King Lear (Quarto 1, 1608)
Not Peer Reviewed
The Historie of King Lear.
¶For now I spie a danger, I intreat you,
1545To bring but fiue and twentie, to no more
¶Will I giue place or notice.
¶Lear. I gaue you all.
¶Reg. And in good time you gaue it.
1550But kept a reseruation to be followed
1555When others are more wicked, not being the worst
¶Thy fifty yet doth double fiue and twentie,
¶And thou art twice her loue.
¶Gon. Heare me my Lord,
1560What need you fiue and twentie, tenne, or fiue,
¶Haue a commaund to tend you.
¶Regan. What needes one?
¶Allow not nature more then nature needes,
¶Mans life as cheape as beasts, thou art a Lady,
¶If onely to goe warme were gorgeous,
¶Why nature needes not, what thou gorgeous wearest
1570Which scarcely keepes thee warme, but for true need,
¶You heauens giue me that patience, patience I need,
¶You see me here (you Gods) a poore old fellow,
¶As full of greefe as age, wretched in both,
1575Against their Father, foole me not to much,
¶To beare it lamely, touch me with noble anger,
¶O let not womens weapons, water drops
¶Stayne my mans cheekes, no you vnnaturall hags,
¶I will haue such reuenges on you both,
¶What they are yet I know not, but they shalbe
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