This hand shall hale them down to deepest hell, Where none but furies, bugs and tortures dwell.

GHOAST. Then, sweet Reuenge, doo this at my request: Let me iudge and doome them to vnrest; Let loose poore Titius from the vultures gripe, And let Don Ciprian supply his roome; Place Don Lorenzo on Ixions wheele, And let the louers endles paines surcease, Iuno forget olde wrath and graunt him ease; Hang Balthazar about Chimeras neck, And let him there bewaile his bloudy loue, Repining at our ioyes that are aboue; Let Serberine goe roule the fatall stone And take from Siciphus his endles mone; False Pedringano, for his trecherie, Let him be dragde through boyling Acheron, And there liue dying still in endles flames, Blaspheming gods and all their holy names.

REUENGE. Then haste we downe to meet thy freends and foes; To place thy freends in ease, the rest in woes. For heere though death [doth] end their miserie, Ile there begin their endles tragedie.

Exeunt.

FINIS.

Please Support the Classic Literature Library

Buy Thomas Kyd Books from Amazon.com

The Spanish Tragedie

Thomas Kyd

16th Century Literature

Free Books in the public domain from the Classic Literature Library ©

Thomas Kyd
Classic Literature Library
Classic Authors

All Pages of This Book