The Winter's Tale (Folio 1, 1623)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Scœna Secunda.
3010
Enter Autolicus, and a Gentleman.
¶Aut. Beseech you (Sir) were you present at this Re-
¶lation?
¶Gent.1. I was by at the opening of the Farthell, heard
¶the old Shepheard deliuer the manner how he found it:
¶manded out of the Chamber: onely this (me thought) I
¶heard the Shepheard say, he found the Child.
3020but the changes I perceiued in the King, and Camillo, were
¶ring on one another, to teare the Cases of their Eyes.
¶very gesture: they look'd as they had heard of a World
¶Ioy, or Sorrow; but in the extremitie of the one, it must
¶needs be.
Enter another Gentleman.
3030Here comes a Gentleman, that happily knowes more:
¶The Newes, Rogero.
¶Gent.2. Nothing but Bon-fires: the Oracle is fulfill'd:
¶the Kings Daughter is found: such a deale of wonder is
¶broken out within this houre, that Ballad-makers cannot
¶Here comes the Lady Paulina's Steward, hee can deliuer
¶you more. How goes it now (Sir.) This Newes (which
¶is call'd true) is so like an old Tale, that the veritie of it is
¶of Queene Hermiones: her Iewell about the Neck of it:
¶the Letters of Antigonus found with it, which they know
3045to be his Character: the Maiestie of the Creature, in re-
¶which Nature shewes aboue her Breeding, and many o-
¶ther Euidences, proclayme her, with all certaintie, to be
¶the Kings Daughter. Did you see the meeting of the
3050two Kings?
¶Gent.2. No.
3055it seem'd Sorrow wept to take leaue of them: for their
¶Ioy waded in teares. There was casting vp of Eyes, hol-
¶that they were to be knowne by Garment, not by Fauor.
¶Our King being ready to leape out of himselfe, for ioy of
3060his found Daughter; as if that Ioy were now become a
¶then againe worryes he his Daughter, with clipping her.
¶Now he thanks the old Shepheard (which stands by, like
3065a Weather-bitten Conduit, of many Kings Reignes.) I
¶neuer heard of such another Encounter; which lames Re-
¶port to follow it, and vndo's description to doe it.
¶Gent.2. What, 'pray you, became of Antigonus, that
¶carryed hence the Child?
¶pen; he was torne to pieces with a Beare: This auouches
¶the Shepheards Sonne; who ha's not onely his Innocence
3075and Rings of his, that Paulina knowes.
¶Gent.1. What became of his Barke, and his Fol-
¶lowers?
¶death, and in the view of the Shepheard: so that all the
¶then lost, when it was found. But oh the Noble Combat,
¶that 'twixt Ioy and Sorrow was fought in Paulina. Shee
¶ther eleuated, that the Oracle was fulfill'd: Shee lifted the
¶more be in danger of loosing.
¶Gent.1. The Dignitie of this Act was worth the au-
¶dience of Kings and Princes, for by such was it acted.
¶which angl'd for mine Eyes (caught the Water, though
¶not the Fish) was, when at the Relation of the Queenes
¶death (with the manner how shee came to't, brauely con-
3095wounded his Daughter, till (from one signe of dolour to
¶Teares; for I am sure, my heart wept blood. Who was
3100had beene vniuersall.
¶Gent.1. Are they returned to the Court?
¶Statue (which is in the keeping of Paulina) a Peece many
¶yeeres in doing, and now newly perform'd, by that rare
¶nitie, and could put Breath into his Worke) would be-
¶He so neere to Hermione, hath done Hermione, that they
¶and there they intend to Sup.
¶hand, for shee hath priuately, twice or thrice a day, euer
3115Shall wee thither, and with our companie peece the Re-
¶ioycing?
¶Gent.1. Who would be thence, that ha's the benefit
¶will be borne: our Absence makes vs vnthriftie to our
3120Knowledge. Let's along.
Exit.
¶me) would Preferment drop on my head. I brought the
¶old man and his Sonne aboord the Prince; told him, I
¶heard them talke of a Farthell, and I know not what: but
3125he at that time ouer-fond of the Shepheards Daughter (so
¶he then tooke her to be) who began to be much Sea-sick,
¶and himselfe little better, extremitie of Weather conti-
¶one to me: for had I beene the finder-out of this Secret,
¶
Enter Shepheard and Clowne.
¶tune.
¶Sonnes and Daughters will be all Gentlemen borne.
¶Clow. You are well met (Sir:) you deny'd to fight
¶with mee this other day, because I was no Gentleman
¶Lye: doe: and try whether I am not now a Gentleman
¶borne.
¶Aut. I know you are now (Sir) a Gentleman borne.
¶Clow. So you haue: but I was a Gentleman borne be-
¶fore my Father: for the Kings Sonne tooke me by the
¶hand, and call'd mee Brother: and then the two Kings
3150call'd my Father Brother: and then the Prince (my Bro-
¶teares that euer we shed.
¶rous estate as we are.
¶faults I haue committed to your Worship, and to giue
¶me your good report to the Prince my Master.
¶we are Gentlemen.
¶Clow. Thou wilt amend thy life?
3165thou art as honest a true Fellow as any is in Bohemia.
¶the Prince, thou art a tall Fellow of thy hands, and that
¶thou wilt not be drunke: but I know thou art no tall Fel-
¶low of thy hands, and that thou wilt be drunke: but Ile
¶thy hands.
¶Clow. I, by any meanes proue a tall Fellow: if I do not
¶wonder, how thou dar'st venture to be drunke, not being
3180a tall Fellow, trust me not. Harke, the Kings and Prin-
¶ces (our Kindred) are going to see the Queenes Picture.
¶Come, follow vs: wee'le be thy good Masters.
Exeunt.
