Romeo and Juliet (Quarto 1, 1597)
Not Peer Reviewed
AN
EXCELLENT
conceited Tragedie
OF
Romeo and Iuliet.
As it hath been often (with great applause)
plaid publiquely, by the right Ho-
nourable the L. of Hunsdon
his Seruants.
LONDON,
Printed by Iohn Danter.
1597.
0.1
The Prologue.
¶Tvvo houshold Frends alike in dignitie,
¶(In faire Verona, where we lay our Scene)
¶From ciuill broyles broke into enmitie,
.5VVhose ciuill warre makes ciuill hands vncleane.
¶From forth the fatall loynes of these two foes,
.10(Through the continuing of their Fathers strife,
¶Is now the two howres traffique of our Stage.
.15The which if you with patient eares attend,
¶VVhat here we want wee'l studie to amend.
1
The most excellent Tragedie of
1.1
Romeo and Iuliet.
¶
Enter 2. Seruing-men of the Capolets.
5GRegorie, of my word Ile carrie no coales.
¶ 1 If I be in choler, Ile draw.
¶ 2 Euer while you liue, drawe your necke out of the
¶the collar.
¶to it: therefore (of my word) if thou be mooud thou't
14.1runne away.
¶ 1 There's not a man of them I meete, but Ile take
16.1the wall of.
¶to the wall.
¶wouldst be but poor Iohn.
¶off with their heads.
¶ 2 The heads of the maids?
¶ 1 I the heades of their Maides, or the Maidenheades,
¶take it in what sence thou wilt.
comes two of the Mountagues.
¶
Enter two Seruingmen of the Mountagues.
¶ 1 Nay feare not me I warrant thee.
40 2 I feare them no more than thee, but draw.
¶first. Ile tell thee what Ile doo, as I goe by ile bite my
44.1 2 Content, goe thou by and bite thy thumbe, and ile
¶come after and frowne.
¶ 1 Moun: Doo you bite your thumbe at vs?
50 1 I bite my thumbe.
2 Moun: I but i'st at vs?
48.1 2 No.
1 I bite my thumbe.
60
They draw, to them enters Tybalt, they fight, to them the
¶On paine of torture, from those bloody handes
¶Throw your mistempered weapons to the ground.
¶Three Ciuell brawles bred of an airie word,
¶By the old Capulet and Mountague,
100For this time euery man depart in peace.
¶Come Capulet come you along with me,
¶and Mouutague, come you this after noone,
¶To old free Towne our common iudgement place,
105Once more on paine of death each man depart.
105.1
Exeunt
¶Speake Nephew, were you by when it began?
¶And yours close fighting ere I did approch.
¶Right glad I am he was not at this fray.
¶Peept through the golden window of the East,
¶A troubled thought drew me from companie:
¶Where vnderneath the groue Sicamoure,
¶I drew towards him, but he was ware of me,
¶And drew into the thicket of the wood:
¶I noting his affections by mine owne,
145.1
Enter Romeo
¶ Moun: I neyther know it nor can learne of him.
160Ile know his grieuance, or be much denied.
¶To heare true shrift. Come Madame lets away.
170 Ben: In loue.
¶ Ro: Out.
¶ Ben: Of loue.
¶ Ro: Out of her fauor where I am in loue.
175Should be so tyrranous and rough in proofe.
¶Should without lawes giue path-waies to our will:
¶Where shall we dine? Gods me, what fray was here?
¶Yet tell me not for I haue heard it all,
180Heres much to doe with hate, but more with loue.
¶Why then, O brawling loue, O louing hate,
¶O anie thing, of nothing first create!
¶O heauie lightnes serious vanitie!
¶Still waking sleepe, that is not what it is:
¶This loue feele I, which feele no loue in this.
¶Doest thou not laugh?
190 Rom: Good hart at what?
¶Griefes of mine owne lie heauie at my hart,
¶Doth ad more griefe to too much of mine owne:
¶Being purgde, a fire sparkling in louers eyes:
¶Being vext, a sea raging with a louers teares.
¶Ben: Nay Ile goe along.
¶And if you hinder me you doo me wrong.
¶This is not Romeo, hee's some other where.
¶Ah word ill vrgde to one that is so ill.
¶With Cupids arrow, she hath Dianaes wit,
220Shee'le not abide the siedge of louing tearmes,
¶Nor ope her lap to Saint seducing gold,
¶Ah she is rich in beautie, only poore,
Exeu.
¶
Enter Countie Paris, old Capulet.
¶Of honorable reckoning are they both,
¶And pittie tis they liue at ods so long:
255My daughter is a stranger in the world,
¶Shee hath not yet attainde to fourteene yeares:
¶Let two more sommers wither in their pride,
¶Before she can be thought fit for a Bride.
¶But wooe her gentle Paris, get her heart,
¶My word to her consent is but a part.
¶Whereto I haue inuited many a guest,
¶Such as I loue: yet you among the store,
270One more most welcome makes the number more.
¶Earth treadding stars, that make darke heauen light:
¶Such comfort as doo lusty youngmen feele,
¶When well apparaild Aprill on the heele
275Of lumping winter treads, euen such delights
¶Such amongst view of many myne beeing one,
280May stand in number through in reckoning none.
280.1
Enter Seruingman.
¶Where are you sirra, goe trudge about
284.1
Exeunt.
290and yet I knowe not who are written here: I must to
¶the learned to learne of them, that's as much to say, as
¶with his needle, the Painter with his nets, and the Fisher
¶
Enter Benuolio and Romeo.
¶Ben: Tut man one fire burnes out anothers burning,
295Turne backward, and be holp with backward turning,
¶Take thou some new infection to thy eye,
¶And the ranke poyson of the old will die.
¶Romeo: Your Planton leafe is excellent for that.
300Ben: For what?
¶Ben: Why Romeo art thou mad?
¶Rom: Not mad, but bound more than a mad man is.
¶Shut vp in prison, kept without my foode,
305Whipt and tormented, and Godden good fellow.
¶Ser: Perhaps you haue learned it without booke:
¶but I pray can you read any thing you see?
310Rom: I if I know the letters and the language.
¶Rom: Stay fellow I can read.
¶
He reads the Letter.
¶SEigneur Martino and his wife and daughters, Countie
¶Vtruuio, Seigneur Placentio, and his louelie Neeces,
316.1Mercutio and his brother Valentine, mine vncle Capu-
¶let his wife and daughters, my faire Neece Rosaline and
¶Liuia, Seigneur Valentio and his Cosen Tibalt, Lucio
¶and the liuelie Hellena.
¶Ser: Vp.
¶the great rich Capulet, and if you be not of the house of
330you merrie.
¶With all the admired beauties of Verona,
¶Goe thither and with vnattainted eye,
¶And I will make thee thinke thy swan a crow.
¶Ro: When the deuout religion of mine eye
¶And these who often drownde could neuer die,
340Transparent Heretiques be burnt for liers.
350But to reioyce in splendor of mine owne.
¶
Enter Capulets wife and Nurce.
¶VVife: Nurce wher's my daughter call her forth to
352.1mee.
¶Nurce:Now by my maiden head at twelue yeare old I
¶bad her come, what Lamb, what Ladie bird, God forbid.
355VVher's this girle? what Iuliet.
Enter Iuliet.
¶Iuliet: How now who cals?
¶Nurce:Your Mother.
¶Iul: Madame I am here, what is your will?
¶est my daughters of a prettie age.
¶Nurce:Faith I can tell her age vnto a houre.
365VVife: Shee's not fourteene.
¶Nnrce: Ile lay fourteene of my teeth, and yet to my
¶How long is it now to Lammas-tide?
370VVife: A fortnight and odde dayes.
¶Nurce: Euen or odde, of all dayes in the yeare come
¶all the daies of the yeare vpon that day: for I had then laid
380housewall. My Lord and you were then at Mantua, nay I
¶wood on the nipple of my dug, & felt it bitter, pretty foole
¶to see it teachie and fall out with Dugge. Shake qucth the
385that time it is a leauen yeare: for then could Iuliet stande
¶high lone, nay by the Roode, shee could haue wadled vp and
¶downe, for euen the day before shee brake her brow, and then
¶my husband God be with his soule, hee was a merrie man:
390Dost thou fall forward Iuliet? thou wilt fall backward when
¶dred yeare, I never should forget it, wilt thou not Iuliet?
¶Nurce:VVell goe thy waies, God marke thee for his
¶fected to be married:
¶Iul: It is an honor that I dreame not off.
¶Nurce: An honor! were not I thy onely Nurce, I
420.1thee for his Wife.
¶the world, why he is a man of waxe.
¶Nurce: Nay he is a flower, in faith a very flower.
425VVife: Well Iuliet, how like you of Paris loue.
¶Iuliet: Ile looke to like, if looking liking moue,
¶But no more deepe will I engage mine eye,
¶
Enter Clowne.
¶the Nurce curst in the Pantrie, all thinges in extreamitie,
¶
Enter Maskers with Romeo and a Page.
¶Or shall we on without Apologie.
¶Weele haue no Cupid hudwinckt with a Scarfe,
460Bearing a Tartars painted bow of lath,
¶Scaring the Ladies like a crow-keeper:
461.1Nor no without booke Prologue faintly spoke
¶After the Prompter, for our entrance.
¶But let them measure vs by what they will;
¶Rom: A torch for me I am not for this aumbling,
465Beeing but heauie I will beare the light.
¶What curious eye doth coate deformitie.
¶Rom: Giue me a Torch, let wantons light of hart
¶Ile be a candleholder and looke on,
¶The game was nere so faire and I am done.
¶If thou beest Dun, weele draw thee from the mire
¶Leaue this talke, we burne day light here.
¶We burne our lights by night, like Lampes by day,
500Take our good meaning for our iudgement fits
¶Three times a day, ere once in her right wits.
¶Rom: So we meane well by going to this maske:
¶But tis no wit to goe.
¶Mer: Why Romeo may one aske?
505Rom: I dreamt a dreame tonight.
¶Mer: That dreamers often lie.
¶She is the Fairies Midwife and doth come
512.1On the forefinger of a Burgomaster,
¶Drawne with a teeme of little Atomi,
515The couer, of the winges of Grashoppers,
¶The traces are the Moone-shine watrie beames,
¶The collers crickets bones, the lash of filmes,
¶Her waggoner is a small gray coated flie,
¶Not halfe so big as is a little worme,
519.1Pickt from the lasie finger of a maide,
523.1Through Louers braines, and then they dream of loue:
¶Which oft the angrie Mab with blisters plagues,
Because their breathes with sweet meats tainted are:
¶Sometimes she gallops ore a Lawers lap,
¶And then dreames he of another benefice:
¶And then dreames he of cutting forraine throats,
¶Of breaches ambuscados, countermines,
534.1Of healthes fiue fadome deepe, and then anon
535Drums in his eare: at which he startes and wakes,
¶This is that Mab that makes maids lie on their backes,
¶And proues them women of good cariage.
¶This is the verie Mab that plats the manes of Horses in
(the night,
¶Which once vntangled much misfortune breedes.
¶Mer: True I talk of dreames,
¶Which are the Chi dren of an idle braine,
¶Begot of nothing but vaine fantasie,
¶And more inconstant than the winde,
551.1Which wooes euen now the frosē bowels of the north,
¶And being angred puffes away in haste,
¶Turning his face to the dew-dropping south.
¶Supper is done and we shall come too late.
¶Which bitterly begins his fearefull date
560With this nights reuels, and expiers the terme
¶By some vntimelie forfet of vile death:
¶
Enter old Capulet with the Ladies.
585Capu: Welcome Gentlemen, welcome Gentlemen,
¶Ladies that haue their toes vnplagud with Corns
¶Which of you all will now refuse to dance?
¶More lights you knaues, & turn these tables vp,
¶And quench the fire the roome is growne too hote.
¶How long is it since you and I were in a Maske?
¶Tis since the mariage of Lucentio,
¶Come Pentecost as quicklie as it will,
¶Some fiue and twentie yeares, and then we maskt.
¶His sonne was but a Ward three yeares agoe,
613.1Good youths I faith. Oh youth's a iolly thing.
¶Rom: What Ladie is that that doth inrich the hand
615Of yonder Knight? O shee doth teach the torches to
¶burne bright!
¶Like a rich iewell in an Aethiops eare,
620Beautie too rich for vse, for earth too deare:
¶As this faire Ladie ouer her fellowes showes
¶And touching hers, make happie my rude hand
¶I neuer saw true beautie till this night.
¶Fetch me my rapier boy. What dares the slaue
¶Come hither couer'd with an Anticke face,
¶Now by the stocke and honor of my kin,
635Ti: Vncle this is a Mountague our foe,
¶A villaine that is hether come in spight,
¶To mocke at our solemnitie this night.
¶Ca: Young Romeo, is it not?
¶Ti: It is that villaine Romeo.
¶And to speake truth, Verona brags of him,
¶As of a vertuous and well gouern'd youth:
¶I would not for the wealth of all this towne,
¶Therefore be quiet take no note of him,
¶Ile not indure him.
¶You'le set Cocke a hoope, you'le be the man.
¶This tricke will scath you one day I know what.
¶Well said my hartes. Be quiet:
¶More light Ye knaue, or I will make you quiet.
¶Makes my flesh tremble in their different greetings:
670Rom: If I prophane with my vnworhie hand,
¶Which mannerly deuotion shewes in this:
¶For Saints haue hands which holy Palmers touch,
¶Rom: Haue not Saints lips, and holy Palmers too?
¶Iu: Saints doe not mooue though: grant nor praier
¶forsake.
685Ro: Then mooue not till my praiers effect I take.
¶Thus from my lips, by yours my sin is purgde.
¶Giue me my sinne againe.
¶Nurse: Madame your mother calles.
¶Rom: What is her mother?
¶Nurse Marrie Batcheler her mother is the Ladie of the
¶her daughter that you talkt withall, I tell you, he that can
¶lay hold of her shall haue the chinkes.
700My life is my foes thrail.
¶Ca: Nay gentlemen prepare not to be gone,
¶We have a trifling foolish banquet towards.
704.1
They whisper in his ears,
705I pray you let me intreat you. Is it so?
¶Well then I thanke you honest Gentlemen,
706.1I promise you but for your company,
¶I would haue bin a bed an houre agoe:
707.1Light to my chamber hoe.
¶
Exeunt
¶Iul: Whats he that now is going out of dore?
¶Nur: That as I thinke is yong Petruchio.
¶Nur: I know not.
¶Iul: Goe learne his name, if he be maried,
¶My grave is like to be my wedding bed.
¶Nur: His name is Romeo and a Mountague, the onely
720sonne of your great enemie.
¶Too early seene vnknowne, and knowne too late:
¶Prodigious birth of loue is this to me,
¶That I should loue a loathed enemie.
725Nurse: VVhats this? whats that?
¶oue I dancst with.
730.1with you.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Romeo alone.
¶Ro: Shall I goe forward and my heart is here?
¶Turne backe dull earth and finde thy Center out.
750
Enter Benuolio Mercutio.
¶Vpon my life he hath stolne him home to bed.
¶Ben: He came this way, and leapt this Orchard wall.
755Call good Mercutio.
¶Mer: Call, nay Ile coniure too.
¶Romeo, madman, humors, passion, liner, appeare thou in
760but ay me. Pronounce but Loue and Doue, speake to
¶purblinde sonne and heire young Abraham:Cupid hee
¶begger wench. Hee heares me not. I coniure thee by
¶prettie foote, straight leg, and quiuering thigh, and the
¶thou appeare to vs.
¶Ben:If he doe heare thee thou wilt anger him.
¶to raise vp him.
¶To be conforted with the humerous night,
¶Blinde in his loue, and best befits the darke.
¶Mer: If loue be blind, loue will not hit the marke,
¶Now will he sit vnder a Medler tree,
¶As maides call Medlers when they laugh alone.
¶An open Et cetera, thou a poprin Peare.
¶Romeo God night, il'e to my trundle bed:
790This field bed is too cold for mee.
¶Come lets away, for tis but vaine,
791.1To seeke him here that meanes not to be found.
795But soft, what light forth yonder window breakes?
¶It is the East, and Iuliet is the Sunne,
¶Arise faire S nne, and kill the enuious Moone
¶That is alreadie sicke and pale with griefe:
¶That thou her maid, art far more faire than she.
¶Her vestall liuerie is but pale and greene,
¶And none but fooles doe weare it, cast it off.
¶To twinckle in their spheares till they returne.
810What if her eyes were there, they in her head,
¶As day-light doth a Lampe, her eyes in heauen,
¶That birdes would sing, and thinke it were not night.
815Oh now she leanes her cheekes vpon her hand,
¶I would I were the gloue to that same hand,
¶Iul: Ay me.
¶For thou art as glorious to this night beeing ouer my
(head,
¶Vnto the white vpturned woondring eyes,
¶Of mortals that fall backe to gaze on him,
¶Iul: Ah Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?
¶Denie thy Father, and refuse thy name,
¶Or if thou wilt not be but sworne my loue,
830And il'e no longer be a Capulet.
¶Iul: Tis but thy name that is mine enemie.
¶Whats Mountague? It is nor hand nor foote,
835Nor arme, nor face, nor any other part.
¶Whats in a name? That which we call a Rose,
¶So Romeo would, were he not Romeo cald,
840Retaine the diuine perfection he owes:
¶Without that title Romeo part thy name,
¶And for that name which is no part of thee,
¶Take all I haue.
¶Rom: I take thee at thy word,
845Call me but loue, and il'e be new Baptisde,
¶Henceforth I neuer will be Romeo.
¶Iu: What man art thou, that thus beskrind in night,
¶Ro: By a name I know not how to tell thee.
¶My name deare Saint is hatefull to my selfe,
¶Because it is an enemie to thee.
¶Had I it written I would teare the word.
¶Iul: My eares haue not yet drunk a hundred words
855Of that tongues vtterance, yet I know the sound:
¶Art thou not Romeo and a Mountague?
860The Orchard walles are high and hard to clime,
¶And the place death considering who thou art,
¶If any of my kinsmen finde thee here.
865For stonie limits cannot hold loue out,
¶And what loue can doo,that dares loue attempt,
¶Therefore thy kinsmen are no let to me.
¶Iul: If they doe finde thee they will murder thee.
¶Ro: Alas there lies more perrill in thine eyes,
¶And I am proofe against their enmitie.
¶And but thou loue me let them finde me here:
875For life were better ended by their hate,
¶Than death proroged wanting of thy loue.
¶I he gaue me counsaile and I lent him eyes.
880I am no Pilot: yet wert thou as farre
¶Els would a Maiden blush bepaint my cheeks:
¶Faine would I dwell on forme, faine faine denie,
¶What I haue spoke: but farewell complements.
¶Ah gentle Romeo, if thou loue pronounce it faithfully:
¶Or if thou thinke I am too easely wonne,
895So thou wilt wooe: but els not for the world,
¶In truth faire Mountague, I am too fond,
¶And therefore thou maiest thinke my hauiour light:
¶But trust me gentleman Ile proue more true,
¶Than they that haue more cunning to be strange.
¶But that thou ouer-heardst ere I was ware
¶My true loues Passion: therefore pardon me,
¶And not impute this yeelding to light loue,
¶That monthlie changeth in her circled orbe,
910Ro: Now by
¶Which art the God of my Idolatrie,
¶And il'e beleeue thee.
915Ro: If my true harts loue
¶I haue small ioy in this contract to night,
¶Too like the lightning that doth cease to bee
¶Deare loue adew, sweet Mountague be true,
940Stay but a little and il'e come againe.
¶All this is but a dreame I heare and see,
¶If that thy bent of loue be honourable?
¶By one that il'e procure to come to thee:
¶Where and what time thou wilt performe that right,
950And al my fortunes at thy foote il'e lay,
¶And follow thee my Lord through out the world.
961.1their bookes,
¶But loue from loue, to schoole with heauie lookes.
¶Iul: Romeo, Romeo, O for a falkners voice,
¶Bondage is hoarse and may not crie aloud,
¶Els would I teare the Caue where Eccho lies
¶And make her airie voice as hoarse as mine,
¶With repetition of my Romeos name.
969.1Romeo?
¶Iul: Romeo?
¶Ro: Madame.
¶Ro: At the houre of nine.
¶Iul: I will not faile, tis twentie yeares till then.
¶Romeo I haue forgot why I did call thee backe.
¶Remembring how I loue thy companie.
¶Forgetting any other home but this.
¶But yet no further then a wantons bird,
¶Who lets it hop a little from her hand,
¶And with a silke thred puls it backe againe,
990Too louing iealous of his libertie.
¶Ro: Would I were thy bird.
¶Now will I go to my Ghostly fathers Cell,
¶His help to craue, and my good hap to tell.
1005
Enter Frier Francis
¶And flecked darkenes like a drunkard reeles,
¶From forth daies path, and Titans fierie wheeles:
1010Now ere the Sunne aduance his burning eye,
¶The world to cheare, and nights darke dew to drie
¶With balefull weeds, and precious iuyced flowers.
1020Oh mickle is the powerfull grace that lies
¶In hearbes, plants, stones, and their true qualities:
¶For nought so vile, that vile on earth doth liue,
¶And vice sometimes by action dignified.
¶Withing the infant rinde of this small flower,
¶For this being smelt too, with that part cheares ech hart,
¶In man as well as herbes,grace and rude will,
1035And where the worser is predominant,
¶Full soone the canker death eats vp that plant.
¶So soone to bid good morrow to my bed.
¶Care keepes his watch in euerie old mans eye,
¶And where care lodgeth, sleep can neuer lie:
1045Doth couch his limmes, there golden sleepe remaines:
¶Or if not so, then here I hit it righ
¶Our Romeo hath not bin a bed to night.
¶I haue forgot that name,and that names woe.
1055Ro: I tell thee ere thou aske it me againe,
¶I have bin feasting with mine enemie:
¶Where on the sodaine one hath wounded mee
¶Thats by me wounded, both our remedies
¶With in thy help and holy phisicke lies,
1065On the faire daughter of rich Capulet:
¶By holy marriage: where,and when,and how,
¶We met, we woo'd,and made exchange of vowes,
¶That thou consent to marrie vs to day.
¶Fri: Holy S.Francis, what a change is here?
1075Not truelie in their harts, but in their eyes.
¶Iesu Maria, what a deale of brine
¶Thy old grones ring yet in my ancient eares,
¶Of an old teare that is not washt off yet.
¶If euer thou wert thus, and these woes thine,
¶And art thou changde, pronounce this sentence then
¶Women may fal, when ther's no strength in men.
¶Fr: For doating, not for louing, pupill mine.
¶Fr: Not in a graue,
¶To lay one in another out to haue.
¶Doth grace for grace, and loue for loue allow:
1095The other did not so.
¶Thy loue did read by rote, and could not spell,
¶But come yong Wauerer, come goe with mee,
1100For this alliaunce may so happie proue,
¶To turne your Housholds rancour to pure loue.
Exeunt
1105
Enter Mercutio, Benuolio.
¶Mer: Why whats become of Romeo? came he not
¶home to night?
¶Some Challenge on my life.
¶challenged.
¶with a white wenches blacke eye, shot thorough the eare
1120with a loue song, the verie pinne of his heart cleft with the
¶blinde bow-boyes but-shaft. And is he a man to encounter
¶Tybalt?
¶Ben: Why what is Tybalt?
¶Mer: More than the prince of cattes I can tell you. Oh
1125he is the couragious captaine of complements. Catso, he
in your bosome, the very butcher of a silken button, a Duel-
1130uerso, the Hay.
¶Ben: The what?
¶blade, a very tall man, a very good whoore. Why graund-
¶bones.
¶Ben. Heere comes Romeo.
¶how art thou fishified. Sirra now is he for the numbers that
¶Petrarch flowdin : Laura to his Lady was but a kitchin
¶Romeo bon iour, there is a French curtesie to your French
¶Rom: What counterfeit I pray you?
¶constraine a man to bow in the hams.
¶Rom: Pinke for flower?
¶Mer: Right.
¶Rom: Then is my Pumpe well flour'd:
¶Me: Come between vs good Benuolio, for my wits faile.
¶thy wits, than I haue in al my fiue: Was I with you there for
¶the goose?
¶Rom: Thou were neuer with me for any thing, when
¶thou wert not with me for the goose.
¶from an ynch narrow to an ell broad.
¶Mer: Why is not this better now than groning for loue?
¶thou what thou art, as wel by arte as nature. This driueling
¶loue is like a great naturall, that runs vp and downe to hide
¶his bable in a hole.
¶Ben: Stop there.
the haire.
¶Mer: Tut man thou art deceiued, I meant to make it
short, for I was come to the whole depth of my tale? and
¶meant indeed to occupie the argument no longer.
¶Rom: Heers goodly geare.
1200
Enter Nurse and her man.
¶Nur: Peter, pree thee giue me my fan.
¶Mer: Pree thee doo good Peter, to hide her face: for
¶her fanne is the fairer of the two.
¶Nur: God ye goodmorrow Gentlemen.
1210Mer: God ye good den faire Gentlewoman.
¶Nur: Is it godye gooden I pray you.
¶the diall is euen now vpon the pricke of noone.
¶Nur: Fie, what a man is this?
¶himselfe to marre.
¶quoth he? I pray you can anie of you tell where one maie
¶finde yong Romeo?
1220Rom: I can : but yong Romeo will bee elder when you
¶haue found him, than he was when you sought him, I am
1225ly, wisely.
¶Mer: So ho. A baud, a baud, a baud.
1232.1
He walkes by them, and sings.
1233.1And an olde hare hore, and an olde hare hore
¶is verie good meate in Lent:
1235But a hare thats hoare is too much for a score,
¶if it hore ere it be spent.
¶Youl come to your fathers to supper?
¶Rom: I will.
¶
Exeunt Benuolio, Mercutio.
¶this that was so full of his roperipe?
¶to in a month.
¶him downe if he were lustier than he is: if I cannot take him
1250down, Ile finde them that shall: I am none of his flurt-
1251.1gills,I am none of his skaines mates.
¶
She turnes to Peter her man.
¶out as anothers if I see time and place.
¶behauiour as they say, for the Gentlewoman is yong. Now
1265if you should deale doubly with her, it were verie weake
¶dealing, and not to be offered to anie Gentlewoman.
¶test.
1270a ioyfull woman.
¶Rom: Why, what wilt thou tell her?
¶Gentlemanlike proffer.
1275Rom: Bid her get leaue to morrow morning
¶To come to shrift to Frier Laurence cell:
¶My man shall come to thee, and bring along
¶The cordes, made like a tackled staire,
¶Which to the hightop-gallant of my ioy
1285.1Hold, take that for thy paines.
¶Nur: No, not a penie truly.
1310
Enter Iuliet.
¶Doth hurrie from the fearfull Cannonsmouth.
¶
Enter Nurse
1329.1What sayes my Loue?
¶my bones ake. Oh wheres my man? Giue me some aqua
vitae.
Nur: Fie, what a iaunt haue I had: and my backe a to-
¶no bodie, he is not the Flower of curtesie, he is not a proper
¶man: and for a hand, and a foote, and a baudie, wel go thy
1355way wench, thou hast it ifaith, Lord, Lord, how my head
1355.1beates?
1358.1riage?
¶kinde, and I warrant a vertuous : wheres your Mother?
1360kinde Gentleman, and an honest, and a vertuous; wheres
¶your mother?
¶done, euen doot yourselfe.
1378.1What sayes my Loue, my Lord, my Romeo?
¶There stayes a Bridegroome to make you a Bride.
¶Now comes the wanton blood vp in your cheekes,
¶I must prouide a ladder made of cordes,
¶I must take paines to further your delight,
1390Doth this newes please you now?
1390.1Iul: How doth her latter words reuiue my hart.
¶And Ile not faile to meete my Romeo.
Exeunt
¶
Enter Romeo, Frier.
1392.1Rom: Now Father Laurence, in thy holy grant
¶Fr: Without more words I will doo all I may,
¶To make you happie if in me it lye.
¶Witnes of our harts loue by ioyning hands,
1398.1And come she will.
¶
Enter Iuliet somewhat fast, and embraceth Romeo.
¶See where she comes.
1409.1So light of foote nere hurts the troden flower:
¶Iul: Romeo.
¶Rom: My Iuliet welcome. As doo waking eyes
¶So Romeo hath expected Iuliet,
¶And thou art come.
¶Iul: I am (if I be Day)
¶Comme to my Sunne: shine foorth, and make me faire.
.10Rom: All beauteous fairnes dwelleth in thine eyes.
¶Defer imbracements till some fitter time,
¶Part for a while, you shall not be alone,
.15Till holy Church haue ioynd ye both in one.
Exeunt omnes.
¶
Enter Benuolio, Mercutio.
¶Ben: I pree thee good Mercutio lets retire,
¶The day is hot, the Capels are abroad.
¶into the confines of a tauerne, claps me his rapier on the
¶the operation of the next cup of wine, he drawes it on the
1440drawer, when indeed there is no need.
¶Mer: Go too, thou art as hot a Iacke being mooude,
¶be mooud.
1445Ben: And what too?
¶wakd thy dogge that laye a sleepe in the Sunne ? With a
¶Taylor for wearing his new dublet before Easter: and
¶with another for tying his new shoes with ole ribands.
¶And yet thou wilt forbid me of quarrelling.
1460Ben: By my head heere comes a Capolet.
1465
Enter Tybalt.
¶Mer: By my heele I care not.
¶Tyb: Gentlemen a word with one of you.
¶it with somewhat,and make it a word and a blow.
¶heeres my fiddle-sticke.
¶
Enter Romeo.
¶Tyb: Well peace be with you, heere comes my man.
¶Mer: But Ile be hanged if he weare your lyuery: Mary
1490go before into the field, and he may be your follower, so in
¶ter words then these, thou art a villaine.
¶fore I well perceiue thou knowst me not.
¶drawe.
¶my loue.
¶it away. You Ratcatcher, come backe, come backe.
¶Mer: Nothing King of Cates, but borrow one of your
1510nine liues, therefore come drawe your rapier out of your
1515Rom: Stay Tibalt, hould Mercutio: Benuolio beate
¶downe their weapons.
1517.1
Tibalt under Romeos arms thrusts Mer-
¶
cutio, in and flyes.
¶Mer: Is he gone, hath hee nothing? A poxe on your
1524.1houses.
¶Rom: What art thou hurt man, the wound is not deepe.
¶barne doore, but it will serue I warrant. What meant you to
¶come betweene vs? I was hurt vnder your arme.
¶goe fetch me a Surgeon.
1528.1Boy: I goe my Lord.
¶hath made wormes meate of me, & ye aske for me to mor-
row you shall finde me a graue-man. A poxe of your houses,
¶your house of the Mountegues and the Capolets: and then
¶write my Epitapth, that Tybalt came and broke the Princes
¶cause. Wher's the Surgeon?
¶Mer: Now heele keepe a mumbling in my guts on the
¶otherside, come Benuolio, lend me thy hand: a poxe of your
.10houses.
Exeunt
¶Rom: This Gentleman the Princes neere Alie.
¶My very frend hath tane this mortall wound
1545In my behalfe, my reputation staind
¶With Tibalts slaunder, Tybalt that an houre
¶Hath beene my kinsman, Ah Iuliet
¶Thy beautie makes me thus effeminate,
1550
Enter Benuolio.
¶Ben: Ah Romeo Romeo braue Mercutio is dead,
¶Which too vntimely scornd the lowly earth.
¶Rom: This daies black fate,on more daies doth depend
1555This but begins what other dayes must end.
¶
Enter Tibalt
¶Ben: Heere comes the furious Tibalt backe againe.
¶Away to heauen respectiue lenity:
1560And fier eyed fury be my conduct now.
¶Now Tibalt take the villaine backe againe,
¶Is but a little way aboue the cloudes,
¶And staies for thine to beare him company.
1565Or thou, or I, or both shall follow him.
¶
Fight, Tibalt falles.
¶The Citizens approach, away, begone
¶Thou wilt be taken.
¶
Exeunt
¶
Enter Citizens.
¶laine?
1580Ben: There is that Tybalt.
¶Vp sirra goe with vs.
¶
Enter Prince, Capolets wife.
1585Pry: Where be the vile beginners of this fray?
¶The most vnlucky mannage of this brawle.
¶Heere lyes the man slaine by yong Romeo,
1590M: Tibalt, Tybalt, O my brothers child,
¶Vnhappie fight? Ah the blood is spilt
¶Of my deare kinsman, Prince as thou art true:
¶For blood of ours, shed bloud of Mountagew.
1595Pry: Speake Benuolio who began this fray?
¶Romeo who spake him fayre bid him bethinke
¶How nice the quarrell was.
¶And on me cry'd, who drew to part their strife,
.5And with his agill arme yong Romeo,
¶As fast as tung cryde peace, fought peace to make.
¶While they were enterchanging thrusts and blows,
¶Vnder yong Romeos laboring arme to part,
¶That rid the life of stout Mercutio.
¶With that he fled, but presently return'd,
1614.1And with his rapier braued Romeo:
1615That had but newly entertain'd reuenge,
¶And ere I could draw forth my rapyer
¶To part their furie, downe did Tybalt fall,
¶And this way Romeo fled.
¶Some twentie of them fought in this blacke strife:
¶And all those twenty could but kill one life.
1625Romeo slew Tybalt, Romeo may not liue.
¶Prin: And for that offence
¶Immediately we doo exile him hence.
¶I have an interest in your hates proceeding,
¶My blood for your rude braules doth lye a bleeding.
1635But Ile amerce you with so large a fine,
¶I will be deafe to pleading and excuses,
¶Mercie to all but murdrers, pardoning none that kill.
¶
Exeunt omnes.
¶
Enter Iuliet.
¶As Phaeton, would quickly bring you thether,
¶And send in cloudie night immediately.
¶
Enter Nurse wringing her hands, with the ladder
1676.1
of cordes in her lap.
1680What hast thou there, the cordes?
¶Nur: I, I, the cordes: alacke we are vndone,
¶We are vndone, Ladie we are vndone.
¶Iul: What diuell art thou that torments me thus?
¶Nurs: Alack the day, hees dead, hees dead, hees dead.
1693.1Can heauens be so enuious?
1695Nur: Romeo can if heauens cannot.
¶Hath seuerd thee from thy true Iuliet?
¶Or Fate enuie our happie Marriage,
¶O honest Tybalt, curteous Gentleman.
1715Is Tybalt dead, and Romeo murdered:
¶Then let the trumpet sound a generall doome,
¶These two being dead, then liuing is there none.
1720Romeo that murdered him is banished.
¶Nur: It did, it did, alacke the day it did.
1724.1O painted sepulcher, including filth.
1735Was neuer booke containing so foule matter,
¶So fairly bound. Ah, what meant Romeo?
¶Shame come to Romeo.
1755That villaine Cousen would have kild my husband.
¶All this is comfort. But there yet remaines
¶VVorse than his death, which faine I would forget:
¶Is Father, Mother, Tybalt, Iuliet,
¶Where are my Father and my Mother Nurse?
¶VVill you goe to them?
¶Nur.Ladie, your Romeo will be here to night,
1795Ile to him, he is hid at Laurence Cell.
¶And bid him come to take his last farewell.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Frier.
1800Fr:Romeo come forth, come forth thou fearfull man,
¶Affliction is enamourd on thy parts,
¶And thou art wedded to Calamitie.
1803.1
Enter Romeo.
¶Rom:Father what newes, what is the Princes doome,
¶VVhat Sorrow craues acquaintance at our hands,
¶VVhich yet we know not.
¶Fr:Too familiar
1810I bring thee tidings of the Princes doome.
¶Not bodies death, but bodies banishment.
¶For Exile hath more terror in his lookes,
¶Be patient, for the world is broad and wide.
1820Rom:There is no world without Verona walls,
¶But purgatorie, torture, hell itselfe.
¶And world exilde is death. Calling death banishment,
1825Thou cutst my head off with a golden axe,
¶Thy fault our law calls death, but the milde Prince
1830And turnd that blacke word death to banishment:
¶Rom:Tis torture and not mercie, heauen is heere
¶Where Iuliet liues: and euerie cat and dog,
¶And little mouse, euerie vnworthie thing
1835Liue here in heauen, and may looke on her,
¶But Romeo may not. More validitie,
¶In carrion flyes, than Romeo: they may seaze
¶On the white wonder of faire Iuliets skinne,
1845But Romeo may not, he is banished.
1845.1Flies may doo this, but I from this must flye.
1848.1To torture me withall: ah, banished.
¶O Frier, the damned vse that word in hell:
1850Howling attends it. How hadst thou the heart,
¶To mangle me with that word, Banishment?
¶Fr:Ile giue thee armour to beare off this word,
¶To comfort thee though thou be banished.
¶It helpes not, it preuailes not, talke no more.
1865eyes.
¶Wert thou as young as I, Iuliet thy Loue,
¶An houre but married, Tybalt murdred.
1870Doting like me, and like me banished,
¶hayre.
¶And fall vpon the ground as I doe now,
¶Taking the measure of an vnmade graue.
1875
Nurse knockes.
¶I heare one knocke, arise and get thee gone.
1877.1Nu:Hoe Fryer.
¶Fr:Gods will what wilfulnes is this?
¶
Shee knockes againe.
¶Nur:Hoe Fryer open the doore,
1892.1Fr:By and by I come. Who is there?
¶Nur:One from Lady Iuliet.
1895Fr:Then come neare.
¶Nur:Oh holy Fryer, tell mee oh holy Fryer,
¶Where is my Ladies Lord? Wher's Romeo?
¶Fr:There on the ground, with his owne teares made
¶drunke.
¶Weeping and blubbring, blubbring and weeping:
1906.1
He rises.
1910Doth she not thinke me an olde murderer,
¶Now I haue stainde the childhood of her ioy,
¶With bloud remou'd but little from her owne?
¶My conceal'd Lady to our canceld loue?
¶And now fals on her bed, now on the ground,
¶And Tybalt cryes, and then on Romeo calles.
1920Did murder her, as that names cursed hand
¶Murderd her kinsman. Ah tell me holy Fryer
¶In what vile part of this Anatomy
¶Doth my name lye? Tell me that I may sacke
¶The hatefull mansion?
1924.1
He offers to stab himselfe, and Nurse snatches
the dagger away.
¶Nur:Ah?
¶Cryes out thou art, but thy wilde actes denote
¶Thou hast amaz'd me. By my holy order,
¶And slay thy Lady too, that liues in thee?
¶There art thou happy. Tybalt would kill thee,
¶Happines Courts thee in his best array:
1960But like a misbehaude and sullen wench
¶Goe get thee to thy loue as was decreed:
¶Ascend her Chamber Window, hence and comfort her,
1966.1Nurse prouide all things in a readines,
¶Which heauy sorrow makes them apt vnto.
¶Nur:Good Lord what a thing learning is.
¶I could haue stayde heere all this night
1976.1To heare good counsell. Well Sir,
¶Ile tell my Lady that you will come.
1979.1Farwell good Nurse.
¶
Nurse offers to goe in and turnes againe.
¶Rom:How well my comfort is reuiued by this.
1982.1
Exit Nurse.
¶Fr:Soiorne in Mantua, Ile finde out your man,
¶Euery good hap that doth befall thee heere.
1990Farwell.
¶It were a griefe so breefe to part with thee.
¶
Enter olde Capolet and his Wife, With
1994.1
County Paris.
¶That we haue had no time to moue my daughter.
¶And so did I. Well, we were borne to dye,
1998.1Wife wher's your daughter, is she in her chamber?
¶I thinke she meanes not to come downe to night.
¶Maddam farwell, commend me to your daughter.
2003.1
Paris offers to goe in, and Capolet
¶
calles him againe.
¶But soft what day is this?
¶Par:Munday my Lord.
¶Wee'le make no great a doe, a frend or two, or so:
2020It will be thought we held him careleslye:
¶If we should reuell much, therefore we will haue
¶Some halfe a dozen frends and make no more adoe.
2025row.
¶Cap:Wife goe you to your daughter, ere you goe to
2027.1bed.
¶Acquaint her with the County Paris loue,
¶Fare well my Lord till Thursday next.
2029.1Wife gette you to your daughter. Light to my Chamber.
2030Afore me it is so very very late,
2030.1That we may call it earely by and by.
¶
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Romeo and Iuliet at the window.
¶Iul:Wilt thou be gone? It is not yet nere day,
¶It was the Nightingale and not the Larke
2035That pierst the fearfull hollow of thine eare:
¶Beleeue me loue, it was the Nightingale.
¶Rom:It was the Larke, the Herald of the Morne,
¶And not the Nightingale. See Loue what enuious strakes
¶Nights candles are burnt out, and iocond Day
¶Stands tiptoes on the mystie mountaine tops.
¶Iul:Yon light is not day light, I know it I:
2045It is some Meteor that the Sunne exhales,
¶To be this night to thee a Torch-bearer,
¶And light thee on thy way to Mantua.
2050If thou wilt haue it so, I am content.
¶Ile say yon gray is not the Mornings Eye,
¶It is the pale reflex of Cynthias brow.
¶Ile say it is the Nightingale that beares
¶The vaultie heauen so high aboue our heads,
¶Come death and welcome, Iuliet wils it so.
¶What sayes my Loue? lets talke, tis not yet day.
¶Iul:It is, it is, be gone, flye hence away.
¶This doth not so: for this diuideth vs.
¶Some say the Larke and loathed Toad change eyes,
¶I would that now they had changd voyces too:
2065Since arme from arme her voyce doth vs affray,
¶Hunting thee hence with Huntsvp to the day.
¶So now be gone, more light and light it growes.
¶Rom:More light and light, more darke and darke our
woes.
¶
He goeth downe.
¶I must heare from thee euerie day in the hower:
¶For in an hower there are manie minutes,
¶Minutes are dayes, so will I number them:
2080Oh by this count I shall be much in yeares,
¶Ere I see thee againe.
¶Rom:Farewell, I will omit no opportunitie
¶That may conueigh my greetings loue to thee.
¶Me thinkes I see thee now thou art below
¶Like one dead in the bottome of a Tombe:
¶Drie sorrow drinkes our blood: adieu, adieu.
Exit.
2092.1
Enter Nurse hastely.
¶Nur:Madame beware, take heed the day is broke,
¶Your Mother's comming to your Chamber, make all sure.
¶
She goeth downe from the window.
¶
Enter Iuliets Mother, Nurse.
¶Moth:Where are you Daughter?
2099.1Nur:What Ladie, Lambe, what Iuliet?
2100Iul:How now, who calls?
2100.1Nur:It is your Mother.
¶Moth:Why how now Iuliet?
¶Iul:Madam, I am not well.
¶I thinke thoult wash him from his graue with teares.
2115Moth:I cannot blame thee.
¶But it greeues thee more that Villaine liues.
¶Iul:What Villaine Madame?
¶Moth:That Villaine Romeo.
2125Moth:Content thee Girle, if I could finde a man
¶Till I behold him, dead is my poore heart.
¶Thus for a Kinsman vext?
Moth:Well let that passe. I come to bring thee ioyfull
(newes?
¶And one who pittying thy needfull state,
¶Hath found thee out a happie day of ioy.
¶Iul:What day is that I pray you?
2150Moth:Marry my Childe,
¶The gallant, yong and youthfull Gentlemen,
¶The Countie Paris at Saint Peters Church,
¶To make you there a glad and ioyfull Bride.
¶Iul:Now by Saint Peters Church and Peter too,
2155He shall not there make mee a ioyfull Bride.
¶Are these the newes you had to tell me of?
¶Marrie here are newes indeed. Madame I will not marrie
2159.1yet.
And when I doo, it shalbe rather Romeo whom I hate,
¶Then Countie Paris that I cannot loue.
¶
Enter olde Capolet.
2170For this thy bodie which I tearme a barke,
¶Still floating in thy euerfalling teares,
2176.1she to it?
2180VVould God that she were married to her graue.
¶she not wexe proud?
¶Iul:Not proud ye haue, but thankfull that ye haue:
2185Proud can I neuer be of that I hate,
¶But thankfull euen for hate that is ment loue.
¶Capo:Proud and I thanke you, and I thanke you not,
¶And yet not proud. VVhats here, chop logicke.
¶Proud me no prouds, nor thanke me no thankes,
2195To goe with Paris to Saint Peters Church,
¶Or I will drag you on a hurdle thether.
¶Out you greene sicknes baggage, out you tallow face.
2200.1
She kneeles downe.
¶To goe with Paris to Saint Peters Church:
¶Or henceforth neuer looke me in the face.
2205Speake not, reply not, for my fingers ytch.
¶That God had sent vs but this onely chyld:
¶But now I see this one is one too much,
¶You are too blame to rate her so.
¶Cap:Oh godde godden.
2220For heere we need it not.
¶Mo:My Lord ye are too hotte.
¶Day, night, early, late, at home, abroad,
¶Alone, in company, waking or sleeping,
2225Still my care hath beene to see her matcht.
¶And hauing how found out a Gentleman,
¶Of Princely parentage, youthfull, and nobly trainde.
¶Stuft as they say with honorable parts,
¶Proportioned as ones heart coulde wish a man:
2230And then to haue a wretched whyning foole,
¶A puling mammet in her fortunes tender,
¶To say I cannot loue, I am too yong, I pray you pardon
¶mee?
¶But if you cannot wedde Ile pardon you.
¶I tell yee what, Thursday is neere,
¶If you be mine, Ile giue you to my frend:
¶If not, hang, drowne, starue, beg,
2240Dye in the streetes: for by my Soule
2240.1Ile neuer more acknowledge thee,
¶Nor what I haue shall euer doe thee good,
Exit.
¶Iul:Is there no pitty hanging in the cloudes,
¶That lookes into the bottom of my woes?
¶Defer this mariage for a day or two,
¶Or if you cannot, make my mariage bed
¶In that dimme monument where Tybalt lyes.
2250Do what thou wilt for I haue done with thee.
Exit.
¶giue me.
¶Your Romeo he is banisht, and all the world to nothing
¶He neuer dares returne to challendge you.
¶Now I thinke good you marry with this County,
¶Oh he is a gallant Gentleman, Romeo is but a dishclout
¶I thinke you happy in this second match.
¶As for your husband he is dead:
¶Or twere as good he were, for you haue no vse of him.
¶Iul:Amen.
¶I pray thee goe thy waies vnto my mother
To Fryer Laurence Cell to confesse me,
¶And to be absolu'd.
2284.1
She lookes after Nurse.
¶Ile to the Fryer to know his remedy,
¶If all faile els, I haue the power to dye.
2292.1
Exit.
¶
Enter Fryer and Paris.
¶Vneuen is the course, I like it not.
2300And therefore haue I little talkt of loue.
¶Now Sir, her father thinkes it daungerous:
2305To stop the inundation of her teares,
¶Which too much minded by her selfe alone
¶May be put from her by societie.
¶
Enter Paris.
2310Here comes the Lady to my cell,
¶Par:Welcome my loue, my Lady and my wife:
¶Fr:Thats a certaine text.
¶Par:Do not deny to him that you loue me.
¶Iu:And if I doe, it wilbe of more price,
¶Being spoke behinde your backe, than to your face.
¶For it was bad enough before their spite.
¶Are you at leasure holy Father now:
2335My Lord we must entreate the time alone.
2338.1
Exit Paris.
¶Fr:Ah Iuliet I already know thy griefe,
¶I heare thou must and nothiug may proroge it,
¶On Thursday next be married to the Countie.
¶Twixt my extreames and me, this bloodie Knife
¶Shall play the Vmpeere, arbitrating that
¶Which the Commission of thy yeares and arte
¶Speake not, be briefe: for I desire to die,
¶VVhich craues as desperate an execution,
2365As that is desperate we would preuent.
¶If rather than to marrie Countie Paris
¶Tis not vnlike that thou wilt vndertake
¶A thing like death to chyde away this shame,
¶And if thou doost, Ile giue thee remedie.
¶Iul:Oh bid me leape (rather than marrie Paris)
¶From off the battlements of yonder tower:
2375.1VVhere roaring Beares and sauage Lions are:
2380Or lay me in tombe with one new dead:
¶Things that to heare them namde haue made me tremble;
¶And I will doo it without feare or doubt,
2383.1To my deere Lord, my deerest Romeo.
¶Fr:Hold Iuliet, hie thee home, get thee to bed,
¶Let not thy Nurse lye with thee in thy Chamber:
¶And when thou art alone, take thou this Violl,
¶And this distilled Liquor drinke thou off:
¶And in this borrowed likenes of shrunke death,
2400Thou shalt remaine full two and fortie houres.
¶And when thou art laid in thy Kindreds Vault,
¶And he shall come and take thee from thy graue.
2422.1
Exeunt.
¶
Enter olde Capolet, his Wife, Nurse, and
¶
Seruingman.
¶Capo:Goe, prouide me twentie cunning Cookes.
¶Ser:I warrant you Sir, let me alone for that, Ile knowe
¶them by licking their fingers.
¶gers.
¶Capo:Well get you gone.
2433.1
Exit Seruingman.
¶But where's this Head-strong?
2437.1Moth:Shees gone (my Lord) to Frier Laurence Cell
¶To be confest.
¶
Enter Iuliet.
¶gadding?
¶Of froward wilfull opposition
¶By holy Laurence to fall prostrate here,
2447.1
She kneeles downe.
¶Capo:Now before God this holy reuerent Frier
¶All our whole Citie is much bound vnto.
2455Goe tell the Countie presently of this,
¶For I will haue this knot knit vp to morrow.
¶Against to morrow.
Moth:I pree thee doo, good Nurse goe in with her
Helpe her to sort Tyres, Rebatoes, Chaines,
And I will come vnto you presently,
Nur:Come sweet hart, shall we goe?
Iul:I pree thee let vs.
2465
Exeunt Nurse and Iuliet.
Goe one and certefie the Count thereof.
¶Capo:Let me alone for that, goe get you in,
2475Now before God my heart is passing light,
¶To see her thus conformed to our will.
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Nurse, Iuliet.
¶For I doo meane to lye alone to night.
.5and so good night.
Exit.
¶
Enter Mother.
2486.1For I haue manie things to thinke vpon.
2492.1The Countie will be earlie here to morrow.
Exit.
2495gaine.
¶Ah, I doo take a fearfull thing in hand.
¶What if this Potion should not worke at all,
¶Must I of force be married to the Countie?
¶This shall forbid it. Knife, lye thou there.
¶What if the Frier should giue me this drinke
¶Our former marriage? Ah, I wrong him much,
¶He is a holy and religious Man:
2509.1I will not entertaine so bad a thought.
¶Awake an houre before the appointed time:
2530An then I feare I shall be lunaticke,
¶And playing with my dead forefathers bones,
2535My Cosin Tybalt weltring in his bloud,
¶Romeo I come, this doe I drinke to thee.
2538.1
She fals vpon her bed within the Curtaines.
¶
Enter Nurse with hearbs, Mother.
¶The Countie will be heere immediatly.
2568.1
Enter Oldeman.
¶The Curfewe bell hath rung, t'is foure a clocke,
¶Looke to your bakt meates good Angelica.
¶Nur:Goe get you to bed you cotqueane. I faith you
2550will be sicke anone.
night, and haue taken no harme at all.
¶
Enter a Seruingman with Logs & Coales.
¶What haue you there?
Cap:Goe, goe choose dryer. Will will tell thee where
¶thou shalt fetch them.
¶Ser:Nay I warrant let me alone, I haue a heade Inoe to
¶choose a Log.
2565
Exit.
2566.1Come, come, make hast call vp your daughter,
The Countie will be heere with musicke straight.
¶Gods me hees come, Nurse call vp my daughter.
¶Nur:Goe, get you gone. What lambe, what Lady
¶birde? fast I warrant. What Iuliet? well, let the County take
2580you in your bed, yee sleepe for a weeke now, but the next
¶your bed, drest in your cloathes and down, ah me, alack the
¶day, some Aqua vitae hoe.
2591.1
Enter Mother.
¶Moth:How now whats the matter?
¶
Enter Oldeman.
2603.1Accursed time, vnfortunate olde man.
¶
Enter Fryer and Paris.
¶Par:What is the bride ready to goe to Church?
¶Cap:Ready to goe, but neuer to returne.
2615O Sonne the night before thy wedding day,
¶Hath Death laine with thy bride, flower as she is,
¶Death is my Sonne in Law, to him I giue all that I haue.
¶Borne to the world to be a slaue in it.
¶O heauens , O nature, wherefore did you make me,
¶And being dead, dead sorrow nips vs all.
¶
All at once cry out and wring their hands.
¶All cry:All our ioy, and all our hope is dead,
¶Why to this day haue you preseru'd my life?
¶Depriude of sence, of life, of all by death,
¶This day, this vniust, this impartiall day
¶Wherein I hop'd to see my comfort full,
¶Alacke the time that euer I was borne,
¶To be partaker of this destinie.
.25Alacke the day, alacke and welladay.
2645.1Your daughter liues in peace and happines,
2660And as the custome of our Country is,
2661.1Conuay her where her Ancestors lie tomb'd,
¶Let vs together taste this bitter fare.
2675
They all but the Nurse goe foorth, casting Rosemary on
2675.1
her and shutting the Curtens.
¶
Enter Musitions.
.5
Enter Seruingman.
2681.1some mery dumpe.
¶Ser:You will not then?
¶1.No marry will wee.
¶1.What will you giue vs?
¶1.If you re vs and fa vs, we will note you.
¶Ser:I will put vp my Iron dagger, and beate you with
2700.11.Lets heare.
2705Ser:When griping griefe the heart doth wound,
2716.1well.
Exit.
¶
Enter Romeo
¶And I am comforted with pleasing dreames.
¶Me thought I was this night alreadie dead:
¶(Strange dreames that giue a dead man leaue to thinke)
And that my Ladie Iuliet came to me,
¶That I reuiude and was an Emperour.
¶
Enter Balthasar his man booted.
2735Newes from Verona. How now Balthasar,
¶How doth my Ladie? Is my Father well?
¶How fares my Iuliet? that I aske againe:
¶If she be well, then nothing can be ill.
¶Her bodie sleepes in Capels Monument,
¶And her immortall parts with Angels dwell.
2750I will not stay in Mantua to night.
¶Balt:Pardon me Sir, I will not leaue you thus,
¶Your lookes are dangerous and full of feare:
¶I dare not, nor I will not leaue you yet.
2755Rom:Doo as I bid thee, get me incke and paper,
¶
Exit Balthasar.
¶Well Iuliet, I will lye with thee to night.
¶Lets see for meanes. As I doo remember
¶Here dwells a Pothecarie whom oft I noted
With beggerly accounts of emptie boxes:
2770And in the same an Aligarta hangs,
¶Olde endes of packthred, and cakes of Roses,
¶Him as I noted, thus with my selfe I thought:
¶Here he might buy it. This thought of mine
2780Did but forerunne my need: and here about he dwels.
¶What ho Apothecarie, come forth I say.
2785
Enter Apothecarie.
¶Rom:Heeres twentie duckates,
2790As will dispatch the wearie takers life,
¶As suddenly as powder being fierd
¶From forth a Cannons mouth.
¶And doost thou feare to violate the Law?
¶The Law is not thy frend, nor the Lawes frend,
2801.1And therefore make no conscience of the law:
¶Vpon thy backe hangs ragged Miserie,
¶And starued Famine dwelleth in thy cheekes.
2805Rom:I pay thy pouertie, but not thy will.
¶Apo:Hold take you this, and put it in anie liquid thing
¶you will, and it will serue had you the liues of twenty men.
¶Than this which thou hast giuen me. Goe hye thee hence,
¶Goe buy the cloathes, and get thee into flesh.
2815Come cordiall and not poyson, goe with mee
Exeunt.
¶
Enter Frier Iohn.
¶Iohn: VVhat Frier Laurence, Brother, ho?
¶VVhat newes from Mantua, what will Romeo come?
¶VVhereas the infectious pestilence remaind:
¶And being by the Searchers of the Towne
2830Found and examinde, we were both shut vp.
¶Laur:VVho bare my letters then to Romeo?
¶Laur:Now by my holy Order,
¶The letters were not nice, but of great weight.
¶Goe get thee hence, and get me presently
2840A spade and a mattocke.
¶Be wakde from sleepe. I will hye
¶To free her from that Tombe of miserie.
Exit.
¶
Enter Countie Paris and his Page with flowers
2851.1
and sweete Water.
¶Par:Put out the torch, and lye thee all along
¶Vnder this Ew-tree, keeping thine eare close to the hollow
2855ground.
¶And if thou heare one tread within the Churchyard,
¶Staight giue me notice.
¶Boy:I will my Lord.
2861.1
Paris strewes the Tomb with flowers.
2863.1bed:
¶Sweete Tombe that in thy circuite dost containe,
¶The perfect modell of eternitie:
¶Faire Iuliet that with Angells dost remaine,
.5Accept this latest fauour at my hands,
¶That liuing honourd thee, and being dead
¶With funerall praises doo adorne thy Tombe.
¶Boy whistles and calls.My Lord.
¶
Enter Romeo and Balthasar, with a torch, a
2874.1
a mattocke, and a crow of yron.
.5What with a torch, muffle me night a while.
2875.1ron.
¶And take these letters early in the morning,
¶See thou deliuer them to my Lord and Father.
¶So get thee gone and trouble me no more.
¶Why I descend into this bed of death,
¶Is partly to behold my Ladies face,
¶But chiefly to take from her dead finger,
2885In deare imployment but if thou wilt stay,
¶Further to prie in what I vndertake,
¶By heauen Ile teare thee ioynt by ioynt,
¶And strewe thys hungry churchyard with thy lims.
2890The time and my intents are sauage, wilde.
¶Balt:Well, Ile be gone and not trouble you.
2895Commend me to my Father, farwell good fellow.
¶Balt:Yet for all this will I not part from hence.
2897.1
Romeo opens the tombe.
2900Thus I enforce thy rotten iawes to ope.
¶That murderd my loues cosen, I will apprehend him.
¶Stop thy vnhallowed toyle vile Mountague.
¶Can vengeance be pursued further then death?
¶I doe attach thee as a fellon heere.
2910The Law condemnes thee, therefore thou must dye.
¶Good youth begone, tempt not a desperate man.
2915Heape not another sinne vpon my head
¶I loue thee better then I loue my selfe:
¶Par:I doe defie thy coniurations:
¶And doe attach thee as a fellon heere.
2923.1
They fight.
¶Boy:O Lord they fight, I will goe call the watch.
¶Open the tombe, lay me with Iuliet.
¶Mercutios kinsman, noble County Paris?
2930Did no regard him as we past a long.
¶For thou hast prizd thy loue aboue thy life.
2940Death lye thou there, by a dead man interd,
¶How oft haue many at the houre of death
¶Beene blith and pleasant? which their keepers call
¶A lightning before death But how may I
¶Call this a lightning. Ah deare Iuliet,
2944.1How well thy beauty doth become this graue?
2956.1Is amorous, and doth court my loue.
¶Therefore will I, O heere, O euer heere,
¶With wormes, that are thy chamber mayds.
¶Come desperate Pilot now at once runne on
¶Heers to my loue. O true Apothecary:
Falls.
¶
Enter Fryer with a Lanthorne.
¶How oft to night haue these my aged feete
2980.1Whose there?
¶Man.A frend and one that knowes you well.
¶What light is yon? if I be not deceived,
2985Me thinkes it burnes in Capels monument?
¶That loues you dearely.
¶Fr.Who is it?
¶Man:Romeo.
2990Fr:How long hath he beene there?
¶Man:Full halfe an houre and more.
¶Fr:Goe with me thether.
2995On paine of death he chargde me to be gone,
¶And not for to disturbe him in his enterprize.
2997.1
Fryer stoops and lookes on the blood and weapons.
¶What blood is this that staines the entrance
¶Of this marble stony monument?
¶Ah me I doubt, whose heere? what Romeo dead?
¶Who and Paris too? what vnluckie houre
3009.1
Iuliet rises.
3010The Lady sturres.
¶Ah comfortable Fryer.
¶I doe remember well where I should be,
¶And what we talkt of: but yet I cannot see
3019.1And Romeo dead: and if we heere be tane
¶Iul:Ah leaue me, leaue me, I will not from hence.
Iul:Goe get thee gone.
¶Whats heere a cup closde in my louers hands?
¶Ah churle drinke all, and leaue no drop for me.
¶
Enter Watch.
¶Watch:This way, this way.
¶O happy dagger thou shalt end my feare,
3035.1
She stabs herselfe and falles.
Enter Watch.
¶Cap:Come looke about, what weapons haue we heere?
¶See frends where Iuliet two daies buried,
3042.1Attach and bring them to vs presently.
¶
Enter one with the Fryer.
¶1.Captaine heers a Fryer with tooles about him,
3055Fitte to ope a tombe.
¶
Enter one with Romets Man.
30501.Heeres Romeos Man.
¶Capt:Keepe him to be examinde.
¶
Enter Prince with others.
Where Iuliet that hath lyen intoombed two dayes,
Warme and fresh bleeding, Romeo and Countie Paris
Likewise newly slaine.
Prin:Search seeke about to finde the murderers.
Enter olde Capolet and his Wife.
¶And some on Iuliet: as if they alone
¶For (loe) the backe is emptie of yong Mountague,
¶
Enter olde Mountague.
¶Prin:Come Mountague, for thou art early vp,
¶To see thy Sonne and Heire more early downe.
3085Mount:Dread Souereigne, my Wife is dead to night,
¶And yong Benuolio is deceased too:
¶What further mischiefe can there yet be found?
¶Mount:O thou vntaught, what manners is in this
¶And let vs seeke to finde the Authors out
3100And Ile informe you how these things fell out.
¶Iuliet here slaine was married to that Romeo,
3106.1Without her Fathers or her Mothers grant:
3140The Nurse was priuie to the marriage.
¶The balefull day of this vnhappie marriage,
¶VVas Tybalts doomesday: for which Romeo
3110VVas banished from hence to Mantua.
¶To marrie her to Paris: but her Soule
¶Hither to finde a meanes she might auoyd
¶Then did I giue her, (tutord my mine arte)
¶Send hence to Mantua for her Romeo,
¶That he might come and take her from the Toombe,
3125But he that had my Letters (Frier Iohn)
¶VVhereas the sicke infection remaind,
¶VVas stayed by the Searchers of the Towne.
¶But Romeo vnderstanding by his man,
¶Vnto Verona for to see his loue.
¶VVhat after happened touching Paris death,
3150Or Romeos is to me vnknowne at all.
¶But when I came to take the Lady hence,
¶VVhom faine I would haue taken from the tombe,
3155Anone I heard the watch and then I fled,
¶VVhat after happened I am ignorant of.
¶And if in this ought haue miscaried
¶By me, or by my meanes let my old life
¶VVheres Romeos man, what can he say in this?
Vnto this Toombe. These Letters he deliuered me,
Charging me early giue them to his Father.
Prin:Lets see the Letters, I will read them ouer.
VVhere is the Counties Boy that calld the VVatch?
Boy:I brought my Master vnto Iuliets graue,
At last they fought, I ran to call the VVatch.
3158.1And this is all that I can say or know.
Prin:These letters doe make good the Fryers wordes,
3165Come Capolet, and come olde Mountagewe.
3170Cap:Come brother Mountague giue me thy hand,
¶There is my daughters dowry: for now no more
¶Can I bestowe on her, thats all I haue.
¶Moun:But I will giue them more, I will erect
¶Her statue of pure golde:
3175That while Verona by that name is knowne.
¶As that of Romeos loued Iuliet.
¶Poore Sacrifices to our Enmitie.
3180Prin:A gloomie peace this day doth with it bring.
¶Come, let vs hence,
To haue more talke of these sad things.
¶Fore nere was heard a Storie of more woe,
3185Than this of Iuliet and her Romeo.
¶
FINIS.
