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actus
tertius
scena
prima
enter
antipholus
of
ephesus
his
man
dromio
angelo
the
goldsmith
and
balthaser
the
merchant
e
anti
good
signior
angelo
you
must
excuse
vs
all
my
wife
is
shrewish
when
i
keepe
not
howres
say
that
i
lingerd
with
you
at
your
shop
to
see
the
making
of
her
carkanet
and
that
to
morrow
you
will
bring
it
home
but
here's
a
villaine
that
would
face
me
downe
he
met
me
on
the
mart
and
that
i
beat
him
and
charg'd
him
with
a
thousand
markes
in
gold
and
that
i
did
denie
my
wife
and
house
thou
drunkard
thou
what
didst
thou
meane
by
this
e
dro
say
what
you
wil
sir
but
i
know
what
i
know
that
you
beat
me
at
the
mart
i
haue
your
hand
to
show
if
the
skin
were
parchment
the
blows
you
gaue
were
ink
your
owne
hand
writing
would
tell
you
what
i
thinke
e
ant
i
thinke
thou
art
an
asse
e
dro
marry
so
it
doth
appeare
by
the
wrongs
i
suffer
and
the
blowes
i
beare
i
should
kicke
being
kickt
and
being
at
that
passe
you
would
keepe
from
my
heeles
and
beware
of
an
asse
e
an
y'are
sad
signior
balthazar
pray
god
our
cheer
may
answer
my
good
will
and
your
good
welcom
here
bal
i
hold
your
dainties
cheap
sir
your
welcom
deer
e
an
oh
signior
balthazar
either
at
flesh
or
fish
a
table
full
of
welcome
makes
scarce
one
dainty
dish
bal
good
meat
sir
is
co
m
mon
that
euery
churle
affords
anti
and
welcome
more
common
for
thats
nothing
but
words
bal
small
cheere
and
great
welcome
makes
a
merrie
feast
anti
i
to
a
niggardly
host
and
more
sparing
guest
but
though
my
cates
be
meane
take
them
in
good
part
better
cheere
may
you
haue
but
not
with
better
hart
but
soft
my
doore
is
lockt
goe
bid
them
let
vs
in
e
dro
maud
briget
marian
cisley
gillian
ginn
s
dro
mome
malthorse
capon
coxcombe
idiot
patch
either
get
thee
from
the
dore
or
sit
downe
at
the
hatch
dost
thou
coniure
for
wenches
that
thou
calst
for
such
store
when
one
is
one
too
many
goe
get
thee
from
the
dore
e
dro
what
patch
is
made
our
porter
my
master
stayes
in
the
street
s
dro
let
him
walke
from
whence
he
came
lest
hee
catch
cold
on's
feet
e
ant
who
talks
within
there
hoa
open
the
dore
s
dro
right
sir
ile
tell
you
when
and
you'll
tell
me
wherefore
ant
wherefore
for
my
dinner
i
haue
not
din'd
to
day
s
dro
nor
to
day
here
you
must
not
come
againe
when
you
may
anti
what
art
thou
that
keep'st
mee
out
from
the
howse
i
owe
s
dro
the
porter
for
this
time
sir
and
my
name
is
dromio
e
dro
o
villaine
thou
hast
stolne
both
mine
office
and
my
name
the
one
nere
got
me
credit
the
other
mickle
blame
if
thou
hadst
beene
dromio
to
day
in
my
place
thou
wouldst
haue
chang'd
thy
face
for
a
name
or
thy
name
for
an
asse
enter
luce
luce
what
a
coile
is
there
dromio
who
are
those
at
the
gate
e
dro
let
my
master
in
luce
luce
faith
no
hee
comes
too
late
and
so
tell
your
master
e
dro
o
lord
i
must
laugh
haue
at
you
with
a
prouerbe
shall
i
set
in
my
staffe
luce
haue
at
you
with
another
that's
when
can
you
tell
s
dro
if
thy
name
be
called
luce
luce
thou
hast
an
swer'd
him
well
anti
doe
you
heare
you
minion
you'll
let
vs
in
i
hope
luce
i
thought
to
haue
askt
you
s
dro
and
you
said
no
e
dro
so
come
helpe
well
strooke
there
was
blow
for
blow
anti
thou
baggage
let
me
in
luce
can
you
tell
for
whose
sake
e
drom
master
knocke
the
doore
hard
luce
let
him
knocke
till
it
ake
anti
you'll
crie
for
this
minion
if
i
beat
the
doore
downe
luce
what
needs
all
that
and
a
paire
of
stocks
in
the
towne
enter
adriana
adr
who
is
that
at
the
doore
that
keeps
all
this
noise
s
dro
by
my
troth
your
towne
is
troubled
with
vnruly
boies
anti
are
you
there
wife
you
might
haue
come
before
adri
your
wife
sir
knaue
go
get
you
from
the
dore
e
dro
if
you
went
in
paine
master
this
knaue
wold
goe
sore
angelo
heere
is
neither
cheere
sir
nor
welcome
we
would
faine
haue
either
baltz
in
debating
which
was
best
wee
shall
part
with
neither
e
dro
they
stand
at
the
doore
master
bid
them
welcome
hither
anti
there
is
something
in
the
winde
that
we
cannot
get
in
e
dro
you
would
say
so
master
if
your
garments
were
thin
your
cake
here
is
warme
within
you
stand
here
in
the
cold
it
would
make
a
man
mad
as
a
bucke
to
be
so
bought
and
sold
ant
go
fetch
me
something
ile
break
ope
the
gate
s
dro
breake
any
breaking
here
and
ile
breake
your
knaues
pate
e
dro
a
man
may
breake
a
word
with
your
sir
and
words
are
but
winde
i
and
breake
it
in
your
face
so
he
break
it
not
behinde
s
dro
it
seemes
thou
want'st
breaking
out
vpon
thee
hinde
e
dro
here's
too
much
out
vpon
thee
i
pray
thee
let
me
in
s
dro
i
when
fowles
haue
no
feathers
and
fish
haue
no
fin
ant
well
ile
breake
in
go
borrow
me
a
crow
e
dro
a
crow
without
feather
master
meane
you
so
for
a
fish
without
a
finne
ther's
a
fowle
without
a
fether
if
a
crow
help
vs
in
sirra
wee'll
plucke
a
crow
together
ant
go
get
thee
gon
fetch
me
an
iron
crow
balth
haue
patience
sir
oh
let
it
not
be
so
heerein
you
warre
against
your
reputation
and
draw
within
the
compasse
of
suspect
th'
vnuiolated
honor
of
your
wife
once
this
your
long
experience
of
your
wisedome
her
sober
vertue
yeares
and
modestie
plead
on
your
part
some
cause
to
you
vnknowne
and
doubt
not
sir
but
she
will
well
excuse
why
at
this
time
the
dores
are
made
against
you
be
rul'd
by
me
depart
in
patience
and
let
vs
to
the
tyger
all
to
dinner
and
about
euening
come
your
selfe
alone
to
know
the
reason
of
this
strange
restraint
if
by
strong
hand
you
offer
to
breake
in
now
in
the
stirring
passage
of
the
day
a
vulgar
comment
will
be
made
of
it
and
that
supposed
by
the
common
rowt
against
your
yet
vngalled
estimation
that
may
with
foule
intrusion
enter
in
and
dwell
vpon
your
graue
when
you
are
dead
for
slander
liues
vpon
succession
for
euer
hows'd
where
it
gets
possession
anti
you
haue
preuail'd
i
will
depart
in
quiet
and
in
despight
of
mirth
meane
to
be
merrie
i
know
a
wench
of
excellent
discourse
prettie
and
wittie
wilde
and
yet
too
gentle
there
will
we
dine
this
woman
that
i
meane
my
wife
but
i
protest
without
desert
hath
oftentimes
vpbraided
me
withall
to
her
will
we
to
dinner
get
you
home
and
fetch
the
chaine
by
this
i
know
'tis
made
bring
it
i
pray
you
to
the
porpentine
for
there's
the
house
that
chaine
will
i
bestow
be
it
for
nothing
but
to
spight
my
wife
vpon
mine
hostesse
there
good
sir
make
haste
since
mine
owne
doores
refuse
to
entertaine
me
ile
knocke
else
where
to
see
if
they'll
disdaine
me
ang
ile
meet
you
at
that
place
some
houre
hence
anti
do
so
this
iest
shall
cost
me
some
expence
exeunt
enter
iuliana
with
antipholus
of
siracusia
iulia
and
may
it
be
that
you
haue
quite
forgot
a
husbands
office
shall
antipholus
euen
in
the
spring
of
loue
thy
loue
springs
rot
shall
loue
in
buildings
grow
so
ruinate
if
you
did
wed
my
sister
for
her
wealth
then
for
her
wealths
sake
vse
her
with
more
kindnesse
or
if
you
like
else
where
doe
it
by
stealth
muffle
your
false
loue
with
some
shew
of
blindnesse
let
not
my
sister
read
it
in
your
eye
be
not
thy
tongue
thy
owne
shames
orator
looke
sweet
speake
faire
become
disloyaltie
apparell
vice
like
vertues
harbenger
beare
a
faire
presence
though
your
heart
be
tainted
teach
sinne
the
carriage
of
a
holy
saint
be
secret
false
what
need
she
be
acquainted
what
simple
thiefe
brags
of
his
owne
attaine
'tis
double
wrong
to
truant
with
your
bed
and
let
her
read
it
in
thy
lookes
at
boord
shame
hath
a
bastard
fame
well
managed
ill
deeds
is
doubled
with
an
euill
word
alas
poore
women
make
vs
not
beleeue
being
compact
of
credit
that
you
loue
vs
though
others
haue
the
arme
shew
vs
the
sleeue
we
in
your
motion
turne
and
you
may
moue
vs
then
gentle
brother
get
you
in
againe
comfort
my
sister
cheere
her
call
her
wise
'tis
holy
sport
to
be
a
little
vaine
when
the
sweet
breath
of
flatterie
conquers
strife
s
anti
sweete
mistris
what
your
name
is
else
i
know
not
nor
by
what
wonder
you
do
hit
of
mine
lesse
in
your
knowledge
and
your
grace
you
show
not
then
our
earths
wonder
more
then
earth
diuine
teach
me
deere
creature
how
to
thinke
and
speake
lay
open
to
my
earthie
grosse
conceit
smothred
in
errors
feeble
shallow
weake
the
foulded
meaning
of
your
words
deceit
against
my
soules
pure
truth
why
labour
you
to
make
it
wander
in
an
vnknowne
field
are
you
a
god
would
you
create
me
new
transforme
me
then
and
to
your
powre
ile
yeeld
but
if
that
i
am
i
then
well
i
know
your
weeping
sister
is
no
wife
of
mine
nor
to
her
bed
no
homage
doe
i
owe
farre
more
farre
more
to
you
doe
i
decline
oh
traine
me
not
sweet
mermaide
with
thy
note
to
drowne
me
in
thy
sister
floud
of
teares
sing
siren
for
thy
selfe
and
i
will
dote
spread
ore
the
siluer
waues
thy
golden
haires
and
as
a
bud
ile
take
thee
and
there
lie
and
in
that
glorious
supposition
thinke
he
gaines
by
death
that
hath
such
meanes
to
die
let
loue
being
light
be
drowned
if
she
sinke
luc
what
are
you
mad
that
you
doe
reason
so
ant
not
mad
but
mated
how
i
doe
not
know
luc
it
is
a
fault
that
springeth
from
your
eie
ant
for
gazing
on
your
beames
faire
sun
being
by
luc
gaze
when
you
should
and
that
will
cleere
your
sight
ant
as
good
to
winke
sweet
loue
as
looke
on
night
luc
why
call
you
me
loue
call
my
sister
so
ant
thy
sisters
sister
luc
that's
my
sister
ant
no
it
is
thy
selfe
mine
owne
selfes
better
part
mine
eies
cleere
eie
my
deere
hearts
deerer
heart
my
foode
my
fortune
and
my
sweet
hopes
aime
my
sole
earths
heauen
and
my
heauens
claime
luc
all
this
my
sister
is
or
else
should
be
ant
call
thy
selfe
sister
sweet
for
i
am
thee
thee
will
i
loue
and
with
thee
lead
my
life
thou
hast
no
husband
yet
nor
i
no
wife
giue
me
thy
hand
luc
oh
soft
sir
hold
you
still
ile
fetch
my
sister
to
get
her
good
will
exit
enter
dromio
siracusia
ant
why
how
now
dromio
where
run'st
thou
so
fast
s
dro
doe
you
know
me
sir
am
i
dromio
am
i
your
man
am
i
my
selfe
ant
thou
art
dromio
thou
art
my
man
thou
art
thy
selfe
dro
i
am
an
asse
i
am
a
womans
man
and
besides
my
selfe
ant
what
womans
man
and
how
besides
thy
selfe
dro
marrie
sir
besides
my
selfe
i
am
due
to
a
woman
one
that
claimes
me
one
that
haunts
me
one
that
will
haue
me
anti
what
claime
laies
she
to
thee
dro
marry
sir
such
claime
as
you
would
lay
to
your
horse
and
she
would
haue
me
as
a
beast
not
that
i
beeing
a
beast
she
would
haue
me
but
that
she
being
a
verie
beastly
creature
layes
claime
to
me
anti
what
is
she
dro
a
very
reuerent
body
i
such
a
one
as
a
man
may
not
speake
of
without
he
say
sir
reuerence
i
haue
but
leane
lucke
in
the
match
and
yet
is
she
a
wondrous
fat
marriage
anti
how
dost
thou
meane
a
fat
marriage
dro
marry
sir
she's
the
kitchin
wench
al
grease
and
i
know
not
what
vse
to
put
her
too
but
to
make
a
lampe
of
her
and
run
from
her
by
her
owne
light
i
warrant
her
ragges
and
the
tallow
in
them
will
burne
a
poland
winter
if
she
liues
till
doomesday
she'l
burne
a
weeke
longer
then
the
whole
world
anti
what
complexion
is
she
of
dro
swart
like
my
shoo
but
her
face
nothing
like
so
cleane
kept
for
why
she
sweats
a
man
may
goe
o
uer
shooes
in
the
grime
of
it
anti
that's
a
fault
that
water
will
mend
dro
no
sir
'tis
in
graine
noahs
flood
could
not
do
it
anti
what's
her
name
dro
nell
sir
but
her
name
is
three
quarters
that's
an
ell
and
three
quarters
will
not
measure
her
from
hip
to
hip
anti
then
she
beares
some
bredth
dro
no
longer
from
head
to
foot
then
from
hippe
to
hippe
she
is
sphericall
like
a
globe
i
could
find
out
countries
in
her
anti
in
what
part
of
her
body
stands
ireland
dro
marry
sir
in
her
buttockes
i
found
it
out
by
the
bogges
ant
where
scotland
dro
i
found
it
by
the
barrennesse
hard
in
the
palme
of
the
hand
ant
where
france
dro
in
her
forhead
arm'd
and
reuerted
making
warre
against
her
heire
ant
where
england
dro
i
look'd
for
the
chalkle
cliffes
but
i
could
find
no
whitenesse
in
them
but
i
guesse
it
stood
in
her
chin
by
the
salt
rheume
that
ranne
betweene
france
and
it
ant
where
spaine
dro
faith
i
saw
it
not
but
i
felt
it
hot
in
her
breth
ant
where
america
the
indies
dro
oh
sir
vpon
her
nose
all
ore
embellished
with
rubies
carbuncles
saphires
declining
their
rich
aspect
to
the
hot
breath
of
spaine
who
sent
whole
armadoes
of
carrects
to
be
ballast
at
her
nose
anti
where
stood
belgia
the
netherlands
dro
oh
sir
i
did
not
looke
so
low
to
conclude
this
drudge
or
diuiner
layd
claime
to
mee
call'd
mee
dromio
swore
i
was
assur'd
to
her
told
me
what
priuie
markes
i
had
about
mee
as
the
marke
of
my
shoulder
the
mole
in
my
necke
the
great
wart
on
my
left
arme
that
i
amaz'd
ranne
from
her
as
a
witch
and
i
thinke
if
my
brest
had
not
beene
made
of
faith
and
my
heart
of
steele
she
had
transform'd
me
to
a
curtull
dog
made
me
turne
i'th
wheele
anti
go
hie
thee
presently
post
to
the
rode
and
if
the
winde
blow
any
way
from
shore
i
will
not
harbour
in
this
towne
to
night
if
any
barke
put
forth
come
to
the
mart
where
i
will
walke
till
thou
returne
to
me
if
euerie
one
knowes
vs
and
we
know
none
'tis
time
i
thinke
to
trudge
packe
and
be
gone
dro
as
from
a
beare
a
man
would
run
for
life
so
flie
i
from
her
that
would
be
my
wife
exit
anti
there's
none
but
witches
do
inhabite
heere
and
therefore
'tis
hie
time
that
i
were
hence
she
that
doth
call
me
husband
euen
my
soule
doth
for
a
wife
abhorre
but
her
faire
sister
possest
with
such
a
gentle
soueraigne
grace
of
such
inchanting
presence
and
discourse
hath
almost
made
me
traitor
to
my
selfe
but
least
my
selfe
be
guilty
to
selfe
wrong
ile
stop
mine
eares
against
the
mermaids
song
enter
angelo
with
the
chaine
ang
mr
antipholus
anti
i
that's
my
name
ang
i
know
it
well
sir
loe
here's
the
chaine
i
thought
to
haue
tane
you
at
the
porpentine
the
chaine
vnfinish'd
made
me
stay
thus
long
anti
what
is
your
will
that
i
shal
do
with
this
ang
what
please
your
selfe
sir
i
haue
made
it
for
you
anti
made
it
for
me
sir
i
bespoke
it
not
ang
not
once
nor
twice
but
twentie
times
you
haue
go
home
with
it
and
please
your
wife
withall
and
soone
at
supper
time
ile
visit
you
and
then
receiue
my
money
for
the
chaine
anti
i
pray
you
sir
receiue
the
money
now
for
feare
you
ne're
see
chaine
nor
mony
more
ang
you
are
a
merry
man
sir
fare
you
well
exit
ant
what
i
should
thinke
of
this
i
cannot
tell
but
this
i
thinke
there's
no
man
is
so
vaine
that
would
refuse
so
faire
an
offer'd
chaine
i
see
a
man
heere
needs
not
liue
by
shifts
when
in
the
streets
he
meetes
such
golden
gifts
ile
to
the
mart
and
there
for
dromio
stay
if
any
ship
put
out
then
straight
away
exit
actus
secundus
enter
adriana
wife
to
antipholis
sereptus
with
luciana
her
sister
adr
neither
my
husband
nor
the
slaue
return'd
that
in
such
haste
i
sent
to
seeke
his
master
sure
luciana
it
is
two
a
clocke
luc
perhaps
some
merchant
hath
inuited
him
and
from
the
mart
he's
somewhere
gone
to
dinner
good
sister
let
vs
dine
and
neuer
fret
a
man
is
master
of
his
libertie
time
is
their
master
and
when
they
see
time
they'll
goe
or
come
if
so
be
patient
sister
adr
why
should
their
libertie
then
ours
be
more
luc
because
their
businesse
still
lies
out
a
dore
adr
looke
when
i
serue
him
so
he
takes
it
thus
luc
oh
know
he
is
the
bridle
of
your
will
adr
there's
none
but
asses
will
be
bridled
so
luc
why
headstrong
liberty
is
lasht
with
woe
there's
nothing
situate
vnder
heauens
eye
but
hath
his
bound
in
earth
in
sea
in
skie
the
beasts
the
fishes
and
the
winged
fowles
are
their
males
subiects
and
at
their
controules
man
more
diuine
the
master
of
all
these
lord
of
the
wide
world
and
wilde
watry
seas
indued
with
intellectuall
sence
and
soules
of
more
preheminence
then
fish
and
fowles
are
masters
to
their
females
and
their
lords
then
let
your
will
attend
on
their
accords
adri
this
seruitude
makes
you
to
keepe
vnwed
luci
not
this
but
troubles
of
the
marriage
bed
adr
but
were
you
wedded
you
wold
bear
some
sway
luc
ere
i
learne
loue
ile
practise
to
obey
adr
how
if
your
husband
start
some
other
where
luc
till
he
come
home
againe
i
would
forbeare
adr
patience
vnmou'd
no
maruel
though
she
pause
they
can
be
meeke
that
haue
no
other
cause
a
wretched
soule
bruis'd
with
aduersitie
we
bid
be
quiet
when
we
heare
it
crie
but
were
we
burdned
with
like
waight
of
paine
as
much
or
more
we
should
our
selues
complaine
so
thou
that
hast
no
vnkinde
mate
to
greeue
thee
with
vrging
helpelesse
patience
would
releeue
me
but
if
thou
liue
to
see
like
right
bereft
this
foole
beg'd
patience
in
thee
will
be
left
luci
well
i
will
marry
one
day
but
to
trie
heere
comes
your
man
now
is
your
husband
nie
enter
dromio
eph
adr
say
is
your
tardie
master
now
at
hand
e
dro
nay
hee's
at
too
hands
with
mee
and
that
my
two
eares
can
witnesse
adr
say
didst
thou
speake
with
him
knowst
thou
his
minde
e
dro
i
i
he
told
his
minde
vpon
mine
eare
beshrew
his
hand
i
scarce
could
vnderstand
it
luc
spake
hee
so
doubtfully
thou
couldst
not
feele
his
meaning
e
dro
nay
hee
strooke
so
plainly
i
could
too
well
feele
his
blowes
and
withall
so
doubtfully
that
i
could
scarce
vnderstand
them
adri
but
say
i
prethee
is
he
comming
home
it
seemes
he
hath
great
care
to
please
his
wife
e
dro
why
mistresse
sure
my
master
is
horne
mad
adri
horne
mad
thou
villaine
e
dro
i
meane
not
cuckold
mad
but
sure
he
is
starke
mad
when
i
desir'd
him
to
come
home
to
dinner
he
ask'd
me
for
a
hundred
markes
in
gold
'tis
dinner
time
quoth
i
my
gold
quoth
he
your
meat
doth
burne
quoth
i
my
gold
quoth
he
will
you
come
quoth
i
my
gold
quoth
he
where
is
the
thousand
markes
i
gaue
thee
villaine
the
pigge
quoth
i
is
burn'd
my
gold
quoth
he
my
mistresse
sir
quoth
i
hang
vp
thy
mistresse
i
know
not
thy
mistresse
out
on
thy
mistresse
luci
quoth
who
e
dr
quoth
my
master
i
know
quoth
he
no
house
no
wife
no
mistresse
so
that
my
arrant
due
vnto
my
tongue
i
thanke
him
i
bare
home
vpon
my
shoulders
for
in
conclusion
he
did
beat
me
there
adri
go
back
againe
thou
slaue
fetch
him
home
dro
goe
backe
againe
and
be
new
beaten
home
for
gods
sake
send
some
other
messenger
adri
backe
slaue
or
i
will
breake
thy
pate
a
crosse
dro
and
he
will
blesse
the
crosse
with
other
beating
betweene
you
i
shall
haue
a
holy
head
adri
hence
prating
pesant
fetch
thy
master
home
dro
am
i
so
round
with
you
as
you
with
me
that
like
a
foot
ball
you
doe
spurne
me
thus
you
spurne
me
hence
and
he
will
spurne
me
hither
if
i
last
in
this
seruice
you
must
case
me
in
leather
luci
fie
how
impatience
lowreth
in
your
face
adri
his
company
must
do
his
minions
grace
whil'st
i
at
home
starue
for
a
merrie
looke
hath
homelie
age
th'
alluring
beauty
tooke
from
my
poore
cheeke
then
he
hath
wasted
it
are
my
discourses
dull
barren
my
wit
if
voluble
and
sharpe
discourse
be
mar'd
vnkindnesse
blunts
it
more
then
marble
hard
doe
their
gay
vestments
his
affections
baite
that's
not
my
fault
hee's
master
of
my
state
what
ruines
are
in
me
that
can
be
found
by
him
not
ruin'd
then
is
he
the
ground
of
my
defeatures
my
decayed
faire
a
sunnie
looke
of
his
would
soone
repaire
but
too
vnruly
deere
he
breakes
the
pale
and
feedes
from
home
poore
i
am
but
his
stale
luci
selfe
harming
iealousie
fie
beat
it
hence
ad
vnfeeling
fools
can
with
such
wrongs
dispence
i
know
his
eye
doth
homage
other
where
or
else
what
lets
it
but
he
would
be
here
sister
you
know
he
promis'd
me
a
chaine
would
that
alone
a
loue
he
would
detaine
so
he
would
keepe
faire
quarter
with
his
bed
i
see
the
iewell
best
enamaled
will
loose
his
beautie
yet
the
gold
bides
still
that
others
touch
and
often
touching
will
where
gold
and
no
man
that
hath
a
name
by
falshood
and
corruption
doth
it
shame
since
that
my
beautie
cannot
please
his
eie
ile
weepe
what's
left
away
and
weeping
die
luci
how
manie
fond
fooles
serue
mad
ielousie
exit
enter
antipholis
errotis
ant
the
gold
i
gaue
to
dromio
is
laid
vp
safe
at
the
centaur
and
the
heedfull
slaue
is
wandred
forth
in
care
to
seeke
me
out
by
computation
and
mine
hosts
report
i
could
not
speake
with
dromio
since
at
first
i
sent
him
from
the
mart
see
here
he
comes
enter
dromio
siracusia
how
now
sir
is
your
merrie
humor
alter'd
as
you
loue
stroakes
so
iest
with
me
againe
you
know
no
centaur
you
receiu'd
no
gold
your
mistresse
sent
to
haue
me
home
to
dinner
my
house
was
at
the
phœnix
wast
thou
mad
that
thus
so
madlie
thou
did
didst
answere
me
s
dro
what
answer
sir
when
spake
i
such
a
word
e
ant
euen
now
euen
here
not
halfe
an
howre
since
s
dro
i
did
not
see
you
since
you
sent
me
hence
home
to
the
centaur
with
the
gold
you
gaue
me
ant
villaine
thou
didst
denie
the
golds
receit
and
toldst
me
of
a
mistresse
and
a
dinner
for
which
i
hope
thou
feltst
i
was
displeas'd
s
dro
i
am
glad
to
see
you
in
this
merrie
vaine
what
meanes
this
iest
i
pray
you
master
tell
me
ant
yea
dost
thou
ieere
flowt
me
in
the
teeth
thinkst
thou
i
iest
hold
take
thou
that
that
beats
dro
s
dr
hold
sir
for
gods
sake
now
your
iest
is
earnest
vpon
what
bargaine
do
you
giue
it
me
antiph
because
that
i
familiarlie
sometimes
doe
vse
you
for
my
foole
and
chat
with
you
your
sawcinesse
will
iest
vpon
my
loue
and
make
a
common
of
my
serious
howres
when
the
sunne
shines
let
foolish
gnats
make
sport
but
creepe
in
crannies
when
he
hides
his
beames
if
you
will
iest
with
me
know
my
aspect
and
fashion
your
demeanor
to
my
lookes
or
i
will
beat
this
method
in
your
sconce
s
dro
sconce
call
you
it
so
you
would
leaue
battering
i
had
rather
haue
it
a
head
and
you
vse
these
blows
long
i
must
get
a
sconce
for
my
head
and
insconce
it
to
or
else
i
shall
seek
my
wit
in
my
shoulders
but
i
pray
sir
why
am
i
beaten
ant
dost
thou
not
know
s
dro
nothing
sir
but
that
i
am
beaten
ant
shall
i
tell
you
why
s
dro
i
sir
and
wherefore
for
they
say
euery
why
hath
a
wherefore
ant
why
first
for
flowting
me
and
then
wherefore
for
vrging
it
the
second
time
to
me
s
dro
was
there
euer
anie
man
thus
beaten
out
of
season
when
in
the
why
and
the
wherefore
is
neither
rime
nor
reason
well
sir
i
thanke
you
ant
thanke
me
sir
for
what
s
dro
marry
sir
for
this
something
that
you
gaue
me
for
nothing
ant
ile
make
you
amends
next
to
giue
you
nothing
for
something
but
say
sir
is
it
dinner
time
s
dro
no
sir
i
thinke
the
meat
wants
that
i
haue
ant
in
good
time
sir
what's
that
s
dro
basting
ant
well
sir
then
'twill
be
drie
s
dro
if
it
be
sir
i
pray
you
eat
none
of
it
ant
your
reason
s
dro
lest
it
make
you
chollericke
and
purchase
me
another
drie
basting
ant
well
sir
learne
to
iest
in
good
time
there's
a
time
for
all
things
s
dro
i
durst
haue
denied
that
before
you
were
so
chollericke
anti
by
what
rule
sir
s
dro
marry
sir
by
a
rule
as
plaine
as
the
plaine
bald
pate
of
father
time
himselfe
ant
let's
heare
it
s
dro
there's
no
time
for
a
man
to
recouer
his
haire
that
growes
bald
by
nature
ant
may
he
not
doe
it
by
fine
and
recouerie
s
dro
yes
to
pay
a
fine
for
a
perewig
and
recouer
the
lost
haire
of
another
man
ant
why
is
time
such
a
niggard
of
haire
being
as
it
is
so
plentifull
an
excrement
s
dro
because
it
is
a
blessing
that
hee
bestowes
on
beasts
and
what
he
hath
scanted
them
in
haire
hee
hath
giuen
them
in
wit
ant
why
but
theres
manie
a
man
hath
more
haire
then
wit
s
dro
not
a
man
of
those
but
he
hath
the
wit
to
lose
his
haire
ant
why
thou
didst
conclude
hairy
men
plain
dealers
without
wit
s
dro
the
plainer
dealer
the
sooner
lost
yet
he
looseth
it
in
a
kinde
of
iollitie
an
for
what
reason
s
dro
for
two
and
sound
ones
to
an
nay
not
sound
i
pray
you
s
dro
sure
ones
then
an
nay
not
sure
in
a
thing
falsing
s
dro
certaine
ones
then
an
name
them
s
dro
the
one
to
saue
the
money
that
he
spends
in
trying
the
other
that
at
dinner
they
should
not
drop
in
his
porrage
an
you
would
all
this
time
haue
prou'd
there
is
no
time
for
all
things
s
dro
marry
and
did
sir
namely
in
no
time
to
recouer
haire
lost
by
nature
an
but
your
reason
was
not
substantiall
why
there
is
no
time
to
recouer
s
dro
thus
i
mend
it
time
himselfe
is
bald
and
therefore
to
the
worlds
end
will
haue
bald
followers
an
i
knew
'twould
be
a
bald
conclusion
but
soft
who
wafts
vs
yonder
enter
adriana
and
luciana
adri
i
i
antipholus
looke
strange
and
frowne
some
other
mistresse
hath
thy
sweet
aspects
i
am
not
adriana
nor
thy
wife
the
time
was
once
when
thou
vn
vrg'd
wouldst
vow
that
neuer
words
were
musicke
to
thine
eare
that
neuer
obiect
pleasing
in
thine
eye
that
neuer
touch
well
welcome
to
thy
hand
that
neuer
meat
sweet
sauour'd
in
thy
taste
vnlesse
i
spake
or
look'd
or
touch'd
or
caru'd
to
thee
how
comes
it
now
my
husband
oh
how
comes
it
that
thou
art
then
estranged
from
thy
selfe
thy
selfe
i
call
it
being
strange
to
me
that
vndiuidable
incorporate
am
better
then
thy
deere
selfes
better
part
ah
doe
not
teare
away
thy
selfe
from
me
for
know
my
loue
as
easie
maist
thou
fall
a
drop
of
water
in
the
breaking
gulfe
and
take
vnmingled
thence
that
drop
againe
without
addition
or
diminishing
as
take
from
me
thy
selfe
and
not
me
too
how
deerely
would
it
touch
thee
to
the
quicke
shouldst
thou
but
heare
i
were
licencious
and
that
this
body
consecrate
to
thee
by
ruffian
lust
should
be
contaminate
wouldst
thou
not
spit
at
me
and
spurne
at
me
and
hurle
the
name
of
husband
in
my
face
and
teare
the
stain'd
skin
of
my
harlot
brow
and
from
my
false
hand
cut
the
wedding
ring
and
breake
it
with
a
deepe
diuorcing
vow
i
know
thou
canst
and
therefore
see
thou
doe
it
i
am
possest
with
an
adulterate
blot
my
bloud
is
mingled
with
the
crime
of
lust
for
if
we
two
be
one
and
thou
play
false
i
doe
digest
the
poison
of
thy
flesh
being
strumpeted
by
thy
contagion
keepe
then
faire
league
and
truce
with
thy
true
bed
i
liue
distain'd
thou
vndishonoured
antip
plead
you
to
me
faire
dame
i
know
you
not
in
ephesus
i
am
but
two
houres
old
as
strange
vnto
your
towne
as
to
your
talke
who
euery
word
by
all
my
wit
being
scan'd
wants
wit
in
all
one
word
to
vnderstand
luci
fie
brother
how
the
world
is
chang'd
with
you
when
were
you
wont
to
vse
my
sister
thus
she
sent
for
you
by
dromio
home
to
dinner
ant
by
dromio
drom
by
me
adr
by
thee
and
this
thou
didst
returne
from
him
that
he
did
buffet
thee
and
in
his
blowes
denied
my
house
for
his
me
for
his
wife
ant
did
you
conuerse
sir
with
this
gentlewoman
what
is
the
course
and
drift
of
your
compact
s
dro
i
sir
i
neuer
saw
her
till
this
time
ant
villaine
thou
liest
for
euen
her
verie
words
didst
thou
deliuer
to
me
on
the
mart
s
dro
i
neuer
spake
with
her
in
all
my
life
ant
how
can
she
thus
then
call
vs
by
our
names
vnlesse
it
be
by
inspiration
adri
how
ill
agrees
it
with
your
grauitie
to
counterfeit
thus
grosely
with
your
slaue
abetting
him
to
thwart
me
in
my
moode
be
it
my
wrong
you
are
from
me
exempt
but
wrong
not
that
wrong
with
a
more
contempt
come
i
will
fasten
on
this
sleeue
of
thine
thou
art
an
elme
my
husband
i
a
vine
whose
weaknesse
married
to
thy
stranger
state
makes
me
with
thy
strength
to
communicate
if
ought
possesse
thee
from
me
it
is
drosse
vsurping
iuie
brier
or
idle
mosse
who
all
for
want
of
pruning
with
intrusion
infect
thy
sap
and
liue
on
thy
confusion
ant
to
mee
shee
speakes
shee
moues
mee
for
her
theame
what
was
i
married
to
her
in
my
dreame
or
sleepe
i
now
and
thinke
i
heare
all
this
what
error
driues
our
eies
and
eares
amisse
vntill
i
know
this
sure
vncertaintie
ile
entertaine
the
free'd
fallacie
luc
dromio
goe
bid
the
seruants
spred
for
dinner
s
dro
oh
for
my
beads
i
crosse
me
for
a
sinner
this
is
the
fairie
land
oh
spight
of
spights
we
talke
with
goblins
owles
and
sprights
if
we
obay
them
not
this
will
insue
they'll
sucke
our
breath
or
pinch
vs
blacke
and
blew
luc
why
prat'st
thou
to
thy
selfe
and
answer'st
not
dromio
thou
dromio
thou
snaile
thou
slug
thou
sot
s
dro
i
am
transformed
master
am
i
not
ant
i
thinke
thou
art
in
minde
and
so
am
i
s
dro
nay
master
both
in
minde
and
in
my
shape
ant
thou
hast
thine
owne
forme
s
dro
no
i
am
an
ape
luc
if
thou
art
chang'd
to
ought
'tis
to
an
asse
s
dro
'tis
true
she
rides
me
and
i
long
for
grasse
'tis
so
i
am
an
asse
else
it
could
neuer
be
but
i
should
know
her
as
well
as
she
knowes
me
adr
come
come
no
longer
will
i
be
a
foole
to
put
the
finger
in
the
eie
and
weepe
whil'st
man
and
master
laughes
my
woes
to
scorne
come
sir
to
dinner
dromio
keepe
the
gate
husband
ile
dine
aboue
with
you
to
day
and
shriue
you
of
a
thousand
idle
prankes
sirra
if
any
aske
you
for
your
master
say
he
dines
forth
and
let
no
creature
enter
come
sister
dromio
play
the
porter
well
ant
am
i
in
earth
in
heauen
or
in
hell
sleeping
or
waking
mad
or
well
aduisde
knowne
vnto
these
and
to
my
selfe
disguisde
ile
say
as
they
say
and
perseuer
so
and
in
this
mist
at
all
aduentures
go
s
dro
master
shall
i
be
porter
at
the
gate
adr
i
and
let
none
enter
least
i
breake
your
pate
luc
come
come
antipholus
we
dine
to
late
actus
quintus
scœna
prima
enter
the
merchant
and
the
goldsmith
gold
i
am
sorry
sir
that
i
haue
hindred
you
but
i
protest
he
had
the
chaine
of
me
though
most
dishonestly
he
doth
denie
it
mar
how
is
the
man
esteem'd
heere
in
the
citie
gold
of
very
reuerent
reputation
sir
of
credit
infinite
highly
belou'd
second
to
none
that
liues
heere
in
the
citie
his
word
might
beare
my
wealth
at
any
time
mar
speake
softly
yonder
as
i
thinke
he
walkes
enter
antipholus
and
dromio
againe
gold
'tis
so
and
that
selfe
chaine
about
his
necke
which
he
forswore
most
monstrously
to
haue
good
sir
draw
neere
to
me
ile
speake
to
him
signior
antipholus
i
wonder
much
that
you
would
put
me
to
this
shame
and
trouble
and
not
without
some
scandall
to
your
selfe
with
circumstance
and
oaths
so
to
denie
this
chaine
which
now
you
weare
so
openly
beside
the
charge
the
shame
imprisonment
you
haue
done
wrong
to
this
my
honest
friend
who
but
for
staying
on
our
controuersie
had
hoisted
saile
and
put
to
sea
to
day
this
chaine
you
had
of
me
can
you
deny
it
ant
i
thinke
i
had
i
neuer
did
deny
it
mar
yes
that
you
did
sir
and
forswore
it
too
ant
who
heard
me
to
denie
it
or
forsweare
it
mar
these
eares
of
mine
thou
knowst
did
hear
thee
fie
on
thee
wretch
'tis
pitty
that
thou
liu'st
to
walke
where
any
honest
men
resort
ant
thou
art
a
villaine
to
impeach
me
thus
ile
proue
mine
honor
and
mine
honestie
against
thee
presently
if
thou
dar'st
stand
mar
i
dare
and
do
defie
thee
for
a
villaine
they
draw
enter
adriana
luciana
courtezan
others
adr
hold
hurt
him
not
for
god
sake
he
is
mad
some
get
within
him
take
his
sword
away
binde
dromio
too
and
beare
them
to
my
house
s
dro
runne
master
run
for
gods
sake
take
a
house
this
is
some
priorie
in
or
we
are
spoyl'd
exeunt
to
the
priorie
enter
ladie
abbesse
ab
be
quiet
people
wherefore
throng
you
hither
adr
to
fetch
my
poore
distracted
husband
hence
let
vs
come
in
that
we
may
binde
him
fast
and
beare
him
home
for
his
recouerie
gold
i
knew
he
was
not
in
his
perfect
wits
mar
i
am
sorry
now
that
i
did
draw
on
him
ab
how
long
hath
this
possession
held
the
man
adr
this
weeke
he
hath
beene
heauie
sower
sad
and
much
different
from
the
man
he
was
but
till
this
afternoone
his
passion
ne're
brake
into
extremity
of
rage
ab
hath
he
not
lost
much
wealth
by
wrack
of
sea
buried
some
deere
friend
hath
not
else
his
eye
stray'd
his
affection
in
vnlawfull
loue
a
sinne
preuailing
much
in
youthfull
men
who
giue
their
eies
the
liberty
of
gazing
which
of
these
sorrowes
is
he
subiect
too
adr
to
none
of
these
except
it
be
the
last
namely
some
loue
that
drew
him
oft
from
home
ab
you
should
for
that
haue
reprehended
him
adr
why
so
i
did
ab
i
but
not
rough
enough
adr
as
roughly
as
my
modestie
would
let
me
ab
haply
in
priuate
adr
and
in
assemblies
too
ab
i
but
not
enough
adr
it
was
the
copie
of
our
conference
in
bed
he
slept
not
for
my
vrging
it
at
boord
he
fed
not
for
my
vrging
it
alone
it
was
the
subiect
of
my
theame
in
company
i
often
glanced
it
still
did
i
tell
him
it
was
vilde
and
bad
ab
and
thereof
came
it
that
the
man
was
mad
the
venome
clamors
of
a
iealous
woman
poisons
more
deadly
then
a
mad
dogges
tooth
it
seemes
his
sleepes
were
hindred
by
thy
railing
and
thereof
comes
it
that
his
head
is
light
thou
saist
his
meate
was
sawc'd
with
thy
vpbraidings
vnquiet
meales
make
ill
digestions
thereof
the
raging
fire
of
feauer
bred
and
what's
a
feauer
but
a
fit
of
madnesse
thou
sayest
his
sports
were
hindred
by
thy
bralles
sweet
recreation
barr'd
what
doth
ensue
but
moodie
and
dull
melancholly
kinsman
to
grim
and
comfortlesse
dispaire
and
at
her
heeles
a
huge
infectious
troope
of
pale
distemperatures
and
foes
to
life
in
food
in
sport
and
life
preseruing
rest
to
be
disturb'd
would
mad
or
man
or
beast
the
consequence
is
then
thy
iealous
fits
hath
scar'd
thy
husband
from
the
vse
of
wits
luc
she
neuer
reprehended
him
but
mildely
when
he
demean'd
himselfe
rough
rude
and
wildly
why
beare
you
these
rebukes
and
answer
not
adri
she
did
betray
me
to
my
owne
reproofe
good
people
enter
and
lay
hold
on
him
ab
no
not
a
creature
enters
in
my
house
ad
then
let
your
seruants
bring
my
husband
forth
ab
neither
he
tooke
this
place
for
sanctuary
and
it
shall
priuiledge
him
from
your
hands
till
i
haue
brought
him
to
his
wits
againe
or
loose
my
labour
in
assaying
it
adr
i
will
attend
my
husband
be
his
nurse
diet
his
sicknesse
for
it
is
my
office
and
will
haue
no
atturney
but
my
selfe
and
therefore
let
me
haue
him
home
with
me
ab
be
patient
for
i
will
not
let
him
stirre
till
i
haue
vs'd
the
approoued
meanes
i
haue
with
wholsome
sirrups
drugges
and
holy
prayers
to
make
of
him
a
formall
man
againe
it
is
a
branch
and
parcell
of
mine
oath
a
charitable
dutie
of
my
order
therefore
depart
and
leaue
him
heere
with
me
adr
i
will
not
hence
and
leaue
my
husband
heere
and
ill
it
doth
beseeme
your
holinesse
to
separate
the
husband
and
the
wife
ab
be
quiet
and
depart
thou
shalt
not
haue
him
luc
complaine
vnto
the
duke
of
this
indignity
adr
come
go
i
will
fall
prostrate
at
his
feete
and
neuer
rise
vntill
my
teares
and
prayers
haue
won
his
grace
to
come
in
person
hither
and
take
perforce
my
husband
from
the
abbesse
mar
by
this
i
thinke
the
diall
points
at
fiue
anon
i'me
sure
the
duke
himselfe
in
person
comes
this
way
to
the
melancholly
vale
the
place
of
depth
and
sorrie
execution
behinde
the
ditches
of
the
abbey
heere
gold
vpon
what
cause
mar
to
see
a
reuerent
siracusian
merchant
who
put
vnluckily
into
this
bay
against
the
lawes
and
statutes
of
this
towne
beheaded
publikely
for
his
offence
gold
see
where
they
come
we
wil
behold
his
death
luc
kneele
to
the
duke
before
he
passe
the
abbey
enter
the
duke
of
ephesus
and
the
merchant
of
siracuse
bare
head
with
the
headsman
other
officers
duke
yet
once
againe
proclaime
it
publikely
if
any
friend
will
pay
the
summe
for
him
he
shall
not
die
so
much
we
tender
him
adr
iustice
most
sacred
duke
against
the
abbesse
duke
she
is
a
vertuous
and
a
reuerend
lady
it
cannot
be
that
she
hath
done
thee
wrong
adr
may
it
please
your
grace
antipholus
my
husba
n
d
who
i
made
lord
of
me
and
all
i
had
at
your
important
letters
this
ill
day
a
most
outragious
fit
of
madnesse
tooke
him
that
desp'rately
he
hurried
through
the
streete
with
him
his
bondman
all
as
mad
as
he
doing
displeasure
to
the
citizens
by
rushing
in
their
houses
bearing
thence
rings
iewels
any
thing
his
rage
did
like
once
did
i
get
him
bound
and
sent
him
home
whil'st
to
take
order
for
the
wrongs
i
went
that
heere
and
there
his
furie
had
committed
anon
i
wot
not
by
what
strong
escape
he
broke
from
those
that
had
the
guard
of
him
and
with
his
mad
attendant
and
himselfe
each
one
with
irefull
passion
with
drawne
swords
met
vs
againe
and
madly
bent
on
vs
chac'd
vs
away
till
raising
of
more
aide
we
came
againe
to
binde
them
then
they
fled
into
this
abbey
whether
we
pursu'd
them
and
heere
the
abbesse
shuts
the
gates
on
vs
and
will
not
suffer
vs
to
fetch
him
out
nor
send
him
forth
that
we
may
beare
him
hence
therefore
most
gracious
duke
with
thy
command
let
him
be
brought
forth
and
borne
hence
for
helpe
duke
long
since
thy
husband
seru'd
me
in
my
wars
and
i
to
thee
ingag'd
a
princes
word
when
thou
didst
make
him
master
of
thy
bed
to
do
him
all
the
grace
and
good
i
could
go
some
of
you
knocke
at
the
abbey
gate
and
bid
the
lady
abbesse
come
to
me
i
will
determine
this
before
i
stirre
enter
a
messenger
oh
mistris
mistris
shift
and
saue
your
selfe
my
master
and
his
man
are
both
broke
loose
beaten
the
maids
a
row
and
bound
the
doctor
whose
beard
they
haue
sindg'd
off
with
brands
of
fire
and
euer
as
it
blaz'd
they
threw
on
him
great
pailes
of
puddled
myre
to
quench
the
haire
my
mr
preaches
patience
to
him
and
the
while
his
man
with
cizers
nickes
him
like
a
foole
and
sure
vnlesse
you
send
some
present
helpe
betweene
them
they
will
kill
the
coniurer
adr
peace
foole
thy
master
and
his
man
are
here
and
that
is
false
thou
dost
report
to
vs
mess
mistris
vpon
my
life
i
tel
you
true
i
haue
not
breath'd
almost
since
i
did
see
it
he
cries
for
you
and
vowes
if
he
can
take
you
to
scorch
your
face
and
to
disfigure
you
cry
within
harke
harke
i
heare
him
mistris
flie
be
gone
duke
come
stand
by
me
feare
nothing
guard
with
halberds
adr
ay
me
it
is
my
husband
witnesse
you
that
he
is
borne
about
inuisible
euen
now
we
hous'd
him
in
the
abbey
heere
and
now
he's
there
past
thought
of
humane
reason
enter
antipholus
and
e
dromio
of
ephesus
e
ant
iustice
most
gracious
duke
oh
grant
me
iustice
euen
for
the
seruice
that
long
since
i
did
thee
when
i
bestrid
thee
in
the
warres
and
tooke
deepe
scarres
to
saue
thy
life
euen
for
the
blood
that
then
i
lost
for
thee
now
grant
me
iustice
mar
fat
vnlesse
the
feare
of
death
doth
make
me
dote
i
see
my
sonne
antipholus
and
dromio
e
ant
iustice
sweet
prince
against
that
woman
there
she
whom
thou
gau'st
to
me
to
be
my
wife
that
hath
abused
and
dishonored
me
euen
in
the
strength
and
height
of
iniurie
beyond
imagination
is
the
wrong
that
she
this
day
hath
shamelesse
throwne
on
me
duke
discouer
how
and
thou
shalt
finde
me
iust
e
ant
this
day
great
duke
she
shut
the
doores
vpon
me
while
she
with
harlots
feasted
in
my
house
duke
a
greeuous
fault
say
woman
didst
thou
so
adr
no
my
good
lord
my
selfe
he
and
my
sister
to
day
did
dine
together
so
befall
my
soule
as
this
is
false
he
burthens
me
withall
luc
nere
may
i
looke
on
day
nor
sleepe
on
night
but
she
tels
to
your
highnesse
simple
truth
gold
o
periur'd
woman
they
are
both
forsworne
in
this
the
madman
iustly
chargeth
them
e
ant
my
liege
i
am
aduised
what
i
say
neither
disturbed
with
the
effect
of
wine
nor
headie
rash
prouoak'd
with
raging
ire
albeit
my
wrongs
might
make
one
wiser
mad
this
woman
lock'd
me
out
this
day
from
dinner
that
goldsmith
there
were
he
not
pack'd
with
her
could
witnesse
it
for
he
was
with
me
then
who
parted
with
me
to
go
fetch
a
chaine
promising
to
bring
it
to
the
porpentine
where
balthasar
and
i
did
dine
together
our
dinner
done
and
he
not
comming
thither
i
went
to
seeke
him
in
the
street
i
met
him
and
in
his
companie
that
gentleman
there
did
this
periur'd
goldsmith
sweare
me
downe
that
i
this
day
of
him
receiu'd
the
chaine
which
god
he
knowes
i
saw
not
for
the
which
he
did
arrest
me
with
an
officer
i
did
obey
and
sent
my
pesant
home
for
certaine
duckets
he
with
none
return'd
then
fairely
i
bespoke
the
officer
to
go
in
person
with
me
to
my
house
by'th'
way
we
met
my
wife
her
sister
and
a
rabble
more
of
vilde
confederates
along
with
them
they
brought
one
pinch
a
hungry
leane
fac'd
villaine
a
meere
anatomie
a
mountebanke
a
thred
bare
iugler
and
a
fortune
teller
a
needy
hollow
ey'd
sharpe
looking
wretch
a
liuing
dead
man
this
pernicious
slaue
forsooth
tooke
on
him
as
a
coniurer
and
gazing
in
mine
eyes
feeling
my
pulse
and
with
no
face
as
'twere
out
facing
me
cries
out
i
was
possest
then
altogether
they
fell
vpon
me
bound
me
bore
me
thence
and
in
a
darke
and
dankish
vault
at
home
there
left
me
and
my
man
both
bound
together
till
gnawing
with
my
teeth
my
bonds
in
sunder
i
gain'd
my
freedome
and
immediately
ran
hether
to
your
grace
whom
i
beseech
to
giue
me
ample
satisfaction
for
these
deepe
shames
and
great
indignities
gold
my
lord
in
truth
thus
far
i
witnes
with
him
that
he
din'd
not
at
home
but
was
lock'd
out
duke
but
had
he
such
a
chaine
of
thee
or
no
gold
he
had
my
lord
and
when
he
ran
in
heere
these
people
saw
the
chaine
about
his
necke
mar
besides
i
will
be
sworne
these
eares
of
mine
heard
you
confesse
you
had
the
chaine
of
him
after
you
first
forswore
it
on
the
mart
and
thereupon
i
drew
my
sword
on
you
and
then
you
fled
into
this
abbey
heere
from
whence
i
thinke
you
are
come
by
miracle
e
ant
i
neuer
came
within
these
abbey
wals
nor
euer
didst
thou
draw
thy
sword
on
me
i
neuer
saw
the
chaine
so
helpe
me
heauen
and
this
is
false
you
burthen
me
withall
duke
why
what
an
intricate
impeach
is
this
i
thinke
you
all
haue
drunke
of
circes
cup
if
heere
you
hous'd
him
heere
he
would
haue
bin
if
he
were
mad
he
would
not
pleade
so
coldly
you
say
he
din'd
at
home
the
goldsmith
heere
denies
that
saying
sirra
what
say
you
e
dro
sir
he
din'de
with
her
there
at
the
porpentine
cur
he
did
and
from
my
finger
snacht
that
ring
e
anti
tis
true
my
liege
this
ring
i
had
of
her
duke
saw'st
thou
him
enter
at
the
abbey
heere
curt
as
sure
my
liege
as
i
do
see
your
grace
duke
why
this
is
straunge
go
call
the
abbesse
hither
i
thinke
you
are
all
mated
or
starke
mad
exit
one
to
the
abbesse
fa
most
mighty
duke
vouchsafe
me
speak
a
word
haply
i
see
a
friend
will
saue
my
life
and
pay
the
sum
that
may
deliuer
me
duke
speake
freely
siracusian
what
thou
wilt
fath
is
not
your
name
sir
call'd
antipholus
and
is
not
that
your
bondman
dromio
e
dro
within
this
houre
i
was
his
bondman
sir
but
he
i
thanke
him
gnaw'd
in
two
my
cords
now
am
i
dromio
and
his
man
vnbound
fath
i
am
sure
you
both
of
you
remember
me
dro
our
selues
we
do
remember
sir
by
you
for
lately
we
were
bound
as
you
are
now
you
are
not
pinches
patient
are
you
sir
father
why
looke
you
strange
on
me
you
know
me
well
e
ant
i
neuer
saw
you
in
my
life
till
now
fa
oh
griefe
hath
chang'd
me
since
you
saw
me
last
and
carefull
houres
with
times
deformed
hand
haue
written
strange
defeatures
in
my
face
but
tell
me
yet
dost
thou
not
know
my
voice
ant
neither
fat
dromio
nor
thou
dro
no
trust
me
sir
nor
i
fa
i
am
sure
thou
dost
e
dromio
i
sir
but
i
am
sure
i
do
not
and
whatsoeuer
a
man
denies
you
are
now
bound
to
beleeue
him
fath
not
know
my
voice
oh
times
extremity
hast
thou
so
crack'd
and
splitted
my
poore
tongue
in
seuen
short
yeares
that
heere
my
onely
sonne
knowes
not
my
feeble
key
of
vntun'd
cares
though
now
this
grained
face
of
mine
be
hid
in
sap
consuming
winters
drizled
snow
and
all
the
conduits
of
my
blood
froze
vp
yet
hath
my
night
of
life
some
memorie
my
wasting
lampes
some
fading
glimmer
left
my
dull
deafe
eares
a
little
vse
to
heare
all
these
old
witnesses
i
cannot
erre
tell
me
thou
art
my
sonne
antipholus
ant
i
neuer
saw
my
father
in
my
life
fa
but
seuen
yeares
since
in
siracusa
boy
thou
know'st
we
parted
but
perhaps
my
sonne
thou
sham'st
to
acknowledge
me
in
miserie
ant
the
duke
and
all
that
know
me
in
the
city
can
witnesse
with
me
that
it
is
not
so
i
ne're
saw
siracusa
in
my
life
duke
i
tell
thee
siracusian
twentie
yeares
haue
i
bin
patron
to
antipholus
during
which
time
he
ne're
saw
siracusa
i
see
thy
age
and
dangers
make
thee
dote
enter
the
abbesse
with
antipholus
siracusa
and
dromio
sir
abbesse
most
mightie
duke
behold
a
man
much
wrong'd
all
gather
to
see
them
adr
i
see
two
husbands
or
mine
eyes
deceiue
me
duke
one
of
these
men
is
genius
to
the
other
and
so
of
these
which
is
the
naturall
man
and
which
the
spirit
who
deciphers
them
s
dromio
i
sir
am
dromio
command
him
away
e
dro
i
sir
am
dromio
pray
let
me
stay
s
ant
egeon
art
thou
not
or
else
his
ghost
s
drom
oh
my
olde
master
who
hath
bound
him
heere
abb
who
euer
bound
him
i
will
lose
his
bonds
and
gaine
a
husband
by
his
libertie
speake
olde
egeon
if
thou
bee'st
the
man
that
hadst
a
wife
once
call'd
æmilia
that
bore
thee
at
a
burthen
two
faire
sonnes
oh
if
thou
bee'st
the
same
egeon
speake
and
speake
vnto
the
same
æmilia
duke
why
heere
begins
his
morning
storie
right
these
twoantipholus
these
two
so
like
and
these
two
dromio's
one
in
semblance
besides
her
vrging
of
her
wracke
at
sea
these
are
the
parents
to
these
children
which
accidentally
are
met
together
fa
if
i
dreame
not
thou
art
æmilia
if
thou
art
she
tell
me
where
is
that
sonne
that
floated
with
thee
on
the
fatall
rafte
abb
by
men
of
epidamium
he
and
i
and
the
twin
dromio
all
were
taken
vp
but
by
and
by
rude
fishermen
of
corinth
by
force
tooke
dromio
and
my
sonne
from
them
and
me
they
left
with
those
of
epidamium
what
then
became
of
them
i
cannot
tell
i
to
this
fortune
that
you
see
mee
in
duke
antipholus
thou
cam'st
from
corinth
first
s
ant
no
sir
not
i
i
came
from
siracuse
duke
stay
stand
apart
i
know
not
which
is
which
e
ant
i
came
from
corinth
my
most
gracious
lord
e
dro
and
i
with
him
e
ant
brought
to
this
town
by
that
most
famous
warriour
duke
menaphon
your
most
renowned
vnckle
adr
which
of
you
two
did
dine
with
me
to
day
s
ant
i
gentle
mistris
adr
and
are
not
you
my
husband
e
ant
no
i
say
nay
to
that
s
ant
and
so
do
i
yet
did
she
call
me
so
and
this
faire
gentlewoman
her
sister
heere
did
call
me
brother
what
i
told
you
then
i
hope
i
shall
haue
leisure
to
make
good
if
this
be
not
a
dreame
i
see
and
heare
goldsmith
that
is
the
chaine
sir
which
you
had
of
mee
s
ant
i
thinke
it
be
sir
i
denie
it
not
e
ant
and
you
sir
for
this
chaine
arrested
me
gold
i
thinke
i
did
sir
i
deny
it
not
adr
i
sent
you
monie
sir
to
be
your
baile
by
dromio
but
i
thinke
he
brought
it
not
e
dro
no
none
by
me
s
ant
this
purse
of
duckets
i
receiu'd
from
you
and
dromio
my
man
did
bring
them
me
i
see
we
still
did
meete
each
others
man
and
i
was
tane
for
him
and
he
for
me
and
thereupon
these
errors
are
arose
e
ant
these
duckets
pawne
i
for
my
father
heere
duke
it
shall
not
neede
thy
father
hath
his
life
cur
sir
i
must
haue
that
diamond
from
you
e
ant
there
take
it
and
much
thanks
for
my
good
cheere
abb
renowned
duke
vouchsafe
to
take
the
paines
to
go
with
vs
into
the
abbey
heere
and
heare
at
large
discoursed
all
our
fortunes
and
all
that
are
assembled
in
this
place
that
by
this
simpathized
one
daies
error
haue
suffer'd
wrong
goe
keepe
vs
companie
and
we
shall
make
full
satisfaction
thirtie
three
yeares
haue
i
but
gone
in
trauaile
of
you
my
sonnes
and
till
this
present
houre
my
heauie
burthen
are
deliuered
the
duke
my
husband
and
my
children
both
and
you
the
kalenders
of
their
natiuity
go
to
a
gossips
feast
and
go
with
mee
after
so
long
greefe
such
natiuitie
duke
with
all
my
heart
ile
gossip
at
this
feast
exeunt
omnes
manet
the
two
dromio's
and
two
brothers
s
dro
mast
shall
i
fetch
your
stuffe
from
shipbord
e
an
dromio
what
stuffe
of
mine
hast
thou
imbarkt
s
dro
your
goods
that
lay
at
host
sir
in
the
centaur
s
ant
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
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
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
s
dro
not
i
sir
you
are
my
elder
e
dro
that's
a
question
how
shall
we
trie
it
s
dro
wee'l
draw
cuts
for
the
signior
till
then
lead
thou
first
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
finis
the
comedie
of
errors
actus
primus
scena
prima
enter
the
duke
of
ephesus
with
the
merchant
of
siracusa
iaylor
and
other
attendants
marchant
broceed
solinus
to
procure
my
fall
and
by
the
doome
of
death
end
woes
and
all
duke
merchant
of
siracusa
plead
no
more
i
am
not
partiall
to
infringe
our
lawes
the
enmity
and
discord
which
of
late
sprung
from
the
rancorous
outrage
of
your
duke
to
merchants
our
well
dealing
countrimen
who
wanting
gilders
to
redeeme
their
liues
haue
seal'd
his
rigorous
statutes
with
their
blouds
excludes
all
pitty
from
our
threatning
lookes
for
since
the
mortall
and
intestine
iarres
twixt
thy
seditious
countrimen
and
vs
it
hath
in
solemne
synodes
beene
decreed
both
by
the
siracusians
and
our
selues
to
admit
no
trafficke
to
our
aduerse
townes
nay
more
if
any
borne
at
ephesus
be
seene
at
any
siracusian
marts
and
fayres
againe
if
any
siracusian
borne
come
to
the
bay
of
ephesus
he
dies
his
goods
confiscate
to
the
dukes
dispose
vnlesse
a
thousand
markes
be
leuied
to
quit
the
penalty
and
to
ransome
him
thy
substance
valued
at
the
highest
rate
cannot
amount
vnto
a
hundred
markes
therefore
by
law
thou
art
condemn'd
to
die
mer
yet
this
my
comfort
when
your
words
are
done
my
woes
end
likewise
with
the
euening
sonne
duk
well
siracusian
say
in
briefe
the
cause
why
thou
departedst
from
thy
natiue
home
and
for
what
cause
thou
cam'st
to
ephesus
mer
a
heauier
taske
could
not
haue
beene
impos'd
then
i
to
speake
my
griefes
vnspeakeable
yet
that
the
world
may
witnesse
that
my
end
was
wrought
by
nature
not
by
vile
offence
ile
vtter
what
my
sorrow
giues
me
leaue
in
syracusa
was
i
borne
and
wedde
vnto
a
woman
happy
but
for
me
and
by
me
had
not
our
hap
beene
bad
with
her
i
liu'd
in
ioy
our
wealth
increast
by
prosperous
voyages
i
often
made
to
epidamium
till
my
factors
death
and
he
great
care
of
goods
at
randone
left
drew
me
from
kinde
embracements
of
my
spouse
from
whom
my
absence
was
not
sixe
moneths
olde
before
her
selfe
almost
at
fainting
vnder
the
pleasing
punishment
that
women
beare
had
made
prouision
for
her
following
me
and
soone
and
safe
arriued
where
i
was
there
had
she
not
beene
long
but
she
became
a
ioyfull
mother
of
two
goodly
sonnes
and
which
was
strange
the
one
so
like
the
other
as
could
not
be
distinguish'd
but
by
names
that
very
howre
and
in
the
selfe
same
inne
a
meane
woman
was
deliuered
of
such
a
burthen
male
twins
both
alike
those
for
their
parents
were
exceeding
poore
i
bought
and
brought
vp
to
attend
my
sonnes
my
wife
not
meanely
prowd
of
two
such
boyes
made
daily
motions
for
our
home
returne
vnwilling
i
agreed
alas
too
soone
wee
came
aboord
a
league
from
epidamium
had
we
saild
before
the
alwaies
winde
obeying
deepe
gaue
any
tragicke
instance
of
our
harme
but
longer
did
we
not
retaine
much
hope
for
what
obscured
light
the
heauens
did
grant
did
but
conuay
vnto
our
fearefull
mindes
a
doubtfull
warrant
of
immediate
death
which
though
my
selfe
would
gladly
haue
imbrac'd
yet
the
incessant
weepings
of
my
wife
weeping
before
for
what
she
saw
must
come
and
pitteous
playnings
of
the
prettie
babes
that
mourn'd
for
fashion
ignorant
what
to
feare
forst
me
to
seeke
delayes
for
them
and
me
and
this
it
was
for
other
meanes
was
none
the
sailors
sought
for
safety
by
our
boate
and
left
the
ship
then
sinking
ripe
to
vs
my
wife
more
carefull
for
the
latter
borne
had
fastned
him
vnto
a
small
spare
mast
such
as
sea
faring
men
prouide
for
stormes
to
him
one
of
the
other
twins
was
bound
whil'st
i
had
beene
like
heedfull
of
the
other
the
children
thus
dispos'd
my
wife
and
i
fixing
our
eyes
on
whom
our
care
was
fixt
fastned
our
selues
at
eyther
end
the
mast
and
floating
straight
obedient
to
the
streame
was
carried
towards
corinth
as
we
thought
at
length
the
sonne
gazing
vpon
the
earth
disperst
those
vapours
that
offended
vs
and
by
the
benefit
of
his
wished
light
the
seas
waxt
calme
and
we
discouered
two
shippes
from
farre
making
amaine
to
vs
of
corinth
that
of
epidarus
this
but
ere
they
came
oh
let
me
say
no
more
gather
the
sequell
by
that
went
before
duk
nay
forward
old
man
doe
not
breake
off
so
for
we
may
pitty
though
not
pardon
thee
merch
oh
had
the
gods
done
so
i
had
not
now
worthily
tearm'd
them
mercilesse
to
vs
for
ere
the
ships
could
meet
by
twice
fiue
leagues
we
were
encountred
by
a
mighty
rocke
which
being
violently
borne
vp
our
helpefull
ship
was
splitted
in
the
midst
so
that
in
this
vniust
diuorce
of
vs
fortune
had
left
to
both
of
vs
alike
what
to
delight
in
what
to
sorrow
for
her
part
poore
soule
seeming
as
burdened
with
lesser
waight
but
not
with
lesser
woe
was
carried
with
more
speed
before
the
winde
and
in
our
sight
they
three
were
taken
vp
by
fishermen
of
corinth
as
we
thought
at
length
another
ship
had
seiz'd
on
vs
and
knowing
whom
it
was
their
hap
to
saue
gaue
healthfull
welcome
to
their
ship
wrackt
guests
and
would
haue
reft
the
fishers
of
their
prey
had
not
their
backe
beene
very
slow
of
saile
and
therefore
homeward
did
they
bend
their
course
thus
haue
you
heard
me
seuer'd
from
my
blisse
that
by
misfortunes
was
my
life
prolong'd
to
tell
sad
stories
of
my
owne
mishaps
duke
and
for
the
sake
of
them
thou
sorrowest
for
doe
me
the
fauour
to
dilate
at
full
what
haue
befalne
of
them
and
they
till
now
merch
my
yongest
boy
and
yet
my
eldest
care
at
eighteene
yeeres
became
inquisitiue
after
his
brother
and
importun'd
me
that
his
attendant
so
his
case
was
like
reft
of
his
brother
but
retain'd
his
name
might
beare
him
company
in
the
quest
of
him
whom
whil'st
i
laboured
of
a
loue
to
see
i
hazarded
the
losse
of
whom
i
lou'd
fiue
sommers
haue
i
spent
in
farthest
greece
roming
cleane
through
the
bounds
of
asia
and
coasting
homeward
came
to
ephesus
hopelesse
to
finde
yet
loth
to
leaue
vnsought
or
that
or
any
place
that
harbours
men
but
heere
must
end
the
story
of
my
life
and
happy
were
i
in
my
timelie
death
could
all
my
trauells
warrant
me
they
liue
duke
haplesse
egeon
whom
the
fates
haue
markt
to
beare
the
extremitie
of
dire
mishap
now
trust
me
were
it
not
against
our
lawes
against
my
crowne
my
oath
my
dignity
which
princes
would
they
may
not
disanull
my
soule
should
sue
as
aduocate
for
thee
but
though
thou
art
adiudged
to
the
death
and
passed
sentence
may
not
be
recal'd
but
to
our
honours
great
disparagement
yet
will
i
fauour
thee
in
what
i
can
therefore
marchant
ile
limit
thee
this
day
to
seeke
thy
helpe
by
beneficiall
helpe
try
all
the
friends
thou
hast
in
ephesus
beg
thou
or
borrow
to
make
vp
the
summe
and
liue
if
no
then
thou
art
doom'd
to
die
iaylor
take
him
to
thy
custodie
iaylor
i
will
my
lord
merch
hopelesse
and
helpelesse
doth
egean
wend
but
to
procrastinate
his
liuelesse
end
exeunt
enter
antipholis
erotes
a
marchant
and
dromio
mer
therefore
giue
out
you
are
of
epidamium
lest
that
your
goods
too
soone
be
confiscate
this
very
day
a
syracusian
marchant
is
apprehended
for
a
riuall
here
and
not
being
able
to
buy
out
his
life
according
to
the
statute
of
the
towne
dies
ere
the
wearie
sunne
set
in
the
west
there
is
your
monie
that
i
had
to
keepe
ant
goe
beare
it
to
the
centaure
where
we
host
and
stay
there
dromio
till
i
come
to
thee
within
this
houre
it
will
be
dinner
time
till
that
ile
view
the
manners
of
the
towne
peruse
the
traders
gaze
vpon
the
buildings
and
then
returne
and
sleepe
within
mine
inne
for
with
long
trauaile
i
am
stiffe
and
wearie
get
thee
away
dro
many
a
man
would
take
you
at
your
word
and
goe
indeede
hauing
so
good
a
meane
exit
dromio
ant
a
trustie
villaine
sir
that
very
oft
when
i
am
dull
with
care
and
melancholly
lightens
my
humour
with
his
merry
iests
what
will
you
walke
with
me
about
the
towne
and
then
goe
to
my
inne
and
dine
with
me
e
mar
i
am
inuited
sir
to
certaine
marchants
of
whom
i
hope
to
make
much
benefit
i
craue
your
pardon
soone
at
fiue
a
clocke
please
you
ile
meete
with
you
vpon
the
mart
and
afterward
consort
you
till
bed
time
my
present
businesse
cals
me
from
you
now
ant
farewell
till
then
i
will
goe
loose
my
selfe
and
wander
vp
and
downe
to
view
the
citie
e
mar
sir
i
commend
you
to
your
owne
content
exeunt
ant
he
that
commends
me
to
mine
owne
content
commends
me
to
the
thing
i
cannot
get
i
to
the
world
am
like
a
drop
of
water
that
in
the
ocean
seekes
another
drop
who
falling
there
to
finde
his
fellow
forth
vnseene
inquisitiue
confounds
himselfe
so
i
to
finde
a
mother
and
a
brother
in
quest
of
them
vnhappie
a
loose
my
selfe
enter
dromio
of
ephesus
here
comes
the
almanacke
of
my
true
date
what
now
how
chance
thou
art
return'd
so
soone
e
dro
return'd
so
soone
rather
approacht
too
late
the
capon
burnes
the
pig
fals
from
the
spit
the
clocke
hath
strucken
twelue
vpon
the
bell
my
mistris
made
it
one
vpon
my
cheeke
she
is
so
hot
because
the
meate
is
colde
the
meate
is
colde
because
you
come
not
home
you
come
not
home
because
you
haue
no
stomacke
you
haue
no
stomacke
hauing
broke
your
fast
but
we
that
know
what
'tis
to
fast
and
pray
are
penitent
for
your
default
to
day
ant
stop
in
your
winde
sir
tell
me
this
i
pray
where
haue
you
left
the
mony
that
i
gaue
you
e
dro
oh
sixe
pence
that
i
had
a
wensday
last
to
pay
the
sadler
for
my
mistris
crupper
the
sadler
had
it
sir
i
kept
it
not
ant
i
am
not
in
a
sportiue
humor
now
tell
me
and
dally
not
where
is
the
monie
we
being
strangers
here
how
dar'st
thou
trust
so
great
a
charge
from
thine
owne
custodie
e
dro
i
pray
you
iest
sir
as
you
sit
at
dinner
i
from
my
mistris
come
to
you
in
post
if
i
returne
i
shall
be
post
indeede
for
she
will
scoure
your
fault
vpon
my
pate
me
thinkes
your
maw
like
mine
should
be
your
cooke
and
strike
you
home
without
a
messenger
ant
come
dromio
come
these
iests
are
out
of
season
reserue
them
till
a
merrier
houre
then
this
where
is
the
gold
i
gaue
in
charge
to
thee
e
dro
to
me
sir
why
you
gaue
no
gold
to
me
ant
come
on
sir
knaue
haue
done
your
foolishnes
and
tell
me
how
thou
hast
dispos'd
thy
charge
e
dro
my
charge
was
but
to
fetch
you
from
the
mart
home
to
your
house
the
phœnix
sir
to
dinner
my
mistris
and
her
sister
staies
for
you
ant
now
as
i
am
a
christian
answer
me
in
what
safe
place
you
haue
bestow'd
my
monie
or
i
shall
breake
that
merrie
sconce
of
yours
that
stands
on
tricks
when
i
am
vndispos'd
where
is
the
thousand
markes
thou
hadst
of
me
e
dro
i
haue
some
markes
of
yours
vpon
my
pate
some
of
my
mistris
markes
vpon
my
shoulders
but
not
a
thousand
markes
betweene
you
both
if
i
should
pay
your
worship
those
againe
perchance
you
will
not
beare
them
patiently
ant
thy
mistris
markes
what
mistris
slaue
hast
thou
e
dro
your
worships
wife
my
mistris
at
the
phœnix
she
that
doth
fast
till
you
come
home
to
dinner
and
praies
that
you
will
hie
you
home
to
dinner
ant
what
wilt
thou
flout
me
thus
vnto
my
face
being
forbid
there
take
you
that
sir
knaue
e
dro
what
meane
you
sir
for
god
sake
hold
your
hands
nay
and
you
will
not
sir
ile
take
my
heeles
exeunt
dromio
ep
ant
vpon
my
life
by
some
deuise
or
other
the
villaine
is
ore
wrought
of
all
my
monie
they
say
this
towne
is
full
of
cosenage
as
nimble
iuglers
that
deceiue
the
eie
darke
working
sorcerers
that
change
the
minde
soule
killing
witches
that
deforme
the
bodie
disguised
cheaters
prating
mountebankes
and
manie
such
like
liberties
of
sinne
if
it
proue
so
i
will
be
gone
the
sooner
ile
to
the
centaur
to
goe
seeke
this
slaue
i
greatly
feare
my
monie
is
not
safe
actus
quartus
scæna
prima
enter
a
merchant
goldsmith
and
an
officer
mar
you
know
since
pentecost
the
sum
is
due
and
since
i
haue
not
much
importun'd
you
nor
now
i
had
not
but
that
i
am
bound
to
persia
and
want
gilders
for
my
voyage
therefore
make
present
satisfaction
or
ile
attach
you
by
this
officer
gold
euen
iust
the
sum
that
i
do
owe
to
you
is
growing
to
me
by
antipholus
and
in
the
instant
that
i
met
with
you
he
had
of
me
a
chaine
at
fiue
a
clocke
i
shall
receiue
the
money
for
the
same
pleaseth
you
walke
with
me
downe
to
his
house
i
will
discharge
my
bond
and
thanke
you
too
enter
antipholus
ephes
dromio
from
the
courtizans
offi
that
labour
may
you
saue
see
where
he
comes
ant
while
i
go
to
the
goldsmiths
house
go
thou
and
buy
a
ropes
end
that
will
i
bestow
among
my
wife
and
their
confederates
for
locking
me
out
of
my
doores
by
day
but
soft
i
see
the
goldsmith
get
thee
gone
buy
thou
a
rope
and
bring
it
home
to
me
dro
i
buy
a
thousand
pound
a
yeare
i
buy
a
rope
exit
dromio
eph
ant
a
man
is
well
holpe
vp
that
trusts
to
you
i
promised
your
presence
and
the
chaine
but
neither
chaine
nor
goldsmith
came
to
me
belike
you
thought
our
loue
would
last
too
long
if
it
were
chain'd
together
and
therefore
came
not
gold
sauing
your
merrie
humor
here's
the
note
how
much
your
chaine
weighs
to
the
vtmost
charect
the
finenesse
of
the
gold
and
chargefull
fashion
which
doth
amount
to
three
odde
duckets
more
then
i
stand
debted
to
this
gentleman
i
pray
you
see
him
presently
discharg'd
for
he
is
bound
to
sea
and
stayes
but
for
it
anti
i
am
not
furnish'd
with
the
present
monie
besides
i
haue
some
businesse
in
the
towne
good
signior
take
the
stranger
to
my
house
and
with
you
take
the
chaine
and
bid
my
wife
disburse
the
summe
on
the
receit
thereof
perchance
i
will
be
there
as
soone
as
you
gold
then
you
will
bring
the
chaine
to
her
your
selfe
anti
no
beare
it
with
you
least
i
come
not
time
enough
gold
well
sir
i
will
haue
you
the
chaine
about
you
ant
and
if
i
haue
not
sir
i
hope
you
haue
or
else
you
may
returne
without
your
money
gold
nay
come
i
pray
you
sir
giue
me
the
chaine
both
winde
and
tide
stayes
for
this
gentleman
and
i
too
blame
haue
held
him
heere
too
long
anti
good
lord
you
vse
this
dalliance
to
excuse
your
breach
of
promise
to
the
porpentine
i
should
haue
chid
you
for
not
bringing
it
but
like
a
shrew
you
first
begin
to
brawle
mar
the
houre
steales
on
i
pray
you
sir
dispatch
gold
you
heare
how
he
importunes
me
the
chaine
ant
why
giue
it
to
my
wife
and
fetch
your
mony
gold
come
come
you
know
i
gaue
it
you
euen
now
either
send
the
chaine
or
send
me
by
some
token
ant
fie
now
you
run
this
humor
out
of
breath
come
where's
the
chaine
i
pray
you
let
me
see
it
mar
my
businesse
cannot
brooke
this
dalliance
good
sir
say
whe'r
you'l
answer
me
or
no
if
not
ile
leaue
him
to
the
officer
ant
i
answer
you
what
should
i
answer
you
gold
the
monie
that
you
owe
me
for
the
chaine
ant
i
owe
you
none
till
i
receiue
the
chaine
gold
you
know
i
gaue
it
you
halfe
an
houre
since
ant
you
gaue
me
none
you
wrong
mee
much
to
say
so
gold
you
wrong
me
more
sir
in
denying
it
consider
how
it
stands
vpon
my
credit
mar
well
officer
arrest
him
at
my
suite
offi
i
do
and
charge
you
in
the
dukes
name
to
obey
me
gold
this
touches
me
in
reputation
either
consent
to
pay
this
sum
for
me
or
i
attach
you
by
this
officer
ant
consent
to
pay
thee
that
i
neuer
had
arrest
me
foolish
fellow
if
thou
dar'st
gold
heere
is
thy
fee
arrest
him
officer
i
would
not
spare
my
brother
in
this
case
if
he
should
scorne
me
so
apparantly
offic
i
do
arrest
you
sir
you
heare
the
suite
ant
i
do
obey
thee
till
i
giue
thee
baile
but
sirrah
you
shall
buy
this
sport
as
deere
as
all
the
mettall
in
your
shop
will
answer
gold
sir
sir
i
shall
haue
law
in
ephesus
to
your
notorious
shame
i
doubt
it
not
enter
dromio
sira
from
the
bay
dro
master
there's
a
barke
of
epidamium
that
staies
but
till
her
owner
comes
aboord
and
then
sir
she
beares
away
our
fraughtage
sir
i
haue
conuei'd
aboord
and
i
haue
bought
the
oyle
the
balsamum
and
aqua
vitæ
the
ship
is
in
her
trim
the
merrie
winde
blowes
faire
from
land
they
stay
for
nought
at
all
but
for
their
owner
master
and
your
selfe
an
how
now
a
madman
why
thou
peeuish
sheep
what
ship
of
epidamium
staies
for
me
s
dro
a
ship
you
sent
me
too
to
hier
waftage
ant
thou
drunken
slaue
i
sent
thee
for
a
rope
and
told
thee
to
what
purpose
and
what
end
s
dro
you
sent
me
for
a
ropes
end
as
soone
you
sent
me
to
the
bay
sir
for
a
barke
ant
i
will
debate
this
matter
at
more
leisure
and
teach
your
eares
to
list
me
with
more
heede
to
adriana
villaine
hie
thee
straight
giue
her
this
key
and
tell
her
in
the
deske
that's
couer'd
o're
with
turkish
tapistrie
there
is
a
purse
of
duckets
let
her
send
it
tell
her
i
am
arrested
in
the
streete
and
that
shall
baile
me
hie
thee
slaue
be
gone
on
officer
to
prison
till
it
come
exeunt
s
dromio
to
adriana
that
is
where
we
din'd
where
dowsabell
did
claime
me
for
her
husband
she
is
too
bigge
i
hope
for
me
to
compasse
thither
i
must
although
against
my
will
for
seruants
must
their
masters
mindes
fulfill
exit
enter
adriana
and
luciana
adr
ah
luciana
did
he
tempt
thee
so
might'st
thou
perceiue
austeerely
in
his
eie
that
he
did
plead
in
earnest
yea
or
no
look'd
he
or
red
or
pale
or
sad
or
merrily
what
obseruation
mad'st
thou
in
this
case
oh
his
hearts
meteors
tilting
in
his
face
luc
first
he
deni'de
you
had
in
him
no
right
adr
he
meant
he
did
me
none
the
more
my
spight
luc
then
swore
he
that
he
was
a
stranger
heere
adr
and
true
he
swore
though
yet
forsworne
hee
were
luc
then
pleaded
i
for
you
adr
and
what
said
he
luc
that
loue
i
begg'd
for
you
he
begg'd
of
me
adr
with
what
perswasion
did
he
tempt
thy
loue
luc
with
words
that
in
an
honest
suit
might
moue
first
he
did
praise
my
beautie
then
my
speech
adr
did'st
speake
him
faire
luc
haue
patience
i
beseech
adr
i
cannot
nor
i
will
not
hold
me
still
my
tongue
though
not
my
heart
shall
haue
his
will
he
is
deformed
crooked
old
and
sere
ill
fac'd
worse
bodied
shapelesse
euery
where
vicious
vngentle
foolish
blunt
vnkinde
stigmaticall
in
making
worse
in
minde
luc
who
would
be
iealous
then
of
such
a
one
no
euill
lost
is
wail'd
when
it
is
gone
adr
ah
but
i
thinke
him
better
then
i
say
and
yet
would
herein
others
eies
were
worse
farre
from
her
nest
the
lapwing
cries
away
my
heart
praies
for
him
though
my
tongue
doe
curse
enter
s
dromio
dro
here
goe
the
deske
the
purse
sweet
now
make
haste
luc
how
hast
thou
lost
thy
breath
s
dro
by
running
fast
adr
where
is
thy
master
dromio
is
he
well
s
dro
no
he's
in
tartar
limbo
worse
then
hell
a
diuell
in
an
euerlasting
garment
hath
him
on
whose
hard
heart
is
button'd
vp
with
steele
a
feind
a
fairie
pittilesse
and
ruffe
a
wolfe
nay
worse
a
fellow
all
in
buffe
a
back
friend
a
shoulder
clapper
one
that
countermads
the
passages
of
allies
creekes
and
narrow
lands
a
hound
that
runs
counter
and
yet
draws
drifoot
well
one
that
before
the
iudgment
carries
poore
soules
to
hel
adr
why
man
what
is
the
matter
s
dro
i
doe
not
know
the
matter
hee
is
rested
on
the
case
adr
what
is
he
arrested
tell
me
at
whose
suite
s
dro
i
know
not
at
whose
suite
he
is
arested
well
but
is
in
a
suite
of
buffe
which
rested
him
that
can
i
tell
will
you
send
him
mistris
redemption
the
monie
in
his
deske
adr
go
fetch
it
sister
this
i
wonder
at
exit
luciana
thus
he
vnknowne
to
me
should
be
in
debt
tell
me
was
he
arested
on
a
band
s
dro
not
on
a
band
but
on
a
stronger
thing
a
chaine
a
chaine
doe
you
not
here
it
ring
adria
what
the
chaine
s
dro
no
no
the
bell
'tis
time
that
i
were
gone
it
was
two
ere
i
left
him
and
now
the
clocke
strikes
one
adr
the
houres
come
backe
that
did
i
neuer
here
s
dro
oh
yes
if
any
houre
meete
a
serieant
a
turnes
backe
for
verie
feare
adri
as
if
time
were
in
debt
how
fondly
do'st
thou
reason
s
dro
time
is
a
verie
bankerout
and
owes
more
then
he's
worth
to
season
nay
he's
a
theefe
too
haue
you
not
heard
men
say
that
time
comes
stealing
on
by
night
and
day
if
i
be
in
debt
and
theft
and
a
serieant
in
the
way
hath
he
not
reason
to
turne
backe
an
houre
in
a
day
enter
luciana
adr
go
dromio
there's
the
monie
beare
it
straight
and
bring
thy
master
home
imediately
come
sister
i
am
prest
downe
with
conceit
conceit
my
comfort
and
my
iniurie
exit
enter
antipholus
siracusia
there's
not
a
man
i
meete
but
doth
salute
me
as
if
i
were
their
well
acquainted
friend
and
euerie
one
doth
call
me
by
my
name
some
tender
monie
to
me
some
inuite
me
some
other
giue
me
thankes
for
kindnesses
some
offer
me
commodities
to
buy
euen
now
a
tailor
cal'd
me
in
his
shop
and
show'd
me
silkes
that
he
had
bought
for
me
and
therewithall
tooke
measure
of
my
body
sure
these
are
but
imaginarie
wiles
and
lapland
sorcerers
inhabite
here
enter
dromio
sir
s
dro
master
here's
the
gold
you
sent
me
for
what
haue
you
got
the
picture
of
old
adam
new
apparel'd
ant
what
gold
is
this
what
adam
do'st
thou
meane
s
dro
not
that
adam
that
kept
the
paradise
but
that
adam
that
keepes
the
prison
hee
that
goes
in
the
calues
skin
that
was
kil'd
for
the
prodigall
hee
that
came
behinde
you
sir
like
an
euill
angel
and
bid
you
forsake
your
libertie
ant
i
vnderstand
thee
not
s
dro
no
why
'tis
a
plaine
case
he
that
went
like
a
base
viole
in
a
case
of
leather
the
man
sir
that
when
gentlemen
are
tired
giues
them
a
sob
and
rests
them
he
sir
that
takes
pittie
on
decaied
men
and
giues
them
suites
of
durance
he
that
sets
vp
his
rest
to
doe
more
exploits
with
his
mace
then
a
moris
pike
ant
what
thou
mean'st
an
officer
s
dro
i
sir
the
serieant
of
the
band
he
that
brings
any
man
to
answer
it
that
breakes
his
band
one
that
thinkes
a
man
alwaies
going
to
bed
and
saies
god
giue
you
good
rest
ant
well
sir
there
rest
in
your
foolerie
is
there
any
ships
puts
forth
to
night
may
we
be
gone
s
dro
why
sir
i
brought
you
word
an
houre
since
that
the
barke
expedition
put
forth
to
night
and
then
were
you
hindred
by
the
serieant
to
tarry
for
the
hoy
delay
here
are
the
angels
that
you
sent
for
to
deliuer
you
ant
the
fellow
is
distract
and
so
am
i
and
here
we
wander
in
illusions
some
blessed
power
deliuer
vs
from
hence
enter
a
curtizan
cur
well
met
well
met
master
antipholus
i
see
sir
you
haue
found
the
gold
smith
now
is
that
the
chaine
you
promis'd
me
to
day
ant
sathan
auoide
i
charge
thee
tempt
me
not
s
dro
master
is
this
mistris
sathan
ant
it
is
the
diuell
s
dro
nay
she
is
worse
she
is
the
diuels
dam
and
here
she
comes
in
the
habit
of
a
light
wench
and
thereof
comes
that
the
wenches
say
god
dam
me
that's
as
much
to
say
god
make
me
a
light
wench
it
is
written
they
appeare
to
men
like
angels
of
light
light
is
an
effect
of
fire
and
fire
will
burne
ergo
light
wenches
will
burne
come
not
neere
her
cur
your
man
and
you
are
maruailous
merrie
sir
will
you
goe
with
me
wee'll
mend
our
dinner
here
s
dro
master
if
do
expect
spoon
meate
or
bespeake
a
long
spoone
ant
why
dromio
s
dro
marrie
he
must
haue
a
long
spoone
that
must
eate
with
the
diuell
ant
auoid
then
fiend
what
tel'st
thou
me
of
supping
thou
art
as
you
are
all
a
sorceresse
i
coniure
thee
to
leaue
me
and
be
gon
cur
giue
me
the
ring
of
mine
you
had
at
dinner
or
for
my
diamond
the
chaine
you
promis'd
and
ile
be
gone
sir
and
not
trouble
you
s
dro
some
diuels
aske
but
the
parings
of
ones
naile
a
rush
a
haire
a
drop
of
blood
a
pin
a
nut
a
cherrie
stone
but
she
more
couetous
wold
haue
a
chaine
master
be
wise
and
if
you
giue
it
her
the
diuell
will
shake
her
chaine
and
fright
vs
with
it
cur
i
pray
you
sir
my
ring
or
else
the
chaine
i
hope
you
do
not
meane
to
cheate
me
so
ant
auant
thou
witch
come
dromio
let
vs
go
s
dro
flie
pride
saies
the
pea
cocke
mistris
that
you
know
exit
cur
now
out
of
doubt
antipholus
is
mad
else
would
he
neuer
so
demeane
himselfe
a
ring
he
hath
of
mine
worth
fortie
duckets
and
for
the
same
he
promis'd
me
a
chaine
both
one
and
other
he
denies
me
now
the
reason
that
i
gather
he
is
mad
besides
this
present
instance
of
his
rage
is
a
mad
tale
he
told
to
day
at
dinner
of
his
owne
doores
being
shut
against
his
entrance
belike
his
wife
acquainted
with
his
fits
on
purpose
shut
the
doores
against
his
way
my
way
is
now
to
hie
home
to
his
house
and
tell
his
wife
that
being
lunaticke
he
rush'd
into
my
house
and
tooke
perforce
my
ring
away
this
course
i
fittest
choose
for
fortie
duckets
is
too
much
to
loose
enter
antipholus
ephes
with
a
iailor
an
feare
me
not
man
i
will
not
breake
away
ile
giue
thee
ere
i
leaue
thee
so
much
money
to
warrant
thee
as
i
am
rested
for
my
wife
is
in
a
wayward
moode
to
day
and
will
not
lightly
trust
the
messenger
that
i
should
be
attach'd
in
ephesus
i
tell
you
'twill
sound
harshly
in
her
eares
enter
dromio
eph
with
a
ropes
end
heere
comes
my
man
i
thinke
he
brings
the
monie
how
now
sir
haue
you
that
i
sent
you
for
e
dro
here's
that
i
warrant
you
will
pay
them
all
anti
but
where's
the
money
e
dro
why
sir
i
gaue
the
monie
for
the
rope
ant
fiue
hundred
duckets
villaine
for
a
rope
e
dro
ile
serue
you
sir
fiue
hundred
at
the
rate
ant
to
what
end
did
i
bid
thee
hie
thee
home
e
dro
to
a
ropes
end
sir
and
to
that
end
am
i
re
turn'd
ant
and
to
that
end
sir
i
will
welcome
you
offi
good
sir
be
patient
e
dro
nay
'tis
for
me
to
be
patient
i
am
in
aduersitie
offi
good
now
hold
thy
tongue
e
dro
nay
rather
perswade
him
to
hold
his
hands
anti
thou
whoreson
senselesse
villaine
e
dro
i
would
i
were
senselesse
sir
that
i
might
not
feele
your
blowes
anti
thou
art
sensible
in
nothing
but
blowes
and
so
is
an
asse
e
dro
i
am
an
asse
indeede
you
may
prooue
it
by
my
long
eares
i
haue
serued
him
from
the
houre
of
my
natiuitie
to
this
instant
and
haue
nothing
at
his
hands
for
my
seruice
but
blowes
when
i
am
cold
he
heates
me
with
beating
when
i
am
warme
he
cooles
me
with
beating
i
am
wak'd
with
it
when
i
sleepe
rais'd
with
it
when
i
sit
driuen
out
of
doores
with
it
when
i
goe
from
home
welcom'd
home
with
it
when
i
returne
nay
i
beare
it
on
my
shoulders
as
a
begger
woont
her
brat
and
i
thinke
when
he
hath
lam'd
me
i
shall
begge
with
it
from
doore
to
doore
enter
adriana
luciana
courtizan
and
a
schoolemaster
call'd
pinch
ant
come
goe
along
my
wife
is
comming
yonder
e
dro
mistris
respice
finem
respect
your
end
or
rather
the
prophesie
like
the
parrat
beware
the
ropes
end
anti
wilt
thou
still
talke
beats
dro
curt
how
say
you
now
is
not
your
husband
mad
adri
his
inciuility
confirmes
no
lesse
good
doctor
pinch
you
are
a
coniurer
establish
him
in
his
true
sence
againe
and
i
will
please
you
what
you
will
demand
luc
alas
how
fiery
and
how
sharpe
he
lookes
cur
marke
how
he
trembles
in
his
extasie
pinch
giue
me
your
hand
and
let
mee
feele
your
pulse
ant
there
is
my
hand
and
let
it
feele
your
eare
pinch
i
charge
thee
sathan
hous'd
within
this
man
to
yeeld
possession
to
my
holie
praiers
and
to
thy
state
of
darknesse
hie
thee
straight
i
coniure
thee
by
all
the
saints
in
heauen
anti
peace
doting
wizard
peace
i
am
not
mad
adr
oh
that
thou
wer't
not
poore
distressed
soule
anti
you
minion
you
are
these
your
customers
did
this
companion
with
the
saffron
face
reuell
and
feast
it
at
my
house
to
day
whil'st
vpon
me
the
guiltie
doores
were
shut
and
i
denied
to
enter
in
my
house
adr
o
husband
god
doth
know
you
din'd
at
home
where
would
you
had
remain'd
vntill
this
time
free
from
these
slanders
and
this
open
shame
anti
din'd
at
home
thou
villaine
what
sayest
thou
dro
sir
sooth
to
say
you
did
not
dine
at
home
ant
were
not
my
doores
lockt
vp
and
i
shut
out
dro
perdie
your
doores
were
lockt
and
you
shut
out
anti
and
did
not
she
her
selfe
reuile
me
there
dro
sans
fable
she
her
selfe
reuil'd
you
there
anti
did
not
her
kitchen
maide
raile
taunt
and
scorne
me
dro
certis
she
did
the
kitchin
vestall
scorn'd
you
ant
and
did
not
i
in
rage
depart
from
thence
dro
in
veritie
you
did
my
bones
beares
witnesse
that
since
haue
felt
the
vigor
of
his
rage
adr
is't
good
to
sooth
him
in
these
contraries
pinch
it
is
no
shame
the
fellow
finds
his
vaine
and
yeelding
to
him
humors
well
his
frensie
ant
thou
hast
subborn'd
the
goldsmith
to
arrest
mee
adr
alas
i
sent
you
monie
to
redeeme
you
by
dromio
heere
who
came
in
hast
for
it
dro
monie
by
me
heart
and
good
will
you
might
but
surely
master
not
a
ragge
of
monie
ant
wentst
not
thou
to
her
for
a
purse
of
duckets
adri
he
came
to
me
and
i
deliuer'd
it
luci
and
i
am
witnesse
with
her
that
she
did
dro
god
and
the
rope
maker
beare
me
witnesse
that
i
was
sent
for
nothing
but
a
rope
pinch
mistris
both
man
and
master
is
possest
i
know
it
by
their
pale
and
deadly
lookes
they
must
be
bound
and
laide
in
some
darke
roome
ant
say
wherefore
didst
thou
locke
me
forth
to
day
and
why
dost
thou
denie
the
bagge
of
gold
adr
i
did
not
gentle
husband
locke
thee
forth
dro
and
gentle
mr
i
receiu'd
no
gold
but
i
confesse
sir
that
we
were
lock'd
out
adr
dissembling
villain
thou
speak'st
false
in
both
ant
dissembling
harlot
thou
art
false
in
all
and
art
confederate
with
a
damned
packe
to
make
a
loathsome
abiect
scorne
of
me
but
with
these
nailes
ile
plucke
out
these
false
eyes
that
would
behold
in
me
this
shamefull
sport
enter
three
or
foure
and
offer
to
binde
him
hee
striues
adr
oh
binde
him
binde
him
let
him
not
come
neere
me
pinch
more
company
the
fiend
is
strong
within
him
luc
aye
me
poore
man
how
pale
and
wan
he
looks
ant
what
will
you
murther
me
thou
iailor
thou
i
am
thy
prisoner
wilt
thou
suffer
them
to
make
a
rescue
offi
masters
let
him
go
he
is
my
prisoner
and
you
shall
not
haue
him
pinch
go
binde
this
man
for
he
is
franticke
too
adr
what
wilt
thou
do
thou
peeuish
officer
hast
thou
delight
to
see
a
wretched
man
do
outrage
and
displeasure
to
himselfe
offi
he
is
my
prisoner
if
i
let
him
go
the
debt
he
owes
will
be
requir'd
of
me
adr
i
will
discharge
thee
ere
i
go
from
thee
beare
me
forthwith
vnto
his
creditor
and
knowing
how
the
debt
growes
i
will
pay
it
good
master
doctor
see
him
safe
conuey'd
home
to
my
house
oh
most
vnhappy
day
ant
oh
most
vnhappie
strumpet
dro
master
i
am
heere
entred
in
bond
for
you
ant
out
on
thee
villaine
wherefore
dost
thou
mad
mee
dro
will
you
be
bound
for
nothing
be
mad
good
master
cry
the
diuell
luc
god
helpe
poore
soules
how
idlely
doe
they
talke
adr
go
beare
him
hence
sister
go
you
with
me
say
now
whose
suite
is
he
arrested
at
exeunt
manet
offic
adri
luci
courtizan
off
one
angelo
a
goldsmith
do
you
know
him
adr
i
know
the
man
what
is
the
summe
he
owes
off
two
hundred
duckets
adr
say
how
growes
it
due
off
due
for
a
chaine
your
husband
had
of
him
adr
he
did
bespeake
a
chain
for
me
but
had
it
not
cur
when
as
your
husband
all
in
rage
to
day
came
to
my
house
and
tooke
away
my
ring
the
ring
i
saw
vpon
his
finger
now
straight
after
did
i
meete
him
with
a
chaine
adr
it
may
be
so
but
i
did
neuer
see
it
come
iailor
bring
me
where
the
goldsmith
is
i
long
to
know
the
truth
heereof
at
large
enter
antipholus
siracusia
with
his
rapier
drawne
and
dromio
sirac
luc
god
for
thy
mercy
they
are
loose
againe
adr
and
come
with
naked
swords
let's
call
more
helpe
to
haue
them
bound
againe
runne
all
out
off
away
they'l
kill
vs
exeunt
omnes
as
fast
as
may
be
frighted
s
ant
i
see
these
witches
are
affraid
of
swords
s
dro
she
that
would
be
your
wife
now
ran
from
you
ant
come
to
the
centaur
fetch
our
stuffe
from
thence
i
long
that
we
were
safe
and
sound
aboord
dro
faith
stay
heere
this
night
they
will
surely
do
vs
no
harme
you
saw
they
speake
vs
faire
giue
vs
gold
me
thinkes
they
are
such
a
gentle
nation
that
but
for
the
mountaine
of
mad
flesh
that
claimes
mariage
of
me
i
could
finde
in
my
heart
to
stay
heere
still
and
turne
witch
ant
i
will
not
stay
to
night
for
all
the
towne
therefore
away
to
get
our
stuffe
aboord
exeunt