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- THE TWO NOBLE KINSMEN
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- Act 1 Scene 4
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- (Cornetts. A battle struck within. Then a retreat. Flourish. Then enter
- Theseus, victor. The three Queens meet him and fall on their faces before
- him. Also enter a Herald, and attendants bearing Palamon and Arcite on
- two hearses)
- l1l First Queen (to Theseus) To thee no star be dark.
- Second Queen (to Theseus) Both heaven and earth
- l2l Friend thee for ever.
- Third Queen (to Theseus) All the good that may
- l3l Be wished upon thy head, I cry ôAmenö to Æt.
- l4l Theseus ThÆ impartial gods, who from the mounted heavens
- l5l View us their mortal herd, behold who err
- l6l And in their time chastise. Go and find out
- l7l The bones of your dead lords and honour them
- l8l With treble ceremony: rather than a gap
- l9l Should be in their dear rites we would supply Æt.
- l10l But those we will depute which shall invest
- l11l You in your dignities, and even each thing
- l12l Our haste does leave imperfect. So adieu,
- l13l And heavenÆs good eyes look on you.
- (Exeunt the Queens)
- What are those?
- l14l Herald Men of great quality, as may be judged
- l15l By their appointment. Some of Thebes have told Æs
- l16l They are sistersÆ children, nephews to the King.
- l17l Theseus By thÆ helm of Mars I saw them in the war,
- l18l Like to a pair of lions smeared with prey,
- l19l Make lanes in troops aghast. I fixed my note
- l20l Constantly on them, for they were a mark
- l21l Worth a godÆs view. What prisoner was Æt that told me
- l22l When I enquired their names?
- Herald WiÆ leave, theyÆre called
- l23l Arcite and Palamon.
- Theseus ÆTis right: those, those.
- l24l They are not dead?
- l25l Herald Nor in a state of life. Had they been taken
- l26l When their last hurts were given, Ætwas possible
- l27l They might have been recovered. Yet they breathe,
- l28l And have the name of men.
- Theseus Then like men use Æem.
- l29l The very lees of such, millions of rates
- l30l Exceed the wine of others. All our surgeons
- l31l Convent in their behoof; our richest balms,
- l32l Rather than niggard, waste. Their lives concern us
- l33l Much more than Thebes is worth. Rather than have Æem
- l34l Freed of this plight and in their morning stateù
- l35l Sound and at libertyùI would Æem dead;
- l36l But forty-thousandfold we had rather have Æem
- l37l Prisoners to us, than death. Bear Æem speedily
- l38l From our kind air, to them unkind, and minister
- l39l What man to man may doùfor our sake, more,
- l40l Since I have known frights, fury, friendsÆ behests,
- l41l LoveÆs provocations, zeal, a mistressÆ task,
- l42l Desire of liberty, a fever, madness,
- l43l Hath set a mark which nature could not reach to
- l44l Without some imposition, sickness in will
- l45l OÆer-wrestling strength in reason. For our love
- l46l And great ApolloÆs mercy, all our best
- l47l Their best skill tender.ùLead into the city
- l48l Where, having bound things scattered, we will post
- l49l To Athens fore our army.
- (Flourish. Exeunt)
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