|
*TITLE*
DRAMATIS PERSONAE (Persons Represented):
- FERDINAND, King of Navarre
- BEROWNE, Lord attending on the King
- LONGAVILLE, Lord attending on the King
- DUMAINE, Lord attending on the King
- BOYET, Lord attending on the Princess of France
- MARCADE, Lord attending on the Princess of France
- DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO, a fantastical Spaniard
- SIR NATHANIEL, a Curate
- HOLOFERNES, a Schoolmaster
- DULL, a Constable
- COSTARD, a Clown
- MOTH, Page to Armado
- A FORESTER
- THE PRINCESS OF FRANCE
- ROSALINE, Lady attending on the Princess
- MARIA, Lady attending on the Princess
- KATHARINE, Lady attending on the Princess
- JAQUENETTA, a country wench
- Officers and Others, Attendants on the King and Princess.
SCENE: Navarre
<
ACT I.
SCENE I. The King of Navarre's park
[Enter the King, BEROWNE, LONGAVILLE, and DUMAIN.]
KING.
- Let fame, that all hunt after in their lives,
- Live regist'red upon our brazen tombs,
- And then grace us in the disgrace of death;
- When, spite of cormorant devouring Time,
- The endeavour of this present breath may buy
- That honour which shall bate his scythe's keen edge,
- And make us heirs of all eternity.
- Therefore, brave conquerors-for so you are
- That war against your own affections
- And the huge army of the world's desires-
- Our late edict shall strongly stand in force:
- Navarre shall be the wonder of the world;
- Our court shall be a little academe,
- Still and contemplative in living art.
- You three, Berowne, Dumain, and Longaville,
- Have sworn for three years' term to live with me,
- My fellow-scholars, and to keep those statutes
- That are recorded in this schedule here:
- Your oaths are pass'd; and now subscribe your names,
- That his own hand may strike his honour down
- That violates the smallest branch herein.
- If you are arm'd to do as sworn to do,
- Subscribe to your deep oaths, and keep it too.
LONGAVILLE.
- I am resolv'd; 'tis but a three years' fast:
- The mind shall banquet, though the body pine:
- Fat paunches have lean pates; and dainty bits
- Make rich the ribs, but bankrupt quite the wits.
DUMAINE.
- My loving lord, Dumain is mortified:
- The grosser manner of these world's delights
- He throws upon the gross world's baser slaves;
- To love, to wealth, to pomp, I pine and die,
- With all these living in philosophy.
BEROWNE.
- I can but say their protestation over;
- So much, dear liege, I have already sworn,
- That is, to live and study here three years.
- But there are other strict observances:
- As, not to see a woman in that term,
- Which I hope well is not enrolled there:
- And one day in a week to touch no food,
- And but one meal on every day beside;
- The which I hope is not enrolled there:
- And then to sleep but three hours in the night
- And not be seen to wink of all the day,-
- When I was wont to think no harm all night,
- And make a dark night too of half the day,-
- Which I hope well is not enrolled there.
- O! these are barren tasks, too hard to keep,
- Not to see ladies, study, fast, not sleep.
KING.
- Your oath is pass'd to pass away from these.
BEROWNE.
- Let me say no, my liege, an if you please:
- I only swore to study with your Grace,
- And stay here in your court for three years' space.
LONGAVILLE.
- You swore to that, Berowne, and to the rest.
BEROWNE.
- By yea and nay, sir, then I swore in jest.
- What is the end of study? let me know.
KING.
- Why, that to know which else we should not know.
BEROWNE.
- Things hid and barr'd, you mean, from common sense?
KING. Ay, that is study's god-like recompense.
BEROWNE.
- Come on, then; I will swear to study so,
- To know the thing I am forbid to know,
- As thus: to study where I well may dine,
- When I to feast expressly am forbid;
- Or study where to meet some mistress fine,
- When mistresses from common sense are hid;
- Or, having sworn too hard-a-keeping oath,
- Study to break it, and not break my troth.
- If study's gain be thus, and this be so,
- Study knows that which yet it doth not know.
- Swear me to this, and I will ne'er say no.
KING.
- These be the stops that hinder study quite,
- And train our intellects to vain delight.
BEROWNE.
- Why, all delights are vain; but that most vain
- Which, with pain purchas'd, doth inherit pain:
- As painfully to pore upon a book,
- To seek the light of truth; while truth the while
- Doth falsely blind the eyesight of his look.
- Light, seeking light, doth light of light beguile;
- So, ere you find where light in darkness lies,
- Your light grows dark by losing of your eyes.
- Study me how to please the eye indeed,
- By fixing it upon a fairer eye;
- Who dazzling so, that eye shall be his heed,
- And give him light that it was blinded by.
- Study is like the heaven's glorious sun,
- That will not be deep-search'd with saucy looks;
- Small have continual plodders ever won,
- Save base authority from others' books.
- These earthly godfathers of heaven's lights
- That give a name to every fixed star
- Have no more profit of their shining nights
- Than those that walk and wot not what they are.
- Too much to know is to know nought but fame;
- And every godfather can give a name.
KING.
- How well he's read, to reason against reading!
DUMAINE.
- Proceeded well, to stop all good proceeding!
LONGAVILLE.
- He weeds the corn, and still lets grow the weeding.
BEROWNE.
- The spring is near, when green geese are a-breeding.
DUMAINE.
- How follows that?
BEROWNE.
- Fit in his place and time.
DUMAINE.
- In reason nothing.
BEROWNE.
- Something then in rime.
LONGAVILLE.
- Berowne is like an envious sneaping frost
- That bites the first-born infants of the spring.
BEROWNE.
- Well, say I am: why should proud summer boast
- Before the birds have any cause to sing?
- Why should I joy in any abortive birth?
- At Christmas I no more desire a rose
- Than wish a snow in May's new-fangled shows;
- But like of each thing that in season grows;
- So you, to study now it is too late,
- Climb o'er the house to unlock the little gate.
KING.
- Well, sit out; go home, Berowne; adieu.
BEROWNE.
- No, my good lord; I have sworn to stay with you;
- And though I have for barbarism spoke more
- Than for that angel knowledge you can say,
- Yet confident I'll keep what I have swore,
- And bide the penance of each three years' day.
- Give me the paper; let me read the same;
- And to the strict'st decrees I'll write my name.
KING.
- How well this yielding rescues thee from shame!
BEROWNE.
- 'Item. That no woman shall come within a mile of
- my court.'Hath this been proclaimed?
LONGAVILLE.
- Four days ago.
BEROWNE.
- Let's see the penalty. 'On pain of losing her
- tongue.' Who devised this penalty?
LONGAVILLE.
- Marry, that did I.
BEROWNE.
- Sweet lord, and why?
LONGAVILLE.
- To fright them hence with that dread penalty.
BEROWNE.
- A dangerous law against gentility!
- 'Item. If any man be seen to talk with a woman within
- the term of three years, he shall endure such public shame as the
- rest of the court can possibly devise.'
- This article, my liege, yourself must break;
- For well you know here comes in embassy
- The French king's daughter, with yourself to speak-
- A mild of grace and complete majesty-
- About surrender up of Aquitaine
- To her decrepit, sick, and bedrid father:
- Therefore this article is made in vain,
- Or vainly comes th' admired princess hither.
KING.
- What say you, lords? why, this was quite forgot.
BEROWNE.
- So study evermore is over-shot:
- While it doth study to have what it would,
- It doth forget to do the thing it should;
- And when it hath the thing it hunteth most,
- 'Tis won as towns with fire; so won, so lost.
KING.
- We must of force dispense with this decree;
- She must lie here on mere necessity.
BEROWNE.
- Necessity will make us all forsworn
- Three thousand times within this three years' space;
- For every man with his affects is born,
- Not by might master'd, but by special grace.
- If I break faith, this word shall speak for me:
- I am forsworn 'on mere necessity.'
- So to the laws at large I write my name; [Subscribes]
- And he that breaks them in the least degree
- Stands in attainder of eternal shame.
- Suggestions are to other as to me;
- But I believe, although I seem so loath,
- I am the last that will last keep his oath.
- But is there no quick recreation granted?
KING.
- Ay, that there is. Our court, you know, is haunted
- With a refined traveller of Spain;
- A man in all the world's new fashion planted,
- That hath a mint of phrases in his brain;
- One who the music of his own vain tongue
- Doth ravish like enchanting harmony;
- A man of complements, whom right and wrong
- Have chose as umpire of their mutiny:
- This child of fancy, that Armado hight,
- For interim to our studies shall relate,
- In high-born words, the worth of many a knight
- From tawny Spain lost in the world's debate.
- How you delight, my lords, I know not, I;
- But, I protest, I love to hear him lie,
- And I will use him for my minstrelsy.
BEROWNE.
- Armado is a most illustrious wight,
- A man of fire-new words, fashion's own knight.
LONGAVILLE.
- Costard the swain and he shall be our sport;
- And so to study three years is but short.
[Enter DULL, with a letter, and COSTARD.]
DULL.
- Which is the duke's own person?
BEROWNE.
- This, fellow. What wouldst?
DULL.
- I myself reprehend his own person, for I am his Grace's
- tharborough: but I would see his own person in flesh and blood.
BEROWNE.
- This is he.
DULL.
- Signior Arm-Arm-commends you. There's villainy abroad:
- this letter will tell you more.
COSTARD.
- Sir, the contempts thereof are as touching me.
KING.
- A letter from the magnificent Armado.
BEROWNE.
- How long soever the matter, I hope in God for high words.
LONGAVILLE.
- A high hope for a low heaven: God grant us patience!
BEROWNE.
- To hear, or forbear laughing?
LONGAVILLE.
- To hear meekly, sir, and to laugh moderately; or, to
- forbear both.
BEROWNE.
- Well, sir, be it as the style shall give us cause to climb
- in the merriness.
COSTARD.
- The matter is to me, sir, as concerning Jaquenetta.
- The manner of it is, I was taken with the manner.
BEROWNE.
- In what manner?
COSTARD.
- In manner and form following, sir; all those three: I was
- seen with her in the manor-house, sitting with her upon the form,
- and taken following her into the park; which, put together, is in
- manner and form following. Now, sir, for the manner,-it is the
- manner of a man to speak to a woman, for the form,-in some form.
BEROWNE.
- For the following, sir?
COSTARD.
- As it shall follow in my correction; and God defend the right!
KING.
- Will you hear this letter with attention?
BEROWNE.
- As we would hear an oracle.
COSTARD.
- Such is the simplicity of man to hearken after the flesh.
KING.
- 'Great deputy, the welkin's vicegerent and sole dominator of
- Navarre, my soul's earth's god and body's fostering patron,'
COSTARD.
- Not a word of Costard yet.
KING.
- 'So it is,'-
COSTARD.
- It may be so; but if he say it is so, he is, in telling
- true, but so.-
KING.
- Peace!
COSTARD.
- Be to me, and every man that dares not fight!
KING.
- No words!
COSTARD.
- Of other men's secrets, I beseech you.
KING.
- 'So it is, besieged with sable-coloured melancholy, I
- did commend the black-oppressing humour to the most wholesome
- physic of thy health-giving air; and, as I am a gentleman, betook
- myself to walk. The time when? About the sixth hour; when beasts
- most graze, birds best peck, and men sit down to that nourishment
- which is called supper: so much for the time when. Now for the
- ground which; which, I mean, I upon; it is ycleped thy park. Then
- for the place where; where, I mean, I did encounter that obscene
- and most preposterous event, that draweth from my snow-white pen
- the ebon-coloured ink which here thou viewest, beholdest,
- surveyest, or seest. But to the place where, it standeth
- north-north-east and by east from the west corner of thy
- curious-knotted garden: there did I see that low-spirited swain,
- that base minnow of thy mirth,'-
COSTARD.
- Me.
KING.
- 'that unlettered small-knowing soul,'-
COSTARD.
- Me.
KING.
- 'that shallow vassal,'-
COSTARD.
- Still me.-
KING.
- 'which, as I remember, hight Costard,'-
COSTARD.
- O me.
KING.
- 'sorted and consorted, contrary to thy established proclaimed
- edict and continent canon, with-with,-O! with but with this I
- passion to say wherewith,'-
COSTARD.
- With a wench.
KING.
- 'with a child of our grandmother Eve, a female; or, for thy
- more sweet understanding, a woman. Him, I,-as my ever-esteemed
- duty pricks me on,-have sent to thee, to receive the meed of
- punishment, by thy sweet Grace's officer, Antony Dull, a man of
- good repute, carriage, bearing, and estimation.'
DULL.
- Me, an't please you; I am Antony Dull.
KING.
- 'For Jaquenetta,-so is the weaker vessel called, which I
- apprehended with the aforesaid swain,-I keep her as a vessel of
- thy law's fury; and shall, at the least of thy sweet notice,
- bring her to trial. Thine, in all compliments of devoted and
- heart-burning heat of duty,
- DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO.'
BEROWNE.
- This is not so well as I looked for, but the best that ever I
- heard.
KING.
- Ay, the best for the worst. But, sirrah, what say you to this?
COSTARD.
- Sir, I confess the wench.
KING.
- Did you hear the proclamation?
COSTARD.
- I do confess much of the hearing it, but little of the
- marking of it.
KING.
- It was proclaimed a year's imprisonment to be taken with a
- wench.
COSTARD.
- I was taken with none, sir: I was taken with a damosel.
KING.
- Well, it was proclaimed 'damosel'.
COSTARD.
- This was no damosel neither, sir; she was a 'virgin'.
KING.
- It is so varied too; for it was proclaimed 'virgin'.
COSTARD.
- If it were, I deny her virginity: I was taken with a maid.
KING.
- This maid not serve your turn, sir.
COSTARD.
- This maid will serve my turn, sir.
KING.
- Sir, I will pronounce your sentence: you shall fast a week
- with bran and water.
COSTARD.
- I had rather pray a month with mutton and porridge.
KING.
- And Don Armado shall be your keeper.
- My Lord Berowne, see him delivered o'er:
- And go we, lords, to put in practice that
- Which each to other hath so strongly sworn.
[Exeunt KING, LONGAVILLE, and DUMAIN.]
BEROWNE.
- I'll lay my head to any good man's hat
- These oaths and laws will prove an idle scorn.
- Sirrah, come on.
COSTARD.
- I suffer for the truth, sir: for true it is I was taken
- with Jaquenetta, and Jaquenetta is a true girl; and therefore
- welcome the sour cup of prosperity! Affliction may one day smile
- again; and till then, sit thee down, sorrow!
[Exeunt.]
SCENE II. The park.
[Enter ARMADO and MOTH.]
ARMADO.
- Boy, what sign is it when a man of great spirit grows
- melancholy?
MOTH.
- A great sign, sir, that he will look sad.
ARMADO.
- Why, sadness is one and the self-same thing, dear imp.
MOTH.
- No, no; O Lord, sir, no.
ARMADO.
- How canst thou part sadness and melancholy, my tender
- juvenal?
MOTH.
- By a familiar demonstration of the working, my tough senior.
ARMADO.
- Why tough senior? Why tough senior?
MOTH.
- Why tender juvenal? Why tender juvenal?
ARMADO.
- I spoke it, tender juvenal, as a congruent epitheton
- appertaining to thy young days, which we may nominate tender.
MOTH.
- And I, tough senior, as an appertinent title to your old
- time, which we may name tough.
ARMADO.
- Pretty and apt.
MOTH.
- How mean you, sir? I pretty, and my saying apt? or I apt, and
- my saying pretty?
ARMADO.
- Thou pretty, because little.
MOTH.
- Little pretty, because little. Wherefore apt?
ARMADO.
- And therefore apt, because quick.
MOTH.
- Speak you this in my praise, master?
ARMADO.
- In thy condign praise.
MOTH.
- I will praise an eel with the same praise.
ARMADO.
- What! That an eel is ingenious?
MOTH.
- That an eel is quick.
ARMADO.
- I do say thou art quick in answers: thou heat'st my blood.
MOTH.
- I am answered, sir.
ARMADO.
- I love not to be crossed.
MOTH.
- [Aside] He speaks the mere contrary: crosses love not him.
ARMADO.
- I have promised to study three years with the duke.
MOTH.
- You may do it in an hour, sir.
ARMADO.
- Impossible.
MOTH.
- How many is one thrice told?
- @@@@
ARMADO.
- I am ill at reck'ning; it fitteth the spirit of a tapster.
MOTH.
- You are a gentleman and a gamester, sir.
ARMADO.
- I confess both: they are both the varnish of a complete man.
MOTH.
- Then I am sure you know how much the gross sum of deuce-ace
- amounts to.
ARMADO.
- It doth amount to one more than two.
MOTH.
- Which the base vulgar do call three.
ARMADO.
- True.
MOTH.
- Why, sir, is this such a piece of study? Now here's three
- studied ere ye'll thrice wink; and how easy it is to put 'years'
- to the word 'three,' and study three years in two words, the
- dancing horse will tell you.
ARMADO.
- A most fine figure!
MOTH.
- [Aside] To prove you a cipher.
ARMADO.
- I will hereupon confess I am in love; and as it is base for
- a soldier to love, so am I in love with a base wench. If drawing
- my sword against the humour of affection would deliver me from
- the reprobate thought of it, I would take Desire prisoner, and
- ransom him to any French courtier for a new-devised curtsy. I
- think scorn to sigh: methinks I should out-swear Cupid. Comfort
- me, boy: what great men have been in love?
MOTH.
- Hercules, master.
ARMADO.
- Most sweet Hercules! More authority, dear boy, name more;
- and, sweet my child, let them be men of good repute and carriage.
MOTH.
- Samson, master: he was a man of good carriage, great
- carriage, for he carried the town gates on his back like a
- porter; and he was in love.
ARMADO.
- O well-knit Samson! strong-jointed Samson! I do excel thee
- in my rapier as much as thou didst me in carrying gates. I am in
- love too. Who was Samson's love, my dear Moth?
MOTH.
- A woman, master.
ARMADO.
- Of what complexion?
MOTH.
- Of all the four, or the three, or the two, or one of the
- four.
ARMADO.
- Tell me precisely of what complexion.
MOTH.
- Of the sea-water green, sir.
ARMADO.
- Is that one of the four complexions?
MOTH.
- As I have read, sir; and the best of them too.
ARMADO.
- Green, indeed, is the colour of lovers; but to have a love
- of that colour, methinks Samson had small reason for it. He
- surely affected her for her wit.
MOTH.
- It was so, sir, for she had a green wit.
ARMADO.
- My love is most immaculate white and red.
MOTH.
- Most maculate thoughts, master, are masked under such
- colours.
ARMADO.
- Define, define, well-educated infant.
MOTH.
- My father's wit my mother's tongue assist me!
ARMADO.
- Sweet invocation of a child; most pretty, and pathetical!
MOTH.
- If she be made of white and red,
- Her faults will ne'er be known;
- For blushing cheeks by faults are bred,
- And fears by pale white shown.
- Then if she fear, or be to blame,
- By this you shall not know,
- For still her cheeks possess the same
- Which native she doth owe.
- A dangerous rhyme, master, against the reason of white and red.
ARMADO.
- Is there not a ballad, boy, of the King and the Beggar?
MOTH.
- The world was very guilty of such a ballad some three ages
- since; but I think now 'tis not to be found; or if it were, it
- would neither serve for the writing nor the tune.
ARMADO.
- I will have that subject newly writ o'er, that I may
- example my digression by some mighty precedent. Boy, I do love
- that country girl that I took in the park with the rational hind
- Costard: she deserves well.
MOTH.
- [Aside] To be whipped; and yet a better love than my master.
ARMADO.
- Sing, boy: my spirit grows heavy in love.
MOTH.
- And that's great marvel, loving a light wench.
ARMADO.
- I say, sing.
MOTH.
- Forbear till this company be past.
[Enter DULL, COSTARD, and JAQUENETTA.]
DULL.
- Sir, the Duke's pleasure is, that you keep Costard safe: and
- you must suffer him to take no delight nor no penance; but a'
- must fast three days a week. For this damsel, I must keep her at
- the park; she is allowed for the day-woman. Fare you well.
ARMADO.
- I do betray myself with blushing. Maid!
JAQUENETTA.
- Man?
ARMADO.
- I will visit thee at the lodge.
JAQUENETTA.
- That's hereby.
ARMADO.
- I know where it is situate.
JAQUENETTA.
- Lord, how wise you are!
ARMADO.
- I will tell thee wonders.
JAQUENETTA.
- With that face?
ARMADO.
- I love thee.
JAQUENETTA.
- So I heard you say.
ARMADO.
- And so, farewell.
JAQUENETTA.
- Fair weather after you!
DULL.
- Come, Jaquenetta, away!
[Exit with JAQUENETTA.]
ARMADO.
- Villain, thou shalt fast for thy offences ere thou be
- pardoned.
COSTARD.
- Well, sir, I hope when I do it I shall do it on a full
- stomach.
ARMADO.
- Thou shalt be heavily punished.
COSTARD.
- I am more bound to you than your fellows, for they are but
- lightly rewarded.
ARMADO.
- Take away this villain: shut him up.
MOTH.
- Come, you transgressing slave: away!
COSTARD.
- Let me not be pent up, sir: I will fast, being loose.
MOTH.
- No, sir; that were fast and loose: thou shalt to prison.
COSTARD.
- Well, if ever I do see the merry days of desolation that I
- have seen, some shall see-
MOTH.
- What shall some see?
COSTARD.
- Nay, nothing, Master Moth, but what they look upon. It is
- not for prisoners to be too silent in their words, and therefore
- I will say nothing. I thank God I have as little patience as
- another man, and therefore I can be quiet.
[Exeunt MOTH and COSTARD.]
ARMADO.
- I do affect the very ground, which is base, where her shoe,
- which is baser, guided by her foot, which is basest, doth tread.
- I shall be forsworn,-which is a great argument of falsehood,-if
- I love. And how can that be true love which is falsely attempted?
- Love is a familiar; Love is a devil; there is no evil angel but
- Love. Yet was Samson so tempted, and he had an excellent
- strength; yet was Solomon so seduced, and he had a very good wit.
- Cupid's butt-shaft is too hard for Hercules' club, and therefore
- too much odds for a Spaniard's rapier. The first and second cause
- will not serve my turn; the passado he respects not, the duello
- he regards not; his disgrace is to be called boy, but his glory
- is to subdue men. Adieu, valour! rust, rapier! be still, drum!
- for your manager is in love; yea, he loveth. Assist me, some
- extemporal god of rime, for I am sure I shall turn sonneter.
- Devise, wit; write, pen; for I am for whole volumes in folio.
[Exit.]
ACT II.
SCENE II. The King of Navarre's park. A pavilion and tents at adistance.
[Enter the PRINCESS OF FRANCE, ROSALINE, MARIA, KATHARINE, BOYET, LORDS, and other Attendants.]
BOYET.
- Now, madam, summon up your dearest spirits:
- Consider who the king your father sends,
- To whom he sends, and what's his embassy:
- Yourself, held precious in the world's esteem,
- To parley with the sole inheritor
- Of all perfections that a man may owe,
- Matchless Navarre; the plea of no less weight
- Than Aquitaine, a dowry for a queen.
- Be now as prodigal of all dear grace
- As Nature was in making graces dear
- When she did starve the general world beside,
- And prodigally gave them all to you.
PRINCESS.
- Good Lord Boyet, my beauty, though but mean,
- Needs not the painted flourish of your praise:
- Beauty is bought by judgment of the eye,
- Not utt'red by base sale of chapmen's tongues.
- I am less proud to hear you tell my worth
- Than you much willing to be counted wise
- In spending your wit in the praise of mine.
- But now to task the tasker: good Boyet,
- You are not ignorant, all-telling fame
- Doth noise abroad, Navarre hath made a vow,
- Till painful study shall outwear three years,
- No woman may approach his silent court:
- Therefore to's seemeth it a needful course,
- Before we enter his forbidden gates,
- To know his pleasure; and in that behalf,
- Bold of your worthiness, we single you
- As our best-moving fair solicitor.
- Tell him the daughter of the King of France,
- On serious business, craving quick dispatch,
- Importunes personal conference with his Grace.
- Haste, signify so much; while we attend,
- Like humble-visag'd suitors, his high will.
BOYET.
- Proud of employment, willingly I go.
PRINCESS.
- All pride is willing pride, and yours is so.
[Exit BOYET.]
- Who are the votaries, my loving lords,
- That are vow-fellows with this virtuous duke?
FIRST LORD.
- Lord Longaville is one.
PRINCESS.
- Know you the man?
MARIA.
- I know him, madam: at a marriage feast,
- Between Lord Perigort and the beauteous heir
- Of Jaques Falconbridge, solemnized
- In Normandy, saw I this Longaville.
- A man of sovereign parts, he is esteem'd,
- Well fitted in arts, glorious in arms:
- Nothing becomes him ill that he would well.
- The only soil of his fair virtue's gloss,-
- If virtue's gloss will stain with any soil,-
- Is a sharp wit match'd with too blunt a will;
- Whose edge hath power to cut, whose will still wills
- It should none spare that come within his power.
PRINCESS.
- Some merry mocking lord, belike; is't so?
MARIA.
- They say so most that most his humours know.
PRINCESS.
- Such short-liv'd wits do wither as they grow.
- Who are the rest?
KATHARINE.
- The young Dumain, a well-accomplish'd youth,
- Of all that virtue love for virtue lov'd;
- Most power to do most harm, least knowing ill,
- For he hath wit to make an ill shape good,
- And shape to win grace though he had no wit.
- I saw him at the Duke Alencon's once;
- And much too little of that good I saw
- Is my report to his great worthiness.
ROSALINE.
- Another of these students at that time
- Was there with him, if I have heard a truth:
- Berowne they call him; but a merrier man,
- Within the limit of becoming mirth,
- I never spent an hour's talk withal.
- His eye begets occasion for his wit,
- For every object that the one doth catch
- The other turns to a mirth-moving jest,
- Which his fair tongue, conceit's expositor,
- Delivers in such apt and gracious words
- That aged ears play truant at his tales,
- And younger hearings are quite ravished;
- So sweet and voluble is his discourse.
PRINCESS.
- God bless my ladies! Are they all in love,
- That every one her own hath garnished
- With such bedecking ornaments of praise?
FIRST LORD.
- Here comes Boyet.
[Re-enter BOYET.]
PRINCESS.
- Now, what admittance, lord?
BOYET.
- Navarre had notice of your fair approach,
- And he and his competitors in oath
- Were all address'd to meet you, gentle lady,
- Before I came. Marry, thus much I have learnt;
- He rather means to lodge you in the field,
- Like one that comes here to besiege his court,
- Than seek a dispensation for his oath,
- To let you enter his unpeeled house.
- Here comes Navarre.
[The LADIES mask.]
[Enter KING, LONGAVILLE, DUMAINE, BEROWNE, and ATTENDANTS.]
KING.
- Fair Princess, welcome to the court of Navarre.
PRINCESS.
- 'Fair' I give you back again; and 'welcome' I have not yet: the
- roof of this court is too high to be yours, and welcome to the
- wide fields too base to be mine.
KING.
- You shall be welcome, madam, to my court.
PRINCESS.
- I will be welcome then: conduct me thither.
KING.
- Hear me, dear lady; I have sworn an oath.
PRINCESS.
- Our Lady help my lord! he'll be forsworn.
KING.
- Not for the world, fair madam, by my will.
PRINCESS.
- Why, will shall break it; will, and nothing else.
KING.
- Your ladyship is ignorant what it is.
PRINCESS.
- Were my lord so, his ignorance were wise,
- Where now his knowledge must prove ignorance.
- I hear your Grace hath sworn out house-keeping:
- 'Tis deadly sin to keep that oath, my lord,
- And sin to break it.
- But pardon me, I am too sudden bold:
- To teach a teacher ill beseemeth me.
- Vouchsafe to read the purpose of my coming,
- And suddenly resolve me in my suit.
[Gives a paper.]
KING.
- Madam, I will, if suddenly I may.
PRINCESS.
- You will the sooner that I were away,
- For you'll prove perjur'd if you make me stay.
BEROWNE.
- Did not I dance with you in Brabant once?
ROSALINE.
- Did not I dance with you in Brabant once?
BEROWNE.
- I know you did.
ROSALINE.
- How needless was it then
- To ask the question!
BEROWNE.
- You must not be so quick.
ROSALINE.
- 'Tis long of you, that spur me with such questions.
BEROWNE.
- Your wit's too hot, it speeds too fast, 'twill tire.
ROSALINE.
- Not till it leave the rider in the mire.
BEROWNE.
- What time o' day?
ROSALINE.
- The hour that fools should ask.
BEROWNE.
- Now fair befall your mask!
ROSALINE.
- Fair fall the face it covers!
BEROWNE.
- And send you many lovers!
ROSALINE.
- Amen, so you be none.
BEROWNE.
- Nay, then will I be gone.
KING.
- Madam, your father here doth intimate
- The payment of a hundred thousand crowns;
- Being but the one half of an entire sum
- Disbursed by my father in his wars.
- But say that he or we,-as neither have,-
- Receiv'd that sum, yet there remains unpaid
- A hundred thousand more, in surety of the which,
- One part of Aquitaine is bound to us,
- Although not valued to the money's worth.
- If then the King your father will restore
- But that one half which is unsatisfied,
- We will give up our right in Aquitaine,
- And hold fair friendship with his majesty.
- But that, it seems, he little purposeth,
- For here he doth demand to have repaid
- A hundred thousand crowns; and not demands,
- On payment of a hundred thousand crowns,
- To have his title live in Aquitaine;
- Which we much rather had depart withal,
- And have the money by our father lent,
- Than Aquitaine so gelded as it is.
- Dear Princess, were not his requests so far
- From reason's yielding, your fair self should make
- A yielding 'gainst some reason in my breast,
- And go well satisfied to France again.
PRINCESS.
- You do the king my father too much wrong,
- And wrong the reputation of your name,
- In so unseeming to confess receipt
- Of that which hath so faithfully been paid.
KING.
- I do protest I never heard of it;
- And, if you prove it, I'll repay it back
- Or yield up Aquitaine.
PRINCESS.
- We arrest your word.
- Boyet, you can produce acquittances
- For such a sum from special officers
- Of Charles his father.
KING.
- Satisfy me so.
BOYET.
- So please your Grace, the packet is not come,
- Where that and other specialties are bound:
- To-morrow you shall have a sight of them.
KING.
- It shall suffice me; at which interview
- All liberal reason I will yield unto.
- Meantime receive such welcome at my hand
- As honour, without breach of honour, may
- Make tender of to thy true worthiness.
- You may not come, fair Princess, in my gates;
- But here without you shall be so receiv'd
- As you shall deem yourself lodg'd in my heart,
- Though so denied fair harbour in my house.
- Your own good thoughts excuse me, and farewell:
- To-morrow shall we visit you again.
PRINCESS.
- Sweet health and fair desires consort your Grace!
KING.
- Thy own wish wish I thee in every place.
[Exeunt KING and his Train.]
BEROWNE.
- Lady, I will commend you to mine own heart.
ROSALINE.
- Pray you, do my commendations; I would be glad to see it.
BEROWNE.
- I would you heard it groan.
ROSALINE.
- Is the fool sick?
BEROWNE.
- Sick at the heart.
ROSALINE.
- Alack! let it blood.
BEROWNE.
- Would that do it good?
ROSALINE.
- My physic says 'ay.'
BEROWNE.
- Will you prick't with your eye?
ROSALINE.
- No point, with my knife.
BEROWNE.
- Now, God save thy life!
ROSALINE.
- And yours from long living!
BEROWNE.
- I cannot stay thanksgiving.
[Retiring.]
DUMAINE.
- Sir, I pray you, a word: what lady is that same?
BOYET.
- The heir of Alencon, Katharine her name.
DUMAINE.
- A gallant lady! Monsieur, fare you well.
[Exit.]
LONGAVILLE.
- I beseech you a word: what is she in the white?
BOYET.
- A woman sometimes, an you saw her in the light.
LONGAVILLE.
- Perchance light in the light. I desire her name.
BOYET.
- She hath but one for herself; to desire that were a shame.
LONGAVILLE.
- Pray you, sir, whose daughter?
BOYET.
- Her mother's, I have heard.
LONGAVILLE.
- God's blessing on your beard!
BOYET.
- Good sir, be not offended.
- She is an heir of Falconbridge.
LONGAVILLE.
- Nay, my choler is ended.
- She is a most sweet lady.
BOYET.
- Not unlike, sir; that may be.
[Exit LONGAVILLE.]
BEROWNE.
- What's her name in the cap?
BOYET.
- Rosaline, by good hap.
BEROWNE.
- Is she wedded or no?
BOYET.
- To her will, sir, or so.
BEROWNE.
- You are welcome, sir. Adieu!
BOYET.
- Farewell to me, sir, and welcome to you.
[Exit BEROWNE.-LADIES unmask.]
MARIA.
- That last is Berowne, the merry mad-cap lord;
- Not a word with him but a jest.
BOYET.
- And every jest but a word.
PRINCESS.
- It was well done of you to take him at his word.
BOYET.
- I was as willing to grapple as he was to board.
MARIA.
- Two hot sheeps, marry!
BOYET.
- And wherefore not ships?
- No sheep, sweet lamb, unless we feed on your lips.
MARIA.
- You sheep and I pasture: shall that finish the jest?
BOYET.
- So you grant pasture for me.
[Offering to kiss her.]
MARIA.
- Not so, gentle beast.
- My lips are no common, though several they be.
BOYET.
- Belonging to whom?
MARIA.
- To my fortunes and me.
PRINCESS.
- Good wits will be jangling; but, gentles, agree;
- This civil war of wits were much better us'd
- On Navarre and his book-men, for here 'tis abus'd.
BOYET.
- If my observation,-which very seldom lies,
- By the heart's still rhetoric disclosed with eyes,
- Deceive me not now, Navarre is infected.
PRINCESS.
- With what?
BOYET.
- With that which we lovers entitle affected.
PRINCESS.
- Your reason.
BOYET.
- Why, all his behaviours did make their retire
- To the court of his eye, peeping thorough desire;
- His heart, like an agate, with your print impress'd,
- Proud with his form, in his eye pride express'd;
- His tongue, all impatient to speak and not see,
- Did stumble with haste in his eyesight to be;
- All senses to that sense did make their repair,
- To feel only looking on fairest of fair.
- Methought all his senses were lock'd in his eye,
- As jewels in crystal for some prince to buy;
- Who, tend'ring their own worth from where they were glass'd,
- Did point you to buy them, along as you pass'd.
- His face's own margent did quote such amazes
- That all eyes saw his eyes enchanted with gazes.
- I'll give you Aquitaine, and all that is his,
- An you give him for my sake but one loving kiss.
PRINCESS.
- Come, to our pavilion: Boyet is dispos'd.
BOYET.
- But to speak that in words which his eye hath disclos'd.
- I only have made a mouth of his eye,
- By adding a tongue which I know will not lie.
ROSALINE.
- Thou art an old love-monger, and speak'st skilfully.
MARIA.
- He is Cupid's grandfather, and learns news of him.
ROSALINE.
- Then was Venus like her mother; for her father is but grim.
BOYET.
- Do you hear, my mad wenches?
MARIA.
- No.
BOYET.
- What, then, do you see?
ROSALINE.
- Ay, our way to be gone.
BOYET.
- You are too hard for me.
[Exeunt.]
ACT III.
SCENE I. The King of Navarre's park.
[Enter ARMADO and MOTH.]
ARMADO.
- Warble, child; make passionate my sense of hearing.
MOTH [Singing.]
- Concolinel,-
ARMADO.
- Sweet air! Go, tenderness of years; take this key, give
- enlargement to the swain, bring him festinately hither; I must
- employ him in a letter to my love.
MOTH.
- Master, will you win your love with a French brawl?
ARMADO.
- How meanest thou? brawling in French?
MOTH.
- No, my complete master; but to jig off a tune at the tongue's
- end, canary to it with your feet, humour it with turning up your
- eyelids, sigh a note and sing a note, sometime through the
- throat, as if you swallowed love with singing love, sometime
- through the nose, as if you snuffed up love by smelling love;
- with your hat penthouse-like o'er the shop of your eyes, with
- your arms crossed on your thin-belly doublet, like a rabbit on a
- spit; or your hands in your pocket, like a man after the old
- painting; and keep not too long in one tune, but a snip and away.
- These are complements, these are humours; these betray nice
- wenches, that would be betrayed without these; and make them men
- of note,-do you note me?-that most are affected to these.
ARMADO.
- How hast thou purchased this experience?
MOTH.
- By my penny of observation.
ARMADO.
- But O-but O,-
MOTH.
- 'The hobby-horse is forgot.'
ARMADO.
- Call'st thou my love 'hobby-horse'?
MOTH.
- No, master; the hobby-horse is but a colt, and your love
- perhaps, a hackney. But have you forgot your love?
ARMADO.
- Almost I had.
MOTH.
- Negligent student! learn her by heart.
ARMADO.
- By heart and in heart, boy.
MOTH.
- And out of heart, master: all those three I will prove.
ARMADO.
- What wilt thou prove?
MOTH.
- A man, if I live; and this, by, in, and without, upon the
- instant: by heart you love her, because your heart cannot come by
- her; in heart you love her, because your heart is in love with
- her; and out of heart you love her, being out of heart that you
- cannot enjoy her.
ARMADO.
- I am all these three.
MOTH.
- And three times as much more, and yet nothing at all.
ARMADO.
- Fetch hither the swain: he must carry me a letter.
MOTH.
- A message well sympathized; a horse to be ambassador for an
- ass.
ARMADO.
- Ha, ha! what sayest thou?
MOTH.
- Marry, sir, you must send the ass upon the horse, for he is
- very slow-gaited. But I go.
ARMADO.
- The way is but short: away!
MOTH.
- As swift as lead, sir.
ARMADO.
- The meaning, pretty ingenious?
- Is not lead a metal heavy, dull, and slow?
MOTH.
- Minime, honest master; or rather, master, no.
ARMADO.
- I say lead is slow.
MOTH.
- You are too swift, sir, to say so:
- Is that lead slow which is fir'd from a gun?
ARMADO.
- Sweet smoke of rhetoric!
- He reputes me a cannon; and the bullet, that's he;
- I shoot thee at the swain.
MOTH.
- Thump then, and I flee.
[Exit.]
ARMADO.
- A most acute juvenal; volable and free of grace!
- By thy favour, sweet welkin, I must sigh in thy face:
- Most rude melancholy, valour gives thee place.
- My herald is return'd.
[Re-enter MOTH with COSTARD.]
MOTH.
- A wonder, master! here's a costard broken in a shin.
ARMADO.
- Some enigma, some riddle: come, thy l'envoy; begin.
COSTARD.
- No egma, no riddle, no l'envoy; no salve in the mail, sir.
- O! sir, plantain, a plain plantain; no l'envoy, no l'envoy; no
- salve, sir, but a plantain.
ARMADO.
- By virtue thou enforcest laughter; thy silly thought, my
- spleen; the heaving of my lungs provokes me to ridiculous
- smiling: O! pardon me, my stars. Doth the inconsiderate take
- salve for l'envoy, and the word l'envoy for a salve?
MOTH.
- Do the wise think them other? Is not l'envoy a salve?
ARMADO.
- No, page: it is an epilogue or discourse to make plain
- Some obscure precedence that hath tofore been sain.
- I will example it:
- The fox, the ape, and the humble-bee,
- Were still at odds, being but three.
- There's the moral. Now the l'envoy.
MOTH.
- I will add the l'envoy. Say the moral again.
ARMADO.
- The fox, the ape, and the humble-bee,
- Were still at odds, being but three.
MOTH.
- Until the goose came out of door,
- And stay'd the odds by adding four.
- Now will I begin your moral, and do you follow with my l'envoy.
- The fox, the ape, and the humble-bee,
- Were still at odds, being but three.
ARMADO.
- Until the goose came out of door,
- Staying the odds by adding four.
MOTH.
- A good l'envoy, ending in the goose; would you desire more?
COSTARD.
- The boy hath sold him a bargain, a goose, that's flat.
- Sir, your pennyworth is good an your goose be fat.
- To sell a bargain well is as cunning as fast and loose:
- Let me see: a fat l'envoy; ay, that's a fat goose.
ARMADO.
- Come hither, come hither. How did this argument begin?
MOTH.
- By saying that a costard was broken in a shin.
- Then call'd you for the l'envoy.
COSTARD.
- True, and I for a plantain: thus came your argument in;
- Then the boy's fat l'envoy, the goose that you bought;
- And he ended the market.
ARMADO.
- But tell me; how was there a costard broken in a shin?
MOTH.
- I will tell you sensibly.
COSTARD.
- Thou hast no feeling of it, Moth: I will speak that
- l'envoy:
- I, Costard, running out, that was safely within,
- Fell over the threshold and broke my shin.
ARMADO.
- We will talk no more of this matter.
COSTARD.
- Till there be more matter in the shin.
ARMADO.
- Sirrah Costard. I will enfranchise thee.
COSTARD.
- O! marry me to one Frances: I smell some l'envoy, some
- goose, in this.
ARMADO.
- By my sweet soul, I mean setting thee at liberty,
- enfreedoming thy person: thou wert immured, restrained,
- captivated, bound.
COSTARD.
- True, true; and now you will be my purgation, and let me
- loose.
ARMADO.
- I give thee thy liberty, set thee from durance; and, in
- lieu thereof, impose on thee nothing but this:-[Giving a
- letter.] Bear this significant to the country maid Jaquenetta.
- [Giving money.] there is remuneration; for the best ward of mine
- honour is rewarding my dependents. Moth, follow.
[Exit.]
MOTH.
- Like the sequel, I. Signior Costard, adieu.
COSTARD.
- My sweet ounce of man's flesh! my incony Jew!
[Exit MOTH.]
- Now will I look to his remuneration. Remuneration! O! that's the
- Latin word for three farthings: three farthings, remuneration.
- 'What's the price of this inkle?' 'One penny.' 'No, I'll give
- you a remuneration.' Why, it carries it. Remuneration! Why, it is
- a fairer name than French crown. I will never buy and sell out of
- this word.
[Enter BEROWNE.]
BEROWNE.
- O! My good knave Costard, exceedingly well met.
COSTARD.
- Pray you, sir, how much carnation riband may a man buy for
- a remuneration?
BEROWNE.
- What is a remuneration?
COSTARD.
- Marry, sir, halfpenny farthing.
BEROWNE.
- Why, then, three-farthing worth of silk.
COSTARD.
- I thank your worship. God be wi' you!
BEROWNE.
- Stay, slave; I must employ thee:
- As thou wilt win my favour, good my knave,
- Do one thing for me that I shall entreat.
COSTARD.
- When would you have it done, sir?
BEROWNE.
- O, this afternoon.
COSTARD.
- Well, I will do it, sir! fare you well.
BEROWNE.
- O, thou knowest not what it is.
COSTARD.
- I shall know, sir, when I have done it.
BEROWNE.
- Why, villain, thou must know first.
COSTARD.
- I will come to your worship to-morrow morning.
BEROWNE.
- It must be done this afternoon. Hark, slave, it is but this:
- The princess comes to hunt here in the park,
- And in her train there is a gentle lady;
- When tongues speak sweetly, then they name her name,
- And Rosaline they call her: ask for her
- And to her white hand see thou do commend
- This seal'd-up counsel.
[Gives him a shilling.]
- There's thy guerdon: go.
COSTARD.
- Gardon, O sweet gardon! better than remuneration; a
- 'leven-pence farthing better; most sweet gardon! I will do it,
- sir, in print. Gardon- remuneration!
[Exit.]
BEROWNE.
- And I,-
- Forsooth, in love; I, that have been love's whip;
- A very beadle to a humorous sigh;
- A critic, nay, a night-watch constable;
- A domineering pedant o'er the boy,
- Than whom no mortal so magnificent!
- This wimpled, whining, purblind, wayward boy,
- This senior-junior, giant-dwarf, Dan Cupid;
- Regent of love-rimes, lord of folded arms,
- The anointed sovereign of sighs and groans,
- Liege of all loiterers and malcontents,
- Dread prince of plackets, king of codpieces,
- Sole imperator, and great general
- Of trotting 'paritors: O my little heart!
- And I to be a corporal of his field,
- And wear his colours like a tumbler's hoop!
- What! I love! I sue, I seek a wife!
- A woman, that is like a German clock,
- Still a-repairing, ever out of frame,
- And never going aright, being a watch,
- But being watch'd that it may still go right!
- Nay, to be perjur'd, which is worst of all;
- And, among three, to love the worst of all,
- A wightly wanton with a velvet brow,
- With two pitch balls stuck in her face for eyes;
- Ay, and, by heaven, one that will do the deed,
- Though Argus were her eunuch and her guard:
- And I to sigh for her! to watch for her!
- To pray for her! Go to; it is a plague
- That Cupid will impose for my neglect
- Of his almighty dreadful little might.
- Well, I will love, write, sigh, pray, sue, and groan:
- Some men must love my lady, and some Joan.
[Exit.]
ACT IV.
SCENE I. The King of Navarre's park.
[Enter the PRINCESS, ROSALINE, MARIA, KATHARINE, BOYET, LORDS, ATTENDANTS, and a FORESTER.
PRINCESS.
- Was that the King that spurr'd his horse so hard
- Against the steep uprising of the hill?
BOYET.
- I know not; but I think it was not he.
PRINCESS.
- Whoe'er a' was, a' show'd a mounting mind.
- Well, lords, to-day we shall have our dispatch;
- On Saturday we will return to France.
- Then, forester, my friend, where is the bush
- That we must stand and play the murderer in?
FORESTER.
- Hereby, upon the edge of yonder coppice;
- A stand where you may make the fairest shoot.
PRINCESS.
- I thank my beauty, I am fair that shoot,
- And thereupon thou speak'st the fairest shoot.
FORESTER.
- Pardon me, madam, for I meant not so.
PRINCESS.
- What, what? First praise me, and again say no?
- O short-liv'd pride! Not fair? Alack for woe!
FORESTER.
- Yes, madam, fair.
PRINCESS.
- Nay, never paint me now;
- Where fair is not, praise cannot mend the brow.
- Here, good my glass [Gives money]:-take this for telling true:
Fair payment for foul words is more than due.
FORESTER.
- Nothing but fair is that which you inherit.
PRINCESS.
- See, see! my beauty will be sav'd by merit.
- O heresy in fair, fit for these days!
- A giving hand, though foul, shall have fair praise.
- But come, the bow: now mercy goes to kill,
- And shooting well is then accounted ill.
- Thus will I save my credit in the shoot:
- Not wounding, pity would not let me do't;
- If wounding, then it was to show my skill,
- That more for praise than purpose meant to kill.
- And out of question so it is sometimes,
- Glory grows guilty of detested crimes,
- When, for fame's sake, for praise, an outward part,
- We bend to that the working of the heart;
- As I for praise alone now seek to spill
- The poor deer's blood, that my heart means no ill.
BOYET.
- Do not curst wives hold that self-sovereignty
- Only for praise' sake, when they strive to be
- Lords o'er their lords?
PRINCESS.
- Only for praise; and praise we may afford
- To any lady that subdues a lord.
[Enter COSTARD.]
BOYET.
- Here comes a member of the commonwealth.
COSTARD.
- God dig-you-den all! Pray you, which is the head lady?
PRINCESS.
- Thou shalt know her, fellow, by the rest that have no heads.
COSTARD.
- Which is the greatest lady, the highest?
PRINCESS.
- The thickest and the tallest.
COSTARD.
- The thickest and the tallest! It is so; truth is truth.
- An your waist, mistress, were as slender as my wit,
- One o' these maids' girdles for your waist should be fit.
- Are not you the chief woman? You are the thickest here.
PRINCESS.
- What's your will, sir? What's your will?
COSTARD.
- I have a letter from Monsieur Berowne to one Lady Rosaline.
PRINCESS.
- O! thy letter, thy letter; he's a good friend of mine.
- Stand aside, good bearer. Boyet, you can carve;
- Break up this capon.
BOYET.
- I am bound to serve.
- This letter is mistook; it importeth none here.
- It is writ to Jaquenetta.
PRINCESS.
- We will read it, I swear.
- Break the neck of the wax, and every one give ear.
BOYET.
- 'By heaven, that thou art fair is most infallible;
- true, that thou art beauteous; truth itself, that thou art
- lovely. More fairer than fair, beautiful than beauteous, truer
- than truth itself, have commiseration on thy heroical vassal! The
- magnanimous and most illustrate king Cophetua set eye upon the
- pernicious and indubitate beggar Zenelophon, and he it was that
- might rightly say, Veni, vidi, vici; which to anatomize in
- the vulgar- O base and obscure vulgar!-videlicet, he came, saw,
- and overcame: he came, one; saw, two; overcame, three. Who came?
- the king: Why did he come? to see: Why did he see? to overcome:
- To whom came he? to the beggar: What saw he? the beggar. Who
- overcame he? the beggar. The conclusion is victory; on whose
- side? the king's; the captive is enriched: on whose side? the
- beggar's. The catastrophe is a nuptial: on whose side? the
- king's, no, on both in one, or one in both. I am the king, for so
- stands the comparison; thou the beggar, for so witnesseth thy
- lowliness. Shall I command thy love? I may: Shall I enforce thy
- love? I could: Shall I entreat thy love? I will. What shalt thou
- exchange for rags? robes; for tittles? titles; for thyself?
- -me. Thus, expecting thy reply, I profane my lips on thy foot, my
- eyes on thy picture, and my heart on thy every part.
- Thine in the dearest design of industry,
- DON ADRIANO DE ARMADO.
- 'Thus dost thou hear the Nemean lion roar
- 'Gainst thee, thou lamb, that standest as his prey;
- Submissive fall his princely feet before,
- And he from forage will incline to play.
- But if thou strive, poor soul, what are thou then?
- Food for his rage, repasture for his den.'
PRINCESS.
- What plume of feathers is he that indited this letter?
- What vane? What weathercock? Did you ever hear better?
BOYET.
- I am much deceiv'd but I remember the style.
PRINCESS.
- Else your memory is bad, going o'er it erewhile.
BOYET.
- This Armado is a Spaniard, that keeps here in court;
- A phantasime, a Monarcho, and one that makes sport
- To the Prince and his book-mates.
PRINCESS.
- Thou fellow, a word.
- Who gave thee this letter?
COSTARD.
- I told you; my lord.
PRINCESS.
- To whom shouldst thou give it?
COSTARD.
- From my lord to my lady.
PRINCESS.
- From which lord to which lady?
COSTARD.
- From my Lord Berowne, a good master of mine,
- To a lady of France that he call'd Rosaline.
PRINCESS.
- Thou hast mistaken his letter. Come, lords, away.
- Here, sweet, put up this: 'twill be thine another day.
[Exeunt PRINCESS and TRAIN.]
BOYET.
- Who is the suitor? who is the suitor?
ROSALINE.
- Shall I teach you to know?
BOYET.
- Ay, my continent of beauty.
ROSALINE.
- Why, she that bears the bow.
- Finely put off!
BOYET.
- My lady goes to kill horns; but, if thou marry,
- Hang me by the neck, if horns that year miscarry.
- Finely put on!
ROSALINE.
- Well then, I am the shooter.
BOYET.
- And who is your deer?
ROSALINE.
- If we choose by the horns, yourself: come not near.
- Finely put on indeed!
MARIA.
- You still wrangle with her, Boyet, and she strikes at the
- brow.
BOYET.
- But she herself is hit lower: have I hit her now?
ROSALINE.
- Shall I come upon thee with an old saying, that was a man
- when King Pepin of France was a little boy, as touching the hit
- it?
BOYET.
- So I may answer thee with one as old, that was a woman when
- Queen Guinever of Britain was a little wench, as touching the hit
- it.
ROSALINE.
- Thou canst not hit it, hit it, hit it,
- Thou canst not hit it, my good man.
BOYET.
- An I cannot, cannot, cannot,
- An I cannot, another can.
[Exeunt ROSALINE and KATHARINE.]
COSTARD.
- By my troth, most pleasant: how both did fit it!
MARIA.
- A mark marvellous well shot; for they both did hit it.
BOYET.
- A mark! O! mark but that mark; A mark, says my lady!
- Let the mark have a prick in't, to mete at, if it may be.
MARIA.
- Wide o' the bow-hand! I' faith, your hand is out.
COSTARD.
- Indeed, a' must shoot nearer, or he'll ne'er hit the clout.
BOYET.
- An' if my hand be out, then belike your hand is in.
COSTARD.
- Then will she get the upshoot by cleaving the pin.
MARIA.
- Come, come, you talk greasily; your lips grow foul.
COSTARD.
- She's too hard for you at pricks, sir; challenge her to bowl.
BOYET.
- I fear too much rubbing. Good-night, my good owl.
[Exeunt BOYET and MARIA.]
COSTARD.
- By my soul, a swain! a most simple clown!
- Lord, Lord! how the ladies and I have put him down!
- O' my troth, most sweet jests, most incony vulgar wit!
- When it comes so smoothly off, so obscenely, as it were, so fit.
- Armado, o' the one side, O! a most dainty man!
- To see him walk before a lady and to bear her fan!
- To see him kiss his hand! and how most sweetly a' will swear!
- And his page o' t'other side, that handful of wit!
- Ah! heavens, it is a most pathetical nit.
- [Shouting within.] Sola, sola!
[Exit running.]
SCENE II. The same.
Enter HOLOFERNES, SIR NATHANIEL, and DULL.
NATHANIEL.
- Very reverent sport, truly; and done in the testimony of
- a good conscience.
HOLOFERNES.
- The deer was, as you know, sanguis, in blood; ripe as
- the pomewater, who now hangeth like a jewel in the ear of caelo,
- the sky, the welkin, the heaven; and anon falleth like a crab on
- the face of terra, the soil, the land, the earth.
NATHANIEL.
- Truly, Master Holofernes, the epithets are sweetly
- varied, like a scholar at the least: but, sir, I assure ye it was
- a buck of the first head.
HOLOFERNES.
- Sir Nathaniel, haud credo.
DULL.
- Twas not a haud credo; 'twas a pricket.
HOLOFERNES.
- Most barbarous intimation! yet a kind of insinuation,
- as it were, in via, in way, of explication; facere, as it were,
- replication, or rather, ostentare, to show, as it were, his
- inclination,-after his undressed, unpolished, uneducated,
- unpruned, untrained, or rather, unlettered, or ratherest,
- unconfirmed fashion,-to insert again my haud credo for a deer.
DULL.
- I sthe deer was not a haud credo; 'twas a pricket.
HOLOFERNES.
- Twice sod simplicity, bis coctus!
- O! thou monster Ignorance, how deformed dost thou look!
NATHANIEL.
- Sir, he hath never fed of the dainties that are bred of a book;
- he hath not eat paper, as it were; he hath not drunk ink: his
- intellect is not replenished; he is only an animal, only sensible
- in the duller parts:
- And such barren plants are set before us that we thankful should
- be,
- Which we of taste and feeling are, for those parts that do
- fructify in us more than he;
- For as it would ill become me to be vain, indiscreet, or a fool,
- So, were there a patch set on learning, to see him in a school.
- But, omne bene, say I; being of an old Father's mind:
- Many can brook the weather that love not the wind.
DULL.
- You two are book-men: can you tell me by your wit,
- What was a month old at Cain's birth, that's not five weeks old
- as yet?
HOLOFERNES.
- Dictynna, goodman Dull; Dictynna, goodman Dull.
DULL.
- What is Dictynna?
NATHANIEL.
- A title to Phoebe, to Luna, to the moon.
HOLOFERNES.
- The moon was a month old when Adam was no more,
- And raught not to five weeks when he came to five-score.
- The allusion holds in the exchange.
DULL.
- 'Tis true, indeed; the collusion holds in the exchange.
HOLOFERNES.
- God comfort thy capacity! I say, the allusion holds in
- the exchange.
DULL.
- And I say the pollusion holds in the exchange, for the moon is
- never but a month old; and I say beside that 'twas a pricket
- that the Princess killed.
HOLOFERNES.
- Sir Nathaniel, will you hear an extemporal epitaph on the death
- of the deer? And, to humour the ignorant, I have call'd the deer
- the Princess killed, a pricket.
NATHANIEL.
- Perge, good Master Holofernes, perge; so it shall please
- you to abrogate scurrility.
HOLOFERNES.
- I will something affect the letter; for it argues facility.
- The preyful Princess pierc'd and prick'd a pretty pleasing
- pricket;
- Some say a sore; but not a sore till now made sore with
- shooting.
- The dogs did yell; put L to sore, then sorel jumps from thicket-
- Or pricket sore, or else sorel; the people fall a-hooting.
- If sore be sore, then L to sore makes fifty sores one sorel!
- Of one sore I an hundred make, by adding but one more L.
NATHANIEL.
- A rare talent!
DULL.
- [Aside] If a talent be a claw, look how he claws him with a
- talent.
HOLOFERNES.
- This is a gift that I have, simple, simple; a foolish
- extravagant spirit, full of forms, figures, shapes, objects,
- ideas, apprehensions, motions, revolutions: these are begot in
- the ventricle of memory, nourished in the womb of pia mater, and
- delivered upon the mellowing of occasion. But the gift is good in
- those in whom it is acute, and I am thankful for it.
NATHANIEL.
- Sir, I praise the Lord for you, and so may my parishioners; for
- their sons are well tutored by you, and their daughters profit
- very greatly under you: you are a good member of the
- commonwealth.
HOLOFERNES.
- Mehercle! if their sons be ingenious, they shall want no
- instruction; if their daughters be capable, I will put it to
- them; but, vir sapit qui pauca loquitur. A soul feminine saluteth
- us.
[Enter JAQUENETTA and COSTARD.]
JAQUENETTA.
- God give you good morrow, Master parson.
HOLOFERNES.
- Master parson, quasi pers-on. And if one should be
- pierced, which is the one?
COSTARD.
- Marry, Master schoolmaster, he that is likest to a hogshead.
HOLOFERNES.
- Piercing a hogshead! A good lustre or conceit in a turf
- of earth; fire enough for a flint, pearl enough for a swine; 'tis
- pretty; it is well.
JAQUENETTA.
- Good Master parson [Giving a letter to NATHANIEL.], be so good as
- read me this letter: it was given me by Costard, and sent me from
- Don Armado: I beseech you read it.
HOLOFERNES.
- 'Fauste, precor gelida quando pecus omne sub umbra Ruminat,'
- and so forth. Ah! good old Mantuan. I may speak of thee as
- the traveller doth of Venice:
- -Venetia, Venetia,
- Chi non ti vede, non ti pretia.
- Old Mantuan! old Mantuan! Who understandeth thee not,
- loves thee not. Ut, re, sol, la, mi, fa. Under pardon, sir, what
- are the contents? or rather as Horace says in his- What, my
- soul, verses?
NATHANIEL.
- Ay, sir, and very learned.
HOLOFERNES.
- Let me hear a staff, a stanze, a verse; lege, domine.
NATHANIEL.
- If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to love?
- Ah! never faith could hold, if not to beauty vow'd;
- Though to myself forsworn, to thee I'll faithful prove;
- Those thoughts to me were oaks, to thee like osiers bowed.
- Study his bias leaves, and makes his book thine eyes,
- Where all those pleasures live that art would comprehend:
- If knowledge be the mark, to know thee shall suffice.
- Well learned is that tongue that well can thee commend;
- All ignorant that soul that sees thee without wonder;
- Which is to me some praise that I thy parts admire.
- Thy eye Jove's lightning bears, thy voice his dreadful thunder,
- Which, not to anger bent, is music and sweet fire.
- Celestial as thou art, O! pardon love this wrong,
- That sings heaven's praise with such an earthly tongue.
HOLOFERNES.
- You find not the apostrophas, and so miss the accent:
- let me supervise the canzonet. Here are only numbers ratified;
- but, for the elegancy, facility, and golden cadence of poesy,
- caret. Ovidius Naso was the man: and why, indeed, Naso but for
- smelling out the odoriferous flowers of fancy, the jerks of
- invention? Imitari is nothing: so doth the hound his master, the
- ape his keeper, the 'tired horse his rider. But, damosella
- virgin, was this directed to you?
JAQUENETTA.
- Ay, sir; from one Monsieur Berowne, one of the strange
- queen's lords.
HOLOFERNES.
- I will overglance the superscript: 'To the snow-white
- hand of the most beauteous Lady Rosaline.' I will look again on
- the intellect of the letter, for the nomination of the party
- writing to the person written unto: 'Your Ladyship's in all
- desired employment, Berowne.'-Sir Nathaniel, this Berowne is one
- of the votaries with the king; and here he hath framed a letter
- to a sequent of the stranger queen's, which, accidentally, or by
- the way of progression, hath miscarried. Trip and go, my sweet;
- deliver this paper into the royal hand of the king; it may
- concern much. Stay not thy compliment; I forgive thy duty. Adieu.
JAQUENETTA.
- Good Costard, go with me. Sir, God save your life!
COSTARD.
- Have with thee, my girl.
[Exeunt COSTARD and JAQUENETTA.]
NATHANIEL.
- Sir, you have done this in the fear of God, very religiously;
- and, as a certain Father saith-
HOLOFERNES.
- Sir, tell not me of the Father; I do fear colourable colours. But
- to return to the verses: did they please you, Sir Nathaniel?
NATHANIEL.
- Marvellous well for the pen.
HOLOFERNES.
- I do dine to-day at the father's of a certain pupil of
- mine; where, if, before repast, it shall please you to gratify
- the table with a grace, I will, on my privilege I have with the
- parents of the foresaid child or pupil, undertake your ben
- venuto; where I will prove those verses to be very unlearned,
- neither savouring of poetry, wit, nor invention. I beseech your
- society.
NATHANIEL.
- And thank you too; for society,-saith the text,-is the
- happiness of life.
HOLOFERNES.
- And certes, the text most infallibly concludes it.
- [To DULL] Sir, I do invite you too; you shall not say me nay:
- pauca verba. Away! the gentles are at their game, and we will to
- our recreation.
[Exeunt.]
SCENE III. The same.
[Enter BEROWNE, with a paper.]
BEROWNE.
- The king he is hunting the deer: I am coursing myself: they have
- pitched a toil: I am tolling in a pitch,-pitch that defiles:
- defile! a foul word! Well, sit thee down, sorrow! for
- so they say the fool said, and so say I, and I am the fool: well
- proved, wit! By the Lord, this love is as mad as Ajax: it kills
- sheep; it kills me, I a sheep: well proved again o' my side. I
- will not love; if I do, hang me; i' faith, I will not. O! but her
- eye,-by this light, but for her eye, I would not love her; yes,
- for her two eyes. Well, I do nothing in the world but lie, and
- lie in my throat. By heaven, I do love; and it hath taught me to
- rime, and to be melancholy; and here is part of my rhyme, and
- here my melancholy. Well, she hath one o' my sonnets already; the
- clown bore it, the fool sent it, and the lady hath it: sweet
- clown, sweeter fool, sweetest lady! By the world, I would not
- care a pin if the other three were in. Here comes one with a
- paper; God give him grace to groan!
[Gets up into a tree.]
[Enter the KING, with a paper.]
KING.
- Ay me!
BEROWNE. [Aside.]
- Shot, by heaven! Proceed, sweet Cupid; thou hast thumped
- him with thy bird-bolt under the left pap. In faith, secrets!
KING.
- So sweet a kiss the golden sun gives not
- To those fresh morning drops upon the rose,
- As thy eye-beams, when their fresh rays have smote
- The night of dew that on my cheeks down flows;
- Nor shines the silver moon one half so bright
- Through the transparent bosom of the deep,
- As doth thy face through tears of mine give light.
- Thou shin'st in every tear that I do weep:
- No drop but as a coach doth carry thee;
- So ridest thou triumphing in my woe.
- Do but behold the tears that swell in me,
- And they thy glory through my grief will show:
- But do not love thyself; then thou wilt keep
- My tears for glasses, and still make me weep.
- O queen of queens! how far dost thou excel
- No thought can think nor tongue of mortal tell.
How shall she know my griefs? I'll drop the paper:
- Sweet leaves, shade folly. Who is he comes here?
- [Steps aside.]
- What, Longaville! and reading! Listen, ear.
- [Enter LONGAVILLE, with a paper.]
BEROWNE.
- Now, in thy likeness, one more fool appear!
LONGAVILLE.
- Ay me! I am forsworn.
BEROWNE.
- Why, he comes in like a perjure, wearing papers.
KING.
- In love, I hope: sweet fellowship in shame!
BEROWNE.
- One drunkard loves another of the name.
LONGAVILLE.
- Am I the first that have been perjur'd so?
BEROWNE.
- I could put thee in comfort: not by two that I know;
- Thou makest the triumviry, the corner-cap of society,
- The shape of love's Tyburn that hangs up simplicity.
LONGAVILLE.
- I fear these stubborn lines lack power to move.
- O sweet Maria, empress of my love!
- These numbers will I tear, and write in prose.
BEROWNE.
- O! rimes are guards on wanton Cupid's hose:
- Disfigure not his slop.
LONGAVILLE.
- This same shall go.
Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye,
- 'Gainst whom the world cannot hold argument,
- Persuade my heart to this false perjury?
- Vows for thee broke deserve not punishment.
- A woman I forswore; but I will prove,
- Thou being a goddess, I forswore not thee:
- My vow was earthly, thou a heavenly love;
- Thy grace being gain'd, cures all disgrace in me.
- Vows are but breath, and breath a vapour is:
- Then thou, fair sun, which on my earth dost shine,
- Exhal'st this vapour-vow; in thee it is:
- If broken, then it is no fault of mine:
- If by me broke, what fool is not so wise
- To lose an oath to win a paradise!
BEROWNE.
- This is the liver-vein, which makes flesh a deity;
- A green goose a goddess; pure, pure idolatry.
- God amend us, God amend! We are much out o' the way.
LONGAVILLE.
- By whom shall I send this?-Company! Stay.
[Steps aside.]
BEROWNE.
- All hid, all hid; an old infant play.
- Like a demigod here sit I in the sky,
- And wretched fools' secrets heedfully o'er-eye.
- More sacks to the mill! O heavens, I have my wish.
[Enter DUMAINE, with a paper.]
- Dumain transformed: four woodcocks in a dish!
DUMAINE.
- O most divine Kate!
BEROWNE.
- O most profane coxcomb!
DUMAINE.
- By heaven, the wonder in a mortal eye!
BEROWNE.
- By earth, she is but corporal; there you lie.
DUMAINE.
- Her amber hairs for foul hath amber quoted.
BEROWNE.
- An amber-colour'd raven was well noted.
DUMAINE.
- As upright as the cedar.
BEROWNE.
- Stoop, I say;
- Her shoulder is with child.
DUMAINE.
- As fair as day.
BEROWNE.
- Ay, as some days; but then no sun must shine.
DUMAINE.
- O! that I had my wish.
LONGAVILLE.
- And I had mine!
KING.
- And I mine too, good Lord!
BEROWNE.
- Amen, so I had mine. Is not that a good word?
DUMAINE.
- I would forget her; but a fever she
- Reigns in my blood, and will remember'd be.
BEROWNE.
- A fever in your blood! Why, then incision
- Would let her out in saucers: sweet misprision!
DUMAINE.
- Once more I'll read the ode that I have writ.
BEROWNE.
- Once more I'll mark how love can vary wit.
DUMAINE.
-
- On a day, alack the day!
- Love, whose month is ever May,
- Spied a blossom passing fair
- Playing in the wanton air:
- Through the velvet leaves the wind,
- All unseen, 'gan passage find;
- That the lover, sick to death,
- Wish'd himself the heaven's breath.
- Air, quoth he, thy cheeks may blow;
- Air, would I might triumph so!
- But, alack! my hand is sworn
- Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn;
- Vow, alack! for youth unmeet,
- Youth so apt to pluck a sweet.
- Do not call it sin in me,
- That I am forsworn for thee;
- Thou for whom e'en Jove would swear
- Juno but an Ethiope were;
- And deny himself for Jove,
- Turning mortal for thy love.
- This will I send, and something else more plain,
- That shall express my true love's fasting pain.
- O! would the King, Berowne and Longaville
- Were lovers too. Ill, to example ill,
- Would from my forehead wipe a perjur'd note;
- For none offend where all alike do dote.
LONGAVILLE.
- [Advancing.] Dumain, thy love is far from charity,
- That in love's grief desir'st society;
- You may look pale, but I should blush, I know,
- To be o'erheard and taken napping so.
KING.
- [Advancing.] Come, sir, you blush; as his, your case is such.
- You chide at him, offending twice as much:
- You do not love Maria; Longaville
- Did never sonnet for her sake compile;
- Nor never lay his wreathed arms athwart
- His loving bosom, to keep down his heart.
- I have been closely shrouded in this bush,
- And mark'd you both, and for you both did blush.
- I heard your guilty rimes, observ'd your fashion,
- Saw sighs reek from you, noted well your passion:
- Ay me! says one. O Jove! the other cries;
- One, her hairs were gold; crystal the other's eyes:
- [To LONGAVILLE] You would for paradise break faith and troth;
- [To DUMAIN] And Jove, for your love would infringe an oath.
- What will Berowne say when that he shall hear
- Faith infringed which such zeal did swear?
- How will he scorn! how will he spend his wit!
- How will he triumph, leap, and laugh at it!
- For all the wealth that ever I did see,
- I would not have him know so much by me.
BEROWNE.
- Now step I forth to whip hypocrisy.
- [Descends from the tree.]
- Ah! good my liege, I pray thee pardon me:
- Good heart! what grace hast thou thus to reprove
- These worms for loving, that art most in love?
- Your eyes do make no coaches; in your tears
- There is no certain princess that appears:
- You'll not be perjur'd; 'tis a hateful thing:
- Tush! none but minstrels like of sonneting.
- But are you not asham'd? nay, are you not,
- All three of you, to be thus much o'ershot?
- You found his mote; the king your mote did see;
- But I a beam do find in each of three.
- O! what a scene of foolery have I seen,
- Of sighs, of groans, of sorrow, and of teen;
- O me! with what strict patience have I sat,
- To see a king transformed to a gnat;
- To see great Hercules whipping a gig,
- And profound Solomon to tune a jig,
- And Nestor play at push-pin with the boys,
- And critic Timon laugh at idle toys!
- Where lies thy grief, O! tell me, good Dumaine?
- And, gentle Longaville, where lies thy pain?
- And where my liege's? all about the breast:
- A caudle, ho!
KING.
- Too bitter is thy jest.
- Are we betrayed thus to thy over-view?
BEROWNE.
- Not you by me, but I betray'd by you.
- I that am honest; I that hold it sin
- To break the vow I am engaged in;
- I am betrayed by keeping company
- With men like men, men of inconstancy.
- When shall you see me write a thing in rime?
- Or groan for Joan? or spend a minute's time
- In pruning me? When shall you hear that I
- Will praise a hand, a foot, a face, an eye,
- A gait, a state, a brow, a breast, a waist,
- A leg, a limb?-
KING.
- Soft! whither away so fast?
- A true man or a thief that gallops so?
BEROWNE.
- I post from love; good lover, let me go.
[Enter JAQUENETTA and COSTARD.]
JAQUENETTA.
- God bless the king!
KING.
- What present hast thou there?
COSTARD.
- Some certain treason.
KING.
- What makes treason here?
COSTARD.
- Nay, it makes nothing, sir.
KING.
- If it mar nothing neither,
- The treason and you go in peace away together.
JAQUENETTA.
- I beseech your Grace, let this letter be read;
- Our parson misdoubts it; 'twas treason, he said.
KING.
- Berowne, read it over.
[Giving the letter to him.]
- Where hadst thou it?
JAQUENETTA.
- Of Costard.
KING.
- Where hadst thou it?
COSTARD.
- Of Dun Adramadio, Dun Adramadio.
[BEROWNE tears the letter.]
KING.
- How now! What is in you? Why dost thou tear it?
BEROWNE.
- A toy, my liege, a toy: your Grace needs not fear it.
LONGAVILLE.
- It did move him to passion, and therefore let's hear it.
DUMAINE.
- [Picking up the pieces.]
- It is Berowne's writing, and here is his name.
BEROWNE.
- [To COSTARD.] Ah, you whoreson loggerhead, you were born
- to do me shame.
- Guilty, my lord, guilty; I confess, I confess.
KING.
- What?
BEROWNE.
- That you three fools lack'd me fool to make up the mess;
- He, he, and you, and you, my liege, and I,
- Are pick-purses in love, and we deserve to die.
- O! dismiss this audience, and I shall tell you more.
DUMAINE.
- Now the number is even.
BEROWNE.
- True, true, we are four.
- Will these turtles be gone?
KING.
- Hence, sirs; away!
COSTARD.
- Walk aside the true folk, and let the traitors stay.
[Exeunt COSTARD and JAQUENETTA.]
BEROWNE.
- Sweet lords, sweet lovers, O! let us embrace!
- As true we are as flesh and blood can be:
- The sea will ebb and flow, heaven show his face;
- Young blood doth not obey an old decree:
- We cannot cross the cause why we were born,
- Therefore of all hands must we be forsworn.
KING.
- What! did these rent lines show some love of thine?
BEROWNE.
- 'Did they?' quoth you? Who sees the heavenly Rosaline
- That, like a rude and savage man of Inde
- At the first op'ning of the gorgeous east,
- Bows not his vassal head and, strucken blind,
- Kisses the base ground with obedient breast?
- What peremptory eagle-sighted eye
- Dares look upon the heaven of her brow,
- That is not blinded by her majesty?
KING.
- What zeal, what fury hath inspir'd thee now?
- My love, her mistress, is a gracious moon;
- She, an attending star, scarce seen a light.
BEROWNE.
- My eyes are then no eyes, nor I Berowne.
- O! but for my love, day would turn to night.
- Of all complexions the cull'd sovereignty
- Do meet, as at a fair, in her fair cheek,
- Where several worthies make one dignity,
- Where nothing wants that want itself doth seek.
- Lend me the flourish of all gentle tongues,-
- Fie, painted rhetoric! O! she needs it not:
- To things of sale a seller's praise belongs;
- She passes praise; then praise too short doth blot.
- A wither'd hermit, five-score winters worn,
- Might shake off fifty, looking in her eye:
- Beauty doth varnish age, as if new-born,
- And gives the crutch the cradle's infancy.
- O! 'tis the sun that maketh all things shine!
KING.
- By heaven, thy love is black as ebony.
BEROWNE.
- Is ebony like her? O wood divine!
- A wife of such wood were felicity.
- O! who can give an oath? Where is a book?
- That I may swear beauty doth beauty lack,
- If that she learn not of her eye to look.
- No face is fair that is not full so black.
KING.
- O paradox! Black is the badge of hell,
- The hue of dungeons, and the school of night;
- And beauty's crest becomes the heavens well.
BEROWNE.
- Devils soonest tempt, resembling spirits of light.
- O! if in black my lady's brows be deck'd,
- It mourns that painting and usurping hair
- Should ravish doters with a false aspect;
- And therefore is she born to make black fair.
- Her favour turns the fashion of the days,
- For native blood is counted painting now;
- And therefore red, that would avoid dispraise,
- Paints itself black, to imitate her brow.
DUMAINE.
- To look like her are chimney-sweepers black.
LONGAVILLE.
- And since her time are colliers counted bright.
KING.
- And Ethiopes of their sweet complexion crack.
DUMAINE.
- Dark needs no candles now, for dark is light.
BEROWNE.
- Your mistresses dare never come in rain,
- For fear their colours should be wash'd away.
KING.
- 'Twere good yours did; for, sir, to tell you plain,
- I'll find a fairer face not wash'd to-day.
BEROWNE.
- I'll prove her fair, or talk till doomsday here.
KING.
- No devil will fright thee then so much as she.
DUMAINE.
- I never knew man hold vile stuff so dear.
LONGAVILLE.
- Look, here's thy love:
[Showing his shoe.]
- my foot and her face see.
BEROWNE.
- O! if the streets were paved with thine eyes,
- Her feet were much too dainty for such tread.
DUMAINE.
- O vile! Then, as she goes, what upward lies
- The street should see as she walk'd over head.
KING.
- But what of this? Are we not all in love?
BEROWNE.
- Nothing so sure; and thereby all forsworn.
KING.
- Then leave this chat; and, good Berowne, now prove
- Our loving lawful, and our faith not torn.
DUMAINE.
- Ay, marry, there; some flattery for this evil.
LONGAVILLE.
- O! some authority how to proceed;
- Some tricks, some quillets, how to cheat the devil.
DUMAINE.
- Some salve for perjury.
BEROWNE.
- O, 'tis more than need.
- Have at you, then, affection's men-at-arms:
- Consider what you first did swear unto,
- To fast, to study, and to see no woman;
- Flat treason 'gainst the kingly state of youth.
- Say, can you fast? Your stomachs are too young,
- And abstinence engenders maladies.
- And where that you you have vow'd to study, lords,
- In that each of you have forsworn his book,
- Can you still dream, and pore, and thereon look?
- For when would you, my lord, or you, or you,
- Have found the ground of study's excellence
- Without the beauty of a woman's face?
- From women's eyes this doctrine I derive:
- They are the ground, the books, the academes,
- From whence doth spring the true Promethean fire.
- Why, universal plodding poisons up
- The nimble spirits in the arteries,
- As motion and long-during action tires
- The sinewy vigour of the traveller.
- Now, for not looking on a woman's face,
- You have in that forsworn the use of eyes,
- And study too, the causer of your vow;
- For where is author in the world
- Teaches such beauty as a woman's eye?
- Learning is but an adjunct to ourself,
- And where we are our learning likewise is:
- Then when ourselves we see in ladies' eyes,
- Do we not likewise see our learning there?
- O! we have made a vow to study, lords,
- And in that vow we have forsworn our books:
- For when would you, my liege, or you, or you,
- In leaden contemplation have found out
- Such fiery numbers as the prompting eyes
- Of beauty's tutors have enrich'd you with?
- Other slow arts entirely keep the brain;
- And therefore, finding barren practisers,
- Scarce show a harvest of their heavy toil;
- But love, first learned in a lady's eyes,
- Lives not alone immured in the brain,
- But with the motion of all elements,
- Courses as swift as thought in every power,
- And gives to every power a double power,
- Above their functions and their offices.
- It adds a precious seeing to the eye;
- A lover's eyes will gaze an eagle blind;
- A lover's ear will hear the lowest sound,
- When the suspicious head of theft is stopp'd:
- Love's feeling is more soft and sensible
- Than are the tender horns of cockled snails:
- Love's tongue proves dainty Bacchus gross in taste.
- For valour, is not Love a Hercules,
- Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?
- Subtle as Sphinx; as sweet and musical
- As bright Apollo's lute, strung with his hair;
- And when Love speaks, the voice of all the gods
- Make heaven drowsy with the harmony.
- Never durst poet touch a pen to write
- Until his ink were temper'd with Love's sighs;
- O! then his lines would ravish savage ears,
- And plant in tyrants mild humility.
- From women's eyes this doctrine I derive:
- They sparkle still the right Promethean fire;
- They are the books, the arts, the academes,
- That show, contain, and nourish, all the world;
- Else none at all in aught proves excellent.
- Then fools you were these women to forswear,
- Or, keeping what is sworn, you will prove fools.
- For wisdom's sake, a word that all men love,
- Or for love's sake, a word that loves all men,
- Or for men's sake, the authors of these women;
- Or women's sake, by whom we men are men,
- Let us once lose our oaths to find ourselves,
- Or else we lose ourselves to keep our oaths.
- It is religion to be thus forsworn;
- For charity itself fulfils the law;
- And who can sever love from charity?
KING.
- Saint Cupid, then! and, soldiers, to the field!
BEROWNE.
- Advance your standards, and upon them, lords;
- Pell-mell, down with them! be first advis'd,
- In conflict that you get the sun of them.
LONGAVILLE.
- Now to plain-dealing; lay these glozes by:
- Shall we resolve to woo these girls of France?
KING.
- And win them too; therefore let us devise
- Some entertainment for them in their tents.
BEROWNE.
- First, from the park let us conduct them thither;
- Then homeward every man attach the hand
- Of his fair mistress: in the afternoon
- We will with some strange pastime solace them,
- Such as the shortness of the time can shape;
- For revels, dances, masks, and merry hours,
- Forerun fair Love, strewing her way with flowers.
KING.
- Away, away! No time shall be omitted,
- That will betime, and may by us be fitted.
BEROWNE.
- Allons! allons! Sow'd cockle reap'd no corn;
- And justice always whirls in equal measure:
- Light wenches may prove plagues to men forsworn;
- If so, our copper buys no better treasure.
[Exeunt.]
ACT V.
SCENE I. The King of Navarre's park.
[Enter HOLOFERNES, SIR NATHANIEL, and DULL.]
HOLOFERNES.
- Satis quod sufficit.
NATHANIEL.
- I praise God for you, sir: your reasons at dinner have
- been sharp and sententious; pleasant without scurrility, witty
- without affection, audacious without impudency, learned without
- opinion, and strange without heresy. I did converse this quondam
- day with a companion of the king's who is intituled, nominated,
- or called, Don Adriano de Armado.
HOLOFERNES.
- Novi hominem tanquam te: his humour is lofty, his
- discourse peremptory, his tongue filed, his eye ambitious, his
- gait majestical and his general behaviour vain, ridiculous, and
- thrasonical. He is too picked, too spruce, too affected, too odd,
- as it were, too peregrinate, as I may call it.
NATHANIEL.
- A most singular and choice epithet.
[Draws out his table-book.]
HOLOFERNES.
- He draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than
- the staple of his argument. I abhor such fanatical phantasimes,
- such insociable and point-devise companions; such rackers of
- orthography, as to speak dout, fine, when he should say doubt;
- det when he should pronounce debt,-d, e, b, t, not d, e, t: he
- clepeth a calf, cauf; half, hauf; neighbour vocatur nebour, neigh
- abbreviated ne. This is abhominable, which he
- would call abominable,-it insinuateth me of insanie: anne
- intelligis, domine? to make frantic, lunatic.
NATHANIEL.
- Laus Deo, bone intelligo.
HOLOFERNES.
- Bone? bone for bene: Priscian a little scratch'd; 'twill serve.
[Enter ARMADO, MOTH, and COSTARD.]
NATHANIEL.
- Videsne quis venit?
HOLOFERNES.
- Video, et gaudeo.
ARMADO.
- [To MOTH] Chirrah!
HOLOFERNES.
- Quare chirrah, not sirrah?
ARMADO.
- Men of peace, well encountered.
HOLOFERNES.
- Most military sir, salutation.
MOTH.
- [Aside to COSTARD.] They have been at a great feast of
- languages and stolen the scraps.
COSTARD.
- O! they have lived long on the alms-basket of words. I
- marvel thy master hath not eaten thee for a word, for thou are
- not so long by the head as honorificabilitudinitatibus; thou art
- easier swallowed than a flap-dragon.
MOTH.
- Peace! the peal begins.
ARMADO.
- [To HOLOFERNES.] Monsieur, are you not lettered?
MOTH.
- Yes, yes; he teaches boys the hornbook. What is a, b, spelt
- backward with the horn on his head?
HOLOFERNES.
- Ba, pueritia, with a horn added.
MOTH.
- Ba! most silly sheep with a horn. You hear his learning.
HOLOFERNES.
- Quis, quis, thou consonant?
MOTH.
- The third of the five vowels, if you repeat them; or the
- fifth, if I.
HOLOFERNES.
- I will repeat them,-a, e, i,-
MOTH.
- The sheep; the other two concludes it,-o, u.
ARMADO.
- Now, by the salt wave of the Mediterraneum, a sweet touch,
- a quick venue of wit! snip, snap, quick and home! It rejoiceth my
- intellect: true wit!
MOTH.
- Offered by a child to an old man; which is wit-old.
HOLOFERNES.
- What is the figure? What is the figure?
MOTH.
- Horns.
HOLOFERNES.
- Thou disputes like an infant; go, whip thy gig.
MOTH.
- Lend me your horn to make one, and I will whip about your
- infamy circum circa. A gig of a cuckold's horn.
COSTARD.
- An I had but one penny in the world, thou shouldst have it
- to buy gingerbread. Hold, there is the very remuneration I had
- of thy master, thou half-penny purse of wit, thou pigeon-egg of
- discretion. O! an the heavens were so pleased that thou wert but
- my bastard, what a joyful father wouldst thou make me. Go to;
- thou hast it ad dunghill, at the fingers' ends, as they say.
HOLOFERNES.
- O, I smell false Latin! 'dunghill' for unguem.
ARMADO.
- Arts-man, praeambula; we will be singled from the barbarous. Do
- you not educate youth at the charge-house on the top of the
- mountain?
HOLOFERNES.
- Or mons, the hill.
ARMADO.
- At your sweet pleasure, for the mountain.
HOLOFERNES.
- I do, sans question.
ARMADO.
- Sir, it is the King's most sweet pleasure and affection to
- congratulate the princess at her pavilion, in the posteriors of
- this day, which the rude multitude call the afternoon.
HOLOFERNES.
- The posterior of the day, most generous sir, is liable,
- congruent, and measurable, for the afternoon. The word is well
- culled, chose, sweet, and apt, I do assure you, sir; I do assure.
ARMADO.
- Sir, the King is a noble gentleman, and my familiar, I do
- assure ye, very good friend. For what is inward between us, let
- it pass: I do beseech thee, remember thy courtsy; I beseech
- thee, apparel thy head: and among other importunate and most
- serious designs, and of great import indeed, too, but let that
- pass: for I must tell thee it will please his Grace, by the
- world, sometime to lean upon my poor shoulder, and with his royal
- finger thus dally with my excrement, with my mustachio: but,
- sweet heart, let that pass. By the world, I recount no fable:
- some certain special honours it pleaseth his greatness to impart
- to Armado, a soldier, a man of travel, that hath seen the world:
- but let that pass. The very all of all is, but, sweet heart, I do
- implore secrecy, that the King would have me present the
- princess, sweet chuck, with some delightful ostentation, or show,
- or pageant, or antic, or firework. Now, understanding that the
- curate and your sweet self are good at such eruptions and sudden
- breaking-out of mirth, as it were, I have acquainted you withal,
- to the end to crave your assistance.
HOLOFERNES.
- Sir, you shall present before her the Nine Worthies. Sir
- Nathaniel, as concerning some entertainment of time, some
- show in the posterior of this day, to be rendered by our
- assistance, the King's command, and this most gallant,
- illustrate, and learned gentleman, before the princess, I say
- none so fit as to present the Nine Worthies.
NATHANIEL.
- Where will you find men worthy enough to present them?
HOLOFERNES.
- Joshua, yourself; myself, Alexander; this gallant
- gentleman, Judas Maccabaeus; this swain, because of his great
- limb or joint, shall pass Pompey the Great; the page, Hercules,-
ARMADO.
- Pardon, sir; error: he is not quantity enough for that
- Worthy's thumb; he is not so big as the end of his club.
HOLOFERNES.
- Shall I have audience? He shall present Hercules in minority: his
- enter and exit shall be strangling a snake; and I will have an
- apology for that purpose.
MOTH.
- An excellent device! So, if any of the audience hiss, you may
- cry 'Well done, Hercules; now thou crushest the snake!' That is
- the way to make an offence gracious, though few have the grace to
- do it.
ARMADO.
- For the rest of the Worthies?-
HOLOFERNES.
- I will play three myself.
MOTH.
- Thrice-worthy gentleman!
ARMADO.
- Shall I tell you a thing?
HOLOFERNES.
- We attend.
ARMADO.
- We will have, if this fadge not, an antic. I beseech you,
- follow.
HOLOFERNES.
- Via, goodman Dull! Thou has spoken no word all this while.
DULL.
- Nor understood none neither, sir.
HOLOFERNES.
- Allons! we will employ thee.
DULL.
- I'll make one in a dance, or so, or I will play on the tabor to
- the Worthies, and let them dance the hay.
HOLOFERNES.
- Most dull, honest Dull! To our sport, away.
[Exeunt.]
SCENE II. The same. Before the Princess's pavilion.
[Enter the PRINCESS, KATHARINE, ROSALINE and MARIA.]
PRINCESS.
- Sweet hearts, we shall be rich ere we depart,
- If fairings come thus plentifully in.
- A lady wall'd about with diamonds!
- Look you what I have from the loving king.
ROSALINE.
- Madam, came nothing else along with that?
PRINCESS.
- Nothing but this! Yes, as much love in rime
- As would be cramm'd up in a sheet of paper
- Writ o' both sides the leaf, margent and all,
- That he was fain to seal on Cupid's name.
ROSALINE.
- That was the way to make his godhead wax;
- For he hath been five thousand years a boy.
KATHARINE.
- Ay, and a shrewd unhappy gallows too.
ROSALINE.
- You'll ne'er be friends with him: a' kill'd your sister.
KATHARINE.
- He made her melancholy, sad, and heavy;
- And so she died: had she been light, like you,
- Of such a merry, nimble, stirring spirit,
- She might ha' been a grandam ere she died;
- And so may you, for a light heart lives long.
ROSALINE.
- What's your dark meaning, mouse, of this light word?
KATHARINE.
- A light condition in a beauty dark.
ROSALINE.
- We need more light to find your meaning out.
KATHARINE.
- You'll mar the light by taking it in snuff;
- Therefore I'll darkly end the argument.
ROSALINE.
- Look what you do, you do it still i' the dark.
KATHARINE.
- So do not you; for you are a light wench.
ROSALINE.
- Indeed, I weigh not you; and therefore light.
KATHARINE.
- You weigh me not? O! that's you care not for me.
ROSALINE.
- Great reason; for 'past cure is still past care.'
PRINCESS.
- Well bandied both; a set of wit well play'd.
- But, Rosaline, you have a favour too:
- Who sent it? and what is it?
ROSALINE.
- I would you knew.
- An if my face were but as fair as yours,
- My favour were as great: be witness this.
- Nay, I have verses too, I thank Berowne;
- The numbers true, and, were the numbering too,
- I were the fairest goddess on the ground:
- I am compar'd to twenty thousand fairs.
- O! he hath drawn my picture in his letter.
PRINCESS.
- Anything like?
ROSALINE.
- Much in the letters; nothing in the praise.
PRINCESS.
- Beauteous as ink; a good conclusion.
KATHARINE.
- Fair as a text B in a copy-book.
ROSALINE.
- 'Ware pencils! how! let me not die your debtor,
- My red dominical, my golden letter:
- O, that your face were not so full of O's!
KATHARINE.
- A pox of that jest! and beshrew all shrows!
PRINCESS.
- But, Katharine, what was sent to you from fair Dumaine?
KATHARINE.
- Madam, this glove.
PRINCESS.
- Did he not send you twain?
KATHARINE.
- Yes, madam; and, moreover,
- Some thousand verses of a faithful lover;
- A huge translation of hypocrisy,
- Vilely compil'd, profound simplicity.
MARIA.
- This, and these pearl, to me sent Longaville;
- The letter is too long by half a mile.
PRINCESS.
- I think no less. Dost thou not wish in heart
- The chain were longer and the letter short?
MARIA.
- Ay, or I would these hands might never part.
PRINCESS.
- We are wise girls to mock our lovers so.
ROSALINE.
- They are worse fools to purchase mocking so.
- That same Berowne I'll torture ere I go.
- O that I knew he were but in by th' week!
- How I would make him fawn, and beg, and seek,
- And wait the season, and observe the times,
- And spend his prodigal wits in bootless rimes,
- And shape his service wholly to my hests,
- And make him proud to make me proud that jests!
- So perttaunt-like would I o'ersway his state
- That he should be my fool, and I his fate.
PRINCESS.
- None are so surely caught, when they are catch'd,
- As wit turn'd fool: folly, in wisdom hatch'd,
- Hath wisdom's warrant and the help of school
- And wit's own grace to grace a learned fool.
ROSALINE.
- The blood of youth burns not with such excess
- As gravity's revolt to wantonness.
MARIA.
- Folly in fools bears not so strong a note
- As fool'ry in the wise when wit doth dote;
- Since all the power thereof it doth apply
- To prove, by wit, worth in simplicity.
[Enter BOYET.]
PRINCESS.
- Here comes Boyet, and mirth is in his face.
BOYET.
- O! I am stabb'd with laughter! Where's her Grace?
PRINCESS.
- Thy news, Boyet?
BOYET.
- Prepare, madam, prepare!-
- Arm, wenches, arm! encounters mounted are
- Against your peace: Love doth approach disguis'd,
- Armed in arguments; you'll be surpris'd:
- Muster your wits; stand in your own defence;
- Or hide your heads like cowards, and fly hence.
PRINCESS.
- Saint Denis to Saint Cupid! What are they
- That charge their breath against us? Say, scout, say.
BOYET.
- Under the cool shade of a sycamore
- I thought to close mine eyes some half an hour;
- When, lo, to interrupt my purpos'd rest,
- Toward that shade I might behold addrest
- The king and his companions: warily
- I stole into a neighbour thicket by,
- And overheard what you shall overhear;
- That, by and by, disguis'd they will be here.
- Their herald is a pretty knavish page,
- That well by heart hath conn'd his embassage:
- Action and accent did they teach him there;
- 'Thus must thou speak' and 'thus thy body bear,'
- And ever and anon they made a doubt
- Presence majestical would put him out;
- 'For' quoth the King 'an angel shalt thou see;
- Yet fear not thou, but speak audaciously.'
- The boy replied 'An angel is not evil;
- I should have fear'd her had she been a devil.'
- With that all laugh'd, and clapp'd him on the shoulder,
- Making the bold wag by their praises bolder.
- One rubb'd his elbow, thus, and fleer'd, and swore
- A better speech was never spoke before.
- Another with his finger and his thumb
- Cried 'Via! we will do't, come what will come.'
- The third he caper'd, and cried 'All goes well.'
- The fourth turn'd on the toe, and down he fell.
- With that they all did tumble on the ground,
- With such a zealous laughter, so profound,
- That in this spleen ridiculous appears,
- To check their folly, passion's solemn tears.
PRINCESS.
- But what, but what, come they to visit us?
BOYET.
- They do, they do, and are apparell'd thus,
- Like Muscovites or Russians, as I guess.
- Their purpose is to parley, court, and dance;
- And every one his love-feat will advance
- Unto his several mistress; which they'll know
- By favours several which they did bestow.
PRINCESS.
- And will they so? The gallants shall be task'd:
- For, ladies, we will every one be mask'd;
- And not a man of them shall have the grace,
- Despite of suit, to see a lady's face.
- Hold, Rosaline, this favour thou shalt wear,
- And then the king will court thee for his dear;
- Hold, take thou this, my sweet, and give me thine,
- So shall Berowne take me for Rosaline.
- And change you favours too; so shall your loves
- Woo contrary, deceiv'd by these removes.
ROSALINE.
- Come on, then, wear the favours most in sight.
KATHARINE.
- But, in this changing, what is your intent?
PRINCESS.
- The effect of my intent is to cross theirs;
- They do it but in mocking merriment;
- And mock for mock is only my intent.
- Their several counsels they unbosom shall
- To loves mistook, and so be mock'd withal
- Upon the next occasion that we meet
- With visages display'd to talk and greet.
ROSALINE.
- But shall we dance, if they desire us to't?
PRINCESS.
- No, to the death, we will not move a foot,
- Nor to their penn'd speech render we no grace;
- But while 'tis spoke each turn away her face.
BOYET.
- Why, that contempt will kill the speaker's heart,
- And quite divorce his memory from his part.
PRINCESS.
- Therefore I do it; and I make no doubt
- The rest will ne'er come in, if he be out.
- There's no such sport as sport by sport o'erthrown,
- To make theirs ours, and ours none but our own:
- So shall we stay, mocking intended game,
- And they well mock'd, depart away with shame.
[Trumpet sounds within.]
BOYET.
- The trumpet sounds: be mask'd; the maskers come.
[The LADIES mask.]
[Enter BLACKAMOORS with music; MOTH, the KING, BEROWNE, LONGAVILLE, and DUMAINE in Russian habits, and masked.]
MOTH.
- 'All hail, the richest heauties on the earth!'
BOYET.
- Beauties no richer than rich taffeta.
MOTH.
- 'A holy parcel of the fairest dames
[The LADIES turn their backs to him.]
- That ever turn'd their-backs-to mortal views!
BEROWNE.
- 'Their eyes,' villain, 'their eyes.'
MOTH.
- 'That ever turn'd their eyes to mortal views!
- Out'-
BOYET.
- True; 'out,' indeed.
MOTH.
- 'Out of your favours, heavenly spirits, vouchsafe
- Not to behold'-
BEROWNE.
- 'Once to behold,' rogue.
MOTH.
- 'Once to behold with your sun-beamed eyes-with your
- sun-beamed eyes'-
BOYET.
- They will not answer to that epithet;
- You were best call it 'daughter-beamed eyes.'
MOTH.
- They do not mark me, and that brings me out.
BEROWNE.
- Is this your perfectness? be gone, you rogue.
[Exit MOTH.]
ROSALINE.
- What would these strangers? Know their minds, Boyet.
- If they do speak our language, 'tis our will
- That some plain man recount their purposes:
- Know what they would.
BOYET.
- What would you with the princess?
BEROWNE.
- Nothing but peace and gentle visitation.
ROSALINE.
- What would they, say they?
BOYET.
- Nothing but peace and gentle visitation.
ROSALINE.
- Why, that they have; and bid them so be gone.
BOYET.
- She says you have it, and you may be gone.
KING.
- Say to her we have measur'd many miles
- To tread a measure with her on this grass.
BOYET.
- They say that they have measur'd many a mile
- To tread a measure with you on this grass.
ROSALINE.
- It is not so. Ask them how many inches
- Is in one mile? If they have measured many,
- The measure then of one is easily told.
BOYET.
- If to come hither you have measur'd miles,
- And many miles, the Princess bids you tell
- How many inches doth fill up one mile.
BEROWNE.
- Tell her we measure them by weary steps.
BOYET.
- She hears herself.
ROSALINE.
- How many weary steps
- Of many weary miles you have o'ergone
- Are number'd in the travel of one mile?
BEROWNE.
- We number nothing that we spend for you;
- Our duty is so rich, so infinite,
- That we may do it still without accompt.
- Vouchsafe to show the sunshine of your face,
- That we, like savages, may worship it.
ROSALINE.
- My face is but a moon, and clouded too.
KING.
- Blessed are clouds, to do as such clouds do!
- Vouchsafe, bright moon, and these thy stars, to shine,
- Those clouds remov'd, upon our watery eyne.
ROSALINE.
- O vain petitioner! beg a greater matter;
- Thou now requests'st but moonshine in the water.
KING.
- Then in our measure do but vouchsafe one change.
- Thou bid'st me beg; this begging is not strange.
ROSALINE.
- Play, music, then! Nay, you must do it soon.
[Music plays.]
- Not yet! No dance! thus change I like the moon.
KING.
- Will you not dance? How come you thus estranged?
ROSALINE.
- You took the moon at full; but now she's chang'd.
KING.
- Yet still she is the moon, and I the man.
- The music plays; vouchsafe some motion to it.
ROSALINE.
- Our ears vouchsafe
|