Twelfth Night |
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| Twelfth Night
| Act 5, Scene 1
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Enter Clown and FABIANFABIAN
Now, as thou lovest me, let me see his letter.Clown
Good Master Fabian, grant me another request.FABIAN
Any thing.Clown
Do not desire to see this letter.FABIAN
This is, to give a dog, and in recompense desire myDUKE ORSINO
dog again.
Enter DUKE ORSINO, VIOLA, CURIO, and Lords
Belong you to the Lady Olivia, friends?Clown
Ay, sir; we are some of her trappings.DUKE ORSINO
I know thee well; how dost thou, my good fellow?Clown
Truly, sir, the better for my foes and the worseDUKE ORSINO
for my friends.
Just the contrary; the better for thy friends.Clown
No, sir, the worse.DUKE ORSINO
How can that be?Clown
Marry, sir, they praise me and make an ass of me;DUKE ORSINO
now my foes tell me plainly I am an ass: so that by
my foes, sir I profit in the knowledge of myself,
and by my friends, I am abused: so that,
conclusions to be as kisses, if your four negatives
make your two affirmatives why then, the worse for
my friends and the better for my foes.
Why, this is excellent.Clown
By my troth, sir, no; though it please you to beDUKE ORSINO
one of my friends.
Thou shalt not be the worse for me: there's gold.Clown
But that it would be double-dealing, sir, I wouldDUKE ORSINO
you could make it another.
O, you give me ill counsel.Clown
Put your grace in your pocket, sir, for this once,DUKE ORSINO
and let your flesh and blood obey it.
Well, I will be so much a sinner, to be aClown
double-dealer: there's another.
Primo, secundo, tertio, is a good play; and the oldDUKE ORSINO
saying is, the third pays for all: the triplex,
sir, is a good tripping measure; or the bells of
Saint Bennet, sir, may put you in mind; one, two, three.
You can fool no more money out of me at this throw:Clown
if you will let your lady know I am here to speak
with her, and bring her along with you, it may awake
my bounty further.
Marry, sir, lullaby to your bounty till I comeVIOLA
again. I go, sir; but I would not have you to think
that my desire of having is the sin of covetousness:
but, as you say, sir, let your bounty take a nap, I
will awake it anon.
Exit
Here comes the man, sir, that did rescue me.DUKE ORSINO
Enter ANTONIO and Officers
That face of his I do remember well;First Officer
Yet, when I saw it last, it was besmear'd
As black as Vulcan in the smoke of war:
A bawbling vessel was he captain of,
For shallow draught and bulk unprizable;
With which such scathful grapple did he make
With the most noble bottom of our fleet,
That very envy and the tongue of loss
Cried fame and honour on him. What's the matter?
Orsino, this is that AntonioVIOLA
That took the Phoenix and her fraught from Candy;
And this is he that did the Tiger board,
When your young nephew Titus lost his leg:
Here in the streets, desperate of shame and state,
In private brabble did we apprehend him.
He did me kindness, sir, drew on my side;DUKE ORSINO
But in conclusion put strange speech upon me:
I know not what 'twas but distraction.
Notable pirate! thou salt-water thief!ANTONIO
What foolish boldness brought thee to their mercies,
Whom thou, in terms so bloody and so dear,
Hast made thine enemies?
Orsino, noble sir,VIOLA
Be pleased that I shake off these names you give me:
Antonio never yet was thief or pirate,
Though I confess, on base and ground enough,
Orsino's enemy. A witchcraft drew me hither:
That most ingrateful boy there by your side,
From the rude sea's enraged and foamy mouth
Did I redeem; a wreck past hope he was:
His life I gave him and did thereto add
My love, without retention or restraint,
All his in dedication; for his sake
Did I expose myself, pure for his love,
Into the danger of this adverse town;
Drew to defend him when he was beset:
Where being apprehended, his false cunning,
Not meaning to partake with me in danger,
Taught him to face me out of his acquaintance,
And grew a twenty years removed thing
While one would wink; denied me mine own purse,
Which I had recommended to his use
Not half an hour before.
How can this be?DUKE ORSINO
When came he to this town?ANTONIO
To-day, my lord; and for three months before,DUKE ORSINO
No interim, not a minute's vacancy,
Both day and night did we keep company.
Enter OLIVIA and Attendants
Here comes the countess: now heaven walks on earth.OLIVIA
But for thee, fellow; fellow, thy words are madness:
Three months this youth hath tended upon me;
But more of that anon. Take him aside.
What would my lord, but that he may not have,VIOLA
Wherein Olivia may seem serviceable?
Cesario, you do not keep promise with me.
Madam!DUKE ORSINO
Gracious Olivia,--OLIVIA
What do you say, Cesario? Good my lord,--VIOLA
My lord would speak; my duty hushes me.OLIVIA
If it be aught to the old tune, my lord,DUKE ORSINO
It is as fat and fulsome to mine ear
As howling after music.
Still so cruel?OLIVIA
Still so constant, lord.DUKE ORSINO
What, to perverseness? you uncivil lady,OLIVIA
To whose ingrate and unauspicious altars
My soul the faithfull'st offerings hath breathed out
That e'er devotion tender'd! What shall I do?
Even what it please my lord, that shall become him.DUKE ORSINO
Why should I not, had I the heart to do it,VIOLA
Like to the Egyptian thief at point of death,
Kill what I love?--a savage jealousy
That sometimes savours nobly. But hear me this:
Since you to non-regardance cast my faith,
And that I partly know the instrument
That screws me from my true place in your favour,
Live you the marble-breasted tyrant still;
But this your minion, whom I know you love,
And whom, by heaven I swear, I tender dearly,
Him will I tear out of that cruel eye,
Where he sits crowned in his master's spite.
Come, boy, with me; my thoughts are ripe in mischief:
I'll sacrifice the lamb that I do love,
To spite a raven's heart within a dove.
And I, most jocund, apt and willingly,OLIVIA
To do you rest, a thousand deaths would die.
Where goes Cesario?VIOLA
After him I loveOLIVIA
More than I love these eyes, more than my life,
More, by all mores, than e'er I shall love wife.
If I do feign, you witnesses above
Punish my life for tainting of my love!
Ay me, detested! how am I beguiled!VIOLA
Who does beguile you? who does do you wrong?OLIVIA
Hast thou forgot thyself? is it so long?DUKE ORSINO
Call forth the holy father.
Come, away!OLIVIA
Whither, my lord? Cesario, husband, stay.DUKE ORSINO
Husband!OLIVIA
Ay, husband: can he that deny?DUKE ORSINO
Her husband, sirrah!VIOLA
No, my lord, not I.OLIVIA
Alas, it is the baseness of thy fearPriest
That makes thee strangle thy propriety:
Fear not, Cesario; take thy fortunes up;
Be that thou know'st thou art, and then thou art
As great as that thou fear'st.
Enter Priest
O, welcome, father!
Father, I charge thee, by thy reverence,
Here to unfold, though lately we intended
To keep in darkness what occasion now
Reveals before 'tis ripe, what thou dost know
Hath newly pass'd between this youth and me.
A contract of eternal bond of love,DUKE ORSINO
Confirm'd by mutual joinder of your hands,
Attested by the holy close of lips,
Strengthen'd by interchangement of your rings;
And all the ceremony of this compact
Seal'd in my function, by my testimony:
Since when, my watch hath told me, toward my grave
I have travell'd but two hours.
O thou dissembling cub! what wilt thou beVIOLA
When time hath sow'd a grizzle on thy case?
Or will not else thy craft so quickly grow,
That thine own trip shall be thine overthrow?
Farewell, and take her; but direct thy feet
Where thou and I henceforth may never meet.
My lord, I do protest--OLIVIA
O, do not swear!SIR ANDREW
Hold little faith, though thou hast too much fear.
Enter SIR ANDREW
For the love of God, a surgeon! Send one presentlyOLIVIA
to Sir Toby.
What's the matter?SIR ANDREW
He has broke my head across and has given Sir TobyOLIVIA
a bloody coxcomb too: for the love of God, your
help! I had rather than forty pound I were at home.
Who has done this, Sir Andrew?SIR ANDREW
The count's gentleman, one Cesario: we took him forDUKE ORSINO
a coward, but he's the very devil incardinate.
My gentleman, Cesario?SIR ANDREW
'Od's lifelings, here he is! You broke my head forVIOLA
nothing; and that that I did, I was set on to do't
by Sir Toby.
Why do you speak to me? I never hurt you:SIR ANDREW
You drew your sword upon me without cause;
But I bespoke you fair, and hurt you not.
If a bloody coxcomb be a hurt, you have hurt me: IDUKE ORSINO
think you set nothing by a bloody coxcomb.
Enter SIR TOBY BELCH and Clown
Here comes Sir Toby halting; you shall hear more:
but if he had not been in drink, he would have
tickled you othergates than he did.
How now, gentleman! how is't with you?SIR TOBY BELCH
That's all one: has hurt me, and there's the endClown
on't. Sot, didst see Dick surgeon, sot?
O, he's drunk, Sir Toby, an hour agone; his eyesSIR TOBY BELCH
were set at eight i' the morning.
Then he's a rogue, and a passy measures panyn: IOLIVIA
hate a drunken rogue.
Away with him! Who hath made this havoc with them?SIR ANDREW
I'll help you, Sir Toby, because well be dressed together.SIR TOBY BELCH
Will you help? an ass-head and a coxcomb and aOLIVIA
knave, a thin-faced knave, a gull!
Get him to bed, and let his hurt be look'd to.SEBASTIAN
Exeunt Clown, FABIAN, SIR TOBY BELCH, and SIR ANDREW
Enter SEBASTIAN
I am sorry, madam, I have hurt your kinsman:DUKE ORSINO
But, had it been the brother of my blood,
I must have done no less with wit and safety.
You throw a strange regard upon me, and by that
I do perceive it hath offended you:
Pardon me, sweet one, even for the vows
We made each other but so late ago.
One face, one voice, one habit, and two persons,SEBASTIAN
A natural perspective, that is and is not!
Antonio, O my dear Antonio!ANTONIO
How have the hours rack'd and tortured me,
Since I have lost thee!
Sebastian are you?SEBASTIAN
Fear'st thou that, Antonio?ANTONIO
How have you made division of yourself?OLIVIA
An apple, cleft in two, is not more twin
Than these two creatures. Which is Sebastian?
Most wonderful!SEBASTIAN
Do I stand there? I never had a brother;VIOLA
Nor can there be that deity in my nature,
Of here and every where. I had a sister,
Whom the blind waves and surges have devour'd.
Of charity, what kin are you to me?
What countryman? what name? what parentage?
Of Messaline: Sebastian was my father;SEBASTIAN
Such a Sebastian was my brother too,
So went he suited to his watery tomb:
If spirits can assume both form and suit
You come to fright us.
A spirit I am indeed;VIOLA
But am in that dimension grossly clad
Which from the womb I did participate.
Were you a woman, as the rest goes even,
I should my tears let fall upon your cheek,
And say 'Thrice-welcome, drowned Viola!'
My father had a mole upon his brow.SEBASTIAN
And so had mine.VIOLA
And died that day when Viola from her birthSEBASTIAN
Had number'd thirteen years.
O, that record is lively in my soul!VIOLA
He finished indeed his mortal act
That day that made my sister thirteen years.
If nothing lets to make us happy bothSEBASTIAN
But this my masculine usurp'd attire,
Do not embrace me till each circumstance
Of place, time, fortune, do cohere and jump
That I am Viola: which to confirm,
I'll bring you to a captain in this town,
Where lie my maiden weeds; by whose gentle help
I was preserved to serve this noble count.
All the occurrence of my fortune since
Hath been between this lady and this lord.
[To OLIVIA] So comes it, lady, you have been mistook:DUKE ORSINO
But nature to her bias drew in that.
You would have been contracted to a maid;
Nor are you therein, by my life, deceived,
You are betroth'd both to a maid and man.
Be not amazed; right noble is his blood.VIOLA
If this be so, as yet the glass seems true,
I shall have share in this most happy wreck.
To VIOLA
Boy, thou hast said to me a thousand times
Thou never shouldst love woman like to me.
And all those sayings will I overswear;DUKE ORSINO
And those swearings keep as true in soul
As doth that orbed continent the fire
That severs day from night.
Give me thy hand;VIOLA
And let me see thee in thy woman's weeds.
The captain that did bring me first on shoreOLIVIA
Hath my maid's garments: he upon some action
Is now in durance, at Malvolio's suit,
A gentleman, and follower of my lady's.
He shall enlarge him: fetch Malvolio hither:Clown
And yet, alas, now I remember me,
They say, poor gentleman, he's much distract.
Re-enter Clown with a letter, and FABIAN
A most extracting frenzy of mine own
From my remembrance clearly banish'd his.
How does he, sirrah?
Truly, madam, he holds Belzebub at the staves's end asOLIVIA
well as a man in his case may do: has here writ a
letter to you; I should have given't you to-day
morning, but as a madman's epistles are no gospels,
so it skills not much when they are delivered.
Open't, and read it.Clown
Look then to be well edified when the fool deliversOLIVIA
the madman.
Reads
'By the Lord, madam,'--
How now! art thou mad?Clown
No, madam, I do but read madness: an your ladyshipOLIVIA
will have it as it ought to be, you must allow Vox.
Prithee, read i' thy right wits.Clown
So I do, madonna; but to read his right wits is toOLIVIA
read thus: therefore perpend, my princess, and give ear.
Read it you, sirrah.FABIAN
To FABIAN
[Reads] 'By the Lord, madam, you wrong me, and theOLIVIA
world shall know it: though you have put me into
darkness and given your drunken cousin rule over
me, yet have I the benefit of my senses as well as
your ladyship. I have your own letter that induced
me to the semblance I put on; with the which I doubt
not but to do myself much right, or you much shame.
Think of me as you please. I leave my duty a little
unthought of and speak out of my injury.
THE MADLY-USED MALVOLIO.'
Did he write this?Clown
Ay, madam.DUKE ORSINO
This savours not much of distraction.OLIVIA
See him deliver'd, Fabian; bring him hither.DUKE ORSINO
Exit FABIAN
My lord so please you, these things further
thought on,
To think me as well a sister as a wife,
One day shall crown the alliance on't, so please you,
Here at my house and at my proper cost.
Madam, I am most apt to embrace your offer.OLIVIA
To VIOLA
Your master quits you; and for your service done him,
So much against the mettle of your sex,
So far beneath your soft and tender breeding,
And since you call'd me master for so long,
Here is my hand: you shall from this time be
Your master's mistress.
A sister! you are she.DUKE ORSINO
Re-enter FABIAN, with MALVOLIO
Is this the madman?OLIVIA
Ay, my lord, this same.MALVOLIO
How now, Malvolio!
Madam, you have done me wrong,OLIVIA
Notorious wrong.
Have I, Malvolio? no.MALVOLIO
Lady, you have. Pray you, peruse that letter.OLIVIA
You must not now deny it is your hand:
Write from it, if you can, in hand or phrase;
Or say 'tis not your seal, nor your invention:
You can say none of this: well, grant it then
And tell me, in the modesty of honour,
Why you have given me such clear lights of favour,
Bade me come smiling and cross-garter'd to you,
To put on yellow stockings and to frown
Upon Sir Toby and the lighter people;
And, acting this in an obedient hope,
Why have you suffer'd me to be imprison'd,
Kept in a dark house, visited by the priest,
And made the most notorious geck and gull
That e'er invention play'd on? tell me why.
Alas, Malvolio, this is not my writing,FABIAN
Though, I confess, much like the character
But out of question 'tis Maria's hand.
And now I do bethink me, it was she
First told me thou wast mad; then camest in smiling,
And in such forms which here were presupposed
Upon thee in the letter. Prithee, be content:
This practise hath most shrewdly pass'd upon thee;
But when we know the grounds and authors of it,
Thou shalt be both the plaintiff and the judge
Of thine own cause.
Good madam, hear me speak,OLIVIA
And let no quarrel nor no brawl to come
Taint the condition of this present hour,
Which I have wonder'd at. In hope it shall not,
Most freely I confess, myself and Toby
Set this device against Malvolio here,
Upon some stubborn and uncourteous parts
We had conceived against him: Maria writ
The letter at Sir Toby's great importance;
In recompense whereof he hath married her.
How with a sportful malice it was follow'd,
May rather pluck on laughter than revenge;
If that the injuries be justly weigh'd
That have on both sides pass'd.
Alas, poor fool, how have they baffled thee!Clown
Why, 'some are born great, some achieve greatness,MALVOLIO
and some have greatness thrown upon them.' I was
one, sir, in this interlude; one Sir Topas, sir; but
that's all one. 'By the Lord, fool, I am not mad.'
But do you remember? 'Madam, why laugh you at such
a barren rascal? an you smile not, he's gagged:'
and thus the whirligig of time brings in his revenges.
I'll be revenged on the whole pack of you.OLIVIA
Exit
He hath been most notoriously abused.DUKE ORSINO
Pursue him and entreat him to a peace:Clown
He hath not told us of the captain yet:
When that is known and golden time convents,
A solemn combination shall be made
Of our dear souls. Meantime, sweet sister,
We will not part from hence. Cesario, come;
For so you shall be, while you are a man;
But when in other habits you are seen,
Orsino's mistress and his fancy's queen.
Exeunt all, except Clown
[Sings]
When that I was and a little tiny boy,
With hey, ho, the wind and the rain,
A foolish thing was but a toy,
For the rain it raineth every day.
But when I came to man's estate,
With hey, ho, & c.
'Gainst knaves and thieves men shut their gate,
For the rain, & c.
But when I came, alas! to wive,
With hey, ho, & c.
By swaggering could I never thrive,
For the rain, & c.
But when I came unto my beds,
With hey, ho, & c.
With toss-pots still had drunken heads,
For the rain, & c.
A great while ago the world begun,
With hey, ho, & c.
But that's all one, our play is done,
And we'll strive to please you every day.
Exit