M. William Shak-speare:
 H I S
 True Chronicle Historie of the life and
 death of King LEAR and his three
 Daughters.
 With the vnfortunate life of Edgar, sonne
 and heire to the Earle of Gloster, and his
 sullen and assumed humor of
 TOM of Bedlam:
 As it was played before the King's Maiestie at Whitehall vpon
 S.Stephans night in Christmas Hollidayes.
 By his Maiesties seruants playing vsually at the Gloabe
 on the Bancke-side.
 LONDON,
 Printed for Nathaniel Butter, and are to be sold at his shop in Pauls
 Church-yard at the signe of the Pide Bull neere
 St. Austins Gate. 1608.
 M. William Shak-speare
 HISHistorie, of King Lear.
 21Enter Kent, Gloster, and Bastard.  43I Thought the King had more a
ffe
cted the 
5Duke of 
Al-  65Glost. It did allwaies 
seeme 
so to vs, but 
7now in the
  6diui
sion of the kingdomes, it ap
8peares not which of
  7the Dukes he values 
9mo
st, for equalities are 
so weighed,
 that cu
-  8rio
sitie in nei
10ther, can make choi
se of eithers moytie.
  119Kent. Is not this your 
sonne my Lord?
  1210Glost. His breeding 
sir hath beene at my charge, I haue 
13so of
-  1411ten blu
sht to acknowledge him, that now I am braz'd to it.
  1512Kent. I cannot conceiue you.
  1613Glost. Sir, this young fellowes mother Could, wher
17upon 
shee
  14grew round wombed, and had indeed Sir a 
18sonne for her cradle,
  15ere 
she had a hu
sband for her bed, 
19doe you 
smell a fault?
  2016Kent. I cannot wi
sh the fault vndone, the i
ssue of it 
21being 
so
  2218Glost. But I haue 
sir a 
sonne by order of Law, 
some 
23yeare el
-  19der then this, who yet is no deerer in my ac
24count, though this
  20knaue came 
something 
sawcely into the 
25world before hee was
  21sent for, yet was his mother faire, 
26there was good 
sport at his
  22makeing,
 &
 the whore
son mu
st 27be acknowledged,
 do, you know
  23this noble gentle
29man 
Edmund?
  3025Glost. My Lord of Kent, 
31remember him hereafter as my ho
-  3227Bast. My 
seruices to your Lord
ship.
  3328Kent. I mu
st loue you,
 and 
sue to know you better.
  3429Bast. Sir I 
shall 
study de
seruing.
  3530Glost. Hee hath beene out nine yeares, and away hee 
shall
  3631againe, the King is comming.
  3732Sound a Sennet, Enter one bearing a Coronet, then Lear, then the  3833Dukes of Albany, and Cornwell, next Gonorill, Regan, 38.1Cor-  3935Lear. Attend my Lords of France and Burgundy,
 Gloster.
  4036Glost. I 
shall my Leige.
  4137Lear. Meane time we will expre
sse our darker purpo
ses,
  4238The map there; know we haue diuided
  4339In three,
 our kingdome; and tis our 
fir
st intent,
  4440To 
shake all cares and bu
sines of our 
state,
  4541Con
firming them on yonger yeares,
  5042The two great Princes 
France and 
Burgundy,
  5143Great ryuals in our younge
st daughters loue,
  5244Long in our Court haue made their amorous 
soiourne,
  5345And here are to be an
swerd, tell me my daughters,
  5646Which of you 
shall we 
say doth loue vs mo
st,
  5747That we our large
st bountie may extend,
  5848Where merit doth mo
st challenge it,
  5949Gonorill our elde
st borne,
 speake 
fir
st?  6050Gon. Sir I do loue you more then words can weild the (matter,
  6151Dearer then eye-
sight,
 space or libertie,
  6252Beyond what can be valued rich or rare,
  6353No le
sse then life; with grace,
 health,
 beautie,
 honour,
  6454As much a child ere loued,
 or father friend,
  6555A loue that makes breath poore,
 and 
speech vnable,
  6656Beyond all manner of 
so much I loue you.
  6757Cor. What 
shall 
Cordelia doe, loue and be 
silent.
  6858Lear. Of al the
se bounds,
 euen from this line to this,
  6959With 
shady forre
sts,
 and wide 
skirted meades,
  7160We make thee Lady, to thine and 
Albaines i
ssue,
  7261Be this perpetuall, what 
saies our 
second daughter?
  7362Our deere
st Regan, wife to 
Cornwell,
 speake?
  7463Reg. Sir I am made of the 
selfe 
same mettall that my 
sister is,
  7564And prize me at her worth in my true heart,
  7665I 
find 
she names my very deed of loue, 
77onely 
she came 
short,
  66That I profe
sse 
78my 
selfe an enemie to all other ioyes,
  7967Which the mo
st precious 
square of 
sence po
sse
sses,
  8068And 
find I am alone felicitate,
 81in your deere highnes loue.
  8269Cord. Then poore 
Cord.
 83& yet not 
so,
 since I am 
sure
  70My loues 
84more richer then my tongue.
  8571Lear. To thee and thine hereditarie euer
  8672Remaine this ample third of our faire kingdome,
  8773No le
sse in 
space, validity, and plea
sure,
  8874Then that con
firm'd on 
Gonorill,
 but now our ioy,
  8975Although the la
st,
 not lea
st in our deere loue,
  9176What can you 
say to win 
92a third, more opulent
  9378Cord. Nothing my Lord.
  9679Lear. How, nothing can come of nothing, 
speake (againe.
  9780Cord. Vnhappie that I am, I cannot heaue 
98my heart into my
  81mouth,-->
 I loue your Maie
stie 
99according to my bond,
 nor more nor
  10083Lear. Goe to,
 goe to,
 mend your 
speech a little,
  10184Lea
st it may mar your fortunes.
  10386You haue begot me, bred me, loued me,
  10487I returne tho
se duties backe as are right 
fit,
  10588Obey you, loue you,
 and mo
st honour you,
  10689Why haue my 
sisters hu
sbands if they 
say 
107they loue you all,.
  90Happely when I 
shall wed, 
108that Lord who
se hand
  91Mu
st take my plight, 
shall cary 
109halfe my loue with him,
  92Halfe my care and duty, 
110sure I 
shall neuer
  93Mary like my 
sisters, to loue my father all.
  11194Lear. But goes this with thy heart?
  11295Cord. I good my Lord.
  11396Lear. So yong and 
so vntender.
  11497Cord. So yong my Lord and true.
  11598Lear. Well let it be 
so, thy truth then be thy dower,
  11699For by the 
sacred radience of the Sunne,
  117100The mi
stre
sse of 
Heccat,
 and the might,
  118101By all the operation of the orbs,
  119102From whome we doe ex
sist and cea
se to be
  120103Heere I di
sclaime all my paternall care,
  121104Propinquitie and property of blood,
  122105And as a 
stranger to my heart and me
  123106Hould thee from this for euer, the barbarous 
Scythyan,
  124107Or he that makes his generation
  108Me
sses 
125to gorge his appetite
  126109Shall bee as well neighbour'd,
 pittyed and relieued
  127110As thou my 
sometime daughter.
  129112Lear. Peace 
Kent, 
130come not between the Dragon & (his wrath,
  131113I lou'd her mo
st,
 and thought to 
set my re
st  132114On her kind nurcery,
 hence and auoide my 
sight
?  133115So be my graue my peace as here I giue,
  134116Her fathers heart from her, call 
France, who 
stirres?
  135117Call 
Burgundy, 
Cornwell,
 and 
Albany,
  136118With my two daughters dower dige
st this third,
  137119Let pride, which 
she cals plainnes, marrie her:
  138120I doe inue
st you iointly in my powre,
  139121Preheminence,
 and all the large e
ffe
cts
  140122That troope with Maie
stie, our 
selfe by monthly cour
se
  141123With re
seruation of an hundred knights,
  142124By you to be 
su
stayn'd, 
shall our abode
  143125Make with you by due turnes, onely we 
still retaine
  144126The name and all the additions to a King,
  127The 
sway, 
145reuenue, execution of the re
st,
  146128Beloued 
sonnes be yours,
 which to con
firme,
  147129This Coronet part betwixt you.
  149131Whom I haue euer honor'd as my King,
  150132Loued as my Father,
 as my mai
ster followed,
  151133As my great patron thought on in my prayers.
  152134Lear. The bow is bẽt & drawen make from the 
shafte.
  153135Kent. Let it fall rather,
  136Though the forke inuade 
154the region of my heart,
  137Be 
Kent vnmannerly 
155when 
Lear is man,
  138What wilt thou doe ould man, 
156think'
st thou that dutie
  139Shall haue dread to 
speake,
 157when power to 
flatterie bowes,
  158140To plainnes honours bound 
159when Maie
sty 
stoops to folly,
  141Reuer
se thy doome, 
160and in thy be
st con
sideration
  142Checke 
161this hideous ra
shnes,
 an
swere my life
  143My iudgement,
 162thy yonge
st daughter does not loue thee lea
st,
  163144Nor are tho
se empty harted who
se low,
 sound
  165146Lear. Kent on thy life no more.
  166147Kent. My life I neuer held but as a pawne
  167148To wage again
st thy enemies,
 nor feare to lo
se
 it
  168149Thy 
safty being the motiue.
  170151Kent. See better 
Lear and let me 
still remaine,
  171152The true blanke of thine eye.
  173154Kent. Now by 
Appollo King 
174thou 
sweare
st thy Gods (in vaine.
  175155Lear. Va
ssall, recreant.
  177156Kent. Doe, kill thy Phy
sicion,
  157And the fee be
stow 
178vpon the foule di
sea
se,
  158Reuoke thy doome, 
179or whil
st I can vent clamour
  159From my throat, 
180ile tell thee thou do
st euill.
  181160Lear. Heare me,
 on thy allegeance heare me?
  182161Since thou ha
st sought to make vs breake our vow,
  183162Which we dur
st neuer yet; and with 
straied pride,
  184163To come betweene our 
sentence and our powre,
  185164Which nor our nature nor our place can beare,
  186165Our potency made good,
 take thy reward,
  187166Foure dayes we doe allot thee for proui
sion,
  188167To 
shield thee from di
sea
ses of the world,
  189168And on the 
fift to turne thy hated backe
  190169Vpon our kingdome, if on the tenth day following,
  191170Thy bani
sht truncke be found in our dominions,
  192171The moment is thy death, away, by 
Iupiter  193172This 
shall not be reuokt.
  194173Kent. Why fare thee well king, 
 since thus thou wilt (appeare,
  195174Friend
ship liues hence,
 and bani
shment is here,
  196175The Gods to their prote
ction take the maide,
  197176That rightly thinks, and ha
st mo
st iu
stly 
said,
  198177And your large 
speeches may your deedes approue,
  199178That good e
ffe
cts may 
spring from wordes of loue:
  200179Thus 
Kent O Princes, bids you all adew,
  201180Heele 
shape his old cour
se in a countrie new.
  202181Enter France and Burgundie with Gloster.  204182Glost. Heers 
France and 
Burgundie my noble Lord.
  205183Lear. My L. of 
Burgũdie,
 206we 
fir
st addres towards you,
  184Who with a King 
207hath riuald for our daughter,
  185What in the lea
st 208will you require in pre
sent
  186Dower with her, 
209or cea
se your que
st of loue?
  211I craue no more then what
  188Your highnes o
ffered,
 212nor will you tender le
sse
?  213189Lear. Right noble 
Burgundie,
 214when 
she was deere to (vs
  190We did hold her 
so,
 215but now her pri
se is fallen,
  191Sir there 
she 
stands, 
216if ought within that little
  192Seeming 
sub
stãce,
 217or al of it with our di
splea
sure peec'
st,
  218193And nothing el
se may 
fitly like your grace,
  219194Shees there,
 and 
she is yours.
  221196Lear. Sir will you with tho
se in
firmities 
she owes,
  222197Vnfriended,
 new adopted to our hate,
  223198Couered with our cur
se, and 
stranger'd with our oth,
  225200Burg. Pardon me royall 
sir, 
226ele
ction makes not vp
  227202Lear. Then leaue her 
sir,
 for by the powre that made (me
  228203I tell you all her wealth, for you great King,
  229204I would not from your loue make 
such a 
stray,
  230205To match you where I hate, therefore be
seech you,
  231206To auert your liking a more worthier way,
  232207Then on a wretch whome nature is a
shamed
  233208Almo
st to acknowledge hers.
  234209Fra. This is mo
st strange,
 235that 
she, that euen but now
  210Was your be
st obie
ct, 
236the argument of your prai
se,
  211Balme of your age,
 237mo
st be
st,
 mo
st deere
st,
  212Should in this trice of time 
238commit a thing,
  213So mon
strous to di
smantell 
239so many foulds of fauour,
  214Sure her o
ffence 
240mu
st be of 
such vnnaturall degree,
  241215That mon
sters it, or you for voucht a
ffe
ctions
  242216Falne into taint,
 which to beleeue of her
  243217Mu
st be a faith that rea
son without miracle
  244218Could neuer plant in me.
  245219Cord. I yet be
seech your Maie
stie,
  246220If for I want that glib and oyly Art,
  247221To 
speake and purpo
se not,
 since what I well entend
  248222Ile do't before I 
speake,
 that you may know
  249223It is no vicious blot,
 murder or foulnes,
  250224No vncleane a
ction or di
shonord 
step
  251225That hath depriu'd me of your grace and fauour,
  252226But euen for want of that, for which I am rich,
  253227A 
still 
soliciting eye, and 
such a tongue,
  254228As I am glad I haue not, though not to haue it,
  255229Hath lo
st me in your liking.
  256230Leir. Goe to, goe to, better thou had
st 257not bin borne,
  231Then not to haue pleas'd me better.
  258232Fran. Is it no more but this, a tardines in nature,
  259233That often leaues the hi
storie vn
spoke 
260that it intends to (do,
  234My Lord of 
Burgundie,
 261what 
say you to the Lady?
  235Loue is not loue 
262when it is mingled with re
spe
cts that (
stãds
  263236Aloofe from the intire point wil you haue her?
  264237She is her 
selfe and dowre.
  239Which your 
selfe propo
sd,
 267and here I take 
Cordelia  240By the hand,
 268Dutches of 
Burgundie,
  269241Leir. Nothing, I haue 
sworne.
  270242Burg. I am 
sory then you haue 
so lo
st a father,
  271243That you mu
st loo
se a hu
sband.
  272244Cord. Peace be with 
Burgundie,
 273since that re
spe
cts
  245Of fortune are his loue, 
274I 
shall not be his wife.
  275246Fran. Faire
st Cordelia that art mo
st rich being poore,
  276247Mo
st choi
se for
saken,
 and mo
st loued de
spi
sd,
  277248Thee and thy vertues here I ceaze vpon,
  278249Be it lawfull I take vp whats ca
st away,
  279250Gods,
 Gods
! tis 
strãge,
 that from their could
st negle
ct,
  280251My loue 
should kindle to in
flam'd re
spe
ct,
  281252Thy dowreles daughter King throwne to thy chance,
  282253Is Queene of vs,
 of ours,
 and our faire 
France:  283254Not all the Dukes in watri
sh Burgundie,
  284255Shall buy this vnprizd precious maide of me,
  285256Bid them farewell 
Cordelia, though vnkind
  286257Thou loo
se
st here, a better where to 
find.
  287258Lear. Thou ha
st her 
France,
 let her be thine,
  259For we 
288haue no 
such daughter,
 nor 
shall euer 
see
  289260That face of hers againe,
 therfore be gone,
  290261Without our grace, our loue, our benizon? 
291come noble (
Burgũdy.
  262Exit Lear and Burgundie.  292263Fran. Bid farewell to your 
sisters
?  293264Cord. The iewels of our father,
  265With wa
sht eyes 
294Cordelia leaues you, I know you what (you are,
  295266And like a 
sister am mo
st loath to call 
296your faults
  267As they are named, v
se well our Father,
  297268To your profe
ssed bo
soms I commit him,
  298269But yet alas 
stood I within his grace,
  299270I would preferre him to a better place:
  300271So farewell to you both?
  301272Gonorill. Pre
scribe not vs our duties?
  302273Regan. Let your 
study 
303be to content your Lord,
  274Who hath receaued you 
304at Fortunes almes,
  275You haue obedience 
scanted,
  305276And well are worth the worth that you haue wanted.
  306277Cord. Time 
shal vnfould what pleated cũning hides,
  307278Who couers faults, at la
st shame them derides:
  309280Fran. Come faire 
Cordelia? 
 Exit France & Cord.  310281Gonor. Si
ster,
 it is not a little I haue to 
say,
  311282Of what mo
st neerely appertaines to vs both,
  312283I thinke our father will hence to night.
  313284Reg. Thats mo
st certaine,
 and with you,
 next moneth with vs.
  314285Gon. You 
see how full of changes his age is the ob
315seruation we
  286haue made of it hath not bin little; hee alwaies 
316loued our 
sister
  287mo
st, and with what poore iudgement hee 
317hath now ca
st her
  288o
ff, appeares too gro
sse.
  318289Reg. Tis the in
firmitie of his age, yet hee hath euer but 
319slen
-  290derly knowne him
selfe.
  320291Gono. The be
st and 
sounde
st of his time hath bin but 
321ra
sh,
  292then mu
st we looke to receiue from his age not a
322lone the imper
-  293fe
ction of long ingrafted condition,
 but 
323therwithal vnruly way
-  294wardnes, that in
firme and 
324cholericke yeares bring with them.
  325295Rag. Such vncon
stant 
starts are we like to haue from 
326him, as
  296this of 
Kents bani
shment.
  327297Gono. There is further complement of leaue taking be
328tweene
  298France and him,
 pray lets hit together,
 if our 
329Father cary autho
-  299rity with 
such di
spo
sitions as he beares,
 330this la
st surrender of his,
  331301Ragan. We 
shall further thinke on't.
  332302Gon. We mu
st doe 
something,
 and it'h heate. 
 Exeunt.  335304Bast. Thou Nature art my Godde
sse,
 to thy law 
336my 
seruices
  305are bound, wherefore 
should I 
337stand in the plague of cu
stome,
  306and permit 
338the curio
sitie of nations to depriue me, 
339for that I am
  307some twelue or 14.
 moone
shines 
340lag of a brother,
 why ba
stard?
  308wherfore ba
se, 
341when my dementions are as well compa
ct,
  309mind as generous,
 and my 
shape as true 
343as hone
st madams i
ssue,
  310why brand they vs 
344with ba
se, ba
se ba
stardie? 
345who in the lu
sty
  311stealth of nature, take more compo
sition and feirce quality,
 347then
  312doth within a 
stale dull lyed bed, 
348goe to the creating of a whole
  313tribe of fops 
349got tweene a 
sleepe and wake; well the 
350legitimate
  314Edgar, I mu
st haue your land, 
351our Fathers loue is to the ba
stard
  315Edmund, 
352as to the legitimate, 
353well my legitimate, if this letter
  316speede,
 354and my inuention thriue, 
Edmund the ba
se
  317gitimate: I grow, I pro
sper, 
356now Gods 
stand vp for Ba
stards.
  358319Glost. Kent bani
sht thus, and 
France in choller parted, 
359and
  320the King gone to night, 
sub
scribd his power, 
360con
fined to exhi
-  321bition, all this donne 
361vpon the gadde; 
Edmund how now
  362323Bast. So plea
se your Lord
ship, none
:  363324Glost. Why 
so earne
stly 
seeke you to put vp that letter?
  364325Bast. I know no newes my Lord.
  365326Glost. What paper were you reading?
  367328Glost. No, what needes then that terribe di
spatch of 
368it into
  329your pocket, the qualitie of nothing hath not 
369such need to hide
  330it 
selfe, lets 
see, come if it bee no
370thing I 
shall not neede 
spe
cta
-  371332Ba. I be
seech you Sir pardon me,
 it is a letter 
372from my brother,
  333that I haue not all ore read,
 for 
so 
373much as I haue peru
sed, I 
find it
  334not 
fit for your liking.
  375335Glost. Giue me the letter 
sir.
  376336Bast, I 
shall o
ffend either to detaine or giue it, 
377the contents
  337as in part I vnder
stand them, 
378are too blame.
  379338Glost. Lets 
see, lets 
see?
  380339Bast. I hope for my brothers iu
sti
fication, he wrot 
381this but
  340as an e
ssay,
 or ta
st of my vertue. 
 A Letter.	  382341Glost. This policie of age makes the 
383world bitter to the be
st  342of our times, keepes our fortunes from 
384vs till our oldnes cannot
  343reli
sh them, I begin to 
find an idle 
385and fond bondage in the op
-  344pre
ssion of aged tyranny,
 who 
swaies 
386not as it hath power,
 but as
  345it is 
su
ffered,
 come to me,
 that of 
387this I may 
speake more, if our
  346father would 
sleepe till I wakt 
388him, you 
should inioy halfe his
  347reuenew for euer, and liue the 
389beloued of your brother 
Ed-  390349 Hum, con
spiracie, 
slept till I wakt him,
 you 
should 
391enioy halfe
  350his reuenew, my 
sonne 
Edgar, had hee a 
392hand to write this, a
  351hart,
 and braine to breed it in, 
393when came this to you, who
  394353Bast. It was not brought me my Lord, ther's the 
395cunning of
  354it, I found it throwne in at the ca
sement of 
396my clo
set.
  397355Glost. You know the Cara
ctar to be your brothers?
  398356Bast. If the matter were good,
 my Lord I dur
st sweare 
399it were
  357his but in re
spe
ct,
 of that I would faine thinke it 
400were
  not,
 402359Bast. It is his hand my Lord, but I hope his heart is 
403not in
  404361Glost. Hath he neuer heretofore 
soũded you in this bu
sines
?  405362Bast. Neuer my Lord, but I haue often heard him main
406taine
  363it to be 
fit, that 
sons at per
fit age,
 & fathers 
407declining,
 his father
  364should be as ward to the 
sonne,
 and 
408the 
sonne mannage the re
-  409366Glost. O villaine,
 villaine,
 his very opinion in the let
410ter, ab
-  367horred villaine,
 vnnaturall dete
sted bruti
sh 411villaine,
 wor
se then
  368bruti
sh,
 go 
sir 
seeke him,
 I 
412apprehend him,
 abhominable villaine
  413370Bast. I doe not well know my Lord, if it 
shall plea
se you to
  414371su
spend your indignation again
st my brother, til you can 
415deriue
  372from him better te
stimony of this intent: you 
should 
416run a cer
-  373taine cour
se, where if you violently proceed 
417again
st him, mi
-  374staking his purpo
se, it would make a great 
418gap in your owne
  375honour,
 &
 shake in peeces the heart of 
419his obediẽce,
 I dare pawn
  376downe my life for him, 
420he hath wrote this to feele my a
ffe
ction
  377to your honour,
 and 
421to no further pretence of danger.
  423379Bast. If your honour iudge it meete, I will place you 
424where
  380you 
shall heare vs conferre of this,
 and by an auri
425gular a
ssurance
  381haue your 
sati
sfa
ction, and that without 
426any further delay then
  427383Glost. He cannot be 
such a mon
ster.
  427.2385Glost. To his father,
 that 
so tenderly and intirely loues him,
  427.3386heauen and earth
! Edmund seeke 
428him out, wind mee into him, I
  387pray you frame your bu
429sines after your own wi
sedome, I would
  388vn
state my 
430selfe to be in a due re
solution.
  431389Bast. I 
shall 
seeke him 
sir pre
sently, conuey the bu
432sine
sse as I
  390shall 
see meanes, and acquaint you withall.
  433391Glost. The
se late eclip
ses in the Sunne and Moone por
434tend
  392no good to vs, though the wi
sedome of nature can 
435rea
son thus
  393and thus, yet nature 
finds it 
selfe 
scourg'd 
436by the 
sequent e
ffe
cts,
  394loue cooles, friend
ship fals o
ff, 
437brothers diuide,
 in Citties mu
-  395tinies, in Countries di
s438cords, Pallaces trea
son, the bond crackt
  396betweene 
439sonne and father; 
444find out this villaine 
Edmund, it 
shal
  397loo
se 
445thee nothing, doe it carefully, and the noble and true har
-  446398ted 
Kent bani
sht, his o
ffence hone
st, 
strange 
strange!
  447399Bast. This is the excellent foppery of the world, that 
448when
  400we are 
sicke in Fortune,
 often the 
surfeit of our owne 
449behauiour,
  401we make guiltie of our di
sa
sters, the Sunne, the 
450Moone,
 and the
  402Starres, as if we were Villaines by nece
ssitie, 
451Fooles by heauen
-  403ly compul
sion, Knaues, Theeues, and 
452Trecherers by 
spirituall
  404predominance, Drunkards, Ly
453ars,
 and Adulterers by an enfor
st  405obedience of planitary 
454in
fluence, and all that wee are euill in,
  406by a diuine thru
455sting on, an admirable eua
sion of whorema
ster
  407man, 
456to lay his goti
sh di
spo
sition to the charge of Starres: 
457my
  408Father compounded with my Mother vnder the Dra
458gons taile,
  409and my natiuitie was vnder 
Vrsa maior, 
so 
459that it followes,
 I am
  410rough and lecherous,
 Fut,
 I 
should 
460haue beene that I am,
 had the
  411maidenle
st starre of the Fir
461mament twinckled on my ba
stardy
  462412 er Edgar
463Edgar; and out hee comes like the Cata
strophe of the old Co
-  414medy, 
464mine is villanous melancholy, with a 
sith like them of
  465415Bedlam; O the
se eclip
ses doe portend the
se diui
466sions.
  416Edgar. How now 
467brother 
Edmund,
 what 
serious con
468templa
-  469418Bast. I am thinking brother of a predi
ction I read this 
470other
  419day,
 what 
should follow the
se Eclip
ses.
  471420Edg. Doe you bu
sie your 
selfe about that?
  472421Bast. I promi
se you the e
ffe
cts he writ of,
 succeed 
473vnhappily,
  422as of vnnaturalne
sse betweene the child and the parent, death,
  473.1423dearth, di
ssolutions of ancient amities, diui
sions in 
state, mena
-  473.2424ces and maledi
ctions again
st King and nobles, needles di
ffiden
-  473.3425ces,
 bani
shment of
 friẽds,
 di
ssipation of Cohorts,
 nuptial breach
-  473.5427Edg. How long haue you beene a 
se
ctary A
stronomicall?
  428Bast. Come, come, 
474when 
saw you my father la
st?  429Edg. Why, 
475the night gon by.
  476430Bast. Spake you with him?
  477431Edg. Two houres together.
  478432Bast. Parted you in good tearmes
? found you no di
s479plea
sure
  433in him by word or countenance?
  481435Bast. Bethinke your 
selfe wherein you may haue o
ffen
482ded
  436him, and at my intreatie,
 forbeare his pre
sence,
 till 
483some little
  437time hath quali
fied the heat of his di
splea
sure, 
484which at this in
-  438stant 
so rageth in him,
 that with the mi
s485chiefe,
 of your par
son it
  486440Edg. Some villaine hath done me wrong.
  487441Bast. Thats my feare 
493brother, I adui
se you to the be
st, goe
  442arm'd, I am no hone
st 494man if there bee any good meaning to
-  443wards you, I haue told 
495you what I haue 
seene & heard, but faint
-  444ly, nothing 
496like the image and horror of it, pray you away
  497445Edg. Shall I heare from you anon?
  498446Bast. I doe 
serue you in this bu
sines: 
 Exit Fdgar  499447A credulous Father,
 and a brother noble,
  500448Who
se nature is 
so farre from doing harmes,
  501449That he 
su
spe
cts none,
 on who
se fooli
sh hone
sty
  502450My pra
cti
ses ride ea
sie, I 
see the bu
sines,
  503451Let me if not by birth, haue lands by wit,
  504452All with me's meete, that I can fa
shion 
fit. 
 Exit.  506453Enter Gonorill and Gentleman.  507454Gon. Did my Father 
strike my gentleman for chi
508ding of his
  510457Gon. By day and night he wrongs me,
  511458Euery houre he 
fla
shes into one gro
sse crime or other
  512459That 
sets vs all at ods,
 ile not indure it,
  513460His Knights grow ryotous,
 and him 
selfe obrayds vs,
  514461On euery trifell when he returnes from hunting,
  515462I will not 
speake with him, 
say I am 
sicke,
  516463If you come 
slacke of former 
seruices,
  517464You 
shall doe well, the fault of it ile an
swere.
  518465Gent. Hee's coming Madam,
 I heare him.
  519466Gon. Put on what wearie negligence you plea
se,
 520you and your
  467fellow 
seruants, i'de haue it come in que
stion, 
521if he di
slike it,
 let
  468him to our 
sister, 
522who
se mind and mine I know in that are one,
  522.1469not to be ouerruld; idle old man that 
still would manage tho
se
  522.2470authorities that hee hath giuen away, now by my life old fooles
  522.3471are babes again, & mu
st be vs'd with checkes as 
flatteries,
 when
  472they are 
seene abu
sd,
523 remember what I tell you.
  525474Gon. And let his Knights haue colder looks among 
526you,
 what
  475growes of it no matter, adui
se your fellowes 
so, I would breed
  526.1476from hence occa
sions, and I 
shall, that I may 
speake, 
527ile write
  477straight to my 
sister to hould my very cour
se, goe pre
528pare for
  531480Kent. If but as well I other accents borrow,
 532that can my 
speech
  481defu
se, my good intent 
533may carry through it 
selfe to that full i
s-  482sue 
534for which I raz'd my likenes, now bani
sht 
Kent,
 535if thou can
st  483serue where thou do
st stand condem'd, 
536thy mai
ster whom thou
  484loue
st 537shall 
find the full of labour.
  539486Lear. Let me not 
stay a iot for dinner, goe get it readie, 
540how
  542489Lear. What do
st thou profe
sse? what would'
st thou 
543with vs?
  544490Kent. I doe profe
sse to be no le
sse then I 
seeme, to 
serue 
545him
  491truly that will put me in tru
st, to loue him that is 
546hone
st, to con
-  492uer
se with him that is wi
se,
 and 
sayes little, to 
547feare iudgement,
  493to 
fight when I cannot chu
se, and to 
548eate no 
fishe.
  550495Kent. A very hone
st harted fellow, and as poore as 
551the king.
  552496Lear. If thou be as poore for a 
subie
ct,
 as he is for a 
553King,
 thar't
  497poore enough, what would'
st thou
?  554498Kent. Seruice.
 Lear. 555Who would'
st thou 
serue
?  556499Kent. You.
 Lear. 557Do'
st thou know me fellow
?  558500Kent. No 
sir,
 but you haue that in your countenance,
 559which
  501I would faine call Mai
ster.
  562503Lear. What 
seruices can
st doe
?  563504Kent. I can keepe hone
st coun
saile, ride, run, mar a 
564curious
  505tale in telling it, and deliuer a plaine me
ssage 
565bluntly, that
  506which ordinarie men are 
fit for, I am qua
566li
fied in, and the be
st  568509Kent. Not 
so yong to loue a woman for 
singing,
 569nor 
so old to
  510dote on her for any thing, I haue yeares on 
570my backe fortie
  571512Lear. Follow mee, thou 
shalt 
serue mee, if I like thee no
  572513wor
se after dinner, I will not part from thee yet, dinner, 
573ho din
-  514ner,
 wher's my knaue, my foole, goe you and call 
574my foole he
-  515ther,
 you 
sirra,
 whers my daughter?
  577518Lear. What 
say's the fellow there, call the clat-
578pole backe,
  519whers my foole, ho I thinke the world's 
579a
sleepe, how now,
  580521Kent. He 
say's my Lord,
 your daughter is not well.
  581522Lear. Why came not the 
slaue backe to mee when I 
582cal'd
  583524seruant. Sir, hee an
swered mee in the rounde
st maner, 
584hee
  525would not.
585 Lear. A would not
?  586526seruant. My Lord,
 I know not what the matter is, 
587but to my
  527iudgemẽt,
 your highnes is not ẽtertained 
588with that ceremonious
  528a
ffe
ction as you were wont, 
589ther's a great abatement, apeer's as
  529well in 
590the generall dependants, as in the Duke him
selfe al
so,
  530and 
591your daughter.
592 Lear. Ha, 
say'
st thou 
so
?  593531seruant. I be
seech you pardon mee my Lord,
 if I be 
594mi
staken,
  532for my dutie cannot bee 
silent, when I thinke 
595your highne
sse
  596534Lear. Thou but remember'
st me of mine owne con
597ception, I
  535haue perceiued a mo
st faint negle
ct of late, 
598which I haue rather
  536blamed as mine owne ielous curio
599sitie,
 then as a very pretence
 &
  537purport of vnkindne
sse, 
600I will looke further into't, but wher's
  538this foole? I 
601haue not 
seene him this two dayes.
  602539seruant. Since my yong Ladies going into 
France 603sir, the foole
  604541Lear. No more of that, I haue noted it, goe you 
605and tell my
  542daughter,
 I would 
speake with her,
 goe you 
606cal hither my foole,
  543O you 
sir, you 
sir, come you hither, 
607who am I 
sir?
  610545Lear. My Ladies father, my Lords knaue, you hore
611son dog,
  612547Stew. I am none of this my Lord,
  613I be
seech you pardon me.
  614548Lear. Doe you bandie lookes with me you ra
scall
?  615549Stew. Ile not be 
struck my Lord,
  616550Kent. Nor tript neither, you ba
se football player.
  617551Lear. I thanke thee fellow, 
618thou 
seru'
st me,
 and ile loue thee.
  619552Kent. Come 
sir ile teach you di
fferences, 
620away, away, if
  553you will mea
sure your lubbers length a
621gaine, tarry, but away,
  622555Lear. Now friendly knaue I thanke thee, their's 
623earne
st of
  556thy 
seruice. 
624  Enter Foole.  625557Foole. Let me hire him too, heer's my coxcombe.
  626558Lear. How now my prety knaue, how do'
st thou
?  627559Foole. Sirra, you were be
st take my coxcombe.
  629561Foole. Why for taking on's part, that's out of fauour,
 630nay and
  562thou can'
st not 
smile as the wind 
sits, thou't catch 
631cold 
shortly,
  563there take my coxcombe; why this fellow 
632hath bani
sht two
  564on's daughters, and done the third a 
633ble
ssing again
st his will, if
  565thou follow him, thou mu
st 634needs weare my coxcombe, how
  566now nuncle, would 
635I had two coxcombes, and two daughters.
  637568Foole. If I gaue them any liuing, id'e keepe my cox
638combs
  569my 
selfe, ther's mine, beg another of thy 
639daughters.
  640570Lear. Take heede 
sirra, the whip.
  641571Foole. Truth is a dog that mu
st to kenell, hee mu
st bee 
642whipt
  572out, when Ladie oth'e brach may 
stand by the 
fire 
643and 
stincke.
  644573Lear. A pe
stilent gull to mee.
  645574Foole. Sirra ile teach thee a 
speech.
646 Lear. Doe.
  647575Foole. Marke it vncle, 
648haue more then thou 
shewe
st, 
649speake
  576le
sse then thou knowe
st, 
650lend le
sse then thou owe
st, 
651ride more
  577then thou goe
st, 
652learne more then thou trowe
st, 
653set le
sse then
  578thou throwe
st, 
654leaue thy drinke and thy whore, 
655and keepe in a
  579doore, 
656and thou 
shalt haue more, 
657then two tens to a 
score.
  658580Lear. This is nothing foole.
  659581Foole. Then like the breath of an vnfeed Lawyer, 
660you gaue
  582me nothing for't, can you make no v
se of
 no
661thing vncle
?  662583Lear. Why no boy, 
663nothing can be made out of nothing.
  664584Foole. Preethe tell him 
so much the rent of his land 
665comes to,
  585he will not beleeue a foole.
  667587Foole. Doo'
st know the di
fference my boy,
 be
668tweene a bitter
  588foole, and a 
sweete foole.
  669589Lear. No lad, teach mee.
  670590Foole. 670.01That Lord that coun
sail'd thee to giue away thy land,
  670.02591Come place him heere by mee, doe thou for him 
stand,
  670.03592The 
sweet and bitter foole will pre
sently appeare,
  670.04593The one in motley here, the other found out there.
  670.05594Lear. Do'
st thou call mee foole boy
?  670.06595Foole. All thy other Titles thou ha
st giuen away, tha thou
  670.08597Kent. This is not altogether foole my Lord.
  670.09598Foole. No faith, Lords and great men will not let me, if I had
  670.10599a monopolie out,
 they would haue part an't,
 and Ladies too,
 they
  670.11600will not let me haue all the foole to my 
selfe, they'l be 
snatching;
  601giue me an egge Nuncle, and ile giue thee 
671two crownes.
  672602Lear. What two crownes 
shall they be
?  673603Foole. Why, after I haue cut the egge in the middle and 
674eate
  604vp the meate, the two crownes of the egge; when 
675thou cloue
st  605thy crowne it'h middle,
 and gaue
st away 
676both parts, thou bore
st  606thy a
sse at'h backe or'e the 
677durt, thou had'
st little wit in thy bald
  607crowne, when thou 
678gaue
st thy golden one away, if I 
speake like
  608my 
selfe in 
679this, let him be whipt that 
fir
st finds it 
so.
  680609Fooles had nere le
sse wit,  in a yeare,
  681610For wi
se men are growne foppi
sh,
  682611They know not how their wits doe weare,
  683612Their manners are 
so api
sh.
  684613Lear. When were you wont to be 
so full of 
songs 
sirra?
  685614Foole. I haue vs'd it nuncle,
 euer 
since thou mad'
st 686thy daugh
-  615ters thy mother, for when thou gaue
st them 
687the rod, and put'
st  616downe thine own breeches, then they 
688for 
sudden ioy did weep,
  689617and I for 
sorrow 
sung, 
690that 
such a King 
should play bo-peepe,
  691618and goe the fooles among: 
692prethe Nunckle keepe a 
schoolema
-  619ster that can teach 
693thy foole to lye, I would faine learneto lye.
  694620Lear. And you lye, weele haue you whipt.
  695621Foole. I maruell what kin thou and thy daughters are, 
696they'l
  622haue me whipt for 
speaking true, thou wilt haue mee 
697whipt for
  623lying, and 
sometime I am whipt for holding 
698my peace, I had
  624rather be any kind of thing then a foole,
 699and yet I would not bee
  625thee Nuncle,
 thou ha
st pared thy 
700wit a both 
sides, & left nothing
  626in the middle,
 here 
701comes one of the parings.
  703628Lear. How now daughter, what makes that Frontlet 
704on,
  629Me thinks you are too much alate
 it'h frowne.
  705630Foole. Thou wa
st a prettie fellow when thou had'
st no 
706need
  631to care for her frowne, now thou art an O with
707out a 
figure, I am
  632better then thou art now, I am a foole,
 708thou art nothing, yes for
-  633sooth I will hould my tongue, 
so 
709your face bids mee, though
  710635Mum, mum, he that keepes neither cru
st nor crum,
  711636Wearie of all, 
shall want 
some. That's a 
sheald pe
scod.
  712637Gon. Not onely 
sir this,
 your all-licenc'd foole, 
713but other of
  638your in
solent retinue 
714do hourely carpe and quarrell, breaking
  639forth 
716in ranke & (not to be indured riots,) Sir I had thought by
  640making this well knowne vnto you, 
717to haue found a 
safe redres,
  641but now grow fearefull 
718by what your 
selfe too late haue 
spoke
  642and done, 
719that you prote
ct this cour
se, and put on 
720by your al
-  643lowance, which if you 
should,
 the fault 
721would not 
scape cen
sure,
  644nor the redre
sse,
 sleepe, 
722which in the tender of a whol
some
  645weale, 
723might in their working doe you that o
ffence, 
724that el
se
  646were 
shame, that then nece
ssitie 
725mu
st call di
screet proceedings.
  726647Foole. For you trow nuncle, the hedge 
sparrow 
727fed the Coo
-  648kow 
so long, that it had it head bit o
ff beit 
728young, 
so out went
  649the candle, and we were left dark
729ling.
  730650Lear. Are you our daughter?
  731651Gon. Come 
sir, I would you would make v
se of that good
  652wi
sedome 
732whereof I know you are fraught, and put away 
733the
se
  653di
spo
sitions, that of late tran
sforme you 
734from what you rightly
  735655Foole. May not an A
sse know when the cart drawes 
736the hor
se,
  738657Lear. Doth any here know mee? 
739why this is not 
Lear, 
740doth
  658Lear walke thus? 
speake thus? where are his eyes, 
741either his no
-  659tion,
 weaknes,
 or his di
scernings 
742are lethergie,
 sleeping,
 or wake
-  660ing; ha! 
sure tis not 
so,
 743who is it that can tell me who I am
? Lears  744661shadow
? I would learne that, for by the markes of 
soueraintie,
  744.1662knowledge, and rea
son, I 
should bee fal
se per
swaded I had
  744.3664Foole. Which they,
 will make an obedient father.
  745665Lear. Your name faire gentlewoman?
  746666Gon. Come 
sir, this admiration is much of the 
sauour 
747of other
  667your new prankes, I doe be
seech you 
748vnder
stand my purpo
ses
  668aright,
 749as you are old and reuerend,
 should be wi
se, 
750here do you
  669keepe a 100.
 Knights and Squires, 
751men 
so di
sordred, 
so deboy
st  670and bold,
 752that this our court infe
cted with their manners,
 753showes
  671like a riotous Inne,
 epicuri
sme,
 and lu
st 754make more like a tauerne
  672or brothell, 
755then a great pallace, the 
shame it 
selfe doth 
speake
  756673for in
stant remedie, be thou de
sired 
757by her, that el
se will take the
  674thing 
shee
 begs, 
758a little to di
squantitie your traine, 
759and the re
-  675mainder that 
shall 
still depend, 
760to bee 
such men as may be
sort
  676your age, 
761that know them
selues and you.
  762677Lear. Darkenes,
 and Deuils
! 763saddle my hor
ses, call my traine
  678together, 
764degenerate ba
stard, ile not trouble thee, 
765yet haue I left
  766680Gon. You 
strike my people,
 and your di
sordred rabble,
 767make
  681seruants of their betters. 	
768Enter Duke.  769682Lear. We that too late repent's,
 O 
sir,
 are you come
? 770is it your
  683will that wee prepare any hor
ses,
 771ingratitude
! thou marble har
-  684ted 
fiend, 
772more hideous when thou 
shewe
st thee in a child,
 773then
  685the Sea-mon
ster, 
775dete
sted kite, thou li
st 776my traine, and men of
  686choi
se and rare
st parts, 
777that all particulars of dutie knowe, 
778and
  687in the mo
st exa
ct regard, 
support 
779the wor
ships of their name,
 O
  688mo
st small fault, 
780how vgly did'
st thou in 
Cordelia shewe, that
  781689like an engine wrencht my frame of nature 
782from the 
fixt place,
  690drew from my heart all loue 
783and added to the gall,
 O 
Lear.
 Lear!  784691beat at this gate that let thy folly in, 
785and thy deere iudgement
  692out,
 goe goe, my people
?  786693Duke, My Lord,
 I am giltles as I am ignorant.
  788694Leir. It may be 
so my Lord, 
789harke 
Nature,
 heare deere God
-  695de
sse, 
790su
spend thy purpo
se, if thou did'
st intend 
791to make this
  696creature fruitful 
792into her wombe, conuey 
sterility, 
793drie vp in hir
  697the organs of increa
se,
 794and from her derogate body neuer 
spring
  795698a babe to honour her, if
 shee mu
st teeme, 
796create her childe of
  699spleene, that it may liue 
797and bee a thourt di
suetur'd torment to
  700her, 
798let it 
stampe wrinckles in her brow of youth, 
799with accent
  701teares, fret channels in her cheeks,
 800turne all her mothers paines
  702and bene
fits 
801to laughter and contempt, that 
shee may feele,
 that
  703she may feele, 
802how 
sharper then a 
serpents tooth it is, 
803to haue a
  704thankle
sse child, goe, goe,
 my people
?  804705Duke. Now Gods that we adore, 
805whereof comes this!
  806706Gon. Neuer a
ffli
ct your 
selfe to know the cau
se, 
807but let his
  707di
spo
sition haue that 
scope 
808that dotage giues it.
  810708Lear. What,
 fiftie of my followers at a clap,
 811within a fortnight?
  812709Duke. What is the matter 
sir?
  813710Lear. Ile tell thee, 
814life and death!
 I am a
sham'd
  711power to 
shake my manhood thus, 
816that the
se hot teares that
  712breake from me perforce.
 817should make the wor
st 818bla
sts and fogs
  713vpon 
819the vntented woundings of a fathers
 cur
sse, 
820pierce euery
  714sence about the old fond eyes, 
821beweepe this cau
se againe, ile
  715pluck you out,
822 & you ca
st with the waters that you make 
823to tem
-  716per clay, yea, i'
st come to this? 
824yet haue I left a daughter,
 825whom
  717I am 
sure is kind and comfortable, 
826when 
shee 
shall heare this of
  718thee, with her nailes 
827shee'l 
flea thy wolui
sh vi
sage, thou 
shalt
  719find 
828that ile re
sume the 
shape,
 which thou do
st thinke 
829I haue ca
st  720o
ff for euer, thou 
shalt I warrant thee.
  830721Gon. Doe you marke that my Lord
?  831722Duke. I cannot bee 
so partiall 
Gonorill  724Gon. Come 
sir no more,
  834you, more knaue then foole, after 
725your ma
ster? 
835  726Foole. Nunckle
 Lear, Nunckle 
Lear, 
836tary and take the foole 
727with 
837a fox when one has caught her, 
838and 
such a daughter 
839should 
728sure to the 
slaughter, 
840if my cap would buy a halter, 
841so the foole 
729followes after.
  848730Gon. What 
Oswald, ho.
Oswald. Here Madam, 
858  731Gon. What haue you writ this letter to my 
sister?
  733Gon. Take you 
some company, and away to hor
se,
  861informe 
734her full of my particular feares, 
862and thereto add 
such rea
sons of
  735your owne, 
863as may compa
ct it more,
 get you gon, 
864& hasten your
  736returne now my Lord,
 865this mildie gentlenes and cour
se of yours
  866737though I di
slike not, yet vnder pardon 
867y'are much more attastk
  738for want of wi
sedome, 
868then prai
se for harmfull mildnes.
  869739Duke. How farre your eyes may pearce I cannot tell, 
870striuing
740to better ought, we marre whats well.
  871741Gon. Nay then.
872 Duke. Well,
 well,
 the euent, 
  Exeunt  Gloster with the
se letters, 
876acquaint
  744my daughter no further with any thing you 
877know, then comes
  745from her demand out of the letter, 
878if your diligence be not 
spee
-  746die, I 
shall be there before 
879you.
  880747Kent. I will not 
sleepe my Lord, till I haue deliuered 
881your
  882749Foole. If a mans braines where in his heeles, wert not in 
883dan
-  750ger of kibes?
884   Lear. I boy.
  885751Foole. Then I prethe be mery,
 thy wit 
shal nere goe 
886slip
shod.
  888753Foole. Shalt 
see thy other daughter will v
se thee kind
889ly, for
  754though 
shees as like this,
 as a crab is like an 
890apple,
 yet I con,
 what
  891756Lear. Why what can
st thou tell my boy?
  892757Foole. Sheel ta
st as like this, as a crab doth to a 
893crab, thou
  758can
st not tell why ones no
se 
stande in the middle 
894of his face?
  896760Foole. Why,
 to keep his eyes on either 
side's no
se,
 897that what
  761a man cannot 
smell out, a may 
spie into.
  899763Foole. Can
st tell how an Oy
ster makes his 
shell. 
900Lear. No.
  901764Foole. Nor I neither, but I can tell why a 
snayle has 
902a hou
se.
  904766Foole. Why, to put his head in, not to giue it away to his
  905767daughter,
 and leaue his hornes without a ca
se.
  906768Lear. I will forget my nature, 
so kind a father; be 
907my hor
ses
  908770Foole. Thy A
sses are gone about them, the rea
son why 
909the
  771seuen 
starres are no more then 
seuen, is a prettie rea
son.
  910772Lear. Becau
se they are not eight.
  911773Foole. Yes thou would
st make a good foole.
  912774Lear. To tak't againe perforce, Mon
ster,
 ingratitude!
  913775Fool. If thou wert my foole Nunckle,
 id'e haue thee 
914beatẽ for
  776being old before thy time.
  916778Foole. Thou 
should
st not haue beene old, before thou had
st  918780Lear. O let me not be mad 
sweet heauen!
 I would not be mad,
  919781keepe me in temper,
 I would not be mad, are 
920the hor
ses readie?
  921782Seruant. Readie my Lord. 
Lear. Come boy. 
  Exit.  923783Foole. Shee that is maide now,
 and laughs at my departure,
  924784Shall not be a maide long, except things be cut 
shorter. 
 Exit  927785Enter Bast. and Curan meeting.  929787Curan. And you Sir, I haue beene 
930with your father, and giuen
  788him notice, 
931that the Duke of 
Cornwall and his Dutches 
932will bee
  789here with him to night.
  934791Curan. Nay,
 I know not,
 you haue heard of the newes 
935abroad,
  792I meane the whi
sperd ones, for there are yet but 
936eare-bu
ssing ar
-  937794Bast. Not, I pray you what are they?
  938795Curan. Haue you heard of no likely warres towards, 
939twixt
  796the two Dukes of 
Cornwall and 
Albany?  941798Curan. You may then in time, 
942fare you well 
sir.
  943799Bast. The Duke be here to night! the better be
st, 
944this weaues
  800  Enter Edgar
it 
selfe perforce into my bu
sines, 
945my father hath 
set gard to take
  801my brother, 
947and I haue one thing of a que
sie que
stion, which
  802mu
st aske breefnes and fortune helpe; 
949brother, a word, di
scend
  803brother I 
say, 
950my father watches, O 
flie this place, 
951intelligence
  804is giuen where you are hid, 
952you haue now the good aduantage
  805of the night, 
953haue you not 
spoken gain
st the Duke of 
Cornwall  806ought, 
954hee's coming hether now in the night, it'h ha
st, 
955and 
Re-  807gan with him, haue you nothing 
said 
956vpon his partie again
st the
  808Duke of 
Albany,
 957adui
se your--- 
  958809Edg. I am 
sure on't not a word.
  959810Bast. I heare my father coming,
 pardon me 
960in crauing,
 I mu
st  811draw my 
sword vpon you,
 961seeme to defend your 
selfe, 
962now quit
  812you well, 
963yeeld, come before my father, light here, here, 
964flie
  813brother 
flie, torches, torches, 
so farwell; 
966some bloud drawne
  814on mee would beget opinion 
967of my more 
fierce indeuour, I
  815haue 
seene drunckards 
968doe more then this in 
sport, father,
 father,
  969816stop, 
stop, no,
 helpe?	
 Enter Glost.
  971817Glost. Now 
Edmund where is the villaine?
  972818Bast. Here 
stood he in the darke,
 his 
sharpe 
sword out, 
973warb
-  819ling of wicked charms, coniuring the Moone 
974to 
stand's au
spici
-  820ous Mi
stris.	
Glost. 975But where is he
?  976821Bast. Looke 
sir, I bleed.
  977822Glost. Where is the villaine 
Edmund?  978823Bast. Fled this way 
sir, when by no meanes he could--- 
  979824Glost. Pur
sue him, go after,
 by no meanes, what?
  980825Bast. Per
swade me to the murder of your Lord
ship, but that
  981826I told him the reuengiue Gods, 
982gain
st Paracides did all their
  827thunders bend, 
984spoke with how many fould and 
strong a bond
  828the child was bound to the father, 
sir in a 
fine, 
985seeing how loath
-  829ly oppo
site I 
stood,
 986to his vnnaturall purpo
se,
 with fell motion
  987830with his prepared 
sword,
 hee charges home 
988my vnprouided bo
-  831dy, lancht mine arme, 
989but when he 
saw my be
st alarumd 
spirits,
  990832bould in the quarrels,
 rights, rou
sd to the encounter,
 991or whether
  833ga
sted by the noy
se I made, 
992but 
sodainly he 
fled.
  993834Glost, Let him 
flie farre, 
994not in this land 
shall hee remaine vn
-  835caught 
995and found, di
spatch, the noble Duke my mai
ster, 
996my
  836worthy Arch and Patron, comes to night,
 997by his authoritie I will
  837proclaime it, 
998that he which 
finds him 
shall de
serue our thankes,
  999838bringing the murderous caytife to the 
stake,
 1000hee that conceals
  1001840Bast. When I di
sswaded him from his intent, 
1002and found him
  841pight to doe it, with cur
st speech 
1003I threatned to di
scouer him,
 he
  842replyed, 
1004thou vnpo
sse
ssing Ba
stard,
 do
st thou thinke,
 1005if I would
  843stand again
st thee, could the repo
sure 
1006of any tru
st, vertue, or
  844worth in thee 
1007make thy words fayth'd?
 no. what I 
should denie,
  1008845as this I would,
 I,
 though thou did
st produce 
1009my very chara
cter,
  846id'e turne it all 
1010to thy 
sugge
stion, plot, and damned pretence,
  1011847and thou mu
st make a dullard of the world, 
1012if they not thought
  848the pro
fits of my death, 
1013were very pregnant and potentiall
  849spurres 
1014to make thee 
seeke it.
  1015850Glost. Strong and fa
stned villaine, 
1016would he denie his letter,
  851I neuer got him, 
1017harke the Dukes trumpets, I know not why he
  852comes, 
1018all Ports ile barre, the villaine 
shall not 
scape, 
1019the Duke
  853mu
st grant mee that, be
sides, his pi
cture 
1020I will 
send farre and
  854neere, that all the kingdome 
1021may haue note of him, and of my
  855land 
1022loyall and naturall boy, ile worke the meanes 
1023to make thee
  1025858Corn. How now my noble friend, 
since I came hether,
 1026which
  859I can call but now, I haue heard 
strange newes.
  1027860Reg. If it be true, all vengeance comes too 
short 
1028which can
  861pur
sue the o
ffender, how do
st my Lord?
  1029862Glost. Madam my old heart is crackt, is crackt.
  1030863Reg. What, did my fathers god
son 
seeke your life
? 1031he whom
  864my father named your 
Edgar?  1032865Glost. I Ladie, Ladie, 
shame would haue it hid.
  1033866Reg. Was he not companion with the ryotous knights, 
1034that
  1035868Glost. I know not Madam, tis too bad, too bad.
  1037870Reg. No maruaile then though he were ill a
ffe
cted,
  1038871Tis they haue put him on the old mans death,
  1039872To haue the wa
st and 
spoyle of his reuenues:
  1040873I haue this pre
sent euening from my 
sister,
  1041874Beene well inform'd of them,
 and with 
such cautions,
  1042875That if they come to 
soiourne at my hou
se,
 1043ile not be there.
  1044876Duke. Nor I, a
ssure thee 
Regan; 
Edmund, 
1045I heard that you
  877haue 
shewen your father 
1046a child-like o
ffice.
  1048879Glost. He did betray his pra
cti
se, and receiued
  1049880This hurt you 
see,
 striuing to apprehend him.
  1052882Duke. If he be taken, he 
shall neuer more 
1053be feard of doing
  883harme,
 make your own purpo
se 
1054how in my 
strength you plea
se,
  884for you 
Edmund, 
1055who
se vertue and obedience,
 doth this in
stant
  1056885so much commend it 
selfe, you 
shall bee ours, 
1057natures of 
such
  886deepe tru
st, wee 
shall much need 
1059you,
 we 
fir
st seaze on.
  887Bast. I 
shall 
serue you truly, how euer el
se.
  1060888Glost. For him I thanke your grace.
  1061889Duke. You know not why we came to vi
sit you
?  1062890Regan. Thus out of 
sea
son, threatning darke ey'd night,
  1063891Oca
sions noble 
Gloster of 
some pri
se,
  1064892Wherein we mu
st haue v
se of your adui
se,
  1065893Our Father he hath writ,
 so hath our 
sister,
  1066894Of diferences, which I le
st thought it 
fit,
  1067895To an
swer from our home,
 the 
seuerall me
ssengers
  1068896From hence attend di
spatch,
 our good old friend,
  1069897Lay comforts to your bo
some,
 & be
stow 
1070your needfull councell
  898To our bu
sines,
 1071which craues the in
stant v
se. 
 (Exeunt.  1072899Glost. I 
serue you Madam,
 1073your Graces are right welcome.
  1076901Steward. Good euen to thee friend,
 art of the hou
se
?  1079903Kent. It'h mire.
Stew. 1080Prethee if thou loue me, tell me.
  1081904Kent. I loue thee not. 	
Stew. 1082Why then I care not for thee.
  1083905 Kent. If I had thee in Lip
sburie pinfold, I would make 
1084thee
  1085907Stew. Why do
st thou v
se me thus? I know thee not.
  1087909Stew, What do
st thou know me for?
  1088910Kent. A knaue, a ra
scall, an eater of broken meates, a 
1089ba
se,
  911proud,
 shallow, beggerly, three 
shewted hundred 
1090pound,
 filthy
  912wor
sted-
stocken knaue,
 a lilly lyuer'd 
1091a
ction taking knaue, a
  913whor
son gla
ssegazing 
super
1092finicall rogue, one truncke inheri
-  914ting 
slaue, one that 
1093would'
st bee a baud in way of good 
seruice,
  915and art no
1094thing but the compo
sition of a knaue, begger, cow
-  916ard, 
1095pander, and the 
sonne and heire of a mungrell bitch,
 1096whom
  917I will beat into clamorous whyning, if thou 
1097denie the lea
st silla
-  1098919Stew. What a mon
strous fellow art thou, thus 
1099to raile on one,
  920that's neither 
1100knowne of thee, nor knowes thee.
  1101921Kent. What a brazen fac't varlet art thou, to deny 
1102thou
  922knowe
st mee, is it two dayes agoe 
since I beat thee,
 and tript vp
  923thy 
1103heeles before the King? draw you rogue, 
1104for though it be
  924night the Moone 
shines,
 ile make a 
1105sop of the moone-
shine a'you,
  925draw you whor
son cullyonly 
1106barber-munger, draw
?  1107926Stew. Away, I haue nothing to doe with thee.
  1108927Kent. Draw you ra
scall, you bring letters a
1109gain
st the King,
  928and take Vanitie the puppets part, 
1110again
st the royaltie of her
  929father, draw you rogue 
1111or ile 
so carbonado your 
shankes, draw
  930you ra
scall, come 
1112your wayes.
  1113931Stew. Helpe, ho, murther,
 helpe.
  1114932Kent. Strike you 
slaue, 
stand rogue, 
stand you neate 
1115slaue,
  1116933strike? 
Stew. Helpe, ho, murther,
 helpe.
  1117934Enter Edmund with his rapier drawne, Gloster the Duke  1118936Bast. How now,
 whats the matter
?  1119937Kent. With you goodman boy, and you plea
se come, 
1120ile
  938flea
sh you, come on yong mai
ster.
  1121939Glost. Weapons, armes, whats the matter here?
  1122940Duke. Keepe peace vpon your liues, hee dies that 
1123strikes a
-  941gaine, what's the matter?
  1124942Reg. The me
ssengers from our 
sister, and the King.
  1125943Duke. Whats your di
fference, 
speake?
  1126944Stew. I am 
scar
se in breath my Lord.
  1127945Kent. No maruaile you haue 
so be
stir'd your valour, 
1128you
  946cowardly ra
scall, nature di
sclaimes in thee, a Tayler 
1129made thee. 
  1130947Duke. Thou art a 
strange fellow, a Taylor make a man.
  1131948Kent. I, a Tayler 
sir; a Stone-cutter, or a Painter could 
1132not
  949haue made him 
so ill, though hee had beene but two 
1133houres at
  1134951Glost. Speake yet,
 how grew your quarrell?
  1135952Stew. This ancient ru
ffen 
sir, who
se life I haue 
1136spar'd at 
sute
  1137954Kent. Thou whor
son Zedd, thou vnnece
ssarie letter, 
1138my
  955Lord if you'l giue mee leaue, I will tread this vn
1139boulted villaine
  956into morter, and daube the walles of a 
1140iaques with him, 
spare
  957my gray beard you wagtayle.
  1141958Duke. Peace 
sir, you 
1142bea
stly Knaue you haue no reuerence.
  1143959Kent. Yes 
sir, but anger has a priuiledge.
  1145961Kent. That 
such a 
slaue as this 
should weare a 
sword,
  1146962That weares no hone
sty, 
such 
smiling roges as the
se,
  1147963Like Rats oft bite tho
se cordes in twaine,
  1148964Which are to intrench,
 to inloo
se 
smooth euery pa
ssion
  1149965That in the natures of their Lords rebell,
  1150966Bring oyle to 
stir, 
snow to their colder-moods,
  1151967Reneag,
 a
ffirme,
 and turne their halcion beakes
  1152968With euery gale and varie of their mai
sters,
  1153969Knowing nought like dayes but following, 
1154a plague vpon your (epeliptick
  970Vi
sage, 
1155smoyle you my 
speeches,
 as I were a foole?
  1156971Goo
se and I had you vpon Sarum plaine,
  1157972Id'e 
send you cackling home to Camulet.,
  1158973Duke. What art thou mad old fellow?
  1159974Glost. How fell you out,
 say that?
  1160975Kent. No contraries hold more, antipathy,
  1162977Duke. Why do
st thou call him knaue, 
1163what's his o
ffence.
  1164978Kent. His countenance likes me not.
  1165979Duke. No more perchance does mine,
 or his,
 or hers.
  1166980Kent. Sir tis my occupation to be plaine,
  1167981I haue 
seene better faces in my time
  1168982That 
stands on any 
shoulder that I 
see
  1170984Duke. This is a fellow 
1171who hauing beene pray
sd
  985For bluntnes doth a
ffe
ct 1172a 
sawcy ru
ffines,
  986And con
straines the garb 
1173quite from his nature,
  987He cannot 
flatter he, he mu
st be plaine,
  1174988He mu
st speake truth,
 1175and they will tak't 
so,
  989If not he's plaine, 
1176the
se kind of knaues I know
  990Which in this plainnes 
1177harbour more craft,
  991And more corrupter ends, 
1178then twentie 
silly ducking
  992Ob
seruants, 
1179that 
stretch their duties ni
sely.
  1180993Kent. Sir in good 
sooth, or in 
sincere veritie,
  1181994Vnder the allowance of your graund a
spe
ct.
  1182995Who
se in
fluence like the wreath of radient 
fire
  1183996In 
flitkering 
Phoebus front.
  1184997Duke. What mean'
st thou by this
?  1185998Kent. To goe out of my dialogue which you di
scom
1186mend 
so
  999much,
 I know 
sir,
 I am no 
flatterer,
 he that be
1187guild you in a plain
  1000accent, was a plaine knaue, which for my part 
1188I will not bee,
  1001though I 
should win your di
splea
sure, to intreat mee too't.
  11901002Duke. What's the o
ffence you gaue him?
  11911003Stew. I neuer gaue him any, 
1192it pleas'd the King his mai
ster
  1004Very late 
1193to 
strike at me vpon his mi
scon
stru
ction,
  11941005When he coniun
ct and 
flattering his di
splea
sure
  11951006Tript me behind, being downe, in
sulted, rayld,
  11961007And put vpon him 
such a deale of man, that,
  11971008That worthied him, got pray
ses of the King,
  11981009For him attempting who was 
selfe 
subdued,
  11991010And in the 
flechuent of this dread exploit,
  12011012Kent. None of the
se roges & cowards but 
AIax 1202is their foole.
  12031013Duke. Bring forth the 
stockes ho?
  12041014You 
stubburne mi
screant knaue,
 you reuerent bragart,
  12061016Kent. I am too old to learne, 
1207call not your 
stockes for me,
  1017I 
serue the King, 
1208on who
se imployments I was 
sent to you,
  12091018You 
should doe 
small re
spe
ct, 
shew too bold malice
  12101019Again
st the Grace and per
son of my mai
ster,
  12121021Duke. Fetch forth the 
stockes
? 1213as I haue life and honour,
  1023Reg. Till noone, till night my Lord,
 and all night too.
  12151024Kent. Why Madam, if I were your fathers dogge, 
1216you could
  12171026Reg. Sir being his knaue, I will.
  12181027Duke. This is a fellow of the 
selfe 
same nature,
  12191028Our 
sister 
speake of, come bring away the 
stockes
?  12201029Glost. Let me be
seech your Grace not to doe 
so,
  1030His fault is much, and 
1221the good King his mai
ster
  1221.11031Will check him for't, your purpo
st low corre
ction
  1221.21032Is 
such,
 as ba
se
st and temne
st wretches for pilfrings
  1221.31033And mo
st common tre
spa
sses are puni
sht with,
  1034The King mu
st take it ill, 
1222that hee's 
so 
slightly valued
  1035In his me
ssenger,
 1223should haue him thus re
strained.
  12251037Reg. My 
sister may receiue it much more wor
se,
  12261038To haue her Gentlemen abus'd, a
ssalted
  1226.11039For following her a
ffaires,
 put in his legges,
  12281041Glost. I am 
sory for thee friend,
 tis the Dukes plea
sure,
  12291042Who
se di
spo
sition all the world well knowes
  12301043Will not be rubd nor 
stopt, ile intreat for thee.
  12311044Kent. Pray you doe not 
sir,
 I haue watcht and trauaild (hard,
  12321045Sometime I 
shal 
sleepe ont,
 the re
st ile whi
stle,
  12331046A good mans fortune may grow out at heeles,
  12351048Glost. The Dukes to blame in this,
 1236twill be ill tooke.
  12371049Kent. Good King that mu
st approue the cõmon 
saw,
  12381050Thou out of heauens benedi
ction come
st  12401052Approach thou beacon to this vnder gloabe,
  12411053That by thy comfortable beames I may
  12421054Peru
se this letter, nothing almo
st sees my wracke
  12431055But mi
serie, I know tis from 
Cordelia,
  12441056Who hath mo
st fortunately bin informed
  12451057Of my ob
scured cour
se, and 
shall 
find time
  12461058From this enormious 
state, 
seeking to giue
  12471059Lo
sses their remedies, all wearie and ouerwatch
  12481060Take vantage heauie eyes not to behold
  12491061This 
shamefull lodging, Fortune goodnight,
  12501062Smile, once more turne thy wheele. 	 
sleepes.  12521064Edg. I heare my 
selfe proclaim'd,
  12531065And by the happie hollow of a tree
  12541066E
scapt the hunt, no Port is free, no place
  12551067That guard, and mo
st vnu
suall vigilence
  12561068Do
st not attend my taking while I may 
scape,
  12571069I will pre
serue my 
selfe, and am bethought
  12581070To take the ba
se
st and mo
st poore
st shape,
  12591071That euer penury in contempt of man,
  12601072Brought neare to bea
st,
 my face ile grime with 
filth,
  12611073Blanket my loynes, el
se all my haire with knots,
  12621074And with pre
sented nakednes outface,
  12631075The wind,
 and per
secution of the skie,
  12641076The Countrie giues me proofe and pre
sident
  12651077Of Bedlam beggers, who with roring voyces,
  12661078Strike in their numb'd and morti
fied bare armes,
  12671079Pins, wodden prickes, nayles, 
sprigs of ro
semary,
  12681080And with this horrible obie
ct from low 
seruice,
  12691081Poore pelting villages, 
sheep-coates,
 and milles,
  12701082Sometime with lunaticke bans, 
sometime with prayers
  12711083Enforce their charitie, poore 
Turlygod, poore 
Tom,
  12721084That's 
something yet, 
Edgar I nothing am. 
 Exit  12741086Lear. Tis 
strange that they 
should 
so depart from (hence,
  12751087And not 
send backe my me
ssenger.
  12761088Knight. As I learn'd, 
1277the night before there was
  12791090Kent. Hayle to thee noble mai
ster.
  12801091Lear. How, mak'
st thou this 
shame thy pa
stime?
  12821092Foole. Ha ha, looke he weares crewell garters,
  1093Hor
ses are 
1283tide by the heeles, dogges and beares
  1094Byt'h necke, 
1284munkies bit'h loynes,
 and men
  1095Byt'h legges, when a mans 
1285ouer lu
sty at legs,
  1096Then he weares wooden neather
stockes.
  12891099Kent. It is both he and 
shee, your 
sonne & daugter.
  1102Lear. No no,
 they would not.
Kent. Yes they haue.
  12951103Lear. By 
Iupiter I 
sweare no,
 1297they dur
st not do't,
  12981104They would not, could not do't,
 tis wor
se then murder,
  12991105To doe vpon re
spe
ct such violent outrage,
  13001106Re
solue me with all mode
st ha
st, which way
  13011107Thou may'
st de
serue,
 or they purpo
se this v
sage,
  13031109Kent. My Lord, when at their home
  13041110I did commend your highnes letters to them,
  13051111Ere I was ri
sen from the place that 
shewed
  13061112My dutie kneeling, came there a reeking Po
st,
  13071113Stewd in his ha
st,
 halfe breathles,
 panting forth
  13081114From 
Gonerill his mi
stris, 
salutations,
  13091115Deliuered letters 
spite of intermi
ssion,
  13101116Which pre
sently they read, on who
se contents
  13111117They 
summond vp their men, 
straight tooke hor
se,
  1119Of their an
swere, gaue me cold lookes,
  13141120And meeting here the other me
ssenger,
  13151121Who
se welcome I perceau'd had poy
son'd mine,
  13161122Being the very fellow that of late
  13171123Di
splay'd 
so 
sawcily again
st your Highnes,
  13181124Hauing more man then wit,
 about me drew,
  13191125He rai
sed the hou
se with loud and coward cries,
  13201126Your 
sonne and daughter found this tre
spas worth
  13211127This 
shame which here it 
su
ffers.
  13281128Lear. O how this mother 
swels vp toward my hart,
  13291129Historica passio downe thou climing 
sorrow,
  13301130Thy element's below,
 where is this daughter?
  13311131Kent. With the Earle 
sir within,
  13321132Lear. Follow me not,
 stay there?
  13331133Knight. Made you no more o
ffẽce 
1334then what you 
speake of?
  13351134Kent. No,
 1336how chance the King comes with 
so 
small a traine
?  13371135Foole. And thou had
st beene 
set in the 
stockes for that 
1338que
sti
-  1136on, thou ha'd
st well de
serued it.
  13401138Foole. Weele 
set thee to 
schoole to an Ant,
 to teach 
1341thee ther's
  1139no labouring in the winter, all that follow their no
ses,
 are led by
  1140their eyes,
 but blind men, and ther's not a 
1342no
se among a 100.
 but
  13431141can 
smell him thats 
stinck
1344ing, let goe thy hold when a great
  1142wheele runs downe a 
1345hill, lea
st it breake thy necke with follow
-  1143ing it, but the 
1346great one that goes vp the hill, let him draw thee
  1144after, 
1347when a wi
se man giues thee better councell, giue mee mine
  13481145againe, I would haue none but knaues follow it, 
sincea 
1349foole
   That Sir that serues for gaine,
 13521149 Will packe when it begin to raine,
  13541151 But I will tarie, the foole will 
stay,
  13561153 The knaue turnes foole that runs away,
  13591155Kent. Where learnt you this foole?
  13611158Lear. Denie to 
speake with mee,
 1362th'are 
sicke, th'are (weary,
  13631159They traueled hard to night, meare Iu
stice,
  13641160I the Images of reuolt and 
flying o
ff,
  1367you know the 
fierie qualitie of the
  1163Duke, 
1368how vnremoueable and 
fixt he is 
1369in his owne Cour
se.
  13701164Lear. Vengeance, death,
 plague, confu
sion,
 what 
fierie quality,
  13711165why 
Gloster,
 Gloster, 
1372id'e 
speake with the Duke of 
Cornewall,
 and
  13761168Lear. The King would 
speak with 
Cornewal,
 1377the deare father
  13781169Would with his daughter 
speake,
 commands her 
seruice,
  13801170Fierie Duke, tell the hot Duke that 
Lear,
  13811171No but not yet may be he is not well,
  13821172In
firmitie doth 
still negle
ct all o
ffice,
 1383where to our health
  1173Is boũd,
 we are not our 
selues,
 1384when nature being opre
st  1174Cõmand the mind 
1385to 
su
ffer with the bodie,
 ile forbeare,
  13861175And am fallen out with my more hedier will,
  13871176To take the indi
spos'd and 
sickly 
fit,
 1388for the 
sound man,
  1177Death on my 
state, wherfore 
1389should he 
sit here
?  1178This a
ct per
swades me,
 1390that this remotion of the Duke, (& her
  13911179Is pra
cti
se,
 only giue me my 
seruant forth,
  13921180Tell the Duke and's wife, Ile 
speake with them
  13931181Now pre
sently, bid them come forth and heare me,
  13941182Or at their chamber doore ile beat the drum,
  13961184Glost. I would haue all well betwixt you.
  13981186Foole. Cry to it Nunckle,
 as the Cokney did to the 
1399eeles,
 when
  1187she put vm ith  pâ
st aliue,
 she rapt vm 
1400ath coxcombs with a 
stick,
  1188and cryed downe wantons 
1401downe,
 twas her brother,
 that in pure
  1189kindnes to his 
1402hor
se buttered his hay.
  14061193Reg. I am glad to 
see your highnes.
  14071194Lear. Regan I thinke you are, I know what rea
son
  14081195I haue to thinke 
so, if
 thou 
should
st not be glad,
  14091196I would diuor
se me from thy mothers tombe
  14101197Sepulchring an adultre
sse, yea are you free
?  14111198Some other time for that. Beloued 
Regan,
  14121199Thy 
sister is naught, oh 
Regan she hath tyed,
  14131200Sharpe tooth'd vnkindnes, like a vulture heare,
  14141201I can 
scarce 
speake to thee, thout not beleeue,
  14151202Of how depriued a qualitie, O 
Regan.
  14161203Reg. I pray 
sir take patience, I haue hope
  14171204You le
sse know how to value her de
sert,
  14271208Nature on you 
standes on the very verge 
1428of her con
- (
fine,
  1209You 
should be rul'd and led 
1429by 
some di
scretion,
  1210That di
scernes your 
state 
1430better thẽ you your 
selfe,
  1211Therfore I pray 
1431that to our 
sister,
 you do make returne,
  14341214Doe you marke how this becomes the hou
se,
  14351215Deare daughter, I confe
sse that I am old,
  14361216Age is vnnece
ssarie,
 on my knees I beg,
  14371217That you'l vouch
safe me rayment, bed and food.
  14381218Reg. Good 
sir no more, the
se are vn
sightly tricks,
  14411221She hath abated me of
 halfe my traine,
  14421222Lookt
 blacke vpon me, 
strooke mee with her tongue
  14431223Mo
st Serpent-like vpon the very heart,
  14441224All the 
stor'd vengeances of heauen fall 
1445on her ingratful (top,
  1225Strike her yong bones,
 1446you taking ayrs with lamenes.
  14481227Lear. You nimble lightnings dart your blinding 
flames,
  14491228Into her 
scornfull eyes,
 infe
ct her beautie,
  14501229You Fen 
suckt fogs, drawne by the powrefull Sunne,
  1232When the ra
sh mood---
  14541233Lear. No 
Regan, thou 
shalt neuer haue my cur
se,
  1235To har
shnes,
 her eies
 are 
fierce,
 but thine 
1457do cõfort & not (burne
  1236Tis not in thee 
1458to grudge my plea
sures, to cut o
ff my
  (traine,
 14591237To bandy ha
sty words,
 to 
scant my 
sizes,
  14601238And in conclu
sion,
 to oppo
se the bolt
  14611239Again
st my coming in, thou better knowe
st,
  14621240The o
ffices of nature, bond of child-hood,
  14631241E
ffe
cts of curte
sie, dues of gratitude,
  14641242Thy halfe of the kingdome, ha
st thou not forgot
  14671245Lear. Who put my man i'th 
stockes
?  14691246Duke. What trumpets that
?  Enter Steward.  14701247Reg. I know't my 
sisters, this approues her letters,
  14711248That 
she would 
soone be here,
 is your Lady come
?  14721249Lear. This is a 
slaue, who
se ea
sie borrowed pride
  14731250Dwels in the 
fickle grace of her, a followes,
  14751252Duke. What meanes your Grace? 
  Enter Gon.  14771253Gon. Who 
struck my 
seruant,
 Regan I haue good hope
  14791255Lear. Who comes here
? O heauens!
  14801256If you doe loue old men, if you 
sweet 
sway 
1481allow
  1257Obedience, if your 
selues are old,
 1482make it your cau
se,
  1258Send downe and take my part,
  14831259Art not a
sham'd to looke vpon this beard?
  14841260O 
Regan wilt thou take her by the hand
?  14851261Gon. Why not by the hand 
sir,
 how haue I o
ffended
?  14861262Als not o
ffence that indi
scretion 
finds
  14881264Lear. O 
sides you are too tough,
  14891265Will you yet hold? 
1490how came my man it'h 
stockes?
  14911266Duke. I 
set him there 
sir, but his owne di
sorders
  14921267De
seru'd much le
sse aduancement, 
  14941269Reg. I pray you father being weake 
seeme 
so,
  14951270If till the expiration of your moneth,
  14961271You will returne and 
soiorne with my 
sister,
  14971272Di
smi
ssing halfe your traine, come then to me,
  14981273I am now from home,
 and out of that proui
sion,
  14991274Which 
shall be needful for your entertainment.
  15001275Lear. Returne to her,
 and 
fiftie men di
smi
st,
  15011276No rather I abiure all roofes, and chu
se
  15021277To wage again
st the enmitie of the Ayre,
  15031278To be a Comrade with the Woolfe and owle,
  15041279Nece
ssities 
sharpe pinch, returne with her,
  15051280Why the hot bloud in 
France, that dowerles
  1281Tooke 
1506our yonge
st borne, I could as well be brought
  15071282To knee his throne,
 and Squire-like pen
sion bag,
  15081283To keepe ba
se life afoot, returne with her,
  15091284Per
swade me rather to be 
slaue and 
sumter
  15121287Lear. Now I prithee daughter do not make me mad,
  15131288I will not trouble thee my child,
 farewell,
  15141289Wee'le no more meete, no more 
see one another.
  15151290But yet thou art my 
fle
sh, my bloud,
 my daughter,
  15161291Or rather a di
sea
se that lies within my 
fle
sh,
  15171292Which I mu
st needs call mine, thou art a bile,
  1294Corrupted bloud, but Ile not chide thee,
  15201295Let 
shame come when it will,
 I doe not call it,
  15211296I doe not bid the thunder bearer 
shoote,
  15221297Nor tell tailes of thee to high Iudging 
Ioue,
  15231298Mend when thou can
st, be better at thy lea
sure,
  15241299I can be patient, I can 
stay with 
Regan,
  15261301Reg. Not altogether 
so 
sir, 
1527I looke not for you yet,
  1302Nor am prouided 
1528for your 
fit welcome,
  1303Giue eare 
sir to my 
sister,
 1529for tho
se
  1304That mingle rea
son with your pa
ssion,
  15301305Mu
st be content to thinke you are old,
 and 
so,
  15331308Reg. I dare auouch it 
sir, what 
fiftie followers,
  15341309Is it not well,
 what 
should you need of more,
  15351310Yea or 
so many, 
sith that both charge and danger
  15361311Speakes gain
st so great a number,
 how in a hou
se
  15371312Should many people vnder two commands
  15381313Hold amytie, tis hard,
 almo
st impo
ssible.
  15391314Gon. Why might not you my Lord receiue attendãce
  15401315From tho
se that 
she cals 
seruants,
 or from mine?
  15411316Reg. Why not my Lord? 
1542 if then they chanc'
st to 
slacke you,
  15431317We could controwle them,
 if you will come to me,
  15441318For now I 
spie a danger, I intreat you,
  15451319To bring but 
fiue and twentie, to no more
  15481322Reg. And in good time you gaue it.
  15491323Lear. Made you my guardians, my depo
sitaries,
  15501324But kept a re
seruation to be followed
  15511325With 
such a number, what, mu
st I come to you
  15521326With 
fiue and twentie, 
Regan said you 
so
?  15531327Reg. And 
speak't againe my Lord,
 no more with me.
  15541328Lea. Tho
se wicked creatures yet do 
seem wel fauor'd
  15551329When others are more wicked,
 not being the wor
st  15561330Stands in 
some ranke of pray
se,
 Ile goe with thee,
  15571331Thy 
fifty yet doth double 
fiue and twentie,
  15601334What need you 
fiue and twentie, tenne, or 
fiue,
  15611335To follow in a hou
se, where twi
se 
so many
  15641338Lear. O rea
son not the deed, our ba
se
st beggers,
  15651339Are in the poore
st thing 
super
fluous,
  15661340Allow not nature more then nature needes,
  15671341Mans life as cheape as bea
sts, thou art a Lady,
  15681342If onely to goe warme were gorgeous,
  15691343Why nature needes not,
 what thou gorgeous weare
st  15701344Which 
scarcely keepes thee warme, but for true need,
  15711345You heauens giue me that patience,
 patience I need,
  15721346You 
see me here (you Gods) a poore old fellow,
  15731347As full of greefe as age, wretched in both,
  15741348If it be you that 
stirres the
se daughters hearts
  15751349Again
st their Father, foole me not to much,
  15761350To beare it lamely, touch me with noble anger,
  15771351O let not womens weapons,
 water drops
  15781352Stayne my mans cheekes, no you vnnaturall hags,
  15791353I will haue 
such reuenges on you both,
  15801354That all the world 
shall, I will doe 
such things,
  15811355What they are yet I know not, but they 
shalbe
  15821356The terrors of the earth, you thinke ile weepe,
  15831357No ile not weepe, I haue full cau
se of weeping,
  15851358But this heart 
shall breake,
 in a 100.
 thou
sand 
flowes
  15861359Or ere ile weepe, O foole I 
shall goe mad.
  1360Exeunt Lear, Leister, Kent, and Foole.  15871361Duke. Let vs withdraw, twill be a 
storme.
  15881362Reg. This hou
se is little the old man and his people,
  15901364Gon. Tis his own blame hath put him
selfe from re
st,
  15921366Reg. For his particuler, ile receiue him gladly,
  15941368Duke. So am I puspos'd,
 1595where is my Lord of 
Gloster? Enter Glo.
  15971369Reg. Followed the old man forth,
 he is return'd.
  15981370Glo. The King is in high rage, 
1600& wil I know not whe
- (ther.
  16011371Re. Tis good to giue him way, he leads him
selfe.
  16021372Gon. My Lord,
 intreat him by no meanes to 
stay.
  16031373Glo. Alack the night comes on,
 and the bleak winds
  16041374Do 
sorely ru
ssel,
 for many miles about ther's not a bu
sh.
  16071376The iniuries that they them
selues procure,
  16081377Mu
st be their 
schoolema
sters,
 shut vp your doores,
  16091378He is attended with a de
sperate traine,
  16101379And what they may incen
se him to,
 being apt,
  16111380To haue his eare abu
sd, wi
sedome bids feare.
  16121381Duke. Shut vp your doores my Lord,
 tis a wild night,
  16131382My 
Reg coun
sails well,
 come out at'h 
storme. 
 Exeũt  16151383Enter Kent and a Gentleman at seuerall doores.  16161384Kent. Whats here be
side foule weather?
  16171385Gent. One minded like the weather mo
st vnquietly.
  16181386Kent. I know you, whers the King?
  16191387Gent. Contending with the fretfull element,
  16201388Bids the wind blow the earth into the 
sea,
  16211389Or 
swell the curled waters boue the maine
  16221390That things might change or cea
se, teares his white(haire,
  1622.11391Which the impetuous bla
sts with eyles rage
  1622.21392Catch in their furie,
 and make nothing of,
  1622.31393Striues in his little world of man to out
scorne,
  1622.41394The too and fro con
fli
cting wind and raine,
  1622.51395This night wherin the cub-drawne Beare would couch,
  1622.71397Keepe their furre dry, vnbonneted he runnes,
  16241400Gent. None but the foole,
 who labours to out-ie
st  16271403And dare vpon the warrant of my Arte,
  16281404Commend a deare thing to you, there is diui
sion,
  16291405Although as yet the face of it be couer'd,
  16301406With mutuall cunning, twixt 
Albany and 
Cornwall  1638.11407But true it is, from 
France there comes a power
  1638.21408Into this 
scattered kingdome, who alreadie wi
se in our(negligẽce,
  1638.31409Haue 
secret feet in 
some of our be
st Ports,
  1638.41410And are at point to 
shew their open banner,
  1638.51411Now to you, if on my credit you dare build 
so farre,
  1638.61412To make your 
speed to Douer,
 you 
shall 
find
  1638.71413Some that will thanke you, making iu
st report
  16391419Gent. I will talke farther with you. 
  16411421For con
firmation that I much more
  16421422Then my out-wall, open this pur
se and take
  16431423What it containes, if you 
shall 
see 
Cordelia,
  16441424As feare not but you 
shall, 
shew her this ring,
  16451425And 
she will tell you who your fellow is,
  16461426That yet you doe not know, 
fie on this 
storme,
  16481428Gent. Giue me
 your hand,
 1649haue you no more to 
say?
  16501429Kent. Few words but to e
ffe
ct more then all yet:
  16511430That when we haue found the King,
  16521431Ile this way,
 you that, he that 
fir
st lights
  1432On him,
 1653hollow the other.	
 Exeunt.  16561434Lear. Blow wind & cracke your cheekes,
 rage,
 blow
  16571435You caterickes,
 & Hircanios 
spout 
1658til you haue drencht,
  1436The 
steeples drown'd the cockes, 
1659you 
sulpherous and
  1437Thought executing 
fires, 
1660vaunt-currers to
  1438Oke-cleauing thunderboults, 
1661singe my white head,
  1439And thou all 
shaking thunder, 
1662smite 
flat
  1440The thicke Rotunditie of the world, 
1663cracke natures
  1441Mold,
 all Germains 
spill at once 
1664that make
  16651443Foole. O Nunckle, Court holy water in a drie hou
se
  16661444Is better then this raine water out a doore,
  1445Good Nunckle 
1667in,
 and aske thy daughters ble
ssing,
  1446Heers a night pities 
1668nether wi
se man nor foole.
  16691447Lear. Rumble thy belly full,
 spit 
fire,
 spout raine,
  16701448Nor raine,
 wind,
 thunder,
 fire,
 are my daughters,
  16711449I taske not you you elements with vnkindnes,
  16721450I neuer gaue you kingdome, cald you children,
  16731451You owe me no 
sub
scription,
 why then
 let fall 
1674your horrible (ple
sure
  1452Here I 
stãd your 
slaue,
 1675a poore in
firme weak &
  1453De
spis'd ould man,
 1676but yet I call you 
seruile
  1454Mini
sters,
 1677that haue with 2.
 pernitious daughters ioin'd
  16781455Your high engẽdred battel gain
st a head 
1679so old & white 
1456As this, O tis foule.
  16801457Foole. Hee that has a hou
se to put his head in, has a good
  16811458headpeece,
 1682the Codpeece that will hou
se before the head, has
  1459any 
1683the head and hee 
shall low
se, 
so beggers mary many, 
1684the
  1460man that makes his toe, what hee his heart 
should make, 
1685shall
  1461haue a corne cry woe, and turne his 
sleepe to wake, for
  16861462there was neuer yet faire woman but 
shee made 
1687mouthes in a
  16891464Lear. No I will be the patterne of all patience 
 En.ter Kent.  16921467Foole. Marry heers Grace, & a codpis, that's a 
1693wi
seman and
1468a foole.
  1470Things that loue night,
 1695loue not 
such nights as the
se,
  1471The wrathfull Skies 
1696gallow,
 the very wanderer of the
  1472Darke, and 
1697makes them keepe their caues,
  1473Since I was man, 
1698such 
sheets of 
fire,
  1474Such bur
sts of horred thunder, 
1699such grones of
  1475Roaring winde,
 and rayne, I ne're 
1700remember
  1476To haue heard, mans nature cannot cary
  17021478Lear. Let the great Gods 
1703that keepe this dreadful
  1479Powther ore our heades, 
1704find out their enemies now,
  1480Tremble thou wretch 
1705that ha
st within thee
  1481Vndivulged crimes, 
1706vnwhipt of Iu
stice,
  1482Hide thee thou bloudyhand,
 1707thou periur'd,
 and
  1483Thou 
simular man of vertue 
1708that art ince
stious,
  1484Caytife in peeces 
shake, 
1709that vnder couert
  1485And conuenient 
seeming,
 1710ha
st pra
cti
sed on mans life,
  1486Clo
se pent vp guilts, 
1711riue your concealed centers,
  1487And cry 
1712the
se dreadfull 
summoners grace,
  1488I am a man 
1713more 
sind again
st their 
sinning.
  17141489Kent. Alacke bare headed, 
1715gracious my Lord, hard by here is
  1490a houell, 
1716some friend
ship will it lend you gain
st the tempe
st, 
1717re
-  1491po
se you there, whil
st I to this hard hou
se, 
1718more hard then is
  1492the 
stone whereof
 tis rais'd, 
1719which euen but now demaunding
  1493after me, 
1720denide me to come in, returne and force 
1721their 
scanted
1494curte
sie.
  17231496Come on my boy, how do
st my boy,
 art cold?
  17241497I am cold my 
selfe, where is this 
straw my fellow,
  1499Make vild things precious, come you houell 
1727poore,
  1500Foole and knaue, I haue one part of my heart
  17291502Foole. Hee that has a little tine witte, 
1730with hey ho the wind
  1503and the raine,
 1731mu
st make content with his fortunes 
fit, 
1732for the
  1504raine, it raineth euery day.
  17331505Lear. True my good boy, come bring vs to this houell?
  17521506Enter Gloster and the Bastard with lights.  17531507Glost. Alacke alacke 
Edmund I like not this,
  1508Vnnaturall 
1754dealing when I de
sir'd their leaue
  1509That I might pitty him,
 1755they tooke me from me
  1510The v
se of mine owne hou
se, charg'd 
1756me on paine
  1511Of their di
splea
sure, neither to 
speake 
1757of him,
  1512Intreat for him,
 nor any way 
su
staine him.
  17581513Bast. Mo
st sauage and vnnaturall.
  17591514Glost. Go toe
 say you nothing,
 ther's a diui
siõ be
1760twixt (the Dukes,
  1515And a wor
se matter then that, I haue 
1761receiued
  1516A letter this night, tis dangerous to be 
spoken,
  17621517I haue lockt the letter in my clo
set, the
se iniuries
  1518The 
1763King now beares, will be reuenged home
  1519Ther's part of 
1764a power already landed,
  1520We mu
st incline to the King, I 
1765will 
seeke him,
 and
  1521Priuily releeue him, goe you and 
1766maintaine talke
  1522With the Duke, that my charity be not of 
1767him
  1523Perceiued, if hee aske for me, I am ill,
 and gon
  1524To 
1768bed, though I die for't,
 as no le
sse is threatned me,
  1525The King 
1769my old ma
ster mu
st be releeued,
 there is
  1526Some 
strãge thing 
1770toward, 
Edmund pray you be careful. 
 Exit.  17711527Bast. This curte
sie forbid thee,
 shal the Duke 
1772in
stãly (know
  1528And of that letter to,
 1773this 
seems a faire de
seruing
  1529And mu
st draw me 
1774that which my father loo
ses,
 no le
sse
  1530Then all, 
1775then yonger ri
ses when the old doe fall. 
 Exit.  17781532Kent. Here is the place my Lord, good my Lord enter, 
1779the
  1533tyrannie of
 the open nights too ru
ffe 
1780for nature to indure.
  17841536Kent. I had rather breake mine owne, 
1785good my Lord enter.
  17861537Lear. Thou think'
st tis much, that this tempe
stious 
storme
  17871538Inuades vs to the skin, 
so tis to thee,
  17881539But where the greater malady is 
fixt
  17891540The le
sser is 
scarce felt, thoud'
st shun a Beare,
  17901541But if thy 
flight lay toward the roring 
sea,
  17911542Thoud'
st meet the beare it'h mouth,
 whẽ the mind's free
  17921543The bodies delicate, this tempe
st in my mind
  17931544Doth from my 
sences take all feeling el
se
  17941545Saue what beates their 
filiall ingratitude,
  17951546Is it not as this mouth 
should teare this hand
  17961547For lifting food to't, but I will puni
sh sure,
  17971548No I will weepe no more, 
1799in 
such a night as this
!  1549O 
Regan, 
Gonorill,
 1800your old kind father
  1550Who
se franke heart gaue you all, 
1801O that way madnes (lies,
  1551Let me 
shun that, 
1802no more of that.
  18041553Lear. Prethe goe in thy 
selfe, 
seeke thy one ea
se
  18051554This tempe
st will not giue me leaue to ponder
  18061555On things would hurt me more, but ile goe in,
  18091556Poore naked wretches, where 
so ere you are
  18101557That bide the pelting of this pittiles night,
  18111558How 
shall your hou
se-le
sse heads,
 and vnfed 
sides,
  18121559Your loopt and windowed raggednes defend you
  18131560From 
sea
sons 
such as the
se, O I haue tane
  18141561Too little care of this, take phy
sicke pompe,
  18151562Expo
se thy 
selfe to feele what wretches feele,
  18161563That thou may
st shake the 
super
flux to them,
  18201565Foole. Come not in here Nunckle,
 her's a 
spirit,
 helpe 
1821me,
 helpe
  18221567Kent. Giue me thy hand, who
se there.
  18251569Kent. What art thou that do
st grumble there in the 
1826straw,
  18271571Edg. Away,
 the fowle 
fiend followes me,
 thorough the 
1828sharpe
  1572hathorne blowes the cold wind, goe to thy cold 
1829bed and warme
  18301574Lear. Ha
st thou giuen all to thy two daughters, and art 
1831thou
  18321576Edg. Who giues any thing to poore 
Tom, whome 
1833the foule
  1577Fiende hath led, through 
fire, and 
1834through foord, and
  1578whirli-poole, ore bog and quag
1835mire, that has layd kniues vn
-  1579der his pillow,
 and halters 
1836in his pue,
 set ratsbane by his pottage,
  1580made him 
1837proud of heart, to ride on a bay trotting hor
se ouer
  1581foure 
1838incht bridges, to cour
se his owne 
shadow for a traytor,
  18391582ble
sse thy 
fiue wits, 
Toms
 a cold, 
1840ble
sse thee from whirle-winds,
  1583starre-blu
sting,
 and ta
1841king, doe poore 
Tom some charitie,
 whom
  1584the foule 
fiend 
1842vexes,
 there could I haue him now,
 and there, and
  18441586Lear. What, his daughters brought him to this pa
sse,
  18451587Could
st thou 
saue nothing, did
st thou giue them all
?  18461588Foole. Nay he re
seru'd a blanket, el
se we had beene all 
1847sham'd. 
  18481589Lear. Now all the plagues that in the pendulous ayre
  18491590Hang fated ore mens faults, fall on thy daughters.
  18511592Lear. Death traytor, nothing could haue 
subdued nature
  18521593To 
such a lownes, but his vnkind daughters,
  18531594Is it the fa
shion that di
scarded fathers,
  18541595Should haue thus little mercy on their 
fle
sh,
  18551596Iudicious puni
shment twas this 
fle
sh  18571598Edg. Pilicock 
sate on pelicocks hill, a lo lo
  lo.
 18581599Foole. This cold night will turne vs all to fooles & 
1859madmen.
  18601600Fdg. Take heede at'h foule 
fiend, obay thy pa
1861rents,
 keep thy
  1601words iu
stly, 
sweare not, commit not 
1862with mans 
sworne 
spou
se,
  1602set not thy 
sweet heart on 
1863proud array, 
Toms a cold,
  18651604Edg. A Seruingman, proud in heart and mind, that 
1866curld my
  1605haire, wore gloues in my cap,
 serued the lu
st 1867of my mi
stris heart,
  1606and did the a
ct of darkenes with 
1868her, 
swore as many oaths as I
  1607spake words, and broke 
1869them in the 
sweet face of heauen, one
  1608that 
slept in the 
1870contriuing of lu
st, and wakt to doe it, wine lo
-  1609ued I deeply, dice 
1871deerely, and in woman out paromord 
1872the
  1610Turke, fal
se of heart,
 light of eare,
 bloudie of hand,
 1873Hog in 
sloth,
  1611Fox in 
stealth, 
Woolfe in greedines,, Dog 
1874in madnes, Lyon
  1612in pray, let not the creeking of 
shooes, 
1875nor the ru
slngs of 
silkes
  1613betray thy poore heart to wo
1876men, keepe thy foote out of bro
-  1614thell, thy hand out of 
1877placket, thy pen from lenders booke,
  1615and de
fie the 
1878foule 
fiend,
 still through the hathorne blowes the
  18791616cold wind, hay no on ny, Dolphin my boy, my boy, cae
se
  18811618Lear. Why thou wert better in thy graue, then to an
swere
  18821619with thy vncouered bodie this extremitie of the 
skies, is 
1883man no
  1620more, but this cõ
sider him well,
 thou owe
st 1884the worme no 
silke,
  1621the bea
st no hide, the 
sheepe no 
1885wooll, the cat no perfume, her's
  1622three ons are 
1886sophi
sticated,
 thou art the thing it 
selfe,
 vnaccom
-  1623o
1887dated man, is no more but 
such a poore bare forked A
1888nimall
  1624as thou art, o
ff o
ff you lendings,
 come on
  18911625Foole. Prithe Nunckle be content, this is a naughty 
1892night to
  1626swim in,
 now a little 
fire in a wild 
field, 
1893were like an old leachers
  1627heart, a 
small 
sparke,
 all the re
st 1894in bodie cold,
 looke here comes
  1628a walking 
fire.	
 Enter Gloster.  18951629Edg. This is the foule 
fiend 
fliberdegibek, hee begins at 
1896cur
-  1630phew, and walks till the 
fir
st cocke, he giues the web,
 1897& the pin,
  1631squemes the eye, and makes the hare lip, 
1898mildewes the white
  1632wheate, and hurts the poore crea
1899ture of earth, 
swithald 
1900footed
  1633thrice the old,
 1901he met the night mare and her nine fold 
1902bid her,
 O
  1634light and her troth plight 
1903and arint thee, witch arint thee.
  19061637Kent. Who
se there, what i'
st you 
seeke?
  19071638Glost. What are you there? your names
?  19081639Edg. Poore 
Tom, that eats the 
swimming frog, the
 1909tode, the
  1640tod pole, the wall-newt, and the water, that 
1910in the furie of his
  1641heart,
 when the foule 
fiend rages,
 eats 
1911cow-dung for 
sallets, 
 swal
-  1642lowes the old ratt, and the 
1912ditch dogge,
 drinkes the greene man
-  1643tle of the 
standing 
1913poole, who is whipt from tithing to tithing,
  1644and 
1914stock-puni
sht and impri
soned,
 who hath had three 
sutes 
1915to
  1645his backe, 
sixe 
shirts to his bodie, 
1916hor
se to ride, and weapon
   But mise and rats, and such small Deere,
 19181648 Hath beene 
Toms foode for 
seuen long yeare-
  19191649Beware my follower, peace
 snulbug, peace thou 
fiend.
  19201650Glost. What hath your Grace no better company
?  19211651Edg. The Prince of darkenes is a Gentleman, 
modo 1922he's caled
  19231653Glost. Our 
fle
sh and bloud is growne 
so 
1924vild my Lord, that it
  1654doth hate what gets it.
  19261656Glost. Go in with me,
 my dutie cãnot 
su
ffer to obay in all your
  19271657daughters hard commaunds,
 1928though their iniun
ction be to barre
  1658my doores,
 1929and let this tyranous night take hold vpon you, 
1930yet
  1659haue I venter'd to come 
seeke you out, 
1931and bring you where
  1660both food and 
fire is readie.
  19321661Lear. Fir
st let me talke with this Philo
sopher,
  19341663Kent. My good Lord take his o
ffer, 
1935goe into the hou
se.
  19361664Lear. Ile talke a word with this mo
st learned Theban, 
1937what is
  19381666Edg. How to preuent the 
fiend,
 and to kill vermine.
  19391667Lear. Let me aske you one word in priuate.
  19401668Kent. Importune him to goe my Lord,
 1941his wits begin (to vn
settle.
  19431670His daughters 
seeke his death, O that good 
Kent,
  19441671He 
said it would be thus, poore bani
sht man,
  19451672Thou 
saye
st the King growes mad, ile tell thee friend
  19461673I am almo
st mad my 
selfe,
 I had a 
sonne
  19471674Now out-lawed from my bloud,
 a 
sought my life
  19481675But lately,
 very late, I lou'd him friend
  19491676No father his 
sonne deerer, true to tell thee,
  1678What a nights this
?1951 I doe be
seech your Grace.
  19521679Lear. O crie you mercie 
1953noble Philo
sopher,
 your com
-(pany.
  19551681Glost. In fellow there,
 in't houell keepe thee warme.
  19581684Lear. With him 
1959I wil keep 
stil, with my Philo
sopher.
  19601685Ken. Good my Lord 
sooth him,
 1961let him take the fellow.
  19631687Kent. Sirah come on, goe along with vs?
  19651689Glost. No words, no words, hu
sh.
  19661690Edg. Child 
Rowland, to the darke towne come,
  19671691His word was 
still fy fo and fum,
  19681692I 
smell the bloud of a Briti
sh man.
  19711694Corn. I will haue my reuenge ere I depart the hou
se.
  19721695Bast. How my Lord I may be cen
sured, that nature 
1973thus giues
  1696way to loyaltie, 
some thing feares me to 
1975thinke of.
  1697Corn. I now perceiue it was not altogether your 
1976brothers e
-  1698uill di
spo
sition made him 
seeke his death,
 but 
1977a prouoking merit,
  1699set a worke by a reproueable badnes 
1978in him
selfe.
  19791700Bast. How malicious is my fortune, that I mu
st re
1980pent to bee
  1701iu
st? this is the letter he 
spoke of,
 1981which approues him an intelli
-  1702gent partie to the aduanta
1982ges of 
France, O heauens that his trea
-  1703son were, 
1983or not I the dete
cter.
  19841704Corn. Goe with me to the Dutches.
  19851705Bast. If the matter of this paper be certaine, you haue 
1986mighty
  19871707Corn. True or fal
se, it hath made thee Earle of 
Glo1988ster, 
seeke
  1708out where thy father is, that hee may bee 
1989readie for our appre
-  19901710Bast. If I 
find him comforting the King, it will 
stu
ffe 
1991his 
su
s-  1711pition more fully, I will per
seuere in my cour
se of 
1992loyaltie,
  1712though the con
fli
ct be 
sore betweene that and 
1993my bloud.
  19941713Corn. I will lay tru
st vpon thee, and thou 
shalt 
find 
1995a dearer
  1714father in my loue. 
 Exit.  19971715Enter Gloster and Lear, Kent, Foole, and Tom.  19981716Glost. Here is better then the open ayre, take it thank
1999fully, I
  1717will peece out the comfort with what addition I 
2000can,
 I will not be
  20011719Ken. All the power of his wits haue giuen way to 
2002impatience,
  1720the Gods de
serue your kindnes.
  20041721Edg. Fretereto cals me, and tels me 
Nero is an ang
2005ler in the
  1722lake of darknes,
 pray innocent beware 
2006the foule 
fiend.
  20071723Foole. Prithe Nunckle tell me, whether a mad man be 
2008a Gen
-  20091725Lear. A King, a King, 
2013to haue a thou
sand with red burning
  1726spits 
2014come hi
szing in vpon them.
  2014.21728Foole. He's mad, that tru
sts in the tamenes of a Wolfe, a hor
-  2014.31729ses health, a boyes loue, or a whores oath.
  2014.41730Lear. It 
shalbe done,
 I wil arraigne them 
straight,
  2014.61732Thou 
sapient 
sir 
sit here, no you 
shee Foxes--
  2014.71733Edg. Looke where he 
stands and glars, wan
st thou eyes, at
  2014.81734tral madam come ore the broome 
Bessy to mee.
  2014.91735Foole. Her boat hath a leake,
 and 
she mu
st not 
speake,
  2014.111737Edg. The foule 
fiend haũts poore 
Tom in the voyce of a nigh
- (tingale,
  2014.121738Hoppedance cries in 
Toms belly for two white herring,
  2014.131739Croke not blacke Angell, I haue no foode for thee.
  2014.141740Kent. How doe you 
sir? 
stand you not 
so amazd, will you
  2014.161742Lear. Ile 
see their triall 
fir
st, bring in their euidence, thou
  2014.171743robbed man of Iu
stice take thy place, & thou his yokefellow of
  2014.181744equity, bench by his 
side, you are ot'h commi
ssion, 
sit you too.
  2014.191745Ed. Let vs deale iu
stly 
sleepe
st or wake
st thou iolly 
shepheard,
  2014.201746Thy 
sheepe bee in the corne, and for one bla
st of thy minikin
  2014.211747mouth, thy 
sheepe 
shall take no harme, Pur the cat is gray.
  2014.221748Lear. Arraigne her 
fir
st tis 
Gonoril,
 I here take my oath before
  2014.231749this honorable a
ssembly kickt the poore king her father.
  2014.241750Foole. Come hither mi
stri
sse is your name 
Gonorill.
  2014.261752Fool. Cry you mercy I tooke you for a ioyne 
stoole.
  2014.271753Lear. And heres another who
se warpt lookes proclaime,
  2014.281754What 
store her hart is made an, 
stop her there,
  2014.291755Armes,
 armes, 
sword, 
fire, corruption in the place,
  20161758Kent. O pity 
sir, where is the patience now,
  20171759That you 
so oft haue boa
sted to retaine.
  20181760Edg. My teares begin to take his part 
so much,
  20211763Trey, Blanch, and Sweet hart,
 see they barke at me.
  20221764Edg. Tom will throw his head at them,
 auant you 
2023curs,
  1765Be thy mouth, or blacke, or white, 
2024tooth that poy
sons if it bite,
  20251766Ma
stife,
 grayhoũd,
 mungril,
 grim-
2026hoũd or 
spaniel,
 brach or him,
  20271767Bobtaile tike,
 or trũdletaile,
 Tom will make them weep & waile,
  20291768For with throwing thus my head, 
2030dogs leape the hatch and all
  1769are 
fled, 
2031loudla doodla come march to wakes, and faires, and
  20321770market townes, poore 
Tom thy horne is dry.
  20331771Lear. Then let them anotomize 
Regan, 
see what 
2034breeds about (her
  1772Hart is there any cau
se in nature that 
2035makes this hardnes,
  1773You 
sir, I entertaine you for one of 
2036my hundred,
  1774Only I do not like the fa
shion of your gar
2037ments youle 
say,
  1775They are Per
sian attire, but let them be 
2038chang'd.
  20401776Kent. Now good my Lord lie here awhile.
  20411777Lear. Make no noi
se,
 make no noi
se,
 draw the cur
2042tains,
 so,
 so,
 so,
  1778Weele go to 
supper it'h morning,
 so,
 so,
 so, 
  Enter Gloster.  20441779Glost. Come hither friend, 
2045where is the King my mai
ster.
  20461780Kent. Here 
sir,
 but trouble him not his wits are gon.
  20471781Glost. Good friend I prithy take him in thy armes,
  20481782I haue or'e heard a plot of death vpon him,
  20491783Ther is a Litter ready lay him in't,
 2050& driue towards Douer frend,
  1784Where thou 
shalt meet 
2051both welcome & prote
ction,
 take vp thy  (ma
ster,
  20521785If thou 
should'
st dally halfe an houre,
 his life 
2053with thine
  1786And all that o
ffer to defend him 
2054stand in a
ssured lo
sse,
  1787Take vp the King 
2055and followe me, that will to 
some proui
sion
  2056.21790This re
st might yet haue balmed thy broken 
sinewes,
  2056.31791Which if conuenience will not alow 
stand in hard cure,
  2056.41792Come helpe to beare thy mai
ster, thou mu
st not 
stay behind.
  2056.61794Edg. When we our betters 
see bearing our woes: we 
scarcely
  2056.81796Who alone 
su
ffers 
su
ffers, mo
st it'h mind,
  2056.91797Leauing free things and happy 
showes behind,
  2056.101798But then the mind much 
su
fferance doth or'e 
scip,
  2056.111799When griefe hath mates,
 and bearing fellow
ship:
  2056.131801When that which makes me bend, makes the King bow.
  2056.161804When fal
se opinion who
se wrong thoughts de
file thee,
  2056.171805In thy iu
st proofe repeals and reconciles thee,
  2056.181806What will hap more to night,
 safe 
scape the King,
  20581808Enter Cornwall, and Regan, and Gonorill, and Bastard.  20601809Corn. Po
st speedily to my Lord your husband 
shew 
2061him this(letter
  1810The army of France is landed,
 seeke out the vilaine 
Gloster.
  20651813Corn. Leaue him to my di
splea
sure,
 Edmũd keep 
2066you our 
sister (company.
  1814The reuenge we are bound to 
2067take vpon your trayterous father, 
  1815Are not 
fit for your 
2068beholding, adui
se the Duke where you are (going
  1816To a 
2069mo
st fe
stuant preparatiõ we are bound to the like, 
  1817Our 
2070po
st shall be 
swift and intelligence betwixt vs,
  1818Fare
2071well deere 
sister,
 farewell my Lord of 
Gloster,
  20741820Stew. My Lord of 
Gloster hath conueyd him hence,
  20751821Some 
fiue or 
sixe and thirtie of his Knights 
2076hot que
strits after
  1822him,
 met him at gate,
 2077who with 
some other of the Lords depen
-  1823dants 
2078are gone with him towards Douer, where they boa
st 2079to
  1824haue well armed friends.
  20801825Corn. Get hor
ses for your mi
stris.
  20811826Gon. Farewell 
sweet Lord and 
sister. 
 Exit Gon. and Bast..
  20821827Corn. Edmund farewell. goe 
seeke the traytor 
Gloster.
  20831828Pinion him like a theefe, bring him before vs,
  20841829Though we may not pa
sse vpon his life
  20851830Without the forme of Iu
stice, yet our power
  20861831Shall doe a curte
sie to our wrath,
 which men 
2087may blame
  1832But not controule, 
2089who
se there, the traytor?
  20881833Enter Gloster brought in by two or three,  20911835Corn. Bind fa
st his corkie armes.
  20921836Glost. What meanes your Graces,
 2093good my friends con
sider,
  1837You are my ge
sts, 
2094doe me no foule play friends.
  20961839Reg. Hard hard, O 
filthie traytor!
  20971840Glost. Vnmercifull Lady as you are, I am true.
  20981841Corn. To this chaire bind him, 
2099villaine thou 
shalt 
find--- 
  21001842Glost. By the kind Gods tis mo
st ignobly done, 
2101to pluck me
  1843by the beard.
 Reg. 2102So white and 
such a Traytor.
  21031844Glost. Naughty Ladie,
 2104the
se haires which thou do
st raui
sh from(my chin
  21051845Will quicken and accu
se thee, I am your ho
st.
  21061846With robbers hands, my ho
spitable fauours
  21071847You 
should not ru
ffell thus, what will you doe.
  21081848Corn. Come 
sir, 
2109what letters had you late from 
France?
  21101849Reg. Be 
simple an
swerer, for we know the truth.
  21111850Corn. And what confederacy haue you with the tra
2112tours late
  1851footed in the king dome?
  21131852Reg. To who
se hands 
2114you haue 
sent the lunatick King 
speake? 
  21151853Glost. I haue a letter ge
ssingly 
set downe
  21161854Which came from one,
 that's of a neutrall heart,
  21201857 Corn. Where ha
st thou 
sent the King
? Glost. 2121To Douer.
  21221858Reg. Wherefore to Douer? 
2123wa
st thou not charg'd at perill--- 
  21241859Corn. Wherefore to Douer? let him 
fir
st an
swere that.
  21251860Glost. I am tide tot'h 
stake, 
2126and I mu
st stand the cour
se.
  21281862Glost. Becau
se I would not 
see thy cruell nayles
  21291863Pluck out his poore old eyes, nor thy 
fierce 
sister
  21301864In his annoynted 
fle
sh ra
sh bori
sh phangs,
  21311865The Sea with 
such a 
storme of his lou'd head
  21321866In hell blacke night indur'd, would haue layd vp
  21331867And quencht the 
steeled 
fires, 
2134yet poore old heart,
  1868Hee holpt the heauens to rage,
  21351869If wolues had at thy gate heard that dearne time
  21361870Thou 
should
st haue 
said,
 good Porter turne the key,
  21371871All cruels el
se 
sub
scrib'd but I 
shall 
see
  21381872The winged vengeance ouertake 
such children.
  21391873Corn. Seet 
shalt thou neuer, fellowes hold the chaire,
  21401874Vpon
 tho
se eyes of thine, Ile 
set my foote.
  21411875Glost. He that will thinke to liue till he be old
  21421876Giue me 
some helpe, O cruell, O ye Gods!
  21431877Reg. One 
side will mocke another,
 tother to.
  21461880I haue 
seru'd euer 
since I was a child
  21471881But better 
seruice
 haue I neuer done you,
 2148thẽ now to bid(you hold.
  21501883Seru. If you did weare a beard vpon your chin 
2151id'e 
shake it
  1884on this quarrell,
 what doe you meane?
   draw and fight.
 21531886Seru. Why then come on,
 and take the chance of anger.
  21541887Reg. Giue me thy 
sword, a pe
sant 
stand vp thus.
  21551888Shee takes a sword and runs at him behind.  21561889Seruant. Oh I am 
slaine my Lord,
 yet haue you one eye left to
  21581891Corn, Lea
st it 
see more preuent it, out vild Ielly.
  21601893Glost. All darke and comfortles, 
2161wher's my 
sonne 
Edmund?
  21621894Edmund vnbridle all the 
sparks of nature,
 2163to quit this horred a
ct.
  21641895Reg. Out villaine, 
2165thou cal
st on him that hates thee, it was he
  21661896that made the ouerture of thy trea
sons to vs, 
2167who is too good to
  21681898Glost. O my follies, then 
Edgar was abus'd,
  21691899Kind Gods forgiue me that,
 and pro
sper him.
  21701900Reg. Goe thru
st him out at gates, and let him 
smell 
2171his way to
  1901Douer, 
2172how i
st my Lord? how looke you
?  21731902Corn. I haue receiu'd a hurt, follow me Ladie,
  21741903Turne out that eyles villaine, throw this 
slaue 
2175vpon
  1904The dungell 
Regan,
 I bleed apace,
 2176vntimely
  1905Comes this hurt, giue me
 your arme.
  Exit.
 2176.11906Seruant. Ile neuer care what wickednes I doe,
  2176.319082 Seruant. If 
she liue long, & in the end meet the old cour
se
  2176.41909of death, women will all turne mon
sters.
  2177.519101 
Ser. Lets follow the old Earle,
 and get the bedlom
  2176.819132 Ser. Goe thou, ile fetch 
some 
flaxe and whites of egges to
  2176.91914apply to his bleeding face,
 now heauen helpe him. 
 Exit.  21791916Edg. Yet better thus, and knowne to be contemnd,
  21801917Then 
still contemn'd and 
flattered to be wor
st,
  21811918The lowe
st and mo
st deie
cted thing of Fortune
  21821919Stands 
still in experience,
 liues not in feare,
  21831920The lamentable change is from the be
st,
  21891922Who's here,
 my father parti,
 eyd, 
2190world, world, O world!
  21911923But that thy 
strange mutations make vs hate thee,
  21921924Life would not yeeld to age. 
  Enter Glost. led by an old man.  21931925Old man O my good Lord, I haue beene your tenant,
 2194& your
  1926fathers tenant this fore
score--- 
  21951927Glost. Away, get thee away,
 good friend be gon,
  21961928Thy comforts can doe me no good at all,
  21981930Old man. Alack 
sir, you cannot 
see your way.
  21991931Glost. I haue no way,
 and therefore want no eyes,
  22001932I 
stumbled when I 
saw, full oft tis 
seene
  22011933Our meanes 
secure vs,
 and our meare defe
cts
  22021934Proue our comodities, ah deere 
sonne 
Edgar,
  22031935The food of thy abu
sed fathers wrath,
  22041936Might I but liue to 
see thee in my tuch,
  22071939Edg. O Gods, who i
st can 
say I am at the wor
st,
  22101942Edg. And wor
se I may be yet, the wor
st is not.
  22111943As long as we can 
say,
 this is the wor
st.
  22141946Old man. Mad man,
 and begger to.
  22151947Glost. A has 
some rea
son, el
se he could not beg,
  22161948In the la
st nights 
storme I 
such a fellow 
saw,
  22171949Which made me thinke a man a worme,
 my 
sonne
  22181950Came then into my mind,
 and yet my mind
  22191951Was then 
scarce friendes with him, 
2220I haue heard more(
since,
  22211952As 
flies are
 toth' wanton boyes,
 are we toth' Gods,
  22231954Edg. How 
should this be, 
2224bad is the trade that mu
st play the
  1955foole to 
sorrow 
2225angring it 
selfe and others, ble
sse thee mai
ster.
  22261956Glost. Is that the naked fellow
?  22281958Glost. Then prethee get thee gon,
 if for my 
sake
  22291959Thou wilt oretake vs here a mile or twaine
  22301960Ith' way toward Douer, doe it for ancient loue
  22311961And bring 
some couering for this naked 
soule
  22341964Glost. Tis the times plague, 
2235when madmen lead the(blind,
  22361965Doe as I bid thee,
 or rather doe thy plea
sure,
  22381967Old man. Ile bring him the be
st parrell that I haue
  22411970Edg. Poore 
Toms a cold, I cannot dance it farther.
  22441972Edg. Ble
sse thy 
sweete eyes, they bleed.
  22451973Glost. Know
st thou the way to Douer
?  22461974Edg. Both 
stile and gate,
 hor
se-way, and foot-path,
  22471975Poore 
Tom hath beene 
scard out of his good wits,
  1976Ble
sse 
2248the good man from the foule 
fiend,
  2248.11977Fiue 
fiends haue beene in poore 
Tom at once,
  2248.21978Of lu
st,
 as 
Obidicut, 
Hobbididence Prince of dumbnes,
  2248.31979Mahu of 
stealing, 
Modo of murder, 
Stiberdigebit of
  2248.41980Mobing, & 
Mobing who 
since po
sse
sses chambermaids
  2248.51981And waiting women, 
so, ble
sse thee mai
ster.
  22491982Glost. Here take this pur
se, thou whome the heauens(plagues.
  22501983Haue humbled to all 
strokes,
 that I am wretched,
 2251makes(thee
  1984The happier, heauens deale 
so 
still,
  22521985Let the 
super
fluous and lu
st-dieted man
  22531986That 
stands your ordinance, that will not 
see
  22541987Becau
se he does not feele,
 feele your power quickly,
  22551988So di
stribution 
should vnder exce
sse,
  22561989And each man haue enough, do
st thou know Douer
?  22581991Glost. There is a cli
ffe who
se high & bending head
  22591992Lookes 
firmely in the con
fined deepe,
  22601993Bring me but to the very brimme of it
  22611994And ile repaire the mi
sery thou do
st beare
  1996From that place 
2263I 
shal no leading need.
  22641997Edg. Giue me thy arme,
 2265poore 
Tom shall lead thee.
  22681999Gon. Welcome my Lord,
 I maruaile our mild hu
sband
  22692000Not met vs on the way,
 now wher's your mai
ster?
  22702002Stew. Madame within,
 but neuer man 
so chang'd, 
2271I told him
  2003of the army that was landed, 
2272he 
smild at it, I told him you were
  2004coming, 
2273his an
swere was the wor
se, of 
Glosters treacherie,
 and of
  22742005the loyall 
seruice of his 
sonne 
2275when I enform'd him, then hee
  2006cald me 
sott, 
2276and told me I had turnd the wrong 
side out, 
2277what
  2007hee 
should mo
st de
sire 
seemes plea
sant to him, 
2278what like o
ffen
-  22792009Gon. Then 
shall you goe no further,
  22802010It is the cowi
sh terrer  of his 
spirit
  22812011That dares not vndertake, hele not feele wrongs
  22822012Which tie him to an an
swere, our wi
shes on the way
  22832013May proue e
ffe
cts, backe 
Edgar to my brother,
  22842014Ha
sten his mu
sters, and condu
ct his powers
  22852015I mu
st change armes at home,
 and giue the di
sta
ffe
  22862016Into my hu
sbands hands, this tru
sty 
seruant
  22872017Shall pa
sse betweene vs, ere long you are like to heare
  22882018If you dare venture in your owne behalfe
  22892019A mi
stre
sses command, weare this, 
spare 
speech,
  22902020Decline your head: this ki
sse if it dur
st speake
  22912021Would 
stretch thy 
spirits vp into the ayre,
  22932023Bast. Yours in the ranks of death.
  22942024Gon. My mo
st deere 
Gloster,
 to thee womans 
seruices(are dew
  22982026Stew. Madam here comes my Lord. 
 Exit Stew.  23002027Gon. I haue beene worth the whi
stlling.
  23012028Alb. O 
Gonoril,
 2302you are not worth the du
st which the(rude wind
  23032029Blowes in your face,
 I feare your di
spo
sition
  2303.22031Cannot be bordered certaine in it 
selfe,
  2303.32032She that her 
selfe will 
sliuer and di
sbranch
  2303.42033From her materiall 
sap, perforce mu
st wither,
  2303.72036Alb. Wi
sedome and goodnes,
 to the vild 
seeme vild,
  2303.82037Filths 
sauor but them
selues, what haue you done?
  2303.92038Tigers, not daughters, what haue you perform'd?
  2303.112040Who
se reuerence euen the head-lugd beare would lick.
  2303.122041Mo
st barbarous, mo
st degenerate haue you madded,
  2303.152044If that the heauens doe not their vi
sible 
spirits
  2303.162045Send quickly downe to tame the vild o
ffences,
 it will(come
  2303.172046Humanity mu
st perforce pray on it 
self like mon
sters of (the deepe.
  23052048That beare
st a cheeke for bloes, a head for wrongs,
  23062049Who ha
st not in thy browes an eye de
seruing 
2307thine honour,
  2050From thy 
su
ffering,
 that not know'
st, fools
 do tho
se vilains pitty
  2307.12051Who are puni
sht ere they haue done their mi
schiefe,
  2307.22052Wher's thy drum? 
France spreds his banners in our noy
seles  land,
  2307.32053With plumed helme, thy 
state begin thereat
  2307.42054Whil'
st thou a morall foole 
sits 
still and cries
  23082056Alb. See thy 
selfe deuill, 
2309proper deformity 
shews  not in the
  2311.12059Alb. Thou changed, and 
selfe-couerd thing for 
shame
  2311.22060Be-mon
ster not thy feature, wer't my 
fitnes
  2311.42062They are apt enough to di
slecate and teare
  2311.52063Thy 
fle
sh and bones, how ere thou art a 
fiend,
  23122066Alb. What newes. 	
 Enter a Gentleman.  23132067Gent. O my good Lord the Duke of 
Cornwals dead, 
2314slaine by
  2068his 
seruant,
 going to put out 
2315the other eye of 
Gloster.
  23172070Gen. A 
seruant that he bred,
 thrald with remor
se,
  23182071Oppos'd again
st the a
ct, bending his 
sword
  23192072To his great mai
ster,
 who thereat inraged
  23202073Flew on him, and among
st them, feld him dead,
  23212074But not without that harmefull 
stroke,
 which 
since
  2077That the
se our nether crimes 
2325so 
speedely can venge.
  2078But O poore 
Gloster 2326lo
st he his other eye.
  23272079Gent. Both, both my Lord,
 2328this letter Madam craues a 
speedy(an
swer,
  23292080Tis from your 
sister.
Gon. One way I like this well,
  23312081But being widow and my 
Gloster with her,
  23322082May all the building on my fancie plucke,
  23332083Vpon my hatefull life, another way 
2334the newes is not 
so tooke,
  2084Ile reade and an
swer.	
Exit.  23352085Alb. Where was his 
sonne 
2336when they did take his eyes.
  23372086Gent. Come with my Lady hither. 
2338Alb. He is not here.
  23392087Gent. No my good Lord I met him backe againe.
  23412089Gent. I my good Lord twas he informd again
st him,
  23422090And quit the hou
se on purpo
se that there puni
shment
  23442092Alb. Gloster I liue 
2345to thanke thee for the loue thou 
shewed
st the(King,
  23462093And to reuenge thy eyes, come hither friend,
  23472094Tell me what more thou knowe
st.	
Exit.  2347.22096Kent. Why the King of 
Fraunce is 
so 
suddenly gone backe,
  2347.42098Gent. Something he left imperfe
ct in the 
state, which 
since his
  2347.52099comming forth is thought of, which imports to the Kingdome,
  2347.62100So much feare and danger that his per
sonall returne was mo
st re
-  2347.82102Kent. Who hath he left behind him, General.
  2347.92103Gent. The Mar
shall of 
France Mon
sier 
la Far.
  2347.102104Kent. Did your letters pierce the queene to any demon
stratiõ(of griefe.
  2347.112105Gent. I 
say 
she tooke them, read them in my pre
sence,
  2347.132107Her delicate cheeke, it 
seemed 
she was a queene ouer her pa
ssion,
  2347.142108Who mo
st rebell-like, 
sought to be King ore her.
  2347.162110Gent. Not to a rage,
 patience and 
sorow 
streme,
  2347.172111Who 
should expre
sse her goodlie
st you haue 
seene,
  2347.182112Sun 
shine and raine at once, her 
smiles and teares,
  2347.192113Were like a better way tho
se happie 
smilets,
  2347.202114That playd on her ripe lip 
seeme not to know,
  2347.212115What gue
sts were in her eyes which parted thence,
  2347.262120Gent. Faith once or twice 
she heau'd the name of father,
  2347.282122Cried 
sisters,
 sisters, 
shame of Ladies 
sisters:
  2347.292123Kent, father, 
sisters, what ith 
storme ith night,
  2347.322126And clamour moy
stened her, then away 
she 
started,
  2347.342128Kent. It is the 
stars,
 the 
stars aboue vs gouerne our conditions,
  2347.352129El
se one 
selfe mate and make could not beget,
  2347.362130Such di
fferent i
ssues, you 
spoke not with her 
since.
  2347.372131Gent. No.
Kent. Was this before the King returnd.
  2347.392133Kent. Well 
sir, the poore di
stre
ssed 
Lear's ith towne,
  2347.412135What we are come about,
 and by no meanes will yeeld to 
see his(daughter.
  2347.432137Kent. A 
soueraigne 
shame 
so elbows him his own vnkindnes
  2347.442138That 
stript her from his benedi
ction turnd her,
  2347.452139To forraine ca
sualties gaue her deare rights,
  2347.462140To his dog-harted daughters, the
se things 
sting his mind,
  2347.472141So venomou
sly that burning 
shame detaines him from 
Cordelia.
  2347.492143Kent. Of 
Albanies and 
Cornewals powers you heard not.
  2347.512145Kent. Well 
sir, ile bring you to our mai
ster 
Lear,
  2347.522146And leaue you to attend him 
some deere cau
se,
  2347.542148When I am knowne aright you 
shall not greeue,
  2347.552149Lending me this acquaintance, I pray you go along with me.
  23492150Enter Cordelia, Doctor and others.  Exit.  23512151Cor. Alack tis he, why he was met euen now,
  23522152As mad as the vent 
sea 
singing aloud,
  23532153Crownd with ranke femiter and furrow weedes,
  23542154With hor-docks, hemlocke,
 netles, cookow 
flowers,
  23552155Darnell and all the idle weedes that grow,
  23562156In our 
su
stayning, corne, a centurie is 
sent forth,
  23572157Search euery acre in the hie growne 
field,
  23582158And bring him to our eye, what can mans wi
sdome
  23592159In the re
storing his bereued 
sence,
 he that can helpe him
  23622162Our fo
ster nur
se of nature is repo
se,
  23632163The which he lackes that to prouoke in him,
  23642164Are many 
simples operatiue who
se power,
  23662166Cord. All ble
st secrets 
2367all you vnpubli
sht vertues of the earth,
  23682167Spring with my teares be
 aydant and remediat,
  23692168In the good mans di
stre
sse, 
seeke,
 seeke,
 for him,
  23702169Le
st his vngouernd rage di
ssolue the life.
  23712170That wants the meanes to lead it. 
2372 Enter messenger.  23732171Mes. News Madam,
 2374the Britti
sh powers are marching hither
-(ward.
  23752172Cord. Tis knowne before, our preparation 
stands,
  23762173In expe
ctation of them,
 ô deere father
  23772174It is thy bu
sines that I go about,
 therfore great 
France  23782175My mourning and important teares hath pitied,
  23792176No blowne ambition doth our armes in 
sight
  23802177But loue, deere loue,
 and our ag'd fathers right,
  23812178Soone may I heare and 
see him.	
Exit.  23842180Reg. But are my brothers powers 
set forth?
  23872182Stew. Madam with much ado,
 2388your 
sister is the better 
soldier.
  23892183Reg. Lord 
Edmund spake not with your Lady at home.
  23912185Reg. What might import my 
sisters letters to him
?   23932187Reg. Faith he is po
sted hence on 
serious matter,
  23942188It was great ignorance, 
Glosters eyes being out
  23952189To let him liue, where he ariues he moues
  23962190All harts again
st vs, and now I thinke is gone
  23972191In pitie of his mi
sery to di
spatch 
2398his nighted life,
  2192Moreouer to di
scrie 
2399the 
strength at'h army.
  24002193Stew. I mu
st needs after him with my letters
  24012194Reg. Our troope 
sets forth to morrow 
stay with vs,
  24032196Stew. I may not Madame, 
2404my Lady charg'd my dutie in this
  24052198Reg. Why 
should 
she write to 
Edmund?
 2406might not you
  2199Tran
sport her purpo
ses by word, belike
  24072200Some thing, I know not what, ile loue thee much,
  24102203Reg. I know your Lady does not loue her hu
sband
  24112204I am 
sure of that, and at her late being here
  24122205Shee gaue 
strange aliads,
 and mo
st speaking lookes
  24132206To noble 
Edmund, I know you are of her bo
some.
  24152208Reg. I 
speake in vnder
standing,
 for I know't,
  24162209Therefore I doe adui
se you take this note,
  24172210My Lord is dead, 
Edmund and I haue talkt,
  24182211And more conuenient is he for my hand
  24192212Then for your Ladies, you may gather more
  24202213If you doe 
find him,
 pray you giue him this,
  24212214And when your mi
stris heares thus much from you
  24222215I pray de
sire her call her wi
sedome to her,
 so farewell,
  24242216If you doe chance to heare of that blind traytor,
  24252217Preferment fals on him that cuts him o
ff.
  24262218Ste. Would I could meet him Madam,
 I would 
shew
  Exit.
 24312222Glost. When 
shall we come toth' top of
 that 
same hill
?  24322223Edg. You do climbe it vp
 now,
 looke how we labour?
  24332224Glost. Me thinks the ground is euen.
  24342225Edg. Horrible 
steepe,
 2435harke doe you heare the 
sea
?  24372227Edg. Why then your other 
sences grow imperfe
ct  24402230Me thinks thy voyce is altered,
 and thou 
speake
st  24412231With better phra
se and matter then thou did
st.
  24422232Edg. Y'ar much deceaued, in nothing am I chang'd
  24442234Glost. Me thinks y'ar better 
spoken.
  24452235Edg. Come on 
sir, 
2446her's the place, 
stand 
still, how (feareful
  24472236And dizi tis to ca
st ones eyes 
so low
  24482237The crowes and choghes that wing the midway ayre
  24492238Shew 
scarce 
so gro
sse as beetles,
 halfe way downe
  24502239Hangs one that gathers 
sampire, dreadfull trade,
  24512240Me thinkes he 
seemes no bigger then his head,
  24522241The 
fishermen that walke vpon the beach
  24532242Appeare like mi
se,
 and yon tall anchoring barke
  24542243Dimini
sht to her cock, her cock a boui
  24552244Almo
st too 
small for 
sight,
 the murmuring 
surge
  24562245That on the vnnumbred idle peeble cha
ffes
  24572246Cannot be heard, its 
so hie ile looke no more,
  24582247Lea
st my braine turne,
 and the de
ficient 
sight
  24612250Edg. Giue me your hand, 
2462you are now within a foot
  2251Of th'extreame verge,
 2463for all beneath the Moone
  2252Would I not leape vpright.
  24652254Here friend's another pur
sse, in it a iewell,
  24662255Well worth a poore mans taking,
 Fairies and Gods
  24672256Pro
sper it with thee, goe thou farther o
ff,
  24682257Bid me farewell, and let me heare thee going.
  24692258Edg. Now fare you well good 
sir.
  24712260Edg. Why I do trifell thus with his di
spaire 
2472is done(to cure it.
  24732261Glost. O you mightie Gods, 
 He kneeles.  24742262This world I doe renounce,
 and in your 
sights
  24752263Shake patiently my great a
ffli
ction o
ff,
  24762264If I could beare it longer and not fall
  24772265To quarel with your great oppo
sles wils
  24782266My 
snur
ff and loathed part of nature 
should
  24792267Burne it 
selfe out, if 
Edgar liue, O ble
sse,
  24802268Now fellow fare thee well. 
 He fals.  24812269Edg. Gon 
sir, farewell, 
2482and yet I know not how conceit my
  2270robbe 
2483the trea
surie of life, when life it 
selfe 
2484yealds to the theft,
  2271had he beene where he thought 
2485by this had thought beene pa
st,
  2272aliue or dead,
 2486ho you 
sir, heare you 
sir, 
speak,
 2487thus might he pa
sse
  2273indeed, yet he reuiues, 
2488what are you 
sir?
  24902275Edg. Had
st thou beene ought 
2491but go
smore feathers ayre,
  24922276So many fadome downe precipitating
  24932277Thou had
st shiuerd like an egge, but thou do
st breath
  24942278Ha
st heauy 
sub
stance,
 bleed
st not,
 speake
st,
 art 
sound,
  24952279Ten ma
sts at each, make not the altitude,
  24962280Which thou ha
st perpendicularly fell,
  24972281Thy lifes a miracle,
 speake yet againe.
  24982282Glost. But haue I fallen or no l
  24992283Edg. From the dread 
sommons of this chalkie borne,
  25002284Looke vp a hight, the 
shrill gorg'd larke 
so farre
  25012285Cannot
 bee 
seene or heard, doe but looke vp?
  25032287Is wretchednes depriu'd, that bene
fit
  25042288To end it 
selfe by death twas yet 
some comfort
  25052289When mi
sery could beguile the tyrants rage
  25082292Vp,
 so, how feele you your legges, you 
stand.
  25102294Edg. This is aboue all 
strangenes
  25112295Vpon the crowne of the cli
ffe what thing was that
  25132297Glost. A poore vnfortunate bagger.
  25142298Edg. As I 
stood here below me thoughts his eyes
  25152299Were two full Moones, a had a thou
sand no
ses
  25162300Hornes,
 welk't and waued like the enridged 
sea,
  25172301It was 
some 
fiend, therefore thou happy father
  25182302Thinke that the cleere
st Gods, who made their honours
  25192303Of mens impo
ssibilities, haue pre
serued thee.
  25202304Glost. I doe remember now,
 henceforth ile beare
  25212305A
ffli
ction till it doe crie out it 
selfe
  25222306Enough, enough,and die that thing you 
speake of,
  25232307I tooke it for a man, often would it 
say
  25242308The 
fiend the 
fiend,
 he led me to that place
  25252309Edg. Bare free & patient thoughts,
 but who comes here
  25282310The 
safer 
sence will neare accõmodate 
2529his mai
ster thus.
  25302312Lear. No they cannot touch mee for coyning,
 I am the 
2531king (him
selfe.
  25322313Edg. O thou 
side pearcing 
sight.
  25332314Lear. Nature is aboue Art in that re
spe
ct, ther's your 
2534pre
sse
  2315money, that fellow handles his bow like a crow-
2535keeper,
 draw me
  2316a clothiers yard, looke,
 looke a 
2536mow
se, peace,
 peace, this to
sted
  2317chee
se will 
2537do it,
 ther's my gauntlet,
 ile proue it on a gyant,
 2538bring
  2318vp the browne-billes,
 O well 
flowne bird 
2539in the ayre,
 hagh, giue
  2319the word
 ?	
2540 Edg. Sweet Margerum.
  25412320Lear. Pa
sse.	 
Glost. I know that voyce.
  25432321Lear. Ha 
Gonorill, ha 
Regan, they 
flattered 
2544mee like a dogge,
  2322and tould me I had white haires in 
2545my beard, ere the black ones
  2323were there, to 
say I and 
2546no,
 to euery thing I 
saide, I and no toe,
  2324was no good 
2547diuinitie, when the raine came to wet me once, and
  2325the 
2548winde to make mee chatter, when the thunder would not
  25492326peace at my bidding, there I found them,
 there I 
smelt them 
2550out,
  2327goe toe, they are not men of their words, they told 
2551mee I was
  2328euery thing,
 tis a lye, I am not argue-proofe.
  25522329Glost. The tricke of that voyce I doe well remember, 
2553i
st not
  25542331Lear. I euer inch a King 
2555when I do 
stare, 
see how the 
subie
ct  2332quakes, 
2556I pardon that mans life, what was thy cau
se,
 2557adultery?
  2333thou 
shalt not die for adulterie, 
2558no the wren goes toot, and the
  2334smal guilded 
flie 
2559doe letcher in my 
sight, let copulation thriue,
  25602335for 
Glosters ba
stard 
son was kinder to his father 
2561then my daugh
-  2336ters got tweene the lawfull 
sheets, 
2562toot luxurie,
 pell, 
mell, for I
  2337lacke 
souldiers, 
2563behold yon 
simpring dame who
se face between
  2338her 
2564forkes pre
sageth 
snow, that minces vertue, and do 
shake 
2565the
  2339head heare of plea
sures name to 
fichew nor 
2566the 
soyled hor
se
  2340goes toot with a more riotous appe
2567tite,
 down frõ the wa
st tha're
  2341centaures, though 
2568women all aboue, but to the girdle doe the
  2342gods inhe
2569rit, beneath is all the 
fiends, thers hell, thers dark
2570ne
sse,
  2343ther's the 
sulphury pit, burning, 
scalding, 
stench, 
2571con
sumation,
  2344fie, 
fie, 
fie, pah, pah, Giue mee an ounce of 
2572Ciuet, good Apo
-  2345thocarie,to 
sweeten my imagination,
 2573ther's money for thee.
  25742346Glost. O let me ki
sse that hand.
  25752347Lear. Here wipe it 
fir
st, 
2576it 
smels of mortalitie.
  25772348Glost. O ruind peece of nature, this great world 
2578should 
so
  2349weare out to naught, 
2579do you know me?
  25802350Lear. I remember thy eyes well inough, do
st thou 
2581squiny on
  2351me, no do thy wor
st blind 
Cupid, ile not 
2582loue, reade thou that
  2352challenge,
 marke the penning 
2583oft.
  25842353Glost. Were all the letters 
sunnes I could not 
see one.
  25852354Edg. I would not take this from report, 
2586it is, and my heart
  2355breakes at it.
2587 Lear. Read. 
2588Glost. What! with the ca
se of eyes
  25892356Lear. O ho,
 are you there with me, no eyes in your 
2590head, nor
2357no mony in your pur
se, your eyes are in a heau
2591ie ca
se,
 your pur
se
  2358in a light, yet you 
see how this world 
2592goes.
  25942360Lear. What art mad, a man may 
see how the world 
2595goes with
  2361no eyes, looke with thy eares, 
see how 
2596yon Iu
stice railes vpon
  2362yon 
simple theefe, harke in 
2597thy eare handy, dandy, which is the
  2363theefe, which is 
2598the Iu
stice,
 thou ha
st seene a far
2599mers dogge barke
  26012365Lear. And the creature runne from the cur,
 there thou 
2602might
st  2366behold the great image of authoritie, a dogge, 
2603so bade in o
ffice,
  2367thou ra
scall beadle hold thy bloudy 
2604hand, why do
st thou la
sh  2368that whore, 
strip thine owne 
2605backe,
 thy bloud hotly lu
sts to v
se
  2369her in that kind for which 
2606thou whip
st her, the v
surer hangs the
  2370co
sioner,
 th
2607rough tottered raggs,
 smal vices do appeare,
 robes 
2608&
  2371furd-gownes hides all, 
2613get thee gla
sse eyes, and like a 
scuruy po
-  2372lititian 
seeme to 
see the 
2614things thou doe
st not, no now pull o
ff  26162374Edg. O matter and impertinencie mixt 
2617rea
son in madne
sse.
  26182375Lear. If thou wilt weepe my fortune take my eyes, 
2619I knowe
  2376thee well inough thy name is 
Gloster, 
2620thou mu
st be patient, we
  2377came crying hither, 
2621thou knowe
st the 
fir
st time that we 
smell the
  2378aire, 
2622we wayl and cry,
 I will preach to thee marke me.
  26242380Lear. When we are borne,
 we crie that wee are come 
2625to this
  2381great 
stage of fooles, this a good blocke. 
2626It were a delicate 
stra
-  2382tagem to 
shoot 
2627a troupe of hor
se with fell,
 2628& when I haue 
stole
  2383vpon the
se 
sonne in lawes, 
2629then kill,
 kill,
 kill,
 kill,
 kill,
 kill.
  26312385Gent. O here he is, lay hands vpon him 
sirs, 
2632your mo
st deere
  26332386Lear. No re
skue, what a pri
soner, I am eene 
2634the naturall foole
  2387of Fortune, v
se me well 
2635you 
shall haue ran
some, let mee haue a
  2388churgion 
2636I am cut to the braines.
  26382390Lear. No 
seconds, all my 
selfe, 
2639why this would make a man
  2391of 
salt 
2640to v
se his eyes for garden waterpots, I and laying Autums
2392du
st.
  2393Lear. I will die brauely 
2641like a bridegroome, what? I will be
  2394Iouiall, 
2642come, come, I am a King my mai
sters, know you that.
  26432395Gent. You are a royall one, and we obey you.
  26442396Lear. Then theres life int, nay and 
2645you get it you 
shall get it
  2397with running.
  Exit King running.  26462398Gent. A 
sight mo
st pitifull in the meane
st wretch, 
2647pa
st spea
-  2399king of
 in a king: thou ha
st one daughter 
2648who redeemes nature
  2400from the generall cur
se 
2649which twaine hath brought her to.
  26512402Gent. Sir 
speed you, whats your will.
  26522403Edg. Do you heare ought of a battell toward.
  26532404Gent. Mo
st sure and vulgar 
2654euery one here's that
  2405That can di
stingui
sh sence.
  26552406Edg. But by your fauour 
2656how neers the other army.
  26572407 Gent. Neere and on 
speed fort the maine de
scryes,
  26582408Stand
st on the howerly thoughts.
  26592409Edg. I thanke you 
sir thats all.
  26602410Gent. Though that the Queene on 
speciall cau
se is here,
  26612411Hir army is moued on. 
 2662 Edg. I thanke you 
sir. 
 Exit.  26632412Glost. You euer gentle gods take my breath from me,
  26642413Let not my wor
ser 
spirit tempt me againe,
  26652414To dye before you plea
se.
2666 Edg. Well, pray you father.
  26672415Glost. Now good 
sir what are you.
  26682416Edg. A mo
st poore man made lame by Fortunes blowes,
  26692417Who by the Art of knowne and feeling 
sorrowes
  26702418Am pregnant to good pitty, giue me your hand
  26762422Stew. A proclamed prize,
 mo
st happy,
 2677that eyles head of thine
  2423was framed 
fle
sh 2678to ray
se my fortunes, thou mo
st vnhappy tray
-  2424tor, 
2679brie
fly thy 
selfe remember, the 
sword is out 
2680that mu
st de
-  26812426Glost. Now let thy friendly hand 
2682put 
strength enough to't.
  26832427Stew. Wherefore bould pe
sant 
2684dur
st thou 
support a publi
sht
  2428traytor,
 hence 
2685lea
st the infe
ction of his fortune take 
2686like hold on
  2429thee, let goe his arme?
  26892431Stew. Let goe 
slaue, or thou die
st.
  26902432Edg. Good Gentleman goe your gate, let poore 
2691voke pa
sse,
  2433and chud haue beene 
swaggar'd out of my life, 
2692it would not haue
  2434beene 
so long by a fortnight, nay 
2693come not neare the old man,
  2435keepe out, cheuore ye, or ile 
2694trie whether your co
ster or my bat
-  2436tero be the harder, 
2695ile be plaine with you.
  they fight.
 26972438Edg.Possible blackletter period.--> Chill pick your teeth 
sir,
 come,
 no matter for 
2698your foyns. 
  26992439Stew. Slaue thou ha
st slaine me, villaine take my pur
sse,
  27002440If euer thou wilt thriue, burie my bodie,
  27012441And giue the letters which thou 
find'
st about me
  2443The 
British partie, ô vntimely death! death. 
 He dies.  27042444Edg. I know thee well, a 
seruiceable villaine,
  27052445As dutious to the vices of thy mi
stres, 
2706as badnes would(de
sire.
  27082447Edg. Sit you down father,
 re
st you 
2709lets 
see his pockets
  2448The
se letters that he 
speakes of 
2710may be my friends,
  2449Hee's dead,
 I am only 
sorrow 
2711he had no other death
smã
  2450Let vs 
see,
 2712leaue gentle waxe,
 and manners blame vs not
  27132451To know our enemies minds wee'd rip their hearts,
  27162453 Let your reciprocall vowes bee remembred, you haue many
  27172454opportunities to cut him o
ff,
 if your will want not,
 time and 
2718place
  2455will be fruitfully o
ffered, there is nothing done, If he 
2719returne the
  2456conquerour, then am I the pri
soner, and his bed my 
2720gayle, from
  2457the lothed warmth whereof deliuer me,
 and 
supply 
2721the place for
  2458your labour,
 2722your wife
 (
so I would 
say) your a
ffe
ctio
2723nate 
seruant
  2459and for you her owne for 
Venter, 
Gonorill.
  27242460Edg. O Indi
stingui
sht 
space of womans wit,
  27252461A plot vpon her vertuous hu
sbands life,
  27262462And the exchange my brother heere in the 
sands,
  27272463Thee ile rake vp, the po
st vn
san
cti
fied
  27282464Of murtherous leachers, and in the mature time,
  27292465With this vngratious paper 
strike the 
sight
  27302466Of the death pra
cti
s'd Duke, for him tis well,
  27312467That of thy death and bu
sine
sse I can tell.
  27322468Glost. The King is mad, 
2733how 
sti
ffe is my vild 
sence,
  27342469That I 
stand vp and haue ingenious feeling
  27352470Of my huge 
sorowes, better I were di
stra
ct,
  27362471So 
should my thoughts be fenced from my griefes,
  27382472And woes by wrong imaginations loo
se
  27392473The knowledge of them
selues. 
2737  A drum a farre off.  27402474Edg. Giue me your hand 
2741far o
ff me thinks I heare the beaten (drum,
  27422475Come father ile be
stow you with a friend.
Exit.  27442476Enter Cordelia, Kent and Doctor.  27452477Cord. O thou good 
Kent 2746how 
shall I liue and worke 
2747to match (thy goodnes,
  27482478My life will be too 
short 
2749and euery mea
sure faile me.
  27502479Kent. To be acknowlegd madame is ore payd,
  27512480All my reports go with the mode
st truth,
  27532482Cor. Be better 
suited 
2754the
se weeds are memories of tho
se
  2483Wor
ser howers, 
2755I prithe put them o
ff.
  27572485Yet to be knowne 
shortens my made intent,
  27582486My, boone I make it that you know me not,
  27602488Cord. Then beet 
so, my good Lord 
2761how does the king.
  27632490Cord. O you kind Gods 
2764cure this great breach in his abu
sed(nature,
  27652491The vntund and hurrying 
sences, O wind vp
  27672493Doct. So plea
se your Maie
stie 
2768that we may wake the king,
  27692495Cord. Be gouernd by your knowledge and proceed,
  27702496Ith 
sway of your owne will is he arayd,
  27722497Doct. I madam, in the heauine
sse of his 
sleepe,
  27742499Gent. Good madam be by,
 when we do awake him
  2775.22502Doct. Plea
se you draw neere, louder the mu
sicke there,
  27762503Cor. O my deer father re
storatiõ hang 
2777thy medicin on my lips,
  2504And let this kis 
2778repaire tho
se violent harmes that my two 
sisters
  27812507Cord. Had you not bene their father the
se white 
flakes,
  27822508Had challengd pitie of them,
 was this a face
  27832509To be expo
sd again
st the warring winds,
  2783.12510To 
stand again
st the deepe dread bolted thunder,
  2784.32512Of quick cro
sse lightning to watch poore 
Per du,
  27842513With this thin helme mine iniurious dogge,
  2514Though he had bit me, 
2785should haue 
stood that night
  2515Again
st my 
fire, 
2786and wa
st thou faine poore father,
  27872516To houill thee with 
swine and rogues forlorne,
  27882517In 
short and mu
stie 
straw, alack, alack,
  27892518Tis wonder that thy life and wits at once
  27902519Had not concluded all, he wakes 
speake to him.
  27912520Doct. Madam do
 you, tis 
fitte
st.
  27922521Cord. How does my royall Lord, 
2793how fares your maie
stie.
  27942522Lear. You do me wrong to take me out ath graue,
  27952523Thou art a 
soule in bli
sse, but I am bound
  27962524Vpon a wheele of 
fire, that mine owne teares
  27992527Lear. Yar a 
spirit I know, where did you dye.
  28012529Doct. Hees 
scarce awake, let him alone a while.
  28032530Lear. Where haue I bene, 
2804where am I faire day light,
  28052531I am mightily abu
sd, I 
should ene dye with pitie,
  28062532To 
see another thus, I know not what to 
say,
  28072533I will not 
sweare the
se are my hands, lets 
see,
  28082534I feele this pin pricke, would I were a
ssur'd 
2809of my condition.
  28102535Cord. O looke vpon me 
sir,
 2811and hold your hands in benedi
cti
-  2536on or'e me, no 
sir 
2812you mu
st not kneele.
  28142538I am a very fooli
sh fond old man,
  28152539Foure
score and vpward,
 and to deale plainly
  28182540I feare I am not in my perfe
ct mind,
  28192541Mee thinks I 
should know you,
 and know this man;
  28202542Yet I am doubtfull, for I am mainly ignorant
  28212543What place this is, and all the skill I haue
  28222544Remembers not the
se garments, nor I know not
  28232545Where I did lodge la
st night,
 doe not laugh at me,
  28242546For as I am a man, I thinke this Ladie
  28252547To be my child 
Cordelia.
 Cord. And 
so I am.
  28272548Lear. Be your teares wet, 
2828yes faith, I pray weep not,
  28292549If you haue poy
son for mee I will drinke it,
  28302550I know you doe not loue me, for your 
sisters
  28312551Haue as I doe remember, done me wrong,
  28322552You haue 
some cau
se,
 they haue not.
  28332553Cord. No cau
se,
 no cau
se. 	
2834 Lear. Am I in 
France?
  28352554Kent. In your owne kingdome 
sir.
  28372556Doct. Be comforted good Madame, the great rage 
2838you 
see is
  2557cured in him, and yet it is danger to make him euen ore the time
  2558hee has lo
st, de
sire him to goe in, 
2839trouble him no more till fur
-  2559ther 
setling
:  2840 Cord. Wilt plea
se your highnes walke?
  28412560Lear. You mu
st beare with me, 
2842pray now forget and forgiue,
  28432561I am old and fooli
sh. 
  Exeunt.  Manet Kent and Gent.  2843.12562Gent. Holds it true 
sir that the Duke of 
Cornwall was 
so 
slaine?
  2843.42565Kent. As tis 
said, the ba
stard 
sonne of 
Gloster.
  2843.52566Gent. They 
say 
Edgar his bani
sht 
sonne is with the Earle of
  2843.72568Kent. Report is changeable,
 tis time to looke about,
  2843.82569The powers of the kingdome approach apace.
  2843.92570Gent. The arbiterment is like to be bloudie,
 fare you well 
sir.
  2843.102571Kent. My poynt and period will be throughly wrought,
  2843.112572Or well, or ill, as this dayes battels fought. 
 Exit.  28452573Enter Edmund, Regan, and their powers.  28472574Bast. Know of the Duke if his la
st purpo
se hold,
  28482575Or whether 
since he is aduis'd by ought
  28492576To change the cour
se, he's full of abdication
  28502577And 
selfe reprouing, bring his con
stant plea
sure.
  28512578Reg. Our 
sisters man is certainly mi
scaried,
  28542581You know the goodnes I intend vpon you,
  28552582Tell me but truly, but then 
speak the truth,
  28562583Doe you not loue my 
sister
? 2857 Bast. I, honor'd loue.
  28582584Reg. But haue you neuer found my brothers way,
  28592585To the forfended place? 
 Bast. That thought abu
ses you.
  2859.12586Reg. I am doubtfull that you haue beene coniun
ct and bo
-  28612589Reg. I neuer 
shall indure hir, deere my Lord bee not familiar(with her.
  28632590Bast. Feare me not, 
shee and the Duke her hu
sband.
  28642591Enter Albany and Gonorill with troupes.  2864.12592Gono. I had rather loo
se the battaile, then that 
sister 
should
  28652594Alb. Our very louing 
sister well be-met
  28662595For this I heare the King is come to his daughter
  28672596With others,
 whome the rigour of our 
state
  28682597For
st to crie out, where I could not be hone
st  2868.12598I neuer yet was valiant, for this bu
sines
  2868.22599It touches vs, as 
France inuades our land
  2868.32600Not bolds the King, with others whome I feare,
  2602Bast. Sir you 
speake nobly. 
2869Reg. Why is this rea
son'd
?  28702603Gono. Combine togither gain
st the enemy,
  28712604For the
se dome
stique dore particulars
  28732606Alb. Let vs then determine with the auntient of warre 
2874on our
  2607proceedings. 
 Bast. I 
shall attend you pre
sently at your tent.
  28772609Reg. Tis mo
st conuenient, pray you goe with vs.
  28782610Gon. O ho, I know the riddle, I will goe. 
2880 Enter Edgar  28812611Edg. If ere your Grace had 
speech with man 
so poore,
  28842614Edg. Before you 
fight the battell ope this letter,
  28852615If you haue vi
ctory let the trumpet 
sound
  28862616For him that brought it, wretched though I 
seeme,
  28872617I can produce a champion that will proue
  28882618What is auowched there, if you mi
scary,
  28892619Your bu
sines of the world hath 
so an end,
  28902620Fortune loue you,
2891 Alb. Stay till I haue read the letter.
  28922621Edg. I was forbid it, 
2893when time 
shall 
serue let but the Herald
  2622cry, 
2894and ile appeare againe. 
 Exit.  28952623Alb. Why fare thee well, I will ore-looke the paper.
  28972625Bast. The enemies in vew, draw vp your powers
  28982626Hard is the
 que
sse of their great 
strength and forces
  28992627By diligent di
scouery, but your ha
st 2900is now vrg'd on you.
  29012628Alb. Wee will greet the time.	
Exit.  29022629Bast. To both the
se 
sister haue I 
sworne my loue,
  29032630Each iealous of the other as the 
sting 
2904are of the Adder,
  2631Which of them 
shall I take, 
2905both one or neither, neither can bee(inioy'd
  29062632If both remaine aliue, to take the widdow
  29072633Exa
sperates,
 makes mad her 
sister 
Gonorill,
  29082634And hardly 
shall I cary out my 
side
  29092635Her hu
sband being aliue, now then we'le v
se
  29102636His countenadce for the battaile, which being done
  29112637Let her that would be rid of him deui
se
  29122638His 
speedie taking o
ff, as for his mercy
  29132639Which he entends to 
Lear and to 
Cordelia:
  29142640The battaile done,
 and they within our power
  29152641Shall neuer 
see his pardon, for my 
state
  29162642Stands on me to defend, not to debate.
  Exit.
 29182643 Alarum. Enter the powers of France ouer the stage, Cordelia with  29212646Edg. Here father, take the 
shaddow of this bu
sh  29222647For your good hoa
st, pray that the right may thriue
  29232648If euer I returne to you againe 
2924ile bring you comfort. 
 Exit.  29252649Glost. Grace goe with you 
sir. 
2926  Alarum and retreat.  29282650Edg. Away old man,
 giue me thy hand,
 away,
  29292651King 
Lear hath lo
st,
 he and his daughter taine,
  29312653Glost. No farther 
sir, a man may rot euen here.
  29322654Edg. What in ill thoughts againe 
2933men mu
st indure,
  29342655Their going hence,
 euen as their coming hither,
  29382657Enter Edmund, with Lear and Cordelia prisoners.  29402658Bast, Some o
fficers take them away,
 good guard
  29412659Vntill their greater plea
sures be
st be knowne
  29432661Cor. We are not the 
fir
st 2944who with be
st meaning haue(incurd
  2662The wor
st, 
2945for thee oppre
ssed King am I ca
st downe,
  29462663My 
selfe could el
se outfrowne fal
se Fortunes frowne,
  29472664Shall we not 
see the
se daughters, and the
se 
sisters?
  29482665Lear. No,
 no, come lets away to pri
son
  29492666We two alone will 
sing like birds it'h cage,
  29502667When thou do
st a
ske me ble
ssing,
 ile kneele downe
  29512668And aske of thee forgiuenes,
 so weele liue
  29522669And pray,
 and 
sing, and tell old tales and laugh
  29532670At guilded butter
flies,
 and heare poore rogues
  29542671Talke of Court newes,
 and weele talke with them to,
  29552672Who loo
ses,
 and who wins,
 who
se in,
 who
se out,
  29562673And take vpon's the mi
stery of things
  29572674As if we were Gods 
spies,
 and weele weare out
  29582675In a wal'd pri
son,
 packs and 
se
cts of great ones
  29612678Lear. Vpon 
such 
sacri
fices my 
Cordelia,
  29622679The Gods thẽ
selues throw incen
se, 
2963haue I caught thee?
  29642680He that parts vs 
shall bring a brand from heauen,
  29652681And
 fire vs hence like Foxes,
 wipe thine eyes,
  29662682The good 
shall deuoure em,
 fleach and fell
  29672683Ere they 
shall make vs weepe
? 2968wele 
see vm 
starue 
fir
st, (come.
  29692684Bast. Come hither Captaine,
 harke.
  29702685Take thou this note,
 goe follow them to pri
son,
  29712686And 
step, I haue aduanct thee, if thou do
st  29722687As this in
stru
cts thee, thou do
st make thy way
  29732688To noble fortunes, know thou this that men
  29742689Are as the time is, to be tender minded
  29752690Does not become a 
sword, thy great imployment
  29762691Will not beare que
stion, either 
say thout do't,
  29792694Bast. About it, and write happy when thou ha
st don,
  29802695Marke I 
say in
stantly, and carie it 
so
  2981.12697Cap. I cannot draw a cart, nor eate dride oats,
  29822699Enter Duke, the two Ladies, and others.  29832700Alb. Sir you haue 
shewed to day your valiant 
strain,
  29842701And Fortune led you well you haue the captiues
  29852702That were the oppo
sites of this dayes 
strife,
  29862703We doe require then of you, 
so to v
se them,
  29872704As we 
shall 
find their merits, and our 
safty
  29902707To 
send the old and mi
serable King to 
some retention, and ap-(pointed guard,
  29912708Who
se age has charmes in it,
 who
se title more
  29922709To pluck the coren bo
ssom of his 
side,
  29932710And turne our impre
st launces in our eyes
  29942711Which doe commaund them,
 with him I 
sent the queen
  29952712My rea
son,
 all the 
same and they are readie 
2996to morrow,
  2713Or at further 
space, to appeare 
2997where you 
shall hold
  2714Your 
se
ssion at this time, mee 
sweat and bleed,
  2997.12715The friend hath lo
st his friend,
 and the be
st quarrels
  2997.22716In the heat are cur
st, by tho
se that feele their 
sharpes,
  29992720I hold you but a 
subie
ct of this warre,
 3000not as a brother.
  30012721Reg. That's as we li
st to grace him,
  30022722Me thinkes our plea
sure 
should haue beene demanded
  30032723Ere you had 
spoke 
so farre, he led our powers,
  30042724Bore the commi
ssion of my place and per
son,
  30052725The which imediate may well 
stand vp,
  30072727Gono. Not 
so hot, 
3008in his owne grace hee doth exalt him
selfe
  30102729Reg. In my right 
3011by me inue
sted he com-peers the be
st.
  30122730Gon. That were the mo
st, if hee 
should husband you.
  30132731Reg. Ie
sters doe oft proue Prophets.
  30142732Gon. Hola,
 hola, 
3015that eye that told you 
so,
 lookt but a 
squint.
  30162733Reg. Lady I am not well, els I 
should an
swere
  30172734From a full 
flowing 
stomack, Generall
  30182735Take thou my 
souldiers,
 pri
soners, patrimonie,
  30202736Witnes the world that I create thee here
  30222738Gon. Meane you to inioy him then?
  30232739Alb. The let alone lies not in your good will.
  30262742Bast. Let the drum 
strike, and proue my title good.
  30272743Alb. Stay yet,
 heare rea
son, 
Edmund I arre
st thee
  30282744On capitall trea
son,
 and in thine attaint,
  30292745This gilded Serpent, for your claime faire 
sister
  30302746I bare it in the intere
st of my wife.
  30312747Tis 
she is 
subcontra
cted to this Lord
  30322748And I her husband contradi
ct the banes,
  30332749If you will mary, make your loue to me,
  30342750My Lady is be
spoke, thou art arm'd 
Gloster,
  30382751If none appeare to proue vpon thy head,
  30392752Thy hainous,
 manife
st,
 and many trea
sons,
  30402753There is my pledge, ile proue it on thy heart
  30412754Ere I ta
st bread, thou art in nothing le
sse
  30422755Then I haue here proclaimd thee.
  30442757Gon. If not, ile ne're tru
st poy
son.
  30452758Bast. Ther's my exchange, what in the world he is,
  30462759That names me traytor,
 villain-like he lies,
  30472760Call by thy trumpet,
 he that dares approach,
  30482761On him,
 on you,
 who not, I will maintaine
  30512763Alb. A Herald ho. 
Bast. A Herald ho,
 a Herald.
  30522764Alb. Tru
st to thy 
single vertue,
 for thy 
souldiers
  30532765All leuied in my name, haue in my name 
3054tooke their(di
scharge.
  30552766Reg. This 
sicknes growes vpon me.
  30562767Alb. She is not well,
 conuey her to my tent,
  30572768Come hether Herald,
 let the trumpet 
sound,
  30582769And read out this.
 Cap. Sound trumpet?
  30602770Her. If any man of qualitie or degree, in the hoa
st of the
  2771ar
3061my, will maintaine vpon 
Edmund suppo
sed Earle of 
Gloster,
  30622772that he's a manifold traitour, let him appeare at the third 
3063sound
  2773of the trumpet, he is bold in his defence.
  30672775Enter Edgar at the third sound, a trumpet before him.  30682776Alb. Aske him his purpo
ses why he appeares
  2779And why you an
swere 
3072this pre
sent 
summons.
  2781Bare-gnawne and canker-bitte;
 3075yet are I mou't
  2782Where is the aduer
sarie 
3076I come to cope with all.
  30782784Edg. What's he that 
speakes for 
Edmund Earle of (
 Gloster,
  30792785Bast. Him 
selfe,
 what 
saie
st thou to him?
  2788May do thee Iu
stice, here is mine.
  30852790My oath and my profe
ssion, I prote
st,
  30862791Maugure thy 
strength, youth,
 place and eminence,
  30872792De
spight thy vi
ctor, 
sword and 
fire new fortun'd,
  30882793Thy valor and thy heart thou art a traytor.
  30892794Fal
se to thy Gods thy brother and thy Father,
  30902795Con
spicuate gain
st this high illu
strious prince,
  30912796And from the'xtreame
st vpward of thy head,
  30922797To the de
scent and du
st beneath thy feet,
  30932798A mo
st toad-
spotted traytor 
say thou no
  30942799This 
sword, this arme,
 and my be
st spirits,
  2800As bent 
3095to proue vpon thy heart whereto I 
speake 
3096thou lie
st,
  30972801Bast. In wi
sdome I 
sholud aske thy name,
  30982802But 
since thy out
side lookes 
so faire and warlike,
  30992803And that thy being 
some 
say of breeding breathes,
  31012804By right of knighthood,
 I di
sdaine and 
spurne
  31022805Heere do I to
sse tho
se trea
sons to thy head.
  31032806With the hell hatedly, oreturnd thy heart,
  31042807Which for they yet glance by and 
scarcely bru
se,
  31052808This 
sword of mine 
shall giue them in
stant way
  31062809Where they 
shall re
st for euer, trumpets 
speake.
  31082811Gon. This is meere pra
cti
se 
Gloster 3109by the law of armes
  2812Thou art not bound to an
swere 
3110an vnknowne oppo
site,
  2813Thou art not vanqui
sht, 
3111but cou
sned and beguild,
  31122814Alb. Stop your mouth dame, 
3113or with this paper 
shall I 
stople
  2815it, 
3114thou wor
se then any thing, reade thine owne euill, nay 
3115no
  2816tearing Lady,
 I perceiue you know't.
  31162817Gon. Say if I do,
 the lawes are mine not thine,
 3117who 
shal arraine(me for't.
  31182818Alb. Mo
st mon
strous know'
st thou this paper?
  31192819Gon. Aske me not what I know.	
Exit. Gonorill.  31202820Alb. Go after her,
 shee's de
sperate, gouerne her.
  31212821Bast. What you haue chargd me with,
 3122that haue I don
  31232822And more, much more, the time will bring it out.
  31242823Tis pa
st, and 
so am I, but what art thou
  31252824That ha
st this fortune on me? if
 thou bee'
st noble
  31282827I am no le
sse in bloud then thou art 
Edmond,
  31292828If more, the more thou ha
st wrongd me.
  31302829My name is 
Edgar, and thy fathers 
sonne,
  31312830The Gods are iu
st, and of our plea
sant vertues.
  31322831Make in
struments to 
scourge vs 
3133the darke and vitious
  2832Place where thee he gotte, 
3134co
st him his eies.
  31352833Bast. Thou ha
st spoken truth, 
3136the wheele is come
  2834full circled I am heere.
  31372835Alb. Me thought thy very gate did prophecie,
  31382836A royall noblene
sse I mu
st embrace thee.
  31392837Let 
sorow 
split my heart if I 
3140did euer hate thee or thy father.
  31422839Alb. Where haue you hid your 
selfe?
  31432840How haue you knowne the mi
series of your father
?  2842Li
st a briefe tale, 
3145and when tis told
  2844To e
scape 
3147that followed me 
so neere,
  2845O our liues 
sweetnes, 
3148that with the paine of death,
  2846Would hourly die, 
3149rather then die at once.
  2847Taught me to 
shift 
3150into a mad-mans rags
  2848To a
ssume a 
semblance 
3151that very dogges di
sdain'd
  2849And in this habit 
3152met I my father with his bleeding rings,
  31532850The precious 
stones new lo
st became his guide,
  31542851Led him, beg'd for him, 
sau'd him from di
spaire,
  31552852Neuer (O Father)
 reueald my 
selfe vnto him,
  31562853Vntill 
some halfe houre pa
st, when I was armed,
  31572854Not
 sure, though, hoping of this good 
succe
sse,
  31582855I askt his ble
ssing, and from 
fir
st to la
st,
  31592856Told him my pilgrimage, but his 
flawd heart,
  31602857Alacke too weake,
 the con
fli
ct to 
support,
  31612858Twixt two extreames of pa
ssion, ioy and griefe,
  31632860Bast. This 
speech of yours hath moued me,
  31642861And 
shall perchance do good,
 but 
speake you on,
  31652862You looke as you had 
something more to 
say,
  31662863Alb. If there be more, more wofull, hold it in,
  31672864For I am almo
st ready to di
ssolue, hearing of this,
  3168.12865Edg. This would haue 
seemd a periode to 
such
  3168.22866As loue not 
sorow,
 but another to ampli
fie too much,
  3168.32867Would make much more, and top extreamitie
  3168.42868Whil'
st I was big in clamor, came there in a man,
  3168.62870Shund my abhord 
society, but then 
finding
  3168.72871Who twas that 
so indur'd with his 
strong armes
  3168.82872He fa
stened on my necke and bellowed out,
  3168.92873As hee'd bur
st heauen,
 threw me on my father,
  3168.112875That euer eare receiued, which in recounting
  3168.122876His griefe
 grew pui
ssant and the 
strings of life,
  3168.132877Began to cracke twice, then the trumpets 
sounded.
  3168.162880Ed. Kent sir, the bani
sht K
ent, who in digui
se,
  3168.172881Followed his enemie king and did him 
seruice
  31712885Alb. What kind of helpe, 
3173what meanes that bloudy
(knife
?  31742886Gent. Its hot it 
smokes, it came euen from the heart 
3175of -
  31772888Gent. Your Lady 
sir, your Lady, and her 
sister
  31782889By her is poy
soned, 
she hath confe
st it.
  31792890Bast. I was contra
cted to them both, all three
  31832892Alb. Produce their bodies,
 be they aliue or dead,
  31852893This Iu
stice of the heauens that makes vs tremble,
  31862894Touches vs not with pity.
3181 Edg. Here comes 
Kent sir.
  2895Alb. O tis he, 
3187the time will not allow 
3182  Enter Kent  2896The complement 
3188that very manners vrges.
  31892897Kent. I am come 
3190to bid my King and mai
ster ay good night,
  31932900Speake 
Edmund, whers the king, and whers 
Cordelia  31942901See
st thou this obie
ct Kent. 
  The bodies of Gonorill and Regan are brought in.  31972904The one the other poy
soned for my 
sake,
  31982905And after 
slue her 
selfe.
3199 Duke. Euen 
so, couer their faces.
  32002906Bast. I pant for life, 
some good I meane to do,
  32012907De
spight of my owne nature,
 quickly 
send,
  32022908Be briefe, int toth' ca
stle for my writ,
  32032909Is on the life of 
Lear and on 
Cordelia,
  2912Thy token of repreeue.
  32082913Bast. Well thought on, take my 
sword the Captaine,
  32092914Giue it the Captaine
?	3210 Duke. Ha
st thee for thy life.
  32112915Bast. He hath Commi
ssion from thy wife and me,
  2917The blame vpon her owne de
spaire,
  32152919Duke. The Gods defend her, beare him hence a while.
  32162920Enter Lear with Cordelia in his armes.  32172921Lear. Howle,
 howle,
 howle,
 howle, O you are men of 
stones,
  32182922Had I your tongues and eyes, I would v
se them 
so,
  32192923That heauens vault 
should cracke,
 shees gone for euer,
  32202924I know when one is dead and when one liues,
  32212925Shees dead as earth, lend me a looking gla
sse,
  32222926If that her breath will mi
st or 
staine the 
stone,
  32232927Why then 
she liues.	
3224 Kent. Is this the promi
st end.
  32252928Edg. Or image of that horror. 
3226Duke. Fall and cea
se.
  32272929Lear. This feather 
stirs 
she liues, if it be 
so,
  32282930It is a chance which do's redeeme all 
sorowes
  32292931That euer I haue felt.	
 Kent. A my good mai
ster.
  32312932Lear. Prethe away? 
3232Edg. Tis noble 
Kent your friend.
  32332933Lear. A plague vpon your murderous traytors all,
  32342934I might haue 
saued her, now 
shees gone for euer,
  32352935Cordelia,
 Cordelia, 
stay a little, ha,
  32362936What i
st thou 
saye
st, her voyce was euer 
soft,
  32372937Gentle and low, an excellent thing in women,
  32382938I kild the 
slaue that was a hanging thee.
  2941With my good biting Fauchon 
3242I would
  2942Haue made them 
skippe, I am old now,
  32432943And the
se 
same cro
sses 
spoyle me, who are you
?  32442944Mine eyes are not othe be
st, ile tell you 
straight.
  32452945Kent. If Fortune bragd of two 
she loued or hated,
  32462946One of them we behold.	
 Lear. Are not you 
Kent?  32482947Kent. The 
same your 
seruant 
Kent,
 3249where is your 
seruant 
Caius, 
  32502948Lear. Hees a good fellow, I can tell that,
  32512949Heele 
strike and quickly too, hees dead and rotten.
  32522950Kent. No my good Lord, I am the very man.
  32542952Kent. That from your life of di
fference and decay,
  32552953Haue followed your 
sad 
steps. 
3256 Lear. You'r welcome hither.
  32572954Kent. Nor no man el
se, 
3258als chearles, darke and deadly,
  32592955Your elde
st daughters haue foredoome them
selues,
  32622957Duke. He knowes not what he 
sees, and vaine it is,
  32632958That we pre
sent vs to him.	
3265 Edg. Very bootle
sse. 
  Enter Captaine.  32672960Duke. Thats but a tri
fle heere, 
3268you Lords and noble friends,
  2961Know our intent, 
3269what comfort to this decay may come, 
3270shall be
  2962applied: for vs we wil re
signe 
3271during the life of this old maie
sty,
  32722963to him our ab
solute power, you to your rights 
3273with boote, and
  2964such addition as your honor 
3274haue more then merited, all friends
  2965shall 
3275ta
st the wages of their vertue,
 and al foes 
3276the cup of their de
-  2966seruings, O 
see,
 see.
  32772967Lear. And my poore foole is hangd, no, no life, 
3278why 
should a
  2968dog, a hor
se, a rat of life 
3279and thou no breath at all, O thou wilt
  2969come no more, 
3280neuer,
 neuer,
 neuer, 
3281pray you vndo this button,
  2970thanke you 
sir, O, o,
 o,
 o.
 Edg. He faints my Lord,
 my Lord.
  32852971Lear. Breake hart,
 I prethe breake. 
3286Edgar. Look vp my Lord.
  32872972Kent. Vex not his gho
st, O let him pa
sse,
  2973He hates him 
3288that would vpon the wracke,
  2974Of this tough world 
3289stretch him out longer.
  32912976Kent. The wonder is, he hath endured 
so long,
  32932978Duke. Beare them from hence, our pre
sent bu
sines
  32942979Is to generall woe, friends of my 
soule, you twaine
  32952980Rule in this kingdome, and the goard 
state 
su
staine.
  32962981Kent. I haue a iourney 
sir, 
shortly to go,
  32972982My mai
ster cals, and I mu
st not 
say no.
  32982983Duke. The waight of this 
sad time we mu
st obey,
  32992984Speake what we feele, not what we ought to 
say,
  33002985The olde
st haue borne mo
st, we that are yong,
  33012986Shall neuer 
see 
so much, nor liue 
so long.
  FINIS.