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Lear. Good morrow to you both |
Corn. Haile to your Grace. |
Kent here set at liberty. |
Reg. I am glad to see your Highnesse |
Lear. Regan, I thinke you are. I know what reason |
I haue to thinke so, if thou should'st not be glad, |
I would diuorce me from thy Mother Tombe, |
Sepulchring an Adultresse. O are you free? |
Some other time for that. Beloued Regan, |
Thy Sisters naught: oh Regan, she hath tied |
Sharpe-tooth'd vnkindnesse, like a vulture heere, |
I can scarce speake to thee, thou'lt not beleeue |
With how deprau'd a quality. Oh Regan |
Reg. I pray you Sir, take patience, I haue hope |
You lesse know how to value her desert, |
Then she to scant her dutie |
Lear. Say? How is that? |
Reg. I cannot thinke my Sister in the least |
Would faile her Obligation. If Sir perchance |
She haue restrained the Riots of your Followres, |
'Tis on such ground, and to such wholesome end, |
As cleeres her from all blame |
Lear. My curses on her |
Reg. O Sir, you are old, |
Nature in you stands on the very Verge |
Of his confine: you should be rul'd, and led |
By some discretion, that discernes your state |
Better then you your selfe: therefore I pray you, |
That to our Sister, you do make returne, |
Say you haue wrong'd her |
Lear. Aske her forgiuenesse? |
Do you but marke how this becomes the house? |
Deere daughter, I confesse that I am old; |
Age is vnnecessary: on my knees I begge, |
That you'l vouchsafe me Rayment, Bed, and Food |
Reg. Good Sir, no more: these are vnsightly trickes: |
Returne you to my Sister |
Lear. Neuer Regan: |
She hath abated me of halfe my Traine; |
Look'd blacke vpon me, strooke me with her Tongue |
Most Serpent-like, vpon the very Heart. |
All the stor'd Vengeances of Heauen, fall |
On her ingratefull top: strike her yong bones |
You taking Ayres, with Lamenesse |
Corn. Fye sir, fie |
Le. You nimble Lightnings, dart your blinding flames |
Into her scornfull eyes: Infect her Beauty, |
You Fen-suck'd Fogges, drawne by the powrfull Sunne, |
To fall, and blister |
Reg. O the blest Gods! |
So will you wish on me, when the rash moode is on |
Lear. No Regan, thou shalt neuer haue my curse: |
Thy tender-hefted Nature shall not giue |
Thee o're to harshnesse: Her eyes are fierce, but thine |
Do comfort, and not burne. 'Tis not in thee |
To grudge my pleasures, to cut off my Traine, |
To bandy hasty words, to scant my sizes, |
And in conclusion, to oppose the bolt |
Against my comming in. Thou better know'st |
The Offices of Nature, bond of Childhood, |
Effects of Curtesie, dues of Gratitude: |
Thy halfe o'th' Kingdome hast thou not forgot, |
Wherein I thee endow'd |
Reg. Good Sir, to'th' purpose. |
Tucket within. |
Lear. Who put my man i'th' Stockes? |
Enter Steward. |
Corn. What Trumpet's that? |
Reg. I know't, my Sisters: this approues her Letter, |
That she would soone be heere. Is your Lady come? |
Lear. This is a Slaue, whose easie borrowed pride |
Dwels in the sickly grace of her he followes. |
Out Varlet, from my sight |
Corn. What meanes your Grace? |
Enter Gonerill. |
Lear. Who stockt my Seruant? Regan, I haue good hope |
Thou did'st not know on't. |
Who comes here? O Heauens! |
If you do loue old men; if your sweet sway |
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