Read The Complete Works of William Shakespeare In Plain and Simple English (Translated) Online
Authors: WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
THESEUS
It is true; and I will give you comfort
To give your dead lords graves; the which to do
Must make some work with Creon.
It is true; and I will bring you peace
by making sure your dead lords are buried;
to do this I'll have to take on Creon.
FIRST QUEEN.
And that work presents itself to th’ doing:
Now ’twill take form, the heats are gone tomorrow.
Then, bootless toil must recompense itself
With its own sweat; now he’s secure,
Not dreams we stand before your puissance
Wrinching our holy begging in our eyes
To make petition clear.
And the best chance of success is to do it now:
strike while the iron's hot.
Tomorrow, fruitless work will only
bring sweat; at the moment he thinks he's safe,
and doesn't dream we are standing before
your majesty, weeping as we explain
the holy task we want you to perform.
SECOND QUEEN.
Now you may take him
Drunk with his victory.
Now you could beat him,
while he's drunk with celebrating victory.
THIRD QUEEN.
And his army full
Of bread and sloth.
And his army
are stuffed and lazy.
THESEUS
Artesius, that best knowest
How to draw out, fit to this enterprise,
The prim’st for this proceeding, and the number
To carry such a business, forth and levy
Our worthiest instruments, whilst we dispatch
This grand act of our life, this daring deed
Of fate in wedlock.
Artesius, you know best
how to choose the best men for this business,
and what numbers we will need
to carry it out; go out and raise
our finest soldiers, while I finish
this great act of my life, this brave
act of committing to marriage.
FIRST QUEEN.
Dowagers, take hands,
Let us be widows to our woes; delay
Commends us to a famishing hope.
Dowagers, join hands.
Let us go on with our mourning;
delay starves our hopes.
ALL QUEENS.
Farewell.
Farewell.
SECOND QUEEN.
We come unseasonably; but when could grief
Cull forth, as unpang’d judgment can, fitt’st time
For best solicitation?
We have come at a bad time, but how can grief
choose, as emotionless judgement can, the best time
to put itself forward?
THESEUS
Why, good ladies,
This is a service, whereto I am going,
Greater than any war; it more imports me
Than all the actions that I have foregone,
Or futurely can cope.
Why, good ladies,
the business I am undertaking now
is greater than any war; it's more important to me
than anything I've ever done,
or will do.
FIRST QUEEN.
The more proclaiming
Our suit shall be neglected. When her arms,
Able to lock Jove from a synod, shall
By warranting moonlight corslet thee—O, when
Her twinning cherries shall their sweetness fall
Upon thy tasteful lips, what wilt thou think
Of rotten kings or blubber’d queens? What care
For what thou feel’st not? What thou feel’st being able
To make Mars spurn his drum. O, if thou couch
But one night with her, every hour in’t will
Take hostage of thee for a hundred, and
Thou shalt remember nothing more than what
That banquet bids thee to!
This tells us
our requests will not be answered. When her arms,
which could keep Jove from a meeting, are
wrapped round you in the sweet moonlight -
oh, when her cherry red lips give their sweetness
to yours, what thought will you give
to rotting kings or weeping queens? What will you
care about things you can't feel? What you'll be
feeling would be enough to make Mars give up war.
Oh, if you sleep just one night with her, every hour
of it will make you stay for a hundred more,
and you'll be thinking of nothing but
the feast you're enjoying there!
HIPPOLYTA
Though much unlike
You should be so transported, as much sorry
I should be such a suitor; yet I think
Did I not by th’ abstaining of my joy,
Which breeds a deeper longing, cure their surfeit
That craves a present med’cine, I should pluck
All ladies’ scandal on me. Therefore, sir,
Kneels.
As I shall here make trial of my pray’rs,
Either presuming them to have some force,
Or sentencing for aye their vigor dumb,
Prorogue this business we are going about, and hang
Your shield afore your heart, about that neck
Which is my fee, and which I freely lend
To do these poor queens service.
Though it's very unlikely
that you would forget your duty like this, I would
be very sorry to be the cause of it; but I think
that if I didn't hold back from my pleasure,
which can only make desire stronger,
to cure their illness which needs medicine at once,
all women would be horrified with me. Therefore, sir,
[kneels]
I shall now test what value my pleas have,
either thinking that they have some influence,
or letting me know never to ask again,
I ask you to postpone our current business, and place
your shield in front of your heart, round the neck
which belongs to me, and which I freely lend
to help these poor queens.
ALL QUEENS
To Emilia.
O, help now!
Our cause cries for your knee.
Oh, help us now!
Our cause needs you to plead for us.
EMILIA
Kneels.
If you grant not
My sister her petition, in that force,
With that celerity and nature, which
She makes it in, from henceforth I’ll not dare
To ask you any thing, nor be so hardy
Ever to take a husband.
If you do not give
my sister what she's asking for, with the same
strength, speed and spirit with which
she's asking, from now on I won't dare
ask you for anything, or be so foolish
as to ever get married.
THESEUS
Pray stand up.
They rise.
I am entreating of myself to do
That which you kneel to have me. Pirithous,
Lead on the bride; get you and pray the gods
For success and return; omit not any thing
In the pretended celebration. Queens,
Follow your soldier.
To Artesius.
As before, hence you,
And at the banks of Aulis meet us with
The forces you can raise, where we shall find
The moi’ty of a number for a business
More bigger-look’d.
Exit Artesius.
To Hippolyta.
Since that our theme is haste,
I stamp this kiss upon thy currant lip.
Sweet, keep it as my token. Set you forward,
For I will see you gone.
Exeunt slowly towards the temple.
Farewell, my beauteous sister. Pirithous,
Keep the feast full, bate not an hour on’t.
Please stand up.
I am pleading with myself to do
the thing which you are begging me. Pirithous,
you lead the bride; go and pray to the gods
for our success and safe return; don't omit any element
of our intended celebration.
Queens, follow me.
[To Artesius]
As we've done before, you go,
and meet me at the banks of the Aulis with
what forces you can gather, while I shall gather
another group for a business
that's bigger than it looks.
[To Hippolyta]
Since we have to hurry,
I kiss your true lips.
Darling, keep this as a symbol of my love. Get going,
I want to see you go.
Farewell, my beautiful sister. Pirithous,
follow all the plans for the celebrations, don't cut it short by an hour.
PIRITHOUS
Sir,
I’ll follow you at heels; the feast’s solemnity
Shall want till your return.
Sir,
I'll follow you; the celebration of the feast
can wait until you return.
THESEUS
Cousin, I charge you
Boudge not from Athens. We shall be returning
Ere you can end this feast, of which I pray you
Make no abatement. Once more, farewell all.
Cousin, I order you
not to move from Athens. We shall be coming back
before the end of this feast, which I'm asking you
not to cut short. Once more, farewell to all.
FIRST QUEEN.
Thus dost thou still make good
The tongue o’ th’ world.
So you live up to
your reputation.
SECOND QUEEN.
And earn’st a deity
Equal with Mars.
And make yourself a god,
equal to Mars.
THIRD QUEEN.
If not above him, for
Thou being but mortal makest affections bend
To godlike honors; they themselves, some say,
Groan under such a mast’ry.
If not greater than him, for
being just a mortal that makes the mind
offer you the honours due to gods; some say the gods
could not bear such tasks as you do.
THESEUS
As we are men
Thus should we do, being sensually subdu’d
We lose our human title. Good cheer, ladies.
Now turn we towards your comforts.
Flourish. Exeunt.
This is what we should do,
being men, if we lose our sympathy
we stop being human. Be in good spirits, ladies.
We're now coming to your aid.