Milford,

When from the mountain-top Pisanio showed thee,

Thou wast within a ken.6 O Jove, I think

Foundations fly the wretched7: such, I mean,

Where they should be relieved. Two beggars told me

I could not miss my way. Will poor folks lie,

That have afflictions on them, knowing ’tis

A punishment or trial?11 Yes; no wonder,

When rich ones scarce tell true. To lapse in fullness12

Is sorer13 than to lie for need, and falsehood

Is worse in kings than beggars. My dear lord,

Thou art on15e o’th’false ones. Now I think on thee

My hunger’s gone; but even before16, I was

At point17 to sink for food. But what is this?

Here is a path to’t: ’tis some savage hold18:

I were best19 not call; I dare not call: yet famine,

Ere clean it o’erthrow nature20, makes it valiant.

Plenty and peace breeds cowards: hardness ever21

Of hardiness is mother. Ho! Who’s here?

If anything that’s civil, speak: if savage,

Take or lend.24 Ho! No answer? Then I’ll enter.

Best25 draw my sword; and if mine enemy

Draws

But fear the sword like me, he’ll scarcely look on’t.

Such a foe, good heavens!27

Exit [into the cave]

Enter Belarius, Guiderius and Arviragus

BELARIUS    You, Polydore, have proved best woodman28 and

Are master of the feast: Cadwal and I

Will play the cook and servant: ’tis our match.30

The sweat of industry would dry and die31

But for the end it works to. Come, our stomachs

Will make what’s homely33 savoury: weariness

Can snore upon the flint when resty sloth34

Finds the down35 pillow hard. Now peace be here,

Poor house, that keep’st thyself.36

GUIDERIUS    I am throughly37 weary.

ARVIRAGUS    I am weak with toil, yet strong in appetite.

GUIDERIUS    There is cold meat i’th’cave, we’ll browse39 on that

Whilst what we have killed be cooked.

Looks into the cave

BELARIUS    Stay; come not in:

But that it eats our victuals42, I should think

Here were a fairy.

GUIDERIUS    What’s the matter, sir?

BELARIUS    By Jupiter, an angel! Or if not,

An earthly paragon.46 Behold divineness

No elder than a boy.

Enter Innogen

INNOGEN    Good masters, harm me not:

Before I entered here, I called, and thought

To have begged or bought what I have took: good troth50,

I have stol’n nought51, nor would not, though I had found

Gold strewed i’th’floor.52 Here’s money for my meat:

Offers money

I would have left it on the board so53 soon

As I had made my meal, and parted54

With prayers for the provider.

GUIDERIUS    Money, youth?

ARVIRAGUS    All gold and silver rather turn to dirt,

As ’tis no better reckoned but of58 those

Who worship dirty gods.

INNOGEN    I see you’re angry:

Know, if you kill me for my fault, I should61

Have died had I not made62 it.

BELARIUS    Whither bound?63

INNOGEN    To Milford Haven.

BELARIUS    What’s your name?

INNOGEN    Fidele66, sir: I have a kinsman who

Is bound for Italy; he embarked at Milford,

To whom being going, almost spent68 with hunger,

I am fall’n in69 this offence.

BELARIUS    Prithee, fair youth,

Think us no churls71: nor measure our good minds

By this rude72 place we live in. Well encountered!

’Tis almost night: you shall have better cheer73

Ere you depart, and thanks74 to stay and eat it.

Boys, bid him welcome.

GUIDERIUS    Were you a woman, youth,

I should woo hard but be your groom in honesty77:

Ay, bid for you as I’d buy.78

ARVIRAGUS    I’ll make’t my comfort

He is a man, I’ll love him as my brother:

And such a welcome as I’d give to him

After long absence, such is yours. Most welcome!

Be sprightly83, for you fall ’mongst friends.

INNOGEN    ’Mongst friends84

Aside

If brothers.— Would it had been so that they

Had been my father’s sons, then had my prize86

Been less, and so more equal ballasting

To thee, Posthumus.

BELARIUS    He wrings89 at some distress.

GUIDERIUS    Would I could free’t.90

ARVIRAGUS    Or I, whate’er it be,

What pain it cost, what danger. Gods!

They whisper aside

BELARIUS    Hark, boys.

To herself

INNOGEN    Great men

That had a court no bigger than this cave,

That did attend themselves96 and had the virtue

Which their own conscience sealed themlaying by97

That nothing-gift of differing multitudes98

Could not out-peer these twain.99 Pardon me, gods,

I’d change my sex to be companion with them,

Since Leonatus’101 false.

BELARIUS    It shall be so:

Boys, we’ll go dress our hunt.103 Fair youth, come in:

Discourse is heavy, fasting104: when we have supped

We’ll mannerly demand105 thee of thy story,

So far as thou wilt speak it.

GUIDERIUS    Pray draw near.

ARVIRAGUS    The night to th’owl and morn to th’lark less welcome.108

INNOGEN    Thanks, sir.

ARVIRAGUS    I pray draw near.

Exeunt

Act 3 Scene 7

running scene 12

Enter two Roman Senators and Tribunes

FIRST SENATOR    This is the tenor of the emperor’s writ1:

That since the common men2 are now in action

Gainst the Pannonians and Dalmatians3,

And that the legions now in Gallia are

Full5 weak to undertake our wars against

The fall’n-off Britons, that we do incite6

The gentry to this business. He creates

Lucius proconsul: and to you the tribunes,

For this immediate levy, he commands9

His absolute commission.10 Long live Caesar!

TRIBUNE    Is Lucius general of the forces?

SECOND SENATOR    Ay.

TRIBUNE    Remaining now in Gallia?

FIRST SENATOR    With those legions

Which I have spoke of, whereunto your levy

Must be supplyant16: the words of your commission

Will tie you to the numbers and the time

Of their dispatch.

TRIBUNE    We will discharge our duty.

Exeunt

Act 4 Scene 1

running scene 13

Enter Cloten alone

CLOTEN    I am near to th’place where they should meet, if

Pisanio have mapped it truly. How fit2 his garments serve me!

Why should his mistress, who was made by him that made

the tailor, not be fit too? The rather — saving reverence of4

the word — for ’tis said a woman’s fitness comes by fits.5

Therein I must play the workman.6 I dare speak it to myself,

for it is not vainglory for a man and his glass7 to confer in his

own chamber; I mean, the lines of my body are as well

drawn as his: no less young, more strong, not beneath him in

fortunes, beyond him in the advantage of the time10, above

him in birth, alike conversant in general services11, and more

remarkable in single oppositions; yet this imperceiverant12

thing loves him in my despite. What mortality13 is! Posthumus,

thy head, which now is growing upon thy shoulders, shall

within this hour be off, thy mistress enforced15, thy garments

cut to pieces before thy face: and all this done, spurn16 her

home to her father, who may haply17 be a little angry for my so

rough usage: but my mother, having power of his testiness18,

shall turn all into my commendations.19 My horse is tied up

Draws

safe. Out, sword, and to a sore purpose! Fortune20 put

them into my hand. This is the very description of their

meeting-place, and the fellow dares not deceive me.

Exit

Act 4 Scene 2

running scene 14

Enter Belarius, Guiderius, Arviragus and Innogen from the cave

Innogen disguised as Fidele

To Innogen

BELARIUS    You are not well: remain here in the cave,

We’ll come to you after hunting.

To Innogen

ARVIRAGUS    Brother, stay here:

Are we not brothers?

INNOGEN    So man and man should be,

But clay and clay differs in dignity,

Whose dust is both alike. I am very sick.

GUIDERIUS    Go you to hunting, I’ll abide with him.

INNOGEN    So sick I am not, yet I am not well:

But not so citizen a wanton10 as

To seem to die ere11 sick: so please you, leave me,

Stick to your journal course: the breach of custom12

Is breach of all. I am ill, but your being by me

Cannot amend me. Society14 is no comfort

To one not sociable: I am not very sick,

Since I can reason of16 it: pray you trust me here,

I’ll rob none17 but myself, and let me die,

Stealing so poorly.18

GUIDERIUS    I love thee: I have spoke it,

How much the quantity, the weight20 as much,

As I do love my father.

BELARIUS    What? How? How?

ARVIRAGUS    If it be sin to say so, sir, I yoke me23

In my good brother’s fault: I know not why

I love this youth, and I have heard you say

Love’s reason’s without reason. The bier at door26,

And a demand who is’t shall die, I’d say

‘My father, not this youth.’

Aside

BELARIUS    O noble strain!29

O worthiness of nature, breed30 of greatness!

Cowards father cowards, and base things sire base:

Nature hath meal and bran32, contempt and grace.

I’m not their father, yet who this should be33

Doth miracle itself, loved before me.—

Aloud

’Tis the ninth hour o’th’morn.

ARVIRAGUS    Brother, farewell.

INNOGEN    I wish ye sport.

ARVIRAGUS    You health.— So please you, sir.38

Aside

INNOGEN    These are kind creatures.

Gods, what lies I have heard!

Our courtiers say all’s savage but41 at court;

Experience, O, thou disprov’st report!

Th’imperious seas breeds monsters; for the dish

Poor tributary44 rivers as sweet fish:

I am sick still, heart-sick. Pisanio,

I’ll now taste of thy drug.

Drinks

GUIDERIUS    I could not stir47 him:

He said he was gentle48, but unfortunate;

Dishonestly afflicted49, but yet honest.

ARVIRAGUS    Thus did he answer me, yet said hereafter

I might know more.

BELARIUS    To th’field52, to th’field!

We’ll leave you for this time, go in and rest.

ARVIRAGUS    We’ll not be long away.

BELARIUS    Pray be not sick,

For you must be our housewife.

INNOGEN    Well or ill,

I am bound58 to you.

Exit [into the cave]

BELARIUS    And shalt be ever.

This youth, howe’er distressed60, appears he hath had

Good ancestors.

ARVIRAGUS    How angel-like he sings!

GUIDERIUS    But his neat cookery! He cut our roots in characters63,

And sauced our broths as Juno64 had been sick

And he her dieter.65

ARVIRAGUS    Nobly he yokes66

A smiling with a sigh, as if the sigh

Was that68 it was for not being such a smile:

The smile mocking the sigh, that it would fly

From so divine a temple, to commix70

With winds that sailors rail71 at.

GUIDERIUS    I do note

That grief and patience, rooted in him both,

Mingle their spurs74 together.

ARVIRAGUS    Grow patience75,

And let the stinking elder, grief, untwine

His perishing root with77 the increasing vine.

BELARIUS    It is great morning.78 Come away.— Who’s there?

Enter Cloten

CLOTEN    I cannot find those runagates79, that villain

Hath mocked80 me. I am faint.

BELARIUS    ‘Those runagates’?

Means he not us? I partly know him, ’tis

Cloten, the son o’th’queen. I fear some ambush.

I saw him not these many years, and yet

I know ’tis he. We are held85 as outlaws: hence!

GUIDERIUS    He is but86 one: you and my brother search

What companies87 are near: pray you away,

Let me alone with him.

[Exeunt Belarius and Arviragus]

CLOTEN    Soft89, what are you

That fly90 me thus? Some villain mountaineers?

I have heard of such. What slave art thou?

GUIDERIUS    A thing

More slavish did I ne’er than answering

A slave without a knock.94

CLOTEN    Thou art a robber,

A law-breaker, a villain: yield thee, thief.

GUIDERIUS    To who? To thee? What art thou? Have not I

An arm as big as thine? A heart as big?

Thy words I grant are bigger, for I wear not99

My dagger in my mouth. Say what thou art,

Why I should yield to thee?

CLOTEN    Thou villain base,

Know’st me not by my clothes?103

GUIDERIUS    No, nor thy tailor, rascal,

Who is thy grandfather: he made those clothes,

Which, as it seems, make thee.

CLOTEN    Thou precious varlet107,

My tailor made them not.

GUIDERIUS    Hence, then, and thank

The man that gave them thee. Thou art some fool,

I am loath111 to beat thee.

CLOTEN    Thou injurious112 thief,

Hear but my name, and tremble.

GUIDERIUS    What’s thy name?

CLOTEN    Cloten, thou villain.

GUIDERIUS    Cloten, thou double villain be thy name,

I cannot tremble at it: were it toad, or adder, spider,

’Twould move me sooner.

CLOTEN    To thy further fear,

Nay, to thy mere confusion120, thou shalt know

I am son to th’queen.

GUIDERIUS    I am sorry for’t: not seeming122

So123 worthy as thy birth.

CLOTEN    Art not afeard?

GUIDERIUS    Those that I reverence, those I fear, the wise:

At fools I laugh, not fear them.

CLOTEN    Die the death:

When I have slain thee with my proper128 hand,

I’ll follow those that even now fled hence,

And on the gates of Lud’s town set your heads130:

Yield, rustic mountaineer.

Fight and exeunt

Enter Belarius and Arviragus

BELARIUS    No company’s abroad?132

ARVIRAGUS    None in the world: you did mistake him, sure.133

BELARIUS    I cannot tell: long is it since I saw him,

But time hath nothing blurred those lines of favour135

Which then he wore: the snatches136 in his voice

And burst of speaking were as his: I am absolute137

’Twas very138 Cloten.

ARVIRAGUS    In this place we left them.

I wish my brother make good time with140 him,

You say he is so fell.141

BELARIUS    Being scarce made up142,

I mean to man, he had not apprehension143

Of roaring terrors: for defect of judgement144

Enter Guiderius

With Cloten’s head

Is oft the cause of fear.

But see thy brother.

GUIDERIUS    This Cloten was a fool, an empty purse,

There was no money in’t: not Hercules148

Could have knocked out his brains, for he had none:

Yet I not doing this150, the fool had borne

My head, as I do his.

BELARIUS    What hast thou done?

GUIDERIUS    I am perfect153 what: cut off one Cloten’s head,

Son to the queen, after154 his own report,

Who called me traitor, mountaineer, and swore

With his own single hand he’d take us in156,

Displace our heads where — thank the gods — they grow,

And set them on Lud’s town.

BELARIUS    We are all undone.

GUIDERIUS    Why, worthy father, what have we to lose

But that he swore to take, our lives? The law161

Protects not us, then why should we be tender162

To let an arrogant piece of flesh threat163 us,

Play judge and executioner all himself,

For165 we do fear the law? What company

Discover you abroad?

BELARIUS    No single soul

Can we set eye on, but in all safe168 reason

He must have some attendants. Though his humour169

Was nothing but mutation170, ay, and that

From one bad thing to worse, not frenzy,

Not absolute madness could so far have raved

To bring him here alone: although perhaps

It may be heard at court that such as we

Cave175 here, hunt here, are outlaws, and in time

May make some stronger head176, the which he hearing —

As it is like himmight break out177 and swear

He’d fetch us in178, yet is’t not probable

To come179 alone, either he so undertaking,

Or they so suffering180: then on good ground we fear,

If we do fear this body hath a tail181

More perilous than the head.

ARVIRAGUS    Let ord’nance183

Come as the gods foresay it: howsoe’er184,

My brother hath done well.

BELARIUS    I had no mind186

To hunt this day: the boy Fidele’s sickness

Did make my way long forth.188

GUIDERIUS    With his own sword,

Which he did wave against my throat, I have ta’en

His head from him: I’ll throw’t into the creek

Behind our rock, and let it to192 the sea

And tell the fishes he’s the queen’s son, Cloten:

That’s all I reck.194

Exit

BELARIUS    I fear ’twill be revenged:

Would, Polydore, thou hadst not done’t, though valour

Becomes thee well enough.

ARVIRAGUS    Would I had done’t,

So199 the revenge alone pursued me! Polydore,

I love thee brotherly, but envy much

Thou hast robbed me of this deed: I would201 revenges

That possible strength might meet202 would seek us through

And put us to our answer.203

BELARIUS    Well, ’tis done:

We’ll hunt no more today, nor seek for danger

Where there’s no profit. I prithee, to our rock,

You and Fidele play the cooks: I’ll stay

Till hasty208 Polydore return, and bring him

To dinner presently.

ARVIRAGUS    Poor sick Fidele!

I’ll willingly to him: to gain211 his colour

I’d let a parish of such Clotens’ blood212,

And praise myself for charity.

Exit [into the cave]

BELARIUS    O thou goddess,

Thou divine Nature, thou thyself thou blazon’st215

In these two princely boys! They are as gentle

As zephyrs217 blowing below the violet,

Not wagging218 his sweet head; and yet as rough,

Their royal blood enchafed, as the rud’st219 wind,

That by the top doth take the mountain pine,

And make him stoop to th’vale. ’Tis wonder

That an invisible instinct should frame222 them

To royalty unlearned, honour untaught,

Civility not seen from other224, valour

That wildly225 grows in them, but yields a crop

As if it had been sowed.