King Lear (Quarto 2, 1619)
Not Peer Reviewed
The History of King Lear.
¶For by the sacred radience of the Sunne,
¶By all the operation of the Orbes,
120Heere I dissclaime all my paternall care,
¶Propinquity and property of bloud,
¶And as a stranger to my heart and me,
¶Hold thee from this foreuer, the barbarous Scythian,
¶Or he that makes his generation
¶Shall be as well neighbour'd, pittied and releeued,
¶As thou my some-time daughter.
¶Kent. Good my Liege.
¶So be my graue my peace as heere I guie,
¶Her fathers heart from her; call France, who stirres?
135Call Burgundy, Cornwall, and Albany,
¶With my two daughters dower digest this third,
¶I do inuest you ioyntly in my power,
¶Preheminence, and all the large effects
¶With reseruation of an hundred Knights,
¶Make with you by due turnes, onely we still retaine
¶The name and all the additions to a King,
¶Beloued sonnes be yours, which to confirme,
¶This Coronet part betwixt you.
¶Kent. Royall Lear,
¶Whom I haue euer honor'd as my King,
150Loued as my Father, as my Master followed,
¶As my great Patron thought on in my praiers.
Kent.
