Twelfth Night (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Scena Quarta.
250
Enter Valentine, and Viola in mans attire.
¶Cesario, you are like to be much aduanc'd, he hath known
¶you but three dayes, and already you are no stranger.
¶Vio. You either feare his humour, or my negligence,
255that you call in question the continuance of his loue. Is
Val. No beleeue me.
¶
Enter Duke, Curio, and Attendants.
¶Vio. I thanke you: heere comes the Count.
260Vio. On your attendance my Lord heere.
¶And tell them, there thy fixed foot shall grow
¶Till thou haue audience.
¶Vio. Sure my Noble Lord,
¶Du, Be clamorous, and leape all ciuill bounds,
¶Rather then make vnprofited returne,
¶It shall become thee well to act my woes:
¶She will attend it better in thy youth,
¶Then in a Nuntio's of more graue aspect.
280Du. Deere Lad, beleeue it;
¶For they shall yet belye thy happy yeeres,
¶That say thou art a man: Dianas lip
285And all is semblatiue a womans part.
¶I know thy constellation is right apt
¶For this affayre: some foure or fiue attend him,
290And thou shalt liue as freely as thy Lord,
¶To call his fortunes thine.
¶To woe your Lady: yet a barrefull strife,
¶Who ere I woe, my selfe would be his wife.
Exeunt.
