741 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
741 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Actus Quintus. Scœna Prima.
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Enter the Merchant and the Goldsmith.
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Gold.
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I am sorry Sir that I haue hindred you,
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But I protest he had the Chaine of me,
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Though most dishonestly he doth denie it.
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Mar.
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How is the man esteem'd heere in the Citie?
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Gold.
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Of very reuerent reputation sir,
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Of credit infinite, highly belou'd,
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Second to none that liues heere in the Citie:
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His word might beare my wealth at any time.
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Mar.
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Speake softly, yonder as I thinke he walkes.
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Enter Antipholus and Dromio againe.
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Gold.
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'Tis so: and that selfe chaine about his necke,
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Which he forswore most monstrously to haue.
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Good sir draw neere to me, Ile speake to him:
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Signior Antipholus, I wonder much
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That you would put me to this shame and trouble,
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And not without some scandall to your selfe,
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With circumstance and oaths, so to denie
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This Chaine, which now you weare so openly.
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Beside the charge, the shame, imprisonment,
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You haue done wrong to this my honest friend,
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Who but for staying on our Controuersie,
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Had hoisted saile, and put to sea to day:
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This Chaine you had of me, can you deny it?
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Ant.
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I thinke I had, I neuer did deny it.
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Mar.
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Yes that you did sir, and forswore it too.
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Ant.
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Who heard me to denie it or forsweare it?
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Mar.
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These eares of mine thou knowst did hear thee:
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Fie on thee wretch, 'tis pitty that thou liu'st
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To walke where any honest men resort.
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Ant.
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Thou art a Villaine to impeach me thus,
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Ile proue mine honor, and mine honestie
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Against thee presently, if thou dar'st stand:
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Mar.
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I dare and do defie thee for a villaine.
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They draw. Enter Adriana, Luciana, Courtezan, & others.
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Adr.
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Hold, hurt him not for God sake, he is mad,
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Some get within him, take his sword away:
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Binde Dromio too, and beare them to my house.
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S.Dro.
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Runne master run, for Gods sake take a house,
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This is some Priorie, in, or we are spoyl'd. Exeunt to the Priorie.
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Enter Ladie Abbesse.
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Ab.
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Be quiet people, wherefore throng you hither?
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Adr.
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To fetch my poore distracted husband hence,
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Let vs come in, that we may binde him fast,
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And beare him home for his recouerie.
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Gold.
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I knew he was not in his perfect wits.
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Mar.
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I am sorry now that I did draw on him.
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Ab.
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How long hath this possession held the man.
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Adr.
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This weeke he hath beene heauie, sower sad,
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And much different from the man he was:
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But till this afternoone his passion
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Ne're brake into extremity of rage.
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Ab.
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Hath he not lost much wealth by wrack of sea,
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Buried some deere friend, hath not else his eye
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Stray'd his affection in vnlawfull loue,
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A sinne preuailing much in youthfull men,
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Who giue their eies the liberty of gazing.
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Which of these sorrowes is he subiect too?
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Adr.
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To none of these, except it be the last,
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Namely, some loue that drew him oft from home.
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Ab.
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You should for that haue reprehended him.
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Adr.
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Why so I did.
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Ab.
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I but not rough enough.
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Adr.
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As roughly as my modestie would let me.
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Ab.
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Haply in priuate.
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Adr.
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And in assemblies too.
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Ab.
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I, but not enough.
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Adr.
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It was the copie of our Conference.
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In bed he slept not for my vrging it,
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At boord he fed not for my vrging it:
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Alone, it was the subiect of my Theame:
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In company I often glanced it:
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Still did I tell him, it was vilde and bad.
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Ab.
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And thereof came it, that the man was mad.
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The venome clamors of a iealous woman,
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Poisons more deadly then a mad dogges tooth.
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It seemes his sleepes were hindred by thy railing,
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And thereof comes it that his head is light.
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Thou saist his meate was sawc'd with thy vpbraidings,
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Vnquiet meales make ill digestions,
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Thereof the raging fire of feauer bred,
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And what's a Feauer, but a fit of madnesse?
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Thou sayest his sports were hindred by thy bralles.
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Sweet recreation barr'd, what doth ensue
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But moodie and dull melancholly,
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Kinsman to grim and comfortlesse dispaire,
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And at her heeles a huge infectious troope
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Of pale distemperatures, and foes to life?
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In food, in sport, and life-preseruing rest
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To be disturb'd, would mad or man, or beast:
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The consequence is then, thy iealous fits
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Hath scar'd thy husband from the vse of wits.
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Luc.
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She neuer reprehended him but mildely,
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When he demean'd himselfe, rough, rude, and wildly,
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Why beare you these rebukes, and answer not?
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Adri.
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She did betray me to my owne reproofe,
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Good people enter, and lay hold on him.
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Ab.
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No, not a creature enters in my house.
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Ad.
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Then let your seruants bring my husband forth
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Ab.
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Neither: he tooke this place for sanctuary,
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And it shall priuiledge him from your hands,
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Till I haue brought him to his wits againe,
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Or loose my labour in assaying it.
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Adr.
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I will attend my husband, be his nurse,
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Diet his sicknesse, for it is my Office,
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And will haue no atturney but my selfe,
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And therefore let me haue him home with me.
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Ab.
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Be patient, for I will not let him stirre,
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Till I haue vs'd the approoued meanes I haue,
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With wholsome sirrups, drugges, and holy prayers
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To make of him a formall man againe:
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It is a branch and parcell of mine oath,
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A charitable dutie of my order,
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Therefore depart, and leaue him heere with me.
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Adr.
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I will not hence, and leaue my husband heere:
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And ill it doth beseeme your holinesse
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To separate the husband and the wife.
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Ab.
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Be quiet and depart, thou shalt not haue him.
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Luc.
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Complaine vnto the Duke of this indignity.
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Adr.
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Come go, I will fall prostrate at his feete,
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And neuer rise vntill my teares and prayers
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Haue won his grace to come in person hither,
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And take perforce my husband from the Abbesse.
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Mar.
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By this I thinke the Diall points at fiue:
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Anon I'me sure the Duke himselfe in person
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Comes this way to the melancholly vale;
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The place of depth, and sorrie execution,
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Behinde the ditches of the Abbey heere.
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Gold.
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Vpon what cause?
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Mar.
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To see a reuerent Siracusian Merchant,
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Who put vnluckily into this Bay
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Against the Lawes and Statutes of this Towne,
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Beheaded publikely for his offence.
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Gold.
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See where they come, we wil behold his death
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Luc.
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Kneele to the Duke before he passe the Abbey.
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Enter the Duke of Ephesus, and the Merchant of Siracuse
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bare head, with the Headsman, & other
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Officers.
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Duke.
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Yet once againe proclaime it publikely,
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If any friend will pay the summe for him,
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He shall not die, so much we tender him.
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Adr.
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Iustice most sacred Duke against the Abbesse.
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Duke.
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She is a vertuous and a reuerend Lady,
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It cannot be that she hath done thee wrong.
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Adr.
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May it please your Grace, Antipholus my husba[n]d,
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Who I made Lord of me, and all I had,
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At your important Letters this ill day,
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A most outragious fit of madnesse tooke him:
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That desp'rately he hurried through the streete,
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With him his bondman, all as mad as he,
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Doing displeasure to the Citizens,
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By rushing in their houses: bearing thence
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Rings, Iewels, any thing his rage did like.
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Once did I get him bound, and sent him home,
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Whil'st to take order for the wrongs I went,
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That heere and there his furie had committed,
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Anon I wot not, by what strong escape
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He broke from those that had the guard of him,
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And with his mad attendant and himselfe,
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Each one with irefull passion, with drawne swords
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Met vs againe, and madly bent on vs
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Chac'd vs away: till raising of more aide
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We came againe to binde them: then they fled
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Into this Abbey, whether we pursu'd them,
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And heere the Abbesse shuts the gates on vs,
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And will not suffer vs to fetch him out,
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Nor send him forth, that we may beare him hence.
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Therefore most gracious Duke with thy command,
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Let him be brought forth, and borne hence for helpe.
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Duke.
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Long since thy husband seru'd me in my wars
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And I to thee ingag'd a Princes word,
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When thou didst make him Master of thy bed,
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To do him all the grace and good I could.
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Go some of you, knocke at the Abbey gate,
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And bid the Lady Abbesse come to me:
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I will determine this before I stirre.
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Enter a Messenger.
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Oh Mistris, Mistris, shift and saue your selfe,
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My Master and his man are both broke loose,
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Beaten the Maids a-row, and bound the Doctor,
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Whose beard they haue sindg'd off with brands of fire,
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And euer as it blaz'd, they threw on him
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Great pailes of puddled myre to quench the haire;
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My Mr preaches patience to him, and the while
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His man with Cizers nickes him like a foole:
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And sure (vnlesse you send some present helpe)
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Betweene them they will kill the Coniurer.
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Adr.
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Peace foole, thy Master and his man are here,
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And that is false thou dost report to vs.
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Mess.
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Mistris, vpon my life I tel you true,
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I haue not breath'd almost since I did see it.
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He cries for you, and vowes if he can take you,
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To scorch your face, and to disfigure you:
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Cry within.
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Harke, harke, I heare him Mistris: flie, be gone.
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Duke.
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Come stand by me, feare nothing: guard with Halberds.
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Adr.
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Ay me, it is my husband: witnesse you,
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That he is borne about inuisible,
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Euen now we hous'd him in the Abbey heere.
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And now he's there, past thought of humane reason.
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Enter Antipholus, and E.Dromio of Ephesus.
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E.Ant.
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Iustice most gracious Duke, oh grant me iustice,
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Euen for the seruice that long since I did thee,
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When I bestrid thee in the warres, and tooke
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Deepe scarres to saue thy life; euen for the blood
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That then I lost for thee, now grant me iustice.
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Mar.Fat. Vnlesse the feare of death doth make me
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dote, I see my sonne Antipholus and Dromio.
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E.Ant.
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Iustice (sweet Prince) against that Woman there:
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She whom thou gau'st to me to be my wife;
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That hath abused and dishonored me,
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Euen in the strength and height of iniurie:
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Beyond imagination is the wrong
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That she this day hath shamelesse throwne on me.
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Duke.
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Discouer how, and thou shalt finde me iust.
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E.Ant.
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This day (great Duke) she shut the doores vpon me,
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While she with Harlots feasted in my house.
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Duke.
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A greeuous fault: say woman, didst thou so?
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Adr.
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No my good Lord. My selfe, he, and my sister,
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To day did dine together: so befall my soule,
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As this is false he burthens me withall.
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Luc.
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Nere may I looke on day, nor sleepe on night,
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But she tels to your Highnesse simple truth.
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Gold.
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O periur'd woman! They are both forsworne,
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In this the Madman iustly chargeth them.
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E.Ant.
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My Liege, I am aduised what I say,
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Neither disturbed with the effect of Wine,
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Nor headie-rash prouoak'd with raging ire,
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Albeit my wrongs might make one wiser mad.
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This woman lock'd me out this day from dinner;
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That Goldsmith there, were he not pack'd with her,
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Could witnesse it: for he was with me then,
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Who parted with me to go fetch a Chaine,
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Promising to bring it to the Porpentine,
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Where Balthasar and I did dine together.
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Our dinner done, and he not comming thither,
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I went to seeke him. In the street I met him,
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And in his companie that Gentleman.
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There did this periur'd Goldsmith sweare me downe,
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That I this day of him receiu'd the Chaine,
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Which God he knowes, I saw not. For the which,
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He did arrest me with an Officer.
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I did obey, and sent my Pesant home
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For certaine Duckets: he with none return'd.
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Then fairely I bespoke the Officer
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To go in person with me to my house.
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By'th' way, we met my wife, her sister, and a rabble more
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Of vilde Confederates: Along with them
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They brought one Pinch, a hungry leane-fac'd Villaine;
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A meere Anatomie, a Mountebanke,
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A thred-bare Iugler, and a Fortune-teller,
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A needy-hollow-ey'd-sharpe-looking-wretch;
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A liuing dead man. This pernicious slaue,
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Forsooth tooke on him as a Coniurer:
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And gazing in mine eyes, feeling my pulse,
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And with no-face (as 'twere) out-facing me,
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Cries out, I was possest. Then altogether
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They fell vpon me, bound me, bore me thence,
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And in a darke and dankish vault at home
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There left me and my man, both bound together,
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Till gnawing with my teeth my bonds in sunder,
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I gain'd my freedome; and immediately
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Ran hether to your Grace, whom I beseech
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To giue me ample satisfaction
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For these deepe shames, and great indignities.
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Gold.
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My Lord, in truth, thus far I witnes with him:
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That he din'd not at home, but was lock'd out.
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Duke.
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But had he such a Chaine of thee, or no?
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Gold.
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He had my Lord, and when he ran in heere,
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These people saw the Chaine about his necke.
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Mar.
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Besides, I will be sworne these eares of mine,
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Heard you confesse you had the Chaine of him,
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After you first forswore it on the Mart,
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And thereupon I drew my sword on you:
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And then you fled into this Abbey heere,
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From whence I thinke you are come by Miracle.
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E.Ant.
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I neuer came within these Abbey wals,
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Nor euer didst thou draw thy sword on me:
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I neuer saw the Chaine, so helpe me heauen:
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And this is false you burthen me withall.
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Duke.
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Why what an intricate impeach is this?
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I thinke you all haue drunke of Circes cup:
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If heere you hous'd him, heere he would haue bin.
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If he were mad, he would not pleade so coldly:
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You say he din'd at home, the Goldsmith heere
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Denies that saying. Sirra, what say you?
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E.Dro.
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Sir he din'de with her there, at the Porpentine.
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Cur.
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He did, and from my finger snacht that Ring.
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E.Anti.
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Tis true (my Liege) this Ring I had of her.
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Duke.
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Saw'st thou him enter at the Abbey heere?
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Curt.
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As sure (my Liege) as I do see your Grace.
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Duke.
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Why this is straunge: Go call the Abbesse hither.
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I thinke you are all mated, or starke mad.
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Exit one to the Abbesse.
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Fa.
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Most mighty Duke, vouchsafe me speak a word:
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Haply I see a friend will saue my life,
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And pay the sum that may deliuer me.
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Duke.
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Speake freely Siracusian what thou wilt.
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Fath.
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Is not your name sir call'd Antipholus?
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And is not that your bondman Dromio?
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E.Dro.
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Within this houre I was his bondman sir,
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But he I thanke him gnaw'd in two my cords,
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Now am I Dromio, and his man, vnbound.
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Fath.
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I am sure you both of you remember me.
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Dro.
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Our selues we do remember sir by you:
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For lately we were bound as you are now.
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You are not Pinches patient, are you sir?
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Father.
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Why looke you strange on me? you know me well.
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E.Ant.
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I neuer saw you in my life till now.
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Fa.
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Oh! griefe hath chang'd me since you saw me last,
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And carefull houres with times deformed hand,
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Haue written strange defeatures in my face:
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But tell me yet, dost thou not know my voice?
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Ant.
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Neither.
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Fat.
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Dromio, nor thou?
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Dro.
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No trust me sir, nor I.
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Fa.
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I am sure thou dost?
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E.Dromio.
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I sir, but I am sure I do not, and whatsoeuer a man denies, you are now bound to beleeue him.
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Fath.
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Not know my voice, oh times extremity
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Hast thou so crack'd and splitted my poore tongue
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In seuen short yeares, that heere my onely sonne
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Knowes not my feeble key of vntun'd cares?
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Though now this grained face of mine be hid
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In sap-consuming Winters drizled snow,
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And all the Conduits of my blood froze vp:
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Yet hath my night of life some memorie:
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My wasting lampes some fading glimmer left;
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My dull deafe eares a little vse to heare:
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All these old witnesses, I cannot erre.
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Tell me, thou art my sonne Antipholus.
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Ant.
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I neuer saw my Father in my life.
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Fa.
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But seuen yeares since, in Siracusa boy
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Thou know'st we parted, but perhaps my sonne,
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Thou sham'st to acknowledge me in miserie.
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Ant.
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The Duke, and all that know me in the City,
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Can witnesse with me that it is not so.
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I ne're saw Siracusa in my life.
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Duke.
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I tell thee Siracusian, twentie yeares
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Haue I bin Patron to Antipholus,
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During which time, he ne're saw Siracusa:
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I see thy age and dangers make thee dote.
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Enter the Abbesse with Antipholus Siracusa, and Dromio Sir.
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Abbesse.
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Most mightie Duke, behold a man much wrong'd.
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All gather to see them.
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Adr.
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I see two husbands, or mine eyes deceiue me.
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Duke.
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One of these men is genius to the other:
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And so of these, which is the naturall man,
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And which the spirit? Who deciphers them?
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S.Dromio.
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I Sir am Dromio, command him away.
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E.Dro.
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I Sir am Dromio, pray let me stay.
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S.Ant.
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Egeon art thou not? or else his ghost.
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S.Drom.
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Oh my olde Master, who hath bound him heere?
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Abb.
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Who euer bound him, I will lose his bonds,
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And gaine a husband by his libertie:
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Speake olde Egeon, if thou bee'st the man
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That hadst a wife once call'd Æmilia,
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That bore thee at a burthen two faire sonnes?
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Oh if thou bee'st the same Egeon, speake:
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And speake vnto the same Æmilia.
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Duke.
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Why heere begins his Morning storie right:
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These twoAntipholus, these two so like,
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And these two Dromio's, one in semblance:
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Besides her vrging of her wracke at sea,
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These are the parents to these children,
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Which accidentally are met together.
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Fa.
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If I dreame not, thou art Æmilia,
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If thou art she, tell me, where is that sonne
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That floated with thee on the fatall rafte.
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Abb.
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By men of Epidamium, he, and I,
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And the twin Dromio, all were taken vp;
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But by and by, rude Fishermen of Corinth
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By force tooke Dromio, and my sonne from them,
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And me they left with those of Epidamium.
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What then became of them, I cannot tell:
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I, to this fortune that you see mee in.
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Duke.
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Antipholus thou cam'st from Corinth first.
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S.Ant.
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No sir, not I, I came from Siracuse.
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Duke.
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Stay, stand apart, I know not which is which.
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E.Ant.
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I came from Corinth my most gracious Lord
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E.Dro.
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And I with him.
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E.Ant.
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Brought to this Town by that most famous Warriour,
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Duke Menaphon your most renowned Vnckle.
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Adr.
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Which of you two did dine with me to day?
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S.Ant.
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I, gentle Mistris.
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Adr. And are not you my husband?
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E.Ant.
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No, I say nay to that.
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S.Ant.
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And so do I, yet did she call me so:
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And this faire Gentlewoman her sister heere
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Did call me brother. What I told you then,
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I hope I shall haue leisure to make good,
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If this be not a dreame I see and heare.
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Goldsmith.
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That is the Chaine sir, which you had of mee.
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S.Ant.
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I thinke it be sir, I denie it not.
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E.Ant.
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And you sir for this Chaine arrested me.
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Gold.
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I thinke I did sir, I deny it not.
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Adr.
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I sent you monie sir to be your baile
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By Dromio, but I thinke he brought it not.
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E.Dro.
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No, none by me.
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S.Ant.
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This purse of Duckets I receiu'd from you,
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And Dromio my man did bring them me:
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I see we still did meete each others man,
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And I was tane for him, and he for me,
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And thereupon these errors are arose.
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E.Ant.
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These Duckets pawne I for my father heere.
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Duke.
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It shall not neede, thy father hath his life.
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Cur.
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Sir I must haue that Diamond from you.
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E.Ant.
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There take it, and much thanks for my good cheere.
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Abb.
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Renowned Duke, vouchsafe to take the paines
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To go with vs into the Abbey heere,
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|
And heare at large discoursed all our fortunes,
|
|
And all that are assembled in this place:
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|
That by this simpathized one daies error
|
|
Haue suffer'd wrong. Goe, keepe vs companie,
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And we shall make full satisfaction.
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|
Thirtie three yeares haue I but gone in trauaile
|
|
Of you my sonnes, and till this present houre
|
|
My heauie burthen are deliuered:
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The Duke my husband, and my children both,
|
|
And you the Kalenders of their Natiuity,
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|
Go to a Gossips feast, and go with mee,
|
|
After so long greefe such Natiuitie.
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Duke.
|
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With all my heart, Ile Gossip at this feast.
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Exeunt omnes. Manet the two Dromio's and two Brothers.
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S.Dro.
|
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Mast. shall I fetch your stuffe from shipbord?
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E.An.
|
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Dromio, what stuffe of mine hast thou imbarkt
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S.Dro.
|
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Your goods that lay at host sir in the Centaur.
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S.Ant.
|
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He speakes to me, I am your master Dromio.
|
|
Come go with vs, wee'l looke to that anon,
|
|
Embrace thy brother there, reioyce with him. Exit
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S.Dro.
|
|
There is a fat friend at your masters house,
|
|
That kitchin'd me for you to day at dinner:
|
|
She now shall be my sister, not my wife,
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E.D.
|
|
Me thinks you are my glasse, & not my brother:
|
|
I see by you, I am a sweet-fac'd youth,
|
|
Will you walke in to see their gossipping?
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S.Dro.
|
|
Not I sir, you are my elder.
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E.Dro.
|
|
That's a question, how shall we trie it.
|
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S.Dro.
|
|
Wee'l draw Cuts for the Signior, till then, lead thou first.
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|
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|
E.Dro.
|
|
Nay then thus:
|
|
We came into the world like brother and brother:
|
|
And now let's go hand in hand, not one before another. Exeunt.
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FINIS.
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