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            <title level="a" type="main" rend="italic">The Lamentable and Tragical History of Titus Andronicus; with the/ Fall of his 25 Sons, in the Wars of Goths, with the manner of the Ravishment of his Daughter Lavinia/ by the Empresses two Sons, through the means of a Bloody Moor, taken by the Sword of Titus, in the/ War; with his Revenge upon their Cruel and Inhumane Act.</title>
            <author/>
            <sponsor>University of California - Santa Barbara</sponsor>
            <sponsor>The Early Modern Center</sponsor>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Director</resp>
               <name>Patricia Fumerton</name>
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         <editionStmt>
            <edition>
               <date>1684-1686</date>
            </edition>
         </editionStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <publisher>Early Modern Center, University of California Santa Barbara</publisher>
            <pubPlace>Santa Barbara, CA</pubPlace>
            <date>08/24/2007</date>
            <idno type="EMC">20800</idno>
            <availability>
               <p> The University of California makes a claim of copyright only to original
                   contributions made by Early Modern Center participants and other members of
                   the university community. The University of California makes no claim of
                   copyright to the original text. Permission is granted to download, transmit
                   or otherwise reproduce, distribute or display the contributions to this work
                   claimed by The University of California for non-profit educational purposes,
                   provided that this header is included in its entirety. For inquiries about
                   commercial uses, please contact:
                  <address>
                     <addrLine>Patricia Fumerton</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>Early Modern Center - English Department</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>University of California</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>Santa Barbara, CA 93105</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>United States of America</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>EMail: pfumer@english.ucsb.edu</addrLine>
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            <idno type="Pepys">2.184-185</idno>
            <idno type="ESTC">R234367</idno>
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            <note type="Tune-Total">1</note>
            <note type="Tune-1">Fortune My Foe</note>
            <note type="Tune_Simpson-1">Fortune My Foe</note>
            <note type="Tune_Modern-1">Fortune My Foe</note>
            <note type="First_Lines">YOu Noble minds, and famous Martial Wights,/ That in defence of Native Countries fights,</note>
            <note type="Notes">title unclear: The Lamentable and Tragical History of Titus Andronicus; wi[t]h the / Fall of his 25 Sons, in the Wars of Goths, with the manner of the Ravishment of his Daughter La[vinia] / by the Empresses two Sons, through the means of a Bloody Moor, taken by the Sword of Titus, in the / War; with his Revenge upon their Cruel and Inhumane Act.</note>
            <note type="Source">Pepys 2.184-185</note>
            <note type="References">Wing L254[a]A; Rollins (2) 2643 (Feb. 6, 1594, II, 644, Jno. Danter); Rollins (2) 2644 (Dec. 14, 1624, IV, 131); Rollins (2) 1123 (Mch. 13, 1656, ii, 37); Rollins (2) 1420 (Mch. 1, 1675, ii, 497).</note>
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                        <name>W.G. Day</name>
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                        <publisher>D.S. Brewer</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>Cambridge [England]</pubPlace>
                        <date>1987</date>
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                  <biblScope type="vol: p">2: 184</biblScope>
                  <biblScope type="vol: p">2: 185</biblScope>
                  <title n="1" type="main" rend="italic">The Lamentable and Tragical History of Titus Andronicus; with the/ Fall of his 25 Sons, in the Wars of Goths, with the manner of the Ravishment of his Daughter Lavinia/ by the Empresses two Sons, through the means of a Bloody Moor, taken by the Sword of Titus, in the/ War; with his Revenge upon their Cruel and Inhumane Act.</title>
                  <title n="1" type="alt" rend="italic">The Lamentable and Tragical History of Titus Andronicus; with the Fall of his 25 Sons, in the Wars of Goths, with the manner of the Ravishment of his Daughter La[vini]a by the Empresses two Sons, through the means of a Bloody Moor, taken by the Sword of Titus, in the War; with his Revenge upon their Cruel and Inhumane Act.</title>
                  <title n="1" type="descriptive" rend="italic">The Lamentable and Tragical History of Titus Andronicus; With the Fall of His 25 Sons, in the Wars of Goths, With the Manner of the Ravishment of His Daughter Lavinia by the Empress' Two Sons, Through the Means of a Bloody Moor, Taken by the Sword of Titus, in the War; With His Revenge Upon Their Cruel and Inhuman Act.</title>
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                  <extent id="p.1">single sheet oblong folio, pasted across 2 pages, 260 x ?360</extent>
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                     <date value="1684-1686" certainty="exact">1684-1686</date>
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         <div type="ballad">
            <div type="part" n="1" >
               <head>
                  <title>
                     <seg n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">The Lamentable and Tragical History of <hi rend="bold">Titus Andronicus</hi>; with the</hi></seg>
                     <seg n="2" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Fall of his 25 Sons, in the Wars of</hi> Goths, <hi rend="italic">with the manner of the Ravishment of his Daughter</hi> La[vini]a</seg>
                     <seg n="3" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">by the Empresses two Sons, through the means of a Bloody Moor, taken by the Sword of</hi> Titus<hi rend="italic">, in the</hi></seg>
                     <seg n="4" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">War; with his Revenge upon their Cruel and Inhumane Act.</hi></seg>
                     <seg n="5" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">To the Tune of</hi>, Fortune my Foe.</seg>
                  </title>
               </head>
               <div type="col" n ="1.1" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Y</hi>Ou Noble minds, and famous Martial Wights,</l>
                     <l n="2" rend="left">That in defence of Native Countries fights,</l>
                     <l n="3" rend="left">Give ear to me that ten years fought for <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi>,</l>
                     <l n="4" rend="left">Yet reap'd disgrace at my returning home.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="5" rend="left">In <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> I liv'd in fame full threescore years</l>
                     <l n="6" rend="left">My name beloved was of all my peers,</l>
                     <l n="7" rend="left">Full five and twenty valiant Sons I had,</l>
                     <l n="8" rend="left">Whose forward vertues made their Father glad,</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="9" rend="left">For when <hi rend="italic">Romes</hi> foes their warlike forces felt</l>
                     <l n="10" rend="left">Against them still my Sons and I were sent;</l>
                     <l n="11" rend="left">Against the <hi rend="italic">Goths</hi> full ten years weary war</l>
                     <l n="12" rend="left">We spent, receiving many a bloody scar.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="13" rend="left">Just two and twenty of my sons were slain,</l>
                     <l n="14" rend="left">Before I did return to <hi rend="italic"><hi rend="bold">R</hi></hi><hi rend="italic">ome</hi> again;</l>
                     <l n="15" rend="left">Of five and twenty Sons I brought but three</l>
                     <l n="16" rend="left">Alive, the stately tower of <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> to see.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="17" rend="left">When wars were done, I conquest home did bring,</l>
                     <l n="18" rend="left">And did present my prisoners to the King:</l>
                     <l n="19" rend="left">The Queen of <hi rend="italic">Goths</hi>, her Sons, and eke a Moor,</l>
                     <l n="20" rend="left">Who did such Murders like were none before.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="21" rend="left">The Emperor did make the Queen his wife,</l>
                     <l n="22" rend="left">Which bread in <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> debate and deadly strife:</l>
                     <l n="23" rend="left">The Moor with her two Sons did grow so proud,</l>
                     <l n="24" rend="left">That none like them in <hi rend="italic">Rome</hi> might be allow'd.</l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.2" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="25" rend="left">The moor so pleased this new Empress eye</l>
                     <l n="26" rend="left">That she consented to him secretly:</l>
                     <l n="27" rend="left">For to abuse her husbands Marriage bed,</l>
                     <l n="28" rend="left">And so in time a Blackamore she bred.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="29" rend="left">Then she whose thoughts to Murder was inclind</l>
                     <l n="30" rend="left">Consented with the moor with bloody mind,</l>
                     <l n="31" rend="left">Against my self, my kin, and all my friends,</l>
                     <l n="32" rend="left">In cruel sort to bring them to their ends.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="33" rend="left">So when in age I thought to live in peace,</l>
                     <l n="34" rend="left">Both care and grief began then to encrease;</l>
                     <l n="35" rend="left">Amongst my Sons I had one daughter bright,</l>
                     <l n="36" rend="left">Which joy'd and pleased best my aged sight.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="37" rend="left">My <hi rend="italic">Lavinia</hi> was betrothed then</l>
                     <l n="38" rend="left">To <hi rend="italic">Caesers</hi> Son, a young and noble man:</l>
                     <l n="39" rend="left">Who in a hunting, by the Emperors wife</l>
                     <l n="40" rend="left">And her two Sons, bereaved were of life.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="41" rend="left">He being slain was cast in cruel wise,</l>
                     <l n="42" rend="left">Into a darksome den from light of Skies,</l>
                     <l n="43" rend="left">The cruel moor did come that way as then,</l>
                     <l n="44" rend="left">With my three Sons who fell into the den.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="45" rend="left">The Moor then fetcht the Emperor with speed,</l>
                     <l n="46" rend="left">For to accuse them of that murderous deed:</l>
                     <l n="47" rend="left">And when my Sons within the den was found,</l>
                     <l n="48" rend="left">In wrongful prison were they cast and bound.</l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.3" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="49" rend="left">B[U]t now behold what wounded most my mind</l>
                     <l n="50" rend="left">The Empresses two Sons of Tygers kind</l>
                     <l n="51" rend="left">My Daughter ravished without remorse,</l>
                     <l n="52" rend="left">And took away her honour quite perforce.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="53" rend="left">When they had tasted of so sweet a Flower,</l>
                     <l n="54" rend="left">Fearing this sweet should turned be to sower:</l>
                     <l n="55" rend="left">They cut her tongue whereby she could not tell</l>
                     <l n="56" rend="left">How that dishonour unto her befell.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="57" rend="left">Then both her hands they basely cut off quite,</l>
                     <l n="58" rend="left">Whereby their wickedness she could not write</l>
                     <l n="59" rend="left">Nor with her needle on her sampler Sow,</l>
                     <l n="60" rend="left">The bloody workers of her dismal woe.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="61" rend="left">My Brother <hi rend="italic">Marcus</hi> found her in the wood,</l>
                     <l n="62" rend="left">Staining the grassie ground with purple blood</l>
                     <l n="63" rend="left">That trickled from her stumps &amp; handless <hi rend="italic">arms</hi></l>
                     <l n="64" rend="left">No tongue at all she had to tell her harms,</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="65" rend="left">But when I saw her in that woful case,</l>
                     <l n="66" rend="left">With tears of blood I wet my aged face;</l>
                     <l n="67" rend="left">For my <hi rend="italic">Lavinia</hi> I lamented more,</l>
                     <l n="68" rend="left">Then for my two and twenty sons before.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="69" rend="left">When as I saw she could not write nor speak</l>
                     <l n="70" rend="left">With grief my aged heart began to break,</l>
                     <l n="71" rend="left">We spread a heap of sand upon the Ground,</l>
                     <l n="72" rend="left">Whereby the bloody Tyrants out we found.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="73" rend="left">For with a staff without the help of hand,</l>
                     <l n="74" rend="left">She writ these words upon a plat of Sand:</l>
                     <l n="75" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">The lustful Sons of the proud Emperess,</hi></l>
                     <l n="76" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Are doers of this hateful wickedness</hi>.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="77" rend="left">I tore the milk-white hairs from off my head</l>
                     <l n="78" rend="left">I curst the hour wherein I first was bred,</l>
                     <l n="79" rend="left">I wisht the hand that fought for Countrys fame</l>
                     <l n="80" rend="left">In cradle rockt had first been strucken lame.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="81" rend="left">The Moor delighting still in villany,</l>
                     <l n="82" rend="left">Did say to set my Sons from prison free,</l>
                     <l n="83" rend="left">I should unto the King my right hand give</l>
                     <l n="84" rend="left">And then my three imprisoned sons should live</l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.4" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="85" rend="left">The Moor I caus'd to strike it off with speed,</l>
                     <l n="86" rend="left">Whereat I grieved not to see it bleed,</l>
                     <l n="87" rend="left">But for my Sons would willingly impart,</l>
                     <l n="88" rend="left">And for their ransome send my bleeding heart.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="89" rend="left">But as my life did linger thus in vain,</l>
                     <l n="90" rend="left">They send to me my bootless hand again:</l>
                     <l n="91" rend="left">And therewithal the heads of my three Sons,</l>
                     <l n="92" rend="left">Which fil'd my dying heart with fresher groan</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="93" rend="left">Then past relief I up and down did go</l>
                     <l n="94" rend="left">And with my tears writ in the dust my woe,</l>
                     <l n="95" rend="left">I shot my arrows toward heaven high</l>
                     <l n="96" rend="left">And for revenge to hell did often cry.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="97" rend="left">The Empress thinking then that I was mad,</l>
                     <l n="98" rend="left">Like furies she and both her Sons were glad:</l>
                     <l n="99" rend="left">So nam'd revenge, and rape on murder they,</l>
                     <l n="100" rend="left">To undermine and hear what I would say.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="101" rend="left">I fed their foolish veins a little space,</l>
                     <l n="102" rend="left">Until my friends did find a secret place,</l>
                     <l n="103" rend="left">Where both her Sons unto a post was bound,</l>
                     <l n="104" rend="left">Where just revenge in cruel sort was found.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="105" rend="left">I cut their throats, my daughter held the pan</l>
                     <l n="106" rend="left">Betwixt her stumps, wherein the blood it ran:</l>
                     <l n="107" rend="left">And then I ground their bones to powder small</l>
                     <l n="108" rend="left">And made a paste for Pies straight therewithal.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="109" rend="left">Then with their flesh I made two mighty pies,</l>
                     <l n="110" rend="left">And at a banquet serv'd in stately wise:</l>
                     <l n="111" rend="left">Before the Empress set this loathsome meat,</l>
                     <l n="112" rend="left">So of her sons own flesh she well did eat.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="113" rend="left">My self bereav'd my Daughter then of life,</l>
                     <l n="114" rend="left">The Empress then I slew with bloody Knife,</l>
                     <l n="115" rend="left">And stab'd the Emperor immediately,</l>
                     <l n="116" rend="left">And then my self, even so did <hi rend="italic">Titus</hi> dye.</l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="117" rend="left">Then this revenge against the Moor was found,</l>
                     <l n="118" rend="left">Alive they set him half into the ground;</l>
                     <l n="119" rend="left">Whereas he stood until such time he starv'd,</l>
                     <l n="120" rend="left">And so God send all Murtherers may be serv'd.</l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
         </div>
            <closer>
                  <seg n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Printed for <hi rend="bold">J. Clarke, W. Thackeray</hi>, and <hi rend="bold">T. Passinger</hi></hi>.</seg>
            </closer>
         </div>
      </body>
   </text>
</TEI.2>
