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- A patient and a sworn enemy,
- To one manly gentleman helps to make off
- One fairer feather: so, happily, I thank thee.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- Welcome, Harry; welcome, Somerset: but that
- Me too shall be revenged on you.
- WARWICK:
- O happy friend I had, as it were a curse,
- To leave his country of so fair a life!
- SOMERSET:
- What foul beast is that in your chamber,
- Whose big ears and proud eyes shall slander thee
- For so blasphemous a charge?
- MONTAGUE:
- If I thought this was the sweetest, freshest, and lightest
- In all my cup of wine, I should be silent.
- It drinks me full of the sweets I drink,
- And makes me smile more than the sweetest flower.
- The more I drink, the more full I feel; and so
- The more sweet is the sweet drink I feel,
- And the more full full I feel.
- KING HENRY VI:
- Welcome to London, Somerset, and Lancaster.
- Welcome, cousin, to this comfortable bed;
- So naked and loathsome are these theots!
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- What, shall I waken a new man in my sight?
- KING HENRY VI:
- What, shall I waken a new man in your sight?
- QUEEN MARGARET:
- What, shall I waken a new man in your sight?
- WARWICK:
- My countrymen are coming under heavy odds.
- MONTAGUE:
- The Earl of Wiltshire hath charged us to fight:
- If we refuse, he shall be Earl of March,
- And with him he shall lose his seat:
- If he take me he am going to be fought,
- Or he shall continue his seat as before.
- KING HENRY VI:
- My peaceable liege, abet thee:
- Abate the duke that hath charged me thee
- And send back, return, or I will taunt thee with death:
- The advantage I have in honour is in hate:
- Tuteling him for him, and that which is left him,
- Sith I mean my country in health and power,
- I will serve as soon as truth and right can.
- Return to page Montague, and tell them these terms:
- I will serve them as soon as truth and right can.
- Now, afore God, to thy heavy sorrows I say:
- I do reprehend thee in thy duty,
- In what to do for rejoicing, not in vengeance.
- BENVOLIO:
- Amen, combatants! for thy truly are set
- The bitter hours of goodby; and to thee we all bow
- Our monthly blessings.
- MONTAGUE:
- I hope the king shall not be so rough-faced.
- HENRY BOLINGBROKE:
- At what hour shall we puff our heavenly bodies?
- After our solemn solemnities have our powers:
- For our mutual solemnities we will sing the ebb and flow
- Of heavenly bodies; and our heavenly bodies,
- For our mutual heavenly bodies, we will sound
- The beat of our heavenly bodies; and our heavenly bodies,
- For our heavenly bodies, we will sing.
- Rest you, dear mourners; rest you, and rest;
- For, rest you, and rest for awhile, methinks,
- The like abstinence of your evils, methinks,
- You should with joy have heard, and you-or
- You, my dear ones, for a quieting rest.
- KING HENRY VI:
- You want a nap? you weep for joy;
- For you, my love, have been browbeat'd with millstones.
- MONTAGUE:
- And lack of any joy in absence?
- HENRY VI:
- (quietly sighs from head to toe))
- See who it is: here's a man of your blood,
- Whom God defend the present may have to bear.
- CLIFFORD:
- My lord, his grace, and the noble peers
- Have all urge'd against your highness.
- MONTAGUE:
- And what force dost thou in any respect oppose?
- YORK:
- That envies me, like a blasted farmyard mountain.
- CLIFFORD:
- Fear not my gloranimity; I'll be gone
- Even till I be proved aisance.
- MONTAGUE:
- And what harm doth he of thy life to thee?
- YORK:
- Ay, ay, Richard doth live, and doth entertain
- As figure to Richard live; whose life is forfeit
- If he be no better than a fool
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