Measure for Measure

Contents2024 Feb 20  13:01:29

 
Act 1Scene 1An apartment in the DUKE'S palace.
Scene 2A Street.
Scene 3A monastery.
Scene 4A nunnery.
 
Act 2Scene 1An hall in ANGELO's house.
Scene 2Another room in the same.
Scene 3A room in a prison.
Scene 4A room in ANGELO's house.
 
Act 3Scene 1A room in the prison.
Scene 2The street before the prison.
 
Act 4Scene 1The moated grange at ST. LUKE's.
Scene 2A room in the prison.
Scene 3Another room in the same.
Scene 4A room in ANGELO's house.
Scene 5Fields without the town.
Scene 6Street near the city gate.
 
Act 5Scene 1The city gate.
 
Finis
 
Contents

Act 1

Scene 1

An apartment in the DUKE'S palace.

Enter DUKE VINCENTIO, ESCALUS, Lords and Attendants
1.1.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
Escalus.
1.1.2 ESCALUS
My lord.
1.1.3 DUKE VINCENTIO
Of government the properties to unfold,
Would seem in me to affect speech and discourse;
Since I am put to know that your own science
Exceeds, in that, the lists of all advice
My strength can give you: then no more remains,
But that to your sufficiency, as your Worth is able,
And let them work. The nature of our people,
Our city's institutions, and the terms
For common justice, you're as pregnant in
As art and practise hath enriched any
That we remember. There is our commission,
From which we would not have you warp. Call hither,
I say, bid come before us Angelo.
Exit an Attendant
What figure of us think you he will bear?
For you must know, we have with special soul
Elected him our absence to supply,
Lent him our terror, dress'd him with our love,
And given his deputation all the organs
Of our own power: what think you of it?
1.1.22 ESCALUS
If any in Vienna be of worth
To undergo such ample grace and honour,
It is Lord Angelo.
1.1.25 DUKE VINCENTIO
Look where he comes.
Enter ANGELO
1.1.26 ANGELO
Always obedient to your grace's will,
I come to know your pleasure.
1.1.28 DUKE VINCENTIO
Angelo,
There is a kind of character in thy life,
That to the observer doth thy history
Fully unfold. Thyself and thy belongings
Are not thine own so proper as to waste
Thyself upon thy virtues, they on thee.
Heaven doth with us as we with torches do,
Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues
Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike
As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touch'd
But to fine issues, nor Nature never lends
The smallest scruple of her excellence
But, like a thrifty goddess, she determines
Herself the glory of a creditor,
Both thanks and use. But I do bend my speech
To one that can my part in him advertise;
Hold therefore, Angelo: –
In our remove be thou at full ourself;
Mortality and mercy in Vienna
Live in thy tongue and heart: old Escalus,
Though first in question, is thy secondary.
Take thy commission.
1.1.50 ANGELO
Now, good my lord,
Let there be some more test made of my metal,
Before so noble and so great a figure
Be stamp'd upon it.
1.1.54 DUKE VINCENTIO
No more evasion:
We have with a leaven'd and prepared choice
Proceeded to you; therefore take your honours.
Our haste from hence is of so quick condition
That it prefers itself and leaves unquestion'd
Matters of needful value. We shall write to you,
As time and our concernings shall importune,
How it goes with us, and do look to know
What doth befall you here. So, fare you well;
To the hopeful execution do I leave you
Of your commissions.
1.1.65 ANGELO
Yet give leave, my lord,
That we may bring you something on the way.
1.1.67 DUKE VINCENTIO
My haste may not admit it;
Nor need you, on mine honour, have to do
With any scruple; your scope is as mine own
So to enforce or qualify the laws
As to your soul seems good. Give me your hand:
I'll privily away. I love the people,
But do not like to stage me to their eyes:
Through it do well, I do not relish well
Their loud applause and Aves vehement;
Nor do I think the man of safe discretion
That does affect it. Once more, fare you well.
1.1.78 ANGELO
The heavens give safety to your purposes!
1.1.79 ESCALUS
Lead forth and bring you back in happiness!
1.1.80 DUKE VINCENTIO
I thank you. Fare you well.
Exit
1.1.81 ESCALUS
I shall desire you, sir, to give me leave
To have free speech with you; and it concerns me
To look into the bottom of my place:
A power I have, but of what strength and nature
I am not yet instructed.
1.1.86 ANGELO
'Tis so with me. Let us withdraw together,
And we may soon our satisfaction have
Touching that point.
1.1.89 ESCALUS
I'll wait upon your honour.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 1

Scene 2

A Street.

Enter LUCIO and two Gentlemen
1.2.1 LUCIO
If the duke with the other dukes come not to
composition with the King of Hungary, why then all
the dukes fall upon the king.
1.2.4 First Gentleman
Heaven grant us its peace, but not the King of
Hungary's!
1.2.6 Second Gentleman
Amen.
1.2.7 LUCIO
Thou concludest like the sanctimonious pirate, that
went to sea with the Ten Commandments, but scraped
one out of the table.
1.2.10 Second Gentleman
'Thou shalt not steal'?
1.2.11 LUCIO
Ay, that he razed.
1.2.12 First Gentleman
Why, 'twas a commandment to command the captain and
all the rest from their functions: they put forth
to steal. There's not a soldier of us all, that, in
the thanksgiving before meat, do relish the petition
well that prays for peace.
1.2.17 Second Gentleman
I never heard any soldier dislike it.
1.2.18 LUCIO
I believe thee; for I think thou never wast where
grace was said.
1.2.20 Second Gentleman
No? a dozen times at least.
1.2.21 First Gentleman
What, in metre?
1.2.22 LUCIO
In any proportion or in any language.
1.2.23 First Gentleman
I think, or in any religion.
1.2.24 LUCIO
Ay, why not? Grace is grace, despite of all
controversy: as, for example, thou thyself art a
wicked villain, despite of all grace.
1.2.27 First Gentleman
Well, there went but a pair of shears between us.
1.2.28 LUCIO
I grant; as there may between the lists and the
velvet. Thou art the list.
1.2.30 First Gentleman
And thou the velvet: thou art good velvet; thou'rt
a three-piled piece, I warrant thee: I had as lief
be a list of an English kersey as be piled, as thou
art piled, for a French velvet. Do I speak
feelingly now?
1.2.35 LUCIO
I think thou dost; and, indeed, with most painful
feeling of thy speech: I will, out of thine own
confession, learn to begin thy health; but, whilst I
live, forget to drink after thee.
1.2.39 First Gentleman
I think I have done myself wrong, have I not?
1.2.40 Second Gentleman
Yes, that thou hast, whether thou art tainted or free.
1.2.41 LUCIO
Behold, behold. where Madam Mitigation comes! I
have purchased as many diseases under her roof as come to –
1.2.43 Second Gentleman
To what, I pray?
1.2.44 LUCIO
Judge.
1.2.45 Second Gentleman
To three thousand dolours a year.
1.2.46 First Gentleman
Ay, and more.
1.2.47 LUCIO
A French crown more.
1.2.48 First Gentleman
Thou art always figuring diseases in me; but thou
art full of error; I am sound.
1.2.50 LUCIO
Nay, not as one would say, healthy; but so sound as
things that are hollow: thy bones are hollow;
impiety has made a feast of thee.
Enter MISTRESS OVERDONE
1.2.53 First Gentleman
How now! which of your hips has the most profound sciatica?
1.2.54 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Well, well; there's one yonder arrested and carried
to prison was worth five thousand of you all.
1.2.56 Second Gentleman
Who's that, I pray thee?
1.2.57 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Marry, sir, that's Claudio, Signior Claudio.
1.2.58 First Gentleman
Claudio to prison? 'tis not so.
1.2.59 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Nay, but I know 'tis so: I saw him arrested, saw
him carried away; and, which is more, within these
three days his head to be chopped off.
1.2.62 LUCIO
But, after all this fooling, I would not have it so.
Art thou sure of this?
1.2.64 MISTRESS OVERDONE
I am too sure of it: and it is for getting Madam
Julietta with child.
1.2.66 LUCIO
Believe me, this may be: he promised to meet me two
hours since, and he was ever precise in
promise-keeping.
1.2.69 Second Gentleman
Besides, you know, it draws something near to the
speech we had to such a purpose.
1.2.71 First Gentleman
But, most of all, agreeing with the proclamation.
1.2.72 LUCIO
Away! let's go learn the truth of it.
Exeunt LUCIO and Gentlemen
1.2.73 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Thus, what with the war, what with the sweat, what
with the gallows and what with poverty, I am
custom-shrunk.
Enter POMPEY
How now! what's the news with you?
1.2.77 POMPEY
Yonder man is carried to prison.
1.2.78 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Well; what has he done?
1.2.79 POMPEY
A woman.
1.2.80 MISTRESS OVERDONE
But what's his offence?
1.2.81 POMPEY
Groping for trouts in a peculiar river.
1.2.82 MISTRESS OVERDONE
What, is there a maid with child by him?
1.2.83 POMPEY
No, but there's a woman with maid by him. You have
not heard of the proclamation, have you?
1.2.85 MISTRESS OVERDONE
What proclamation, man?
1.2.86 POMPEY
All houses in the suburbs of Vienna must be plucked down.
1.2.87 MISTRESS OVERDONE
And what shall become of those in the city?
1.2.88 POMPEY
They shall stand for seed: they had gone down too,
but that a wise burgher put in for them.
1.2.90 MISTRESS OVERDONE
But shall all our houses of resort in the suburbs be
pulled down?
1.2.92 POMPEY
To the ground, mistress.
1.2.93 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Why, here's a change indeed in the commonwealth!
What shall become of me?
1.2.95 POMPEY
Come; fear you not: good counsellors lack no
clients: though you change your place, you need not
change your trade; I'll be your tapster still.
Courage! there will be pity taken on you: you that
have worn your eyes almost out in the service, you
will be considered.
1.2.101 MISTRESS OVERDONE
What's to do here, Thomas tapster? let's withdraw.
1.2.102 POMPEY
Here comes Signior Claudio, led by the provost to
prison; and there's Madam Juliet.
Exeunt
Enter Provost, CLAUDIO, JULIET, and Officers
1.2.104 CLAUDIO
Fellow, why dost thou show me thus to the world?
Bear me to prison, where I am committed.
1.2.106 Provost
I do it not in evil disposition,
But from Lord Angelo by special charge.
1.2.108 CLAUDIO
Thus can the demigod Authority
Make us pay down for our offence by weight
The words of heaven; on whom it will, it will;
On whom it will not, so; yet still 'tis just.
Re-enter LUCIO and two Gentlemen
1.2.112 LUCIO
Why, how now, Claudio! whence comes this restraint?
1.2.113 CLAUDIO
From too much liberty, my Lucio, liberty:
As surfeit is the father of much fast,
So every scope by the immoderate use
Turns to restraint. Our natures do pursue,
Like rats that ravin down their proper bane,
A thirsty evil; and when we drink we die.
1.2.119 LUCIO
If could speak so wisely under an arrest, I would
send for certain of my creditors: and yet, to say
the truth, I had as lief have the foppery of freedom
as the morality of imprisonment. What's thy
offence, Claudio?
1.2.124 CLAUDIO
What but to speak of would offend again.
1.2.125 LUCIO
What, is't murder?
1.2.126 CLAUDIO
No.
1.2.127 LUCIO
Lechery?
1.2.128 CLAUDIO
Call it so.
1.2.129 Provost
Away, sir! you must go.
1.2.130 CLAUDIO
One word, good friend. Lucio, a word with you.
1.2.131 LUCIO
A hundred, if they'll do you any good.
Is lechery so look'd after?
1.2.133 CLAUDIO
Thus stands it with me: upon a true contract
I got possession of Julietta's bed:
You know the lady; she is fast my wife,
Save that we do the denunciation lack
Of outward order: this we came not to,
Only for propagation of a dower
Remaining in the coffer of her friends,
From whom we thought it meet to hide our love
Till time had made them for us. But it chances
The stealth of our most mutual entertainment
With character too gross is writ on Juliet.
1.2.144 LUCIO
With child, perhaps?
1.2.145 CLAUDIO
Unhappily, even so.
And the new deputy now for the duke –
Whether it be the fault and glimpse of newness,
Or whether that the body public be
A horse whereon the governor doth ride,
Who, newly in the seat, that it may know
He can command, lets it straight feel the spur;
Whether the tyranny be in his place,
Or in his emmence that fills it up,
I stagger in: – but this new governor
Awakes me all the enrolled penalties
Which have, like unscour'd armour, hung by the wall
So long that nineteen zodiacs have gone round
And none of them been worn; and, for a name,
Now puts the drowsy and neglected act
Freshly on me: 'tis surely for a name.
1.2.161 LUCIO
I warrant it is: and thy head stands so tickle on
thy shoulders that a milkmaid, if she be in love,
may sigh it off. Send after the duke and appeal to
him.
1.2.165 CLAUDIO
I have done so, but he's not to be found.
I prithee, Lucio, do me this kind service:
This day my sister should the cloister enter
And there receive her approbation:
Acquaint her with the danger of my state:
Implore her, in my voice, that she make friends
To the strict deputy; bid herself assay him:
I have great hope in that; for in her youth
There is a prone and speechless dialect,
Such as move men; beside, she hath prosperous art
When she will play with reason and discourse,
And well she can persuade.
1.2.177 LUCIO
I pray she may; as well for the encouragement of the
like, which else would stand under grievous
imposition, as for the enjoying of thy life, who I
would be sorry should be thus foolishly lost at a
game of tick-tack. I'll to her.
1.2.182 CLAUDIO
I thank you, good friend Lucio.
1.2.183 LUCIO
Within two hours.
1.2.184 CLAUDIO
Come, officer, away!
Exeunt
Contents

Act 1

Scene 3

A monastery.

Enter DUKE VINCENTIO and FRIAR THOMAS
1.3.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
No, holy father; throw away that thought;
Believe not that the dribbling dart of love
Can pierce a complete bosom. Why I desire thee
To give me secret harbour, hath a purpose
More grave and wrinkled than the aims and ends
Of burning youth.
1.3.7 FRIAR THOMAS
May your grace speak of it?
1.3.8 DUKE VINCENTIO
My holy sir, none better knows than you
How I have ever loved the life removed
And held in idle price to haunt assemblies
Where youth, and cost, and witless bravery keeps.
I have deliver'd to Lord Angelo,
A man of stricture and firm abstinence,
My absolute power and place here in Vienna,
And he supposes me travell'd to Poland;
For so I have strew'd it in the common ear,
And so it is received. Now, pious sir,
You will demand of me why I do this?
1.3.19 FRIAR THOMAS
Gladly, my lord.
1.3.20 DUKE VINCENTIO
We have strict statutes and most biting laws.
The needful bits and curbs to headstrong weeds,
Which for this nineteen years we have let slip;
Even like an o'ergrown lion in a cave,
That goes not out to prey. Now, as fond fathers,
Having bound up the threatening twigs of birch,
Only to stick it in their children's sight
For terror, not to use, in time the rod
Becomes more mock'd than fear'd; so our decrees,
Dead to infliction, to themselves are dead;
And liberty plucks justice by the nose;
The baby beats the nurse, and quite athwart
Goes all decorum.
1.3.33 FRIAR THOMAS
It rested in your grace
To unloose this tied-up justice when you pleased:
And it in you more dreadful would have seem'd
Than in Lord Angelo.
1.3.37 DUKE VINCENTIO
I do fear, too dreadful:
Sith 'twas my fault to give the people scope,
'Twould be my tyranny to strike and gall them
For what I bid them do: for we bid this be done,
When evil deeds have their permissive pass
And not the punishment. Therefore indeed, my father,
I have on Angelo imposed the office;
Who may, in the ambush of my name, strike home,
And yet my nature never in the fight
To do in slander. And to behold his sway,
I will, as 'twere a brother of your order,
Visit both prince and people: therefore, I prithee,
Supply me with the habit and instruct me
How I may formally in person bear me
Like a true friar. More reasons for this action
At our more leisure shall I render you;
Only, this one: Lord Angelo is precise;
Stands at a guard with envy; scarce confesses
That his blood flows, or that his appetite
Is more to bread than stone: hence shall we see,
If power change purpose, what our seemers be.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 1

Scene 4

A nunnery.

Enter ISABELLA and FRANCISCA
1.4.1 ISABELLA
And have you nuns no farther privileges?
1.4.2 FRANCISCA
Are not these large enough?
1.4.3 ISABELLA
Yes, truly; I speak not as desiring more;
But rather wishing a more strict restraint
Upon the sisterhood, the votarists of Saint Clare.
1.4.6 LUCIO
[Within] Ho! Peace be in this place!
1.4.7 ISABELLA
Who's that which calls?
1.4.8 FRANCISCA
It is a man's voice. Gentle Isabella,
Turn you the key, and know his business of him;
You may, I may not; you are yet unsworn.
When you have vow'd, you must not speak with men
But in the presence of the prioress:
Then, if you speak, you must not show your face,
Or, if you show your face, you must not speak.
He calls again; I pray you, answer him.
Exit
1.4.16 ISABELLA
Peace and prosperity! Who is't that calls
Enter LUCIO
1.4.17 LUCIO
Hail, virgin, if you be, as those cheek-roses
Proclaim you are no less! Can you so stead me
As bring me to the sight of Isabella,
A novice of this place and the fair sister
To her unhappy brother Claudio?
1.4.22 ISABELLA
Why 'her unhappy brother'? let me ask,
The rather for I now must make you know
I am that Isabella and his sister.
1.4.25 LUCIO
Gentle and fair, your brother kindly greets you:
Not to be weary with you, he's in prison.
1.4.27 ISABELLA
Woe me! for what?
1.4.28 LUCIO
For that which, if myself might be his judge,
He should receive his punishment in thanks:
He hath got his friend with child.
1.4.31 ISABELLA
Sir, make me not your story.
1.4.32 LUCIO
It is true.
I would not – though 'tis my familiar sin
With maids to seem the lapwing and to jest,
Tongue far from heart – play with all virgins so:
I hold you as a thing ensky'd and sainted.
By your renouncement an immortal spirit,
And to be talk'd with in sincerity,
As with a saint.
1.4.40 ISABELLA
You do blaspheme the good in mocking me.
1.4.41 LUCIO
Do not believe it. Fewness and truth, 'tis thus:
Your brother and his lover have embraced:
As those that feed grow full, as blossoming time
That from the seedness the bare fallow brings
To teeming foison, even so her plenteous womb
Expresseth his full tilth and husbandry.
1.4.47 ISABELLA
Some one with child by him? My cousin Juliet?
1.4.48 LUCIO
Is she your cousin?
1.4.49 ISABELLA
Adoptedly; as school-maids change their names
By vain though apt affection.
1.4.51 LUCIO
She it is.
1.4.52 ISABELLA
O, let him marry her.
1.4.53 LUCIO
This is the point.
The duke is very strangely gone from hence;
Bore many gentlemen, myself being one,
In hand and hope of action: but we do learn
By those that know the very nerves of state,
His givings-out were of an infinite distance
From his true-meant design. Upon his place,
And with full line of his authority,
Governs Lord Angelo; a man whose blood
Is very snow-broth; one who never feels
The wanton stings and motions of the sense,
But doth rebate and blunt his natural edge
With profits of the mind, study and fast.
He – to give fear to use and liberty,
Which have for long run by the hideous law,
As mice by lions – hath pick'd out an act,
Under whose heavy sense your brother's life
Falls into forfeit: he arrests him on it;
And follows close the rigour of the statute,
To make him an example. All hope is gone,
Unless you have the grace by your fair prayer
To soften Angelo: and that's my pith of business
'Twixt you and your poor brother.
1.4.76 ISABELLA
Doth he so seek his life?
1.4.77 LUCIO
Has censured him
Already; and, as I hear, the provost hath
A warrant for his execution.
1.4.80 ISABELLA
Alas! what poor ability's in me
To do him good?
1.4.82 LUCIO
Assay the power you have.
1.4.83 ISABELLA
My power? Alas, I doubt –
1.4.84 LUCIO
Our doubts are traitors
And make us lose the good we oft might win
By fearing to attempt. Go to Lord Angelo,
And let him learn to know, when maidens sue,
Men give like gods; but when they weep and kneel,
All their petitions are as freely theirs
As they themselves would owe them.
1.4.91 ISABELLA
I'll see what I can do.
1.4.92 LUCIO
But speedily.
1.4.93 ISABELLA
I will about it straight;
No longer staying but to give the mother
Notice of my affair. I humbly thank you:
Commend me to my brother: soon at night
I'll send him certain word of my success.
1.4.98 LUCIO
I take my leave of you.
1.4.99 ISABELLA
Good sir, adieu.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 2

Scene 1

An hall in ANGELO's house.

Enter ANGELO, ESCALUS, and a Justice, Provost, Officers, and other Attendants, behind
2.1.1 ANGELO
We must not make a scarecrow of the law,
Setting it up to fear the birds of prey,
And let it keep one shape, till custom make it
Their perch and not their terror.
2.1.5 ESCALUS
Ay, but yet
Let us be keen, and rather cut a little,
Than fall, and bruise to death. Alas, this gentleman
Whom I would save, had a most noble father!
Let but your honour know,
Whom I believe to be most strait in virtue,
That, in the working of your own affections,
Had time cohered with place or place with wishing,
Or that the resolute acting of your blood
Could have attain'd the effect of your own purpose,
Whether you had not sometime in your life
Err'd in this point which now you censure him,
And pull'd the law upon you.
2.1.18 ANGELO
'Tis one thing to be tempted, Escalus,
Another thing to fall. I not deny,
The jury, passing on the prisoner's life,
May in the sworn twelve have a thief or two
Guiltier than him they try. What's open made to justice,
That justice seizes: what know the laws
That thieves do pass on thieves? 'Tis very pregnant,
The jewel that we find, we stoop and take't
Because we see it; but what we do not see
We tread upon, and never think of it.
You may not so extenuate his offence
For I have had such faults; but rather tell me,
When I, that censure him, do so offend,
Let mine own judgment pattern out my death,
And nothing come in partial. Sir, he must die.
2.1.33 ESCALUS
Be it as your wisdom will.
2.1.34 ANGELO
Where is the provost?
2.1.35 Provost
Here, if it like your honour.
2.1.36 ANGELO
See that Claudio
Be executed by nine tomorrow morning:
Bring him his confessor, let him be prepared;
For that's the utmost of his pilgrimage.
Exit Provost
2.1.40 ESCALUS
[Aside] Well, heaven forgive him! and forgive us all!
Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall:
Some run from brakes of ice, and answer none:
And some condemned for a fault alone.
Enter ELBOW, and Officers with FROTH and POMPEY
2.1.44 ELBOW
Come, bring them away: if these be good people in
a commonweal that do nothing but use their abuses in
common houses, I know no law: bring them away.
2.1.47 ANGELO
How now, sir! What's your name? and what's the matter?
2.1.48 ELBOW
If it please your honour, I am the poor duke's
constable, and my name is Elbow: I do lean upon
justice, sir, and do bring in here before your good
honour two notorious benefactors.
2.1.52 ANGELO
Benefactors? Well; what benefactors are they? are
they not malefactors?
2.1.54 ELBOW
If it please your honour, I know not well what they
are: but precise villains they are, that I am sure
of; and void of all profanation in the world that
good Christians ought to have.
2.1.58 ESCALUS
This comes off well; here's a wise officer.
2.1.59 ANGELO
Go to: what quality are they of? Elbow is your
name? why dost thou not speak, Elbow?
2.1.61 POMPEY
He cannot, sir; he's out at elbow.
2.1.62 ANGELO
What are you, sir?
2.1.63 ELBOW
He, sir! a tapster, sir; parcel-bawd; one that
serves a bad woman; whose house, sir, was, as they
say, plucked down in the suburbs; and now she
professes a hot-house, which, I think, is a very ill house too.
2.1.67 ESCALUS
How know you that?
2.1.68 ELBOW
My wife, sir, whom I detest before heaven and your honour, –
2.1.69 ESCALUS
How? thy wife?
2.1.70 ELBOW
Ay, sir; whom, I thank heaven, is an honest woman, –
2.1.71 ESCALUS
Dost thou detest her therefore?
2.1.72 ELBOW
I say, sir, I will detest myself also, as well as
she, that this house, if it be not a bawd's house,
it is pity of her life, for it is a naughty house.
2.1.75 ESCALUS
How dost thou know that, constable?
2.1.76 ELBOW
Marry, sir, by my wife; who, if she had been a woman
cardinally given, might have been accused in
fornication, adultery, and all uncleanliness there.
2.1.79 ESCALUS
By the woman's means?
2.1.80 ELBOW
Ay, sir, by Mistress Overdone's means: but as she
spit in his face, so she defied him.
2.1.82 POMPEY
Sir, if it please your honour, this is not so.
2.1.83 ELBOW
Prove it before these varlets here, thou honourable
man; prove it.
2.1.85 ESCALUS
Do you hear how he misplaces?
2.1.86 POMPEY
Sir, she came in great with child; and longing,
saving your honour's reverence, for stewed prunes;
sir, we had but two in the house, which at that very
distant time stood, as it were, in a fruit-dish, a
dish of some three-pence; your honours have seen
such dishes; they are not China dishes, but very
good dishes, –
2.1.93 ESCALUS
Go to, go to: no matter for the dish, sir.
2.1.94 POMPEY
No, indeed, sir, not of a pin; you are therein in
the right: but to the point. As I say, this
Mistress Elbow, being, as I say, with child, and
being great-bellied, and longing, as I said, for
prunes; and having but two in the dish, as I said,
Master Froth here, this very man, having eaten the
rest, as I said, and, as I say, paying for them very
honestly; for, as you know, Master Froth, I could
not give you three-pence again.
2.1.103 FROTH
No, indeed.
2.1.104 POMPEY
Very well: you being then, if you be remembered,
cracking the stones of the foresaid prunes, –
2.1.106 FROTH
Ay, so I did indeed.
2.1.107 POMPEY
Why, very well; I telling you then, if you be
remembered, that such a one and such a one were past
cure of the thing you wot of, unless they kept very
good diet, as I told you, –
2.1.111 FROTH
All this is true.
2.1.112 POMPEY
Why, very well, then, –
2.1.113 ESCALUS
Come, you are a tedious fool: to the purpose. What
was done to Elbow's wife, that he hath cause to
complain of? Come me to what was done to her.
2.1.116 POMPEY
Sir, your honour cannot come to that yet.
2.1.117 ESCALUS
No, sir, nor I mean it not.
2.1.118 POMPEY
Sir, but you shall come to it, by your honour's
leave. And, I beseech you, look into Master Froth
here, sir; a man of four-score pound a year; whose
father died at Hallowmas: was't not at Hallowmas,
Master Froth?
2.1.123 FROTH
All-hallond eve.
2.1.124 POMPEY
Why, very well; I hope here be truths. He, sir,
sitting, as I say, in a lower chair, sir; 'twas in
the Bunch of Grapes, where indeed you have a delight
to sit, have you not?
2.1.128 FROTH
I have so; because it is an open room and good for winter.
2.1.129 POMPEY
Why, very well, then; I hope here be truths.
2.1.130 ANGELO
This will last out a night in Russia,
When nights are longest there: I'll take my leave.
And leave you to the hearing of the cause;
Hoping you'll find good cause to whip them all.
2.1.134 ESCALUS
I think no less. Good morrow to your lordship.
Exit ANGELO
Now, sir, come on: what was done to Elbow's wife, once more?
2.1.136 POMPEY
Once, sir? there was nothing done to her once.
2.1.137 ELBOW
I beseech you, sir, ask him what this man did to my wife.
2.1.138 POMPEY
I beseech your honour, ask me.
2.1.139 ESCALUS
Well, sir; what did this gentleman to her?
2.1.140 POMPEY
I beseech you, sir, look in this gentleman's face.
Good Master Froth, look upon his honour; 'tis for a
good purpose. Doth your honour mark his face?
2.1.143 ESCALUS
Ay, sir, very well.
2.1.144 POMPEY
Nay; I beseech you, mark it well.
2.1.145 ESCALUS
Well, I do so.
2.1.146 POMPEY
Doth your honour see any harm in his face?
2.1.147 ESCALUS
Why, no.
2.1.148 POMPEY
I'll be supposed upon a book, his face is the worst
thing about him. Good, then; if his face be the
worst thing about him, how could Master Froth do the
constable's wife any harm? I would know that of
your honour.
2.1.153 ESCALUS
He's in the right. Constable, what say you to it?
2.1.154 ELBOW
First, an it like you, the house is a respected
house; next, this is a respected fellow; and his
mistress is a respected woman.
2.1.157 POMPEY
By this hand, sir, his wife is a more respected
person than any of us all.
2.1.159 ELBOW
Varlet, thou liest; thou liest, wicked varlet! the
time has yet to come that she was ever respected
with man, woman, or child.
2.1.162 POMPEY
Sir, she was respected with him before he married with her.
2.1.163 ESCALUS
Which is the wiser here? Justice or Iniquity? Is
this true?
2.1.165 ELBOW
O thou caitiff! O thou varlet! O thou wicked
Hannibal! I respected with her before I was married
to her! If ever I was respected with her, or she
with me, let not your worship think me the poor
duke's officer. Prove this, thou wicked Hannibal, or
I'll have mine action of battery on thee.
2.1.171 ESCALUS
If he took you a box o' the ear, you might have your
action of slander too.
2.1.173 ELBOW
Marry, I thank your good worship for it. What is't
your worship's pleasure I shall do with this wicked caitiff?
2.1.175 ESCALUS
Truly, officer, because he hath some offences in him
that thou wouldst discover if thou couldst, let him
continue in his courses till thou knowest what they
are.
2.1.179 ELBOW
Marry, I thank your worship for it. Thou seest, thou
wicked varlet, now, what's come upon thee: thou art
to continue now, thou varlet; thou art to continue.
2.1.182 ESCALUS
Where were you born, friend?
2.1.183 FROTH
Here in Vienna, sir.
2.1.184 ESCALUS
Are you of fourscore pounds a year?
2.1.185 FROTH
Yes, an't please you, sir.
2.1.186 ESCALUS
So. What trade are you of, sir?
2.1.187 POMPEY
Tapster; a poor widow's tapster.
2.1.188 ESCALUS
Your mistress' name?
2.1.189 POMPEY
Mistress Overdone.
2.1.190 ESCALUS
Hath she had any more than one husband?
2.1.191 POMPEY
Nine, sir; Overdone by the last.
2.1.192 ESCALUS
Nine! Come hither to me, Master Froth. Master
Froth, I would not have you acquainted with
tapsters: they will draw you, Master Froth, and you
will hang them. Get you gone, and let me hear no
more of you.
2.1.197 FROTH
I thank your worship. For mine own part, I never
come into any room in a tap-house, but I am drawn
in.
2.1.200 ESCALUS
Well, no more of it, Master Froth: farewell.
Exit FROTH
Come you hither to me, Master tapster. What's your
name, Master tapster?
2.1.203 POMPEY
Pompey.
2.1.204 ESCALUS
What else?
2.1.205 POMPEY
Bum, sir.
2.1.206 ESCALUS
Troth, and your bum is the greatest thing about you;
so that in the beastliest sense you are Pompey the
Great. Pompey, you are partly a bawd, Pompey,
howsoever you colour it in being a tapster, are you
not? come, tell me true: it shall be the better for you.
2.1.211 POMPEY
Truly, sir, I am a poor fellow that would live.
2.1.212 ESCALUS
How would you live, Pompey? by being a bawd? What
do you think of the trade, Pompey? is it a lawful trade?
2.1.214 POMPEY
If the law would allow it, sir.
2.1.215 ESCALUS
But the law will not allow it, Pompey; nor it shall
not be allowed in Vienna.
2.1.217 POMPEY
Does your worship mean to geld and splay all the
youth of the city?
2.1.219 ESCALUS
No, Pompey.
2.1.220 POMPEY
Truly, sir, in my poor opinion, they will to't then.
If your worship will take order for the drabs and
the knaves, you need not to fear the bawds.
2.1.223 ESCALUS
There are pretty orders beginning, I can tell you:
it is but heading and hanging.
2.1.225 POMPEY
If you head and hang all that offend that way but
for ten year together, you'll be glad to give out a
commission for more heads: if this law hold in
Vienna ten year, I'll rent the fairest house in it
after three-pence a bay: if you live to see this
come to pass, say Pompey told you so.
2.1.231 ESCALUS
Thank you, good Pompey; and, in requital of your
prophecy, hark you: I advise you, let me not find
you before me again upon any complaint whatsoever;
no, not for dwelling where you do: if I do, Pompey,
I shall beat you to your tent, and prove a shrewd
Caesar to you; in plain dealing, Pompey, I shall
have you whipt: so, for this time, Pompey, fare you well.
2.1.238 POMPEY
I thank your worship for your good counsel:
Aside
but I shall follow it as the flesh and fortune shall
better determine.
Whip me? No, no; let carman whip his jade:
The valiant heart is not whipt out of his trade.
Exit
2.1.243 ESCALUS
Come hither to me, Master Elbow; come hither, Master
constable. How long have you been in this place of constable?
2.1.245 ELBOW
Seven year and a half, sir.
2.1.246 ESCALUS
I thought, by your readiness in the office, you had
continued in it some time. You say, seven years together?
2.1.248 ELBOW
And a half, sir.
2.1.249 ESCALUS
Alas, it hath been great pains to you. They do you
wrong to put you so oft upon 't: are there not men
in your ward sufficient to serve it?
2.1.252 ELBOW
Faith, sir, few of any wit in such matters: as they
are chosen, they are glad to choose me for them; I
do it for some piece of money, and go through with
all.
2.1.256 ESCALUS
Look you bring me in the names of some six or seven,
the most sufficient of your parish.
2.1.258 ELBOW
To your worship's house, sir?
2.1.259 ESCALUS
To my house. Fare you well.
Exit ELBOW
What's o'clock, think you?
2.1.261 Justice
Eleven, sir.
2.1.262 ESCALUS
I pray you home to dinner with me.
2.1.263 Justice
I humbly thank you.
2.1.264 ESCALUS
It grieves me for the death of Claudio;
But there's no remedy.
2.1.266 Justice
Lord Angelo is severe.
2.1.267 ESCALUS
It is but needful:
Mercy is not itself, that oft looks so;
Pardon is still the nurse of second woe:
But yet, – poor Claudio! There is no remedy.
Come, sir.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 2

Scene 2

Another room in the same.

Enter Provost and a Servant
2.2.1 Servant
He's hearing of a cause; he will come straight
I'll tell him of you.
2.2.3 Provost
Pray you, do.
Exit Servant
I'll know
His pleasure; may be he will relent. Alas,
He hath but as offended in a dream!
All sects, all ages smack of this vice; and he
To die for't!
Enter ANGELO
2.2.9 ANGELO
Now, what's the matter. Provost?
2.2.10 Provost
Is it your will Claudio shall die tomorrow?
2.2.11 ANGELO
Did not I tell thee yea? hadst thou not order?
Why dost thou ask again?
2.2.13 Provost
Lest I might be too rash:
Under your good correction, I have seen,
When, after execution, judgment hath
Repented o'er his doom.
2.2.17 ANGELO
Go to; let that be mine:
Do you your office, or give up your place,
And you shall well be spared.
2.2.20 Provost
I crave your honour's pardon.
What shall be done, sir, with the groaning Juliet?
She's very near her hour.
2.2.23 ANGELO
Dispose of her
To some more fitter place, and that with speed.
Re-enter Servant
2.2.25 Servant
Here is the sister of the man condemn'd
Desires access to you.
2.2.27 ANGELO
Hath he a sister?
2.2.28 Provost
Ay, my good lord; a very virtuous maid,
And to be shortly of a sisterhood,
If not already.
2.2.31 ANGELO
Well, let her be admitted.
Exit Servant
See you the fornicatress be removed:
Let have needful, but not lavish, means;
There shall be order for't.
Enter ISABELLA and LUCIO
2.2.35 Provost
God save your honour!
2.2.36 ANGELO
Stay a little while.
To ISABELLA
You're welcome: what's your will?
2.2.38 ISABELLA
I am a woeful suitor to your honour,
Please but your honour hear me.
2.2.40 ANGELO
Well; what's your suit?
2.2.41 ISABELLA
There is a vice that most I do abhor,
And most desire should meet the blow of justice;
For which I would not plead, but that I must;
For which I must not plead, but that I am
At war 'twixt will and will not.
2.2.46 ANGELO
Well; the matter?
2.2.47 ISABELLA
I have a brother is condemn'd to die:
I do beseech you, let it be his fault,
And not my brother.
2.2.50 Provost
[Aside] Heaven give thee moving graces!
2.2.51 ANGELO
Condemn the fault and not the actor of it?
Why, every fault's condemn'd ere it be done:
Mine were the very cipher of a function,
To fine the faults whose fine stands in record,
And let go by the actor.
2.2.56 ISABELLA
O just but severe law!
I had a brother, then. Heaven keep your honour!
2.2.58 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] Give't not o'er so: to him
again, entreat him;
Kneel down before him, hang upon his gown:
You are too cold; if you should need a pin,
You could not with more tame a tongue desire it:
To him, I say!
2.2.64 ISABELLA
Must he needs die?
2.2.65 ANGELO
Maiden, no remedy.
2.2.66 ISABELLA
Yes; I do think that you might pardon him,
And neither heaven nor man grieve at the mercy.
2.2.68 ANGELO
I will not do't.
2.2.69 ISABELLA
But can you, if you would?
2.2.70 ANGELO
Look, what I will not, that I cannot do.
2.2.71 ISABELLA
But might you do't, and do the world no wrong,
If so your heart were touch'd with that remorse
As mine is to him?
2.2.74 ANGELO
He's sentenced; 'tis too late.
2.2.75 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] You are too cold.
2.2.76 ISABELLA
Too late? why, no; I, that do speak a word.
May call it back again. Well, believe this,
No ceremony that to great ones 'longs,
Not the king's crown, nor the deputed sword,
The marshal's truncheon, nor the judge's robe,
Become them with one half so good a grace
As mercy does.
If he had been as you and you as he,
You would have slipt like him; but he, like you,
Would not have been so stern.
2.2.86 ANGELO
Pray you, be gone.
2.2.87 ISABELLA
I would to heaven I had your potency,
And you were Isabel! should it then be thus?
No; I would tell what 'twere to be a judge,
And what a prisoner.
2.2.91 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA]
Ay, touch him; there's the vein.
2.2.93 ANGELO
Your brother is a forfeit of the law,
And you but waste your words.
2.2.95 ISABELLA
Alas, alas!
Why, all the souls that were were forfeit once;
And He that might the vantage best have took
Found out the remedy. How would you be,
If He, which is the top of judgment, should
But judge you as you are? O, think on that;
And mercy then will breathe within your lips,
Like man new made.
2.2.103 ANGELO
Be you content, fair maid;
It is the law, not I condemn your brother:
Were he my kinsman, brother, or my son,
It should be thus with him: he must die tomorrow.
2.2.107 ISABELLA
Tomorrow! O, that's sudden! Spare him, spare him!
He's not prepared for death. Even for our kitchens
We kill the fowl of season: shall we serve heaven
With less respect than we do minister
To our gross selves? Good, good my lord, bethink you;
Who is it that hath died for this offence?
There's many have committed it.
2.2.114 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] Ay, well said.
2.2.115 ANGELO
The law hath not been dead, though it hath slept:
Those many had not dared to do that evil,
If the first that did the edict infringe
Had answer'd for his deed: now 'tis awake
Takes note of what is done; and, like a prophet,
Looks in a glass, that shows what future evils,
Either new, or by remissness new-conceived,
And so in progress to be hatch'd and born,
Are now to have no successive degrees,
But, ere they live, to end.
2.2.125 ISABELLA
Yet show some pity.
2.2.126 ANGELO
I show it most of all when I show justice;
For then I pity those I do not know,
Which a dismiss'd offence would after gall;
And do him right that, answering one foul wrong,
Lives not to act another. Be satisfied;
Your brother dies tomorrow; be content.
2.2.132 ISABELLA
So you must be the first that gives this sentence,
And he, that suffer's. O, it is excellent
To have a giant's strength; but it is tyrannous
To use it like a giant.
2.2.136 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] That's well said.
2.2.137 ISABELLA
Could great men thunder
As Jove himself does, Jove would ne'er be quiet,
For every pelting, petty officer
Would use his heaven for thunder;
Nothing but thunder! Merciful Heaven,
Thou rather with thy sharp and sulphurous bolt
Split'st the unwedgeable and gnarled oak
Than the soft myrtle: but man, proud man,
Drest in a little brief authority,
Most ignorant of what he's most assured,
His glassy essence, like an angry ape,
Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven
As make the angels weep; who, with our spleens,
Would all themselves laugh mortal.
2.2.151 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] O, to him, to him, wench! he
will relent;
He's coming; I perceive 't.
2.2.154 Provost
[Aside] Pray heaven she win him!
2.2.155 ISABELLA
We cannot weigh our brother with ourself:
Great men may jest with saints; 'tis wit in them,
But in the less foul profanation.
2.2.158 LUCIO
Thou'rt i' the right, girl; more o, that.
2.2.159 ISABELLA
That in the captain's but a choleric word,
Which in the soldier is flat blasphemy.
2.2.161 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] Art avised o' that? more on 't.
2.2.162 ANGELO
Why do you put these sayings upon me?
2.2.163 ISABELLA
Because authority, though it err like others,
Hath yet a kind of medicine in itself,
That skins the vice o' the top. Go to your bosom;
Knock there, and ask your heart what it doth know
That's like my brother's fault: if it confess
A natural guiltiness such as is his,
Let it not sound a thought upon your tongue
Against my brother's life.
2.2.171 ANGELO
[Aside] She speaks, and 'tis
Such sense, that my sense breeds with it. Fare you well.
2.2.173 ISABELLA
Gentle my lord, turn back.
2.2.174 ANGELO
I will bethink me: come again tomorrow.
2.2.175 ISABELLA
Hark how I'll bribe you: good my lord, turn back.
2.2.176 ANGELO
How! bribe me?
2.2.177 ISABELLA
Ay, with such gifts that heaven shall share with you.
2.2.178 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] You had marr'd all else.
2.2.179 ISABELLA
Not with fond shekels of the tested gold,
Or stones whose rates are either rich or poor
As fancy values them; but with true prayers
That shall be up at heaven and enter there
Ere sun-rise, prayers from preserved souls,
From fasting maids whose minds are dedicate
To nothing temporal.
2.2.186 ANGELO
Well; come to me tomorrow.
2.2.187 LUCIO
[Aside to ISABELLA] Go to; 'tis well; away!
2.2.188 ISABELLA
Heaven keep your honour safe!
2.2.189 ANGELO
[Aside] Amen:
For I am that way going to temptation,
Where prayers cross.
2.2.192 ISABELLA
At what hour tomorrow
Shall I attend your lordship?
2.2.194 ANGELO
At any time 'fore noon.
2.2.195 ISABELLA
'Save your honour!
Exeunt ISABELLA, LUCIO, and Provost
2.2.196 ANGELO
From thee, even from thy virtue!
What's this, what's this? Is this her fault or mine?
The tempter or the tempted, who sins most?
Ha!
Not she: nor doth she tempt: but it is I
That, lying by the violet in the sun,
Do as the carrion does, not as the flower,
Corrupt with virtuous season. Can it be
That modesty may more betray our sense
Than woman's lightness? Having waste ground enough,
Shall we desire to raze the sanctuary
And pitch our evils there? O, fie, fie, fie!
What dost thou, or what art thou, Angelo?
Dost thou desire her foully for those things
That make her good? O, let her brother live!
Thieves for their robbery have authority
When judges steal themselves. What, do I love her,
That I desire to hear her speak again,
And feast upon her eyes? What is't I dream on?
O cunning enemy, that, to catch a saint,
With saints dost bait thy hook! Most dangerous
Is that temptation that doth goad us on
To sin in loving virtue: never could the strumpet,
With all her double vigour, art and nature,
Once stir my temper; but this virtuous maid
Subdues me quite. Even till now,
When men were fond, I smiled and wonder'd how.
Exit
Contents

Act 2

Scene 3

A room in a prison.

Enter, severally, DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as a friar, and Provost
2.3.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
Hail to you, provost! so I think you are.
2.3.2 Provost
I am the provost. What's your will, good friar?
2.3.3 DUKE VINCENTIO
Bound by my charity and my blest order,
I come to visit the afflicted spirits
Here in the prison. Do me the common right
To let me see them and to make me know
The nature of their crimes, that I may minister
To them accordingly.
2.3.9 Provost
I would do more than that, if more were needful.
Enter JULIET
Look, here comes one: a gentlewoman of mine,
Who, falling in the flaws of her own youth,
Hath blister'd her report: she is with child;
And he that got it, sentenced; a young man
More fit to do another such offence
Than die for this.
2.3.16 DUKE VINCENTIO
When must he die?
2.3.17 Provost
As I do think, tomorrow.
I have provided for you: stay awhile,
To JULIET
And you shall be conducted.
2.3.20 DUKE VINCENTIO
Repent you, fair one, of the sin you carry?
2.3.21 JULIET
I do; and bear the shame most patiently.
2.3.22 DUKE VINCENTIO
I'll teach you how you shall arraign your conscience,
And try your penitence, if it be sound,
Or hollowly put on.
2.3.25 JULIET
I'll gladly learn.
2.3.26 DUKE VINCENTIO
Love you the man that wrong'd you?
2.3.27 JULIET
Yes, as I love the woman that wrong'd him.
2.3.28 DUKE VINCENTIO
So then it seems your most offenceful act
Was mutually committed?
2.3.30 JULIET
Mutually.
2.3.31 DUKE VINCENTIO
Then was your sin of heavier kind than his.
2.3.32 JULIET
I do confess it, and repent it, father.
2.3.33 DUKE VINCENTIO
'Tis meet so, daughter: but lest you do repent,
As that the sin hath brought you to this shame,
Which sorrow is always towards ourselves, not heaven,
Showing we would not spare heaven as we love it,
But as we stand in fear, –
2.3.38 JULIET
I do repent me, as it is an evil,
And take the shame with joy.
2.3.40 DUKE VINCENTIO
There rest.
Your partner, as I hear, must die tomorrow,
And I am going with instruction to him.
Grace go with you, Benedicite!
Exit
2.3.44 JULIET
Must die tomorrow! O injurious love,
That respites me a life, whose very comfort
Is still a dying horror!
2.3.47 Provost
'Tis pity of him.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 2

Scene 4

A room in ANGELO's house.

Enter ANGELO
2.4.1 ANGELO
When I would pray and think, I think and pray
To several subjects. Heaven hath my empty words;
Whilst my invention, hearing not my tongue,
Anchors on Isabel: Heaven in my mouth,
As if I did but only chew his name;
And in my heart the strong and swelling evil
Of my conception. The state, whereon I studied
Is like a good thing, being often read,
Grown fear'd and tedious; yea, my gravity,
Wherein – let no man hear me – I take pride,
Could I with boot change for an idle plume,
Which the air beats for vain. O place, O form,
How often dost thou with thy case, thy habit,
Wrench awe from fools and tie the wiser souls
To thy false seeming! Blood, thou art blood:
Let's write good angel on the devil's horn:
'Tis not the devil's crest.
Enter a Servant
How now! who's there?
2.4.19 Servant
One Isabel, a sister, desires access to you.
2.4.20 ANGELO
Teach her the way.
Exit Servant
O heavens!
Why does my blood thus muster to my heart,
Making both it unable for itself,
And dispossessing all my other parts
Of necessary fitness?
So play the foolish throngs with one that swoons;
Come all to help him, and so stop the air
By which he should revive: and even so
The general, subject to a well-wish'd king,
Quit their own part, and in obsequious fondness
Crowd to his presence, where their untaught love
Must needs appear offence.
Enter ISABELLA
How now, fair maid?
2.4.34 ISABELLA
I am come to know your pleasure.
2.4.35 ANGELO
That you might know it, would much better please me
Than to demand what 'tis. Your brother cannot live.
2.4.37 ISABELLA
Even so. Heaven keep your honour!
2.4.38 ANGELO
Yet may he live awhile; and, it may be,
As long as you or I yet he must die.
2.4.40 ISABELLA
Under your sentence?
2.4.41 ANGELO
Yea.
2.4.42 ISABELLA
When, I beseech you? that in his reprieve,
Longer or shorter, he may be so fitted
That his soul sicken not.
2.4.45 ANGELO
Ha! fie, these filthy vices! It were as good
To pardon him that hath from nature stolen
A man already made, as to remit
Their saucy sweetness that do coin heaven's image
In stamps that are forbid: 'tis all as easy
Falsely to take away a life true made
As to put metal in restrained means
To make a false one.
2.4.53 ISABELLA
'Tis set down so in heaven, but not in earth.
2.4.54 ANGELO
Say you so? then I shall pose you quickly.
Which had you rather, that the most just law
Now took your brother's life; or, to redeem him,
Give up your body to such sweet uncleanness
As she that he hath stain'd?
2.4.59 ISABELLA
Sir, believe this,
I had rather give my body than my soul.
2.4.61 ANGELO
I talk not of your soul: our compell'd sins
Stand more for number than for accompt.
2.4.63 ISABELLA
How say you?
2.4.64 ANGELO
Nay, I'll not warrant that; for I can speak
Against the thing I say. Answer to this:
I, now the voice of the recorded law,
Pronounce a sentence on your brother's life:
Might there not be a charity in sin
To save this brother's life?
2.4.70 ISABELLA
Please you to do't,
I'll take it as a peril to my soul,
It is no sin at all, but charity.
2.4.73 ANGELO
Pleased you to do't at peril of your soul,
Were equal poise of sin and charity.
2.4.75 ISABELLA
That I do beg his life, if it be sin,
Heaven let me bear it! you granting of my suit,
If that be sin, I'll make it my morn prayer
To have it added to the faults of mine,
And nothing of your answer.
2.4.80 ANGELO
Nay, but hear me.
Your sense pursues not mine: either you are ignorant,
Or seem so craftily; and that's not good.
2.4.83 ISABELLA
Let me be ignorant, and in nothing good,
But graciously to know I am no better.
2.4.85 ANGELO
Thus wisdom wishes to appear most bright
When it doth tax itself; as these black masks
Proclaim an enshield beauty ten times louder
Than beauty could, display'd. But mark me;
To be received plain, I'll speak more gross:
Your brother is to die.
2.4.91 ISABELLA
So.
2.4.92 ANGELO
And his offence is so, as it appears,
Accountant to the law upon that pain.
2.4.94 ISABELLA
True.
2.4.95 ANGELO
Admit no other way to save his life, –
As I subscribe not that, nor any other,
But in the loss of question, – that you, his sister,
Finding yourself desired of such a person,
Whose credit with the judge, or own great place,
Could fetch your brother from the manacles
Of the all-building law; and that there were
No earthly mean to save him, but that either
You must lay down the treasures of your body
To this supposed, or else to let him suffer;
What would you do?
2.4.106 ISABELLA
As much for my poor brother as myself:
That is, were I under the terms of death,
The impression of keen whips I'ld wear as rubies,
And strip myself to death, as to a bed
That longing have been sick for, ere I'ld yield
My body up to shame.
2.4.112 ANGELO
Then must your brother die.
2.4.113 ISABELLA
And 'twere the cheaper way:
Better it were a brother died at once,
Than that a sister, by redeeming him,
Should die for ever.
2.4.117 ANGELO
Were not you then as cruel as the sentence
That you have slander'd so?
2.4.119 ISABELLA
Ignomy in ransom and free pardon
Are of two houses: lawful mercy
Is nothing kin to foul redemption.
2.4.122 ANGELO
You seem'd of late to make the law a tyrant;
And rather proved the sliding of your brother
A merriment than a vice.
2.4.125 ISABELLA
O, pardon me, my lord; it oft falls out,
To have what we would have, we speak not what we mean:
I something do excuse the thing I hate,
For his advantage that I dearly love.
2.4.129 ANGELO
We are all frail.
2.4.130 ISABELLA
Else let my brother die,
If not a feodary, but only he
Owe and succeed thy weakness.
2.4.133 ANGELO
Nay, women are frail too.
2.4.134 ISABELLA
Ay, as the glasses where they view themselves;
Which are as easy broke as they make forms.
Women! Help Heaven! men their creation mar
In profiting by them. Nay, call us ten times frail;
For we are soft as our complexions are,
And credulous to false prints.
2.4.140 ANGELO
I think it well:
And from this testimony of your own sex, –
Since I suppose we are made to be no stronger
Than faults may shake our frames, – let me be bold;
I do arrest your words. Be that you are,
That is, a woman; if you be more, you're none;
If you be one, as you are well express'd
By all external warrants, show it now,
By putting on the destined livery.
2.4.149 ISABELLA
I have no tongue but one: gentle my lord,
Let me entreat you speak the former language.
2.4.151 ANGELO
Plainly conceive, I love you.
2.4.152 ISABELLA
My brother did love Juliet,
And you tell me that he shall die for it.
2.4.154 ANGELO
He shall not, Isabel, if you give me love.
2.4.155 ISABELLA
I know your virtue hath a licence in't,
Which seems a little fouler than it is,
To pluck on others.
2.4.158 ANGELO
Believe me, on mine honour,
My words express my purpose.
2.4.160 ISABELLA
Ha! little honour to be much believed,
And most pernicious purpose! Seeming, seeming!
I will proclaim thee, Angelo; look for't:
Sign me a present pardon for my brother,
Or with an outstretch'd throat I'll tell the world aloud
What man thou art.
2.4.166 ANGELO
Who will believe thee, Isabel?
My unsoil'd name, the austereness of my life,
My vouch against you, and my place i' the state,
Will so your accusation overweigh,
That you shall stifle in your own report
And smell of calumny. I have begun,
And now I give my sensual race the rein:
Fit thy consent to my sharp appetite;
Lay by all nicety and prolixious blushes,
That banish what they sue for; redeem thy brother
By yielding up thy body to my will;
Or else he must not only die the death,
But thy unkindness shall his death draw out
To lingering sufferance. Answer me tomorrow,
Or, by the affection that now guides me most,
I'll prove a tyrant to him. As for you,
Say what you can, my false o'erweighs your true.
Exit
2.4.183 ISABELLA
To whom should I complain? Did I tell this,
Who would believe me? O perilous mouths,
That bear in them one and the self-same tongue,
Either of condemnation or approof;
Bidding the law make court'sy to their will:
Hooking both right and wrong to the appetite,
To follow as it draws! I'll to my brother:
Though he hath fallen by prompture of the blood,
Yet hath he in him such a mind of honour.
That, had he twenty heads to tender down
On twenty bloody blocks, he'ld yield them up,
Before his sister should her body stoop
To such abhorr'd pollution.
Then, Isabel, live chaste, and, brother, die:
More than our brother is our chastity.
I'll tell him yet of Angelo's request,
And fit his mind to death, for his soul's rest.
Exit
Contents

Act 3

Scene 1

A room in the prison.

Enter DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before, CLAUDIO, and Provost
3.1.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
So then you hope of pardon from Lord Angelo?
3.1.2 CLAUDIO
The miserable have no other medicine
But only hope:
I've hope to live, and am prepared to die.
3.1.5 DUKE VINCENTIO
Be absolute for death; either death or life
Shall thereby be the sweeter. Reason thus with life:
If I do lose thee, I do lose a thing
That none but fools would keep: a breath thou art,
Servile to all the skyey influences,
That dost this habitation, where thou keep'st,
Hourly afflict: merely, thou art death's fool;
For him thou labour'st by thy flight to shun
And yet runn'st toward him still. Thou art not noble;
For all the accommodations that thou bear'st
Are nursed by baseness. Thou'rt by no means valiant;
For thou dost fear the soft and tender fork
Of a poor worm. Thy best of rest is sleep,
And that thou oft provokest; yet grossly fear'st
Thy death, which is no more. Thou art not thyself;
For thou exist'st on many a thousand grains
That issue out of dust. Happy thou art not;
For what thou hast not, still thou strivest to get,
And what thou hast, forget'st. Thou art not certain;
For thy complexion shifts to strange effects,
After the moon. If thou art rich, thou'rt poor;
For, like an ass whose back with ingots bows,
Thou bear's thy heavy riches but a journey,
And death unloads thee. Friend hast thou none;
For thine own bowels, which do call thee sire,
The mere effusion of thy proper loins,
Do curse the gout, serpigo, and the rheum,
For ending thee no sooner. Thou hast nor youth nor age,
But, as it were, an after-dinner's sleep,
Dreaming on both; for all thy blessed youth
Becomes as aged, and doth beg the alms
Of palsied eld; and when thou art old and rich,
Thou hast neither heat, affection, limb, nor beauty,
To make thy riches pleasant. What's yet in this
That bears the name of life? Yet in this life
Lie hid more thousand deaths: yet death we fear,
That makes these odds all even.
3.1.42 CLAUDIO
I humbly thank you.
To sue to live, I find I seek to die;
And, seeking death, find life: let it come on.
3.1.45 ISABELLA
[Within] What, ho! Peace here; grace and good company!
3.1.46 Provost
Who's there? come in: the wish deserves a welcome.
3.1.47 DUKE VINCENTIO
Dear sir, ere long I'll visit you again.
3.1.48 CLAUDIO
Most holy sir, I thank you.
Enter ISABELLA
3.1.49 ISABELLA
My business is a word or two with Claudio.
3.1.50 Provost
And very welcome. Look, signior, here's your sister.
3.1.51 DUKE VINCENTIO
Provost, a word with you.
3.1.52 Provost
As many as you please.
3.1.53 DUKE VINCENTIO
Bring me to hear them speak, where I may be concealed.
Exeunt DUKE VINCENTIO and Provost
3.1.54 CLAUDIO
Now, sister, what's the comfort?
3.1.55 ISABELLA
Why,
As all comforts are; most good, most good indeed.
Lord Angelo, having affairs to heaven,
Intends you for his swift ambassador,
Where you shall be an everlasting leiger:
Therefore your best appointment make with speed;
Tomorrow you set on.
3.1.62 CLAUDIO
Is there no remedy?
3.1.63 ISABELLA
None, but such remedy as, to save a head,
To cleave a heart in twain.
3.1.65 CLAUDIO
But is there any?
3.1.66 ISABELLA
Yes, brother, you may live:
There is a devilish mercy in the judge,
If you'll implore it, that will free your life,
But fetter you till death.
3.1.70 CLAUDIO
Perpetual durance?
3.1.71 ISABELLA
Ay, just; perpetual durance, a restraint,
Though all the world's vastidity you had,
To a determined scope.
3.1.74 CLAUDIO
But in what nature?
3.1.75 ISABELLA
In such a one as, you consenting to't,
Would bark your honour from that trunk you bear,
And leave you naked.
3.1.78 CLAUDIO
Let me know the point.
3.1.79 ISABELLA
O, I do fear thee, Claudio; and I quake,
Lest thou a feverous life shouldst entertain,
And six or seven winters more respect
Than a perpetual honour. Darest thou die?
The sense of death is most in apprehension;
And the poor beetle, that we tread upon,
In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great
As when a giant dies.
3.1.87 CLAUDIO
Why give you me this shame?
Think you I can a resolution fetch
From flowery tenderness? If I must die,
I will encounter darkness as a bride,
And hug it in mine arms.
3.1.92 ISABELLA
There spake my brother; there my father's grave
Did utter forth a voice. Yes, thou must die:
Thou art too noble to conserve a life
In base appliances. This outward-sainted deputy,
Whose settled visage and deliberate word
Nips youth i' the head and follies doth emmew
As falcon doth the fowl, is yet a devil
His filth within being cast, he would appear
A pond as deep as hell.
3.1.101 CLAUDIO
The prenzie Angelo!
3.1.102 ISABELLA
O, 'tis the cunning livery of hell,
The damned'st body to invest and cover
In prenzie guards! Dost thou think, Claudio?
If I would yield him my virginity,
Thou mightst be freed.
3.1.107 CLAUDIO
O heavens! it cannot be.
3.1.108 ISABELLA
Yes, he would give't thee, from this rank offence,
So to offend him still. This night's the time
That I should do what I abhor to name,
Or else thou diest tomorrow.
3.1.112 CLAUDIO
Thou shalt not do't.
3.1.113 ISABELLA
O, were it but my life,
I'ld throw it down for your deliverance
As frankly as a pin.
3.1.116 CLAUDIO
Thanks, dear Isabel.
3.1.117 ISABELLA
Be ready, Claudio, for your death tomorrow.
3.1.118 CLAUDIO
Yes. Has he affections in him,
That thus can make him bite the law by the nose,
When he would force it? Sure, it is no sin,
Or of the deadly seven, it is the least.
3.1.122 ISABELLA
Which is the least?
3.1.123 CLAUDIO
If it were damnable, he being so wise,
Why would he for the momentary trick
Be perdurably fined? O Isabel!
3.1.126 ISABELLA
What says my brother?
3.1.127 CLAUDIO
Death is a fearful thing.
3.1.128 ISABELLA
And shamed life a hateful.
3.1.129 CLAUDIO
Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
To lie in cold obstruction and to rot;
This sensible warm motion to become
A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
In thrilling region of thick-ribbed ice;
To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
And blown with restless violence round about
The pendent world; or to be worse than worst
Of those that lawless and incertain thought
Imagine howling: 'tis too horrible!
The weariest and most loathed worldly life
That age, ache, penury and imprisonment
Can lay on nature is a paradise
To what we fear of death.
3.1.144 ISABELLA
Alas, alas!
3.1.145 CLAUDIO
Sweet sister, let me live:
What sin you do to save a brother's life,
Nature dispenses with the deed so far
That it becomes a virtue.
3.1.149 ISABELLA
O you beast!
O faithless coward! O dishonest wretch!
Wilt thou be made a man out of my vice?
Is't not a kind of incest, to take life
From thine own sister's shame? What should I think?
Heaven shield my mother play'd my father fair!
For such a warped slip of wilderness
Ne'er issued from his blood. Take my defiance!
Die, perish! Might but my bending down
Reprieve thee from thy fate, it should proceed:
I'll pray a thousand prayers for thy death,
No word to save thee.
3.1.161 CLAUDIO
Nay, hear me, Isabel.
3.1.162 ISABELLA
O, fie, fie, fie!
Thy sin's not accidental, but a trade.
Mercy to thee would prove itself a bawd:
'Tis best thou diest quickly.
3.1.166 CLAUDIO
O hear me, Isabella!
Re-enter DUKE VINCENTIO
3.1.167 DUKE VINCENTIO
Vouchsafe a word, young sister, but one word.
3.1.168 ISABELLA
What is your will?
3.1.169 DUKE VINCENTIO
Might you dispense with your leisure, I would by and
by have some speech with you: the satisfaction I
would require is likewise your own benefit.
3.1.172 ISABELLA
I have no superfluous leisure; my stay must be
stolen out of other affairs; but I will attend you awhile.
Walks apart
3.1.174 DUKE VINCENTIO
Son, I have overheard what hath passed between you
and your sister. Angelo had never the purpose to
corrupt her; only he hath made an assay of her
virtue to practise his judgment with the disposition
of natures: she, having the truth of honour in her,
hath made him that gracious denial which he is most
glad to receive. I am confessor to Angelo, and I
know this to be true; therefore prepare yourself to
death: do not satisfy your resolution with hopes
that are fallible: tomorrow you must die; go to
your knees and make ready.
3.1.185 CLAUDIO
Let me ask my sister pardon. I am so out of love
with life that I will sue to be rid of it.
3.1.187 DUKE VINCENTIO
Hold you there: farewell.
Exit CLAUDIO
Provost, a word with you!
Re-enter Provost
3.1.189 Provost
What's your will, father
3.1.190 DUKE VINCENTIO
That now you are come, you will be gone. Leave me
awhile with the maid: my mind promises with my
habit no loss shall touch her by my company.
3.1.193 Provost
In good time.
Exit Provost. ISABELLA comes forward
3.1.194 DUKE VINCENTIO
The hand that hath made you fair hath made you good:
the goodness that is cheap in beauty makes beauty
brief in goodness; but grace, being the soul of
your complexion, shall keep the body of it ever
fair. The assault that Angelo hath made to you,
fortune hath conveyed to my understanding; and, but
that frailty hath examples for his falling, I should
wonder at Angelo. How will you do to content this
substitute, and to save your brother?
3.1.203 ISABELLA
I am now going to resolve him: I had rather my
brother die by the law than my son should be
unlawfully born. But, O, how much is the good duke
deceived in Angelo! If ever he return and I can
speak to him, I will open my lips in vain, or
discover his government.
3.1.209 DUKE VINCENTIO
That shall not be much amiss: Yet, as the matter
now stands, he will avoid your accusation; he made
trial of you only. Therefore fasten your ear on my
advisings: to the love I have in doing good a
remedy presents itself. I do make myself believe
that you may most uprighteously do a poor wronged
lady a merited benefit; redeem your brother from
the angry law; do no stain to your own gracious
person; and much please the absent duke, if
peradventure he shall ever return to have hearing of
this business.
3.1.220 ISABELLA
Let me hear you speak farther. I have spirit to do
anything that appears not foul in the truth of my spirit.
3.1.222 DUKE VINCENTIO
Virtue is bold, and goodness never fearful. Have
you not heard speak of Mariana, the sister of
Frederick the great soldier who miscarried at sea?
3.1.225 ISABELLA
I have heard of the lady, and good words went with her name.
3.1.226 DUKE VINCENTIO
She should this Angelo have married; was affianced
to her by oath, and the nuptial appointed: between
which time of the contract and limit of the
solemnity, her brother Frederick was wrecked at sea,
having in that perished vessel the dowry of his
sister. But mark how heavily this befell to the
poor gentlewoman: there she lost a noble and
renowned brother, in his love toward her ever most
kind and natural; with him, the portion and sinew of
her fortune, her marriage-dowry; with both, her
combinate husband, this well-seeming Angelo.
3.1.237 ISABELLA
Can this be so? did Angelo so leave her?
3.1.238 DUKE VINCENTIO
Left her in her tears, and dried not one of them
with his comfort; swallowed his vows whole,
pretending in her discoveries of dishonour: in few,
bestowed her on her own lamentation, which she yet
wears for his sake; and he, a marble to her tears,
is washed with them, but relents not.
3.1.244 ISABELLA
What a merit were it in death to take this poor maid
from the world! What corruption in this life, that
it will let this man live! But how out of this can she avail?
3.1.247 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is a rupture that you may easily heal: and the
cure of it not only saves your brother, but keeps
you from dishonour in doing it.
3.1.250 ISABELLA
Show me how, good father.
3.1.251 DUKE VINCENTIO
This forenamed maid hath yet in her the continuance
of her first affection: his unjust unkindness, that
in all reason should have quenched her love, hath,
like an impediment in the current, made it more
violent and unruly. Go you to Angelo; answer his
requiring with a plausible obedience; agree with
his demands to the point; only refer yourself to
this advantage, first, that your stay with him may
not be long; that the time may have all shadow and
silence in it; and the place answer to convenience.
This being granted in course, – and now follows
all, – we shall advise this wronged maid to stead up
your appointment, go in your place; if the encounter
acknowledge itself hereafter, it may compel him to
her recompense: and here, by this, is your brother
saved, your honour untainted, the poor Mariana
advantaged, and the corrupt deputy scaled. The maid
will I frame and make fit for his attempt. If you
think well to carry this as you may, the doubleness
of the benefit defends the deceit from reproof.
What think you of it?
3.1.272 ISABELLA
The image of it gives me content already; and I
trust it will grow to a most prosperous perfection.
3.1.274 DUKE VINCENTIO
It lies much in your holding up. Haste you speedily
to Angelo: if for this night he entreat you to his
bed, give him promise of satisfaction. I will
presently to Saint Luke's: there, at the moated
grange, resides this dejected Mariana. At that
place call upon me; and dispatch with Angelo, that
it may be quickly.
3.1.281 ISABELLA
I thank you for this comfort. Fare you well, good father.
Exeunt severally
Contents

Act 3

Scene 2

The street before the prison.

Enter, on one side, DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before; on the other, ELBOW, and Officers with POMPEY
3.2.1 ELBOW
Nay, if there be no remedy for it, but that you will
needs buy and sell men and women like beasts, we
shall have all the world drink brown and white bastard.
3.2.4 DUKE VINCENTIO
O heavens! what stuff is here
3.2.5 POMPEY
'Twas never merry world since, of two usuries, the
merriest was put down, and the worser allowed by
order of law a furred gown to keep him warm; and
furred with fox and lamb-skins too, to signify, that
craft, being richer than innocency, stands for the facing.
3.2.10 ELBOW
Come your way, sir. 'Bless you, good father friar.
3.2.11 DUKE VINCENTIO
And you, good brother father. What offence hath
this man made you, sir?
3.2.13 ELBOW
Marry, sir, he hath offended the law: and, sir, we
take him to be a thief too, sir; for we have found
upon him, sir, a strange picklock, which we have
sent to the deputy.
3.2.17 DUKE VINCENTIO
Fie, sirrah! a bawd, a wicked bawd!
The evil that thou causest to be done,
That is thy means to live. Do thou but think
What 'tis to cram a maw or clothe a back
From such a filthy vice: say to thyself,
From their abominable and beastly touches
I drink, I eat, array myself, and live.
Canst thou believe thy living is a life,
So stinkingly depending? Go mend, go mend.
3.2.26 POMPEY
Indeed, it does stink in some sort, sir; but yet,
sir, I would prove –
3.2.28 DUKE VINCENTIO
Nay, if the devil have given thee proofs for sin,
Thou wilt prove his. Take him to prison, officer:
Correction and instruction must both work
Ere this rude beast will profit.
3.2.32 ELBOW
He must before the deputy, sir; he has given him
warning: the deputy cannot abide a whoremaster: if
he be a whoremonger, and comes before him, he were
as good go a mile on his errand.
3.2.36 DUKE VINCENTIO
That we were all, as some would seem to be,
From our faults, as faults from seeming, free!
3.2.38 ELBOW
His neck will come to your waist, – a cord, sir.
3.2.39 POMPEY
I spy comfort; I cry bail. Here's a gentleman and a
friend of mine.
Enter LUCIO
3.2.41 LUCIO
How now, noble Pompey! What, at the wheels of
Caesar? art thou led in triumph? What, is there
none of Pygmalion's images, newly made woman, to be
had now, for putting the hand in the pocket and
extracting it clutch'd? What reply, ha? What
sayest thou to this tune, matter and method? Is't
not drowned i' the last rain, ha? What sayest
thou, Trot? Is the world as it was, man? Which is
the way? Is it sad, and few words? or how? The
trick of it?
3.2.51 DUKE VINCENTIO
Still thus, and thus; still worse!
3.2.52 LUCIO
How doth my dear morsel, thy mistress? Procures she
still, ha?
3.2.54 POMPEY
Troth, sir, she hath eaten up all her beef, and she
is herself in the tub.
3.2.56 LUCIO
Why, 'tis good; it is the right of it; it must be
so: ever your fresh whore and your powdered bawd:
an unshunned consequence; it must be so. Art going
to prison, Pompey?
3.2.60 POMPEY
Yes, faith, sir.
3.2.61 LUCIO
Why, 'tis not amiss, Pompey. Farewell: go, say I
sent thee thither. For debt, Pompey? or how?
3.2.63 ELBOW
For being a bawd, for being a bawd.
3.2.64 LUCIO
Well, then, imprison him: if imprisonment be the
due of a bawd, why, 'tis his right: bawd is he
doubtless, and of antiquity too; bawd-born.
Farewell, good Pompey. Commend me to the prison,
Pompey: you will turn good husband now, Pompey; you
will keep the house.
3.2.70 POMPEY
I hope, sir, your good worship will be my bail.
3.2.71 LUCIO
No, indeed, will I not, Pompey; it is not the wear.
I will pray, Pompey, to increase your bondage: If
you take it not patiently, why, your mettle is the
more. Adieu, trusty Pompey. 'Bless you, friar.
3.2.75 DUKE VINCENTIO
And you.
3.2.76 LUCIO
Does Bridget paint still, Pompey, ha?
3.2.77 ELBOW
Come your ways, sir; come.
3.2.78 POMPEY
You will not bail me, then, sir?
3.2.79 LUCIO
Then, Pompey, nor now. What news abroad, friar?
what news?
3.2.81 ELBOW
Come your ways, sir; come.
3.2.82 LUCIO
Go to kennel, Pompey; go.
Exeunt ELBOW, POMPEY and Officers
What news, friar, of the duke?
3.2.84 DUKE VINCENTIO
I know none. Can you tell me of any?
3.2.85 LUCIO
Some say he is with the Emperor of Russia; other
some, he is in Rome: but where is he, think you?
3.2.87 DUKE VINCENTIO
I know not where; but wheresoever, I wish him well.
3.2.88 LUCIO
It was a mad fantastical trick of him to steal from
the state, and usurp the beggary he was never born
to. Lord Angelo dukes it well in his absence; he
puts transgression to 't.
3.2.92 DUKE VINCENTIO
He does well in 't.
3.2.93 LUCIO
A little more lenity to lechery would do no harm in
him: something too crabbed that way, friar.
3.2.95 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is too general a vice, and severity must cure it.
3.2.96 LUCIO
Yes, in good sooth, the vice is of a great kindred;
it is well allied: but it is impossible to extirp
it quite, friar, till eating and drinking be put
down. They say this Angelo was not made by man and
woman after this downright way of creation: is it
true, think you?
3.2.102 DUKE VINCENTIO
How should he be made, then?
3.2.103 LUCIO
Some report a sea-maid spawned him; some, that he
was begot between two stock-fishes. But it is
certain that when he makes water his urine is
congealed ice; that I know to be true: and he is a
motion generative; that's infallible.
3.2.108 DUKE VINCENTIO
You are pleasant, sir, and speak apace.
3.2.109 LUCIO
Why, what a ruthless thing is this in him, for the
rebellion of a codpiece to take away the life of a
man! Would the duke that is absent have done this?
Ere he would have hanged a man for the getting a
hundred bastards, he would have paid for the nursing
a thousand: he had some feeling of the sport: he
knew the service, and that instructed him to mercy.
3.2.116 DUKE VINCENTIO
I never heard the absent duke much detected for
women; he was not inclined that way.
3.2.118 LUCIO
O, sir, you are deceived.
3.2.119 DUKE VINCENTIO
'Tis not possible.
3.2.120 LUCIO
Who, not the duke? yes, your beggar of fifty; and
his use was to put a ducat in her clack-dish: the
duke had crotchets in him. He would be drunk too;
that let me inform you.
3.2.124 DUKE VINCENTIO
You do him wrong, surely.
3.2.125 LUCIO
Sir, I was an inward of his. A shy fellow was the
duke: and I believe I know the cause of his
withdrawing.
3.2.128 DUKE VINCENTIO
What, I prithee, might be the cause?
3.2.129 LUCIO
No, pardon; 'tis a secret must be locked within the
teeth and the lips: but this I can let you
understand, the greater file of the subject held the
duke to be wise.
3.2.133 DUKE VINCENTIO
Wise! why, no question but he was.
3.2.134 LUCIO
A very superficial, ignorant, unweighing fellow.
3.2.135 DUKE VINCENTIO
Either this is the envy in you, folly, or mistaking:
the very stream of his life and the business he hath
helmed must upon a warranted need give him a better
proclamation. Let him be but testimonied in his own
bringings-forth, and he shall appear to the
envious a scholar, a statesman and a soldier.
Therefore you speak unskilfully: or if your
knowledge be more it is much darkened in your malice.
3.2.143 LUCIO
Sir, I know him, and I love him.
3.2.144 DUKE VINCENTIO
Love talks with better knowledge, and knowledge with
dearer love.
3.2.146 LUCIO
Come, sir, I know what I know.
3.2.147 DUKE VINCENTIO
I can hardly believe that, since you know not what
you speak. But, if ever the duke return, as our
prayers are he may, let me desire you to make your
answer before him. If it be honest you have spoke,
you have courage to maintain it: I am bound to call
upon you; and, I pray you, your name?
3.2.153 LUCIO
Sir, my name is Lucio; well known to the duke.
3.2.154 DUKE VINCENTIO
He shall know you better, sir, if I may live to
report you.
3.2.156 LUCIO
I fear you not.
3.2.157 DUKE VINCENTIO
O, you hope the duke will return no more; or you
imagine me too unhurtful an opposite. But indeed I
can do you little harm; you'll forswear this again.
3.2.160 LUCIO
I'll be hanged first: thou art deceived in me,
friar. But no more of this. Canst thou tell if
Claudio die tomorrow or no?
3.2.163 DUKE VINCENTIO
Why should he die, sir?
3.2.164 LUCIO
Why? For filling a bottle with a tundish. I would
the duke we talk of were returned again: the
ungenitured agent will unpeople the province with
continency; sparrows must not build in his
house-eaves, because they are lecherous. The duke
yet would have dark deeds darkly answered; he would
never bring them to light: would he were returned!
Marry, this Claudio is condemned for untrussing.
Farewell, good friar: I prithee, pray for me. The
duke, I say to thee again, would eat mutton on
Fridays. He's not past it yet, and I say to thee,
he would mouth with a beggar, though she smelt brown
bread and garlic: say that I said so. Farewell.
Exit
3.2.177 DUKE VINCENTIO
No might nor greatness in mortality
Can censure 'scape; back-wounding calumny
The whitest virtue strikes. What king so strong
Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue?
But who comes here?
Enter ESCALUS, Provost, and Officers with MISTRESS OVERDONE
3.2.182 ESCALUS
Go; away with her to prison!
3.2.183 MISTRESS OVERDONE
Good my lord, be good to me; your honour is accounted
a merciful man; good my lord.
3.2.185 ESCALUS
Double and treble admonition, and still forfeit in
the same kind! This would make mercy swear and play
the tyrant.
3.2.188 Provost
A bawd of eleven years' continuance, may it please
your honour.
3.2.190 MISTRESS OVERDONE
My lord, this is one Lucio's information against me.
Mistress Kate Keepdown was with child by him in the
duke's time; he promised her marriage: his child
is a year and a quarter old, come Philip and Jacob:
I have kept it myself; and see how he goes about to abuse me!
3.2.195 ESCALUS
That fellow is a fellow of much licence: let him be
called before us. Away with her to prison! Go to;
no more words.
Exeunt Officers with MISTRESS OVERDONE
Provost, my brother Angelo will not be altered;
Claudio must die tomorrow: let him be furnished
with divines, and have all charitable preparation.
if my brother wrought by my pity, it should not be
so with him.
3.2.203 Provost
So please you, this friar hath been with him, and
advised him for the entertainment of death.
3.2.205 ESCALUS
Good even, good father.
3.2.206 DUKE VINCENTIO
Bliss and goodness on you!
3.2.207 ESCALUS
Of whence are you?
3.2.208 DUKE VINCENTIO
Not of this country, though my chance is now
To use it for my time: I am a brother
Of gracious order, late come from the See
In special business from his holiness.
3.2.212 ESCALUS
What news abroad i' the world?
3.2.213 DUKE VINCENTIO
None, but that there is so great a fever on
goodness, that the dissolution of it must cure it:
novelty is only in request; and it is as dangerous
to be aged in any kind of course, as it is virtuous
to be constant in any undertaking. There is scarce
truth enough alive to make societies secure; but
security enough to make fellowships accurst: much
upon this riddle runs the wisdom of the world. This
news is old enough, yet it is every day's news. I
pray you, sir, of what disposition was the duke?
3.2.223 ESCALUS
One that, above all other strifes, contended
especially to know himself.
3.2.225 DUKE VINCENTIO
What pleasure was he given to?
3.2.226 ESCALUS
Rather rejoicing to see another merry, than merry at
any thing which professed to make him rejoice: a
gentleman of all temperance. But leave we him to
his events, with a prayer they may prove prosperous;
and let me desire to know how you find Claudio
prepared. I am made to understand that you have
lent him visitation.
3.2.233 DUKE VINCENTIO
He professes to have received no sinister measure
from his judge, but most willingly humbles himself
to the determination of justice: yet had he framed
to himself, by the instruction of his frailty, many
deceiving promises of life; which I by my good
leisure have discredited to him, and now is he
resolved to die.
3.2.240 ESCALUS
You have paid the heavens your function, and the
prisoner the very debt of your calling. I have
laboured for the poor gentleman to the extremest
shore of my modesty: but my brother justice have I
found so severe, that he hath forced me to tell him
he is indeed Justice.
3.2.246 DUKE VINCENTIO
If his own life answer the straitness of his
proceeding, it shall become him well; wherein if he
chance to fail, he hath sentenced himself.
3.2.249 ESCALUS
I am going to visit the prisoner. Fare you well.
3.2.250 DUKE VINCENTIO
Peace be with you!
Exeunt ESCALUS and Provost
He who the sword of heaven will bear
Should be as holy as severe;
Pattern in himself to know,
Grace to stand, and virtue go;
More nor less to others paying
Than by self-offences weighing.
Shame to him whose cruel striking
Kills for faults of his own liking!
Twice treble shame on Angelo,
To weed my vice and let his grow!
O, what may man within him hide,
Though angel on the outward side!
How may likeness made in crimes,
Making practise on the times,
To draw with idle spiders' strings
Most ponderous and substantial things!
Craft against vice I must apply:
With Angelo tonight shall lie
His old betrothed but despised;
So disguise shall, by the disguised,
Pay with falsehood false exacting,
And perform an old contracting.
Exit
Contents

Act 4

Scene 1

The moated grange at ST. LUKE's.

Enter MARIANA and a Boy
4.1.1 Boy
[Sings] Take, O, take those lips away,
That so sweetly were forsworn;
And those eyes, the break of day,
Lights that do mislead the morn:
But my kisses bring again, bring again;
Seals of love, but sealed in vain, sealed in vain.
4.1.7 MARIANA
Break off thy song, and haste thee quick away:
Here comes a man of comfort, whose advice
Hath often still'd my brawling discontent.
Exit Boy
Enter DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before
I cry you mercy, sir; and well could wish
You had not found me here so musical:
Let me excuse me, and believe me so,
My mirth it much displeased, but pleased my woe.
4.1.14 DUKE VINCENTIO
'Tis good; though music oft hath such a charm
To make bad good, and good provoke to harm.
I pray, you, tell me, hath any body inquired
for me here today? much upon this time have
I promised here to meet.
4.1.19 MARIANA
You have not been inquired after:
I have sat here all day.
Enter ISABELLA
4.1.21 DUKE VINCENTIO
I do constantly believe you. The time is come even
now. I shall crave your forbearance a little: may
be I will call upon you anon, for some advantage to yourself.
4.1.24 MARIANA
I am always bound to you.
Exit
4.1.25 DUKE VINCENTIO
Very well met, and well come.
What is the news from this good deputy?
4.1.27 ISABELLA
He hath a garden circummured with brick,
Whose western side is with a vineyard back'd;
And to that vineyard is a planched gate,
That makes his opening with this bigger key:
This other doth command a little door
Which from the vineyard to the garden leads;
There have I made my promise
Upon the heavy middle of the night
To call upon him.
4.1.36 DUKE VINCENTIO
But shall you on your knowledge find this way?
4.1.37 ISABELLA
I have ta'en a due and wary note upon't:
With whispering and most guilty diligence,
In action all of precept, he did show me
The way twice o'er.
4.1.41 DUKE VINCENTIO
Are there no other tokens
Between you 'greed concerning her observance?
4.1.43 ISABELLA
No, none, but only a repair i' the dark;
And that I have possess'd him my most stay
Can be but brief; for I have made him know
I have a servant comes with me along,
That stays upon me, whose persuasion is
I come about my brother.
4.1.49 DUKE VINCENTIO
'Tis well borne up.
I have not yet made known to Mariana
A word of this. What, ho! within! come forth!
Re-enter MARIANA
I pray you, be acquainted with this maid;
She comes to do you good.
4.1.54 ISABELLA
I do desire the like.
4.1.55 DUKE VINCENTIO
Do you persuade yourself that I respect you?
4.1.56 MARIANA
Good friar, I know you do, and have found it.
4.1.57 DUKE VINCENTIO
Take, then, this your companion by the hand,
Who hath a story ready for your ear.
I shall attend your leisure: but make haste;
The vaporous night approaches.
4.1.61 MARIANA
Will't please you walk aside?
Exeunt MARIANA and ISABELLA
4.1.62 DUKE VINCENTIO
O place and greatness! millions of false eyes
Are stuck upon thee: volumes of report
Run with these false and most contrarious quests
Upon thy doings: thousand escapes of wit
Make thee the father of their idle dreams
And rack thee in their fancies.
Re-enter MARIANA and ISABELLA
Welcome, how agreed?
4.1.69 ISABELLA
She'll take the enterprise upon her, father,
If you advise it.
4.1.71 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is not my consent,
But my entreaty too.
4.1.73 ISABELLA
Little have you to say
When you depart from him, but, soft and low,
'Remember now my brother.'
4.1.76 MARIANA
Fear me not.
4.1.77 DUKE VINCENTIO
Nor, gentle daughter, fear you not at all.
He is your husband on a pre-contract:
To bring you thus together, 'tis no sin,
Sith that the justice of your title to him
Doth flourish the deceit. Come, let us go:
Our corn's to reap, for yet our tithe's to sow.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 4

Scene 2

A room in the prison.

Enter Provost and POMPEY
4.2.1 Provost
Come hither, sirrah. Can you cut off a man's head?
4.2.2 POMPEY
If the man be a bachelor, sir, I can; but if he be a
married man, he's his wife's head, and I can never
cut off a woman's head.
4.2.5 Provost
Come, sir, leave me your snatches, and yield me a
direct answer. Tomorrow morning are to die Claudio
and Barnardine. Here is in our prison a common
executioner, who in his office lacks a helper: if
you will take it on you to assist him, it shall
redeem you from your gyves; if not, you shall have
your full time of imprisonment and your deliverance
with an unpitied whipping, for you have been a
notorious bawd.
4.2.14 POMPEY
Sir, I have been an unlawful bawd time out of mind;
but yet I will be content to be a lawful hangman. I
would be glad to receive some instruction from my
fellow partner.
4.2.18 Provost
What, ho! Abhorson! Where's Abhorson, there?
Enter ABHORSON
4.2.19 ABHORSON
Do you call, sir?
4.2.20 Provost
Sirrah, here's a fellow will help you tomorrow in
your execution. If you think it meet, compound with
him by the year, and let him abide here with you; if
not, use him for the present and dismiss him. He
cannot plead his estimation with you; he hath been a bawd.
4.2.25 ABHORSON
A bawd, sir? fie upon him! he will discredit our mystery.
4.2.26 Provost
Go to, sir; you weigh equally; a feather will turn
the scale.
Exit
4.2.28 POMPEY
Pray, sir, by your good favour, – for surely, sir, a
good favour you have, but that you have a hanging
look, – do you call, sir, your occupation a mystery?
4.2.31 ABHORSON
Ay, sir; a mystery.
4.2.32 POMPEY
Painting, sir, I have heard say, is a mystery; and
your whores, sir, being members of my occupation,
using painting, do prove my occupation a mystery:
but what mystery there should be in hanging, if I
should be hanged, I cannot imagine.
4.2.37 ABHORSON
Sir, it is a mystery.
4.2.38 POMPEY
Proof?
4.2.39 ABHORSON
Every true man's apparel fits your thief.
4.2.40 POMPEY
If it be too little for your thief,
your true man thinks it big enough;
if it be too big for your thief
your thief thinks it little enough:
so every true man's apparel fits your thief.
Re-enter Provost
4.2.45 Provost
Are you agreed?
4.2.46 POMPEY
Sir, I will serve him; for I do find your hangman is
a more penitent trade than your bawd; he doth
oftener ask forgiveness.
4.2.49 Provost
You, sirrah, provide your block and your axe
tomorrow four o'clock.
4.2.51 ABHORSON
Come on, bawd; I will instruct thee in my trade; follow.
4.2.52 POMPEY
I do desire to learn, sir: and I hope, if you have
occasion to use me for your own turn, you shall find
me yare; for truly, sir, for your kindness I owe you
a good turn.
4.2.56 Provost
Call hither Barnardine and Claudio:
Exeunt POMPEY and ABHORSON
The one has my pity; not a jot the other,
Being a murderer, though he were my brother.
Enter CLAUDIO
Look, here's the warrant, Claudio, for thy death:
'Tis now dead midnight, and by eight tomorrow
Thou must be made immortal. Where's Barnardine?
4.2.62 CLAUDIO
As fast lock'd up in sleep as guiltless labour
When it lies starkly in the traveller's bones:
He will not wake.
4.2.65 Provost
Who can do good on him?
Well, go, prepare yourself.
Knocking within
But, hark, what noise?
Heaven give your spirits comfort!
Exit CLAUDIO
By and by.
I hope it is some pardon or reprieve
For the most gentle Claudio.
Enter DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before
Welcome father.
4.2.73 DUKE VINCENTIO
The best and wholesomest spirts of the night
Envelope you, good Provost! Who call'd here of late?
4.2.75 Provost
None, since the curfew rung.
4.2.76 DUKE VINCENTIO
Not Isabel?
4.2.77 Provost
No.
4.2.78 DUKE VINCENTIO
They will, then, ere't be long.
4.2.79 Provost
What comfort is for Claudio?
4.2.80 DUKE VINCENTIO
There's some in hope.
4.2.81 Provost
It is a bitter deputy.
4.2.82 DUKE VINCENTIO
Not so, not so; his life is parallel'd
Even with the stroke and line of his great justice:
He doth with holy abstinence subdue
That in himself which he spurs on his power
To qualify in others: were he meal'd with that
Which he corrects, then were he tyrannous;
But this being so, he's just.
Knocking within
Now are they come.
Exit Provost
This is a gentle provost: seldom when
The steeled gaoler is the friend of men.
Knocking within
How now! what noise? That spirit's possessed with haste
That wounds the unsisting postern with these strokes.
Re-enter Provost
4.2.94 Provost
There he must stay until the officer
Arise to let him in: he is call'd up.
4.2.96 DUKE VINCENTIO
Have you no countermand for Claudio yet,
But he must die tomorrow?
4.2.98 Provost
None, sir, none.
4.2.99 DUKE VINCENTIO
As near the dawning, provost, as it is,
You shall hear more ere morning.
4.2.101 Provost
Happily
You something know; yet I believe there comes
No countermand; no such example have we:
Besides, upon the very siege of justice
Lord Angelo hath to the public ear
Profess'd the contrary.
Enter a Messenger
This is his lordship's man.
4.2.108 DUKE VINCENTIO
And here comes Claudio's pardon.
4.2.109 Messenger
[Giving a paper]
My lord hath sent you this note; and by me this
further charge, that you swerve not from the
smallest article of it, neither in time, matter, or
other circumstance. Good morrow; for, as I take it,
it is almost day.
4.2.115 Provost
I shall obey him.
Exit Messenger
4.2.116 DUKE VINCENTIO
[Aside] This is his pardon, purchased by such sin
For which the pardoner himself is in.
Hence hath offence his quick celerity,
When it is born in high authority:
When vice makes mercy, mercy's so extended,
That for the fault's love is the offender friended.
Now, sir, what news?
4.2.123 Provost
I told you. Lord Angelo, belike thinking me remiss
in mine office, awakens me with this unwonted
putting-on; methinks strangely, for he hath not used it before.
4.2.126 DUKE VINCENTIO
Pray you, let's hear.
4.2.127 Provost
[Reads]
'Whatsoever you may hear to the contrary, let
Claudio be executed by four of the clock; and in the
afternoon Barnardine: for my better satisfaction,
let me have Claudio's head sent me by five. Let
this be duly performed; with a thought that more
depends on it than we must yet deliver. Thus fail
not to do your office, as you will answer it at your peril.'
What say you to this, sir?
4.2.136 DUKE VINCENTIO
What is that Barnardine who is to be executed in the
afternoon?
4.2.138 Provost
A Bohemian born, but here nursed up and bred; one
that is a prisoner nine years old.
4.2.140 DUKE VINCENTIO
How came it that the absent duke had not either
delivered him to his liberty or executed him? I
have heard it was ever his manner to do so.
4.2.143 Provost
His friends still wrought reprieves for him: and,
indeed, his fact, till now in the government of Lord
Angelo, came not to an undoubtful proof.
4.2.146 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is now apparent?
4.2.147 Provost
Most manifest, and not denied by himself.
4.2.148 DUKE VINCENTIO
Hath he born himself penitently in prison? how
seems he to be touched?
4.2.150 Provost
A man that apprehends death no more dreadfully but
as a drunken sleep; careless, reckless, and fearless
of what's past, present, or to come; insensible of
mortality, and desperately mortal.
4.2.154 DUKE VINCENTIO
He wants advice.
4.2.155 Provost
He will hear none: he hath evermore had the liberty
of the prison; give him leave to escape hence, he
would not: drunk many times a day, if not many days
entirely drunk. We have very oft awaked him, as if
to carry him to execution, and showed him a seeming
warrant for it: it hath not moved him at all.
4.2.161 DUKE VINCENTIO
More of him anon. There is written in your brow,
provost, honesty and constancy: if I read it not
truly, my ancient skill beguiles me; but, in the
boldness of my cunning, I will lay myself in hazard.
Claudio, whom here you have warrant to execute, is
no greater forfeit to the law than Angelo who hath
sentenced him. To make you understand this in a
manifested effect, I crave but four days' respite;
for the which you are to do me both a present and a
dangerous courtesy.
4.2.171 Provost
Pray, sir, in what?
4.2.172 DUKE VINCENTIO
In the delaying death.
4.2.173 Provost
A lack, how may I do it, having the hour limited,
and an express command, under penalty, to deliver
his head in the view of Angelo? I may make my case
as Claudio's, to cross this in the smallest.
4.2.177 DUKE VINCENTIO
By the vow of mine order I warrant you, if my
instructions may be your guide. Let this Barnardine
be this morning executed, and his head born to Angelo.
4.2.180 Provost
Angelo hath seen them both, and will discover the favour.
4.2.181 DUKE VINCENTIO
O, death's a great disguiser; and you may add to it.
Shave the head, and tie the beard; and say it was
the desire of the penitent to be so bared before his
death: you know the course is common. If any thing
fall to you upon this, more than thanks and good
fortune, by the saint whom I profess, I will plead
against it with my life.
4.2.188 Provost
Pardon me, good father; it is against my oath.
4.2.189 DUKE VINCENTIO
Were you sworn to the duke, or to the deputy?
4.2.190 Provost
To him, and to his substitutes.
4.2.191 DUKE VINCENTIO
You will think you have made no offence, if the duke
avouch the justice of your dealing?
4.2.193 Provost
But what likelihood is in that?
4.2.194 DUKE VINCENTIO
Not a resemblance, but a certainty. Yet since I see
you fearful, that neither my coat, integrity, nor
persuasion can with ease attempt you, I will go
further than I meant, to pluck all fears out of you.
Look you, sir, here is the hand and seal of the
duke: you know the character, I doubt not; and the
signet is not strange to you.
4.2.201 Provost
I know them both.
4.2.202 DUKE VINCENTIO
The contents of this is the return of the duke: you
shall anon over-read it at your pleasure; where you
shall find, within these two days he will be here.
This is a thing that Angelo knows not; for he this
very day receives letters of strange tenor;
perchance of the duke's death; perchance entering
into some monastery; but, by chance, nothing of what
is writ. Look, the unfolding star calls up the
shepherd. Put not yourself into amazement how these
things should be: all difficulties are but easy
when they are known. Call your executioner, and off
with Barnardine's head: I will give him a present
shrift and advise him for a better place. Yet you
are amazed; but this shall absolutely resolve you.
Come away; it is almost clear dawn.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 4

Scene 3

Another room in the same.

Enter POMPEY
4.3.1 POMPEY
I am as well acquainted here as I was in our house
of profession: one would think it were Mistress
Overdone's own house, for here be many of her old
customers. First, here's young Master Rash; he's in
for a commodity of brown paper and old ginger,
ninescore and seventeen pounds; of which he made
five marks, ready money: marry, then ginger was not
much in request, for the old women were all dead.
Then is there here one Master Caper, at the suit of
Master Three-pile the mercer, for some four suits of
peach-coloured satin, which now peaches him a
beggar. Then have we here young Dizy, and young
Master Deep-vow, and Master Copperspur, and Master
Starve-lackey the rapier and dagger man, and young
Drop-heir that killed lusty Pudding, and Master
Forthlight the tilter, and brave Master Shooty the
great traveller, and wild Half-can that stabbed
Pots, and, I think, forty more; all great doers in
our trade, and are now 'for the Lord's sake.'
Enter ABHORSON
4.3.20 ABHORSON
Sirrah, bring Barnardine hither.
4.3.21 POMPEY
Master Barnardine! you must rise and be hanged.
Master Barnardine!
4.3.23 ABHORSON
What, ho, Barnardine!
4.3.24 BARNARDINE
[Within] A pox o' your throats! Who makes that
noise there? What are you?
4.3.26 POMPEY
Your friends, sir; the hangman. You must be so
good, sir, to rise and be put to death.
4.3.28 BARNARDINE
[Within] Away, you rogue, away! I am sleepy.
4.3.29 ABHORSON
Tell him he must awake, and that quickly too.
4.3.30 POMPEY
Pray, Master Barnardine, awake till you are
executed, and sleep afterwards.
4.3.32 ABHORSON
Go in to him, and fetch him out.
4.3.33 POMPEY
He is coming, sir, he is coming; I hear his straw rustle.
4.3.34 ABHORSON
Is the axe upon the block, sirrah?
4.3.35 POMPEY
Very ready, sir.
Enter BARNARDINE
4.3.36 BARNARDINE
How now, Abhorson? what's the news with you?
4.3.37 ABHORSON
Truly, sir, I would desire you to clap into your
prayers; for, look you, the warrant's come.
4.3.39 BARNARDINE
You rogue, I have been drinking all night; I am not
fitted for 't.
4.3.41 POMPEY
O, the better, sir; for he that drinks all night,
and is hanged betimes in the morning, may sleep the
sounder all the next day.
4.3.44 ABHORSON
Look you, sir; here comes your ghostly father: do
we jest now, think you?
Enter DUKE VINCENTIO disguised as before
4.3.46 DUKE VINCENTIO
Sir, induced by my charity, and hearing how hastily
you are to depart, I am come to advise you, comfort
you and pray with you.
4.3.49 BARNARDINE
Friar, not I I have been drinking hard all night,
and I will have more time to prepare me, or they
shall beat out my brains with billets: I will not
consent to die this day, that's certain.
4.3.53 DUKE VINCENTIO
O, sir, you must: and therefore I beseech you
Look forward on the journey you shall go.
4.3.55 BARNARDINE
I swear I will not die today for any man's
persuasion.
4.3.57 DUKE VINCENTIO
But hear you.
4.3.58 BARNARDINE
Not a word: if you have any thing to say to me,
come to my ward; for thence will not I today.
Exit
4.3.60 DUKE VINCENTIO
Unfit to live or die: O gravel heart!
After him, fellows; bring him to the block.
Exeunt ABHORSON and POMPEY
Re-enter Provost
4.3.62 Provost
Now, sir, how do you find the prisoner?
4.3.63 DUKE VINCENTIO
A creature unprepared, unmeet for death;
And to transport him in the mind he is
Were damnable.
4.3.66 Provost
Here in the prison, father,
There died this morning of a cruel fever
One Ragozine, a most notorious pirate,
A man of Claudio's years; his beard and head
Just of his colour. What if we do omit
This reprobate till he were well inclined;
And satisfy the deputy with the visage
Of Ragozine, more like to Claudio?
4.3.74 DUKE VINCENTIO
O, 'tis an accident that heaven provides!
Dispatch it presently; the hour draws on
Prefix'd by Angelo: see this be done,
And sent according to command; whiles I
Persuade this rude wretch willingly to die.
4.3.79 Provost
This shall be done, good father, presently.
But Barnardine must die this afternoon:
And how shall we continue Claudio,
To save me from the danger that might come
If he were known alive?
4.3.84 DUKE VINCENTIO
Let this be done.
Put them in secret holds, both Barnardine and Claudio:
Ere twice the sun hath made his journal greeting
To the under generation, you shall find
Your safety manifested.
4.3.89 Provost
I am your free dependant.
4.3.90 DUKE VINCENTIO
Quick, dispatch, and send the head to Angelo.
Exit Provost
Now will I write letters to Angelo, –
The provost, he shall bear them, whose contents
Shall witness to him I am near at home,
And that, by great injunctions, I am bound
To enter publicly: him I'll desire
To meet me at the consecrated fount
A league below the city; and from thence,
By cold gradation and well-balanced form,
We shall proceed with Angelo.
Re-enter Provost
4.3.100 Provost
Here is the head; I'll carry it myself.
4.3.101 DUKE VINCENTIO
Convenient is it. Make a swift return;
For I would commune with you of such things
That want no ear but yours.
4.3.104 Provost
I'll make all speed.
Exit
4.3.105 ISABELLA
[Within] Peace, ho, be here!
4.3.106 DUKE VINCENTIO
The tongue of Isabel. She's come to know
If yet her brother's pardon be come hither:
But I will keep her ignorant of her good,
To make her heavenly comforts of despair,
When it is least expected.
Enter ISABELLA
4.3.111 ISABELLA
Ho, by your leave!
4.3.112 DUKE VINCENTIO
Good morning to you, fair and gracious daughter.
4.3.113 ISABELLA
The better, given me by so holy a man.
Hath yet the deputy sent my brother's pardon?
4.3.115 DUKE VINCENTIO
He hath released him, Isabel, from the world:
His head is off and sent to Angelo.
4.3.117 ISABELLA
Nay, but it is not so.
4.3.118 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is no other: show your wisdom, daughter,
In your close patience.
4.3.120 ISABELLA
O, I will to him and pluck out his eyes!
4.3.121 DUKE VINCENTIO
You shall not be admitted to his sight.
4.3.122 ISABELLA
Unhappy Claudio! wretched Isabel!
Injurious world! most damned Angelo!
4.3.124 DUKE VINCENTIO
This nor hurts him nor profits you a jot;
Forbear it therefore; give your cause to heaven.
Mark what I say, which you shall find
By every syllable a faithful verity:
The duke comes home tomorrow; nay, dry your eyes;
One of our convent, and his confessor,
Gives me this instance: already he hath carried
Notice to Escalus and Angelo,
Who do prepare to meet him at the gates,
There to give up their power. If you can, pace your wisdom
In that good path that I would wish it go,
And you shall have your bosom on this wretch,
Grace of the duke, revenges to your heart,
And general honour.
4.3.138 ISABELLA
I am directed by you.
4.3.139 DUKE VINCENTIO
This letter, then, to Friar Peter give;
'Tis that he sent me of the duke's return:
Say, by this token, I desire his company
At Mariana's house tonight. Her cause and yours
I'll perfect him withal, and he shall bring you
Before the duke, and to the head of Angelo
Accuse him home and home. For my poor self,
I am combined by a sacred vow
And shall be absent. Wend you with this letter:
Command these fretting waters from your eyes
With a light heart; trust not my holy order,
If I pervert your course. Who's here?
Enter LUCIO
4.3.151 LUCIO
Good even. Friar, where's the provost?
4.3.152 DUKE VINCENTIO
Not within, sir.
4.3.153 LUCIO
O pretty Isabella, I am pale at mine heart to see
thine eyes so red: thou must be patient. I am fain
to dine and sup with water and bran; I dare not for
my head fill my belly; one fruitful meal would set
me to 't. But they say the duke will be here
tomorrow. By my troth, Isabel, I loved thy brother:
if the old fantastical duke of dark corners had been
at home, he had lived.
Exit ISABELLA
4.3.161 DUKE VINCENTIO
Sir, the duke is marvellous little beholding to your
reports; but the best is, he lives not in them.
4.3.163 LUCIO
Friar, thou knowest not the duke so well as I do:
he's a better woodman than thou takest him for.
4.3.165 DUKE VINCENTIO
Well, you'll answer this one day. Fare ye well.
4.3.166 LUCIO
Nay, tarry; I'll go along with thee
I can tell thee pretty tales of the duke.
4.3.168 DUKE VINCENTIO
You have told me too many of him already, sir, if
they be true; if not true, none were enough.
4.3.170 LUCIO
I was once before him for getting a wench with child.
4.3.171 DUKE VINCENTIO
Did you such a thing?
4.3.172 LUCIO
Yes, marry, did I but I was fain to forswear it;
they would else have married me to the rotten medlar.
4.3.174 DUKE VINCENTIO
Sir, your company is fairer than honest. Rest you well.
4.3.175 LUCIO
By my troth, I'll go with thee to the lane's end:
if bawdy talk offend you, we'll have very little of
it. Nay, friar, I am a kind of burr; I shall stick.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 4

Scene 4

A room in ANGELO's house.

Enter ANGELO and ESCALUS
4.4.1 ESCALUS
Every letter he hath writ hath disvouched other.
4.4.2 ANGELO
In most uneven and distracted manner. His actions
show much like to madness: pray heaven his wisdom be
not tainted! And why meet him at the gates, and
redeliver our authorities there
4.4.6 ESCALUS
I guess not.
4.4.7 ANGELO
And why should we proclaim it in an hour before his
entering, that if any crave redress of injustice,
they should exhibit their petitions in the street?
4.4.10 ESCALUS
He shows his reason for that: to have a dispatch of
complaints, and to deliver us from devices
hereafter, which shall then have no power to stand
against us.
4.4.14 ANGELO
Well, I beseech you, let it be proclaimed betimes
i' the morn; I'll call you at your house: give
notice to such men of sort and suit as are to meet
him.
4.4.18 ESCALUS
I shall, sir. Fare you well.
4.4.19 ANGELO
Good night.
Exit ESCALUS
This deed unshapes me quite, makes me unpregnant
And dull to all proceedings. A deflower'd maid!
And by an eminent body that enforced
The law against it! But that her tender shame
Will not proclaim against her maiden loss,
How might she tongue me! Yet reason dares her no;
For my authority bears of a credent bulk,
That no particular scandal once can touch
But it confounds the breather. He should have lived,
Save that riotous youth, with dangerous sense,
Might in the times to come have ta'en revenge,
By so receiving a dishonour'd life
With ransom of such shame. Would yet he had lived!
A lack, when once our grace we have forgot,
Nothing goes right: we would, and we would not.
Exit
Contents

Act 4

Scene 5

Fields without the town.

Enter DUKE VINCENTIO in his own habit, and FRIAR PETER
4.5.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
These letters at fit time deliver me
Giving letters
The provost knows our purpose and our plot.
The matter being afoot, keep your instruction,
And hold you ever to our special drift;
Though sometimes you do blench from this to that,
As cause doth minister. Go call at Flavius' house,
And tell him where I stay: give the like notice
To Valentinus, Rowland, and to Crassus,
And bid them bring the trumpets to the gate;
But send me Flavius first.
4.5.11 FRIAR PETER
It shall be speeded well.
Exit
Enter VARRIUS
4.5.12 DUKE VINCENTIO
I thank thee, Varrius; thou hast made good haste:
Come, we will walk. There's other of our friends
Will greet us here anon, my gentle Varrius.
Exeunt
Contents

Act 4

Scene 6

Street near the city gate.

Enter ISABELLA and MARIANA
4.6.1 ISABELLA
To speak so indirectly I am loath:
I would say the truth; but to accuse him so,
That is your part: yet I am advised to do it;
He says, to veil full purpose.
4.6.5 MARIANA
Be ruled by him.
4.6.6 ISABELLA
Besides, he tells me that, if peradventure
He speak against me on the adverse side,
I should not think it strange; for 'tis a physic
That's bitter to sweet end.
4.6.10 MARIANA
I would Friar Peter –
4.6.11 ISABELLA
O, peace! the friar is come.
Enter FRIAR PETER
4.6.12 FRIAR PETER
Come, I have found you out a stand most fit,
Where you may have such vantage on the duke,
He shall not pass you. Twice have the trumpets sounded;
The generous and gravest citizens
Have hent the gates, and very near upon
The duke is entering: therefore, hence, away!
Exeunt
Contents

Act 5

Scene 1

The city gate.

MARIANA veiled, ISABELLA, and FRIAR PETER, at their stand. Enter DUKE VINCENTIO, VARRIUS, Lords, ANGELO, ESCALUS, LUCIO, Provost, Officers, and Citizens, at several doors
5.1.1 DUKE VINCENTIO
My very worthy cousin, fairly met!
Our old and faithful friend, we are glad to see you.
5.1.3 ANGELO  and  ESCALUS
Happy return be to your royal grace!
5.1.4 DUKE VINCENTIO
Many and hearty thankings to you both.
We have made inquiry of you; and we hear
Such goodness of your justice, that our soul
Cannot but yield you forth to public thanks,
Forerunning more requital.
5.1.9 ANGELO
You make my bonds still greater.
5.1.10 DUKE VINCENTIO
O, your desert speaks loud; and I should wrong it,
To lock it in the wards of covert bosom,
When it deserves, with characters of brass,
A forted residence 'gainst the tooth of time
And razure of oblivion. Give me your hand,
And let the subject see, to make them know
That outward courtesies would fain proclaim
Favours that keep within. Come, Escalus,
You must walk by us on our other hand;
And good supporters are you.
FRIAR PETER and ISABELLA come forward
5.1.20 FRIAR PETER
Now is your time: speak loud and kneel before him.
5.1.21 ISABELLA
Justice, O royal duke! Vail your regard
Upon a wrong'd, I would fain have said, a maid!
O worthy prince, dishonour not your eye
By throwing it on any other object
Till you have heard me in my true complaint
And given me justice, justice, justice, justice!
5.1.27 DUKE VINCENTIO
Relate your wrongs; in what? by whom? be brief.
Here is Lord Angelo shall give you justice:
Reveal yourself to him.
5.1.30 ISABELLA
O worthy duke,
You bid me seek redemption of the devil:
Hear me yourself; for that which I must speak
Must either punish me, not being believed,
Or wring redress from you. Hear me, O hear me, here!
5.1.35 ANGELO
My lord, her wits, I fear me, are not firm:
She hath been a suitor to me for her brother
Cut off by course of justice, –
5.1.38 ISABELLA
By course of justice!
5.1.39 ANGELO
And she will speak most bitterly and strange.
5.1.40 ISABELLA
Most strange, but yet most truly, will I speak:
That Angelo's forsworn; is it not strange?
That Angelo's a murderer; is 't not strange?
That Angelo is an adulterous thief,
An hypocrite, a virgin-violator;
Is it not strange and strange?
5.1.46 DUKE VINCENTIO
Nay, it is ten times strange.
5.1.47 ISABELLA
It is not truer he is Angelo
Than this is all as true as it is strange:
Nay, it is ten times true; for truth is truth
To the end of reckoning.
5.1.51 DUKE VINCENTIO
Away with her! Poor soul,
She speaks this in the infirmity of sense.
5.1.53 ISABELLA
O prince, I conjure thee, as thou believest
There is another comfort than this world,
That thou neglect me not, with that opinion
That I am touch'd with madness! Make not impossible
That which but seems unlike: 'tis not impossible
But one, the wicked'st caitiff on the ground,
May seem as shy, as grave, as just, as absolute
As Angelo; even so may Angelo,
In all his dressings, characts, titles, forms,
Be an arch-villain; believe it, royal prince:
If he be less, he's nothing; but he's more,
Had I more name for badness.
5.1.65 DUKE VINCENTIO
By mine honesty,
If she be mad, – as I believe no other, –
Her madness hath the oddest frame of sense,
Such a dependency of thing on thing,
As e'er I heard in madness.
5.1.70 ISABELLA
O gracious duke,
Harp not on that, nor do not banish reason
For inequality; but let your reason serve
To make the truth appear where it seems hid,
And hide the false seems true.
5.1.75 DUKE VINCENTIO
Many that are not mad
Have, sure, more lack of reason. What would you say?
5.1.77 ISABELLA
I am the sister of one Claudio,
Condemn'd upon the act of fornication
To lose his head; condemn'd by Angelo:
I, in probation of a sisterhood,
Was sent to by my brother; one Lucio
As then the messenger, –
5.1.83 LUCIO
That's I, an't like your grace:
I came to her from Claudio, and desired her
To try her gracious fortune with Lord Angelo
For her poor brother's pardon.
5.1.87 ISABELLA
That's he indeed.
5.1.88 DUKE VINCENTIO
You were not bid to speak.
5.1.89 LUCIO
No, my good lord;
Nor wish'd to hold my peace.
5.1.91 DUKE VINCENTIO
I wish you now, then;
Pray you, take note of it: and when you have
A business for yourself, pray heaven you then
Be perfect.
5.1.95 LUCIO
I warrant your honour.
5.1.96 DUKE VINCENTIO
The warrants for yourself; take heed to't.
5.1.97 ISABELLA
This gentleman told somewhat of my tale, –
5.1.98 LUCIO
Right.
5.1.99 DUKE VINCENTIO
It may be right; but you are i' the wrong
To speak before your time. Proceed.
5.1.101 ISABELLA
I went
To this pernicious caitiff deputy, –
5.1.103 DUKE VINCENTIO
That's somewhat madly spoken.
5.1.104 ISABELLA
Pardon it;
The phrase is to the matter.
5.1.106 DUKE VINCENTIO
Mended again. The matter; proceed.
5.1.107 ISABELLA
In brief, to set the needless process by,
How I persuaded, how I pray'd, and kneel'd,
How he refell'd me, and how I replied, –
For this was of much length, – the vile conclusion
I now begin with grief and shame to utter:
He would not, but by gift of my chaste body
To his concupiscible intemperate lust,
Release my brother; and, after much debatement,
My sisterly remorse confutes mine honour,
And I did yield to him: but the next morn betimes,
His purpose surfeiting, he sends a warrant
For my poor brother's head.
5.1.119 DUKE VINCENTIO
This is most likely!
5.1.120 ISABELLA
O, that it were as like as it is true!
5.1.121 DUKE VINCENTIO
By heaven, fond wretch, thou knowist not what thou speak'st,
Or else thou art suborn'd against his honour
In hateful practise. First, his integrity
Stands without blemish. Next, it imports no reason
That with such vehemency he should pursue
Faults proper to himself: if he had so offended,
He would have weigh'd thy brother by himself
And not have cut him off. Some one hath set you on:
Confess the truth, and say by whose advice
Thou camest here to complain.
5.1.131 ISABELLA
And is this all?
Then, O you blessed ministers above,
Keep me in patience, and with ripen'd time
Unfold the evil which is here wrapt up
In countenance! Heaven shield your grace from woe,
As I, thus wrong'd, hence unbelieved go!
5.1.137 DUKE VINCENTIO
I know you'ld fain be gone. An officer!
To prison with her! Shall we thus permit
A blasting and a scandalous breath to fall
On him so near us? This needs must be a practise.
Who knew of Your intent and coming hither?
5.1.142 ISABELLA
One that I would were here, Friar Lodowick.
5.1.143 DUKE VINCENTIO
A ghostly father, belike. Who knows that Lodowick?
5.1.144 LUCIO
My lord, I know him; 'tis a meddling friar;
I do not like the man: had he been lay, my lord
For certain words he spake against your grace
In your retirement, I had swinged him soundly.
5.1.148 DUKE VINCENTIO
Words against me? this is a good friar, belike!
And to set on this wretched woman here
Against our substitute! Let this friar be found.
5.1.151 LUCIO
But yesternight, my lord, she and that friar,
I saw them at the prison: a saucy friar,
A very scurvy fellow.
5.1.154 FRIAR PETER
Blessed be your royal grace!
I have stood by, my lord, and I have heard
Your royal ear abused. First, hath this woman
Most wrongfully accused your substitute,
Who is as free from touch or soil with her
As she from one ungot.
5.1.160 DUKE VINCENTIO
We did believe no less.
Know you that Friar Lodowick that she speaks of?
5.1.162 FRIAR PETER
I know him for a man divine and holy;
Not scurvy, nor a temporary meddler,
As he's reported by this gentleman;
And, on my trust, a man that never yet
Did, as he vouches, misreport your grace.
5.1.167 LUCIO
My lord, most villanously; believe it.
5.1.168 FRIAR PETER
Well, he in time may come to clear himself;
But at this instant he is sick my lord,
Of a strange fever. Upon his mere request,
Being come to knowledge that there was complaint
Intended 'gainst Lord Angelo, came I hither,
To speak, as from his mouth, what he doth know
Is true and false; and what he with his oath
And all probation will make up full clear,
Whensoever he's convented. First, for this woman.
To justify this worthy nobleman,
So vulgarly and personally accused,
Her shall you hear disproved to her eyes,
Till she herself confess it.
5.1.181 DUKE VINCENTIO
Good friar, let's hear it.
ISABELLA is carried off guarded; and MARIANA comes forward
Do you not smile at this, Lord Angelo?
O heaven, the vanity of wretched fools!
Give us some seats. Come, cousin Angelo;
In this I'll be impartial; be you judge
Of your own cause. Is this the witness, friar?
First, let her show her face, and after speak.
5.1.188 MARIANA
Pardon, my lord; I will not show my face
Until my husband bid me.
5.1.190 DUKE VINCENTIO
What, are you married?
5.1.191 MARIANA
No, my lord.
5.1.192 DUKE VINCENTIO
Are you a maid?
5.1.193 MARIANA
No, my lord.
5.1.194 DUKE VINCENTIO
A widow, then?
5.1.195 MARIANA
Neither, my lord.
5.1.196 DUKE VINCENTIO
Why, you are nothing then: neither maid, widow, nor wife?
5.1.197 LUCIO
My lord, she may be a punk; for many of them are
neither maid, widow, nor wife.
5.1.199 DUKE VINCENTIO
Silence that fellow: I would he had some cause
To prattle for himself.
5.1.201 LUCIO
Well, my lord.
5.1.202 MARIANA
My lord; I do confess I ne'er was married;
And I confess besides I am no maid:
I have known my husband; yet my husband
Knows not that ever he knew me.
5.1.206 LUCIO
He was drunk then, my lord: it can be no better.
5.1.207 DUKE VINCENTIO
For the benefit of silence, would thou wert so too!
5.1.208 LUCIO
Well, my lord.
5.1.209 DUKE VINCENTIO
This is no witness for Lord Angelo.
5.1.210 MARIANA
Now I come to't my lord
She that accuses him of fornication,
In self-same manner doth accuse my husband,
And charges him my lord, with such a time
When I'll depose I had him in mine arms
With all the effect of love.
5.1.216 ANGELO
Charges she more than me?
5.1.217 MARIANA
Not that I know.
5.1.218 DUKE VINCENTIO
No? you say your husband.
5.1.219 MARIANA
Why, just, my lord, and that is Angelo,
Who thinks he knows that he ne'er knew my body,
But knows he thinks that he knows Isabel's.
5.1.222 ANGELO
This is a strange abuse. Let's see thy face.
5.1.223 MARIANA
My husband bids me; now I will unmask.
Unveiling
This is that face, thou cruel Angelo,
Which once thou sworest was worth the looking on;
This is the hand which, with a vow'd contract,
Was fast belock'd in thine; this is the body
That took away the match from Isabel,
And did supply thee at thy garden-house
In her imagined person.
5.1.231 DUKE VINCENTIO
Know you this woman?
5.1.232 LUCIO
Carnally, she says.
5.1.233 DUKE VINCENTIO
Sirrah, no more!
5.1.234 LUCIO
Enough, my lord.
5.1.235 ANGELO
My lord, I must confess I know this woman:
And five years since there was some speech of marriage
Betwixt myself and her; which was broke off,
Partly for that her promised proportions
Came short of composition, but in chief
For that her reputation was disvalued
In levity: since which time of five years
I never spake with her, saw her, nor heard from her,
Upon my faith and honour.
5.1.244 MARIANA
Noble prince,
As there comes light from heaven and words from breath,
As there is sense in truth and truth in virtue,
I am affianced this man's wife as strongly
As words could make up vows: and, my good lord,
But Tuesday night last gone in's garden-house
He knew me as a wife. As this is true,
Let me in safety raise me from my knees
Or else for ever be confixed here,
A marble monument!
5.1.254 ANGELO
I did but smile till now:
Now, good my lord, give me the scope of justice
My patience here is touch'd. I do perceive
These poor informal women are no more
But instruments of some more mightier member
That sets them on: let me have way, my lord,
To find this practise out.
5.1.261 DUKE VINCENTIO
Ay, with my heart
And punish them to your height of pleasure.
Thou foolish friar, and thou pernicious woman,
Compact with her that's gone, think'st thou thy oaths,
Though they would swear down each particular saint,
Were testimonies against his worth and credit
That's seal'd in approbation? You, Lord Escalus,
Sit with my cousin; lend him your kind pains
To find out this abuse, whence 'tis derived.
There is another friar that set them on;
Let him be sent for.
5.1.272 FRIAR PETER
Would he were here, my lord! for he indeed
Hath set the women on to this complaint:
Your provost knows the place where he abides
And he may fetch him.
5.1.276 DUKE VINCENTIO
Go do it instantly.
Exit Provost
And you, my noble and well-warranted cousin,
Whom it concerns to hear this matter forth,
Do with your injuries as seems you best,
In any chastisement: I for a while will leave you;
But stir not you till you have well determined
Upon these slanderers.
5.1.283 ESCALUS
My lord, we'll do it throughly.
Exit DUKE
Signior Lucio, did not you say you knew that
Friar Lodowick to be a dishonest person?
5.1.286 LUCIO
'Cucullus non facit monachum:' honest in nothing
but in his clothes; and one that hath spoke most
villanous speeches of the duke.
5.1.289 ESCALUS
We shall entreat you to abide here till he come and
enforce them against him: we shall find this friar a
notable fellow.
5.1.292 LUCIO
As any in Vienna, on my word.
5.1.293 ESCALUS
Call that same Isabel here once again; I would speak with her.
Exit an Attendant
Pray you, my lord, give me leave to question; you
shall see how I'll handle her.
5.1.296 LUCIO
Not better than he, by her own report.
5.1.297 ESCALUS
Say you?
5.1.298 LUCIO
Marry, sir, I think, if you handled her privately,
she would sooner confess: perchance, publicly,
she'll be ashamed.
5.1.301 ESCALUS
I will go darkly to work with her.
5.1.302 LUCIO
That's the way; for women are light at midnight.
Re-enter Officers with ISABELLA; and Provost with the DUKE VINCENTIO in his friar's habit
5.1.303 ESCALUS
Come on, mistress: here's a gentlewoman denies all
that you have said.
5.1.305 LUCIO
My lord, here comes the rascal I spoke of; here with
the provost.
5.1.307 ESCALUS
In very good time: speak not you to him till we
call upon you.
5.1.309 LUCIO
Mum.
5.1.310 ESCALUS
Come, sir: did you set these women on to slander
Lord Angelo? they have confessed you did.
5.1.312 DUKE VINCENTIO
'Tis false.
5.1.313 ESCALUS
How! know you where you are?
5.1.314 DUKE VINCENTIO
Respect to your great place! and let the devil
Be sometime honour'd for his burning throne!
Where is the duke? 'tis he should hear me speak.
5.1.317 ESCALUS
The duke's in us; and we will hear you speak:
Look you speak justly.
5.1.319 DUKE VINCENTIO
Boldly, at least. But, O, poor souls,
Come you to seek the lamb here of the fox?
Good night to your redress! Is the duke gone?
Then is your cause gone too. The duke's unjust,
Thus to retort your manifest appeal,
And put your trial in the villain's mouth
Which here you come to accuse.
5.1.326 LUCIO
This is the rascal; this is he I spoke of.
5.1.327 ESCALUS
Why, thou unreverend and unhallow'd friar,
Is't not enough thou hast suborn'd these women
To accuse this worthy man, but, in foul mouth
And in the witness of his proper ear,
To call him villain? and then to glance from him
To the duke himself, to tax him with injustice?
Take him hence; to the rack with him! We'll touse you
Joint by joint, but we will know his purpose.
What 'unjust'!
5.1.336 DUKE VINCENTIO
Be not so hot; the duke
Dare no more stretch this finger of mine than he
Dare rack his own: his subject am I not,
Nor here provincial. My business in this state
Made me a looker on here in Vienna,
Where I have seen corruption boil and bubble
Till it o'er-run the stew; laws for all faults,
But faults so countenanced, that the strong statutes
Stand like the forfeits in a barber's shop,
As much in mock as mark.
5.1.346 ESCALUS
Slander to the state! Away with him to prison!
5.1.347 ANGELO
What can you vouch against him, Signior Lucio?
Is this the man that you did tell us of?
5.1.349 LUCIO
'Tis he, my lord. Come hither, goodman baldpate:
do you know me?
5.1.351 DUKE VINCENTIO
I remember you, sir, by the sound of your voice: I
met you at the prison, in the absence of the duke.
5.1.353 LUCIO
O, did you so? And do you remember what you said of the duke?
5.1.354 DUKE VINCENTIO
Most notedly, sir.
5.1.355 LUCIO
Do you so, sir? And was the duke a fleshmonger, a
fool, and a coward, as you then reported him to be?
5.1.357 DUKE VINCENTIO
You must, sir, change persons with me, ere you make
that my report: you, indeed, spoke so of him; and
much more, much worse.
5.1.360 LUCIO
O thou damnable fellow! Did not I pluck thee by the
nose for thy speeches?
5.1.362 DUKE VINCENTIO
I protest I love the duke as I love myself.
5.1.363 ANGELO
Hark, how the villain would close now, after his
treasonable abuses!
5.1.365 ESCALUS
Such a fellow is not to be talked withal. Away with
him to prison! Where is the provost? Away with him
to prison! lay bolts enough upon him: let him
speak no more. Away with those giglots too, and
with the other confederate companion!
5.1.370 DUKE VINCENTIO
[To Provost] Stay, sir; stay awhile.
5.1.371 ANGELO
What, resists he? Help him, Lucio.
5.1.372 LUCIO
Come, sir; come, sir; come, sir; foh, sir! Why, you
bald-pated, lying rascal, you must be hooded, must
you? Show your knave's visage, with a pox to you!
show your sheep-biting face, and be hanged an hour!
Will't not off?
Pulls off the friar's hood, and discovers DUKE VINCENTIO
5.1.377 DUKE VINCENTIO
Thou art the first knave that e'er madest a duke.
First, provost, let me bail these gentle three.
To LUCIO
Sneak not away, sir; for the friar and you
Must have a word anon. Lay hold on him.
5.1.381 LUCIO
This may prove worse than hanging.
5.1.382 DUKE VINCENTIO
[To ESCALUS] What you have spoke I pardon: sit you down:
We'll borrow place of him.
To ANGELO
Sir, by your leave.
Hast thou or word, or wit, or impudence,
That yet can do thee office? If thou hast,
Rely upon it till my tale be heard,
And hold no longer out.
5.1.389 ANGELO
O my dread lord,
I should be guiltier than my guiltiness,
To think I can be undiscernible,
When I perceive your grace, like power divine,
Hath look'd upon my passes. Then, good prince,
No longer session hold upon my shame,
But let my trial be mine own confession:
Immediate sentence then and sequent death
Is all the grace I beg.
5.1.398 DUKE VINCENTIO
Come hither, Mariana.
Say, wast thou e'er contracted to this woman?
5.1.400 ANGELO
I was, my lord.
5.1.401 DUKE VINCENTIO
Go take her hence, and marry her instantly.
Do you the office, friar; which consummate,
Return him here again. Go with him, provost.
Exeunt ANGELO, MARIANA, FRIAR PETER and Provost
5.1.404 ESCALUS
My lord, I am more amazed at his dishonour
Than at the strangeness of it.
5.1.406 DUKE VINCENTIO
Come hither, Isabel.
Your friar is now your prince: as I was then
Advertising and holy to your business,
Not changing heart with habit, I am still
Attorney'd at your service.
5.1.411 ISABELLA
O, give me pardon,
That I, your vassal, have employ'd and pain'd
Your unknown sovereignty!
5.1.414 DUKE VINCENTIO
You are pardon'd, Isabel:
And now, dear maid, be you as free to us.
Your brother's death, I know, sits at your heart;
And you may marvel why I obscured myself,
Labouring to save his life, and would not rather
Make rash remonstrance of my hidden power
Than let him so be lost. O most kind maid,
It was the swift celerity of his death,
Which I did think with slower foot came on,
That brain'd my purpose. But, peace be with him!
That life is better life, past fearing death,
Than that which lives to fear: make it your comfort,
So happy is your brother.
5.1.427 ISABELLA
I do, my lord.
Re-enter ANGELO, MARIANA, FRIAR PETER, and Provost
5.1.428 DUKE VINCENTIO
For this new-married man approaching here,
Whose salt imagination yet hath wrong'd
Your well defended honour, you must pardon
For Mariana's sake: but as he adjudged your brother, –
Being criminal, in double violation
Of sacred chastity and of promise-breach
Thereon dependent, for your brother's life, –
The very mercy of the law cries out
Most audible, even from his proper tongue,
'An Angelo for Claudio, death for death!'
Haste still pays haste, and leisure answers leisure;
Like doth quit like, and MEASURE still FOR MEASURE.
Then, Angelo, thy fault's thus manifested;
Which, though thou wouldst deny, denies thee vantage.
We do condemn thee to the very block
Where Claudio stoop'd to death, and with like haste.
Away with him!
5.1.445 MARIANA
O my most gracious lord,
I hope you will not mock me with a husband.
5.1.447 DUKE VINCENTIO
It is your husband mock'd you with a husband.
Consenting to the safeguard of your honour,
I thought your marriage fit; else imputation,
For that he knew you, might reproach your life
And choke your good to come; for his possessions,
Although by confiscation they are ours,
We do instate and widow you withal,
To buy you a better husband.
5.1.455 MARIANA
O my dear lord,
I crave no other, nor no better man.
5.1.457 DUKE VINCENTIO
Never crave him; we are definitive.
5.1.458 MARIANA
Gentle my liege, –
Kneeling
5.1.459 DUKE VINCENTIO
You do but lose your labour.
Away with him to death!
To LUCIO
Now, sir, to you.
5.1.462 MARIANA
O my good lord! Sweet Isabel, take my part;
Lend me your knees, and all my life to come
I'll lend you all my life to do you service.
5.1.465 DUKE VINCENTIO
Against all sense you do importune her:
Should she kneel down in mercy of this fact,
Her brother's ghost his paved bed would break,
And take her hence in horror.
5.1.469 MARIANA
Isabel,
Sweet Isabel, do yet but kneel by me;
Hold up your hands, say nothing; I'll speak all.
They say, best men are moulded out of faults;
And, for the most, become much more the better
For being a little bad: so may my husband.
O Isabel, will you not lend a knee?
5.1.476 DUKE VINCENTIO
He dies for Claudio's death.
5.1.477 ISABELLA
Most bounteous sir,
Kneeling
Look, if it please you, on this man condemn'd,
As if my brother lived: I partly think
A due sincerity govern'd his deeds,
Till he did look on me: since it is so,
Let him not die. My brother had but justice,
In that he did the thing for which he died:
For Angelo,
His act did not o'ertake his bad intent,
And must be buried but as an intent
That perish'd by the way: thoughts are no subjects;
Intents but merely thoughts.
5.1.489 MARIANA
Merely, my lord.
5.1.490 DUKE VINCENTIO
Your suit's unprofitable; stand up, I say.
I have bethought me of another fault.
Provost, how came it Claudio was beheaded
At an unusual hour?
5.1.494 Provost
It was commanded so.
5.1.495 DUKE VINCENTIO
Had you a special warrant for the deed?
5.1.496 Provost
No, my good lord; it was by private message.
5.1.497 DUKE VINCENTIO
For which I do discharge you of your office:
Give up your keys.
5.1.499 Provost
Pardon me, noble lord:
I thought it was a fault, but knew it not;
Yet did repent me, after more advice;
For testimony whereof, one in the prison,
That should by private order else have died,
I have reserved alive.
5.1.505 DUKE VINCENTIO
What's he?
5.1.506 Provost
His name is Barnardine.
5.1.507 DUKE VINCENTIO
I would thou hadst done so by Claudio.
Go fetch him hither; let me look upon him.
Exit Provost
5.1.509 ESCALUS
I am sorry, one so learned and so wise
As you, Lord Angelo, have still appear'd,
Should slip so grossly, both in the heat of blood.
And lack of temper'd judgment afterward.
5.1.513 ANGELO
I am sorry that such sorrow I procure:
And so deep sticks it in my penitent heart
That I crave death more willingly than mercy;
'Tis my deserving, and I do entreat it.
Re-enter Provost, with BARNARDINE, CLAUDIO muffled, and JULIET
5.1.517 DUKE VINCENTIO
Which is that Barnardine?
5.1.518 Provost
This, my lord.
5.1.519 DUKE VINCENTIO
There was a friar told me of this man.
Sirrah, thou art said to have a stubborn soul.
That apprehends no further than this world,
And squarest thy life according. Thou'rt condemn'd:
But, for those earthly faults, I quit them all;
And pray thee take this mercy to provide
For better times to come. Friar, advise him;
I leave him to your hand. What muffled fellow's that?
5.1.527 Provost
This is another prisoner that I saved.
Who should have died when Claudio lost his head;
As like almost to Claudio as himself.
Unmuffles CLAUDIO
5.1.530 DUKE VINCENTIO
[To ISABELLA] If he be like your brother, for his sake
Is he pardon'd; and, for your lovely sake,
Give me your hand and say you will be mine.
He is my brother too: but fitter time for that.
By this Lord Angelo perceives he's safe;
Methinks I see a quickening in his eye.
Well, Angelo, your evil quits you well:
Look that you love your wife; her worth worth yours.
I find an apt remission in myself;
And yet here's one in place I cannot pardon.
To LUCIO
You, sirrah, that knew me for a fool, a coward,
One all of luxury, an ass, a madman;
Wherein have I so deserved of you,
That you extol me thus?
5.1.544 LUCIO
'Faith, my lord. I spoke it but according to the
trick. If you will hang me for it, you may; but I
had rather it would please you I might be whipt.
5.1.547 DUKE VINCENTIO
Whipt first, sir, and hanged after.
Proclaim it, provost, round about the city.
Is any woman wrong'd by this lewd fellow,
As I have heard him swear himself there's one
Whom he begot with child, let her appear,
And he shall marry her: the nuptial finish'd,
Let him be whipt and hang'd.
5.1.554 LUCIO
I beseech your highness, do not marry me to a whore.
Your highness said even now, I made you a duke:
good my lord, do not recompense me in making me a cuckold.
5.1.557 DUKE VINCENTIO
Upon mine honour, thou shalt marry her.
Thy slanders I forgive; and therewithal
Remit thy other forfeits. Take him to prison;
And see our pleasure herein executed.
5.1.561 LUCIO
Marrying a punk, my lord, is pressing to death,
whipping, and hanging.
5.1.563 DUKE VINCENTIO
Slandering a prince deserves it.
Exit Officers with LUCIO
She, Claudio, that you wrong'd, look you restore.
Joy to you, Mariana! Love her, Angelo:
I have confess'd her and I know her virtue.
Thanks, good friend Escalus, for thy much goodness:
There's more behind that is more gratulate.
Thanks, provost, for thy care and secrecy:
We shill employ thee in a worthier place.
Forgive him, Angelo, that brought you home
The head of Ragozine for Claudio's:
The offence pardons itself. Dear Isabel,
I have a motion much imports your good;
Whereto if you'll a willing ear incline,
What's mine is yours and what is yours is mine.
So, bring us to our palace; where we'll show
What's yet behind, that's meet you all should know.
Exeunt
Contents

Finis