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If you will marry, make your loues to me, |
My Lady is bespoke |
Gon. An enterlude |
Alb. Thou art armed Gloster, |
Let the Trumpet sound: |
If none appeare to proue vpon thy person, |
Thy heynous, manifest, and many Treasons, |
There is my pledge: Ile make it on thy heart |
Ere I taste bread, thou art in nothing lesse |
Then I haue heere proclaim'd thee |
Reg. Sicke, O sicke |
Gon. If not, Ile nere trust medicine |
Bast. There's my exchange, what in the world hes |
That names me Traitor, villain-like he lies, |
Call by the Trumpet: he that dares approach; |
On him, on you, who not, I will maintaine |
My truth and honor firmely. |
Enter a Herald. |
Alb. A Herald, ho. |
Trust to thy single vertue, for thy Souldiers |
All leuied in my name, haue in my name |
Tooke their discharge |
Regan. My sicknesse growes vpon me |
Alb. She is not well, conuey her to my Tent. |
Come hither Herald, let the Trumpet sound, |
And read out this. |
A Trumpet sounds. |
Herald reads. |
If any man of qualitie or degree, within the lists of the Army, |
will maintaine vpon Edmund, supposed Earle of Gloster, |
that he is a manifold Traitor, let him appeare by the third |
sound of the Trumpet: he is bold in his defence. |
1 Trumpet. |
Her. Againe. |
2 Trumpet. |
Her. Againe. |
3 Trumpet. |
Trumpet answers within. |
Enter Edgar armed. |
Alb. Aske him his purposes, why he appeares |
Vpon this Call o'th' Trumpet |
Her. What are you? |
Your name, your quality, and why you answer |
This present Summons? |
Edg. Know my name is lost |
By Treasons tooth: bare-gnawne, and Canker-bit, |
Yet am I Noble as the Aduersary |
I come to cope |
Alb. Which is that Aduersary? |
Edg. What's he that speakes for Edmund Earle of Gloster? |
Bast. Himselfe, what saist thou to him? |
Edg. Draw thy Sword, |
That if my speech offend a Noble heart, |
Thy arme may do thee Iustice, heere is mine: |
Behold it is my priuiledge, |
The priuiledge of mine Honours, |
My oath, and my profession. I protest, |
Maugre thy strength, place, youth, and eminence, |
Despise thy victor-Sword, and fire new Fortune, |
Thy valor, and thy heart, thou art a Traitor: |
False to thy Gods, thy Brother, and thy Father, |
Conspirant 'gainst this high illustrious Prince, |
And from th' extremest vpward of thy head, |
To the discent and dust below thy foote, |
A most Toad-spotted Traitor. Say thou no, |
This Sword, this arme, and my best spirits are bent |
To proue vpon thy heart, where to I speake, |
Thou lyest |
Bast. In wisedome I should aske thy name, |
But since thy out-side lookes so faire and Warlike, |
And that thy tongue (some say) of breeding breathes, |
What safe, and nicely I might well delay, |
By rule of Knight-hood, I disdaine and spurne: |
Backe do I tosse these Treasons to thy head, |
With the hell-hated Lye, ore-whelme thy heart, |
Which for they yet glance by, and scarcely bruise, |
This Sword of mine shall giue them instant way, |
Where they shall rest for euer. Trumpets speake |
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