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- Edition: Measure for Measure
Measure for Measure (Folio, 1623)
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731Scena Secunda.
732Enter Prouost, Seruant.
734I'le tell him of you.
735Pro. 'Pray you doe; Ile know
736His pleasure, may be he will relent; alas
737He hath but as offended in a dreame,
739To die for't?
740Enter Angelo.
747When after execution, Iudgement hath
748Repented ore his doome.
749Ang. Goe to; let that be mine,
750Doe you your office, or giue vp your Place,
752Pro. I craue your Honours pardon:
753What shall be done Sir, with the groaning Iuliet?
754Shee's very neere her howre.
760Pro. I my good Lord, a very vertuous maid,
762If not alreadie.
763Ang. Well: let her be admitted,
764See you the Fornicatresse be remou'd,
765Let her haue needfull, but not lauish meanes,
766There shall be order for't.
767Enter Lucio and Isabella.
768Pro. 'Saue your Honour.
769Ang. Stay a little while: y'are welcome: what's your (will?
770Isab. I am a wofull Sutor to your Honour,
771'Please but your Honor heare me.
775For which I would not plead, but that I must,
776For which I must not plead, but that I am
777At warre, twixt will, and will not.
778Ang. Well: the matter?
779Isab. I haue a brother is condemn'd to die,
780I doe beseech you let it be his fault,
781And not my brother.
782Pro. Heauen giue thee mouing graces.
784Why euery fault's condemnd ere it be done:
785Mine were the verie Cipher of a Function
787And let goe by the Actor :
789I had a brother then; heauen keepe your honour.
791Kneele downe before him, hang vpon his gowne,
792You are too cold: if you should need a pin,
793You could not with more tame a tongue desire it:
794To him, I say.
796Ang. Maiden, no remedie.
797Isab. Yes: I doe thinke that you might pardon him,
798And neither heauen, nor man grieue at the mercy.
799Ang. I will not doe't.
800Isab. But can you if you would?
801Ang. Looke what I will not, that I cannot doe.
802Isab. But might you doe't & do the world no wrong
804As mine is to him?
806Luc. You are too cold.
808May call it againe: well, beleeue this
809No ceremony that to great ones longs,
810Not the Kings Crowne; nor the deputed sword,
811The Marshalls Truncheon, nor the Iudges Robe
812Become them with one halfe so good a grace
813As mercie does: If he had bin as you, and you as he,
814You would haue slipt like him, but he like you
816Ang. Pray you be gone.
817Isab. I would to heauen I had your potencie,
819No: I would tell what 'twere to be a Iudge,
820And what a prisoner.
821Luc. I, touch him: there's the veine.
822Ang. Your Brother is a forfeit of the Law,
823And you but waste your words.
824Isab. Alas, alas:
825Why all the soules that were, were forfeit once,
826And he that might the vantage best haue tooke,
827Found out the remedie: how would you be,
828If he, which is the top of Iudgement, should
829But iudge you, as you are? Oh, thinke on that,
830And mercie then will breathe within your lips
831Like man new made.
832Ang. Be you content, (faire Maid)
833It is the Law, not I, condemne your brother,
837Spare him, spare him:
838Hee's not prepar'd for death; euen for our kitchins
842Who is it that hath di'd for this offence?
843There's many haue committed it.
846Those many had not dar'd to doe that euill
848Had answer'd for his deed. Now 'tis awake,
849Takes note of what is done, and like a Prophet
854But here they liue to end.
857For then I pittie those I doe not know,
And
68Measure for Measure.
859And doe him right, that answering one foule wrong
861Your Brother dies to morrow; be content.
864To haue a Giants strength: but it is tyrannous
865To vse it like a Giant.
867Isab. Could great men thunder
868As Ioue himselfe do's, Ioue would neuer be quiet,
869For euery pelting petty Officer
870Would vse his heauen for thunder;
871Nothing but thunder: Mercifull heauen,
873Splits the vn-wedgable and gnarled Oke,
874Then the soft Mertill: But man, proud man,
875Drest in a little briefe authoritie,
879As makes the Angels weepe: who with our spleenes,
880Would all themselues laugh mortall.
881Luc. Oh, to him, to him wench: he will relent,
882Hee's comming: I perceiue't.
885Great men may iest with Saints: tis wit in them,
886But in the lesse fowle prophanation.
887Luc. Thou'rt i'th right (Girle) more o'that.
888Isab. That in the Captaine's but a chollericke word,
890Luc. Art auis'd o'that? more on't.
893Hath yet a kinde of medicine in it selfe
895Knock there, and aske your heart what it doth know
896That's like my brothers fault: if it confesse
898Let it not sound a thought vpon your tongue
899Against my brothers life.
901That my Sence breeds with it; fare you well.
902Isab. Gentle my Lord, turne backe.
903Ang. I will bethinke me: come againe to morrow.
904Isa. Hark, how Ile bribe you: good my Lord turn back.
905Ang. How? bribe me?
909Or Stones, whose rate are either rich, or poore
910As fancie values them: but with true prayers,
911That shall be vp at heauen, and enter there
914To nothing temporall.
915Ang. Well: come to me to morrow.
916Luc. Goe to: 'tis well; away.
918Ang. Amen.
919For I am that way going to temptation,
920Where prayers crosse.
921Isab. At what hower to morrow,
922Shall I attend your Lordship?
923Ang. At any time 'fore-noone.
924Isab. 'Saue your Honour.
925Ang. From thee: euen from thy vertue.
926What's this? what's this? is this her fault, or mine?
929That, lying by the Violet in the Sunne,
930Doe as the Carrion do's, not as the flowre,
932That Modesty may more betray our Sence
936What dost thou? or what art thou Angelo?
938That make her good? oh, let her brother liue :
939Theeues for their robbery haue authority,
942And feast vpon her eyes? what is't I dreame on?
943Oh cunning enemy, that to catch a Saint,
945Is that temptation, that doth goad vs on
946To sinne, in louing vertue: neuer could the Strumpet
947With all her double vigor, Art, and Nature
948Once stir my temper: but this vertuous Maid
949Subdues me quite: Euer till now