Not Peer Reviewed
Measure for Measure (Folio, 1623)
76Measure for Measure.
1893be hang'd, I cannot imagine.
1895Clo. Proofe.
1897Clo. If it be too little for your theefe, your true man
1898thinkes it bigge enough. If it bee too bigge for your
1899Theefe, your Theefe thinkes it little enough: So euerie
1900true mans apparrell fits your Theefe.
1901Enter Prouost.
1902Pro. Are you agreed?
1904man is a more penitent Trade then your Bawd: he doth
1907to morrow, foure a clocke.
1909Trade: follow.
1913good turne. Exit
1914Pro. Call hether Barnardine and Claudio:
1915Th' one has my pitie; not a iot the other,
1916Being a Murtherer, though he were my brother.
1917Enter Claudio.
1918Looke, here's the Warrant Claudio, for thy death,
1919'Tis now dead midnight, and by eight to morrow
1920Thou must be made immortall. Where's Barnardine?
1922When it lies starkely in the Trauellers bones,
1923He will not wake.
1924Pro. Who can do good on him?
1926Heauen giue your spirits comfort: by, and by,
1927I hope it is some pardon, or repreeue
1928For the most gentle Claudio. Welcome Father.
1929Enter Duke.
1931Inuellop you, good Prouost: who call'd heere of late?
1934Pro. No.
1935Duke. They will then er't be long.
1936Pro. What comfort is for Claudio?
1938Pro. It is a bitter Deputie.
1943To qualifie in others: were he meal'd with that
1944Which he corrects, then were he tirrannous,
1947The steeled Gaoler is the friend of men:
1951Arise to let him in: he is call'd vp.
1952Duke. Haue you no countermand for Claudio yet?
1953But he must die to morrow?
1954Pro. None Sir, none.
1956You shall heare more ere Morning.
1957Pro. Happely
1958You something know: yet I beleeue there comes
1959No countermand: no such example haue we:
1961Lord Angelo hath to the publike eare
1962Profest the contrarie.
1963Enter a Messenger.
1964Duke. This is his Lords man.
1965Pro. And heere comes Claudio's pardon.
1967And by mee this further charge;
1969Neither in time, matter, or other circumstance.
1970Good morrow: for as I take it, it is almost day.
1973For which the Pardoner himselfe is in:
1974Hence hath offence his quicke celeritie,
1975When it is borne in high Authority.
1976When Vice makes Mercie; Mercie's so extended,
1977That for the faults loue, is th' offender friended.
1978Now Sir, what newes?
1979Pro. I told you:
1980Lord Angelo (be-like) thinking me remisse
1981In mine Office, awakens mee
1982With this vnwonted putting on, methinks strangely:
1983For he hath not vs'd it before.
1984Duk. Pray you let's heare.
1990 thought that more depends on it, then we must yet deliuer.
1992your perill.
1993What say you to this Sir?
1995ted in th' afternoone?
1997One that is a prisoner nine yeeres old.
1999either deliuer'd him to his libertie, or executed him? I
2000haue heard it was euer his manner to do so.
2002And indeed his fact till now in the gouernment of Lord
2003Angelo, came not to an vndoubtfull proofe.
2004Duke. It is now apparant?
2007How seemes he to be touch'd?
2011of mortality, and desperately mortall.
2012Duke. He wants aduice.
2015would not. Drunke many times a day, if not many daies
2016entirely drunke. We haue verie oft awak'd him, as if to
2018rant for it, it hath not moued him at all.
Duke.