King Lear (Quarto 1, 1608)
Not Peer Reviewed
The Historie of King Lear.
1160Kent. No contraries hold more, antipathy,
¶Then I and such a knaue.
¶Kent. His countenance likes me not.
1165Duke. No more perchance does mine, or his, or hers.
¶Kent. Sir tis my occupation to be plaine,
¶I haue seene better faces in my time
¶Before me at this instant.
For bluntnes doth affect ¶a sawcy ruffines,
And constraines the garb ¶quite from his nature,
He cannot flatter he, he must be plaine,
If not he's plaine, ¶these kind of knaues I know
Which in this plainnes ¶harbour more craft,
And more corrupter ends, ¶then twentie silly ducking
¶Vnder the allowance of your graund aspect.
¶Whose influence like the wreath of radient fire
¶In flitkering Phoebus front.
much, I know sir, I am no flatterer, he that be¶guild you in a plain
accent, was a plaine knaue, which for my part ¶I will not bee,
though I should win your displeasure, to intreat mee too't.
1190Duke. What's the offence you gaue him?
1195Tript me behind, being downe, insulted, rayld,
¶And put vpon him such a deale of man, that,
¶That worthied him, got prayses of the King,
¶And in the flechuent of this dread exploit,
1200Drew on me here againe.
E2
Duke.
