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- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- DRAMATIS PERSONAE
-
-
- SOLINUS Duke of Ephesus. (DUKE SOLINUS:)
-
- AEGEON a merchant of Syracuse.
-
-
- ANTIPHOLUS |
- OF EPHESUS |
- | twin brothers, and sons to AEgeon and AEmilia.
- ANTIPHOLUS |
- OF SYRACUSE |
-
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS |
- | twin brothers, and attendants on the two Antipholuses.
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE |
-
-
- BALTHAZAR a merchant
-
- ANGELO a goldsmith.
-
- First Merchant friend to Antipholus of Syracuse.
-
- Second Merchant to whom Angelo is a debtor.
-
- PINCH a schoolmaster.
-
- AEMILIA wife to AEgeon, an abbess at Ephesus.
-
- ADRIANA wife to Antipholus of Ephesus.
-
- LUCIANA her sister.
-
- LUCE servant to Adriana.
-
- A Courtezan.
-
- Gaoler, Officers, and other Attendants
- (Gaoler:)
- (Officer:)
- (Servant:)
-
- SCENE Ephesus.
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT I
-
-
-
- SCENE I A hall in DUKE SOLINUS'S palace.
-
-
- [Enter DUKE SOLINUS, AEGEON, Gaoler, Officers, and other
- Attendants]
-
- AEGEON Proceed, Solinus, to procure my fall
- And by the doom of death end woes and all.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Merchant of Syracuse, plead no more;
- I am not partial to infringe our laws:
- The enmity and discord which of late
- Sprung from the rancorous outrage of your duke
- To merchants, our well-dealing countrymen,
- Who wanting guilders to redeem their lives
- Have seal'd his rigorous statutes with their bloods,
- Excludes all pity from our threatening looks.
- For, since the mortal and intestine jars
- 'Twixt thy seditious countrymen and us,
- It hath in solemn synods been decreed
- Both by the Syracusians and ourselves,
- To admit no traffic to our adverse towns Nay, more,
- If any born at Ephesus be seen
- At any Syracusian marts and fairs;
- Again: if any Syracusian born
- Come to the bay of Ephesus, he dies,
- His goods confiscate to the duke's dispose,
- Unless a thousand marks be levied,
- To quit the penalty and to ransom him.
- Thy substance, valued at the highest rate,
- Cannot amount unto a hundred marks;
- Therefore by law thou art condemned to die.
-
- AEGEON Yet this my comfort: when your words are done,
- My woes end likewise with the evening sun.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Well, Syracusian, say in brief the cause
- Why thou departed'st from thy native home
- And for what cause thou camest to Ephesus.
-
- AEGEON A heavier task could not have been imposed
- Than I to speak my griefs unspeakable:
- Yet, that the world may witness that my end
- Was wrought by nature, not by vile offence,
- I'll utter what my sorrows give me leave.
- In Syracusa was I born, and wed
- Unto a woman, happy but for me,
- And by me, had not our hap been bad.
- With her I lived in joy; our wealth increased
- By prosperous voyages I often made
- To Epidamnum; till my factor's death
- And the great care of goods at random left
- Drew me from kind embracements of my spouse:
- From whom my absence was not six months old
- Before herself, almost at fainting under
- The pleasing punishment that women bear,
- Had made provision for her following me
- And soon and safe arrived where I was.
- There had she not been long, but she became
- A joyful mother of two goodly sons;
- And, which was strange, the one so like the other,
- As could not be distinguish'd but by names.
- That very hour, and in the self-same inn,
- A meaner woman was delivered
- Of such a burden, male twins, both alike:
- Those,--for their parents were exceeding poor,--
- I bought and brought up to attend my sons.
- My wife, not meanly proud of two such boys,
- Made daily motions for our home return:
- Unwilling I agreed. Alas! too soon,
- We came aboard.
- A league from Epidamnum had we sail'd,
- Before the always wind-obeying deep
- Gave any tragic instance of our harm:
- But longer did we not retain much hope;
- For what obscured light the heavens did grant
- Did but convey unto our fearful minds
- A doubtful warrant of immediate death;
- Which though myself would gladly have embraced,
- Yet the incessant weepings of my wife,
- Weeping before for what she saw must come,
- And piteous plainings of the pretty babes,
- That mourn'd for fashion, ignorant what to fear,
- Forced me to seek delays for them and me.
- And this it was, for other means was none:
- The sailors sought for safety by our boat,
- And left the ship, then sinking-ripe, to us:
- My wife, more careful for the latter-born,
- Had fasten'd him unto a small spare mast,
- Such as seafaring men provide for storms;
- To him one of the other twins was bound,
- Whilst I had been like heedful of the other:
- The children thus disposed, my wife and I,
- Fixing our eyes on whom our care was fix'd,
- Fasten'd ourselves at either end the mast;
- And floating straight, obedient to the stream,
- Was carried towards Corinth, as we thought.
- At length the sun, gazing upon the earth,
- Dispersed those vapours that offended us;
- And by the benefit of his wished light,
- The seas wax'd calm, and we discovered
- Two ships from far making amain to us,
- Of Corinth that, of Epidaurus this:
- But ere they came,--O, let me say no more!
- Gather the sequel by that went before.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Nay, forward, old man; do not break off so;
- For we may pity, though not pardon thee.
-
- AEGEON O, had the gods done so, I had not now
- Worthily term'd them merciless to us!
- For, ere the ships could meet by twice five leagues,
- We were encounterd by a mighty rock;
- Which being violently borne upon,
- Our helpful ship was splitted in the midst;
- So that, in this unjust divorce of us,
- Fortune had left to both of us alike
- What to delight in, what to sorrow for.
- Her part, poor soul! seeming as burdened
- With lesser weight but not with lesser woe,
- Was carried with more speed before the wind;
- And in our sight they three were taken up
- By fishermen of Corinth, as we thought.
- At length, another ship had seized on us;
- And, knowing whom it was their hap to save,
- Gave healthful welcome to their shipwreck'd guests;
- And would have reft the fishers of their prey,
- Had not their bark been very slow of sail;
- And therefore homeward did they bend their course.
- Thus have you heard me sever'd from my bliss;
- That by misfortunes was my life prolong'd,
- To tell sad stories of my own mishaps.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS And for the sake of them thou sorrowest for,
- Do me the favour to dilate at full
- What hath befall'n of them and thee till now.
-
- AEGEON My youngest boy, and yet my eldest care,
- At eighteen years became inquisitive
- After his brother: and importuned me
- That his attendant--so his case was like,
- Reft of his brother, but retain'd his name--
- Might bear him company in the quest of him:
- Whom whilst I labour'd of a love to see,
- I hazarded the loss of whom I loved.
- Five summers have I spent in furthest Greece,
- Roaming clean through the bounds of Asia,
- And, coasting homeward, came to Ephesus;
- Hopeless to find, yet loath to leave unsought
- Or that or any place that harbours men.
- But here must end the story of my life;
- And happy were I in my timely death,
- Could all my travels warrant me they live.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Hapless AEgeon, whom the fates have mark'd
- To bear the extremity of dire mishap!
- Now, trust me, were it not against our laws,
- Against my crown, my oath, my dignity,
- Which princes, would they, may not disannul,
- My soul would sue as advocate for thee.
- But, though thou art adjudged to the death
- And passed sentence may not be recall'd
- But to our honour's great disparagement,
- Yet I will favour thee in what I can.
- Therefore, merchant, I'll limit thee this day
- To seek thy life by beneficial help:
- Try all the friends thou hast in Ephesus;
- Beg thou, or borrow, to make up the sum,
- And live; if no, then thou art doom'd to die.
- Gaoler, take him to thy custody.
-
- Gaoler I will, my lord.
-
- AEGEON Hopeless and helpless doth AEgeon wend,
- But to procrastinate his lifeless end.
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT I
-
-
-
- SCENE II The Mart.
-
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse, DROMIO of Syracuse,
- and First Merchant]
-
- First Merchant Therefore give out you are of Epidamnum,
- Lest that your goods too soon be confiscate.
- This very day a Syracusian merchant
- Is apprehended for arrival here;
- And not being able to buy out his life
- According to the statute of the town,
- Dies ere the weary sun set in the west.
- There is your money that I had to keep.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Go bear it to the Centaur, where we host,
- And stay there, Dromio, till I come to thee.
- Within this hour it will be dinner-time:
- Till that, I'll view the manners of the town,
- Peruse the traders, gaze upon the buildings,
- And then return and sleep within mine inn,
- For with long travel I am stiff and weary.
- Get thee away.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Many a man would take you at your word,
- And go indeed, having so good a mean.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE A trusty villain, sir, that very oft,
- When I am dull with care and melancholy,
- Lightens my humour with his merry jests.
- What, will you walk with me about the town,
- And then go to my inn and dine with me?
-
- First Merchant I am invited, sir, to certain merchants,
- Of whom I hope to make much benefit;
- I crave your pardon. Soon at five o'clock,
- Please you, I'll meet with you upon the mart
- And afterward consort you till bed-time:
- My present business calls me from you now.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Farewell till then: I will go lose myself
- And wander up and down to view the city.
-
- First Merchant Sir, I commend you to your own content.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE He that commends me to mine own content
- Commends me to the thing I cannot get.
- I to the world am like a drop of water
- That in the ocean seeks another drop,
- Who, falling there to find his fellow forth,
- Unseen, inquisitive, confounds himself:
- So I, to find a mother and a brother,
- In quest of them, unhappy, lose myself.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Ephesus]
-
- Here comes the almanac of my true date.
- What now? how chance thou art return'd so soon?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Return'd so soon! rather approach'd too late:
- The capon burns, the pig falls from the spit,
- The clock hath strucken twelve upon the bell;
- My mistress made it one upon my cheek:
- She is so hot because the meat is cold;
- The meat is cold because you come not home;
- You come not home because you have no stomach;
- You have no stomach having broke your fast;
- But we that know what 'tis to fast and pray
- Are penitent for your default to-day.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Stop in your wind, sir: tell me this, I pray:
- Where have you left the money that I gave you?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS O,--sixpence, that I had o' Wednesday last
- To pay the saddler for my mistress' crupper?
- The saddler had it, sir; I kept it not.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I am not in a sportive humour now:
- Tell me, and dally not, where is the money?
- We being strangers here, how darest thou trust
- So great a charge from thine own custody?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I pray you, air, as you sit at dinner:
- I from my mistress come to you in post;
- If I return, I shall be post indeed,
- For she will score your fault upon my pate.
- Methinks your maw, like mine, should be your clock,
- And strike you home without a messenger.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Come, Dromio, come, these jests are out of season;
- Reserve them till a merrier hour than this.
- Where is the gold I gave in charge to thee?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS To me, sir? why, you gave no gold to me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Come on, sir knave, have done your foolishness,
- And tell me how thou hast disposed thy charge.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS My charge was but to fetch you from the mart
- Home to your house, the Phoenix, sir, to dinner:
- My mistress and her sister stays for you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE In what safe place you have bestow'd my money,
- Or I shall break that merry sconce of yours
- That stands on tricks when I am undisposed:
- Where is the thousand marks thou hadst of me?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I have some marks of yours upon my pate,
- Some of my mistress' marks upon my shoulders,
- But not a thousand marks between you both.
- If I should pay your worship those again,
- Perchance you will not bear them patiently.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thy mistress' marks? what mistress, slave, hast thou?
-
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Your worship's wife, my mistress at the Phoenix;
- She that doth fast till you come home to dinner,
- And prays that you will hie you home to dinner.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What, wilt thou flout me thus unto my face,
- Being forbid? There, take you that, sir knave.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS What mean you, sir? for God's sake, hold your hands!
- Nay, and you will not, sir, I'll take my heels.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Upon my life, by some device or other
- The villain is o'er-raught of all my money.
- They say this town is full of cozenage,
- As, nimble jugglers that deceive the eye,
- Dark-working sorcerers that change the mind,
- Soul-killing witches that deform the body,
- Disguised cheaters, prating mountebanks,
- And many such-like liberties of sin:
- If it prove so, I will be gone the sooner.
- I'll to the Centaur, to go seek this slave:
- I greatly fear my money is not safe.
-
- [Exit]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT II
-
-
-
- SCENE I The house of ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus.
-
-
- [Enter ADRIANA and LUCIANA]
-
- ADRIANA Neither my husband nor the slave return'd,
- That in such haste I sent to seek his master!
- Sure, Luciana, it is two o'clock.
-
- LUCIANA Perhaps some merchant hath invited him,
- And from the mart he's somewhere gone to dinner.
- Good sister, let us dine and never fret:
- A man is master of his liberty:
- Time is their master, and, when they see time,
- They'll go or come: if so, be patient, sister.
-
- ADRIANA Why should their liberty than ours be more?
-
- LUCIANA Because their business still lies out o' door.
-
- ADRIANA Look, when I serve him so, he takes it ill.
-
- LUCIANA O, know he is the bridle of your will.
-
- ADRIANA There's none but asses will be bridled so.
-
- LUCIANA Why, headstrong liberty is lash'd with woe.
- There's nothing situate under heaven's eye
- But hath his bound, in earth, in sea, in sky:
- The beasts, the fishes, and the winged fowls,
- Are their males' subjects and at their controls:
- Men, more divine, the masters of all these,
- Lords of the wide world and wild watery seas,
- Indued with intellectual sense and souls,
- Of more preeminence than fish and fowls,
- Are masters to their females, and their lords:
- Then let your will attend on their accords.
-
- ADRIANA This servitude makes you to keep unwed.
-
- LUCIANA Not this, but troubles of the marriage-bed.
-
- ADRIANA But, were you wedded, you would bear some sway.
-
- LUCIANA Ere I learn love, I'll practise to obey.
-
- ADRIANA How if your husband start some other where?
-
- LUCIANA Till he come home again, I would forbear.
-
- ADRIANA Patience unmoved! no marvel though she pause;
- They can be meek that have no other cause.
- A wretched soul, bruised with adversity,
- We bid be quiet when we hear it cry;
- But were we burdened with like weight of pain,
- As much or more would we ourselves complain:
- So thou, that hast no unkind mate to grieve thee,
- With urging helpless patience wouldst relieve me,
- But, if thou live to see like right bereft,
- This fool-begg'd patience in thee will be left.
-
- LUCIANA Well, I will marry one day, but to try.
- Here comes your man; now is your husband nigh.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Ephesus]
-
- ADRIANA Say, is your tardy master now at hand?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Nay, he's at two hands with me, and that my two ears
- can witness.
-
- ADRIANA Say, didst thou speak with him? know'st thou his mind?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Ay, ay, he told his mind upon mine ear:
- Beshrew his hand, I scarce could understand it.
-
- LUCIANA Spake he so doubtfully, thou couldst not feel his meaning?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Nay, he struck so plainly, I could too well feel his
- blows; and withal so doubtfully that I could scarce
- understand them.
-
- ADRIANA But say, I prithee, is he coming home? It seems he
- hath great care to please his wife.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Why, mistress, sure my master is horn-mad.
-
- ADRIANA Horn-mad, thou villain!
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I mean not cuckold-mad;
- But, sure, he is stark mad.
- When I desired him to come home to dinner,
- He ask'd me for a thousand marks in gold:
- ''Tis dinner-time,' quoth I; 'My gold!' quoth he;
- 'Your meat doth burn,' quoth I; 'My gold!' quoth he:
- 'Will you come home?' quoth I; 'My gold!' quoth he.
- 'Where is the thousand marks I gave thee, villain?'
- 'The pig,' quoth I, 'is burn'd;' 'My gold!' quoth he:
- 'My mistress, sir' quoth I; 'Hang up thy mistress!
- I know not thy mistress; out on thy mistress!'
-
- LUCIANA Quoth who?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Quoth my master:
- 'I know,' quoth he, 'no house, no wife, no mistress.'
- So that my errand, due unto my tongue,
- I thank him, I bare home upon my shoulders;
- For, in conclusion, he did beat me there.
-
- ADRIANA Go back again, thou slave, and fetch him home.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Go back again, and be new beaten home?
- For God's sake, send some other messenger.
-
- ADRIANA Back, slave, or I will break thy pate across.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS And he will bless that cross with other beating:
- Between you I shall have a holy head.
-
- ADRIANA Hence, prating peasant! fetch thy master home.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Am I so round with you as you with me,
- That like a football you do spurn me thus?
- You spurn me hence, and he will spurn me hither:
- If I last in this service, you must case me in leather.
-
- [Exit]
-
- LUCIANA Fie, how impatience loureth in your face!
-
- ADRIANA His company must do his minions grace,
- Whilst I at home starve for a merry look.
- Hath homely age the alluring beauty took
- From my poor cheek? then he hath wasted it:
- Are my discourses dull? barren my wit?
- If voluble and sharp discourse be marr'd,
- Unkindness blunts it more than marble hard:
- Do their gay vestments his affections bait?
- That's not my fault: he's master of my state:
- What ruins are in me that can be found,
- By him not ruin'd? then is he the ground
- Of my defeatures. My decayed fair
- A sunny look of his would soon repair
- But, too unruly deer, he breaks the pale
- And feeds from home; poor I am but his stale.
-
- LUCIANA Self-harming jealousy! fie, beat it hence!
-
- ADRIANA Unfeeling fools can with such wrongs dispense.
- I know his eye doth homage otherwhere,
- Or else what lets it but he would be here?
- Sister, you know he promised me a chain;
- Would that alone, alone he would detain,
- So he would keep fair quarter with his bed!
- I see the jewel best enamelled
- Will lose his beauty; yet the gold bides still,
- That others touch, and often touching will
- Wear gold: and no man that hath a name,
- By falsehood and corruption doth it shame.
- Since that my beauty cannot please his eye,
- I'll weep what's left away, and weeping die.
-
- LUCIANA How many fond fools serve mad jealousy!
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT II
-
-
-
- SCENE II A public place.
-
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE The gold I gave to Dromio is laid up
- Safe at the Centaur; and the heedful slave
- Is wander'd forth, in care to seek me out
- By computation and mine host's report.
- I could not speak with Dromio since at first
- I sent him from the mart. See, here he comes.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- How now sir! is your merry humour alter'd?
- As you love strokes, so jest with me again.
- You know no Centaur? you received no gold?
- Your mistress sent to have me home to dinner?
- My house was at the Phoenix? Wast thou mad,
- That thus so madly thou didst answer me?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE What answer, sir? when spake I such a word?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Even now, even here, not half an hour since.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I did not see you since you sent me hence,
- Home to the Centaur, with the gold you gave me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Villain, thou didst deny the gold's receipt,
- And told'st me of a mistress and a dinner;
- For which, I hope, thou felt'st I was displeased.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I am glad to see you in this merry vein:
- What means this jest? I pray you, master, tell me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Yea, dost thou jeer and flout me in the teeth?
- Think'st thou I jest? Hold, take thou that, and that.
-
- [Beating him]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Hold, sir, for God's sake! now your jest is earnest:
- Upon what bargain do you give it me?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Because that I familiarly sometimes
- Do use you for my fool and chat with you,
- Your sauciness will jest upon my love
- And make a common of my serious hours.
- When the sun shines let foolish gnats make sport,
- But creep in crannies when he hides his beams.
- If you will jest with me, know my aspect,
- And fashion your demeanor to my looks,
- Or I will beat this method in your sconce.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Sconce call you it? so you would leave battering, I
- had rather have it a head: an you use these blows
- long, I must get a sconce for my head and ensconce
- it too; or else I shall seek my wit in my shoulders.
- But, I pray, sir why am I beaten?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Dost thou not know?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Nothing, sir, but that I am beaten.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Shall I tell you why?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Ay, sir, and wherefore; for they say every why hath
- a wherefore.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why, first,--for flouting me; and then, wherefore--
- For urging it the second time to me.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Was there ever any man thus beaten out of season,
- When in the why and the wherefore is neither rhyme
- nor reason?
- Well, sir, I thank you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thank me, sir, for what?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, sir, for this something that you gave me for nothing.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I'll make you amends next, to give you nothing for
- something. But say, sir, is it dinner-time?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No, sir; I think the meat wants that I have.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE In good time, sir; what's that?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Basting.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Well, sir, then 'twill be dry.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE If it be, sir, I pray you, eat none of it.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Your reason?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Lest it make you choleric and purchase me another
- dry basting.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Well, sir, learn to jest in good time: there's a
- time for all things.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I durst have denied that, before you were so choleric.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE By what rule, sir?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, sir, by a rule as plain as the plain bald
- pate of father Time himself.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Let's hear it.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE There's no time for a man to recover his hair that
- grows bald by nature.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE May he not do it by fine and recovery?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Yes, to pay a fine for a periwig and recover the
- lost hair of another man.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why is Time such a niggard of hair, being, as it is,
- so plentiful an excrement?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Because it is a blessing that he bestows on beasts;
- and what he hath scanted men in hair he hath given them in wit.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why, but there's many a man hath more hair than wit.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Not a man of those but he hath the wit to lose his hair.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why, thou didst conclude hairy men plain dealers without wit.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE The plainer dealer, the sooner lost: yet he loseth
- it in a kind of jollity.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE For what reason?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE For two; and sound ones too.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Nay, not sound, I pray you.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Sure ones, then.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Nay, not sure, in a thing falsing.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Certain ones then.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Name them.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE The one, to save the money that he spends in
- trimming; the other, that at dinner they should not
- drop in his porridge.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE You would all this time have proved there is no
- time for all things.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, and did, sir; namely, no time to recover hair
- lost by nature.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE But your reason was not substantial, why there is no
- time to recover.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Thus I mend it: Time himself is bald and therefore
- to the world's end will have bald followers.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I knew 'twould be a bald conclusion:
- But, soft! who wafts us yonder?
-
- [Enter ADRIANA and LUCIANA]
-
- ADRIANA Ay, ay, Antipholus, look strange and frown:
- Some other mistress hath thy sweet aspects;
- I am not Adriana nor thy wife.
- The time was once when thou unurged wouldst vow
- That never words were music to thine ear,
- That never object pleasing in thine eye,
- That never touch well welcome to thy hand,
- That never meat sweet-savor'd in thy taste,
- Unless I spake, or look'd, or touch'd, or carved to thee.
- How comes it now, my husband, O, how comes it,
- That thou art thus estranged from thyself?
- Thyself I call it, being strange to me,
- That, undividable, incorporate,
- Am better than thy dear self's better part.
- Ah, do not tear away thyself from me!
- For know, my love, as easy mayest thou fall
- A drop of water in the breaking gulf,
- And take unmingled that same drop again,
- Without addition or diminishing,
- As take from me thyself and not me too.
- How dearly would it touch me to the quick,
- Shouldst thou but hear I were licentious
- And that this body, consecrate to thee,
- By ruffian lust should be contaminate!
- Wouldst thou not spit at me and spurn at me
- And hurl the name of husband in my face
- And tear the stain'd skin off my harlot-brow
- And from my false hand cut the wedding-ring
- And break it with a deep-divorcing vow?
- I know thou canst; and therefore see thou do it.
- I am possess'd with an adulterate blot;
- My blood is mingled with the crime of lust:
- For if we too be one and thou play false,
- I do digest the poison of thy flesh,
- Being strumpeted by thy contagion.
- Keep then far league and truce with thy true bed;
- I live unstain'd, thou undishonoured.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Plead you to me, fair dame? I know you not:
- In Ephesus I am but two hours old,
- As strange unto your town as to your talk;
- Who, every word by all my wit being scann'd,
- Want wit in all one word to understand.
-
- LUCIANA Fie, brother! how the world is changed with you!
- When were you wont to use my sister thus?
- She sent for you by Dromio home to dinner.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE By Dromio?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE By me?
-
- ADRIANA By thee; and this thou didst return from him,
- That he did buffet thee, and, in his blows,
- Denied my house for his, me for his wife.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Did you converse, sir, with this gentlewoman?
- What is the course and drift of your compact?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I, sir? I never saw her till this time.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Villain, thou liest; for even her very words
- Didst thou deliver to me on the mart.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I never spake with her in all my life.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE How can she thus then call us by our names,
- Unless it be by inspiration.
-
- ADRIANA How ill agrees it with your gravity
- To counterfeit thus grossly with your slave,
- Abetting him to thwart me in my mood!
- Be it my wrong you are from me exempt,
- But wrong not that wrong with a more contempt.
- Come, I will fasten on this sleeve of thine:
- Thou art an elm, my husband, I a vine,
- Whose weakness, married to thy stronger state,
- Makes me with thy strength to communicate:
- If aught possess thee from me, it is dross,
- Usurping ivy, brier, or idle moss;
- Who, all for want of pruning, with intrusion
- Infect thy sap and live on thy confusion.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE To me she speaks; she moves me for her theme:
- What, was I married to her in my dream?
- Or sleep I now and think I hear all this?
- What error drives our eyes and ears amiss?
- Until I know this sure uncertainty,
- I'll entertain the offer'd fallacy.
-
- LUCIANA Dromio, go bid the servants spread for dinner.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE O, for my beads! I cross me for a sinner.
- This is the fairy land: O spite of spites!
- We talk with goblins, owls and sprites:
- If we obey them not, this will ensue,
- They'll suck our breath, or pinch us black and blue.
-
- LUCIANA Why pratest thou to thyself and answer'st not?
- Dromio, thou drone, thou snail, thou slug, thou sot!
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I am transformed, master, am I not?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I think thou art in mind, and so am I.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Nay, master, both in mind and in my shape.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thou hast thine own form.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No, I am an ape.
-
- LUCIANA If thou art changed to aught, 'tis to an ass.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE 'Tis true; she rides me and I long for grass.
- 'Tis so, I am an ass; else it could never be
- But I should know her as well as she knows me.
-
- ADRIANA Come, come, no longer will I be a fool,
- To put the finger in the eye and weep,
- Whilst man and master laugh my woes to scorn.
- Come, sir, to dinner. Dromio, keep the gate.
- Husband, I'll dine above with you to-day
- And shrive you of a thousand idle pranks.
- Sirrah, if any ask you for your master,
- Say he dines forth, and let no creature enter.
- Come, sister. Dromio, play the porter well.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Am I in earth, in heaven, or in hell?
- Sleeping or waking? mad or well-advised?
- Known unto these, and to myself disguised!
- I'll say as they say and persever so,
- And in this mist at all adventures go.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, shall I be porter at the gate?
-
- ADRIANA Ay; and let none enter, lest I break your pate.
-
- LUCIANA Come, come, Antipholus, we dine too late.
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT III
-
-
-
- SCENE I Before the house of ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus.
-
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus, DROMIO of Ephesus,
- ANGELO, and BALTHAZAR]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Good Signior Angelo, you must excuse us all;
- My wife is shrewish when I keep not hours:
- Say that I linger'd with you at your shop
- To see the making of her carcanet,
- And that to-morrow you will bring it home.
- But here's a villain that would face me down
- He met me on the mart, and that I beat him,
- And charged him with a thousand marks in gold,
- And that I did deny my wife and house.
- Thou drunkard, thou, what didst thou mean by this?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Say what you will, sir, but I know what I know;
- That you beat me at the mart, I have your hand to show:
- If the skin were parchment, and the blows you gave were ink,
- Your own handwriting would tell you what I think.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I think thou art an ass.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Marry, so it doth appear
- By the wrongs I suffer and the blows I bear.
- I should kick, being kick'd; and, being at that pass,
- You would keep from my heels and beware of an ass.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS You're sad, Signior Balthazar: pray God our cheer
- May answer my good will and your good welcome here.
-
- BALTHAZAR I hold your dainties cheap, sir, and your
- welcome dear.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS O, Signior Balthazar, either at flesh or fish,
- A table full of welcome make scarce one dainty dish.
-
- BALTHAZAR Good meat, sir, is common; that every churl affords.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS And welcome more common; for that's nothing but words.
-
- BALTHAZAR Small cheer and great welcome makes a merry feast.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Ay, to a niggardly host, and more sparing guest:
- But though my cates be mean, take them in good part;
- Better cheer may you have, but not with better heart.
- But, soft! my door is lock'd. Go bid them let us in.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Maud, Bridget, Marian, Cicel, Gillian, Ginn!
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Mome, malt-horse, capon, coxcomb,
- idiot, patch!
- Either get thee from the door, or sit down at the hatch.
- Dost thou conjure for wenches, that thou call'st
- for such store,
- When one is one too many? Go, get thee from the door.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS What patch is made our porter? My master stays in
- the street.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Let him walk from whence he came, lest he
- catch cold on's feet.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Who talks within there? ho, open the door!
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Right, sir; I'll tell you when, an you tell
- me wherefore.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Wherefore? for my dinner: I have not dined to-day.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Nor to-day here you must not; come again
- when you may.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS What art thou that keepest me out from the house I owe?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] The porter for this time, sir, and my name
- is Dromio.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS O villain! thou hast stolen both mine office and my name.
- The one ne'er got me credit, the other mickle blame.
- If thou hadst been Dromio to-day in my place,
- Thou wouldst have changed thy face for a name or thy
- name for an ass.
-
- LUCE [Within] What a coil is there, Dromio? who are those
- at the gate?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Let my master in, Luce.
-
- LUCE [Within] Faith, no; he comes too late;
- And so tell your master.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS O Lord, I must laugh!
- Have at you with a proverb--Shall I set in my staff?
-
- LUCE [Within] Have at you with another; that's--When?
- can you tell?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] If thy name be call'd Luce--Luce, thou hast
- answered him well.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS Do you hear, you minion? you'll let us in, I hope?
- OF EPHESUS
-
- LUCE [Within] I thought to have asked you.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] And you said no.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS So, come, help: well struck! there was blow for blow.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Thou baggage, let me in.
-
- LUCE [Within] Can you tell for whose sake?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Master, knock the door hard.
-
- LUCE [Within] Let him knock till it ache.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS You'll cry for this, minion, if I beat the door down.
-
- LUCE [Within] What needs all that, and a pair of stocks in the town?
-
- ADRIANA [Within] Who is that at the door that keeps all
- this noise?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] By my troth, your town is troubled with
- unruly boys.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Are you there, wife? you might have come before.
-
- ADRIANA [Within] Your wife, sir knave! go get you from the door.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS If you went in pain, master, this 'knave' would go sore.
-
- ANGELO Here is neither cheer, sir, nor welcome: we would
- fain have either.
-
- BALTHAZAR In debating which was best, we shall part with neither.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS They stand at the door, master; bid them welcome hither.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS There is something in the wind, that we cannot get in.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS You would say so, master, if your garments were thin.
- Your cake there is warm within; you stand here in the cold:
- It would make a man mad as a buck, to be so bought and sold.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Go fetch me something: I'll break ope the gate.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Break any breaking here, and I'll break your
- knave's pate.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS A man may break a word with you, sir, and words are but wind,
- Ay, and break it in your face, so he break it not behind.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] It seems thou want'st breaking: out upon
- thee, hind!
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Here's too much 'out upon thee!' I pray thee,
- let me in.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE [Within] Ay, when fowls have no feathers and fish have no fin.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Well, I'll break in: go borrow me a crow.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS A crow without feather? Master, mean you so?
- For a fish without a fin, there's a fowl without a feather;
- If a crow help us in, sirrah, we'll pluck a crow together.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Go get thee gone; fetch me an iron crow.
-
- BALTHAZAR Have patience, sir; O, let it not be so!
- Herein you war against your reputation
- And draw within the compass of suspect
- The unviolated honour of your wife.
- Once this,--your long experience of her wisdom,
- Her sober virtue, years and modesty,
- Plead on her part some cause to you unknown:
- And doubt not, sir, but she will well excuse
- Why at this time the doors are made against you.
- Be ruled by me: depart in patience,
- And let us to the Tiger all to dinner,
- And about evening come yourself alone
- To know the reason of this strange restraint.
- If by strong hand you offer to break in
- Now in the stirring passage of the day,
- A vulgar comment will be made of it,
- And that supposed by the common rout
- Against your yet ungalled estimation
- That may with foul intrusion enter in
- And dwell upon your grave when you are dead;
- For slander lives upon succession,
- For ever housed where it gets possession.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS You have prevailed: I will depart in quiet,
- And, in despite of mirth, mean to be merry.
- I know a wench of excellent discourse,
- Pretty and witty; wild, and yet, too, gentle:
- There will we dine. This woman that I mean,
- My wife--but, I protest, without desert--
- Hath oftentimes upbraided me withal:
- To her will we to dinner.
-
- [To Angelo]
-
- Get you home
- And fetch the chain; by this I know 'tis made:
- Bring it, I pray you, to the Porpentine;
- For there's the house: that chain will I bestow--
- Be it for nothing but to spite my wife--
- Upon mine hostess there: good sir, make haste.
- Since mine own doors refuse to entertain me,
- I'll knock elsewhere, to see if they'll disdain me.
-
- ANGELO I'll meet you at that place some hour hence.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Do so. This jest shall cost me some expense.
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT III
-
-
-
- SCENE II The same.
-
-
- [Enter LUCIANA and ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse]
-
- LUCIANA And may it be that you have quite forgot
- A husband's office? shall, Antipholus.
- Even in the spring of love, thy love-springs rot?
- Shall love, in building, grow so ruinous?
- If you did wed my sister for her wealth,
- Then for her wealth's sake use her with more kindness:
- Or if you like elsewhere, do it by stealth;
- Muffle your false love with some show of blindness:
- Let not my sister read it in your eye;
- Be not thy tongue thy own shame's orator;
- Look sweet, be fair, become disloyalty;
- Apparel vice like virtue's harbinger;
- Bear a fair presence, though your heart be tainted;
- Teach sin the carriage of a holy saint;
- Be secret-false: what need she be acquainted?
- What simple thief brags of his own attaint?
- 'Tis double wrong, to truant with your bed
- And let her read it in thy looks at board:
- Shame hath a bastard fame, well managed;
- Ill deeds are doubled with an evil word.
- Alas, poor women! make us but believe,
- Being compact of credit, that you love us;
- Though others have the arm, show us the sleeve;
- We in your motion turn and you may move us.
- Then, gentle brother, get you in again;
- Comfort my sister, cheer her, call her wife:
- 'Tis holy sport to be a little vain,
- When the sweet breath of flattery conquers strife.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Sweet mistress--what your name is else, I know not,
- Nor by what wonder you do hit of mine,--
- Less in your knowledge and your grace you show not
- Than our earth's wonder, more than earth divine.
- Teach me, dear creature, how to think and speak;
- Lay open to my earthy-gross conceit,
- Smother'd in errors, feeble, shallow, weak,
- The folded meaning of your words' deceit.
- Against my soul's pure truth why labour you
- To make it wander in an unknown field?
- Are you a god? would you create me new?
- Transform me then, and to your power I'll yield.
- But if that I am I, then well I know
- Your weeping sister is no wife of mine,
- Nor to her bed no homage do I owe
- Far more, far more to you do I decline.
- O, train me not, sweet mermaid, with thy note,
- To drown me in thy sister's flood of tears:
- Sing, siren, for thyself and I will dote:
- Spread o'er the silver waves thy golden hairs,
- And as a bed I'll take them and there lie,
- And in that glorious supposition think
- He gains by death that hath such means to die:
- Let Love, being light, be drowned if she sink!
-
- LUCIANA What, are you mad, that you do reason so?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Not mad, but mated; how, I do not know.
-
- LUCIANA It is a fault that springeth from your eye.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE For gazing on your beams, fair sun, being by.
-
- LUCIANA Gaze where you should, and that will clear your sight.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE As good to wink, sweet love, as look on night.
-
-
- LUCIANA Why call you me love? call my sister so.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thy sister's sister.
-
-
- LUCIANA That's my sister.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE No;
- It is thyself, mine own self's better part,
- Mine eye's clear eye, my dear heart's dearer heart,
- My food, my fortune and my sweet hope's aim,
- My sole earth's heaven and my heaven's claim.
-
- LUCIANA All this my sister is, or else should be.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Call thyself sister, sweet, for I am thee.
- Thee will I love and with thee lead my life:
- Thou hast no husband yet nor I no wife.
- Give me thy hand.
-
- LUCIANA O, soft, air! hold you still:
- I'll fetch my sister, to get her good will.
-
- [Exit]
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why, how now, Dromio! where runn'st thou so fast?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Do you know me, sir? am I Dromio? am I your man?
- am I myself?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thou art Dromio, thou art my man, thou art thyself.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I am an ass, I am a woman's man and besides myself.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS What woman's man? and how besides thyself? besides thyself?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, sir, besides myself, I am due to a woman; one
- that claims me, one that haunts me, one that will have me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What claim lays she to thee?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry sir, such claim as you would lay to your
- horse; and she would have me as a beast: not that, I
- being a beast, she would have me; but that she,
- being a very beastly creature, lays claim to me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What is she?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE A very reverent body; ay, such a one as a man may
- not speak of without he say 'Sir-reverence.' I have
- but lean luck in the match, and yet is she a
- wondrous fat marriage.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE How dost thou mean a fat marriage?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, sir, she's the kitchen wench and all grease;
- and I know not what use to put her to but to make a
- lamp of her and run from her by her own light. I
- warrant, her rags and the tallow in them will burn a
- Poland winter: if she lives till doomsday,
- she'll burn a week longer than the whole world.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What complexion is she of?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Swart, like my shoe, but her face nothing half so
- clean kept: for why, she sweats; a man may go over
- shoes in the grime of it.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE That's a fault that water will mend.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No, sir, 'tis in grain; Noah's flood could not do it.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What's her name?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Nell, sir; but her name and three quarters, that's
- an ell and three quarters, will not measure her from
- hip to hip.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Then she bears some breadth?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No longer from head to foot than from hip to hip:
- she is spherical, like a globe; I could find out
- countries in her.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE In what part of her body stands Ireland?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, in her buttocks: I found it out by the bogs.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where Scotland?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I found it by the barrenness; hard in the palm of the hand.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where France?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE In her forehead; armed and reverted, making war
- against her heir.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where England?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I looked for the chalky cliffs, but I could find no
- whiteness in them; but I guess it stood in her chin,
- by the salt rheum that ran between France and it.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where Spain?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Faith, I saw it not; but I felt it hot in her breath.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where America, the Indies?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Oh, sir, upon her nose all o'er embellished with
- rubies, carbuncles, sapphires, declining their rich
- aspect to the hot breath of Spain; who sent whole
- armadoes of caracks to be ballast at her nose.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Where stood Belgia, the Netherlands?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Oh, sir, I did not look so low. To conclude, this
- drudge, or diviner, laid claim to me, call'd me
- Dromio; swore I was assured to her; told me what
- privy marks I had about me, as, the mark of my
- shoulder, the mole in my neck, the great wart on my
- left arm, that I amazed ran from her as a witch:
- And, I think, if my breast had not been made of
- faith and my heart of steel,
- She had transform'd me to a curtal dog and made
- me turn i' the wheel.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Go hie thee presently, post to the road:
- An if the wind blow any way from shore,
- I will not harbour in this town to-night:
- If any bark put forth, come to the mart,
- Where I will walk till thou return to me.
- If every one knows us and we know none,
- 'Tis time, I think, to trudge, pack and be gone.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE As from a bear a man would run for life,
- So fly I from her that would be my wife.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE There's none but witches do inhabit here;
- And therefore 'tis high time that I were hence.
- She that doth call me husband, even my soul
- Doth for a wife abhor. But her fair sister,
- Possess'd with such a gentle sovereign grace,
- Of such enchanting presence and discourse,
- Hath almost made me traitor to myself:
- But, lest myself be guilty to self-wrong,
- I'll stop mine ears against the mermaid's song.
-
- [Enter ANGELO with the chain]
-
- ANGELO Master Antipholus,--
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Ay, that's my name.
-
- ANGELO I know it well, sir, lo, here is the chain.
- I thought to have ta'en you at the Porpentine:
- The chain unfinish'd made me stay thus long.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What is your will that I shall do with this?
-
- ANGELO What please yourself, sir: I have made it for you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Made it for me, sir! I bespoke it not.
-
- ANGELO Not once, nor twice, but twenty times you have.
- Go home with it and please your wife withal;
- And soon at supper-time I'll visit you
- And then receive my money for the chain.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I pray you, sir, receive the money now,
- For fear you ne'er see chain nor money more.
-
- ANGELO You are a merry man, sir: fare you well.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What I should think of this, I cannot tell:
- But this I think, there's no man is so vain
- That would refuse so fair an offer'd chain.
- I see a man here needs not live by shifts,
- When in the streets he meets such golden gifts.
- I'll to the mart, and there for Dromio stay
- If any ship put out, then straight away.
-
- [Exit]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT IV
-
-
-
- SCENE I A public place.
-
-
- [Enter Second Merchant, ANGELO, and an Officer]
-
- Second Merchant You know since Pentecost the sum is due,
- And since I have not much importuned you;
- Nor now I had not, but that I am bound
- To Persia, and want guilders for my voyage:
- Therefore make present satisfaction,
- Or I'll attach you by this officer.
-
- ANGELO Even just the sum that I do owe to you
- Is growing to me by Antipholus,
- And in the instant that I met with you
- He had of me a chain: at five o'clock
- I shall receive the money for the same.
- Pleaseth you walk with me down to his house,
- I will discharge my bond and thank you too.
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus and DROMIO of Ephesus
- from the courtezan's]
-
- Officer That labour may you save: see where he comes.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS While I go to the goldsmith's house, go thou
- And buy a rope's end: that will I bestow
- Among my wife and her confederates,
- For locking me out of my doors by day.
- But, soft! I see the goldsmith. Get thee gone;
- Buy thou a rope and bring it home to me.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I buy a thousand pound a year: I buy a rope.
-
- [Exit]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS A man is well holp up that trusts to you:
- I promised your presence and the chain;
- But neither chain nor goldsmith came to me.
- Belike you thought our love would last too long,
- If it were chain'd together, and therefore came not.
-
- ANGELO Saving your merry humour, here's the note
- How much your chain weighs to the utmost carat,
- The fineness of the gold and chargeful fashion.
- Which doth amount to three odd ducats more
- Than I stand debted to this gentleman:
- I pray you, see him presently discharged,
- For he is bound to sea and stays but for it.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I am not furnish'd with the present money;
- Besides, I have some business in the town.
- Good signior, take the stranger to my house
- And with you take the chain and bid my wife
- Disburse the sum on the receipt thereof:
- Perchance I will be there as soon as you.
-
- ANGELO Then you will bring the chain to her yourself?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS No; bear it with you, lest I come not time enough.
-
- ANGELO Well, sir, I will. Have you the chain about you?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS An if I have not, sir, I hope you have;
- Or else you may return without your money.
-
- ANGELO Nay, come, I pray you, sir, give me the chain:
- Both wind and tide stays for this gentleman,
- And I, to blame, have held him here too long.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Good Lord! you use this dalliance to excuse
- Your breach of promise to the Porpentine.
- I should have chid you for not bringing it,
- But, like a shrew, you first begin to brawl.
-
- Second Merchant The hour steals on; I pray you, sir, dispatch.
-
- ANGELO You hear how he importunes me;--the chain!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Why, give it to my wife and fetch your money.
-
- ANGELO Come, come, you know I gave it you even now.
- Either send the chain or send me by some token.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Fie, now you run this humour out of breath,
- where's the chain? I pray you, let me see it.
-
- Second Merchant My business cannot brook this dalliance.
- Good sir, say whether you'll answer me or no:
- If not, I'll leave him to the officer.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I answer you! what should I answer you?
-
- ANGELO The money that you owe me for the chain.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I owe you none till I receive the chain.
-
- ANGELO You know I gave it you half an hour since.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS You gave me none: you wrong me much to say so.
-
- ANGELO You wrong me more, sir, in denying it:
- Consider how it stands upon my credit.
-
- Second Merchant Well, officer, arrest him at my suit.
-
- Officer I do; and charge you in the duke's name to obey me.
-
- ANGELO This touches me in reputation.
- Either consent to pay this sum for me
- Or I attach you by this officer.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Consent to pay thee that I never had!
- Arrest me, foolish fellow, if thou darest.
-
- ANGELO Here is thy fee; arrest him, officer,
- I would not spare my brother in this case,
- If he should scorn me so apparently.
-
- Officer I do arrest you, sir: you hear the suit.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I do obey thee till I give thee bail.
- But, sirrah, you shall buy this sport as dear
- As all the metal in your shop will answer.
-
- ANGELO Sir, sir, I will have law in Ephesus,
- To your notorious shame; I doubt it not.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Syracuse, from the bay]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, there is a bark of Epidamnum
- That stays but till her owner comes aboard,
- And then, sir, she bears away. Our fraughtage, sir,
- I have convey'd aboard; and I have bought
- The oil, the balsamum and aqua-vitae.
- The ship is in her trim; the merry wind
- Blows fair from land: they stay for nought at all
- But for their owner, master, and yourself.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS How now! a madman! Why, thou peevish sheep,
- What ship of Epidamnum stays for me?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE A ship you sent me to, to hire waftage.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Thou drunken slave, I sent thee for a rope;
- And told thee to what purpose and what end.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE You sent me for a rope's end as soon:
- You sent me to the bay, sir, for a bark.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I will debate this matter at more leisure
- And teach your ears to list me with more heed.
- To Adriana, villain, hie thee straight:
- Give her this key, and tell her, in the desk
- That's cover'd o'er with Turkish tapestry,
- There is a purse of ducats; let her send it:
- Tell her I am arrested in the street
- And that shall bail me; hie thee, slave, be gone!
- On, officer, to prison till it come.
-
- [Exeunt Second Merchant, Angelo, Officer, and
- Antipholus of Ephesus]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE To Adriana! that is where we dined,
- Where Dowsabel did claim me for her husband:
- She is too big, I hope, for me to compass.
- Thither I must, although against my will,
- For servants must their masters' minds fulfil.
-
- [Exit]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT IV
-
-
-
- SCENE II The house of ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus.
-
-
- [Enter ADRIANA and LUCIANA]
-
- ADRIANA Ah, Luciana, did he tempt thee so?
- Mightst thou perceive austerely in his eye
- That he did plead in earnest? yea or no?
- Look'd he or red or pale, or sad or merrily?
- What observation madest thou in this case
- Of his heart's meteors tilting in his face?
-
- LUCIANA First he denied you had in him no right.
-
- ADRIANA He meant he did me none; the more my spite.
-
- LUCIANA Then swore he that he was a stranger here.
-
- ADRIANA And true he swore, though yet forsworn he were.
-
- LUCIANA Then pleaded I for you.
-
- ADRIANA And what said he?
-
- LUCIANA That love I begg'd for you he begg'd of me.
-
- ADRIANA With what persuasion did he tempt thy love?
-
- LUCIANA With words that in an honest suit might move.
- First he did praise my beauty, then my speech.
-
- ADRIANA Didst speak him fair?
-
- LUCIANA Have patience, I beseech.
-
- ADRIANA I cannot, nor I will not, hold me still;
- My tongue, though not my heart, shall have his will.
- He is deformed, crooked, old and sere,
- Ill-faced, worse bodied, shapeless everywhere;
- Vicious, ungentle, foolish, blunt, unkind;
- Stigmatical in making, worse in mind.
-
- LUCIANA Who would be jealous then of such a one?
- No evil lost is wail'd when it is gone.
-
- ADRIANA Ah, but I think him better than I say,
- And yet would herein others' eyes were worse.
- Far from her nest the lapwing cries away:
- My heart prays for him, though my tongue do curse.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Here! go; the desk, the purse! sweet, now, make haste.
-
- LUCIANA How hast thou lost thy breath?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE By running fast.
-
- ADRIANA Where is thy master, Dromio? is he well?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No, he's in Tartar limbo, worse than hell.
- A devil in an everlasting garment hath him;
- One whose hard heart is button'd up with steel;
- A fiend, a fury, pitiless and rough;
- A wolf, nay, worse, a fellow all in buff;
- A back-friend, a shoulder-clapper, one that
- countermands
- The passages of alleys, creeks and narrow lands;
- A hound that runs counter and yet draws dryfoot well;
- One that before the judgement carries poor souls to hell.
-
- ADRIANA Why, man, what is the matter?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I do not know the matter: he is 'rested on the case.
-
- ADRIANA What, is he arrested? Tell me at whose suit.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I know not at whose suit he is arrested well;
- But he's in a suit of buff which 'rested him, that can I tell.
- Will you send him, mistress, redemption, the money in his desk?
-
- ADRIANA Go fetch it, sister.
-
- [Exit Luciana]
-
- This I wonder at,
- That he, unknown to me, should be in debt.
- Tell me, was he arrested on a band?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Not on a band, but on a stronger thing;
- A chain, a chain! Do you not hear it ring?
-
- ADRIANA What, the chain?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No, no, the bell: 'tis time that I were gone:
- It was two ere I left him, and now the clock
- strikes one.
-
- ADRIANA The hours come back! that did I never hear.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE O, yes; if any hour meet a sergeant, a' turns back for
- very fear.
-
- ADRIANA As if Time were in debt! how fondly dost thou reason!
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Time is a very bankrupt, and owes more than he's
- worth, to season.
- Nay, he's a thief too: have you not heard men say
- That Time comes stealing on by night and day?
- If Time be in debt and theft, and a sergeant in the way,
- Hath he not reason to turn back an hour in a day?
-
- [Re-enter LUCIANA with a purse]
-
- ADRIANA Go, Dromio; there's the money, bear it straight;
- And bring thy master home immediately.
- Come, sister: I am press'd down with conceit--
- Conceit, my comfort and my injury.
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT IV
-
-
-
- SCENE III A public place.
-
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE There's not a man I meet but doth salute me
- As if I were their well-acquainted friend;
- And every one doth call me by my name.
- Some tender money to me; some invite me;
- Some other give me thanks for kindnesses;
- Some offer me commodities to buy:
- Even now a tailor call'd me in his shop
- And show'd me silks that he had bought for me,
- And therewithal took measure of my body.
- Sure, these are but imaginary wiles
- And Lapland sorcerers inhabit here.
-
- [Enter DROMIO OF SYRACUSE]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, here's the gold you sent me for. What, have
- you got the picture of old Adam new-apparelled?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What gold is this? what Adam dost thou mean?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Not that Adam that kept the Paradise but that Adam
- that keeps the prison: he that goes in the calf's
- skin that was killed for the Prodigal; he that came
- behind you, sir, like an evil angel, and bid you
- forsake your liberty.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I understand thee not.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE No? why, 'tis a plain case: he that went, like a
- bass-viol, in a case of leather; the man, sir,
- that, when gentlemen are tired, gives them a sob
- and 'rests them; he, sir, that takes pity on decayed
- men and gives them suits of durance; he that sets up
- his rest to do more exploits with his mace than a
- morris-pike.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE What, thou meanest an officer?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Ay, sir, the sergeant of the band, he that brings
- any man to answer it that breaks his band; one that
- thinks a man always going to bed, and says, 'God
- give you good rest!'
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Well, sir, there rest in your foolery. Is there any
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Why, sir, I brought you word an hour since that the
- bark Expedition put forth to-night; and then were
- you hindered by the sergeant, to tarry for the hoy
- Delay. Here are the angels that you sent for to
- deliver you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE The fellow is distract, and so am I;
- And here we wander in illusions:
- Some blessed power deliver us from hence!
-
- [Enter a Courtezan]
-
- Courtezan Well met, well met, Master Antipholus.
- I see, sir, you have found the goldsmith now:
- Is that the chain you promised me to-day?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Satan, avoid! I charge thee, tempt me not.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, is this Mistress Satan?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE It is the devil.
-
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Nay, she is worse, she is the devil's dam; and here
- she comes in the habit of a light wench: and thereof
- comes that the wenches say 'God damn me;' that's as
- much to say 'God make me a light wench.' It is
- written, they appear to men like angels of light:
- light is an effect of fire, and fire will burn;
- ergo, light wenches will burn. Come not near her.
-
- Courtezan Your man and you are marvellous merry, sir.
- Will you go with me? We'll mend our dinner here?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, if you do, expect spoon-meat; or bespeak a
- long spoon.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Why, Dromio?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Marry, he must have a long spoon that must eat with
- the devil.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Avoid then, fiend! what tell'st thou me of supping?
- Thou art, as you are all, a sorceress:
- I conjure thee to leave me and be gone.
-
- Courtezan Give me the ring of mine you had at dinner,
- Or, for my diamond, the chain you promised,
- And I'll be gone, sir, and not trouble you.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Some devils ask but the parings of one's nail,
- A rush, a hair, a drop of blood, a pin,
- A nut, a cherry-stone;
- But she, more covetous, would have a chain.
- Master, be wise: an if you give it her,
- The devil will shake her chain and fright us with it.
-
- Courtezan I pray you, sir, my ring, or else the chain:
- I hope you do not mean to cheat me so.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Avaunt, thou witch! Come, Dromio, let us go.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE 'Fly pride,' says the peacock: mistress, that you know.
-
- [Exeunt Antipholus of Syracuse and Dromio of Syracuse]
-
- Courtezan Now, out of doubt Antipholus is mad,
- Else would he never so demean himself.
- A ring he hath of mine worth forty ducats,
- And for the same he promised me a chain:
- Both one and other he denies me now.
- The reason that I gather he is mad,
- Besides this present instance of his rage,
- Is a mad tale he told to-day at dinner,
- Of his own doors being shut against his entrance.
- Belike his wife, acquainted with his fits,
- On purpose shut the doors against his way.
- My way is now to hie home to his house,
- And tell his wife that, being lunatic,
- He rush'd into my house and took perforce
- My ring away. This course I fittest choose;
- For forty ducats is too much to lose.
-
- [Exit]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT IV
-
-
-
- SCENE IV A street.
-
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus and the Officer]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Fear me not, man; I will not break away:
- I'll give thee, ere I leave thee, so much money,
- To warrant thee, as I am 'rested for.
- My wife is in a wayward mood to-day,
- And will not lightly trust the messenger
- That I should be attach'd in Ephesus,
- I tell you, 'twill sound harshly in her ears.
-
- [Enter DROMIO of Ephesus with a rope's-end]
-
- Here comes my man; I think he brings the money.
- How now, sir! have you that I sent you for?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Here's that, I warrant you, will pay them all.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS But where's the money?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Why, sir, I gave the money for the rope.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Five hundred ducats, villain, for a rope?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I'll serve you, sir, five hundred at the rate.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS To what end did I bid thee hie thee home?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS To a rope's-end, sir; and to that end am I returned.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS And to that end, sir, I will welcome you.
-
- [Beating him]
-
- Officer Good sir, be patient.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Nay, 'tis for me to be patient; I am in adversity.
-
- Officer Good, now, hold thy tongue.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Nay, rather persuade him to hold his hands.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Thou whoreson, senseless villain!
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I would I were senseless, sir, that I might not feel
- your blows.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS Thou art sensible in nothing but blows, and so is an
- ass.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I am an ass, indeed; you may prove it by my long
- ears. I have served him from the hour of my
- nativity to this instant, and have nothing at his
- hands for my service but blows. When I am cold, he
- heats me with beating; when I am warm, he cools me
- with beating; I am waked with it when I sleep;
- raised with it when I sit; driven out of doors with
- it when I go from home; welcomed home with it when
- I return; nay, I bear it on my shoulders, as a
- beggar wont her brat; and, I think when he hath
- lamed me, I shall beg with it from door to door.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Come, go along; my wife is coming yonder.
-
- [Enter ADRIANA, LUCIANA, the Courtezan, and PINCH]
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Mistress, 'respice finem,' respect your end; or
- rather, the prophecy like the parrot, 'beware the
- rope's-end.'
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Wilt thou still talk?
-
- [Beating him]
-
- Courtezan How say you now? is not your husband mad?
-
- ADRIANA His incivility confirms no less.
- Good Doctor Pinch, you are a conjurer;
- Establish him in his true sense again,
- And I will please you what you will demand.
-
- LUCIANA Alas, how fiery and how sharp he looks!
-
- Courtezan Mark how he trembles in his ecstasy!
-
- PINCH Give me your hand and let me feel your pulse.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS There is my hand, and let it feel your ear.
-
- [Striking him]
-
- PINCH I charge thee, Satan, housed within this man,
- To yield possession to my holy prayers
- And to thy state of darkness hie thee straight:
- I conjure thee by all the saints in heaven!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Peace, doting wizard, peace! I am not mad.
-
- ADRIANA O, that thou wert not, poor distressed soul!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS You minion, you, are these your customers?
- Did this companion with the saffron face
- Revel and feast it at my house to-day,
- Whilst upon me the guilty doors were shut
- And I denied to enter in my house?
-
- ADRIANA O husband, God doth know you dined at home;
- Where would you had remain'd until this time,
- Free from these slanders and this open shame!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Dined at home! Thou villain, what sayest thou?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Sir, sooth to say, you did not dine at home.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Were not my doors lock'd up and I shut out?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Perdie, your doors were lock'd and you shut out.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS And did not she herself revile me there?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Sans fable, she herself reviled you there.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Did not her kitchen-maid rail, taunt, and scorn me?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Certes, she did; the kitchen-vestal scorn'd you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS And did not I in rage depart from thence?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS In verity you did; my bones bear witness,
- That since have felt the vigour of his rage.
-
- ADRIANA Is't good to soothe him in these contraries?
-
- PINCH It is no shame: the fellow finds his vein,
- And yielding to him humours well his frenzy.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Thou hast suborn'd the goldsmith to arrest me.
-
- ADRIANA Alas, I sent you money to redeem you,
- By Dromio here, who came in haste for it.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Money by me! heart and goodwill you might;
- But surely master, not a rag of money.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Went'st not thou to her for a purse of ducats?
-
- ADRIANA He came to me and I deliver'd it.
-
- LUCIANA And I am witness with her that she did.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS God and the rope-maker bear me witness
- That I was sent for nothing but a rope!
-
- PINCH Mistress, both man and master is possess'd;
- I know it by their pale and deadly looks:
- They must be bound and laid in some dark room.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Say, wherefore didst thou lock me forth to-day?
- And why dost thou deny the bag of gold?
-
- ADRIANA I did not, gentle husband, lock thee forth.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS And, gentle master, I received no gold;
- But I confess, sir, that we were lock'd out.
-
- ADRIANA Dissembling villain, thou speak'st false in both.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Dissembling harlot, thou art false in all;
- And art confederate with a damned pack
- To make a loathsome abject scorn of me:
- But with these nails I'll pluck out these false eyes
- That would behold in me this shameful sport.
-
- [Enter three or four, and offer to bind him.
- He strives]
-
- ADRIANA O, bind him, bind him! let him not come near me.
-
- PINCH More company! The fiend is strong within him.
-
- LUCIANA Ay me, poor man, how pale and wan he looks!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS What, will you murder me? Thou gaoler, thou,
- I am thy prisoner: wilt thou suffer them
- To make a rescue?
-
- Officer Masters, let him go
- He is my prisoner, and you shall not have him.
-
- PINCH Go bind this man, for he is frantic too.
-
- [They offer to bind Dromio of Ephesus]
-
- ADRIANA What wilt thou do, thou peevish officer?
- Hast thou delight to see a wretched man
- Do outrage and displeasure to himself?
-
- Officer He is my prisoner: if I let him go,
- The debt he owes will be required of me.
-
- ADRIANA I will discharge thee ere I go from thee:
- Bear me forthwith unto his creditor,
- And, knowing how the debt grows, I will pay it.
- Good master doctor, see him safe convey'd
- Home to my house. O most unhappy day!
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS O most unhappy strumpet!
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Master, I am here entered in bond for you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Out on thee, villain! wherefore dost thou mad me?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Will you be bound for nothing? be mad, good master:
- cry 'The devil!'
-
- LUCIANA God help, poor souls, how idly do they talk!
-
- ADRIANA Go bear him hence. Sister, go you with me.
-
- [Exeunt all but Adriana, Luciana, Officer and
- Courtezan]
-
- Say now, whose suit is he arrested at?
-
- Officer One Angelo, a goldsmith: do you know him?
-
- ADRIANA I know the man. What is the sum he owes?
-
- Officer Two hundred ducats.
-
- ADRIANA Say, how grows it due?
-
- Officer Due for a chain your husband had of him.
-
- ADRIANA He did bespeak a chain for me, but had it not.
-
- Courtezan When as your husband all in rage to-day
- Came to my house and took away my ring--
- The ring I saw upon his finger now--
- Straight after did I meet him with a chain.
-
- ADRIANA It may be so, but I did never see it.
- Come, gaoler, bring me where the goldsmith is:
- I long to know the truth hereof at large.
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse with his rapier drawn,
- and DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- LUCIANA God, for thy mercy! they are loose again.
-
- ADRIANA And come with naked swords.
- Let's call more help to have them bound again.
-
- Officer Away! they'll kill us.
-
- [Exeunt all but Antipholus of Syracuse and Dromio
- of Syracuse]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I see these witches are afraid of swords.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE She that would be your wife now ran from you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Come to the Centaur; fetch our stuff from thence:
- I long that we were safe and sound aboard.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Faith, stay here this night; they will surely do us
- no harm: you saw they speak us fair, give us gold:
- methinks they are such a gentle nation that, but for
- the mountain of mad flesh that claims marriage of
- me, I could find in my heart to stay here still and
- turn witch.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I will not stay to-night for all the town;
- Therefore away, to get our stuff aboard.
-
- [Exeunt]
-
-
-
-
- THE COMEDY OF ERRORS
-
-
- ACT V
-
-
-
- SCENE I A street before a Priory.
-
-
- [Enter Second Merchant and ANGELO]
-
- ANGELO I am sorry, sir, that I have hinder'd you;
- But, I protest, he had the chain of me,
- Though most dishonestly he doth deny it.
-
- Second Merchant How is the man esteemed here in the city?
-
- ANGELO Of very reverend reputation, sir,
- Of credit infinite, highly beloved,
- Second to none that lives here in the city:
- His word might bear my wealth at any time.
-
- Second Merchant Speak softly; yonder, as I think, he walks.
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse and DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- ANGELO 'Tis so; and that self chain about his neck
- Which he forswore most monstrously to have.
- Good sir, draw near to me, I'll speak to him.
- Signior Antipholus, I wonder much
- That you would put me to this shame and trouble;
- And, not without some scandal to yourself,
- With circumstance and oaths so to deny
- This chain which now you wear so openly:
- Beside the charge, the shame, imprisonment,
- You have done wrong to this my honest friend,
- Who, but for staying on our controversy,
- Had hoisted sail and put to sea to-day:
- This chain you had of me; can you deny it?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I think I had; I never did deny it.
-
- Second Merchant Yes, that you did, sir, and forswore it too.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Who heard me to deny it or forswear it?
-
- Second Merchant These ears of mine, thou know'st did hear thee.
- Fie on thee, wretch! 'tis pity that thou livest
- To walk where any honest man resort.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE Thou art a villain to impeach me thus:
- I'll prove mine honour and mine honesty
- Against thee presently, if thou darest stand.
-
- Second Merchant I dare, and do defy thee for a villain.
-
- [They draw]
-
- [Enter ADRIANA, LUCIANA, the Courtezan, and others]
-
- ADRIANA Hold, hurt him not, for God's sake! he is mad.
- Some get within him, take his sword away:
- Bind Dromio too, and bear them to my house.
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Run, master, run; for God's sake, take a house!
- This is some priory. In, or we are spoil'd!
-
- [Exeunt Antipholus of Syracuse and Dromio of Syracuse
- to the Priory]
-
- [Enter the Lady Abbess, AEMILIA]
-
- AEMELIA Be quiet, people. Wherefore throng you hither?
-
- ADRIANA To fetch my poor distracted husband hence.
- Let us come in, that we may bind him fast
- And bear him home for his recovery.
-
- ANGELO I knew he was not in his perfect wits.
-
- Second Merchant I am sorry now that I did draw on him.
-
- AEMELIA How long hath this possession held the man?
-
- ADRIANA This week he hath been heavy, sour, sad,
- And much different from the man he was;
- But till this afternoon his passion
- Ne'er brake into extremity of rage.
-
- AEMELIA Hath he not lost much wealth by wreck of sea?
- Buried some dear friend? Hath not else his eye
- Stray'd his affection in unlawful love?
- A sin prevailing much in youthful men,
- Who give their eyes the liberty of gazing.
- Which of these sorrows is he subject to?
-
- ADRIANA To none of these, except it be the last;
- Namely, some love that drew him oft from home.
-
- AEMELIA You should for that have reprehended him.
-
- ADRIANA Why, so I did.
-
- AEMELIA Ay, but not rough enough.
-
- ADRIANA As roughly as my modesty would let me.
-
- AEMELIA Haply, in private.
-
- ADRIANA And in assemblies too.
-
- AEMELIA Ay, but not enough.
-
- ADRIANA It was the copy of our conference:
- In bed he slept not for my urging it;
- At board he fed not for my urging it;
- Alone, it was the subject of my theme;
- In company I often glanced it;
- Still did I tell him it was vile and bad.
-
- AEMELIA And thereof came it that the man was mad.
- The venom clamours of a jealous woman
- Poisons more deadly than a mad dog's tooth.
- It seems his sleeps were hinder'd by thy railing,
- And therefore comes it that his head is light.
- Thou say'st his meat was sauced with thy upbraidings:
- Unquiet meals make ill digestions;
- Thereof the raging fire of fever bred;
- And what's a fever but a fit of madness?
- Thou say'st his sports were hinderd by thy brawls:
- Sweet recreation barr'd, what doth ensue
- But moody and dull melancholy,
- Kinsman to grim and comfortless despair,
- And at her heels a huge infectious troop
- Of pale distemperatures and foes to life?
- In food, in sport and life-preserving rest
- To be disturb'd, would mad or man or beast:
- The consequence is then thy jealous fits
- Have scared thy husband from the use of wits.
-
- LUCIANA She never reprehended him but mildly,
- When he demean'd himself rough, rude and wildly.
- Why bear you these rebukes and answer not?
-
- ADRIANA She did betray me to my own reproof.
- Good people enter and lay hold on him.
-
- AEMELIA No, not a creature enters in my house.
-
- ADRIANA Then let your servants bring my husband forth.
-
- AEMELIA Neither: he took this place for sanctuary,
- And it shall privilege him from your hands
- Till I have brought him to his wits again,
- Or lose my labour in assaying it.
-
- ADRIANA I will attend my husband, be his nurse,
- Diet his sickness, for it is my office,
- And will have no attorney but myself;
- And therefore let me have him home with me.
-
- AEMELIA Be patient; for I will not let him stir
- Till I have used the approved means I have,
- With wholesome syrups, drugs and holy prayers,
- To make of him a formal man again:
- It is a branch and parcel of mine oath,
- A charitable duty of my order.
- Therefore depart and leave him here with me.
-
- ADRIANA I will not hence and leave my husband here:
- And ill it doth beseem your holiness
- To separate the husband and the wife.
-
- AEMELIA Be quiet and depart: thou shalt not have him.
-
- [Exit]
-
- LUCIANA Complain unto the duke of this indignity.
-
- ADRIANA Come, go: I will fall prostrate at his feet
- And never rise until my tears and prayers
- Have won his grace to come in person hither
- And take perforce my husband from the abbess.
-
- Second Merchant By this, I think, the dial points at five:
- Anon, I'm sure, the duke himself in person
- Comes this way to the melancholy vale,
- The place of death and sorry execution,
- Behind the ditches of the abbey here.
-
- ANGELO Upon what cause?
-
- Second Merchant To see a reverend Syracusian merchant,
- Who put unluckily into this bay
- Against the laws and statutes of this town,
- Beheaded publicly for his offence.
-
- ANGELO See where they come: we will behold his death.
-
- LUCIANA Kneel to the duke before he pass the abbey.
-
- [Enter DUKE SOLINUS, attended; AEGEON bareheaded; with the
- Headsman and other Officers]
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Yet once again proclaim it publicly,
- If any friend will pay the sum for him,
- He shall not die; so much we tender him.
-
- ADRIANA Justice, most sacred duke, against the abbess!
-
- DUKE SOLINUS She is a virtuous and a reverend lady:
- It cannot be that she hath done thee wrong.
-
- ADRIANA May it please your grace, Antipholus, my husband,
- Whom I made lord of me and all I had,
- At your important letters,--this ill day
- A most outrageous fit of madness took him;
- That desperately he hurried through the street,
- With him his bondman, all as mad as he--
- Doing displeasure to the citizens
- By rushing in their houses, bearing thence
- Rings, jewels, any thing his rage did like.
- Once did I get him bound and sent him home,
- Whilst to take order for the wrongs I went,
- That here and there his fury had committed.
- Anon, I wot not by what strong escape,
- He broke from those that had the guard of him;
- And with his mad attendant and himself,
- Each one with ireful passion, with drawn swords,
- Met us again and madly bent on us,
- Chased us away; till, raising of more aid,
- We came again to bind them. Then they fled
- Into this abbey, whither we pursued them:
- And here the abbess shuts the gates on us
- And will not suffer us to fetch him out,
- Nor send him forth that we may bear him hence.
- Therefore, most gracious duke, with thy command
- Let him be brought forth and borne hence for help.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Long since thy husband served me in my wars,
- And I to thee engaged a prince's word,
- When thou didst make him master of thy bed,
- To do him all the grace and good I could.
- Go, some of you, knock at the abbey-gate
- And bid the lady abbess come to me.
- I will determine this before I stir.
-
- [Enter a Servant]
-
- Servant O mistress, mistress, shift and save yourself!
- My master and his man are both broke loose,
- Beaten the maids a-row and bound the doctor
- Whose beard they have singed off with brands of fire;
- And ever, as it blazed, they threw on him
- Great pails of puddled mire to quench the hair:
- My master preaches patience to him and the while
- His man with scissors nicks him like a fool,
- And sure, unless you send some present help,
- Between them they will kill the conjurer.
-
- ADRIANA Peace, fool! thy master and his man are here,
- And that is false thou dost report to us.
-
- Servant Mistress, upon my life, I tell you true;
- I have not breathed almost since I did see it.
- He cries for you, and vows, if he can take you,
- To scorch your face and to disfigure you.
-
- [Cry within]
-
- Hark, hark! I hear him, mistress. fly, be gone!
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Come, stand by me; fear nothing. Guard with halberds!
-
- ADRIANA Ay me, it is my husband! Witness you,
- That he is borne about invisible:
- Even now we housed him in the abbey here;
- And now he's there, past thought of human reason.
-
- [Enter ANTIPHOLUS of Ephesus and DROMIO of Ephesus]
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Justice, most gracious duke, O, grant me justice!
- Even for the service that long since I did thee,
- When I bestrid thee in the wars and took
- Deep scars to save thy life; even for the blood
- That then I lost for thee, now grant me justice.
-
- AEGEON Unless the fear of death doth make me dote,
- I see my son Antipholus and Dromio.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Justice, sweet prince, against that woman there!
- She whom thou gavest to me to be my wife,
- That hath abused and dishonour'd me
- Even in the strength and height of injury!
- Beyond imagination is the wrong
- That she this day hath shameless thrown on me.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Discover how, and thou shalt find me just.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS This day, great duke, she shut the doors upon me,
- While she with harlots feasted in my house.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS A grievous fault! Say, woman, didst thou so?
-
- ADRIANA No, my good lord: myself, he and my sister
- To-day did dine together. So befall my soul
- As this is false he burdens me withal!
-
- LUCIANA Ne'er may I look on day, nor sleep on night,
- But she tells to your highness simple truth!
-
- ANGELO O perjured woman! They are both forsworn:
- In this the madman justly chargeth them.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS My liege, I am advised what I say,
- Neither disturbed with the effect of wine,
- Nor heady-rash, provoked with raging ire,
- Albeit my wrongs might make one wiser mad.
- This woman lock'd me out this day from dinner:
- That goldsmith there, were he not pack'd with her,
- Could witness it, for he was with me then;
- Who parted with me to go fetch a chain,
- Promising to bring it to the Porpentine,
- Where Balthazar and I did dine together.
- Our dinner done, and he not coming thither,
- I went to seek him: in the street I met him
- And in his company that gentleman.
- There did this perjured goldsmith swear me down
- That I this day of him received the chain,
- Which, God he knows, I saw not: for the which
- He did arrest me with an officer.
- I did obey, and sent my peasant home
- For certain ducats: he with none return'd
- Then fairly I bespoke the officer
- To go in person with me to my house.
- By the way we met
- My wife, her sister, and a rabble more
- Of vile confederates. Along with them
- They brought one Pinch, a hungry lean-faced villain,
- A mere anatomy, a mountebank,
- A threadbare juggler and a fortune-teller,
- A needy, hollow-eyed, sharp-looking wretch,
- A dead-looking man: this pernicious slave,
- Forsooth, took on him as a conjurer,
- And, gazing in mine eyes, feeling my pulse,
- And with no face, as 'twere, outfacing me,
- Cries out, I was possess'd. Then all together
- They fell upon me, bound me, bore me thence
- And in a dark and dankish vault at home
- There left me and my man, both bound together;
- Till, gnawing with my teeth my bonds in sunder,
- I gain'd my freedom, and immediately
- Ran hither to your grace; whom I beseech
- To give me ample satisfaction
- For these deep shames and great indignities.
-
- ANGELO My lord, in truth, thus far I witness with him,
- That he dined not at home, but was lock'd out.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS But had he such a chain of thee or no?
-
- ANGELO He had, my lord: and when he ran in here,
- These people saw the chain about his neck.
-
- Second Merchant Besides, I will be sworn these ears of mine
- Heard you confess you had the chain of him
- After you first forswore it on the mart:
- And thereupon I drew my sword on you;
- And then you fled into this abbey here,
- From whence, I think, you are come by miracle.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I never came within these abbey-walls,
- Nor ever didst thou draw thy sword on me:
- I never saw the chain, so help me Heaven!
- And this is false you burden me withal.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Why, what an intricate impeach is this!
- I think you all have drunk of Circe's cup.
- If here you housed him, here he would have been;
- If he were mad, he would not plead so coldly:
- You say he dined at home; the goldsmith here
- Denies that saying. Sirrah, what say you?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Sir, he dined with her there, at the Porpentine.
-
- Courtezan He did, and from my finger snatch'd that ring.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS 'Tis true, my liege; this ring I had of her.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Saw'st thou him enter at the abbey here?
-
- Courtezan As sure, my liege, as I do see your grace.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Why, this is strange. Go call the abbess hither.
- I think you are all mated or stark mad.
-
- [Exit one to Abbess]
-
- AEGEON Most mighty duke, vouchsafe me speak a word:
- Haply I see a friend will save my life
- And pay the sum that may deliver me.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Speak freely, Syracusian, what thou wilt.
-
- AEGEON Is not your name, sir, call'd Antipholus?
- And is not that your bondman, Dromio?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Within this hour I was his bondman sir,
- But he, I thank him, gnaw'd in two my cords:
- Now am I Dromio and his man unbound.
-
- AEGEON I am sure you both of you remember me.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Ourselves we do remember, sir, by you;
- For lately we were bound, as you are now
- You are not Pinch's patient, are you, sir?
-
- AEGEON Why look you strange on me? you know me well.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS I never saw you in my life till now.
-
- AEGEON O, grief hath changed me since you saw me last,
- And careful hours with time's deformed hand
- Have written strange defeatures in my face:
- But tell me yet, dost thou not know my voice?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Neither.
-
- AEGEON Dromio, nor thou?
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS No, trust me, sir, nor I.
-
- AEGEON I am sure thou dost.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Ay, sir, but I am sure I do not; and whatsoever a
- man denies, you are now bound to believe him.
-
- AEGEON Not know my voice! O time's extremity,
- Hast thou so crack'd and splitted my poor tongue
- In seven short years, that here my only son
- Knows not my feeble key of untuned cares?
- Though now this grained face of mine be hid
- In sap-consuming winter's drizzled snow,
- And all the conduits of my blood froze up,
- Yet hath my night of life some memory,
- My wasting lamps some fading glimmer left,
- My dull deaf ears a little use to hear:
- All these old witnesses--I cannot err--
- Tell me thou art my son Antipholus.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I never saw my father in my life.
-
- AEGEON But seven years since, in Syracusa, boy,
- Thou know'st we parted: but perhaps, my son,
- Thou shamest to acknowledge me in misery.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS The duke and all that know me in the city
- Can witness with me that it is not so
- I ne'er saw Syracusa in my life.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS I tell thee, Syracusian, twenty years
- Have I been patron to Antipholus,
- During which time he ne'er saw Syracusa:
- I see thy age and dangers make thee dote.
-
- [Re-enter AEMILIA, with ANTIPHOLUS of Syracuse and
- DROMIO of Syracuse]
-
- AEMELIA Most mighty duke, behold a man much wrong'd.
-
- [All gather to see them]
-
- ADRIANA I see two husbands, or mine eyes deceive me.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS One of these men is Genius to the other;
- And so of these. Which is the natural man,
- And which the spirit? who deciphers them?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE I, sir, am Dromio; command him away.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS I, sir, am Dromio; pray, let me stay.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE AEgeon art thou not? or else his ghost?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE O, my old master! who hath bound him here?
-
- AEMELIA Whoever bound him, I will loose his bonds
- And gain a husband by his liberty.
- Speak, old AEgeon, if thou be'st the man
- That hadst a wife once call'd AEmilia
- That bore thee at a burden two fair sons:
- O, if thou be'st the same AEgeon, speak,
- And speak unto the same AEmilia!
-
- AEGEON If I dream not, thou art AEmilia:
- If thou art she, tell me where is that son
- That floated with thee on the fatal raft?
-
- AEMELIA By men of Epidamnum he and I
- And the twin Dromio all were taken up;
- But by and by rude fishermen of Corinth
- By force took Dromio and my son from them
- And me they left with those of Epidamnum.
- What then became of them I cannot tell
- I to this fortune that you see me in.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Why, here begins his morning story right;
- These two Antipholuses, these two so like,
- And these two Dromios, one in semblance,--
- Besides her urging of her wreck at sea,--
- These are the parents to these children,
- Which accidentally are met together.
- Antipholus, thou camest from Corinth first?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE No, sir, not I; I came from Syracuse.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS Stay, stand apart; I know not which is which.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS I came from Corinth, my most gracious lord,--
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS And I with him.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Brought to this town by that most famous warrior,
- Duke Menaphon, your most renowned uncle.
-
- ADRIANA Which of you two did dine with me to-day?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I, gentle mistress.
-
- ADRIANA And are not you my husband?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS No; I say nay to that.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE And so do I; yet did she call me so:
- And this fair gentlewoman, her sister here,
- Did call me brother.
-
- [To Luciana]
-
- What I told you then,
- I hope I shall have leisure to make good;
- If this be not a dream I see and hear.
-
- ANGELO That is the chain, sir, which you had of me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE I think it be, sir; I deny it not.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS And you, sir, for this chain arrested me.
-
- ANGELO I think I did, sir; I deny it not.
-
- ADRIANA I sent you money, sir, to be your bail,
- By Dromio; but I think he brought it not.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS No, none by me.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE This purse of ducats I received from you,
- And Dromio, my man, did bring them me.
- I see we still did meet each other's man,
- And I was ta'en for him, and he for me,
- And thereupon these errors are arose.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS These ducats pawn I for my father here.
-
- DUKE SOLINUS It shall not need; thy father hath his life.
-
- Courtezan Sir, I must have that diamond from you.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS There, take it; and much thanks for my good cheer.
-
- AEMELIA Renowned duke, vouchsafe to take the pains
- To go with us into the abbey here
- And hear at large discoursed all our fortunes:
- And all that are assembled in this place,
- That by this sympathized one day's error
- Have suffer'd wrong, go keep us company,
- And we shall make full satisfaction.
- Thirty-three years have I but gone in travail
- Of you, my sons; and till this present hour
- My heavy burden ne'er delivered.
- The duke, my husband and my children both,
- And you the calendars of their nativity,
- Go to a gossips' feast and go with me;
- After so long grief, such festivity!
-
- DUKE SOLINUS With all my heart, I'll gossip at this feast.
-
- [Exeunt all but Antipholus of Syracuse, Antipholus
- of Ephesus, Dromio of Syracuse and Dromio of Ephesus]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Master, shall I fetch your stuff from shipboard?
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF EPHESUS Dromio, what stuff of mine hast thou embark'd?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Your goods that lay at host, sir, in the Centaur.
-
- ANTIPHOLUS
- OF SYRACUSE He speaks to me. I am your master, Dromio:
- Come, go with us; we'll look to that anon:
- Embrace thy brother there; rejoice with him.
-
- [Exeunt Antipholus of Syracuse and Antipholus of Ephesus]
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE There is a fat friend at your master's house,
- That kitchen'd me for you to-day at dinner:
- She now shall be my sister, not my wife.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Methinks you are my glass, and not my brother:
- I see by you I am a sweet-faced youth.
- Will you walk in to see their gossiping?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE Not I, sir; you are my elder.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS That's a question: how shall we try it?
-
- DROMIO OF SYRACUSE We'll draw cuts for the senior: till then lead thou first.
-
- DROMIO OF EPHESUS Nay, then, thus:
- We came into the world like brother and brother;
- And now let's go hand in hand, not one before another.
-
- [Exeunt]
-