THE
CONSPIRACIE
.
Actus
1.
Scena
1
Enter
two
servants
preparing
for
a
Banquet
.
1
SO
,
dispatch
,
dispatch
,
what
wines
are
those
?
2
The
late
present
from
the
Merchants
.
1
Tis
well
.
Enter
Polyander
.
Pol.
Are
all
things
ready
fellowes
?
the
King's
on
entring
.
1
They
are
my
Lord
.
Enter
King
,
Polyander
,
Menetius
,
Comastes
,
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Eurylochus
attendants
.
King
.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
no
happinesse
like
the
Fooles
,
Comastes
?
Com.
No
,
none
Sir
,
hees
mirth
it selfe
,
and
the
cause
of
it
in
others
,
they
say
all
pleasure
is
a
shadow
,
then
that
which
wee
enjoy
is
but
the
shadow
of
a
shadow
,
hardly
the
Picture
of
what
he
imbraces
;
our
Delights
are
faint
,
thwarted
by
the
Conscience
,
started
with
feares
,
and
after
an
hower
of
pleasure
a
weeke
of
repentance
;
in
which
time
wee
live
by
rule
,
and
not
by
custome
,
laugh
not
though
the
jest
bee
good
,
nor
rage
though
at
a
just
cause
;
but
sickly
whisper
out
our
sayings
,
as
though
they
were
our
last
and
eate
our
chickens
with
the
curtaines
drawne
,
when
the
Foole
lusts
with
his
whole
soule
too
,
and
sinnes
till
hee's
weary
,
knowes
no
Conscience
but
his
want
that
way
;
nor
remorse
but
disability
.
King
.
Hah
,
ha
,
ha
.
Com.
Nature
never
shewed
her
liberality
more
than
to
those
she
was
sparing
of
her
best
gifts
to
,
shee
houses
wisedome
in
a
body
full
of
decayes
,
and
requires
her
whole
strength
to
beare
off
the
ruine
,
measures
his
legges
with
the
spiders
,
gives
him
pale
and
wan
lookes
,
scarce
altered
from
the
earth
hee
was
made
of
,
where
to
the
Ideot
she
bestowes
a
body
equall
with
the
bulke
of
trees
,
and
armes
as
Thunder-proofe
,
makes
him
a
strong
,
a
large
,
and
healthy
foole
.
King
.
Ha
,
ha
;
ha
.
Ara.
Fit
Lectures
for
such
a
Sholler
.
King
.
Well
Comastes
,
thou
shalt
not
want
for
a
coate
,
if
that
will
doe't
.
Com.
Send
me
a
minde
to
with
it
,
and
you
have
not
a
greater
present
for
your
neighbour
Princes
.
King
.
Come
my
Lords
,
let's
sit
and
fill
up
our
cups
,
Make
them
like
our
joyes
,
still
full
,
and
flowing
,
Thus
it
should
be
my
Lords
in
a
State
that
Knowes
no
troubles
,
let
unhappy
Princes
,
Whom
losses
doe
afflict
,
and
feares
affright
,
Make
yearely
feasts
:
But
wee
,
whose
even
affaires
Doe
follow
one
another
,
and
doe
keepe
There
just
Periods
,
though
the
reines
are
loose
And
their
guide
sleepe
,
seeming
rather
,
so
to
Have
fallen
out
,
than
so
caus'd
;
each
day
shall
Bee
a
triumph
,
each
houre
a
feast
.
Ara.
Wee
may
chance
to
finde
one
out
for
Funeralls
.
King
.
A
health
to
all
,
and
a
long
peace
.
Com.
You
are
mellancholly
Aratus
.
claps
him
somewhat
rudely
.
Ara.
You
are
rude
Comastes
,
and
let
me
tell
you
—
Pol.
His
Lordship
is
one
of
those
which
say
their
Prayers
backward
for
the
State
,
and
ends
in
black
wishes
.
Ara.
You
are
the
Foxes
that
thrive
by
it
.
Phro.
Aratus
your
anger
is
unseasonable
,
and
the
King
marks
it
.
King
.
How
now
Aratus
,
whats
the
matter
?
our
table
should
know
no
frownes
,
then
least
of
all
when
we
our selfe
forbeares
them
.
Ara.
Royall
Sir
I
aske
your
pardon
,
hee
wakt
mee
something
rudely
,
and
got
a
froward
answer
.
King
.
What
,
all
dead
,
fill
another
round
,
our
wine
moves
not
,
here
Polyander
,
to
thee
,
what
thinkst
thou
of
Comastes
happines
?
Pol.
I
thinke
Sir
,
'tis
as
dull
as
foolish
,
there
cannot
bee
a
sence
of
pleasure
,
where
there
is
so
little
sence
.
Greatnesse
is
the
center
of
all
happinesse
,
and
felicity
like
our
lands
,
at
first
is
tyed
to
the
Crowne
,
kings
come
nere
unto
the
gods
,
and
are
like
them
both
in
power
and
pleasure
,
doe
command
all
,
enjoy
all
,
are
miserable
onely
in
too
much
,
and
want
but
what
to
wish
for
,
this
is
the
dazeling
happinesse
.
Tis
vaine
therefore
to
preferre
private
joyes
before
the
Crowne-pleasures
,
the
King
may
throw
by
his
greatnesse
when
he
please
,
and
be
poorely
happy
,
the
beggar
will
nere
sigh
unto
a
Scepter
.
King
.
Why
I
Polyander
ther's
some
life
in
this
,
a
little
heaven
even
in
the
apprehension
.
Aratus
art
not
thou
of
this
opinion
?
Ara.
Not
I
Sir
,
nor
of
my
Lord
the
Foole's
there
,
Kings
are
more
miserable
than
they
seeme
Happy
,
flattered
by
themselves
and
others
Into
a
Ioy
that
is
not
,
and
what
they
Feele
,
they
rather
doe
beleeve
,
than
finde
so
.
Yet
I
grant
too
,
a
King
may
be
happy
But
never
as
a
King
.
Felicity
Is
a
purchase
,
and
no
inheritance
,
Nor
hath
the
prerogative
more
than
one
Life
in't
neither
,
it
dies
still
with
the
buyer
,
Troubles
are
the
good
kings
profession
,
In
the
warres
the
first
dart
is
throwne
at
him
,
Where
his
happinesse
is
in
a
glorious
death
,
Or
else
his
God-like
rayes
pluckt
from
him
By
some
accursed
hand
,
and
so
falls
lesse
Happie
,
being
but
wishd
so
by
a
poore
Revenge
hee
knowes
not
.
Com.
Very
grave
and
unseasonable
,
thus
your
Lordship
gets
the
reputation
of
singularity
,
which
the
vulgar
suspect
to
be
wisedome
.
Ara.
Sir
,
you
see
how
this
place
and
my
freenes
are
injurd
.
King
.
Mirth
,
onely
mirth
Aratus
,
he
meanes
'twould
better
become
a
counsaile
than
a
banquet
.
Enter
Timeus
.
King
.
Timeus
welcome
,
nay
,
keepe
your
seates
,
would
thou
hadst
beene
partaker
of
our
sports
.
Time.
When
that
my
actions
or
mine
age
shall
make
mee
worthy
of
your
ease
and
pleasures
,
I
shall
be
a
thankefull
sharer
,
but
till
then
,
your
troubles
will
become
me
better
than
your
sports
,
and
cares
will
sit
more
lovely
on
my
brow
than
roses
.
Sir
,
those
that
are
about
you
seeke
to
drowne
your
virtues
.
Ara.
Your
Lordship
meanes
none
here
?
Time.
I
name
none
here
my
Lord
.
King
.
Nay
Timeus
thou
nere
lookst
friendly
on
our
pleasures
Time.
I
must
confesse
Sir
,
I
had
rather
see
you
bloody
than
thus
wet
,
nor
are
my
wishes
impious
:
Poliander
?
Pol.
My
Lord
:
Time.
How
basely
that
smile
becomes
thee
:
I
had
Rather
thou
hadst
answered
me
with
a
blow
,
Than
such
a
looke
:
I
thought
to
have
ask'd
thee
Something
,
but
I
see
thou
art
unworthy
Of
a
brave
demand
.
Thy
skill
lies
onely
In
the
curiosity
of
a
meale
.
To
say
at
the
first
touch
a
th
tongue
,
this
is
A
Chian
,
this
a
Falernian
wine
.
Streight
by
the
colour
of
the
flesh
to
know
Whether
the
fowle
were
cram'd
,
or
whether
fed
:
Prithee
Polyander
how
sat
the
wind
When
this
Bore
was
slaine
?
were
not
these
apples
Pulld
the
Moone
increasing
?
Degenerate
,
I
have
seene
thee
put
thy
face
into
a
frowne
,
And
wer't
so
constant
in
that
looke
,
as
if
Thou
hadst
no
other
.
Pol.
Sir
,
when
you
shall
finde
or
make
a
cause
,
Ile
put
them
on
againe
,
here
theyle
but
sowre
the
entertainment
.
Com.
You
see
,
my
Lord
,
they
are
not
drownd
,
they
live
still
under
water
.
Time.
Like
thine
,
beast
.
King
.
Prithee
Timeus
let
us
enjoy
our
mirth
while
the
gods
give
it
,
the
time
will
come
that
we
shall
wish
for
it
,
and
not
have
it
;
on
my
Conscience
thou
wishest
for
enemies
that
thou
mightst
cut
them
off
.
Tim.
I
am
sorry
I
have
offended
against
your
mirth
,
twas
not
my
intent
,
I
came
to
bring
you
newes
.
King
.
Newes
,
what
is't
good
?
Tim.
Tis
as
you
shall
esteeme
on't
,
Sir
,
Theres
a
Stranger
Prince
arriv'd
.
King
Hither
?
Tim.
Yes
Sir
,
his
visits
forc't
by
a
storme
as
he
pretends
.
King
.
What ere
the
occasion
bee
,
hee
shall
bee
welcome
.
The
time's
farre
spent
.
Aratus
it
shall
be
thy
imployment
,
from
us
fairely
salute
the
Prince
,
and
tell
him
though
the
Seas
have
been
unfriendly
,
the
land
shall
court
him
.
Ara.
Great
sir
you
highly
honor
me
.
Exeunt
.
King
,
Timeus
,
Pol
Com.
Men
.
attendants
.
Phro.
So
,
now
we
have
time
to
speake
,
what
thinkst
thou
Aratus
of
these
passages
?
Ara.
Well
,
bravely
well
.
Euril.
Your
speech
strooke
desperatly
at
the
King
,
hee
will
not
swallow
it
without
some
touch
of
Iealousie
.
Ara.
Tis
no
matter
,
hee
cannot
crosse
us
now
,
None
but
the
Gods
can
do't
,
nor
they
without
a
miracle
,
great
as
was
their
providence
Which
hitherto
hath
sav'd
us
,
we
have
not
Ta'ne
so
many
yeares
to
build
a
worke
up
And
then
to
have
it
ruind
with
a
push
:
No
,
he
that
will
shak't
,
must
first
orethrow
A
Kingdome
,
a
Prince
,
a
Law
,
so
large
The
extents
are
,
nere
did
plot
thrive
like
it
:
It
has
infected
with
the
holy
sore
The
greatest
part
o'th
Realme
,
and
catches
daily
Like
some
unheard
of
new
opinions
Streigthned
at
first
,
and
prisoned
in
the
brests
Of
two
or
three
,
gaines
strength
by
time
,
and
eares
,
And
dayly
fed
by
curiosity
,
Thrusts
out
at
last
the
old
and
most
receiv'd
,
And
growes
the
whole
religion
of
the
place
.
When
we
have
calld
our
party
forth
,
the
worke
Will
seeme
done
,
the
thinne
numbers
which
are
left
Not
deserving
the
name
of
enemies
.
The
Tyrant
then
will
see
himselfe
no
more
A
Klng
,
onely
the
wretched
cause
of
warre
His
power
being
ravishd
from
him
.
Phro.
While
the
fruit
thus
ripe
,
why
doe
we
let
it
grow
?
Eur.
And
spoile
perhaps
.
Ara.
We
will
not
longer
,
onely
a
little
ceremony
detaines
us
,
to
crowne
our
King
,
that
past
,
our
actions
,
and
our
thoughts
shall
then
contend
in
motion
.
Euri.
How
sped
your
visit
to
the
young
Prince
?
Ara.
Most
happily
,
Oh
had
you
seene
with
me
there
the
deare
cause
Of
this
our
danger
,
you
would
have
thought
it
So
no
more
,
but
stood
contemning
life
,
Thinking
your
blood
ill
stord
within
your
veines
,
When
that
his
service
calld
it
.
Sure
twas
some
such
Shape
and
sweetnesse
,
which
first
slav'd
men
And
gain'd
a
Rule
before
there
was
a
kingdome
.
Eura.
You
forgot
your
message
to
the
Prince
.
Ara.
O
tis
true
,
our
next
part
is
to
delight
our selves
in
doing
something
,
pray
beare
me
company
,
we
may
get
thankes
for
it
another
day
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Harpastes
.
Har.
Devill
,
whether
wilt
thou
hurle
mee
?
the
ship
Sunke
under
so
much
ill
,
nor
can
the
earth
Beare
us
both
together
,
the
greatest
hills
Presse
not
her
face
with
halfe
that
load
;
one
thought
Of
goodnesse
made
me
lighter
than
the
waves
And
at
an
instant
taught
me
how
to
swim
.
Enter
Metampus
to
him
.
Mel.
Harpastes
?
Har.
Melampus
?
Mel.
Are
wee
onely
scap'd
?
Har.
I
hope
so
.
Mel.
Then
the
storme
has
plaid
the
hangman
,
and
sav'd
us
innocent
.
Har.
Innocent
?
what's
that
?
it
has
sav'd
us
so
much
labor
and
a
broken
head
perhaps
.
Mel.
The
wracke
was
great
and
full
of
horror
.
Har.
How
the
rogues
praid
,
and
rored
above
the
waves
,
vowed
whole
heards
of
offerings
for
their
safetie
.
But
Neptune
sav'd
em
charges
and
tooke
the
verger
beasts
.
Mel.
Wee
scapt
miraculously
.
Har.
I
hope
youle
burne
no
bullocks
to
the
Sea
.
Mel.
No
,
my
vowes
were
of
another
nature
,
I
vowd
To
live
well
,
and
chang'd
my
bloody
purpose
.
Har.
Thou
didst
not
meane
in
earnest
?
Mell.
I
did
then
,
but
I
no
sooner
toucht
the
shore
and
safety
but
my
old
thoughts
returnd
.
Har.
Come
weele
goe
claime
our
hire
,
and
sweare
wee
kild
him
before
the
storme
,
our
fellowes
dead
pay
will
fall
to
us
,
weele
demand
for
losses
,
I
,
and
our
dangers
too
.
Mel.
If
mine
eyes
deceive
mee
not
,
here
comes
one
will
deny
the
payment
.
Har.
Tis
he
,
be
resolute
and
follow
me
.
Enter
Pallantus
to
them
.
Pall.
How
now
friends
,
amazde
at
what's
past
:
dangers
ore-blowne
are
dreames
,
no
more
to
bee
esteem'd
of
,
within
this
houre
you
would
have
given
a
world
to
stand
thus
,
were
it
yours
,
let
not
smaller
losses
then
afflict
you
,
the
greatest
goods
are
trifles
after
such
deliverance
,
our
birth
day
was
not
halfe
to
us
so
happie
as
is
this
minute
,
then
wee
had
no
sense
of
life
,
now
we
perceive
and
ioy
in't
.
They
assault
him
and
he
kills
them
.
Pall.
What
mov'd
these
villaines
hatred
?
sure
they
know
me
not
,
nor
did
I
ere
see
them
before
this
voyage
,
they
could
not
hope
for
money
,
there's
more
in't
,
heres
a
paper
which
He
searches
thē
.
may
chance
to
tell
me
something
,
by
this
I
see
they
are
murtherers
,
what's
here
,
a
beard
and
haire
?
blacke
patches
,
sure
tis
their
trade
they
are
so
furnish'd
,
both
of
the
same
profession
.
A
Letter
.
I
am
glad
to
heare
you
have
found
Pallantus
,
receive
this
man
the
bearer
into
your
company
and
councell
,
and
if
your
secret
practises
faile
you
,
assault
him
openly
,
and
by
violence
performe
the
murther
:
let
the
one
or
other
bee
done
speedily
,
my
imployments
here
for
you
,
are
many
and
instant
.
Your
Lord
and
friend
,
Timeus
.
Art
thou
the
Lord
?
my
wonder
then
is
done
,
Thy
treacheries
is
greater
than
thy
hate
,
And
that
too
is
something
more
than
malice
Above
the
search
of
innocence
,
a
knot
Unto
the
subtilest
Traytors
,
a
riddle
To
thy selfe
;
were
not
thy
home
villanies
Enough
,
but
thou
must
maintaine
thy
Factors
Out
for
lives
in
forraigne
Kingdomes
?
bloody
Marchant
.
I
have
laine
hid
so
long
,
am
now
So
new
form'd
by
time
,
no
friend
can
know
me
.
Hate
,
thine
eyes
are
more
perceiving
farre
than
Friendship
;
I
have
not
dar'd
to
name
my selfe
,
Because
with
it
I
doe
name
my
Father
,
And
yet
thou
hast
it
perfect
;
him
with
Many
more
,
who
were
too
good
to
looke
on
So
much
ill
,
as
thine
and
thy
fathers
lives
,
Were
made
away
—
ease
;
my
brest
,
or
too
much
Rage
,
instead
of
a
Revenger
,
will
turne
me
A
stocke
,
a
foole
;
Heare
me
you
banisht
gods
,
For
I
may
justly
feare
,
if
that
your
Powers
Are
absent
any where
,
'tis
from
this
place
Where
tyranny
doth
raigne
;
on
this
Altar
I
doe
vow
to
be
your
Martyr
,
if
not
Your
surviving
instrument
,
nere
to
let
Fall
your
vengeance
,
till
it
light
on
those
which
Slew
the
King
,
your
King
,
the
image
of
your
Goodnesse
,
which
killd
the
Prince
,
and
dar'd
to
say
That
he
was
lost
,
lost
indeed
;
which
on
the
Princesse
doe
intend
a
rape
,
their
marriage
is
No
better
,
which
kill'd
my
father
,
and
last
Resolv'd
on
me
:
Had
I
a
thousand
lives
I'de
gage
them
here
And
thinke
your
Indgement
yet
not
bought
too
deare
.
Enter
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Eurilochus
,
and
others
to
him
.
Ara.
In
the
name
of
wonder
what
art
thou
?
Pall.
Why
?
what
am
I
Sir
?
Ara.
Nay
,
I
know
not
,
not
does
any
but
an
Antiquary
or
a
Conjurer
,
certainely
thou
art
no
man
,
or
if
beest
,
I
am
sure
,
none
of
the
last
Edition
.
Pall.
Were
your
troope
absent
I'de
make
you
finde
,
I
were
without
those
helpes
,
'twas
so
long
since
you
saw
a
man
,
a
true
one
,
that
you
know
not
when
you
meet
one
,
your
Lordships
glasse
shewd
you
none
this
morning
.
Eur.
Whence
cam'st
thou
?
Ara.
I
,
that
i'de
faine
know
,
heeres
no
hole
open
In
the
earth
.
Pall.
From
Sea
.
Ara.
From
the
bottome
of
it
I
thinke
,
theres
nothing
like
thee
above
water
.
Phro.
Of
what
profession
art
thou
,
a
Souldier
?
Pall.
Yes
.
Ara.
Thou
shouldst
be
hang'd
for
thy
very
lookes
,
if
thou
wert
not
,
they
are
excusable
in
no
calling
else
.
Pall.
These
are
some
insolent
scoffers
which
breath
their
wits
on
all
they
see
weaker
then
themselves
against
they
meete
the
foole
next
,
I
wrong
my selfe
to
talke
with
'em
.
Eur.
Dost
heare
?
Pall.
None
of
your
wit
yet
.
Eur.
Thou
bleedest
!
Pall.
Was
it
that
made
me
such
a
wonder
?
I
doe
so
.
Phro.
And
much
blood
is
spilt
upon
the
ground
knowst
thou
the
cause
?
Pall.
Yes
,
I
was
assaulted
by
two
ranke
rascalls
which
I
let
blood
and
cured
?
Phro.
Hast
thou
not
killd
,
and
rob'd
'em
?
Pall.
Sr.
your
thoughts
are
base
,
and
you
doe
ill
thus
to
insult
upon
mine
innocence
.
Robd
'em
?
monyes
more
below
my
thoughts
then
Earth
,
my
education
hath
beene
noble
,
and
though
the
Mid-wife
lapt
me
not
in
Purple
,
nor
Princes
gossipt
at
my
birth
,
I
have
dard
to
bee
as
honest
as
the
richest
,
my
word
hath
commanded
more
then
all
your
Land
or
mony
.
Those
deeds
which
I
have
donne
,
dishonestly
dard
not
to
have
lookt
on
,
they
would
have
frighted
your
Lordship
if
but
told
you
towards
bedd
time
.
Phro.
I
never
saw
such
feircenesse
.
Ara.
I
begin
to
admire
this
fellow
.
Eur.
Where
hast
thou
bestowed
'em
?
Pall.
Behind
there
,
if
you
search
'em
you
may
finde
more
,
if
they
had
any
mony
the
Sea
washt
them
cleane
on't
before
their
deaths
.
Eur.
Why
,
were
they
cast
away
?
Pall.
Yes
,
but
it
seemes
they
had
a
land-fate
.
Ara.
They
search
them
.
What's
here
;
a
roges
Limbs
,
Beards
:
their
two
heads
a
peece
.
Phro.
Her's
a
Paper
confirms
them
most
notorious
Villaines
.
Eur.
Sure
I
have
seene
some
faces
like
them
.
Phro.
They
were
propper
men
.
Ara.
They
were
so
,
didst
kill
them
both
alone
,
Pall.
I
tould
you
once
so
,
I
am
no
proud
on't
,
to
boast
it
ore
againe
,
and
tell
you
how
I
did
it
.
Ara.
Trust
me
,
thou
art
a
brave
fellow
,
and
I
admire
thy
stoutnesse
,
thou
lookst
as
if
thou
hadst
beene
nurst
in
perills
:
darst
thou
withstand
a
bould
one
,
but
as
honest
as
tis
great
?
what
sayst
thou
,
canst
thou
like
of
us
?
Phro.
Thou
shalt
not
finde
us
as
we
appeard
at
first
.
Pall.
While
you
talke
thus
I
can
,
and
in
your
busines
if
honesty
goe
yoakt
with
danger
:
it
cannot
fright
me
then
though
it
have
more
terror
then
Seamen
faigne
at
their
returne
,
or
Cowards
feares
suggest
,
horred
even
unto
a
ly
.
I
dare
face
it
,
and
wager
a
life
i'le
conquer
it
.
Arat.
Thy
words
goe
high
as
Thunder
.
Pall.
Pardon
my
words
if
my
actions
prove
as
fatall
.
Ara.
I
beleeve
thee
,
and
dare
promise
thou
wilt
doe
wonders
,
let
me
imbrace
thee
,
thou
art
welcome
to
our
friendship
;
mine
eyes
did
looke
on
thee
unworthyly
before
,
methinks
thart
comely
now
,
thy
scarrs
are
so
many
graces
,
not
set
by
an
effiminate
but
by
a
manly
and
warlike
Skill
Busines
calls
us
hence
,
thou
shalt
not
part
one
minute
from
me
,
thy
wound
needs
helpe
,
Come
,
thou
shalt
heale
before
me
.
Exeunt
.
Om.
Enter
Clearchus
,
Haimantus
.
Clear.
Have
you
commanded
all
the
Marriners
aboard
each
Captaine
to
his
charge
;
bid
the
Souldiers
fill
the
decks
with
their
full
numbers
,
and
display
their
collours
.
Let
nothing
wanting
that
may
add
to
the
glory
of
the
Navy
.
Hai.
Sr
there
is
not
,
all
things
are
in
their
pride
and
height
,
the
Captaines
seeme
to
lend
brightnes
to
the
day
,
and
like
the
Sunne
throws
raies
,
and
light
about
them
;
nor
lookes
their
gold
lesse
awfull
then
the
Souldiers
Steele
,
on
the
Ships
appeare
the
joy
and
riches
of
a
conquest
,
and
yet
keepes
the
strictnesse
of
a
joyning
battell
,
there
want's
nothing
to
make
a
warlike
like
,
princely
and
well
commanded
,
Navy
but
your
presence
,
Sr.
Clea.
I
would
not
have
them
thinke
us
such
poore
men
that
we
are
drove
to
seeke
for
their
releife
,
to
due
for
bread
,
and
water
,
but
rather
that
wee
come
like
Noble
wooers
,
full
of
rewards
and
presents
able
to
returne
all
favours
wee
receive
,
and
equally
to
honor
them
which
honor
us
.
As
great
as
they
,
It
shall
appeare
hee
that
is
master
of
such
a
Fleete
,
may
Stile
himselfe
King
,
though
Lord
of
nothing
else
.
Hai.
The
people
flocke
upon
the
shore
,
and
with
one
voyce
say
you
come
to
fetch
their
Princesse
,
you
have
more
then
their
consents
already
you
have
their
wishes
too
.
Clea.
I
marry
Haimantus
such
a
Jewell
would
Make
the
rest
looke
dimme
,
there
are
two
Ladies
in
this
Ile
,
if
fame
say
true
,
the
wonders
of
the
World
.
When
nature
made
'em
shee
summond
her
whole
God-head
,
and
unwearied
wrought
till
shee
Had
don
,
form'd
each
limbe
as
if
she
had
begun
there
,
Shee
seem'd
to
practise
on
the
World
till
now
,
and
what
like
beautifull
she
Fram'd
before
,
were
but
degrees
to
this
height
,
These
the
assent
from
which
she
now
must
fall
They
made
her
older
then
the
labour
of
A
thousand
yeares
.
Enter
a
Messenger
.
What's
the
matter
?
Hai.
Ther's
a
great
Traine
,
it
seemes
from
Court
comming
to
your
grace
.
Clea.
How
nigh
are
they
?
Mess.
They
are
on
entring
my
Lord
.
Clea.
Weele
meete
'em
.
Enter
Aratus
Phronimus
,
Eurylochus
,
Palluntus
,
and
attendants
to
them
.
Ara.
Sr.
the
King
congratulates
your
safety
and
is
glad
of
your
arrivall
,
though
the
cause
were
dangerous
,
you
would
have
oblig'd
him
much
,
Sr.
if
you
had
beene
bound
for
Creta
.
Clea
The
King
is
royall
and
chides
me
kindly
,
he
binds
a
stranger
ever
to
his
Service
.
Ara.
His
Majesty
expects
youle
honor
him
with
your
presence
this
night
at
Court
.
Clea.
I
shall
wait
upon
him
,
but
my
Lord
I
must
first
desire
,
youle
honour
mee
with
your
company
a
Ship-board
,
I
shall
not
need
to
excuse
a
Souldiers
entertainment
,
I
doubt
not
but
your
Lordship
knowes
it
well
,
plainnesse
is
halfe
the
praise
on't
.
Arat.
Sir
,
you
are
the
envie
of
our
neighbour
Princes
,
you
so
farre
exceed
them
in
a
brave
command
.
I
nere
was
happie
in
the
like
sight
before
,
and
my
Lord
,
they
that
can
boast
the
strangest
,
have
not
seene
one
so
common
and
so
rare
;
your
Navie
lookes
as
if
shee
wore
the
spoiles
of
a
whole
Land
,
or
came
to
buy
them
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
youle
make
me
proud
,
your
presence
yet
will
adde
unto
its
glory
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Timeus
and
Coracinus
.
Tim.
Found
dead
upon
the
Shore
?
Cora.
I
my
Lord
,
throwne
into
a
cliffe
by
certaine
Fishermen
.
Tim.
Were
they
drown'd
?
Cora.
No
my
Lord
,
there
were
many
wounds
found
upon
their
bodies
,
and
yet
their
clothes
were
wet
.
Tim.
Tis
strange
,
were
there
but
two
?
Cora.
No
my
Lord
.
Tim.
That's
stranger
yet
,
reward
the
men
,
and
command
them
make
no
further
search
,
nor
speake
of
it
,
let
it
dy
with
you
too
,
doe
yee
heare
?
Exit
.
Coarcinus
.
The
villaines
have
robd
at
their
returne
,
and
got
their
Deaths
that
way
,
I
neere
could
spare
them
worse
,
the
State
stands
in
greater
need
of
theirs
,
than
of
the
sword
of
Justice
.
Rodia
?
Enter
Rodia
?
Rod.
My
Lord
.
Tim.
Is
your
Lady
to
be
spoke
with
?
Rod.
Alwayes
my
Lord
by
you
,
but
now
shee's
comming
forth
.
Enter
Eudora
.
Tim.
Save
you
sweet
sister
.
Eudo.
O
you
are
welcome
Sir
.
Tim.
Sure
Eudora
,
Venus
and
the
Graces
had
their
hands
to day
about
you
,
you
looke
fairer
than
your selfe
,
and
move
in
the
Sphere
of
love
and
beauty
.
Cupid
has
taken
his
stand
up
in
your
eyes
,
and
shoots
at
all
that
come
before
him
;
pray
Venus
he
misse
mee
.
Eudo.
When
begins
your
serious
?
Tim.
These
are
the
sweet
lookes
that
captivate
the
Prince
in
a
free
country
,
and
this
the
dresse
that
must
inchant
him
,
ha
?
Eudo.
There
is
no
charme
in't
certainely
,
it
pleasd
mee
the
least
of
many
,
no
,
tis
your
faire
Mistris
which
beares
those
Love-nets
about
her
,
if
the
Stranger
scape
her
hee's
safe
.
Tim.
Had
better
kill
his
father
,
and
then
gaze
upon
the
spectacle
,
than
looke
upon
her
with
the
eyes
of
love
.
Eudo.
Nay
then
you
are
cruell
,
would
you
have
him
strongger
then
your selfe
was
?
if
he
be
guilty
the
same
doome
must
light
on
you
too
.
Tim.
But
I
have
prevaild
so
farre
that
he
shall
be
free
from
the
Danger
both
of
love
and
seeing
,
shee'l
not
bee
there
;
nor
must
you
make
up
his
entertainement
.
Eudo.
I
was
commanded
to
be
ready
and
attend
there
.
Time.
But
now
the
Commissions
altered
and
runnes
in
another
sence
.
Eudo.
I
shall
bee
content
to
obey
either
.
May
I
not
know
the
cause
?
Tim.
You
may
,
wee
would
not
feed
the
Prince
here
with
hopes
to
get
a
wife
,
this
was
the
storme
that
drove
him
in
,
nor
must
you
onely
for
this
time
forbeare
his
presence
,
but
while
he
stayes
;
he
is
unworthy
of
you
.
Eudo.
If
you
know
him
so
,
I
shall
then
without
Excuse
deny
his
visits
,
But
I
thinke
This
businesse
may
be
borne
a
nobler
way
,
Nor
will
the
end
faile
though
the
meanes
be
faire
Leave
it
with
me
,
if
he
sue
with
honour
,
He
will
take
an
honourable
answer
.
Though
he
gaine
none
from
me
,
Ile
get
his
love
,
And
send
him
home
,
no
lesse
a
friend
,
than
if
Hee
were
a
husband
,
by
my
restraint
youle
Onely
gaine
unto
your selfe
the
markes
of
Jealousie
and
malice
,
and
fouler
staines
If
that
the
crime
were
nam'd
to
the
desert
.
Besides
it
does
proclaime
in
me
too
,
such
A
weakenes
as
I
am
much
asham'd
of
;
Had
he
a
face
adorn'd
with
the
graces
Of
both
Sexes
,
beauty
and
manlinesse
,
And
these
ingrafted
on
the
body
of
A
god
,
I
could
looke
on
,
converse
,
I
,
and
Neglect
him
too
,
when
I
have
reason
;
feare
Not
me
then
.
Tim.
I
doe
not
,
I
know
thee
strong
,
the
honour
of
a
Kingdome
may
leane
with
safety
on
thee
,
but
hee
will
linger
here
too
long
,
besot
the
State
with
feastings
,
and
in
this
ease
give
safety
to
treacherous
undertakings
,
he
must
be
usd
ill
,
ther's
reason
for't
.
Eudo.
Is
there
then
a
policy
in
rudenesse
?
Why
don't
you
rather
send
a
defiance
To
him
,
proclaime
him
enemy
;
this
were
Nobler
farre
,
than
to
receive
him
in
your
armes
And
then
affront
him
,
say
health
and
wish
Poyson
in
the
cup
,
are
you
so
much
below
him
?
Tim.
Theres
greater
thoughts
in
hand
than
curious
rules
of
Ceremony
,
if
he
send
any
present
to
you
,
returne
it
backe
with
scorne
.
Eudo.
Pride
is
ill
becomming
,
and
hated
by
the
next
proud
man
.
Tim.
Then
take
um
and
laugh
at
him
.
Eudo.
No
,
where
my
thanks
are
too
much
,
Ile
rather
returne
gifts
for
gifts
;
I
would
be
loth
to
have
my
faults
reach
further
than
my
goodnesse
.
Tim.
Hee'l
weare
those
gifts
for
favours
.
Eudo.
They
will
not
prove
so
,
yet
hee
will
deserve
some
as
he
is
a
stranger
.
Tim.
Not
from
you
,
rewards
the
State
will
give
him
,
you
heare
my
fathers
will
,
you
must
not
see
him
while
he
stayes
.
Eudo.
I
doe
,
and
shall
easily
keepe
that
I
doe
not
care
to
breake
.
Tim.
Farewell
.
Eudo.
Must
you
be
gone
?
Tim.
There's
a
little
busines
calls
me
.
Eudo.
If
be
but
a
little
stay
.
Tim.
Onely
the
welcome
of
the
Stranger
.
Eudo.
Tis
too
much
to
hinder
,
I
see
a
causelesse
and
a
needeless
rage
Hid
in
your
brest
the
Prince
may
be
noble
,
Valiant
,
if
you
receive
him
then
with
scorne
,
Hee'l
prove
a
stronger
enemy
than
those
Unworthy
ones
you
feare
at
home
,
whose
own
Actions
daily
ruine
,
and
whose
ill
made
Knots
will
loosen
faster
than
they
ty
them
;
You
have
prevaild
with
me
,
Ile
not
be
wonne
To
see
him
now
:
but
let
it
not
appeare
By
your
default
,
and
that
my
retirement
Is
onely
in
scorne
to
him
,
which
will
be
Made
plaine
,
if
that
you
change
not
this
face
you
Have
put
on
,
it
becomes
you
at
no
time
;
A
Prince
should
alwaies
smile
or
look
indifferent
,
He
has
no
need
of
frownes
,
as
other
men
,
All
lives
are
in
his
breath
,
and
if
they
doe
Offend
,
his
revenge
is
knowne
,
and
need
not
Be
declar'd
by
face
expressions
,
where
ther's
Power
to
punish
tis
tyranny
to
rage
,
Anger
is
no
attribute
of
Iustice
;
Tis
true
,
shee's
painted
with
a
sword
,
but
lookes
As
if
shee
held
it
not
,
though
warre
be
in
Her
hand
,
yet
peace
dwells
in
her
face
;
learne
once
Of
me
,
and
when
you
have
no
cause
of
a
Distemper
,
expresse
none
;
now
you
have
made
All
sure
,
doubt
not
,
but
receive
the
Stranger
With
fearelesse
and
confident
imbraces
.
Time.
I
will
,
or
at
least
Ile
tell
thee
so
when
thou
perswadst
me
thus
.
Farewell
.
Exit
Timeus
.
Eudo.
Thy
subtile
plots
will
ruine
thee
at
last
,
Valour
and
policie
doe
seldome
meete
,
Yet
here
they
are
in
their
extreames
in
one
,
But
doe
most
strangely
divide
the
owner
,
Makes
him
dread
none
,
and
yet
confirmes
him
not
Within
a
guard
.
Exit
.
What
can
our
wishes
deprecate
.
When
vice
is
made
both
Law
and
fate
!
When
for
the
good
o'th
Common-weale
The
councells
cald
to
Plot
a
Meale
,
And
Beasts
brought
in
with
solemne
cry
.
As
spoiles
got
from
the
enimy
.
Chorus
.
Whose
life's
the
Table
and
the
Stage
,
He
doth
not
spend
but
loose
his
age
.
The
Kings
eyes
,
like
his
Jewells
,
be
Set
to
Adorne
,
not
to
foresee
:
And
as
his
Crowne
:
he
thinkes
each
thing
Runnes
round
in
a
continved
Ring
.
But
Sacrifices
crowned
bee
And
Gardlands
fit
for
Destiny
.
Chorus
.
Fates
then
we
feare
,
have
writ
this
lot
That
Wine
shall
loose
what
blood
hath
got
.
Actus
Secundus
:
Scena
I.
Enter
Clearchus
.
CLea.
Is
this
your
royall
entertainment
?
a
Common
host
would
have
given
one
as
civill
;
shewne
his
guests
their
quarter
,
and
then
left
them
to
stumble
out
againe
;
my
receavers
are
all
vanisht
—
An
undeserving
scorne
will
trouble
me
—
neyther
of
the
two
Princes
were
in
the
traine
;
they
might
have
trusted
'em
,
I
could
have
gag'd
a
Kingdome
for
their
security
.
The
meanest
things
displease
me
not
,
if
they
are
the
fullest
offerings
of
the
place
,
and
gratefully
I
can
submit
to
the
necessity
:
but
where
they
are
afforded
I
can
relish
nothing
but
the
choysest
,
and
looke
on
ought
but
what
invites
the
generall
and
first
eye
,
here
a
continuall
Spring
and
Harvest
make
but
one
season
,
no
scarsity
doth
dwell
but
in
their
minds
,
and
then
I
thinke
my selfe
neglected
with
the
best
things
.
Enter
Courtier
and
passes
by
,
halfe
Reeling
.
Was
not
the
fellow
drunke
?
Another
something
fat
.
Courtier
passes
by
.
Now
they
begin
to
muster
up
againe
,
here
I
stand
like
one
that
learnes
to
make
his
first
honor
.
Enter
Mellissa
and
passes
by
.
When
comes
the
fourth
?
three
of
the
Elements
have
past
by
simple
and
unmixt
,
Water
,
Earth
and
Ayre
,
livelier
exprest
than
in
a
Masque
:
the
fourth
was
in
the
Prince
,
hee
singd
my
face
with
a
complement
.
I
am
arriv'd
among
a
stranger
people
,
than
ever
I
heard
lyde
of
yet
,
at
my
returne
I
shall
have
undiscoverd
story
enough
to
fill
a
map
,
though
the
Land
bee
knowne
,
I
have
past
some
two
degrees
,
and
may
lawfully
extend
my
lines
to
twenty
,
and
fill
the
vacuity
with
monsters
and
Fish-heads
.
Enter
Comastes
.
Sir
,
by
your
favour
,
if
your
businesse
call
you
not
,
pray
let
me
intreat
your
company
awhile
.
Com.
Troth
,
an't
like
your
Grace
,
I
am
in
hast
,
in
verie
great
hast
,
the
King
has
sent
for
mee
,
and
I
know
hee's
thirsty
till
I
come
;
I
would
your
Grace
were
as
resolute
,
and
as
well
armd
this
way
as
I
Hee
discovers
a
great
Goblet
.
you'd
be
the
wellcomst
man
—
Hee
loves
a
royall
Drunkard
with
admiration
,
hee
never
saw
one
yet
but
in
a
glasse
.
Sir
,
have
you
any
businesse
with
him
?
you
neede
no
other
Oratour
,
than
such
as
this
,
such
a
mouth
,
without
a
tongue
,
will
perswade
any
thing
;
yet
this
is
o'th
least
,
fit
onely
for
Phisicke-daies
,
when
hee
would
not
surfet
,
a
meere
toy
that
troubles
the
waiters
with
often
filling
,
but
I
have
one
as
high
—
heeres
nothing
to
measure
it
by
;
twas
that
made
mee
so
inward
with
him
.
I
alwaies
use
to
petition
with
it
,
tis
bigger
than
any
of
his
owne
,
and
pleasd
him
above
measure
;
the
first
time
hee
saw
it
,
hee
commended
the
largenesse
of
my
minde
,
and
said
it
was
a
noble
emulation
in
mee
:
hee
has
a
Daughter
Sir
,
a
beautifull
Lady
,
my
hopes
,
unlesse
some
neighbour
Prince
doe
reele
betwixt
us
,
your
Grace
comes
the
right
way
,
hee
hates
a
dry
Inland
traveller
,
but
that
you
kisse
the
cup
,
and
have
too
much
bounce
,
and
downe
with
him
in
you
,
which
were
things
hee
surfeited
on
some
fifteene
yeares
since
,
and
still
the
very
names
turne
his
Stomacke
,
besides
your
Navy
and
attendants
are
too
great
,
hee'd
have
esteem'd
more
on
you
,
had
they
been
fewer
,
enough
onely
to
leane
on
,
when
you
are
oretaken
,
or
if
you
had
wanted
those
,
and
borrowed
his
unto
your
chamber
it
had
beene
better
where
hee
findes
worth
,
the
pompe
delights
him
not
,
your
pardon
Sir
.
Exit
Comastes
.
Clea.
This
is
stranger
than
all
,
with
what
licence
this
fellow
abuses
his
Master
,
or
speakes
truths
altogether
,
as
unpardonable
;
sure
he
has
a
pattent
for't
:
I
see
I
shall
want
names
for
all
the
monsters
.
Enter
Aratus
to
him
.
Ara.
Though
your
grace
are
here
a
Strangor
,
I
may
demand
of
you
where
the
King
is
?
Clea.
If
none
know
more
than
I
,
my
Lord
,
you
have
lost
your
king
.
Ara.
Sure
hee
is
not
well
,
I
hope
hee
is
not
,
with
a
safe
loyalty
I
may
wish
hee
hath
a
dangerous
cause
rather
than
none
,
to
take
him
from
a
Prince
the
first
night
of
his
arrivall
in
Court
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
I
have
found
much
honor
in
you
,
one
that
knowes
to
shew
more
civility
to
a
Stranger
than
hee
can
deserve
,
and
onely
are
unhappie
at
this
time
in
an
unworthy
choice
,
but
if
you
still
can
continue
this
noblenesse
,
though
the
King
frowne
,
I
shall
gladly
make
some
stay
,
at
least
till
I
have
satisfied
a
strangers
curiosity
,
and
may
seeme
rather
to
have
left
the
place
,
than
to
have
beene
thrust
from
it
.
Ara.
Beleeve
me
(
my
Lord
)
both
your
entertainment
,
and
this
necessity
,
that
you
are
drove
to
use
so
meane
a
service
as
mine
,
doth
shame
me
much
.
Tis
not
the
nature
of
this
place
to
be
thus
uncivill
,
nor
is
tour
custome
,
as
it
hath
beene
this
day
,
to
coope
our
Ladies
up
as
if
the
sight
were
dangerous
,
their
beauties
will
indure
the
Test
:
and
we
will
put
them
too't
;
twas
unkindly
done
,
I
know
one
looke
of
theirs
would
have
given
a
wellcome
to
a
young
man
above
the
greatest
cost
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
you
know
to
speake
a
pleasing
language
.
Ara.
Wee
have
two
Princesses
Sir
,
few
Kingdomes
can
shew
such
Jewells
,
but
onely
one
is
orientall
,
the
other's
artificiall
,
but
an
excellent
Iemme
too
;
one
of
them
,
the
true
one
,
I
doubt
not
but
I
have
credit
for
to
shew
you
,
but
tis
not
to
bee
purchast
,
that
happy
opportunity
is
alreadie
past
,
and
the
now
owner
esteemes
it
above
his
wealth
,
his
life
,
I
,
and
his
honour
too
.
aside
.
Clea.
Yet
my
Lord
blesse
me
with
the
sight
,
I
can
rejoyce
at
so
much
excellence
,
though
another
doe
possesse
it
,
and
no
doubt
as
much
of
the
owners
felicity
lies
in
others
admiration
,
as
in
his
owne
possession
.
Ara.
All
but
jealous
men
thinke
so
,
and
they
count
themselves
robd
of
all
happinesse
in
their
wives
another
doth
receive
,
are
as
covetous
of
their
beauties
as
manie
husbands
of
their
persons
,
thinke
themselves
cuckolded
by
a
womans
commendation
.
But
,
my
Lord
,
Ile
leave
you
,
I
was
going
to
the
Princesse
before
I
met
your
grace
.
I
know
few
words
will
gaine
so
easie
a
request
,
to morrow
and
daily
Ile
wait
upon
your
Lordship
.
Clea.
Sir
you
have
engaged
Me
your
servant
beyond
my
hope
of
freedome
.
Exeunt
omnes
Enter
Hianthe
and
Ladies
.
Hian.
Nay
,
you
must
beare
it
patiently
,
my
dominion
extends
no
further
than
these
roomes
,
and
beyond
them
I
grant
nothing
:
how
will
you
endure
the
Strangers
delayes
,
that
thus
hardly
brooke
his
comming
,
the
King
in
complement
will
not
admit
the
winds
to
serve
sooner
than
a
moneth
,
were
that
all
his
stay
;
but
here
must
be
Masques
and
triumphes
before
he
goes
,
and
the
Subject
yet
not
knowne
for
the
one
,
nor
ornaments
made
for
the
other
;
perhaps
a
league
must
be
concluded
,
and
then
I
would
not
live
to
bee
so
old
as
to
see
the
end
on't
,
the
meanest
persons
will
require
a
moneth
to
fit
themselves
,
a
Prince
cannot
turne
in
lesse
than
a
season
.
1
Lady
.
May
you
not
see
the
Garden
,
Madam
?
Hian.
No
,
nor
the
day
,
but
through
a
window
.
2
Lady
.
Wee'l
petition
to
him
under
the
title
of
distressed
Damsells
,
that
must
passe
the
flower
of
their
age
in
imprisonment
,
unlesse
hee'l
travell
to
his
owne
,
or
some
other
Country
,
to
gaine
'em
freedome
.
Hian.
Madam
,
hee'l
thinke
wee
are
held
by
inchantment
,
that
his
absence
,
and
not
his
sword
must
gaine
our
liberty
.
Faith
wenches
,
what
would
you
doe
with
such
a
servant
that
will
lay
commands
on
you
,
and
be
your
Lord
before
Himen
hath
made
him
so
?
1.
Lady
,
Madam
,
I'de
change
him
.
Hian.
Leave
him
I
would
but
change
him's
a
harder
matter
,
and
will
require
more
consideration
,
I
have
not
the
faith
that
I
can
worke
so
great
a
miracle
as
to
perswad
mine
,
to
any
thing
he
has
not
a
minde
to
,
and
yet
he
sweares
he
loves
me
,
as
he
loves
a
Kingdome
.
2.
Lady
,
You
may
beleeve
him
,
Madam
,
you
are
his
best
Title
were
the
Sword
away
.
Hian.
Melissa
broke
loose
,
and
gone
to
the
shew
.
Enter
Melissa
.
Mel.
No
Madam
,
shees
return'd
.
Hian.
Is
she
so
,
and
what
hath
shee
seene
?
Mel.
The
scurviest
entertainment
,
I
did
not
thinke
it
possible
so
short
a
time
could
have
prepared
one
so
ill
,
'twas
thought
on
before
,
and
paines
taken
to
order
it
so
much
for
the
worse
:
This
was
the
first
day
that
e're
me thoughts
the
King
and
my
Lord
Timeus
lookt
like
the
Father
and
the
Sunne
,
The
King
had
on
his
old
councell
face
,
which
all
hoped
he
had
forgot
and
this
was
the
only
time
these
many
yeeres
he
should
not
have
worne
it
,
they
both
embrac'd
the
Stranger
,
as
cold
,
and
carelessely
as
if
they
had
beene
to
fight
after
,
this
behaviour
in
the
great
ones
,
was
presently
observed
like
a
new
fashion
,
and
in
an
instant
the
whole
traine
was
in
,
from
the
bravest
to
those
which
follow
a
fashion
onely
,
when
tis
to
leave
off
something
,
and
then
looke
not
as
if
they
were
hot
:
but
wanting
a
cloake
.
Marry
their
wit's
were
not
so
changeable
,
as
their
faces
,
and
having
but
one
Sure
of
Complement
,
and
that
now
unfashonable
,
they
were
faine
to
supply
it
with
Leggs
,
and
Silence
.
Hian.
How
look't
the
Prince
on
their
behaviour
?
Mel.
He
look't
much
above
it
in
my
opinion
,
two
foote
higher
then
my
Lord
Timeus
though
not
altogether
so
tall
,
these
sower
lookes
were
all
the
without-dore
shew
,
which
endeed
in
a
solemne
March
,
they
returnd
all
into
the
Pallace
,
Shew's
Papers
.
the
Strangers
seemed
rather
to
follow
with
a
silent
consent
then
an
invitation
;
there
the
presse
shoock
me
off
to
finde
this
out
for
your
graces
mirth
,
and
at
my
returne
,
as
I
least
expected
,
I
found
the
Prince
all
alone
where
any body
might
have
seene
him
for
nothing
,
the
Grecian
,
and
the
Trojan
Captaines
in
the
hangings
were
all
his
company
,
with
whom
hee
seem'd
well
suited
,
had
they
beene
alive
his
lookes
were
as
challinging
as
theirs
,
and
standing
so
,
bred
much
comparison
.
Hian.
Know
you
the
reason
of
this
behaviour
?
Mell.
No
Madam
,
yet
if
I
would
I
might
have
learnt
of
many
,
indeed
all
could
give
a
reason
,
those
which
onely
from
this
occasion
knew
what
belong'd
to
any
the
whole
company
were
Polliticians
,
there
was
one
Yeoman
,
Statesman
informd
most
about
him
,
and
left
them
to
write
his
letters
for
certaine
newes
into
the
Country
.
Hian.
Well
,
now
turne
your
wit
unto
our
mirth
,
we
have
more
neede
of
that
,
what
have
you
got
there
?
Mell.
That
which
shall
save
my
wit
blamelesse
that
is
unpractised
'tis
a
rare
peece
of
Poetry
,
which
I
have
beene
Patronesse
of
from
the
first
nonsence
in't
,
that
is
,
from
the
first
line
,
there
much
mirth
intended
in
it
,
and
I
doubt
not
,
but
your
grace
will
finde
it
,
the
Author
,
himselfe
is
an
Emblem
of
the
first
Comedies
,
where
one
acted
all
,
and
will
make
you
laugh
though
you
saw
him
every
day
,
I
have
brought
him
along
with
me
,
he
stays
but
without
till
his
admittance
be
graunted
.
Hian.
No
,
prethee
Melissa
,
'twill
be
too
much
.
Mell.
I
beseech
your
grace
,
and
do
but
smile
upon
his
learning
.
Domine
,
Domine
.
Enter
a
Poet
rudely
,
and
seeing
the
Princesse
and
other
Ladies
stepps
back
as
rudely
.
Mel.
Looke
,
looke
,
I
told
you
what
you'd
doe
,
you
are
so
forward
.
Poet
.
I
can
presume
most
humble
Lady
.
Hian.
Ladies
ha
,
ha
,
ha
.
They
turne
from
him
when
they
laugh
and
come
up
againe
.
Mell.
Hold
your
peace
,
with
your
presuming
,
you
should
let
the
Princesse
speake
.
This
is
the
author
Madam
.
Hian.
Ladyes
.
ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
Mell.
What
thinke
you
your
Play
will
doe
when
One
Sceane
of
your selfe
breeds
all
this
mirth
?
Poet
.
Ham
.
Hian.
Melissa
?
Mel.
Your
Grace
?
Hian.
Prethee
discharge
him
I
am
not
able
to
looke
so
much
laughter
in
the
face
and
keepe
it
in
to
save
my
Modesty
.
Mel.
So
,
tis
well
Sir
,
the
Princesse
hath
taken
notice
of
your
worth
,
and
commanded
me
to
reward
your
.
Attend
tomorrow
and
you
shall
receive
it
,
and
pray
see
that
her
grace
have
all
your
labours
(
as
you
call
'em
)
and
your
fooling
.
Exit
Poet
.
Hian.
O
tis
well
we
dresse
us
not
,
but
was
this
a
Poet
,
Mel
.
beleeve
it
Madam
but
I
hope
his
worke
will
satisfie
that
Question
her's
rare
stuffe
i'le
warrant
it
.
Shee
turnes
over
the
leaves
and
reades
these
entries
.
Enter
Eugenia
dieing
as
she
goes
.
Enter
a
Nimph
,
persued
by
a
wild
Beare
.
Will
your
grace
examine
it
?
They
all
take
severall
papers
,
and
sit
downe
,
in
the
meane
time
Clearchus
,
and
Haimantus
mistakes
in
upon
them
.
1
Waitor
,
Who
were
they
past
by
?
2
Waitor
,
But
certainely
they
know
what
they
doe
They
are
so
confident
.
Clea.
Where
are
we
now
?
Haim
Certainely
in
no
danger
Sir
.
First
the
Ladies
spie
e'm
and
Rise
amazedly
,
and
afterwards
the
Princesse
.
Mel.
The
Prince
.
The
other
Ladies
whisper
the
Prince
,
the
Prince
.
Clea.
Madam
,
our
bold
mistake
hath
thrust
us
on
too
farre
,
to
retire
without
excuse
,
which
we
shall
hardly
make
unlesse
,
your
favour
meete
us
,
wee
are
Strangers
that
thus
have
er'd
,
unfortunately
I
must
not
say
,
that
were
a
sinne
great
as
our
rudenesse
,
yet
we
ought
to
esteeme
a
fault
,
though
it
is
to
us
a
blessed
one
,
and
hath
conferred
a
happines
,
our
best
deeds
could
not
have
deserv'd
.
Exeunt
.
Clea.
and
Haim
Mel.
This
entrance
was
something
abrupt
,
and
beyond
the
intent
of
our
Poet
.
Hian.
A
strange
accident
,
was
it
the
Prince
that
spoke
?
Mel.
I
Madam
,
but
'twas
impropper
here
.
Hian.
Art
thou
sure
'twas
he
?
Mel.
I
am
Madam
,
does
your
grace
incline
,
I
see
a
Prince
is
too
high
a
personage
and
spoiles
a
Commedy
,
shall
not
our
Play
goe
on
?
Hian.
We
have
had
too
much
on't
.
Shee
snatches
it
from
her
,
and
goes
out
.
Mel.
Nay
,
Madam
,
take
us
along
with
you
,
we
cannot
maintaine
the
Stage
without
our
partes
.
Exeunt
.
Ladies
.
Enter
Aratus
,
and
Pallantus
.
Ara.
Madam
,
a
litle
of
your
company
I
beseech
you
.
Mel.
My
Lord
Aratus
,
save
you
.
Ara.
A
good
salutation
for
a
faire
Lady
whose
beauties
so
distructive
.
Mell.
Your
Lordship's
very
conceited
,
on
my
conference
tis
the
first
left
hath
beene
made
on
that
poore
saying
this
thousand
yeares
.
Shee
lookes
at
Pallantus
and
hee
hinders
her
.
Ara.
What
doe
you
looke
at
?
doe
you
want
a
servant
?
Mel.
Blesse
me
,
my
Lord
,
what
pale
man
have
you
got
there
?
Ara.
Why
pray
?
because
hee's
blacke
;
the
sitter
for
a
Lady
.
Mel.
For
a
Lady
?
I
never
saw
such
a
Devills
play-fellow
.
Ara.
Hee's
white
within
,
all
snow
and
milke
.
Mel.
They
are
put
into
an
inke-bottle
.
Ara.
What
,
would
you
have
one
that
spends
more
milke
about
his
face
than
he
suckt
in
his
childhood
,
that
dresses
himselfe
in
gloves
as
if
one
part
were
too
good
to
doe
service
for
the
other
,
and
dares
not
shew
his
hands
for
shaming
of
his
Mistris
,
nor
commend
hers
because
his
owne
are
whiter
,
and
when
he
is
a bed
,
none
can
distinguish
whether
hee
be
the
husband
,
nor
hardly
shee
herselfe
.
This
is
one
neglects
his
outside
beyond
a
common
cleannesse
,
and
bestowes
that
care
upon
his
minde
,
there
wasts
his
foure
houres
of
dressing
,
and
what
the
other
doth
exceede
in
sprucenes
hee'l
make
good
in
service
,
pay
respects
unto
his
Ladies
person
,
and
not
unto
her
muffe
,
and
if
at
any
time
danger
doe
approach
her
,
fearelesse
he
dares
beat
it
backe
,
or
make
it
welcome
by
his
noble
fall
,
himselfe
in
presence
guards
her
,
and
his
memory
in
his
absence
.
Come
,
pray
spoile
not
his
hopes
among
the
Ladies
hee's
a
young
Courtier
and
wants
a
Mistris
.
Mel.
I
am
turn'd
when
I
heare
reason
.
I
beseech
,
my
Lord
,
let
me
be
she
.
Ara.
I
thought
'twould
come
to
this
,
you
make
the
furthest
way
about
,
the
nighest
to
your
ends
,
love
by
discommending
,
pray
let
him
salute
you
then
.
Mel.
Not
unlesse
youle
stand
by
me
.
Ara.
Well
,
I
warrant
you
;
my
friend
?
Pall.
My
Lord
?
Ara.
Pray
draw
neere
,
heeres
a
faire
Lady
gladly
would
salute
you
,
now
you
are
at
Court
you
must
lay
by
your
warlike
thoughts
,
and
plot
how
you
shall
overcome
in
complement
and
conquer
in
civility
.
Pall.
My
Lord
,
I
shall
bee
a
sham'd
to
pretend
so
much
unto
the
Soldier
,
as
to
make
my selfe
uncapable
of
so
great
an
honour
this
Lady
does
mee
by
her
faire
salutation
,
though
I
am
unworthy
,
I
can
be
proud
to
be
her
Servant
.
Ara.
What
thinke
you
?
Mel.
I
know
not
what
to
thinke
of
so
much
wonder
,
what
rarities
shall
I
be
mistris
of
,
and
none
envy
me
.
Ara.
Well
,
to
leave
you
in
that
rapture
,
May
I
speake
with
the
Princesse
?
Mel.
Yes
,
she
went
hence
but
now
.
Ara.
May
I
adventure
to
goe
in
?
Mel.
You
may
,
but
call
my
servant
along
with
you
.
Ara.
You
are
a
longing
againe
,
but
not
a
bit
,
tis
sweet
meat
,
not
a
bit
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Clearchus
.
Clea.
Why
should
I
feare
to
entertaine
a
guest
So
honourable
as
love
is
,
that
fills
The
minde
with
noble
thoughts
,
and
strengthens
men
To
act
such
deeds
themselves
stile
gods
.
Pallas
Mars
and
Mercury
,
are
but
the
proper
names
For
virtues
,
loves
effects
,
without
some
kind
Of
which
there
could
be
no
society
,
The
world
is
held
up
with
Loves
Deity
,
But
it
appeares
most
god-like
,
when
beauty
Is
its
sphere
.
I
will
imbrace
thee
therefore
Gentle
spirit
.
Fooles
doe
profane
thy
fires
And
call
thee
a
Disease
.
Thou
wert
the
old
And
first
Religion
,
not
taught
,
but
borne
Within
us
,
the
onely
and
first
law
,
which
None
that
lov'd
could
erre
in
,
thou
hast
too
long
Been
absent
,
and
unkindly
never
wouldst
Vouchsafe
a
Dart
till
now
.
Dwell
in
my
brest
And
teach
me
all
thy
lawes
.
Let
not
thy
shades
And
flowry
bankes
withdraw
thee
,
when
thou
maist
Inhabit
here
,
make
Paphies
but
thy
refuge
,
The
heart's
thy
native
soile
,
thy
mothers
lap's
A
banishment
to
it
.
How
well
thou
hast
Already
taught
me
,
each
Lover
is
thy
Priest
And
speakes
thy
Power
,
without
thy
aide
Beautie
appeares
dead
,
and
cold
to
all
,
as
it
hath
Hitherto
to
me
,
nor
sinkes
it
deeper
than
the
eye
.
Thou
art
the
Organ
that
beares
The
species
inward
.
When
thou
sitst
multiplyde
in
every
part
,
Thou
mak'st
each
limbe
as
sensible
as
the
Heart
.
Enter
Haimantus
and
waiters
as
attending
him
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Hianthe
,
Aratus
,
Pallantus
and
Ladies
.
Ara.
And
Madam
,
I
doubt
not
but
shortly
I
shall
bring
you
newes
of
greater
joyes
,
and
see
you
in
that
height
you
were
borne
,
a
Queene
,
not
to
be
approachd
but
by
ceremony
,
and
the
humblest
services
.
Hian.
My
Lord
,
that
happinesse
you
wish
mee
through
my
Lord
Timeus
will
come
too
soone
upon
mee
.
But
as
I
said
before
,
my
Lord
,
the
Princes
comming
,
if
it
be
knowne
,
will
cause
much
jealousie
and
danger
.
Ara.
Madam
,
leave
that
to
mee
,
none
but
my selfe
,
and
this
Gentlemen
(
which
I
beseech
your
Grace
to
know
)
shall
be
acquainted
with
it
,
and
we
will
waite
upon
him
.
Pall.
Amongst
those
many
voyces
,
and
knees
which
dayly
do
you
honour
.
I
gladly
would
receive
an
humble
place
,
and
pay
my
dutyes
at
your
feete
too
,
you
may
demand
what
they
are
.
A
heart
and
carelesse
life
to
doe
you
service
just
so
,
what
was
Incence
on
an
Alter
to
a
Deity
that
had
noe
sent
:
or
a
Cake
and
Wine
to
a
power
that
had
not
Stomacke
?
yet
they
harkened
to
those
which
offered
such
trifles
,
and
lik't
and
approv'd
the
worship
,
with
the
same
hopes
I
present
my
flight
but
most
devoted
Services
.
Hian.
Sr.
your
Love
is
welcome
.
Ara.
We
are
both
your
humble
creatures
.
Exeunt
Om.
Cleander
is
discovered
sleeping
.
A
Song
.
While
Morpheus
thus
doth
gently
lay
His
powerfull
charge
upon
each
part
,
Making
thy
spirits
even
obay
The
silver
charmes
of
his
dull
Art
:
I
thy
good
Angell
from
thy
side
,
As
smoke
doth
from
the
Alter
rise
,
Making
no
noyse
as
it
doth
glide
Will
leave
thee
in
this
softe
surprize
.
And
from
the
Clouds
will
fetch
thee
downe
A
holy
vision
to
expresse
,
Thy
right
unto
an
earthly
Crowne
:
No
power
can
make
this
Kingdome
lesse
.
But
gently
,
gently
least
I
bring
A
start
in
sleepe
by
suddaine
flight
,
Playing
a
loose
,
and
hovering
,
Till
I
am
lost
unto
the
sight
.
This
is
a
motion
still
,
and
soft
So
free
from
noyse
or
crie
,
That
Jove
himselfe
who
heares
a
thought
Knows
not
when
we
passe
by
.
Enter
Achates
.
Acha.
There
he
sits
,
and
sleepe
hath
seized
on
him
,
which
seldome
does
so
at
a
season'd
houre
,
but
still
he
takes
it
when
it
comes
,
not
when
tis
due
,
when
wearinesse
and
not
the
warnings
of
the
night
doe
prompt
him
to
it
.
Hee
sayes
to
sleepe
because
the
day
is
gon
,
is
to
performe
a
duty
not
a
necessity
,
and
to
eate
at
a
certaine
houre
to
satisfie
the
time
,
and
not
his
hunger
.
Nature
is
the
Mistris
of
his
faculties
and
no
custome
,
which
are
rude
and
stubborne
and
will
admit
not
Lawes
but
what
themselves
enact
,
nor
stricktly
observe
them
neyther
.
Tis
a
strange
distraction
for
16.
yeares
,
a
deeper
discontent
possesses
him
then
doth
the
memories
of
those
,
which
have
runne
the
miseryes
,
and
sinnes
of
a
long
life
.
This
desolate
happines
is
all
that
he
enjoyes
,
and
this
I
am
commanded
to
breake
from
him
.
Cleander
,
what
who
Cleander
.
Clea.
Why
are
you
thus
crewell
in
your
care
?
did
you
but
know
the
felicityes
you
have
wak't
me
from
,
you
would
have
rockt
my
sleepe
for
ever
,
thought
it
a
greater
mercy
to
have
kill'd
,
then
thus
to
have
divor'st
me
,
I
was
wrapt
into
the
company
of
men
,
of
gods
,
if
compar'd
with
those
we
here
converse
with
,
enjoy'd
the
most
excellent
things
,
there
more
,
excellent
,
and
glorified
,
was
Crown'd
a
King
o're
all
and
with
a
traytorous
push
you
have
depos'd
me
.
Alas
how
fading
is
my
happines
,
which
a
small
noyse
or
motion
can
dissolve
,
nay
turne
to
nothing
.
Acha.
Let
that
reason
make
you
scorn 'em
,
and
aime
at
lasting
ones
.
Clean.
Were
their
longest
life
but
three
minutes
,
and
that
time
uncertaine
,
they
were
to
be
preferr'd
before
the
reallest
,
and
most
continuing
you
could
thinke
on
,
these
are
pure
and
celestiall
pleasures
,
to
be
fed
on
onely
by
the
fantasie
,
I'le
in
and
againe
invite
them
with
a
slumber
.
Exit
.
Acha.
I
must
forbeare
my
remedies
'tis
dangerous
applying
Physicke
in
a
fit
.
Exit
.
Enter
Comastes
at
one
dore
,
Poliander
Menetius
at
the
other
.
Com.
Poliander
,
Menetius
,
well
met
;
what
have
you
seene
the
thing
yet
?
Men.
What
thing
?
Com.
The
thing
that
haunts
the
Court
,
it
has
something
like
a
man
,
and
pretends
to
be
one
,
he
comes
among
the
Ladyes
like
a
Rough
water
Dog
to
a
Flock
of
Fowle
,
and
flutter
as
fast
from
him
,
scattering
feathers
as
they
passe
,
I
meane
their
Fanns
and
such
moveables
,
he
has
done
noe
hurt
yet
,
the
Guard
dare
not
mingle
with
him
,
hee's
too
boysterous
for
their
company
,
one
glance
of
him
as
he
past
by
broke
the
Kings
draught
,
which
a
cubit
Cup
could
nee'r
doe
.
Enter
Pallantus
.
See
,
see
,
here
he
comes
,
with
as
many
patches
and
such
like
properties
as
would
furnish
a
whole
casheer'd
Company
to
beg
with
,
sure
he
was
Scarr-bearer
to
some
Army
lett's
observe
it
what
it
will
doe
,
looke
,
looke
,
'tis
pleas'd
with
the
hangings
.
Poli.
He
cannot
be
thus
by
nature
,
nor
by
accident
,
he
has
studied
to
appeare
horrid
.
Men
Danger
is
not
so
dreadfull
in
it selfe
as
it
appeares
in
him
.
Com.
I
cannot
forbeare
,
for
curiosity
sake
,
i'le
enter
parly
with
it
,
what
rare
things
shall
I
know
if
I
can
get
him
speake
,
I'le
inquire
the
fortune
of
the
Kingdome
for
the
next
thousand
yeares
,
that's
not
worth
the
asking
.
I'le
inquire
the
age
of
the
World
and
where
her
treasure
lyes
,
he
cannot
chuse
but
know
the
very
heart
of
the
earth
.
If
I
cannot
perswad
,
I'le
conjure
something
from
him
.
He
goes
to
Pallantus
.
Boe
,
boe
,
O
Bull-begger
!
what
art
thou
?
who
let
thee
loose
?
where
is
any
gold
hid
?
my
fears
were
just
,
nothing
but
a
charme
will
doe
it
.
Anaell
,
Marfo
,
Rachimas
,
Thulnear
,
vemoby
save
an
vernessa
.
Elty
,
Famelron
,
dusculta
et
obtempora
mandatis
meis
.
This
was
not
terrible
enough
.
Omallaharen
,
Madrason
,
Taporois
,
Iosaschan
.
Almonim
,
Fabelmarasim
—
,
—
This
won't
doe
it
,
it
must
bee
more
tirrible
yet
,
I
adjure
thee
by
those
Boots
,
thy
Velvet
eye
,
by
all
the
Taylors
worke
about
thee
—
Pall.
Peace
Foole
—
Com.
Oah.
Pall.
The
King
will
heare
thee
and
thou
wilt
be
whipt
for
balling
.
Exit
.
Com.
Prethee
good
divell
something
of
the
other
World
.
Men.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
.
Poli.
I
hope
hee
has
satisfied
your
curiosity
Comastes
,
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
.
Com.
Nay
,
I'le
not
leave
him
thus
,
be
bafled
by
a
Goblin
?
I'le
follow
it
to
the
place
where
it
shakes
the
Chaine
,
that
certaine
.
Exit
.
Men.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
come
let's
see
the
end
of
the
Conjuration
.
Exeunt
Om.
Enter
Clearchus
,
Haimantus
in
holy
habits
,
Aratus
.
Ara.
My
Lord
,
Cupid
put
his
hood-winke
on
you
that
he
us'd
to
aime
with
,
and
than
you
could
not
misse
the
marke
,
I
feare
the
second
view
will
not
be
so
delightfull
,
the
most
excellent
things
scarse
please
twice
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
thinke
not
so
,
for
were
the
World
darke
about
her
,
or
I
blind
to
all
things
else
,
in
her
I
could
find
variety
enough
,
and
so
long
as
she
were
not
ecclipsed
I
could
not
envy
him
that
were
so
plac'd
,
that
he
at
once
could
see
the
whole
earth
as
in
a
Map
.
Ara.
These
habits
then
my
Lord
will
bring
you
thither
,
me thinks
your
Grace
becomes
them
really
well
,
now
you
are
a
Person
most
Sacrosanct
,
twice
holy
,
made
so
by
your
Majesty
and
order
.
Tis
time
that
you
were
goeing
,
the
guide
is
ready
to
attend
you
to
the
place
from
whence
you
must
seeme
to
come
,
I
with
a
private
guard
will
waite
you
at
the
Princesse
lodgings
for
feare
of
any
suddaine
danger
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
I
shall
ever
owe
my
life
to
you
,
as
much
as
if
you
had
sau'd
it
,
and
that
I
liv'd
wholly
by
your
guift
,
but
here
can
be
no
danger
where
she
wishes
safety
.
Exeunt
Clea.
Haim
.
Ara.
When
this
is
past
,
then
for
the
great
worke
,
this
is
but
a
florish
to
recreate
the
Sences
in
respect
of
that
,
it
now
growes
toward
an
end
,
and
heavier
like
many
things
at
first
light
in
themselves
,
and
hardly
to
bee
caught
for
every
aire
,
being
condensed
and
thickned
to
a
bottome
,
doe
presse
the
shoulders
and
make
the
vaines
groane
under
.
As
Aratus
goes
out
,
Phronimus
and
Eurilochus
enters
and
calls
after
him
.
Phro.
Aratus
?
Ara.
How
now
friends
,
mee thinkes
your
lookes
are
lively
,
how
succeeds
your
undertakings
?
Phro.
Too
well
to
faile
a
minute
of
the
time
.
Eur.
All
the
places
we
named
,
are
sided
with
us
,
and
those
parts
which
Pallantus
heretofore
commanded
are
ready
to
sacrifice
their
new
Lords
to
any
that
can
but
say
hee
knew
their
old
.
Ara.
Why
this
is
the
life
of
every
action
,
and
makes
it
pleasant
,
when
fortune
is
no
enemie
to
industry
,
nor
turnes
her
wisdome
into
folly
,
makes
not
that
a
ruine
which
was
a
well
ordered
safety
,
when
they
both
consent
the
burthen's
light
,
and
labour
but
a
serious
sport
.
Phro.
The
young
Prince
is
come
,
but
wee
have
given
command
to
keepe
him
close
,
least
his
face
discover
what
his
fortune
is
,
a
Gentleman
at
the
first
sight
started
at
him
,
and
calld
him
the
Prince's
Picture
.
Ara.
You
must
looke
to
that
.
The
time
now
growes
pretious
,
we
must
waigh
each
dram
,
and
till
this
be
over
,
count
all
lost
wee
spend
in
sleepe
or
eating
:
come
,
every
man
to
his
charge
.
I
doubt
not
on
the
day
,
to
have
a
Prince
helpe
us
to
set
the
Crowne
upon
our
King
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
the
King
and
Timeus
.
King
.
But
these
are
things
for
the
following
age
,
wee
are
hedg'd
in
beyond
all
feare
,
if
loyalty
may
prove
distructive
,
there
is
yet
some
danger
.
Tim.
Because
you
see
a
calme
enwrap
all
round
About
yee
,
you
conceive
'twill
be
As
lasting
as
tis
pleasing
.
Tempests
,
sir
,
May
contradict
you
even
whiles
you
think
so
,
Evills
are
silent
now
,
not
done
away
,
They
couch
and
lye
in
waite
.
Sedition
walkes
With
clawes
bowd
in
,
and
a
close
mouth
,
which
onely
Shee
keeps
for
opportunity
of
prey
.
Your
ruine
yet
appeares
not
and
you
thinke
Because
it
lurkes
,
you
are
safe
,
Hee
that
will
be
truly
secure
must
found
A
peace
on
the
distruction
of
all
things
That
can
impeach
it
:
enemies
reconcild
Are
like
wilde
beasts
brought
up
to
hand
,
they
have
More
advantage
given
them
to
be
cruell
.
King
.
Can
the
grave
Quicken
her
ashes
into
Souldiers
?
shall
Stench
and
corruption
yeild
us
enemies
?
We
are
safe
from
those
that
live
,
they
will
not
hurt
,
And
those
that
sleepe
in
the
forgotten
dust
Cannot
.
There
is
nothing
now
remaining
To
our
care
,
but
to
give
thankes
wee
are
safe
Enough
,
if
that
we
can
rejoyce
.
Thou
letst
Thy
best
dayes
passe
without
receiving
fruit
That
should
be
cropt
from
them
.
I
did
expect
Thou
shouldst
have
urgd
me
to
thy
Nuptialls
,
Such
cares
befit
thee
best
;
how
the
Triumphs
Should
be
ordered
,
and
Hymens
torch
well
lighted
.
Tim.
Pray
Heauen
no
other
flames
breake
out
But
such
as
mirth
shew
forth
,
when
treason
laughes
Upon
your
sports
you
call
it
piety
,
Cause
it
lookes
smoothly
on
your
strength
when't
runnes
Out
in
an
idle
pompe
,
suffering
your
vigor
To
wast
it selfe
in
triumph
,
and
diminish
In
a
continued
jollity
,
that
so
,
Sir
,
Ruine
may
be
quiet
,
and
you
perish
Without
disturbance
,
nor
are
all
things
yet
So
free
from
our
suspition
as
you
make
'em
,
You
doe
suppose
that
all
close
eyes
must
sleepe
,
When
they
are
nere
more
watchfull
,
than
when
thus
They
counterfeit
neglect
.
Severely
prying
Into
the
depth
of
things
,
by
seeming
not
T'observe
the
face
and
outside
;
Treason
doth
Walke
in
a
whisper
yet
,
their
hate
is
busie
And
makes
no
noise
;
think
not
that
it
is
their
feare
,
But
their
advice
and
councell
makes
it
silent
.
Doe
you
expect
a
Proclamation
,
or
A
Herauld
from
Sedition
?
tis
too
late
To
say
you
were
deceived
,
when
that
the
Trumpet
Shall
summon
to
your
ruine
,
you
doe
slumber
,
Girt
you
,
before
the
fire
hath
gaind
your
Cabin
,
And
doe
not
trust
your
preservation
to
A
Miracle
,
or
a
chance
;
you
have
an
heire
,
Yet
hee
is
none
of
yours
,
hee
that
begot
mee
Did
perish
long
agoe
.
I
was
the
child
Of
Vigor
,
not
of
Luxurie
.
I
must
tell
you
,
Sir
,
A
few
flattering
Lords
gild
ore
the
defects
And
ruines
of
your
State
,
they
make
you
call
A
Lethargy
,
Security
;
and
that
a
Kingdome
Which
,
like
to
childrens
houses
on
the
sand
,
Reard
up
in
sport
and
toying
,
will
become
A
Prey
unto
the
wave
that
first
approacheth
,
They
can
perhaps
judge
well
of
meates
and
wines
,
Good
Table
States-men
,
Souldiers
at
a
banquet
,
Strong
,
to
orecome
a
Goblet
,
or
a
Charger
:
But
Kingdomes
safeties
are
not
owed
unto
The
Pallat
,
and
the
Stomacke
;
if
that
these
Were
State
affaires
,
your
Councell
were
most
found
,
And
every
brest
a
Synod
;
if
that
Musique
could
now
Raise
Walls
and
Cities
as
of
old
,
Your
Realme
would
be
impregnable
.
King
.
Hast
thou
yet
done
?
Not
all
the
Ghosts
that
I
have
made
,
have
beene
Thus
cruell
to
me
,
nor
,
as
yet
,
their
graves
Have
threated
halfe
these
evills
,
thy
mothers
Labour
was
a
conception
to
these
paines
Thou
howerly
bringst
upon
me
.
Tim.
Sir
,
I
am
sorrie
,
'twas
my
love
,
my
love
That
so
did
dictate
to
mee
,
my
desire
That
your
sports
might
follow
one
another
,
And
succeed
so
just
that
they
may
seeme
to
Bring
the
season
on
,
and
not
the
season
,
Them
,
that
thus
they
might
continue
ever
,
But
'twas
that
they
might
continue
,
and
not
Fall
by
treason
.
But
Sir
,
I
will
no
more
,
I
shall
hereafter
think't
more
piety
Hand
in
hand
to
fall
in
perills
with
you
,
Then
my selfe
to
bring
them
.
King
.
What
wouldst
thou
have
?
The
power
I
have
is
wholly
thine
,
if
that
I
never
did
deny
,
was
not
thought
given
,
Now
I
doe
,
take
all
the
meanes
thou
canst
by
Law
or
Majesty
to
remove
thy
feares
.
Time.
Sir
,
I
thanke
you
,
humbly
thus
low
I
thank
you
,
Nor
will
I
in
a
complement
returne
It
backe
againe
,
till
I
have
made
you
safe
;
I
shall
goe
to
worke
like
a
resolute
,
But
skillfull
Surgeon
,
that
dares
feele
and
search
A
wound
,
and
if
hee
finde
dead
flesh
dares
cut
It
off
,
or
more
corruption
will
not
spare
A
limbe
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Hianthe
,
Aratus
,
Pallantus
.
Hian.
May
I
hope
to
see
such
happinesse
?
Ara.
To
enjoy
it
howerly
,
and
to
the
end
,
or
I
shall
curse
my selfe
else
.
Pall.
It
is
the
power
of
Princes
for
to
change
The
place
the
come
in
to
a
Court
,
but
this
Lady
beares
such
divinity
about
her
,
That
where
she
comes
,
she
consecrates
the
place
A
Temple
,
me thinks
a
sacred
awe
doth
Fill
the
roome
resulting
from
her
presence
.
How
happie
were
those
times
which
saw
a
King
And
Councell
of
the
same
blessed
temper
,
Informd
with
soules
like
hers
;
that
knew
no
vice
But
what
they
punisht
,
nor
learnt
it
further
Than
the
law
and
common
place
instructed
;
In
that
great
Massaker
(
I
may
rather
say
)
Of
virtues
than
of
men
,
all
that
fled
not
To
this
holy
Sanctuary
were
crusht
to
nothing
.
Hian.
Can
I
no
way
be
a
helper
?
Ara.
Onely
with
your
prayers
,
the
men
will
orecome
,
and
the
Gods
,
who
must
with
piety
bee
conquered
,
wee'l
leave
to
your
goodnesse
,
but
madam
you
must
yet
conceale
your
ioyes
,
and
not
speake
them
with
a
looke
.
Hian.
This
is
the
hardest
taske
,
the
first
is
so
iust
and
righteous
that
in
it selfe
it
is
both
prayer
and
sacrifice
.
Ara.
There
are
but
a
few
dayes
now
,
as
I
may
truly
say
,
to
crowne
our
labours
,
our
greatest
care
is
how
we
shall
provide
for
your
grace
before
the
time
,
your
stay
heere
may
bee
dangerous
.
Hian.
Take
no
care
for
me
,
my
Lord
,
which
way
so ere
the
fortune
goes
,
I
shall
be
safe
from
all
,
but
from
my selfe
.
Ara.
Madam
the
Prince
.
Enter
Clearchus
,
Haimantus
.
Hian.
So
fell
the
cloud
from
off
the
Troian
Lord
,
Not
able
to
imbrace
such
raies
within
,
But
being
piercd
,
turnd
all
at
once
to
ayre
,
And
left
thin
closd
as
dazling
as
the
Sunne
.
Clea.
Sure
I
was
rude
and
barbarous
;
before
This
softer
fire
did
touch
my
heart
,
and
from
The
wild
inhabitants
of
the
wood
,
differed
In
passion
onely
,
and
not
reason
;
that
Without
more
respect
,
my
dull
eyes
could
gaze
Upon
such
brightnesse
,
and
with
a
ready
rudenesse
Could
excuse
the
fault
committed
.
The
unhewne
Clowne
not
faultering
with
his
tongue
Or
in
his
lookes
abasht
,
could
answer
to
The
Emperor
of
the
world
,
when
he
that's
Better
taught
and
neerer
to
the
Maiestie
That
speakes
,
beates
for
a
word
,
and
answers
but
With
lookes
:
although
at
other
times
his
learn'd
Soule
can
dictate
such
as
would
be
:
if
that
the
god
of
Wit
his
Deity
were
calld
in
question
,
And
forcd
to
shew
some
excellent
Piece
above
all
was
ever
writ
,
as
the
Tenure
by
which
he
holds
his
God-head
:
Pardon
that
,
like
the
attendants
of
the
Alter
thus
by
degrees
I
come
,
and
pause
At
each
step
,
and
bend
unto
that
neerenesse
,
Rashnesse
was
my
fault
before
,
and
brought
me
Into
shame
.
Though
no
adoration
,
Yet
there
is
a
duty
to
be
paid
at
Your
faire
shrine
.
Hian.
Sir
,
It
was
not
yours
,
but
the
rudenesse
of
the
Court
that
would
leave
you
to
so
unhappie
a
mistake
.
Ara.
If
I
would
set
a
spectacle
to
the
World
,
it
should
be
such
a
close
,
where
beauty
Ador'd
beauty
and
greatnesse
bowd
to
greatnesse
,
Me thinks
the
heavens
doe
open
,
and
the
clowds
Are
spun
into
a
thread
,
to
let
downe
some
God
unto
this
contract
.
Let
us
withdraw
,
The
Power
is
now
descended
,
and
all
Within
is
sacred
and
misterious
,
And
if
we
doe
pry
into
these
secrets
,
Our
curiosity
will
bee
punishd
.
Exeunt
Aratus
,
Pallantus
,
Haimantus
,
Clea.
This
honourable
admittance
you
have
granted
mee
shall
hereafter
be
my
onely
glory
,
the
sweet
meditation
that
accompanies
my
old
age
,
nor
shall
the
much
envied
youth
,
make
mee
wish
one
day
backe
to
bee
partaker
of
their
lesser
pleasures
,
when
I
shall
call
these
greater
unto
minde
,
what
cordiall
will
it
bee
;
when
I
can
silently
boast
within
my selfe
,
my
younger
daies
were
grac'd
by
a
Princesse
,
the
fairest
in
the
world
;
so
I
may
say
.
Fian.
O
my
Lord
,
when
you
talke
thus
,
though
I
am
loath
,
you
doe
compell
me
to
turne
my
face
away
.
Clea.
I
humbly
crave
your
pardon
.
Tis
strange
so
much
seriousenesse
can
produce
such
follies
,
yet
I
have
faire
grounds
for
what
I
said
,
which
most
excellently
shew
themselves
in
every
part
.
Hian.
They
shew
but
to
the
fantasie
,
ther's
no
such
beauty
here
,
tis
borrowed
from
your
speech
and
faire
esteeme
,
which
thus
Ile
pay
you
backe
againe
;
you
are
all
that
you
have
said
,
and
when
I
first
saw
you
,
so
you
did
appeare
to
me
,
and
I
think
to
all
the
world
,
the
first
sight
promises
all
vertues
,
and
the
next
performes
'em
,
nothing
seem'd
then
so
low
in
you
as
this
passion
.
Clea.
What
honours
you
have
laid
upon
mee
,
I
may
bleed
for
,
but
cannot
purchase
any
like
'em
;
nor
returne
such
back
againe
,
there
all
must
submit
,
your
gifts
,
as
your
beauties
,
are
excelling
.
But
away
vaine
words
,
I
will
endeavour
to
grow
strong
in
those
virtues
,
and
not
melt
in
the
passion
you
have
named
,
I'le
set
new
Lawes
to
all
noble
Lovers
,
that
shall
make
all
their
idle
passions
appeare
as
fond
unto
themselves
as
others
,
make
them
throw
by
their
Pen
,
and
with
their
Sword
to
act
those
Fictions
nor
daring
to
name
nor
thinke
upon
the
Saint
they
worship
,
but
when
they
have
an
offering
some
vertuous
increase
to
bring
them
neere
.
Thus
is
a
Love
that's
free
to
all
,
none
is
injur'd
by
it
Himens
.
Torch
burnes
brighter
by
such
flames
,
and
Vestas
fires
more
lasting
and
more
pure
,
who
can
complaine
the
want
of
beauty
,
when
any
(
any
that
dares
be
good
)
may
adore
any
,
and
she
like
her
Picture
though
she
truely
looke
one
way
may
,
seeme
to
cast
a
gratious
eye
o're
all
.
Hian.
How
his
soule
labours
to
soare
above
the
pitch
of
honor
.
Clea.
How
glad
,
how
much
greater
should
I
grow
,
if
I
could
promise
to
my selfe
,
but
one
of
those
seeming
lookes
from
you
.
Hian,
My
Lord
,
I
have
not
heard
you
without
admiration
and
wish
I
could
bestow
favours
rich
,
and
lovely
worthy
your
acceptance
;
but
seeing
that
I
cannot
:
I'le
strive
to
honor
you
,
not
with
peevish
and
womanish
commands
,
but
such
as
shall
be
worthy
of
your
valour
,
and
make
you
yet
more
a
Prince
.
The
bravery
you
have
shewne
hath
not
rais'd
a
vaine
passion
in
me
,
but
a
confidence
,
a
noble
confidence
,
that
all
those
vertues
were
not
nam'd
by
you
but
spoke
in
you
,
which
thus
i'le
shew
my
Lord
,
my
Lord
,
Aratus
.
Enter
Aratus
.
But
I
must
leave
you
to
an
instructer
,
'tis
fit
for
your
Sword
,
and
therefore
above
my
power
to
utter
,
shame
not
,
Sir
,
that
I
put
a
tutor
to
you
,
you
are
but
to
ground
with
him
,
you
may
build
to
what
height
you
please
.
Come
my
Lord
,
you
must
lay
off
all
Strangenesse
here
,
and
receive
a
noble
helper
whole
bring
both
Strength
,
and
honor
to
your
Cause
.
Ara.
I
may
stand
amazed
at
the
noblenesse
in
you
both
,
but
not
at
this
agreement
in
you
,
I
know
vertues
are
still
a
kinne
though
the
persons
are
strangers
they
are
in
.
Exeunt
omnes
Whiles
this
old
Puppy
thus
doth
sleepe
And
doth
in
vice
,
as
age
grow
deepe
Benumming
all
these
Plants
are
nigh
Into
a
drowsy
Let
bargie
,
Behold
a
nobler
Branch
appeares
,
As
farr
from's
manners
as
his
yeares
,
Chorus
.
O
shed
thou
then
thy
influence
,
And
weele
returne
fresh
beauties
thence
.
The
feircer
sweetnes
of
his
face
Presents
a
rigour
mixt
with
grace
.
And
though
there
were
,
a
want
of
blood
His
worth
would
make
his
Title
good
.
Virtues
so
growne
in
so
few
yeeres
Make
him
eu'n
such
,
become
their
feares
,
Chorus
.
On
then
,
and
make
the
Scepter
be
Thought
but
reserud
,
not
snatcht
from
thee
.
Actus
Tertius
:
Scaena
I.
Enter
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Pallantus
,
Eurilochus
,
and
others
.
ARa.
Are
all
things
ready
for
the
ceremony
;
the
Crowne
,
and
robes
?
Phro.
They
are
,
ther's
nothing
wanting
if
the
Prince
were
come
.
Euri.
Hee's
come
now
.
Enter
Clearchus
,
Hiamantus
.
Ara.
Your
grace
is
welcome
,
but
it
may
seeme
to
a
Strange
place
and
person
;
what
thinke
you
my
Lord
,
are
not
you
fallen
into
the
company
of
so
many
trayterous
and
lost
men
.
Clea.
Sir
,
say
not
so
,
you
have
not
warrant
,
though
you
ranke
your selfe
within
the
number
.
The
place
,
and
persons
rather
appeare
to
me
,
as
if
there
were
some
Religion
towards
.
Ara.
My
Lord
,
you
understand
it
right
,
there
is
a
Religion
towards
,
and
I
may
truely
say
that
this
our
private
meeting
and
close
Counsell
is
more
just
,
and
glorious
then
the
lowdest
deede
in
Court
,
that
all
our
publike
Acts
,
edicts
,
and
formes
of
Law
,
are
darke
and
impious
compared
to
it
;
nay
,
that
this
time
and
place
made
holy
by
our
purposes
hath
the
gods
more
manifest
and
present
,
then
the
Sacrifice
and
Temples
,
long
since
made
void
and
empty
of
a
Deity
,
by
those
which
sue
for
favours
and
request
for
him
,
who
justly
heare
deserves
their
horridst
vengeance
,
we
are
not
met
heere
to
plot
a
generall
ruine
for
a
private
injury
,
we
know
and
teach
the
greatest
Donne
by
the
King
unto
the
Subject
,
can
not
give
him
cause
to
throw
off
his
faith
.
Kings
are
petty
gods
and
may
tempt
us
,
nor
is
it
want
or
desire
of
Innovation
that
thus
Stirreth
us
,
wee
are
in
the
best
ill
State
allready
,
nor
ambition
to
Strike
at
that
Lawrell
which
the
Thunder
spares
,
no
we
reverence
it
,
and
know
that
as
men
are
the
workes
of
nature
,
so
Kings
of
Jove
.
But
'tis
our
oath
the
Sacrament
we
tooke
,
which
still
holds
us
though
our
Lord
be
dead
,
untill
his
successor
doe
quit
us
from
it
,
by
taking
of
a
new
one
,
we
are
not
subjects
,
but
slaves
to
him
we
now
obey
,
and
therefore
as
slaves
we
ought
to
hate
our
Master
;
he
was
borne
lesse
then
we
,
and
hides
the
private
man
under
the
publique
gowne
;
the
purple
which
he
weares
was
dipt
deepe
in
the
blood
of
Innocents
to
collour't
so
.
But
I
vainely
wast
my selfe
in
words
,
here
are
no
minds
to
be
perswaded
,
nor
eares
to
be
instructed
;
the
sinnes
we
are
to
punish
,
we
all
know
,
and
the
gods
remember
,
our
Strength
then
is
all
we
are
to
speake
of
,
which
is
the
greatest
halfe
of
the
Isle
16.
yeares
undisturb'd
provision
,
so
carelesly
was
that
provided
for
which
was
got
by
blood
,
there
is
but
one
Lordship
,
small
in
respect
of
others
,
the
Tyrants
owne
possession
that
will
stand
strong
for
him
,
but
they
are
so
besotted
with
their
fortunes
that
their
greatest
aide
will
be
but
in
their
will
to
doe
him
service
.
They
may
offer
up
their
lives
,
like
so
many
Sacrifices
for
his
sake
,
but
not
like
Souldiers
,
they
are
unworthy
of
that
name
:
They
may
dy
but
never
conquer
,
warr
is
never
talk't
of
but
in
their
banquets
,
nor
dare
they
fight
beyond
a
Brawle
.
Phro.
And
if
we
would
count
part
of
our
Strength
in
their
weaknesse
,
we
have
no
opposition
.
In
the
City
where
they
and
their
vices
are
daily
seene
,
nothing
is
to
contemptible
;
and
in
the
remoter
parts
,
where
Majestie
is
no
more
reverenc'd
,
being
knowne
onely
by
the
Power
and
lawes
,
and
where
the
name
of
King
heares
like
the
name
of
God
,
even
there
those
sonnes
of
the
earth
(
as
I
may
so
call
them
)
dare
minace
at
him
,
and
pile
hills
on
hills
to
set
their
bodies
equall
to
their
hates
.
Euri.
Heere
we
are
three
,
can
each
of
us
raise
such
forces
,
which
,
though
they
could
not
,
yet
could
make
the
Kingdome
feare
a
conquest
.
Pall.
You
are
a
Souldier
my
Lord
,
and
though
but
young
perhaps
have
seene
already
what
others
whole
lives
have
not
shewne
them
,
yet
wee'l
play
a
game
we
dare
invite
you
to
,
though
you
were
accompanied
with
all
the
ancient
Heroes
,
who
had
they
leave
but
in
their
airie
shapes
to
sit
on
a
Tribunall
,
spectators
of
the
warre
,
this
their
second
leaving
of
the
earth
,
should
bee
more
grievous
to
them
than
their
former
deaths
,
and
they
would
wish
this
Kingdome
might
bee
their
Elizium
.
Ara.
You
see
,
my
Lord
,
how
each
can
bring
his
forces
in
and
prompt
the
other
,
those
which
have
none
on
earth
can
bring
them
downe
from
heaven
;
in
stead
of
men
bring
manly
spirits
,
words
and
lookes
confirming
more
than
Armies
.
Clea.
If
you
have
not
yet
done
,
I
can
heare
you
still
,
and
with
such
lectures
bee
content
to
have
my selfe
perswaded
to
that
thing
,
whose
imbraces
I
would
leape
into
;
would
I
could
lend
aides
equall
to
yours
,
but
theres
none
so
good
,
yet
if
you
can
stay
so
long
,
I
can
command
worthy
helpers
.
Ara.
My
Lord
,
it
shall
not
neede
,
all
that
wee
desire
is
to
have
you
not
our
enemy
.
Phro.
Are
you
ready
for
the
Priest
yet
?
Ara.
Yes
,
pray
call
him
in
.
Though
wee
need
Exit
.
Phro.
nothing
to
strengthen
our
resolutions
,
yet
wee'l
take
an
oath
,
tis
good
to
have
the
Gods
along
with
us
,
a
Sacrament
is
the
tie
no
lesse
of
loyalty
than
of
treason
.
Phronimus
returnes
,
and
a
Flamen
to
them
,
with
the
Images
of
some
of
the
gods
.
Ara.
Here
let
us
all
before
the
sacred
witnes
of
faith
and
periury
,
make
a
holy
vow
of
loyalty
to
our selves
and
cause
,
and
as
we
draw
neere
to
so
divine
an
Essence
,
consider
tis
not
gold
or
marble
that
wee
touch
,
but
a
modle
of
a
sensible
and
living
Power
,
which
has
vouchsafd
to
be
imbracd
by
one
hand
,
when
the
vastnesse
of
our
thoughts
could
not
comprehend
it
.
Here
they
all
seeme
to
take
an
oath
by
touching
of
the
Image
.
Ara.
Now
we
are
ready
for
the
Prince
,
Eurilochus
prethee
doe
thou
conduct
him
in
.
Exit
.
Eurilochus
Ara.
Your
grace
shall
see
a
stronger
perswation
than
any
you
have
yet
heard
,
the
lively
image
of
her
you
so
much
serve
,
he
knowes
not
yet
his
fortunes
,
but
I
dare
warrant
hee'l
beare
them
bravely
,
hee
has
read
the
lives
of
kings
though
hee
never
acted
any
,
and
you
shall
perceive
he's
princely
borne
,
though
not
bred
in
Court
.
Enter
Eurilochus
and
Cleander
the
young
Prince
.
Euri.
This
way
,
Sir
.
-
at
his
entrance
they
all
stand
bare
,
and
-
after
some
pause
,
Aratus
speaks
to
him
Ara.
Royall
Sir
you
are
wellcome
.
Start
not
at
the
name
,
it
is
your
due
,
you
were
borne
to
that
title
,
and
I
doubt
not
,
though
you
never
heard
it
thus
applide
before
,
tis
not
altogether
a
Stranger
to
you
,
there
was
a
sparke
which
in
the
first
wombe
after
a
speciall
manner
was
infusd
into
you
,
and
is
as
another
soule
within
you
,
as
the
one
informes
your
body
,
so
this
informes
that
soule
,
we
may
call
it
the
difference
of
a
King
,
that
will
tell
you
we
are
all
heere
your
subjects
,
and
this
no
strange
Phylosophy
I
teach
,
and
though
this
rich
persume
hath
hitherto
beene
wrapt
in
this
disguise
of
learning
,
and
defended
from
the
aire
oth
court
,
tis
not
decayde
,
but
growne
stronger
by
such
keeping
,
which
when
it
shall
bee
opened
will
cast
a
fragrant
smell
ore
all
the
Kingdome
,
and
cure
the
infections
of
the
former
age
;
to
open
it
we
are
met
,
it
is
a
medicine
we
too
long
have
languishd
for
.
And
Sir
,
though
it
bee
a
short
warning
to
so
great
a
matter
,
you
must
presently
preparè
to
bee
a
King
;
wee
have
no
time
now
to
instruct
you
in
your
right
,
and
how
you
lost
it
,
it
was
yeares
a
doing
,
and
will
require
yeares
for
to
relate
it
.
In
the
meane
time
,
let
what
you
see
perswade
you
,
our
serious
lookes
,
respects
,
and
the
presence
of
these
holy
rights
.
Clean.
I
neede
not
excuse
my
want
of
answer
to
you
,
there
is
nothing
fit
for
me
to
say
,
which
way
so ever
I
ope
my
mouth
to
this
purpose
will
appeare
foolish
,
whether
I
refuse
,
or
grant
both
are
alike
ridiculous
.
I
cannot
turne
my selfe
in
this
place
,
without
committing
shame
,
'tis
not
with
me
as
with
elder
yeares
they
may
deny
such
offers
and
be
admired
for
their
modesty
,
or
accept
them
and
bee
honor'd
for
that
Noblenesse
,
I
have
nothing
yet
at
my
dispose
,
obedience
is
my
best
part
;
here
I
am
;
you
may
use
me
as
you
please
,
command
me
,
even
to
weare
a
Crowne
,
and
make
me
submit
unto
the
highest
honors
,
set
me
on
the
Throne
you
speake
of
,
and
when
I
have
had
it
long
enough
,
take
it
againe
from
me
like
other
toyes
I
play
with
,
yet
my
Lords
,
I
am
not
so
young
,
but
that
I
know
I
am
a
subject
,
and
that
I
have
a
King
;
that
thus
,
though
but
a
sport
,
to
use
his
titles
is
a
fault
,
or
for
any
to
acknowledge
such
a
spirit
as
you
my
Lord
have
spoken
,
is
no
lesse
a
traytor
then
he
which
strikes
the
Crowne
from
off
his
head
.
Ara.
You
have
beene
heavenly
taught
,
and
shall
be
ever
instructed
in
such
Lectures
.
But
the
treason
which
is
committed
is
committed
against
your selfe
,
your
spirit
is
usurpt
,
and
he
that
holds
it
is
your
servant
as
I
am
,
or
at
least
should
be
so
,
please
you
to
attend
.
Sir
yond
place
is
provided
for
you
.
Clean.
My
Lord
,
set
me
not
such
a
spectacle
of
shame
.
Eury.
Phro.
It
must
be
so
.
Ara.
Submit
now
,
and
command
ever
.
My
Lord
,
will
you
honor
us
with
your
helpe
.
Here
they
seate
Cleander
in
the
Throne
,
and
after
they
take
of
his
blacke
habit
,
and
put
on
him
a
Scarlet
Robe
.
Clearchus
and
the
Flamen
hold
the
Crowne
over
his
head
,
and
the
rest
stand
before
,
and
salute
him
saying
,
the
gods
preserve
the
King
.
Omnes
The
gods
preserve
the
King
.
Ara.
We
have
now
perform'd
the
one
halfe
of
our
duty
,
which
was
to
seate
you
thus
,
the
other
is
with
our
lives
to
keepe
you
at
this
height
.
Clean.
If
I
may
yet
take
confidence
to
speake
,
and
it
will
become
me
to
say
something
of
my selfe
.
I
could
tell
you
how
this
day
hath
beene
familier
to
me
,
and
in
a
dreame
I
have
seene
things
so
often
,
that
did
not
these
shoutes
confirme
me
,
which
were
then
Still
the
concluders
of
my
happines
,
I
could
not
yet
beleeve
but
all
that
I
have
now
suffered
is
only
ayrie
,
and
these
shapes
I
see
,
meerely
phantastique
.
Fla.
It
was
a
good
and
prosperous
Omen
;
which
presag'd
your
quiet
here
.
The
gods
would
not
suffer
you
to
rest
in
a
wrong
place
.
All
.
May
it
be
so
.
Here
Aratus
brings
Clearchus
to
the
King
,
and
seemes
to
informe
him
who
he
is
,
he
discends
,
and
they
imbrace
,
making
a
mutuall
shew
of
complement
,
in
the
meane
time
Pallantus
speakes
.
Pall.
And
shall
I
alone
in
such
a
glorious
Action
walke
unseene
?
and
as
a
fault
performe
my
duties
in
disguise
?
I
rather
will
proclaime
it
,
here
fall
my
mist
away
,
now
thou
onely
barrest
me
from
my
joyes
,
to
which
I
am
not
neere
enough
unlesse
I
can
embrace
.
Give
me
leave
my
Lords
that
as
my
life
,
so
I
may
throw
my
body
at
his
feete
;
I
have
a
share
in
him
,
I
,
though
a
Stranger
to
you
,
it
was
my
Fathers
purchase
,
with
his
life
,
he
bought
it
,
nor
desire
I
to
hold
it
by
another
pattent
,
may
such
be
the
noted
end
successively
of
all
our
name
,
noe
disease
but
our
Mistris
cause
to
dy
on
.
Heere
let
me
kneele
and
pray
all
happines
and
the
best
things
may
fall
,
and
then
rise
,
and
with
my
Sword
procure
those
blessings
I
have
praid
for
,
know
me
my
Lords
,
I
am
Pallantus
.
—
Phro.
Euri.
Pallantus
?
Ara.
Pallantus
!
My
dearest
friend
proved
my
dearest
kinsman
?
could
I
be
so
dull
as
to
imagine
such
vallours
could
be
in
a
shape
so
low
as
thy
outside
promist
,
or
so
common
as
to
be
met
by
chance
.
That
I
could
love
thee
so
,
and
yet
have
noe
interest
in
thee
?
where
hast
thou
beene
thus
long
dead
?
Sr.
looke
upon
this
man
that
turnes
our
joyes
thus
from
you
,
your
party
is
made
strong
by
his
discouery
,
he
has
brought
such
unexpected
aide
within
himselfe
.
Clean.
My
Lord
,
I
am
yet
as
in
a
new
World
,
and
know
no
more
then
if
I
now
began
to
live
,
the
most
common
things
are
wonders
to
me
,
you
must
excuse
me
therefore
if
I
know
not
how
to
entertaine
such
accidents
as
these
,
yet
I
can
love
,
if
you
point
me
where
I
should
,
and
being
that
I
want
art
,
and
reason
I'le
lay
on
the
more
.
Clear.
Sir
as
I
;
new
friend
,
let
me
imbrace
you
,
but
this
alteration
shall
not
give
me
leave
to
forget
those
former
favours
I
am
to
serve
you
for
,
what
I
receive
in
your
disguise
,
I
shall
be
ever
ready
to
pay
unto
your selfe
.
Ara.
How
it
greeves
me
to
see
thy
beauties
thus
blasted
in
thy
youth
,
warre
hath
beene
too
rough
a
Mistrisse
to
thee
,
and
set
thy
glories
in
too
eminent
a
place
:
had
Venus
beene
i'th
Campe
she
would
have
cover'd
thee
with
Marses
Shield
,
although
the
god
himselfe
had
wanted
it
,
I
can
remember
when
the
lovelyest
face
compared
with
thine
,
could
not
have
taken
from
thee
,
when
in
the
brightest
ring
of
beauty
thou
appearst
but
well
set
,
and
hadst
thou
beene
attired
like
one
of
them
thou
mighst
have
wonne
the
Prize
of
Fairnesse
from
a
Court
of
Ladies
.
Pall.
My
Lord
,
they
are
well
lost
,
both
those
which
were
the
causers
of
it
,
shall
receive
wounds
as
Deepe
though
not
so
disfiguring
,
and
afford
their
blood
to
wash
the
scarres
they
have
made
.
Ara.
They
shall
,
and
we
will
helpe
to
bath
thee
.
'Tis
time
that
wee
broake
up
,
our
longer
stay
my
prove
dangerous
,
Phronimus
and
Euril
.
you
must
post
this
night
to
your
command
,
your
Majesty
must
beare
them
company
,
and
now
without
more
delay
shew
your selves
,
we
will
be
ready
heere
upon
the
first
newes
,
my
Lord
,
your
Navy
will
require
a
Strickt
watch
and
guard
on
the
first
motion
that
will
be
attempted
.
Clea.
Haimantus
you
shall
presently
away
,
and
take
the
whole
charge
upon
your selfe
.
Ara.
Pray
doe
so
my
Lord
,
all
we
have
to
doe
is
to
mingle
our selves
in
the
Court
againe
,
when
these
troubles
are
once
over
a
perpetuall
ease
will
follow
.
Clean.
My
Lord
,
I
never
enjoy'd
safety
like
these
dangers
.
Exeunt
Om.
Enter
Timeus
.
My
Lord
,
Now
to
leave
suspitions
,
I
can
write
certaine
newes
of
the
conspiracie
we
have
a
long
time
feard
,
the
swarmes
are
now
flowne
out
,
the
Hives
are
growne
too
narrow
for
their
numbers
,
and
they
keepe
their
murmurings
abroad
,
every
petty
Inmate
upon
his
Country
grievance
dares
threaten
a
State-revenge
,
and
what
the
Law
takes
from
him
,
will
repay
with
ruine
.
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Eurildchus
the
three
great
diseases
—
Tim.
But
not
incurable
.
I
know
which
way
To
handle
them
:
there
must
be
some
suddaine
Remedy
applied
,
that
will
worke
strongly
;
This
night
Ile
send
it
.
Be
absent
all
yee
Lazie
medicines
that
the
Law
doth
bring
,
Ye
are
more
treacherous
than
the
villaine
You
examine
,
and
where
there
was
none
,
give
Time
for
to
act
mischife
:
the
summons
are
The
traitors
watchword
,
and
drive
him
to
take
That
opportunity
,
which
otherwise
His
feares
would
have
let
slip
;
my selfe
will
be
The
accuser
and
the
Judge
;
when
publique
Meanes
are
dangerous
,
each
Prince
hath
the
Courts
Of
Justice
in
his
brest
.
Enter
Pallantus
.
What
fiend
is
this
that
causes
such
antipathy
within
me
?
the
midnight
ghost
take
not
shapes
so
horrid
.
I
have
not
slept
since
first
he
crost
me
.
Pall.
Wee
are
both
alone
,
the
Gods
have
given
this
time
for
my
revenge
.
Tim.
What
does
hee
mutter
to
himselfe
?
Pall.
Ile
not
loose
this
opportunity
.
When
Pallantus
thinks
to
draw
,
Tim.
cals
2.
of
his
guard
,
which
makes
him
forbeare
.
Tim.
Coracinus
,
Argestes
?
Enter
Argestes
,
Coracinus
.
Tim.
Kill
that
Dog
.
Co.
My
Lord
?
Tim.
Kill
that
Dog
.
cowardly
They
assault
Pall
.
and
have
the
worst
on't
.
Tim.
drawes
,
and
they
make
him
retire
.
Villaines
,
it
were
a
mercy
to
leave
You
to
the
worrying
.
exeunt
.
Voyces
are
heard
within
,
Treason
,
Treason
,
save
the
Prince
,
Treason
.
Timeus
,
Coracinus
,
Argestes
,
returne
bloody
,
and
others
.
Tim.
Hee
was
a
Devill
,
the
power
of
hell
was
in
his
arme
,
Night
threw
her
shades
about
him
to
defend
him
:
hee
could
not
have
scapt
unlesse
he
had
vanishd
.
Is
he
oretaken
yet
.
Enter
a
Servant
.
Ser.
No
my
Lord
,
but
tis
impossible
he
should
passe
the
Court
,
sure
he
has
taken
covert
in
lodgings
thereabout
.
Tim.
Let
there
bee
search
made
,
and
give
command
that
when
hee
appeares
againe
,
hee
that
first
meets
him
without
more
delay
doe
kill
him
.
Promise
a
reward
for
him
that
brings
his
head
.
Enter
Clearchus
and
Aratus
with
their
swords
drawne
.
Clea.
How
doe
you
,
my
Lord
?
Tim.
Well
.
Ara.
Is
your
Grace
hurt
?
Tim.
And
may
be
againe
,
if
I
looke
not
warilie
,
would
your
Lordships
sword
were
sheath'd
.
Ara.
Sir
,
it
was
drawne
in
your
defence
,
and
if
you
are
jealous
,
you
wrong
it
,
and
a
ready
hand
to
doe
you
service
.
Clea.
Sir
,
is
not
the
Traitour
knowne
that
did
it
?
Tim.
No
doubt
he
is
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
you
speake
very
doubtfull
.
I
hope
you
doe
not
thinke
but
I
am
sorry
for
the
accident
.
Time.
I
know
not
what
to
thinke
,
your
disposition
is
as
great
a
stranger
to
me
as
your selfe
.
Clea.
I
see
my
Lord
,
you
know
to
bestow
injuries
,
though
no
curtesies
,
to
a
stranger
.
Tim.
Iniuries
are
deserving
to
an
intruding
guest
.
Clea.
You
are
unworthy
—
Timeus
offers
to
draw
,
and
they
hold
him
.
And
though
I
am
encompast
with
all
the
dangers
I
may
justly
feare
from
so
barbarous
a
place
,
which
dares
doe
any
thing
it
lusts
unto
,
without
regard
of
lawes
or
hospitality
,
I'de
tell
you
so
,
and
were
you
from
the
Dung-hill
that
you
stalke
on
(
it
is
no
better
)
I'de
pull
downe
that
unmanner'd
pride
within
you
.
Tim.
Let
mee
goe
,
nothing
shall
priviledge
him
to
talke
thus
.
Clea.
They
hold
you
in
your
safety
,
nor
is
the
distance
twixt
your
life
and
death
longer
than
this
space
that
parts
us
.
If
you
dare
,
oretake
me
,
Ile
stay
you
out
a
daies
sayle
at
Sea
.
I
challenge
you
to
a
princely
combate
,
where
come
with
all
your
Power
,
that
I
may
destroy
so
many
bruite
beasts
from
of
the
earth
.
Exit
.
Clearchus
Time.
Shall
I
bee
tyed
while
I
am
bayted
?
Ile
send
those
that
shall
oretake
you
,
and
cut
you
off
before
your
shipping
yet
.
Coracinus
hast
unto
the
City
presently
,
and
in
my
fathers
name
command
them
to
raise
all
speedie
Power
to
stop
the
Prince
,
bid
them
fire
his
ships
in
the
Haven
.
Ara.
O
my
Lord
,
consider
a
little
more
before
you
lay
a
scandall
on
the
Kingdome
,
which
future
ages
cannot
wipe
off
,
no
story
can
paralell
such
a
fact
;
your
grace
moved
him
much
and
gave
him
cause
of
choller
.
Tim.
Does
hee
helpe
your
Lordship
with
ships
,
that
thus
you
plead
his
cause
?
shall
I
be
tutord
by
a
Traytor
?
Ara.
Sir
,
you
are
happie
if
you
can
find
a
Tutor
,
when
you
thus
much
need
one
,
and
for
your
other
language
,
if
I
understood
it
I'de
give
you
an
answere
,
in
the
meane
time
it
must
returne
upon
you
.
Enter
the
King
,
Polyander
,
Menetius
,
Comastes
,
and
attendants
.
Time.
Well
Sir
,
I
shall
finde
other
waies
than
words
to
answer
you
.
King
.
How
now
Timeus
,
what
bloody
?
Time.
No
more
than
you
see
Sir
,
the
sword
rather
left
it
on
me
then
drew
it
out
.
King
.
Who
is
the
traytor
that
durst
attempt
such
outrage
?
Tim.
He's
scapt
unknowne
.
King
.
Unknowne
?
that
cannot
bee
,
when
he
has
past
thus
farre
in
the
court
some
must
take
notice
of
him
.
Can
you
describe
him
?
Time.
Hee
was
habited
like
a
Souldier
,
but
his
lookes
had
more
of
Devill
than
of
man
.
King
.
Upon
my
life
I
saw
him
:
but
tis
some
two
dayes
since
,
he
must
be
knowne
in
all
this
time
,
enquire
who
brought
in
any
such
man
,
or
was
seene
with
him
.
Com.
This
can
be
no bodie
but
my
Hobgoblin
.
An't
please
your
grace
,
was
hee
not
in
a
buffe
Coate
,
and
his
face
all
to
bee
dab'ld
with
patches
?
Tim.
Yes
he
was
so
.
Com.
Then
doe
I
know
him
,
hee
belongs
to
my
Lord
Aratus
there
,
no bodie
durst
speake
to
him
but
hee
,
hee
shewed
his
teeth
at
every bodie
else
,
he
had
like
to
have
bit
me
once
.
King
.
Aratus
doe
you
heare
?
they
say
hee
that
committed
this
outrage
belongs
to
you
.
Ara.
To
mee
Sir
?
hee
wrongs
mee
that
thinkes
so
,
I
maintaine
none
that
dare
commit
such
insolence
.
Poli.
My
Lord
,
I
saw
him
with
you
.
Ara.
Who
?
pray
make
me
know
the
man
.
Poly.
A
blacke
sterne
Souldier
that
followed
you
.
Ara.
I
feare
I
understand
you
now
,
there
is
such
a
one
does
follow
mee
,
but
I
never
discoverd
anie
disloyall
spirit
in
him
;
his
outside
,
tis
true
,
was
as
you
discribe
,
not
moulded
after
the
common
frame
of
men
,
but
threatned
more
than
anie
I
have
seene
;
yet
twas
but
his
outside
that
threatned
so
,
within
hee
was
gentle
,
all
a
Courtier
,
to
be
wound
and
turnd
by
the
smallest
courtesie
.
I
must
confesse
,
if
he
were
injurd
,
then
hee
was
proud
,
and
Lordly
stormes
rose
within
his
lookes
,
and
thunder
was
in
his
voice
.
King
.
And
you
knowing
this
,
how
durst
you
turne
such
a
wild
beast
loose
into
the
Court
,
whom
had
I
met
and
chancd
to
have
anger'd
my
fortune
had
beene
the
same
.
Lay
hands
upon
him
,
you
shall
find
that
such
a
Spirit
lodges
in
my
brest
too
,
and
when
tis
stird
will
raise
Tempests
as
greate
;
we
shall
find
other
matters
to
examine
you
of
.
Through
this
seeming
neglect
we
doe
put
on
,
we
can
observe
all
your
actions
,
and
with
a
halfe
and
sleeping
eie
see
into
your
darkest
plots
.
The
King
turnes
to
goe
away
.
Ara.
Then
the
Gods
send
their
aid
or
all
is
lost
,
yet
Sir
heare
me
speake
,
the
jealousies
you
have
on
mee
,
I
shall
not
bee
able
to
cleare
,
but
will
leave
them
to
the
triall
of
my
innocence
and
your
favour
:
Yet
Sir
,
to
shew
you
in
this
last
accident
how
much
I
am
guiltlesse
,
I
will
relate
unto
you
how
first
I
met
the
actour
of
it
.
Twas
on
that
day
I
was
imploid
on
an
honorable
message
from
your
Majesty
,
to
the
Stranger
Prince
,
on
the
shore
I
found
him
having
lately
scapt
a
Shipwracke
,
and
as
great
a
danger
on
the
Land
,
for
he
was
assaulted
by
two
Villaines
that
were
in
the
same
voyage
with
him
,
but
the
cause
of
their
hate
himselfe
he
could
not
tell
,
he
had
no
acquaintance
with
them
but
in
the
Ship
,
but
as
he
had
before
the
waves
,
so
in
this
Tempest
too
(
as
I
may
call
it
)
he
bore
himselfe
above
and
left
them
both
as
calme
as
death
upon
the
shore
,
In
the
instant
when
he
was
yet
hot
in
his
anger
and
,
their
blood
we
came
upon
him
—
Tim.
Pray
Sir
,
let
me
speake
to
you
,
there
is
a
wonder
discovered
to
me
by
his
relation
,
and
under
this
Monster
he
hath
spoke
of
a
greater
doth
ly
hid
,
one
that
you
would
rather
have
in
Chaines
,
then
all
the
list
of
Traytors
I
have
named
,
Sir
commit
the
uncasing
him
to
me
,
and
suffer
me
to
free
Aratus
,
let
it
suffice
I
am
an
eye
upon
him
,
and
the
rest
,
and
will
suddenly
by
their
distruction
,
distroy
their
Plot
.
King
.
Take
your
way
,
I'le
leave
him
to
you
.
Exeunt
King
,
Poliander
,
Comastes
,
&c.
Tim.
My
Lord
,
with
the
perswasion
of
your
innocence
,
I
have
procured
your
freedome
of
my
father
,
and
doe
desire
in
requitall
of
this
kindnesse
(
if
it
be
such
)
to
let
me
see
the
face
of
this
my
enemy
once
more
:
if
your
acquantance
as
appeares
by
your
words
,
be
not
too
late
to
know
his
aboade
,
My
Lord
,
I
shall
receive
him
otherwise
then
you
expect
,
the
relation
you
have
made
of
him
,
and
what
my selfe
was
witnesse
on
,
hath
turn'd
my
hate
into
admiration
,
and
if
I
can
move
his
Love
,
as
I
have
donne
his
anger
:
I
shall
be
happy
in
his
vallour
.
'Tis
noe
strange
thing
that
the
vallor
of
enemies
have
made
them
friends
,
and
that
wounder
have
beene
the
first
seale
of
Love
.
I
doe
consider
how
much
I
injured
him
,
and
that
on
such
occasion
,
he
could
not
have
don
least
,
at
first
sight
I
cald
him
dog
,
and
without
more
circumstance
commanded
for
to
kill
him
.
Ara.
Now
,
Sir
,
I
must
kneele
to
you
,
you
have
the
mercy
of
a
Prince
;
he
shall
submit
for
his
offence
,
or
suffer
for
it
,
and
if
you
find
not
that
noble
spirit
in
him
,
I
have
told
you
of
in
the
most
dangerous
busines
you
shall
implory
him
.
Let
him
be
punish't
for
this
his
ill
plac'd
valour
.
Time.
My
Lord
,
I'le
take
no
other
surety
but
your
word
,
ever
ingage
me
thus
.
Exit
Timeus
.
Ara.
But
my
Lord
,
though
I
can
answer
,
I
cannot
give
credit
to
your
smooth
tongue
,
this
last
accident
had
like
to
have
broke
all
,
and
had
there
not
beene
helpe
above
,
there
had
beene
none
beneath
.
I
must
be
no
more
so
venterous
,
our
Conspiracy
begins
to
be
discovered
,
and
that
we
are
suspected
is
the
least
feare
,
we
must
not
longer
deferre
our
breaking
out
;
there
is
noe
safety
now
but
in
a
publique
danger
.
Exit
.
Enter
Tymeus
,
Hianthe
.
Timeus
,
I
am
come
to
tell
you
,
the
infection
.
That
caused
this
your
retyrement
,
is
now
Vanisht
,
and
abroad
you
may
easely
blesse
Us
with
your
beauties
.
It
shames
me
to
say
this
I
can
pronounce
,
you
may
do
something
that
May
command
all
.
I
ever
as
a
servant
did
approach
You
,
but
now
as
an
offender
,
as
one
That
is
guilty
of
a
sinne
of
so
high
A
nature
as
this
your
sadnesse
is
.
Can
I
doe
lesse
then
condemne
my selfe
that
would
Have
kild
the
man
that
would
have
don
it
?
yet
I
hope
this
my
action
hath
not
made
me
Appeare
,
to
throw
of
that
honorable
name
As
servant
to
you
,
'tis
a
title
I
am
most
Ambitious
of
,
and
never
did
Engage
my selfe
a
more
humble
one
Then
by
my
last
command
.
Before
I
was
A
votary
to
your
beauty
,
now
to
Your
goodnesse
,
there
is
noe
earthly
thing
I
So
much
reverence
(
if
I
may
call
that
Earthy
that's
so
devine
)
I
bend
but
at
Two
places
the
Alter
,
and
your
virtues
.
Enter
Melissa
.
Hi.
My
Lord
,
though
your
complement
be
such
,
as
to
esteeme
this
my
retirment
for
your
sake
so
great
a
fauour
.
I
must
not
so
account
it
,
nor
thinke
I
have
laid
so
deepe
ingagments
on
you
,
in
granting
that
I
voluntary
,
&
unask't
performe
:
your
respects
may
claime
greater
services
,
and
your
last
words
had
beene
requitall
to
a
Stranger
.
Hianthe
turnes
to
Melissa
,
and
Timeus
goes
aside
.
Mell.
Ther's
a
Gentleman
desires
accesse
unto
your
grace
,
from
Prince
Clearchus
,
and
my
Lord
Aratus
.
Hian.
Prethee
goe
stay
him
within
,
assoone
as
this
troubles
o're
,
I
will
come
to
him
.
Sure
'tis
to
warne
me
of
their
breaking
out
.
The
time
of
their
great
birth
is
now
compleat
.
The
howers
are
finish't
.
O
let
it
not
yow
Which
looke
downe
,
which
favourably
looke
downe
Upon
this
Isle
,
want
your
power
which
first
Did
strengthen
it
,
let
the
same
hands
that
hid
Disclose
it
too
,
shame
not
at
so
glorious
An
off-spring
,
when
it
is
heavenly
,
and
doth
Confesse
the
father
,
when
none
but
gods
dare
Call
it
their's
,
nor
without
blasphemy
can
Owne
it
,
you
were
kinde
fathers
at
the
first
,
Shew
your selfe
still
so
,
and
breed
the
child
you
Have
gotten
,
where
humane
strength
shall
faile
,
there
Hold
it
up
,
and
make
that
want
the
Strongest
,
Yet
when
I
looke
this
way
it
doth
distract
My
prayers
,
and
makes
me
wish
a
conquest
Without
distruction
of
the
enemy
.
O
'tis
pity
that
so
much
noblenesse
Should
fall
to
earth
,
although
noe
love
,
I
can
Afford
him
teares
.
Enter
the
King
,
Comastes
,
Menetius
,
and
attendants
.
King
.
Why
,
well
said
Timeus
,
now
I
like
thee
,
here
thy
eares
and
services
are
bent
the
right
way
would
I
could
see
thee
once
looke
pale
in
these
,
but
thou
art
so
worldly
that
thou
appearst
still
as
if
thou
wer't
not
in
it
.
Can
a
yong
man
when
he
may
have
leave
to
breath
in
such
a
Paradice
as
this
,
draw
a
common
ayre
,
an
ayre
of
the
people
?
Madam
,
I
don't
thinke
but
you
find
him
a
rude
servant
,
one
that
payes
his
courtship
as
a
busines
,
and
not
as
a
delight
,
that
has
one
eye
upon
the
dore
to
be
gone
,
when
the
other's
fixt
on
you
.
Hian.
My
Lord
,
I
was
never
witnesse
of
any
others
courtship
and
therefore
can
compare
it
onely
with
what
I
can
imagine
:
and
'tis
above
my
highest
fantasy
.
King
.
Why
dost
thou
not
answer
?
I
am
asham'd
to
see
thee
,
O
my
conscience
at
these
yeares
,
I
could
ont
wooe
thee
my selfe
;
I
thinke
we
had
best
change
busines
,
neyther
will
goe
forward
else
,
i'le
court
for
thee
,
and
thou
shall
rule
for
me
:
thoul't
never
get
a
wife
without
the
helpe
of
a
commission
.
Tim.
Though
nothing
is
more
just
then
a
Noble
Love
,
yet
nothing
ought
to
be
more
secret
,
None
are
to
be
admitted
to
the
rights
Of
it
,
but
the
god
,
and
the
two
partyes
,
Sir
,
you
are
not
acquainted
with
the
lawes
,
Of
a
deviner
love
,
that
may
imagine
The
progresse
of
it
a
teadious
Pilgrimage
,
And
that
they
languish
which
doe
live
in
hope
The
meanes
is
more
delightfull
then
the
end
,
Then
is
the
bloome
and
spring
of
joy
when
it
Is
greene
:
as
it
growes
riper
,
the
blossome
Falls
and
turnes
to
profit
,
the
perfection
Is
the
first
decay
of
love
,
there
is
a
Marriage
of
the
Soule
,
preceeds
the
other
In
time
,
and
excellence
,
and
is
perform'd
By
a
Hymen
of
a
more
extracted
Deity
,
whose
Torch
is
purer
then
the
Element
of
Fire
,
these
are
lawes
unknowne
To
your
unfashioned
Cupid
,
who
perhaps
May
wound
a
brest
among
those
ruder
Soules
,
Who
thinke
they
ought
to
exchange
heart
for
heart
,
And
love
onely
in
requitall
,
but
here
A
noblenesse
must
tip
the
Shaft
as
well
As
goodnes
,
or
else
it
peirces
but
to
pity
.
King
.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
saist
thou
so
?
thar't
kild
in
a
Phylosophy
,
I
thought
thou
hadst
never
dreampt
of
,
I
am
loath
to
put
it
out
of
thee
with
other
thoughts
:
but
I
thinke
this
busines
I
am
to
tell
thee
of
will
confirme
thee
more
:
and
remove
all
thy
jealousies
.
The
suspition
thou
hadst
of
a
Treason
was
not
in
vaine
,
since
it
hath
broken
out
,
but
'tis
allready
cured
,
the
two
chiefe
of
them
are
taken
in
their
passage
as
they
went
to
raise
commotions
.
And
I
have
commanded
that
they
be
set
so
as
they
may
have
a
full
veiw
of
that
earth
they
were
so
ambitious
of
,
and
then
to
Strangle
them
at
that
height
.
Time.
Were
there
but
two
,
Sr
,
flatter
not
your selfe
,
had
they
beene
thousands
they
had
yet
left
more
behinde
,
you
account
that
a
victory
which
they
scorne
to
account
a
losse
,
and
thinke
you
are
safe
when
they
are
not
indangered
.
Is
Aratus
,
Phronimus
or
Eurylochus
among
them
?
King
.
Noe
,
nor
suspected
by
any
but
your selfe
.
Enter
Poliander
.
How
now
,
what's
the
matter
?
Poli.
Sr
,
yonder
are
two
fellowes
wee
have
laid
hold
on
,
that
call
themselves
messengers
from
Aratus
to
your
Majesty
.
But
they
have
behav'd
themselves
so
trayterously
that
we
have
us'd
them
accordingly
,
and
clapt
bolts
upon
'em
,
till
they
shall
be
further
determin'd
of
,
what
their
busines
is
,
they
will
declare
to
none
but
to
your selfe
,
and
they
have
spoke
those
things
which
they
are
sure
would
bring
them
thither
.
They
answerd
when
they
were
urged
,
they
came
to
defie
the
King
,
and
us
,
and
if
they
are
not
mad
,
they
are
the
most
desperate
villaines
I
ere
heard
speake
.
Time.
These
were
the
evills
I
was
a
Prophet
of
,
I
saw
them
when
they
were
yet
disguis'd
.
King
.
Where
are
they
?
Poli.
They
are
under
guard
here
in
the
Court
,
ther's
a
messenger
too
from
the
Governour
of
the
City
,
desires
admittance
to
your
Majesty
,
he
sayes
a
broad
are
many
signes
of
tumults
.
Time.
Sr
,
this
is
noe
time
to
delay
,
if
we
beleeve
not
yet
,
the
next
newes
will
bee
brought
us
home
by
the
Traytors
themselves
,
you
may
perceive
their
Strength
,
and
readynes
in
this
,
that
they
dare
make
such
bold
declarations
and
in
the
open
day
produce
their
black
Plotts
.
If
we
haste
not
to
o're-take
them
now
;
our
greatest
speed
hereafter
will
not
reach
them
.
King
.
Madam
,
we
must
intreat
your
pardon
,
that
thus
we
have
offended
gainst
your
quiet
,
and
made
you
the
first
witnesse
of
our
Troubles
,
that
ought
to
have
knowne
them
last
.
Hian.
Sr
,
The
trouble
is
too
sad
to
be
excused
.
Exeunt
Om.
Whiles
he
that
should
be
eye
,
and
eare
,
Through
sloth
doth
neither
see
nor
heare
,
Behold
like
Thunder
comes
a
Sound
,
Which
doth
at
once
amaze
and
wound
:
That
dart
sure
hits
what
clouds
did
hide
,
And
safely
kills
,
cause
undiscride
.
Chor.
Where
dangers
urge
,
he
that
is
slow
,
Takes
from
himselfe
and
addes
to's
foe
.
They're
come
beyond
a
whisper
now
,
And
boldly
dare
proclaime
their
vow
,
When
the
prey's
sure
,
to
shew
the
snare
,
Begets
not
Councell
,
but
dispaire
,
Like
Lightning
it
awakes
the
sence
,
Onely
to
see
,
and
grow
blinde
thence
.
Chor.
Tis
Love
,
not
Faction
,
where
the
good
Conspire
to
spill
usurping
Blood
.
Actus
Quartus
:
Scaena
I.
Enter
Aratus
and
Pallantus
,
as
in
their
Tent
.
Ara.
OUr
message
you
say
,
is
returnd
againe
upon
us
.
Pall.
In
a
manner
,
the
same
words
,
accompanied
onely
with
a
few
threats
more
.
Ara.
Wee
expected
no
other
,
yet
it
was
fit
to
neglect
no
part
that
belongs
to
the
iustice
of
our
cause
,
though
it
were
but
meerely
formall
,
we
ought
to
claime
the
right
wee
had
,
before
we
use
the
meanes
to
conquer
it
;
the
same
circumstance
is
to
be
observed
aswell
in
the
Court
of
warre
,
as
in
the
Courts
of
Law
,
no
triall
till
the
demand
be
past
.
Pall.
There
is
but
one
of
the
messengers
returnd
:
the
other
for
his
stout
demanding
of
the
Crowne
lost
his
head
,
there
his
fellow
reports
he
delivered
those
words
you
put
into
him
,
with
such
resolution
,
that
hee
appeared
not
to
denounce
,
but
bring
those
evills
on
him
.
The
Tyrant
grew
pale
,
and
seemed
to
feele
them
in
his
threates
,
nor
could
hee
thinke
himselfe
safe
encompast
with
his
friends
and
guard
,
till
hee
had
silenc'd
that
voyce
that
so
could
wound
him
through
all
their
swords
.
Ara.
Alas
poore
man
,
yet
hee
fell
nobly
,
his
sword
might
have
purchast
him
a
higher
name
in
warre
,
but
not
in
honour
.
In
our
daies
of
triumph
he
shall
not
be
forgotten
,
nor
his
glory
though
he
perceive
it
not
,
be
defend
behind
those
that
live
.
Enter
Clearchus
to
them
.
Clea.
Doe
yee
heare
the
newes
my
Lord
?
Ara.
No
,
my
Lord
,
what
is't
?
Clea.
All's
lost
.
Ara.
Blesse
us
,
my
Lord
,
how
?
Clea.
Yet
it
may
be
but
a
rumor
and
scattered
by
the
enemy
,
Phronimus
and
Eurilochus
in
their
convoy
with
the
young
King
are
taken
.
The
Campe
is
ready
to
mutinie
on
the
report
.
Ara.
There
cannot
be
such
an
evill
,
it
is
a
sinne
to
give
credit
to
it
.
Pray
,
my
Lord
,
relate
some
particulers
of
the
report
,
was
there
any
made
mention
of
the
kings
age
?
Clea.
No
,
The
rumour
goes
that
two
Lords
were
taken
on
the
way
by
a
Troope
of
horse
of
the
adverse
party
,
the
young
King
being
in
his
disguise
,
and
not
yet
knowne
,
past
undiscovered
as
one
of
their
followers
.
Ara.
O
tis
most
likely
.
Pall.
Where
are
all
our
great
words
now
?
those
Mighty
sounds
that
made
a
trembling
in
the
aire
,
And
causd
no
lesse
a
deafenesse
with
their
fall
,
Then
if
thunder
,
the
voice
of
heaven
were
turnd
Articulate
,
and
spake
the
threats
of
Jove
Unto
the
world
?
chang'd
to
as
great
a
silence
,
Such
when
a
Tempest
ceases
is
the
calme
That
followes
,
no
noyse
is
heard
,
as
if
the
Wind
with
blasts
were
breath
lesse
growne
,
and
the
Seas
Sat
downe
,
and
after
so
much
toyle
requir'd
ease
.
Not
able
for
to
lift
that
from
a
Rocke
,
Whose
Keele
strooke
hell
,
and
Mast
the
Clouds
did
knocke
,
Why
had
we
not
bodies
equall
to
our
mindes
?
That
when
we
durst
meet
Perills
,
we
might
Beare
them
too
,
and
not
with
a
fading
trunke
Lose
thoughts
invincible
:
yet
I
will
doe
Something
,
and
where
the
gods
have
given
a
will
We
ought
not
in
their
service
to
sit
still
.
Exit
.
Pallantus
.
Clea.
My
Lord
,
raise
your selfe
,
the
newes
may
be
false
,
and
all
the
danger
they
are
in
may
be
by
this
your
beleefe
,
give
not
your selfe
cause
to
mourne
hereafter
,
that
all
perishd
on
a
mistake
,
if
that
this
the
worst
of
evills
be
befallen
,
it
ought
not
to
be
the
reason
of
your
neglect
,
but
greater
care
and
vigilance
.
Ara.
My
Lord
,
I
thanke
you
,
and
will
take
your
advice
;
Pardon
me
that
I
was
stupified
at
the
greatest
amazement
that
could
befall
,
and
appeard
dead
when
that
the
life
of
all
my
action
was
taken
from
mee
;
yet
twas
not
a
slumber
I
was
lost
in
,
but
a
confusion
of
various
thoughts
,
not
knowing
which
to
choose
,
untill
you
pointed
mee
one
out
,
wee
will
doe
something
presently
,
and
not
give
them
leave
to
put
their
black
intents
in
practice
.
harke
.
A
mutinous
noyse
is
heard
.
Clea.
The
Souldiers
are
in
a
mutinie
.
As
they
are
going
out
,
Demophilus
enters
to
them
,
and
delivers
Aratus
a
letter
.
Ara.
Demophilus
,
what
newes
?
Aratus
snatches
the
Letter
greedily
from
him
,
and
in
reading
shewes
signes
of
joy
.
Clea.
What
newes
,
my
Lord
?
Ara.
Such
as
is
not
to
be
nam'd
without
a
Sacrifice
.
O
see
,
my
Lord
,
though
we
have
lost
,
we
are
not
yet
undone
;
theres
a
Relaps
,
but
not
a
totall
ruine
of
our
fortunes
;
the
King
,
Phronimus
,
and
Eurilochus
are
all
safe
,
and
never
were
in
danger
,
this
night
they
will
be
here
with
their
full
power
,
the
occasion
of
the
mistake
is
now
plaine
.
Clear.
Till
this
fell
out
wee
had
no
sence
of
the
happinesse
wee
were
in
.
Pray
my
Lord
,
what
are
they
which
are
taken
?
Ara.
Two
that
stood
strongly
for
our
party
,
more
besides
their
names
here
,
and
that
they
were
vertuous
I
am
not
to
instruct
you
,
you
may
perceive
they
which
have
no
such
cause
of
joy
as
wee
have
,
doe
lament
them
much
:
wee
shall
have
a
time
too
to
mourne
their
deaths
,
then
,
when
wee
have
leave
to
laugh
at
theirs
which
slew
them
,
in
the
meane
time
fare'em
well
;
such
a
leave
,
were
I
in
their
misfortune
,
I
would
have
expected
,
they
have
onely
out-stript
us
in
the
payment
of
a
debt
we
all
owe
unto
our
Master
,
ours
is
due
,
though
not
yet
calld
for
.
And
how
fares
the
young
King
?
Demo.
As
one
the
gods
take
care
on
,
his
words
and
lookes
have
gain'd
many
unto
his
party
,
and
put
courage
in
all
the
rest
.
Ara.
And
weele
make
use
of
it
while
it
is
yet
hot
,
after
this
nights
rest
they
shall
give
battle
to
the
enemy
,
harke
the
Muteny
increases
let
us
away
,
least
we
loose
all
heere
,
A
greater
noyse
of
Muteny
is
heard
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
the
King
,
and
Timeus
.
Tim.
Sr
,
though
there
are
troubles
in
your
affaires
Let
none
be
in
your
countenance
:
your
eyes
Should
like
those
blest
twinne
fires
upon
the
Ship
Display
a
vigorous
flame
.
A
light
of
joy
,
And
comfort
round
about
,
that
they
which
toyle
In
the
rage
and
fury
of
this
tempest
May
from
thence
foresee
a
calme
,
and
nourish
Hopes
of
safety
.
Thus
you
wrong
your
Kingdome
Distroying
it
your selfe
cause
others
would
.
The
people
groane
just
as
you
groane
,
their
Pulses
Have
the
same
motion
,
and
their
hearts
doe
beate
Both
hope
or
feare
,
according
as
yours
doth
Eyther
dilate
or
else
contract
it
else
.
All
omen
comes
from
you
,
your
Passion
is
not
,
A
single
sadnesse
,
'tis
your
Subjects
too
.
When
you
confesse
a
feare
,
who
dares
behold
?
They
doe
account
it
a
disloyallty
to
have
a
Thought
that
shall
runne
crosse
to
yours
.
Your
mirth
were
now
discretion
,
and
a
face
Chearfull
as
at
a
Feast
,
were
pollicy
,
'Twould
be
one
kind
of
succor
.
King
.
Why
Timeus
,
I
thanke
thee
,
but
these
joyes
come
From
above
,
are
not
to
be
taken
When
we
please
,
no
man
can
resolve
he
will
Be
happy
,
yet
I
will
strugle
with
my
Thoughts
,
and
endeavor
to
force
that
quiet
They
have
taken
from
me
.
But
let
not
this
thing
Discomfort
you
,
'tis
but
a
course
of
humors
Perhapps
a
litle
Physicke
will
remove
it
.
Time.
Now
Sir
,
you
put
a
new
life
into
me
,
And
I
dare
say
we
shall
be
victorious
,
Nay
,
we
will
,
no
power
doth
stand
against
us
,
Now
that
is
favourable
which
attends
upon
Your
person
,
to
whose
protection
I
will
leave
you
,
And
goe
see
how
the
Campe
fares
.
Shall
I
beare
any
of
your
commands
thither
?
King
.
Onely
my
love
,
the
care
of
all
things
else
doe
thou
take
upon
thee
,
and
to morrow
,
if
this
fit
leave
mee
,
before
the
battle
Ile
visit
you
.
Exit
.
Timcus
.
How
every
thing
is
irkesome
to
me
:
clowdes
And
darkenesse
are
before
mine
eyes
,
all
things
Dissenting
one
from
the
other
yet
conspire
In
this
,
that
they
present
death
to
my
view
,
I
have
that
idle
comfort
onely
,
that
He
that
dispaires
of
all
,
ought
to
feare
nothing
When
things
cannot
grow
worse
,
all
fortune
then
Is
on
his
side
that
suffers
.
But
my
injustice
Strengthned
with
murder
,
doth
forbid
successe
,
A
Kingdome
got
by
blood
,
is
built
upon
A
slippery
foundation
.
I
have
beene
Nourishd
in
peace
thus
long
,
that
being
growne
Specious
and
great
,
I
may
at
last
fall
downe
A
Sacrifice
worth
slaughter
.
Thoughts
urge
thoughts
,
Suspition
gets
suspition
,
Danger
,
danger
;
I
have
not
that
small
setlednesse
of
minde
,
As
to
thinke
one
thing
twice
:
were
I
but
innocent
,
I
would
provoke
misfortune
,
call
for
Fate
With
as
undanted
courage
as
the
Lord
And
ruler
of
it
doth
—
An
uprore
is
heard
at
the
doore
,
and
Pallantus
enters
and
wounds
the
King
,
and
the
Guard
follow
on
him
.
King
.
Stay
.
What
a
nothing
tis
that
I
have
thus
much
feard
And
labor'd
to
escape
,
when
twas
my
good
:
Childishly
dreading
every
thought
of
cure
,
Then
most
offended
when
my
health
was
neere
?
How
well
I'am
after
this
little
wound
?
Quiet
of
mind
and
peace
of
Conscience
,
Those
blest
companions
doe
possesse
me
now
,
I
see
nothing
but
blood
can
appease
blood
In
sacrifice
,
that
to
the
guilty
theres
No
ease
like
death
,
no
mercy
like
the
crosse
.
Oh
,
oh
.
The
King
makes
signes
of
weaknesse
,
and
the
guard
make
an
offer
to
kill
Pallantus
.
Hold
in
your
rage
,
have
you
not
already
Acted
mischiefes
enough
by
my
command
.
But
thus
you
seeke
to
pull
more
upon
yee
?
Ye
are
deceiv'd
,
though
I
have
been
hitherto
A
Tyrant
,
now
I
am
mercifull
,
and
can
Command
things
that
are
just
and
innocent
.
The
King
shewes
greater
signes
of
weakenesse
and
the
guard
make
another
offer
.
Guard
.
He
faints
the
villaine
must
not
live
.
King
.
I
command
you
hold
,
my
power
is
yet
good
You
are
the
villaines
,
the
first
causers
of
This
my
misery
,
and
you
should
lay
hands
Upon
your selves
;
how
ridiculous
is
this
Your
rage
?
suppose
I
should
give
way
to
Your
desires
,
what
were
you
the
safer
,
Or
I
the
better
?
you
would
have
one
foe
The
lesse
,
and
I
one
sinne
more
that
am
already
Loaden
.
Does
not
this
iudgement
affright
you
Rather
?
I
am
not
onely
guilty
,
your
Hands
were
dipt
in
the
same
blood
and
perform'd
Such
things
I
often
durst
but
wish
:
that
you
Were
commanded
will
not
excuse
you
,
your
Loyalty
to
me
was
but
at
best
a
Broken
faith
unto
another
;
and
when
You
observ'd
it
most
,
you
were
most
periurd
.
What
can
you
expect
?
you
see
when
that
I
Was
guarded
by
an
hoast
,
needed
not
feare
What
the
power
of
earth
,
or
men
could
doe
Unto
me
,
one
man
(
as
I
may
say
)
one
Handfull
of
that
earth
broke
through
them
all
,
and
With
a
single
arme
forc'd
what
a
million
Could
not
keepe
,
and
when
there
was
no
meanes
left
,
Yet
there
was
a
miracle
to
conquer
me
.
The
guard
let
fall
their
swords
.
To
you
I
turne
now
,
no
more
my
ternor
,
In
returne
of
this
favour
you
have
found
,
Shew
the
like
to
these
,
and
others
,
that
shall
Be
guilty
of
that
name
,
as
friends
to
me
,
Though
you
are
nothing
yet
,
this
deed
Will
make
you
powerfull
and
you
that
have
given
them
all
May
demand
so
small
a
share
:
now
you
have
been
So
much
my
enemy
change
something
To
a
friend
.
How
vainely
I
take
care
for
Lesser
things
neglecting
my
greatest
charge
.
O
my
Timeus
!
my
poore
Eudora
!
heere
hee's
troubled
againe
.
Leave
me
not
yet
,
my
soule
,
thou
canst
not
mount
Untill
the
load
be
taken
from
thy
wing
,
Thou
couldst
inhabit
here
when
it
was
Hell
,
Now
it
is
Paradice
,
—
O
stay
—
and
dwell
—
Dies
,
the
guard
runne
and
beare
up
his
body
.
Pall.
Though
the
fall
be
great
it
cannot
shake
me
When
I
know
'tis
iust
.
The
malefactors
Penitence
,
takes
not
the
iustice
of
his
Doome
a
way
,
though
he
be
chang'd
that
remaines
Unstaind
,
he
may
die
with
pity
,
but
not
With
innocence
.
They
mind
me
not
Ile
endevour
To
escape
while
they
are
thus
stupified
with
griefe
,
I
will
not
trust
their
obedience
to
a
dead
command
.
Exit
.
Cap.
Leave
your
sad
imbraces
,
They'le
bring
no
comfort
to
you
,
though
you
persisted
in
them
till
you
were
such
as
thus
you
hold
.
Death
,
like
a
coy
mistris
,
makes
no
returne
of
love
for
all
that
is
bestowed
,
you
may
wast
your selves
but
not
your
sorrowes
here
.
This
ground
will
afford
a
perpetuall
supply
of
moysture
;
which
your
eyes
,
like
two
Sunnes
,
may
draw
up
and
powre
downe
for
ever
.
Let's
to
the
Prince
,
and
to
him
Offer
up
our
lives
and
griefes
together
,
Th'
ones
the
onely
medicine
for
the
other
.
1
Guard
.
The
Traytor's
scapt
.
2
Guard
.
We
were
to
soft
to
obey
a
dying
speech
.
Cap.
His
scape's
as
Strange
as
was
his
enterance
We
had
power
to
hinder
neyther
.
Exeunt
.
Om.
Enter
Tymeus
,
and
sees
his
father
slaine
.
Timeus
.
Give
me
a
power
mighty
as
my
rage
,
That
my
revenge
may
reach
unto
the
Clouds
And
unthrone
those
gods
that
joynd
hands
with
men
To
comit
so
black
a
deede
:
it
were
but
Justice
they
should
loose
their
diety
that
So
would
throw
it
off
.
O
my
father
!
did
I
unload
thy
shoulders
of
the
Kingdome
That
thou
might
fall
under
a
lesse
waight
,
And
bereft
thee
of
all
thy
jealousies
,
to
Ruine
thee
with
more
assurance
onely
?
Where
are
all
those
flattering
tongues
that
when
There
was
noe
neede
would
in
a
complement
Howerly
suffer
for
thee
?
not
one
to
dy
In
thy
defence
,
or
by
his
fall
to
make
Thine
more
decent
?
how
dismall
is
this
place
?
The
graves
where
death
inhabits
are
not
so
Dreadfull
.
I'le
fly
thee
though
I
runne
amongst
The
thickest
of
my
foes
,
they
can
present
Noe
dangers
like
this
lonenesse
the
cryes
,
the
Sword
,
the
Trumpet
in
the
battle
strike
not
So
deepe
amazement
,
what
ho
,
Clitus
Charisius
,
Erastus
,
Amanthes
,
Not
one
voyce
?
He
goes
out
in
Search
,
and
returnes
againe
.
I
walke
like
Aeneas
among
the
shades
.
All
is
hell
about
me
:
I
see
nothing
But
what
my
Fantasy
frames
in
horrid
shapes
,
O
the
vaine
feares
of
guilty
men
!
all
are
Unreasonable
,
but
yours
ridiculous
,
When
you
have
contemn'd
the
greatest
powers
On
earth
,
threatening
with
strength
,
and
hatred
,
You
tremble
at
a
ghost
,
a
thing
lesse
then
is
A
man
,
and
when
the
substance
could
not
,
the
Shaddow
frights
you
.
There
is
noe
way
but
this
To
set
me
above
my
feares
,
when
I
am
Lesse
I
shall
be
equall
to
them
—
Enter
the
Captaine
of
the
guard
,
and
two
more
.
Cap.
O
hold
my
Lord
,
offer
not
up
your selfe
A
sacrifice
when
there
are
so
many
That
gladly
would
releeve
you
with
their
lives
;
Let
that
thought
prevaile
with
you
,
hat
you
ought
To
live
for
them
,
that
so
willingly
would
Dy
for
you
,
y'are
the
prop
of
thousands
,
and
If
you
fall
,
you
sinke
a
Kingdome
with
you
.
Take
the
Sword
by
the
other
end
,
and
so
Holding
it
,
seeke
to
appease
this
Sacred
Ghost
:
such
a
will
exceeds
this
performance
If
you
can't
confirme
the
Crowne
,
yet
confirme
Your
memory
by
the
losse
of
it
.
This
Object
makes
your
greife
a
burden
to
your
Honour
.
Leane
on
me
my
Lord
,
I'le
beare
you
To
the
Campe
.
Exeunt
Om.
Enter
Poliander
.
Menetius
,
Comastes
a
Captaine
,
and
others
as
in
their
Tent
.
A
shout
is
heard
from
among
the
enemies
.
Poli.
What
shout
is
that
among
the
enemies
?
Cap.
Tis
the
acclamation
of
the
Campe
,
at
the
receaving
of
their
fellowes
,
this
night
they
expected
their
other
forces
,
and
it
seemes
they
are
now
arrived
.
Poli.
I
am
glad
on't
,
I
hope
we
shall
have
command
to
try
the
fortune
of
the
Feild
to morrow
,
would
the
whole
knot
of
them
were
there
,
that
we
might
make
quicke
worke
;
and
like
Alexander
,
unty
it
with
a
blow
.
Com.
I
,
and
a
wall
round
about
'em
to
keepe
them
to
the
slaughter
,
that
we
may
not
be
troubled
to
kill
a
thousand
in
a
thousand
places
:
I
don't
like
this
persuing
'tis
the
greatest
evill
next
to
the
being
persued
,
the
wine
neere
tasts
well
when
'tis
so
jumbled
.
Give
me
a
Standing
Campe
that
florishes
like
a
peacefull
City
,
and
want's
no
necessaries
,
here
stand
your
Engins
,
there
your
beefe
,
on
this
hand
a
Palesado
defends
you
,
on
the
other
,
a
Baracado
of
Porke-Tubs
impregnable
,
before
a
Ditche
is
cut
of
some
two
hundred
paces
,
and
the
Souldiers
tipling
in't
,
behind
a
Coope
runns
out
of
the
same
length
,
&
the
Poultry
tipling
in
their
Trenches
,
whose
body
are
too
dilicate
and
tender
for
bare
travell
,
here
a
man
may
even
among
the
Tents
forget
to
be
a
Souldier
.
All
.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
Pol.
O
,
my
conscience
Comastes
thou
art
weary
o'th
Campe
allready
.
Com.
Yes
,
faith
as
your selves
are
,
if
you'd
confesse
the
truth
.
Poli.
Why
,
me thinks
there
is
noe
pleasure
to
be
compar'd
with
it
,
every
man
hath
his
delights
here
as
if
he
tooke
his
leave
on
'em
:
and
if
he
chance
to
returne
at
night
,
like
friends
which
parted
in
the
morne
two
dangerous
and
hopelesse
ways
of
ever
seeing
,
they
meet
with
a
multiplyed
and
unexpected
joy
,
these
very
wounds
are
pleasures
,
and
Elizium
comes
faster
on
them
then
their
deathes
.
Com.
When
honor
is
the
prize
,
and
wrong'd
Justice
The
cause
that
thrusts
them
on
,
they
throw
of
one
That
they
may
get
a
better
life
,
a
life
Of
fame
,
which
is
eternall
even
on
earth
,
That
they
enjoy'd
before
was
fading
Sustayned
onely
by
the
infirmities
Of
one
weake
body
;
now
'tis
supported
By
the
memoryes
of
all
,
the
charge
of
it
Is
committed
unto
a
world
of
men
,
Nor
ist
extinguisht
before
the
fame
o'th
Whole
universe
,
none
are
so
surviving
As
the
Sonns
of
glorious
Warre
.
Jove
gave
Life
to
Hercules
,
and
Theseus
;
but
Mars
Eternity
,
they
breath'd
from
one
,
but
gain'd
Heaven
by
the
other
,
these
were
the
great
thoughts
Which
when
I
was
yet
young
,
and
not
able
To
embrace
them
,
did
dwell
in
me
:
they
did
Suggest
unto
my
soule
,
that
I
ought
to
raise
,
my
hand
Against
the
gods
,
if
they
slept
.
At
perjury
and
favour'd
injustice
.
Poli.
Holloe
.
what
aylst
thou
?
Mene.
What
meanst
thou
Comastes
?
Com.
To
shew
you
how
easy
a
thing
it
is
,
to
talke
like
a
Souldier
,
and
be
as
brave
a
fellow
as
eyther
of
you
.
All
.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
.
Mene.
Thou
wouldst
make
an
excellent
runne-away
Souldier
,
such
a
speech
on
the
high-way
were
greater
violence
than
bidding
stand
a
long
staffe
,
would
not
get
an
almes
so
soone
.
Poly.
What
wilt
thou
say
now
Comastes
to
a
joviall
round
or
two
beyond
the
Court
healths
,
those
at
the
Kings
owne
Table
?
Comast.
I
thinke
I
shall
say
more
than
you
at
this
,
as
well
as
in
the
other
.
Poly.
Captaine
prithee
command
'um
to
bring
some
wine
in
,
Come
let
us
sit
in
the
meane
time
,
and
take
away
these
fearefull
things
from
Comastes
.
hee
bids
them
remove
the
Armor
off
the
Table
.
Com.
And
why
from
me
,
me
I
pray
?
Poly.
Why
they'le
fright
thy
mirth
away
,
looke
,
it
gapes
upon
thee
,
but
won't
bite
.
Com.
No
more
than
your
Lordships
sword
.
Is
this
the
terrible
thing
?
I
know
not
what
it
may
doe
in
a
darke
night
with
a
candle
in't
,
but
in
the
day
,
and
your
Lordship
looking
through
it
,
I
shall
never
turne
my
backe
unlesse
it
be
to
laugh
.
Pray
God
the
enemy
thinke
of
no
such
stratagem
with
a
pitcher
in
the
Progenerall-ship
,
it
may
be
as
much
as
the
Kings
Army
lies
on
.
Poly.
Ha
,
ha
.
Mene.
Take
this
away
too
,
is
not
this
a
Divells
hand
Comastes
?
Coma.
Yes
,
Theres
a
couple
,
pray
remove
'em
both
,
and
his
wit
that
is
so
devillish
,
that
we
may
fall
a
little
to
our
business
.
Enter
with
wine
.
if
we
must
,
let's
to
it
stoutly
,
and
like
Souldiers
,
what
say
yee
?
shall
wee
drinke
a
battle
?
the
triall
of
to
morrowes
victory
,
Ile
take
the
Kings
part
against
you
all
.
I
am
the
strongest
,
and
when
I
have
orecome
,
Ile
send
him
word
of
the
good
omen
,
tis
worth
a
thousand
of
your
paltry
birds
,
and
oxe
entralls
,
tis
a
piece
of
service
will
gaine
the
favour
from
you
all
.
Poly.
Come
,
wee'l
undertake
you
begin
,
that
honour
belongs
to
your
side
.
one
brings
Comastes
a
cup
.
Com.
Heres
—
how
now
,
what's
this
?
what
does
such
a
boy
doe
in
the
warre
?
disroole
him
,
I
scorne
to
bee
Captaine
of
such
a
youngster
.
Poly.
O
whilst
you
live
,
begin
with
your
light
Armature
,
the
Legionaries
follow
.
Com.
Is
that
the
trick
on't
?
Here
then
for
the
King
I
throw
the
first
reede
,
this
boy
can
manage
no
greater
weapon
.
He
drinkes
,
and
they
all
pledge
him
.
Com.
I
marry
,
there
stands
a
rank
of
lusty
fellowes
,
a
man
may
rely
upon
such
valours
,
their
very
looks
wil
orecome
common
stomacks
.
I
long
to
see
them
buckle
to
it
,
this
is
too
much
sport
.
Poly.
Reach
them
downe
then
.
They
fill
a
great
Goblet
to
Comastes
.
Com.
Give
it
me
,
and
found
an
assault
?
Pallas
and
victory
for
the
King
—
why
I
,
this
was
a
tall
fellow
.
I
don't
thinke
but
Alexander
had
alwaies
a
Guard
of
such
attending
on
his
Person
;
He
have
a
doozen
of
them
,
and
call
them
my
twelve
Labours
.
Hee
perceives
Menetius
hard
set
.
O
for
a
shout
,
a
little
noise
would
gaine
the
conquest
.
Mene.
In
good
time
,
but
not
so
easily
.
Poly.
You
doe
but
dreame
a
victory
yet
.
Com.
No
?
helpe
me
then
old
Souldier
.
Hee
drinkes
,
and
shewes
signes
of
faultring
.
Men.
Hold
up
Comastes
for
the
greatnesse
of
your
cause
,
hold
up
,
you
shew
signes
of
fainting
,
how
now
?
Com.
Hah
,
goe
thy
waies
,
nere
a
Goblet
the
King
has
ere
got
the
honour
to
struggle
so
long
with
me
.
Poly.
I
feare
wee
must
lose
in
loyalty
,
youle
nere
orecome
else
.
Com.
I
warrant
you
,
I
retired
but
to
an
ambush
.
But
who
keepes
the
doore
all
this
while
?
Say
the
enemies
should
come
and
cut
all
our
throates
.
I
can
tell
you
I
have
read
such
pretty
stories
.
Poly.
How
now
Comastes
,
what
words
are
these
?
does
Wine
breed
feares
in
you
?
Com.
A
pox
on
this
Warre
twill
bee
my
undoing
,
I
shall
come
out
with
some
such
roguish
question
or
other
at
the
Kings
Table
and
have
my
bones
broken
by
the
Guard
.
Mene
The
Wine
workes
not
at
all
,
Comastes
you
begin
not
fast
enough
.
Com.
Fill
another
—
So
now
bring
me
the
Armour
againe
Poli.
What
will
you
doe
with
it
?
Com.
Bring
it
againe
I
say
,
I'le
put
mirth
into
you
all
,
pray
let
him
helpe
me
that
has
nothing
to
doe
.
One
fetches
it
,
and
he
armes
himselfe
with
some
of
it
.
Men.
Here
will
you
take
this
?
Com.
Noe
I
shall
have
noe
need
of
that
.
Mene.
O
I
had
forgot
,
thy
Face
is
allwayes
arm'd
enough
.
Com.
Well
Sr
,
when
I
returne
I'le
pay
you
that
.
As
Comastes
goes
out
,
and
they
all
sit
in
expectation
what
he
will
doe
,
one
that
was
present
at
the
Kings
death
enters
.
Guard
O
the
King's
kild
!
All
.
The
King
!
They
all
start
up
,
and
draw
their
Swords
.
Poli.
Thou
look'st
distractedly
,
speake
it
againe
.
Guard
.
Hee's
slaine
,
my selfe
was
present
at
his
fall
.
Poli.
By
what
accursed
hand
?
Guard
.
That
divell
that
wounded
the
Prince
,
hath
murderd
him
,
he
was
before
his
terror
,
and
was
now
his
death
.
Poli.
O
the
heavy
hand
of
Justice
.
Is
the
Prince
safe
?
Guard
.
Slaine
too
,
if
report
be
true
,
but
by
what
hand
I
know
not
,
he
left
the
King
just
before
his
fall
to
come
hither
,
and
being
that
he
is
not
heere
,
we
have
much
cause
to
feare
the
worst
.
Enter
Six
Souldiers
.
1
Sol.
Feare
not
now
,
you
have
past
the
greatest
danger
,
when
we
have
made
an
end
of
these
theres
none
left
to
punish
us
,
the
King
and
Prince
are
killd
,
and
those
which
remaine
,
we
doe
the
busines
for
,
and
will
reward
us
richly
according
to
the
service
,
and
their
great
promises
.
We
have
no
other
way
to
gaine
ought
by
this
alteration
,
our
pardons
all
that
we
can
hope
for
,
if
we
still
,
let
us
on
presently
least
some
others
doe
prevent
us
,
follow
me
,
I'le
give
the
first
blow
.
They
walke
up
to
the
Captaines
,
and
when
they
looke
upon
'em
,
it
dashes
their
resolution
.
Poli.
How
now
?
what
gaze
you
at
?
know
you
where
you
are
?
does
your
feet
leade
you
without
the
councell
of
your
head
?
get
you
to
your
quarter
or
i'le
stretch
you
up
in't
.
The
Souldiers
retyre
,
and
goe
out
.
These
Villains
dare
doe
any
thing
,
Captaine
follow
'em
and
see
'em
punish't
.
Exit
Captaine
.
What
shall
we
doe
?
here
we
stand
like
so
many
trunkes
of
men
,
headles
,
and
livelesse
,
none
to
obey
,
nor
able
to
command
,
there
is
noe
way
can
present
us
safety
,
but
this
we
are
now
in
is
the
most
unworthy
danger
:
So
beasts
when
they
have
beene
fed
unto
the
slaughter
,
submit
unto
it
,
let
us
not
stand
still
,
but
resolve
to
turne
our
Swords
upon
our
enemies
,
or
bend
them
against
our
owne
brestes
;
eyther
wayes
a
victory
,
and
will
bring
us
happines
and
glory
.
Mene.
I
am
for
the
last
,
it
is
the
safest
way
,
and
in
our
griefes
the
noblest
.
Enter
the
Captaine
.
Cap.
Sr
,
These
fellowes
came
to
kill
us
,
one
of
the
weakest
on
'em
,
when
he
saw
himselfe
laid
hold
on
for
his
other
fault
,
suspecting
he
was
discover'd
out
of
mere
guiltines
confest
,
that
unwillingly
he
was
brought
into
the
plot
,
by
the
perswation
of
his
fellowes
,
who
in
hope
of
preferment
from
the
enemy
had
decreed
on
all
our
deathes
,
he
sayes
too
that
himselfe
,
and
many
more
were
attempted
by
some
of
the
adverse
party
with
promises
,
and
threates
to
lay
downe
their
Armes
,
and
that
the
Campe
is
full
of
such
commotors
.
Poli.
This
then
will
confirme
our
former
resolutions
,
come
let
us
number
up
our selves
,
and
if
we
are
equall
each
man
set
his
sword
against
his
fellowes
brest
,
and
with
a
friendly
wound
(
in
spite
of
Fate
or
Fortune
,
being
our selves
Lords
of
a
greater
power
)
give
happines
to
eyther
.
Then
these
wild
Beasts
will
deplore
the
losse
of
that
they
so
indeavour
to
throw
away
,
and
leape
like
head-lesse
bodyes
into
flames
,
and
ruine
.
As
they
thinke
to
kill
themselves
,
Timeus
enters
to
them
;
they
run
,
and
kneele
to
him
.
Poli.
O!
my
Lord
,
let
us
imbrace
you
with
such
a
love
,
as
dead
,
and
revived
friends
would
expresse
to
eyther
,
to
us
you
were
dead
,
and
are
alive
againe
.
And
have
bestowed
this
life
we
now
enjoy
,
we
must
not
owe
it
to
another
Parent
.
So
is
the
Judge
a
Father
to
the
guilty
,
your
sentence
was
past
upon
us
,
and
the
hand
held
up
to
put
it
into
practise
,
when
you
,
as
if
from
heaven
you
had
fallen
,
set
all
right
that
was
in
such
confusion
,
what
trifles
will
the
greatest
dangers
appeare
to
us
.
Tim.
Rise
,
you
have
noe
lesse
quickened
me
,
that
was
as
nigh
my
end
as
you
your selves
were
,
but
now
I
live
,
and
againe
can
thinke
of
life
and
vengance
to
our
enemies
,
which
presently
weele
put
in
practice
,
and
seeing
that
our
spirits
are
redoubled
,
our
losses
shall
no
longer
fright
us
.
Poli.
Tis
time
Sr
,
you
shew'd
your selfe
unto
the
Army
,
there
you
are
dead
still
,
and
their
faith
on
the
beleefe
litle
better
,
but
your
presence
,
will
enliven
it
againe
,
and
make
them
fight
on
hatred
of
their
former
fault
,
and
shame
of
their
present
desperation
.
Timeus
.
Let
us
away
.
Enter
Cleander
the
young
King
,
Aratus
Eurylochus
,
and
others
.
Ara.
Never
did
Justice
appeare
so
eminent
this
was
a
deed
,
as
if
her
owne
hand
had
wrought
it
,
who
can
complaine
the
want
of
providence
,
or
say
the
guilty
,
and
the
innocent
make
one
heape
,
when
this
is
told
.
A
Tyrant
in
the
height
of
all
his
glory
guarded
with
friends
,
and
crewelty
what
eyther
power
or
violence
could
make
him
safe
with
,
by
a
mortall
hand
Strengthened
with
Justice
,
was
snatch't
from
the
midst
of
all
,
the
lightning
melts
not
the
enclosed
gold
with
halfe
that
wonder
:
leaving
that's
more
combustible
,
nor
doth
the
plague
in
a
multitude
of
men
make
a
choyce
so
curious
.
King
.
Where
is
the
great
worker
,
of
it
?
Ara.
Againe
departed
to
performe
greater
things
,
If
be
possible
,
I
did
prophesie
,
though
not
the
nature
of
them
,
that
he
could
act
us
wonders
,
weele
strive
to
second
his
first
blow
,
and
now
the
gods
and
he
have
done
,
play
our
parts
.
I
could
almost
give
him
divine
honors
,
and
say
when
he
is
in
the
Campe
,
there
is
no
neede
of
any
other
power
,
Souldiers
are
but
charge
,
and
troubles
only
.
Euri.
Tis
time
,
that
my
troopes
were
gone
,
that
wee
may
reach
the
place
of
ambush
,
ere
the
breake
of
day
.
Ara.
Tis
true
you
shall
presently
away
,
Phronimus
is
allready
gone
with
his
Forces
to
stop
the
passage
betweene
the
enemy
,
and
the
City
,
we
in
front
will
stand
against
them
,
so
that
in
the
morning
when
they
rise
it
shall
appeare
to
them
as
if
they
were
inhabited
with
foes
,
not
being
able
to
turne
away
they
shall
not
loose
their
sight
in
our
large
number
.
Enter
Clearchus
to
them
.
Clea.
Some
of
those
which
were
sent
to
corrupt
the
enemies
are
return'd
,
and
say
their
words
were
harkned
to
,
beyond
their
expectation
:
and
if
a
present
assault
were
given
,
there
were
no
doubt
of
victory
,
all
is
in
such
a
tumult
.
Ara.
Such
evills
increase
by
delay
,
wee'l
let
'em
grow
untill
the
morning
,
and
then
our
sight
will
gaine
the
conquest
;
if
it
be
possible
wee'l
order't
so
,
that
wee
may
rather
shew
'um
warre
than
bring
it
on
them
,
though
they
are
given
into
our
hands
wee
ought
not
to
shew
our
mercy
,
and
not
our
power
.
Exeunt
omnes
Enter
Eudora
,
Rodia
,
and
Ladies
,
frighted
in
by
tumult
.
Ladies
.
Oh
,
O!
Rodia
.
Madam
they
breake
in
upon
us
.
Eudo.
O
my
father
!
when
thou
art
slaine
I
cannot
feare
what
after
does
befall
me
,
the
same
that
was
their
cruelty
to
thee
,
will
to
me
be
pity
.
within
—
Pallantus
is
heard
without
,
spare
no
opposition
,
breake
the
gates
,
adde
fire
unto
your
force
.
A
noyse
is
heard
as
if
the
gates
were
broken
,
and
Pallantus
,
a
Captaine
,
and
Souldiers
,
rush
in
with
their
swords
drawne
,
and
seaze
upon
the
Ladies
,
they
give
a
shreeke
,
and
—
Pall.
Hold
,
I
command
you
hold
,
hee
that
takes
a
life
shall
pay
one
backe
againe
.
The
Souldiers
free
the
Ladies
.
My
rage
hath
blindly
led
me
on
to
violate
a
place
,
no
lesse
sacred
then
the
Temples
and
rudely
,
ere
I
lookd
about
,
hath
thrust
me
on
the
Deity
.
Like
those
which
being
led
to
see
some
glorious
thing
,
eager
,
and
longing
,
aske
still
as
they
passe
,
which
is
the
sight
,
and
how
neere
,
untill
they
are
ingag'd
within
its
splendour
,
which
opening
suddenly
upon
them
,
makes
them
retire
as
fast
againe
with
reverence
.
Eudo.
What
stayes
thee
monster
,
and
makes
thee
pant
thus
ore
the
prey
?
here
I
stand
readie
and
doe
invite
thy
fury
,
come
and
save
my
hand
a
labour
,
if
thou
art
surfeited
Ile
whet
thy
thine
appetite
.
Thou
art
a
Murderer
,
a
villaine
,
These
name
thee
not
,
nor
drawne
in
the
same
Table
would
expresse
thee
,
such
offenders
the
Magistrates
can
punish
,
They
are
but
diseases
of
the
State
,
thou
the
death
,
the
Law
comprehends
them
within
her
virge
,
thy
giant
faults
doe
so
much
oretop
her
,
that
iustice
cannot
reach
thee
.
And
if
there
were
no
gods
thou
then
wert
innocent
,
and
wouldst
stand
safe
because
thou
art
so
wicked
.
Thou
hast
killd
thy
King
;
O
no
,
thou
hadst
no
share
in
him
,
hee
was
a
King
of
men
,
thou
a
beast
,
the
bloodiest
in
the
Forrest
,
yet
he
was
they
Soveraigne
too
,
the
heards
were
under
him
,
and
the
wildest
knew
no
other
Lord
.
Pall.
My
revenge
how
false
thy
beauty
was
?
Eudo.
How
monstrous
thou
appearest
,
thou
representst
unto
me
all
ill
I
ever
heard
of
.
Pall.
And
thou
all
that
ever
I
heard
of
good
.
Eudo.
Thou
movest
like
so
many
living
mischiefes
,
had
the
Priests
beheld
thee
,
they
might
have
divinde
all
these
future
evills
so
exactly
in
thy
feature
,
that
what
they
told
would
rather
seeme
a
Story
than
a
Prophecy
,
and
saved
us
from
thee
.
Nature
was
never
guilty
of
such
a
Worke
,
some
hellish
power
hath
given
the
birth
,
and
Spirit
,
and
sent
thee
on
earth
to
destroy
all
that's
faire
and
holy
.
Cap.
Sir
,
raise
your selfe
,
can
you
endure
such
words
as
these
?
Souldiers
on
,
and
make
them
feele
those
evills
shee
hath
uttered
.
Pall.
Hold
villaines
dare
you
make
an
offer
to
such
a
deed
,
and
not
in
that
thought
expect
a
bolt
upon
your
breasts
?
hee
that
heaves
his
hand
shall
know
I
have
that
thunder
here
.
Thou
worse
than
she
hath
named
,
unhallowed
Traytor
,
canst
thou
command
such
Sacriledge
?
if
that
thy
faults
were
told
thee
from
above
,
thou'ldst
blaspheme
the
voyce
that
spoke
to
thee
.
If
shalt
dare
to
speake
such
things
as
these
,
Ile
make
thy
soule
passe
faster
than
thy
words
,
thinke
not
to
wrong
me
with
a
seeming
shew
.
Ile
not
take
your
bitternesse
,
though
gilded
in
the
name
of
friendship
,
withdraw
and
shew
your
love
this
way
.
Cap.
Sir
,
will
you
stay
?
there
may
be
treachery
in
the
place
.
Pall.
Still
you
iniure
me
with
your
kindnesse
.
Exeunt
Captaine
and
Souldiers
Eudo.
What
next
intendst
thou
?
what
master-peace
of
wickednesse
wilt
thou
glory
in
alone
?
know
thou
canst
not
force
me
,
here
within
thy
reach
I
am
as
safe
as
if
an
army
all
resolute
to
death
divided
us
.
This
hand
something
weaker
than
a
womans
,
can
resist
all
thy
strength
,
were
in
as
great
mischiefe
as
thy
will
.
Pall.
Though
I
seeme
all
that
you
have
named
,
and
fouler
yet
,
this
is
a
sinne
blacker
than
all
;
such
as
I
dare
not
doe
.
O
thinke
me
not
worse
than
you
have
said
alreadie
,
and
then
I
may
againe
be
happy
.
The
beasts
are
noble
,
meeke
to
Chastity
,
and
humbly
licke
the
feet
of
Majesty
.
Judge
me
not
by
shew
,
our
eyes
deceive
us
,
and
as
oft
perswade
us
to
the
wrong
,
as
doe
the
blinde
mans
feete
,
falsely
doe
prompt
us
.
All
that
is
white
is
innocent
,
and
all
that's
blacke
is
sinnefull
,
without
exception
.
Should
those
which
looke
on
you
be
led
so
by
the
scence
,
they
must
kneele
downe
before
you
,
and
adore
you
as
some
Deity
,
not
being
able
to
fantasie
so
much
god
,
as
they
doe
see
in
you
;
such
formes
their
power
have
given
you
,
that
you
may
become
a
rivall
in
their
worships
.
Eudo.
Why
talkst
thou
thus
?
thy
tongue
hath
no
more
Power
than
hath
thy
hands
.
Pall.
Neither
intend
violence
,
would
you
could
entertaine
of
me
one
thought
of
goodnesse
,
as
hopelesse
as
you
thinke
me
,
I
de
undertake
to
make
it
good
,
and
better't
daily
.
Eudo.
Why
delayest
thou
?
what
wouldst
thou
have
?
Pall.
Forgivenesse
,
I
dare
not
say
love
.
Eudo.
Love
?
thy
thoughts
are
more
mishapen
than
thy selfe
,
even
in
thy
hopes
th'art
cruell
.
This
base
imagination
hath
wrong'd
mee
more
than
all
thy
actions
,
before
thou
onely
soughtst
my
ruine
,
now
the
ruine
of
my
name
,
that
thou
intendst
a
rape
it
was
a
glory
to
me
,
and
though
I
had
lost
it
,
would
have
got
me
same
,
the
honour
of
a
ravisht
virgin
.
Didst
thou
woe
mee
with
the
greatest
services
,
as
thou
comst
in
my
fathers
blood
,
I
could
reward
thee
,
but
could
never
yeeld
thee
love
;
I
was
too
long
a
Princesse
,
and
lost
the
name
too
late
to
entertaine
so
low
a
thought
.
Pall.
The
world
of
causes
that
part
me
and
happinesse
.
Eudo.
Love
is
softe
,
and
full
of
curtesie
a
greater
opposite
to
lust
than
hate
;
the
flames
thou
feelst
are
more
preposterous
than
those
which
burne
the
breasts
of
Satyrs
,
and
of
beasts
,
w
kill
the
young
and
in
that
blood
injoy
the
Damme
.
Thinkest
thou
that
any
is
so
bold
in
lust
to
embrace
such
feares
thy
love
bring
with
it
.
Pall.
My
youth
and
comelinesse
whither
are
you
fled
?
Eudo.
My
miseries
have
put
a
new
nature
in
me
,
chang'd
that
calmenesse
I
had
wont
t'enjoy
,
into
the
lookes
and
language
of
a
fury
:
how
ill
doth
rage
become
a
virgins
breast
?
I
will
suppresse
it
,
and
if
it
must
breake
forth
,
dissolve
it
into
teares
.
An
age
worne
out
in
thought
cannot
present
one
comfort
to
mee
,
I
am
so
wretched
.
Her
griefe
and
anger
make
her
shewe
signes
of
fainting
.
Oh
,
my
soule's
more
earthly
than
my
body
.
This
warre
that
is
within
mee
,
will
gaine
a
victory
ore
me
.
I
finde
decayes
already
.
Pall
Accursed
that
I
am
,
to
be
the
Author
of
such
misery
,
is
there
no
way
to
restore
that
peace
which
you
have
lost
?
if
there
be
any
,
dispaire
not
of
it
,
though
it
be
held
in
the
iawes
of
death
,
Ile
snatch
it
for
you
;
though
it
were
lost
in
the
darkest
masse
of
things
,
my
love
would
distinsh't
in
a
Chaos
:
if
it
have
no
being
but
what
your
thought
gives
life
too
,
Ile
wish
it
for
you
.
So
strong
my
fantasie
is
to
serve
you
;
let
it
be
any
thing
to
be
done
Ile
doe't
,
can
I
,
the
wretched
cause
removed
bring
ease
unto
you
,
here
on
my
knee
I
yeeld
my
life
unto
your
taking
,
or
if
you
had
rather
,
Ile
offer't
up
my selfe
.
Eudo.
No
,
and
yet
there
is
a
way
,
and
thou
maist
doe
it
.
Pall.
Is
there
a
way
?
O
my
ioyes
,
the
gods
are
mercifull
,
name
it
,
name
it
to
me
.
Eudo.
If
thou'lt
vow
to
doe
it
presently
.
Pall.
Need
I
an
oath
to
confirme
I
would
be
happy
?
tis
my
owne
happinesse
I
thus
eagerly
persue
in
yours
,
every
sigh
you
give
doth
make
me
breathlesse
,
and
every
teare
which
you
let
fall
doth
bow
mee
nearer
to
the
earth
,
than
all
the
yeares
and
wounds
that
I
have
suffered
;
yet
I
will
sweare
by
all
things
holy
,
all
that
I
feare
and
reverence
,
to
refuse
no
labours
,
deaths
,
to
gaine
your
ease
—
Eudo.
Then
—
Pall.
And
restore
ioy
unto
your
life
againe
.
Eudo.
Now
thou
canst
not
,
thy
last
words
have
rendred
thee
unable
.
The
ease
was
death
,
which
yet
I
beg
from
thee
.
Pall.
From
what
a
heaven
of
happines
am
I
fallen
?
Eudo.
Assist
me
all
my
Strength
,
the
gods
this
way
you
have
ordeyned
I
should
come
to
you
,
pardon
that
Fate
then
which
your selves
did
give
me
.
Eudor
a
makes
an
offer
to
kill
her selfe
.
La
O
my
Lady
.
Pall.
Stay
,
O
;
stay
that
hand
,
let
that
goodnesse
in
you
which
would
spare
things
faire
,
and
holy
,
preserve
the
fairest
,
and
the
holyest
.
The
angells
would
be
prowd
to
take
such
shape
upon
them
when
they
visit
earth
,
'tis
such
as
your selfe
ought
to
looke
with
reverence
on
.
Eudo.
Ther's
a
weapon
hid
within
my
heart
,
which
none
can
take
away
:
it
wounds
deepely
.
Now
Death
thou
art
a
lover
,
and
dost
court
me
mildly
.
She
faints
.
La.
O
my
Lady
,
helpe
,
helpe
,
O
my
Lady
.
Rodia
.
Give
her
more
ayre
.
Pall.
Shees
gone
,
my
times
noe
longer
,
our
lives
were
woven
on
the
same
web
,
the
destynies
condemn'd
me
to
see
her
death
,
and
then
to
follow
.
Hee
wounds
himselfe
,
and
falls
.
Rodia
.
Shee
breathes
,
stand
off
.
Eudo.
My
Brother
,
O
my
Father
.
Rodia
.
How
do
you
Madam
?
Eudo.
Too
well
,
my
Strength
returnes
too
fast
upon
me
.
Pall.
Were
my
Soule
fled
,
that
voyce
would
call
it
backe
againe
,
it selfe
would
returne
:
and
choose
this
Paradice
on
earth
,
I'le
not
disturbe
her
with
my
longer
stay
.
He
speakes
to
Rodia
.
If
that
your
Lady
shall
neede
any
thing
,
you
may
have
it
with
a
thought
,
a
long
peace
shall
not
present
it
with
more
care
,
and
speed
:
shee
shall
not
find
lesse
tendernes
,
and
honor
then
if
her
Father
still
ruld
all
.
The
Guards
at
your
command
,
and
shall
stay
onely
for
your
safety
.
Exit
Pallanius
.
Rodia
.
Souldier
,
thart
noble
,
may
the
gods
reward
thy
goodnesse
,
Madam
,
you
had
best
goe
in
.
They
lead
of
their
Lady
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Timeus
,
Polyander
,
Menetius
Comastes
,
and
a
Captaine
.
Tim.
Fortune
,
glory
,
Victory
,
all
are
fled
Unto
their
severall
habitations
,
And
have
left
Dishonor
,
Losses
,
Danger
In
their
Stead
,
not
so
much
prayse
to
all
our
Dead
Story
,
as
that
we
lost
one
man
to
Save
a
Kingdome
,
not
bleed
a
drop
for
the
Whole
bodyes
safety
.
Poli.
My
Lord
,
let
not
the
treachery
of
such
Villaines
trouble
you
more
then
your
thought
of
safety
,
shew
your
hate
unto
their
false-hood
by
seeking
to
revenge
it
,
you
have
yet
hopes
left
,
if
timely
you
put
your
former
Resolution
into
practise
,
when
wee
have
gain'd
the
Forte
,
there's
meanes
to
escape
the
I'sle
,
and
seeke
forraigne
aide
,
you
have
many
friends
that
you
may
trust
too
.
This
our
obscure
flight
will
make
our
returne
more
glorious
,
which
shall
bee
i'th
face
of
the
whole
Kingdome
,
nor
will
we
choose
another
way
,
but
what
passes
o're
Cities
,
Armies
,
and
through
a
generall
ruine
to
our
Revenge
.
Exeunt
Om.
He
who
injustly
swaid
the
State
Lives
noe
where
now
,
but
in
their
Hate
.
Ther's
nothing
left
of
him
but
shame
.
Which
both
preserues
,
and
Clouds
his
name
.
When
civell
Beasts
fall
,
Let
it
be
Cald
slaughter
,
and
not
Victorie
.
Cho.
When
that
he
dies
,
that
liv'd
a
shade
His
sleepes
continued
then
,
not
made
.
Arise
thou
Starre
of
honor
there
And
in
his
stead
shine
round
our
Spheare
Grace
thou
the
Throne
,
and
let
us
see
Thy
father
once
more
Raigne
in
thee
.
Weele
now
in
naught
but
love
conspire
,
And
noe
brest
burne
,
but
with
true
fire
.
Cho.
While
that
such
manners
rule
the
Throne
Live
all
by
his
,
he
by
his
owne
.
Actus
Quintus
:
Scaena
I.
Enter
Eudora
,
Rodia
,
and
Ladies
,
Eudo.
This
quiet
we
enjoy
doth
strike
amazement
in
me
,
sure
they
have
slaine
the
body
with
the
head
,
which
makes
this
generall
calme
.
Rod.
Madam
,
'tis
more
innocent
,
I
had
newes
brought
by
one
I
sent
to
learne
that
did
astonish
me
,
that
the
people
knew
noe
cause
of
griefe
or
gladnesse
,
but
rose
to
their
affaires
as
in
a
time
when
neyther
enemies
,
nor
holidayes
doe
distract
them
from
their
labours
.
The
Kings
death
was
newes
this
morning
in
the
City
,
such
care
the
Victors
tooke
least
,
the
many
headed
but
unbrained
multitude
,
should
pull
a
slaughter
on
them
.
Eudo.
Their
piety
is
too
late
,
nor
will
it
satisfie
the
gods
,
when
they
have
spilt
so
much
blood
,
that
they
will
spill
noe
more
.
Rod.
The
Souldiers
,
though
their
charge
was
gone
,
kept
their
Guard
Still
,
they
of
the
party
durst
not
disclose
it
for
their
owne
safety
.
Some
there
were
which
whisperd
it
,
but
they
seemed
rather
curious
in
the
State
,
then
those
dull
which
knew
it
not
.
Eudo.
Can
a
Kingdome
fall
,
and
the
ruine
not
wake
the
people
.
Rod.
The
messinger
with
this
doubted
what
he
had
seene
and
heard
;
nor
durst
hee
bee
confirm'd
least
his
question
might
seeme
Treason
,
the
first
opening
of
it
was
by
Proclamation
,
with
such
secresy
the
plot
was
carried
,
that
now
it
was
a
labour
to
discover
it
.
After
this
Aratus
,
and
the
rest
of
the
Conspirators
went
into
the
Market-place
,
where
the
people
were
comanded
to
attend
by
publique
voyce
,
and
there
to
the
assembly
when
they
had
declared
the
Justice
of
their
action
,
they
produced
the
yong
Prince
,
which
in
the
last
alteration
of
the
State
was
lost
.
But
by
all
supposed
to
have
beene
murdered
,
which
that
hee
was
the
Kings
Sonne
was
confirmed
by
Aratus
his
conferring
the
Kingdome
on
him
:
himselfe
being
the
next
heire
unto
the
Crowne
,
if
the
Kings
Issue
fail'd
.
The
Story
of
the
Princes
life
bred
much
Love
,
and
Pity
,
and
his
lookes
were
able
to
have
led
them
to
a
civill
Warre
,
had
he
beene
Counterfet
.
Eudo.
This
may
be
true
,
they
who
can
beleeve
there
is
a
providence
,
may
easily
give
credit
to
this
Justice
,
our
sinnes
were
mightier
then
our
sufferings
,
and
had
wee
a
greater
debt
then
life
,
we
ought
to
pay
it
,
my
Miseries
are
due
to
mee
.
I
was
a
party
,
and
enjoy'd
my
Fathers
violence
.
Rod.
Madam
you
are
as
Innocent
,
as
at
that
time
your
age
was
,
and
onely
doe
offend
in
your
teares
,
and
too
much
love
,
which
on
this
occasion
spent
excessively
,
is
not
to
greeve
but
to
repine
,
the
King
was
old
,
and
taking
his
latest
leave
,
and
was
hastned
onely
a
litle
sooner
to
shew
the
Justice
of
the
gods
;
'tis
true
,
my
Lord
Timeus
was
yong
,
yet
had
noe
patent
for
his
life
,
but
as
all
brothers
,
was
an
uncertaine
joy
.
Eudo.
How
ill
these
words
become
thee
,
and
me
to
heare
,
think'st
thou
my
Fathers
faults
can
bring
a
comfort
to
mee
.
Rod.
Madam
,
twould
be
noe
glory
to
you
that
an
unworthy
greife
should
be
your
death
,
your
enemies
noe
doubt
are
noble
,
sure
they
chose
the
crewellest
to
execute
their
businesse
,
and
him
though
his
churlish
out-side
promist
not
,
we
found
more
courteous
,
then
they
which
doe
professe
it
,
his
words
were
the
lawes
of
Complement
.
One
that
simpathizd
in
all
your
sufferings
,
and
though
his
manlinesse
would
not
suffer
him
faint
,
he
died
together
with
you
.
One
knocks
at
the
dore
.
Eudo.
See
who
'tis
disturbes
us
.
Who
ist
?
Rodia
goes
out
and
returnes
.
Rod.
Madam
,
I
know
not
,
nor
did
I
ere
see
any
like
him
,
his
beauties
beyond
all
similitude
,
he
speakes
like
the
Souldier
we
were
talking
of
,
but
him
it
cannot
be
,
he
was
the
terror
,
this
the
darling
of
mankind
.
Eudo.
Whether
wilt
thou
loose
thy selfe
in
commendation
?
in
men
beauties
the
least
part
.
Rodia
.
Madam
,
it
appeares
so
in
him
,
yet
such
features
lay
a
necessity
of
noblenesse
on
the
minde
,
hee
humbly
craves
admittance
,
nor
would
hee
take
it
before
that
it
were
granted
.
Eudo.
Call
him
in
,
wee
must
indure
their
pleasures
,
it
will
not
become
our
state
to
deny
commands
,
much
lesse
when
they
intreat
.
Rodia
goes
out
,
and
returnes
with
Pallantus
.
Pall.
The
Kingdome
owes
a
Sacrifice
for
your
life
,
all
will
ioy
to
heare
it
,
which
had
it
faild
,
would
have
pulld
more
guilt
upon
us
,
than
the
sinnes
of
a
whole
age
.
Eudo.
It
is
my
fault
you
tell
me
of
,
and
a
great
share
of
my
griefe
that
thus
I
stay
to
grieve
.
Pall.
My
offensive
tongue
can
utter
nothing
pleasing
to
you
,
so
great
are
your
misfortunes
,
and
your
honor
so
tender
to
you
,
the
wounds
that
I
have
given
you
are
beyond
my
cure
.
Eudo.
Thou
art
not
hee
that
gave
'um
.
Pall.
If
my
repentance
can
make
me
cleare
,
I
am
not
,
otherwaies
tis
I
that
partially
hearing
my
owne
cause
,
beleev'd
and
iudg'd
for
it
,
that
hastily
without
examining
what
I
did
,
decreed
on
all
your
woe
.
Eudo.
Thart
strangely
altered
,
if
thou
beest
hee
.
Pall.
Nothing
so
strangely
as
my
hopes
are
,
at
first
they
did
appeare
in
a
divine
and
holy
forme
,
beyond
all
that
I
can
fantasie
,
such
a
mind
though
ravishd
with
the
beauty
,
could
not
expresse
then
,
and
promist
all
should
bee
as
heavenly
as
their
shape
,
calld
mee
the
instrument
of
Iustice
,
the
saver
of
my
Countrey
:
set
all
the
sinnes
before
mee
,
I
was
to
punish
,
told
mee
there
was
no
heaven
,
but
what
their
clowdes
did
veile
;
thus
they
crept
into
mee
,
and
won
mee
with
the
most
specious
shewes
unto
their
service
,
on
my
bare
resolution
gave
mee
part
of
that
happinesse
I
was
to
ayme
at
.
Then
they
clothed
mee
in
a
body
,
foule
as
the
Tragedy
I
was
to
act
,
and
made
me
dote
on
those
deformities
which
all
did
loath
,
when
they
had
bewitcht
mee
with
these
false
,
yet
glittering
names
,
and
I
obeyed
their
blacke
commands
,
in
a
moment
they
changd
into
Repentance
,
a
mournefull
figure
:
and
sadly
left
mee
as
they
first
did
find
me
,
and
as
I
now
appeare
to
you
.
Eudo.
Thou
hadst
no
cause
for
all
that
thou
hast
done
,
the
faults
were
generall
,
and
concernd
not
thee
,
but
thou
wert
ready
,
for
all
ill
;
as
well
as
goodnesse
.
Pall.
Yet
,
I
had
a
cause
(
Pardon
me
that
I
say
)
and
being
that
I
saw
not
you
before
I
did
it
,
a
iust
one
.
I
lost
a
Soveraigne
,
as
nere
to
me
in
blood
,
as
love
;
and
if
this
cause
may
seeme
remote
,
I
had
a
father
murdered
,
whose
death
,
as
it
becomes
you
thus
to
mourne
,
so
it
did
mee
for
to
revenge
,
my selfe
was
banisht
,
loyaltie
was
both
our
faults
,
and
when
they
had
heapt
these
sorrowes
on
me
,
left
mee
not
one
hope
to
leane
on
;
they
were
not
yet
content
with
my
despaire
,
but
sought
my
life
,
which
was
so
poore
,
it
could
not
be
distinguisht
then
from
death
;
their
injuries
forcd
a
new
one
in
mee
,
and
blew
the
sparke
untill
the
flame
consumde
'um
.
But
had
I
beheld
you
before
their
danger
,
it
would
have
turnd
my
soule
within
mee
,
changd
mee
from
a
Foe
unto
their
partie
.
I
cannot
now
beleeve
I
had
a
Justice
,
that
there
could
bee
any where
you
were
iniurd
in
it
,
so
much
my
love
doth
mount
above
my
griefe
,
that
it
makes
mee
thinke
I
have
onely
lost
your
father
.
Why
weepe
you
thus
?
Could
that
recall
him
,
I'de
beare
you
company
,
and
breake
those
stubborne
gates
,
which
from
my
childe-hood
to
this
present
houre
hath
kept
them
backe
,
and
spend
my
whole
store
here
.
But
nothing
can
redeeme
him
,
let
that
common
remedy
which
all
apply
,
and
helpeth
all
,
give
ease
unto
you
,
that
nothing
can
redeeme
him
.
O
learne
a
strength
of
me
(
that
is
the
worst
name
for
it
)
to
beare
a
fathers
losse
.
Let
the
innocence
of
mine
excuse
my
violence
to
yours
,
wee
are
the
wretchedst
two
alive
,
made
so
by
our selves
,
and
can
be
onely
happy
in
our selves
.
Eudo.
Oh
,
O.
Pall.
Look
on
this
,
it
may
bring
you
comfort
,
with
making
out
of
love
with
the
subiect
of
your
griefe
.
Hee
delivers
her
that
letter
which
hee
found
in
the
villaines
pocket
,
to
murder
him
,
written
by
her
brother
.
Shee
starts
in
the
reading
.
Eudo.
Ha
?
Pall.
Falls
not
my
deformityes
away
?
Eudo.
Pallantus
?
art
thou
Pallantus
?
Pall.
This
is
the
first
time
I
darde
to
be
so
.
Eudo.
And
to
all
this
villany
is
signd
Tymeus
,
couldst
thou
be
thus
cruell
,
thus
basely
cruell
?
unworthy
brother
.
This
hath
made
a
mercy
of
all
that
hath
befallen
thee
,
thou
dost
deserve
to
have
thy
punishments
out-live
thee
,
to
have
engraven
on
thy
Tombe
,
Heere
lies
the
treacherous
,
bloody
,
and
to
make
thee
monstrous
,
have
thy
age
adde
to
it
,
The
young
Timeus
,
that
was
subtile
in
his
youth
,
what
remaines
for
mee
?
that
happinesse
the
most
wretched
doe
enjoy
,
is
taken
from
me
,
a
worthy
cause
of
griefe
.
Now
I
can
neither
live
,
nor
die
,
without
a
staine
.
Pall.
Can
you
yet
read
a
resemblance
but
of
Iustice
in
my
Actions
.
Eudo.
I
know
not
how
to
answere
.
The
tongue
must
bee
as
wicked
as
the
will
that
did
commit
'em
,
that
can
defend
such
deeds
,
had
equity
pointed
all
your
Actions
out
,
given
you
Rules
to
work
by
,
told
you
how
much
,
how
farre
you
must
have
gone
,
you
could
not
have
done
more
justly
,
there
wants
not
any
thing
to
crowne
your
iudgement
but
my
death
,
the
onely
issue
of
that
sinnefull
race
.
I
have
a
long
time
loathed
my
life
,
and
now
I
loath
my selfe
too
.
I
find
I
know
not
how
,
a
guiltinesse
within
me
,
my
fathers
faults
flow
like
his
blood
within
mee
.
Pall.
You
are
not
at
all
allide
unto
his
vices
.
Profane
not
then
your
goodnesse
,
it
is
a
sinne
though
you
your selfe
commit
it
;
that
you
was
a
Princesse
was
not
your
ambition
but
obedience
,
you
are
onely
guilty
in
thinking
of
your selfe
so
,
why
then
doe
yue
talke
of
death
thus
?
Eudo.
Can
any
life
be
noble
after
such
losses
?
Pall.
My selfe
,
and
the
many
which
have
suffered
them
doe
thinke
so
,
and
are
receiv'd
of
all
with
pity
,
and
with
honour
,
can
you
expect
to
find
lesse
humanity
?
you
are
not
fallne
so
low
,
but
the
greatest
Prince
would
be
proud
to
do
you
service
.
Tis
vainenes
to
professe
,
all
civility
is
your
due
.
Eudo.
You
reward
me
good
for
bad
,
before
that
I
was
certaine
of
a
cause
,
I
slandered
your
vertues
with
those
names
foule
deeds
deserve
,
or
a
worse
nature
could
invent
,
I
falsely
did
apply
to
you
that
which
was
true
in
me
.
Pall.
You
are
a
Iudge
too
cruell
to
your selfe
,
I
did
deserve
them
at
the
least
from
you
,
it
was
a
noble
passion
,
and
owed
unto
your
friends
,
had
they
beene
worse
,
yet
if
you'de
make
amends
,
where
there
was
no
wrong
,
give
one
comfort
to
your selfe
,
and
I
shall
receive
a
million
:
ample
and
satisfactory
.
Eudo.
You
have
given
me
many
,
more
than
I
did
hope
,
or
wish
for
,
and
removed
those
killing
doubts
within
me
.
I
shall
remember
you
no
more
the
cause
,
but
mourner
of
my
fathers
death
.
O
that
name
of
father
,
how ever
thou
deserv'st
,
thou
dost
deserve
these
teares
of
me
.
Pall.
Fall
not
to
a
relapse
againe
,
I
dare
not
leave
you
thus
.
Eudo.
You
may
there
is
no
danger
in't
,
they
were
but
teares
,
and
are
already
wipt
away
.
Pall
All
about
you
does
minister
to
your
griefe
.
The
King
would
gladly
comfort
you
,
can
you
admit
his
visit
?
Eudo.
I
finde
hereafter
that
I
may
,
yet
tis
too
soone
,
Pray
excuse
me
.
Pall.
May
peace
and
quiet
returne
to
their
home
,
againe
to
this
place
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
the
King
,
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Eunilochus
,
attendants
.
People
Jove
,
Neptune
,
Apollo
,
and
the
gods
of
Greece
;
preserve
,
and
blesse
the
King
.
King
.
Through
the
happines
of
my
people
,
may
I
know
no
other
ioy
or
sadnesse
,
but
what
passes
you
,
still
the
middle
way
of
blessings
twixt
the
gods
and
me
.
People
The
gods
preserve
your
Majesty
.
Ara.
Sir
,
give
us
leave
too
,
to
ease
our selves
of
that
ioy
that
doth
oppresse
us
,
how
hath
these
your
virtues
rewarded
all
our
travell
,
made
our
deede
honourable
,
and
to
our
faith
have
joynd
discretion
,
in
shewing
your selfe
thus
worthy
of
the
place
you
are
chose
too
,
you
have
made
it
plaine
,
as
none
ought
,
so
none
but
your selfe
can
rule
:
what
praises
will
after-ages
give
us
for
this
our
loyalty
?
Had
you
beene
brought
in
with
fire
,
with
blood
,
with
desolation
,
as
you
,
with
wonder
,
are
given
a
gift
of
peace
in
the
height
of
warre
,
yet
your
endowments
would
have
made
all
innocent
,
and
like
a
yeare
of
good
things
made
the
bad
forgotten
.
Sir
I
hope
you
doe
not
thinke
I
flatter
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
I
doe
not
,
you
that
have
so
many
virtues
for
to
live
by
,
neede
no
dishonest
Arts
,
nor
by
such
waies
seeke
to
endeare
me
,
when
you
have
alreadie
so
really
ingaged
me
,
that
I
am
not
able
to
give
you
a
thankes
,
much
lesse
a
returne
that's
equall
not
to
say
if
I
could
what
I
would
do
deserving
you
,
and
if
you
cannot
in
some
kinde
reward
your selfe
,
tis
not
in
my
power
to
doe
it
:
These
praises
you
have
given
me
,
doe
tell
,
if
not
what
I
am
,
yet
what
I
should
be
,
they
shall
not
make
mee
proud
,
but
good
,
nor
will
I
glory
in
them
,
but
make
them
still
my
ayme
.
Ile
first
offer
them
to
the
gods
,
and
humbly
from
their
hands
pray
for
them
againe
,
and
at
the
second
gift
account
them
mine
.
Ara.
These
men
wrought
hard
too
for
,
you
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
I
know
it
,
and
could
I
thanke
them
in't
,
Ide
stoope
lower
than
the
place
from
whence
they
raysed
me
.
Enter
Clearchus
,
Hianthe
,
Haimantus
,
Melissa
,
Ladies
,
to
them
.
Ara.
See
Sir
,
what
ioyes
approch
you
,
your
royall
Sister
.
King
.
This
way
let
me
expresse
a
brothers
love
Before
I
speake
it
—
O
my
Sister
,
y'are
My
Throne
,
my
Scepter
,
and
my
Crowne
,
or
what
Is
more
deare
and
estimable
with
me
,
The
Grace
,
the
Maiesty
that
rises
from
them
.
Pardon
,
if
my
much
love
make
me
a
rude
Brother
,
and
too
credulously
soone
I
Proudly
call
my selfe
by
that
honourable
Name
,
when
so
lately
I
had
leave
to
doe't
:
Yet
had
it
not
been
before
declar'd
Unto
me
,
I
could
not
so
easily
Consent
to
the
beleefe
;
your
face
before
Did
ioy
me
,
but
then
an
Angell
wore
it
,
And
appeard
more
heavenly
in
your
borrowed
Shape
than
in
his
owne
.
I
cannot
blame
the
Troubles
of
my
former
life
,
when
I
was
Barr'd
from
such
felicities
as
these
.
Hian.
The
gods
were
not
so
favourable
to
me
As
in
a
Dreame
,
faintly
and
a farre
off
To
shew
the
Blessings
I
was
to
hope
,
how
Gladly
J
would
have
changd
my
greatest
ioyes
For
such
your
troubles
;
This
I
may
call
my
Birth-day
,
I
walk't
,
and
breath'd
,
and
spoke
before
.
But
lived
not
till
this
hower
.
I
had
a
being
Then
,
but
not
a
life
till
now
.
King
:
Tis
so
to
both
of
us
.
And
we
will
ever
celebrate
it
,
as
the
first
day
that
we
were
borne
Brother
and
Sister
,
before
we
were
Strangers
,
now
we
are
twinns
of
love
.
My
Lord
,
I
understand
the
holy
League
betwixt
you
,
and
though
I
lay
my
hand
thus
on
it
,
I
Intend
not
for
to
breake
it
,
nor
make
a
divorse
,
though
thus
I
part
you
:
pardon
me
that
I
seeme
covetous
of
so
great
a
happines
;
and
shew
a
loathnes
to
part
from
it
,
before
I
have
my selfe
enjoyed
it
.
She
must
sit
some
time
my
Queene
,
before
she
be
crown'd
yours
.
Clear.
It
were
a
creuelty
to
wish
it
other
,
I
will
not
be
guilty
of
such
desires
,
if
after
a
brother
,
I
an
humble
servant
shall
be
thought
on
,
'tis
the
time
and
place
I
am
ambitious
off
.
I
will
withdraw
Sir
,
and
though
there
is
noe
happines
,
I
can
enjoy
so
great
,
as
beholding
yours
,
I
will
deny
my selfe
the
view
.
King
.
O
my
Lord
,
say
not
so
,
though
I
am
kinde
I
am
not
fond
,
I'le
give
up
my
interest
,
or
any
thing
rather
then
you
shall
leave
us
;
I
spoke
it
as
a
meanes
to
stay
you
make
it
not
then
a
parting
word
:
helpe
me
to
perswade
him
.
Hian.
My
Lord
.
Clear.
Tis
enough
,
I
obey
,
my
busines
is
much
below
my
love
,
and
I
will
rather
distroy
the
one
,
then
offend
the
other
,
yet
now
I
have
granted
I'le
intreat
againe
,
as
for
a
new
favour
.
I
may
perswade
,
though
deny
nothing
.
My
voyage
was
bound
to
another
place
,
before
happily
I
was
cast
upon
this
shore
,
and
though
I
call
my selfe
a
Prince
,
I
am
a
servant
to
my
imployments
,
and
obey
the
Commission
of
a
Father
,
the
expence
,
and
expectation
of
a
Kingdome
,
King
.
My
Lord
,
if
your
imployments
are
so
great
,
we
would
not
make
you
guilty
of
a
dishonorable
Stay
.
Cle.
If
with
your
leaves
I
shall
depart
,
as
a
man
that
is
pull'd
from
his
delights
,
with
a
strong
hand
,
being
freed
recoyles
againe
to
them
,
so
speedy
shall
be
my
returne
,
and
in
my
absence
account
al
violence
,
that
does
detaine
me
,
by
that
time
too
,
your
first
troubles
wil
be
setled
,
&
you
more
fit
to
receive
an
idleman
.
King
.
Our
passion
ought
to
give
way
unto
your
reason
.
Phro.
Aratus
you
are
in
a
maze
.
Ara.
Hah
,
I
must
confesse
I
am
so
.
These
Princes
play
their
parts
so
rarely
,
that
there
is
nothing
left
for
us
,
but
wonder
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
shall
we
intreat
you
to
beare
us
company
unto
the
Temple
:
thither
we're
a
going
;
to
give
that
perfection
to
our
joyes
which
yet
is
wanting
,
and
for
unusuall
benefits
offer
unusuall
thanks
.
Enter
Pallantus
,
and
kneeles
,
and
kisses
the
Kings
hand
.
Pall.
Sr
,
I
humbly
crave
your
pardon
,
that
thus
tardily
after
the
people
and
your
enemies
,
I
present
my
service
to
you
,
and
wish
you
happines
.
King
.
I
cannot
be
deceived
,
thou
must
be
my
Pallantus
,
ther's
none
can
speake
,
or
looke
like
thee
,
thy
least
resemblance
is
above
all
men
,
'tis
noe
wonder
to
see
thee
Chang'd
,
thy
deede
has
thus
transform'd
thee
,
it
sits
upon
thy
brow
and
Casts
a
glory
round
about
thy
face
.
Ara.
Me thinks
the
times
had
such
a
vizor
on
,
and
till
this
day
shewd
not
a
true
face
,
Sr
,
you
shall
see
him
each
day
make
new
discoveries
of
virtues
.
Pall.
My
Lord
,
you
promise
too
highly
for
me
.
Ara.
Thou
look'st
sadly
after
all
thy
Honors
.
King
.
So
me thought
,
what
can
be
the
cause
?
A
King
they
say's
the
best
Physition
for
a
discontent
.
If
I
cannot
bring
you
comfort
,
I
sacrifice
in
your
behalfe
.
Pall.
Sr
,
I
bow
to
you
.
But
that
which
is
my
greife
will
be
noe
longer
mine
alone
,
then
while
I
doe
conceale
it
,
all
that
hears't
will
also
have
their
share
in
it
,
'tis
a
disease
that
good
men
catch
meerely
by
the
fantasy
.
Justice
could
never
yet
with
all
her
care
so
carue
out
her
punishment
,
but
that
the
Innocent
were
wounded
with
the
blow
,
and
felt
the
Judgement
of
another
sinne
,
while
with
her
Sword
she
cuts
off
the
offending
parent
the
child
is
made
an
Orphan
in
the
Cradle
,
and
mournes
hereafter
because
he
had
noe
fault
.
King
.
Whether
doth
this
sad
beginning
tend
?
Pall.
To
this
Sr
,
as
we
have
slaine
withall
religion
a
bloody
tyrant
,
one
that
was
greater
in
his
sinnes
then
in
the
Kingdome
he
purchast
by
them
.
So
too
we
have
causelesse
slayne
the
father
of
a
Lady
,
that
knew
not
so
much
guilt
as
to
satisfie
her
,
why
shee
lost
him
:
for
want
of
whose
life
she
now
contemnes
her
owne
,
a
Jewell
of
inestimable
value
with
all
that
does
behold
it
but
her selfe
,
Sr
,
you
cannot
call
her
an
enemy
,
though
her
goodnesse
hath
stood
against
you
,
and
preserved
her
Father
so
many
yeeres
in
spite
of
all
his
sinnes
,
she
ought
to
resist
all
piety
if
it
were
an
enemy
to
her
owne
.
Hian.
Her
cause
of
greife
is
mighty
,
and
if
care
be
not
taken
,
as
their
faults
have
donne
the
rest
,
her
goodnesse
will
distroy
her
,
we
that
beheld
the
past
deformities
,
can
beare
witnes
of
her
virtues
,
she
was
the
only
mine
of
honour
,
and
when
we
have
beene
wearyed
in
seeking
one
graine
,
in
her
we
could
finde
a
treasure
,
nor
wast
a
beauty
set
of
onely
with
the
blemishes
of
others
,
or
foild
by
generall
vices
,
but
a
reall
,
and
a
native
excellence
,
which
as
it
could
not
be
obscured
with
thickest
darkenesse
:
so
neyther
could
it
be
outshind
by
other
lights
.
King
.
Her
greife
concernes
us
all
,
and
ought
to
be
considered
before
our
joyes
,
beare
these
teares
to
her
,
we
wish
the
excesse
of
ours
may
lessen
her's
,
and
say
that
comfort
which
is
left
we
will
preserve
,
and
carefully
offer
to
her
.
Her
brother
with
many
of
her
friends
are
fled
unto
the
Fort
,
and
are
there
shut
up
—
would
I
could
give
them
life
,
what
say
you
my
Lord
?
may
I
doe
this
?
Is
not
mercy
in
this
place
folly
?
Ara.
Sir
,
'tis
so
at
no
time
;
you
may
doe
this
or
any
thing
you
have
a
minde
too
,
even
in
your
fantasiy
there
is
a
secret
councell
,
and
seeing
that
all
your
actions
,
nay
all
your
pleasures
,
are
in
some
exercise
of
virtue
,
we
will
not
crosse
you
,
but
make
it
our
greater
care
to
preserve
you
in
them
,
and
have
a
more
diligent
eye
least
your
pity
may
prove
crewell
to
your selfe
King
.
You
have
given
me
resolution
,
hast
presently
unto
'em
(
twas
their
desire
this
morning
to
have
conference
with
one
of
note
)
and
if
you
find
'em
fit
for
mercy
or
to
be
made
fit
,
offert
to
'um
.
Exeunt
Omnes
.
Enter
Tymeus
,
at
one
dore
.
Menetius
,
Poliander
,
Comastes
,
a
Captaine
at
the
other
Tim.
Noe
answer
yet
returnd
?
Mene.
Not
yet
,
Sir
.
Tim.
One
Looke
out
againe
.
Exit
Cap.
Polyander
,
I
remember
I
heard
thee
once
say
,
when
I
condemnd
thee
for
thy
smiles
,
that
if
I
had
a
cause
thou
wouldst
frowne
,
why
lookst
thou
sadly
then
?
our
fortunes
ought
rather
to
stirre
our
anger
than
our
griefe
.
Poly.
Were
they
Sir
,
my
misfortunes
alone
,
and
not
yours
,
I
would
not
now
fall
below
my
words
,
the
greatest
should
not
move
any
affection
in
me
,
unlesse
it
were
some
glory
.
Enter
Captaine
.
Cap.
Theres
now
one
arriv'd
Sir
,
who
certainely
hath
brought
us
newes
.
Tim.
Let
us
seate
our selves
before
he
enters
,
that
he
may
see
on
what
strength
we
doe
demand
,
every
man
put
on
a
face
of
mirth
,
now
we
are
at
a
Banquet
that
will
refresh
us
after
all
our
toyle
.
There
stands
a
Table
,
and
a
cup
of
poyson
on
it
,
they
all
sit
about
.
Enter
Pallantus
,
and
a
guard
.
Pall.
Now
retire
,
but
on
the
least
call
bee
ready
for
to
enter
.
Tim.
Who's
this
?
doe
any
of
you
know
him
?
Pol.
Men.
Not
I
my
Lord
.
Tim.
Sir
,
y'are
welcome
,
but
wee
invite
you
onely
to
looke
on
,
these
cates
are
not
easie
of
digestion
;
the
gods
give
not
life
more
certaine
than
this
gives
death
,
doe
you
thinke
you
can
endure
the
sight
?
would
Aratus
himselfe
were
heere
,
that
once
hee
might
bee
satisfied
with
a
spectacle
of
blood
.
You
looke
pale
on
us
already
,
sure
they
have
a
plot
upon
you
,
and
sent
you
hither
to
see
your
death
,
had
they
none
to
send
us
to
behold
our
resolutions
but
such
a
trifle
.
Pall.
What
shape
can
I
put
on
,
and
thou
not
iniure
mee
in't
.
I
never
yet
appeard
to
thee
in
any
forme
,
but
that
I
suffered
by
thee
,
at
first
I
was
thy
feare
,
as
all
that
were
innocent
did
fright
thee
,
because
thou
wert
guilty
I
was
banisht
,
not
to
remove
me
,
but
my
death
,
which
with
treachery
thou
soughtst
.
And
when
I
had
,
with
wonder
escapt
thy
intended
mischiefes
,
by
chance
thou
wouldst
have
slaine
mee
when
thou
hadst
no
cause
of
hatred
,
my
disguise
wrongd
thee
not
,
twas
as
much
a
stranger
to
thee
,
as
an
inhabitant
of
remotest
Africa
—
Timeus
and
the
rest
start
from
their
places
,
and
draw
.
Timeus
.
I
know
thee
now
,
thou
needs
not
further
declare
thy selfe
,
and
th'art
come
past
all
my
wishes
to
satisfie
my
revenge
.
Pallantus
knockes
,
and
the
guard
enters
,
and
they
runne
upon
Timeus
and
the
rest
.
Pall.
Hold
,
I
came
to
bring
peace
and
not
destruction
,
doe
you
yet
perceive
how
vaine
is
all
your
malice
?
Tim.
If
thou
art
that
man
thou
would
seeme
to
bee
,
and
equally
with
me
dost
honour
a
dead
father
,
yet
(
setting
by
these
helpers
)
let
us
singly
try
our
hatred
;
the
grant
of
this
will
please
above
all
our
demands
,
I
had
rather
see
thee
dead
,
or
by
this
meanes
not
see
thee
live
,
then
againe
be
Master
of
the
fortunes
I
have
lost
,
I
am
unfit
for
life
.
I
shall
but
curse
the
givers
of
it
.
Pall.
If
I
thought
so
,
I'de
grant
to
your
request
,
and
kill
you
;
I
could
doe
it
,
I
have
strength
,
and
justice
enough
to
make
me
able
,
but
you
are
not
so
bad
,
as
you
suppose
,
these
are
dispairing
,
and
not
malitious
thoughts
;
yet
ere
I
goe
one
way
or
other
Ile
give
you
satisfaction
,
I
came
for
that
intent
.
Let
me
see
your
Articles
—
Hee
seemes
to
read
them
to
himselfe
,
and
speakes
out
the
last
.
And
if
these
may
not
be
granted
,
that
thus
accompanied
,
wee
may
depart
the
Isle
.
How
poore
are
these
requests
?
without
more
commission
I
dare
grant
you
greater
.
Why
,
these
are
demands
within
the
compasse
of
a
subjects
breast
,
deceive
not
your selves
,
you
were
not
so
safe
in
your
owne
raigne
,
as
in
your
enemies
.
The
State
is
not
translated
from
one
tyranny
to
another
,
but
to
a
kingdome
.
A
Prince
governes
now
,
which
is
the
name
of
mercy
,
as
well
as
power
,
which
he
truly
knowes
,
and
in
his
first
deeds
desires
to
shew
on
you
;
he
does
not
thinke
he's
then
like
Iove
when
he
can
thunder
,
but
when
he
can
hold
it
in
,
not
when
he
is
the
voice
of
death
,
but
when
he
sits
harmelesse
,
with
the
power
of
death
about
him
.
Revenge
,
Torments
,
Executions
,
are
not
expressions
of
a
king
,
but
a
distruction
,
he
rivalls
not
the
immortall
powers
in
Temples
,
statues
,
adoration
,
but
transcendent
virtues
,
divine
performances
,
these
are
the
additions
by
which
he
climbes
heaven
,
and
appeares
a
god
on
earth
.
Tim.
Why
should
I
bee
a
stranger
to
these
virtues
,
more
than
this
man
?
I
was
not
borne
for
lesse
things
than
he
,
certainly
when
nature
made
this
frame
,
she
intended
it
for
the
noblest
actions
.
Pall.
Have
you
yet
resolv'd
on
any
thing
?
Tim.
If
you
will
goe
on
,
I
can
heare
you
still
.
Pall.
I
will
goe
on
in
mercy
,
tis
my
commission
,
and
if
you
will
not
dam
against
its
streames
,
it
may
flow
to
you
:
yet
the
way
is
even
;
why
looke
you
strangely
at
the
word
?
tis
no
wonder
to
the
sender
of
it
,
nor
they
which
live
about
him
.
Though
the
dangers
may
seeme
great
,
twere
not
worthy
of
the
high
name
of
his
mercy
,
if
the
offence
were
not
such
.
This
is
but
the
least
of
his
expressions
,
that
his
enemies
were
courted
for
to
live
,
but
presently
you
thinke
tis
not
to
save
you
,
but
to
deferre
your
death
.
A
vaine
thought
,
when
can
it
be
done
more
safely
,
and
more
justly
,
you
are
now
as
farre
from
those
to
help
you
,
as
to
pity
you
.
None
but
himselfe
has
any
care
of
you
.
Tis
true
,
there
is
a
Lady
that
had
a
share
in
you
,
but
with
your
honor
you
threw
her
off
,
nor
can
you
claime
an
interest
,
when
you
have
neglected
her
in
all
her
miseries
;
not
in
your
flight
,
your
articles
,
no
,
not
in
your
thoughts
providing
for
her
.
And
,
had
she
not
fallen
into
the
hands
of
enemies
that
were
servants
too
,
to
honour
;
you
had
throwne
away
a
Jewell
that
had
a
first
thought
,
even
among
the
gods
.
Tim.
O
Sir
,
you
have
underminde
my
pride
,
and
remov'd
me
from
that
advantage
ground
I
stood
on
,
to
my
owne
low
height
.
These
your
last
words
comes
neere
unto
me
,
and
makes
me
with
reverence
beleeve
all
that
you
have
spoken
;
before
your
virtues
onely
sturd
my
hate
and
envie
,
this
deed
first
taught
me
to
admire
,
and
cannot
doubt
there
is
a
want
of
any
noblenesse
,
when
you
have
shewne
such
passionate
care
in
preserving
a
distressed
Virgin
,
whom
I
durst
not
thinke
of
,
least
I
should
thinke
too
,
of
her
dishonour
.
Pall.
Sir
,
keepe
in
your
joy
,
wee
doe
not
thinke
our selves
such
high
deservers
,
in
doing
that
which
barbarous
people
would
have
done
,
they
which
would
have
burnt
the
Temples
,
would
have
kneeld
to
her
,
and
what
duties
they
neglected
to
the
Altar
,
would
have
paid
at
her
feet
.
Thinke
you
wee
could
desire
to
save
such
enemies
as
you
,
and
not
adore
an
enemy
of
her
virtues
.
Tim.
Give
me
not
scorne
and
honour
in
the
same
breath
,
you
have
made
me
leave
my selfe
,
hate
me
not
now
I
am
nothing
.
Pall.
Now
I
meete
you
:
and
first
give
me
leave
with
this
to
throw
away
all
danger
that
does
threaten
you
.
He
spills
the
poyson
.
Next
my
request
is
(
if
you
dare
trust
me
)
to
leave
this
place
,
and
presently
goe
with
me
whether
I
shall
lead
you
.
All
but
Comastes
follow
Pallantus
.
Com.
I
breath
,
am
warme
—
all
alive
—
The
Sunne
shines
too
,
I
have
not
heard
of
any
of
his
rayes
in
the
other
world
.
Tis
earth
I
tread
on
at
least
,
if
I
am
not
mounted
higher
,
and
yet
I
hope
I
am
not
in
heaven
,
for
let
them
say
what
they
will
,
tis
to
bee
dead
to
be
there
;
and
I
like
not
the
society
,
though
they
be
Angels
;
what
doe
I
see
?
I
begin
to
mis-doubt
,
I
doe
behold
some
such
shapes
here
.
Faces
heavenly
,
and
di
—
Divine
,
or
else
my
fantasie
abuses
me
,
if
I
be
alive
and
on
the
earth
,
then
there
was
poyson
in
that
cup
.
A
poxe
o
my
curiositie
,
He
takes
it
,
and
tasts
a
little
of
the
bottome
.
what
need
I
have
car'd
whether
I
had
beene
,
so
long
as
I
found
my selfe
well
?
I
should
have
got
fearefull
honour
if
I
had
drunke
my
share
.
By
this
I
see
'twas
not
a
dreame
,
nor
swound
I
was
in
,
but
all
true
story
.
I
did
not
thinke
before
,
it
had
beene
in
the
power
of
all
the
Kings
in
the
world
to
have
given
mee
life
,
when
I
was
yet
living
;
but
these
thoughts
shall
passe
.
And
now
Ile
looke
before
me
presently
,
Ile
to
the
new
Court
,
and
though
the
King
be
chang'd
,
not
despaire
to
be
the
same
man
.
exit
.
Enter
Eudora
.
Eudo.
My
father
,
my
brother
,
why
doe
you
flye
mee
?
your
wellcome
,
and
lov'd
shapes
.
O
my
sad
fantasie
!
Enter
Rodia
.
Rod.
Madam
,
The
King
wishes
you
ioy
and
comfort
.
Eudo.
The
King
,
what
King
?
oh
.
Rod.
And
desires
to
visit
you
.
Eudo.
Returne
all
duty
and
service
to
the
King
.
Exit
.
Rodia
Enter
Pallantus
.
Pall.
Joy
attend
you
Madam
.
Eudo.
My
Comforter
.
Pall.
Your
unfortunate
one
,
to
see
that
litle
he
had
wrought
with
much
care
so
soone
decay'd
againe
,
yet
I
hope
I
shall
this
time
be
more
happie
in
my
cure
,
before
I
brought
but
Physicke
for
your
greife
,
but
now
I
bring
you
joy
it selfe
,
it
makes
me
bold
and
assures
me
of
my
wellcome
,
though
thus
without
leave
I
enter
.
He
needs
noe
ceremony
that
can
say
your
brother
lives
.
Eudo.
My
brother
?
O
where
?
and
how
?
alas
it
cannot
be
,
why
doe
yee
mocke
my
sadnes
?
thus
such
false
hopes
as
these
make
more
wretched
.
Pall.
I
dare
not
play
with
holy
things
,
nor
would
I
deferr
your
hopes
,
much
lesse
delu'd
'em
;
he
came
along
with
me
,
and
stayd
but
till
I
had
thus
prepar'd
his
way
:
I
know
to
have
given
him
you
,
as
you
immagine
,
had
beene
twice
onely
to
have
taken
him
away
,
noe
danger
threatened
him
but
his
owne
discontent
.
The
King
among
his
first
cares
provided
for
his
safety
:
he
shall
himselfe
confirme
my
words
.
Enter
Rodia
.
Eudo.
Pray
stay
,
I
doe
beleeve
and
aske
you
pardon
,
but
now
I
am
certaine
of
him
.
I
would
not
at
first
shew
any
signes
of
joy
,
I
have
thought
a
way
to
entertaine
him
,
Rodia
,
fetch
the
paper
that
lyes
within
upon
the
Table
,
so
:
now
Sr
,
you
may
admit
him
.
Rodia
goes
out
,
and
brings
the
Letter
written
by
Timeus
,
to
kill
Pallantus
.
Pallantus
goes
out
,
and
returnes
with
Timeus
.
Tim.
Here
let
me
alone
be
happy
,
without
a
covetous
wish
of
what
I
have
lost
.
O
Eudora
!
wonder
not
at
my
excessive
passion
,
misery
layes
stronger
bonds
of
love
then
nature
,
and
they
are
more
one
whom
the
same
misfortune
joynd
together
,
then
whom
the
same
wombe
gave
life
.
Eudo.
But
stay
my
brother
,
I
knowledge
that
you
say
most
true
,
and
was
noe
lesse
surpriz'd
at
first
to
heare
of
this
your
safety
,
for
when
I
once
beleev'd
you
dead
that
you
were
alive
againe
,
was
a
greater
good
then
I
could
give
credit
to
.
But
when
I
consider
the
cause
of
my
greefe
and
gladnesse
:
and
found
it
was
merely
the
name
of
brother
,
nay
not
so
much
the
dishonor
of
our
name
onely
,
with
teares
I
threw
away
,
what
with
teares
I
sought
for
,
looke
on
this
unworthy
man
.
Shee
gives
him
the
Letter
.
Heere
you
are
discected
,
and
see
if
I
ought
to
mourne
for
any
part
being
lost
,
or
rejoyce
for
any
that
safe
in
the
whole
Anotamy
.
Pall.
O
be
not
too
severe
,
but
suddenly
give
that
joy
you
have
prepared
for
him
.
Eudo.
Now
I
meet
your
love
,
pardon
me
my
brother
,
I
was
to
rejoyce
at
this
your
sadnesse
,
before
I
could
share
with
you
in
another
joy
.
Enter
a
Lady
.
La.
Madam
,
the
King's
hard
by
.
Pall.
The
King
?
Eudo.
Yes
,
he
sent
before
that
he
would
visite
me
,
what
will
you
doe
?
Tim.
Not
see
him
willingly
at
this
time
.
Pall.
Sir
,
you
need
not
,
he
understands
the
nature
of
,
your
losses
,
and
will
not
expect
so
suddenly
to
see
you
.
Eudo.
Stay
within
till
he
be
gone
.
Exeunt
Tim
,
Rodia
,
and
Lady
.
Pallantus
.
Madam
,
I'le
meet
the
King
,
and
meete
upon
him
in
.
Eudo.
Did
you
say
this
was
the
King's
mercy
?
Pall.
I
did
Madam
.
Exit
Pallantus
.
Enter
the
King
,
Pallantus
as
in
talke
with
him
,
Clearchus
Hianthe
,
Haimantus
,
Aratus
,
Phronimus
,
Eurylochus
,
and
Attendants
King
.
And
does
she
know
of
it
yet
?
Pall.
She
lives
onely
by
the
favour
.
As
the
King
drawes
neere
,
Eudora
offers
to
kneele
.
King
.
Madam
,
fall
not
so
low
,
we
have
already
too
much
dejected
you
,
and
would
our selves
gladly
submit
in
recompence
,
y'are
still
in
the
esteeme
of
all
,
that
which
you
have
beene
,
not
by
the
sinnes
of
others
but
by
your
owne
indowments
,
admired
Princesse
,
and
may
a
curse
light
,
light
on
those
,
who
shall
dare
to
unthrone
a
Majesty
which
the
gods
themselves
have
seated
;
we
are
come
confident
in
these
your
virtues
,
that
you
will
not
disdaine
when
nobly
we
endeavour
it
,
to
have
your
greife
lessened
by
your
enemies
,
Madam
,
though
unpropper
,
yet
we
are
willing
comforters
,
and
have
as
true
a
sence
of
what
you
suffer
as
those
,
who
in
a
neerer
name
doe
share
their
losses
with
you
.
Eudo.
Sr
,
admit
me
to
kneele
before
you
,
I
ought
not
to
stand
an
equall
height
with
Majesty
,
and
vertue
,
so
much
above
me
,
what
undeserving
name
is
due
to
me
,
when
you
are
pleas'd
to
call
your selfe
an
enemy
,
if
you
are
one
,
it
is
to
your selfe
,
in
thus
prefering
your
mercy
before
your
safety
,
you
have
given
my
brother
life
,
to
bring
your
owne
in
danger
,
and
removed
my
greife
,
which
hereafter
may
be
the
cause
of
it
to
your selfe
.
Sr
,
thinke
me
unworthy
,
but
not
a
scorner
,
of
these
favours
,
were
my
sorrowes
heaver
.
(
Thus
offerd
)
twere
but
religion
to
bow
,
and
to
receive
'em
,
King
.
You
make
us
all
happy
,
and
shew
a
virtue
above
your
sex
,
in
being
able
so
much
to
love
,
and
yet
to
loose
a
Father
,
if
still
you
can
resist
this
passion
,
and
rejoyce
with
us
,
with
you
we
will
observe
your
dayes
of
mourning
.
We
are
now
going
to
pay
some
Funerall
duties
to
our
dead
predecessor
,
for
your
sake
so
we
will
ever
call
him
.
Spare
these
teares
,
and
we
will
weepe
them
for
you
,
mourne
all
as
if
we
had
lost
a
generall
parent
.
Eudo.
Sir
,
there
is
much
joy
in
them
,
which
the
softenesse
of
your
words
,
and
not
my
greife
causeth
to
flow
from
me
.
Clear.
Fame
,
thou
spokst
loudly
of
these
Ladyes
,
and
yet
thy
voyce
was
narrow
in
their
Prayse
.
Here
they
all
present
themselves
to
Eudora
.
Enter
Comastes
.
Com.
I
have
past
hitherto
,
and
perceive
noe
great
alteration
,
I
thought
the
subversion
of
a
State
would
have
made
such
a
clatter
among
the
houses
,
and
ther's
no
such
matter
,
it
has
not
chang'd
a
suite
of
hangings
heere
,
yonders
our
Princesse
too
,
I
am
among
friends
,
now
fortune
direct
me
,
which
is
the
King
—
The
least
change
that
ever
I
saw
,
nay
then
I
perceive
I
may
doe
even
what
I
list
.
Aratus
spies
him
.
Ara.
My
Lord
Comastes
?
Com.
Your
servant
my
Lord
,
I
hope
you
have
forgot
all
those
litle
unkindnesses
that
past
betwixt
us
,
and
will
speake
a
noble
word
in
my
behalfe
unto
the
yong
King
.
Ara.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
wouldst
thou
be
foole
againe
.
Com.
No
my
Lord
,
you
know
I
was
never
call'd
so
in
the
last
raigne
.
Ara.
Ha
,
ha
,
ha
,
why
I
tell
thee
the
King's
too
serious
,
he
never
laughes
nor
smiles
,
but
very
seldome
,
and
then
'tis
still
at
something
excellent
,
he
hates
a
jeast
,
looke
,
twice
he
hath
cast
his
eye
upon
thee
,
and
yet
keeps
his
countenance
,
dispaire
of
ever
pleasing
him
,
ther's
noe
mirth
that
thou
canst
make
,
worthy
to
be
compared
with
this
thy
misery
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
who's
that
?
Arat.
One
Sr
,
that
was
master
of
the
dead
King's
mirth
,
he
never
laught
without
his
allowance
.
Twas
in
his
power
to
have
jeasted
any
head
off
in
the
whole
Kingdome
,
but
I
thinke
he
was
never
guilty
of
any
other
sinne
,
but
Luxury
.
King
.
What
does
he
expect
?
Arat.
To
hold
the
same
place
under
you
.
King
.
Sr
,
we
understand
you
,
and
your
desires
,
goe
leave
the
Court
upon
your
life
,
be
not
seene
in't
after
this
day
,
and
looke
hereafter
warily
to
your
actions
,
if
you
deserve
a
light
judgement
you
shall
feele
the
Heauyest
Ara.
Stay
my
Lord
,
you
have
doom'd
him
as
if
you
had
beene
witnesse
of
his
follyes
,
and
if
there
were
not
hopes
,
that
he
might
redeeme
hereafter
what
he
has
so
ill
spent
,
he
does
deserue
a
greater
punishment
;
I
beseech
you
Sir
,
let
me
intreat
for
him
,
he
is
yet
young
,
and
if
he
have
leave
,
may
be
virtuous
,
continue
as
you
have
begunne
,
to
change
the
men
,
and
not
destroy
'em
:
he
thrust
himselfe
with
confidence
on
your
mercy
,
let
it
not
be
said
that
was
a
Snare
to
any
,
besides
you
have
made
this
place
a
Sanctuary
to
all
those
who
can
claime
an
interest
in
that
excellent
Lady
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
I
would
be
ever
taught
thus
by
you
.
Sir
,
I
recall
what
I
have
said
,
and
wish
to
see
those
virtues
we
see
in
you
.
Com.
Ile
not
despaire
to
be
Master
of
them
:
Com.
kneeles
'Twas
the
desire
of
favour
with
my
King
,
that
made
me
what
I
was
before
,
and
shame
now
for
to
remember
.
But
seeing
I
am
to
please
another
way
,
and
make
virtue
my
endeavour
,
unwearied
in
those
ragged
waies
,
Ile
toyle
to
gaine
your
smiles
.
King
.
My
Lord
,
do'e
still
intend
to
leave
us
so
suddenly
,
as
tomorrow
.
If
I
durst
presume
so
much
of
your
ill
entertainement
,
I
would
perswade
you
to
a
longer
stay
.
Clea.
Sir
,
I
have
found
a
royall
wellcome
,
such
as
cannot
be
betterd
but
by
your
owne
wishes
,
which
are
the
onely
things
above
your
actions
.
Yet
ere
I
goe
,
I
have
a
request
to
you
,
but
'tis
such
as
I
must
not
receive
,
unlesse
another
will
bee
content
to
aske
it
for
me
,
you
are
the
man
,
my
Lord
,
and
your
company
I
desire
,
which
if
I
can
obtaine
,
I
dare
promise
to
my selfe
a
victorious
enterprise
.
Pall.
Sir
,
you
much
honor
me
,
and
intreat
mee
to
that
I
am
most
ambitious
of
,
my
will
I
freely
offer
,
but
the
greater
part
is
wholly
devoted
to
your
service
Sir
,
and
none
besides
ought
to
dispose
of
it
.
King
.
I
thus
give
it
with
the
rest
,
by
this
request
,
My
Lord
,
I
perceive
youle
keepe
your
word
,
and
suddenly
returne
,
you
would
not
else
at
once
bereft
us
of
your selfe
,
and
so
neere
a
servant
.
Pall.
How
gladly
I
would
thinke
my selfe
so
much
concernd
,
as
to
aske
a
leave
of
you
,
but
I
have
ever
made
my selfe
a
stranger
to
you
or
whats
worse
,
a
knowne
enemy
,
and
can
expect
onely
ill
wishes
from
you
.
Eudo.
Sir
,
I
thinke
not
so
,
you
have
deserv'd
better
from
me
,
and
if
I
give
you
not
a
leave
,
tis
because
I
am
loath
to
have
you
goe
,
twas
you
confirm'd
my
life
,
when
I
thought
it
not
in
the
power
of
Art
,
or
heaven
to
have
done
it
,
and
that
before
I
made
not
these
large
expressions
,
twas
because
they
then
became
me
not
,
if
I
had
owed
lesse
,
I
would
have
said
more
.
Pall.
You
have
given
mee
a
happinesse
,
which
neither
envy
,
malice
,
nor
the
worst
of
fortune
can
take
from
me
.
I
stand
the
onely
man
above
the
stroke
of
Fate
,
may
I
hope
to
see
that
ioy
dwell
in
your
face
againe
,
which
I
was
never
yet
so
blest
as
to
behold
?
Eudo.
You
may
.
Pall.
And
will
you
leave
off
these
mourning
Habits
?
Eudo.
I
will
:
I
will
doe
that
that's
noble
.
King
.
I
hope
I
understand
you
,
and
that
I
may
yet
expect
a
happinesse
,
equall
to
the
happinesse
of
this
day
.
Hitherto
our
Kingdome
hath
been
like
the
Kingdome
of
the
gods
.
Felicity
upon
felicity
,
joy
crow'nd
with
joy
;
and
though
this
day
concluded
what
it
hath
begun
.
I
have
raign'd
a
perfect
raigne
,
having
beheld
in
few
howers
the
numerous
changes
of
an
age
.
1.
Flam.
Sacred
Peans
to
Mars
sing
Notes
of
Triumph
,
not
of
woe
,
Hence
your
Ewe
,
and
Cypresse
fling
,
Who
adornes
a
Trophie
so
?
These
are
the
spoiles
of
our
great
Enemie
,
Hang
Garlands
on
them
of
the
Lawrell
tree
.
2.
Flam.
Hence
impure
and
bloody
voice
,
Farre
be
from
our
Misteries
,
Bidentalls
are
Joves
proper
choice
,
Holier
then
the
Sacrifice
.
Each
unskillfull
hand
,
and
rude
,
At
his
Altar
dares
obtrude
.
3.
Flam.
Touch
not
then
with
lips
profane
What
Heavens
Fire
hath
purifide
,
Whose
teares
have
washd
away
his
staine
,
Whose
blacke
deeds
in
his
blood
are
died
.
Hee
for
his
sinnes
hath
paid
,
with
death
and
sorrow
,
His
Credits
more
that
paies
,
than
doth
not
borrow
.
Chorus
.
Hee
for
his
sinnes
,
&c.
2.
Flam.
None
heare
after
of
thy
faults
,
But
that
thou
ought's
To
die
,
remembred
be
,
The
rest
shall
sleepe
with
thee
.
1.
Flam.
Least
our
too
partiall
favour
this
way
bent
,
Excuse
the
ill
,
and
blame
the
innocent
.
Chorus
.
Least
our
too
partiall
favour
,
&c.