All's Well That Ends Well (Folio 1, 1623)
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All's Well, that Ends Well
241
1375The fundamentall reasons of this warre,
¶And more thirsts after.
¶Vpon your Graces part: blacke and fearefull
1380On the opposer.
¶Against our borrowing prayers.
¶FrenchE Good my Lord,
¶But like a common and an outward man,
¶That the great figure of a Counsaile frames,
¶By selfe vnable motion, therefore dare not
¶Say what I thinke of it, since I haue found
1390My selfe in my incertaine grounds to faile
¶As often as I guest.
1395Come heere for Physicke.
¶And all the honors that can flye from vs,
¶Shall on them settle: you know your places well,
¶When better fall, for your auailes they fell,
1400To morrow to'th the field.
Flourish
¶
Enter Countesse and Clowne
¶that he comes not along with her.
¶Clo By my troth I take my young Lord to be a ve-
1405rie melancholly man.
¶his teeth, and sing: I know a man that had this tricke of
1410melancholy hold a goodly Mannor for a song.
¶to come.
¶Our old Lings, and our Isbelsa'th Country, are nothing
1415like your old Ling and your Isbelsa'th Court: the brains
¶of my Cupid's knock'd out, and I beginne to loue, as an
¶old man loues money, with no stomacke.
¶Lad What haue we heere?
1420
A Letter
¶_King, and vndone me I haue wedded her, not bedded her¶_runne away, know it before the report come. If there bee¶Bertram._
¶This is not well rash and vnbridled boy,
¶To flye the fauours of so good a King,
1430To plucke his indignation on thy head,
¶For the contempt of Empire.
¶
Enter Clowne
¶Clow O Madam, yonder is heauie newes within be-
1435tweene two souldiers, and my yong Ladie.
¶La What is the matter.
¶he would.
¶men, though it be the getting of children. Heere they
¶come will tell you more. For my part I onely heare your
1445sonne was run away.
¶
Enter Hellen and two Gentlemen
¶FrenchE Saue you good Madam.
¶Hel Madam, my Lord is gone, for euer gone.
1450La Thinke vpon patience, pray you Gentlemen,
¶I haue felt so many quirkes of ioy and greefe,
¶Can woman me vntoo't. Where is my sonne I pray you?
1455 rence,
¶We met him thitherward, for thence we came:
¶Thither we bend againe.
1460
When thou canst get the Ring vpon my finger, which neuer
¶I write a Neuer
¶This is a dreadfull sentence.
1465La Brought you this Letter Gentlemen?
¶for our paines.
¶Old La I prethee Ladie haue a better cheere,
¶But I do wash his name out of my blood,
¶And thou art all my childe. Towards Florence is he?
¶Fren. G I Madam.
¶The Duke will lay vpon him all the honor
¶That good conuenience claimes.
¶La Returne you thither.
1480Hel. Till I haue no wife, I haue nothing in France
¶'Tis bitter.
¶La Finde you that there?
¶Hel I Madame.
1485his heart was not consenting too.
¶Lad Nothing in France, vntill he haue no wife:
¶There's nothing heere that is too good for him
¶That twenty such rude boyes might tend vpon,
1490And call her hourely Mistris. Who was with him?
¶haue sometime knowne.
¶La Parolleswas it not?
¶Fren. E I my good Ladie, hee.
¶My sonne corrupts a well deriued nature
¶With his inducement.
¶Fren. E Indeed good Ladie the fellow has a deale of
¶that, too much, which holds him much to haue.
1500La Y'are welcome Gentlemen, I will intreate you
¶neuer winne the honor that he looses: more Ile intreate
X
you
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All's Well that Ends Well
