Peer Reviewed
- Edition: As You Like It
As You Like It (Folio 1, 1623)
- Introduction
- Texts of this edition
- Contextual materials
- Facsimiles
702Scena Tertia.
703Enter Orlando and Adam.
704Orl. Who's there?
707Of old Sir Rowland; why, what make you here?
708Why are you vertuous? Why do people loue you?
709And wherefore are you gentle, strong, and valiant?
710Why would you be so fond to ouercome
711The bonnie priser of the humorous Duke?
714Their graces serue them but as enemies,
715No more doe yours: your vertues gentle Master
717Oh what a world is this, when what is comely
718Enuenoms him that beares it?
719Why, what's the matter?
720Ad. O vnhappie youth,
721Come not within these doores: within this roofe
722The enemie of all your graces liues
723Your brother, no, no brother, yet the sonne
725Of him I was about to call his Father,
726Hath heard your praises, and this night he meanes,
727To burne the lodging where you vse to lye,
728And you within it: if he faile of that
729He will haue other meanes to cut you off;
731This is no place, this house is but a butcherie;
732Abhorre it, feare it, doe not enter it.
737A theeuish liuing on the common rode?
738This I must do, or know not what to do:
739Yet this I will not do, do how I can,
741Of a diuerted blood, and bloudie brother.
743The thriftie hire I saued vnder your Father,
746And vnregarded age in corners throwne,
747Take that, and he that doth the Rauens feede,
748Yea prouidently caters for the Sparrow,
749Be comfort to my age: here is the gold,
750All this I giue you, let me be your seruant,
752For in my youth I neuer did apply
753Hot, and rebellious liquors in my bloud,
754Nor did not with vnbashfull forehead woe,
755The meanes of weaknesse and debilitie,
756Therefore my age is as a lustie winter,
757Frostie, but kindely; let me goe with you,
758Ile doe the seruice of a yonger man
760Orl. Oh good old man, how well in thee appeares
764Where none will sweate, but for promotion,
765And hauing that do choake their seruice vp,
766Euen with the hauing, it is not so with thee:
767But poore old man, thou prun'st a rotten tree,
769In lieu of all thy paines and husbandrie,
770But come thy waies, weele goe along together,
771And ere we haue thy youthfull wages spent,
776Here liued I, but now liue here no more
778But at fourescore, it is too late a weeke,
779Yet fortune cannot recompence me better