Shakespeare's First Folio Part 683
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Arui. Brother, stay heere: Are we not Brothers?
Imo. So man and man should be, But Clay and Clay, differs in dignitie, Whose dust is both alike. I am very sicke, Gui. Go you to Hunting, Ile abide with him
Imo. So sicke I am not, yet I am not well: But not so Citizen a wanton, as To seeme to dye, ere sicke: So please you, leaue me, Sticke to your Iournall course: the breach of Custome, Is breach of all. I am ill, but your being by me Cannot amend me. Society, is no comfort To one not sociable: I am not very sicke, Since I can reason of it: pray you trust me heere, Ile rob none but my selfe, and let me dye Stealing so poorely
Gui. I loue thee: I haue spoke it, How much the quant.i.ty, the waight as much, As I do loue my Father
Bel. What? How? how?
Arui. If it be sinne to say so (Sir) I yoake mee In my good Brothers fault: I know not why I loue this youth, and I haue heard you say, Loue's reason's, without reason. The Beere at doore, And a demand who is't shall dye, I'ld say My Father, not this youth
Bel. Oh n.o.ble straine!
O worthinesse of Nature, breed of Greatnesse!
''Cowards father Cowards, & Base things Syre Bace; ''Nature hath Meale, and Bran; Contempt, and Grace.
I'me not their Father, yet who this should bee, Doth myracle it selfe, lou'd before mee.
'Tis the ninth houre o'th' Morne
Arui. Brother, farewell
Imo. I wish ye sport
Arui. You health. - So please you Sir
Imo. These are kinde Creatures.
G.o.ds, what lyes I haue heard: Our Courtiers say, all's sauage, but at Court; Experience, oh thou disproou'st Report.
Th' emperious Seas breeds Monsters; for the Dish, Poore Tributary Riuers, as sweet Fish: I am sicke still, heart-sicke; Pisanio, Ile now taste of thy Drugge
Gui. I could not stirre him: He said he was gentle, but vnfortunate; Dishonestly afflicted, but yet honest
Arui. Thus did he answer me: yet said heereafter, I might know more
Bel. To'th' Field, to'th' Field: Wee'l leaue you for this time, go in, and rest
Arui. Wee'l not be long away
Bel. Pray be not sicke, For you must be our Huswife
Imo. Well, or ill, I am bound to you.
Enter.
Bel. And shal't be euer.
This youth, how ere distrest, appeares he hath had Good Ancestors
Arui. How Angell-like he sings?
Gui. But his neate Cookerie?
Arui. He cut our Rootes in Charracters, And sawc'st our Brothes, as Iuno had bin sicke, And he her Dieter
Arui. n.o.bly he yoakes A smiling, with a sigh; as if the sighe Was that it was, for not being such a Smile: The Smile, mocking the Sigh, that it would flye From so diuine a Temple, to commix With windes, that Saylors raile at
Gui. I do note, That greefe and patience rooted in them both, Mingle their spurres together
Arui. Grow patient, And let the stinking-Elder (Greefe) vntwine His peris.h.i.+ng roote, with the encreasing Vine
Bel. It is great morning. Come away: Who's there?
Enter Cloten.
Clo. I cannot finde those Runnagates, that Villaine Hath mock'd me. I am faint
Bel. Those Runnagates?
Meanes he not vs? I partly know him, 'tis Cloten, the Sonne o'th' Queene. I feare some Ambush: I saw him not these many yeares, and yet I know 'tis he: We are held as Out-Lawes: Hence
Gui. He is but one: you, and my Brother search What Companies are neere: pray you away, Let me alone with him
Clot. Soft, what are you That flye me thus? Some villaine-Mountainers?
I haue heard of such. What Slaue art thou?
Gui. A thing More slauish did I ne're, then answering A Slaue without a knocke
Clot. Thou art a Robber, A Law-breaker, a Villaine: yeeld thee Theefe
Gui. To who? to thee? What art thou? Haue not I An arme as bigge as thine? A heart, as bigge: Thy words I grant are bigger: for I weare not My Dagger in my mouth. Say what thou art: Why I should yeeld to thee?
Clot. Thou Villaine base, Know'st me not by my Cloathes?
Gui. No, nor thy Taylor, Rascall: Who is thy Grandfather? He made those cloathes, Which (as it seemes) make thee
Clo. Thou precious Varlet, My Taylor made them not
Gui. Hence then, and thanke The man that gaue them thee. Thou art some Foole, I am loath to beate thee
Clot. Thou iniurious Theefe, Heare but my name, and tremble
Gui. What's thy name?
Clo. Cloten, thou Villaine
Gui. Cloten, thou double Villaine be thy name, I cannot tremble at it, were it Toad, or Adder, Spider, 'Twould moue me sooner
Clot. To thy further feare, Nay, to thy meere Confusion, thou shalt know I am Sonne to'th' Queene
Gui. I am sorry for't: not seeming So worthy as thy Birth
Clot. Art not afeard?
Gui. Those that I reuerence, those I feare: the Wise: At Fooles I laugh: not feare them
Clot. Dye the death: When I haue slaine thee with my proper hand, Ile follow those that euen now fled hence: And on the Gates of Luds-Towne set your heads: Yeeld Rusticke Mountaineer.
Fight and Exeunt.
Enter Belarius and Aruiragus.
Bel. No Companie's abroad?
Arui. None in the world: you did mistake him sure
Bel. I cannot tell: Long is it since I saw him, But Time hath nothing blurr'd those lines of Fauour Which then he wore: the s.n.a.t.c.hes in his voice, And burst of speaking were as his: I am absolute 'Twas very Cloten
Shakespeare's First Folio Part 683
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Shakespeare's First Folio Part 683 summary
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