29802728Des. He
saies he will returne incontinent:
29812729He hath commanded me to goe to bed,
29842732Des. It was his bidding, therefore good
Emillia,
29852733Giue me my nightly wearing, and adiue,
29872735Em. I would you had neuer
seene him.
29882736Des. So would not I, my loue doth
so approue him,
29892737That euen his
stubbornene
sse, his checks and frownes.
29902738Prethee vnpin me; haue grace and fauour in them.
29912739Em. I haue laied the
se
sheetes you bade me, on the bed.
29922740Des. All's one good faith: how fooli
sh are our minds?
29932741If I doe die before thee, prethee
shrowd me
29962744Des. My mother had a maid cald
Barbary,
29972745She was in loue, and he
she lou'd, prou'd mad,
29982746And did for
sake her,
she has a
song of willow,
29992747An old thing 'twas, but it expre
st her fortune,
30002748And
she died
singing it, that Song to night,
30012749Will not goe from my mind -- harke, who's that knocks?
30272751Des. Now get thee gone, good night:
2752Mine eyes doe itch, does that bode weeping?
30352754Des. Would
st thou doe
such a deed, for all the world?
30372756Des. No, by this heauenly light.
30382757Em. Nor I neither, by this heauenly light,
30392758I might doe it as well in the darke.
30402759Des. Would thou doe
such a thing for all the world?
30412760Em. The world is a huge thing, it is a great price,
30432762Des. Good troth I thinke thou would
st not.
30442763Em. By my troth I thinke I
should, and vndo't when I had done
30452764it, mary I would not doe
such a thing for a ioynt ring; or for mea
- sures