The most excellent
Historie of the Merchant
of Venice.
With the extreame cueltie of Shylocke the Iewe
towards the sayd Merchant, in cutting a iust pound
of his flesh: and the obtayning of Portia
by the choyse of three
chests.
As it hath beene diuers times acted by the Lord
Chamberlaine his Seruants.
Written by William Shakespeare.
AT LONDON,
Printed by l. R. for Thomas Heyes,
and are to be sold in Paules Church-yard, at the
signe of the Greene Dragon.
1600.
The comicall History of the Mer-
chant of Venice.
12Enter Anthonio, Salaryno, and Salanio. 23An. IN
sooth I know not why I am
so
sad,
34It wearies me, you
say it wearies you;
45But how I caught it, found it, or came by it,
56What
stu
ffe tis made of, whereof it is borne,
67I am to learne: and
such a want-wit
sadnes
89That I haue much adoe to know my
selfe.
910Salarino. Your minde is to
ssing on the Ocean,
1011There where your Argo
sies with portlie
sayle
1112Like Signiors and rich Burgars on the
flood,
1213Or as it were the Pageants of the
sea,
1314Doe ouer-peere the petty tra
ffiquers
1415That cur
sie to them do them reuerence
1516As they
flie by them with theyr wouen wings.
1617Salanio. Beleeue mee
sir, had I
such venture forth,
1718The better part of my a
ffe
ctions would
1819Be with my hopes abroade. I
should be
still
1920Plucking the gra
sse to know where
sits the wind,
2021Piring in Maps for ports, and peers and rodes:
2122And euery obie
ct that might make me feare
2223Mis-fortune to my ventures, out of doubt
2425Salar. My wind cooling my broth,
2526would blow me to an ague when I thought
2627what harme a winde too great might doe at
sea.
2728I
should not
see the
sandie howre-gla
sse runne
2829But I
should thinke of
shallowes and of
flatts,
2930And
see my wealthy
Andrew docks in
sand
A2
3031Vayling her high top lower then her ribs
3132To ki
sse her buriall;
should I goe to Church
3233And
see the holy edi
fice of
stone
3334And not bethinke me
straight of dangerous rocks,
3435which touching but my gentle ve
ssels
side
3536would
scatter all her
spices on the
streame,
3637Enrobe the roring waters with my
silkes,
3738And in a word, but euen now worth this,
3839And now worth nothing. Shall I haue the thought
3940To thinke on this, and
shall I lack the thought
4041That
such a thing bechaunc'd would make me
sad?
4142But tell not me, I know
Anthonio 4243Is
sad to thinke vpon his merchandize.
4344Anth. Beleeue me no, I thanke my fortune for it
4445My ventures are not in one bottome tru
sted,
4546Nor to one place; nor is my whole e
state
4647Vpon the fortune of this pre
sent yeere:
4748Therefore my merchandize makes me not
sad.
4849Sola. Why then you are in loue.
5051Sola. Not in loue neither: then let vs
say you are
sad
5152Becau
se you are not merry; and twere as ea
sie
5253For you to laugh and leape, and
say you are merry
5354Becau
se you are not
sad. Now by two-headed
Ianus,
5455Nature hath framd
strange fellowes in her time:
5556Some that will euermore peepe through their eyes,
5657And laugh like Parrats at a bagpyper.
5758And other of
such vinigar a
spe
ct,
5859That theyle not
shew theyr teeth in way of
smile
5960Though
Nestor sweare the ie
st be laughable.
6061Enter Bassanio, Lorenso, and Gratiano. 6162Sola. Here comes
Bassanio your mo
st noble kin
sman,
6263Gratiano, and
Lorenso. Faryewell,
6364We leaue you now with better company.
6465Sala. I would haue
staid till I had made you merry,
6566If worthier friends had not preuented me.
6667Anth. Your worth is very deere in my regard.
I
the Merchant of Venice.
6768I take it your owne bu
sines calls on you,
6869And you embrace th'occa
sion to depart.
6970Sal. Good morrow my good Lords.
7071Bass. Good
signiors both when
shal we laugh?
say, when?
7172You grow exceeding
strange: mu
st it be
so?
7273Sal. Weele make our ley
sures to attend on yours.
7374Exeunt Salarino, and Solanio. 7475Lor. My Lord
Bassanio,
since you haue found
Anthonio 7576We two will leaue you, but at dinner time
7677I pray you haue in minde where we mu
st meete.
7778Bass. I will not faile you.
7879Grat. You looke not well
signior
Anthonio,
7980You haue too much re
spe
ct vpon the world:
8081They loo
se it that doe buy it with much care,
8182Beleeue me you are meruailou
sly changd.
8283Ant. I hold the world but as the world
Gratiano,
8384A
stage, where euery man mu
st play a part,
8586Grati. Let me play the foole,
8687With mirth and laughter let old wrinckles come,
8788And let my liuer rather heate with wine
8889Then my hart coole with mortifying grones.
8990Why
should a man who
se blood is warme within,
9091Sit like his grand
sire, cut in Alabla
ster?
9192Sleepe when he wakes? and creepe into the Iaundies
9293By beeing peeui
sh? I tell thee what
Anthonio,
9394I loue thee, and tis my loue that
speakes:
9495There are a
sort of men who
se vi
sages
9596Doe creame and mantle like a
standing pond,
9697And doe a wilful
stilnes entertaine,
9798With purpo
se to be dre
st in an opinion
9899Of wi
sedome, grauitie, profound conceit,
99100As who
should
say, I am
sir Oracle,
100101And when I ope my lips, let no dogge barke.
101102O my
Anthonio I doe know of the
se
102103That therefore onely are reputed wi
se
A3. For
The comicall Historie of
103104For
saying nothing; when I am very
sure
104105If they
should
speake, would almo
st dam tho
se eares
105106which hearing them would call their brothers fooles,
106107Ile tell thee more of this another time.
107108But
fish not with this melancholy baite
108109For this foole gudgin, this opinion:
109110Come good
Lorenso, faryewell a while,
110111Ile end my exhortation after dinner.
111112Loren. Well, we will leaue you then till dinner time.
112113I mu
st be one of the
se
same dumbe wi
se men,
113114For
Gratiano neuer lets me
speake.
114115Gra. Well keepe me company but two yeeres moe
115116Thou
shalt not know the
sound of thine owne tongue.
116117An. Far you well, Ile grow a talker for this geare.
117118Gra. Thanks yfaith, for
silence is onely commendable
118119In a neates togue dried, and a mayde not vendable.
Exeunt. 119120An. It is that any thing now.
120121Bass. Gratiano speakes an in
finite deale of nothing more then any
121122man in all Venice, his rea
sons are as two graines of wheate hid in
122123two bu
shels of cha
ffe: you
shall
seeke all day ere you
finde them,
123124and when you haue them, they are not worth the
search.
124125An. Well, tell me now what Lady is the
same
125126To whom you
swore a
secrete pilgrimage
126127That you to day promi
sd to tell me of.
127128Bass. Tis not vnknowne to you
Anthonio 128129How much I haue di
sabled mine e
state,
129130By
something
showing a more
swelling port
130131Then my faint meanes would graunt continuance:
131132Nor doe I now make mone to be abridg'd
132133From
such a noble rate, but my cheefe care
133134Is to come fairely of from the great debts
134135wherein my time
something too prodigall
135136Hath left me gagd: to you
Anthonio 136137I owe the mo
st in money and in loue,
137138And from your loue I haue a warrantie
138139To vnburthen all my plots and purpo
ses
139140How to get cleere of all the debts I owe.
Anth.
the Merchant of Venice.
140141An. I pray you good
Bassanio let me know it,
141142And if it
stand as you your
selfe
still doe,
142143within the eye of honour, be a
ssurd
143144My pur
se, my per
son, my extreame
st meanes
144145Lie all vnlockt to your occa
sions.
145146Bass. In my
schoole dayes, when I had lo
st one
shaft,
146147I
shot his fellow of the
selfe
same
flight
147148The
selfe
same way, with more adui
sed watch
148149To
finde the other forth, and by aduenturing both,
149150I oft found both: I vrge this child-hood proofe
150151Becau
se what followes is pure innocence.
151152I owe you much, and like a wilfull youth
152153That which I owe is lo
st, but if you plea
se
153154To
shoote another arrow that
selfe way
154155which you did
shoote the
fir
st, I doe not doubt,
155156As I will watch the ayme or to
find both,
156157Or bring your latter hazzard bake againe,
157158And thankfully re
st debter for the
fir
st.
158159An. You know me well, and heerein
spend but time
159160To wind about my loue with circum
stance,
160161And out of doubt you doe me now more wrong
161162In making que
stion of my vttermo
st 162163Then if you had made wa
st of all I haue:
163164Then doe but
say to me what I
should doe
164165That in your knowledge may by me be done,
165166And I am pre
st vnto it: therefore
speake.
166167Bass. In
Belmont is a Lady richly left,
167168And
she is faire, and fairer then that word,
168169Of wondrous vertues,
sometimes from her eyes
169170I did receaue faire
speechle
sse me
ssages:
170171Her name is
Portia, nothing vndervallewd
171172To
Catos daughter,
Brutus Portia,
172173Nor is the wide world ignorant of her worth,
173174For the foure winds blow in from euery coa
st 174175Renowned
sutors, and her
sunny locks
175176Hang on her temples like a golden
fleece,
176177which makes her
seat of
Belmont Cholchos strond,
And
The comicall Historie of
177178And many
Iasons come in que
st of her.
178179O my
Anthonio, had I but the meanes
179180To hold a riuall place with one of them,
180181I haue a minde pre
sages me
such thrift
181182That I
should que
stionle
sse be fortunate.
182183Anth. Thou know
st that all my fortunes are at
sea,
183184Neither haue I money, nor commoditie
184185To rai
se a pre
sent
summe, therefore goe forth
185186Try what my credite can in Venice doe,
186187That
shall be rackt euen to the vttermo
st 187188To furni
sh thee to
Belmont to faire
Portia.
188189Goe pre
sently enquire and
so will I
189190where money is, and I no que
stion make
190191To haue it of my tru
st, or for my
sake.
Exeunt. 192192Enter Portia with her wayting woman Nerrissa. 194193Portia. By my troth
Nerrissa, my little body is awearie of this
196195Ner. You would be
sweet Madam, if your mi
series were in the
197196same aboundance as your good fortunes are: and yet for ought I
198197see, they are as
sicke that
surfeite with too much, as they that
starue
199198with nothing; it is no meane happines therfore to be
seated in the
200199meane,
super
fluitie comes
sooner by white haires, but competen
- 202201Portia. Good
sentences, and well pronounc'd.
203202Ner. They would be better if well followed.
204203Portia. If to do were as ea
sie as to know what were good to do,
205204Chappels had beene Churches, and poore mens cottages Princes
206205Pallaces, it is a good diuine that followes his owne in
stru
ctions, I
207206can ea
sier teach twentie what were good to be done, then to be one
208207of the twentie to follow mine owne teaching: the braine may de
- 209208ui
se lawes for the blood, but a hote temper leapes ore a colde de
- 210209cree,
such a hare is madnes the youth, to
skippe ore the me
shes of
211210good coun
saile the cripple; but this rea
soning is not in the fa
shion
212211to choo
se mee a hu
sband, ô mee the word choo
se, I may neyther
213212choo
se who I would, nor refu
se who I di
slike,
so is the will of a ly
- 214213uing daughter curbd by the will of a deade father: is it not harde
Nerissa,
the Merchant of Venice.
215214Nerrissa, that I cannot choo
se one, nor refu
se none.
216215Ner. Your Father was euer vertuous, and holy men at theyr
218216death haue good in
spirations, therefore the lottrie that he hath deui
sed
219217in the
se three che
sts of gold,
siluer, and leade, whereof who
220218choo
ses his meaning choo
ses you, will no doubt neuer be cho
sen
221219by any rightlie, but one who you
shall rightly loue: But what
222220warmth is there in your a
ffe
ction towardes any of the
se Princelie
223221suters that are already come?
224222Por. I pray thee ouer-name them, and as thou name
st them, I
225223will de
scribe them, and according to my de
scription leuell at my
227225Ner. Fir
st there is the Neopolitane Prince.
229226Por. I thats a colt indeede, for he doth nothing but talke of his
230227hor
se, & he makes it a great appropriation to his owne good parts
231228that he can
shoo him him
selfe: I am much afeard my Ladie his
232229mother plaid fal
se with a Smyth.
233230Ner. Than is there the Countie Palentine.
234231Por. Hee doth nothing but frowne (as who
should
say, & you
235232will not haue me, choo
se, he heares merry tales and
smiles not, I
236233feare hee will prooue the weeping Phylo
sopher when hee growes
237234old, beeing
so full of vnmannerly
sadnes in his youth,) I had rather
239235be married to a deaths head with a bone in his mouth, then to ey
- 240236ther of the
se: God defend me from the
se two.
241237Ner. How
say you by the French Lord, Moun
sier
Le Boune?
242238Por. God made him, and therefore let him pa
sse for a man, in
243239truth I knowe it is a
sinne to be a mocker, but hee, why hee hath a
244240hor
se better then the Neopolitans, a better bad habite of frowning
245241then the Count Palentine, he is euery man in no man, if a Tra
ssell
246242sing, he falls
straght a capring, he will fence with his owne
shadow.
247243If I
should marry him, I
should marry twenty hu
sbands: if hee
248244would de
spi
se me,
I would forgiue him, for if he loue me to madnes,
249245I shall neuer requite him.
250246Ner. What
say you then to Fauconbridge, the young Barron
252248Por. You know
I say nothing to him, for hee vnder
stands not
253249me, nor
I him: he hath neither Latine, French, nor
Italian, & you
254250will come into the Court and
sweare that
I haue a poore pennie
- B worth
The comicall Historie of
255251worth in the Engli
sh: hee is a proper mans pi
cture, but alas
who
256252can conuer
se with a dumbe
show? how odly hee is
suted,
I thinke
257253he bought his doublet in
Italie, his round ho
se in Fraunce, his bon
- 258254net in Germanie, and his behauiour euery where.
259255Nerrissa. What thinke you of the Scotti
sh Lorde his neigh
- 261257Portia. That hee hath a neyghbourlie charitie in him, for hee
262258borrowed a boxe of the eare of the Engli
shman, and
swore hee
263259would pay him againe when he was able:
I think the Frenchman
264260became his
suretie, and
seald vnder for another.
265261Ner. How like you the young Germaine, the Duke of Saxo
- 267263Por. Very vildlie in the morning when hee is
sober, and mo
st 268264vildly in the afternoone when he is drunke: when he is be
st, he is
269265a little wor
se then a man, & when he is wor
st he is little better then
270266a bea
st, and the wor
st fall that euer fell, I hope I
shall make
shift
272268Ner. Yf hee
shoulde o
ffer to choo
se, and choo
se the right Ca
s- 273269ket, you
should refu
se to performe your Fathers will, if you
should
275271Portia. Therefore for feare of the wor
st,
I pray thee
set a deepe
276272gla
sse of Reyni
she
wine on the contrarie Ca
sket, for if the deuill
277273be within, and that temptation without, I knowe hee will choo
se
278274it. I will doe any thing
Nerrissa ere
I will be married to a
spunge.
279275Nerrissa. You neede not feare Ladie the hauing anie of the
se
280276Lords, they haue acquainted me with theyr determinations, which
281277is indeede to returne to theyr home, and to trouble you with no
282278more
sute, vnle
sse you may be wonne by
some other
sort thē your
283279Fathers impo
sition, depending on the Ca
skets.
284280Por. Yf I liue to be as old as Sibilla,
I will die as cha
st as Diana,
285281vnle
sse I be obtained by the maner of my Fathers will: I am glad
286282this parcell of wooers are
so rea
sonable, for there is not one among
287283them but
I doate on his very ab
sence: &
I pray God graunt them
289285Nerrissa. Doe you not remember Lady in your Fathers time, a
290286Venecian a Scholler & a Souldiour that came hether in companie
291287of the Marque
sse of Mountferrat?
Portia.
the Merchant of Venice.
292288Portia. Yes, yes, it was
Bassanio, as I thinke
so was he calld.
293289Ner. True maddam, hee of all the men that euer my fooli
sh 294290eyes look'd vpon, was the be
st de
seruing a faire Ladie.
295291Portia. I remember him well, and
I remember him worthie of
299295Ser. The foure
strangers
seeke for you maddam to take theyr
300296leaue: and there is a fore-runner come from a
fift, the Prince of
301297Moroco, who brings word the Prince his Mai
ster will be heere to
303299Por. Yf
I could bid the
fift welcome with
so good hart as I can
304300bid the other foure farewell,
I should bee glad of his approch: if
305301he haue the condition of a Saint, and the complexion of a deuill, I
306302had rather he
should
shriue mee then wiue mee. Come
Nerrissa,
307303sirra goe before: whiles we
shut the gate vpon one wooer, another
308304knocks at the doore.
Exeunt. 309305Enter Bassanio with Shylocke the Iew. 310306Shy. Three thou
sand ducates, well.
311307Bass. I sir, for three months.
312308Shy. For three months, well.
313309Bass. For the which as I told you,
315311Shy. Anthonio shall become bound, well.
316312Bass. May you
sted me? Will you plea
sure me?
317313 Shall I know your aun
swere.
318314Shy. Three thou
sand ducats for three months,
320316Bass. Your aun
swere to that.
321317Shy. Anthonio is a good man.
322318Bass. Haue you heard any imputation to the contrary.
323319Shylocke. Ho no, no, no, no: my meaning in
saying hee is
324320a good man, is to haue you vnder
stand mee that hee is
su
fficient,
325321yet his meanes are in
suppo
sition: hee hath an Argo
sie bound
326322to Tripolis, another to the Indies, I vnder
stand moreouer vp
- 327323on the Ryalta, hee hath a third at Mexico, a fourth for England,
B2. and
The comicall Historie of
328324and other ventures he hath
squandred abroade, but
ships are but
329325boordes, Saylers but men, there be land rats, and water rats, water
330326theeues, and land theeues,
I meane Pyrats, and then there is the
331327perrill of waters, windes, and rockes: the man is notwith
standing
332328su
fficient, three thou
sand ducats,
I thinke
I may take his bond.
334330Iew. I will be a
ssurd
I may: and that
I may bee a
ssured,
I will
335331bethinke mee, may
I speake with
Anthonio?
336332Bass. Yf it plea
se you to dine with vs.
337333Iew. Yes, to
smell porke, to eate of the habitation which your
338334Prophet the Nazarit coniured the deuill into:
I wil buy with you,
339335sell with you, talke with you, walke with you, and
so following:
340336but
I will not eate with you, drinke with you, nor pray with you.
341337What newes on the Ryalto, who is he comes heere?
343339Bass. This is
signior
Anthonio.
344340Jew. How like a fawning publican he lookes.
345341I hate him for he is a Chri
stian:
346342But more, for that in low
simplicitie
347343He lends out money gratis, and brings downe
348344The rate of v
sance heere with vs in Venice.
349345Yf
I can catch him once vpon the hip,
350346I will feede fat the auncient grudge
I beare him.
351347He hates our
sacred Nation, and he rayles
352348Euen there where Merchants mo
st doe congregate
353349On me, my bargaines, and my well-wone thrift,
354350which hee calls interre
st: Cur
sed be my Trybe
356352Bass. Shyloch, doe you heare.
357353Shyl. J am debating of my pre
sent
store,
358354And by the neere ge
sse of my memorie
359355I cannot in
stantly rai
se vp the gro
sse
360356Of full three thou
sand ducats: what of that,
361357Tuball a wealthy Hebrew of my Tribe
362358Will furni
sh me; but
soft, how many months
363359Doe you de
sire? Re
st you faire good
signior,
364360Your wor
ship was the la
st man in our mouthes.
Shylocke.
the Merchant of Venice.
365361An. Shylocke, albeit
I neither lend nor borrow
366362By taking nor by giuing of exce
sse,
367363Yet to
supply the ripe wants of my friend,
368364Ile breake a cu
stome: is hee yet po
sse
st 370366Shy.JI,
I, three thou
sand ducats.
371367Ant. And for three months.
372368Shyl. I had forgot, three months, you told me
so.
373369Well then, your bond: and let me
see, but heare you,
374370Me thoughts you
said, you neither lend nor borrow
376372Ant. I doe neuer v
se it.
377373Shy. When
Iacob grazd his Vncle
Labans Sheepe,
378374This
Iacob from our holy
Abram was
379375(As his wi
se mother wrought in his behalfe)
380376The third po
sse
sser;
I, he was the third.
381377Ant. And what of him, did he take interre
st?
382378Shyl. No, not take intere
st, not as you would
say
383379Dire
ctly intre
st, marke what
Iacob did,
384380When
Laban and him
selfe were compremyzd
385381That all the eanelings which were
streakt and pied
386382Should fall as
Iacobs hier, the Ewes being ranck
387383In end of Autume turned to the Rammes,
388384And when the worke of generation was
389385Betweene the
se wolly breeders in the a
ct,
390386The
skilful
sheepheard pyld me certaine wands,
391387And in the dooing of the deede of kind
392388He
stuck them vp before the ful
some Ewes,
393389Who then conceauing, did in eaning time
394390Fall party-colourd lambs, and tho
se were
Iacobs.
395391This was a way to thriue, and he was ble
st:
396392And thrift is ble
ssing if men
steale it not.
397393An. This was a venture
sir that
Iacob serud for,
398394A thing not in his power to bring to pa
sse,
399395But
swayd and fa
shiond by the hand of heauen.
400396Was this in
serted to make interre
st good?
401397Or is your gold and
siluer ewes and rammes?
B3. Shy.
The comicall Historie of
402398Shyl. I cannot tell, I make it breede as fa
st,
404400Anth. Marke you this
Bassanio,
405401The deuill can cite Scripture for his purpo
se,
406402An euill
soule producing holy witnes
407403Is like a villaine with a
smiling cheeke,
408404A goodly apple rotten at the hart.
409405O what a goodly out-
side fal
shood hath.
410406Shy. Three thou
sand ducats, tis a good round
summe.
411407Three months from twelue, then let me
see the rate.
412408Ant. Well
Shylocke,
shall we be beholding to you?
413409Shyl. Signior
Anthonio, manie a time and oft
414410In the Ryalto you haue rated me
415411About my moneyes and my v
sances:
416412Still haue I borne it with a patient
shrug,
417413(For
su
ffrance is the badge of all our Trybe)
418414You call me mi
sbeleeuer, cut-throate dog,
419415And
spet vpon my Iewi
sh gaberdine,
420416And all for v
se of that which is mine owne.
421417Well then, it now appeares you neede my helpe:
422418Goe to then, you come to me, and you
say,
423419Shylocke, we would haue moneyes, you
say
so:
424420You that did voyde your rume vpon my beard,
425421And foote me as you
spurne a
stranger curre
426422Ouer your thre
shold, moneyes is your
sute.
427423What
should I
say to you? Should I not
say
428424Hath a dog money? is it po
ssible
429425A curre can lend three thou
sand ducats? or
430426Shall I bend low, and in a bond-mans key
431427With bated breath, and whi
spring humblenes
432428Say this: Faire
sir, you
spet on me on Wedne
sday la
st,
433429You
spurnd me
such a day another time,
434430You calld me dogge: and for the
se curte
sies
435431Ile lend you thus much moneyes.
436432Ant.J am as like to call thee
so againe,
437433To
spet on thee againe, to
spurne thee to.
438434Yf thou wilt lend this money, lend it not
As
the Merchant of Venice.
439435As to thy friends, for when did friend
ship take
440436A breede for barraine mettaile of his friend?
441437But lend it rather to thine enemie,
442438Who if he breake, thou mai
st with better face
444440Shy. Why looke you how you
storme,
445441I would be friends with you, and haue your loue,
446442Forget the
shames that you haue
staind me with,
447443Supply your pre
sent wants, and take no doyte
448444Of v
sance for my moneyes, and youle not heare mee,
450446Bass. This were kindne
sse.
451447Shyl. This kindne
sse will I
showe,
452448Goe with me to a Notarie,
seale me there
453449Your
single bond, and in a merrie
sport
454450if you repay me not on
such a day
455451in
such a place,
such
summe or
summes as are
456452expre
st in the condition, let the forfaite
457453be nominated for an equall pound
458454of your faire
fle
sh, to be cut o
ff and taken
459455in what part of your bodie plea
seth me.
460456Ant. Content infaith, yle
seale to
such a bond,
461457and
say there is much kindnes in the Iew.
462458Bass. You
shall not
seale to
such a bond for me,
463459Ile rather dwell in my nece
ssitie.
464460An. Why feare not man, I will not forfaite it,
465461within the
se two months, thats a month before
466462this bond expires, I doe expe
ct returne
467463of thrice three times the valew of this bond.
468464Shy. O father Abram, what the
se Chri
stians are,
469465Who
se owne hard dealings teaches them
su
spe
ct 470466the thoughts of others: Pray you tell me this,
471467if he
should breake his day what
should I gaine
472468by the exa
ction of the forfeyture?
473469A pound of mans
fle
sh taken from a man,
474470is not
so e
stimable, pro
fitable neither
475471as
fle
sh of Muttons, Beefes, or Goates, I
say
to
The comicall Historie of
476472To buy his fauour, I extend this friend
ship,
477473Yf he wil take it,
so, if not adiew,
478474And for my loue I pray you wrong me not.
479475An. Yes
Shylocke, I will
seale vnto this bond.
480476Shy. Then meete me forthwith at the Noteries,
481477Giue him dire
ction for this merry bond
482478And I will goe and pur
se the ducats
straite,
483479See to my hou
se left in the fearefull gard
484480Of an vnthriftie knaue: and pre
sently
486482An. Hie thee gentle Iewe. The Hebrew will turne
487483Chri
stian, he growes kinde.
488484Bassa. I like not faire termes, and a villaines minde.
489485An. Come on, in this there can be no di
smay,
490486My
ships come home a month before the day.
492488Enter Morochus a tawnie Moore all in white, and three 493489or foure followers accordingly, with Portia, 494490Nerrissa, and their traine. 495491Morocho. Mi
slike me not for my complexion,
496492The
shadowed liuerie of the burni
sht
sunne,
497493To whom I am a neighbour, and neere bred.
498494Bring me the fayre
st creature North-ward borne,
499495Where
Phaebus fire
scarce thawes the y
sicles,
500496And let vs make incyzion for your loue,
501497To proue who
se blood is redde
st, his or mine.
502498I tell thee Lady this a
spe
ct of mine
503499Hath feard the valiant, (by my loue I
sweare)
504500The be
st regarded Virgins of our Clyme
505501Haue lou'd it to: I would not change this hue,
506502Except to
steale your thoughts my gentle Queene.
507503Portia. In termes of choy
se I am not
soly led
508504By nice dire
ction of a maydens eyes:
509505Be
sides, the lottrie of my de
stenie
510506Barrs me the right of voluntary choo
sing:
511507But if my Father had not
scanted me,
And
the Merchant of Venice.
512508And hedgd me by his wit to yeeld my
selfe
513509His wife, who winnes me by that meanes I told you,
514510Your
selfe (renowned Prince) than
stoode as faire
515511As any commer I haue look'd on yet
517513Mor. Euen for that I thanke you,
518514Therefore I pray you leade me to the Ca
skets
519515To try my fortune: By this Symitare
520516That
slewe the Sophy, and a Per
sian Prince
521517That wone three
fields of Sultan Solyman,
522518I would ore-
stare the
sterne
st eyes that looke:
523519Out-braue the hart mo
st daring on the earth:
524520Pluck the young
sucking Cubs from the
she Beare,
525521Yea, mock the Lyon when a rores for pray
526522To win the Lady. But alas, the while
527523If
Hercules and
Lychas play at dice
528524Which is the better man, the greater throw
529525May turne by fortune from the weaker hand:
530526So is
Alcides beaten by his rage,
531527And
so may I, blind Fortune leading me
532528Mi
sse that which one vnworthier may attaine,
534530Portia. You mu
st take your chaunce,
535531And eyther not attempt to choo
se at all,
536532Or
sweare before you choo
se, if you choo
se wrong
537533Neuer to
speake to Lady afterward
538534In way of marriage, therefore be aduis'd.
539535Mor. Nor will not, come bring me vnto my chaunce.
540536Portia. Fir
st forward to the temple, after dinner
541537Your hazard
shall be made.
543539To make me ble
st or cur
sed'
st among men.
546542Clowne. Certainely, my con
science will
serue me to runne from
547543this Iewe my Mai
ster: the
fiend is at mine elbow, and tempts me,
548544saying to me,
Iobbe, Launcelet Jobbe, good
Launcelet, or good
Iobbe,
C. or
The Comicall Historie of
549545or good
Launcelet Iobbe, v
se your legges, take the
start, runne a
- 550546way, my con
science
sayes no; take heede hone
st Launcelet, take
551547heede hone
st Iobbe, or as afore-
saide hone
st Launcelet Iobbe, doe
552548not runne,
scorne running with thy heeles; well, the mo
st cora
- 553549gious
fiend bids me packe,
fia sayes the
fiend, away
sayes the
fiend,
554550for the heauens rou
se vp a braue minde
sayes the
fiend, and runne;
555551well, my con
science hanging about the necke of my heart,
sayes
556552very wi
sely to mee: my hone
st friend
Launcelet beeing an hone
st 557553mans
sonne, or rather an hone
st womans
sonne, for indeede my
558554Father did
something
smacke,
something grow to; he had a kinde
559555of ta
st; well, my con
science
sayes
Launcelet bouge not, bouge
sayes
560556the
fiend, bouge not
sayes my con
science, con
science
say I you
561557coun
saile wel,
fiend
say I you coun
saile well, to be ruld by my con
- 562558science, I
should
stay with the Iewe my Mai
ster, (who God ble
sse
563559the marke) is a kinde of deuill; and to runne away from the Iewe I
564560should be ruled by the
fiend, who
sauing your reuerence is the de
- 565561uill him
selfe: certainely the Iewe is the very deuill incarnation, and
566562in my con
science, my con
science is but a kinde of hard con
sci
- 567563ence, to o
ffer to coun
saile mee to
stay with the Iewe; the
fiend
568564giues the more friendly coun
saile: I will runne
fiend, my heeles
569565are at your commaundement, I will runne.
570566Enter old Gobbo with a basket. 571567Gobbo. Mai
ster young-man, you I pray you, which is the way
573569Launcelet. O heauens, this is my true begotten Father, who be
- 574570ing more then
sand blinde, high grauell blinde, knowes me not, I
575571will try confu
sions with him.
576572Gobbo. Mai
ster young Gentleman, I pray you which is the way
578574Launcelet. Turne vp on your right hand at the next turning,
579575but at the next turning of all on your left; marry at the very next
580576turning turne of no hand, but turne downe indire
ctly to the Iewes
582578Gobbo. Be Gods
sonties twill be a hard way to hit, can you tell
me
the Merchant of Venice.
583579mee whether one
Launcelet that dwels with him, dwell with him
585581Launcelet. Talke you of young Mai
ster
Launcelet, marke mee
586582nowe, nowe will I rai
se the waters; talke you of young Mai
ster
588584Gobbo. No Mai
ster
sir, but a poore mans Sonne, his Father
589585though I
say't is an hone
st exceeding poore man, and God bee
591587Launce. Well, let his Father be what a will, wee talke of young
593589Gob. Your wor
ships friend and
Launcelet sir.
594590Launce. But I pray you
ergo olde man,
ergo I be
seech you, talke
595591you of young Mai
ster
Launcelet.
596592Gob. Of
Launcelet ant plea
se your mai
ster
ship.
597593Launce. Ergo Mai
ster
Launcelet, talke not of mai
ster
Launcelet 598594Father, for the young Gentleman according to fates and de
ste
- 599595nies, and
such odd
sayings, the
sisters three, and
such braunches of
600596learning, is indeede decea
sed, or as you would
say in plaine termes,
602598Gobbo. Marry God forbid, the boy was the very
sta
ffe of my
604600Launcelet. Doe I looke like a cudgell or a houell po
st, a
sta
ffe,
605601or a prop: doe you know me Father.
606602Gobbo. Alacke the day, I knowe you not young Gentleman,
607603but I pray you tell mee, is my boy GOD re
st his
soule aliue or
609605Launcelet. Doe you not know me Father.
610606Gobbo. Alack
sir I am
sand blind, I know you not.
611607Launcelet. Nay, in deede if you had your eyes you might fayle
612608of the knowing mee: it is a wi
se Father that knowes his o
wne
613609childe. Well, olde man, I will tell you newes of your
sonne, giue
614610mee your ble
ssing, trueth will come to light, muder cannot bee
615611hidde long, a mannes Sonne may, but in the ende trueth
will
617613Gobbo. Pray you
sir
stand vp, I am
sure you are not
Launcelet C2 Launce.
The Comicall Historie of
619615Launce. Pray you let's haue no more fooling, about it, but giue
620616mee your ble
ssing: I am
Launcelet your boy that was, your
sonne
621617that is, your child that
shall be.
622618Gob. I cannot thinke you are my
sonne.
623619Launc. I know not what I
shall think of that: but I am
Launce- 623.1620let the Iewes man, and I am
sure
Margerie your wife is my mo
- 625622Gob. Her name is
Margerie in deede, ile be
sworne if thou bee
626623Launcelet, thou art mine owne
fle
sh and blood: Lord wor
shipt
627624might he be, what a beard ha
st thou got; thou ha
st got more haire
628625on thy chinne, then Dobbin my philhor
se ha
se on his taile.
629626Launce. It
should
seeme then that Dobbins taile growes back
- 630627ward. I am
sure hee had more haire of his taile then I haue of my
631628face when I lo
st saw him.
632629Gob. Lord how art thou changd: how doo
st thou and thy Ma
- 633630ster agree, I haue brought him a pre
sent; how gree you now?
634631Launce. Well, well, but for mine owne part, as I haue
set vp my
635632re
st to runne away,
so I will not re
st till I haue runne
some ground;
636633my Mai
ster's a very Iewe, giue him a pre
sent, giue him a halter, I
637634am fami
sht in his
seruice. You may tell euery
finger I haue with
638635my ribs: Father I am glad you are come, giue me your pre
sent to
639636one Mai
ster
Bassanio, who in deede giues rare newe Lyuories, if I
640637serue not him, I will runne as farre as God has any ground. O rare
641638fortune, heere comes the man, to him Father, for I am a Iewe if I
642639serue the Iewe any longer.
643640Enter Bassanio with a follower or two. 644641Bass. You may doe
so, but let it be
so ha
sted that
supper be ready
645642at the farthe
st by
fiue of the clocke:
see the
se Letters deliuered,
646643put the Lyueries to making, and de
sire
Gratiano to come anone to
649646Gob. God ble
sse your wor
ship.
650647Bass. Gramercie, would
st thou ought with me.
651648Gobbe. Heere's my
sonne
sir, a poore boy.
652649Launce. Not a poore boy
sir, but the rich Iewes man that would
653650sir as my Father
shall
speci
fie.
Gob.
the Merchant of Venice.
654651Gob. He hath a great infe
ction
sir, as one would
say to
serue.
655652Lau. Indeede the
short and the long is,
I serue the Iewe, & haue
656653a de
sire as my Father
shall
speci
fie.
657654Gob. His Mai
ster and he (
sauing your wor
ships reuerence) are
659656Lau. To be briefe, the very truth is, that the Iewe hauing done
660657me wrong, dooth cau
se me as my Father being I hope an old man
661658shall fruti
fie vnto you.
662659Gob. I haue heere a di
sh of Doues that I would be
stow vppon
663660your wor
ship, and my
sute is.
664661Lau. In very briefe, the
sute is impertinent to my
selfe, as your
665662wor
ship
shall knowe by this hone
st old man, and though I
say it,
666663though old man, yet poore man my Father.
667664Bass. One
speake for both, what would you?
669666Gob. That is the very defe
ct of the matter
sir.
670667Bass. I know thee well, thou ha
st obtaind thy
sute,
671668Shylocke thy Mai
ster
spoke with me this day,
672669And hath preferd thee, if it be preferment
673670To leaue a rich Iewes
seruice, to become
674671The follower of
so poore a Gentleman.
675672Clowne. The old prouerb is very well parted betweene my Mai
ster
676673Shylocke and you
sir, you haue the grace of God
sir, and hee
678675Bass. Thou
speak
st it well; goe Father with thy Sonne
679676Take leaue of thy old Mai
ster, and enquire
680677My lodging out, giue him a Lyuerie
681678More garded then his fellowes:
see it done.
682679Clowne. Father in, I cannot get a
seruice, no, I haue nere a tong
683680in my head, wel: if any man in Italy haue a fayrer table which
684681dooth o
ffer to
sweare vpon a booke, I
shall haue good fortune;
685682goe too, heere's a
simple lyne of life, heeres a
small try
fle of wiues,
686683alas,
fifteene wiues is nothing, a leuen widdowes and nine maydes
687684is a
simple comming in for one man, and then to
scape drowning
688685thrice, and to be in perrill of my life with the edge of a featherbed,
689686heere are
simple
scapes:
well, if Fortune be a woman
she's a good
690687wench for this gere: Father come, ile take my leaue of the Iewe in
C3 the
The comicall Historie of
691688the twinkling.
Exit Clowne. 692689Bass. I pray thee good
Leonardo thinke on this,
693690The
se things being bought and orderly be
stowed
694691Returne in ha
st, for I doe fea
st to night
695692My be
st e
steemd acquaintance, hie thee goe.
696693Leon. My be
st endeuours
shall be done heerein.
Exit Leonardo. 698695Grati. Where's your Mai
ster.
699696Leonar. Yonder
sir he walkes.
700697Grati. Signior
Bassanio.
702699Gra. I haue
sute to you.
703700Bass. You haue obtaind it.
704701Gra. You mu
st not deny me, I mu
st goe with you to Belmont.
705702Bass. Why then you mu
st but heare thee
Gratiano,
706703Thou art to wild, to rude, and bold of voyce,
707704Parts that become thee happily enough,
708705And in
such eyes as ours appeare not faults
709706But where thou art not knowne; why there they
show
710707Somthing too liberall, pray thee take paine
711708To allay with
some cold drops of mode
stie
712709Thy
skipping
spirit, lea
st through thy wild behauiour
713710I be mi
scon
stred in the place I goe to,
715712Gra. Signor
Bassanio, heare me,
716713Yf I doe not put on a
sober habite,
717714Talke with re
spe
ct, and
sweare but now and than,
718715Weare prayer bookes in my pocket, looke demurely,
719716Nay more, while grace is
saying hood mine eyes
720717Thus with my hat, and
sigh and
say amen:
721718V
se all the ob
seruance of ciuillity
722719Like one well
studied in a
sad o
stent
723720To plea
se his Grandam, neuer tru
st me more.
724721Bass. Well, we
shall
see your bearing.
725722Gra. Nay but I barre to night, you
shall not gage me
726723By what we doe to night.
727724Bass. No that were pitty,
I would
the Merchant of Venice.
728725I would intreate you rather to put on
729726Your bolde
st sute of mirth, for we haue friends
730727That purpo
se merriment: but far you well,
732729Gra. And I mu
st to
Lorenso and the re
st,
733730But we will vi
site you at
supper time.
Exeunt. 734731Enter Iessica and the Clowne. 735732Jessica. I am
sorry thou wilt leaue my Father
so,
736733Our hou
se is hell, and thou a merry deuill
737734Did
st rob it of
some ta
st of tediou
snes,
738735But far thee well, there is a ducat for thee,
739736And
Launcelet,
soone at
supper
shalt thou
see
740737Lorenso, who is thy new Mai
sters gue
st,
741738Giue him this Letter, doe it
secretly,
742739And
so farwell: I would not haue my Father
743740See me in talke with thee.
744741Clowne. Adiew, teares exhibit my tongue, mo
st beautifull Pagan,
745742mo
st sweete Iewe, if a Chri
stian doe not play the knaue and
746743get thee,
I am much deceaued; but adiew, the
se fooli
sh drops doe
747744somthing drowne my manly
spirit: adiew.
748745Jessica. Farwell good
Launcelet.
749746Alack, what heynous
sinne is it in me
750747To be a
shamed to be my Fathers child,
751748But though
I am a daughter to his blood
752749I am not to his manners: ô
Lorenso 753750Yf thou keepe promi
se
I shall end this
strife,
754751Become a Chri
stian and thy louing wife.
Exit. 755752Enter Gratiano, Lorenso, Salaryno, and Salanio. 756753Loren. Nay, we will
slinke away in
supper time,
757754Di
sgui
se vs at my lodging, and returne all in an houre.
758755Gratia. We haue not made good preparation.
759756Salari. We haue not
spoke vs yet of Torch-bearers,
760757Solanio. Tis vile vnle
sse it may be quaintly ordered,
761758And better in my minde not vndertooke.
762759Loren. Tis now but foure of clocke, we haue two houres
To
The comicall Historie of
763760To furni
sh vs; friend
Launcelet whats the newes.
Enter Launcelet. 764761Launcelet. And it
shal plea
se you to breake vp this, it
shal
seeme
766763Loren. I know the hand, in faith tis a faire hand,
767764And whiter then the paper it writ on
768765Is the faire hand that writ.
769766Gratia. Loue, newes in faith.
770767Launce. By your leaue
sir.
771768Loren. Whither goe
st thou.
773769Launc. Marry
sir to bid my old Mai
ster the Iewe to
sup to night
774770with my new Mai
ster the Chri
stian.
775771Loren. Hold heere take this, tell gentle
Iessica 776772I will not faile her,
speake it priuatly,
777773Goe Gentlemen, will you prepare you for this ma
ske to night,
778774I am prouided of a Torch-bearer.
Exit Clowne. 779775Sal. I marry, ile be gone about it
straite.
781777Loren. Meete me and
Gratiano at
Gratianos lodging
783779Sal. Tis good we doe
so.
Exit. 784780Gratia. Was not that Letter from faire
Iessica.
785781Loren. I mu
st needes tell thee all,
she hath dire
cted
786782How I
shall take her from her Fathers hou
se,
787783What gold and iewels
she is furni
sht with,
788784What Pages
sute
she hath in readines,
789785Yf ere the Iewe her Father come to heauen,
790786Yt will be for his gentle daughters
sake,
791787And neuer dare mi
sfortune cro
sse her foote,
792788Vnle
sse
she doe it vnder this excu
se,
793789That
she is i
ssue to a faithle
sse Iewe:
794790Come goe with me, perv
se this as thou goe
st,
795791Faire
Jessica shall be my Torch-bearer.
Exit. 796792Enter Iewe and his man that was the Clowne. 797793Iewe. Well, thou
shalt
see, thy eyes
shall be thy iudge,
798794The di
fference of old
Shylocke and
Bassanio;
799795What
Iessica, thou
shalt not gurmandize
As
the Merchant of Venice.
800796As thou ha
st done with mee:
what
Iessica,
801797and
sleepe, and
snore, and rend apparraile out.
804800Shy. Who bids thee call? I doe not bid thee call.
805801Clow. Your
wor
ship was wont to tell me,
806802I could doe nothing without bidding.
808804Iessica. Call you?
what is your will?
809805Shy. I am bid forth to
supper
Iessica,
810806There are my keyes: but wherefore
should I goe?
811807I am not bid for loue, they
flatter me,
812808But yet Ile goe in hate, to feede vpon
813809The prodigall Chri
stian.
Iessica my girle,
814810looke to my hou
se,
I am right loth to goe,
815811There is
some ill a bruing towards my re
st,
816812For I did dreame of money baggs to night.
817813Clowne. I be
seech you
sir goe, my young Mai
ster
818814 doth expe
ct your reproch.
820816Clowne. And they haue con
spired together,
I will not
say
821817you
shall
see a Ma
ske, but if you doe, then it was not for nothing
822818that my no
se fell a bleeding on black monday la
st, at
sixe a clocke
823819ith morning, falling out that yeere on a
shwen
sday was foure yeere
825821Shy. What are there ma
skes? heare you me
Iessica,
826822lock vp my doores, and when you heare the drumme
827823and the vile
squealing of the wry-neckt Fi
ffe
828824clamber not you vp to the ca
sements then
829825Nor thru
st your head into the publique
streete
830826To gaze on Chri
stian fooles with varni
sht faces:
831827But
stop my hou
ses eares,
I meane my ca
sements,
832828let not the
sound of
shallow fopprie enter
833829my
sober hou
se. By
Iacobs sta
ffe I
sweare
834830I haue no minde of fea
sting forth to night:
835831but
I will goe: goe you before me
sirra,
D. Clowne
The comciall Historie of
837833Clowne. I will goe before
sir.
838834Mi
stres looke out at window for all this,
839835 there will come a Chri
stian by
840836will be worth a Iewes eye.
841837Shyl. What
sayes that foole of
Hagars of
spring? ha.
842838Iessica. His words were farewell mi
stris, nothing els.
843839Shy. The patch is kinde enough, but a huge feeder,
844840Snaile
slow in pro
fit, and he
sleepes by day
845841more then the
wild-cat: drones hiue not with me,
846842therefore
I part with him, and part with him
847843to one that I would haue him helpe to wa
st 848844his borrowed pur
se. Well
Iessica goe in,
849845perhaps
I will returne immediatlie,
850846do as I bid you,
shut dores after you, fa
st bind, fa
st find.
851847a prouerbe neuer
stale in thriftie minde.
Exit. 852848Ies. Farewell, and if my fortune be not cro
st,
853849I haue a Father, you a daughter lo
st.
Exit. 854850 Enter the maskers Gratiano and Salerino. 855851Grat. This is the penthou
se vnder which
Lorenzo 856852de
sired vs to make
stand.
857853Sal. His howre is almo
st pa
st.
858854Gra. And it is meruaile he out-dwells his howre,
859855for louers euer runne before the clocke.
860856Sal. O tenne times fa
ster
Venus pidgions
flie
861857to
seale loues bonds new made, then they are wont
862858to keepe obliged faith vnforfaited.
863859Gra. That euer holds: who ri
seth from a fea
st 864860with that keene appetite that he
sits downe?
865861where is the hor
se that doth vntread againe
866862his tedious mea
sures with the vnbated
fire
867863that he did pace them
fir
st: all things that are
868864are with more
spirit cha
sed then enioyd.
869865How like a younger or a prodigall
870866the
skarfed barke puts from her natiue bay
871867hugd and embraced by the
strumpet wind,
872868how like the prodigall doth
she returne
with
the Merchant of Venice.
873869with ouer-wetherd ribbs and ragged
sailes
874870leane, rent, and beggerd by the
strumpet wind?
876872Sal. Heere comes
Lorenzo, more of this hereafter.
877873Lor. Sweet freends, your patience for my long abode
878874not I but my a
ffaires haue made you waite:
879875when you
shall plea
se to play the theeues for wiues
880876Ile watch as long for you then: approch
881877here dwels my father Iew. Howe who
se within?
883879Iess. Who are you? tell me for more certainty,
884880Albeit Ile
sweare that I doe know your tongue.
885881Lor. Lorenzo and thy loue.
886882Iessica. Lorenzo certaine, and my loue indeed,
887883for who loue I
so much? and now who knowes
888884but you
Lorenzo whether I am yours?
889885Lor. Heauen & thy thoughts are witnes that thou art.
890886Ies. Heere catch this ca
sket, it is worth the paines,
891887I am glad tis night you doe not looke on me,
892888for I am much a
shamde of my exchange:
893889But loue is blinde, and louers cannot
see
894890The pretty follies that them
selues commit,
895891for if they could,
Cupid him
selfe would blu
sh 896892to
see me thus trans-formed to a boy.
897893Lor. De
scend, for you mu
st be my torch-bearer.
898894Ies. What, mu
st I hold a candle to my
shames,
899895they in them
selues good
sooth are too too light.
900896Why, tis an o
ffice of di
scouery loue,
901897and I
should be ob
scurd.
903899euen in the louely garni
sh of a boy, but come at once,
904900for the clo
se night doth play the runaway,
905901and we are
staid for at
Bassanios fea
st.
906902Ies. I will make fa
st the doores & guild my
selfe
907903with
some mo ducats, and be with you
straight.
908904Gra. Now by my hoode a gentle, and no Iew.
909905Lor. Be
shrow me but I loue her hartilie,
D2 for
The comicall Historie of
910906For
she is wi
se, if
I can iudge of her,
911907and faire
she is, if that mine eyes be true,
912908and true
she is, as
she hath proou'd her
selfe:
913909And therefore like her
selfe, wi
se, faire, and true,
914910shall
she be placed in my con
stant
soule.
Enter Iessica. 915911What, art thou come, on gentleman, away,
916912our ma
sking mates by this time for vs
stay.
Exit. 920916Anth. Fie,
fie Gratiano, where are all the re
st?
921917Tis nine a clocke, our friends all
stay for you,
922918No ma
ske to night, the wind is come about
923919Bassanio pre
sently will goe abord,
924920I haue
sent twentie out to
seeke for you.
925921Gra. I am glad ont, I de
sire no more delight
926922then to be vnder
saile, and gone to night.
Exeunt. 927923Enter Portia with Morrocho and both 929925Por. Goe, draw a
side the curtaines and di
scouer
930926the
seuerall ca
skets to this noble Prince:
932928Mor. This
fir
st of gold, who this in
scription beares,
933929Who choo
seth me,
shall gaine what many men de
sire.
934930The
second
siluer, which this promi
se carries,
935931Who choo
seth me,
shall get as much as he de
serues.
936932This third, dull lead, with warning all as blunt,
937933Who choo
seth me, mu
st giue and hazard all he hath.
938934How
shall I know if
I doe choo
se the right?
939935Por. The one of them containes my pi
cture Prince,
940936if you choo
se that, then
I am yours withall.
941937Mor. Some God dire
ct my iudgement, let me
see,
942938I will
suruay th'in
scriptions, back againe,
943939What
saies this leaden ca
sket?
944940Who choo
seth me, mu
st giue and hazard all he hath,
945941Mu
st giue, for what? for lead, hazard for lead?
946942This ca
sket threatens men that hazard all
doe
the Merchant of Venice.
947943doe it in hope of faire aduantages:
948944A golden minde
stoopes not to
showes of dro
sse,
949945Ile then nor giue nor hazard ought for lead.
950946What
sayes the
siluer with her virgin hue?
951947Who choo
seth me,
shal get as much as he de
serues.
952948As much as he de
serues, pau
se there
Morocho,
953949and weigh thy valew with an euen hand,
954950If thou bee
st rated by thy e
stimation
955951thou doo
st de
serue enough, and yet enough
956952May not extend
so farre as to the Ladie:
957953And yet to be afeard of my de
seruing
958954were but a weake di
sabling of my
selfe.
959955As much as
I de
serue, why thats the Ladie.
960956I doe in birth de
serue her, and in fortunes,
961957in graces, and in qualities of breeding:
962958but more then the
se, in loue
I doe de
serue,
963959what if
I straid no farther, but cho
se heere?
964960Lets
see once more this
saying grau'd in gold:
965961Who choo
seth me
shall gaine what many men de
sire:
966962Why thats the Ladie, all the world de
sires her.
967963From the foure corners of the earth they come
968964to ki
sse this
shrine, this mortall breathing Saint.
969965The Hircanion de
serts, and the va
stie wildes
970966Of wide Arabia are as throughfares now
971967for Princes to come view faire
Portia.
972968The waterie Kingdome, who
se ambitious head
973969Spets in the face of heauen, is no barre
974970To
stop the forraine
spirits, but they come
975971as ore a brooke to
see faire
Portia.
976972One of the
se three containes her heauenly pi
cture.
977973Ist like that leade containes her, twere damnation
978974to thinke
so ba
se a thought, it were too gro
sse
979975to ribb her
serecloth in the ob
scure graue,
980976Or
shall I thinke in
siluer
shees immurd
981977beeing tenne times vndervalewed to tride gold,
982978O
sinful thought, neuer
so rich a
Iem
983979was
set in wor
se then gold. They haue in England
D3 A
The comicall Historie of
984980A coyne that beares the
figure of an Angell
985981stampt in gold, but thats in
sculpt vpon:
986982But heere an Angell in a golden bed
987983lies all
within. Deliuer me the key:
988984heere doe I choo
se, and thriue I as I may.
989985Por. There take it Prince, and if my forme lie there
991987Mor. O hell! what haue wee heare, a carrion death,
992988within who
se emptie eye there is a written
scroule,
All that glisters is not gold,
995991Often haue you heard that told,
996992Many a man his life hath sold 997993But my outside to behold,
998994Guilded timber doe wormes infold: 999995Had you beene as wise as bold,
1000996Young in limbs, in iudgement old,
1001997Your aunswere had not beene inscrold,
1002998Fareyouwell, your sute is cold.
1003999Mor. Cold indeede and labour lo
st,
10041000Then farewell heate, and welcome fro
st:
10051001Portia adiew, I haue too greeu'd a hart
10061002To take a tedious leaue: thus loo
sers part.
Exit. 10071003Por. A gentle riddance, draw the curtaines, go,
10081004Let all of his complexion choo
se me
so.
Exeunt. 10101006Sal. Why man I
saw
Bassanio vnder
sayle,
10111007with him is
Gratiano gone along;
10121008and in theyr
ship I am
sure
Lorenzo is not.
10131009Sola. The villaine Iew with outcries rai
sd the Duke,
10141010who went with him to
search
Bassanios ship.
10151011Sal. He came too late, the
ship was vnder
saile,
10161012But there the Duke was giuen to vnder
stand
10171013that in a Gondylo were
seene together
10181014Lorenzo and his amorous
Iessica.
10191015Be
sides,
Anthonio certi
fied the Duke
10201016they were not with
Bassanio in his
ship.
I
the Merchant of Venice.
10211017Sol. I neuer heard a pa
ssion
so confu
sd,
10221018So
strange, outragious, and
so variable
10231019as the dogge Iew did vtter in the
streets,
10241020My daughter, ô my ducats, ô my daughter,
10251021Fled with a Chri
stian, ô my Chri
stian ducats.
10261022Iu
stice, the law, my ducats, and my daughter,
10271023A
sealed bag, two
sealed bags of ducats
10281024of double ducats,
stolne from me by my daughter,
10291025and Iewels, two
stones, two rich and precious
stones,
10301026Stolne by my daughter: iu
stice,
find the girle,
10311027shee hath the
stones vpon her, and the ducats.
10321028Sal. Why all the boyes in Venice follow him,
10331029crying his
stones, his daughter, and his ducats.
10341030Sola. Let good
Anthonio looke he keepe his day
10371033I rea
sond with a Frenchman ye
sterday,
10381034who told me, in the narrow
seas that part
10391035the French and Engli
sh, there mi
scaried
10401036a ve
ssell of our country richly fraught:
10411037I thought vpon
Anthonio when he told me,
10421038and wi
sht in
silence that it were not his.
10431039Sol. You were be
st to tell
Anthonio what you heare,
10441040Yet doe not
suddainely, for it may greeue him.
10451041Sal. A kinder gentleman treades not the earth,
10461042I
saw
Bassanio and
Anthonio part,
10471043Bassanio told him he would make
some
speede
10481044of his returne: he aun
swered, doe not
so,
10491045slumber not bu
sines for my
sake
Bassanio,
10501046but
stay the very riping of the time,
10511047and for the Iewes bond which he hath of me
10521048let it not enter in your minde of loue:
10531049be merry, and imploy your cheefe
st thoughts
10541050to court
ship, and
such faire o
stents of loue
10551051as
shall conueniently become you there,
10561052And euen there his eye being big with teares,
10571053turning his face, he put his hand behind him,
10581054and with a
ffe
ction wondrous
sencible
He
The comicall Historie of
10591055He wrung
Bassanios hand, and
so they parted.
10601056Sol. I thinke hee onely loues the world for him,
10611057I pray thee let vs goe and
finde him out
10621058and quicken his embraced heauines
10661062Ner. Quick, quick
I pray thee, draw the curtain
strait,
10671063The Prince of Arragon hath tane his oath,
10681064and comes to his ele
ction pre
sently.
10691065Enter Arrogon, his trayne, and Portia. 10701066Por. Behold, there
stand the ca
skets noble Prince,
10711067yf you choo
se that wherein I am containd
10721068straight
shall our nuptiall rights be
solemniz'd:
10731069but if you faile, without more
speech my Lord
10741070you mu
st be gone from hence immediatly.
10751071Arra. I am enioynd by oath to ob
serue three things,
10761072Fir
st, neuer to vnfold to any one
10771073which ca
sket twas
I cho
se; next, if I faile
10781074of the right ca
sket, neuer in my life
10791075to wooe a maide in way of marriage:
10801076la
stly, if
I doe faile in fortune of my choy
se,
10811077immediatly to leaue you, and be gone.
10821078Por. To the
se iniun
ctions euery one doth
sweare
10831079that comes to hazard for my worthle
sse
selfe.
10841080Arr. And
so haue I addre
st me, fortune now
10851081To my harts hope: gold,
siluer, and ba
se lead.
10861082Who choo
seth me, mu
st giue and hazard all he hath.
10871083You
shall looke fairer ere I giue or hazard.
10881084What
saies the golden che
st, ha, let me
see,
10891085Who choo
seth me,
shall gaine what many men de
sire,
10901086What many men de
sire, that many may be meant
10911087by the foole multitude that choo
se by
show,
10921088not learning more then the fond eye doth teach,
10931089which pries not to th interiour, but like the Martlet
builds
the Merchant of Venice.
10941090Builds in the weather on the outward wall,
10951091Euen in the force and rode of ca
sualty.
10961092I will not choo
se what many men de
sire,
10971093Becau
se I will not iumpe with common
spirits,
10981094And ranke me with the barbarous multitudes.
10991095Why then to thee thou
siluer trea
sure hou
se,
11001096Tell me once more what title thou doo
st beare;
11011097Who choo
seth me
shall get as much as he de
serues,
11021098And well
sayde to; for who
shall goe about
11031099To co
sen Fortune, and be honourable
11041100without the
stampe of merrit, let none pre
sume
11061102O that e
states, degrees, and o
ffices,
11071103were not deriu'd corruptly, and that cleare honour
11081104were purcha
st by the merrit of the wearer,
11091105How many then
should couer that
stand bare?
11101106How many be commaunded that commaund?
11111107How much low pea
santry would then be gleaned
11121108From the true
seede of honour? and how much honour
11131109Pickt from the chaft and ruin of the times,
11141110To be new varni
st; well but to my choi
se.
11151111Who choo
seth me
shall get as much as he de
serues,
11161112I will a
ssume de
sert; giue me a key for this,
11171113And in
stantly vnlocke my fortunes heere.
11181114Portia. Too long a pau
se for that which you
finde there.
11191115Arrag. What's heere, the pourtrait of a blinking idiot
11201116Pre
senting me a
shedule, I will reade it:
11211117How much vnlike art thou to
Portia?
11221118How much vnlike my hopes and my de
seruings.
11231119Who choo
seth me,
shall haue as much as he de
serues?
11241120Did I de
serue no more then a fooles head,
11251121Is that my prize, are my de
serts no better?
11261122Portia. To o
ffend and iudge are di
stin
ct o
ffices,
The fier seauen times tried this,
11301126Seauen times tried that iudement is,
E. That
The comicall Historie of
That did neuer choose amis,
11321128Some there be that shadowes kis.
11391135Arrag. Still more foole I
shall appeare
11411137With one fooles head
I came to woo,
11451141Portia. Thus hath the candle
singd the moath:
11461142O the
se deliberate fooles when they doe choo
se,
11471143They haue the wi
sedome by their wit to loo
se.
11481144Nerriss. The auncient
saying is no heri
sie,
11491145Hanging and wiuing goes by de
stinie.
11501146Portia. Come draw the curtaine
Nerrissa.
11531149Portia. Heere, what would my Lord?
11541150Mess. Madame, there is a-lighted at your gate
11551151A young Venetian, one that comes before
11561152To
signi
fie th'approching of his Lord,
11571153From whom he bringeth
sen
sible regreets;
11581154To wit, (be
sides commends and curtious breath)
11591155Gifts of rich valiew; yet I haue not
seene
11601156So likely an Emba
ssador of loue.
11611157A day in Aprill neuer came
so
sweete
11621158To
show how co
stly Sommer was at hand,
11631159As this fore-
spurrer comes before his Lord.
11641160Portia. No more I pray thee,
I am halfe a-feard
11651161Thou wilt
say anone he is
some kin to thee,
11661162Thou
spend
st such high day wit in pray
sing him:
Come
the Merchant of Venice.
11671163Come come
Nerryssa, for I long to
see
11681164Quick
Cupids Po
st that comes
so mannerly.
11691165Nerryss. Bassanio Lord, loue if thy will it be.
Exeunt. 11711167Solanio. Now what newes on the Ryalto?
11731168Salari. Why yet it liues there vncheckt, that
Anthonio hath a
ship
11741169of rich lading wrackt on the narrow Seas; the Goodwins I thinke
11751170they call the place, a very dangerous
flat, and fatall, where the car
- 11761171ca
sses of many a tall
ship lie buried, as they
say, if my go
ssip report
11781173Solanio. I would
she were as lying a go
ssip in that, as euer knapt
11791174Ginger, or made her neighbours beleeue
she wept for the death of
11801175a third hu
sband: but it is true, without any
slips of prolixity, or
11811176cro
ssing the plaine high way of talke, that the good
Anthonio, the
11821177hone
st Anthonio; ô that I had a tytle good enough to keepe his
11851180Solanio. Ha, what
saye
st thou, why the end is, he hath lo
st a
ship.
11861181Salari. I would it might proue the end of his lo
sses.
11871182Solanio. Let me
say amen betimes, lea
st the deuil cro
sse my prai
- 11881183er, for heere he comes in the likenes of a Iewe. How now
Shylocke,
11891184what newes among the Merchants?
Enter Shylocke. 11901185Shy. You knew, none
so well, none
so well as you, of my daugh
- 11921187Salari. Thats certaine,
I for my part knew the Taylor that made
11941189Solan. And
Shylocke for his own part knew the bird was
flidge,
11951190and then it is the complexion of them all to leaue the dam.
11971192Salari. Thats certaine, if the deuill may be her Iudge.
11981193Shy. My owne
fle
sh and blood to rebell.
11991194Sola. Out vpon it old carrion, rebels it at the
se yeeres.
12001195Shy. I
say my daughter is my
fle
sh and my blood.
12011196Salari. There is more di
fference betweene thy
fle
sh and hers,
12021197then betweene
Iet and
Iuorie, more betweene your bloods, then
12031198there is betweene red
wine and renni
sh: but tell vs, doe you heare
12041199whether
Anthonio haue had any lo
sse at
sea or no?
E2 Shy. There
The comicall Historie of
12051200Shy. There I haue another bad match, a bankrout, a prodigall,
12061201who dare
scarce
shewe his head on the Ryalto, a begger that was
12071202v
sd to come
so
smug vpon the Mart: let him looke to his bond,
12081203he was wont to call me v
surer, let him looke to his bond, hee was
12091204wont to lende money for a Chri
stian cur
sie, let him looke to his
12111206Salari. Why I am
sure if he forfaite, thou wilt not take his
fle
sh,
12141208Shyl. To baite
fish with all, if it will feede nothing el
se, it will
12151209feede my reuenge; hee hath di
sgrac'd me, and hindred me halfe a
12161210million, laught at my lo
sses, mockt at my gaines,
scorned my Na
- 12171211tion, thwarted my bargaines, cooled my friends, heated mine ene
- 12181212mies, and whats his rea
son, I am a Iewe: Hath not a Iewe eyes,
12191213hath not a Iewe hands, organs, dementions,
sences, a
ffe
ctions, pa
ssions,
12201214fed with the
same foode, hurt with the
same weapons,
sub
- 12211215to the
same di
sea
ses, healed by the
same meanes, warmed and
12221216cooled by the
same Winter and Sommer as a Chri
stian is: if you
12231217pricke vs doe we not bleede, if you tickle vs doe wee not laugh, if
12241218you poy
son vs doe wee not die, and if you wrong vs
shall wee not
12251219reuenge, if we are like you in the re
st, we will re
semble you in that.
12261220If a Iewe wrong a Chri
stian, what is his humillity, reuenge? If a
12271221Chri
stian wrong a Iewe, what
should his
su
fferance be by Chri
sti
- 12281222an example, why reuenge? The villanie you teach me I will exe
- 12291223cute, and it
shall goe hard but I will better the in
stru
ction.
12311225Gentlemen, my mai
ster
Anthonio is at his hou
se, and de
sires to
12331227Saleri. We haue beene vp and downe to
seeke him.
12351229Solanio. Heere comes another of the Tribe, a third cannot bee
12361230matcht, vnle
sse the deuill him
selfe turne Iewe.
Exeunt Gentlemen. 12381232Shy. How now
Tuball, what newes from Genowa, ha
st thou
12401234Tuball. I often came where I did heare of her, but cannot
finde
Shy.
the Merchant of Venice.
12421236Shylocke. Why there, there, there, there, a diamond gone co
st me
12431237two thou
sand ducats in Franckford, the cur
se neuer fell vpon our
12441238Nation till now, I neuer felt it till nowe, two thou
sand ducats in
12451239that, & other precious precious iewels; I would my daughter were
12461240dead at my foote, and the iewels in her eare: would
she were hear
st 12471241at my foote, and the ducats in her co
ffin: no newes of them, why
12481242so? and I know not whats
spent in the
search: why thou lo
sse vpon
12491243lo
sse, the theefe gone with
so much, and
so much to
finde the
12501244theefe, and no
sati
sfa
ction, no reuenge, nor no ill lucke
stirring but
12511245what lights a my
shoulders, no
sighs but a my breathing, no teares
12531247Tuball. Yes, other men haue ill lucke to,
Anthonio as I heard
12551249Shy. What, what, what, ill lucke, ill lucke.
12561250Tuball. Hath an Argo
sie ca
st away comming from Tripolis.
12571251Shy. I thank God,
I thank God, is it true, is it true.
12581252Tuball. I spoke with
some of the Saylers that e
scaped the wrack.
12591253Shy. I thank thee good
Tuball, good newes, good newes: ha ha,
12611255Tuball. Your daughter
spent in Genowa, as I heard, one night
12631257Shy. Thou
stick
st a dagger in me, I
shall neuer
see my gold a
- 12641258gaine, foure
score ducats at a
sitting, foure
score ducats.
12651259Tuball. There came diuers of
Anthonios creditors in my com
- 12661260pany to Venice, that
sweare, he cannot choo
se but breake.
12671261Shy. I am very glad of it, ile plague him, ile torture him,
I am
12691263Tuball. One of them
shewed mee a ring that hee had of your
12711265Shy. Out vpon her, thou torture
st mee
Tuball, it was my Tur
- 12721266kies, I had it of
Leah when I was a Batcheler: I would not haue
12731267giuen it for a Wildernes of Monkies.
12741268Tuball. But
Anthonio is certainly vndone.
12751269Shy. Nay, that's true, that's very true, goe
Tuball fee me an O
ffi- 12761270cer, be
speake him a fortnight before, I will haue the hart of him if
12771271he forfeite, for were he out of Venice I can make what merchan
- 12781272dize I will: goe
Tuball, and meete me at our Sinagogue, goe good
E3 Tuball,
The comicall Historie of
12791273Tuball, at our Sinagogue
Tuball.
Exeunt. 12801274Enter Bassanio, Portia, Gratiano, and all 12821276Portia. I pray you tarry, pau
se a day or two
12831277Before you hazard, for in choo
sing wrong
12841278I loo
se your companie; therefore forbeare a while,
12851279Theres
something tells me (but it is not loue)
12861280I would not loo
se you, and you know your
selfe,
12871281Hate coun
sailes not in
such a quallity;
12881282But lea
st you
should not vnder
stand me well,
12891283And yet a mayden hath no tongue, but thought,
12901284I would detaine you heere
some moneth or two
12911285before you venture for me. I could teach you
12921286how to choo
se right, but then I am for
sworne,
12931287So will
I neuer be,
so may you mi
sse me,
12941288But if you doe, youle make me wi
sh a
sinne,
12951289That
I had beene for
sworne: Be
shrow your eyes,
12961290They haue ore-lookt me and deuided me,
12971291One halfe of me is yours, the other halfe yours,
12981292Mine owne I would
say: but if mine then yours,
12991293And
so all yours; ô the
se naughty times
13001294puts barres betweene the o
wners and their rights,
13011295And
so though yours, not yours, (proue it
so)
13021296Let Fortune goe to hell for it, not I.
13031297I
speake too long, but tis to peize the time,
13041298To ech it, and to draw it out in length,
13071301For as
I am,
I liue vpon the racke.
13081302Por. Vpon the racke
Bassanio, then confe
sse
13091303what trea
son there is mingled with your loue.
13101304Bass. None but that vgly trea
son of mi
stru
st,
13111305which makes me feare th'inioying of my Loue,
13121306There may as well be amity and life
13131307Tweene
snow and
fire, as trea
son and my loue.
13141308Por. I but I feare you
speake vpon the racke
13151309where men enforced doe
speake any thing.
Bass.
the Merchant of Venice.
13161310Bass. Promi
se me life, and ile confe
sse the truth.
13171311Portia. Well then, confe
sse and liue.
13191313had beene the very
sum of my confe
ssion:
13201314O happy torment, when my torturer
13211315doth teach me aun
sweres for deliuerance:
13221316But let me to my fortune and the ca
skets.
13231317Portia. Away then, I am lockt in one of them,
13241318If you doe loue me, you will
finde me out.
13251319Nerryssa and the re
st,
stand all aloofe,
13261320Let mu
sique
sound while he doth make his choy
se,
13271321Then if he loo
se he makes a Swan-like end,
13281322Fading in mu
sique. That the compari
son
13291323may
stand more proper, my eye
shall be the
streame
13301324and watry death-bed for him: he may win,
13311325And what is mu
sique than? Than mu
sique is
13321326euen as the
flouri
sh, when true
subie
cts bowe
13331327to a new crowned Monarch: Such it is,
13341328As are tho
se dulcet
sounds in breake of day,
13351329That creepe into the dreaming bride-groomes eare,
13361330And
summon him to marriage. Now he goes
13371331with no le
sse pre
sence, but with much more loue
13381332Then young Alcides, when he did redeeme
13391333The virgine tribute, payed by howling Troy
13401334To the Sea-mon
ster: I
stand for
sacri
fice,
13411335The re
st aloofe are the Dardanian
wiues:
13421336With bleared vi
sages come forth to view
13431337The i
ssue of th'exploit: Goe Hercules,
13441338Liue thou, I liue with much much more di
smay,
13451339I view the
fight, then thou that mak'
st the fray.
13461340A Song the whilst Bassanio comments on the caskets Tell me where is fancie bred,
13501344How begot, how nourished?
Replie, replie.
It
The comicall Historie of
13521346With gazing fed, and Fancie dies: 13581352Bass. So may the outward
showes be lea
st them
selues,
13591353The world is
still deceau'd with ornament
13601354In Law, what plea
so tainted and corrupt,
13611355But being
sea
son'd with a gracious voyce,
13621356Ob
scures the
show of euill.
In religion
13631357What damned error but
some
sober brow
13641358will ble
sse it, and approue it with a text,
13651359Hiding the gro
snes with faire ornament:
13661360There is no voyce
so
simple, but a
ssumes
13671361Some marke of vertue on his outward parts;
13681362How many cowards who
se harts are all as fal
se
13691363As
stayers of
sand, weare yet vpon their chins
13701364The beards of
Hercules and frowning
Mars,
13711365who inward
searcht, haue lyuers white as milke,
13721366And the
se a
ssume but valours excrement
13731367To render them redoubted. Looke on beauty,
13741368And you
shall
see tis purcha
st by the weight,
13751369which therein works a miracle in nature,
13761370Making them lighte
st that weare mo
st of it:
13771371So are tho
se cri
sped
snaky golden locks
13781372which maketh
such wanton gambols with the wind
13791373Vpon
suppo
sed fairenes, often knowne
13801374To be the dowry of a
second head,
13811375The
scull that bred them in the Sepulcher.
13821376Thus ornament is but the guiled
shore
13831377To a mo
st dangerous
sea: the beautious
scarfe
13841378vailing an Indian beauty; In a word,
13851379The
seeming truth which cunning times put on
13861380To intrap the wi
se
st. Therefore then thou gaudy gold,
13871381Hard food for
Midas, I will none of thee,
Nor
the Merchant of Venice.
13881382Nor none of thee thou pale and common drudge
13891383tweene man and man: but thou, thou meager lead
13901384which rather threaten
st then do
st promi
se ought,
13911385thy palenes moues me more then eloquence,
13921386and heere choo
se I, ioy be the con
sequence.
13931387Por. How all the other pa
ssions
fleet to ayre,
13941388As doubtfull thoughts, and ra
sh imbrac'd de
spaire:
13951389And
shyddring feare, and greene-eyed iealou
sie.
13961390O loue be moderate, allay thy exta
sie,
13971391In mea
sure raine thy ioy,
scant this exce
sse,
13981392I feele too much thy ble
ssing, make it le
sse
14011395Faire
Portias counterfeit. What demy God
14021396hath come
so neere creation? moue the
se eyes?
14031397Or whither riding on the balls of mine
14041398seeme they in motion? Heere are
seuerd lips
14051399parted with
suger breath,
so
sweet a barre
14061400should
sunder
such
sweet friends: heere in her haires
14071401the Paynter playes the Spyder, and hath wouen
14081402a golden me
sh tyntrap the harts of men
14091403fa
ster then gnats in cobwebs, but her eyes
14101404how could he
see to doe them? hauing made one,
14111405me thinkes it
should haue power to
steale both his
14121406and leaue it
selfe vnfurni
sht: Yet looke how farre
14131407the
sub
stance of my prai
se doth wrong this
shadow
14141408in vnderpry
sing it,
so farre this
shadow
14151409doth limpe behind the
sub
stance. Heeres the
scroule,
14161410the continent and
summarie of my fortune.
14171411 You that choose not by the view 14181412Chaunce as faire, and choose as true: 14191413Since this fortune falls to you,
14211415If you be well pleasd with this,
14221416and hold your fortune for your blisse,
14241418And claime her with a louing kis.
F. Bass.
The comicall Historie of
14251419A gentle
scroule: Faire Lady, by your leaue,
14261420I come by note to giue, and to receaue,
14271421Like one of two contending in a prize
14281422That thinks he hath done well in peoples eyes:
14291423Hearing applau
se and vniuer
sall
shoute,
14301424Giddy in
spirit,
still gazing in a doubt
14311425whether tho
se peales of prai
se be his or no,
14321426So thrice faire Lady
stand I euen
so,
14331427As doubtfull whether what I
see be true,
14341428Vntill con
firmd,
signd, rati
fied by you.
14351429Por. You
see me Lord
Bassanio where I
stand,
14361430such as I am; though for my
selfe alone
14371431I would not be ambitious in my wi
sh 14381432to wi
sh my
selfe much better, yet for you,
14391433I would be trebled twentie times my
selfe,
14401434a thou
sand times more faire, tenne thou
sand times
14411435more rich, that onely to
stand high in your account,
14421436I might in vertues, beauties, liuings, friends
14431437exceede account: but the full
summe of me
14441438is
sume of
something: which to terme in gro
sse,
14451439is an vnle
ssond girle, vn
schoold, vnpra
ctized,
14461440happy in this,
she is not yet
so old
14471441but
she may learne: happier then this,
14481442shee is not bred
so dull but
she can learne;
14491443happie
st of all, is that her gentle
spirit
14501444commits it
selfe to yours to be dire
cted,
14511445as from her Lord, her gouernour, her King.
14521446My
selfe, and what is mine, to you and yours
14531447is now conuerted. But now I was the Lord
14541448of this faire man
sion, mai
ster of my
seruants,
14551449Queene ore my
selfe: and euen now, but now,
14561450this hou
se, the
se
seruaunts, and this
same my
selfe
14571451are yours, my Lords, I giue them with this ring,
14581452which when you part from, loo
se, or giue away,
14591453let it pre
sage the ruine of your loue,
14601454and be my vantage to exclaime on you.
14611455Bass. Maddam, you haue bereft me of all words,
onely
the Merchant of Venice.
14621456onely my blood
speakes to you in my vaines,
14631457and there is
such confu
sion in my powers,
14641458as after
some oration fairely
spoke
14651459by a beloued Prince, there doth appeare
14661460among the buzzing plea
sed multitude.
14671461Where euery
somthing beeing blent together,
14681462turnes to a wild of nothing,
saue of ioy
14691463expre
st, and not expre
st: but when this ring
14701464parts from this
finger, then parts life from hence,
14711465Ã ́ then be bold to
say
Bassanios dead.
14721466Ner. My Lord and Lady, it is now our time
14731467that haue
stoode by and
seene our wi
shes pro
sper,
14741468to cry good ioy, good ioy my Lord and Lady.
14751469Gra. My Lord
Bassanio, and my gentle Lady,
14761470I wi
sh you all the ioy that you can wi
sh:
14771471for I am
sure you can wi
sh none from me:
14781472and when your honours meane to
solemnize
14791473the bargaine of your fayth: I doe be
seech you
14801474euen at that time I may be married to.
14811475Bass. With all my hart,
so thou can
st get a wife.
14821476Gra. I thanke your Lord
ship, you haue got me one.
14831477My eyes my Lord can looke as
swift as yours:
14841478you
saw the mi
stres, I beheld the mayd:
14851479You lou'd,
I lou'd for intermi
ssion,
14861480No more pertaines to me my lord then you;
14871481your fortune
stood vpon the ca
skets there,
14881482and
so did mine to as the matter falls:
14891483for wooing heere vntill
I swet againe,
14901484and
swearing till my very rough was dry
14911485with oathes of loue, at la
st, if promi
se la
st 14921486I got a promi
se of this faire one heere
14931487to haue her loue: prouided that your fortune
14961490Ner. Maddam it is,
so you
stand plea
sd withall.
14971491Bass. And doe you
Gratiano meane good fayth?
F2. Bass.
The comicall Historie of
14991493Bass. Our fea
st shalbe much honored in your mariage.
15001494Gra. Wele play with them the
fir
st boy for a thou
sand ducats.
15021496Gra. No, we
shall nere win at that
sport and
stake downe.
15031497But who comes heere?
Lorenzo and his in
fidell?
15041498what, and my old Venecian friend
Salerio?
15051499Enter Lorenzo, Iessica, and Salerio a messenger 15071501Bassa. Lorenzo and
Salerio, welcome hether,
15081502if that the youth of my newe intre
st heere
15091503haue power to bid you welcome: by your leaue
15101504I bid my very friends and countrymen
15121506Por. So doe I my Lord, they are intirely welcome.
15131507Lor. I thanke your honour, for my part my Lord
15141508my purpo
se was not to haue
seene you heere,
15151509but meeting with
Salerio by the way
15161510he did intreate me pa
st all
saying nay
15191513and I haue rea
son for it, Signior
Anthonio 15221516I pray you tell me how my good friend doth.
15231517Sal. Not
sicke my Lord, vnle
sse it be in mind,
15241518nor well, vnle
sse in mind: his letter there
15251519will
show you his e
state.
open the letter. 15261520Gra. Nerrissa, cheere yond
stranger, bid her welcom.
15271521Your hand
Salerio, what's the newes from Venice?
15281522How doth that royall Merchant good
Anthonio?
15291523I know he will be glad of our
succe
sse,
15301524We are the
Iasons, we haue wone the
fleece.
15311525Sal. I would you had won the
fleece that he hath lo
st.
15321526Por. There are
some
shrowd contents in yond
same paper
15331527That
steales the colour from
Bassanios cheeke,
15341528Some deere friend dead, el
se nothing in the world
15351529could turne
so much the con
stitution
of
the Merchant of Venice.
15361530of any con
stant man: what wor
se and wor
se?
15371531With leaue
Bassanio I am halfe your
selfe,
15381532and I mu
st freely haue the halfe of any thing
15391533that this
same paper brings you.
15411535heere are a few of the vnplea
sant'
st words
15421536that euer blotted paper. Gentle Lady
15431537when I did
fir
st impart my loue to you,
15441538I freely told you all the wealth I had
15451539ranne in my vaines, I was a gentleman,
15461540and then
I told you true: and yet deere Lady
15471541rating my
selfe at nothing, you
shall
see
15481542how much
I was a Braggart, when I told you
15491543my
state was nothing, I
should then haue told you
15501544that
I was wor
se then nothing; for indeede
15511545I haue ingag'd my
selfe to a deere friend,
15521546ingag'd my friend to his meere enemie
15531547to feede my meanes. Heere is a letter Lady,
15541548the paper as the body of my friend,
15551549and euery word in it a gaping wound
15561550i
ssuing life blood. But is it true
Salerio 15571551hath all his ventures faild, what not one hit,
15581552from Tripolis, from Mexico and England,
15591553from Li
sbon, Barbary, and
India,
15601554and not one ve
ssell
scape the dreadfull touch
15631557Be
sides, it
should appeare, that if he had
15641558the pre
sent money to di
scharge the Iew,
15651559hee would not take it: neuer did
I know
15661560a creature that did beare the
shape of man
15671561so keene and greedie to confound a man.
15681562He plyes the Duke at morning and at night,
15691563and doth impeach the freedome of the
state
15701564if they deny him iu
stice. Twentie Merchants,
15711565the Duke him
selfe, and the Magni
ficoes
15721566of greate
st port haue all per
swaded with him,
F3 but
The comicall Historie of
15731567but none can driue him from the enuious plea
15741568of forfaiture, of iu
stice, and his bond.
15751569Iessi. When I was with him, I haue heard him
sweare
15761570to
Tuball and to
Chus, his country-men,
15771571that he would rather haue
Anthonios fle
sh 15781572then twentie times the value of the
summe
15791573that he did owe him: and I know my lord,
15801574if law, authoritie, and power denie not,
15811575it will goe hard with poore
Anthonio.
15821576Por. Is it your deere friend that is thus in trouble?
15831577Bass. The deere
st friend to me, the kinde
st man,
15841578the be
st conditiond and vnwearied
spirit
15851579in dooing curte
sies: and one in whom
15861580the auncient Romaine honour more appeares
15871581then any that drawes breath in
Italie.
15881582Por. What
summe owes he the Iew?
15891583Bass. For me three thou
sand ducats.
15901584Por. What no more, pay him
six thou
sand, & deface the bond:
15911585double
sixe thou
sand, and then treble that,
15921586before a friend of this di
scription
15931587shall lo
se a haire through
Bassanios fault.
15941588Fir
st goe with me to Church, and call me wife,
15951589and then away to Venice to your friend:
15961590for neuer
shall you lie by
Portias side
15971591with an vnquiet
soule. You
shall haue gold
15981592to pay the petty debt twenty times ouer.
15991593When it is payd, bring your true friend along,
16001594my mayd
Nerrissa, and my
selfe meane time
16011595will liue as maydes and widdowes; come away,
16021596for you
shall hence vpon your wedding day:
16031597bid your freends welcome,
show a merry cheere,
16041598since you are deere bought, I will loue you deere.
16051599But let me heare the letter of your friend.
Sweet Bassanio, my ships haue all miscaried, my Creditors growe
16071601cruell, my estate is very low, my bond to the Iewe is forfaite, and since in 16081602paying it, it is impossible I should liue, all debts are cleerd betweene you and
the Merchant of Venice.
and I if I might but see you at my death: notwithstanding, vse your plea-
16101604sure,
if your loue do not perswade you to come, let not my letter.
16111605Por. O loue! di
spatch all bu
sines and be gone.
16121606Bass. Since I haue your good leaue to goe away,
16131607I will make ha
st; but till I come againe,
16141608no bed
shall ere be guiltie of my
stay,
16151609nor re
st be interpo
ser twixt vs twaine.
16171611 Enter the Iew, and Salerio, and Anthonio, 16191613Iew. Iaylor, looke to him, tell not me of mercie,
16201614this is the foole that lent out money gratis.
16231617Iew. Ile haue my bond,
speake not again
st my bond,
16241618I haue
sworne an oath, that I will haue my bond:
16251619thou call'd
st me dogge before thou had
st a cau
se,
16261620but
since I am a dog, beware my phanges,
16271621the Duke
shall graunt me iu
stice,
I do wonder
16281622thou naughtie
Iaylor that thou art
so fond
16291623to come abroade with him at his reque
st.
16301624An. I pray thee heare me
speake.
16311625Iew. Ile haue my bond. I will not heare thee
speake,
16321626Ile haue my bond, and therefore
speake no more.
16331627Ile not be made a
soft and dull eyde foole,
16341628to
shake the head, relent, and
sigh, and yeeld
16351629to chri
stian interce
ssers: follow not,
16361630Ile haue no
speaking,
I will haue my bond.
16381632Sol. It is the mo
st impenitrable curre
16411635Ile follow him no more with bootle
sse prayers.
hee
The comicall Historie of
16421636hee
seekes my life, his rea
son well
I know;
16431637I oft deliuerd from his forfeytures
16441638many that haue at times made mone to me,
16461640Sal. I am
sure the Duke will neuer grant
16481642An. The Duke cannot denie the cour
se of law:
16491643for the commoditie that
strangers haue
16501644with vs in Venice, if it be denyed,
16511645will much impeach the iu
stice of the
state,
16521646since that the trade and pro
fit of the citty
16531647con
sisteth of all Nations. Therefore goe,
16541648the
se griefes and lo
sses haue
so bated me
16551649that
I shall hardly
spare a pound of
fle
sh 16561650to morrow, to my bloody Creditor.
16571651Well Iaylor on, pray God
Bassanio come
16581652to
see me pay his debt, and then
I care not.
Exeunt. 16591653Enter Portia, Nerrissa, Lorenzo, Iessica, and a 16611655Lor. Maddam, although I
speake it in your pre
sence,
16621656you haue a noble and a true conceite
16631657of god-like amitie, which appeares mo
st strongly
16641658in bearing thus the ab
sence of your Lord.
16651659But if you knew to whom you
show this honour,
16661660how true a gentleman you
send releefe,
16671661how deere a louer of my Lord your hu
sband,
16681662I know you would be prouder of the worke
16691663then cu
stomarie bountie can enforce you.
16701664Por. I neuer did repent for dooing good,
16711665nor
shall not now: for in companions
16721666that doe conuer
se and wa
st the time together,
16731667who
se
soules doe beare an egall yoke of loue,
16741668there mu
st be needes a like proportion
16751669of lyniaments, of manners, and of
spirit;
16761670which makes me thinke that this
Anthonio 16771671beeing the bo
some louer of my Lord,
16781672mu
st needes be like my Lord. If it be
so,
how
the Merchant of Venice.
16791673How little is the co
st I haue be
stowed
16801674in purcha
sing the
semblance of my
soule;
16811675From out the
state of helli
sh cruelty,
16821676This comes too neere the prai
sing of my
selfe,
16831677Therefore no more of it: heere other things
16841678Lorenso I commit into your hands,
16851679The hu
sbandry and mannage of my hou
se,
16861680Vntill my Lords returne: for mine owne part
16871681I haue toward heauen breath'd a
secret vowe,
16881682To liue in prayer and contemplation,
16891683Onely attended by
Nerrissa heere,
16901684Vntill her hu
sband and my Lords returne,
16911685There is a Mona
stry two miles o
ff,
16921686And there we will abide. I doe de
sire you
16941688the which my loue and
some nece
ssity
16961690Lorens. Madame, with all my hart,
16971691I
shall obey you in all faire commaunds.
16981692Por. My people doe already know my mind,
16991693And will acknowledge you and
Iessica 17001694in place of Lord
Bassanio and my
selfe.
17011695So far you well till we
shall meete againe.
17021696Lor. Faire thoughts and happy houres attend on you.
17031697Iessi. I wi
sh your Ladi
ship all harts content.
17041698Por. I thank you for your wi
sh, and am well plea
sd
17051699to wi
sh it back on you: far you well
Iessica.
Exeunt. 17061700Now
Balthaser, as I haue euer found thee hone
st true,
17071701So let me
find thee
still: take this
same letter,
17081702and v
se thou all th'indeuour of a man,
17091703In
speede to Mantua,
see thou render this
17101704into my co
sin hands Do
ctor
Belario,
17111705And looke what notes and garments he doth giue thee,
17121706bring them
I pray thee with imagin'd
speede
17131707vnto the Trane
ct, to the common Ferrie
17141708which trades to Venice;
wa
st no time in words
17151709but get thee gone, I
shall be there before thee.
G. Baltha.
The comicall Historie of
17161710Baltha. Madam, I goe with all conuenient
speede.
17171711Portia Come on
Nerrissa, I haue worke in hand
17181712That you yet know not of; weele
see our hu
sbands
17211715Portia. They
shall
Nerrissa: but in
such a habite,
17221716that they
shall thinke we are accompli
shed
17231717with that we lacke; Ile hold thee any wager
17241718when we are both accoutered like young men,
17251719ile proue the prettier fellow of the two,
17261720and weare my dagger with the brauer grace,
17271721and
speake betweene the change of man and boy,
17281722with a reede voyce, and turne two min
sing
steps
17291723into a manly
stride; and
speake of frayes
17301724like a
fine bragging youth: and tell quaint lyes
17311725how honorable Ladies
sought my loue,
17321726which I denying, they fell
sicke and dyed.
17331727I could not doe withall: then ile repent,
17341728and wi
sh for all that, that I had not killd them;
17351729And twenty of the
se punie lies ile tell,
17361730that men
shall
sweare I haue di
scontinued
schoole
17371731aboue a twelue-moneth: I haue within my minde
17381732a thou
sand raw tricks of the
se bragging Iacks,
17401734Nerriss. Why,
shall we turne to men?
17411735Portia. Fie, what a que
stion's that,
17421736if thou wert nere a lewd interpreter:
17431737But come, ile tell thee all my whole deuice
17441738when I am in my coach, which
stayes for vs
17451739at the Parke gate; and therefore ha
st away,
17461740for we mu
st mea
sure twenty miles to day.
Exeunt. 17481742Clowne. Yes truly, for looke you, the
sinnes of the Father are to
17491743be laid vpon the children, therefore I promi
se you, I feare you, I
17501744was alwaies plaine with you, and
so now I
speake my agitation of
17511745the matter: therefore be a good chere, for truly I thinke you are
17521746damnd, there is but one hope in it that can doe you any good, and
that
the Merchant of Venice.
17531747that is but a kinde of ba
stard hope neither.
17541748Iessica. And what hope is that I pray thee?
17551749Clowne. Marry you may partly hope that your Father got you
17561750not, that you are not the Iewes daughter.
17571751Iessica. That were a kind of ba
stard hope in deede,
so the
sinnes
17581752of my mother
should be vi
sited vpon me.
17591753Clowne. Truly then I feare you are damnd both by father and
17601754mother: thus when I
shun
Scilla your father, I fall into
Caribdis 17611755your mother; well, you are gone both wayes.
17621756Iessica. I
shall be
sau'd by my hu
sband, he hath made me a Chri
17641758Clowne. Truly the more to blame he, we were Chri
stians enow
17651759before, in as many as could well liue one by another: this making
17661760of Chri
stians will rai
se the price of Hogs, if we grow all to be pork
17671761eaters, we
shall not
shortly haue a ra
sher on the coles for mony.
17691763Iessi. Ile tell my hu
sband
Launcelet what you
say, here he come?
17701764Loren. I
shall grow iealious of you
shortly
Launcelet, if you thus
17721766Iessica. Nay, you neede not feare vs
Lorenzo,
Launcelet and I are
17731767out, he tells me
flatly there's no mercy for mee in heauen, becau
se
17741768I am a Iewes daughter: and he
sayes you are no good member of
17751769the common-wealth, for in conuerting Iewes to Chri
stians, you
17771771Loren. I
shall aun
swere that better to the common-wealth than
17781772you can the getting vp of the Negroes belly: the Moore is
with
17801774Clowne. It is much that the Moore
should be more then rea
- 17811775son: but if
she be le
sse then an hone
st woman,
she is indeede more
17831777Loren. How euery foole can play vpon the word, I thinke the
17841778be
st grace of wit will
shortly turne into
silence, and di
scour
se grow
17851779commendable in none onely but Parrats: goe in
sirra, bid them
17871781Clowne. That is done
sir, they haue all
stomacks?
17881782Loren. Goodly Lord what a wit
snapper are you, than bid them
G2 Clowne.
The comicall Historie of
17901784Clowne. That is done to
sir, onely couer is the word.
17921786Clowne. Not
so
sir neither, I know my duty.
17931787Loren. Yet more quarrelling with occa
sion, wilt thou
shewe
17941788the whole wealth of thy wit in an in
stant; I pray thee vnder
stand a
17951789plaine man in his plaine meaning: goe to thy fellowes, bid them
17961790couer the table,
serue in the meate, and we will come in to dinner.
17971791Clowne. For the table
sir, it
shall be
seru'd in, for the meate
sir, it
17981792shall be couerd, for your comming in to dinner
sir, why let it be as
17991793humors and conceites
shall gouerne.
Exit Clowne. 18001794Loren. O deare di
scretion, how his words are
suted,
18011795The foole hath planted in his memorie
18021796an Armie of good words, and I doe know
18031797a many fooles that
stand in better place,
18041798garni
sht like him, that for a trick
sie word
18051799de
fie the matter: how cher
st thou
Iessica,
18061800And now good
sweet
say thy opinion,
18071801How doo
st thou like the Lord
Bassanios wife?
18081802Iessi. Pa
st all expre
ssing, it is very meete
18091803the Lord
Bassanio liue an vpright life
18101804For hauing
such a ble
ssing in his Lady,
18111805he
findes the ioyes of heauen heere on earth,
18121806And if on earth he doe not meane it, it
18131807in rea
son he
should neuer come to heauen?
18141808Why, if two Gods
should play
some heauenly match,
18151809and on the wager lay two earthly women,
18161810And
Portia one: there mu
st be
somthing el
se
18171811paund with the other, for the poore rude world
18201814ha
st thou of me, as
she is for wife.
18211815Iessi. Nay, but a
ske my opinion to of that?
18221816Loren. I will anone,
fir
st let vs goe to dinner?
18231817Iessi. Nay, let me prai
se you while I haue a
stomack?
18241818Loren. No pray thee, let it
serue for table talke,
18251819Then how
so mere thou
speak
st mong other things,
Iessi.
the Merchant of Venice.
18271821Iessi. Well, ile
set you forth.
Exit. 18281822Enter the Duke, the Magnificoes, Anthonio, Bassanio, 18311825Antho. Ready,
so plea
se your grace?
18321826Duke. I am
sorry for thee, thou art come to aun
swere
18331827a
stonie aduer
sarie, an inhumaine wretch,
18341828vncapable of pitty, voyd, and empty
18371831your grace hath tane great paines to qualli
fie
18381832his rigorous cour
se; but
since he
stands obdurate,
18391833And that no lawfull meanes can carry me
18401834out of his enuies reach, I doe oppo
se
18411835my patience to his furie, and am armd
18421836to
su
ffer with a quietnes of
spirit,
18431837the very tiranny and rage of his.
18441838Duke. Goe one and call the Iew into the Court.
18451839Salerio. He is ready at the dore, he comes my Lord.
18471841Duke. Make roome, and let him
stand before our face.
18481842Shylocke the world thinks, and I thinke
so to
18491843that thou but leade
st this fa
shion of thy mallice
18501844to the la
st houre of a
ct, and then tis thought
18511845thowlt
shew thy mercy and remor
se more
strange,
18521846than is thy
strange apparant cruelty;
18531847and where thou now exa
cts the penalty,
18541848which is a pound of this poore Merchants
fle
sh,
18551849thou wilt not onely loo
se the forfaiture,
18561850but toucht with humaine gentlenes and loue:
18571851Forgiue a moytie of the principall,
18581852glauncing an eye of pitty on his lo
sses
18591853that haue of late
so hudled on his backe,
18601854Enow to pre
sse a royall Merchant downe;
18611855And pluck comi
seration of this
states
18621856from bra
ssie bo
somes and rough harts of
flints,
18631857from
stubborne Turkes, and Tarters neuer traind
G3 to
The comicall Historie of
18651859We all expe
ct a gentle aun
swere Iewe?
18661860Iewe. I haue po
sse
st your grace of what I purpo
se,
18671861and by our holy Sabaoth haue I
sworne
18681862to haue the due and forfet of my bond,
18691863if you deny it, let the danger light
18701864vpon your charter and your Citties freedome?
18711865Youle a
ske me why I rather choo
se to haue
18721866a weight of carrion
fle
sh, then to receaue
18731867three thou
sand ducats: Ile not aun
swer that?
18741868But
say it is my humour, is it aun
swerd?
18751869What if my hou
se be troubled with a Rat,
18761870and I be plea
sd to giue ten thou
sand ducats
18771871to haue it baind?
what, are you aun
swerd yet?
18781872Some men there are loue not a gaping pigge?
18791873Some that are mad if they behold a Cat?
18801874And others when the bagpipe
sings ith no
se,
18811875cannot containe their vrine for a
ffe
ction.
18821876Mai
sters of pa
ssion
swayes it to the moode
18831877of what it likes or loathes, now for your aun
swer:
18841878As there is no
firme rea
son to be rendred
18851879why he cannot abide a gaping pigge?
18861880why he a harmele
sse nece
ssarie Cat?
18871881why he a woollen bagpipe: but of force
18881882mu
st yeeld to
such in euitable
shame,
18891883as to o
ffend him
selfe being o
ffended:
18901884So can I giue no rea
son, nor I will not,
18911885more then a lodgd hate, and a certaine loathing
18921886I beare
Anthonio, that
I follow thus
18931887a loo
sing
sute again
st him? are you aun
swered?
18941888Bass. This is no aun
swer thou vnfeeling man,
18951889to excu
se the currant of thy cruelty?
18961890Iewe. I am not bound to plea
se thee with my an
swers?
18971891Bass. Doe all men kill the things they doe not loue?
18981892Iewe. Hates any man the thing he would not kill?
18991893Bass. Euery o
ffence is not a hate at
fir
st?
19001894Iewe. What would
st thou haue a
serpent
sting thee twice?
Antho.
the Merchant of Venice.
19011895Anth. I pray you think you que
stion with the
Iewe,
19021896you may as well goe
stand vpon the Beach
19031897and bid the maine
flood bate his v
suall height,
19041898you may as
well v
se que
stion with the Woolfe
19061900You may as well forbid the mountaine of Pines
19071901to wag their high tops, and to make no noi
se
19081902when they are fretten with the gu
sts of heauen:
19091903You may as well doe any thing mo
st hard
19101904as
seeke to
soften that then which what's harder:
19111905his
Iewi
sh hart? therefore
I doe be
seech you
19121906make no moe o
ffers, v
se no farther meanes,
19131907but with all briefe and plaine conueniencie
19141908let me haue iudgement, and the
Iewe his will?
19151909Bass. For thy three thou
sand ducats heere is
sixe?
19161910Iewe. If euery ducat in
sixe thou
sand ducats
19171911were in
sixe parts, and euery part a ducat,
19181912I would not draw them,
I would haue my bond?
19191913Duk. How
shalt thou hope for mercy rendring none?
19201914Iewe. What iudgment
shall
I dread doing no wrong?
19211915you haue among you many a purcha
st slaue,
19221916which like your A
sses, and your Dogs and Mules
19231917you v
se in abie
ct and in
slaui
sh parts,
19241918becau
se you bought them,
shall
I say to you,
19251919let them be free, marry them to your heires?
19261920why
sweat they vnder burthens, let their beds
19271921be made as
soft as yours, and let their pallats
19281922be
sea
sond with
such viands, you will aun
swer
19291923the
slaues are ours,
so doe
I aun
swer you:
19301924The pound of
fle
sh which
I demaund of him
19311925is deerely bought, as mine and
I will haue it:
19321926if you deny me,
fie vpon your Law,
19331927there is no force in the decrees of Venice:
19341928I stand for iudgement, aun
swer,
shall I haue it?
19351929Duke. Vpon my power
I may di
smi
sse this Court,
19361930vnle
sse
Bellario a learned Do
ctor,
19371931whom I haue
sent for to determine this
Come
The comciall Historie of
19391933Salerio. My Lord, heere
stayes without
19401934a me
ssenger with letters from the Do
ctor,
19421936Duke. Bring vs the letters? call the Me
ssenger?
19431937Bass. Good cheere
Anthonio? what man, courage yet:
19441938The Iew
shall haue my
fle
sh, blood, bones and all,
19451939ere thou
shalt loo
se for me one drop of blood?
19461940Antho. I am a tainted
weather of the
flocke,
19471941meete
st for death, the weake
st kind of fruite
19481942drops earlie
st to the ground, and
so let me;
19491943You cannot better be imployd
Bassanio,
19501944then to liue
still and write mine Epitaph?
19521946Duke. Came you from Padua from
Bellario?
19531947Ner. From both? my L.
Bellario greetes your grace?
19541948Bass. Why doo
st thou whet thy knife
so earne
stly?
19551949Iewe. To cut the forfaiture from that bankrout there?
19561950Gratia. Not on thy
soule: but on thy
soule har
sh Iew
19571951thou mak
st thy knife keene: but no mettell can,
19581952no, not the hangmans axe beare halfe the keenene
sse
19591953of thy
sharpe enuie: can no prayers pearce thee?
19601954Iewe. No, none that thou ha
st wit enough to make.
19611955Gratia. O be thou damnd, inexecrable dogge,
19621956And for thy life let iu
stice be accu
sd;
19631957Thou almo
st mak'
st me wauer in my faith,
19641958to hold opinion with
Pythagoras,
19651959that
soules of Animalls infu
se them
selues
19661960into the trunks of men: Thy curri
sh spirit
19671961gouernd a Woolfe, who hangd for humaine
slaughter
19681962euen from the gallowes did his fell
soule
fleete,
19691963and while
st thou laye
st in thy vnhallowed dam;
19701964infu
sd it
selfe in thee: for thy de
sires
19711965are
wolui
sh, bloody,
staru'd, and rauenous.
19721966Iewe. Till thou can
st raile the
seale from o
ff my bond,
19731967Thou but o
ffend
st thy lungs to
speake
so loud:
19741968Repaire thy wit good youth, or it will fall
To
the Merchant of Venice.
19751969to curele
sse ruine. I
stand heere for law.
19761970Duke. This letter from
Bellario doth commend
19771971a young and learned Do
ctor to our Court:
19801974to know your aun
swer whether youle admit him.
19811975Duke. With all my hart:
some three or foure of you
19821976goe giue him curteous condu
ct to this place,
19831977meane time the Court
shall heare
Bellarios letter.
Your Grace shall vnderstand, that at the receit of your letter I
19851979am very
sicke, but in the in
stant that your me
ssenger came, in lo
- 19861980uing vi
sitation was with me a young Do
ctor of Rome, his name is
19871981Balthazer: I acquainted him with the cau
se in cōtrouer
sie between
19881982the
Iew and
Anthonio the Merchant, wee turnd ore many bookes
19891983together, hee is furni
shed with my opinion, which bettered
with
19901984his owne learning, the greatnes whereof I cannot enough com
- 19911985mend, comes with him at my importunitie, to
fill vp your graces
19921986reque
st in my
stead.
I be
seech you let his lacke of yeeres be no im
- 19931987pediment to let him lacke a reuerend e
stimation, for
I neuer knew
19941988so young a body with
so olde a head: I leaue him to your gracious
19951989acceptance, who
se tryall
shall better publi
sh his commendation.
19971991Duke. You heare the learnd
Bellario what he writes,
19981992and heere I take it is the do
ctor come.
19991993Giue me your hand, come you from old
Bellario? 20011995Duke. You are welcome, take your place:
20021996are you acquainted with the di
fference
20031997that holds this pre
sent que
stion in the Court.
20041998Por. I am enformed throughly of the cau
se,
20051999which is the Merchant here? and which the
Iew?
20062000Duke. Anthonio and old
Shylocke, both
stand forth.
20092003Por. Of a
strange nature is the
sute you follow,
20102004yet in
such rule, that the Venetian law
H. cannot
The comciall Historie of
20112005cannot impugne you as you doe proceed.
20122006You
stand within his danger, doe you not.
20162010Por. Then mu
st the
Iew be mercifull.
20172011Shy. On what compul
sion mu
st I, tell me that.
20182012Por. The qualitie of mercie is not
straind,
20192013it droppeth as the gentle raine from heauen
20202014vpon the place beneath: it is twi
se ble
st,
20212015it ble
sseth him that giues, and him that takes,
20222016tis mightie
st in the mightie
st, it becomes
20232017the throned Monarch better then his crowne.
20242018His
scepter
showes the force of temporall power,
20252019the attribut to awe and maie
stie,
20262020wherein doth
sit the dread and feare of Kings:
20272021but mercie is aboue this
sceptred
sway,
20282022it is enthroned in the harts of Kings,
20292023it is an attribut to God him
selfe;
20302024and earthly power doth then
show like
st gods
20312025when mercie
sea
sons iu
stice: therefore
Iew,
20322026though iu
stice be thy plea, con
sider this,
20332027that in the cour
se of iu
stice, none of vs
20342028should
see
saluation:
we doe pray for mercy,
20352029and that
same prayer, doth teach vs all to render
20362030the deedes of mercie. I haue
spoke thus much
20372031to mittigate the iu
stice of thy plea,
20382032which if thou follow, this
stri
ct Court of Venice
20392033mu
st needes giue
sentence gain
st the Merchant there.
20402034Shy. My deeds vpon my head, I craue the law,
20412035the penalty and forfaite of my bond.
20422036Por. Is he not able to di
scharge the money?
20432037Bass. Yes, heere I tender it for him in the Court,
20442038yea, twi
se the
summe, if that will not
su
ffise,
20452039I will be bound to pay it ten times ore
20462040on forfait of my hands, my head, my hart,
20472041if this will not
su
ffise, it mu
st appeare
that
the Merchant of Venice.
20482042that malice beares downe truth. And
I be
seech you
20492043wre
st once the law to your authoritie,
20502044to doe a great right, doe a little wrong,
20512045and curbe this cruell deuill of his will.
20522046Por. It mu
st not be, there is no power in Venice
20542048twill be recorded for a precedent,
20552049and many an errour by the
same example
20562050will ru
sh into the
state, it cannot be.
20572051Shy. A Daniell come to iudgement: yea a Daniell.
20582052O wi
se young Iudge how
I doe honour thee.
20592053Por. I pray you let me looke vpon the bond.
20602054Shy. Heere tis mo
st reuerend do
ctor, here it is.
20612055Por. Shylocke theres thrice thy money o
ffred thee.
20622056Shy. An oath, an oath, I haue an oath in heauen,
20632057shall I lay periurie vpon my
soule?
20662060and lawfully by this the Iew may claime
20672061a pound of
fle
sh, to be by him cut o
ff 20682062neere
st the Merchants hart: be mercifull,
20692063take thrice thy money, bid me teare the bond.
20702064Shy. When it is payd, according to the tenure.
20712065It doth appeare you are a worthy iudge,
20722066you know the law, your expo
sition
20732067hath beene mo
st sound:
I charge you by the law,
20742068whereof you are a well de
seruing piller,
20752069proceede to iudgement: by my
soule I
sweare,
20762070there is no power in the tongue of man
20772071to alter me,
I stay here on my Bond,
20782072An. Mo
st hartelie
I doe be
seech the Court
20812075you mu
st prepare your bo
some for his knife.
20822076Shy. O noble
Iudge, ô excellent young man.
20832077Por. For the intent and purpo
se of the law
20842078hath full relation to the penaltie,
H2 which
The comicall Historie of
20852079which heere appeareth due vpon the bond.
20862080Iew. Tis very true: ô wi
se and vpright Iudge,
20872081how much more elder art thou then thy lookes.
20882082Por. Therefore lay bare your bo
some.
20902084so
sayes the bond, doth it not noble Iudge?
20912085Neere
st his hart, tho
se are the very words.
20922086Por. It is
so, are there ballance here to weigh the
fle
sh?
20942088Por. Haue by
some Surgion
Shylocke on your charge,
20952089to
stop his wounds, lea
st he doe bleede to death.
20962090Iew. Is it
so nominated in the bond?
20972091Por. It is not
so expre
st, but what of that?
20982092Twere good you doe
so much for charitie.
20992093Iew. I cannot
finde it, tis not in the bond.
21002094Por. You Merchant, haue you any thing to
say?
21012095Ant. But little;
I am armd and well prepard,
21022096giue me your hand
Bassanio, far you well,
21032097greeue not that
I am falne to this for you:
21042098for heerein Fortune
showes her
selfe more kind
21052099then is her cu
stome: it is
still her v
se
21062100to let the wretched man out-liue his wealth,
21072101to view with hollow eye and wrinckled brow
21082102an age of pouertie: from which lingring pennance
21092103of
such mi
sery doth
she cut me of.
21102104Commend me to your honourable wife,
21112105tell her the proce
sse of
Anthonios end,
21122106say how I lou'd you,
speake me faire in death:
21132107and when the tale is told, bid her be iudge
21142108whether
Bassanio had not once a loue:
21152109Repent but you that you
shall loo
se your friend
21162110and he repents not that he payes your debt.
21172111For if the
Iew doe cut but deepe enough,
21182112Ile pay it in
stantly with all my hart.
21192113Bass. Anthonio,
I am married to a wife
21202114which is as deere to me as life it
selfe,
21212115but life it
selfe, my wife, and all the world,
are
the Merchant of Venice.
21222116are not with me e
steemd aboue thy life.
21232117I would loo
se all, I
sacri
fize them all
21242118heere to this deuill, to deliuer you.
21252119Por. Your wife would giue you little thankes for that
21262120if
she were by to heare you make the o
ffer.
21272121Gra. I haue a wife who
I prote
st I loue,
21282122I would
she were in heauen,
so
she could
21292123intreate
some power to change this curri
sh Iew.
21302124Ner. Tis well you o
ffer it behind her back,
21312125the wi
sh would make el
se an vnquiet hou
se.
21322126Iew. The
se be the chri
stian hu
sbands,
I haue a daughter
21332127would any of the
stocke of Barrabas
21342128had beene her hu
sband, rather then a Chri
stian.
21352129We tri
fle time,
I pray thee pur
sue
sentence.
21362130Por. A pound of that
same Merchants
fle
sh is thine,
21372131the Court awards it, and the law doth giue it.
21392133Por. And you mu
st cut this
fle
sh from o
ff his brea
st,
21402134the law alowes it, and the court awards it.
21412135Iew. Mo
st learned Iudge, a
sentence, come prepare.
21422136Por. Tarry a little, there is
some thing el
se,
21432137this bond doth giue thee heere no iote of blood,
21442138the words expre
sly are a pound of
fle
sh:
21452139take then thy bond, take thou thy pound of
fle
sh,
21462140but in the cutting it, if thou doo
st shed
21472141one drop of Chri
stian blood, thy lands and goods
21482142are by the lawes of Venice con
fiscate
21532147Por. Thy
selfe
shalt
see the A
ct:
21542148for as thou vrge
st iu
stice, be a
ssurd
21552149thou
shalt haue iu
stice more then thou de
sir
st.
21562150Gra. O learned iudge, mark
Iew, a learned iudge.
21572151Iew. I take this o
ffer then, pay the bond thrice
H.3. Bass.
The comciall Historie of
21602154Por. Soft, the Iew
shal haue all iu
stice,
soft no ha
st,
21612155he
shall haue nothing but the penalty.
21622156Gra. O Iew, an vpright Iudge, a learned Iudge.
21632157Por. Therefore prepare thee to cut of the
fle
sh,
21642158Shed thou no blood, nor cut thou le
sse nor more
21652159but iu
st a pound of
fle
sh: if thou tak'
st more
21662160or le
sse then a iu
st pound, be it but
so much
21672161as makes it light or heauy in the
sub
stance,
21682162or the deui
sion of the twentith part
21692163of one poore
scruple, nay if the
scale doe turne
21702164but in the e
stimation of a hayre,
21712165thou dye
st, and all thy goods are con
fiscate.
21722166Gra. A
second Daniell, a Daniell Iew,
21732167now in
fidell
I haue you on the hip.
21742168Por. Why doth the Iew pau
se, take thy forfaiture.
21752169Shy. Giue me my principall, and let me goe.
21762170Bass. I haue it ready for thee, here it is.
21772171Por. Hee hath refu
sd it in the open Court,
21782172hee
shall haue meerely iu
stice and his bond.
21792173Gra. A Daniell
still
say
I, a
second Daniell,
21802174I thanke thee
Iew for teaching me that word.
21812175Shy. Shall
I not haue barely my principall?
21822176Por. Thou
shalt haue nothing but the forfaiture
21832177to be
so taken at thy perrill Iew.
21842178Shy. Why then the deuill giue him good of it:
21872181the law hath yet another hold on you.
21882182It is ena
cted in the lawes of Venice,
21892183if it be proued again
st an alien,
21902184that by dire
ct, or indire
ct attempts
21912185he
seeke the life of any Cittizen,
21922186the party gain
st the which he doth contriue,
21932187shall
seaze one halfe his goods, the other halfe
21942188comes to the priuie co
ffer of the State,
21952189and the o
ffenders life lies in the mercy
of
the Merchant of Venice.
21962190of the Duke onely, gain
st all other voyce.
21972191In which predicament I
say thou
stand
st:
21982192for it appeares by manife
st proceeding,
21992193that indire
ctly, and dire
ctly to
22002194thou ha
st contriued again
st the very life
22012195of the defendant: and thou ha
st incurd
22022196the danger formorly by me rehear
st.
22032197Downe therefore, and beg mercie of the Duke.
22042198Gra. Beg that thou mai
st haue leaue to hang thy
selfe,
22052199and yet thy wealth beeing forfait to the
state,
22062200thou ha
st not left the value of a cord,
22072201therefore thou mu
st be hangd at the
states charge.
22082202Duke. That thou
shalt
see the di
fference of our
spirit
22092203I pardon thee thy life before thou a
ske it:
22102204for halfe thy wealth, it is
Anthonios,
22112205the other halfe comes to the generall
state,
22122206which humblenes may driue vnto a
fine.
22132207Por. I for the
state, not for
Anthonio.
22142208Shy. Nay, take my life and all, pardon not that,
22152209you take my hou
se, when you doe take the prop
22162210that doth
su
staine my hou
se: you take my life
22172211when you doe take the meanes whereby
I liue.
22182212Por. What mercy can you render him
Anthonio? 22192213Gra. A halter gratis, nothing el
se for God
sake.
22202214Anth. So plea
se my Lord the Duke, & all the Court
22212215to quit the
fine for one halfe of his goods,
22222216I am content:
so he will let me haue
22232217the other halfe in v
se, to render it
22242218vpon his death vnto the Gentleman
22262220Two things prouided more, that for this fauour
22272221he pre
sently become a Chri
stian:
22282222the other, that he doe record a gift
22292223heere in the Court of all he dies po
sse
st 22302224vnto his
sonne
Lorenzo and his daughter.
22312225Duke. He
shall doe this, or el
se I doe recant
22322226the pardon that I late pronounced heere.
Por.
The comciall Historie of
22332227Por. Art thou contented Iew? what do
st thou
say?
22352229Por. Clarke, draw a deede of gift.
22362230Shy. I pray you giue me leaue to goe from hence,
22372231I am not well,
send the deede after me,
22392233Duke. Get thee gone, but doe it.
22402234Shy. In chri
stning
shalt thou haue two Godfathers,
22412235had I beene iudge, thou
should
st haue had ten more,
22422236to bring thee to the gallowes, not to the font.
Exit. 22432237Duke. Sir I entreate you home with me to dinner.
22442238Por. I humbly doe de
sire your Grace of pardon,
22452239I mu
st away this night toward Padua,
22462240and it is meete I pre
sently
set forth.
22472241Duke. I am
sorry that your ley
sure
serues you not.
22482242Anthonio, grati
fie this gentleman,
22492243for in my mind you are much bound to him.
22512245Bass. Mo
st worthy gentleman, I and my friend
22522246haue by your wi
sedome been this day aquitted
22532247of greeuous penalties, in lewe whereof,
22542248three thou
sand ducats due vnto the
Iew
22552249wee freely cope your curtious paines withall.
22562250An. And
stand indebted ouer and aboue
22572251in loue and
seruice to you euer-more.
22582252Por. Hee is well payd that is well
sati
sfied,
22592253and I deliuering you, am
sati
sfied,
22602254and therein doe account my
selfe well payd,
22612255my minde was neuer yet more mercinarie.
22622256I pray you know me when we meete againe,
22632257I wi
sh you well, and
so I take my leaue.
22642258Bass. Deere
sir, of force
I mu
st attempt you further,
22652259take
some remembrance of vs as a tribute,
22662260not as fee: graunt me two things I pray you,
22672261not to deny me, and to pardon me.
22682262Por. You pre
sse me farre, and therefore
I wil yeeld,
22692263giue mee your gloues, Ile weare them for your
sake,
and
the Merchant of Venice.
22702264and for your loue ile take this ring from you,
22712265doe not draw back your hand, ile take no more,
22722266and you in loue
shall not denie me this?
22732267Bass. This ring good
sir, alas it is a tri
fle,
22742268I will not
shame my
selfe to giue you this?
22752269Por. I will haue nothing el
se but onely this,
22762270and now me thinks I haue a minde to it?
22772271Bass. There's more depends on this then on the valew,
22782272the deare
st ring in Venice will I giue you,
22792273and
finde it out by proclamation,
22802274onely for this I pray you pardon me?
22812275Por. I
see
sir you are liberall in o
ffers,
22822276you taught me
fir
st to beg, and now me thinks
22832277you teach me how a begger
should be aun
swerd.
22842278Bass. Good
sir, this ring was giuen me by my wife,
22852279and when
she put it on,
she made me vowe
22862280that I
should neither
sell, nor giue, nor loo
se it.
22872281Por. That
scu
se
serues many men to
saue their gifts,
22882282and if your wife be not a mad woman,
22892283and know how well I haue de
seru'd this ring,
22902284she would not hold out enemy for euer
22912285for giuing it to me:
well, peace be with you.
Exeunt. 22922286Anth. My L.
Bassanio, let him haue the ring,
22932287let his de
seruings and my loue withall
22942288be valued gain
st your wiues commaundement.
22952289Bass. Goe
Gratiano, runne and ouer-take him,
22962290giue him the ring, and bring him if thou can
st 22972291vnto
Anthonios hou
se, away, make ha
st.
Exit Gratiano. 22982292Come, you and I will thither pre
sently,
22992293and in the morning early will we both
23002294flie toward Belmont, come
Anthonio.
23032297Por. Enquire the Iewes hou
se out, giue him this deed,
23042298and let him
signe it, weele away to night,
23052299and be a day before our hu
sbands home:
23062300this deede will be well welcome to
Lorenzo?
I. Enter
The comicall Historie of
23082302Grati. Faire
sir, you are well ore-tane:
23092303My L.
Bassanio vpon more aduice,
23102304hath
sent you heere this ring, and doth intreate
23132307his ring I doe accept mo
st thankfully,
23142308and
so I pray you tell him: furthermore,
23152309I pray you
shew my youth old
Shylockes hou
se.
23172311Ner. Sir,
I would
speake with you:
23182312Ile
see if
I can get my hu
sbands ring
23192313which I did make him
sweare to keepe for euer.
23202314Por. Thou mai
st I warrant, we
shal haue old
swearing
23212315that they did giue the rings away to men;
23222316but wele out-face them, and out-
sweare them to:
23232317away, make ha
st, thou know
st where I will tarry.
23242318Ner. Come good
sir, will you
shew me to this hou
se.
23262320Lor. The moone
shines bright. In
such a night as this,
23272321when the
sweet winde did gently ki
sse the trees,
23282322and they did make no noy
se, in
such a night
23292323Troylus me thinks mounted the Troian walls,
23302324and
sigh'd his
soule toward the Grecian tents
23332327did
Thisbie fearefully ore-trip the dewe,
23342328and
saw the Lyons
shadow ere him
selfe,
23372331stoode
Dido with a willow in her hand
23382332vpon the wilde
sea banks, and waft her Loue
23412335Medea gathered the inchanted hearbs
did
the Merchant of Venice.
23442338did
Iessica steale from the wealthy Iewe,
23452339and with an vnthrift loue did runne from Venice,
23482342did young
Lorenzo sweare he loued her well,
23492343stealing her
soule with many vowes of faith,
23522346did pretty
Iessica (like a little
shrow)
23532347slaunder her Loue, and he forgaue it her.
23542348Iessi. I would out-night you did no body come
: 23552349But harke, I heare the footing of a man.
23572351Loren. Who comes
so fa
st in
silence of the night?
23592353Loren. A friend, what friend, your name I pray you friend?
23602354Mess. Stephano is my name, and I bring word
23612355my Mi
stres will before the breake of day
23622356be heere at Belmont,
she doth
stray about
23632357by holy cro
sses where
she kneeles and prayes
23662360Mess. None but a holy Hermit and her mayd:
23672361I pray you is my Mai
ster yet returnd?
23682362Loren. He is not, nor we haue not heard from him,
23692363But goe we in I pray thee
Iessica,
23702364and ceremoniou
sly let vs prepare
23712365some welcome for the Mi
stres of the hou
se.
Enter Clowne. 23722366Clowne. Sola,
sola: wo ha, ho
sola,
sola.
23742368Clo. Sola, did you
see M.
Lorenzo, & M.
Lorenzo sola,
sola.
23752369Loren. Leaue hollowing man, heere.
23782372Clow. Tell him there's a Po
st come from my Mai
ster, with his
23792373horne full of good newes, my Mai
ster will be heere ere morning
I2 Loren.
The comicall Historie of
23812375Loren. Let's in, and there expe
ct their comming.
23822376And yet no matter: why
should we goe in.
23832377My friend
Stephen,
signi
fie
I pray you
23842378within the hou
se, your mi
stres is at hand,
23852379and bring your mu
sique foorth into the ayre.
23862380How
sweet the moone-light
sleepes vpon this banke,
23872381heere will we
sit, and let the
sounds of mu
sique
23882382creepe in our eares
soft
stilnes, and the night
23892383become the tutches of
sweet harmonie:
23902384sit
Iessica, looke how the
floore of heauen
23912385is thick inlayed with pattens of bright gold,
23922386there's not the
smalle
st orbe which thou behold
st 23932387but in his motion like an Angell
sings,
23942388still quiring to the young eyde Cherubins;
23952389such harmonie is in immortall
soules,
23962390but whil
st this muddy ve
sture of decay
23972391dooth gro
sly clo
se it in, we cannot heare it:
23982392Come hoe, and wake
Diana with a himne,
23992393with
sweete
st tutches pearce your mi
stres eare,
24002394and draw her home with mu
sique.
play Musique. 24012395Iessi. I am neuer merry when I heare
sweet mu
sique.
24022396Loren. The rea
son is your
spirits are attentiue:
24032397for doe but note a wild and wanton heard
24042398or race of youthfull and vnhandled colts
24052399fetching mad bounds, bellowing and neghing loude,
24062400which is the hote condition of their blood,
24072401if they but heare perchance a trumpet
sound,
24082402or any ayre of mu
sique touch their eares,
24092403you
shall perceaue them make a mutuall
stand,
24102404their
sauage eyes turn'd to a mode
st gaze,
24112405by the
sweet power of mu
sique: therefore the Poet
24122406did faine that Orpheus drew trees,
stones, and
floods.
24132407Since naught
so
stocki
sh hard and full of rage,
24142408but mu
sique for the time doth change his nature,
24152409the man that hath no mu
sique in him
selfe,
24162410nor is not moued with concord of
sweet
sounds,
24172411is
fit for trea
sons,
stratagems, and
spoiles,
the
the Merchant of Venice.
24182412the motions of his
spirit are dull as night,
24192413and his a
ffe
ctions darke as
Terebus: 24202414let no
such man be tru
sted: marke the mu
sique.
24222416Por. That light we
see is burning in my hall:
24232417how farre that little candell throwes his beames,
24242418so
shines a good deede in a naughty world.
24252419Ner. When the moone
shone we did not
see the candle?
24262420Por. So dooth the greater glory dim the le
sse,
24272421a
sub
stitute
shines brightly as a King
24282422vntill a King be by, and then his
state
24292423empties it
selfe, as doth an inland brooke
24302424into the maine of waters: mu
sique harke.
24312425Ner. It is your mu
sique Madame of the hou
se?
24322426Por. Nothing is good I
see without re
spe
ct,
24332427me thinks it
sounds much
sweeter then by day?
24342428Ner. Silence be
stowes that vertue on it Madam?
24352429Por. The Crow doth
sing as
sweetly as the Larke
24362430when neither is attended: and I thinke
24372431the Nightingale if
she
should
sing by day
24382432when euery Goo
se is cackling, would be thought
24392433no better a Mu
sition then the Renne?
24402434How many things by
sea
son,
sea
sond are
24412435to their right pray
se, and true perfe
ction:
24422436Peace, how the moone
sleepes with Endimion,
24452439or
I am much deceau'd of
Portia.
24462440Por. He knowes me as the blind man knowes the Cuckoe
24492443Por. We haue bin praying for our hu
sbands welfare,
24502444which
speed we hope the better for our words:
24532447but there is come a Me
ssenger before
I3 Por.
The comicall Historie of
24562450Giue order to my
seruants, that they take
24572451no note at all of our being ab
sent hence,
24582452nor you
Lorenzo,
Iessica nor you.
24592453Loren. Your hu
sband is at hand, I heare his trumpet,
24602454we are no tell-tales Madame, feare you not.
24612455Por. This night me thinks is but the day light
sicke,
24622456it lookes a little paler, tis a day,
24632457such as the day is when the
sunne is hid.
24642458 Enter Bassanio, Anthonio, Gratiano, and their 24662460Bass. We
should hold day with the Antipodes,
24672461if you would walke in ab
sence of the
sunne.
24682462Por. Let me giue light, but let me not be light,
24692463for a light wife doth make a heauie hu
sband,
24702464and neuer be
Bassanio so for me,
24712465but God
sort all: you are welcome home my Lord.
24722466Bass. I thank you Madam, giue welcome to my friend,
24732467this is the man, this is
Anthonio,
24742468to whom I am
so in
finitely bound.
24752469Por. You
should in all
sence be much bound to him,
24762470for as I heare he was much bound for you.
24772471Anth. No more then I am well acquitted of.
24782472Por. Sir, you are very welcome to our hou
se:
24792473it mu
st appeare in other wayes then words,
24802474therefore I
scant this breathing curte
sie.
24812475Gra. By yonder moone I
sweare you doe me wrong,
24822476infaith I gaue it to the Iudges Clarke,
24832477would he were gelt that had it for my part,
24842478since you doe take it Loue
so much at hart.
24852479Por. A quarrell hoe already, what's the matter?
24862480Grati. About a hoope of gold, a paltry ring
24872481that
she did giue me, who
se po
sie was
24882482for all the world like Cutlers poetry
24892483vpon a knife,
Loue me, and leaue me not.
24902484Ner. What talke you of the po
sie or the valew:
24912485You
swore to me when I did giue you,
that
the Merchant of Venice.
24922486that you would weare it till your houre of death,
24932487and that it
should lie with you in your graue,
24942488though not for me, yet for your vehement oathes,
24952489you
should haue beene re
spe
ctiue and haue kept it.
24962490Gaue it a Iudges Clarke: no Gods my Iudge
24972491the Clarke will nere weare haire ons face that had it.
24982492Gra. He will, and if he liue to be a man.
24992493Nerrissa. I, if a woman liue to be a man.
25002494Gra. Now by this hand I gaue it to a youth,
25012495a kind of boy, a little
scrubbed boy,
25022496no higher then thy
selfe, the Iudges Clarke,
25032497a prating boy that begd it as a fee,
25042498I could not for my hart deny it him.
25052499Por. You were to blame, I mu
st be plaine with you,
25062500to part
so
slightly with your wiues
fir
st gift,
25072501a thing
stuck on with oaths vpon your
finger,
25082502and
so riueted with faith vnto your
fle
sh.
25092503I gaue my Loue a ring, and made him
sweare
25102504neuer to part with it, and heere he
stands:
25112505I dare be
sworne for him he would not leaue it,
25122506nor pluck it from his
finger, for the wealth
25132507that the world mai
sters. Now in faith
Gratiano 25142508you giue your wife too vnkind a cau
se of griefe,
25152509and twere to me I
should be mad at it.
25162510Bass. Why I were be
st to cut my left hand o
ff,
25172511and
sweare I lo
st the ring defending it.
25182512Gra. My Lord
Bassanio gaue his ring away
25192513vnto the Iudge that begd it, and indeede
25202514de
seru'd it to: and then the boy his Clarke
25212515that tooke
some paines in writing, he begd mine,
25222516and neither man nor mai
ster would take ought
25242518Por. What ring gaue you my Lord?
25252519Not that I hope which you receau'd of me.
25262520Bass. If I could add a lie vnto a fault,
25272521I would deny it: but you
see my
finger
25282522hath not the ring vpon it, it is gone.
Por.
The comicall Historie of
25292523Por. Euen
so voyd is your fal
se hart of truth.
25302524By heauen I will nere come in your bed
25352529if you did know to whom I gaue the ring,
25362530if you did know for whom
I gaue the ring,
25372531and would conceaue for what
I gaue the ring,
25382532and how vnwillingly I left the ring,
25392533when naught would be accepted but the ring,
25402534you would abate the
strength of your di
splea
sure?
25412535Por. If you had knowne the vertue of the ring,
25422536or halfe her worthines that gaue the ring,
25432537or your owne honour to containe the ring,
25442538you would not then haue parted with the ring:
25452539what man is there
so much vnrea
sonable
25462540if you had plea
sd to haue defended it
25472541with any termes of zeale: wanted the mode
sty
25482542to vrge the thing held as a ceremonie:
25492543Nerrissa teaches me what to beleeue,
25502544ile die for't, but
some woman had the ring?
25512545Bass. No by my honour Madam, by my
soule
25522546no woman had it, but a ciuill Do
ctor,
25532547which did refu
se three thou
sand ducats of me,
25542548and begd the ring, the which I did denie him,
25552549and
su
fferd him to goe di
splea
sd away,
25562550euen he that had held vp the very life
25572551of my deere friend. What
should
I say
sweet Lady,
25582552I was inforc'd to
send it after him,
25592553I was be
set with
shame and curte
sie,
25602554my honour would not let ingratitude
25612555so much be
smere it: pardon me good Lady,
25622556for by the
se ble
ssed candels of the night,
25632557had you been there, I think you would haue begd
25642558the ring of me to giue the worthy Do
ctor?
25652559Por. Let not that Do
ctor ere come neere my hou
se
since
the Merchant of Venice.
25662560since he hath got the iewell that I loued,
25672561and that which you did
sweare to keepe for me,
25682562I will become as liberall as you,
25692563Ile not deny him any thing I haue,
25702564no, not my body, nor my hu
sbands bed:
25712565Know him I
shall, I am well
sure of it.
25722566Lie not a night from home. Watch me like Argos,
25732567if you doe not, if I be left alone,
25742568now by mine honour which is yet mine owne,
25752569ile haue that Do
ctor for mine bedfellow.
25762570Nerrissa. And I his Clark: therefore be well adui
sd
25772571how you doe leaue me to mine owne prote
ction.
25782572Gra. Well doe you
so: let not me take him then,
25792573for if I doe, ile mar the young Clarks pen.
25802574Anth. I am th'vnhappy
subie
ct of the
se quarrells.
25812575Por. Sir, greeue not you, you are welcome notwith
standing.
25822576Bass. Portia, forgiue me this enforced wrong,
25832577and in the hearing of the
se many friends
25842578I
sweare to thee, euen by thine owne faire eyes
25872581In both my eyes he doubly
sees him
selfe:
25882582In each eye one,
sweare by your double
selfe,
25912585Pardon this fault, and by my
soule I
sweare
25922586I neuer more will breake an oath with thee.
25932587Anth. I once did lend my body for his wealth,
25942588which but for him that had your hu
sbands ring
25952589had quite mi
scaried.
I dare be bound againe,
25962590my
soule vpon the forfet, that your Lord
25972591will neuer more breake faith adui
sedly.
25982592Por. Then you
shall be his
surety: giue him this,
25992593and bid him keepe it better then the other.
26002594Antho. Here Lord
Bassanio,
sweare to keepe this ring.
26012595Bass. By heauen it is the
same I gaue the Do
ctor.
26022596Por. I had it of him: pardon me
Bassanio,
K. for
The comicall Historie of
26032597for by this ring the Do
ctor lay with me.
26042598Nerrissa. And pardon me my gentle
Gratiano,
26052599for that
same
scrubbed boy the Do
ctors Clarke
26062600in liew of this, la
st night did lie with me.
26072601Grati. Why this is like the mending of high wayes
26082602in Sommer where the wayes are faire enough?
26092603What, are we cuckolds ere we haue de
seru'd it.
26102604Por. Speake not
so gro
sly, you are all amaz'd;
26112605Heere is a letter, reade it at your lea
sure,
26122606It comes from Padua from
Bellario,
26132607there you
shall
finde that
Portia was the Do
ctor,
26142608Nerrissa there her Clarke.
Lorenzo heere
26152609shall witnes I
set foorth as
soone as you,
26162610and euen but now returnd:
I haue not yet
26172611enterd my hou
se.
Anthonio you are welcome,
26182612and I haue better newes in
store for you
26192613than you expe
ct: vn
seale this letter
soone,
26202614there you
shall
finde three of your Argo
sies
26212615are richly come to harbour
sodainly.
26222616You
shall not know by what
strange accident
26252619Bass. Were you the Do
ctor, and
I knew you not?
26262620Gra. Were you the Clark that is to make me cuckold.
26272621Ner. I but the Clarke that neuer meanes to doe it,
26282622vnle
sse he liue vntill he be a man.
26292623Bass. (Sweet Do
ctor) you
shall be my bedfellow,
26302624when
I am ab
sent then lie with my wife.
26312625An. (Sweet Lady) you haue giuen me life and lyuing;
26322626for heere
I reade for certaine that my
ships
26352629my Clarke hath
some good comforts to for you.
26362630Ner I, and ile giue them him without a fee.
26372631There doe
I giue to you and
Iessica 26382632from the rich
Iewe, a
speciall deede of gift
26392633after his death, of all he dies po
sse
st of.
Loren.
the Merchant of Venice.
26402634Loren. Faire Ladies, you drop Manna in the way
26432637and yet I am
sure you are not
sati
sfied
26442638of the
se euents at full. Let vs goe in,
26452639and charge vs there vpon intergotories,
26462640and we will aun
swer all things faithfully.
26472641Gra. Let it be
so, the
fir
st intergotory
26482642that my
Nerrissa shall be
sworne on, is,
26492643whether till the next night
she had rather
stay,
26502644or goe to bed now being two houres to day:
26512645But were the day come,
I should wi
sh it darke
26522646till
I were couching with the Do
ctors Clarke.
26532647Well, while
I liue, ile feare no other thing
26542648so
sore, as keeping
safe
Nerrissas ring.