The Winter's Tale (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
The Winters Tale.
279
¶Of my Boyes face, me thoughts I did requoyle
235In my greene Veluet Coat; my Dagger muzzel'd,
¶(As Ornaments oft do's) too dangerous:
¶How like (me thought) I then was to this Kernell,
240Will you take Egges for Money?
¶Mam. No (my Lord) Ile fight.
¶Leo. You will: why happy man be's dole. My Brother
¶Are you so fond of your young Prince, as we
¶Doe seeme to be of ours?
245Pol. If at home (Sir)
¶He's all my Exercise, my Mirth, my Matter;
¶Now my sworne Friend, and then mine Enemy;
¶My Parasite, my Souldier: States-man; all:
¶He makes a Iulyes day, short as December,
¶Thoughts, that would thick my blood.
¶Offic'd with me: We two will walke (my Lord)
¶And leaue you to your grauer steps. Hermione,
¶Let what is deare in Sicily, be cheape:
¶Next to thy selfe, and my young Rouer, he's
¶Apparant to my heart.
260We are yours i'th' Garden: shall's attend you there?
¶Be you beneath the Sky: I am angling now,
¶(Though you perceiue me not how I giue Lyne)
¶Goe too, goe too.
265How she holds vp the Neb? the Byll to him?
¶To her allowing Husband. Gone already,
¶Ynch-thick, knee-deepe; ore head and eares a fork'd one.
¶Goe play (Boy) play: thy Mother playes, and I
¶Will be my Knell. Goe play (Boy) play, there haue been
¶(Or I am much deceiu'd) Cuckolds ere now,
¶And many a man there is (euen at this present,
275Now, while I speake this) holds his Wife by th' Arme,
¶And his Pond fish'd by his next Neighbor (by
¶Sir Smile, his Neighbor:) nay, there's comfort in't,
¶Whiles other men haue Gates, and those Gates open'd
¶That haue reuolted Wiues, the tenth of Mankind
¶It is a bawdy Planet, that will strike
¶Where 'tis predominant; and 'tis powrefull: thinke it:
¶No Barricado for a Belly. Know't,
¶It will let in and out the Enemy,
¶With bag and baggage: many thousand on's
¶What? Camillo there?
¶Cam. I, my good Lord.
295Camillo, this great Sir will yet stay longer.
¶Cam. You had much adoe to make his Anchor hold,
¶They're here with me already; whisp'ring, rounding:
¶Sicilia is a so-forth: 'tis farre gone,
305That he did stay?
¶Cam. At the good Queenes entreatie.
¶But so it is, it is not. Was this taken
¶By any vnderstanding Pate but thine?
310For thy Conceit is soaking, will draw in
¶More then the common Blocks. Not noted, is't,
¶But of the finer Natures? by some Seueralls
¶Bohemia stayes here longer.
¶Leo. Ha?
¶Cam. Stayes here longer.
¶Leo. I, but why?
325With all the neerest things to my heart, as well
¶My Chamber-Councels, wherein (Priest-like) thou
¶Thy Penitent reform'd: but we haue been
¶Deceiu'd in thy Integritie, deceiu'd
¶Cam. Be it forbid (my Lord.)
¶If thou inclin'st that way, thou art a Coward,
¶And therein negligent: or else a Foole,
340Cam. My gracious Lord,
¶I may be negligent, foolish, and fearefull,
¶In euery one of these, no man is free,
¶But that his negligence, his folly, feare,
¶Among the infinite doings of the World,
345Sometime puts forth in your affaires (my Lord.)
¶If euer I were wilfull-negligent,
¶I play'd the Foole, it was my negligence,
¶Not weighing well the end: if euer fearefull
¶Whereof the execution did cry out
¶Against the non-performance, 'twas a feare
355Is neuer free of. But beseech your Grace
¶Be plainer with me, let me know my Trespas
¶By it's owne visage; if I then deny it,
¶'Tis none of mine.
¶Is thicker then a Cuckolds Horne) or heard?
¶Cannot be mute) or thought? (for Cogitation
¶Resides not in that man, that do's not thinke)
Aa2
My
