FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290  
291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   >>  
f your foolish qualms of conscience; the jewels are lost, and they are all leaving you. _Must._ What, am I forsaken of my subjects? Would the rogue purloin my liege people from me!--I charge you, in my own name, come back, ye deserters, and hear me speak. _1 Rabble._ What, will he come with his balderdash, after the Mufti's eloquent oration? _2 Rabble._ He's our captain, lawfully picked up, and elected upon a stall; we will hear him. _Omnes._ Speak, captain, for we will hear you. _Must._ Do you remember the glorious rapines and robberies you have committed? Your breaking open and gutting of houses, your rummaging of cellars, your demolishing of Christian temples, and bearing off, in triumph, the superstitious plate and pictures, the ornaments of their wicked altars, when all rich moveables were sentenced for idolatrous, and all that was idolatrous was seized? Answer first, for your remembrance of all these sweetnesses of mutiny; for upon those grounds I shall proceed. _Omnes._ Yes, we do remember, we do remember. _Must._ Then make much of your retentive faculties.--And who led you to those honey-combs? Your Mufti? No, believers; he only preached you up to it, but durst not lead you: He was but your counsellor, but I was your captain; he only looed you, but, 'twas I that led you. _Omnes._ That's true, that's true. _Ant._ There you were with him for his figures. _Must._ I think I was, slave Antonio. Alas, I was ignorant of my own talent!--Say then, believers, will you have a captain for your Mufti, or a Mufti for your captain? And, further, to instruct you how to cry, will you have _A mufti_, or _No mufti_? _Omnes._ No Mufti, no Mufti! _Must._ That I laid in for them, slave Antonio--Do I then spit upon your faces? Do I discourage rebellion, mutiny, rapine, and plundering? You may think I do, believers; but, heaven forbid! No, I encourage you to all these laudable undertakings; you shall plunder, you shall pull down the government; but you shall do this upon my authority, and not by his wicked instigation. _3 Rabble._ Nay, when his turn is served, he may preach up loyalty again, and restitution, that he might have another snack among us. _1 Rabble._ He may indeed; for it is but his saying it is sin, and then we must restore; and therefore I would have a new religion, where half the commandments should be taken away, the rest mollified, and there should be little or no sin remaining. _Omne
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290  
291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   >>  



Top keywords:

captain

 

Rabble

 
believers
 

remember

 

Antonio

 

mutiny

 

wicked

 

idolatrous

 

figures

 

remaining


mollified

 
ignorant
 
talent
 

instruct

 
served
 
restore
 

religion

 

preach

 

loyalty

 

restitution


heaven

 

forbid

 

encourage

 

laudable

 

plundering

 

discourage

 

rebellion

 

rapine

 

undertakings

 
plunder

commandments

 

instigation

 
authority
 

government

 

sweetnesses

 
eloquent
 

oration

 
balderdash
 

deserters

 
lawfully

picked

 

robberies

 

committed

 
breaking
 

rapines

 

glorious

 
elected
 

leaving

 

jewels

 
conscience