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- Edition: Troilus and Cressida
Troilus and Cressida (Folio 1, 1623)
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THE TRAGEDIE OF
Troylus and Cressida.
33Actus Primus. Scoena Prima.
34Enter Pandarus and Troylus.
35Troylus.
36CAll here my Varlet, Ile vnarme againe.
37Why should I warre without the wals of Troy
39Each Troian that is master of his heart,
41Pan. Will this geere nere be mended?
44But I am weaker then a womans teare;
45Tamer then sleepe, fonder then ignorance;
46Lesse valiant then the Virgin in the night,
48Pan. Well, I haue told you enough of this: For my
49part, Ile not meddle nor make no farther. Hee that will
50haue a Cake out of the Wheate, must needes tarry the
51grinding.
52Troy. Haue I not tarried?
54Troy. Haue I not tarried?
56Troy. Still haue I tarried.
57Pan. I, to the leauening: but heeres yet in the word
58hereafter, the Kneading, the making of the Cake, the
60the cooling too, or you may chance to burne your lips.
63At Priams Royall Table doe I sit;
64And when faire Cressid comes into my thoughts,
66Pan. Well:
68Or any woman else.
69Troy. I was about to tell thee, when my heart,
70As wedged with a sigh, would riue in twaine,
72I haue (as when the Sunne doth light a-scorne)
79man, I would not (as they tearme it) praise it, but I wold
83When I doe tell thee, there my hopes lye drown'd:
84Reply not in how many Fadomes deepe
85They lye indrench'd. I tell thee, I am mad
87Powr'st in the open Vlcer of my heart,
88Her Eyes, her Haire, her Cheeke, her Gate, her Voice,
93Hard as the palme of Plough-man. This thou tel'st me;
97The Knife that made it.
102ha's the mends in her owne hands.
104Pan. I haue had my Labour for my trauell, ill thought
105on of her, and ill thought on of you: Gone betweene and
106betweene, but small thankes for my labour.
107Troy. What art thou angry Pandarus? what with me?
110be as faire on Friday, as Helen is on Sunday. But what
111care I? I care not and she were a Black-a-Moore, 'tis all
112one to me.
114Troy. I doe not care whether you doe or no. Shee's a
115Foole to stay behinde her Father: Let her to the Greeks,
117meddle nor make no more i'th' matter.
119Troy. Sweete Pandarus.
121as I found it, and there an end. Exit Pand.
122Sound Alarum.
125When with your bloud you daily paint her thus.
126I cannot fight vpon this Argument:
128But Pandarus: O Gods! How do you plague me?
129I cannot come to Cressid but by Pandar,
130And he's as teachy to be woo'd to woe,
132Tell me Apollo for thy Daphnes Loue
133What Cressid is, what Pandar, and what we:
134Her bed is India, there she lies, a Pearle,
135Between our Ilium, and where shee recides
136Let it be cald the wild and wandring flood,
138Our doubtfull hope, our conuoy and our Barke.
141Wherefore not a field?
143For womanish it is to be from thence:
151Troy. Better at home, if would I might were may:
152But to the sport abroad, are you bound thither?