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- Edition: Much Ado About Nothing
 
Much Ado About Nothing (Folio 1, 1623)
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  Much ado about Nothing. 111
 1262Prin. Indeed that tels a heauy tale for him: conclude,
 1263he is in loue.
 1264Clau. Nay, but I know who loues him.
 1265Prince. That would I know too, I warrant one that
 1266knowes him not.
 1268dies for him.
 1273must not heare.
 1274Prin. For my life to breake with him about  Beatrice.
 1276played their parts with Beatrice, and then the two Beares
 1277will not bite one another when they meete.
 1278 Enter Iohn the Bastard.
 1280Prin. Good den brother.
 1282Prince. In priuate?
 1284for what I would speake of, concernes him.
 1285Prin. What's the matter?
 1287row?
 1288Prin. You know he does.
 1289Bast. I know not that when he knowes what I know.
 1291uer it.
 1292Bast. You may thinke I loue you not, let that appeare
 1293hereafter, and ayme better at me by that I now will ma-
 1294nifest, for my brother (I thinke, he holds you well, and in
 1297Prin. Why, what's the matter?
 1300Lady is disloyall.
 1301Clau. Who  Hero?
 1303mans Hero.
 1309ber window entred, euen the night before her wedding
 1310day, if you loue her, then to morrow wed her: But it
 1311would better fit your honour to change your minde.
 1313Princ. I will not thinke it.
 1315that you know: if you will follow mee, I will shew you
 1316enough, and when you haue seene more, & heard more,
 1317proceed accordingly.
 1319marry her to morrow in the congregation, where I shold
 1320wedde, there will I shame her.
 1321Prin. And as I wooed for thee to obtaine her, I will
 1322ioyne with thee to disgrace her.
 1326Prin. O day vntowardly turned!
 1330 Enter Dogbery and his compartner with the watch.
 1331Dog. Are you good men and true?
 1335them, if they should haue any allegiance in them, being
 1336chosen for the Princes watch.
 1337Verges. Well, giue them their charge, neighbour
 1338Dogbery.
 1340to be Constable?
 1342they can write and reade.
 1343Dogb. Come hither neighbour Sea-coale, God hath
 1344blest you with a good name: to be a wel-fauoured man,
 1345is the gift of Fortune, but to write and reade, comes by
 1346Nature.
 1349well, for your fauour sir, why giue God thankes, & make
 1350no boast of it, and for your writing and reading, let that
 1351appeare when there is no need of such vanity, you are
 1354thorne: this is your charge: You shall comprehend all
 1356ces name.
 1358Dogb. Why then take no note of him, but let him go,
 1360thanke God you are ridde of a knaue.
 1363Dogb. True, and they are to meddle with none but
 1366tollerable, and not to be indured.
 1368what belongs to a Watch.
 1371only haue a care that your bills be not stolne: well, you
 1372are to call at all the Alehouses, and bid them that are
 1373drunke get them to bed.
 1374Watch. How if they will not?
 1377they are not the men you tooke them for.
 1381kinde of men, the lesse you meddle or make with them,
 1382why the more is for your honesty.
 1384lay hands on him.
 1389Ver. You haue bin alwaies cal'd a merciful mã partner.
 1390Dog. Truely I would not hang a dog by my will, much
 1391more a man who hath anie honestie in him.
 K2  Verges.