781 Enter Iohn and Borachio.  782Ioh. It is 
so, the Count 
 Claudio shal marry the daugh
-  784Bora. Yea my Lord, but I can cro
sse it.
  785Iohn. Any barre, any cro
sse, any impediment, will be
  786medicinable to me, I am 
sicke in di
splea
sure to him, and
  787what
soeuer comes athwart his a
ffe
ction, ranges euenly
  788with mine, how can
st thou cro
sse this marriage?
  789Bor. Not hone
stly my Lord, but 
so couertly, that no
  790di
shone
sty 
shall appeare in me.
  791Iohn. Shew me breefely how.
  792Bor. I thinke I told your Lord
ship a yeere 
since, how
  793much I am in the fauour of 
Margaret, the waiting gentle
-  796Bor. I can at any vn
sea
sonable in
stant of the night,
  797appoint her to look out at her Ladies chamber window.
  798Iohn. What life is in that, to be the death of this mar
-  800Bor. The poy
son of that lies in you to temper, goe
  801you to the Prince your brother, 
spare not to tell him, that
  802hee hath wronged his Honor in marrying the renowned
  803Claudio, who
se e
stimation do you mightily hold vp, to a
  804contaminated 
stale, 
such a one as 
Hero.
  805Iohn. What proofe 
shall I make of that?
  806Bor. Proofe enough, to mi
su
se the Prince, to vexe
  807Claudio, to vndoe 
 Hero, and kill 
 Leonato, looke you for a
-  809Iohn. Onely to de
spight them, I will endeauour any
  811Bor. Goe then, 
finde me a meete howre, to draw on
  812Pedro and the Count 
 Claudio alone, tell them that you
  813know that 
Hero loues me, intend a kinde of zeale both
  814to the Prince and 
Claudio (as in a loue of your brothers
  815honor who hath made this match) and his friends repu
-  816tation, who is thus like to be co
sen'd with the 
semblance
  817of a maid, that you haue di
scouer'd thus: they will 
scarce
-  818ly beleeue this without triall: o
ffer them in
stances which
  819shall beare no le
sse likelihood, than to 
see mee at her
  820chamber window, heare me call 
Margaret, 
 Hero; heare
  821Margaret terme me 
 Claudio, and bring them to 
see this
  822the very night before the intended wedding, for in the
  823meane time, I will 
so fa
shion the matter, that 
Hero shall
  824be ab
sent, and there 
shall appeare 
such 
seeming truths of
  825Heroes di
sloyaltie, that iealou
sie 
shall be cal'd a
ssurance,
  826and all the preparation ouerthrowne.
  827Iohn. Grow this to what aduer
se i
ssue it can, I will
  828put it in pra
cti
se: be cunning in the working this, and
  829thy fee is a thou
sand ducates.
  830Bor. Be thou con
stant in the accu
sation, and my cun
-  831ning 
shall not 
shame me.
  832Iohn. I will pre
sentlie goe learne their day of marri
-