Cymbeline (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Scena Tertia.
¶
Enter Belarius, Guiderius, and Aruiragus.
¶Whose Roofe's as lowe as ours: Sleepe Boyes, this gate
¶Instructs you how t'adore the Heauens; and bowes you
¶To a mornings holy office. The Gates of Monarches
¶Are Arch'd so high, that Giants may iet through
1560And keepe their impious Turbonds on, without
¶Good morrow to the Sun. Haile thou faire Heauen,
¶As prouder liuers do.
¶Guid. Haile Heauen.
1565Aruir. Haile Heauen.
¶When you aboue perceiue me like a Crow,
1570And you may then reuolue what Tales, I haue told you,
¶Of Courts, of Princes; of the Tricks in Warre.
¶This Seruice, is not Seruice; so being done,
¶But being so allowed. To apprehend thus,
¶Drawes vs a profit from all things we see:
1575And often to our comfort, shall we finde
¶Then is the full-wing'd Eagle. Oh this life,
¶Is Nobler, then attending for a checke:
¶Richer, then doing nothing for a Babe:
1580Prouder, then rustling in vnpayd-for Silke:
¶Such gaine the Cap of him, that makes him fine,
¶Yet keepes his Booke vncros'd: no life to ours.
1585What Ayre's from home. Hap'ly this life is best,
¶With your stiffe Age; but vnto vs, it is
¶A Cell of Ignorance: trauailing a bed,
1590A Prison, or a Debtor, that not dares
¶To stride a limit.
¶When we are old as you? When we shall heare
¶The Raine and winde beate darke December? How
¶The freezing houres away? We haue seene nothing:
¶Like warlike as the Wolfe, for what we eate:
¶Our Valour is to chace what flyes: Our Cage
1600We make a Quire, as doth the prison'd Bird,
¶And sing our Bondage freely.
¶Did you but know the Citties Vsuries,
¶And felt them knowingly: the Art o'th'_Court,
1605As hard to leaue, as keepe: whose top to climbe
¶The feare's as bad as falling. The toyle o'th'_Warre,
1610And hath as oft a sland'rous Epitaph,
¶As Record of faire Act. Nay, many times
¶The World may reade in me: My bodie's mark'd
1615With Roman Swords; and my report, was once
¶And when a Souldier was the Theame, my name
¶Was not farre off: then was I as a Tree
¶Whose boughes did bend with fruit. But in one night,
1620A Storme, or Robbery (call it what you will)
¶Shooke downe my mellow hangings: nay my Leaues,
¶And left me bare to weather.
¶Gui. Vncertaine fauour.
¶Bel. My fault being nothing (as I haue told you oft)
¶Before my perfect Honor, swore to Cymbeline,
¶I was Confederate with the Romanes: so
¶Followed my Banishment, and this twenty yeeres,
1630Where I haue liu'd at honest freedome, payed
¶More pious debts to Heauen, then in all
¶The fore-end of my time. But, vp to'th'_Mountaines,
¶This is not Hunters Language; he that strikes
¶And we will feare no poyson, which attends
¶In place of greater State:
¶Ile meete you in the Valleyes.
Exeunt.
¶How hard it is to hide the sparkes of Nature?
¶Nor Cymbeline dreames that they are aliue.
¶They thinke they are mine,
¶And though train'd vp thus meanely
¶I'th' Caue, whereon the Bowe their thoughts do hit,
1645The Roofes of Palaces, and Nature prompts them
¶In simple and lowe things, to Prince it, much
¶Beyond the tricke of others. This Paladour,
¶The heyre of Cymbeline and Britaine, who
¶The King his Father call'd Guiderius. Ioue,
¶The warlike feats I haue done, his spirits flye out
¶Into my Story: say thus mine Enemy fell,
¶And thus I set my foote on's necke, euen then
¶The Princely blood flowes in his Cheeke, he sweats,
¶That acts my words. The yonger Brother Cadwall,
¶Once Aruiragus, in as like a figure
¶His owne conceyuing. Hearke, the Game is rows'd,
1660Oh Cymbeline, Heauen and my Conscience knowes
¶Thou refts me of my Lands. Euriphile,
1665Thou was't their Nurse, they took thee for their mother,
¶And euery day do honor to her graue:
¶My selfe Belarius, that am Mergan call'd
¶They take for Naturall Father. The Game is vp.
Exit.
