Ant. I know thou would’st.
Vent. I will.
Ant. Ha, ha, ha, ha!
Vent. You laugh.
Ant. I do, to see officious love Give cordials to the dead.
Vent. You would be lost then?
Ant. I am.
Vent. I say you are not. Try your fortune.
Ant. I have, to the utmost. Dost thou
think me desperate,
Without just cause? No, when I found all lost
Beyond repair, I hid me from the world,
And learnt to scorn it here; which now I do
So heartily, I think it is not worth
The cost of keeping.
Vent. Caesar thinks not so:
He’ll thank you for the gift he could not take.
You would be killed like Tully, would you? do,
Hold out your throat to Caesar, and die tamely.
Ant. No, I can kill myself; and so resolve.
Vent. I can die with you too, when time shall
serve;
But fortune calls upon us now to live,
To fight, to conquer.
Ant. Sure thou dream’st, Ventidius.
Vent. No; ’tis you dream; you sleep away
your hours
In desperate sloth, miscalled philosophy.
Up, up, for honour’s sake; twelve legions wait
you,
And long to call you chief: By painful journeys,
I led them, patient both of heat and hunger,
Down from the Parthian marches to the Nile.
’Twill do you good to see their sun-burnt faces,
Their scarred cheeks, and chopt hands: there’s
virtue in them.
They’ll sell those mangled limbs at dearer rates
Than yon trim bands can buy.
Ant. Where left you them?
Vent. I said in Lower Syria.
Ant. Bring them hither; There may be life in these.
Vent. They will not come.
Ant. Why didst thou mock my hopes with promised aids, To double my despair? They’re mutinous.
Vent. Most firm and loyal.
Ant. Yet they will not march To succour me. Oh trifler!
Vent. They petition You would make haste to head them.
Ant. I’m besieged.
Vent. There’s but one way shut up: How came I hither?
Ant. I will not stir.
Vent. They would perhaps desire A better reason.
Ant. I have never used
My soldiers to demand a reason of
My actions. Why did they refuse to march?
Vent. They said they would not fight for Cleopatra.
Ant. What was’t they said?
Vent. They said they would not fight for Cleopatra.
Why should they fight indeed, to make her conquer,
And make you more a slave? to gain you kingdoms,
Which, for a kiss, at your next midnight feast,
You’ll sell to her? Then she new-names
her jewels,
And calls this diamond such or such a tax;
Each pendant in her ear shall be a province.