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King Lear
DRAMATIS PERSONAE (Persons Represented):
- Lear, King of Britain.
- King of France.
- Duke of Burgundy.
- Duke of Cornwall.
- Duke of Albany.
- Earl of Kent.
- Earl of Gloucester.
- Edgar, Son to Gloucester.
- Edmund, Bastard Son to Gloucester.
- Curan, a Courtier.
- Old Man, Tenant to Gloucester.
- Physician.
- Fool.
- Oswald, steward to Goneril.
- An Officer employed by Edmund.
- Gentleman, attendant on Cordelia.
- A Herald.
- Servants to Cornwall.
- Goneril, daughter to Lear.
- Regan, daughter to Lear.
- Cordelia, daughter to Lear.
- Knights attending on the King, Officers, Messengers, Soldiers, and Attendants.
Scene: Britain.
ACT I.
Scene I. A Room of State in King Lear's Palace.
[Enter Kent, Gloucester, and Edmund.]
Kent.
- I thought the King had more affected the Duke of Albany than
- Cornwall.
Glou.
- It did always seem so to us; but now, in the division of the
- kingdom, it appears not which of the Dukes he values most, for
- equalities are so weighed that curiosity in neither can make
- choice of either's moiety.
Kent.
- Is not this your son, my lord?
Glou.
- His breeding, sir, hath been at my charge: I have so often
- blush'd to acknowledge him that now I am braz'd to't.
Kent.
- I cannot conceive you.
Glou.
- Sir, this young fellow's mother could: whereupon she grew
- round-wombed, and had indeed, sir, a son for her cradle ere she
- had a husband for her bed. Do you smell a fault?
Kent.
- I cannot wish the fault undone, the issue of it being so proper.
Glou.
- But I have, sir, a son by order of law, some year elder than
- this, who yet is no dearer in my account: though this knave came
- something saucily into the world before he was sent for, yet was
- his mother fair; there was good sport at his making, and the
- whoreson must be acknowledged. - Do you know this noble gentleman,
- Edmund?
Edm.
- No, my lord.
Glou.
- My Lord of Kent: remember him hereafter as my honourable friend.
Edm.
- My services to your lordship.
Kent.
- I must love you, and sue to know you better.
Edm.
- Sir, I shall study deserving.
Glou.
- He hath been out nine years, and away he shall again. - The king
- is coming.
[Sennet within.]
[Enter Lear, Cornwall, Albany, Goneril, Regan, Cordelia, and
- Attendants.]
Lear.
- Attend the lords of France and Burgundy,
- Gloucester.
Glou.
- I shall, my liege.
[Exeunt Gloucester and Edmund.]
Lear.
- Meantime we shall express our darker purpose. -
- Give me the map there. - Know that we have divided
- In three our kingdom: and 'tis our fast intent
- To shake all cares and business from our age;
- Conferring them on younger strengths, while we
- Unburden'd crawl toward death. - Our son of Cornwall,
- And you, our no less loving son of Albany,
- We have this hour a constant will to publish
- Our daughters' several dowers, that future strife
- May be prevented now. The princes, France and Burgundy,
- Great rivals in our youngest daughter's love,
- Long in our court have made their amorous sojourn,
- And here are to be answer'd. - Tell me, my daughters, -
- Since now we will divest us both of rule,
- Interest of territory, cares of state, -
- Which of you shall we say doth love us most?
- That we our largest bounty may extend
- Where nature doth with merit challenge. - Goneril,
- Our eldest-born, speak first.
Gon.
- Sir, I love you more than words can wield the matter;
- Dearer than eyesight, space, and liberty;
- Beyond what can be valu'd, rich or rare;
- No less than life, with grace, health, beauty, honour;
- As much as child e'er lov'd, or father found;
- A love that makes breath poor and speech unable;
- Beyond all manner of so much I love you.
Cor.
- [Aside.] What shall Cordelia speak? Love, and be silent.
Lear.
- Of all these bounds, even from this line to this,
- With shadowy forests and with champains rich'd,
- With plenteous rivers and wide-skirted meads,
- We make thee lady: to thine and Albany's issue
- Be this perpetual. - What says our second daughter,
- Our dearest Regan, wife to Cornwall? Speak.
Reg.
- Sir, I am made of the selfsame metal that my sister is,
- And prize me at her worth. In my true heart
- I find she names my very deed of love;
- Only she comes too short, - that I profess
- Myself an enemy to all other joys
- Which the most precious square of sense possesses,
- And find I am alone felicitate
- In your dear highness' love.
Cor.
- [Aside.] Then poor Cordelia!
- And yet not so; since, I am sure, my love's
- More richer than my tongue.
Lear.
- To thee and thine hereditary ever
- Remain this ample third of our fair kingdom;
- No less in space, validity, and pleasure
- Than that conferr'd on Goneril. - Now, our joy,
- Although the last, not least; to whose young love
- The vines of France and milk of Burgundy
- Strive to be interess'd; what can you say to draw
- A third more opulent than your sisters? Speak.
Cor.
- Nothing, my lord.
Lear.
- Nothing!
Cor.
- Nothing.
Lear.
- Nothing can come of nothing: speak again.
Cor.
- Unhappy that I am, I cannot heave
- My heart into my mouth: I love your majesty
- According to my bond; no more nor less.
Lear.
- How, how, Cordelia? mend your speech a little,
- Lest you may mar your fortunes.
Cor.
- Good my lord,
- You have begot me, bred me, lov'd me: I
- Return those duties back as are right fit,
- Obey you, love you, and most honour you.
- Why have my sisters husbands if they say
- They love you all? Haply, when I shall wed,
- That lord whose hand must take my plight shall carry
- Half my love with him, half my care and duty:
- Sure I shall never marry like my sisters,
- To love my father all.
Lear.
- But goes thy heart with this?
Cor.
- Ay, good my lord.
Lear.
- So young, and so untender?
Cor.
- So young, my lord, and true.
Lear.
- Let it be so, - thy truth then be thy dower:
- For, by the sacred radiance of the sun,
- The mysteries of Hecate, and the night;
- By all the operation of the orbs,
- From whom we do exist and cease to be;
- Here I disclaim all my paternal care,
- Propinquity, and property of blood,
- And as a stranger to my heart and me
- Hold thee, from this for ever. The barbarous Scythian,
- Or he that makes his generation messes
- To gorge his appetite, shall to my bosom
- Be as well neighbour'd, pitied, and reliev'd,
- As thou my sometime daughter.
Kent.
- Good my liege, -
Lear.
- Peace, Kent!
- Come not between the dragon and his wrath.
- I lov'd her most, and thought to set my rest
- On her kind nursery. - Hence, and avoid my sight! - [To Cordelia.]
- So be my grave my peace, as here I give
- Her father's heart from her! - Call France; - who stirs?
- Call Burgundy! - Cornwall and Albany,
- With my two daughters' dowers digest this third:
- Let pride, which she calls plainness, marry her.
- I do invest you jointly in my power,
- Pre-eminence, and all the large effects
- That troop with majesty. - Ourself, by monthly course,
- With reservation of an hundred knights,
- By you to be sustain'd, shall our abode
- Make with you by due turns. Only we still retain
- The name, and all the additions to a king;
- The sway,
- Revenue, execution of the rest,
- Beloved sons, be yours; which to confirm,
- This coronet part betwixt you.
- [Giving the crown.]
Kent.
- Royal Lear,
- Whom I have ever honour'd as my king,
- Lov'd as my father, as my master follow'd,
- As my great patron thought on in my prayers. -
Lear.
- The bow is bent and drawn; make from the shaft.
Kent.
- Let it fall rather, though the fork invade
- The region of my heart: be Kent unmannerly
- When Lear is mad. What wouldst thou do, old man?
- Think'st thou that duty shall have dread to speak
- When power to flattery bows? To plainness honour's bound
- When majesty falls to folly. Reverse thy state;
- And in thy best consideration check
- This hideous rashness: answer my life my judgment,
- Thy youngest daughter does not love thee least;
- Nor are those empty-hearted whose low sound
- Reverbs no hollowness.
Lear.
- Kent, on thy life, no more.
Kent.
- My life I never held but as a pawn
- To wage against thine enemies; nor fear to lose it,
- Thy safety being the motive.
Lear.
- Out of my sight!
Kent.
- See better, Lear; and let me still remain
- The true blank of thine eye.
Lear.
- Now, by Apollo, -
Kent.
- Now by Apollo, king,
- Thou swear'st thy gods in vain.
Lear.
- O vassal! miscreant!
[Laying his hand on his sword.]
Alb. and Corn.
- Dear sir, forbear!
Kent.
- Do;
- Kill thy physician, and the fee bestow
- Upon the foul disease. Revoke thy gift,
- Or, whilst I can vent clamour from my throat,
- I'll tell thee thou dost evil.
Lear.
- Hear me, recreant!
- On thine allegiance, hear me! -
- Since thou hast sought to make us break our vow, -
- Which we durst never yet, - and with strain'd pride
- To come between our sentence and our power, -
- Which nor our nature nor our place can bear, -
- Our potency made good, take thy reward.
- Five days we do allot thee for provision
- To shield thee from diseases of the world;
- And on the sixth to turn thy hated back
- Upon our kingdom: if, on the tenth day following,
- Thy banish'd trunk be found in our dominions,
- The moment is thy death. Away! by Jupiter,
- This shall not be revok'd.
Kent.
- Fare thee well, king: sith thus thou wilt appear,
- Freedom lives hence, and banishment is here. -
- [To Cordelia.] The gods to their dear shelter take thee, maid,
- That justly think'st and hast most rightly said!
- [To Regan and Goneril.]
- And your large speeches may your deeds approve,
- That good effects may spring from words of love. -
- Thus Kent, O princes, bids you all adieu;
- He'll shape his old course in a country new.
[Exit.]
[Flourish. Re-enter Gloucester, with France, Burgundy, and
- Attendants.]
Glou.
- Here's France and Burgundy, my noble lord.
Lear.
- My Lord of Burgundy,
- We first address toward you, who with this king
- Hath rivall'd for our daughter: what in the least
- Will you require in present dower with her,
- Or cease your quest of love?
Bur.
- Most royal majesty,
- I crave no more than hath your highness offer'd,
- Nor will you tender less.
Lear.
- Right noble Burgundy,
- When she was dear to us, we did hold her so;
- But now her price is fall'n. Sir, there she stands:
- If aught within that little seeming substance,
- Or all of it, with our displeasure piec'd,
- And nothing more, may fitly like your grace,
- She's there, and she is yours.
Bur.
- I know no answer.
Lear.
- Will you, with those infirmities she owes,
- Unfriended, new-adopted to our hate,
- Dower'd with our curse, and stranger'd with our oath,
- Take her, or leave her?
Bur.
- Pardon me, royal sir;
- Election makes not up on such conditions.
Lear.
- Then leave her, sir; for, by the power that made me,
- I tell you all her wealth. - [To France] For you, great king,
- I would not from your love make such a stray
- To match you where I hate; therefore beseech you
- To avert your liking a more worthier way
- Than on a wretch whom nature is asham'd
- Almost to acknowledge hers.
France.
- This is most strange,
- That she, who even but now was your best object,
- The argument of your praise, balm of your age,
- Most best, most dearest, should in this trice of time
- Commit a thing so monstrous, to dismantle
- So many folds of favour. Sure her offence
- Must be of such unnatural degree
- That monsters it, or your fore-vouch'd affection
- Fall'n into taint; which to believe of her
- Must be a faith that reason without miracle
- Should never plant in me.
Cor.
- I yet beseech your majesty, -
- If for I want that glib and oily art
- To speak and purpose not; since what I well intend,
- I'll do't before I speak, - that you make known
- It is no vicious blot, murder, or foulness,
- No unchaste action or dishonour'd step,
- That hath depriv'd me of your grace and favour;
- But even for want of that for which I am richer, -
- A still-soliciting eye, and such a tongue
- As I am glad I have not, though not to have it
- Hath lost me in your liking.
Lear.
- Better thou
- Hadst not been born than not to have pleas'd me better.
France.
- Is it but this, - a tardiness in nature
- Which often leaves the history unspoke
- That it intends to do? - My lord of Burgundy,
- What say you to the lady? Love's not love
- When it is mingled with regards that stands
- Aloof from the entire point. Will you have her?
- She is herself a dowry.
Bur.
- Royal king,
- Give but that portion which yourself propos'd,
- And here I take Cordelia by the hand,
- Duchess of Burgundy.
Lear.
- Nothing: I have sworn; I am firm.
Bur.
- I am sorry, then, you have so lost a father
- That you must lose a husband.
Cor.
- Peace be with Burgundy!
- Since that respects of fortune are his love,
- I shall not be his wife.
France.
- Fairest Cordelia, that art most rich, being poor;
- Most choice, forsaken; and most lov'd, despis'd!
- Thee and thy virtues here I seize upon:
- Be it lawful, I take up what's cast away.
- Gods, gods! 'tis strange that from their cold'st neglect
- My love should kindle to inflam'd respect. -
- Thy dowerless daughter, king, thrown to my chance,
- Is queen of us, of ours, and our fair France:
- Not all the dukes of waterish Burgundy
- Can buy this unpriz'd precious maid of me. -
- Bid them farewell, Cordelia, though unkind:
- Thou losest here, a better where to find.
Lear.
- Thou hast her, France: let her be thine; for we
- Have no such daughter, nor shall ever see
- That face of hers again. - Therefore be gone
- Without our grace, our love, our benison. -
- Come, noble Burgundy.
[Flourish. Exeunt Lear, Burgundy, Cornwall, Albany, Gloucester,
- and Attendants.]
France.
- Bid farewell to your sisters.
Cor.
- The jewels of our father, with wash'd eyes
- Cordelia leaves you: I know you what you are;
- And, like a sister, am most loath to call
- Your faults as they are nam'd. Love well our father:
- To your professed bosoms I commit him:
- But yet, alas, stood I within his grace,
- I would prefer him to a better place.
- So, farewell to you both.
Reg.
- Prescribe not us our duties.
Gon.
- Let your study
- Be to content your lord, who hath receiv'd you
- At fortune's alms. You have obedience scanted,
- And well are worth the want that you have wanted.
Cor.
- Time shall unfold what plighted cunning hides:
- Who cover faults, at last shame them derides.
- Well may you prosper!
France.
- Come, my fair Cordelia.
[Exeunt France and Cordelia.]
Gon.
- Sister, it is not little I have to say of what most nearly
- appertains to us both. I think our father will hence to-night.
Reg.
- That's most certain, and with you; next month with us.
Gon.
- You see how full of changes his age is; the observation we
- have made of it hath not been little: he always loved our
- sister most; and with what poor judgment he hath now cast her
- off appears too grossly.
Reg.
- 'Tis the infirmity of his age: yet he hath ever but slenderly
- known himself.
Gon.
- The best and soundest of his time hath been but rash; then must
- we look to receive from his age, not alone the imperfections of
- long-ingraffed condition, but therewithal the unruly waywardness
- that infirm and choleric years bring with them.
Reg.
- Such unconstant starts are we like to have from him as this of
- Kent's banishment.
Gon.
- There is further compliment of leave-taking between France and
- him. Pray you let us hit together: if our father carry authority
- with such dispositions as he bears, this last surrender of his
- will but offend us.
Reg.
- We shall further think of it.
Gon.
- We must do something, and i' th' heat.
[Exeunt.]
Scene II. A Hall in the Earl of Gloucester's Castle.
[Enter Edmund with a letter.]
Edm.
- Thou, nature, art my goddess; to thy law
- My services are bound. Wherefore should I
- Stand in the plague of custom, and permit
- The curiosity of nations to deprive me,
- For that I am some twelve or fourteen moonshines
- Lag of a brother? Why bastard? wherefore base?
- When my dimensions are as well compact,
- My mind as generous, and my shape as true
- As honest madam's issue? Why brand they us
- With base? with baseness? bastardy? base, base?
- Who, in the lusty stealth of nature, take
- More composition and fierce quality
- Than doth, within a dull, stale, tired bed,
- Go to the creating a whole tribe of fops
- Got 'tween asleep and wake? - Well then,
- Legitimate Edgar, I must have your land:
- Our father's love is to the bastard Edmund
- As to the legitimate: fine word - legitimate!
- Well, my legitimate, if this letter speed,
- And my invention thrive, Edmund the base
- Shall top the legitimate. I grow; I prosper. -
- Now, gods, stand up for bastards!
[Enter Gloucester.]
Glou.
- Kent banish'd thus! and France in choler parted!
- And the king gone to-night! subscrib'd his pow'r!
- Confin'd to exhibition! All this done
- Upon the gad! - Edmund, how now! What news?
Edm.
- So please your lordship, none.
[Putting up the letter.]
Glou.
- Why so earnestly seek you to put up that letter?
Edm.
- I know no news, my lord.
Glou.
- What paper were you reading?
Edm.
- Nothing, my lord.
Glou.
- No? What needed, then, that terrible dispatch of it into your
- pocket? the quality of nothing hath not such need to hide itself.
- Let's see.
- Come, if it be nothing, I shall not need spectacles.
Edm.
- I beseech you, sir, pardon me. It is a letter from my brother
- that I have not all o'er-read; and for so much as I have perus'd,
- I find it not fit for your o'erlooking.
Glou.
- Give me the letter, sir.
Edm.
- I shall offend, either to detain or give it. The contents, as in
- part I understand them, are to blame.
Glou.
- Let's see, let's see!
Edm.
- I hope, for my brother's justification, he wrote this but as an
- essay or taste of my virtue.
Glou.
- [Reads.] 'This policy and reverence of age makes the world
- bitter to the best of our times; keeps our fortunes from us
- till our oldness cannot relish them. I begin to find an idle
- and fond bondage in the oppression of aged tyranny; who sways,
- not as it hath power, but as it is suffered. Come to me, that
- of this I may speak more. If our father would sleep till I
- waked him, you should enjoy half his revenue for ever, and live
- the beloved of your brother,
- 'EDGAR.'
- Hum! Conspiracy? - 'Sleep till I waked him, - you should enjoy half
- his revenue.' - My son Edgar! Had he a hand to write this? a heart
- and brain to breed it in? When came this to you? who brought it?
Edm.
- It was not brought me, my lord, there's the cunning of it; I
- found it thrown in at the casement of my closet.
Glou.
- You know the character to be your brother's?
Edm.
- If the matter were good, my lord, I durst swear it were his; but
- in respect of that, I would fain think it were not.
Glou.
- It is his.
Edm.
- It is his hand, my lord; but I hope his heart is not in the
- contents.
Glou.
- Hath he never before sounded you in this business?
Edm.
- Never, my lord: but I have heard him oft maintain it to be fit
- that, sons at perfect age, and fathers declined, the father
- should be as ward to the son, and the son manage his revenue.
Glou.
- O villain, villain! - His very opinion in the letter! Abhorred
- villain! - Unnatural, detested, brutish villain! worse than
- brutish! - Go, sirrah, seek him; I'll apprehend him. Abominable
- villain! - Where is he?
Edm.
- I do not well know, my lord. If it shall please you to suspend
- your indignation against my brother till you can derive from him
- better testimony of his intent, you should run a certain course;
- where, if you violently proceed against him, mistaking his
- purpose, it would make a great gap in your own honour, and shake
- in pieces the heart of his obedience. I dare pawn down my life
- for him that he hath writ this to feel my affection to your
- honour, and to no other pretence of danger.
Glou.
- Think you so?
Edm.
- If your honour judge it meet, I will place you where you shall
- hear us confer of this, and by an auricular assurance have your
- satisfaction;
- and that without any further delay than this very evening.
Glou.
- He cannot be such a monster.
Edm.
- Nor is not, sure.
Glou.
- To his father, that so tenderly and entirely loves him. - Heaven
- and earth! - Edmund, seek him out; wind me into him, I pray you:
- frame the business after your own wisdom. I would unstate myself
- to be in a due resolution.
Edm.
- I will seek him, sir, presently; convey the business as I shall
- find means, and acquaint you withal.
Glou.
- These late eclipses in the sun and moon portend no good to us:
- though the wisdom of nature can reason it thus and thus, yet
- nature finds itself scourged by the sequent effects: love cools,
- friendship falls off, brothers divide: in cities, mutinies; in
- countries, discord; in palaces, treason; and the bond cracked
- 'twixt son and father. This villain of mine comes under the
- prediction; there's son against father: the king falls from
- bias of nature; there's father against child. We have seen the
- best of our time: machinations, hollowness, treachery, and all
- ruinous disorders follow us disquietly to our graves. - Find out
- this villain, Edmund; it shall lose thee nothing; do it
- carefully. - And the noble and true-hearted Kent banished! his
- offence, honesty! - 'Tis strange.
[Exit.]
Edm.
- This is the excellent foppery of the world, that, when we are
- sick in fortune, - often the surfeit of our own behaviour, - we
- make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and the stars; as
- if we were villains on necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion;
- knaves, thieves, and treachers by spherical pre-dominance;
- drunkards, liars, and adulterers by an enforced obedience of
- planetary influence; and all that we are evil in, by a divine
- thrusting on: an admirable evasion of whoremaster man, to lay his
- goatish disposition to the charge of a star! My father compounded
- with my mother under the dragon's tail, and my nativity was under
- ursa major; so that it follows I am rough and lecherous. - Tut! I
- should have been that I am, had the maidenliest star in the
- firmament twinkled on my bastardizing.
[Enter Edgar.]
Pat! - he comes, like the catastrophe of the old comedy: my cue
- is villainous melancholy, with a sigh like Tom o' Bedlam. - O,
- these eclipses do portend these divisions! fa, sol, la, mi.
Edg.
- How now, brother Edmund! what serious contemplation are you in?
Edm.
- I am thinking, brother, of a prediction I read this other day,
- what should follow these eclipses.
Edg.
- Do you busy yourself with that?
Edm.
- I promise you, the effects he writes of succeed unhappily: as of
- unnaturalness between the child and the parent; death, dearth,
- dissolutions of ancient amities; divisions in state, menaces and
- maledictions against king and nobles; needless diffidences,
- banishment of friends, dissipation of cohorts, nuptial breaches,
- and I know not what.
Edg.
- How long have you been a sectary astronomical?
Edm.
- Come, come! when saw you my father last?
Edg.
- The night gone by.
Edm.
- Spake you with him?
Edg.
- Ay, two hours together.
Edm.
- Parted you in good terms? Found you no displeasure in him by word
- or countenance?
Edg.
- None at all.
Edm.
- Bethink yourself wherein you may have offended him: and at my
- entreaty forbear his presence until some little time hath
- qualified the heat of his displeasure; which at this instant so
- rageth in him that with the mischief of your person it would
- scarcely allay.
Edg.
- Some villain hath done me wrong.
Edm.
- That's my fear. I pray you have a continent forbearance till the
- speed of his rage goes slower; and, as I say, retire with me to
- my lodging, from whence I will fitly bring you to hear my lord
- speak: pray you, go; there's my key. - If you do stir abroad, go
- armed.
Edg.
- Armed, brother!
Edm.
- Brother, I advise you to the best; I am no honest man
- if there be any good meaning toward you: I have told you what I
- have seen and heard but faintly; nothing like the image and
- horror of it: pray you, away!
Edg.
- Shall I hear from you anon?
Edm.
- I do serve you in this business.
[Exit Edgar.]
A credulous father! and a brother noble,
- Whose nature is so far from doing harms
- That he suspects none; on whose foolish honesty
- My practices ride easy! - I see the business.
- Let me, if not by birth, have lands by wit:
- All with me's meet that I can fashion fit.
[Exit.]
Scene III. A Room in the Duke of Albany's Palace.
[Enter Goneril and Oswald.]
Gon.
- Did my father strike my gentleman for chiding of his fool?
Osw. Ay, madam.
Gon.
- By day and night, he wrongs me; every hour
- He flashes into one gross crime or other,
- That sets us all at odds; I'll not endure it:
- His knights grow riotous, and himself upbraids us
- On every trifle. - When he returns from hunting,
- I will not speak with him; say I am sick. -
- If you come slack of former services,
- You shall do well; the fault of it I'll answer.
Osw.
- He's coming, madam; I hear him.
[Horns within.]
Gon.
- Put on what weary negligence you please,
- You and your fellows; I'd have it come to question:
- If he distaste it, let him to our sister,
- Whose mind and mine, I know, in that are one,
- Not to be overruled. Idle old man,
- That still would manage those authorities
- That he hath given away! - Now, by my life,
- Old fools are babes again; and must be us'd
- With checks as flatteries, - when they are seen abus'd.
- Remember what I have said.
Osw.
- Very well, madam.
Gon.
- And let his knights have colder looks among you;
- What grows of it, no matter; advise your fellows so;
- I would breed from hence occasions, and I shall,
- That I may speak. - I'll write straight to my sister
- To hold my very course. - Prepare for dinner.
[Exeunt.]
Scene IV. A Hall in Albany's Palace.
[Enter Kent, disguised.]
Kent.
- If but as well I other accents borrow,
- That can my speech defuse, my good intent
- May carry through itself to that full issue
- For which I rais'd my likeness. - Now, banish'd Kent,
- If thou canst serve where thou dost stand condemn'd,
- So may it come, thy master, whom thou lov'st,
- Shall find thee full of labours.
[Horns within. Enter King Lear, Knights, and Attendants.]
Lear.
- Let me not stay a jot for dinner; go get it ready.
[Exit an Attendant.]
How now! what art thou?
Kent.
- A man, sir.
Lear.
- What dost thou profess? What wouldst thou with us?
Kent.
- I do profess to be no less than I seem; to serve him truly that
- will put me in trust; to love him that is honest; to converse
- with him that is wise and says little; to fear judgment; to fight
- when I cannot choose; and to eat no fish.
Lear.
- What art thou?
Kent.
- A very honest-hearted fellow, and as poor as the king.
Lear.
- If thou be'st as poor for a subject as he's for a king, thou art
- poor enough. What wouldst thou?
Kent.
- Service.
Lear.
- Who wouldst thou serve?
Kent.
- You.
Lear.
- Dost thou know me, fellow?
Kent.
- No, sir; but you have that in your countenance which I would fain
- call master.
Lear.
- What's that?
Kent.
- Authority.
Lear.
- What services canst thou do?
Kent.
- I can keep honest counsel, ride, run, mar a curious tale in
- telling it and deliver a plain message bluntly. That which
- ordinary men are fit for, I am qualified in, and the best of
- me is diligence.
Lear.
- How old art thou?
Kent.
- Not so young, sir, to love a woman for singing; nor so old to
- dote on her for anything: I have years on my back forty-eight.
Lear.
- Follow me; thou shalt serve me. If I like thee no worse after
- dinner, I will not part from thee yet. - Dinner, ho, dinner! -
- Where's my knave? my fool? - Go you and call my fool hither.
[Exit an attendant.]
[Enter Oswald.]
You, you, sirrah, where's my daughter?
Osw.
- So please you, -
[Exit.]
Lear.
- What says the fellow there? Call the clotpoll back. -
[Exit a Knight.]
Where's my fool, ho? - I think the world's asleep.
[Re-enter Knight.]
How now! where's that mongrel?
Knight.
- He says, my lord, your daughter is not well.
Lear.
- Why came not the slave back to me when I called him?
Knight.
- Sir, he answered me in the roundest manner, he would not.
Lear.
- He would not!
Knight.
- My lord, I know not what the matter is; but to my judgment your
- highness is not entertained with that ceremonious affection as
- you were wont; there's a great abatement of kindness appears as
- well in the general dependants as in the duke himself also and
- your daughter.
Lear.
- Ha! say'st thou so?
Knight.
- I beseech you pardon me, my lord, if I be mistaken; for my duty
- cannot be silent when I think your highness wronged.
Lear.
- Thou but rememberest me of mine own conception: I have perceived
- a most faint neglect of late; which I have rather blamed as mine
- own jealous curiosity than as a very pretence and purpose of
- unkindness: I will look further into't. - But where's my fool? I
- have not seen him this two days.
Knight.
- Since my young lady's going into France, sir, the fool hath much
- pined away.
Lear.
- No more of that; I have noted it well. - Go you and tell my
- daughter I would speak with her. -
[Exit Attendant.]
Go you, call hither my fool.
[Exit another Attendant.]
[Re-enter Oswald.]
- O, you, sir, you, come you hither, sir: who am I, sir?
Osw.
- My lady's father.
Lear.
- My lady's father! my lord's knave: you whoreson dog! you slave!
- you cur!
Osw.
- I am none of these, my lord; I beseech your pardon.
Lear.
- Do you bandy looks with me, you rascal?
- [Striking him.]
Osw.
- I'll not be struck, my lord.
Kent.
- Nor tripp'd neither, you base football player.
- [Tripping up his heels.]
Lear.
- I thank thee, fellow; thou servest me, and I'll love thee.
Kent.
- Come, sir, arise, away! I'll teach you differences: away, away!
- If you will measure your lubber's length again, tarry; but away!
- go to; have you wisdom? so.
- [Pushes Oswald out.]
Lear.
- Now, my friendly knave, I thank thee: there's earnest of thy
- service.
- [Giving Kent money.]
[Enter Fool.]
Fool. Let me hire him too; here's my coxcomb.
- [Giving Kent his cap.]
Lear.
- How now, my pretty knave! how dost thou?
Fool.
- Sirrah, you were best take my coxcomb.
Kent.
- Why, fool?
Fool.
- Why, for taking one's part that's out of favour. Nay, an thou
- canst not smile as the wind sits, thou'lt catch cold shortly:
- there, take my coxcomb: why, this fellow hath banish'd two on's
- daughters, and did the third a blessing against his will; if
- thou follow him, thou must needs wear my coxcomb. - How now,
- nuncle! Would I had two coxcombs and two daughters!
Lear.
- Why, my boy?
Fool.
- If I gave them all my living, I'd keep my coxcombs myself.
- There's mine; beg another of thy daughters.
Lear.
- Take heed, sirrah, - the whip.
Fool.
- Truth's a dog must to kennel; he must be whipped out, when
- the lady brach may stand by the fire and stink.
Lear.
- A pestilent gall to me!
Fool.
- Sirrah, I'll teach thee a speech.
Lear.
- Do.
Fool.
- Mark it, nuncle: -
- Have more than thou showest,
- Speak less than thou knowest,
- Lend less than thou owest,
- Ride more than thou goest,
- Learn more than thou trowest,
- Set less than thou throwest;
- Leave thy drink and thy whore,
- And keep in-a-door,
- And thou shalt have more
- Than two tens to a score.
Kent.
- This is nothing, fool.
Fool.
- Then 'tis like the breath of an unfee'd lawyer, - you gave me
- nothing for't. - Can you make no use of nothing, nuncle?
Lear.
- Why, no, boy; nothing can be made out of nothing.
Fool.
- [to Kent] Pr'ythee tell him, so much the rent of his land
- comes to: he will not believe a fool.
Lear.
- A bitter fool!
Fool.
- Dost thou know the difference, my boy, between a bitter fool and
- a sweet one?
Lear.
- No, lad; teach me.
Fool.
- That lord that counsell'd thee
- To give away thy land,
- Come place him here by me, -
- Do thou for him stand:
- The sweet and bitter fool
- Will presently appear;
- The one in motley here,
- The other found out there.
Lear.
- Dost thou call me fool, boy?
Fool.
- All thy other titles thou hast given away; that thou wast born
- with.
Kent.
- This is not altogether fool, my lord.
Fool.
- No, faith; lords and great men will not let me: if I had a
- monopoly out, they would have part on't and loads too: they
- will not let me have all the fool to myself; they'll be
- snatching. - Nuncle, give me an egg, and I'll give thee two
- crowns.
Lear.
- What two crowns shall they be?
Fool.
- Why, after I have cut the egg i' the middle and eat up the
- meat, the two crowns of the egg. When thou clovest thy crown i'
- the middle and gav'st away both parts, thou borest thine ass on
- thy back o'er the dirt: thou hadst little wit in thy bald crown
- when thou gavest thy golden one away. If I speak like myself in
- this, let him be whipped that first finds it so.
- [Singing.]
- Fools had ne'er less grace in a year;
- For wise men are grown foppish,
- And know not how their wits to wear,
- Their manners are so apish.
Lear.
- When were you wont to be so full of songs, sirrah?
Fool.
- I have used it, nuncle, e'er since thou mad'st thy daughters thy
- mothers; for when thou gav'st them the rod, and puttest down
- thine own breeches,
- [Singing.]
- Then they for sudden joy did weep,
- And I for sorrow sung,
- That such a king should play bo-peep
- And go the fools among.
Pr'ythee, nuncle, keep a schoolmaster that can teach thy fool to
- lie; I would fain learn to lie.
Lear.
- An you lie, sirrah, we'll have you whipped.
Fool.
- I marvel what kin thou and thy daughters are: they'll have me
- whipped for speaking true; thou'lt have me whipped for lying;
- and sometimes I am whipped for holding my peace. I had rather be
- any kind o' thing than a fool: and yet I would not be thee,
- nuncle: thou hast pared thy wit o' both sides, and left nothing
- i' the middle: - here comes one o' the parings.
[Enter Goneril.]
Lear.
- How now, daughter? What makes that frontlet on? Methinks you
- are too much of late i' the frown.
Fool.
- Thou wast a pretty fellow when thou hadst no need to care for
- her frowning. Now thou art an O without a figure: I am better
- than thou art; I am a fool, thou art nothing. - Yes, forsooth, I
- will hold my tongue. So your face [To Goneril.] bids me, though
- you say nothing. Mum, mum,
- He that keeps nor crust nor crum,
- Weary of all, shall want some. -
- [Pointing to Lear.] That's a shealed peascod.
Gon.
- Not only, sir, this your all-licens'd fool,
- But other of your insolent retinue
- Do hourly carp and quarrel; breaking forth
- In rank and not-to-be-endured riots. Sir,
- I had thought, by making this well known unto you,
- To have found a safe redress; but now grow fearful,
- By what yourself too late have spoke and done,
- That you protect this course, and put it on
- By your allowance; which if you should, the fault
- Would not scape censure, nor the redresses sleep,
- Which, in the tender of a wholesome weal,
- Might in their working do you that offence
- Which else were shame, that then necessity
- Will call discreet proceeding.
Fool.
- For you know, nuncle,
- The hedge-sparrow fed the cuckoo so long
- That it had it head bit off by it young.
- So out went the candle, and we were left darkling.
Lear.
- Are you our daughter?
Gon.
- Come, sir,
- I would you would make use of that good wisdom,
- Whereof I know you are fraught; and put away
- These dispositions, that of late transform you
- From what you rightly are.
Fool.
- May not an ass know when the cart draws the horse? - Whoop, Jug! I
- love thee!
Lear.
- Doth any here know me? - This is not Lear;
- Doth Lear walk thus? speak thus? Where are his eyes?
- Either his notion weakens, his discernings
- Are lethargied. - Ha! waking? 'Tis not so! -
- Who is it that can tell me who I am?
Fool.
- Lear's shadow.
Lear.
- I would learn that; for, by the marks of sovereignty,
- Knowledge, and reason,
- I should be false persuaded I had daughters.
Fool.
- Which they will make an obedient father.
Lear.
- Your name, fair gentlewoman?
Gon.
- This admiration, sir, is much o' the favour
- Of other your new pranks. I do beseech you
- To understand my purposes aright:
- As you are old and reverend, you should be wise.
- Here do you keep a hundred knights and squires;
- Men so disorder'd, so debosh'd, and bold
- That this our court, infected with their manners,
- Shows like a riotous inn: epicurism and lust
- Make it more like a tavern or a brothel
- Than a grac'd palace. The shame itself doth speak
- For instant remedy: be, then, desir'd
- By her that else will take the thing she begs
- A little to disquantity your train;
- And the remainder, that shall still depend,
- To be such men as may besort your age,
- Which know themselves, and you.
Lear.
- Darkness and devils! -
- Saddle my horses; call my train together. -
- Degenerate bastard! I'll not trouble thee:
- Yet have I left a daughter.
Gon.
- You strike my people; and your disorder'd rabble
- Make servants of their betters.
[Enter Albany.]
Lear.
- Woe that too late repents! -
- [To Albany.] O, sir, are you come?
- Is it your will? Speak, sir. - Prepare my horses. -
- Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend,
- More hideous when thou show'st thee in a child
- Than the sea-monster!
Alb.
- Pray, sir, be patient.
Lear.
- [to Goneril] Detested kite, thou liest!:
- My train are men of choice and rarest parts,
- That all particulars of duty know;
- And in the most exact regard support
- The worships of their name. - O most small fault,
- How ugly didst thou in Cordelia show!
- Which, like an engine, wrench'd my frame of nature
- From the fix'd place; drew from my heart all love,
- And added to the gall. O Lear, Lear, Lear!
- Beat at this gate that let thy folly in [Striking his head.]
- And thy dear judgment out! - Go, go, my people.
Alb.
- My lord, I am guiltless, as I am ignorant
- Of what hath mov'd you.
Lear.
- It may be so, my lord.
- Hear, nature, hear; dear goddess, hear
- Suspend thy purpose, if thou didst intend
- To make this creature fruitful!
- Into her womb convey sterility!
- Dry up in her the organs of increase;
- And from her derogate body never spring
- A babe to honour her! If she must teem,
- Create her child of spleen, that it may live
- And be a thwart disnatur'd torment to her!
- Let it stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth;
- With cadent tears fret channels in her cheeks;
- Turn all her mother's pains and benefits
- To laughter and contempt; that she may feel
- How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is
- To have a thankless child! - Away, away!
[Exit.]
Alb.
- Now, gods that we adore, whereof comes this?
Gon.
- Never afflict yourself to know more of it;
- But let his disposition have that scope
- That dotage gives it.
[Re-enter Lear.]
Lear.
- What, fifty of my followers at a clap!
- Within a fortnight!
Alb.
- What's the matter, sir?
Lear.
- I'll tell thee. - Life and death! - [To Goneril] I am asham'd
- That thou hast power to shake my manhood thus;
- That these hot tears, which break from me perforce,
- Should make thee worth them. - Blasts and fogs upon thee!
- Th' untented woundings of a father's curse
- Pierce every sense about thee! - Old fond eyes,
- Beweep this cause again, I'll pluck you out,
- And cast you, with the waters that you lose,
- To temper clay. Ha!
- Let it be so: I have another daughter,
- Who, I am sure, is kind and comfortable:
- When she shall hear this of thee, with her nails
- She'll flay thy wolvish visage. Thou shalt find
- That I'll resume the shape which thou dost think
- I have cast off for ever.
[Exeunt Lear, Kent, and Attendants.]
Gon.
- Do you mark that?
Alb.
- I cannot be so partial, Goneril,
- To the great love I bear you, -
Gon.
- Pray you, content. - What, Oswald, ho!
- [To the Fool] You, sir, more knave than fool, after your master.
Fool.
- Nuncle Lear, nuncle Lear, tarry, - take the fool with thee. -
- A fox when one has caught her,
- And such a daughter,
- Should sure to the slaughter,
- If my cap would buy a halter;
- So the fool follows after.
[Exit.]
Gon.
- This man hath had good counsel. - A hundred knights!
- 'Tis politic and safe to let him keep
- At point a hundred knights: yes, that on every dream,
- Each buzz, each fancy, each complaint, dislike,
- He may enguard his dotage with their powers,
- And hold our lives in mercy. - Oswald, I say! -
Alb.
- Well, you may fear too far.
Gon.
- Safer than trust too far:
- Let me still take away the harms I fear,
- Not fear still to be taken: I know his heart.
- What he hath utter'd I have writ my sister:
- If she sustain him and his hundred knights,
- When I have show'd th' unfitness, -
[Re-enter Oswald.]
- How now, Oswald!
- What, have you writ that letter to my sister?
Osw.
- Ay, madam.
Gon.
- Take you some company, and away to horse:
- Inform her full of my particular fear;
- And thereto add such reasons of your own
- As may compact it more. Get you gone;
- And hasten your return.
[Exit Oswald.]
No, no, my lord!
- This milky gentleness and course of yours,
- Though I condemn it not, yet, under pardon,
- You are much more attask'd for want of wisdom
- Than prais'd for harmful mildness.
Alb.
- How far your eyes may pierce I cannot tell:
- Striving to better, oft we mar what's well.
Gon.
- Nay then, -
Alb.
- Well, well; the event.
[Exeunt.]
Scene V. Court before the Duke of Albany's Palace.
[Enter Lear, Kent, and Fool.]
Lear.
- Go you before to Gloucester with these letters: acquaint my
- daughter no further with anything you know than comes from her
- demand out of the letter. If your diligence be not speedy, I
- shall be there afore you.
Kent.
- I will not sleep, my lord, till I have delivered your letter.
[Exit.]
Fool.
- If a man's brains were in's heels, were't not in danger of kibes?
Lear.
- Ay, boy.
Fool.
- Then I pr'ythee be merry; thy wit shall not go slipshod.
Lear.
- Ha, ha, ha!
Fool.
- Shalt see thy other daughter will use thee kindly; for though
- she's as like this as a crab's like an apple, yet I can tell
- what I can tell.
Lear.
- What canst tell, boy?
Fool.
- She'll taste as like this as a crab does to a crab. Thou
- canst tell why one's nose stands i' the middle on's face?
Lear.
- No.
Fool.
- Why, to keep one's eyes of either side's nose, that what a man
- cannot smell out, he may spy into.
Lear.
- I did her wrong, -
Fool.
- Canst tell how an oyster makes his shell?
Lear.
- No.
Fool.
- Nor I neither; but I can tell why a snail has a house.
Lear.
- Why?
Fool.
- Why, to put's head in; not to give it away to his daughters, and
- leave his horns without a case.
Lear.
- I will forget my nature. So kind a father! - Be my horses ready?
Fool.
- Thy asses are gone about 'em. The reason why the seven stars are
- no more than seven is a pretty reason.
Lear.
- Because they are not eight?
Fool.
- Yes indeed: thou wouldst make a good fool.
Lear.
- To tak't again perforce! - Monster ingratitude!
Fool.
- If thou wert my fool, nuncle, I'ld have thee beaten for being
- old before thy time.
Lear.
- How's that?
Fool.
- Thou shouldst not have been old till thou hadst been wise.
Lear.
- O, let me not be mad, not mad, sweet heaven!
- Keep me in temper; I would not be mad! -
[Enter Gentleman.]
How now? are the horses ready?
Gent.
- Ready, my lord.
Lear.
- Come, boy.
Fool.
- She that's a maid now, and laughs at my departure,
- Shall not be a maid long, unless things be cut shorter.
[Exeunt.]
ACT II.
Scene I. A court within the Castle of the Earl of Gloucester.
[Enter Edmund and Curan, meeting.]
Edm.
- Save thee, Curan.
Cur.
- And you, sir. I have been with your father, and given him
- notice that the Duke of Cornwall and Regan his duchess will be
- here with him this night.
Edm.
- How comes that?
Cur.
- Nay, I know not. - You have heard of the news abroad; I mean the
- whispered ones, for they are yet but ear-kissing arguments?
Edm.
- Not I: pray you, what are they?
Cur.
- Have you heard of no likely wars toward, 'twixt the two dukes
- of Cornwall and Albany?
Edm.
- Not a word.
Cur.
- You may do, then, in time. Fare you well, sir.
[Exit.]
Edm.
- The Duke be here to-night? The better! best!
- This weaves itself perforce into my business.
- My father hath set guard to take my brother;
- And I have one thing, of a queasy question,
- Which I must act: - briefness and fortune work! -
- Brother, a word! - descend: - brother, I say!
[Enter Edgar.]
- My father watches: - sir, fly this place;
- Intelligence is given where you are hid;
- You have now the good advantage of the night. -
- Have you not spoken 'gainst the Duke of Cornwall?
- He's coming hither; now, i' the night, i' the haste,
- And Regan with him: have you nothing said
- Upon his party 'gainst the Duke of Albany?
- Advise yourself.
Edg.
- I am sure on't, not a word.
Edm.
- I hear my father coming: - pardon me;
- In cunning I must draw my sword upon you: -
- Draw: seem to defend yourself: now quit you well. -
- Yield: - come before my father. - Light, ho, here!
- Fly, brother. - Torches, torches! - So farewell.
[Exit Edgar.]
- Some blood drawn on me would beget opinion
- Of my more fierce endeavour: [Wounds his arm.]
- I have seen drunkards
- Do more than this in sport. - Father, father!
- Stop, stop! No help?
[Enter Gloucester, and Servants with torches.]
Glou.
- Now, Edmund, where's the villain?
Edm.
- Here stood he in the dark, his sharp sword out,
- Mumbling of wicked charms, conjuring the moon
- To stand auspicious mistress, -
Glou.
- But where is he?
Edm.
- Look, sir, I bleed.
Glou.
- Where is the villain, Edmund?
Edm.
- Fled this way, sir. When by no means he could, -
Glou.
- Pursue him, ho! - Go after.
[Exeunt Servants.]
- By no means what?
Edm.
- Persuade me to the murder of your lordship;
- But that I told him the revenging gods
- 'Gainst parricides did all their thunders bend;
- Spoke with how manifold and strong a bond
- The child was bound to the father; - sir, in fine,
- Seeing how loathly opposite I stood
- To his unnatural purpose, in fell motion
- With his prepared sword, he charges home
- My unprovided body, lanc'd mine arm;
- But when he saw my best alarum'd spirits,
- Bold in the quarrel's right, rous'd to the encounter,
- Or whether gasted by the noise I made,
- Full suddenly he fled.
Glou.
- Let him fly far;
- Not in this land shall he remain uncaught;
- And found - dispatch'd. - The noble duke my master,
- My worthy arch and patron, comes to-night:
- By his authority I will proclaim it,
- That he which finds him shall deserve our thanks,
- Bringing the murderous coward to the stake;
- He that conceals him, death.
Edm.
- When I dissuaded him from his intent,
- And found him pight to do it, with curst speech
- I threaten'd to discover him: he replied,
- 'Thou unpossessing bastard! dost thou think,
- If I would stand against thee, would the reposal
- Of any trust, virtue, or worth in thee
- Make thy words faith'd? No: what I should deny
- As this I would; ay, though thou didst produce
- My very character, I'd turn it all
- To thy suggestion, plot, and damned practice:
- And thou must make a dullard of the world,
- If they not thought the profits of my death
- Were very pregnant and potential spurs
- To make thee seek it.
Glou.
- Strong and fast'ned villain!
- Would he deny his letter? - I never got him.
[Trumpets within.]
- Hark, the duke's trumpets! I know not why he comes. -
- All ports I'll bar; the villain shall not scape;
- The duke must grant me that: besides, his picture
- I will send far and near, that all the kingdom
- May have due note of him; and of my land,
- Loyal and natural boy, I'll work the means
- To make thee capable.
[Enter Cornwall, Regan, and Attendants.]
Corn.
- How now, my noble friend! since I came hither, -
- Which I can call but now, - I have heard strange news.
Reg.
- If it be true, all vengeance comes too short
- Which can pursue the offender. How dost, my lord?
Glou.
- O madam, my old heart is crack'd, - it's crack'd!
Reg.
- What, did my father's godson seek your life?
- He whom my father nam'd? your Edgar?
Glou.
- O lady, lady, shame would have it hid!
Reg.
- Was he not companion with the riotous knights
- That tend upon my father?
Glou.
- I know not, madam: -
- It is too bad, too bad.
Edm.
- Yes, madam, he was of that consort.
Reg.
- No marvel then though he were ill affected:
- 'Tis they have put him on the old man's death,
- To have the expense and waste of his revenues.
- I have this present evening from my sister
- Been well inform'd of them; and with such cautions
- That if they come to sojourn at my house,
- I'll not be there.
Corn.
- Nor I, assure thee, Regan. -
- Edmund, I hear that you have shown your father
- A childlike office.
Edm.
- 'Twas my duty, sir.
Glou.
- He did bewray his practice; and receiv'd
- This hurt you see, striving to apprehend him.
Corn.
- Is he pursu'd?
Glou.
- Ay, my good lord.
Corn.
- If he be taken, he shall never more
- Be fear'd of doing harm: make your own purpose,
- How in my strength you please. - For you, Edmund,
- Whose virtue and obedience doth this instant
- So much commend itself, you shall be ours:
- Natures of such deep trust we shall much need;
- You we first seize on.
Edm.
- I shall serve you, sir,
- Truly, however else.
Glou.
- For him I thank your grace.
Corn.
- You know not why we came to visit you, -
Reg.
- Thus out of season, threading dark-ey'd night:
- Occasions, noble Gloucester, of some poise,
- Wherein we must have use of your advice: -
- Our father he hath writ, so hath our sister,
- Of differences, which I best thought it fit
- To answer from our home; the several messengers
- From hence attend despatch. Our good old friend,
- Lay comforts to your bosom; and bestow
- Your needful counsel to our business,
- Which craves the instant use.
Glou.
- I serve you, madam:
- Your graces are right welcome.
[Exeunt.]
Scene II. Before Gloucester's Castle.
[Enter Kent and Oswald, severally.]
Osw.
- Good dawning to thee, friend: art of this house?
Kent.
- Ay.
Osw.
- Where may we set our horses?
Kent.
- I' the mire.
Osw.
- Pr'ythee, if thou lov'st me, tell me.
Kent.
- I love thee not.
Osw.
- Why then, I care not for thee.
Kent.
- If I had thee in Lipsbury pinfold, I would make thee care for me.
Osw.
- Why dost thou use me thus? I know thee not.
Kent.
- Fellow, I know thee.
Osw.
- What dost thou know me for?
Kent.
- A knave; a rascal; an eater of broken meats; a base, proud,
- shallow, beggarly, three-suited, hundred-pound, filthy,
- worsted-stocking knave; a lily-livered, action-taking, whoreson,
- glass-gazing, superserviceable, finical rogue;
- one-trunk-inheriting slave; one that wouldst be a bawd in way of
- good service, and art nothing but the composition of a
- knave, beggar, coward, pander, and the son and heir of a mongrel
- bitch: one whom I will beat into clamorous whining, if thou
- denyest the least syllable of thy addition.
Osw.
- Why, what a monstrous fellow art thou, thus to rail on one that's
- neither known of thee nor knows thee?
Kent.
- What a brazen-faced varlet art thou, to deny thou knowest me! Is
- it two days ago since I beat thee and tripped up thy heels before
- the king? Draw, you rogue: for, though it be night, yet the moon
- shines; I'll make a sop o' the moonshine of you: draw, you
- whoreson cullionly barbermonger, draw!
[Drawing his sword.]
Osw.
- Away! I have nothing to do with thee.
Kent.
- Draw, you rascal: you come with letters against the king; and
- take vanity the puppet's part against the royalty of her father:
- draw, you rogue, or I'll so carbonado your shanks: -
- draw, you rascal; come your ways!
Osw.
- Help, ho! murder! help!
Kent.
- Strike, you slave; stand, rogue, stand; you neat slave, strike!
[Beating him.]
Osw.
- Help, ho! murder! murder!
[Enter Edmund, Cornwall, Regan, Gloucester, and Servants.]
Edm.
- How now! What's the matter?
Kent.
- With you, goodman boy, an you please: come, I'll flesh you; come
- on, young master.
Glou.
- Weapons! arms! What's the matter here?
Corn.
- Keep peace, upon your lives;
- He dies that strikes again. What is the matter?
Reg.
- The messengers from our sister and the king.
Corn.
- What is your difference? speak.
Osw.
- I am scarce in breath, my lord.
Kent.
- No marvel, you have so bestirr'd your valour. You cowardly
- rascal, nature disclaims in thee; a tailor made thee.
Corn.
- Thou art a strange fellow: a tailor make a man?
Kent.
- Ay, a tailor, sir: a stonecutter or a painter could not have
- made him so ill, though he had been but two hours at the trade.
Corn.
- Speak yet, how grew your quarrel?
Osw.
- This ancient ruffian, sir, whose life I have spared at suit of
- his grey
- beard, -
Kent.
- Thou whoreson zed! thou unnecessary letter! - My lord, if you'll
- give me leave, I will tread this unbolted villain into mortar and
- daub the walls of a jakes with him. - Spare my grey beard, you
- wagtail?
Corn.
- Peace, sirrah!
- You beastly knave, know you no reverence?
Kent.
- Yes, sir; but anger hath a privilege.
Corn.
- Why art thou angry?
Kent.
- That such a slave as this should wear a sword,
- Who wears no honesty. Such smiling rogues as these,
- Like rats, oft bite the holy cords a-twain
- Which are too intrinse t' unloose; smooth every passion
- That in the natures of their lords rebel;
- Bring oil to fire, snow to their colder moods;
- Renege, affirm, and turn their halcyon beaks
- With every gale and vary of their masters,
- Knowing naught, like dogs, but following. -
- A plague upon your epileptic visage!
- Smile you my speeches, as I were a fool?
- Goose, an I had you upon Sarum plain,
- I'd drive ye cackling home to Camelot.
Corn.
- What, art thou mad, old fellow?
Glou.
- How fell you out?
- Say that.
Kent.
- No contraries hold more antipathy
- Than I and such a knave.
Corn.
- Why dost thou call him knave? What is his fault?
Kent.
- His countenance likes me not.
Corn.
- No more perchance does mine, or his, or hers.
Kent.
- Sir, 'tis my occupation to be plain:
- I have seen better faces in my time
- Than stands on any shoulder that I see
- Before me at this instant.
Corn.
- This is some fellow
- Who, having been prais'd for bluntness, doth affect
- A saucy roughness, and constrains the garb
- Quite from his nature: he cannot flatter, he, -
- An honest mind and plain, - he must speak truth!
- An they will take it, so; if not, he's plain.
- These kind of knaves I know which in this plainness
- Harbour more craft and more corrupter ends
- Than twenty silly-ducking observants
- That stretch their duties nicely.
Kent.
- Sir, in good faith, in sincere verity,
- Under the allowance of your great aspect,
- Whose influence, like the wreath of radiant fire
- On flickering Phoebus' front, -
Corn.
- What mean'st by this?
Kent.
- To go out of my dialect, which you discommend so much. I know,
- sir, I am no flatterer: he that beguiled you in a plain accent
- was a plain knave; which, for my part, I will not be, though I
- should win your displeasure to entreat me to't.
Corn.
- What was the offence you gave him?
Osw.
- I never gave him any:
- It pleas'd the king his master very late
- To strike at me, upon his misconstruction;
- When he, compact, and flattering his displeasure,
- Tripp'd me behind; being down, insulted, rail'd
- And put upon him such a deal of man,
- That worthied him, got praises of the king
- For him attempting who was self-subdu'd;
- And, in the fleshment of this dread exploit,
- Drew on me here again.
Kent.
- None of these rogues and cowards
- But Ajax is their fool.
Corn.
- Fetch forth the stocks! -
- You stubborn ancient knave, you reverent braggart,
- We'll teach you, -
Kent.
- Sir, I am too old to learn:
- Call not your stocks for me: I serve the king;
- On whose employment I was sent to you:
- You shall do small respect, show too bold malice
- Against the grace and person of my master,
- Stocking his messenger.
Corn.
- Fetch forth the stocks! - As I have life and honour,
- there shall he sit till noon.
Reg.
- Till noon! Till night, my lord; and all night too!
Kent.
- Why, madam, if I were your father's dog,
- You should not use me so.
Reg.
- Sir, being his knave, I will.
Corn.
- This is a fellow of the self-same colour
- Our sister speaks of. - Come, bring away the stocks!
[Stocks brought out.]
Glou.
- Let me beseech your grace not to do so:
- His fault is much, and the good king his master
- Will check him for't: your purpos'd low correction
- Is such as basest and contemned'st wretches
- For pilferings and most common trespasses,
- Are punish'd with: the king must take it ill
- That he, so slightly valu'd in his messenger,
- Should have him thus restrain'd.
Corn.
- I'll answer that.
Reg.
- My sister may receive it much more worse,
- To have her gentleman abus'd, assaulted,
- For following her affairs. - Put in his legs. -
[Kent is put in the stocks.]
- Come, my good lord, away.
[Exeunt all but Gloucester and Kent.]
Glou.
- I am sorry for thee, friend; 'tis the duke's pleasure,
- Whose disposition, all the world well knows,
- Will not be rubb'd nor stopp'd; I'll entreat for thee.
Kent.
- Pray do not, sir: I have watch'd, and travell'd hard;
- Some time I shall sleep out, the rest I'll whistle.
- A good man's fortune may grow out at heels:
- Give you good morrow!
Glou.
- The duke's to blame in this: 'twill be ill taken.
[Exit.]
Kent.
- Good king, that must approve the common saw, -
- Thou out of heaven's benediction com'st
- To the warm sun!
- Approach, thou beacon to this under globe,
- That by thy comfortable beams I may
- Peruse this letter. - Nothing almost sees miracles
- But misery: - I know 'tis from Cordelia,
- Who hath most fortunately been inform'd
- Of my obscured course; and shall find time
- From this enormous state, - seeking to give
- Losses their remedies, - All weary and o'erwatch'd,
- Take vantage, heavy eyes, not to behold
- This shameful lodging.
- Fortune, good night: smile once more, turn thy wheel!
[He sleeps.]
Scene III. The open Country.
[Enter Edgar.]
Edg.
- I heard myself proclaim'd;
- And by the happy hollow of a tree
- Escap'd the hunt. No port is free; no place
- That guard and most unusual vigilance
- Does not attend my taking. While I may scape,
- I will preserve myself: and am bethought
- To take the basest and most poorest shape
- That ever penury, in contempt of man,
- Brought near to beast: my face I'll grime with filth;
- Blanket my loins; elf all my hair in knots;
- And with presented nakedness outface
- The winds and persecutions of the sky.
- The country gives me proof and precedent
- Of Bedlam beggars, who, with roaring voices,
- Strike in their numb'd and mortified bare arms
- Pins, wooden pricks, nails, sprigs of rosemary;
- And with this horrible object, from low farms,
- Poor pelting villages, sheep-cotes, and mills,
- Sometime with lunatic bans, sometime with prayers,
- Enforce their charity. - Poor Turlygod! poor Tom!
- That's something yet: - Edgar I nothing am.
[Exit.]
Scene IV. Before Gloucester's Castle; Kent in the stocks.
[Enter Lear, Fool, and Gentleman.]
Lear.
- 'Tis strange that they should so depart from home,
- And not send back my messenger.
Gent.
- As I learn'd,
- The night before there was no purpose in them
- Of this remove.
Kent.
- Hail to thee, noble master!
Lear.
- Ha!
- Mak'st thou this shame thy pastime?
Kent.
- No, my lord.
Fool.
- Ha, ha! he wears cruel garters. Horses are tied by the
- head; dogs and bears by the neck, monkeys by the loins, and
- men by the legs: when a man is over-lusty at legs, then he
- wears wooden nether-stocks.
Lear.
- What's he that hath so much thy place mistook
- To set thee here?
Kent.
- It is both he and she,
- Your son and daughter.
Lear.
- No.
Kent.
- Yes.
Lear.
- No, I say.
Kent.
- I say, yea.
Lear.
- No, no; they would not.
Kent.
- Yes, they have.
Lear.
- By Jupiter, I swear no.
Kent.
- By Juno, I swear ay.
Lear.
- They durst not do't.
- They would not, could not do't; 'tis worse than murder,
- To do upon respect such violent outrage:
- Resolve me, with all modest haste, which way
- Thou mightst deserve or they impose this usage,
- Coming from us.
Kent.
- My lord, when at their home
- I did commend your highness' letters to them,
- Ere I was risen from the place that show'd
- My duty kneeling, came there a reeking post,
- Stew'd in his haste, half breathless, panting forth
- From Goneril his mistress salutations;
- Deliver'd letters, spite of intermission,
- Which presently they read: on whose contents,
- They summon'd up their meiny, straight took horse;
- Commanded me to follow and attend
- The leisure of their answer; gave me cold looks:
- And meeting here the other messenger,
- Whose welcome I perceiv'd had poison'd mine, -
- Being the very fellow which of late
- Display'd so saucily against your highness, -
- Having more man than wit about me, drew:
- He rais'd the house with loud and coward cries.
- Your son and daughter found this trespass worth
- The shame which here it suffers.
Fool.
- Winter's not gone yet, if the wild geese fly that way.
- Fathers that wear rags
- Do make their children blind;
- But fathers that bear bags
- Shall see their children kind.
- Fortune, that arrant whore,
- Ne'er turns the key to th' poor.
- But for all this, thou shalt have as many dolours for thy
- daughters as thou canst tell in a year.
Lear.
- O, how this mother swells up toward my heart!
- Hysterica passio, - down, thou climbing sorrow,
- Thy element's below! - Where is this daughter?
Kent.
- With the earl, sir, here within.
Lear.
- Follow me not;
- Stay here.
[Exit.]
Gent.
- Made you no more offence but what you speak of?
Kent.
- None.
- How chance the king comes with so small a number?
Fool.
- An thou hadst been set i' the stocks for that question,
- thou hadst well deserved it.
Kent.
- Why, fool?
Fool.
- We'll set thee to school to an ant, to teach thee there's no
- labouring in the winter. All that follow their noses are led by
- their eyes but blind men; and there's not a nose among twenty
- but can smell him that's stinking. Let go thy hold when a great
- wheel runs down a hill, lest it break thy neck with following
- it; but the great one that goes up the hill, let him draw thee
- after.
- When a wise man gives thee better counsel, give me mine again: I
- would have none but knaves follow it, since a fool gives it.
- That sir which serves and seeks for gain,
- And follows but for form,
- Will pack when it begins to rain,
- And leave thee in the storm.
- But I will tarry; the fool will stay,
- And let the wise man fly:
- The knave turns fool that runs away;
- The fool no knave, perdy.
Kent.
- Where learn'd you this, fool?
Fool.
- Not i' the stocks, fool.
[Re-enter Lear, with Gloucester.]
Lear.
- Deny to speak with me? They are sick? they are weary?
- They have travell'd all the night? Mere fetches;
- The images of revolt and flying off.
- Fetch me a better answer.
Glou.
- My dear lord,
- You know the fiery quality of the duke;
- How unremovable and fix'd he is
- In his own course.
Lear.
- Vengeance! plague! death! confusion! -
- Fiery? What quality? why, Gloucester, Gloucester,
- I'd speak with the Duke of Cornwall and his wife.
Glou.
- Well, my good lord, I have inform'd them so.
Lear.
- Inform'd them! Dost thou understand me, man?
Glou.
- Ay, my good lord.
Lear.
- The King would speak with Cornwall; the dear father
- Would with his daughter speak, commands her service:
- Are they inform'd of this? - My breath and blood! -
- Fiery? the fiery duke? - Tell the hot duke that -
- No, but not yet: may be he is not well:
- Infirmity doth still neglect all office
- Whereto our health is bound: we are not ourselves
- When nature, being oppress'd, commands the mind
- To suffer with the body: I'll forbear;
- And am fallen out with my more headier will,
- To take the indispos'd and sickly fit
- For the sound man. - Death on my state! Wherefore
- [Looking on Kent.]
- Should he sit here? This act persuades me
- That this remotion of the duke and her
- Is practice only. Give me my servant forth.
- Go tell the duke and's wife I'd speak with them,
- Now, presently: bid them come forth and hear me,
- Or at their chamber door I'll beat the drum
- Till it cry 'Sleep to death.'
Glou.
- I would have all well betwixt you.
[Exit.]
Lear.
- O me, my heart, my rising heart! - but down!
Fool.
- Cry to it, nuncle, as the cockney did to the eels when she
- put 'em i' the paste alive; she knapped 'em o' the coxcombs with
- a stick and cried 'Down, wantons, down!' 'Twas her brother that,
- in pure kindness to his horse, buttered his hay.
[Enter Cornwall, Regan, Gloucester, and Servants.]
Lear.
- Good-morrow to you both.
Corn.
- Hail to your grace!
[Kent is set at liberty.]
Reg.
- I am glad to see your highness.
Lear.
- Regan, I think you are; I know what reason
- I have to think so: if thou shouldst not be glad,
- I would divorce me from thy mother's tomb,
- Sepulchring an adultress. - [To Kent] O, are you free?
- Some other time for that. - Beloved Regan,
- Thy sister's naught: O Regan, she hath tied
- Sharp-tooth'd unkindness, like a vulture, here, -
- [Points to his heart.]
- I can scarce speak to thee; thou'lt not believe
- With how deprav'd a quality - O Regan!
Reg.
- I pray you, sir, take patience: I have hope
- You less know how to value her desert
- Than she to scant her duty.
Lear.
- Say, how is that?
Reg.
- I cannot think my sister in the least
- Would fail her obligation: if, sir, perchance
- She have restrain'd the riots of your followers,
- 'Tis on such ground, and to such wholesome end,
- As clears her from all blame.
Lear.
- My curses on her!
Reg.
- O, sir, you are old;
- Nature in you stands on the very verge
- Of her confine: you should be rul'd and led
- By some discretion, that discerns your state
- Better than you yourself. Therefore, I pray you,
- That to our sister you do make return;
- Say you have wrong'd her, sir.
Lear.
- Ask her forgiveness?
- Do you but mark how this becomes the house:
- 'Dear daughter, I confess that I am old;
- [Kneeling.]
- Age is unnecessary: on my knees I beg
- That you'll vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food.'
Reg.
- Good sir, no more! These are unsightly tricks:
- Return you to my sister.
Lear.
- [Rising.] Never, Regan:
- She hath abated me of half my train;
- Look'd black upon me; struck me with her tongue,
- Most serpent-like, upon the very heart: -
- All the stor'd vengeances of heaven fall
- On her ingrateful top! Strike her young bones,
- You taking airs, with lameness!
Corn.
- Fie, sir, fie!
Lear.
- You nimble lightnings, dart your blinding flames
- Into her scornful eyes! Infect her beauty,
- You fen-suck'd fogs, drawn by the powerful sun,
- To fall and blast her pride!
Reg.
- O the blest gods!
- So will you wish on me when the rash mood is on.
Lear.
- No, Regan, thou shalt never have my curse:
- Thy tender-hefted nature shall not give
- Thee o'er to harshness: her eyes are fierce; but thine
- Do comfort, and not burn. 'Tis not in thee
- To grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train,
- To bandy hasty words, to scant my sizes,
- And, in conclusion, to oppose the bolt
- Against my coming in: thou better know'st
- The offices of nature, bond of childhood,
- Effects of courtesy, dues of gratitude;
- Thy half o' the kingdom hast thou not forgot,
- Wherein I thee endow'd.
Reg.
- Good sir, to the purpose.
Lear.
- Who put my man i' the stocks?
[Tucket within.]
Corn.
- What trumpet's that?
Reg.
- I know't - my sister's: this approves her letter,
- That she would soon be here.
[Enter Oswald.]
- Is your lady come?
Lear.
- This is a slave, whose easy-borrowed pride
- Dwells in the fickle grace of her he follows. -
- Out, varlet, from my sight!
Corn.
- What means your grace?
Lear.
- Who stock'd my servant? Regan, I have good hope
- Thou didst not know on't. - Who comes here? O heavens!
[Enter Goneril.]
- If you do love old men, if your sweet sway
- Allow obedience, if yourselves are old,
- Make it your cause; send down, and take my part! -
- [To Goneril.] Art not asham'd to look upon this beard? -
- O Regan, wilt thou take her by the hand?
Gon.
- Why not by the hand, sir? How have I offended?
- All's not offence that indiscretion finds
- And dotage terms so.
Lear.
- O sides, you are too tough!
- Will you yet hold? - How came my man i' the stocks?
Corn.
- I set him there, sir: but his own disorders
- Deserv'd much less advancement.
Lear.
- You? did you?
Reg.
- I pray you, father, being weak, seem so.
- If, till the expiration of your month,
- You will return and sojourn with my sister,
- Dismissing half your train, come then to me:
- I am now from home, and out of that provision
- Which shall be needful for your entertainment.
Lear.
- Return to her, and fifty men dismiss'd?
- No, rather I abjure all roofs, and choose
- To wage against the enmity o' the air;
- To be a comrade with the wolf and owl, -
- Necessity's sharp pinch! - Return with her?
- Why, the hot-blooded France, that dowerless took
- Our youngest born, I could as well be brought
- To knee his throne, and, squire-like, pension beg
- To keep base life afoot. - Return with her?
- Persuade me rather to be slave and sumpter
- To this detested groom.
- [Pointing to Oswald.]
Gon.
- At your choice, sir.
Lear.
- I pr'ythee, daughter, do not make me mad:
- I will not trouble thee, my child; farewell:
- We'll no more meet, no more see one another: -
- But yet thou art my flesh, my blood, my daughter;
- Or rather a disease that's in my flesh,
- Which I must needs call mine: thou art a boil,
- A plague sore, an embossed carbuncle
- In my corrupted blood. But I'll not chide thee;
- Let shame come when it will, I do not call it:
- I do not bid the thunder-bearer shoot
- Nor tell tales of thee to high-judging Jove:
- Mend when thou canst; be better at thy leisure:
- I can be patient; I can stay with Regan,
- I and my hundred knights.
Reg.
- Not altogether so:
- I look'd not for you yet, nor am provided
- For your fit welcome. Give ear, sir, to my sister;
- For those that mingle reason with your passion
- Must be content to think you old, and so -
- But she knows what she does.
Lear.
- Is this well spoken?
Reg.
- I dare avouch it, sir: what, fifty followers?
- Is it not well? What should you need of more?
- Yea, or so many, sith that both charge and danger
- Speak 'gainst so great a number? How in one house
- Should many people, under two commands,
- Hold amity? 'Tis hard; almost impossible.
Gon.
- Why might not you, my lord, receive attendance
- From those that she calls servants, or from mine?
Reg.
- Why not, my lord? If then they chanc'd to slack you,
- We could control them. If you will come to me, -
- For now I spy a danger, - I entreat you
- To bring but five-and-twenty: to no more
- Will I give place or notice.
Lear.
- I gave you all, -
Reg.
- And in good time you gave it.
Lear.
- Made you my guardians, my depositaries;
- But kept a reservation to be follow'd
- With such a number. What, must I come to you
- With five-and-twenty, Regan? said you so?
Reg.
- And speak't again my lord; no more with me.
Lear.
- Those wicked creatures yet do look well-favour'd
- When others are more wicked; not being the worst
- Stands in some rank of praise. -
- [To Goneril.] I'll go with thee:
- Thy fifty yet doth double five-and-twenty,
- And thou art twice her love.
Gon.
- Hear, me, my lord:
- What need you five-and-twenty, ten, or five,
- To follow in a house where twice so many
- Have a command to tend you?
Reg.
- What need one?
Lear.
- O, reason not the need: our basest beggars
- Are in the poorest thing superfluous:
- Allow not nature more than nature needs,
- Man's life is cheap as beast's: thou art a lady;
- If only to go warm were gorgeous,
- Why, nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear'st
- Which scarcely keeps thee warm. - But, for true need, -
- You heavens, give me that patience, patience I need!
- You see me here, you gods, a poor old man,
- As full of grief as age; wretched in both!
- If it be you that stirs these daughters' hearts
- Against their father, fool me not so much
- To bear it tamely; touch me with noble anger,
- And let not women's weapons, water-drops,
- Stain my man's cheeks! - No, you unnatural hags,
- I will have such revenges on you both
- That all the world shall, - I will do such things, -
- What they are yet, I know not; but they shall be
- The terrors of the earth. You think I'll weep;
- No, I'll not weep: -
- I have full cause of weeping; but this heart
- Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws
- Or ere I'll weep. - O fool, I shall go mad!
[Exeunt Lear, Gloucester, Kent, and Fool. Storm heard at a distance.]
Corn.
- Let us withdraw; 'twill be a storm.
Reg.
- This house is little: the old man and his people
- Cannot be well bestow'd.
Gon.
- 'Tis his own blame; hath put himself from rest
- And must needs taste his folly.
Reg.
- For his particular, I'll receive him gladly,
- But not one follower.
Gon.
- So am I purpos'd.
- Where is my lord of Gloucester?
Corn.
- Followed the old man forth: - he is return'd.
[Re-enter Gloucester.]
Glou.
- The king is in high rage.
Corn.
- Whither is he going?
Glou.
- He calls to horse; but will I know not whither.
Corn.
- 'Tis best to give him way; he leads himself.
Gon.
- My lord, entreat him by no means to stay.
Glou.
- Alack, the night comes on, and the high winds
- Do sorely ruffle; for many miles about
- There's scarce a bush.
Reg.
- O, sir, to wilful men
- The injuries that they themselves procure
- Must be their schoolmasters. Shut up your doors:
- He is attended with a desperate train;
- And what they may incense him to, being apt
- To have his ear abus'd, wisdom bids fear.
Corn.
- Shut up your doors, my lord; 'tis a wild night:
- My Regan counsels well: come out o' the storm.
[Exeunt.]
ACT III.
Scene I. A Heath.
[A storm with thunder and lightning. Enter Kent and a Gentleman,
- meeting.]
Kent.
- Who's there, besides foul weather?
Gent.
- One minded like the weather, most unquietly.
Kent.
- I know you. Where's the king?
Gent.
- Contending with the fretful elements;
- Bids the wind blow the earth into the sea,
- Or swell the curled waters 'bove the main,
- That things might change or cease; tears his white hair,
- Which the impetuous blasts, with eyeless rage,
- Catch in their fury and make nothing of;
- Strives in his little world of man to outscorn
- The to-and-fro-conflicting wind and rain.
- This night, wherein the cub-drawn bear would couch,
- The lion and the belly-pinched wolf
- Keep their fur dry, unbonneted he runs,
- And bids what will take all.
Kent.
- But who is with him?
Gent.
- None but the fool, who labours to out-jest
- His heart-struck injuries.
Kent.
- Sir, I do know you;
- And dare, upon the warrant of my note,
- Commend a dear thing to you. There is division,
- Although as yet the face of it be cover'd
- With mutual cunning, 'twixt Albany and Cornwall;
- Who have, - as who have not, that their great stars
- Throne and set high? - servants, who seem no less,
- Which are to France the spies and speculations
- Intelligent of our state; what hath been seen,
- Either in snuffs and packings of the dukes;
- Or the hard rein which both of them have borne
- Against the old kind king; or something deeper,
- Whereof, perchance, these are but furnishings; -
- But, true it is, from France there comes a power
- Into this scatter'd kingdom; who already,
- Wise in our negligence, have secret feet
- In some of our best ports, and are at point
- To show their open banner. - Now to you:
- If on my credit you dare build so far
- To make your speed to Dover, you shall find
- Some that will thank you making just report
- Of how unnatural and bemadding sorrow
- The king hath cause to plain.
- I am a gentleman of blood and breeding;
- And from some knowledge and assurance offer
- This office to you.
Gent.
- I will talk further with you.
Kent.
- No, do not.
- For confirmation that I am much more
- Than my out wall, open this purse, and take
- What it contains. If you shall see Cordelia, -
- As fear not but you shall, - show her this ring;
- And she will tell you who your fellow is
- That yet you do not know. Fie on this storm!
- I will go seek the king.
Gent.
- Give me your hand: have you no more to say?
Kent.
- Few words, but, to effect, more than all yet, -
- That, when we have found the king, - in which your pain
- That way, I'll this, - he that first lights on him
- Holla the other.
[Exeunt severally.]
Scene II. Another part of the heath. Storm continues.
[Enter Lear and Fool.]
Lear.
- Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! rage! blow!
- You cataracts and hurricanoes, spout
- Till you have drench'd our steeples, drown'd the cocks!
- You sulphurous and thought-executing fires,
- Vaunt couriers to oak-cleaving thunderbolts,
- Singe my white head! And thou, all-shaking thunder,
- Strike flat the thick rotundity o' the world!
- Crack nature's moulds, all germens spill at once,
- That make ingrateful man!
Fool.
- O nuncle, court holy water in a dry house is better than this
- rain water out o' door. Good nuncle, in; and ask thy daughters
- blessing: here's a night pities nether wise men nor fools.
Lear.
- Rumble thy bellyful! Spit, fire! spout, rain!
- Nor rain, wind, thunder, fire are my daughters:
- I tax not you, you elements, with unkindness;
- I never gave you kingdom, call'd you children;
- You owe me no subscription: then let fall
- Your horrible pleasure; here I stand, your slave,
- A poor, infirm, weak, and despis'd old man: -
- But yet I call you servile ministers,
- That will with two pernicious daughters join
- Your high-engender'd battles 'gainst a head
- So old and white as this! O! O! 'tis foul!
Fool.
- He that has a house to put 's head in has a good head-piece.
- The codpiece that will house
- Before the head has any,
- The head and he shall louse:
- So beggars marry many.
- The man that makes his toe
- What he his heart should make
- Shall of a corn cry woe,
- And turn his sleep to wake.
- - for there was never yet fair woman but she made mouths in a
- glass.
Lear.
- No, I will be the pattern of all patience;
- I will say nothing.
[Enter Kent.]
- Kent.
- Who's there?
Fool.
- Marry, here's grace and a codpiece; that's a wise man and a fool.
Kent.
- Alas, sir, are you here? Things that love night
- Love not such nights as these; the wrathful skies
- Gallow the very wanderers of the dark,
- And make them keep their caves; since I was man,
- Such sheets of fire, such bursts of horrid thunder,
- Such groans of roaring wind and rain I never
- Remember to have heard: man's nature cannot carry
- Th' affliction nor the fear.
Lear.
- Let the great gods,
- That keep this dreadful pother o'er our heads,
- Find out their enemies now. Tremble, thou wretch,
- That hast within thee undivulged crimes
- Unwhipp'd of justice: hide thee, thou bloody hand;
- Thou perjur'd, and thou simular man of virtue
- That art incestuous: caitiff, to pieces shake
- That under covert and convenient seeming
- Hast practis'd on man's life: close pent-up guilts,
- Rive your concealing continents, and cry
- These dreadful summoners grace. - I am a man
- More sinn'd against than sinning.
Kent.
- Alack, bareheaded!
- Gracious my lord, hard by here is a hovel;
- Some friendship will it lend you 'gainst the tempest:
- Repose you there, whilst I to this hard house, -
- More harder than the stones whereof 'tis rais'd;
- Which even but now, demanding after you,
- Denied me to come in, - return, and force
- Their scanted courtesy.
Lear.
- My wits begin to turn. -
- Come on, my boy. how dost, my boy? art cold?
- I am cold myself. - Where is this straw, my fellow?
- The art of our necessities is strange,
- That can make vile things precious. Come, your hovel. -
- Poor fool and knave, I have one part in my heart
- That's sorry yet for thee.
Fool.
- [Singing.]
- He that has and a little tiny wit -
- With hey, ho, the wind and the rain, -
- Must make content with his fortunes fit,
- For the rain it raineth every day.
Lear.
- True, boy. - Come, bring us to this hovel.
[Exeunt Lear and Kent.]
Fool.
- This is a brave night to cool a courtezan. -
- I'll speak a prophecy ere I go: -
- When priests are more in word than matter;
- When brewers mar their malt with water;
- When nobles are their tailors' tutors;
- No heretics burn'd, but wenches' suitors;
- When every case in law is right;
- No squire in debt nor no poor knight;
- When slanders do not live in tongues;
- Nor cutpurses come not to throngs;
- When usurers tell their gold i' the field;
- And bawds and whores do churches build; -
- Then shall the realm of Albion
- Come to great confusion:
- Then comes the time, who lives to see't,
- That going shall be us'd with feet.
- This prophecy Merlin shall make; for I live before his time.
[Exit.]
Scene III. A Room in Gloucester's Castle.
[Enter Gloucester and Edmund.]
Glou.
- Alack, alack, Edmund, I like not this unnatural dealing. When I
- desired their leave that I might pity him, they took from me the
- use of mine own house; charged me on pain of perpetual displeasure,
- neither to speak of him, entreat for him, nor any way sustain him.
Edm.
- Most savage and unnatural!
Glou.
- Go to; say you nothing. There is division betwixt the dukes,
- and a worse matter than that: I have received a letter this
- night; - 'tis dangerous to be spoken; - I have locked the letter in
- my closet: these injuries the king now bears will be revenged
- home; there's part of a power already footed: we must incline to
- the king. I will seek him, and privily relieve him: go you and
- maintain talk with the duke, that my charity be not of him
- perceived: if he ask for me, I am ill, and gone to bed. If I
- die for it, as no less is threatened me, the king my old master
- must be relieved. There is some strange thing toward, Edmund;
- pray you be careful.
[Exit.]
Edm.
- This courtesy, forbid thee, shall the duke
- Instantly know; and of that letter too: -
- This seems a fair deserving, and must draw me
- That which my father loses, - no less than all:
- The younger rises when the old doth fall.
[Exit.]
Scene IV. A part of the Heath with a Hovel. Storm continues.
[Enter Lear, Kent, and Fool.]
Kent.
- Here is the place, my lord; good my lord, enter:
- The tyranny of the open night's too rough
- For nature to endure.
Lear.
- Let me alone.
Kent.
- Good my lord, enter here.
Lear.
- Wilt break my heart?
Kent.
- I had rather break mine own. Good my lord, enter.
Lear.
- Thou think'st 'tis much that this contentious storm
- Invades us to the skin: so 'tis to thee
- But where the greater malady is fix'd,
- The lesser is scarce felt. Thou'dst shun a bear;
- But if thy flight lay toward the raging sea,
- Thou'dst meet the bear i' the mouth. When the mind's free,
- The body's delicate: the tempest in my mind
- Doth from my senses take all feeling else
- Save what beats there. - Filial ingratitude!
- Is it not as this mouth should tear this hand
- For lifting food to't? - But I will punish home: -
- No, I will weep no more. - In such a night
- To shut me out! - Pour on; I will endure: -
- In such a night as this! O Regan, Goneril! -
- Your old kind father, whose frank heart gave all, -
- O, that way madness lies; let me shun that;
- No more of that.
Kent.
- Good my lord, enter here.
Lear.
- Pr'ythee go in thyself; seek thine own ease:
- This tempest will not give me leave to ponder
- On things would hurt me more. - But I'll go in. -
- [To the Fool.] In, boy; go first. - You houseless poverty, -
- Nay, get thee in. I'll pray, and then I'll sleep. -
[Fool goes in.]
- Poor naked wretches, wheresoe'er you are,
- That bide the pelting of this pitiless storm,
- How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides,
- Your loop'd and window'd raggedness, defend you
- From seasons such as these? O, I have ta'en
- Too little care of this! Take physic, pomp;
- Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel,
- That thou mayst shake the superflux to them
- And show the heavens more just.
Edg.
- [Within.] Fathom and half, fathom and half! Poor Tom!
[The Fool runs out from the hovel.]
Fool.
- Come not in here, nuncle, here's a spirit.
- Help me, help me!
Kent.
- Give me thy hand. - Who's there?
Fool.
- A spirit, a spirit: he says his name's poor Tom.
Kent.
- What art thou that dost grumble there i' the straw?
- Come forth.
[Enter Edgar, disguised as a madman.]
Edg.
- Away! the foul fiend follows me! -
- Through the sharp hawthorn blows the cold wind. -
- Hum! go to thy cold bed, and warm thee.
Lear.
- Didst thou give all to thy two daughters?
- And art thou come to this?
Edg.
- Who gives anything to poor Tom? whom the foul fiend hath led
- through fire and through flame, through ford and whirlpool, o'er
- bog and quagmire; that hath laid knives under his pillow and
- halters in his pew, set ratsbane by his porridge; made him proud
- of heart, to ride on a bay trotting horse over four-inched
- bridges, to course his own shadow for a traitor. - Bless thy five
- wits! - Tom's a-cold. - O, do de, do de, do de. - Bless thee from
- whirlwinds, star-blasting, and taking! Do poor Tom some charity,
- whom the foul fiend vexes: - there could I have him now, - and
- there, - and there again, and there.
- [Storm continues.]
Lear.
- What, have his daughters brought him to this pass? -
- Couldst thou save nothing? Didst thou give 'em all?
Fool.
- Nay, he reserv'd a blanket, else we had been all shamed.
Lear.
- Now all the plagues that in the pendulous air
- Hang fated o'er men's faults light on thy daughters!
Kent.
- He hath no daughters, sir.
Lear.
- Death, traitor! nothing could have subdu'd nature
- To such a lowness but his unkind daughters. -
- Is it the fashion that discarded fathers
- Should have thus little mercy on their flesh?
- Judicious punishment! 'twas this flesh begot
- Those pelican daughters.
Edg.
- Pillicock sat on Pillicock-hill: -
- Halloo, halloo, loo loo!
Fool.
- This cold night will turn us all to fools and madmen.
Edg.
- Take heed o' th' foul fiend: obey thy parents; keep thy word
- justly; swear not; commit not with man's sworn spouse; set not
- thy sweet heart on proud array. Tom's a-cold.
Lear.
- What hast thou been?
Edg.
- A serving-man, proud in heart and mind; that curled my hair;
- wore gloves in my cap; served the lust of my mistress' heart, and
- did the act of darkness with her; swore as many oaths as I spake
- words, and broke them in the sweet face of heaven: one that
- slept in the contriving of lust, and waked to do it: wine loved
- I deeply, dice dearly; and in woman out-paramour'd the Turk;
- false of heart, light of ear, bloody of hand; hog in sloth, fox
- in stealth, wolf in greediness, dog in madness, lion in prey.
- Let not the creaking of shoes nor the rustling of silks betray
- thy poor heart to woman: keep thy foot out of brothel, thy hand
- out of placket, thy pen from lender's book, and defy the foul
- fiend. - Still through the hawthorn blows the cold wind: says
- suum, mun, nonny. Dolphin my boy, boy, sessa! let him trot by.
[Storm still continues.]
Lear.
- Why, thou wert better in thy grave than to answer with thy
- uncovered body this extremity of the skies. - Is man no more than
- this? Consider him well. Thou owest the worm no silk, the beast
- no hide, the sheep no wool, the cat no perfume. - Ha! here's three
- on's are sophisticated! Thou art the thing itself:
- unaccommodated man is no more but such a poor, bare, forked
- animal as thou art. - Off, off, you lendings! - Come, unbutton
- here.
- [Tears off his clothes.]
Fool.
- Pr'ythee, nuncle, be contented; 'tis a naughty night to swim
- in. - Now a little fire in a wild field were like an old lecher's
- heart, - a small spark, all the rest on's body cold. - Look, here
- comes a walking fire.
Edg.
- This is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet: he begins at curfew,
- and walks till the first cock; he gives the web and the pin,
- squints the eye, and makes the harelip; mildews the white wheat,
- and hurts the poor creature of earth.
- Swithold footed thrice the old;
- He met the nightmare, and her nine-fold;
- Bid her alight
- And her troth plight,
- And aroint thee, witch, aroint thee!
Kent.
- How fares your grace?
[Enter Gloucester with a torch.]
Lear.
- What's he?
Kent.
- Who's there? What is't you seek?
Glou.
- What are you there? Your names?
Edg.
- Poor Tom; that eats the swimming frog, the toad, the todpole, the
- wall-newt and the water; that in the fury of his heart, when the
- foul fiend rages, eats cow-dung for sallets; swallows the old rat
- and the ditch-dog; drinks the green mantle of the standing pool;
- who is whipped from tithing to tithing, and stocked, punished,
- and imprisoned; who hath had three suits to his back, six shirts
- to his body, horse to ride, and weapons to wear; -
- But mice and rats, and such small deer,
- Have been Tom's food for seven long year.
- Beware my follower. - Peace, Smulkin; peace, thou fiend!
Glou.
- What, hath your grace no better company?
Edg.
- The prince of darkness is a gentleman:
- Modo he's call'd, and Mahu.
Glou.
- Our flesh and blood, my lord, is grown so vile
- That it doth hate what gets it.
Edg.
- Poor Tom's a-cold.
Glou.
- Go in with me: my duty cannot suffer
- To obey in all your daughters' hard commands;
- Though their injunction be to bar my doors,
- And let this tyrannous night take hold upon you,
- Yet have I ventur'd to come seek you out
- And bring you where both fire and food is ready.
Lear.
- First let me talk with this philosopher. -
- What is the cause of thunder?
Kent.
- Good my lord, take his offer; go into the house.
Lear.
- I'll talk a word with this same learned Theban. -
- What is your study?
Edg.
- How to prevent the fiend and to kill vermin.
Lear.
- Let me ask you one word in private.
Kent.
- Importune him once more to go, my lord;
- His wits begin to unsettle.
Glou.
- Canst thou blame him?
- His daughters seek his death: - ah, that good Kent! -
- He said it would be thus, - poor banish'd man! -
- Thou say'st the king grows mad; I'll tell thee, friend,
- I am almost mad myself: I had a son,
- Now outlaw'd from my blood; he sought my life
- But lately, very late: I lov'd him, friend, -
- No father his son dearer: true to tell thee,
- [Storm continues.]
- The grief hath craz'd my wits. - What a night's this! -
- I do beseech your grace, -
Lear.
- O, cry you mercy, sir. -
- Noble philosopher, your company.
Edg.
- Tom's a-cold.
Glou.
- In, fellow, there, into the hovel; keep thee warm.
Lear.
- Come, let's in all.
Kent.
- This way, my lord.
Lear.
- With him;
- I will keep still with my philosopher.
Kent.
- Good my lord, soothe him; let him take the fellow.
Glou.
- Take him you on.
Kent.
- Sirrah, come on; go along with us.
Lear.
- Come, good Athenian.
Glou.
- No words, no words: hush.
Edg.
- Child Rowland to the dark tower came,
- His word was still - Fie, foh, and fum,
- I smell the blood of a British man.
[Exeunt.]
Scene V. A Room in Gloucester's Castle.
[Enter Cornwall and Edmund.]
Corn.
- I will have my revenge ere I depart his house.
Edm.
- How, my lord, I may be censured, that nature thus gives way to
- loyalty, something fears me to think of.
Corn.
- I now perceive it was not altogether your brother's evil
- disposition made him seek his death; but a provoking merit, set
- a-work by a reproveable badness in himself.
Edm.
- How malicious is my fortune, that I must repent to be just! This
- is the letter he spoke of, which approves him an intelligent
- party to the advantages of France. O heavens! that this treason
- were not - or not I the detector!
Corn.
- Go with me to the duchess.
Edm.
- If the matter of this paper be certain, you have mighty business
- in hand.
Corn.
- True or false, it hath made thee earl of Gloucester. Seek out
- where thy father is, that he may be ready for our apprehension.
Edm.
- [Aside.] If I find him comforting the king, it will stuff his
- suspicion more fully. - I will persever in my course of loyalty,
- though the conflict be sore between that and my blood.
Corn.
- I will lay trust upon thee; and thou shalt find a dearer father
- in my love.
[Exeunt.]
Scene VI. A Chamber in a Farmhouse adjoining the Castle.
[Enter Gloucester, Lear, Kent, Fool, and Edgar.]
Glou.
- Here is better than the open air; take it thankfully. I will
- piece out the comfort with what addition I can: I will not be
- long from you.
Kent.
- All the power of his wits have given way to his impatience: -
- the gods reward your kindness!
[Exit Gloucester.]
Edg.
- Frateretto calls me; and tells me Nero is an angler in the lake
- of darkness. - Pray, innocent, and beware the foul fiend.
Fool.
- Pr'ythee, nuncle, tell me whether a madman be a gentleman or a
- yeoman.
Lear.
- A king, a king!
Fool.
- No, he's a yeoman that has a gentleman to his son; for he's a mad
- yeoman that sees his son a gentleman before him.
Lear.
- To have a thousand with red burning spits
- Come hissing in upon 'em, -
Edg.
- The foul fiend bites my back.
Fool.
- He's mad that trusts in the tameness of a wolf, a horse's health,
- a boy's love, or a whore's oath.
Lear.
- It shall be done; I will arraign them straight. -
- [To Edgar.] Come, sit thou here, most learned justicer -
- [To the Fool.] Thou, sapient sir, sit here. Now, you she-foxes! -
Edg.
- Look, where he stands and glares! - Want'st thou eyes at trial,
- madam?
- Come o'er the bourn, Bessy, to me, -
Fool.
- Her boat hath a leak,
- And she must not speak
- Why she dares not come over to thee.
Edg.
- The foul fiend haunts poor Tom in the voice of a nightingale.
- Hoppedance cries in Tom's belly for two white herring. Croak not,
- black angel; I have no food for thee.
Kent.
- How do you, sir? Stand you not so amaz'd;
- Will you lie down and rest upon the cushions?
Lear.
- I'll see their trial first. - Bring in their evidence.
- [To Edgar.] Thou, robed man of justice, take thy place; -
- [To the Fool.] And thou, hi
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