The Merchant of Venice (Quarto 1, 1600)
Not Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Portia, Nerrissa, Lorenzo, Iessica, and a
1660man of Portias.
¶you haue a noble and a true conceite
¶in bearing thus the absence of your Lord.
1665But if you knew to whom you show this honour,
¶how true a gentleman you send releefe,
¶how deere a louer of my Lord your husband,
¶I know you would be prouder of the worke
¶then customarie bountie can enforce you.
1670Por. I neuer did repent for dooing good,
¶nor shall not now: for in companions
¶there must be needes a like proportion
1675of lyniaments, of manners, and of spirit;
¶vvhich makes me thinke that this Anthonio
¶beeing the bosome louer of my Lord,
¶Therefore no more of it: heere other things
¶Lorenso I commit into your hands,
¶Vntill my Lords returne: for mine owne part
¶I haue toward heauen breath'd a secret vowe,
¶To liue in prayer and contemplation,
1690Vntill her husband and my Lords returne,
¶There is a Monastry two miles off,
¶And there we will abide. I doe desire you
¶not to denie this imposition,
1695now layes vpon you.
¶Lorens. Madame, with all my hart,
¶I shall obey you in all faire commaunds.
¶Por. My people doe already know my mind,
¶So far you well till we shall meete againe.
¶Lor. Faire thoughts and happy houres attend on you.
¶and vse thou all th'indeuour of a man,
1710into my cosin hands Doctor Belario,
¶And looke what notes and garments he doth giue thee,
¶bring them I pray thee with imagin'd speede
¶vnto the Tranect, to the common Ferrie
1715but get thee gone, I shall be there before thee.
¶before they thinke of vs?
¶vvith that we lacke; Ile hold thee any wager
¶vvhen we are both accoutered like young men,
1725ile proue the prettier fellow of the two,
¶and weare my dagger with the brauer grace,
¶and speake betweene the change of man and boy,
1730like a fine bragging youth: and tell quaint lyes
¶how honorable Ladies sought my loue,
¶I could not doe withall: then ile repent,
¶and wish for all that, that I had not killd them;
1735And twenty of these punie lies ile tell,
¶aboue a twelue-moneth: I haue within my minde
¶if thou wert nere a lewd interpreter:
¶But come, ile tell thee all my whole deuice
1745at the Parke gate; and therefore hast away,
Exeunt.
