The Works of Christopher Marlowe

Dido


Act: 1 Scene: 2
Follow ye Troians, follow this brave Lord,
And plaine to him the summe of your distresse.
Wretches of Troy, envied of the windes,
That crave such favour at your honors feete,
As poore distressed miserie may pleade:
Save, save, O save our ships from cruell fire,
That doe complaine the wounds of thousand waves,
And spare our lives whom every spite pursues.
We come not we to wrong your Libian Gods,
Or steale your houshold lares from their shrines:
Our hands are not prepar'd to lawles spoyle,
Nor armed to offend in any kind:
Such force is farre from our unweaponed thoughts,
Whose fading weale of victorie forsooke,
Forbids all hope to harbour neere our hearts.

Act: 2 Scene: 1
I heare Aeneas voyce, but see him not,
For none of these can be our Generall.
He names Aeneas, let us kisse his feete.
Blest be the time I see Achates face.
Lovely Aeneas, these are Carthage walles,
And here Queene Dido weares th'imperiall Crowne,
Who for Troyes sake hath entertaind us all,
And clad us in these wealthie robes we weare.
Oft hath she askt us under whom we serv'd,
And when we told her she would weepe for griefe,
Thinking the sea had swallowed up thy ships,
And now she sees thee how will she rejoyce?
Looke where she comes: Aeneas view her well.
Renowmed Dido, tis our Generall:
Warlike Aeneas.

Act: 3 Scene: 1
This man and I were at Olympus games.

Act: 4 Scene: 3
Why, let us build a Citie of our owne,
And not stand lingering here for amorous lookes:
Will Dido raise old Priam forth his grave,
And build the towne againe the Greekes did burne?
No no, she cares not how we sinke or swimme,
So she may have Aeneas in her armes.

Act: 5 Scene: 1
But what shall it be calde, Troy as before?