The Taming of the Shrew (Folio 1, 1623)
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218
The Taming of the Shrew.
¶If you should die before him, where's her dower?
¶Tra. That's but a cauill: he is olde, I young.
¶Gre. And may not yong men die as well as old?
1275On sonday next, you know
¶My daughter Katherine is to be married:
¶If not, to Signior Gremio:
1280And so I take my leaue, and thanke you both.
Exit.
¶Gre. Adieu good neighbour: now I feare thee not:
¶Sirra, yong gamester, your father were a foole
¶To giue thee all, and in his wayning age
¶Set foot vnder thy table: tut, a toy,
1285An olde Italian foxe is not so kinde my boy.
Exit.
¶Tra. A vengeance on your crafty withered hide,
¶Yet I haue fac'd it with a card of ten:
¶'Tis in my head to doe my master good:
¶And that's a wonder: fathers commonly
¶Doe get their children: but in this case of woing,
Exit.
¶
Actus Tertia.
1295
Enter Lucentio, Hortentio, and Bianca.
¶Luc. Fidler forbeare, you grow too forward Sir,
¶Hort. But wrangling pedant, this is
¶Then giue me leaue to haue prerogatiue,
¶Was it not to refresh the minde of man
¶Then giue me leaue to read Philosophy,
¶Bianc. Why gentlemen, you doe me double wrong,
¶Ile not be tied to howres, nor pointed times,
¶Take you your instrument, play you the whiles,
¶His Lecture will be done ere you haue tun'd.
¶Hort. You'll leaue his Lecture when I am in tune?
1325Luc. Hic Ibat, as I told you before, Simois, I am Lu-
¶Lucentio that comes a wooing, priami, is my man Tra-
1330guile the old Pantalowne.
¶Bian. Let's heare, oh fie, the treble iarres.
¶Luc. Spit in the hole man, and tune againe.
¶hic staterat priami, take heede he heare vs not, regia pre-
¶Hort. Madam, tis now in tune.
¶Luc. How fiery and forward our Pedant is,
¶Now for my life the knaue doth court my loue,
¶Pedascule, Ile watch you better yet:
¶Was Aiax cald so from his grandfather.
¶But let it rest, now Litio to you:
1350Good master take it not vnkindly pray
¶That I haue beene thus pleasant with you both.
¶Hort. You may go walk, and giue me leaue a while,
1355And watch withall, for but I be deceiu'd,
¶Our fine Musitian groweth amorous.
¶To learne the order of my fingering,
¶I must begin with rudiments of Art,
1360To teach you gamoth in a briefer sort,
¶More pleasant, pithy, and effectuall,
¶Then hath beene taught by any of my trade,
¶And there it is in writing fairely drawne.
1365Hor. Yet read the gamouth of Hortentio.
¶Bian. Gamouth I am, the ground of all accord:
¶Beeme, Bianca take him for thy Lord
¶Cfavt, that loues with all affection:
1370D solre, one Cliffe, two notes haue I,
¶Ela mi, show pitty or I die,
¶Call you this gamouth? tut I like it not,
¶To charge true rules for old inuentions.
1375
Enter a Messenger.
¶You know to morrow is the wedding day.
¶Methinkes he lookes as though he were in loue:
¶Yet if thy thoughts Bianca be so humble
1385Seize thee that List, if once I finde thee ranging,
¶Hortensio will be quit with thee by changing.
Exit.
¶
Enter Baptista, Gremio, Tranio, Katherine, Bianca, and o-
¶_thers, attendants.
¶Bap. Signior Lucentio, this is the pointed day
1390That Katherine and Petruchio should be married,
¶And yet we heare not of our sonne in Law:
¶What will be said, what mockery will it be?
¶To want the Bride-groome when the Priest attends
¶To speake the ceremoniall rites of marriage?
No
