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The Arden Shakespeare Complete Works

Page 559

by William Shakespeare


  If she entreat again, do anything.

  Lie with her if she ask you.

  JAILER Whoa there, Doctor!

  DOCTOR Yes, in the way of cure.

  JAILER But first, by your leave,

  I’th’ way of honesty.

  DOCTOR That’s but a niceness.

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  Ne’er cast your child away for honesty.

  Cure her first this way; then if she will be honest,

  She has the path before her.

  JAILER Thank ye, Doctor.

  DOCTOR Pray bring her in and let’s see how she is.

  JAILER I will, and tell her

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  Her Palamon stays for her. But, Doctor,

  Methinks you are i’th’ wrong still. Exit Jailer.

  DOCTOR Go, go,

  You fathers are fine fools. Her honesty?

  An we should give her physic till we find that!

  WOOER Why, do you think she is not honest, sir?

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  DOCTOR How old is she?

  WOOER She’s eighteen.

  DOCTOR She may be,

  But that’s all one, ’tis nothing to our purpose.

  Whate’er her father says, if you perceive

  Her mood inclining that way that I spoke of,

  Videlicet, the ‘way of flesh’ – you have me?

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  WOOER Yes, very well, sir.

  DOCTOR Please her appetite

  And do it home, it cures her, ipso facto,

  The melancholy humour that infects her.

  WOOER I am of your mind, Doctor.

  Enter Jailer, Daughter and maid.

  DOCTOR You’ll find it so. She comes; pray, humour her.

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  JAILER Come, your love Palamon stays for you, child,

  And has done this long hour, to visit you.

  DAUGHTER I thank him for his gentle patience;

  He’s a kind gentleman and I am much bound to him.

  Did you ne’er see the horse he gave me?

  JAILER Yes.

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  DAUGHTER How do you like him?

  JAILER He’s a very fair one.

  DAUGHTER You never saw him dance?

  JAILER No.

  DAUGHTER I have, often.

  He dances very finely, very comely,

  And for a jig, come cut and long tail to him,

  He turns ye like a top.

  JAILER That’s fine indeed.

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  DAUGHTER

  He’ll dance the morris twenty mile an hour –

  And that will founder the best hobby-horse,

  If I have any skill, in all the parish –

  And gallops to the tune of ‘Light o’ love’.

  What think you of this horse?

  JAILER Having these virtues,

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  I think he might be brought to play at tennis.

  DAUGHTER Alas, that’s nothing.

  JAILER Can he read and write too?

  DAUGHTER

  A very fair hand, and casts himself th’accounts

  Of all his hay and provender. That ostler

  Must rise betimes that cozens him. You know

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  The chestnut mare the Duke has?

  JAILER Very well.

  DAUGHTER

  She is horribly in love with him, poor beast!

  But he is like his master, coy and scornful.

  JAILER What dowry has she?

  DAUGHTER Some two hundred bottles

  And twenty strike of oats – but he’ll ne’er have her.

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  He lisps in’s neighing, able to entice

  A miller’s mare. He’ll be the death of her.

  DOCTOR What stuff she utters!

  JAILER Make curtsey, here your love comes.

  [Wooer comes forward and bows.]

  WOOER Pretty soul,

  How do ye? [She curtseys.]

  That’s a fine maid! There’s a curtsey!

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  DAUGHTER Yours to command i’th’ way of honesty.

  How far is’t now to th’end o’th’ world, my masters?

  DOCTOR Why, a day’s journey, wench.

  DAUGHTER [to Wooer] Will you go with me?

  WOOER What shall we do there, wench?

  DAUGHTER Why, play at stool-ball;

  What is there else to do?

  WOOER I am content,

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  If we shall keep our wedding there.

  DAUGHTER ’Tis true,

  For there, I will assure you, we shall find

  Some blind priest for the purpose, that will venture

  To marry us, for here they are nice and foolish.

  Besides, my father must be hanged tomorrow

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  And that would be a blot i’th’ business.

  Are not you Palamon?

  WOOER Do not you know me?

  DAUGHTER Yes, but you care not for me. I have nothing

  But this poor petticoat and two coarse smocks.

  WOOER That’s all one; I will have you.

  DAUGHTER Will you surely?

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  WOOER Yes, by this fair hand, will I. [Takes her hand.]

  DAUGHTER We’ll to bed then.

  WOOER E’en when you will. [Kisses her.]

  DAUGHTER [Rubs off the kiss.]

  O, sir, you would fain be nibbling.

  WOOER Why do you rub my kiss off?

  DAUGHTER ’Tis a sweet one

  And will perfume me finely against the wedding.

  Is not this your cousin Arcite? [Indicates the Doctor.]

  DOCTOR Yes, sweetheart,

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  And I am glad my cousin Palamon

  Has made so fair a choice.

  DAUGHTER [to Doctor] Do you think he’ll have me?

  DOCTOR Yes, without doubt.

  DAUGHTER [to Jailer] Do you think so too?

  JAILER Yes.

  DAUGHTER We shall have many children.

  [to Doctor] Lord, how you’re grown!

  My Palamon, I hope, will grow too, finely,

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  Now he’s at liberty. Alas, poor chicken,

  He was kept down with hard meat and ill lodging!

  But I’ll kiss him up again.

  Enter Messenger.

  MESSENGER

  What do you here? You’ll lose the noblest sight

  That e’er was seen.

  JAILER Are they i’th’ field?

  MESSENGER They are.

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  You bear a charge there too.

  JAILER I’ll away straight.

  I must e’en leave you here.

  DOCTOR Nay, we’ll go with you;

  I will not lose the sight.

  JAILER [to Doctor] How did you like her?

  DOCTOR

  I’ll warrant you, within these three or four days

  I’ll make her right again. Exit Jailer with Messenger.

  [to Wooer] You must not from her,

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  But still preserve her in this way.

  WOOER I will.

  DOCTOR Let’s get her in.

  WOOER [to Daughter] Come, sweet, we’ll go to dinner

  And then we’ll play at cards.

  DAUGHTER And shall we kiss too?

  WOOER An hundred times.

  DAUGHTER And twenty?

  WOOER Ay, and twenty.

  DAUGHTER And then we’ll sleep together.

  DOCTOR Take her offer.

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  WOOER [to Daughter] Yes, marry, will we.

  DAUGHTER But you shall not hurt me.

  WOOER I will not, sweet.

  DAUGHTER If you do, love, I’ll cry. Exeunt.

  5.3 Flourish. Enter THESEUS, HIPPOLYTA, EMILIA, PIRITHOUS and attendants.

  EMILIA I’ll no step further.

  PIRITHOUS Will you lose this sight?

  EMILIA I had rather see a wren hawk at a fly

  Than this decision. Every
blow that falls

  Threats a brave life; each stroke laments

  The place whereon it falls and sounds more like

  5

  A bell than blade. I will stay here.

  It is enough my hearing shall be punished

  With what shall happen, ’gainst the which there is

  No deafing, but to hear, not taint mine eye

  With dread sights it may shun.

  PIRITHOUS [to Theseus] Sir, my good lord,

  10

  Your sister will no further.

  THESEUS O, she must.

  She shall see deeds of honour in their kind,

  Which sometime show well, pencilled. Nature now

  Shall make and act the story, the belief

  Both sealed with eye and ear.

  [to Emilia] You must be present:

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  You are the victor’s meed, the prize and garland

  To crown the question’s title.

  EMILIA Pardon me;

  If I were there, I’d wink.

  THESEUS You must be there:

  This trial is as ’twere i’th’ night, and you

  The only star to shine.

  EMILIA I am extinct.

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  There is but envy in that light which shows

  The one the other. Darkness, which ever was

  The dam of horror, who does stand accursed

  Of many mortal millions, may even now,

  By casting her black mantle over both

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  That neither could find other, get herself

  Some part of a good name and many a murder

  Set off whereto she’s guilty.

  HIPPOLYTA You must go.

  EMILIA In faith, I will not.

  THESEUS Why, the knights must kindle

  Their valour at your eye. Know, of this war

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  You are the treasure and must needs be by

  To give the service pay.

  EMILIA Sir, pardon me;

  The title of a kingdom may be tried

  Out of itself.

  THESEUS Well, well, then, at your pleasure.

  Those that remain with you could wish their office

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  To any of their enemies.

  HIPPOLYTA Farewell, sister.

  I am like to know your husband ’fore yourself

  By some small start of time; he whom the gods

  Do of the two know best, I pray them he

  Be made your lot. Exeunt all but Emilia.

  40

  EMILIA Arcite is gently visaged, yet his eye

  Is like an engine bent, or a sharp weapon

  In a soft sheath; mercy and manly courage

  Are bedfellows in his visage. Palamon

  Has a most menacing aspect; his brow

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  Is graved and seems to bury what it frowns on,

  Yet sometime ’tis not so, but alters to

  The quality of his thoughts. Long time his eye

  Will dwell upon his object. Melancholy

  Becomes him nobly. So does Arcite’s mirth.

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  But Palamon’s sadness is a kind of mirth,

  So mingled as if mirth did make him sad

  And sadness merry. Those darker humours that

  Stick misbecomingly on others, on them

  Live in fair dwelling.

  55

  [Cornets. Trumpets sound as to a charge.]

  Hark how yon spurs to spirit do incite

  The princes to their proof! Arcite may win me

  And yet may Palamon wound Arcite to

  The spoiling of his figure. O, what pity

  Enough for such a chance? If I were by

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  I might do hurt, for they would glance their eyes

  Toward my seat and in that motion might

  Omit a ward or forfeit an offence

  Which craved that very time. It is much better

  I am not there.

  [Cornets; a great cry and noise within, crying, ‘ A Palamon!’]

  O, better never born

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  Than minister to such harm!

  Enter Servant.

  What is the chance?

  SERVANT The cry’s ‘A Palamon!’

  EMILIA Then he has won.

  ’Twas ever likely.

 

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