A Midsommer nightes dreame.
13711322Take not her part. For if thou do
st intend
13721323Neuer
so little
shewe of loue to her,
13751326Now follow, if thou dar'
st, to try who
se right,
13761327Of thine or mine, is mo
st in
Helena.
13771328Deme. Follow? Nay: Ile go with thee, cheeke by iowle.
13791329Her. You, mi
stre
sse, all this coyle is long of you.
13821332Nor longer
stay in your cur
st company.
13831333Your hands, than mine, are quicker for a fray:
13841334My legges are longer though, to runne away.
13851335Her. I am amaz'd, and know not what to
say.
Exeunt. 13861336Ob. This is thy negligence:
still thou mi
stak'
st,
13871337Or el
se commit
st thy knaueries wilfully.
13881338Puck. Beleeue mee, king of
shadowes, I mi
stooke.
13891339Did not you tell mee, I
shoud know the man,
13901340By the
Athenian garments, he had on?
13911341And,
so farre blamele
sse prooues my enterpri
se,
13921342That I haue nointed an
Athenians eyes:
13931343And
so farre am I glad, it
so did
sort,
13941344As this their iangling I e
steeme a
sport.
13951345Ob. Thou
see
st, the
se louers
seeke a place to
fight:
13961346Hy therefore
Robin, ouerca
st the night,
13971347The
starry welkin couer thou anon,
13981348With drooping fogge as blacke as
Acheron,
13991349And lead the
se tea
sty Riuals
so a
stray,
14001350As one come not within anothers way.
14011351Like to
Lysander,
sometime frame thy tongue:
14021352Then
stirre
Demetrius vp, with bitter wrong:
14031353And
sometime raile thou like
Demetrius: 14041354And from each other, looke thou lead them thus;
14051355Till ore their browes, death-counterfaiting,
sleepe,
14061356With leaden legs, and Batty wings doth creepe:
Then