Page:All for love- or, The world well lost. A tragedy as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal; and written in imitation of Shakespeare's stile. By John Dryden, servant to His Majesty (IA allforloveorworl00indryd).pdf/32

6 Stood wakeful in his Orb, to watch that hour, And shed his better influence. Her own Birth-day Our Queen neglected, like a vulgar Fate, That pass'd obscurely by.

Ven.Would it had slept, Divided far from his; till some remote And future Age had call'd it out, to ruin Some other Prince, not him.

Alex.Your Emperor, Tho grown unkind, would be more gentle, than T'upbraid my Queen, for loving him too well.

Ven.Does the mute Sacrifice upbraid the Priest? He knows him not his Executioner. O, she has deck'd his ruin with her love, Led him in golden bands to gaudy slaughter, And made perdition pleasing: She has left him The blank of what he was; I tell thee, Eunuch, she has unmann'd him: Can any Roman see, and know him now, Thus alter'd from the Lord of half Mankind, Unbent, unsinew'd, made a Womans Toy, Shrunk from the vast extent of all his honors, And crampt within a corner of the World? O, Antony! Thou bravest Soldier, and thou best of Friends! Bounteous as Nature; next to Nature's God! Could'st thou but make new Worlds, so wouldst thou give 'em, As Bounty were thy being, Rough in Battel, As the first Romans, when they went to War; Yet, after Victory, more pitiful, Than all their Praying Virgins left at home!

Alex.Would you could add to those more shining Virtues, His Truth to her who loves him.

Ven.Would I could not. But, Wherefore waste I precious hours with thee? Thou art her darling mischief, her chief Engin, Antony's other Fate. Go, tell thy Queen, Ventidius is arriv'd, to end her Charms. Let your AEgyptian Timbrels play alone; Nor