The Winter's Tale (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
The Winters Tale.
287
¶Her. Sir,
¶My Life stands in the leuell of your Dreames,
¶Which Ile lay downe.
1260Leo. Your Actions are my Dreames.
¶You had a Bastard by Polixenes,
¶Which to deny, concernes more then auailes: for as
¶No Father owning it (which is indeed
¶More criminall in thee, then it) so thou
¶The Bugge which you would fright me with, I seeke:
¶To me can Life be no commoditie;
¶The crowne and comfort of my Life (your Fauor)
¶I doe giue lost, for I doe feele it gone,
1275But know not how it went. My second Ioy,
¶I am bar'd, like one infectious. My third comfort
¶(The innocent milke in it most innocent mouth)
¶Proclaym'd a Strumpet: With immodest hatred
¶The Child-bed priuiledge deny'd, which longs
¶Here, to this place, i'th' open ayre, before
1285I haue got strength of limit. Now (my Liege)
¶That I should feare to die? Therefore proceed:
¶But yet heare this: mistake me not: no Life,
¶(I prize it not a straw) but for mine Honor,
1290Which I would free: if I shall be condemn'd
¶But what your Iealousies awake) I tell you
¶'Tis Rigor, and not Law. Your Honors all,
¶I doe referre me to the Oracle:
1295Apollo be my Iudge.
¶Is altogether iust: therefore bring forth
¶(And in Apollo's Name) his Oracle.
1300Oh that he were aliue, and here beholding
¶His Daughters Tryall: that he did but see
¶Of Pitty, not Reuenge.
1305That you (Cleomines and Dion) haue
¶Been both at Delphos, and from thence haue brought
¶This seal'd-vp Oracle, by the Hand deliuer'd
¶You haue not dar'd to breake the holy Seale,
1310Nor read the Secrets in't.
¶Leo. Breake vp the Seales, and read.
¶
Officer. Hermione is chast, Polixenes blamelesse, Camillo
¶a true Subiect, Leontes a iealous Tyrant, his innocent Babe1315truly begotten, and the King shall liue without an Heire, if that¶which is lost, be not found.
¶Lords. Now blessed be the great Apollo.
¶Leo. There is no truth at all i'th' Oracle:
¶Ser. My Lord the King: the King?
¶The Prince your Sonne, with meere conceit, and feare
¶Of the Queenes speed, is gone.
¶Leo. How? gone?
¶Ser. Is dead.
¶Paul. This newes is mortall to the Queene: Look downe
¶And see what Death is doing.
¶Leo. Take her hence:
1335Her heart is but o're-charg'd: she will recouer.
¶'Beseech you tenderly apply to her
¶Some remedies for life. Apollo pardon
1340Ile reconcile me to Polixenes,
¶New woe my Queene, recall the good Camillo
¶(Whom I proclaime a man of Truth, of Mercy:)
¶To bloody thoughts, and to reuenge, I chose
¶My friend Polixenes: which had been done,
¶But that the good mind of Camillo tardied
¶My swift command: though I with Death, and with
¶Reward, did threaten and encourage him,
1350Not doing it, and being done: he (most humane,
¶And fill'd with Honor) to my Kingly Guest
¶(Which you knew great) and to the hazard
¶Of all Incertainties, himselfe commended,
1355No richer then his Honor: How he glisters
¶Through my Rust? and how his Pietie
¶Do's my deeds make the blacker?
¶Paul. Woe the while:
¶O cut my Lace, least my heart (cracking it)
1360Breake too.
¶Lord. What fit is this? good Lady?
¶What Wheeles? Racks? Fires? What flaying? boyling?
¶In Leads, or Oyles? What old, or newer Torture
¶(Together working with thy Iealousies,
¶Fancies too weake for Boyes, too greene and idle
¶For Girles of Nine) O thinke what they haue done,
1370And then run mad indeed: starke-mad: for all
¶Thy by-gone fooleries were but spices of it.
¶That thou betrayed'st Polixenes, 'twas nothing,
¶And damnable ingratefull:) Nor was't much.
¶The casting forth to Crowes, thy Baby-daughter,
¶To be or none, or little; though a Deuill
1380Would haue shed water out of fire, ere don't;
¶Nor is't directly layd to thee, the death
¶Of the young Prince, whose honorable thoughts
¶(Thoughts high for one so tender) cleft the heart
1385Blemish'd his gracious Dam: this is not, no,
¶When I haue said, cry woe: the Queene, the Queene,
The
