The Complete Works of Shakespeare. Knowledge house

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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.

       Adr.

      I will not hence, and leave my husband here;

      And ill it doth beseem your holiness

      To separate the husband and the wife.

       Abb.

      Be quiet and depart, thou shalt not have him.

       [Exit.]

       Luc.

      Complain unto the Duke of this indignity.

       Adr.

      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.

       [2. E.] Mer.

      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.

       Ang.

      Upon what cause?

       [2. E.] Mer.

      To see a reverent Syracusian merchant,

      Who put unluckily into this bay

      Against the laws and statutes of this town,

      Beheaded publicly for his offense.

       Ang.

      See where they come, we will behold his death.

       Luc.

      Kneel to the Duke before he pass the abbey.

       Enter the Duke of Ephesus [attended] and [Egeon] the merchant of Syracuse, bare-head, with the Headsman and other Officers.

       Duke.

      Yet once again proclaim it publicly,

      If any friend will pay the sum for him,

      He shall not die, so much we tender him.

       Adr.

      Justice, most sacred Duke, against the Abbess!

       Duke.

      She is a virtuous and a reverend lady,

      It cannot be that she hath done thee wrong.

       Adr.

      May it please your Grace, Antipholus my husband,

      Who 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 desp’rately 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

      Chas’d us away; till raising of more aid,

      We came again to bind them. Then they fled

      Into this abbey, whither we pursu’d 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.

      Long since thy husband serv’d me in my wars,

      And I to thee engag’d 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 Messenger.

       [Mess.]

      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 sing’d off with brands of fire,

      And ever as it blaz’d, they threw on him

      Great pails of puddled mire to quench the hair;

      My

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