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- Edition: Much Ado About Nothing
 
Much Ado About Nothing (Folio 1, 1623)
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  Much ado about Nothing 113
 1524Hero. God giue mee ioy to weare it, for my heart is
 1525exceeding heauy.
 1527man.
 1530not marriage honourable in a beggar? is not your Lord
 1531honourable without marriage? I thinke you would haue
 1534there any harme in the heauier for a husband? none I
 1535thinke, and it be the right husband, and the right wife,
 1536otherwise 'tis light and not heauy, aske my Lady Beatrice
 1538 Enter Beatrice.
 1539Hero. Good morrow Coze.
 1542Beat. I am out of all other tune, me thinkes.
 1543Mar. Claps into Light a loue, (that goes without a
 1544burden,) do you sing it and Ile dance it.
 1545Beat. Ye Light aloue with your heeles, then if your
 1547no barnes.
 1549my heeles.
 1551were ready, by my troth I am exceeding ill, hey ho.
 1553Beat. For the letter that begins them all, H.
 1554Mar. Well, and you be not turn'd Turke, there's no
 1556Beat. What meanes the foole trow?
 1558desire.
 1560excellent perfume.
 1563colde.
 1564Beat. O God helpe me, God help me, how long haue
 1567me rarely?
 1569your cap, by my troth I am sicke.
 1571and lay it to your heart, it is the onely thing for a qualm.
 1574rall in this benedictus.
 1577chance that I thinke you are in loue, nay birlady I am not
 1579what I can, nor indeed I cannot thinke, if I would thinke
 1580my hart out of thinking, that you are in loue, or that you
 1581will be in loue, or that you can be in loue: yet Benedicke
 1583hee would neuer marry, and yet now in despight of his
 1584heart he eates his meat without grudging, and how you
 1585may be conuerted I know not, but me thinkes you looke
 1586with your eies as other women doe.
 1587Beat. What pace is this that thy tongue keepes.
 1589 Enter Vrsula.
 1591nior Benedicke, Don  Iohn, and all the gallants of the
 1592towne are come to fetch you to Church.
 1594good Vrsula. 
 1595 Enter Leonato, and the Constable, and the Headborough. 
 1597bour?
 1599with you, that decernes you nearely.
 1601with me.
 1604Leon. What is it my good friends?
 1608as the skin betweene his browes.
 1610uing, that is an old man, and no honester then I.
 1612bour Verges.
 1613Leon. Neighbours, you are tedious.
 1615the poore Dukes officers, but truely for mine owne part,
 1616if I were as tedious as a King I could finde in my heart to
 1620than 'tis, for I heare as good exclamation on your Wor-
 1621ship as of any man in the Citie, and though I bee but a
 1622poore man, I am glad to heare it.
 1627knaues as any in Messina.
 1629they say, when the age is in the wit is out, God helpe vs,
 1631well, God's a good man, and two men ride of a horse,
 1633troth he is, as euer broke bread, but God is to bee wor-
 1634shipt, all men are not alike, alas good neighbour.
 1636Con. Do. Gifts that God giues.
 1640them this morning examined before your worship.
 1642me, I am now in great haste, as may appeare vnto you.
 1646daughter to her husband.
 1647Leon. Ile wait vpon them, I am ready.
 1649coale, bid him bring his pen and inkehorne to the Gaole:
 1650we are now to examine those men.
 K3 heeres