Authors: William Shakespeare
Enter Jailer
JAILER
Come, sir, are you ready for death?
POSTHUMUS
Over-roasted rather: ready long ago.
JAILER
Hanging is the word, sir: if you be ready for that,
you are well cooked.
POSTHUMUS
So, if I prove a good repast to the spectators, the
dish
259
pays the
shot.
260
JAILER
A heavy
reckoning
261
for you, sir. But the comfort is
you shall be called to no more payments, fear no more
tavern-bills, which are as often the sadness of parting as the
procuring of mirth: you come in faint for want of meat,
depart reeling with too much drink: sorry that you have paid
too much, and sorry that you are
paid
266
too much: purse and
brain both empty: the brain the
heavier for being too light
267
,
the purse too light, being
drawn of heaviness.
Of
268
this
contradiction
you shall now be quit.
269
O, the charity of a
penny cord!
It
sums up
thousands
in a trice
270
: you have no true
debitor and creditor
271
but it: of what’s past, is, and to come, the
discharge
: your neck, sir, is pen, book and
counters
272
; so the
acquittance
273
follows.
POSTHUMUS
I am merrier to die than thou art to live.
FIRST JAILER
Indeed, sir, he that sleeps feels not the toothache: but
a man that were to sleep your sleep, and a hangman to help
him to bed, I think he would change places with his
officer
277
:
for look you, sir, you know not which way you shall go.
POSTHUMUS
Yes indeed do I, fellow.
FIRST JAILER
Your
death
280
has eyes in’s head then: I have not seen
him so
pictured
281
: you must either be directed by some that
take upon them
282
to know, or to take upon yourself that which
I am sure you do not know, or
jump the after-inquiry
283
on your
own peril: and how you shall
speed
284
in your journey’s end, I
think you’ll never return to tell
on.
285
POSTHUMUS
I tell thee, fellow, there are none
want
286
eyes to direct
them the way I am going, but such as
wink
287
and will not use
them.
FIRST JAILER
What an infinite
mock
289
is this, that a man should
have the best use of eyes to see the way of blindness! I am
sure hanging’s the way of
winking.
291
Enter a Messenger
MESSENGER
Knock off his manacles, bring your prisoner to the
king.
POSTHUMUS
Thou bring’st good news, I am called to be made
free.
FIRST JAILER
I’ll be hanged then.
POSTHUMUS
Thou shalt be then freer than a jailer: no
bolts
297
for
the dead.
[
Exeunt Posthumus and Messenger
]
FIRST JAILER
Unless a man would marry a gallows and beget
young gibbets, I never saw one so
prone
300
: yet on my
conscience, there are
verier
knaves desire to live,
for all
301
he be
a Roman: and there be some of them too that die against
their wills; so should I, if I were one. I would we were all of
one mind, and one mind good: O,
there were desolation
304
of
jailers and gallowses! I speak against my present
profit
305
, but
my wish hath a
preferment
306
in’t.
Exit
running scene 18 continues
Enter Cymbeline, Belarius, Guiderius, Arviragus, Pisanio and Lords
CYMBELINE
Stand by my side, you whom the gods have made
Preservers of my throne: woe is my heart
That the poor soldier that so
richly
3
fought,
Whose rags shamed gilded arms, whose
naked
4
breast
Stepped before
targes of proof
5
, cannot be found:
He shall be happy that can find him, if
Our
grace
7
can make him so.
BELARIUS
I never saw
Such noble fury in so poor a thing,
Such precious deeds in one that promised nought
But beggary and poor looks.
CYMBELINE
No tidings of him?
PISANIO
He hath been
searched
13
among the dead and living,
But no trace of him.
CYMBELINE
To my grief, I am
To Belarius and his sons
The
heir of his reward
16
,— which I will add
To you, the
liver, heart and brain
17
of Britain,
By whom I
grant
18
she lives. ’Tis now the time
To ask
of whence you are.
19
Report it.
BELARIUS
Sir,
In
Cambria
are
21
we born, and gentlemen:
Further to boast were neither true nor modest,
Unless I add we are honest.
CYMBELINE
Bow your knees:
They kneel
Arise my
knights o’th’battle
25
, I create you
Companions to our person, and will
fit
26
you
With dignities becoming your
estates.
27
They rise
Enter Cornelius and Ladies
There’s
business
28
in these faces: why so sadly
Greet you our victory? You look like Romans,
And not o’th’court of Britain.
CORNELIUS
Hail, great king!
To sour your happiness, I must report
The queen is dead.
CYMBELINE
Who worse than a physician
Would this report become? But I consider
By med’cine life may be prolonged, yet death
Will seize the doctor too. How ended she?
CORNELIUS
With horror, madly dying, like her life,
Which, being cruel to the world, concluded
Most cruel to herself. What she confessed
I will report, so please you. These her women
Can
trip me
42
if I err, who with wet cheeks
Were present when she finished.
CYMBELINE
Prithee, say.
CORNELIUS
First, she confessed she never loved you, only
Affected
greatness got
by
46
you, not you:
Married your royalty, was wife to your place,
Abhorred your person.
CYMBELINE
She alone knew this;
And,
but
50
she spoke it dying, I would not
Believe her lips in
opening
51
it. Proceed.
CORNELIUS
Your daughter, whom she
bore in hand
52
to love
With such integrity, she did confess
Was as a scorpion to her sight, whose life,
But that her flight prevented it, she
had
55
Ta’en off by poison.
CYMBELINE
O most
delicate
57
fiend!
Who is’t can read a woman? Is there more?
CORNELIUS
More, sir, and worse. She did confess she had
For you a
mortal mineral
60
, which being took,
Should
by the minute
61
feed on life, and, ling’ring,
By inches waste you.
In which time, she
purposed
62
By
watching
, weeping,
tendance
63
, kissing, to
O’ercome you with her
show
64
; and in time,
When she had
fitted
65
you with her craft, to work
Her son into
th’adoption of the crown
66
:
But, failing of her
end
67
by his strange absence,
Grew shameless-desperate,
opened
68
, in despite
Of heaven and men, her purposes, repented
The evils she hatched were not effected: so
Despairing died.
CYMBELINE
Heard you all this, her women?
LADY
We did, so please your highness.
CYMBELINE
Mine eyes
Were not in fault, for she was beautiful,
Mine ears
76
, that heard her flattery, nor my heart,
That thought her like her
seeming.
It
had been vicious
77
To have mistrusted her: yet, O my daughter,
That it was folly in me thou mayst say,
And prove it in thy
feeling.
80
Heaven mend all!
Enter Lucius, Iachimo, [the Soothsayer] and other Roman prisoners
,
[Posthumus] Leonatus behind, and Innogen
Thou com’st not, Caius, now for tribute. That
The Britons have
razed out
82
, though with the loss
Of many a bold one: whose kinsmen have
made suit
83
That
their
84
good souls may be appeased with slaughter
Of you their captives, which ourself have granted,
So think of your
estate.
86
LUCIUS
Consider, sir, the chance of war. The day
Was yours by accident:
had it gone with us
88
,
We should not, when the blood was cool, have threatened
Our prisoners with the sword. But since the gods
Will have it thus, that nothing but our lives
May be
called
ransom, let it come:
sufficeth
92
A Roman with a Roman’s heart can suffer:
Augustus lives to
think on’t
94
: and so much
For my
peculiar care.
95
This one thing only
I will entreat: my boy, a Briton born,
Let him be ransomed: never master had
A page so kind, so duteous, diligent,
So
tender over his occasions
99
, true,
So
feat
100
, so nurse-like: let his virtue join
With my request, which I’ll make bold your highness
Cannot deny: he hath done no Briton harm,
Though he have served a Roman. Save him, sir,
And
104
spare no blood beside.
CYMBELINE
I have surely seen him:
His
favour
106
is familiar to me. Boy,
Thou hast
looked thyself into my grace
107
,
And art mine own. I know not why, wherefore,
To say ‘Live, boy.’
Ne’er thank thy master
109
: live,
And ask of Cymbeline what
boon
110
thou wilt,
Fitting my bounty and thy
state
111
, I’ll give it,
Yea, though thou do demand a prisoner,
The noblest ta’en.
INNOGEN
I humbly thank your highness.
LUCIUS
I do not bid thee beg my life, good lad,
And yet I know thou wilt.
INNOGEN
No, no, alack,
There’s other work in hand: I see a thing
Bitter to me as death: your life, good master,
Must
shuffle
120
for itself.
LUCIUS
The boy disdains me,
He leaves me, scorns me:
briefly
122
die their joys
That place them on the
truth
123
of girls and boys.
Innogen looks closely at Iachimo
Why stands he so
perplexed?
124
CYMBELINE
What wouldst thou, boy?
I love thee more and more: think more and more
What’s best to ask. Know’st him thou look’st on? Speak,
Wilt have him live? Is he thy kin? Thy friend?
INNOGEN
He is a Roman, no more kin to me
Than I to your highness, who, being born your
vassal
130
,
CYMBELINE
Wherefore ey’st him so?
132
INNOGEN
I’ll tell you, sir, in private, if you please
To give me hearing.
CYMBELINE
Ay, with all my heart,
And lend my best attention. What’s thy name?
INNOGEN
Fidele, sir.
CYMBELINE
Thou’rt my good youth, my page:
I’ll be thy master: walk with me, speak freely.