begins to set;
[3380]
How vgly night comes breathing at his heeles,Euen with the vaile and darking of the Sunne.To close the day vp,
Hectors life is done.
Hect.I am vnarm'd, forgoe this vantage Greeke.Achil.Strike fellowes, strike, this is the man I seeke.
[3385]
So Illion fall thou: now Troy sinke downe;Here lyes thy heart, thy sinewes, and thy bone.On
Myrmidons, cry you all a maine,
Achilles hath the mighty
Hector slaine.
Retreat.Harke, a retreat vpon our Grecian part.Gree.
[3390]
The Troian Trumpets sounds the like my Lord.Achi.The dragon wing of night ore‑spreds the earthAnd stickler‑like the Armies seperatesMy halfe supt Sword, that frankly would haue fed,Pleas'd with this dainty bed; thus goes to bed.
[3395]
Come, tye his body to my horses tayle;Along the field, I will the Troian traile.Exeunt.
[Act 5, Scene 9]
Sound Retreat.Shout.Enter Agamemnon, Aiax, Menelaus,
Nestor,
Diomed, and the rest marching.
Aga.
Exit.Enter Achilles.Achil.Where is this
Hector?
Come, come, thou boy‑queller, shew thy face:Know what it is to meete
Achilles angry.
[3315]
Hector, wher's
Hector?
I will none but
Hector.
Exit.Enter Aiax.Aia.
Troylus, thou coward
Troylus, shew thy head.
Enter Diomed.Diom.
Troylus, I say, wher's
Troylus?
Aia.
What would'st thou?
Diom.
I would correct him.
Aia.
[3320]
Were I the Generall,Thou should'st haue my office,Ere that correction:
Troylus I say, what
Troylus?
Enter Troylus.Troy.Oh traitour
Diomed!
Turne thy false face thou traytor,
[3325]
And pay thy life thou owest me for my horse.Dio.
Ha, art thou there?
Aia.Ile fight with him alone, stand
Diomed.
Dio.He is my prize, I will not looke vpon.Troy.Come both you coging Greekes, haue at you
both.
Exit Troylus.Enter Hector.Hect.
[3330]
Yea Troylus? O well fought my yongest
Brother.
Enter Achilles.Achil.Now doe I see thee; haue at thee
Hector.
Hect.
Pause if thou wilt.
Achil.I doe disdaine thy curtesie, proud Troian;Be happy that my armes are out of vse:
[3335]
My rest and negligence befriends thee now,But thou anon shalt heare of me againe:Till when, goe seeke thy fortune.Exit.Hect.Fare thee well:I would haue beene much more a fresher man,
[3340]
Had I expected thee: how now my Brother?Enter Troylus.Troy.Aiax bath tane
Æneas; shall it be?
No, by the flame of yonder glorious heauen,He shall not carry him: Ile be tane too,Or bring him off: Fate heare me what I say;
[3345]
I wreake not, though thou end my life to day.ExitEnter one in Armour.Hect.Stand,stand, thou Greeke,Thou art a goodly marke:No? wilt thou not? I like thy armour well,Ile frush it, and vnlocke the riuets all,
[3350]
But Ile be maister of it: wilt thou not beast abide?Why then flye on, Ile hunt thee for thy hide.Exit.