of Romeo and Iuliet.
 24942454Iu. Farewell, God knowes when we 
shall meete againe,
  24962455I haue a faint cold feare thrills through my veines,
  24972456That almo
st freezes vp the heate of life:
  24982457Ile call them backe againe to comfort me.
  25002459My di
small 
sceane I needs mu
st a
ct alone.
  25012460Come Violl, what if this mixture do not worke at all?
  25022461Shall I be married then to morrow morning?
  25032462No, no, this 
shall forbid it, lie thou there,
  25042463What if it be a poy
son which the Frier
  25052464Subtilly hath mini
stred to haue me dead,
  25062465Lea
st in this marriage he 
should be di
shonourd,
  25072466Becau
se he married me before to 
Romeo?
  25082467I feare it is, and yet me thinks it 
should not,
  25092468For he hath 
still bene tried a holy man.
  25102469How if when I am laid into the Tombe,
  25112470I wake before the time that 
Romeo  25122471Come to redeeme me, theres a fearfull poynt:
  25132472Shall I not then be 
sti
ffled in the Vault?
  25142473To who
se foule mouth no health
some ayre breaths in,
  25152474And there die 
strangled ere my 
Romeo comes.
  25162475Or if I liue, is it not very like,
  25172476The horrible conceit of death and night,
  25182477Togither with the terror of the place,
  25192478As in a Vaulte, an auncient receptacle,
  25202479Where for this many hundred yeares the bones
  25212480Of all my buried aunce
stors are packt,
  25222481Where bloudie 
Tybalt yet but greene in earth,
  25232482Lies fe
string in his 
shroude, where as they 
say,
  25242483At 
some houres in the night, 
spirits re
sort:
  25252484Alack, alack, is it not like that I
  25262485So early waking, what with loath
some 
smels,
  25272486And 
shrikes like mandrakes torne out of the earth,
  25282487That liuing mortalls hearing them run mad:
  25292488O if I walke, 
shall I not be di
straught,
  25302489Inuironed with all the
se hidious feares,
  25312490And madly play with my forefathers ioynts?
  K  And