King Lear (Quarto 2, 1619)
Not Peer Reviewed
The History of King Lear.
¶Reneag, affirme, and turne their halcion beakes
¶With euery gale and vary of their masters,
¶Knowing nought like daies but following,
¶A plague vpon your Epilipticke visage,
1155Smoile you my speeches, as I were a foole?
¶Goose, if I had you vpon Sarum Plaine,
¶Ide send you cackling home to Camulet.
¶Duke. What art thou mad olde fellow?
1160Kent. No contraries hold more antipathy,
¶Then I and such a knaue.
¶Kent. His countenance likes me not.
1165Duke. No more perchance doth 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.
¶And constraines the garb quite from his nature,
¶He cannot flatter he, he must be plaine,
1175If not hee's plaine, these kinde of knaues I know,
¶And more corrupter ends, then twenty silly ducking,
¶Vnder the allowance of your grand aspect.
¶Whose influence like the wreath of radient fire
¶In flitkering Phœbus front.
¶much; I know sir, I am no flatterer, he that beguild you in a plain
¶accent, was a plaine knaue, which for my part I wil not be, thogh
Duke.
