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- Edition: The Merchant of Venice
The Merchant of Venice (Folio 1, 1623)
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1054Enter Salarino and Solanio.
1055Flo. Cornets.
1057With him is Gratiano gone along;
1062But there the Duke was giuen to vnderstand
1063That in a Gondilo were seene together
1064Lorenzo and his amorous Iessica.
1069As the dogge Iew did vtter in the streets;
1070My daughter, O my ducats, O my daughter,
1072Iustice, the law, my ducats, and my daughter;
1074Of double ducats, stolne from me by my daughter,
1077She hath the stones vpon her, and the ducats.
1078Sal. Why all the boyes in Venice follow him,
1079Crying his stones, his daughter, and his ducats.
1080Sol. Let good Anthonio looke he keepe his day
1081Or he shall pay for this.
1082Sal. Marry well remembred,
1084Who told me, in the narrow seas that part
1086A vessell of our countrey richly fraught:
1087I thought vpon Anthonio when he told me,
1090Yet doe not suddainely, for it may grieue him.
1091Sal. A kinder Gentleman treads not the earth,
1096But stay the very riping of the time,
1097And for the Iewes bond which he hath of me,
1098Let it not enter in your minde of loue:
1099Be merry, and imploy your chiefest thoughts
1101As shall conueniently become you there;
1102And euen there his eye being big with teares,
1103Turning his face, he put his hand behinde him,
1106Sol. I thinke he onely loues the world for him,
1107I pray thee let vs goe and finde him out
1108And quicken his embraced heauinesse
1109With some delight or other.