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<document xmlns="http://cnx.rice.edu/cnxml" xmlns:md="http://cnx.rice.edu/mdml/0.4" xmlns:bib="http://bibtexml.sf.net/" id="id2734335">
<name>Twelfth night</name>
<metadata>
  <md:version>1.1</md:version>
  <md:created>2006/03/31 15:31:20.021 US/Central</md:created>
  <md:revised>2006/03/31 15:37:17.080 US/Central</md:revised>
  <md:authorlist>
      <md:author id="amacneil">
      <md:firstname>Angus</md:firstname>
      <md:othername>Joseph</md:othername>
      <md:surname>MacNeil</md:surname>
      <md:email>amacneil@uh.edu</md:email>
    </md:author>
  </md:authorlist>

  <md:maintainerlist>
    <md:maintainer id="amacneil">
      <md:firstname>Angus</md:firstname>
      <md:othername>Joseph</md:othername>
      <md:surname>MacNeil</md:surname>
      <md:email>amacneil@uh.edu</md:email>
    </md:maintainer>
  </md:maintainerlist>
  
  <md:keywordlist>
    <md:keyword>Play</md:keyword>
    <md:keyword>Shakespear</md:keyword>
  </md:keywordlist>

  <md:abstract>One of Shakespear's plays</md:abstract>
</metadata>
<content>
<para id="id2747058">Twelfth Night</para>
<section id="id2727921">
<name>ACT I</name>
<para id="id3006725">SCENE I. DUKE ORSINO's palace.</para>
<para id="id2985043">Enter DUKE ORSINO, CURIO, and other Lords;
Musicians attending</para>
<para id="id3262397">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3413807">If music be the food of love, play on;Give me
excess of it, that, surfeiting,The appetite may sicken, and so
die.That strain again! it had a dying fall:O, it came o'er my ear
like the sweet sound,That breathes upon a bank of violets,Stealing
and giving odour! Enough; no more:'Tis not so sweet now as it was
before.O spirit of love! how quick and fresh art thou,That,
notwithstanding thy capacityReceiveth as the sea, nought enters
there,Of what validity and pitch soe'er,But falls into abatement
and low price,Even in a minute: so full of shapes is fancyThat it
alone is high fantastical.</para>
<para id="id3447513">CURIO</para>
<para id="id3023542">Will you go hunt, my lord?</para>
<para id="id2776090">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3352842">What, Curio?</para>
<para id="id3144038">CURIO</para>
<para id="id2944657">The hart.</para>
<para id="id2983040">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id2825288">Why, so I do, the noblest that I have:O, when
mine eyes did see Olivia first,Methought she purged the air of
pestilence!That instant was I turn'd into a hart;And my desires,
like fell and cruel hounds,E'er since pursue me.</para>
<para id="id3361633">Enter VALENTINE</para>
<para id="id3203700">How now! what news from her?</para>
<para id="id3499266">VALENTINE</para>
<para id="id2977884">So please my lord, I might not be admitted;But
from her handmaid do return this answer:The element itself, till
seven years' heat,Shall not behold her face at ample view;But, like
a cloistress, she will veiled walkAnd water once a day her chamber
roundWith eye-offending brine: all this to seasonA brother's dead
love, which she would keep freshAnd lasting in her sad
remembrance.</para>
<para id="id3394516">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3425234">O, she that hath a heart of that fine frameTo
pay this debt of love but to a brother,How will she love, when the
rich golden shaftHath kill'd the flock of all affections elseThat
live in her; when liver, brain and heart,These sovereign thrones,
are all supplied, and fill'dHer sweet perfections with one self
king!Away before me to sweet beds of flowers:Love-thoughts lie rich
when canopied with bowers.</para>
<para id="id2793113">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3349248">SCENE II. The sea-coast.</para>
<para id="id3508737">Enter VIOLA, a Captain, and Sailors</para>
<para id="id2795488">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3263383">What country, friends, is this?</para>
<para id="id3333922">Captain</para>
<para id="id2731508">This is Illyria, lady.</para>
<para id="id2818474">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3361276">And what should I do in Illyria?My brother he
is in Elysium.Perchance he is not drown'd: what think you,
sailors?</para>
<para id="id3011001">Captain</para>
<para id="id3144576">It is perchance that you yourself were
saved.</para>
<para id="id3415849">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3191162">O my poor brother! and so perchance may he
be.</para>
<para id="id3450476">Captain</para>
<para id="id3132219">True, madam: and, to comfort you with
chance,Assure yourself, after our ship did split,When you and those
poor number saved with youHung on our driving boat, I saw your
brother,Most provident in peril, bind himself,Courage and hope both
teaching him the practise,To a strong mast that lived upon the
sea;Where, like Arion on the dolphin's back,I saw him hold
acquaintance with the wavesSo long as I could see.</para>
<para id="id3000864">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3007882">For saying so, there's gold:Mine own escape
unfoldeth to my hope,Whereto thy speech serves for authority,The
like of him. Know'st thou this country?</para>
<para id="id3145346">Captain</para>
<para id="id2940298">Ay, madam, well; for I was bred and bornNot
three hours' travel from this very place.</para>
<para id="id3025556">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3182048">Who governs here?</para>
<para id="id2917392">Captain</para>
<para id="id3158679">A noble duke, in nature as in name.</para>
<para id="id3016416">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3143803">What is the name?</para>
<para id="id2919254">Captain</para>
<para id="id2876802">Orsino.</para>
<para id="id3188973">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3088661">Orsino! I have heard my father name him:He was
a bachelor then.</para>
<para id="id3122896">Captain</para>
<para id="id3011747">And so is now, or was so very late;For but a
month ago I went from hence,And then 'twas fresh in murmur,--as,
you know,What great ones do the less will prattle of,--That he did
seek the love of fair Olivia.</para>
<para id="id3133563">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3155143">What's she?</para>
<para id="id3186305">Captain</para>
<para id="id2825129">A virtuous maid, the daughter of a countThat
died some twelvemonth since, then leaving herIn the protection of
his son, her brother,Who shortly also died: for whose dear
love,They say, she hath abjured the companyAnd sight of men.</para>
<para id="id3333112">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3505326">O that I served that ladyAnd might not be
delivered to the world,Till I had made mine own occasion
mellow,What my estate is!</para>
<para id="id3007782">Captain</para>
<para id="id3307796">That were hard to compass;Because she will
admit no kind of suit,No, not the duke's.</para>
<para id="id2820916">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3191560">There is a fair behavior in thee, captain;And
though that nature with a beauteous wallDoth oft close in
pollution, yet of theeI will believe thou hast a mind that
suitsWith this thy fair and outward character.I prithee, and I'll
pay thee bounteously,Conceal me what I am, and be my aidFor such
disguise as haply shall becomeThe form of my intent. I'll serve
this duke:Thou shall present me as an eunuch to him:It may be worth
thy pains; for I can singAnd speak to him in many sorts of
musicThat will allow me very worth his service.What else may hap to
time I will commit;Only shape thou thy silence to my wit.</para>
<para id="id3385582">Captain</para>
<para id="id2981868">Be you his eunuch, and your mute I'll be:When
my tongue blabs, then let mine eyes not see.</para>
<para id="id3360111">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3356264">I thank thee: lead me on.</para>
<para id="id3191545">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3434130">SCENE III. OLIVIA'S house.</para>
<para id="id3362482">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH and MARIA</para>
<para id="id3218362">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3352225">What a plague means my niece, to take the
death ofher brother thus? I am sure care's an enemy to life.</para>
<para id="id3085924">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3286842">By my troth, Sir Toby, you must come in
earlier o'nights: your cousin, my lady, takes greatexceptions to
your ill hours.</para>
<para id="id3020910">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3382233">Why, let her except, before excepted.</para>
<para id="id3325651">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3354205">Ay, but you must confine yourself within the
modestlimits of order.</para>
<para id="id3444502">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3436652">Confine! I'll confine myself no finer than I
am:these clothes are good enough to drink in; and so bethese boots
too: an they be not, let them hangthemselves in their own
straps.</para>
<para id="id3023268">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3370913">That quaffing and drinking will undo you: I
heardmy lady talk of it yesterday; and of a foolishknight that you
brought in one night here to be her wooer.</para>
<para id="id3447386">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2949723">Who, Sir Andrew Aguecheek?</para>
<para id="id3398235">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3362764">Ay, he.</para>
<para id="id3324563">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2982202">He's as tall a man as any's in Illyria.</para>
<para id="id3009369">MARIA</para>
<para id="id2722901">What's that to the purpose?</para>
<para id="id3134034">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3442183">Why, he has three thousand ducats a
year.</para>
<para id="id3524247">MARIA</para>
<para id="id2930198">Ay, but he'll have but a year in all these
ducats:he's a very fool and a prodigal.</para>
<para id="id3307861">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3126319">Fie, that you'll say so! he plays o'
theviol-de-gamboys, and speaks three or four languagesword for word
without book, and hath all the goodgifts of nature.</para>
<para id="id3182756">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3447092">He hath indeed, almost natural: for besides
thathe's a fool, he's a great quarreller: and but thathe hath the
gift of a coward to allay the gust hehath in quarrelling, 'tis
thought among the prudenthe would quickly have the gift of a
grave.</para>
<para id="id3200514">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3033487">By this hand, they are scoundrels and
subtractorsthat say so of him. Who are they?</para>
<para id="id3026547">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3088316">They that add, moreover, he's drunk nightly in
your company.</para>
<para id="id3343436">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3359010">With drinking healths to my niece: I'll drink
toher as long as there is a passage in my throat anddrink in
Illyria: he's a coward and a coystrillthat will not drink to my
niece till his brains turno' the toe like a parish-top. What,
wench!Castiliano vulgo! for here comes Sir Andrew Agueface.</para>
<para id="id3006168">Enter SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3447376">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3337161">Sir Toby Belch! how now, Sir Toby
Belch!</para>
<para id="id3504639">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3294688">Sweet Sir Andrew!</para>
<para id="id3432979">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3319855">Bless you, fair shrew.</para>
<para id="id3370335">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3068110">And you too, sir.</para>
<para id="id3150769">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3333801">Accost, Sir Andrew, accost.</para>
<para id="id3057341">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3025121">What's that?</para>
<para id="id3498694">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3171990">My niece's chambermaid.</para>
<para id="id3076787">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3268965">Good Mistress Accost, I desire better
acquaintance.</para>
<para id="id2734434">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3175031">My name is Mary, sir.</para>
<para id="id3028494">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3499178">Good Mistress Mary Accost,--</para>
<para id="id3076826">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3149888">You mistake, knight; 'accost' is front her,
boardher, woo her, assail her.</para>
<para id="id3068362">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3523746">By my troth, I would not undertake her in
thiscompany. Is that the meaning of 'accost'?</para>
<para id="id2777583">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3498642">Fare you well, gentlemen.</para>
<para id="id3012863">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3272688">An thou let part so, Sir Andrew, would thou
mightstnever draw sword again.</para>
<para id="id3158580">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3521011">An you part so, mistress, I would I might
neverdraw sword again. Fair lady, do you think you havefools in
hand?</para>
<para id="id3489188">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3269238">Sir, I have not you by the hand.</para>
<para id="id3207805">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3010435">Marry, but you shall have; and here's my
hand.</para>
<para id="id3041122">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3366536">Now, sir, 'thought is free:' I pray you,
bringyour hand to the buttery-bar and let it drink.</para>
<para id="id3233234">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3268951">Wherefore, sweet-heart? what's your
metaphor?</para>
<para id="id3498974">MARIA</para>
<para id="id2983585">It's dry, sir.</para>
<para id="id2936270">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3152386">Why, I think so: I am not such an ass but I
cankeep my hand dry. But what's your jest?</para>
<para id="id3174376">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3306966">A dry jest, sir.</para>
<para id="id3414717">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id2967414">Are you full of them?</para>
<para id="id2729052">MARIA</para>
<para id="id2727234">Ay, sir, I have them at my fingers' ends:
marry,now I let go your hand, I am barren.</para>
<para id="id3384868">Exit</para>
<para id="id3337841">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2723765">O knight thou lackest a cup of canary: when
did Isee thee so put down?</para>
<para id="id2811818">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3284580">Never in your life, I think; unless you see
canaryput me down. Methinks sometimes I have no more witthan a
Christian or an ordinary man has: but I am agreat eater of beef and
I believe that does harm to my wit.</para>
<para id="id2896799">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3332698">No question.</para>
<para id="id3426016">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3436463">An I thought that, I'ld forswear it. I'll ride
hometo-morrow, Sir Toby.</para>
<para id="id3333045">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3003706">Pourquoi, my dear knight?</para>
<para id="id3269001">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3504867">What is 'Pourquoi'? do or not do? I would I
hadbestowed that time in the tongues that I have infencing, dancing
and bear-baiting: O, had I butfollowed the arts!</para>
<para id="id2896513">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2499022">Then hadst thou had an excellent head of
hair.</para>
<para id="id3071034">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3432956">Why, would that have mended my hair?</para>
<para id="id3119369">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3119384">Past question; for thou seest it will not curl
by nature.</para>
<para id="id3269041">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3262783">But it becomes me well enough, does't
not?</para>
<para id="id3425963">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2897166">Excellent; it hangs like flax on a distaff;
and Ihope to see a housewife take thee between her legsand spin it
off.</para>
<para id="id3426510">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3071012">Faith, I'll home to-morrow, Sir Toby: your
niecewill not be seen; or if she be, it's four to oneshe'll none of
me: the count himself here hard by woos her.</para>
<para id="id3366497">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3169834">She'll none o' the count: she'll not match
aboveher degree, neither in estate, years, nor wit; Ihave heard her
swear't. Tut, there's life in't,man.</para>
<para id="id3399654">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id2896826">I'll stay a month longer. I am a fellow o'
thestrangest mind i' the world; I delight in masquesand revels
sometimes altogether.</para>
<para id="id2897295">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3435569">Art thou good at these kickshawses,
knight?</para>
<para id="id2906320">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3119060">As any man in Illyria, whatsoever he be, under
thedegree of my betters; and yet I will not comparewith an old
man.</para>
<para id="id3487237">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3336203">What is thy excellence in a galliard,
knight?</para>
<para id="id3097872">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id2872672">Faith, I can cut a caper.</para>
<para id="id2896525">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3198638">And I can cut the mutton to't.</para>
<para id="id3281035">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3084078">And I think I have the back-trick simply as
strongas any man in Illyria.</para>
<para id="id3233600">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3071141">Wherefore are these things hid? wherefore
havethese gifts a curtain before 'em? are they like totake dust,
like Mistress Mall's picture? why dostthou not go to church in a
galliard and come home ina coranto? My very walk should be a jig; I
would notso much as make water but in a sink-a-pace. Whatdost thou
mean? Is it a world to hide virtues in?I did think, by the
excellent constitution of thyleg, it was formed under the star of a
galliard.</para>
<para id="id2896916">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3352789">Ay, 'tis strong, and it does indifferent well
in aflame-coloured stock. Shall we set about some revels?</para>
<para id="id3239164">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2897752">What shall we do else? were we not born under
Taurus?</para>
<para id="id3505208">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3041165">Taurus! That's sides and heart.</para>
<para id="id3118418">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3002232">No, sir; it is legs and thighs. Let me see
thecaper; ha! higher: ha, ha! excellent!</para>
<para id="id2896966">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id2896970">SCENE IV. DUKE ORSINO's palace.</para>
<para id="id3432642">Enter VALENTINE and VIOLA in man's
attire</para>
<para id="id3164491">VALENTINE</para>
<para id="id3003234">If the duke continue these favours towards
you,Cesario, you are like to be much advanced: he hathknown you but
three days, and already you are no stranger.</para>
<para id="id2964123">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3182222">You either fear his humour or my negligence,
thatyou call in question the continuance of his love:is he
inconstant, sir, in his favours?</para>
<para id="id3233563">VALENTINE</para>
<para id="id3233732">No, believe me.</para>
<para id="id3094985">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3233618">I thank you. Here comes the count.</para>
<para id="id3129294">Enter DUKE ORSINO, CURIO, and
Attendants</para>
<para id="id3002778">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3003861">Who saw Cesario, ho?</para>
<para id="id3239051">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3209756">On your attendance, my lord; here.</para>
<para id="id3118483">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id2903897">Stand you a while aloof, Cesario,Thou know'st
no less but all; I have unclasp'dTo thee the book even of my secret
soul:Therefore, good youth, address thy gait unto her;Be not denied
access, stand at her doors,And tell them, there thy fixed foot
shall growTill thou have audience.</para>
<para id="id3003613">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3002246">Sure, my noble lord,If she be so abandon'd to
her sorrowAs it is spoke, she never will admit me.</para>
<para id="id3487290">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3426535">Be clamorous and leap all civil boundsRather
than make unprofited return.</para>
<para id="id3118496">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3242157">Say I do speak with her, my lord, what
then?</para>
<para id="id3435920">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3118525">O, then unfold the passion of my love,Surprise
her with discourse of my dear faith:It shall become thee well to
act my woes;She will attend it better in thy youthThan in a
nuncio's of more grave aspect.</para>
<para id="id2897476">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id2901539">I think not so, my lord.</para>
<para id="id2896695">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3336480">Dear lad, believe it;For they shall yet belie
thy happy years,That say thou art a man: Diana's lipIs not more
smooth and rubious; thy small pipeIs as the maiden's organ, shrill
and sound,And all is semblative a woman's part.I know thy
constellation is right aptFor this affair. Some four or five attend
him;All, if you will; for I myself am bestWhen least in company.
Prosper well in this,And thou shalt live as freely as thy lord,To
call his fortunes thine.</para>
<para id="id2994911">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3002754">I'll do my bestTo woo your lady:</para>
<para id="id3091801">Aside</para>
<para id="id3071023">yet, a barful strife!Whoe'er I woo, myself
would be his wife.</para>
<para id="id2944646">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3002515">SCENE V. OLIVIA'S house.</para>
<para id="id3002519">Enter MARIA and Clown</para>
<para id="id3335688">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3118626">Nay, either tell me where thou hast been, or I
willnot open my lips so wide as a bristle may enter inway of thy
excuse: my lady will hang thee for thy absence.</para>
<para id="id2947963">Clown</para>
<para id="id2897503">Let her hang me: he that is well hanged in
thisworld needs to fear no colours.</para>
<para id="id3121431">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3170609">Make that good.</para>
<para id="id2960478">Clown</para>
<para id="id3041088">He shall see none to fear.</para>
<para id="id3487447">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3436407">A good lenten answer: I can tell thee where
thatsaying was born, of 'I fear no colours.'</para>
<para id="id2990849">Clown</para>
<para id="id3297529">Where, good Mistress Mary?</para>
<para id="id3269095">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3119477">In the wars; and that may you be bold to say
in your foolery.</para>
<para id="id3169817">Clown</para>
<para id="id3425804">Well, God give them wisdom that have it; and
thosethat are fools, let them use their talents.</para>
<para id="id3344868">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3011588">Yet you will be hanged for being so long
absent; or,to be turned away, is not that as good as a hanging to
you?</para>
<para id="id3436552">Clown</para>
<para id="id3425858">Many a good hanging prevents a bad marriage;
and,for turning away, let summer bear it out.</para>
<para id="id3119334">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3436278">You are resolute, then?</para>
<para id="id3118914">Clown</para>
<para id="id3435999">Not so, neither; but I am resolved on two
points.</para>
<para id="id3505365">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3002455">That if one break, the other will hold; or, if
bothbreak, your gaskins fall.</para>
<para id="id2897449">Clown</para>
<para id="id3148406">Apt, in good faith; very apt. Well, go thy
way; ifSir Toby would leave drinking, thou wert as witty apiece of
Eve's flesh as any in Illyria.</para>
<para id="id3332774">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3504724">Peace, you rogue, no more o' that. Here comes
mylady: make your excuse wisely, you were best.</para>
<para id="id3436240">Exit</para>
<para id="id2896891">Clown</para>
<para id="id3118849">Wit, an't be thy will, put me into good
fooling!Those wits, that think they have thee, do very oftprove
fools; and I, that am sure I lack thee, maypass for a wise man: for
what says Quinapalus?'Better a witty fool, than a foolish
wit.'</para>
<para id="id3233800">Enter OLIVIA with MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3233804">God bless thee, lady!</para>
<para id="id2896011">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3425884">Take the fool away.</para>
<para id="id3003587">Clown</para>
<para id="id3118342">Do you not hear, fellows? Take away the
lady.</para>
<para id="id3024955">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3425846">Go to, you're a dry fool; I'll no more of
you:besides, you grow dishonest.</para>
<para id="id3119282">Clown</para>
<para id="id3332945">Two faults, madonna, that drink and good
counselwill amend: for give the dry fool drink, then isthe fool not
dry: bid the dishonest man mendhimself; if he mend, he is no longer
dishonest; ifhe cannot, let the botcher mend him. Any thingthat's
mended is but patched: virtue thattransgresses is but patched with
sin; and sin thatamends is but patched with virtue. If that
thissimple syllogism will serve, so; if it will not,what remedy? As
there is no true cuckold butcalamity, so beauty's a flower. The
lady bade takeaway the fool; therefore, I say again, take her
away.</para>
<para id="id3436392">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3332881">Sir, I bade them take away you.</para>
<para id="id3332905">Clown</para>
<para id="id3119437">Misprision in the highest degree! Lady,
cucullus nonfacit monachum; that's as much to say as I wear
notmotley in my brain. Good madonna, give me leave toprove you a
fool.</para>
<para id="id2978297">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3229402">Can you do it?</para>
<para id="id3426002">Clown</para>
<para id="id3192433">Dexterously, good madonna.</para>
<para id="id3436209">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3129440">Make your proof.</para>
<para id="id3233841">Clown</para>
<para id="id3186209">I must catechise you for it, madonna: good my
mouseof virtue, answer me.</para>
<para id="id3023758">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3426577">Well, sir, for want of other idleness, I'll
bide your proof.</para>
<para id="id3120244">Clown</para>
<para id="id3269068">Good madonna, why mournest thou?</para>
<para id="id2896848">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3436489">Good fool, for my brother's death.</para>
<para id="id3345816">Clown</para>
<para id="id3332760">I think his soul is in hell, madonna.</para>
<para id="id3118938">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3260314">I know his soul is in heaven, fool.</para>
<para id="id2903024">Clown</para>
<para id="id3200240">The more fool, madonna, to mourn for your
brother'ssoul being in heaven. Take away the fool,
gentlemen.</para>
<para id="id3118970">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3002493">What think you of this fool, Malvolio? doth he
not mend?</para>
<para id="id3332657">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id2930727">Yes, and shall do till the pangs of death
shake him:infirmity, that decays the wise, doth ever make thebetter
fool.</para>
<para id="id3133075">Clown</para>
<para id="id2897372">God send you, sir, a speedy infirmity, for
thebetter increasing your folly! Sir Toby will besworn that I am no
fox; but he will not pass hisword for two pence that you are no
fool.</para>
<para id="id3426627">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id2974529">How say you to that, Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3315015">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3149918">I marvel your ladyship takes delight in such
abarren rascal: I saw him put down the other daywith an ordinary
fool that has no more brainthan a stone. Look you now, he's out of
his guardalready; unless you laugh and minister occasion tohim, he
is gagged. I protest, I take these wise men,that crow so at these
set kind of fools, no betterthan the fools' zanies.</para>
<para id="id2897124">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3002908">Oh, you are sick of self-love, Malvolio, and
tastewith a distempered appetite. To be generous,guiltless and of
free disposition, is to take thosethings for bird-bolts that you
deem cannon-bullets:there is no slander in an allowed fool, though
he donothing but rail; nor no railing in a known discreetman,
though he do nothing but reprove.</para>
<para id="id3148426">Clown</para>
<para id="id3366455">Now Mercury endue thee with leasing, for
thouspeakest well of fools!</para>
<para id="id2896482">Re-enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id2896487">MARIA</para>
<para id="id2883078">Madam, there is at the gate a young gentleman
muchdesires to speak with you.</para>
<para id="id3118650">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id2897194">From the Count Orsino, is it?</para>
<para id="id3132142">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3210342">I know not, madam: 'tis a fair young man, and
well attended.</para>
<para id="id3504814">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3069494">Who of my people hold him in delay?</para>
<para id="id3332801">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3119177">Sir Toby, madam, your kinsman.</para>
<para id="id2896380">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3268682">Fetch him off, I pray you; he speaks nothing
butmadman: fie on him!</para>
<para id="id3024047">Exit MARIA</para>
<para id="id3332836">Go you, Malvolio: if it be a suit from the
count, Iam sick, or not at home; what you will, to dismiss
it.</para>
<para id="id2897765">Exit MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3118454">Now you see, sir, how your fooling grows old,
andpeople dislike it.</para>
<para id="id3426640">Clown</para>
<para id="id3003496">Thou hast spoke for us, madonna, as if thy
eldestson should be a fool; whose skull Jove cram withbrains!
for,--here he comes,--one of thy kin has amost weak pia
mater.</para>
<para id="id3021579">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3332993">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3221775">By mine honour, half drunk. What is he at the
gate, cousin?</para>
<para id="id3072188">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3118784">A gentleman.</para>
<para id="id3119292">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3487393">A gentleman! what gentleman?</para>
<para id="id3504891">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2897546">'Tis a gentle man here--a plague o'
thesepickle-herring! How now, sot!</para>
<para id="id2789457">Clown</para>
<para id="id3332593">Good Sir Toby!</para>
<para id="id3002714">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3260598">Cousin, cousin, how have you come so early by
this lethargy?</para>
<para id="id3118364">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3002972">Lechery! I defy lechery. There's one at the
gate.</para>
<para id="id3425953">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3233591">Ay, marry, what is he?</para>
<para id="id3436342">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id2897307">Let him be the devil, an he will, I care not:
giveme faith, say I. Well, it's all one.</para>
<para id="id3118352">Exit</para>
<para id="id2896561">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3240273">What's a drunken man like, fool?</para>
<para id="id3148456">Clown</para>
<para id="id3268781">Like a drowned man, a fool and a mad man:
onedraught above heat makes him a fool; the second madshim; and a
third drowns him.</para>
<para id="id3233245">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3333099">Go thou and seek the crowner, and let him sit
o' mycoz; for he's in the third degree of drink, he'sdrowned: go,
look after him.</para>
<para id="id3259956">Clown</para>
<para id="id2931189">He is but mad yet, madonna; and the fool shall
lookto the madman.</para>
<para id="id3148518">Exit</para>
<para id="id3148522">Re-enter MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3157599">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id2897045">Madam, yond young fellow swears he will speak
withyou. I told him you were sick; he takes on him tounderstand so
much, and therefore comes to speakwith you. I told him you were
asleep; he seems tohave a foreknowledge of that too, and
thereforecomes to speak with you. What is to be said to him,lady?
he's fortified against any denial.</para>
<para id="id3127030">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id2897089">Tell him he shall not speak with me.</para>
<para id="id3003302">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3003367">Has been told so; and he says, he'll stand at
yourdoor like a sheriff's post, and be the supporter toa bench, but
he'll speak with you.</para>
<para id="id3118221">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3012106">What kind o' man is he?</para>
<para id="id3017550">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id2896606">Why, of mankind.</para>
<para id="id3148469">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3003576">What manner of man?</para>
<para id="id3436248">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3002808">Of very ill manner; he'll speak with you, will
you or no.</para>
<para id="id3118276">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id2932810">Of what personage and years is he?</para>
<para id="id3435508">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id2897791">Not yet old enough for a man, nor young enough
fora boy; as a squash is before 'tis a peascod, or acooling when
'tis almost an apple: 'tis with himin standing water, between boy
and man. He is verywell-favoured and he speaks very shrewishly;
onewould think his mother's milk were scarce out of him.</para>
<para id="id3118891">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3209636">Let him approach: call in my
gentlewoman.</para>
<para id="id2897802">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3426601">Gentlewoman, my lady calls.</para>
<para id="id3118690">Exit</para>
<para id="id3118694">Re-enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id3072108">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3209626">Give me my veil: come, throw it o'er my
face.We'll once more hear Orsino's embassy.</para>
<para id="id3426039">Enter VIOLA, and Attendants</para>
<para id="id3426043">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3169790">The honourable lady of the house, which is
she?</para>
<para id="id3436287">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3436614">Speak to me; I shall answer for her.Your
will?</para>
<para id="id2811677">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3022505">Most radiant, exquisite and unmatchable
beauty,--Ipray you, tell me if this be the lady of the house,for I
never saw her: I would be loath to cast awaymy speech, for besides
that it is excellently wellpenned, I have taken great pains to con
it. Goodbeauties, let me sustain no scorn; I am verycomptible, even
to the least sinister usage.</para>
<para id="id3325415">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3426296">Whence came you, sir?</para>
<para id="id3333908">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id2796140">I can say little more than I have studied, and
thatquestion's out of my part. Good gentle one, give memodest
assurance if you be the lady of the house,that I may proceed in my
speech.</para>
<para id="id3436576">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3496199">Are you a comedian?</para>
<para id="id3496210">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3505759">No, my profound heart: and yet, by the very
fangsof malice I swear, I am not that I play. Are youthe lady of
the house?</para>
<para id="id3275682">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3505777">If I do not usurp myself, I am.</para>
<para id="id3436141">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3436156">Most certain, if you are she, you do
usurpyourself; for what is yours to bestow is not yoursto reserve.
But this is from my commission: I willon with my speech in your
praise, and then show youthe heart of my message.</para>
<para id="id3505853">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3505876">Come to what is important in't: I forgive you
the praise.</para>
<para id="id3505888">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3115136">Alas, I took great pains to study it, and 'tis
poetical.</para>
<para id="id3474499">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3474514">It is the more like to be feigned: I pray
you,keep it in. I heard you were saucy at my gates,and allowed your
approach rather to wonder at youthan to hear you. If you be not
mad, be gone; ifyou have reason, be brief: 'tis not that time
ofmoon with me to make one in so skipping a dialogue.</para>
<para id="id3505633">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3496705">Will you hoist sail, sir? here lies your
way.</para>
<para id="id3496717">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3496501">No, good swabber; I am to hull here a
littlelonger. Some mollification for your giant, sweetlady. Tell me
your mind: I am a messenger.</para>
<para id="id3496531">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3496546">Sure, you have some hideous matter to deliver,
whenthe courtesy of it is so fearful. Speak your office.</para>
<para id="id3496568">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3496583">It alone concerns your ear. I bring no
overture ofwar, no taxation of homage: I hold the olive in myhand;
my words are as fun of peace as matter.</para>
<para id="id3495832">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3495847">Yet you began rudely. What are you? what would
you?</para>
<para id="id3495859">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3495874">The rudeness that hath appeared in me have
Ilearned from my entertainment. What I am, and what Iwould, are as
secret as maidenhead; to your ears,divinity, to any other's,
profanation.</para>
<para id="id3495914">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3495930">Give us the place alone: we will hear this
divinity.</para>
<para id="id3495942">Exeunt MARIA and Attendants</para>
<para id="id3495946">Now, sir, what is your text?</para>
<para id="id3495956">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3495972">Most sweet lady,--</para>
<para id="id3495982">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3495998">A comfortable doctrine, and much may be said
of it.Where lies your text?</para>
<para id="id3496018">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3496033">In Orsino's bosom.</para>
<para id="id3496044">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3496059">In his bosom! In what chapter of his
bosom?</para>
<para id="id3496070">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3496085">To answer by the method, in the first of his
heart.</para>
<para id="id3496097">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3496112">O, I have read it: it is heresy. Have you no
more to say?</para>
<para id="id3496124">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3496139">Good madam, let me see your face.</para>
<para id="id3496150">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3496165">Have you any commission from your lord to
negotiatewith my face? You are now out of your text: butwe will
draw the curtain and show you the picture.Look you, sir, such a one
I was this present: is'tnot well done?</para>
<para id="id3505968">Unveiling</para>
<para id="id3505973">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3505988">Excellently done, if God did all.</para>
<para id="id3505999">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506014">'Tis in grain, sir; 'twill endure wind and
weather.</para>
<para id="id3506026">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506041">'Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and
whiteNature's own sweet and cunning hand laid on:Lady, you are the
cruell'st she alive,If you will lead these graces to the graveAnd
leave the world no copy.</para>
<para id="id3506089">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506104">O, sir, I will not be so hard-hearted; I will
giveout divers schedules of my beauty: it shall beinventoried, and
every particle and utensillabelled to my will: as, item, two
lips,indifferent red; item, two grey eyes, with lids tothem; item,
one neck, one chin, and so forth. Wereyou sent hither to praise
me?</para>
<para id="id3506171">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506186">I see you what you are, you are too proud;But,
if you were the devil, you are fair.My lord and master loves you:
O, such loveCould be but recompensed, though you were crown'dThe
nonpareil of beauty!</para>
<para id="id3506233">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506248">How does he love me?</para>
<para id="id3506259">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506274">With adorations, fertile tears,With groans
that thunder love, with sighs of fire.</para>
<para id="id3506295">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506310">Your lord does know my mind; I cannot love
him:Yet I suppose him virtuous, know him noble,Of great estate, of
fresh and stainless youth;In voices well divulged, free, learn'd
and valiant;And in dimension and the shape of natureA gracious
person: but yet I cannot love him;He might have took his answer
long ago.</para>
<para id="id3506378">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506393">If I did love you in my master's flame,With
such a suffering, such a deadly life,In your denial I would find no
sense;I would not understand it.</para>
<para id="id3506430">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506445">Why, what would you?</para>
<para id="id3506456">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506471">Make me a willow cabin at your gate,And call
upon my soul within the house;Write loyal cantons of contemned
loveAnd sing them loud even in the dead of night;Halloo your name
to the reverberate hillsAnd make the babbling gossip of the airCry
out 'Olivia!' O, You should not restBetween the elements of air and
earth,But you should pity me!</para>
<para id="id3506553">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506568">You might do much.What is your
parentage?</para>
<para id="id3506588">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506603">Above my fortunes, yet my state is well:I am a
gentleman.</para>
<para id="id3506623">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506638">Get you to your lord;I cannot love him: let
him send no more;Unless, perchance, you come to me again,To tell me
how he takes it. Fare you well:I thank you for your pains: spend
this for me.</para>
<para id="id3506685">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3506700">I am no fee'd post, lady; keep your purse:My
master, not myself, lacks recompense.Love make his heart of flint
that you shall love;And let your fervor, like my master's, bePlaced
in contempt! Farewell, fair cruelty.</para>
<para id="id3506747">Exit</para>
<para id="id3506752">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506767">'What is your parentage?''Above my fortunes,
yet my state is well:I am a gentleman.' I'll be sworn thou art;Thy
tongue, thy face, thy limbs, actions and spirit,Do give thee
five-fold blazon: not too fast:soft, soft!Unless the master were
the man. How now!Even so quickly may one catch the plague?Methinks
I feel this youth's perfectionsWith an invisible and subtle
stealthTo creep in at mine eyes. Well, let it be.What ho,
Malvolio!</para>
<para id="id3506877">Re-enter MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3506881">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3506896">Here, madam, at your service.</para>
<para id="id3506907">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3506922">Run after that same peevish messenger,The
county's man: he left this ring behind him,Would I or not: tell him
I'll none of it.Desire him not to flatter with his lord,Nor hold
him up with hopes; I am not for him:If that the youth will come
this way to-morrow,I'll give him reasons for't: hie thee,
Malvolio.</para>
<para id="id3506989">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3482786">Madam, I will.</para>
<para id="id3482797">Exit</para>
<para id="id3482801">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3482817">I do I know not what, and fear to findMine eye
too great a flatterer for my mind.Fate, show thy force: ourselves
we do not owe;What is decreed must be, and be this so.</para>
<para id="id3482855">Exit</para>
</section>
<section id="id3482860">
<name>ACT II</name>
<para id="id3482867">SCENE I. The sea-coast.</para>
<para id="id3482871">Enter ANTONIO and SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3482882">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3482894">Will you stay no longer? nor will you not that
I go with you?</para>
<para id="id3482906">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3482918">By your patience, no. My stars shine darkly
overme: the malignancy of my fate might perhapsdistemper yours;
therefore I shall crave of you yourleave that I may bear my evils
alone: it were a badrecompense for your love, to lay any of them on
you.ANTONIO: Let me yet know of you whither you are bound.</para>
<para id="id3482978">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3482990">No, sooth, sir: my determinate voyage is
mereextravagancy. But I perceive in you so excellent atouch of
modesty, that you will not extort from mewhat I am willing to keep
in; therefore it chargesme in manners the rather to express myself.
Youmust know of me then, Antonio, my name is Sebastian,which I
called Roderigo. My father was thatSebastian of Messaline, whom I
know you have heardof. He left behind him myself and a sister,
bothborn in an hour: if the heavens had been pleased,would we had
so ended! but you, sir, altered that;for some hour before you took
me from the breach ofthe sea was my sister drowned.</para>
<para id="id3483117">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3483129">Alas the day!</para>
<para id="id3483139">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3483151">A lady, sir, though it was said she much
resembledme, was yet of many accounted beautiful: but,though I
could not with such estimable wonderoverfar believe that, yet thus
far I will boldlypublish her; she bore a mind that envy could not
butcall fair. She is drowned already, sir, with saltwater, though I
seem to drown her remembrance again with more.</para>
<para id="id3483222">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3483234">Pardon me, sir, your bad entertainment.</para>
<para id="id3483244">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3483256">O good Antonio, forgive me your
trouble.</para>
<para id="id3483267">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3483279">If you will not murder me for my love, let me
beyour servant.</para>
<para id="id3483300">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3483311">If you will not undo what you have done, that
is,kill him whom you have recovered, desire it not.Fare ye well at
once: my bosom is full of kindness,and I am yet so near the manners
of my mother, thatupon the least occasion more mine eyes will
telltales of me. I am bound to the Count Orsino's court:
farewell.</para>
<para id="id3483372">Exit</para>
<para id="id3483376">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3483388">The gentleness of all the gods go with thee!I
have many enemies in Orsino's court,Else would I very shortly see
thee there.But, come what may, I do adore thee so,That danger shall
seem sport, and I will go.</para>
<para id="id3483436">Exit</para>
<para id="id3483441">SCENE II. A street.</para>
<para id="id3483445">Enter VIOLA, MALVOLIO following</para>
<para id="id3483456">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3483468">Were not you even now with the Countess
Olivia?</para>
<para id="id3483480">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3483492">Even now, sir; on a moderate pace I have
sincearrived but hither.</para>
<para id="id3483512">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3483524">She returns this ring to you, sir: you might
havesaved me my pains, to have taken it away yourself.She adds,
moreover, that you should put your lordinto a desperate assurance
she will none of him:and one thing more, that you be never so hardy
tocome again in his affairs, unless it be to reportyour lord's
taking of this. Receive it so.</para>
<para id="id3483593">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3483605">She took the ring of me: I'll none of
it.</para>
<para id="id3483616">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3483628">Come, sir, you peevishly threw it to her; and
herwill is, it should be so returned: if it be worthstooping for,
there it lies in your eye; if not, beit his that finds it.</para>
<para id="id3483668">Exit</para>
<para id="id3483672">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3483684">I left no ring with her: what means this
lady?Fortune forbid my outside have not charm'd her!She made good
view of me; indeed, so much,That sure methought her eyes had lost
her tongue,For she did speak in starts distractedly.She loves me,
sure; the cunning of her passionInvites me in this churlish
messenger.None of my lord's ring! why, he sent her none.I am the
man: if it be so, as 'tis,Poor lady, she were better love a
dream.Disguise, I see, thou art a wickedness,Wherein the pregnant
enemy does much.How easy is it for the proper-falseIn women's waxen
hearts to set their forms!Alas, our frailty is the cause, not
we!For such as we are made of, such we be.How will this fadge? my
master loves her dearly;And I, poor monster, fond as much on
him;And she, mistaken, seems to dote on me.What will become of
this? As I am man,My state is desperate for my master's love;As I
am woman,--now alas the day!--What thriftless sighs shall poor
Olivia breathe!O time! thou must untangle this, not I;It is too
hard a knot for me to untie!</para>
<para id="id3483919">Exit</para>
<para id="id3483924">SCENE III. OLIVIA's house.</para>
<para id="id3483928">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH and SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3483939">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3483951">Approach, Sir Andrew: not to be abed
aftermidnight is to be up betimes; and 'diluculosurgere,' thou
know'st,--</para>
<para id="id3478526">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478538">Nay, my troth, I know not: but I know, to be
uplate is to be up late.</para>
<para id="id3478558">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3478570">A false conclusion: I hate it as an unfilled
can.To be up after midnight and to go to bed then, isearly: so that
to go to bed after midnight is to goto bed betimes. Does not our
life consist of thefour elements?</para>
<para id="id3478619">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478631">Faith, so they say; but I think it rather
consistsof eating and drinking.</para>
<para id="id3478652">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3478663">Thou'rt a scholar; let us therefore eat and
drink.Marian, I say! a stoup of wine!</para>
<para id="id3478684">Enter Clown</para>
<para id="id3478688">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478700">Here comes the fool, i' faith.</para>
<para id="id3478711">Clown</para>
<para id="id3478723">How now, my hearts! did you never see the
pictureof 'we three'?</para>
<para id="id3478743">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3478755">Welcome, ass. Now let's have a catch.</para>
<para id="id3478766">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478778">By my troth, the fool has an excellent breast.
Ihad rather than forty shillings I had such a leg,and so sweet a
breath to sing, as the fool has. Insooth, thou wast in very
gracious fooling lastnight, when thou spokest of Pigrogromitus, of
theVapians passing the equinoctial of Queubus: 'twasvery good, i'
faith. I sent thee sixpence for thyleman: hadst it?</para>
<para id="id3478857">Clown</para>
<para id="id3478868">I did impeticos thy gratillity; for Malvolio's
noseis no whipstock: my lady has a white hand, and theMyrmidons are
no bottle-ale houses.</para>
<para id="id3478899">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478911">Excellent! why, this is the best fooling, when
allis done. Now, a song.</para>
<para id="id3478931">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3478943">Come on; there is sixpence for you: let's have
a song.</para>
<para id="id3478955">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3478966">There's a testril of me too: if one knight
give a--</para>
<para id="id3478978">Clown</para>
<para id="id3478990">Would you have a love-song, or a song of good
life?</para>
<para id="id3479002">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479013">A love-song, a love-song.</para>
<para id="id3479024">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479036">Ay, ay: I care not for good life.</para>
<para id="id3479047">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479059">[Sings]O mistress mine, where are you
roaming?O, stay and hear; your true love's coming,That can sing
both high and low:Trip no further, pretty sweeting;Journeys end in
lovers meeting,Every wise man's son doth know.</para>
<para id="id3479124">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479136">Excellent good, i' faith.</para>
<para id="id3479147">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479158">Good, good.</para>
<para id="id3479170">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479181">[Sings]What is love? 'tis not
hereafter;Present mirth hath present laughter;What's to come is
still unsure:In delay there lies no plenty;Then come kiss me, sweet
and twenty,Youth's a stuff will not endure.</para>
<para id="id3479247">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479259">A mellifluous voice, as I am true
knight.</para>
<para id="id3479270">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479282">A contagious breath.</para>
<para id="id3479293">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479305">Very sweet and contagious, i' faith.</para>
<para id="id3479316">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479328">To hear by the nose, it is dulcet in
contagion.But shall we make the welkin dance indeed? shall werouse
the night-owl in a catch that will draw threesouls out of one
weaver? shall we do that?</para>
<para id="id3479369">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479380">An you love me, let's do't: I am dog at a
catch.</para>
<para id="id3479392">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479404">By'r lady, sir, and some dogs will catch
well.</para>
<para id="id3479416">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479428">Most certain. Let our catch be, 'Thou
knave.'</para>
<para id="id3479439">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479451">'Hold thy peace, thou knave,' knight? I shall
beconstrained in't to call thee knave, knight.</para>
<para id="id3479473">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479485">'Tis not the first time I have constrained one
tocall me knave. Begin, fool: it begins 'Hold thy peace.'</para>
<para id="id3479506">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479518">I shall never begin if I hold my peace.</para>
<para id="id3479530">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479542">Good, i' faith. Come, begin.</para>
<para id="id3479552">Catch sung</para>
<para id="id3479557">Enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id3479561">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3479573">What a caterwauling do you keep here! If my
ladyhave not called up her steward Malvolio and bid himturn you out
of doors, never trust me.</para>
<para id="id3479604">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479616">My lady's a Cataian, we are politicians,
Malvolio'sa Peg-a-Ramsey, and 'Three merry men be we.' Am notI
consanguineous? am I not of her blood?Tillyvally. Lady!</para>
<para id="id3479656">Sings</para>
<para id="id3479660">'There dwelt a man in Babylon, lady,
lady!'</para>
<para id="id3479672">Clown</para>
<para id="id3479683">Beshrew me, the knight's in admirable
fooling.</para>
<para id="id3479695">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3479707">Ay, he does well enough if he be disposed, and
so doI too: he does it with a better grace, but I do itmore
natural.</para>
<para id="id3479737">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479749">[Sings] 'O, the twelfth day of
December,'--</para>
<para id="id3479761">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3479772">For the love o' God, peace!</para>
<para id="id3479783">Enter MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3479787">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3479799">My masters, are you mad? or what are you? Have
yeno wit, manners, nor honesty, but to gabble liketinkers at this
time of night? Do ye make analehouse of my lady's house, that ye
squeak out yourcoziers' catches without any mitigation or remorseof
voice? Is there no respect of place, persons, nortime in
you?</para>
<para id="id3479869">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3479880">We did keep time, sir, in our catches. Sneck
up!</para>
<para id="id3479892">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3479904">Sir Toby, I must be round with you. My lady
bade metell you, that, though she harbours you as herkinsman, she's
nothing allied to your disorders. Ifyou can separate yourself and
your misdemeanors, youare welcome to the house; if not, an it would
pleaseyou to take leave of her, she is very willing to bidyou
farewell.</para>
<para id="id3531864">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3531876">'Farewell, dear heart, since I must needs be
gone.'</para>
<para id="id3531887">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3531898">Nay, good Sir Toby.</para>
<para id="id3531908">Clown</para>
<para id="id3531920">'His eyes do show his days are almost
done.'</para>
<para id="id3531931">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3531942">Is't even so?</para>
<para id="id3531952">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3531964">'But I will never die.'</para>
<para id="id3531974">Clown</para>
<para id="id3531985">Sir Toby, there you lie.</para>
<para id="id3531996">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3532007">This is much credit to you.</para>
<para id="id3532017">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532029">'Shall I bid him go?'</para>
<para id="id3532039">Clown</para>
<para id="id3532050">'What an if you do?'</para>
<para id="id3532060">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532072">'Shall I bid him go, and spare not?'</para>
<para id="id3532083">Clown</para>
<para id="id3532094">'O no, no, no, no, you dare not.'</para>
<para id="id3532104">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532116">Out o' tune, sir: ye lie. Art any more than
asteward? Dost thou think, because thou artvirtuous, there shall be
no more cakes and ale?</para>
<para id="id3532145">Clown</para>
<para id="id3532157">Yes, by Saint Anne, and ginger shall be hot i'
themouth too.</para>
<para id="id3532176">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532187">Thou'rt i' the right. Go, sir, rub your chain
withcrumbs. A stoup of wine, Maria!</para>
<para id="id3532207">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3532218">Mistress Mary, if you prized my lady's favour
at anything more than contempt, you would not give meansfor this
uncivil rule: she shall know of it, by this hand.</para>
<para id="id3532248">Exit</para>
<para id="id3532252">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532264">Go shake your ears.</para>
<para id="id3532274">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532285">'Twere as good a deed as to drink when a
man'sa-hungry, to challenge him the field, and then tobreak promise
with him and make a fool of him.</para>
<para id="id3532315">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532326">Do't, knight: I'll write thee a challenge: or
I'lldeliver thy indignation to him by word of mouth.</para>
<para id="id3532346">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532358">Sweet Sir Toby, be patient for tonight: since
theyouth of the count's was today with thy lady, she ismuch out of
quiet. For Monsieur Malvolio, let mealone with him: if I do not
gull him into anayword, and make him a common recreation, do
notthink I have wit enough to lie straight in my bed:I know I can
do it.</para>
<para id="id3532423">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532435">Possess us, possess us; tell us something of
him.</para>
<para id="id3532446">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532457">Marry, sir, sometimes he is a kind of
puritan.</para>
<para id="id3532468">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532480">O, if I thought that I'ld beat him like a
dog!</para>
<para id="id3532491">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532502">What, for being a puritan? thy exquisite
reason,dear knight?</para>
<para id="id3532522">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532533">I have no exquisite reason for't, but I have
reasongood enough.</para>
<para id="id3532552">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532564">The devil a puritan that he is, or any
thingconstantly, but a time-pleaser; an affectioned ass,that cons
state without book and utters it by greatswarths: the best
persuaded of himself, socrammed, as he thinks, with excellencies,
that it ishis grounds of faith that all that look on him lovehim;
and on that vice in him will my revenge findnotable cause to
work.</para>
<para id="id3532638">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532650">What wilt thou do?</para>
<para id="id3532660">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532671">I will drop in his way some obscure epistles
oflove; wherein, by the colour of his beard, the shapeof his leg,
the manner of his gait, the expressureof his eye, forehead, and
complexion, he shall findhimself most feelingly personated. I can
write verylike my lady your niece: on a forgotten matter wecan
hardly make distinction of our hands.</para>
<para id="id3532738">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532749">Excellent! I smell a device.</para>
<para id="id3532759">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532771">I have't in my nose too.</para>
<para id="id3532781">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532792">He shall think, by the letters that thou wilt
drop,that they come from my niece, and that she's inlove with
him.</para>
<para id="id3532821">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532832">My purpose is, indeed, a horse of that
colour.</para>
<para id="id3532844">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532855">And your horse now would make him an
ass.</para>
<para id="id3532866">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532877">Ass, I doubt not.</para>
<para id="id3532888">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3532899">O, 'twill be admirable!</para>
<para id="id3532909">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3532920">Sport royal, I warrant you: I know my physic
willwork with him. I will plant you two, and let thefool make a
third, where he shall find the letter:observe his construction of
it. For this night, tobed, and dream on the event. Farewell.</para>
<para id="id3532968">Exit</para>
<para id="id3532972">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3532984">Good night, Penthesilea.</para>
<para id="id3532994">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3533005">Before me, she's a good wench.</para>
<para id="id3533016">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3533027">She's a beagle, true-bred, and one that adores
me:what o' that?</para>
<para id="id3533046">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3533058">I was adored once too.</para>
<para id="id3533068">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3533079">Let's to bed, knight. Thou hadst need send
formore money.</para>
<para id="id3533099">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3533110">If I cannot recover your niece, I am a foul
way out.</para>
<para id="id3533122">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3533133">Send for money, knight: if thou hast her not
i'the end, call me cut.</para>
<para id="id3533152">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3533164">If I do not, never trust me, take it how you
will.</para>
<para id="id3533175">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3533186">Come, come, I'll go burn some sack; 'tis too
lateto go to bed now: come, knight; come, knight.</para>
<para id="id3533207">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3533211">SCENE IV. DUKE ORSINO's palace.</para>
<para id="id3533215">Enter DUKE ORSINO, VIOLA, CURIO, and
others</para>
<para id="id3533227">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533238">Give me some music. Now, good morrow,
friends.Now, good Cesario, but that piece of song,That old and
antique song we heard last night:Methought it did relieve my
passion much,More than light airs and recollected termsOf these
most brisk and giddy-paced times:Come, but one verse.</para>
<para id="id3533303">CURIO</para>
<para id="id3533315">He is not here, so please your lordship that
should sing it.</para>
<para id="id3533326">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533337">Who was it?</para>
<para id="id3533348">CURIO</para>
<para id="id3533359">Feste, the jester, my lord; a fool that the
ladyOlivia's father took much delight in. He is about the
house.</para>
<para id="id3533380">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533391">Seek him out, and play the tune the
while.</para>
<para id="id3533402">Exit CURIO. Music plays</para>
<para id="id3533406">Come hither, boy: if ever thou shalt love,In
the sweet pangs of it remember me;For such as I am all true lovers
are,Unstaid and skittish in all motions else,Save in the constant
image of the creatureThat is beloved. How dost thou like this
tune?</para>
<para id="id3533463">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533474">It gives a very echo to the seatWhere Love is
throned.</para>
<para id="id3533493">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533504">Thou dost speak masterly:My life upon't, young
though thou art, thine eyeHath stay'd upon some favour that it
loves:Hath it not, boy?</para>
<para id="id3533541">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533552">A little, by your favour.</para>
<para id="id3533562">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533574">What kind of woman is't?</para>
<para id="id3533584">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533595">Of your complexion.</para>
<para id="id3533606">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533617">She is not worth thee, then. What years, i'
faith?</para>
<para id="id3533628">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533639">About your years, my lord.</para>
<para id="id3533650">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533661">Too old by heaven: let still the woman takeAn
elder than herself: so wears she to him,So sways she level in her
husband's heart:For, boy, however we do praise ourselves,Our
fancies are more giddy and unfirm,More longing, wavering, sooner
lost and worn,Than women's are.</para>
<para id="id3533726">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533737">I think it well, my lord.</para>
<para id="id3533747">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533759">Then let thy love be younger than thyself,Or
thy affection cannot hold the bent;For women are as roses, whose
fair flowerBeing once display'd, doth fall that very hour.</para>
<para id="id3533797">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3533808">And so they are: alas, that they are so;To
die, even when they to perfection grow!</para>
<para id="id3533829">Re-enter CURIO and Clown</para>
<para id="id3533833">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533844">O, fellow, come, the song we had last
night.Mark it, Cesario, it is old and plain;The spinsters and the
knitters in the sunAnd the free maids that weave their thread with
bonesDo use to chant it: it is silly sooth,And dallies with the
innocence of love,Like the old age.</para>
<para id="id3533909">Clown</para>
<para id="id3533920">Are you ready, sir?</para>
<para id="id3533931">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3533942">Ay; prithee, sing.</para>
<para id="id3533952">Music</para>
<para id="id3533956">SONG.</para>
<para id="id3533967">Clown</para>
<para id="id3533978">Come away, come away, death,And in sad cypress
let me be laid;Fly away, fly away breath;I am slain by a fair cruel
maid.My shroud of white, stuck all with yew,O, prepare it!My part
of death, no one so trueDid share it.Not a flower, not a flower
sweetOn my black coffin let there be strown;Not a friend, not a
friend greetMy poor corpse, where my bones shall be thrown:A
thousand thousand sighs to save,Lay me, O, whereSad true lover
never find my grave,To weep there!</para>
<para id="id3534115">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534126">There's for thy pains.</para>
<para id="id3534136">Clown</para>
<para id="id3534148">No pains, sir: I take pleasure in singing,
sir.</para>
<para id="id3534159">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534170">I'll pay thy pleasure then.</para>
<para id="id3534181">Clown</para>
<para id="id3534192">Truly, sir, and pleasure will be paid, one
time or another.</para>
<para id="id3534203">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534215">Give me now leave to leave thee.</para>
<para id="id3534225">Clown</para>
<para id="id3534236">Now, the melancholy god protect thee; and
thetailor make thy doublet of changeable taffeta, forthy mind is a
very opal. I would have men of suchconstancy put to sea, that their
business might beevery thing and their intent every where; for
that'sit that always makes a good voyage of nothing.
Farewell.</para>
<para id="id3534294">Exit</para>
<para id="id3534298">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534309">Let all the rest give place.</para>
<para id="id3534319">CURIO and Attendants retire</para>
<para id="id3534324">Once more, Cesario,Get thee to yond same
sovereign cruelty:Tell her, my love, more noble than the
world,Prizes not quantity of dirty lands;The parts that fortune
hath bestow'd upon her,Tell her, I hold as giddily as fortune;But
'tis that miracle and queen of gemsThat nature pranks her in
attracts my soul.</para>
<para id="id3534397">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534408">But if she cannot love you, sir?</para>
<para id="id3534418">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534430">I cannot be so answer'd.</para>
<para id="id3534440">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534451">Sooth, but you must.Say that some lady, as
perhaps there is,Hath for your love a great a pang of heartAs you
have for Olivia: you cannot love her;You tell her so; must she not
then be answer'd?</para>
<para id="id3534498">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534509">There is no woman's sidesCan bide the beating
of so strong a passionAs love doth give my heart; no woman's
heartSo big, to hold so much; they lack retentionAlas, their love
may be call'd appetite,No motion of the liver, but the palate,That
suffer surfeit, cloyment and revolt;But mine is all as hungry as
the sea,And can digest as much: make no compareBetween that love a
woman can bear meAnd that I owe Olivia.</para>
<para id="id3534610">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534621">Ay, but I know--</para>
<para id="id3534631">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534643">What dost thou know?</para>
<para id="id3534653">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534664">Too well what love women to men may owe:In
faith, they are as true of heart as we.My father had a daughter
loved a man,As it might be, perhaps, were I a woman,I should your
lordship.</para>
<para id="id3534711">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534722">And what's her history?</para>
<para id="id3534732">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534744">A blank, my lord. She never told her love,But
let concealment, like a worm i' the bud,Feed on her damask cheek:
she pined in thought,And with a green and yellow melancholyShe sat
like patience on a monument,Smiling at grief. Was not this love
indeed?We men may say more, swear more: but indeedOur shows are
more than will; for still we proveMuch in our vows, but little in
our love.</para>
<para id="id3534828">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534839">But died thy sister of her love, my
boy?</para>
<para id="id3534850">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3534862">I am all the daughters of my father's
house,And all the brothers too: and yet I know not.Sir, shall I to
this lady?</para>
<para id="id3534890">DUKE ORSINO</para>
<para id="id3534902">Ay, that's the theme.To her in haste; give her
this jewel; say,My love can give no place, bide no denay.</para>
<para id="id3534930">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3534934">SCENE V. OLIVIA's garden.</para>
<para id="id3534938">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH, SIR ANDREW, and
FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3534950">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3534962">Come thy ways, Signior Fabian.</para>
<para id="id3534972">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3534983">Nay, I'll come: if I lose a scruple of this
sport,let me be boiled to death with melancholy.</para>
<para id="id3535004">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535015">Wouldst thou not be glad to have the
niggardlyrascally sheep-biter come by some notable shame?</para>
<para id="id3535035">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535047">I would exult, man: you know, he brought me
out o'favour with my lady about a bear-baiting here.</para>
<para id="id3535067">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535078">To anger him we'll have the bear again; and we
willfool him black and blue: shall we not, Sir Andrew?</para>
<para id="id3535099">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3535110">An we do not, it is pity of our lives.</para>
<para id="id3535121">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535133">Here comes the little villain.</para>
<para id="id3535143">Enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id3535147">How now, my metal of India!</para>
<para id="id3535157">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3535169">Get ye all three into the box-tree:
Malvolio'scoming down this walk: he has been yonder i' thesun
practising behavior to his own shadow this halfhour: observe him,
for the love of mockery; for Iknow this letter will make a
contemplative idiot ofhim. Close, in the name of jesting! Lie thou
there,</para>
<para id="id3535226">Throws down a letter</para>
<para id="id3535230">for here comes the trout that must be caught
with tickling.</para>
<para id="id3535241">Exit</para>
<para id="id3535245">Enter MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535250">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535261">'Tis but fortune; all is fortune. Maria once
toldme she did affect me: and I have heard herself comethus near,
that, should she fancy, it should be oneof my complexion. Besides,
she uses me with a moreexalted respect than any one else that
follows her.What should I think on't?</para>
<para id="id3535317">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535328">Here's an overweening rogue!</para>
<para id="id3535339">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535350">O, peace! Contemplation makes a rare
turkey-cockof him: how he jets under his advanced plumes!</para>
<para id="id3535370">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3535382">'Slight, I could so beat the rogue!</para>
<para id="id3535392">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535403">Peace, I say.</para>
<para id="id3535414">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535425">To be Count Malvolio!</para>
<para id="id3535435">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535447">Ah, rogue!</para>
<para id="id3535457">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3535468">Pistol him, pistol him.</para>
<para id="id3535478">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535490">Peace, peace!</para>
<para id="id3535500">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535511">There is example for't; the lady of the
Strachymarried the yeoman of the wardrobe.</para>
<para id="id3535531">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3535542">Fie on him, Jezebel!</para>
<para id="id3535552">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535564">O, peace! now he's deeply in: look
howimagination blows him.</para>
<para id="id3535583">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535594">Having been three months married to her,
sitting inmy state,--</para>
<para id="id3535614">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535625">O, for a stone-bow, to hit him in the
eye!</para>
<para id="id3535636">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535648">Calling my officers about me, in my branched
velvetgown; having come from a day-bed, where I have leftOlivia
sleeping,--</para>
<para id="id3535676">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535688">Fire and brimstone!</para>
<para id="id3535698">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535709">O, peace, peace!</para>
<para id="id3535720">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535731">And then to have the humour of state; and
after ademure travel of regard, telling them I know myplace as I
would they should do theirs, to for mykinsman Toby,--</para>
<para id="id3535769">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535780">Bolts and shackles!</para>
<para id="id3535790">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535802">O peace, peace, peace! now, now.</para>
<para id="id3535812">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535823">Seven of my people, with an obedient start,
makeout for him: I frown the while; and perchance windup watch, or
play with my--some rich jewel. Tobyapproaches; courtesies there to
me,--</para>
<para id="id3535862">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535873">Shall this fellow live?</para>
<para id="id3535884">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3535895">Though our silence be drawn from us with cars,
yet peace.</para>
<para id="id3535906">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535918">I extend my hand to him thus, quenching my
familiarsmile with an austere regard of control,--</para>
<para id="id3535938">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3535949">And does not Toby take you a blow o' the lips
then?</para>
<para id="id3535960">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3535972">Saying, 'Cousin Toby, my fortunes having cast
me onyour niece give me this prerogative of speech,'--</para>
<para id="id3535992">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536003">What, what?</para>
<para id="id3536014">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536025">'You must amend your drunkenness.'</para>
<para id="id3536035">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536047">Out, scab!</para>
<para id="id3536057">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536068">Nay, patience, or we break the sinews of our
plot.</para>
<para id="id3536079">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536091">'Besides, you waste the treasure of your time
witha foolish knight,'--</para>
<para id="id3536110">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3536122">That's me, I warrant you.</para>
<para id="id3536132">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536143">'One Sir Andrew,'--</para>
<para id="id3536153">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3536165">I knew 'twas I; for many do call me
fool.</para>
<para id="id3536176">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536187">What employment have we here?</para>
<para id="id3536197">Taking up the letter</para>
<para id="id3536202">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536213">Now is the woodcock near the gin.</para>
<para id="id3536223">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536234">O, peace! and the spirit of humour intimate
readingaloud to him!</para>
<para id="id3536254">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536265">By my life, this is my lady's hand these be
hervery C's, her U's and her T's and thus makes she hergreat P's.
It is, in contempt of question, her hand.</para>
<para id="id3536295">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3536306">Her C's, her U's and her T's: why that?</para>
<para id="id3536318">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536329">[Reads] 'To the unknown beloved, this, and my
goodwishes:'--her very phrases! By your leave, wax.Soft! and the
impressure her Lucrece, with which sheuses to seal: 'tis my lady.
To whom should this be?</para>
<para id="id3536368">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536379">This wins him, liver and all.</para>
<para id="id3536389">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536401">[Reads]Jove knows I love: But who?Lips, do not
move;No man must know.'No man must know.' What follows? the
numbersaltered! 'No man must know:' if this should bethee,
Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3536462">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536474">Marry, hang thee, brock!</para>
<para id="id3536484">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536495">[Reads]I may command where I adore;But
silence, like a Lucrece knife,With bloodless stroke my heart doth
gore:M, O, A, I, doth sway my life.</para>
<para id="id3536540">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536551">A fustian riddle!</para>
<para id="id3536561">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536572">Excellent wench, say I.</para>
<para id="id3536583">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536594">'M, O, A, I, doth sway my life.' Nay, but
first, letme see, let me see, let me see.</para>
<para id="id3536614">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536625">What dish o' poison has she dressed
him!</para>
<para id="id3536636">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536647">And with what wing the staniel cheques at
it!</para>
<para id="id3536659">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536670">'I may command where I adore.' Why, she may
commandme: I serve her; she is my lady. Why, this isevident to any
formal capacity; there is noobstruction in this: and the end,--what
shouldthat alphabetical position portend? If I could makethat
resemble something in me,--Softly! M, O, A,I,--</para>
<para id="id3536735">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536747">O, ay, make up that: he is now at a cold
scent.</para>
<para id="id3536758">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536769">Sowter will cry upon't for all this, though it
be asrank as a fox.</para>
<para id="id3536789">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536800">M,--Malvolio; M,--why, that begins my
name.</para>
<para id="id3536811">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536822">Did not I say he would work it out? the cur
isexcellent at faults.</para>
<para id="id3536842">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536853">M,--but then there is no consonancy in the
sequel;that suffers under probation A should follow but O
does.</para>
<para id="id3536874">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536885">And O shall end, I hope.</para>
<para id="id3536895">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3536907">Ay, or I'll cudgel him, and make him cry
O!</para>
<para id="id3536918">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536929">And then I comes behind.</para>
<para id="id3536939">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3536951">Ay, an you had any eye behind you, you might
seemore detraction at your heels than fortunes beforeyou.</para>
<para id="id3536979">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3536991">M, O, A, I; this simulation is not as the
former: andyet, to crush this a little, it would bow to me,
forevery one of these letters are in my name. Soft!here follows
prose.</para>
<para id="id3537029">Reads</para>
<para id="id3537033">'If this fall into thy hand, revolve. In my
stars Iam above thee; but be not afraid of greatness: someare born
great, some achieve greatness, and somehave greatness thrust upon
'em. Thy Fates opentheir hands; let thy blood and spirit embrace
them;and, to inure thyself to what thou art like to be,cast thy
humble slough and appear fresh. Beopposite with a kinsman, surly
with servants; letthy tongue tang arguments of state; put thyself
intothe trick of singularity: she thus advises theethat sighs for
thee. Remember who commended thyyellow stockings, and wished to see
thee evercross-gartered: I say, remember. Go to, thou artmade, if
thou desirest to be so; if not, let me seethee a steward still, the
fellow of servants, andnot worthy to touch Fortune's fingers.
Farewell.She that would alter services with thee,THE
FORTUNATE-UNHAPPY.'Daylight and champaign discovers not more: this
isopen. I will be proud, I will read politic authors,I will baffle
Sir Toby, I will wash off grossacquaintance, I will be point-devise
the very man.I do not now fool myself, to let imagination jademe;
for every reason excites to this, that my ladyloves me. She did
commend my yellow stockings oflate, she did praise my leg being
cross-gartered;and in this she manifests herself to my love,
andwith a kind of injunction drives me to these habitsof her
liking. I thank my stars I am happy. I willbe strange, stout, in
yellow stockings, andcross-gartered, even with the swiftness of
puttingon. Jove and my stars be praised! Here is yet
apostscript.</para>
<para id="id3537336">Reads</para>
<para id="id3537341">'Thou canst not choose but know who I am. If
thouentertainest my love, let it appear in thy smiling;thy smiles
become thee well; therefore in mypresence still smile, dear my
sweet, I prithee.'Jove, I thank thee: I will smile; I will
doeverything that thou wilt have me.</para>
<para id="id3537397">Exit</para>
<para id="id3537401">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3537412">I will not give my part of this sport for a
pensionof thousands to be paid from the Sophy.</para>
<para id="id3537432">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537444">I could marry this wench for this
device.</para>
<para id="id3537455">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3537466">So could I too.</para>
<para id="id3537476">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537488">And ask no other dowry with her but such
another jest.</para>
<para id="id3537499">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3537510">Nor I neither.</para>
<para id="id3537521">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3537532">Here comes my noble gull-catcher.</para>
<para id="id3537542">Re-enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id3537546">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537558">Wilt thou set thy foot o' my neck?</para>
<para id="id3537568">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3537579">Or o' mine either?</para>
<para id="id3537590">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537601">Shall I play my freedom at traytrip, and
become thybond-slave?</para>
<para id="id3537620">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3537632">I' faith, or I either?</para>
<para id="id3537642">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537653">Why, thou hast put him in such a dream, that
whenthe image of it leaves him he must run mad.</para>
<para id="id3537674">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3537685">Nay, but say true; does it work upon
him?</para>
<para id="id3537696">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537707">Like aqua-vitae with a midwife.</para>
<para id="id3537718">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3537729">If you will then see the fruits of the sport,
markhis first approach before my lady: he will come toher in yellow
stockings, and 'tis a colour sheabhors, and cross-gartered, a
fashion she detests;and he will smile upon her, which will now be
sounsuitable to her disposition, being addicted to amelancholy as
she is, that it cannot but turn himinto a notable contempt. If you
will see it, followme.</para>
<para id="id3537813">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3537824">To the gates of Tartar, thou most excellent
devil of wit!</para>
<para id="id3537836">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3537847">I'll make one too.</para>
<para id="id3537857">Exeunt</para>
<section id="id3537861">
<name>ACT III</name>
<para id="id3537868">SCENE I. OLIVIA's garden.</para>
<para id="id3537872">Enter VIOLA, and Clown with a tabour</para>
<para id="id3537884">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3537895">Save thee, friend, and thy music: dost thou
live bythy tabour?</para>
<para id="id3537915">Clown</para>
<para id="id3537926">No, sir, I live by the church.</para>
<para id="id3537936">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3537948">Art thou a churchman?</para>
<para id="id3537958">Clown</para>
<para id="id3537969">No such matter, sir: I do live by the church;
forI do live at my house, and my house doth stand bythe
church.</para>
<para id="id3537998">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538009">So thou mayst say, the king lies by a beggar,
if abeggar dwell near him; or, the church stands by thytabour, if
thy tabour stand by the church.</para>
<para id="id3538039">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538050">You have said, sir. To see this age! A
sentence isbut a cheveril glove to a good wit: how quickly thewrong
side may be turned outward!</para>
<para id="id3538079">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538090">Nay, that's certain; they that dally nicely
withwords may quickly make them wanton.</para>
<para id="id3538109">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538121">I would, therefore, my sister had had no name,
sir.</para>
<para id="id3538132">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538143">Why, man?</para>
<para id="id3538154">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538165">Why, sir, her name's a word; and to dally with
thatword might make my sister wanton. But indeed wordsare very
rascals since bonds disgraced them.</para>
<para id="id3538194">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538206">Thy reason, man?</para>
<para id="id3538216">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538227">Troth, sir, I can yield you none without
words; andwords are grown so false, I am loath to provereason with
them.</para>
<para id="id3538256">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538267">I warrant thou art a merry fellow and carest
for nothing.</para>
<para id="id3538279">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538290">Not so, sir, I do care for something; but in
myconscience, sir, I do not care for you: if that beto care for
nothing, sir, I would it would make you invisible.</para>
<para id="id3538320">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538331">Art not thou the Lady Olivia's fool?</para>
<para id="id3538342">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538354">No, indeed, sir; the Lady Olivia has no folly:
shewill keep no fool, sir, till she be married; andfools are as
like husbands as pilchards are toherrings; the husband's the
bigger: I am indeed nother fool, but her corrupter of words.</para>
<para id="id3538402">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538413">I saw thee late at the Count Orsino's.</para>
<para id="id3538424">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538435">Foolery, sir, does walk about the orb like the
sun,it shines every where. I would be sorry, sir, butthe fool
should be as oft with your master as withmy mistress: I think I saw
your wisdom there.</para>
<para id="id3538474">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538485">Nay, an thou pass upon me, I'll no more with
thee.Hold, there's expenses for thee.</para>
<para id="id3538505">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538516">Now Jove, in his next commodity of hair, send
thee a beard!</para>
<para id="id3538528">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538539">By my troth, I'll tell thee, I am almost sick
forone;</para>
<para id="id3538558">Aside</para>
<para id="id3538562">though I would not have it grow on my chin. Is
thylady within?</para>
<para id="id3538582">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538593">Would not a pair of these have bred,
sir?</para>
<para id="id3538604">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538616">Yes, being kept together and put to
use.</para>
<para id="id3538627">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538638">I would play Lord Pandarus of Phrygia, sir, to
bringa Cressida to this Troilus.</para>
<para id="id3538658">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538669">I understand you, sir; 'tis well
begged.</para>
<para id="id3538680">Clown</para>
<para id="id3538691">The matter, I hope, is not great, sir, begging
buta beggar: Cressida was a beggar. My lady iswithin, sir. I will
construe to them whence youcome; who you are and what you would are
out of mywelkin, I might say 'element,' but the word is
over-worn.</para>
<para id="id3538739">Exit</para>
<para id="id3538744">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538755">This fellow is wise enough to play the
fool;And to do that well craves a kind of wit:He must observe their
mood on whom he jests,The quality of persons, and the time,And,
like the haggard, cheque at every featherThat comes before his eye.
This is a practiseAs full of labour as a wise man's artFor folly
that he wisely shows is fit;But wise men, folly-fall'n, quite taint
their wit.</para>
<para id="id3538839">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH, and SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3538844">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3538855">Save you, gentleman.</para>
<para id="id3538866">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538877">And you, sir.</para>
<para id="id3538887">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3538899">Dieu vous garde, monsieur.</para>
<para id="id3538909">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538920">Et vous aussi; votre serviteur.</para>
<para id="id3538930">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3538942">I hope, sir, you are; and I am yours.</para>
<para id="id3538953">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3538964">Will you encounter the house? my niece is
desirousyou should enter, if your trade be to her.</para>
<para id="id3538984">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3538996">I am bound to your niece, sir; I mean, she is
thelist of my voyage.</para>
<para id="id3539015">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3539027">Taste your legs, sir; put them to
motion.</para>
<para id="id3539038">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539049">My legs do better understand me, sir, than
Iunderstand what you mean by bidding me taste my legs.</para>
<para id="id3539070">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3539081">I mean, to go, sir, to enter.</para>
<para id="id3539091">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539102">I will answer you with gait and entrance. But
weare prevented.</para>
<para id="id3539122">Enter OLIVIA and MARIA</para>
<para id="id3539126">Most excellent accomplished lady, the heavens
rainodours on you!</para>
<para id="id3539146">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3539157">That youth's a rare courtier: 'Rain odours;'
well.</para>
<para id="id3539168">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539179">My matter hath no voice, to your own most
pregnantand vouchsafed ear.</para>
<para id="id3539199">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3539210">'Odours,' 'pregnant' and 'vouchsafed:' I'll
get 'emall three all ready.</para>
<para id="id3539230">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539241">Let the garden door be shut, and leave me to
my hearing.</para>
<para id="id3539252">Exeunt SIR TOBY BELCH, SIR ANDREW, and
MARIA</para>
<para id="id3539257">Give me your hand, sir.</para>
<para id="id3539268">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539279">My duty, madam, and most humble
service.</para>
<para id="id3539290">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539301">What is your name?</para>
<para id="id3539312">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539323">Cesario is your servant's name, fair
princess.</para>
<para id="id3539334">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539346">My servant, sir! 'Twas never merry worldSince
lowly feigning was call'd compliment:You're servant to the Count
Orsino, youth.</para>
<para id="id3539375">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539386">And he is yours, and his must needs be
yours:Your servant's servant is your servant, madam.</para>
<para id="id3539406">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539418">For him, I think not on him: for his
thoughts,Would they were blanks, rather than fill'd with me!</para>
<para id="id3539438">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539450">Madam, I come to whet your gentle thoughtsOn
his behalf.</para>
<para id="id3539469">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539480">O, by your leave, I pray you,I bade you never
speak again of him:But, would you undertake another suit,I had
rather hear you to solicit thatThan music from the spheres.</para>
<para id="id3539526">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539537">Dear lady,--</para>
<para id="id3539548">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539559">Give me leave, beseech you. I did send,After
the last enchantment you did here,A ring in chase of you: so did I
abuseMyself, my servant and, I fear me, you:Under your hard
construction must I sit,To force that on you, in a shameful
cunning,Which you knew none of yours: what might you think?Have you
not set mine honour at the stakeAnd baited it with all the
unmuzzled thoughtsThat tyrannous heart can think? To one of your
receivingEnough is shown: a cypress, not a bosom,Hideth my heart.
So, let me hear you speak.</para>
<para id="id3539670">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539682">I pity you.</para>
<para id="id3539692">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539703">That's a degree to love.</para>
<para id="id3539714">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539725">No, not a grize; for 'tis a vulgar proof,That
very oft we pity enemies.</para>
<para id="id3539744">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539756">Why, then, methinks 'tis time to smile
again.O, world, how apt the poor are to be proud!If one should be a
prey, how much the betterTo fall before the lion than the
wolf!</para>
<para id="id3539794">Clock strikes</para>
<para id="id3539798">The clock upbraids me with the waste of
time.Be not afraid, good youth, I will not have you:And yet, when
wit and youth is come to harvest,Your were is alike to reap a
proper man:There lies your way, due west.</para>
<para id="id3539845">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539856">Then westward-ho! Grace and good
dispositionAttend your ladyship!You'll nothing, madam, to my lord
by me?</para>
<para id="id3539885">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539896">Stay:I prithee, tell me what thou thinkest of
me.</para>
<para id="id3539916">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539927">That you do think you are not what you
are.</para>
<para id="id3539938">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539950">If I think so, I think the same of you.</para>
<para id="id3539961">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3539972">Then think you right: I am not what I
am.</para>
<para id="id3539983">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3539994">I would you were as I would have you
be!</para>
<para id="id3540005">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3540017">Would it be better, madam, than I am?I wish it
might, for now I am your fool.</para>
<para id="id3540037">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3540048">O, what a deal of scorn looks beautifulIn the
contempt and anger of his lip!A murderous guilt shows not itself
more soonThan love that would seem hid: love's night is
noon.Cesario, by the roses of the spring,By maidhood, honour, truth
and every thing,I love thee so, that, maugre all thy pride,Nor wit
nor reason can my passion hide.Do not extort thy reasons from this
clause,For that I woo, thou therefore hast no cause,But rather
reason thus with reason fetter,Love sought is good, but given
unsought better.</para>
<para id="id3540160">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3540171">By innocence I swear, and by my youthI have
one heart, one bosom and one truth,And that no woman has; nor never
noneShall mistress be of it, save I alone.And so adieu, good madam:
never moreWill I my master's tears to you deplore.</para>
<para id="id3540227">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3540239">Yet come again; for thou perhaps mayst
moveThat heart, which now abhors, to like his love.</para>
<para id="id3540259">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3540263">SCENE II. OLIVIA's house.</para>
<para id="id3540267">Enter SIR TOBY BELCH, SIR ANDREW, and
FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540280">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540291">No, faith, I'll not stay a jot longer.</para>
<para id="id3540302">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540313">Thy reason, dear venom, give thy
reason.</para>
<para id="id3540324">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540336">You must needs yield your reason, Sir
Andrew.</para>
<para id="id3540347">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540358">Marry, I saw your niece do more favours to
thecount's serving-man than ever she bestowed upon me;I saw't i'
the orchard.</para>
<para id="id3540387">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540398">Did she see thee the while, old boy? tell me
that.</para>
<para id="id3540409">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540421">As plain as I see you now.</para>
<para id="id3540431">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540442">This was a great argument of love in her
toward you.</para>
<para id="id3540454">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540465">'Slight, will you make an ass o' me?</para>
<para id="id3540476">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540487">I will prove it legitimate, sir, upon the
oaths ofjudgment and reason.</para>
<para id="id3540507">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540518">And they have been grand-jury-men since before
Noahwas a sailor.</para>
<para id="id3540538">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540549">She did show favour to the youth in your sight
onlyto exasperate you, to awake your dormouse valour, toput fire in
your heart and brimstone in your liver.You should then have
accosted her; and with someexcellent jests, fire-new from the mint,
you shouldhave banged the youth into dumbness. This waslooked for
at your hand, and this was balked: thedouble gilt of this
opportunity you let time washoff, and you are now sailed into the
north of mylady's opinion; where you will hang like an icicleon a
Dutchman's beard, unless you do redeem it bysome laudable attempt
either of valour or policy.</para>
<para id="id3540662">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540673">An't be any way, it must be with valour; for
policyI hate: I had as lief be a Brownist as apolitician.</para>
<para id="id3540701">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540713">Why, then, build me thy fortunes upon the
basis ofvalour. Challenge me the count's youth to fightwith him;
hurt him in eleven places: my niece shalltake note of it; and
assure thyself, there is nolove-broker in the world can more
prevail in man'scommendation with woman than report of
valour.</para>
<para id="id3540770">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540781">There is no way but this, Sir Andrew.</para>
<para id="id3540792">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540804">Will either of you bear me a challenge to
him?</para>
<para id="id3540815">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540826">Go, write it in a martial hand; be curst and
brief;it is no matter how witty, so it be eloquent and funof
invention: taunt him with the licence of ink:if thou thou'st him
some thrice, it shall not beamiss; and as many lies as will lie in
thy sheet ofpaper, although the sheet were big enough for thebed of
Ware in England, set 'em down: go, about it.Let there be gall
enough in thy ink, though thouwrite with a goose-pen, no matter:
about it.</para>
<para id="id3540911">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540922">Where shall I find you?</para>
<para id="id3540933">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540944">We'll call thee at the cubiculo: go.</para>
<para id="id3540955">Exit SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3540959">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3540971">This is a dear manikin to you, Sir
Toby.</para>
<para id="id3540982">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3540993">I have been dear to him, lad, some two
thousandstrong, or so.</para>
<para id="id3541012">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3541024">We shall have a rare letter from him: but
you'llnot deliver't?</para>
<para id="id3541043">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3541055">Never trust me, then; and by all means stir on
theyouth to an answer. I think oxen and wainropescannot hale them
together. For Andrew, if he wereopened, and you find so much blood
in his liver aswill clog the foot of a flea, I'll eat the rest
ofthe anatomy.</para>
<para id="id3541111">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3541122">And his opposite, the youth, bears in his
visage nogreat presage of cruelty.</para>
<para id="id3541142">Enter MARIA</para>
<para id="id3541146">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3541157">Look, where the youngest wren of nine
comes.</para>
<para id="id3541168">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3541180">If you desire the spleen, and will laugh
yourselfinto stitches, follow me. Yond gull Malvolio isturned
heathen, a very renegado; for there is noChristian, that means to
be saved by believingrightly, can ever believe such impossible
passagesof grossness. He's in yellow stockings.</para>
<para id="id3541237">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3541248">And cross-gartered?</para>
<para id="id3541258">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3541270">Most villanously; like a pedant that keeps a
schooli' the church. I have dogged him, like hismurderer. He does
obey every point of the letterthat I dropped to betray him: he does
smile hisface into more lines than is in the new map with
theaugmentation of the Indies: you have not seen sucha thing as
'tis. I can hardly forbear hurling thingsat him. I know my lady
will strike him: if she do,he'll smile and take't for a great
favour.</para>
<para id="id3541354">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3541366">Come, bring us, bring us where he is.</para>
<para id="id3541377">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3541381">SCENE III. A street.</para>
<para id="id3541385">Enter SEBASTIAN and ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541396">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541408">I would not by my will have troubled you;But,
since you make your pleasure of your pains,I will no further chide
you.</para>
<para id="id3541436">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541448">I could not stay behind you: my desire,More
sharp than filed steel, did spur me forth;And not all love to see
you, though so muchAs might have drawn one to a longer voyage,But
jealousy what might befall your travel,Being skilless in these
parts; which to a stranger,Unguided and unfriended, often
proveRough and unhospitable: my willing love,The rather by these
arguments of fear,Set forth in your pursuit.</para>
<para id="id3541540">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541551">My kind Antonio,I can no other answer make but
thanks,And thanks; and ever [ ] oft good turnsAre shuffled off with
such uncurrent pay:But, were my worth as is my conscience firm,You
should find better dealing. What's to do?Shall we go see the
reliques of this town?</para>
<para id="id3541616">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541627">To-morrow, sir: best first go see your
lodging.</para>
<para id="id3541639">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541650">I am not weary, and 'tis long to night:I pray
you, let us satisfy our eyesWith the memorials and the things of
fameThat do renown this city.</para>
<para id="id3541687">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541698">Would you'ld pardon me;I do not without danger
walk these streets:Once, in a sea-fight, 'gainst the count his
galleysI did some service; of such note indeed,That were I ta'en
here it would scarce be answer'd.</para>
<para id="id3541745">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541756">Belike you slew great number of his
people.</para>
<para id="id3541767">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541778">The offence is not of such a bloody
nature;Albeit the quality of the time and quarrelMight well have
given us bloody argument.It might have since been answer'd in
repayingWhat we took from them; which, for traffic's sake,Most of
our city did: only myself stood out;For which, if I be lapsed in
this place,I shall pay dear.</para>
<para id="id3541853">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541864">Do not then walk too open.</para>
<para id="id3541874">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541886">It doth not fit me. Hold, sir, here's my
purse.In the south suburbs, at the Elephant,Is best to lodge: I
will bespeak our diet,Whiles you beguile the time and feed your
knowledgeWith viewing of the town: there shall you have me.</para>
<para id="id3541933">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3541945">Why I your purse?</para>
<para id="id3541955">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3541966">Haply your eye shall light upon some toyYou
have desire to purchase; and your store,I think, is not for idle
markets, sir.</para>
<para id="id3541996">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3542007">I'll be your purse-bearer and leave youFor an
hour.</para>
<para id="id3542026">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3542038">To the Elephant.</para>
<para id="id3542048">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3542059">I do remember.</para>
<para id="id3542069">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3542074">SCENE IV. OLIVIA's garden.</para>
<para id="id3542078">Enter OLIVIA and MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542089">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542100">I have sent after him: he says he'll come;How
shall I feast him? what bestow of him?For youth is bought more oft
than begg'd or borrow'd.I speak too loud.Where is Malvolio? he is
sad and civil,And suits well for a servant with my fortunes:Where
is Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3542165">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542176">He's coming, madam; but in very strange
manner. Heis, sure, possessed, madam.</para>
<para id="id3542195">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542207">Why, what's the matter? does he rave?</para>
<para id="id3542218">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542229">No. madam, he does nothing but smile:
yourladyship were best to have some guard about you, ifhe come;
for, sure, the man is tainted in's wits.</para>
<para id="id3542259">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542270">Go call him hither.</para>
<para id="id3542280">Exit MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542284">I am as mad as he,If sad and merry madness
equal be.</para>
<para id="id3542304">Re-enter MARIA, with MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542308">How now, Malvolio!</para>
<para id="id3542319">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542330">Sweet lady, ho, ho.</para>
<para id="id3542340">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542352">Smilest thou?I sent for thee upon a sad
occasion.</para>
<para id="id3542371">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542382">Sad, lady! I could be sad: this does make
someobstruction in the blood, this cross-gartering; butwhat of
that? if it please the eye of one, it iswith me as the very true
sonnet is, 'Please one, andplease all.'</para>
<para id="id3542429">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542441">Why, how dost thou, man? what is the matter
with thee?</para>
<para id="id3542452">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542463">Not black in my mind, though yellow in my
legs. Itdid come to his hands, and commands shall beexecuted: I
think we do know the sweet Roman hand.</para>
<para id="id3542493">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542504">Wilt thou go to bed, Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3542515">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542527">To bed! ay, sweet-heart, and I'll come to
thee.</para>
<para id="id3542538">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542549">God comfort thee! Why dost thou smile so and
kissthy hand so oft?</para>
<para id="id3542569">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542580">How do you, Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3542590">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542602">At your request! yes; nightingales answer
daws.</para>
<para id="id3542613">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3542624">Why appear you with this ridiculous boldness
before my lady?</para>
<para id="id3542636">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542647">'Be not afraid of greatness:' 'twas well
writ.</para>
<para id="id3542658">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542669">What meanest thou by that, Malvolio?</para>
<para id="id3542680">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542692">'Some are born great,'--</para>
<para id="id3542702">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542713">Ha!</para>
<para id="id3542724">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542735">'Some achieve greatness,'--</para>
<para id="id3542745">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542757">What sayest thou?</para>
<para id="id3542767">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542778">'And some have greatness thrust upon
them.'</para>
<para id="id3542789">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542801">Heaven restore thee!</para>
<para id="id3542811">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542822">'Remember who commended thy yellow stocking
s,'--</para>
<para id="id3542833">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542845">Thy yellow stockings!</para>
<para id="id3542855">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542866">'And wished to see thee
cross-gartered.'</para>
<para id="id3542877">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542889">Cross-gartered!</para>
<para id="id3542899">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542910">'Go to thou art made, if thou desirest to be
so;'--</para>
<para id="id3542922">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542933">Am I made?</para>
<para id="id3542943">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3542954">'If not, let me see thee a servant
still.'</para>
<para id="id3542966">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3542977">Why, this is very midsummer madness.</para>
<para id="id3542988">Enter Servant</para>
<para id="id3542992">Servant</para>
<para id="id3543003">Madam, the young gentleman of the Count
Orsino's isreturned: I could hardly entreat him back: heattends
your ladyship's pleasure.</para>
<para id="id3543033">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3543044">I'll come to him.</para>
<para id="id3543054">Exit Servant</para>
<para id="id3543058">Good Maria, let this fellow be looked to.
Where'smy cousin Toby? Let some of my people have a specialcare of
him: I would not have him miscarry for thehalf of my dowry.</para>
<para id="id3543096">Exeunt OLIVIA and MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543101">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543112">O, ho! do you come near me now? no worse man
thanSir Toby to look to me! This concurs directly withthe letter:
she sends him on purpose, that I mayappear stubborn to him; for she
incites me to thatin the letter. 'Cast thy humble slough,' says
she;'be opposite with a kinsman, surly with servants;let thy tongue
tang with arguments of state; putthyself into the trick of
singularity;' andconsequently sets down the manner how; as, a
sadface, a reverend carriage, a slow tongue, in thehabit of some
sir of note, and so forth. I havelimed her; but it is Jove's doing,
and Jove make methankful! And when she went away now, 'Let
thisfellow be looked to:' fellow! not Malvolio, norafter my degree,
but fellow. Why, every thingadheres together, that no dram of a
scruple, noscruple of a scruple, no obstacle, no incredulousor
unsafe circumstance--What can be said? Nothingthat can be can come
between me and the fullprospect of my hopes. Well, Jove, not I, is
thedoer of this, and he is to be thanked.</para>
<para id="id3543307">Re-enter MARIA, with SIR TOBY BELCH and
FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3543312">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543323">Which way is he, in the name of sanctity? If
allthe devils of hell be drawn in little, and Legionhimself
possessed him, yet I'll speak to him.</para>
<para id="id3543353">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3543364">Here he is, here he is. How is't with you,
sir?how is't with you, man?</para>
<para id="id3543384">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543395">Go off; I discard you: let me enjoy my
private: gooff.</para>
<para id="id3543414">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543426">Lo, how hollow the fiend speaks within him!
did notI tell you? Sir Toby, my lady prays you to have acare of
him.</para>
<para id="id3543454">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543466">Ah, ha! does she so?</para>
<para id="id3543476">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543487">Go to, go to; peace, peace; we must deal
gentlywith him: let me alone. How do you, Malvolio? howis't with
you? What, man! defy the devil:consider, he's an enemy to
mankind.</para>
<para id="id3543526">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543537">Do you know what you say?</para>
<para id="id3543547">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543559">La you, an you speak ill of the devil, how he
takesit at heart! Pray God, he be not bewitched!</para>
<para id="id3543579">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3543590">Carry his water to the wise woman.</para>
<para id="id3543601">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543613">Marry, and it shall be done to-morrow morning,
if Ilive. My lady would not lose him for more than I'll say.</para>
<para id="id3543633">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543644">How now, mistress!</para>
<para id="id3543655">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543666">O Lord!</para>
<para id="id3543676">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543688">Prithee, hold thy peace; this is not the way:
doyou not see you move him? let me alone with him.</para>
<para id="id3543708">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3543719">No way but gentleness; gently, gently: the
fiend isrough, and will not be roughly used.</para>
<para id="id3543740">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543751">Why, how now, my bawcock! how dost thou,
chuck?</para>
<para id="id3543762">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543774">Sir!</para>
<para id="id3543784">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543795">Ay, Biddy, come with me. What, man! 'tis not
forgravity to play at cherry-pit with Satan: hanghim, foul
collier!</para>
<para id="id3543824">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543835">Get him to say his prayers, good Sir Toby, get
him to pray.</para>
<para id="id3543846">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543858">My prayers, minx!</para>
<para id="id3543868">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3543879">No, I warrant you, he will not hear of
godliness.</para>
<para id="id3543891">MALVOLIO</para>
<para id="id3543902">Go, hang yourselves all! you are idle
shallowthings: I am not of your element: you shall knowmore
hereafter.</para>
<para id="id3543931">Exit</para>
<para id="id3543935">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543946">Is't possible?</para>
<para id="id3543956">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3543968">If this were played upon a stage now, I
couldcondemn it as an improbable fiction.</para>
<para id="id3543988">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3543999">His very genius hath taken the infection of
the device, man.</para>
<para id="id3544011">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3544022">Nay, pursue him now, lest the device take air
and taint.</para>
<para id="id3544033">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544045">Why, we shall make him mad indeed.</para>
<para id="id3544056">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3544067">The house will be the quieter.</para>
<para id="id3544078">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544089">Come, we'll have him in a dark room and bound.
Myniece is already in the belief that he's mad: wemay carry it
thus, for our pleasure and his penance,till our very pastime, tired
out of breath, promptus to have mercy on him: at which time we
willbring the device to the bar and crown thee for afinder of
madmen. But see, but see.</para>
<para id="id3544156">Enter SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3544160">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544171">More matter for a May morning.</para>
<para id="id3544182">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3544193">Here's the challenge, read it: warrant
there'svinegar and pepper in't.</para>
<para id="id3544213">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544224">Is't so saucy?</para>
<para id="id3544234">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3544246">Ay, is't, I warrant him: do but read.</para>
<para id="id3544257">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544268">Give me.</para>
<para id="id3544278">Reads</para>
<para id="id3544282">'Youth, whatsoever thou art, thou art but a
scurvy fellow.'</para>
<para id="id3544294">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544305">Good, and valiant.</para>
<para id="id3544315">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544327">[Reads] 'Wonder not, nor admire not in thy
mind,why I do call thee so, for I will show thee no reason
for't.'</para>
<para id="id3544347">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544359">A good note; that keeps you from the blow of
the law.</para>
<para id="id3544370">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544381">[Reads] 'Thou comest to the lady Olivia, and
in mysight she uses thee kindly: but thou liest in thythroat; that
is not the matter I challenge thee for.'</para>
<para id="id3544411">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544422">Very brief, and to exceeding good
sense--less.</para>
<para id="id3544434">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544445">[Reads] 'I will waylay thee going home; where
if itbe thy chance to kill me,'--</para>
<para id="id3544465">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544476">Good.</para>
<para id="id3544487">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544498">[Reads] 'Thou killest me like a rogue and a
villain.'</para>
<para id="id3544509">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544521">Still you keep o' the windy side of the law:
good.</para>
<para id="id3544532">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544543">[Reads] 'Fare thee well; and God have mercy
uponone of our souls! He may have mercy upon mine; butmy hope is
better, and so look to thyself. Thyfriend, as thou usest him, and
thy sworn enemy,ANDREW AGUECHEEK.If this letter move him not, his
legs cannot:I'll give't him.</para>
<para id="id3544608">MARIA</para>
<para id="id3544619">You may have very fit occasion for't: he is
now insome commerce with my lady, and will by and by depart.</para>
<para id="id3544640">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544651">Go, Sir Andrew: scout me for him at the corner
theorchard like a bum-baily: so soon as ever thou seesthim, draw;
and, as thou drawest swear horrible; forit comes to pass oft that a
terrible oath, with aswaggering accent sharply twanged off, gives
manhoodmore approbation than ever proof itself would haveearned
him. Away!</para>
<para id="id3544717">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3544728">Nay, let me alone for swearing.</para>
<para id="id3544739">Exit</para>
<para id="id3544743">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544754">Now will not I deliver his letter: for the
behaviorof the young gentleman gives him out to be of goodcapacity
and breeding; his employment between hislord and my niece confirms
no less: therefore thisletter, being so excellently ignorant, will
breed noterror in the youth: he will find it comes from aclodpole.
But, sir, I will deliver his challenge byword of mouth; set upon
Aguecheek a notable reportof valour; and drive the gentleman, as I
know hisyouth will aptly receive it, into a most hideousopinion of
his rage, skill, fury and impetuosity.This will so fright them both
that they will killone another by the look, like
cockatrices.</para>
<para id="id3544876">Re-enter OLIVIA, with VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3544880">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3544892">Here he comes with your niece: give them way
tillhe take leave, and presently after him.</para>
<para id="id3544912">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3544923">I will meditate the while upon some horrid
messagefor a challenge.</para>
<para id="id3544943">Exeunt SIR TOBY BELCH, FABIAN, and
MARIA</para>
<para id="id3544948">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3544959">I have said too much unto a heart of stoneAnd
laid mine honour too unchary out:There's something in me that
reproves my fault;But such a headstrong potent fault it is,That it
but mocks reproof.</para>
<para id="id3545006">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545017">With the same 'havior that your passion
bearsGoes on my master's grief.</para>
<para id="id3545036">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3545048">Here, wear this jewel for me, 'tis my
picture;Refuse it not; it hath no tongue to vex you;And I beseech
you come again to-morrow.What shall you ask of me that I'll
deny,That honour saved may upon asking give?</para>
<para id="id3545095">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545107">Nothing but this; your true love for my
master.</para>
<para id="id3545118">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3545129">How with mine honour may I give him thatWhich
I have given to you?</para>
<para id="id3545148">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545160">I will acquit you.</para>
<para id="id3545170">OLIVIA</para>
<para id="id3545181">Well, come again to-morrow: fare thee well:A
fiend like thee might bear my soul to hell.</para>
<para id="id3545202">Exit</para>
<para id="id3545206">Re-enter SIR TOBY BELCH and FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3545211">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545222">Gentleman, God save thee.</para>
<para id="id3545232">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545244">And you, sir.</para>
<para id="id3545254">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545265">That defence thou hast, betake thee to't: of
whatnature the wrongs are thou hast done him, I knownot; but thy
intercepter, full of despite, bloody asthe hunter, attends thee at
the orchard-end:dismount thy tuck, be yare in thy preparation,
forthy assailant is quick, skilful and deadly.</para>
<para id="id3545322">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545334">You mistake, sir; I am sure no man hath any
quarrelto me: my remembrance is very free and clear fromany image
of offence done to any man.</para>
<para id="id3545363">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545374">You'll find it otherwise, I assure you:
therefore,if you hold your life at any price, betake you toyour
guard; for your opposite hath in him whatyouth, strength, skill and
wrath can furnish man withal.</para>
<para id="id3545413">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545425">I pray you, sir, what is he?</para>
<para id="id3545436">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545447">He is knight, dubbed with unhatched rapier and
oncarpet consideration; but he is a devil in privatebrawl: souls
and bodies hath he divorced three; andhis incensement at this
moment is so implacable,that satisfaction can be none but by pangs
of deathand sepulchre. Hob, nob, is his word; give't or
take't.</para>
<para id="id3545504">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545516">I will return again into the house and desire
someconduct of the lady. I am no fighter. I have heardof some kind
of men that put quarrels purposely onothers, to taste their valour:
belike this is a manof that quirk.</para>
<para id="id3545563">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545574">Sir, no; his indignation derives itself out of
avery competent injury: therefore, get you on andgive him his
desire. Back you shall not to thehouse, unless you undertake that
with me which withas much safety you might answer him: therefore,
on,or strip your sword stark naked; for meddle youmust, that's
certain, or forswear to wear iron about you.</para>
<para id="id3545641">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545652">This is as uncivil as strange. I beseech you,
do methis courteous office, as to know of the knight whatmy offence
to him is: it is something of mynegligence, nothing of my
purpose.</para>
<para id="id3545690">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545702">I will do so. Signior Fabian, stay you by
thisgentleman till my return.</para>
<para id="id3545721">Exit</para>
<para id="id3545725">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545737">Pray you, sir, do you know of this
matter?</para>
<para id="id3545748">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3545759">I know the knight is incensed against you,
even to amortal arbitrement; but nothing of the circumstance
more.</para>
<para id="id3545780">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545791">I beseech you, what manner of man is
he?</para>
<para id="id3545802">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3545814">Nothing of that wonderful promise, to read him
byhis form, as you are like to find him in the proofof his valour.
He is, indeed, sir, the most skilful,bloody and fatal opposite that
you could possiblyhave found in any part of Illyria. Will you
walktowards him? I will make your peace with him if Ican.</para>
<para id="id3545879">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3545890">I shall be much bound to you for't: I am one
thathad rather go with sir priest than sir knight: Icare not who
knows so much of my mettle.</para>
<para id="id3545920">Exeunt</para>
<para id="id3545924">Re-enter SIR TOBY BELCH, with SIR
ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3545929">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3545940">Why, man, he's a very devil; I have not seen
such afirago. I had a pass with him, rapier, scabbard andall, and
he gives me the stuck in with such a mortalmotion, that it is
inevitable; and on the answer, hepays you as surely as your feet
hit the ground theystep on. They say he has been fencer to the
Sophy.</para>
<para id="id3545998">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3546009">Pox on't, I'll not meddle with him.</para>
<para id="id3546020">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546031">Ay, but he will not now be pacified: Fabian
canscarce hold him yonder.</para>
<para id="id3546051">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3546062">Plague on't, an I thought he had been valiant
and socunning in fence, I'ld have seen him damned ere I'ldhave
challenged him. Let him let the matter slip,and I'll give him my
horse, grey Capilet.</para>
<para id="id3546101">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546112">I'll make the motion: stand here, make a good
showon't: this shall end without the perdition of souls.</para>
<para id="id3546133">Aside</para>
<para id="id3546137">Marry, I'll ride your horse as well as I ride
you.</para>
<para id="id3546148">Re-enter FABIAN and VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3546152">To FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3546157">I have his horse to take up the quarrel:I have
persuaded him the youth's a devil.</para>
<para id="id3546177">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3546188">He is as horribly conceited of him; and pants
andlooks pale, as if a bear were at his heels.</para>
<para id="id3546208">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546220">[To VIOLA] There's no remedy, sir; he will
fightwith you for's oath sake: marry, he hath betterbethought him
of his quarrel, and he finds that nowscarce to be worth talking of:
therefore draw, forthe supportance of his vow; he protests he will
not hurt you.</para>
<para id="id3546268">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3546279">[Aside] Pray God defend me! A little thing
wouldmake me tell them how much I lack of a man.</para>
<para id="id3546300">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3546311">Give ground, if you see him furious.</para>
<para id="id3546322">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546333">Come, Sir Andrew, there's no remedy; the
gentlemanwill, for his honour's sake, have one bout with you;he
cannot by the duello avoid it: but he haspromised me, as he is a
gentleman and a soldier, hewill not hurt you. Come on; to't.</para>
<para id="id3546381">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3546392">Pray God, he keep his oath!</para>
<para id="id3546403">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3546417">I do assure you, 'tis against my will.</para>
<para id="id3546428">They draw</para>
<para id="id3546432">Enter ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546436">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546451">Put up your sword. If this young gentlemanHave
done offence, I take the fault on me:If you offend him, I for him
defy you.</para>
<para id="id3546480">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546494">You, sir! why, what are you?</para>
<para id="id3546505">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546520">One, sir, that for his love dares yet do
moreThan you have heard him brag to you he will.</para>
<para id="id3546540">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546555">Nay, if you be an undertaker, I am for
you.</para>
<para id="id3546566">They draw</para>
<para id="id3546570">Enter Officers</para>
<para id="id3546574">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3546588">O good Sir Toby, hold! here come the
officers.</para>
<para id="id3546600">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3546614">I'll be with you anon.</para>
<para id="id3546624">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3546639">Pray, sir, put your sword up, if you
please.</para>
<para id="id3546650">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3546664">Marry, will I, sir; and, for that I promised
you,I'll be as good as my word: he will bear you easilyand reins
well.</para>
<para id="id3546693">First Officer</para>
<para id="id3546710">This is the man; do thy office.</para>
<para id="id3546721">Second Officer</para>
<para id="id3546739">Antonio, I arrest thee at the suit of Count
Orsino.</para>
<para id="id3546750">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546767">You do mistake me, sir.</para>
<para id="id3546778">First Officer</para>
<para id="id3546797">No, sir, no jot; I know your favour
well,Though now you have no sea-cap on your head.Take him away: he
knows I know him well.</para>
<para id="id3546828">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546847">I must obey.</para>
<para id="id3546858">To VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3546862">This comes with seeking you:But there's no
remedy; I shall answer it.What will you do, now my necessityMakes
me to ask you for my purse? It grieves meMuch more for what I
cannot do for youThan what befalls myself. You stand amazed;But be
of comfort.</para>
<para id="id3546931">Second Officer</para>
<para id="id3546950">Come, sir, away.</para>
<para id="id3546961">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3546979">I must entreat of you some of that
money.</para>
<para id="id3546991">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3547009">What money, sir?For the fair kindness you have
show'd me here,And, part, being prompted by your present
trouble,Out of my lean and low abilityI'll lend you something: my
having is not much;I'll make division of my present with you:Hold,
there's half my coffer.</para>
<para id="id3547078">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3547097">Will you deny me now?Is't possible that my
deserts to youCan lack persuasion? Do not tempt my misery,Lest that
it make me so unsound a manAs to upbraid you with those
kindnessesThat I have done for you.</para>
<para id="id3547156">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3547175">I know of none;Nor know I you by voice or any
feature:I hate ingratitude more in a manThan lying, vainness,
babbling, drunkenness,Or any taint of vice whose strong
corruptionInhabits our frail blood.</para>
<para id="id3547234">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3547252">O heavens themselves!</para>
<para id="id3547264">Second Officer</para>
<para id="id3547282">Come, sir, I pray you, go.</para>
<para id="id3547294">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3547312">Let me speak a little. This youth that you see
hereI snatch'd one half out of the jaws of death,Relieved him with
such sanctity of love,And to his image, which methought did
promiseMost venerable worth, did I devotion.</para>
<para id="id3547362">First Officer</para>
<para id="id3547381">What's that to us? The time goes by:
away!</para>
<para id="id3547393">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3547411">But O how vile an idol proves this godThou
hast, Sebastian, done good feature shame.In nature there's no
blemish but the mind;None can be call'd deform'd but the
unkind:Virtue is beauty, but the beauteous evilAre empty trunks
o'erflourish'd by the devil.</para>
<para id="id3547471">First Officer</para>
<para id="id3547490">The man grows mad: away with him! Come, come,
sir.</para>
<para id="id3547502">ANTONIO</para>
<para id="id3547520">Lead me on.</para>
<para id="id3547531">Exit with Officers</para>
<para id="id3547536">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3547554">Methinks his words do from such passion
fly,That he believes himself: so do not I.Prove true, imagination,
O, prove true,That I, dear brother, be now ta'en for you!</para>
<para id="id3547595">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3547613">Come hither, knight; come hither, Fabian:
we'llwhisper o'er a couplet or two of most sage saws.</para>
<para id="id3547635">VIOLA</para>
<para id="id3547653">He named Sebastian: I my brother knowYet
living in my glass; even such and soIn favour was my brother, and
he wentStill in this fashion, colour, ornament,For him I imitate:
O, if it prove,Tempests are kind and salt waves fresh in
love.</para>
<para id="id3547713">Exit</para>
<para id="id3547717">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3547736">A very dishonest paltry boy, and more a coward
thana hare: his dishonesty appears in leaving hisfriend here in
necessity and denying him; and forhis cowardship, ask
Fabian.</para>
<para id="id3547777">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3547795">A coward, a most devout coward, religious in
it.</para>
<para id="id3547807">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3547825">'Slid, I'll after him again and beat
him.</para>
<para id="id3547837">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3547856">Do; cuff him soundly, but never draw thy
sword.</para>
<para id="id3547867">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3547886">An I do not,--</para>
<para id="id3547897">FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3547916">Come, let's see the event.</para>
<para id="id3547927">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3547946">I dare lay any money 'twill be nothing
yet.</para>
<para id="id3547957">Exeunt</para>
</section>
<section id="id3547963">
<name>ACT IV</name>
<para id="id3547970">SCENE I. Before OLIVIA's house.</para>
<para id="id3547974">Enter SEBASTIAN and Clown</para>
<para id="id3547987">Clown</para>
<para id="id3547998">Will you make me believe that I am not sent
for you?</para>
<para id="id3548010">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3548022">Go to, go to, thou art a foolish fellow:Let me
be clear of thee.</para>
<para id="id3548043">Clown</para>
<para id="id3548055">Well held out, i' faith! No, I do not know
you; norI am not sent to you by my lady, to bid you comespeak with
her; nor your name is not Master Cesario;nor this is not my nose
neither. Nothing that is so is so.</para>
<para id="id3548096">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3548108">I prithee, vent thy folly somewhere else:
Thouknow'st not me.</para>
<para id="id3548129">Clown</para>
<para id="id3548141">Vent my folly! he has heard that word of
somegreat man and now applies it to a fool. Vent myfolly! I am
afraid this great lubber, the world,will prove a cockney. I prithee
now, ungird thystrangeness and tell me what I shall vent to mylady:
shall I vent to her that thou art coming?</para>
<para id="id3548201">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3548213">I prithee, foolish Greek, depart from me:
There'smoney for thee: if you tarry longer, I shall giveworse
payment.</para>
<para id="id3548244">Clown</para>
<para id="id3548256">By my troth, thou hast an open hand. These
wise menthat give fools money get themselves a goodreport--after
fourteen years' purchase.</para>
<para id="id3548287">Enter SIR ANDREW, SIR TOBY BELCH, and
FABIAN</para>
<para id="id3548292">SIR ANDREW</para>
<para id="id3548304">Now, sir, have I met you again? there's for
you.</para>
<para id="id3548315">SEBASTIAN</para>
<para id="id3548327">Why, there's for thee, and there, and there.
Are allthe people mad?</para>
<para id="id3548348">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3548360">Hold, sir, or I'll throw your dagger o'er the
house.</para>
<para id="id3548372">Clown</para>
<para id="id3548384">This will I tell my lady straight: I would not
bein some of your coats for two pence.</para>
<para id="id3548405">Exit</para>
<para id="id3548410">SIR TOBY BELCH</para>
<para id="id3548422">Come on, sir; hold.</para>
<pa