Romeo and Juliet (Folio 1, 1623)
Not Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Iuliet and Nurse.
2480I pray thee leaue me to my selfe to night:
¶For I haue need of many Orysons,
¶
Enter Mother.
¶As are behoouefull for our state to morrow:
¶So please you, let me now be left alone;
2490For I am sure, you haue your hands full all,
¶Mo. Goodnight.
Exeunt.
¶Iul. Farewell:
2495God knowes when we shall meete againe.
¶I haue a faint cold feare thrills through my veines,
¶That almost freezes vp the heate of fire:
¶Ile call them backe againe to comfort me.
¶Come Viall, what if this mixture do not worke at all?
¶Shall I be married then to morrow morning?
¶No, no, this shall forbid it. Lie thou there,
¶What if it be a poyson which the Frier
2505Subtilly hath ministred to haue me dead,
¶Because he married me before to Romeo?
¶I feare it is, and yet me thinkes it should not,
¶For he hath still beene tried a holy man.
2510How, if when I am laid into the Tombe,
¶I wake before the time that Romeo
¶Come to redeeme me? There's a fearefull point:
¶Shall I not then be stifled in the Vault?
2515And there die strangled ere my Romeo comes.
¶Or if I liue, is it not very like,
¶The horrible conceit of death and night,
¶Together with the terror of the place,
¶As in a Vaulte, an ancient receptacle,
2520Where for these many hundred yeeres the bones
¶Of all my buried Auncestors are packt,
¶Where bloody Tybalt, yet but greene in earth,
2525Alacke, alacke, is it not like that I
¶And shrikes like Mandrakes torne out of the earth,
¶That liuing mortalls hearing them, run mad.
2530Inuironed with all these hidious feares,
¶And madly play with my forefathers ioynts?
¶And plucke the mangled Tybalt from his shrow'd?
¶Seeking out Romeo that did spit his body
¶Romeo, Romeo, Romeo, here's drinke: I drinke to thee.
