The Merchant of Venice (Folio 1, 1623)
Not Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Portia with Morrocho, and both their traines.
975Now make your choyse.
980This third, dull lead, with warning all as blunt,
¶Por. The one of them containes my picture Prince,
985If you choose that, then I am yours withall.
990Must giue, for what? for lead, hazard for lead?
¶This casket threatens men that hazard all
¶Doe it in hope of faire aduantages:
¶Ile then nor giue nor hazard ought for lead.
995What saies the Siluer with her virgin hue?
¶And weigh thy value with an euen hand,
¶May not extend so farre as to the Ladie:
¶And yet to be afeard of my deseruing,
¶As much as I deserue, why that's the Lady.
1005I doe in birth deserue her, and in fortunes,
¶In graces, and in qualities of breeding:
¶Why that's the Lady, all the world desires her:
¶From the foure corners of the earth they come
1015Of wide Arabia are as throughfares now
¶For Princes to come view faire Portia.
¶The waterie Kingdome, whose ambitious head
¶Spets in the face of heauen, is no barre
1020As ore a brooke to see faire Portia.
¶One of these three containes her heauenly picture.
¶Is't like that Lead containes her? 'twere damnation
¶Being ten times vndervalued to tride gold;
¶A coyne that beares the figure of an Angell
1030Stampt in gold, but that's insculpt vpon:
¶But here an Angell in a golden bed
¶Lies all within. Deliuer me the key:
¶Here doe I choose, and thriue I as I may.
¶Por. There take it Prince, and if my forme lye there
1035Then I am yours.
¶Mor. O hell! what haue we here, a carrion death,
¶Ile reade the writing.
¶
All that glisters is not gold,
1040 Often haue you heard that told;
¶ Many a man his life hath sold
¶ But my outside to behold;
¶ Guilded timber doe wormes infold:
¶ Had you beene as wise as bold,
1045 Yong in limbs, in iudgement old,
¶ Fareyouwell, your suite is cold,
¶Then farewell heate, and welcome frost:
1050Portia adew, I haue too grieu'd a heart
¶To take a tedious leaue: thus loosers part.
Exit.
¶Por. A gentle riddance: draw the curtaines, go:
Exeunt.
