<?xml version="1.0"?><!DOCTYPE PLAY SYSTEM "play.dtd"><PLAY><TITLE>The Two Gentlemen of Verona</TITLE><FM><P>Text placed in the public domain by Moby Lexical Tools, 1992.</P><P>SGML markup by Jon Bosak, 1992-1994.</P><P>XML version by Jon Bosak, 1996-1998.</P><P>This work may be freely copied and distributed worldwide.</P></FM><PERSONAE><TITLE>Dramatis Personae</TITLE><PERSONA>DUKE OF MILAN, Father to Silvia. </PERSONA><PGROUP><PERSONA>VALENTINE</PERSONA><PERSONA>PROTEUS</PERSONA><GRPDESCR>the two Gentlemen.</GRPDESCR></PGROUP><PERSONA>ANTONIO, Father to Proteus.</PERSONA><PERSONA>THURIO, a foolish rival to Valentine.</PERSONA><PERSONA>EGLAMOUR, Agent for Silvia in her escape.</PERSONA><PERSONA>HOST, where Julia lodges. </PERSONA><PERSONA>OUTLAWS, with Valentine.</PERSONA><PERSONA>SPEED, a clownish servant to Valentine.</PERSONA><PERSONA>LAUNCE, the like to Proteus.</PERSONA><PERSONA>PANTHINO, Servant to Antonio.</PERSONA><PERSONA>JULIA, beloved of Proteus.</PERSONA><PERSONA>SILVIA, beloved of Valentine.</PERSONA><PERSONA>LUCETTA, waiting-woman to Julia.</PERSONA><PERSONA>Servants, Musicians.</PERSONA></PERSONAE><SCNDESCR>SCENE  Verona; Milan; the frontiers of Mantua.</SCNDESCR><PLAYSUBT>THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA</PLAYSUBT><ACT><TITLE>ACT I</TITLE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE I.  Verona. An open place.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter VALENTINE and PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Cease to persuade, my loving Proteus:</LINE><LINE>Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits.</LINE><LINE>Were't not affection chains thy tender days</LINE><LINE>To the sweet glances of thy honour'd love,</LINE><LINE>I rather would entreat thy company</LINE><LINE>To see the wonders of the world abroad,</LINE><LINE>Than, living dully sluggardized at home,</LINE><LINE>Wear out thy youth with shapeless idleness.</LINE><LINE>But since thou lovest, love still and thrive therein,</LINE><LINE>Even as I would when I to love begin.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Wilt thou be gone? Sweet Valentine, adieu!</LINE><LINE>Think on thy Proteus, when thou haply seest</LINE><LINE>Some rare note-worthy object in thy travel:</LINE><LINE>Wish me partaker in thy happiness</LINE><LINE>When thou dost meet good hap; and in thy danger,</LINE><LINE>If ever danger do environ thee,</LINE><LINE>Commend thy grievance to my holy prayers,</LINE><LINE>For I will be thy beadsman, Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And on a love-book pray for my success?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Upon some book I love I'll pray for thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>That's on some shallow story of deep love:</LINE><LINE>How young Leander cross'd the Hellespont.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That's a deep story of a deeper love:</LINE><LINE>For he was more than over shoes in love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>'Tis true; for you are over boots in love,</LINE><LINE>And yet you never swum the Hellespont.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Over the boots? nay, give me not the boots.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, I will not, for it boots thee not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>To be in love, where scorn is bought with groans;</LINE><LINE>Coy looks with heart-sore sighs; one fading moment's mirth</LINE><LINE>With twenty watchful, weary, tedious nights:</LINE><LINE>If haply won, perhaps a hapless gain;</LINE><LINE>If lost, why then a grievous labour won;</LINE><LINE>However, but a folly bought with wit,</LINE><LINE>Or else a wit by folly vanquished.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>So, by your circumstance, you call me fool.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>So, by your circumstance, I fear you'll prove.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>'Tis love you cavil at: I am not Love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Love is your master, for he masters you:</LINE><LINE>And he that is so yoked by a fool,</LINE><LINE>Methinks, should not be chronicled for wise.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Yet writers say, as in the sweetest bud</LINE><LINE>The eating canker dwells, so eating love</LINE><LINE>Inhabits in the finest wits of all.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And writers say, as the most forward bud</LINE><LINE>Is eaten by the canker ere it blow,</LINE><LINE>Even so by love the young and tender wit</LINE><LINE>Is turn'd to folly, blasting in the bud,</LINE><LINE>Losing his verdure even in the prime</LINE><LINE>And all the fair effects of future hopes.</LINE><LINE>But wherefore waste I time to counsel thee,</LINE><LINE>That art a votary to fond desire?</LINE><LINE>Once more adieu! my father at the road</LINE><LINE>Expects my coming, there to see me shipp'd.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>And thither will I bring thee, Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sweet Proteus, no; now let us take our leave.</LINE><LINE>To Milan let me hear from thee by letters</LINE><LINE>Of thy success in love, and what news else</LINE><LINE>Betideth here in absence of thy friend;</LINE><LINE>And likewise will visit thee with mine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>All happiness bechance to thee in Milan!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>As much to you at home! and so, farewell.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>He after honour hunts, I after love:</LINE><LINE>He leaves his friends to dignify them more,</LINE><LINE>I leave myself, my friends and all, for love.</LINE><LINE>Thou, Julia, thou hast metamorphosed me,</LINE><LINE>Made me neglect my studies, lose my time,</LINE><LINE>War with good counsel, set the world at nought;</LINE><LINE>Made wit with musing weak, heart sick with thought.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter SPEED</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, save you! Saw you my master?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But now he parted hence, to embark for Milan.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Twenty to one then he is shipp'd already,</LINE><LINE>And I have play'd the sheep in losing him.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Indeed, a sheep doth very often stray,</LINE><LINE>An if the shepherd be a while away.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>You conclude that my master is a shepherd, then,</LINE><LINE>and I a sheep?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I do.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why then, my horns are his horns, whether I wake or sleep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>A silly answer and fitting well a sheep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>This proves me still a sheep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>True; and thy master a shepherd.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, that I can deny by a circumstance.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>It shall go hard but I'll prove it by another.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>The shepherd seeks the sheep, and not the sheep the</LINE><LINE>shepherd; but I seek my master, and my master seeks</LINE><LINE>not me: therefore I am no sheep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>The sheep for fodder follow the shepherd; the</LINE><LINE>shepherd for food follows not the sheep: thou for</LINE><LINE>wages followest thy master; thy master for wages</LINE><LINE>follows not thee: therefore thou art a sheep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Such another proof will make me cry 'baa.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But, dost thou hear? gavest thou my letter to Julia?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay sir: I, a lost mutton, gave your letter to her,</LINE><LINE>a laced mutton, and she, a laced mutton, gave me, a</LINE><LINE>lost mutton, nothing for my labour.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Here's too small a pasture for such store of muttons.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>If the ground be overcharged, you were best stick her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay: in that you are astray, 'twere best pound you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, sir, less than a pound shall serve me for</LINE><LINE>carrying your letter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>You mistake; I mean the pound,--a pinfold.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>From a pound to a pin? fold it over and over,</LINE><LINE>'Tis threefold too little for carrying a letter to</LINE><LINE>your lover.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But what said she?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>First nodding</STAGEDIR>  Ay.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Nod--Ay--why, that's noddy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>You mistook, sir; I say, she did nod: and you ask</LINE><LINE>me if she did nod; and I say, 'Ay.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>And that set together is noddy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Now you have taken the pains to set it together,</LINE><LINE>take it for your pains.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>No, no; you shall have it for bearing the letter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, I perceive I must be fain to bear with you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why sir, how do you bear with me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, sir, the letter, very orderly; having nothing</LINE><LINE>but the word 'noddy' for my pains.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Beshrew me, but you have a quick wit.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>And yet it cannot overtake your slow purse.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Come come, open the matter in brief: what said she?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Open your purse, that the money and the matter may</LINE><LINE>be both at once delivered.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, sir, here is for your pains. What said she?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Truly, sir, I think you'll hardly win her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, couldst thou perceive so much from her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, I could perceive nothing at all from her; no,</LINE><LINE>not so much as a ducat for delivering your letter:</LINE><LINE>and being so hard to me that brought your mind, I</LINE><LINE>fear she'll prove as hard to you in telling your</LINE><LINE>mind. Give her no token but stones; for she's as</LINE><LINE>hard as steel.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What said she? nothing?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>No, not so much as 'Take this for thy pains.' To</LINE><LINE>testify your bounty, I thank you, you have testerned</LINE><LINE>me; in requital whereof, henceforth carry your</LINE><LINE>letters yourself: and so, sir, I'll commend you to my master.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Go, go, be gone, to save your ship from wreck,</LINE><LINE>Which cannot perish having thee aboard,</LINE><LINE>Being destined to a drier death on shore.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Exit SPEED</STAGEDIR><LINE>I must go send some better messenger:</LINE><LINE>I fear my Julia would not deign my lines,</LINE><LINE>Receiving them from such a worthless post.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE II.  The same. Garden of JULIA's house.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter JULlA and LUCETTA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>But say, Lucetta, now we are alone,</LINE><LINE>Wouldst thou then counsel me to fall in love?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, madam, so you stumble not unheedfully.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Of all the fair resort of gentlemen</LINE><LINE>That every day with parle encounter me,</LINE><LINE>In thy opinion which is worthiest love?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Please you repeat their names, I'll show my mind</LINE><LINE>According to my shallow simple skill.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What think'st thou of the fair Sir Eglamour?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>As of a knight well-spoken, neat and fine;</LINE><LINE>But, were I you, he never should be mine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What think'st thou of the rich Mercatio?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Well of his wealth; but of himself, so so.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What think'st thou of the gentle Proteus?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Lord, Lord! to see what folly reigns in us!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>How now! what means this passion at his name?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Pardon, dear madam: 'tis a passing shame</LINE><LINE>That I, unworthy body as I am,</LINE><LINE>Should censure thus on lovely gentlemen.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Why not on Proteus, as of all the rest?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Then thus: of many good I think him best.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Your reason?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>I have no other, but a woman's reason;</LINE><LINE>I think him so because I think him so.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And wouldst thou have me cast my love on him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, if you thought your love not cast away.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Why he, of all the rest, hath never moved me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Yet he, of all the rest, I think, best loves ye.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>His little speaking shows his love but small.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Fire that's closest kept burns most of all.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>They do not love that do not show their love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>O, they love least that let men know their love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I would I knew his mind.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Peruse this paper, madam.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>'To Julia.' Say, from whom?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>That the contents will show.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Say, say, who gave it thee?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Valentine's page; and sent, I think, from Proteus.</LINE><LINE>He would have given it you; but I, being in the way,</LINE><LINE>Did in your name receive it: pardon the</LINE><LINE>fault I pray.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, by my modesty, a goodly broker!</LINE><LINE>Dare you presume to harbour wanton lines?</LINE><LINE>To whisper and conspire against my youth?</LINE><LINE>Now, trust me, 'tis an office of great worth</LINE><LINE>And you an officer fit for the place.</LINE><LINE>Or else return no more into my sight.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>To plead for love deserves more fee than hate.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Will ye be gone?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>That you may ruminate.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And yet I would I had o'erlooked the letter:</LINE><LINE>It were a shame to call her back again</LINE><LINE>And pray her to a fault for which I chid her.</LINE><LINE>What a fool is she, that knows I am a maid,</LINE><LINE>And would not force the letter to my view!</LINE><LINE>Since maids, in modesty, say 'no' to that</LINE><LINE>Which they would have the profferer construe 'ay.'</LINE><LINE>Fie, fie, how wayward is this foolish love</LINE><LINE>That, like a testy babe, will scratch the nurse</LINE><LINE>And presently all humbled kiss the rod!</LINE><LINE>How churlishly I chid Lucetta hence,</LINE><LINE>When willingly I would have had her here!</LINE><LINE>How angerly I taught my brow to frown,</LINE><LINE>When inward joy enforced my heart to smile!</LINE><LINE>My penance is to call Lucetta back</LINE><LINE>And ask remission for my folly past.</LINE><LINE>What ho! Lucetta!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Re-enter LUCETTA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>What would your ladyship?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Is't near dinner-time?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>I would it were,</LINE><LINE>That you might kill your stomach on your meat</LINE><LINE>And not upon your maid.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What is't that you took up so gingerly?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nothing.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Why didst thou stoop, then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>To take a paper up that I let fall.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And is that paper nothing?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nothing concerning me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Then let it lie for those that it concerns.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, it will not lie where it concerns</LINE><LINE>Unless it have a false interpeter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Some love of yours hath writ to you in rhyme.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>That I might sing it, madam, to a tune.</LINE><LINE>Give me a note: your ladyship can set.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>As little by such toys as may be possible.</LINE><LINE>Best sing it to the tune of 'Light o' love.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>It is too heavy for so light a tune.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Heavy! belike it hath some burden then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, and melodious were it, would you sing it.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And why not you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>I cannot reach so high.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Let's see your song. How now, minion!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Keep tune there still, so you will sing it out:</LINE><LINE>And yet methinks I do not like this tune.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>You do not?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>No, madam; it is too sharp.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>You, minion, are too saucy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, now you are too flat</LINE><LINE>And mar the concord with too harsh a descant:</LINE><LINE>There wanteth but a mean to fill your song.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>The mean is drown'd with your unruly bass.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Indeed, I bid the base for Proteus.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>This babble shall not henceforth trouble me.</LINE><LINE>Here is a coil with protestation!</LINE><STAGEDIR>Tears the letter</STAGEDIR><LINE>Go get you gone, and let the papers lie:</LINE><LINE>You would be fingering them, to anger me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>She makes it strange; but she would be best pleased</LINE><LINE>To be so anger'd with another letter.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, would I were so anger'd with the same!</LINE><LINE>O hateful hands, to tear such loving words!</LINE><LINE>Injurious wasps, to feed on such sweet honey</LINE><LINE>And kill the bees that yield it with your stings!</LINE><LINE>I'll kiss each several paper for amends.</LINE><LINE>Look, here is writ 'kind Julia.' Unkind Julia!</LINE><LINE>As in revenge of thy ingratitude,</LINE><LINE>I throw thy name against the bruising stones,</LINE><LINE>Trampling contemptuously on thy disdain.</LINE><LINE>And here is writ 'love-wounded Proteus.'</LINE><LINE>Poor wounded name! my bosom as a bed</LINE><LINE>Shall lodge thee till thy wound be thoroughly heal'd;</LINE><LINE>And thus I search it with a sovereign kiss.</LINE><LINE>But twice or thrice was 'Proteus' written down.</LINE><LINE>Be calm, good wind, blow not a word away</LINE><LINE>Till I have found each letter in the letter,</LINE><LINE>Except mine own name: that some whirlwind bear</LINE><LINE>Unto a ragged fearful-hanging rock</LINE><LINE>And throw it thence into the raging sea!</LINE><LINE>Lo, here in one line is his name twice writ,</LINE><LINE>'Poor forlorn Proteus, passionate Proteus,</LINE><LINE>To the sweet Julia:' that I'll tear away.</LINE><LINE>And yet I will not, sith so prettily</LINE><LINE>He couples it to his complaining names.</LINE><LINE>Thus will I fold them one on another:</LINE><LINE>Now kiss, embrace, contend, do what you will.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Re-enter LUCETTA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam,</LINE><LINE>Dinner is ready, and your father stays.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, let us go.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>What, shall these papers lie like tell-tales here?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>If you respect them, best to take them up.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, I was taken up for laying them down:</LINE><LINE>Yet here they shall not lie, for catching cold.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I see you have a month's mind to them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, madam, you may say what sights you see;</LINE><LINE>I see things too, although you judge I wink.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, come; will't please you go?</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE III.  The same. ANTONIO's house.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter ANTONIO and PANTHINO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Tell me, Panthino, what sad talk was that</LINE><LINE>Wherewith my brother held you in the cloister?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>'Twas of his nephew Proteus, your son.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, what of him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>He wonder'd that your lordship</LINE><LINE>Would suffer him to spend his youth at home,</LINE><LINE>While other men, of slender reputation,</LINE><LINE>Put forth their sons to seek preferment out:</LINE><LINE>Some to the wars, to try their fortune there;</LINE><LINE>Some to discover islands far away;</LINE><LINE>Some to the studious universities.</LINE><LINE>For any or for all these exercises,</LINE><LINE>He said that Proteus your son was meet,</LINE><LINE>And did request me to importune you</LINE><LINE>To let him spend his time no more at home,</LINE><LINE>Which would be great impeachment to his age,</LINE><LINE>In having known no travel in his youth.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Nor need'st thou much importune me to that</LINE><LINE>Whereon this month I have been hammering.</LINE><LINE>I have consider'd well his loss of time</LINE><LINE>And how he cannot be a perfect man,</LINE><LINE>Not being tried and tutor'd in the world:</LINE><LINE>Experience is by industry achieved</LINE><LINE>And perfected by the swift course of time.</LINE><LINE>Then tell me, whither were I best to send him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>I think your lordship is not ignorant</LINE><LINE>How his companion, youthful Valentine,</LINE><LINE>Attends the emperor in his royal court.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>I know it well.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>'Twere good, I think, your lordship sent him thither:</LINE><LINE>There shall he practise tilts and tournaments,</LINE><LINE>Hear sweet discourse, converse with noblemen.</LINE><LINE>And be in eye of every exercise</LINE><LINE>Worthy his youth and nobleness of birth.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>I like thy counsel; well hast thou advised:</LINE><LINE>And that thou mayst perceive how well I like it,</LINE><LINE>The execution of it shall make known.</LINE><LINE>Even with the speediest expedition</LINE><LINE>I will dispatch him to the emperor's court.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>To-morrow, may it please you, Don Alphonso,</LINE><LINE>With other gentlemen of good esteem,</LINE><LINE>Are journeying to salute the emperor</LINE><LINE>And to commend their service to his will.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Good company; with them shall Proteus go:</LINE><LINE>And, in good time! now will we break with him.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sweet love! sweet lines! sweet life!</LINE><LINE>Here is her hand, the agent of her heart;</LINE><LINE>Here is her oath for love, her honour's pawn.</LINE><LINE>O, that our fathers would applaud our loves,</LINE><LINE>To seal our happiness with their consents!</LINE><LINE>O heavenly Julia!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>How now! what letter are you reading there?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>May't please your lordship, 'tis a word or two</LINE><LINE>Of commendations sent from Valentine,</LINE><LINE>Deliver'd by a friend that came from him.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Lend me the letter; let me see what news.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>There is no news, my lord, but that he writes</LINE><LINE>How happily he lives, how well beloved</LINE><LINE>And daily graced by the emperor;</LINE><LINE>Wishing me with him, partner of his fortune.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>And how stand you affected to his wish?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>As one relying on your lordship's will</LINE><LINE>And not depending on his friendly wish.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>My will is something sorted with his wish.</LINE><LINE>Muse not that I thus suddenly proceed;</LINE><LINE>For what I will, I will, and there an end.</LINE><LINE>I am resolved that thou shalt spend some time</LINE><LINE>With Valentinus in the emperor's court:</LINE><LINE>What maintenance he from his friends receives,</LINE><LINE>Like exhibition thou shalt have from me.</LINE><LINE>To-morrow be in readiness to go:</LINE><LINE>Excuse it not, for I am peremptory.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>My lord, I cannot be so soon provided:</LINE><LINE>Please you, deliberate a day or two.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>ANTONIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Look, what thou want'st shall be sent after thee:</LINE><LINE>No more of stay! to-morrow thou must go.</LINE><LINE>Come on, Panthino: you shall be employ'd</LINE><LINE>To hasten on his expedition.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt ANTONIO and PANTHINO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Thus have I shunn'd the fire for fear of burning,</LINE><LINE>And drench'd me in the sea, where I am drown'd.</LINE><LINE>I fear'd to show my father Julia's letter,</LINE><LINE>Lest he should take exceptions to my love;</LINE><LINE>And with the vantage of mine own excuse</LINE><LINE>Hath he excepted most against my love.</LINE><LINE>O, how this spring of love resembleth</LINE><LINE>The uncertain glory of an April day,</LINE><LINE>Which now shows all the beauty of the sun,</LINE><LINE>And by and by a cloud takes all away!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Re-enter PANTHINO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, your father calls for you:</LINE><LINE>He is in haste; therefore, I pray you to go.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, this it is: my heart accords thereto,</LINE><LINE>And yet a thousand times it answers 'no.'</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE></ACT><ACT><TITLE>ACT II</TITLE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE I.  Milan. The DUKE's palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter VALENTINE and SPEED</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, your glove.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Not mine; my gloves are on.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, then, this may be yours, for this is but one.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ha! let me see: ay, give it me, it's mine:</LINE><LINE>Sweet ornament that decks a thing divine!</LINE><LINE>Ah, Silvia, Silvia!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam Silvia! Madam Silvia!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How now, sirrah?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>She is not within hearing, sir.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, sir, who bade you call her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Your worship, sir; or else I mistook.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, you'll still be too forward.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>And yet I was last chidden for being too slow.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Go to, sir: tell me, do you know Madam Silvia?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>She that your worship loves?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, how know you that I am in love?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, by these special marks: first, you have</LINE><LINE>learned, like Sir Proteus, to wreathe your arms,</LINE><LINE>like a malecontent; to relish a love-song, like a</LINE><LINE>robin-redbreast; to walk alone, like one that had</LINE><LINE>the pestilence; to sigh, like a school-boy that had</LINE><LINE>lost his A B C; to weep, like a young wench that had</LINE><LINE>buried her grandam; to fast, like one that takes</LINE><LINE>diet; to watch like one that fears robbing; to</LINE><LINE>speak puling, like a beggar at Hallowmas. You were</LINE><LINE>wont, when you laughed, to crow like a cock; when you</LINE><LINE>walked, to walk like one of the lions; when you</LINE><LINE>fasted, it was presently after dinner; when you</LINE><LINE>looked sadly, it was for want of money: and now you</LINE><LINE>are metamorphosed with a mistress, that, when I look</LINE><LINE>on you, I can hardly think you my master.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Are all these things perceived in me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>They are all perceived without ye.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Without me? they cannot.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Without you? nay, that's certain, for, without you</LINE><LINE>were so simple, none else would: but you are so</LINE><LINE>without these follies, that these follies are within</LINE><LINE>you and shine through you like the water in an</LINE><LINE>urinal, that not an eye that sees you but is a</LINE><LINE>physician to comment on your malady.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>But tell me, dost thou know my lady Silvia?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>She that you gaze on so as she sits at supper?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Hast thou observed that? even she, I mean.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, sir, I know her not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Dost thou know her by my gazing on her, and yet</LINE><LINE>knowest her not?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Is she not hard-favoured, sir?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Not so fair, boy, as well-favoured.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, I know that well enough.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What dost thou know?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>That she is not so fair as, of you, well-favoured.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I mean that her beauty is exquisite, but her favour infinite.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>That's because the one is painted and the other out</LINE><LINE>of all count.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How painted? and how out of count?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, sir, so painted, to make her fair, that no</LINE><LINE>man counts of her beauty.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How esteemest thou me? I account of her beauty.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>You never saw her since she was deformed.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How long hath she been deformed?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Ever since you loved her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I have loved her ever since I saw her; and still I</LINE><LINE>see her beautiful.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>If you love her, you cannot see her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Because Love is blind. O, that you had mine eyes;</LINE><LINE>or your own eyes had the lights they were wont to</LINE><LINE>have when you chid at Sir Proteus for going</LINE><LINE>ungartered!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What should I see then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Your own present folly and her passing deformity:</LINE><LINE>for he, being in love, could not see to garter his</LINE><LINE>hose, and you, being in love, cannot see to put on your hose.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Belike, boy, then, you are in love; for last</LINE><LINE>morning you could not see to wipe my shoes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>True, sir; I was in love with my bed: I thank you,</LINE><LINE>you swinged me for my love, which makes me the</LINE><LINE>bolder to chide you for yours.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>In conclusion, I stand affected to her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>I would you were set, so your affection would cease.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Last night she enjoined me to write some lines to</LINE><LINE>one she loves.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>And have you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I have.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Are they not lamely writ?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, boy, but as well as I can do them. Peace!</LINE><LINE>here she comes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  O excellent motion! O exceeding puppet!</LINE><LINE>Now will he interpret to her.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam and mistress, a thousand good-morrows.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  O, give ye good even! here's a million of manners.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Valentine and servant, to you two thousand.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  He should give her interest and she gives it him.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>As you enjoin'd me, I have writ your letter</LINE><LINE>Unto the secret nameless friend of yours;</LINE><LINE>Which I was much unwilling to proceed in</LINE><LINE>But for my duty to your ladyship.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I thank you gentle servant: 'tis very clerkly done.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Now trust me, madam, it came hardly off;</LINE><LINE>For being ignorant to whom it goes</LINE><LINE>I writ at random, very doubtfully.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Perchance you think too much of so much pains?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, madam; so it stead you, I will write</LINE><LINE>Please you command, a thousand times as much; And yet--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>A pretty period! Well, I guess the sequel;</LINE><LINE>And yet I will not name it; and yet I care not;</LINE><LINE>And yet take this again; and yet I thank you,</LINE><LINE>Meaning henceforth to trouble you no more.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  And yet you will; and yet another 'yet.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What means your ladyship? do you not like it?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Yes, yes; the lines are very quaintly writ;</LINE><LINE>But since unwillingly, take them again.</LINE><LINE>Nay, take them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, they are for you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, ay: you writ them, sir, at my request;</LINE><LINE>But I will none of them; they are for you;</LINE><LINE>I would have had them writ more movingly.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Please you, I'll write your ladyship another.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And when it's writ, for my sake read it over,</LINE><LINE>And if it please you, so; if not, why, so.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>If it please me, madam, what then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, if it please you, take it for your labour:</LINE><LINE>And so, good morrow, servant.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>O jest unseen, inscrutable, invisible,</LINE><LINE>As a nose on a man's face, or a weathercock on a steeple!</LINE><LINE>My master sues to her, and she hath</LINE><LINE>taught her suitor,</LINE><LINE>He being her pupil, to become her tutor.</LINE><LINE>O excellent device! was there ever heard a better,</LINE><LINE>That my master, being scribe, to himself should write</LINE><LINE>the letter?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How now, sir? what are you reasoning with yourself?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, I was rhyming: 'tis you that have the reason.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>To do what?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>To be a spokesman for Madam Silvia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>To whom?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>To yourself: why, she wooes you by a figure.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What figure?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>By a letter, I should say.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, she hath not writ to me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>What need she, when she hath made you write to</LINE><LINE>yourself? Why, do you not perceive the jest?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, believe me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>No believing you, indeed, sir. But did you perceive</LINE><LINE>her earnest?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>She gave me none, except an angry word.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, she hath given you a letter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>That's the letter I writ to her friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>And that letter hath she delivered, and there an end.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I would it were no worse.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>I'll warrant you, 'tis as well:</LINE><LINE>For often have you writ to her, and she, in modesty,</LINE><LINE>Or else for want of idle time, could not again reply;</LINE><LINE>Or fearing else some messenger that might her mind discover,</LINE><LINE>Herself hath taught her love himself to write unto her lover.</LINE><LINE>All this I speak in print, for in print I found it.</LINE><LINE>Why muse you, sir? 'tis dinner-time.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I have dined.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, but hearken, sir; though the chameleon Love can</LINE><LINE>feed on the air, I am one that am nourished by my</LINE><LINE>victuals, and would fain have meat. O, be not like</LINE><LINE>your mistress; be moved, be moved.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE II.  Verona. JULIA'S house.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS and JULIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Have patience, gentle Julia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I must, where is no remedy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>When possibly I can, I will return.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>If you turn not, you will return the sooner.</LINE><LINE>Keep this remembrance for thy Julia's sake.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Giving a ring</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why then, we'll make exchange; here, take you this.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And seal the bargain with a holy kiss.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Here is my hand for my true constancy;</LINE><LINE>And when that hour o'erslips me in the day</LINE><LINE>Wherein I sigh not, Julia, for thy sake,</LINE><LINE>The next ensuing hour some foul mischance</LINE><LINE>Torment me for my love's forgetfulness!</LINE><LINE>My father stays my coming; answer not;</LINE><LINE>The tide is now: nay, not thy tide of tears;</LINE><LINE>That tide will stay me longer than I should.</LINE><LINE>Julia, farewell!</LINE><STAGEDIR>Exit JULIA</STAGEDIR><LINE>What, gone without a word?</LINE><LINE>Ay, so true love should do: it cannot speak;</LINE><LINE>For truth hath better deeds than words to grace it.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PANTHINO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, you are stay'd for.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Go; I come, I come.</LINE><LINE>Alas! this parting strikes poor lovers dumb.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE III.  The same. A street.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter LAUNCE, leading a dog</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, 'twill be this hour ere I have done weeping;</LINE><LINE>all the kind of the Launces have this very fault. I</LINE><LINE>have received my proportion, like the prodigious</LINE><LINE>son, and am going with Sir Proteus to the Imperial's</LINE><LINE>court. I think Crab, my dog, be the sourest-natured</LINE><LINE>dog that lives: my mother weeping, my father</LINE><LINE>wailing, my sister crying, our maid howling, our cat</LINE><LINE>wringing her hands, and all our house in a great</LINE><LINE>perplexity, yet did not this cruel-hearted cur shed</LINE><LINE>one tear: he is a stone, a very pebble stone, and</LINE><LINE>has no more pity in him than a dog: a Jew would have</LINE><LINE>wept to have seen our parting; why, my grandam,</LINE><LINE>having no eyes, look you, wept herself blind at my</LINE><LINE>parting. Nay, I'll show you the manner of it. This</LINE><LINE>shoe is my father: no, this left shoe is my father:</LINE><LINE>no, no, this left shoe is my mother: nay, that</LINE><LINE>cannot be so neither: yes, it is so, it is so, it</LINE><LINE>hath the worser sole. This shoe, with the hole in</LINE><LINE>it, is my mother, and this my father; a vengeance</LINE><LINE>on't! there 'tis: now, sit, this staff is my</LINE><LINE>sister, for, look you, she is as white as a lily and</LINE><LINE>as small as a wand: this hat is Nan, our maid: I</LINE><LINE>am the dog: no, the dog is himself, and I am the</LINE><LINE>dog--Oh! the dog is me, and I am myself; ay, so,</LINE><LINE>so. Now come I to my father; Father, your blessing:</LINE><LINE>now should not the shoe speak a word for weeping:</LINE><LINE>now should I kiss my father; well, he weeps on. Now</LINE><LINE>come I to my mother: O, that she could speak now</LINE><LINE>like a wood woman! Well, I kiss her; why, there</LINE><LINE>'tis; here's my mother's breath up and down. Now</LINE><LINE>come I to my sister; mark the moan she makes. Now</LINE><LINE>the dog all this while sheds not a tear nor speaks a</LINE><LINE>word; but see how I lay the dust with my tears.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PANTHINO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Launce, away, away, aboard! thy master is shipped</LINE><LINE>and thou art to post after with oars. What's the</LINE><LINE>matter? why weepest thou, man? Away, ass! You'll</LINE><LINE>lose the tide, if you tarry any longer.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>It is no matter if the tied were lost; for it is the</LINE><LINE>unkindest tied that ever any man tied.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>What's the unkindest tide?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, he that's tied here, Crab, my dog.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Tut, man, I mean thou'lt lose the flood, and, in</LINE><LINE>losing the flood, lose thy voyage, and, in losing</LINE><LINE>thy voyage, lose thy master, and, in losing thy</LINE><LINE>master, lose thy service, and, in losing thy</LINE><LINE>service,--Why dost thou stop my mouth?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>For fear thou shouldst lose thy tongue.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Where should I lose my tongue?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>In thy tale.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>In thy tail!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Lose the tide, and the voyage, and the master, and</LINE><LINE>the service, and the tied! Why, man, if the river</LINE><LINE>were dry, I am able to fill it with my tears; if the</LINE><LINE>wind were down, I could drive the boat with my sighs.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, come away, man; I was sent to call thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, call me what thou darest.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PANTHINO</SPEAKER><LINE>Wilt thou go?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, I will go.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE IV.  Milan. The DUKE's palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA, VALENTINE, THURIO, and SPEED</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Servant!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Mistress?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Master, Sir Thurio frowns on you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, boy, it's for love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Not of you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Of my mistress, then.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Twere good you knocked him.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Servant, you are sad.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Indeed, madam, I seem so.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Seem you that you are not?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Haply I do.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>So do counterfeits.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>So do you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What seem I that I am not?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Wise.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What instance of the contrary?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Your folly.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>And how quote you my folly?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I quote it in your jerkin.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>My jerkin is a doublet.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, then, I'll double your folly.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>How?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What, angry, Sir Thurio! do you change colour?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Give him leave, madam; he is a kind of chameleon.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>That hath more mind to feed on your blood than live</LINE><LINE>in your air.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>You have said, sir.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, sir, and done too, for this time.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I know it well, sir; you always end ere you begin.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>A fine volley of words, gentlemen, and quickly shot off.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>'Tis indeed, madam; we thank the giver.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Who is that, servant?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Yourself, sweet lady; for you gave the fire. Sir</LINE><LINE>Thurio borrows his wit from your ladyship's looks,</LINE><LINE>and spends what he borrows kindly in your company.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, if you spend word for word with me, I shall</LINE><LINE>make your wit bankrupt.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I know it well, sir; you have an exchequer of words,</LINE><LINE>and, I think, no other treasure to give your</LINE><LINE>followers, for it appears by their bare liveries,</LINE><LINE>that they live by your bare words.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>No more, gentlemen, no more:--here comes my father.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter DUKE</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, daughter Silvia, you are hard beset.</LINE><LINE>Sir Valentine, your father's in good health:</LINE><LINE>What say you to a letter from your friends</LINE><LINE>Of much good news?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>My lord, I will be thankful.</LINE><LINE>To any happy messenger from thence.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Know ye Don Antonio, your countryman?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, my good lord, I know the gentleman</LINE><LINE>To be of worth and worthy estimation</LINE><LINE>And not without desert so well reputed.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Hath he not a son?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, my good lord; a son that well deserves</LINE><LINE>The honour and regard of such a father.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>You know him well?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I know him as myself; for from our infancy</LINE><LINE>We have conversed and spent our hours together:</LINE><LINE>And though myself have been an idle truant,</LINE><LINE>Omitting the sweet benefit of time</LINE><LINE>To clothe mine age with angel-like perfection,</LINE><LINE>Yet hath Sir Proteus, for that's his name,</LINE><LINE>Made use and fair advantage of his days;</LINE><LINE>His years but young, but his experience old;</LINE><LINE>His head unmellow'd, but his judgment ripe;</LINE><LINE>And, in a word, for far behind his worth</LINE><LINE>Comes all the praises that I now bestow,</LINE><LINE>He is complete in feature and in mind</LINE><LINE>With all good grace to grace a gentleman.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Beshrew me, sir, but if he make this good,</LINE><LINE>He is as worthy for an empress' love</LINE><LINE>As meet to be an emperor's counsellor.</LINE><LINE>Well, sir, this gentleman is come to me,</LINE><LINE>With commendation from great potentates;</LINE><LINE>And here he means to spend his time awhile:</LINE><LINE>I think 'tis no unwelcome news to you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Should I have wish'd a thing, it had been he.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Welcome him then according to his worth.</LINE><LINE>Silvia, I speak to you, and you, Sir Thurio;</LINE><LINE>For Valentine, I need not cite him to it:</LINE><LINE>I will send him hither to you presently.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>This is the gentleman I told your ladyship</LINE><LINE>Had come along with me, but that his mistress</LINE><LINE>Did hold his eyes lock'd in her crystal looks.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Belike that now she hath enfranchised them</LINE><LINE>Upon some other pawn for fealty.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, sure, I think she holds them prisoners still.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, then he should be blind; and, being blind</LINE><LINE>How could he see his way to seek out you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, lady, Love hath twenty pair of eyes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>They say that Love hath not an eye at all.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>To see such lovers, Thurio, as yourself:</LINE><LINE>Upon a homely object Love can wink.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Have done, have done; here comes the gentleman.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit THURIO</STAGEDIR><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Welcome, dear Proteus! Mistress, I beseech you,</LINE><LINE>Confirm his welcome with some special favour.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>His worth is warrant for his welcome hither,</LINE><LINE>If this be he you oft have wish'd to hear from.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Mistress, it is: sweet lady, entertain him</LINE><LINE>To be my fellow-servant to your ladyship.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Too low a mistress for so high a servant.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Not so, sweet lady: but too mean a servant</LINE><LINE>To have a look of such a worthy mistress.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Leave off discourse of disability:</LINE><LINE>Sweet lady, entertain him for your servant.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>My duty will I boast of; nothing else.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And duty never yet did want his meed:</LINE><LINE>Servant, you are welcome to a worthless mistress.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I'll die on him that says so but yourself.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>That you are welcome?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That you are worthless.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Re-enter THURIO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, my lord your father would speak with you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I wait upon his pleasure. Come, Sir Thurio,</LINE><LINE>Go with me. Once more, new servant, welcome:</LINE><LINE>I'll leave you to confer of home affairs;</LINE><LINE>When you have done, we look to hear from you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>We'll both attend upon your ladyship.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt SILVIA and THURIO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, tell me, how do all from whence you came?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Your friends are well and have them much commended.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And how do yours?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I left them all in health.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How does your lady? and how thrives your love?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>My tales of love were wont to weary you;</LINE><LINE>I know you joy not in a love discourse.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, Proteus, but that life is alter'd now:</LINE><LINE>I have done penance for contemning Love,</LINE><LINE>Whose high imperious thoughts have punish'd me</LINE><LINE>With bitter fasts, with penitential groans,</LINE><LINE>With nightly tears and daily heart-sore sighs;</LINE><LINE>For in revenge of my contempt of love,</LINE><LINE>Love hath chased sleep from my enthralled eyes</LINE><LINE>And made them watchers of mine own heart's sorrow.</LINE><LINE>O gentle Proteus, Love's a mighty lord,</LINE><LINE>And hath so humbled me, as, I confess,</LINE><LINE>There is no woe to his correction,</LINE><LINE>Nor to his service no such joy on earth.</LINE><LINE>Now no discourse, except it be of love;</LINE><LINE>Now can I break my fast, dine, sup and sleep,</LINE><LINE>Upon the very naked name of love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Enough; I read your fortune in your eye.</LINE><LINE>Was this the idol that you worship so?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Even she; and is she not a heavenly saint?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>No; but she is an earthly paragon.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Call her divine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I will not flatter her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>O, flatter me; for love delights in praises.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>When I was sick, you gave me bitter pills,</LINE><LINE>And I must minister the like to you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then speak the truth by her; if not divine,</LINE><LINE>Yet let her be a principality,</LINE><LINE>Sovereign to all the creatures on the earth.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Except my mistress.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sweet, except not any;</LINE><LINE>Except thou wilt except against my love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Have I not reason to prefer mine own?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And I will help thee to prefer her too:</LINE><LINE>She shall be dignified with this high honour--</LINE><LINE>To bear my lady's train, lest the base earth</LINE><LINE>Should from her vesture chance to steal a kiss</LINE><LINE>And, of so great a favour growing proud,</LINE><LINE>Disdain to root the summer-swelling flower</LINE><LINE>And make rough winter everlastingly.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, Valentine, what braggardism is this?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Pardon me, Proteus: all I can is nothing</LINE><LINE>To her whose worth makes other worthies nothing;</LINE><LINE>She is alone.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Then let her alone.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Not for the world: why, man, she is mine own,</LINE><LINE>And I as rich in having such a jewel</LINE><LINE>As twenty seas, if all their sand were pearl,</LINE><LINE>The water nectar and the rocks pure gold.</LINE><LINE>Forgive me that I do not dream on thee,</LINE><LINE>Because thou see'st me dote upon my love.</LINE><LINE>My foolish rival, that her father likes</LINE><LINE>Only for his possessions are so huge,</LINE><LINE>Is gone with her along, and I must after,</LINE><LINE>For love, thou know'st, is full of jealousy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But she loves you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, and we are betroth'd: nay, more, our,</LINE><LINE>marriage-hour,</LINE><LINE>With all the cunning manner of our flight,</LINE><LINE>Determined of; how I must climb her window,</LINE><LINE>The ladder made of cords, and all the means</LINE><LINE>Plotted and 'greed on for my happiness.</LINE><LINE>Good Proteus, go with me to my chamber,</LINE><LINE>In these affairs to aid me with thy counsel.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Go on before; I shall inquire you forth:</LINE><LINE>I must unto the road, to disembark</LINE><LINE>Some necessaries that I needs must use,</LINE><LINE>And then I'll presently attend you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Will you make haste?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I will.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Exit VALENTINE</STAGEDIR><LINE>Even as one heat another heat expels,</LINE><LINE>Or as one nail by strength drives out another,</LINE><LINE>So the remembrance of my former love</LINE><LINE>Is by a newer object quite forgotten.</LINE><LINE>Is it mine, or Valentine's praise,</LINE><LINE>Her true perfection, or my false transgression,</LINE><LINE>That makes me reasonless to reason thus?</LINE><LINE>She is fair; and so is Julia that I love--</LINE><LINE>That I did love, for now my love is thaw'd;</LINE><LINE>Which, like a waxen image, 'gainst a fire,</LINE><LINE>Bears no impression of the thing it was.</LINE><LINE>Methinks my zeal to Valentine is cold,</LINE><LINE>And that I love him not as I was wont.</LINE><LINE>O, but I love his lady too too much,</LINE><LINE>And that's the reason I love him so little.</LINE><LINE>How shall I dote on her with more advice,</LINE><LINE>That thus without advice begin to love her!</LINE><LINE>'Tis but her picture I have yet beheld,</LINE><LINE>And that hath dazzled my reason's light;</LINE><LINE>But when I look on her perfections,</LINE><LINE>There is no reason but I shall be blind.</LINE><LINE>If I can cheque my erring love, I will;</LINE><LINE>If not, to compass her I'll use my skill.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE V.  The same. A street.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter SPEED and LAUNCE severally</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Launce! by mine honesty, welcome to Milan!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Forswear not thyself, sweet youth, for I am not</LINE><LINE>welcome. I reckon this always, that a man is never</LINE><LINE>undone till he be hanged, nor never welcome to a</LINE><LINE>place till some certain shot be paid and the hostess</LINE><LINE>say 'Welcome!'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Come on, you madcap, I'll to the alehouse with you</LINE><LINE>presently; where, for one shot of five pence, thou</LINE><LINE>shalt have five thousand welcomes. But, sirrah, how</LINE><LINE>did thy master part with Madam Julia?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, after they closed in earnest, they parted very</LINE><LINE>fairly in jest.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>But shall she marry him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>No.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>How then? shall he marry her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, neither.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>What, are they broken?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, they are both as whole as a fish.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, then, how stands the matter with them?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, thus: when it stands well with him, it</LINE><LINE>stands well with her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>What an ass art thou! I understand thee not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>What a block art thou, that thou canst not! My</LINE><LINE>staff understands me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>What thou sayest?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, and what I do too: look thee, I'll but lean,</LINE><LINE>and my staff understands me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>It stands under thee, indeed.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, stand-under and under-stand is all one.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>But tell me true, will't be a match?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ask my dog: if he say ay, it will! if he say no,</LINE><LINE>it will; if he shake his tail and say nothing, it will.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>The conclusion is then that it will.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou shalt never get such a secret from me but by a parable.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Tis well that I get it so. But, Launce, how sayest</LINE><LINE>thou, that my master is become a notable lover?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>I never knew him otherwise.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Than how?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>A notable lubber, as thou reportest him to be.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, thou whoreson ass, thou mistakest me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, fool, I meant not thee; I meant thy master.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>I tell thee, my master is become a hot lover.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, I tell thee, I care not though he burn himself</LINE><LINE>in love. If thou wilt, go with me to the alehouse;</LINE><LINE>if not, thou art an Hebrew, a Jew, and not worth the</LINE><LINE>name of a Christian.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Because thou hast not so much charity in thee as to</LINE><LINE>go to the ale with a Christian. Wilt thou go?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>At thy service.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE VI.  The same. The DUKE'S palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>To leave my Julia, shall I be forsworn;</LINE><LINE>To love fair Silvia, shall I be forsworn;</LINE><LINE>To wrong my friend, I shall be much forsworn;</LINE><LINE>And even that power which gave me first my oath</LINE><LINE>Provokes me to this threefold perjury;</LINE><LINE>Love bade me swear and Love bids me forswear.</LINE><LINE>O sweet-suggesting Love, if thou hast sinned,</LINE><LINE>Teach me, thy tempted subject, to excuse it!</LINE><LINE>At first I did adore a twinkling star,</LINE><LINE>But now I worship a celestial sun.</LINE><LINE>Unheedful vows may heedfully be broken,</LINE><LINE>And he wants wit that wants resolved will</LINE><LINE>To learn his wit to exchange the bad for better.</LINE><LINE>Fie, fie, unreverend tongue! to call her bad,</LINE><LINE>Whose sovereignty so oft thou hast preferr'd</LINE><LINE>With twenty thousand soul-confirming oaths.</LINE><LINE>I cannot leave to love, and yet I do;</LINE><LINE>But there I leave to love where I should love.</LINE><LINE>Julia I lose and Valentine I lose:</LINE><LINE>If I keep them, I needs must lose myself;</LINE><LINE>If I lose them, thus find I by their loss</LINE><LINE>For Valentine myself, for Julia Silvia.</LINE><LINE>I to myself am dearer than a friend,</LINE><LINE>For love is still most precious in itself;</LINE><LINE>And Silvia--witness Heaven, that made her fair!--</LINE><LINE>Shows Julia but a swarthy Ethiope.</LINE><LINE>I will forget that Julia is alive,</LINE><LINE>Remembering that my love to her is dead;</LINE><LINE>And Valentine I'll hold an enemy,</LINE><LINE>Aiming at Silvia as a sweeter friend.</LINE><LINE>I cannot now prove constant to myself,</LINE><LINE>Without some treachery used to Valentine.</LINE><LINE>This night he meaneth with a corded ladder</LINE><LINE>To climb celestial Silvia's chamber-window,</LINE><LINE>Myself in counsel, his competitor.</LINE><LINE>Now presently I'll give her father notice</LINE><LINE>Of their disguising and pretended flight;</LINE><LINE>Who, all enraged, will banish Valentine;</LINE><LINE>For Thurio, he intends, shall wed his daughter;</LINE><LINE>But, Valentine being gone, I'll quickly cross</LINE><LINE>By some sly trick blunt Thurio's dull proceeding.</LINE><LINE>Love, lend me wings to make my purpose swift,</LINE><LINE>As thou hast lent me wit to plot this drift!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE VII.  Verona. JULIA'S house.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter JULIA and LUCETTA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Counsel, Lucetta; gentle girl, assist me;</LINE><LINE>And even in kind love I do conjure thee,</LINE><LINE>Who art the table wherein all my thoughts</LINE><LINE>Are visibly character'd and engraved,</LINE><LINE>To lesson me and tell me some good mean</LINE><LINE>How, with my honour, I may undertake</LINE><LINE>A journey to my loving Proteus.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Alas, the way is wearisome and long!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>A true-devoted pilgrim is not weary</LINE><LINE>To measure kingdoms with his feeble steps;</LINE><LINE>Much less shall she that hath Love's wings to fly,</LINE><LINE>And when the flight is made to one so dear,</LINE><LINE>Of such divine perfection, as Sir Proteus.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Better forbear till Proteus make return.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O, know'st thou not his looks are my soul's food?</LINE><LINE>Pity the dearth that I have pined in,</LINE><LINE>By longing for that food so long a time.</LINE><LINE>Didst thou but know the inly touch of love,</LINE><LINE>Thou wouldst as soon go kindle fire with snow</LINE><LINE>As seek to quench the fire of love with words.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>I do not seek to quench your love's hot fire,</LINE><LINE>But qualify the fire's extreme rage,</LINE><LINE>Lest it should burn above the bounds of reason.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>The more thou damm'st it up, the more it burns.</LINE><LINE>The current that with gentle murmur glides,</LINE><LINE>Thou know'st, being stopp'd, impatiently doth rage;</LINE><LINE>But when his fair course is not hindered,</LINE><LINE>He makes sweet music with the enamell'ed stones,</LINE><LINE>Giving a gentle kiss to every sedge</LINE><LINE>He overtaketh in his pilgrimage,</LINE><LINE>And so by many winding nooks he strays</LINE><LINE>With willing sport to the wild ocean.</LINE><LINE>Then let me go and hinder not my course</LINE><LINE>I'll be as patient as a gentle stream</LINE><LINE>And make a pastime of each weary step,</LINE><LINE>Till the last step have brought me to my love;</LINE><LINE>And there I'll rest, as after much turmoil</LINE><LINE>A blessed soul doth in Elysium.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>But in what habit will you go along?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Not like a woman; for I would prevent</LINE><LINE>The loose encounters of lascivious men:</LINE><LINE>Gentle Lucetta, fit me with such weeds</LINE><LINE>As may beseem some well-reputed page.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, then, your ladyship must cut your hair.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>No, girl, I'll knit it up in silken strings</LINE><LINE>With twenty odd-conceited true-love knots.</LINE><LINE>To be fantastic may become a youth</LINE><LINE>Of greater time than I shall show to be.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>What fashion, madam shall I make your breeches?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>That fits as well as 'Tell me, good my lord,</LINE><LINE>What compass will you wear your farthingale?'</LINE><LINE>Why even what fashion thou best likest, Lucetta.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>You must needs have them with a codpiece, madam.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Out, out, Lucetta! that would be ill-favour'd.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>A round hose, madam, now's not worth a pin,</LINE><LINE>Unless you have a codpiece to stick pins on.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Lucetta, as thou lovest me, let me have</LINE><LINE>What thou thinkest meet and is most mannerly.</LINE><LINE>But tell me, wench, how will the world repute me</LINE><LINE>For undertaking so unstaid a journey?</LINE><LINE>I fear me, it will make me scandalized.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>If you think so, then stay at home and go not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, that I will not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Then never dream on infamy, but go.</LINE><LINE>If Proteus like your journey when you come,</LINE><LINE>No matter who's displeased when you are gone:</LINE><LINE>I fear me, he will scarce be pleased withal.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>That is the least, Lucetta, of my fear:</LINE><LINE>A thousand oaths, an ocean of his tears</LINE><LINE>And instances of infinite of love</LINE><LINE>Warrant me welcome to my Proteus.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>All these are servants to deceitful men.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Base men, that use them to so base effect!</LINE><LINE>But truer stars did govern Proteus' birth</LINE><LINE>His words are bonds, his oaths are oracles,</LINE><LINE>His love sincere, his thoughts immaculate,</LINE><LINE>His tears pure messengers sent from his heart,</LINE><LINE>His heart as far from fraud as heaven from earth.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LUCETTA</SPEAKER><LINE>Pray heaven he prove so, when you come to him!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, as thou lovest me, do him not that wrong</LINE><LINE>To bear a hard opinion of his truth:</LINE><LINE>Only deserve my love by loving him;</LINE><LINE>And presently go with me to my chamber,</LINE><LINE>To take a note of what I stand in need of,</LINE><LINE>To furnish me upon my longing journey.</LINE><LINE>All that is mine I leave at thy dispose,</LINE><LINE>My goods, my lands, my reputation;</LINE><LINE>Only, in lieu thereof, dispatch me hence.</LINE><LINE>Come, answer not, but to it presently!</LINE><LINE>I am impatient of my tarriance.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE></ACT><ACT><TITLE>ACT III</TITLE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE I.  Milan. The DUKE's palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter DUKE, THURIO, and PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Thurio, give us leave, I pray, awhile;</LINE><LINE>We have some secrets to confer about.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Exit THURIO</STAGEDIR><LINE>Now, tell me, Proteus, what's your will with me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>My gracious lord, that which I would discover</LINE><LINE>The law of friendship bids me to conceal;</LINE><LINE>But when I call to mind your gracious favours</LINE><LINE>Done to me, undeserving as I am,</LINE><LINE>My duty pricks me on to utter that</LINE><LINE>Which else no worldly good should draw from me.</LINE><LINE>Know, worthy prince, Sir Valentine, my friend,</LINE><LINE>This night intends to steal away your daughter:</LINE><LINE>Myself am one made privy to the plot.</LINE><LINE>I know you have determined to bestow her</LINE><LINE>On Thurio, whom your gentle daughter hates;</LINE><LINE>And should she thus be stol'n away from you,</LINE><LINE>It would be much vexation to your age.</LINE><LINE>Thus, for my duty's sake, I rather chose</LINE><LINE>To cross my friend in his intended drift</LINE><LINE>Than, by concealing it, heap on your head</LINE><LINE>A pack of sorrows which would press you down,</LINE><LINE>Being unprevented, to your timeless grave.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Proteus, I thank thee for thine honest care;</LINE><LINE>Which to requite, command me while I live.</LINE><LINE>This love of theirs myself have often seen,</LINE><LINE>Haply when they have judged me fast asleep,</LINE><LINE>And oftentimes have purposed to forbid</LINE><LINE>Sir Valentine her company and my court:</LINE><LINE>But fearing lest my jealous aim might err</LINE><LINE>And so unworthily disgrace the man,</LINE><LINE>A rashness that I ever yet have shunn'd,</LINE><LINE>I gave him gentle looks, thereby to find</LINE><LINE>That which thyself hast now disclosed to me.</LINE><LINE>And, that thou mayst perceive my fear of this,</LINE><LINE>Knowing that tender youth is soon suggested,</LINE><LINE>I nightly lodge her in an upper tower,</LINE><LINE>The key whereof myself have ever kept;</LINE><LINE>And thence she cannot be convey'd away.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Know, noble lord, they have devised a mean</LINE><LINE>How he her chamber-window will ascend</LINE><LINE>And with a corded ladder fetch her down;</LINE><LINE>For which the youthful lover now is gone</LINE><LINE>And this way comes he with it presently;</LINE><LINE>Where, if it please you, you may intercept him.</LINE><LINE>But, good my Lord, do it so cunningly</LINE><LINE>That my discovery be not aimed at;</LINE><LINE>For love of you, not hate unto my friend,</LINE><LINE>Hath made me publisher of this pretence.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Upon mine honour, he shall never know</LINE><LINE>That I had any light from thee of this.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Adieu, my Lord; Sir Valentine is coming.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><STAGEDIR>Enter VALENTINE</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Valentine, whither away so fast?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Please it your grace, there is a messenger</LINE><LINE>That stays to bear my letters to my friends,</LINE><LINE>And I am going to deliver them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Be they of much import?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>The tenor of them doth but signify</LINE><LINE>My health and happy being at your court.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay then, no matter; stay with me awhile;</LINE><LINE>I am to break with thee of some affairs</LINE><LINE>That touch me near, wherein thou must be secret.</LINE><LINE>'Tis not unknown to thee that I have sought</LINE><LINE>To match my friend Sir Thurio to my daughter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I know it well, my Lord; and, sure, the match</LINE><LINE>Were rich and honourable; besides, the gentleman</LINE><LINE>Is full of virtue, bounty, worth and qualities</LINE><LINE>Beseeming such a wife as your fair daughter:</LINE><LINE>Cannot your Grace win her to fancy him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, trust me; she is peevish, sullen, froward,</LINE><LINE>Proud, disobedient, stubborn, lacking duty,</LINE><LINE>Neither regarding that she is my child</LINE><LINE>Nor fearing me as if I were her father;</LINE><LINE>And, may I say to thee, this pride of hers,</LINE><LINE>Upon advice, hath drawn my love from her;</LINE><LINE>And, where I thought the remnant of mine age</LINE><LINE>Should have been cherish'd by her child-like duty,</LINE><LINE>I now am full resolved to take a wife</LINE><LINE>And turn her out to who will take her in:</LINE><LINE>Then let her beauty be her wedding-dower;</LINE><LINE>For me and my possessions she esteems not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What would your Grace have me to do in this?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>There is a lady in Verona here</LINE><LINE>Whom I affect; but she is nice and coy</LINE><LINE>And nought esteems my aged eloquence:</LINE><LINE>Now therefore would I have thee to my tutor--</LINE><LINE>For long agone I have forgot to court;</LINE><LINE>Besides, the fashion of the time is changed--</LINE><LINE>How and which way I may bestow myself</LINE><LINE>To be regarded in her sun-bright eye.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Win her with gifts, if she respect not words:</LINE><LINE>Dumb jewels often in their silent kind</LINE><LINE>More than quick words do move a woman's mind.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>But she did scorn a present that I sent her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>A woman sometimes scorns what best contents her.</LINE><LINE>Send her another; never give her o'er;</LINE><LINE>For scorn at first makes after-love the more.</LINE><LINE>If she do frown, 'tis not in hate of you,</LINE><LINE>But rather to beget more love in you:</LINE><LINE>If she do chide, 'tis not to have you gone;</LINE><LINE>For why, the fools are mad, if left alone.</LINE><LINE>Take no repulse, whatever she doth say;</LINE><LINE>For 'get you gone,' she doth not mean 'away!'</LINE><LINE>Flatter and praise, commend, extol their graces;</LINE><LINE>Though ne'er so black, say they have angels' faces.</LINE><LINE>That man that hath a tongue, I say, is no man,</LINE><LINE>If with his tongue he cannot win a woman.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>But she I mean is promised by her friends</LINE><LINE>Unto a youthful gentleman of worth,</LINE><LINE>And kept severely from resort of men,</LINE><LINE>That no man hath access by day to her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, then, I would resort to her by night.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, but the doors be lock'd and keys kept safe,</LINE><LINE>That no man hath recourse to her by night.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>What lets but one may enter at her window?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Her chamber is aloft, far from the ground,</LINE><LINE>And built so shelving that one cannot climb it</LINE><LINE>Without apparent hazard of his life.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why then, a ladder quaintly made of cords,</LINE><LINE>To cast up, with a pair of anchoring hooks,</LINE><LINE>Would serve to scale another Hero's tower,</LINE><LINE>So bold Leander would adventure it.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, as thou art a gentleman of blood,</LINE><LINE>Advise me where I may have such a ladder.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>When would you use it? pray, sir, tell me that.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>This very night; for Love is like a child,</LINE><LINE>That longs for every thing that he can come by.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>By seven o'clock I'll get you such a ladder.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>But, hark thee; I will go to her alone:</LINE><LINE>How shall I best convey the ladder thither?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>It will be light, my lord, that you may bear it</LINE><LINE>Under a cloak that is of any length.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>A cloak as long as thine will serve the turn?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, my good lord.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then let me see thy cloak:</LINE><LINE>I'll get me one of such another length.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, any cloak will serve the turn, my lord.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>How shall I fashion me to wear a cloak?</LINE><LINE>I pray thee, let me feel thy cloak upon me.</LINE><LINE>What letter is this same? What's here? 'To Silvia'!</LINE><LINE>And here an engine fit for my proceeding.</LINE><LINE>I'll be so bold to break the seal for once.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Reads</STAGEDIR><LINE>'My thoughts do harbour with my Silvia nightly,</LINE><LINE>And slaves they are to me that send them flying:</LINE><LINE>O, could their master come and go as lightly,</LINE><LINE>Himself would lodge where senseless they are lying!</LINE><LINE>My herald thoughts in thy pure bosom rest them:</LINE><LINE>While I, their king, that hither them importune,</LINE><LINE>Do curse the grace that with such grace hath bless'd them,</LINE><LINE>Because myself do want my servants' fortune:</LINE><LINE>I curse myself, for they are sent by me,</LINE><LINE>That they should harbour where their lord would be.'</LINE><LINE>What's here?</LINE><LINE>'Silvia, this night I will enfranchise thee.'</LINE><LINE>'Tis so; and here's the ladder for the purpose.</LINE><LINE>Why, Phaeton,--for thou art Merops' son,--</LINE><LINE>Wilt thou aspire to guide the heavenly car</LINE><LINE>And with thy daring folly burn the world?</LINE><LINE>Wilt thou reach stars, because they shine on thee?</LINE><LINE>Go, base intruder! overweening slave!</LINE><LINE>Bestow thy fawning smiles on equal mates,</LINE><LINE>And think my patience, more than thy desert,</LINE><LINE>Is privilege for thy departure hence:</LINE><LINE>Thank me for this more than for all the favours</LINE><LINE>Which all too much I have bestow'd on thee.</LINE><LINE>But if thou linger in my territories</LINE><LINE>Longer than swiftest expedition</LINE><LINE>Will give thee time to leave our royal court,</LINE><LINE>By heaven! my wrath shall far exceed the love</LINE><LINE>I ever bore my daughter or thyself.</LINE><LINE>Be gone! I will not hear thy vain excuse;</LINE><LINE>But, as thou lovest thy life, make speed from hence.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And why not death rather than living torment?</LINE><LINE>To die is to be banish'd from myself;</LINE><LINE>And Silvia is myself: banish'd from her</LINE><LINE>Is self from self: a deadly banishment!</LINE><LINE>What light is light, if Silvia be not seen?</LINE><LINE>What joy is joy, if Silvia be not by?</LINE><LINE>Unless it be to think that she is by</LINE><LINE>And feed upon the shadow of perfection</LINE><LINE>Except I be by Silvia in the night,</LINE><LINE>There is no music in the nightingale;</LINE><LINE>Unless I look on Silvia in the day,</LINE><LINE>There is no day for me to look upon;</LINE><LINE>She is my essence, and I leave to be,</LINE><LINE>If I be not by her fair influence</LINE><LINE>Foster'd, illumined, cherish'd, kept alive.</LINE><LINE>I fly not death, to fly his deadly doom:</LINE><LINE>Tarry I here, I but attend on death:</LINE><LINE>But, fly I hence, I fly away from life.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS and LAUNCE</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Run, boy, run, run, and seek him out.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Soho, soho!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What seest thou?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Him we go to find: there's not a hair on's head</LINE><LINE>but 'tis a Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Valentine?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Who then? his spirit?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Neither.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nothing.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Can nothing speak? Master, shall I strike?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Who wouldst thou strike?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nothing.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Villain, forbear.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, sir, I'll strike nothing: I pray you,--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sirrah, I say, forbear. Friend Valentine, a word.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>My ears are stopt and cannot hear good news,</LINE><LINE>So much of bad already hath possess'd them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Then in dumb silence will I bury mine,</LINE><LINE>For they are harsh, untuneable and bad.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Is Silvia dead?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>No, Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No Valentine, indeed, for sacred Silvia.</LINE><LINE>Hath she forsworn me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>No, Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No Valentine, if Silvia have forsworn me.</LINE><LINE>What is your news?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, there is a proclamation that you are vanished.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That thou art banished--O, that's the news!--</LINE><LINE>From hence, from Silvia and from me thy friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>O, I have fed upon this woe already,</LINE><LINE>And now excess of it will make me surfeit.</LINE><LINE>Doth Silvia know that I am banished?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, ay; and she hath offer'd to the doom--</LINE><LINE>Which, unreversed, stands in effectual force--</LINE><LINE>A sea of melting pearl, which some call tears:</LINE><LINE>Those at her father's churlish feet she tender'd;</LINE><LINE>With them, upon her knees, her humble self;</LINE><LINE>Wringing her hands, whose whiteness so became them</LINE><LINE>As if but now they waxed pale for woe:</LINE><LINE>But neither bended knees, pure hands held up,</LINE><LINE>Sad sighs, deep groans, nor silver-shedding tears,</LINE><LINE>Could penetrate her uncompassionate sire;</LINE><LINE>But Valentine, if he be ta'en, must die.</LINE><LINE>Besides, her intercession chafed him so,</LINE><LINE>When she for thy repeal was suppliant,</LINE><LINE>That to close prison he commanded her,</LINE><LINE>With many bitter threats of biding there.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>No more; unless the next word that thou speak'st</LINE><LINE>Have some malignant power upon my life:</LINE><LINE>If so, I pray thee, breathe it in mine ear,</LINE><LINE>As ending anthem of my endless dolour.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Cease to lament for that thou canst not help,</LINE><LINE>And study help for that which thou lament'st.</LINE><LINE>Time is the nurse and breeder of all good.</LINE><LINE>Here if thou stay, thou canst not see thy love;</LINE><LINE>Besides, thy staying will abridge thy life.</LINE><LINE>Hope is a lover's staff; walk hence with that</LINE><LINE>And manage it against despairing thoughts.</LINE><LINE>Thy letters may be here, though thou art hence;</LINE><LINE>Which, being writ to me, shall be deliver'd</LINE><LINE>Even in the milk-white bosom of thy love.</LINE><LINE>The time now serves not to expostulate:</LINE><LINE>Come, I'll convey thee through the city-gate;</LINE><LINE>And, ere I part with thee, confer at large</LINE><LINE>Of all that may concern thy love-affairs.</LINE><LINE>As thou lovest Silvia, though not for thyself,</LINE><LINE>Regard thy danger, and along with me!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I pray thee, Launce, an if thou seest my boy,</LINE><LINE>Bid him make haste and meet me at the North-gate.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Go, sirrah, find him out. Come, Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>O my dear Silvia! Hapless Valentine!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt VALENTINE and PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>I am but a fool, look you; and yet I have the wit to</LINE><LINE>think my master is a kind of a knave: but that's</LINE><LINE>all one, if he be but one knave. He lives not now</LINE><LINE>that knows me to be in love; yet I am in love; but a</LINE><LINE>team of horse shall not pluck that from me; nor who</LINE><LINE>'tis I love; and yet 'tis a woman; but what woman, I</LINE><LINE>will not tell myself; and yet 'tis a milkmaid; yet</LINE><LINE>'tis not a maid, for she hath had gossips; yet 'tis</LINE><LINE>a maid, for she is her master's maid, and serves for</LINE><LINE>wages. She hath more qualities than a water-spaniel;</LINE><LINE>which is much in a bare Christian.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Pulling out a paper</STAGEDIR><LINE>Here is the cate-log of her condition.</LINE><LINE>'Imprimis: She can fetch and carry.' Why, a horse</LINE><LINE>can do no more: nay, a horse cannot fetch, but only</LINE><LINE>carry; therefore is she better than a jade. 'Item:</LINE><LINE>She can milk;' look you, a sweet virtue in a maid</LINE><LINE>with clean hands.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter SPEED</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>How now, Signior Launce! what news with your</LINE><LINE>mastership?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>With my master's ship? why, it is at sea.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, your old vice still; mistake the word. What</LINE><LINE>news, then, in your paper?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>The blackest news that ever thou heardest.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, man, how black?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, as black as ink.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Let me read them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Fie on thee, jolt-head! thou canst not read.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou liest; I can.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>I will try thee. Tell me this: who begot thee?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, the son of my grandfather.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>O illiterate loiterer! it was the son of thy</LINE><LINE>grandmother: this proves that thou canst not read.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, fool, come; try me in thy paper.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>There; and St. Nicholas be thy speed!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Reads</STAGEDIR>  'Imprimis: She can milk.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, that she can.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She brews good ale.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>And thereof comes the proverb: 'Blessing of your</LINE><LINE>heart, you brew good ale.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She can sew.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>That's as much as to say, Can she so?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She can knit.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>What need a man care for a stock with a wench, when</LINE><LINE>she can knit him a stock?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She can wash and scour.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>A special virtue: for then she need not be washed</LINE><LINE>and scoured.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She can spin.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then may I set the world on wheels, when she can</LINE><LINE>spin for her living.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She hath many nameless virtues.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>That's as much as to say, bastard virtues; that,</LINE><LINE>indeed, know not their fathers and therefore have no names.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Here follow her vices.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Close at the heels of her virtues.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She is not to be kissed fasting in respect</LINE><LINE>of her breath.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, that fault may be mended with a breakfast. Read on.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She hath a sweet mouth.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>That makes amends for her sour breath.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She doth talk in her sleep.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>It's no matter for that, so she sleep not in her talk.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She is slow in words.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>O villain, that set this down among her vices! To</LINE><LINE>be slow in words is a woman's only virtue: I pray</LINE><LINE>thee, out with't, and place it for her chief virtue.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She is proud.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Out with that too; it was Eve's legacy, and cannot</LINE><LINE>be ta'en from her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She hath no teeth.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>I care not for that neither, because I love crusts.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She is curst.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, the best is, she hath no teeth to bite.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She will often praise her liquor.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>If her liquor be good, she shall: if she will not, I</LINE><LINE>will; for good things should be praised.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She is too liberal.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Of her tongue she cannot, for that's writ down she</LINE><LINE>is slow of; of her purse she shall not, for that</LINE><LINE>I'll keep shut: now, of another thing she may, and</LINE><LINE>that cannot I help. Well, proceed.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She hath more hair than wit, and more faults</LINE><LINE>than hairs, and more wealth than faults.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Stop there; I'll have her: she was mine, and not</LINE><LINE>mine, twice or thrice in that last article.</LINE><LINE>Rehearse that once more.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'Item: She hath more hair than wit,'--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>More hair than wit? It may be; I'll prove it. The</LINE><LINE>cover of the salt hides the salt, and therefore it</LINE><LINE>is more than the salt; the hair that covers the wit</LINE><LINE>is more than the wit, for the greater hides the</LINE><LINE>less. What's next?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'And more faults than hairs,'--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>That's monstrous: O, that that were out!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>'And more wealth than faults.'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, that word makes the faults gracious. Well,</LINE><LINE>I'll have her; and if it be a match, as nothing is</LINE><LINE>impossible,--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>What then?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, then will I tell thee--that thy master stays</LINE><LINE>for thee at the North-gate.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>For me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>For thee! ay, who art thou? he hath stayed for a</LINE><LINE>better man than thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>And must I go to him?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou must run to him, for thou hast stayed so long</LINE><LINE>that going will scarce serve the turn.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Why didst not tell me sooner? pox of your love letters!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Now will he be swinged for reading my letter; an</LINE><LINE>unmannerly slave, that will thrust himself into</LINE><LINE>secrets! I'll after, to rejoice in the boy's correction.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE II.  The same. The DUKE's palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter DUKE and THURIO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Thurio, fear not but that she will love you,</LINE><LINE>Now Valentine is banish'd from her sight.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Since his exile she hath despised me most,</LINE><LINE>Forsworn my company and rail'd at me,</LINE><LINE>That I am desperate of obtaining her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>This weak impress of love is as a figure</LINE><LINE>Trenched in ice, which with an hour's heat</LINE><LINE>Dissolves to water and doth lose his form.</LINE><LINE>A little time will melt her frozen thoughts</LINE><LINE>And worthless Valentine shall be forgot.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><LINE>How now, Sir Proteus! Is your countryman</LINE><LINE>According to our proclamation gone?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Gone, my good lord.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>My daughter takes his going grievously.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>A little time, my lord, will kill that grief.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>So I believe; but Thurio thinks not so.</LINE><LINE>Proteus, the good conceit I hold of thee--</LINE><LINE>For thou hast shown some sign of good desert--</LINE><LINE>Makes me the better to confer with thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Longer than I prove loyal to your grace</LINE><LINE>Let me not live to look upon your grace.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou know'st how willingly I would effect</LINE><LINE>The match between Sir Thurio and my daughter.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I do, my lord.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>And also, I think, thou art not ignorant</LINE><LINE>How she opposes her against my will</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>She did, my lord, when Valentine was here.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, and perversely she persevers so.</LINE><LINE>What might we do to make the girl forget</LINE><LINE>The love of Valentine and love Sir Thurio?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>The best way is to slander Valentine</LINE><LINE>With falsehood, cowardice and poor descent,</LINE><LINE>Three things that women highly hold in hate.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, but she'll think that it is spoke in hate.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, if his enemy deliver it:</LINE><LINE>Therefore it must with circumstance be spoken</LINE><LINE>By one whom she esteemeth as his friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then you must undertake to slander him.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>And that, my lord, I shall be loath to do:</LINE><LINE>'Tis an ill office for a gentleman,</LINE><LINE>Especially against his very friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Where your good word cannot advantage him,</LINE><LINE>Your slander never can endamage him;</LINE><LINE>Therefore the office is indifferent,</LINE><LINE>Being entreated to it by your friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>You have prevail'd, my lord; if I can do it</LINE><LINE>By ought that I can speak in his dispraise,</LINE><LINE>She shall not long continue love to him.</LINE><LINE>But say this weed her love from Valentine,</LINE><LINE>It follows not that she will love Sir Thurio.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Therefore, as you unwind her love from him,</LINE><LINE>Lest it should ravel and be good to none,</LINE><LINE>You must provide to bottom it on me;</LINE><LINE>Which must be done by praising me as much</LINE><LINE>As you in worth dispraise Sir Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>And, Proteus, we dare trust you in this kind,</LINE><LINE>Because we know, on Valentine's report,</LINE><LINE>You are already Love's firm votary</LINE><LINE>And cannot soon revolt and change your mind.</LINE><LINE>Upon this warrant shall you have access</LINE><LINE>Where you with Silvia may confer at large;</LINE><LINE>For she is lumpish, heavy, melancholy,</LINE><LINE>And, for your friend's sake, will be glad of you;</LINE><LINE>Where you may temper her by your persuasion</LINE><LINE>To hate young Valentine and love my friend.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>As much as I can do, I will effect:</LINE><LINE>But you, Sir Thurio, are not sharp enough;</LINE><LINE>You must lay lime to tangle her desires</LINE><LINE>By wailful sonnets, whose composed rhymes</LINE><LINE>Should be full-fraught with serviceable vows.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay,</LINE><LINE>Much is the force of heaven-bred poesy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Say that upon the altar of her beauty</LINE><LINE>You sacrifice your tears, your sighs, your heart:</LINE><LINE>Write till your ink be dry, and with your tears</LINE><LINE>Moist it again, and frame some feeling line</LINE><LINE>That may discover such integrity:</LINE><LINE>For Orpheus' lute was strung with poets' sinews,</LINE><LINE>Whose golden touch could soften steel and stones,</LINE><LINE>Make tigers tame and huge leviathans</LINE><LINE>Forsake unsounded deeps to dance on sands.</LINE><LINE>After your dire-lamenting elegies,</LINE><LINE>Visit by night your lady's chamber-window</LINE><LINE>With some sweet concert; to their instruments</LINE><LINE>Tune a deploring dump: the night's dead silence</LINE><LINE>Will well become such sweet-complaining grievance.</LINE><LINE>This, or else nothing, will inherit her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>This discipline shows thou hast been in love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>And thy advice this night I'll put in practise.</LINE><LINE>Therefore, sweet Proteus, my direction-giver,</LINE><LINE>Let us into the city presently</LINE><LINE>To sort some gentlemen well skill'd in music.</LINE><LINE>I have a sonnet that will serve the turn</LINE><LINE>To give the onset to thy good advice.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>About it, gentlemen!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>We'll wait upon your grace till after supper,</LINE><LINE>And afterward determine our proceedings.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Even now about it! I will pardon you.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE></ACT><ACT><TITLE>ACT IV</TITLE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE I.  The frontiers of Mantua. A forest.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter certain Outlaws</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Fellows, stand fast; I see a passenger.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>If there be ten, shrink not, but down with 'em.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter VALENTINE and SPEED</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about ye:</LINE><LINE>If not: we'll make you sit and rifle you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, we are undone; these are the villains</LINE><LINE>That all the travellers do fear so much.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>My friends,--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>That's not so, sir: we are your enemies.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Peace! we'll hear him.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, by my beard, will we, for he's a proper man.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then know that I have little wealth to lose:</LINE><LINE>A man I am cross'd with adversity;</LINE><LINE>My riches are these poor habiliments,</LINE><LINE>Of which if you should here disfurnish me,</LINE><LINE>You take the sum and substance that I have.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Whither travel you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>To Verona.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Whence came you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>From Milan.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Have you long sojourned there?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Some sixteen months, and longer might have stay'd,</LINE><LINE>If crooked fortune had not thwarted me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>What, were you banish'd thence?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I was.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>For what offence?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>For that which now torments me to rehearse:</LINE><LINE>I kill'd a man, whose death I much repent;</LINE><LINE>But yet I slew him manfully in fight,</LINE><LINE>Without false vantage or base treachery.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, ne'er repent it, if it were done so.</LINE><LINE>But were you banish'd for so small a fault?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I was, and held me glad of such a doom.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Have you the tongues?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>My youthful travel therein made me happy,</LINE><LINE>Or else I often had been miserable.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>By the bare scalp of Robin Hood's fat friar,</LINE><LINE>This fellow were a king for our wild faction!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>We'll have him. Sirs, a word.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SPEED</SPEAKER><LINE>Master, be one of them; it's an honourable kind of thievery.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Peace, villain!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Tell us this: have you any thing to take to?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Nothing but my fortune.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Know, then, that some of us are gentlemen,</LINE><LINE>Such as the fury of ungovern'd youth</LINE><LINE>Thrust from the company of awful men:</LINE><LINE>Myself was from Verona banished</LINE><LINE>For practising to steal away a lady,</LINE><LINE>An heir, and near allied unto the duke.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>And I from Mantua, for a gentleman,</LINE><LINE>Who, in my mood, I stabb'd unto the heart.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>And I for such like petty crimes as these,</LINE><LINE>But to the purpose--for we cite our faults,</LINE><LINE>That they may hold excus'd our lawless lives;</LINE><LINE>And partly, seeing you are beautified</LINE><LINE>With goodly shape and by your own report</LINE><LINE>A linguist and a man of such perfection</LINE><LINE>As we do in our quality much want--</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Indeed, because you are a banish'd man,</LINE><LINE>Therefore, above the rest, we parley to you:</LINE><LINE>Are you content to be our general?</LINE><LINE>To make a virtue of necessity</LINE><LINE>And live, as we do, in this wilderness?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>What say'st thou? wilt thou be of our consort?</LINE><LINE>Say ay, and be the captain of us all:</LINE><LINE>We'll do thee homage and be ruled by thee,</LINE><LINE>Love thee as our commander and our king.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>But if thou scorn our courtesy, thou diest.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou shalt not live to brag what we have offer'd.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I take your offer and will live with you,</LINE><LINE>Provided that you do no outrages</LINE><LINE>On silly women or poor passengers.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>No, we detest such vile base practises.</LINE><LINE>Come, go with us, we'll bring thee to our crews,</LINE><LINE>And show thee all the treasure we have got,</LINE><LINE>Which, with ourselves, all rest at thy dispose.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE II.  Milan. Outside the DUKE's palace, under SILVIA's chamber.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Already have I been false to Valentine</LINE><LINE>And now I must be as unjust to Thurio.</LINE><LINE>Under the colour of commending him,</LINE><LINE>I have access my own love to prefer:</LINE><LINE>But Silvia is too fair, too true, too holy,</LINE><LINE>To be corrupted with my worthless gifts.</LINE><LINE>When I protest true loyalty to her,</LINE><LINE>She twits me with my falsehood to my friend;</LINE><LINE>When to her beauty I commend my vows,</LINE><LINE>She bids me think how I have been forsworn</LINE><LINE>In breaking faith with Julia whom I loved:</LINE><LINE>And notwithstanding all her sudden quips,</LINE><LINE>The least whereof would quell a lover's hope,</LINE><LINE>Yet, spaniel-like, the more she spurns my love,</LINE><LINE>The more it grows and fawneth on her still.</LINE><LINE>But here comes Thurio: now must we to her window,</LINE><LINE>And give some evening music to her ear.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter THURIO and Musicians</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>How now, Sir Proteus, are you crept before us?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, gentle Thurio: for you know that love</LINE><LINE>Will creep in service where it cannot go.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, but I hope, sir, that you love not here.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir, but I do; or else I would be hence.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Who? Silvia?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, Silvia; for your sake.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>I thank you for your own. Now, gentlemen,</LINE><LINE>Let's tune, and to it lustily awhile.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter, at a distance, Host, and JULIA in boy's clothes</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Now, my young guest, methinks you're allycholly: I</LINE><LINE>pray you, why is it?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, mine host, because I cannot be merry.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, we'll have you merry: I'll bring you where</LINE><LINE>you shall hear music and see the gentleman that you asked for.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>But shall I hear him speak?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, that you shall.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>That will be music.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Music plays</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Hark, hark!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Is he among these?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay: but, peace! let's hear 'em.</LINE><SUBHEAD>SONG.</SUBHEAD><LINE>Who is Silvia? what is she,</LINE><LINE>That all our swains commend her?</LINE><LINE>Holy, fair and wise is she;</LINE><LINE>The heaven such grace did lend her,</LINE><LINE>That she might admired be.</LINE><LINE>Is she kind as she is fair?</LINE><LINE>For beauty lives with kindness.</LINE><LINE>Love doth to her eyes repair,</LINE><LINE>To help him of his blindness,</LINE><LINE>And, being help'd, inhabits there.</LINE><LINE>Then to Silvia let us sing,</LINE><LINE>That Silvia is excelling;</LINE><LINE>She excels each mortal thing</LINE><LINE>Upon the dull earth dwelling:</LINE><LINE>To her let us garlands bring.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>How now! are you sadder than you were before? How</LINE><LINE>do you, man? the music likes you not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>You mistake; the musician likes me not.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, my pretty youth?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>He plays false, father.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>How? out of tune on the strings?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Not so; but yet so false that he grieves my very</LINE><LINE>heart-strings.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>You have a quick ear.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, I would I were deaf; it makes me have a slow heart.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>I perceive you delight not in music.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Not a whit, when it jars so.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Hark, what fine change is in the music!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, that change is the spite.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>You would have them always play but one thing?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I would always have one play but one thing.</LINE><LINE>But, host, doth this Sir Proteus that we talk on</LINE><LINE>Often resort unto this gentlewoman?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>I tell you what Launce, his man, told me: he loved</LINE><LINE>her out of all nick.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Where is Launce?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Gone to seek his dog; which tomorrow, by his</LINE><LINE>master's command, he must carry for a present to his lady.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Peace! stand aside: the company parts.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Thurio, fear not you: I will so plead</LINE><LINE>That you shall say my cunning drift excels.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Where meet we?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>At Saint Gregory's well.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Farewell.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt THURIO and Musicians</STAGEDIR><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA above</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, good even to your ladyship.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I thank you for your music, gentlemen.</LINE><LINE>Who is that that spake?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>One, lady, if you knew his pure heart's truth,</LINE><LINE>You would quickly learn to know him by his voice.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, as I take it.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, gentle lady, and your servant.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What's your will?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That I may compass yours.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>You have your wish; my will is even this:</LINE><LINE>That presently you hie you home to bed.</LINE><LINE>Thou subtle, perjured, false, disloyal man!</LINE><LINE>Think'st thou I am so shallow, so conceitless,</LINE><LINE>To be seduced by thy flattery,</LINE><LINE>That hast deceived so many with thy vows?</LINE><LINE>Return, return, and make thy love amends.</LINE><LINE>For me, by this pale queen of night I swear,</LINE><LINE>I am so far from granting thy request</LINE><LINE>That I despise thee for thy wrongful suit,</LINE><LINE>And by and by intend to chide myself</LINE><LINE>Even for this time I spend in talking to thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I grant, sweet love, that I did love a lady;</LINE><LINE>But she is dead.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>        'Twere false, if I should speak it;</LINE><LINE>For I am sure she is not buried.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Say that she be; yet Valentine thy friend</LINE><LINE>Survives; to whom, thyself art witness,</LINE><LINE>I am betroth'd: and art thou not ashamed</LINE><LINE>To wrong him with thy importunacy?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I likewise hear that Valentine is dead.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And so suppose am I; for in his grave</LINE><LINE>Assure thyself my love is buried.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sweet lady, let me rake it from the earth.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Go to thy lady's grave and call hers thence,</LINE><LINE>Or, at the least, in hers sepulchre thine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  He heard not that.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, if your heart be so obdurate,</LINE><LINE>Vouchsafe me yet your picture for my love,</LINE><LINE>The picture that is hanging in your chamber;</LINE><LINE>To that I'll speak, to that I'll sigh and weep:</LINE><LINE>For since the substance of your perfect self</LINE><LINE>Is else devoted, I am but a shadow;</LINE><LINE>And to your shadow will I make true love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  If 'twere a substance, you would, sure,</LINE><LINE>deceive it,</LINE><LINE>And make it but a shadow, as I am.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I am very loath to be your idol, sir;</LINE><LINE>But since your falsehood shall become you well</LINE><LINE>To worship shadows and adore false shapes,</LINE><LINE>Send to me in the morning and I'll send it:</LINE><LINE>And so, good rest.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>As wretches have o'ernight</LINE><LINE>That wait for execution in the morn.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt PROTEUS and SILVIA severally</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Host, will you go?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>By my halidom, I was fast asleep.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Pray you, where lies Sir Proteus?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Host</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, at my house. Trust me, I think 'tis almost</LINE><LINE>day.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Not so; but it hath been the longest night</LINE><LINE>That e'er I watch'd and the most heaviest.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE III.  The same.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter EGLAMOUR</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>This is the hour that Madam Silvia</LINE><LINE>Entreated me to call and know her mind:</LINE><LINE>There's some great matter she'ld employ me in.</LINE><LINE>Madam, madam!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA above</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Who calls?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>Your servant and your friend;</LINE><LINE>One that attends your ladyship's command.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Eglamour, a thousand times good morrow.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>As many, worthy lady, to yourself:</LINE><LINE>According to your ladyship's impose,</LINE><LINE>I am thus early come to know what service</LINE><LINE>It is your pleasure to command me in.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O Eglamour, thou art a gentleman--</LINE><LINE>Think not I flatter, for I swear I do not--</LINE><LINE>Valiant, wise, remorseful, well accomplish'd:</LINE><LINE>Thou art not ignorant what dear good will</LINE><LINE>I bear unto the banish'd Valentine,</LINE><LINE>Nor how my father would enforce me marry</LINE><LINE>Vain Thurio, whom my very soul abhors.</LINE><LINE>Thyself hast loved; and I have heard thee say</LINE><LINE>No grief did ever come so near thy heart</LINE><LINE>As when thy lady and thy true love died,</LINE><LINE>Upon whose grave thou vow'dst pure chastity.</LINE><LINE>Sir Eglamour, I would to Valentine,</LINE><LINE>To Mantua, where I hear he makes abode;</LINE><LINE>And, for the ways are dangerous to pass,</LINE><LINE>I do desire thy worthy company,</LINE><LINE>Upon whose faith and honour I repose.</LINE><LINE>Urge not my father's anger, Eglamour,</LINE><LINE>But think upon my grief, a lady's grief,</LINE><LINE>And on the justice of my flying hence,</LINE><LINE>To keep me from a most unholy match,</LINE><LINE>Which heaven and fortune still rewards with plagues.</LINE><LINE>I do desire thee, even from a heart</LINE><LINE>As full of sorrows as the sea of sands,</LINE><LINE>To bear me company and go with me:</LINE><LINE>If not, to hide what I have said to thee,</LINE><LINE>That I may venture to depart alone.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, I pity much your grievances;</LINE><LINE>Which since I know they virtuously are placed,</LINE><LINE>I give consent to go along with you,</LINE><LINE>Recking as little what betideth me</LINE><LINE>As much I wish all good befortune you.</LINE><LINE>When will you go?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>This evening coming.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>Where shall I meet you?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>At Friar Patrick's cell,</LINE><LINE>Where I intend holy confession.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>I will not fail your ladyship. Good morrow, gentle lady.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Good morrow, kind Sir Eglamour.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt severally</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE IV.  The same.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter LAUNCE, with his his Dog</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>When a man's servant shall play the cur with him,</LINE><LINE>look you, it goes hard: one that I brought up of a</LINE><LINE>puppy; one that I saved from drowning, when three or</LINE><LINE>four of his blind brothers and sisters went to it.</LINE><LINE>I have taught him, even as one would say precisely,</LINE><LINE>'thus I would teach a dog.' I was sent to deliver</LINE><LINE>him as a present to Mistress Silvia from my master;</LINE><LINE>and I came no sooner into the dining-chamber but he</LINE><LINE>steps me to her trencher and steals her capon's leg:</LINE><LINE>O, 'tis a foul thing when a cur cannot keep himself</LINE><LINE>in all companies! I would have, as one should say,</LINE><LINE>one that takes upon him to be a dog indeed, to be,</LINE><LINE>as it were, a dog at all things. If I had not had</LINE><LINE>more wit than he, to take a fault upon me that he did,</LINE><LINE>I think verily he had been hanged for't; sure as I</LINE><LINE>live, he had suffered for't; you shall judge. He</LINE><LINE>thrusts me himself into the company of three or four</LINE><LINE>gentlemanlike dogs under the duke's table: he had</LINE><LINE>not been there--bless the mark!--a pissing while, but</LINE><LINE>all the chamber smelt him. 'Out with the dog!' says</LINE><LINE>one: 'What cur is that?' says another: 'Whip him</LINE><LINE>out' says the third: 'Hang him up' says the duke.</LINE><LINE>I, having been acquainted with the smell before,</LINE><LINE>knew it was Crab, and goes me to the fellow that</LINE><LINE>whips the dogs: 'Friend,' quoth I, 'you mean to whip</LINE><LINE>the dog?' 'Ay, marry, do I,' quoth he. 'You do him</LINE><LINE>the more wrong,' quoth I; ''twas I did the thing you</LINE><LINE>wot of.' He makes me no more ado, but whips me out</LINE><LINE>of the chamber. How many masters would do this for</LINE><LINE>his servant? Nay, I'll be sworn, I have sat in the</LINE><LINE>stocks for puddings he hath stolen, otherwise he had</LINE><LINE>been executed; I have stood on the pillory for geese</LINE><LINE>he hath killed, otherwise he had suffered for't.</LINE><LINE>Thou thinkest not of this now. Nay, I remember the</LINE><LINE>trick you served me when I took my leave of Madam</LINE><LINE>Silvia: did not I bid thee still mark me and do as I</LINE><LINE>do? when didst thou see me heave up my leg and make</LINE><LINE>water against a gentlewoman's farthingale? didst</LINE><LINE>thou ever see me do such a trick?</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS and JULIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Sebastian is thy name? I like thee well</LINE><LINE>And will employ thee in some service presently.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>In what you please: I'll do what I can.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I hope thou wilt.</LINE><STAGEDIR>To LAUNCE</STAGEDIR><LINE>How now, you whoreson peasant!</LINE><LINE>Where have you been these two days loitering?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, sir, I carried Mistress Silvia the dog you bade me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>And what says she to my little jewel?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Marry, she says your dog was a cur, and tells you</LINE><LINE>currish thanks is good enough for such a present.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But she received my dog?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>No, indeed, did she not: here have I brought him</LINE><LINE>back again.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What, didst thou offer her this from me?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>LAUNCE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, sir: the other squirrel was stolen from me by</LINE><LINE>the hangman boys in the market-place: and then I</LINE><LINE>offered her mine own, who is a dog as big as ten of</LINE><LINE>yours, and therefore the gift the greater.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Go get thee hence, and find my dog again,</LINE><LINE>Or ne'er return again into my sight.</LINE><LINE>Away, I say! stay'st thou to vex me here?</LINE><STAGEDIR>Exit LAUNCE</STAGEDIR><LINE>A slave, that still an end turns me to shame!</LINE><LINE>Sebastian, I have entertained thee,</LINE><LINE>Partly that I have need of such a youth</LINE><LINE>That can with some discretion do my business,</LINE><LINE>For 'tis no trusting to yond foolish lout,</LINE><LINE>But chiefly for thy face and thy behavior,</LINE><LINE>Which, if my augury deceive me not,</LINE><LINE>Witness good bringing up, fortune and truth:</LINE><LINE>Therefore know thou, for this I entertain thee.</LINE><LINE>Go presently and take this ring with thee,</LINE><LINE>Deliver it to Madam Silvia:</LINE><LINE>She loved me well deliver'd it to me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>It seems you loved not her, to leave her token.</LINE><LINE>She is dead, belike?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Not so; I think she lives.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Alas!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Why dost thou cry 'alas'?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I cannot choose</LINE><LINE>But pity her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Wherefore shouldst thou pity her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Because methinks that she loved you as well</LINE><LINE>As you do love your lady Silvia:</LINE><LINE>She dreams of him that has forgot her love;</LINE><LINE>You dote on her that cares not for your love.</LINE><LINE>'Tis pity love should be so contrary;</LINE><LINE>And thinking of it makes me cry 'alas!'</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Well, give her that ring and therewithal</LINE><LINE>This letter. That's her chamber. Tell my lady</LINE><LINE>I claim the promise for her heavenly picture.</LINE><LINE>Your message done, hie home unto my chamber,</LINE><LINE>Where thou shalt find me, sad and solitary.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>How many women would do such a message?</LINE><LINE>Alas, poor Proteus! thou hast entertain'd</LINE><LINE>A fox to be the shepherd of thy lambs.</LINE><LINE>Alas, poor fool! why do I pity him</LINE><LINE>That with his very heart despiseth me?</LINE><LINE>Because he loves her, he despiseth me;</LINE><LINE>Because I love him I must pity him.</LINE><LINE>This ring I gave him when he parted from me,</LINE><LINE>To bind him to remember my good will;</LINE><LINE>And now am I, unhappy messenger,</LINE><LINE>To plead for that which I would not obtain,</LINE><LINE>To carry that which I would have refused,</LINE><LINE>To praise his faith which I would have dispraised.</LINE><LINE>I am my master's true-confirmed love;</LINE><LINE>But cannot be true servant to my master,</LINE><LINE>Unless I prove false traitor to myself.</LINE><LINE>Yet will I woo for him, but yet so coldly</LINE><LINE>As, heaven it knows, I would not have him speed.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA, attended</STAGEDIR><LINE>Gentlewoman, good day! I pray you, be my mean</LINE><LINE>To bring me where to speak with Madam Silvia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What would you with her, if that I be she?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>If you be she, I do entreat your patience</LINE><LINE>To hear me speak the message I am sent on.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>From whom?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>From my master, Sir Proteus, madam.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O, he sends you for a picture.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ay, madam.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Ursula, bring my picture here.</LINE><LINE>Go give your master this: tell him from me,</LINE><LINE>One Julia, that his changing thoughts forget,</LINE><LINE>Would better fit his chamber than this shadow.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, please you peruse this letter.--</LINE><LINE>Pardon me, madam; I have unadvised</LINE><LINE>Deliver'd you a paper that I should not:</LINE><LINE>This is the letter to your ladyship.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I pray thee, let me look on that again.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>It may not be; good madam, pardon me.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>There, hold!</LINE><LINE>I will not look upon your master's lines:</LINE><LINE>I know they are stuff'd with protestations</LINE><LINE>And full of new-found oaths; which he will break</LINE><LINE>As easily as I do tear his paper.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, he sends your ladyship this ring.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>The more shame for him that he sends it me;</LINE><LINE>For I have heard him say a thousand times</LINE><LINE>His Julia gave it him at his departure.</LINE><LINE>Though his false finger have profaned the ring,</LINE><LINE>Mine shall not do his Julia so much wrong.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>She thanks you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>What say'st thou?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I thank you, madam, that you tender her.</LINE><LINE>Poor gentlewoman! my master wrongs her much.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Dost thou know her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Almost as well as I do know myself:</LINE><LINE>To think upon her woes I do protest</LINE><LINE>That I have wept a hundred several times.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Belike she thinks that Proteus hath forsook her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>I think she doth; and that's her cause of sorrow.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Is she not passing fair?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>She hath been fairer, madam, than she is:</LINE><LINE>When she did think my master loved her well,</LINE><LINE>She, in my judgment, was as fair as you:</LINE><LINE>But since she did neglect her looking-glass</LINE><LINE>And threw her sun-expelling mask away,</LINE><LINE>The air hath starved the roses in her cheeks</LINE><LINE>And pinch'd the lily-tincture of her face,</LINE><LINE>That now she is become as black as I.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>How tall was she?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>About my stature; for at Pentecost,</LINE><LINE>When all our pageants of delight were play'd,</LINE><LINE>Our youth got me to play the woman's part,</LINE><LINE>And I was trimm'd in Madam Julia's gown,</LINE><LINE>Which served me as fit, by all men's judgments,</LINE><LINE>As if the garment had been made for me:</LINE><LINE>Therefore I know she is about my height.</LINE><LINE>And at that time I made her weep agood,</LINE><LINE>For I did play a lamentable part:</LINE><LINE>Madam, 'twas Ariadne passioning</LINE><LINE>For Theseus' perjury and unjust flight;</LINE><LINE>Which I so lively acted with my tears</LINE><LINE>That my poor mistress, moved therewithal,</LINE><LINE>Wept bitterly; and would I might be dead</LINE><LINE>If I in thought felt not her very sorrow!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>She is beholding to thee, gentle youth.</LINE><LINE>Alas, poor lady, desolate and left!</LINE><LINE>I weep myself to think upon thy words.</LINE><LINE>Here, youth, there is my purse; I give thee this</LINE><LINE>For thy sweet mistress' sake, because thou lovest her.</LINE><LINE>Farewell.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit SILVIA, with attendants</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And she shall thank you for't, if e'er you know her.</LINE><LINE>A virtuous gentlewoman, mild and beautiful</LINE><LINE>I hope my master's suit will be but cold,</LINE><LINE>Since she respects my mistress' love so much.</LINE><LINE>Alas, how love can trifle with itself!</LINE><LINE>Here is her picture: let me see; I think,</LINE><LINE>If I had such a tire, this face of mine</LINE><LINE>Were full as lovely as is this of hers:</LINE><LINE>And yet the painter flatter'd her a little,</LINE><LINE>Unless I flatter with myself too much.</LINE><LINE>Her hair is auburn, mine is perfect yellow:</LINE><LINE>If that be all the difference in his love,</LINE><LINE>I'll get me such a colour'd periwig.</LINE><LINE>Her eyes are grey as glass, and so are mine:</LINE><LINE>Ay, but her forehead's low, and mine's as high.</LINE><LINE>What should it be that he respects in her</LINE><LINE>But I can make respective in myself,</LINE><LINE>If this fond Love were not a blinded god?</LINE><LINE>Come, shadow, come and take this shadow up,</LINE><LINE>For 'tis thy rival. O thou senseless form,</LINE><LINE>Thou shalt be worshipp'd, kiss'd, loved and adored!</LINE><LINE>And, were there sense in his idolatry,</LINE><LINE>My substance should be statue in thy stead.</LINE><LINE>I'll use thee kindly for thy mistress' sake,</LINE><LINE>That used me so; or else, by Jove I vow,</LINE><LINE>I should have scratch'd out your unseeing eyes</LINE><LINE>To make my master out of love with thee!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE></ACT><ACT><TITLE>ACT V</TITLE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE I.  Milan. An abbey.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter EGLAMOUR</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>The sun begins to gild the western sky;</LINE><LINE>And now it is about the very hour</LINE><LINE>That Silvia, at Friar Patrick's cell, should meet me.</LINE><LINE>She will not fail, for lovers break not hours,</LINE><LINE>Unless it be to come before their time;</LINE><LINE>So much they spur their expedition.</LINE><LINE>See where she comes.</LINE><STAGEDIR>Enter SILVIA</STAGEDIR><LINE>Lady, a happy evening!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Amen, amen! Go on, good Eglamour,</LINE><LINE>Out at the postern by the abbey-wall:</LINE><LINE>I fear I am attended by some spies.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>EGLAMOUR</SPEAKER><LINE>Fear not: the forest is not three leagues off;</LINE><LINE>If we recover that, we are sure enough.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE II.  The same. The DUKE's palace.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter THURIO, PROTEUS, and JULIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Proteus, what says Silvia to my suit?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>O, sir, I find her milder than she was;</LINE><LINE>And yet she takes exceptions at your person.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What, that my leg is too long?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>No; that it is too little.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>I'll wear a boot, to make it somewhat rounder.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  But love will not be spurr'd to what</LINE><LINE>it loathes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What says she to my face?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>She says it is a fair one.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay then, the wanton lies; my face is black.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But pearls are fair; and the old saying is,</LINE><LINE>Black men are pearls in beauteous ladies' eyes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  'Tis true; such pearls as put out</LINE><LINE>ladies' eyes;</LINE><LINE>For I had rather wink than look on them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>How likes she my discourse?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Ill, when you talk of war.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>But well, when I discourse of love and peace?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  But better, indeed, when you hold your peace.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What says she to my valour?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>O, sir, she makes no doubt of that.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  She needs not, when she knows it cowardice.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>What says she to my birth?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That you are well derived.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  True; from a gentleman to a fool.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Considers she my possessions?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>O, ay; and pities them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Wherefore?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  That such an ass should owe them.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>That they are out by lease.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Here comes the duke.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter DUKE</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>How now, Sir Proteus! how now, Thurio!</LINE><LINE>Which of you saw Sir Eglamour of late?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Not I.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Nor I.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Saw you my daughter?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Neither.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why then,</LINE><LINE>She's fled unto that peasant Valentine;</LINE><LINE>And Eglamour is in her company.</LINE><LINE>'Tis true; for Friar Laurence met them both,</LINE><LINE>As he in penance wander'd through the forest;</LINE><LINE>Him he knew well, and guess'd that it was she,</LINE><LINE>But, being mask'd, he was not sure of it;</LINE><LINE>Besides, she did intend confession</LINE><LINE>At Patrick's cell this even; and there she was not;</LINE><LINE>These likelihoods confirm her flight from hence.</LINE><LINE>Therefore, I pray you, stand not to discourse,</LINE><LINE>But mount you presently and meet with me</LINE><LINE>Upon the rising of the mountain-foot</LINE><LINE>That leads towards Mantua, whither they are fled:</LINE><LINE>Dispatch, sweet gentlemen, and follow me.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, this it is to be a peevish girl,</LINE><LINE>That flies her fortune when it follows her.</LINE><LINE>I'll after, more to be revenged on Eglamour</LINE><LINE>Than for the love of reckless Silvia.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>And I will follow, more for Silvia's love</LINE><LINE>Than hate of Eglamour that goes with her.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And I will follow, more to cross that love</LINE><LINE>Than hate for Silvia that is gone for love.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exit</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE III.  The frontiers of Mantua. The forest.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter Outlaws with SILVIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, come,</LINE><LINE>Be patient; we must bring you to our captain.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>A thousand more mischances than this one</LINE><LINE>Have learn'd me how to brook this patiently.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Second Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, bring her away.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Where is the gentleman that was with her?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Third Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Being nimble-footed, he hath outrun us,</LINE><LINE>But Moyses and Valerius follow him.</LINE><LINE>Go thou with her to the west end of the wood;</LINE><LINE>There is our captain: we'll follow him that's fled;</LINE><LINE>The thicket is beset; he cannot 'scape.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>First Outlaw</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, I must bring you to our captain's cave:</LINE><LINE>Fear not; he bears an honourable mind,</LINE><LINE>And will not use a woman lawlessly.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O Valentine, this I endure for thee!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE><SCENE><TITLE>SCENE IV.  Another part of the forest.</TITLE><STAGEDIR>Enter VALENTINE</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>How use doth breed a habit in a man!</LINE><LINE>This shadowy desert, unfrequented woods,</LINE><LINE>I better brook than flourishing peopled towns:</LINE><LINE>Here can I sit alone, unseen of any,</LINE><LINE>And to the nightingale's complaining notes</LINE><LINE>Tune my distresses and record my woes.</LINE><LINE>O thou that dost inhabit in my breast,</LINE><LINE>Leave not the mansion so long tenantless,</LINE><LINE>Lest, growing ruinous, the building fall</LINE><LINE>And leave no memory of what it was!</LINE><LINE>Repair me with thy presence, Silvia;</LINE><LINE>Thou gentle nymph, cherish thy forlorn swain!</LINE><LINE>What halloing and what stir is this to-day?</LINE><LINE>These are my mates, that make their wills their law,</LINE><LINE>Have some unhappy passenger in chase.</LINE><LINE>They love me well; yet I have much to do</LINE><LINE>To keep them from uncivil outrages.</LINE><LINE>Withdraw thee, Valentine: who's this comes here?</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter PROTEUS, SILVIA, and JULIA</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Madam, this service I have done for you,</LINE><LINE>Though you respect not aught your servant doth,</LINE><LINE>To hazard life and rescue you from him</LINE><LINE>That would have forced your honour and your love;</LINE><LINE>Vouchsafe me, for my meed, but one fair look;</LINE><LINE>A smaller boon than this I cannot beg</LINE><LINE>And less than this, I am sure, you cannot give.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  How like a dream is this I see and hear!</LINE><LINE>Love, lend me patience to forbear awhile.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O miserable, unhappy that I am!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Unhappy were you, madam, ere I came;</LINE><LINE>But by my coming I have made you happy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>By thy approach thou makest me most unhappy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE><STAGEDIR>Aside</STAGEDIR>  And me, when he approacheth to your presence.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Had I been seized by a hungry lion,</LINE><LINE>I would have been a breakfast to the beast,</LINE><LINE>Rather than have false Proteus rescue me.</LINE><LINE>O, Heaven be judge how I love Valentine,</LINE><LINE>Whose life's as tender to me as my soul!</LINE><LINE>And full as much, for more there cannot be,</LINE><LINE>I do detest false perjured Proteus.</LINE><LINE>Therefore be gone; solicit me no more.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>What dangerous action, stood it next to death,</LINE><LINE>Would I not undergo for one calm look!</LINE><LINE>O, 'tis the curse in love, and still approved,</LINE><LINE>When women cannot love where they're beloved!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>When Proteus cannot love where he's beloved.</LINE><LINE>Read over Julia's heart, thy first best love,</LINE><LINE>For whose dear sake thou didst then rend thy faith</LINE><LINE>Into a thousand oaths; and all those oaths</LINE><LINE>Descended into perjury, to love me.</LINE><LINE>Thou hast no faith left now, unless thou'dst two;</LINE><LINE>And that's far worse than none; better have none</LINE><LINE>Than plural faith which is too much by one:</LINE><LINE>Thou counterfeit to thy true friend!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>In love</LINE><LINE>Who respects friend?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>All men but Proteus.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Nay, if the gentle spirit of moving words</LINE><LINE>Can no way change you to a milder form,</LINE><LINE>I'll woo you like a soldier, at arms' end,</LINE><LINE>And love you 'gainst the nature of love,--force ye.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>SILVIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O heaven!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>I'll force thee yield to my desire.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Ruffian, let go that rude uncivil touch,</LINE><LINE>Thou friend of an ill fashion!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Valentine!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou common friend, that's without faith or love,</LINE><LINE>For such is a friend now; treacherous man!</LINE><LINE>Thou hast beguiled my hopes; nought but mine eye</LINE><LINE>Could have persuaded me: now I dare not say</LINE><LINE>I have one friend alive; thou wouldst disprove me.</LINE><LINE>Who should be trusted, when one's own right hand</LINE><LINE>Is perjured to the bosom? Proteus,</LINE><LINE>I am sorry I must never trust thee more,</LINE><LINE>But count the world a stranger for thy sake.</LINE><LINE>The private wound is deepest: O time most accurst,</LINE><LINE>'Mongst all foes that a friend should be the worst!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>My shame and guilt confounds me.</LINE><LINE>Forgive me, Valentine: if hearty sorrow</LINE><LINE>Be a sufficient ransom for offence,</LINE><LINE>I tender 't here; I do as truly suffer</LINE><LINE>As e'er I did commit.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Then I am paid;</LINE><LINE>And once again I do receive thee honest.</LINE><LINE>Who by repentance is not satisfied</LINE><LINE>Is nor of heaven nor earth, for these are pleased.</LINE><LINE>By penitence the Eternal's wrath's appeased:</LINE><LINE>And, that my love may appear plain and free,</LINE><LINE>All that was mine in Silvia I give thee.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O me unhappy!</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Swoons</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Look to the boy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Why, boy! why, wag! how now! what's the matter?</LINE><LINE>Look up; speak.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O good sir, my master charged me to deliver a ring</LINE><LINE>to Madam Silvia, which, out of my neglect, was never done.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Where is that ring, boy?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Here 'tis; this is it.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>How! let me see:</LINE><LINE>Why, this is the ring I gave to Julia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>O, cry you mercy, sir, I have mistook:</LINE><LINE>This is the ring you sent to Silvia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>But how camest thou by this ring? At my depart</LINE><LINE>I gave this unto Julia.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And Julia herself did give it me;</LINE><LINE>And Julia herself hath brought it hither.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>How! Julia!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>Behold her that gave aim to all thy oaths,</LINE><LINE>And entertain'd 'em deeply in her heart.</LINE><LINE>How oft hast thou with perjury cleft the root!</LINE><LINE>O Proteus, let this habit make thee blush!</LINE><LINE>Be thou ashamed that I have took upon me</LINE><LINE>Such an immodest raiment, if shame live</LINE><LINE>In a disguise of love:</LINE><LINE>It is the lesser blot, modesty finds,</LINE><LINE>Women to change their shapes than men their minds.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Than men their minds! 'tis true.</LINE><LINE>O heaven! were man</LINE><LINE>But constant, he were perfect. That one error</LINE><LINE>Fills him with faults; makes him run through all the sins:</LINE><LINE>Inconstancy falls off ere it begins.</LINE><LINE>What is in Silvia's face, but I may spy</LINE><LINE>More fresh in Julia's with a constant eye?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Come, come, a hand from either:</LINE><LINE>Let me be blest to make this happy close;</LINE><LINE>'Twere pity two such friends should be long foes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>PROTEUS</SPEAKER><LINE>Bear witness, Heaven, I have my wish for ever.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>JULIA</SPEAKER><LINE>And I mine.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Enter Outlaws, with DUKE and THURIO</STAGEDIR><SPEECH><SPEAKER>Outlaws</SPEAKER><LINE>A prize, a prize, a prize!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Forbear, forbear, I say! it is my lord the duke.</LINE><LINE>Your grace is welcome to a man disgraced,</LINE><LINE>Banished Valentine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Valentine!</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Yonder is Silvia; and Silvia's mine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thurio, give back, or else embrace thy death;</LINE><LINE>Come not within the measure of my wrath;</LINE><LINE>Do not name Silvia thine; if once again,</LINE><LINE>Verona shall not hold thee. Here she stands;</LINE><LINE>Take but possession of her with a touch:</LINE><LINE>I dare thee but to breathe upon my love.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>THURIO</SPEAKER><LINE>Sir Valentine, I care not for her, I;</LINE><LINE>I hold him but a fool that will endanger</LINE><LINE>His body for a girl that loves him not:</LINE><LINE>I claim her not, and therefore she is thine.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>The more degenerate and base art thou,</LINE><LINE>To make such means for her as thou hast done</LINE><LINE>And leave her on such slight conditions.</LINE><LINE>Now, by the honour of my ancestry,</LINE><LINE>I do applaud thy spirit, Valentine,</LINE><LINE>And think thee worthy of an empress' love:</LINE><LINE>Know then, I here forget all former griefs,</LINE><LINE>Cancel all grudge, repeal thee home again,</LINE><LINE>Plead a new state in thy unrivall'd merit,</LINE><LINE>To which I thus subscribe: Sir Valentine,</LINE><LINE>Thou art a gentleman and well derived;</LINE><LINE>Take thou thy Silvia, for thou hast deserved her.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I thank your grace; the gift hath made me happy.</LINE><LINE>I now beseech you, for your daughter's sake,</LINE><LINE>To grant one boom that I shall ask of you.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>I grant it, for thine own, whate'er it be.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>These banish'd men that I have kept withal</LINE><LINE>Are men endued with worthy qualities:</LINE><LINE>Forgive them what they have committed here</LINE><LINE>And let them be recall'd from their exile:</LINE><LINE>They are reformed, civil, full of good</LINE><LINE>And fit for great employment, worthy lord.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>Thou hast prevail'd; I pardon them and thee:</LINE><LINE>Dispose of them as thou know'st their deserts.</LINE><LINE>Come, let us go: we will include all jars</LINE><LINE>With triumphs, mirth and rare solemnity.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>And, as we walk along, I dare be bold</LINE><LINE>With our discourse to make your grace to smile.</LINE><LINE>What think you of this page, my lord?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>I think the boy hath grace in him; he blushes.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>I warrant you, my lord, more grace than boy.</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>DUKE</SPEAKER><LINE>What mean you by that saying?</LINE></SPEECH><SPEECH><SPEAKER>VALENTINE</SPEAKER><LINE>Please you, I'll tell you as we pass along,</LINE><LINE>That you will wonder what hath fortuned.</LINE><LINE>Come, Proteus; 'tis your penance but to hear</LINE><LINE>The story of your loves discovered:</LINE><LINE>That done, our day of marriage shall be yours;</LINE><LINE>One feast, one house, one mutual happiness.</LINE></SPEECH><STAGEDIR>Exeunt</STAGEDIR></SCENE></ACT></PLAY>