1 2 * 4 5 Bote- swaine. 6 Heere Master: What cheere? 7 * Good: Speake to th' Mariners: fall 8 *too't, yarely, or we run our selues #a ground, 9 bestirre, bestirre. 10 11 * Heigh my hearts, cheerely, cheerely my harts: 12 *#yare, #yare: Take in the toppe- sale: Tend to th' Masters 13 *whistle: Blow till thou burst thy winde, if roome e-nough. 14 _ 15 17 * Good Boteswaine haue care: where's the Ma-ster? 18 Play the men. 19 I pray now keepe below. 20 Where is the Master, Boson? 21 * Do you not heare him? you marre our labour, 22 Keepe your Cabines: you do assist the storme. 23 Nay, good be patient. 24 * When the Sea is: hence, what cares these roa-rers 25 *for the name of King? to Cabine; silence: trouble 26 vs not. 27 * Good, yet remember whom thou hast aboord. 28 * None that I more loue then my selfe. You are 29 *a Counsellor, if you can command these Elements to si-lence, 30 *and worke the peace of the present, wee will not 31 *hand a rope more, vse your authoritie: If you cannot, 32 *giue thankes you haue liu'd so long, and make your 33 *selfe readie in your Cabine for the mischance of the 34 *houre, if it so hap. Cheerely good hearts: out of our 35 way I say. 36 * I haue great comfort from this fellow: methinks 37 *he hath no drowning marke vpon him, his complexion 38 *is perfect Gallowes: stand fast good Fate to his han-ging, 39 *make the rope of his destiny our cable, for our 40 *owne doth little aduantage: If he be not borne to bee 41 hang'd, our case is miserable. 42 . 43 * Downe with the top- Mast: #yare, lower, lower, 44 bring her to Try with Maine- course. A plague === 45 46 *vpon this howling: they are lowder then the weather, 47 *or our office: yet againe? What do you heere? Shal we 48 giue ore and drowne, haue you a minde to sinke? 49 * A poxe o'your throat, you bawling, blasphe-mous 50 incharitable Dog. 51 Worke you then. 52 * Hang cur, hang, you whoreson insolent Noyse- maker, 53 *we are lesse afraid to be drownde, then thou art. 54 * I'le warrant him for drowning, though the 55 *Ship were no stronger then a Nutt- shell, and as leaky as 56 an vnstanched wench. 57 * Lay her #a hold, #a hold, set her two courses off 58 to Sea againe, lay her off. 59 60 All lost, to prayers, to prayers, all lost. 61 What must our mouths be cold? 62 * The King, and Prince, at prayers, let's assist them, 63 for our case is as theirs. 64 I'am out of patience. 65 * We are meerly cheated of our liues by drunkards, 66 *This wide- chopt- rascall, would thou mightst lye drow-ning 67 the washing of ten Tides. 68 Hee'l be hang'd yet, 69 Though euery drop of water sweare against it, 70 And gape at widst to glut him. 71 Mercy on vs. 72 We split, we split, Farewell my wife, and children, 73 Farewell brother: we split, we split, we split. 74 Let's all sinke with' King 75 Let's take leaue of him. 76 * Now would I giue a thousand furlongs of Sea, 77 *for an Acre of barren ground: Long heath, Browne 78 *firrs, any thing; the wills aboue be done, but I would 79 faine dye a dry death. 80 81 82 * If by your #Art (my deerest father) you haue 83 Put the wild waters in this Rore; alay them: 84 *The skye it seemes would powre down stinking pitch, 85 But that the Sea, mounting to th' welkins cheeke, 86 Dashes the fire out. Oh! I haue suffered 87 With those that I saw suffer: A braue vessell

88 (Who had no doubt some noble creature in her) 89 Dash'd all to peeces: O the cry did knocke 90 Against my very heart: poore soules, they perish'd. 91 Had I byn any God of power, I would 92 Haue suncke the Sea within the Earth, or ere 93 It should the good Ship so haue swallow'd, and 94 The fraughting Soules within her. 95 Be collected, 96 No more amazement: Tell your pitteous heart 97 there's no harme done. 98 O woe, the day. 99 No harme: 100 I haue done nothing, but in care of thee 101 (Of thee my deere one; thee my daughter) who 102 Art ignorant of what thou art. naught knowing 103 Of whence I am: nor that I am more better 104 Then {Prospero}, Master of a full poore cell, 105 And thy no greater Father. 106 More to know 107 Did neuer medle with my thoughts. 108 'Tis time 109 I should informe thee farther: Lend thy hand 110 And plucke my Magick garment from me: So, 111 *Lye there my #Art: wipe thou thine eyes, haue comfort, 112 The direfull spectacle of the wracke which touch'd 113 The very vertue of compassion in thee: 114 I haue with such prouision in mine #Art 115 So safely ordered, that there is no soule 116 No not so much perdition as an hayre 117 Betid to any creature in the vessell 118 *Which thou heardst cry, which thou saw'st sinke: Sit |(downe, 119 For thou must now know farther. 120 You haue often 121 Begun to tell me what I am, but stopt 122 And left me to a bootelesse Inquisition, 123 Concluding, stay: not yet. 124 The howr's now come 125 The very minute byds thee ope thine eare, 126 Obey, and be attentiue. Canst thou remember 127 A time before we came vnto this Cell? 128 I doe not thinke thou canst, for then thou was't not 129 Out three yeeres old. 130 Certainely Sir, I can. 131 By what? by any other house, or person? 132 Of any thing the Image, tell me, that 133 Hath kept with thy remembrance. 134 'Tis farre off: 135 And rather like a dreame, then an assurance 136 That my remembrance warrants: Had I not 137 Fowre, or fiue women once, that tended me? 138 * Thou hadst; and more {Miranda}: But how is it 139 That this liues in thy minde? What seest thou els 140 In the dark- backward and Abisme of Time? 141 Yf thou remembrest ought ere thou cam'st here, 142 How thou cam'st here thou maist. 143 But that I doe not. 144 * Twelue yere since ({Miranda}) twelue yere since, 145 Thy father was the Duke of {Millaine} and 146 A Prince of power: 147 Sir, are not you my Father? 148 Thy Mother was a peece of vertue, and 149 She said thou wast my daughter; and thy father 150 Was Duke of {Millaine}, and his onely heire, 151 And Princesse; no worse Issued. 152 O the heauens, 153 What fowle play had we, that we came from thence? 154 Or blessed #was't we did? 155 Both, both my Girle. 156 By fowle- play (as thou saist) were we heau'd thence, 157 But blessedly holpe hither. 158 O my heart bleedes 159 To thinke oth' teene that I haue turn'd you to, 160 Which is from my remembrance, please you, farther; 161 My brother and thy vncle, call'd {Anthonio}: 162 I pray thee marke me, that a brother should 163 Be so perfidious: he, whom next thy selfe 164 Of all the world I lou'd, and to him put 165 The mannage of my state, as at that time 166 Through all the signories it was the first, 167 And {Prospero}, the prime Duke, being so reputed 168 In dignity; and for the liberall Artes, 169 Without a paralell; those being all my studie, 170 The Gouernment I cast vpon my brother, 171 And to my State grew stranger, being transported 172 And rapt in secret studies, thy false vncle 173 (Do'st thou attend me?) 174 Sir, most heedefully. 175 Being once perfected how to graunt suites, 176 how to deny them: who t' aduance, and who 177 To trash for ouer- topping; new created 178 The creatures that were mine, I say, or chang'd 'em, 179 Or els new form'd 'em; hauing both the key, 180 Of Officer, and office, set all hearts i'th state 181 To what tune pleas'd his eare, that now he was 182 The Iuy which had hid my princely Trunck, 183 And suckt my verdure out on't: Thou attend'st not? 184 O good Sir, I doe. 185 I pray thee marke me: 186 I thus neglecting worldly ends, all dedicated 187 To closenes, and the bettering of my mind 188 with that, which but by being so retir'd 189 Ore- priz'd all popular rate: in my false brother 190 Awak'd an euill nature, and my trust 191 Like a good parent, did beget of him 192 A falsehood in it's contrarie, as great 193 As my trust was, which had indeede no limit, 194 A confidence sans bound. He being thus Lorded, 195 Not onely with what my reuenew yeelded, 196 But what my power might els exact. Like one 197 Who hauing into truth, by telling of it, 198 Made such a synner of his memorie 199 To credite his owne lie, he did beleeue 200 He was indeed the Duke, out o'th' Substitution 201 And executing th' outward face of Roialtie 202 With all prerogatiue: hence his Ambition growing: 203 Do'st thou heare ? 204 Your tale, Sir, would cure deafenesse. 205 * To haue no Schreene between this part he plaid, 206 And him he plaid it for, he needes will be 207 Absolute {Millaine}, Me (poore man) my Librarie 208 Was Dukedome large enough: of temporall roalties 209 He thinks me now incapable. Confederates 210 (so drie he was for Sway) with King of {Naples} 211 To giue him Annuall tribute, doe him homage 212 Subiect his Coronet, to his Crowne and bend 213 The Dukedom yet vnbow'd (alas poore {Millaine}) 214 To most ignoble stooping. 215 Oh the heauens: 216 * Marke his condition, and th' euent, then tell me 217 If this might be a brother. 218 I should sinne 219 To thinke but Noblie of my Grand- mother,

220 Good wombes haue borne bad sonnes. 221 Now the Condition. 222 This King of {Naples} being an Enemy 223 To me inueterate, hearkens my Brothers suit, 224 Which was, That he in lieu o'th' premises, 225 Of homage, and I know not how much Tribute, 226 Should presently extirpate me and mine 227 Out of the Dukedome, and confer faire {Millaine} 228 With all the Honors, on my brother: Whereon 229 A treacherous Armie leuied, one mid- night 230 Fated to th' purpose, did {Anthonio} open 231 The gates of {Millaine}, and ith' dead of darkenesse 232 The ministers for th' purpose hurried thence 233 Me, and thy crying selfe. 234 Alack, for pitty: 235 I not remembring how I cride out then 236 Will cry it ore againe: it is a hint 237 That wrings mine eyes too't. 238 Heare a little further, 239 And then I'le bring thee to the present businesse 240 Which now's vpon's: without the which, this Story 241 Were most impertinent. 242 Wherefore did they not 243 That howre destroy vs? 244 Well demanded, wench: 245 *My Tale prouokes that question: Deare, they durst not, 246 So deare the loue my people bore me: nor set 247 A marke so bloudy on the businesse; but 248 With colours fairer, painted their foule ends. 249 In few, they hurried vs a-boord a Barke, 250 Bore vs some Leagues to Sea, where they prepared 251 A rotten carkasse of a Butt, not rigg'd, 252 Nor tackle, sayle, nor mast, the very rats 253 Instinctiuely haue quit it: There they hoyst vs 254 To cry to th' Sea, that roard to vs; to sigh 255 To th' windes, whose pitty sighing backe againe 256 Did vs but louing wrong. 257 Alack, what trouble 258 Was I then to you? 259 O, a Cherubin 260 Thou #was't that did preserue me; Thou didst smile, 261 Infused with a fortitude from heauen, 262 When I haue deck'd the sea with drops full salt, 263 Vnder my burthen groan'd, which rais'd in me 264 An vndergoing stomacke, to beare vp 265 Against what should ensue. 266 How came we #a shore? 267 By prouidence diuine, 268 Some food, we had, and some fresh water, that 269 A noble {Neopolitan Gonzalo} 270 Out of his Charity, (who being then appointed 271 Master of this designe) did giue vs, with 272 Rich garments, linnens, stuffs, and necessaries 273 Which since haue steeded much, so of his gentlenesse 274 Knowing I lou'd my bookes, he furnishd me 275 From mine owne Library, with volumes, that 276 I prize aboue my Dukedome. 277 Would I might 278 But euer see that man. 279 Now I arise, 280 Sit still, and heare the last of our sea- sorrow: 281 Heere in this Iland we arriu'd, and heere 282 Haue I, thy Schoolemaster, made thee more profit 283 Then other Princesse can, that haue more time 284 For vainer howres; and Tutors, not so carefull. 285 * Heuens thank you for't. And now I pray you Sir, 286 For still 'tis beating in my minde; your reason 287 For raysing this Sea- storme? 288 Know thus far forth, 289 By accident most strange, bountifull {Fortune} 290 (Now my deere Lady) hath mine enemies 291 Brought to this shore: And by my prescience 292 I finde my {Zenith} doth depend vpon 293 A most auspitious starre, whose influence 294 If now I court not, but omit; my fortunes 295 Will euer after droope: Heare cease more questions, 296 Thou art inclinde to sleepe: 'tis a good dulnesse, 297 And giue it way: I know thou canst not chuse: 298 Come away, Seruant, come; I am ready now, 299 Approach my {Ariel}. Come. 300 * All haile, great Master, graue Sir, haile: I come 301 To answer thy best pleasure; be't to fly, 302 To swim, to diue into the fire: to ride 303 On the curld clowds: to thy strong bidding, taske 304 {Ariel}, and all his Qualitie. 305 Hast thou, Spirit, 306 Performd to point, the Tempest that I #bad thee. 307 To euery Article. 308 I boorded the Kings ship: now on the Beake, 309 Now in the Waste, the Decke, in euery Cabyn, 310 I flam'd amazement, sometime I'ld diuide 311 And burne in many places; on the Top- mast, 312 The Yards and Bore- spritt, would I flame distinctly, 313 *Then meete, and ioyne. {Ioues} Lightning, the precursers 314 O'th dreadfull Thunder- claps more momentarie 315 And sight out- running were not; the fire, and cracks 316 Of sulphurous roaring, the most mighty {Neptune} 317 Seeme to besiege, and make his bold waues tremble, 318 Yea, his dread Trident shake. 319 My braue Spirit, 320 Who was so firme, so constant, that this coyle 321 Would not infect his reason? 322 Not a soule 323 But felt a Feauer of the madde, and plaid 324 Some tricks of desperation; all but Mariners 325 Plung'd in the foaming bryne, and quit the vessell; 326 Then all #a fire with me the Kings sonne {Ferdinand} 327 With haire vp- staring (then like reeds, not haire) 328 Was the first man that leapt; cride #hell is empty, 329 And all the Diuels are heere. 330 Why that's my spirit: 331 But was not this nye shore? 332 Close by, my Master. 333 But are they ({Ariell}) safe? 334 Not a haire perishd: 335 On their sustaining garments not a blemish, 336 But fresher then before: and as thou badst me, 337 In troops I haue dispersd them 'bout the Isle: 338 The Kings sonne haue I landed by himselfe, 339 Whom I left cooling of the Ayre with sighes, 340 In an odde Angle of the Isle, and sitting 341 His armes in this sad knot. 342 Of the Kings ship, 343 The Marriners, say how thou hast disposd, 344 And all the rest o'th' Fleete? 345 Safely in harbour 346 Is the Kings shippe, in the deepe Nooke, where once 347 Thou calldst me vp at midnight to fetch dewe 348 From the still- vext {Bermoothes}, there she's hid; 349 The Marriners all vnder hatches stowed, 350 Who, with a Charme ioynd to their suffred labour 351 I haue left asleep: and for the rest o'th' Fleet

352 (Which I dispers'd) they all haue met againe, 353 And are vpon the {Mediterranian} Flote 354 Bound sadly home for {Naples}, 355 Supposing that they saw the Kings ship wrackt, 356 And his great person perish. 357 {Ariel}, thy charge 358 Exactly is perform'd; but there's more worke: 359 What is the time o'th' day? 360 Past the mid season. 361 * At least two Glasses: the time 'twixt six & now 362 Must by vs both be spent most preciously. 363 * Is there more toyle? Since y dost giue me pains, 364 Let me remember thee what thou hast promis'd, 365 Which is not yet perform'd me. 366 How now? moodie? 367 What is't thou canst demand? 368 My Libertie. 369 Before the time be out? no more: 370 I prethee, 371 Remember I haue done thee worthy seruice, 372 Told thee no lyes, made thee no mistakings, serv'd 373 Without or grudge, or grumblings; thou did promise 374 To bate me a full yeere. 375 Do'st thou forget 376 From what a torment I did free thee? No. 377 * Thou do'st: & thinkst it much to tread y Ooze 378 Of the salt deepe; 379 To run vpon the sharpe winde of the North, 380 To doe me businesse in the veines o'th' earth 381 When it is bak'd with frost. 382 I doe not Sir. 383 * Thou liest, malignant Thing: hast thou forgot 384 The fowle Witch {Sycorax}, who with Age and Enuy 385 Was growne into a hoope? hast thou forgot her? 386 No Sir. 387 * Thou hast: where was she born? speak: tell me: 388 Sir, in {Argier}. 389 Oh, was she so: I must 390 Once in a moneth recount what thou hast bin, 391 Which thou forgetst. This damn'd Witch {Sycorax} 392 For mischiefes manifold, and sorceries terrible 393 To enter humane hearing, from {Argier} 394 Thou know'st was banish'd: for one thing she did 395 *They wold not take her life: Is not this true? #I, Sir. 396 * This blew ey'd hag, was hither brought with |(child, 397 And here was left by th' Saylors; thou my slaue, 398 As thou reportst thy selfe, was then her seruant, 399 And for thou wast a Spirit too delicate 400 To act her earthy, and abhord commands, 401 Refusing her grand hests, she did confine thee 402 By helpe of her more potent Ministers, 403 And in her most vnmittigable rage, 404 Into a clouen Pyne, within which rift 405 Imprison'd, thou didst painefully remaine 406 A dozen yeeres: within which space she #di'd, 407 *And left thee there: where thou didst vent thy groanes 408 As fast as Mill- wheeles strike: Then was this Island 409 (Saue for the Son, that he did littour heere, 410 A frekelld whelpe, hag- borne) not honour'd with 411 A humane shape. 412 Yes: {Caliban} her sonne. 413 Dull thing, I say so: he, that {Caliban} 414 Whom now I keepe in seruice, thou best know'st 415 What torment I did finde thee in; thy grones 416 Did make wolues howle, and penetrate the breasts 417 Of euer- angry Beares; it was a torment 418 To lay vpon the damn'd, which {Sycorax} 419 Could not againe vndoe: it was mine #Art, 420 When I arriu'd, and heard thee, that made gape 421 The Pyne, and let thee out. 422 I thanke thee Master. 423 If thou more murmur'st, I will rend an Oake 424 And peg- thee in his knotty entrailes, till 425 Thou hast howl'd away twelue winters. 426 Pardon, Master, 427 I will be correspondent to command 428 And doe my spryting, gently. 429 Doe so: and after two daies 430 I will discharge thee. 431 That's my noble Master: 432 What shall I doe? say what? what shall I doe? 433 Goe make thy selfe like a Nymph o'th' Sea, 434 Be subiect to no sight but thine, and mine: inuisible 435 To euery eye- ball else: goe take this shape 436 And hither come in't: goe: hence 437 With diligence. 438 * Awake, deere hart awake, thou hast slept #well, 439 Awake. 440 The strangenes of your story, put 441 Heauinesse in me. 442 Shake it off: Come on, 443 Wee'll visit {Caliban}, my slaue, who neuer 444 Yeelds vs kinde answere. 445 * 'Tis a villaine Sir, I doe not loue to looke on. 446 But as 'tis 447 We cannot misse him: he do's make our fire, 448 Fetch in our wood, and serues in Offices 449 That profit vs: What hoa: slaue: {Caliban}: 450 Thou Earth, thou: speake. 451 There's wood enough within. 452 * Come forth I say, there's other busines for thee: 453 Come thou Tortoys, when? 454 Fine apparision: my queint {Ariel}, 455 Hearke in thine eare. 456 My Lord, it shall be done. 457 * Thou poysonous slaue, got by y diuell himselfe 458 Vpon thy wicked Dam; come forth. 459 As wicked dewe, as ere my mother brush'd 460 With Rauens feather from vnwholesome Fen 461 Drop on you both: A Southwest blow on yee, 462 And blister you all ore. 463 * For this be sure, to night thou shalt haue cramps, 464 Side- stitches, that shall pen thy breath vp, Vrchins 465 Shall for that vast of night, that they may worke 466 All exercise on thee: thou shalt be pinch'd 467 As thicke as hony- combe, each pinch more stinging 468 Then Bees that made 'em. 469 I must eat my dinner: 470 This Island's mine by {Sycorax} my mother, 471 Which thou tak'st from me: when thou cam'st first 472 *Thou stroakst me, & made much of me: wouldst giue me 473 Water with berries in't: and teach me how 474 To name the bigger Light, and how the lesse 475 That burne by day, and night: and then I lou'd thee 476 And shew'd thee all the qualities o'th' Isle, 477 The fresh Springs, Brine- pits; barren place and fertill, 478 Curs'd be I that did so: All the Charmes 479 Of {Sycorax}: Toades, Beetles, Batts light on you: 480 For I am all the Subiects that you haue, 481 *Which first was min owne King: and here you sty- me 482 In this hard Rocke, whiles you doe keepe from me 483 The rest o'th' Island.

484 Thou most lying slaue, 485 Whom stripes may moue, not kindnes: I haue vs'd thee 486 (Filth as thou art) with humane care, and lodg'd thee 487 In mine owne Cell, till thou didst seeke to violate 488 The honor of my childe. 489 Oh ho, oh ho, would't had bene done: 490 Thou didst preuent me, I had peopel'd else 491 This Isle with {Calibans}. 492 Abhorred Slaue, 493 Which any print of goodnesse wilt not take, 494 Being capable of all #ill: I pittied thee, 495 *Took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each houre 496 One thing or other: when thou didst not (Sauage) 497 Know thine owne meaning; but wouldst gabble, like 498 A thing most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes 499 *With words that made them knowne: But thy vild race 500 *(Tho thou didst learn) had that in't, which good natures 501 Could not abide to be with; therefore wast thou 502 Deseruedly confin'd into this Rocke, who hadst 503 Deseru'd more then a prison. 504 You taught me Language, and my profit on't 505 Is, I know how to curse: the red- plague rid you 506 For learning me your language. 507 Hag- seed, hence: 508 Fetch vs in Fewell, and be quicke thou'rt best 509 To answer other businesse: shrug'st thou (Malice) 510 If thou neglectst, or dost vnwillingly 511 What I command, Ile racke thee with old Crampes, 512 Fill all thy bones with Aches, make thee rore, 513 That beasts shall tremble at thy dyn. 514 No, 'pray thee. 515 I must obey, his #Art is of such pow'r, 516 It would controll my Dams god {Setebos}, 517 And make a vassaile of him. 518 So slaue, hence. 519 520 {Come vnto these yellow sands}, 521 {and then take hands:} 522 {Curtsied when you haue, and kist} 523 {the wilde waues whist:} 524 {Foote it featly heere, and there, and sweete Sprights beare} 525 {the burthen}. 526 {Harke, harke, bowgh wawgh: the watch- Dogges barke}, 527 {bowgh- wawgh}. 528 * {Hark, hark, I heare, the straine of strutting Chanticlere} 529 {cry cockadidle- dowe}. 530 * Where shold this Musick be? I'th aire, or th' earth? 531 It sounds no more: and sure it waytes vpon 532 Some God o'th' Iland, sitting on a banke, 533 Weeping againe the King my Fathers wracke. 534 This Musicke crept by me vpon the waters, 535 Allaying both their fury, and my passion 536 With it's sweet ayre: thence I haue follow'd it 537 (Or it hath drawne me rather) but 'tis gone. 538 No, it begins againe. 539 {Full fadom fiue thy Father lies}, 540 {Of his bones are Corrall made:} 541 {Those are pearles that were his eies}, 542 {Nothing of him that doth fade}, 543 {But doth suffer a Sea- change} 544 {Into something rich, & strange:} 545 {Sea- Nimphs hourly ring his knell}. 546 ding dong. 547 {Harke now I heare them, ding- dong bell}. 548 The Ditty do's remember my drown'd father, 549 This is no mortall busines, nor no sound 550 That the earth owes: I heare it now aboue me. 551 The fringed Curtaines of thine eye aduance, 552 And say what thou see'st yond. 553 What is't a Spirit? 554 Lord, how it lookes about: Beleeue me sir, 555 It carries a braue forme. But 'tis a spirit. 556 * No wench, it eats, and sleeps, & hath such senses 557 As we haue: such. This Gallant which thou seest 558 Was in the wracke: and but hee's something stain'd 559 *With greefe (that's beauties canker) y might'st call him 560 A goodly person: he hath lost his fellowes, 561 And strayes about to finde 'em. 562 I might call him 563 A thing diuine, for nothing naturall 564 I euer saw so Noble. 565 It goes on I see 566 As my soule prompts it: Spirit, fine spirit, Ile free thee 567 Within two dayes for this. 568 Most sure the Goddesse 569 On whom these ayres attend: Vouchsafe my pray'r 570 May know if you remaine vpon this Island, 571 And that you will some good instruction giue 572 How I may beare me heere: my prime request 573 (Which I do last pronounce) is (O you wonder) 574 If you be Mayd, or no? 575 No wonder Sir, 576 But certainly a Mayd. 577 My Language? Heauens: 578 I am the best of them that speake this speech, 579 Were I but where 'tis spoken. 580 How? the best? 581 What wer't thou if the King of {Naples} heard thee? 582 A single thing, as I am now, that wonders 583 To heare thee speake of {Naples}: he do's heare me, 584 And that he do's, I weepe: my selfe am {Naples}, 585 Who, with mine eyes (neuer since at ebbe) beheld 586 The King my Father wrack't. 587 Alacke, for mercy. 588 * Yes faith, & all his Lords, the Duke of {Millaine} 589 And his braue sonne, being twaine. 590 The Duke of {Millaine} 591 And his more brauer daughter, could controll thee 592 If now 'twere fit to do't: At the first sight 593 They haue chang'd eyes: Delicate {Ariel}, 594 Ile set thee free for this. A word good Sir, 595 *I feare you haue done your selfe some wrong: A word. 596 Why speakes my father so vngently? This 597 Is the third man that ere I saw: the first 598 That ere I sigh'd for: pitty moue my father 599 To be enclin'd my way. 600 O, if a Virgin, 601 And your affection not gone forth, Ile make you 602 The Queene of {Naples}. 603 Soft sir, one word more. 604 *They are both in eythers pow'rs: But this swift busines 605 I must vneasie make, least too light winning 606 Make the prize light. One word more: I charge thee 607 That thou attend me: Thou do'st heere vsurpe 608 The name thou ow'st not, and hast put thy selfe 609 Vpon this Island, as a spy, to win it 610 From me, the Lord on't. 611 No, as I am a man. 612 * Ther's nothing #ill, can dwell in such a Temple, 613 If the ill- spirit haue so fayre a house, 614 Good things will striue to dwell with't. 615 Follow me.

616 * Speake not you for him: hee's a Traitor: come, 617 Ile manacle thy necke and feete together: 618 Sea water shalt thou drinke: thy food shall be 619 The fresh- brooke Mussels, wither'd roots, and huskes 620 Wherein the Acorne cradled. Follow. 621 No, 622 I will resist such entertainment, till 623 Mine enemy ha's more pow'r. 624 625 O deere Father, 626 Make not too rash a triall of him, for 627 Hee's gentle, and not fearfull. 628 What I say, 629 My foote my Tutor? Put thy sword vp Traitor, 630 *Who mak'st a shew, but dar'st not strike: thy conscience 631 Is so possest with guilt: Come, from thy ward, 632 For I can heere disarme thee with this sticke, 633 And make thy weapon drop. 634 Beseech you Father. 635 Hence: hang not on my garments. 636 Sir haue pity, 637 Ile be his surety. 638 Silence: One word more 639 Shall make me chide thee, if not hate thee: What, 640 An aduocate for an Impostor? Hush: 641 Thou think'st there is no more such shapes as he, 642 (Hauing seene but him and {Caliban}:) Foolish wench, 643 To th' most of men, this is a {Caliban}, 644 And they to him are Angels. 645 My affections 646 Are then most humble: I haue no ambition 647 To see a goodlier man. 648 Come on, obey: 649 Thy Nerues are in their infancy againe. 650 And haue no vigour in them. 651 So they are: 652 My spirits, as in a dreame, are all bound vp: 653 My Fathers losse, the weaknesse which I feele, 654 The wracke of all my friends, nor this mans threats, 655 To whom I am subdude, are but light to me, 656 Might I but through my prison once a day 657 Behold this Mayd: all corners else o'th' Earth 658 Let liberty make vse of: space enough 659 Haue I in such a prison. 660 It workes: Come on. 661 Thou hast done well, fine {Ariell}: follow me, 662 Harke what thou else shalt do mee. 663 Be of comfort, 664 My Fathers of a better nature (Sir) 665 Then he appeares by speech: this is vnwonted 666 Which now came from him. 667 Thou shalt be as free 668 As mountaine windes; but then exactly do 669 All points of my command. 670 To th' syllable. 671 Come follow: speake not for him. 672 673 675 Beseech you Sir, be merry; you haue cause, 676 (So haue we all) of ioy; for our escape 677 Is much beyond our losse; our hint of woe 678 Is common, euery day, some Saylors wife, 679 The Masters of some Merchant, and the Merchant 680 Haue iust our Theame of woe: But for the miracle, 681 (I meane our preseruation) few in millions 682 Can speake like vs: then wisely (good Sir) weigh 683 Our sorrow, with our comfort. 684 Prethee peace. 685 He receiues comfort like cold porredge. 686 The Visitor will not giue him ore so. 687 Looke, hee's winding vp the watch of his wit, 688 #By and by it will strike. 689 Sir. 690 One: Tell. 691 When euery greefe is entertaind, 692 That's offer'd comes to th' entertainer. 693 A dollor. 694 * Dolour comes to him indeed, you haue spoken 695 truer then you purpos'd. 696 * You haue taken it wiselier then I meant you 697 should. 698 Therefore my Lord. 699 Fie, what a spend- thrift is he of his tongue. 700 I pre- thee spare. 701 Well, I haue done: But yet 702 He will be talking. 703 Which, of he, or Adrian, for a good wager, 704 First begins to crow? 705 The old Cocke. 706 The Cockrell. 707 Done: The wager? 708 A Laughter. 709 A match. 710 Though this Island seeme to be desert. 711 Ha, ha, ha. 712 So: #you'r paid. 713 Vninhabitable, and almost inaccessible. 714 Yet 715 Yet 716 He could not misse't. 717 * It must needs be of subtle, tender, and delicate 718 temperance. 719 {Temperance} was a delicate wench. 720 #I, and a subtle, as he most learnedly deliuer'd. 721 The ayre breathes vpon vs here most sweetly. 722 As if it had Lungs, and rotten ones. 723 Or, as 'twere perfum'd by a Fen. 724 Heere is euery thing aduantageous to life. 725 True, saue meanes to liue. 726 Of that there's none, or little. 727 How lush and lusty the grasse lookes? 728 How greene? 729 The ground indeed is tawny. 730 With an eye of greene in't. 731 He misses not much. 732 No: he doth but mistake the truth totally. 733 * But the rariety of it is, which is indeed almost 734 beyond credit. 735 As many voucht rarieties are. 736 * That our Garments being (as they were) drencht 737 *in the Sea, hold notwithstanding their freshnesse and 738 *glosses, being rather new dy'de then stain'd with salte 739 water. 740 * If but one of his pockets could speake, would 741 it not say he lyes? 742 #I, or very falsely pocket vp his report.

743 * Me thinkes our garments are now as fresh as 744 *when we put them on first in Affricke, at the marriage 745 *of the kings faire daughter {Claribel} to the king of {Tunis}. 746 * 'Twas a sweet marriage, and we prosper well in 747 our returne. 748 * {Tunis} was neuer grac'd before with such a Pa-ragon 749 to their Queene. 750 Not since widdow {Dido's} time. 751 * Widow? A pox o'that: how came that Wid-dow 752 in? Widdow {Dido}! 753 What if he had said Widdower {Aeneas} too? 754 Good Lord, how you take it? 755 * Widdow {Dido} said you? You make me study 756 of that: She was of {Carthage}, not of {Tunis}. 757 This {Tunis} Sir was {Carthage}. 758 {Carthage}? I assure you {Carthage}. 759 * His word is more then the miraculous Harpe. 760 He hath rais'd the wall, and houses too. 761 * What impossible matter wil he make easy next? 762 * I thinke hee will carry this Island home in his 763 pocket, and giue it his sonne for an Apple. 764 * And sowing the kernels of it in the Sea, bring 765 forth more Islands. 766 #I. Why in good time. 767 * Sir, we were talking, that our garments seeme 768 *now as fresh as when we were at {Tunis} at the marriage 769 of your daughter, who is now Queene. 770 And the rarest that ere came there. 771 Bate (I beseech you) widdow {Dido}. 772 O Widdow {Dido}? #I, Widdow {Dido}. 773 * Is not Sir my doublet as fresh as the first day I 774 wore it? I meane in a sort. 775 That sort was well fish'd for. 776 When I wore it at your daughters marriage. 777 * You cram these words into mine eares, against 778 the stomacke of my sense: would I had neuer 779 Married my daughter there: For comming thence 780 My sonne is lost, and (in my rate) she too, 781 Who is so farre from {Italy} remoued, 782 I ne're againe shall see her: O thou mine heire 783 Of {Naples} and of {Millaine}, what strange fish 784 Hath made his meale on thee? 785 Sir he may liue, 786 I saw him beate the surges vnder him, 787 And ride vpon their backes; he trod the water 788 Whose enmity he flung aside: and brested 789 The surge most swolne that met him: his bold head 790 'Boue the contentious waues he kept, and oared 791 Himselfe with his good armes in lusty stroke 792 To th' shore; that ore his waue- worne basis bowed 793 As stooping to releeue him: I not doubt 794 He came aliue to Land. 795 No, no, hee's gone. 796 * Sir you may thank your selfe for this great losse, 797 *That would not blesse our Europe with your daughter, 798 But rather loose her to an Affrican, 799 Where she at least, is banish'd from your eye, 800 Who hath cause to wet the greefe on't. 801 Pre- thee peace. 802 * You were kneel'd #too, & importun'd otherwise 803 By all of vs: and the faire soule her selfe 804 Waigh'd betweene loathnesse, and obedience, at 805 *Which end o'th' beame should bow: we haue lost your |(son, 806 I feare for euer: {Millaine} and {Naples} haue 807 Mo widdowes in them of this businesse making, 808 Then we bring men to comfort them: 809 The faults your owne. 810 So is the deer'st oth' losse. 811 My Lord {Sebastian}, 812 The truth you speake doth lacke some gentlenesse, 813 And time to speake it in: you rub the sore, 814 When you should bring the plaister. 815 Very well. And most Chirurgeonly. 816 It is foule weather in vs all, good Sir, 817 When you are cloudy. 818 Fowle weather? Very foule. 819 Had I plantation of this Isle my Lord. 820 Hee'd sow't with Nettle- seed. 821 Or dockes, or Mallowes. 822 And were the King on't, what would I do? 823 Scape being drunke, for want of Wine. 824 * I'th' Commonwealth I would (by contraries) 825 Execute all things: For no kinde of Trafficke 826 Would I admit: No name of Magistrate: 827 Letters should not be knowne: Riches, pouerty, 828 And vse of seruice, none: Contract, Succession, 829 Borne, bound of Land, Tilth, Vineyard none: 830 No vse of Mettall, Corne, or Wine, or Oyle: 831 No occupation, all men idle, all: 832 And Women too, but innocent and pure: 833 No Soueraignty. 834 Yet he would be King on't. 835 * The latter end of his Common- wealth forgets 836 the beginning. 837 * All things in common Nature should produce 838 Without sweat or endeuour: Treason, fellony, 839 Sword, Pike, Knife, Gun, or neede of any Engine 840 Would I not haue: but Nature should bring forth 841 Of #it owne kinde, all foyzon, all abundance 842 To feed my innocent people. 843 No marrying 'mong his subiects? 844 None (man) all idle; Whores and knaues, 845 I would with such perfection gouerne Sir: 846 T' Excell the Golden Age. 847 'Saue his Maiesty. Long liue {Gonzalo}. 848 And do you marke me, Sir? 849 * Pre- thee no more: thou dost talke nothing to |(me. 850 * I do #well beleeue your Highnesse, and did it 851 *to minister occasion to these Gentlemen, who are of 852 *such sensible and nimble Lungs, that they alwayes vse 853 to laugh at nothing. 854 'Twas you we laugh'd at. 855 * Who, in this kind of merry fooling am nothing 856 *to you: so you may continue, and laugh at nothing still. 857 What a blow was there giuen? 858 #And it had not falne flat- long. 859 * You are Gentlemen of braue mettal: you would 860 *lift the Moone out of her spheare, if she would continue 861 in it fiue weekes without changing. 862 863 We would so, and then go #a Bat- fowling. 864 Nay good my Lord, be not angry. 865 * No I warrant you, I will not aduenture my 866 *discretion so weakly: Will you laugh me asleepe, for I 867 am very heauy. 868 Go sleepe, and heare vs. 869 What, all so soone asleepe? I wish mine eyes 870 Would (with themselues) shut vp my thoughts, 871 I finde they are inclin'd to do so. 872 Please you Sir, 873 Do not omit the heauy offer of it: 874 *It sildome visits sorrow, when it doth, it is a Comforter.

875 We two my Lord, will guard your person, 876 While you take your rest, and watch your safety. 877 Thanke you: Wondrous heauy. 878 What a strange drowsines possesses them? 879 It is the quality o'th' Clymate. 880 Why 881 Doth it not then our eye- lids sinke? I finde 882 Not my selfe dispos'd to sleep. 883 Nor I, my spirits are nimble: 884 They fell together all, as by consent 885 They dropt, as by a Thunder- stroke: what might 886 Worthy {Sebastian}? O, what might? no more: 887 And yet, me thinkes I see it in thy face, 888 What thou should'st be: th' occasion speaks thee, and 889 My strong imagination see's a Crowne 890 Dropping vpon thy head. 891 What? art thou waking? 892 Do you not heare me speake? 893 I do, and surely 894 It is a sleepy Language; and thou speak'st 895 Out of thy sleepe: What is it thou didst say? 896 This is a strange repose, to be asleepe 897 With eyes wide open: standing, speaking, mouing: 898 And yet so fast asleepe. 899 Noble {Sebastian}, 900 Thou let'st thy fortune sleepe: die rather: wink'st 901 Whiles thou art waking. 902 Thou do'st snore distinctly, 903 There's meaning in thy snores. 904 I am more serious then my custome: you 905 Must be so too, if heed me: which to do, 906 Trebbles thee o're. 907 Well: I am standing water. 908 Ile teach you how to flow. 909 Do so: to ebbe 910 Hereditary Sloth instructs me. 911 O! 912 If you but knew how you the purpose cherish 913 Whiles thus you mocke it: how in stripping it 914 You more inuest it: ebbing men, indeed 915 (Most often) do so neere the bottome run 916 By their owne feare, or sloth. 917 'Pre- thee say on, 918 The setting of thine eye, and cheeke proclaime 919 A matter from thee; and a birth, indeed, 920 Which throwes thee much to yeeld. 921 Thus Sir: 922 Although this Lord of weake remembrance; this 923 Who shall be of as little memory 924 When he is earth'd, hath here almost perswaded 925 (For hee's a Spirit of perswasion, onely 926 Professes to perswade) the King his sonne's aliue, 927 'Tis as impossible that hee's vndrown'd, 928 As he that sleepes heere, swims. 929 I haue no hope 930 That hee's vndrown'd. 931 O, out of that no hope, 932 What great hope haue you? No hope that way, Is 933 Another way so high a hope, that euen 934 Ambition cannot pierce a winke beyond 935 But doubt discouery there. Will you grant with me 936 That {Ferdinand} is drown'd. 937 He's gone. 938 Then tell me, who's the next heire of {Naples}? 939 {Claribell}. 940 She that is Queene of {Tunis}: she that dwels 941 Ten leagues beyond mans life: she that from {Naples} 942 Can haue no note, vnlesse the Sun were post: 943 *The Man i'th Moone's too slow, till new- borne chinnes 944 Be rough, and Razor- able: She that from whom 945 We all were sea- swallow'd, though some cast againe, 946 (And by that destiny) to performe an act 947 Whereof, what's past is Prologue; what to come 948 In yours, and my discharge. 949 What stuffe is this? How say you? 950 'Tis true my brothers daughter's Queene of {Tunis}, 951 So is she heyre of {Naples}, 'twixt which Regions 952 There is some space. 953 A space, whose eu'ry cubit 954 Seemes to cry out, how shall that {Claribell} 955 Measure vs backe to {Naples}? keepe in {Tunis}, 956 And let {Sebastian} wake. Say, this were death 957 That now hath seiz'd them, why they were no worse 958 Then now they are: There be that can rule {Naples} 959 As well as he that sleepes: Lords, that can prate 960 As amply, and vnnecessarily 961 As this {Gonzallo}: I my selfe could make 962 A Chough of as deepe chat: O, that you bore 963 The minde that I do; what a sleepe were this 964 For your aduancement? Do you vnderstand me? 965 Me thinkes I do. 966 And how do's your content 967 Tender your owne good fortune? 968 I remember 969 You did supplant your Brother {Prospero}. 970 True: 971 And looke how well my Garments sit vpon me, 972 Much feater then before: My Brothers seruants 973 Were then my fellowes, now they are my men. 974 But for your conscience. 975 #I Sir: where lies that? If 'twere a kybe 976 'Twould put me to my slipper: But I feele not 977 This Deity in my bosome: 'Twentie consciences 978 That stand 'twixt me, and {Millaine}, candied be they, 979 And melt ere they mollest: Heere lies your Brother, 980 No better then the earth he lies vpon, 981 If he were that which now hee's like (that's dead) 982 Whom I with this obedient steele (three inches of it) 983 Can lay to bed for euer: whiles you doing thus, 984 To the perpetuall winke for aye might put 985 This ancient morsell: this Sir Prudence, who 986 Should not vpbraid our course: for all the rest 987 They'l take suggestion, as a Cat laps milke, 988 They'l tell the clocke, to any businesse that 989 We say befits the houre. 990 Thy case, deere Friend 991 Shall be my president: As thou got'st {Millaine}, 992 I'le come by {Naples}: Draw thy sword, one stroke 993 Shall free thee from the tribute which thou paiest, 994 And I the King shall loue thee. 995 Draw together: 996 And when I reare my hand, do you the like 997 To fall it on {Gonzalo}. 998 O, but one word. 999 1000 * My Master through his #Art foresees the danger 1001 That you (his friend) are in, and sends me forth 1002 (For else his proiect dies) to keepe them liuing. 1003 1004 {While you here do snoaring lie}, 1005 {Open- ey'd Conspiracie} 1006 {His time doth take}:

1007 {If of Life you keepe a care}, 1008 {Shake off slumber and beware}. 1009 {Awake, awake}. 1010 Then let vs both be sodaine. 1011 Now, good Angels preserue the King. 1012 * Why how now hoa; awake? why are you drawn? 1013 Wherefore this ghastly looking? 1014 What's the matter? 1015 Whiles we stood here securing your repose, 1016 (Euen now) we heard a hollow burst of bellowing 1017 Like Buls, or rather Lyons, did't not wake you? 1018 It strooke mine eare most terribly. 1019 I heard nothing. 1020 O, 'twas a din to fright a Monsters eare; 1021 To make an earthquake: sure it was the roare 1022 Of a whole heard of Lyons. 1023 Heard you this {Gonzalo}? 1024 Vpon mine honour, Sir, I heard a humming, 1025 (And that a strange one too) which did awake me: 1026 I shak'd you Sir, and cride: as mine eyes opend, 1027 I saw their weapons drawne: there was a noyse, 1028 That's verily: 'tis best we stand vpon our guard; 1029 Or that we quit this place: let's draw our weapons. 1030 * Lead off this ground & let's make further search 1031 For my poore sonne. 1032 Heauens keepe him from these Beasts: 1033 For he is sure i'th Island. 1034 Lead away. 1035 * {Prospero} my Lord, shall know what I haue |(done. 1036 So (King) goe safely on to seeke thy Son. 1037 1038 1040 All the infections that the Sunne suckes vp 1041 From Bogs, Fens, Flats, on {Prosper} fall, and make him 1042 By ynch- meale a disease: his Spirits heare me, 1043 And yet I needes must curse. But they'll nor pinch, 1044 Fright me with Vrchyn- shewes, pitch me i'th mire, 1045 Nor lead me like a fire- brand, in the darke 1046 Out of my way, vnlesse he bid 'em; but 1047 For euery trifle, are they set vpon me, 1048 Sometime like Apes, that moe and chatter at me, 1049 And after bite me: then like Hedg- hogs, which 1050 Lye tumbling in my bare- foote way, and mount 1051 Their pricks at my foot- fall: sometime am I 1052 All wound with Adders, who with clouen tongues 1053 Doe hisse me into madnesse: Lo, now Lo, 1054 Here comes a Spirit of his, and to torment me 1055 For bringing wood in slowly: I'le fall flat, 1056 Perchance he will not minde me. 1057 * Here's neither bush, nor shrub to beare off any 1058 *weather at all: and another Storme brewing, I heare it 1059 *sing ith' winde: yond same blacke cloud, yond huge 1060 *one, lookes like a foule bumbard that would shed his 1061 *licquor: if it should thunder, as it did before, I know 1062 *not where to hide my head: yond same cloud cannot 1063 *choose but fall by paile-fuls. What haue we here, a man, 1064 *or a fish? dead or aliue? a fish, hee smels like a fish: a 1065 *very ancient and fish- like smell: a kinde of, not of the 1066 *newest poore- Iohn: a strange fish: were I in {England} 1067 *now (as once I was) and had but this fish painted; not 1068 *a holiday- foole there but would giue a peece of siluer: 1069 *there, would this Monster, make a man: any strange 1070 *beast there, makes a man: when they will not giue a 1071 *doit to relieue a lame Begger, they will lay out ten to see 1072 *a dead {Indian}: Leg'd like a man; and his Finnes like 1073 *Armes: warme o'my troth: I doe now let loose my o-pinion; 1074 *hold it no longer; this is no fish, but an Islan-der, 1075 *that hath lately suffered by a Thunderbolt: Alas, 1076 *the storme is come againe: my best way is to creepe vn-der 1077 *his Gaberdine: there is no other shelter herea-bout: 1078 *Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfel-lowes: 1079 *I will here shrowd till the dregges of the storme 1080 be past. 1081 1082 {I shall no more to sea, to sea, here shall I dye ashore}. 1083 This is a very scuruy tune to sing at a mans 1084 Funerall: well, here's my comfort. 1085 * {The Master, the Swabber, the Boate- swaine & I;} 1086 {The Gunner, and his Mate} 1087 {Lou'd Mall, Meg, and Marrian, and Margerie}, 1088 {But none of vs car'd for Kate}. 1089 {For she had a tongue with a tang}, 1090 {Would cry to a Sailor goe hang:} 1091 {She lou'd not the sauour of Tar nor of Pitch}, 1092 {Yet a Tailor might scratch her where ere she did itch}. 1093 {Then to Sea Boyes, and let her goe hang}. 1094 This is a scuruy tune too: 1095 But here's my comfort. 1096 Doe not torment me: oh. 1097 What's the matter? 1098 Haue we diuels here? 1099 *Doe you put trickes vpon's with Saluages, and Men of 1100 *Inde? ha? I haue not scap'd drowning, to be afeard 1101 *now of your foure legges: for it hath bin said; as pro-per 1102 *a man as euer went on foure legs, cannot make him 1103 *giue ground: and it shall be said so againe, while {Ste-phano} 1104 breathes at' nostrils. 1105 The Spirit torments me: oh. 1106 * This is some Monster of the Isle, with foure legs; 1107 *who hath got (as I take it) an Ague: where the diuell 1108 *should he learne our language? I will giue him some re-liefe 1109 *if it be but for that: if I can recouer him, and keepe 1110 *him tame, and get to {Naples} with him, he's a Pre-sent 1111 *for any Emperour that euer trod on Neates- lea-ther. 1112 _ 1113 * Doe not torment me 'prethee: I'le bring my 1114 wood home faster. 1115 * He's in his fit now; and doe's not talke after the 1116 *wisest; hee shall taste of my Bottle: if hee haue neuer 1117 *drunke wine afore, it will goe neere to remoue his Fit: 1118 *if I can recouer him, and keepe him tame, I will not take 1119 *too much for him; hee shall pay for him that hath him, 1120 and that soundly. 1121 Thou do'st me yet but little hurt; thou wilt a-non, 1122 *I know it by thy trembling: Now {Prosper} workes 1123 vpon thee. 1124 * Come on your wayes: open your mouth: here 1125 *is that which will giue language to you Cat; open your 1126 *mouth; this will shake your shaking, I can tell you, and 1127 *that soundly: you cannot tell who's your friend; open 1128 your chaps againe. 1129 I should know that voyce: 1130 It should be,

1131 *But hee is dround; and these are diuels; O de-fend 1132 me. 1133 * Foure legges and two voyces; a most delicate 1134 *Monster: his forward voyce now is to speake well of 1135 *his friend; his backward voice, is to vtter foule speeches, 1136 *and to detract: if all the wine in my bottle will recouer 1137 *him, I will helpe his Ague: Come: Amen, I will 1138 poure some in thy other mouth. 1139 {Stephano}. 1140 * Doth thy other mouth call me? Mercy, mercy: 1141 *This is a diuell, and no Monster: I will leaue him, I 1142 haue no long Spoone. 1143 * {Stephano}: if thou beest {Stephano}, touch me, and 1144 *speake to me: for I am {Trinculo}; be not afeard, thy 1145 good friend {Trinculo}. 1146 * If thou bee'st {Trinculo}: come forth: I'le pull 1147 *thee by the lesser legges: if any be {Trinculo's} legges, 1148 *these are they: Thou art very {Trinculo} indeede: how 1149 *cam'st thou to be the siege of this Moone- calfe? Can 1150 he vent {Trinculo's}? 1151 * I tooke him to be kil'd with a thunder- strok; but 1152 *art thou not dround {Stephano}: I hope now thou art 1153 *not dround: Is the Storme ouer- blowne? I hid mee 1154 *vnder the dead Moone- Calfes Gaberdine, for feare of 1155 *the Storme: And art thou liuing {Stephano}? O {Stephano}, 1156 two {Neapolitanes} scap'd? 1157 * 'Prethee doe not turne me about, my stomacke 1158 is not constant. 1159 * These be fine things, #and if they be not sprights: 1160 *that's a braue God, and beares Celestiall liquor: I will 1161 kneele to him. 1162 How did'st thou scape? 1163 How cam'st thou hither? 1164 *Sweare by this Bottle how thou cam'st hither: I escap'd 1165 *vpon a #But of Sacke, which the Saylors heaued o're-boord, 1166 *by this Bottle which I made of the barke of 1167 a Tree, with mine owne hands, since I was cast a'-shore. 1168 _ 1169 * I'le sweare vpon that Bottle, to be thy true sub-iect, 1170 for the liquor is not earthly. 1171 Heere: sweare then how thou escap'dst. 1172 * Swom ashore (man) like a Ducke: I can swim 1173 like a Ducke i'le be sworne. 1174 Here, kisse the Booke. 1175 *Though thou canst swim like a Ducke, thou art made 1176 like a Goose. 1177 O {Stephano}, ha'st any more of this? 1178 * The whole #But (man) my Cellar is in a rocke 1179 by th' sea- side, where my Wine is hid: 1180 How now Moone- Calfe, how do's thine Ague? 1181 Ha'st thou not dropt from heauen? 1182 * Out o'th Moone I doe assure thee. I was the 1183 Man ith' Moone, when time was. 1184 * I haue seene thee in her: and I doe adore thee: 1185 *My Mistris shew'd me thee, and thy Dog, and thy Bush. 1186 * Come, sweare to that: kisse the Booke: I will 1187 furnish it anon with new Contents: Sweare. 1188 * By this good light, this is a very shallow Mon-ster: 1189 I afeard of him? a very weake Monster: 1190 The Man ith' Moone? 1191 A most poore creadulous Monster: 1192 Well drawne Monster, in good sooth. 1193 * Ile shew thee euery fertill ynch o'th Island: and 1194 I will kisse thy foote: I prethee be my god. 1195 * By this light, a most perfidious, and drunken 1196 Monster, when's god's #a sleepe he'll rob his Bottle. 1197 * Ile kisse thy foot, Ile sweare my selfe thy Subiect. 1198 Come on then: downe and sweare. 1199 * I shall laugh my selfe to death at this puppi- hea-ded 1200 *Monster: a most scuruie Monster: I could finde in 1201 my heart to beate him. 1202 Come, kisse. 1203 But that the poore Monster's in drinke: 1204 An abhominable Monster. 1205 * I'le shew thee the best Springs: I'le plucke thee 1206 *Berries: I'le fish for thee; and get thee wood enough. 1207 A plague vpon the Tyrant that I serue; 1208 *I'le beare him no more Stickes, but follow thee, thou 1209 wondrous man. 1210 * A most rediculous Monster, to make a wonder of 1211 a poore drunkard. 1212 * I 'prethee let me bring thee where Crabs grow; 1213 *and I with my long nayles will digge thee pig- nuts; 1214 *show thee a Iayes nest, and instruct thee how to snare 1215 *the nimble Marmazet: I'le bring thee to clustring 1216 *Philbirts, and sometimes I'le get thee young Scamels 1217 from the Rocke: Wilt thou goe with me? 1218 * I pre'thee now lead the way without any more 1219 *talking. {Trinculo}, the King, and all our company else 1220 *being dround, wee will inherit here: Here; beare my 1221 *Bottle: Fellow {Trinculo}; we'll fill him #by and by a-gaine. 1222 _ 1223 1224 Farewell Master; farewell, farewell. 1225 A howling Monster: a drunken Monster. 1226 {No more dams I'le make for fish}, 1227 {Nor fetch in firing, at requiring}, 1228 {Nor scrape trenchering, nor wash dish}, 1229 {Ban' ban' Cacalyban} 1230 {Has a new Master, get a new Man}. 1231 *Freedome, high- day, high- day freedome, freedome high-day, 1232 freedome. 1233 O braue Monster; lead the way. 1234 1235 1236 * There be some Sports are painfull; & their labor 1237 Delight in them set off: Some kindes of basenesse 1238 Are nobly vndergon; and most poore matters 1239 Point to rich ends: this my meane Taske 1240 Would be as heauy to me, as odious, but 1241 The Mistris which I serue, quickens what's dead, 1242 And makes my labours, pleasures: O She is 1243 Ten times more gentle, then her Father's crabbed; 1244 And he's compos'd of harshnesse. I must remoue 1245 Some thousands of these Logs, and pile them vp, 1246 Vpon a sore iniunction; my sweet Mistris 1247 *Weepes when she sees me worke, & saies, such basenes 1248 Had neuer like Executor: I forget: 1249 *But these sweet thoughts, doe euen refresh my labours, 1250 Most busie lest, when I doe it. 1251 Alas, now pray you 1252 Worke not so hard: I would the lightning had 1253 Burnt vp those Logs that you are enioynd to pile: 1254 Pray set it downe, and rest you: when this burnes 1255 'Twill weepe for hauing wearied you: my Father 1256 Is hard at study; pray now rest your selfe,

1257 Hee's safe for these three houres. 1258 O most deere Mistris 1259 The Sun will set before I shall discharge 1260 What I must striue to do. 1261 If you'l sit downe 1262 Ile beare your Logges the while: pray giue me that, 1263 Ile carry it to the pile. 1264 No precious Creature, 1265 I had rather cracke my sinewes, breake my backe, 1266 Then you should such dishonor vndergoe, 1267 While I sit lazy by. 1268 It would become me 1269 As well as it do's you; and I should do it 1270 With much more ease: for my good #will is to it, 1271 And yours it is against. 1272 Poore worme thou art infected, 1273 This visitation shewes it. 1274 You looke wearily. 1275 * No, noble Mistris, 'tis fresh morning with me 1276 When you are by at night: I do beseech you 1277 Cheefely, that I might set it in my prayers, 1278 What is your name? 1279 {Miranda}, O my Father, 1280 I haue broke your hest to say so. 1281 Admir'd {Miranda}, 1282 Indeede the top of Admiration, worth 1283 What's deerest to the world: full many a Lady 1284 I haue ey'd with best regard, and many a time 1285 Th' harmony of their tongues, hath into bondage 1286 Brought my too diligent eare: for seuerall vertues 1287 Haue I lik'd seuerall women, neuer any 1288 With so full soule, but some defect in her 1289 Did quarrell with the noblest grace she ow'd, 1290 And put it to the foile. But you, O you, 1291 So perfect, and so peerlesse, are created 1292 Of euerie Creatures best. 1293 I do not know 1294 One of my sexe; no womans face remember, 1295 Saue from my glasse, mine owne: Nor haue I seene 1296 More that I may call men, then you good friend, 1297 And my deere Father: how features are abroad 1298 I am skillesse of; but by my modestie 1299 (The iewell in my dower) I would not wish 1300 Any Companion in the world but you: 1301 Nor can imagination forme a shape 1302 Besides your selfe, to like of: but I prattle 1303 Something too wildely, and my Fathers precepts 1304 I therein do forget. 1305 I am, in my condition 1306 A Prince ({Miranda}) I do thinke a King 1307 (I would not so) and would no more endure 1308 This wodden slauerie, then to suffer 1309 *The flesh- flie blow my mouth: heare my soule speake. 1310 The verie instant that I saw you, did 1311 My heart flie to your seruice, there resides 1312 To make me slaue to it, and for your sake 1313 Am I this patient Logge- man. 1314 Do you loue me? 1315 * O heauen; O earth, beare witnes to this sound, 1316 And crowne what I professe with kinde euent 1317 If I speake true: if hollowly, inuert 1318 What best is boaded me, to mischiefe: I, 1319 Beyond all limit of what else i'th world 1320 Do loue, prize, honor you. 1321 I am a foole 1322 To weepe at what I am glad of. 1323 Faire encounter 1324 Of two most rare affections: heauens raine grace 1325 On that which breeds betweene 'em. 1326 Wherefore weepe you? 1327 At mine vnworthinesse, that dare not offer 1328 What I desire to giue; and much lesse take 1329 What I shall die to want: But this is trifling, 1330 And all the more it seekes to hide it selfe, 1331 The bigger bulke it shewes. Hence bashfull cunning, 1332 And prompt me plaine and holy innocence. 1333 I am your wife, if you will marrie me; 1334 If not, Ile die your maid: to be your fellow 1335 You may denie me, but Ile be your seruant 1336 Whether you will or no. 1337 My Mistris (deerest) 1338 And I thus humble euer. 1339 My husband then? 1340 #I, with a heart as willing 1341 As bondage ere of freedome: heere's my hand. 1342 * And mine, with my heart in't; and now farewel 1343 Till halfe an houre hence. 1344 A thousand, thousand. 1345 So glad of this as they I cannot be, 1346 Who are surpriz'd with all; but my reioycing 1347 At nothing can be more: Ile to my booke, 1348 For yet ere supper time, must I performe 1349 Much businesse appertaining. 1350 1351 1352 * Tell not me, when the #But is out we will drinke 1353 *water, not a drop before; therefore beare vp, & boord 1354 em' Seruant Monster, drinke to me. 1355 * Seruant Monster? the folly of this Iland, they 1356 *say there's but fiue vpon this Isle; we are three of them, 1357 if th' other two be brain'd like vs, the State totters. 1358 * Drinke seruant Monster when I bid thee, thy 1359 eies are almost set in thy head. 1360 * Where should they bee set else? hee were a 1361 braue Monster indeede if they were set in his taile. 1362 * My man- Monster hath drown'd his tongue in 1363 *sacke: for my part the Sea cannot drowne mee, I swam 1364 *ere I could recouer the shore, fiue and thirtie Leagues 1365 *off and on, by this light thou shalt bee my Lieutenant 1366 Monster, or my Standard. 1367 Your Lieutenant if you list, hee's no standard. 1368 Weel not run Monsieur Monster. 1369 * Nor go neither: but you'l lie like dogs, and yet 1370 say nothing neither. 1371 * Moone- calfe, speak once in thy life, if thou beest 1372 a good Moone- calfe. 1373 * How does thy honour? Let me licke thy shooe: 1374 Ile not serue him, he is not valiant. 1375 * Thou liest most ignorant Monster, I am in case 1376 *to iustle a Constable: why, thou debosh'd Fish thou, 1377 *was there euer man a Coward, that hath drunk so much 1378 *Sacke as I to day? wilt thou tell a monstrous lie, being 1379 but halfe a Fish, and halfe a Monster? 1380 * Loe, how he mockes me, wilt thou let him my 1381 Lord?

1382 * Lord, quoth he? that a Monster should be such 1383 a Naturall? 1384 Loe, loe againe: bite him to death I prethee. 1385 * {Trinculo}, keepe a good tongue in your head: If 1386 *you proue a mutineere, the next Tree: the poore Mon-ster's 1387 my subiect, and he shall not suffer indignity. 1388 * I thanke my noble Lord. Wilt thou be pleas'd 1389 to hearken once againe to the suite I made to thee? 1390 Marry will I: kneele, and repeate it, 1391 I will stand, and so shall {Trinculo}. 1392 1393 * As I told thee before, I am subiect to a Tirant, 1394 A Sorcerer, that by his cunning hath cheated me 1395 Of the Island. 1396 Thou lyest. 1397 Thou lyest, thou iesting Monkey thou: 1398 I would my valiant Master would destroy thee. 1399 I do not lye. 1400 {Trinculo}, if you trouble him any more in's tale, 1401 By this hand, I will supplant some of your teeth. 1402 Why, I said nothing. 1403 Mum then, and no more: proceed. 1404 I say by Sorcery he got this Isle 1405 From me, he got it. If thy Greatnesse will 1406 Reuenge it on him, (for I know thou dar'st) 1407 But this Thing dare not. 1408 That's most certaine. 1409 Thou shalt be Lord of it, and Ile serue thee. 1410 How now shall this be compast? 1411 Canst thou bring me to the party? 1412 * Yea, yea my Lord, Ile yeeld him thee asleepe, 1413 Where thou maist knocke a naile into his head. 1414 Thou liest, thou canst not. 1415 * What a py'de Ninnie's this? Thou scuruy patch: 1416 I do beseech thy Greatnesse giue him blowes, 1417 And take his bottle from him: When that's gone, 1418 *He shall drinke nought but brine, for Ile not shew him 1419 Where the quicke Freshes are. 1420 {Trinculo}, run into no further danger: 1421 *Interrupt the Monster one word further, and by this 1422 *hand, Ile turne my mercie out o' doores, and make a 1423 Stockfish of thee. 1424 Why, what did I? I did nothing: 1425 Ile go farther off. 1426 Didst thou not say he lyed? 1427 Thou liest. 1428 Do I so? Take thou that, 1429 As you like this, giue me the lye another time. 1430 * I did not giue the lie: Out o'your wittes, and 1431 hearing too? 1432 *A pox o'your bottle, this can Sacke and drinking doo: 1433 *A murren on your Monster, and the diuell take your 1434 fingers. 1435 Ha, ha, ha. 1436 * Now forward with your Tale: prethee stand 1437 further off. 1438 Beate him enough: after a little time 1439 Ile beate him too. 1440 Stand farther: Come proceede. 1441 Why, as I told thee, 'tis a custome with him 1442 *I'th afternoone to sleepe: there thou maist braine him, 1443 Hauing first seiz'd his bookes: Or with a logge 1444 Batter his skull, or paunch him with a stake, 1445 Or cut his wezand with thy knife. Remember 1446 First to possesse his Bookes; for without them 1447 Hee's but a Sot, as I am; nor hath not 1448 One Spirit to command: they all do hate him 1449 As rootedly as I. Burne but his Bookes, 1450 He ha's braue Vtensils (for so he calles them) 1451 Which when he ha's a house, hee'l decke withall. 1452 And that most deeply to consider, is 1453 The beautie of his daughter: he himselfe 1454 Cals her a non- pareill: I neuer saw a woman 1455 But onely {Sycorax} my Dam, and she; 1456 But she as farre surpasseth {Sycorax}, 1457 As great'st do's least. 1458 Is it so braue a Lasse? 1459 #I Lord, she will become thy bed, I warrant, 1460 And bring thee forth braue brood. 1461 * Monster, I will kill this man: his daughter and 1462 *I will be King and Queene, saue our Graces: and {Trin-culo} 1463 and thy selfe shall be Vice-royes: 1464 Dost thou like the plot {Trinculo}? 1465 Excellent. 1466 Giue me thy hand, I am sorry I beate thee: 1467 *But while thou liu'st keepe a good tongue in thy head. 1468 Within this halfe houre will he be asleepe, 1469 Wilt thou destroy him then? 1470 #I on mine honour. 1471 This will I tell my Master. 1472 Thou mak'st me merry: I am full of pleasure, 1473 Let vs be iocond. Will you troule the Catch 1474 You taught me but whileare? 1475 At thy request Monster, I will do reason, 1476 Any reason: Come on {Trinculo}, let vs sing. 1477 1478 {Flout 'em, and cout 'em: and skowt 'em, and flout 'em}, 1479 {Thought is free}. 1480 That's not the tune. 1481 1482 What is this same? 1483 * This is the tune of our Catch, plaid by the pic-ture 1484 of No- body. 1485 * If thou beest a man, shew thy selfe in thy likenes: 1486 If thou beest a diuell, take't as thou list. 1487 O forgiue me my sinnes. 1488 He that dies payes all debts: I defie thee; 1489 Mercy vpon vs. 1490 Art thou affeard? 1491 No Monster, not I. 1492 Be not affeard, the Isle is full of noyses, 1493 *Sounds, and sweet aires, that giue delight and hurt not: 1494 Sometimes a thousand twangling Instruments 1495 Will hum about mine eares; and sometime voices, 1496 That if I then had wak'd after long sleepe, 1497 Will make me sleepe againe, and then in dreaming, 1498 The clouds methought would open, and shew riches 1499 Ready to drop vpon me, that when I wak'd 1500 I cri'de to dreame againe. 1501 This will proue a braue kingdome to me, 1502 Where I shall haue my Musicke for nothing. 1503 When {Prospero} is destroy'd. 1504 That shall be #by and by: 1505 I remember the storie. 1506 The sound is going away, 1507 Lets follow it, and after do our worke. 1508 Leade Monster, 1509 Wee'l follow: I would I could see this Taborer, 1510 He layes it on. 1511 Wilt come? 1512 Ile follow {Stephano}. 1513

1514 1516 By'r lakin, I can goe no further, Sir, 1517 My old bones akes: here's a maze trod indeede 1518 *Through fourth- rights, & Meanders: by your patience, 1519 I needes must rest me. 1520 Old Lord, I cannot blame thee, 1521 Who, am my selfe attach'd with wearinesse 1522 To th' dulling of my spirits: Sit downe, and rest: 1523 Euen here I will put off my hope, and keepe it 1524 No longer for my Flatterer: he is droun'd 1525 Whom thus we stray to finde, and the Sea mocks 1526 Our frustrate search on land: well, let him goe. 1527 I am right glad, that he's so out of hope: 1528 Doe not for one repulse forgoe the purpose 1529 That you resolu'd t' effect. 1530 The next aduantage will we take throughly. 1531 Let it be to night, 1532 For now they are oppress'd with trauaile, they 1533 Will not, nor cannot vse such vigilance 1534 As when they are fresh. 1535 * 1539 I say to night: no more. 1540 * What harmony is this? my good friends, harke. 1541 Maruellous sweet Musicke. 1542 * Giue vs kind keepers, heaue[n]s: what were these? 1543 A liuing {Drolerie}: now I will beleeue 1544 That there are Vnicornes: that in {Arabia} 1545 There is one Tree, the Phoenix throne, one Phoenix 1546 At this houre reigning there. 1547 Ile beleeue both: 1548 And what do's else want credit, come to me 1549 And Ile besworne 'tis true: Trauellers nere did lye, 1550 Though fooles at home condemne 'em. 1551 If in {Naples} 1552 I should report this now, would they beleeue me? 1553 If I should say I saw such Islands; 1554 (For certes, these are people of the Island) 1555 Who though they are of monstrous shape, yet note 1556 Their manners are more gentle, kinde, then of 1557 Our humaine generation you shall finde 1558 Many, nay almost any. 1559 Honest Lord, 1560 Thou hast said well: for some of you there present; 1561 Are worse then diuels. 1562 I cannot too much muse 1563 Such shapes, such gesture, and such sound expressing 1564 (Although they want the vse of tongue) a kinde 1565 Of excellent dumbe discourse. 1566 Praise in departing. 1567 They vanish'd strangely. 1568 No matter, since 1569 *They haue left their Viands behinde; for wee haue sto-|(macks. 1570 #Wilt please you taste of what is here? 1571 Not I. 1572 * Faith Sir, you neede not feare: when wee were |(Boyes 1573 Who would beleeue that there were Mountayneeres, 1574 Dew- lapt, like Buls, whose throats had hanging at 'em 1575 Wallets of flesh? or that there were such men 1576 *Whose heads stood in their brests? which now we finde 1577 Each putter out of fiue for one, will bring vs 1578 Good warrant of. 1579 I will stand to, and feede, 1580 Although my last, no matter, since I feele 1581 The best is past: brother: my Lord, the Duke, 1582 Stand #too, and doe as we. 1583 * 1586 You are three men of sinne, whom destiny 1587 That hath to instrument this lower world, 1588 And what is in't: the neuer surfeited Sea, 1589 Hath caus'd to belch vp you: and on this Island, 1590 Where man doth not inhabit, you 'mongst men, 1591 Being most vnfit to liue: I haue made you mad; 1592 And euen with such like valour, men hang, and drowne 1593 Their proper selues: you fooles, I and my fellowes 1594 Are ministers of Fate, the Elements 1595 Of whom your swords are temper'd, may as well 1596 Wound the loud windes, or with bemockt- at- Stabs 1597 Kill the still closing waters, as diminish 1598 One dowle that's in my plumbe: My fellow ministers 1599 Are like- invulnerable: if you could hurt, 1600 Your swords are now too massie for your strengths, 1601 And will not be vplifted: But remember 1602 (For that's my businesse to you) that you three 1603 From {Millaine} did supplant good {Prospero}, 1604 Expos'd vnto the Sea (which hath requit it) 1605 Him, and his innocent childe: for which foule deed, 1606 The Powres, delaying (not forgetting) haue 1607 Incens'd the Seas, and Shores; yea, all the Creatures 1608 Against your peace: Thee of thy Sonne, {Alonso} 1609 They haue bereft; and doe pronounce by me 1610 Lingring perdition (worse then any death 1611 Can be at once) shall step, by step attend 1612 *You, and your wayes, whose wraths to guard you from, 1613 Which here, in this most desolate Isle, else fals 1614 Vpon your heads, is nothing but hearts- sorrow, 1615 And a cleere life ensuing. 1616 * 1619 Brauely the figure of this {Harpie}, hast thou 1620 Perform'd (my {Ariell}) a grace it had deuouring: 1621 Of my Instruction, hast thou nothing bated 1622 In what thou had'st to say: so with good life, 1623 And obseruation strange, my meaner ministers 1624 *Their seuerall kindes haue done: my high charmes work, 1625 And these (mine enemies) are all knit vp 1626 In their distractions: they now are in my powre; 1627 And in these fits, I leaue them, while I visit 1628 Yong {Ferdinand} (whom they suppose is droun'd) 1629 And his, and mine lou'd darling. 1630 * I'th name of something holy, Sir, why stand you 1631 In this strange stare? 1632 O, it is monstrous: monstrous: 1633 Me thought the billowes spoke, and told me of it, 1634 The windes did sing it to me: and the Thunder 1635 (That deepe and dreadfull Organ- Pipe) pronounc'd 1636 The name of {Prosper}: it did base my Trespasse, 1637 Therefore my Sonne i'th Ooze is bedded; and 1638 I'le seeke him deeper then ere plummet sounded, 1639 And with him there lye mudded. 1640 But one feend at a time, 1641 Ile fight their Legions ore.

1642 Ile be thy Second. 1643 * All three of them are desperate: their great guilt 1644 (Like poyson giuen to worke a great time after) 1645 Now gins to bite the spirits: I doe beseech you 1646 (That are of suppler ioynts) follow them swiftly, 1647 And hinder them from what this extasie 1648 May now prouoke them to. 1649 Follow, I pray you. 1650 1651 1652 If I haue too austerely punish'd you, 1653 Your compensation makes amends, for I 1654 Haue giuen you here, a third of mine owne life, 1655 Or that for which I liue: who, once againe 1656 I tender to thy hand: All thy vexations 1657 Were but my trials of thy loue, and thou 1658 Hast strangely stood the test: here, afore heauen 1659 I ratifie this my rich guift: O {Ferdinand}, 1660 Doe not smile at me, that I boast her of, 1661 For thou shalt finde she will out- strip all praise 1662 And make it halt, behinde her. 1663 I doe beleeue it 1664 Against an Oracle. 1665 Then, as my guest, and thine owne acquisition 1666 Worthily purchas'd, take my daughter: But 1667 If thou do'st breake her Virgin- knot, before 1668 All sanctimonious ceremonies may 1669 With full and holy right, be ministred, 1670 No sweet aspersion shall the heauens let fall 1671 To make this contract grow; but barraine hate, 1672 Sower- ey'd disdaine, and discord shall bestrew 1673 The vnion of your bed, with weedes so loathly 1674 That you shall hate it both: Therefore take heede, 1675 As Hymens Lamps shall light you. 1676 As I hope 1677 For quiet dayes, faire Issue, and long life, 1678 With such loue, as 'tis now the murkiest den, 1679 The most opportune place, the strongst suggestion, 1680 Our worser {Genius} can, shall neuer melt 1681 Mine honor into lust, to take away 1682 The edge of that dayes celebration, 1683 When I shall thinke, or {Phoebus} Steeds are founderd, 1684 Or Night kept chain'd below. 1685 Fairely spoke; 1686 Sit then, and talke with her, she is thine owne; 1687 *What {Ariell}; my industrious serua[n]t {Ariell}. 1688 What would my potent master? here I am. 1689 * Thou, and thy meaner fellowes, your last seruice 1690 Did worthily performe: and I must vse you 1691 In such another tricke: goe bring the rabble 1692 (Ore whom I giue thee powre) here, to this place: 1693 Incite them to quicke motion, for I must 1694 Bestow vpon the eyes of this yong couple 1695 Some vanity of mine #Art: it is my promise, 1696 And they expect it from me. 1697 Presently? 1698 #I: with a twincke. 1699 Before you can say come, and goe, 1700 And breathe twice; and cry, so, so: 1701 Each one tripping on his Toe, 1702 Will be here with mop, and mowe. 1703 Doe you loue me Master? no? 1704 Dearely, my delicate {Ariell}: doe not approach 1705 Till thou do'st heare me call. 1706 Well: I conceiue. 1707 Looke thou be true: doe not giue dalliance 1708 Too much the raigne: the strongest oathes, are straw 1709 To th' fire ith' blood: be more abstenious, 1710 Or else good night your vow. 1711 I warrant you, Sir, 1712 The white cold virgin Snow, vpon my heart 1713 Abates the ardour of my Liuer. 1714 Well. 1715 Now come my {Ariell}, bring a Corolary, 1716 *Rather then want a Spirit; appear, & pertly. 1717 No tongue: all eyes: be silent. 1718 {Ceres}, most bounteous Lady, thy rich Leas 1719 Of Wheate, Rye, Barley, Fetches, Oates and Pease; 1720 Thy Turphie- Mountaines, where liue nibling Sheepe, 1721 And flat Medes thetchd with Stouer, them to keepe: 1722 Thy bankes with pioned, and twilled brims 1723 Which spungie {Aprill}, at thy hest betrims; 1724 *To make cold Nymphes chast crownes; & thy broome-|(#groues; 1725 Whose shadow the dismissed Batchelor loues, 1726 Being lasse- lorne: thy pole- clipt vineyard, 1727 And thy Sea- marge stirrile, and rockey- hard, 1728 Where thou thy selfe do'st ayre, the Queene o'th Skie, 1729 Whose watry Arch, and messenger, am I. 1730 *Bids thee leaue these, & with her soueraigne grace, 1731 Here on this grasse- plot, in this very place 1732 To come, and sport: here Peacocks flye amaine: 1733 Approach, rich {Ceres}, her to entertaine. 1734 Haile, many- coloured Messenger, that nere 1735 Do'st disobey the wife of {Iupiter}: 1736 Who, with thy saffron wings, vpon my flowres 1737 Diffusest hony drops, refreshing showres, 1738 And with each end of thy blew bowe do'st crowne 1739 My boskie acres, and my vnshrubd downe, 1740 Rich scarph to my proud earth: why hath thy Queene 1741 Summond me hither, to this short gras'd Greene? 1742 A contract of true Loue, to celebrate, 1743 And some donation freely to estate 1744 On the bles'd Louers. 1745 Tell me heauenly Bowe, 1746 If {Venus} or her Sonne, as thou do'st know, 1747 Doe now attend the Queene? since they did plot 1748 The meanes, that duskie {Dis}, my daughter got, 1749 Her, and her blind- Boyes scandald company, 1750 I haue forsworne. 1751 Of her societie 1752 Be not afraid: I met her deitie 1753 Cutting the clouds towards {Paphos}: and her Son 1754 *Doue- drawn with her: here thought they to haue done 1755 Some wanton charme, vpon this Man and Maide, 1756 Whose vowes are, that no bed- right shall be paid 1757 Till {Hymens} Torch be lighted: but in vaine, 1758 {Marses} hot Minion is returnd againe, 1759 Her waspish headed sonne, has broke his arrowes, 1760 *Swears he will shoote no more, but play with Sparrows, 1761 And be a Boy right out. 1762 Highest Queene of State, 1763 Great {Iuno} comes, I know her by her gate 1764 How do's my bounteous sister? goe with me 1765 To blesse this twaine, that they may prosperous be, 1766 And honourd in their Issue. 1767 {Honor, riches, marriage, blessing}, 1768 {Long continuance, and encreasing}, 1769 {Hourely ioyes, be still vpon you},

1770 {Iuno sings her blessings on you}. 1771 {Earths increase, foyzon plentie}, 1772 {Barnes, and Garners, neuer empty}. 1773 {Vines, with clustring bunches growing}, 1774 {Plants, with goodly burthen bowing:} 1775 {Spring come to you at the farthest}, 1776 {In the very end of Haruest}. 1777 {Scarcity and want shall shun you}, 1778 Ceres {blessing so is on you}. 1779 This is a most maiesticke vision, and 1780 Harmonious charmingly: may I be bold 1781 To thinke these spirits? 1782 Spirits, which by mine #Art 1783 I haue from their confines call'd to enact 1784 My present fancies. 1785 Let me liue here euer, 1786 So rare a wondred Father, and a wise 1787 Makes this place Paradise. 1788 Sweet now, silence: 1789 {Iuno} and {Ceres} whisper seriously, 1790 There's something else to doe: hush, and be mute 1791 Or else our spell is mar'd. 1792 * 1793 * You Nimphs cald {Nayades} of y windring brooks, 1794 *With your sedg'd crownes, and euer- harmelesse lookes, 1795 Leaue your crispe channels, and on this green- Land 1796 Answere your summons, {Iuno} do's command. 1797 Come temperate {Nimphes}, and helpe to celebrate 1798 A Contract of true Loue: be not too late. 1799 1800 You Sun- burn'd Sicklemen of August weary, 1801 Come hether from the furrow, and be merry, 1802 Make holly day: your Rye- straw hats put on, 1803 And these fresh Nimphes encounter euery one 1804 In Country footing. 1805 * 1809 I had forgot that foule conspiracy 1810 Of the beast {Calliban}, and his confederates 1811 Against my life: the minute of their plot 1812 Is almost come: Well done, auoid: no more. 1813 This is strange: your fathers in some passion 1814 That workes him strongly. 1815 Neuer till this day 1816 Saw I him touch'd with anger, so distemper'd. 1817 You doe looke (my son) in a mou'd sort, 1818 As if you were dismaid: be cheerefull Sir, 1819 Our Reuels now are ended: These our actors, 1820 (As I foretold you) were all Spirits, and 1821 Are melted into Ayre, into thin Ayre, 1822 And like the baselesse fabricke of this vision 1823 The Clowd- capt Towres, the gorgeous Pallaces, 1824 The solemne Temples, the great Globe it selfe, 1825 Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolue, 1826 And like this insubstantiall Pageant faded 1827 Leaue not a racke behinde: we are such stuffe 1828 As dreames are made on; and our little life 1829 Is rounded with a sleepe: Sir, I am vext, 1830 Beare with my weakenesse, my old braine is troubled: 1831 Be not disturb'd with my infirmitie, 1832 If you be pleas'd, retire into my Cell, 1833 And there repose, a turne or two, Ile walke 1834 To still my beating minde. 1835 We wish your peace. 1836 * Come with a thought; I thank thee {Ariell}: come. 1837 1838 * Thy thoughts I cleaue to, what's thy pleasure? 1839 * Spirit: We must prepare to meet with {Caliban}. 1840 #I my Commander, when I presented {Ceres} 1841 I thought to haue told thee of it, but I fear'd 1842 Least I might anger thee. 1843 * Say again, where didst thou leaue these varlots? 1844 * I told you Sir, they were red- hot with drinking, 1845 So full of valour, that they smote the ayre 1846 For breathing in their faces: beate the ground 1847 For kissing of their feete; yet alwaies bending 1848 Towards their proiect: then I beate my Tabor, 1849 At which like vnback't colts they prickt their eares, 1850 Aduanc'd their eye- lids, lifted vp their noses 1851 As they smelt musicke, so I charm'd their eares 1852 That Calfe- like, they my lowing follow'd, through 1853 Tooth'd briars, sharpe firzes, pricking gosse, & thorns, 1854 Which entred their fraile shins: at last I left them 1855 I'th' filthy mantled poole beyond your Cell, 1856 There dancing vp to th' chins, that the fowle Lake 1857 Ore- stunck their feet. 1858 This was well done (my bird) 1859 Thy shape inuisible retaine thou still: 1860 The trumpery in my house, goe bring it hither 1861 For stale to catch these theeues. I go, I goe. 1862 A Deuill, a borne- Deuill, on whose nature 1863 Nurture can neuer sticke: on whom my paines 1864 Humanely taken, all, all lost, quite lost, 1865 And, as with age, his body ouglier growes, 1866 So his minde cankers: I will plague them all, 1867 Euen to roaring: Come, hang on them this line. 1868 * 1870 * Pray you tread softly, that the blinde Mole may 1871 not heare a foot fall: we now are neere his Cell. 1872 * Monster, your Fairy, w you say is a harmles Fairy, 1873 Has done little better then plaid the Iacke with vs. 1874 Monster, I do smell all horse- pisse, at which 1875 My nose is in great indignation. 1876 * So is mine. Do you heare Monster: If I should 1877 Take a displeasure against you: Looke you. 1878 Thou wert but a lost Monster. 1879 Good my Lord, giue me thy fauour stil, 1880 Be patient, for the prize Ile bring thee #too 1881 *Shall hudwinke this mischance: therefore speake softly, 1882 All's husht as midnight yet. 1883 #I, but to loose our bottles in the Poole. 1884 * There is not onely disgrace and dishonor in that 1885 Monster, but an infinite losse. 1886 That's more to me then my wetting: 1887 Yet this is your harmlesse Fairy, Monster. 1888 I will fetch off my bottle, 1889 Though I be o're eares for my labour. 1890 Pre- thee (my King) be quiet. Seest thou heere 1891 This is the mouth o'th Cell: no noise, and enter: 1892 Do that good mischeefe, which may make this Island 1893 Thine owne for euer, and I thy {Caliban} 1894 For aye thy foot- licker. 1895 Giue me thy hand, 1896 I do begin to haue bloody thoughts. 1897 * O King {Stephano}, O Peere: O worthy {Stephano}, 1898 Looke what a wardrobe heere is for thee. 1899 Let it alone thou foole, it is but trash. 1900 * Oh, ho, Monster: wee know what belongs to a 1901 frippery, O King {Stephano}.

1902 * Put off that gowne ({Trinculo}) by this hand Ile 1903 haue that gowne. 1904 Thy grace shall haue it. 1905 * The dropsie drowne this foole, what doe you |(meane 1906 To doate thus on such luggage? let's alone 1907 And doe the murther first: if he awake, 1908 From toe to crowne hee'l fill our skins with pinches, 1909 Make vs strange stuffe. 1910 * Be you quiet (Monster) Mistris line, is not this 1911 *my Ierkin? how is the Ierkin vnder the line: now Ier-kin 1912 *you are like to lose your haire, & proue a bald Ierkin. 1913 * Doe, doe; we steale by lyne and leuell, and't 1914 like your grace. 1915 * I thank thee for that iest; heer's a garment for't: 1916 *Wit shall not goe vn- rewarded while I am King of this 1917 *Country: Steale by line and leuell, is an excellent passe 1918 of pate: there's another garment for't. 1919 * Monster, come put some Lime vpon your fin-gers, 1920 and away with the rest. 1921 I will haue none on't: we shall loose our time, 1922 And all be turn'd to Barnacles, or to Apes 1923 With foreheads villanous low. 1924 * Monster, lay to your fingers: helpe to beare this 1925 *away, where my hogshead of wine is, or Ile turne you 1926 out of my kingdome: goe to, carry this. 1927 And this. 1928 #I, and this. 1929 * 1932 Hey {Mountaine}, hey. 1933 {Siluer}: there it goes, {Siluer}. 1934 Fury, Fury: there Tyrant, there: harke, harke. 1935 Goe, charge my Goblins that they grinde their ioynts 1936 With dry Convultions, shorten vp their sinewes 1937 *With aged Cramps, & more pinch- spotted make them, 1938 Then Pard, or Cat o' Mountaine. 1939 Harke, they rore. 1940 Let them be hunted soundly: At this houre 1941 Lies at my mercy all mine enemies: 1942 Shortly shall all my labours end, and thou 1943 Shalt haue the ayre at freedome: for a little 1944 Follow, and doe me seruice. 1945 1946 1947 Now do's my Proiect gather to a head: 1948 My charmes cracke not: my Spirits obey, and Time 1949 Goes vpright with his carriage: how's the day? 1950 On the sixt hower, at which time, my Lord 1951 You said our worke should cease. 1952 I did say so, 1953 When first I rais'd the Tempest: say my Spirit, 1954 How fares the King, and's followers? 1955 Confin'd together 1956 In the same fashion, as you gaue in charge, 1957 Iust as you left them; all prisoners Sir 1958 In the {Line- groue} which weather- fends your Cell, 1959 They cannot boudge till your release: The King, 1960 His Brother, and yours, abide all three distracted, 1961 And the remainder mourning ouer them, 1962 Brim full of sorrow, and dismay: but chiefly 1963 Him that you term'd Sir, the good old Lord {Gonzallo}, 1964 His teares runs downe his beard like winters drops 1965 *From eaues of reeds: your charm so strongly works 'em 1966 That if you now beheld them, your affections 1967 Would become tender. 1968 Dost thou thinke so, Spirit? 1969 Mine would, Sir, were I humane. 1970 And mine shall. 1971 Hast thou (which art but aire) a touch, a feeling 1972 Of their afflictions, and shall not my selfe, 1973 One of their kinde, that rellish all as sharpely, 1974 Passion as they, be kindlier mou'd then thou art? 1975 *Thogh with their high wrongs I am strook to th' quick, 1976 Yet, with my nobler reason, gainst my furie 1977 Doe I take part: the rarer Action is 1978 In vertue, then in vengeance: they, being penitent, 1979 The sole drift of my purpose doth extend 1980 Not a frowne further: Goe, release them {Ariell}, 1981 My Charmes Ile breake, their sences Ile restore, 1982 And they shall be themselues. 1983 Ile fetch them, Sir. 1984 * Ye Elues of hils, brooks, sta[n]ding lakes & groues, 1985 And ye, that on the sands with printlesse foote 1986 Doe chase the ebbing-{#Neptune}, and doe flie him 1987 When he comes backe: you demy- Puppets, that 1988 By Moone- shine doe the greene sowre Ringlets make, 1989 Whereof the Ewe not bites: and you, whose pastime 1990 Is to make midnight- Mushrumps, that reioyce 1991 To heare the solemne Curfewe, by whose ayde 1992 (Weake Masters though ye be) I haue bedymn'd 1993 *The Noone- tide Sun, call'd forth the mutenous windes, 1994 And twixt the greene Sea, and the azur'd vault 1995 Set roaring warre: To the dread ratling Thunder 1996 Haue I giuen fire, and rifted {Ioues} stowt Oke 1997 With his owne Bolt: The strong bass'd promontorie 1998 Haue I made shake, and by the spurs pluckt vp 1999 The Pyne, and Cedar. Graues at my command 2000 Haue wak'd their sleepers, op'd, and let 'em forth 2001 By my so potent #Art. But this rough Magicke 2002 I heere abiure: and when I haue requir'd 2003 Some heauenly Musicke (which euen now I do) 2004 To worke mine end vpon their Sences, that 2005 This Ayrie- charme is for, I'le breake my staffe, 2006 Bury it certaine fadomes in the earth, 2007 And deeper then did euer Plummet sound 2008 Ile drowne my booke. 2009 * 2014 A solemne Ayre, and the best comforter, 2015 To an vnsetled fancie, Cure thy braines 2016 (Now vselesse) boile within thy skull: there stand 2017 For you are Spell- stopt. 2018 Holy {Gonzallo}, Honourable man, 2019 Mine eyes ev'n sociable to the shew of thine 2020 Fall fellowly drops: The charme dissolues apace, 2021 And as the morning steales vpon the night 2022 (Melting the darkenesse) so their rising sences 2023 Begin to chace the ignorant fumes that mantle 2024 Their cleerer reason. O good {Gonzallo} 2025 My true preseruer, and a loyall #Sir, 2026 To him thou follow'st; I will pay thy graces 2027 Home both in word, and deede: Most cruelly

2028 Did thou {Alonso}, vse me, and my daughter: 2029 Thy brother was a furtherer in the Act, 2030 Thou art pinch'd for't now {Sebastian}. Flesh, and bloud, 2031 You, brother mine, that entertaine ambition, 2032 Expelld remorse, and nature, whom, with {Sebastian} 2033 (Whose inward pinches therefore are most strong) 2034 *Would heere haue kill'd your King: I do forgiue thee, 2035 Vnnaturall though thou art: Their vnderstanding 2036 Begins to swell, and the approching tide 2037 Will shortly fill the reasonable shore 2038 That now ly foule, and muddy: not one of them 2039 That yet lookes on me, or would know me: {Ariell}, 2040 Fetch me the Hat, and Rapier in my Cell, 2041 I will discase me, and my selfe present 2042 As I was sometime {Millaine}: quickly Spirit, 2043 Thou shalt ere long be free. 2044 2045 {Where the #Bee sucks, there suck I}, 2046 {In a Cowslips bell, I lie}, 2047 {There I cowch when Owles doe crie}, 2048 {On the Batts backe I doe flie} 2049 {after Sommer merrily}. 2050 {Merrily, merrily, shall I liue now}, 2051 {Vnder the blossom that hangs on the Bow}. 2052 Why that's my dainty {Ariell}: I shall misse 2053 Thee, but yet thou shalt haue freedome: so, so, so, 2054 To the Kings ship, inuisible as thou art, 2055 There shalt thou finde the Marriners asleepe 2056 Vnder the Hatches: the Master and the Boat- swaine 2057 Being awake, enforce them to this place; 2058 And presently, I pre'thee. 2059 I drinke the aire before me, and returne 2060 Or ere your pulse twice beate. 2061 * All torment, trouble, wonder, and amazement 2062 Inhabits heere: some heauenly power guide vs 2063 Out of this fearefull Country. 2064 Behold Sir King 2065 The wronged Duke of {Millaine}, {Prospero}: 2066 For more assurance that a liuing Prince 2067 Do's now speake to thee, I embrace thy body, 2068 And to thee, and thy Company, I bid 2069 A hearty welcome. 2070 Where thou bee'st he or no, 2071 Or some inchanted triflle to abuse me, 2072 (As late I haue beene) I not know: thy Pulse 2073 Beats as of flesh, and blood: and since I saw thee, 2074 Th' affliction of my minde amends, with which 2075 I feare a madnesse held me: this must craue 2076 (#And if this be at all) a most strange story. 2077 Thy Dukedome I resigne, and doe entreat 2078 Thou pardon me my wrongs: But how shold {Prospero} 2079 Be liuing, and be heere? 2080 First, noble Frend, 2081 Let me embrace thine age, whose honor cannot 2082 Be measur'd, or confin'd. 2083 Whether this be, 2084 Or be not, I'le not sweare. 2085 You doe yet taste 2086 Some subtleties o'th' Isle, that will nor let you 2087 Beleeue things certaine: Wellcome, my friends all, 2088 But you, my brace of Lords, were I so minded 2089 I heere could plucke his Highnesse frowne vpon you 2090 And iustifie you Traitors: at this time 2091 I will tell no tales. 2092 The Diuell speakes in him: 2093 No: 2094 For you (most wicked Sir) whom to call brother 2095 Would euen infect my mouth, I do forgiue 2096 Thy rankest fault; all of them: and require 2097 My Dukedome of thee, which, perforce I know 2098 Thou must restore. 2099 If thou beest {Prospero} 2100 Giue vs particulars of thy preseruation, 2101 *How thou hast met vs heere, whom three howres since 2102 Were wrackt vpon this shore? where I haue lost 2103 (How sharp the point of this remembrance is) 2104 My deere sonne {Ferdinand}. 2105 I am woe for't, Sir. 2106 Irreparable is the losse, and patience 2107 Saies, it is past her cure. 2108 I rather thinke 2109 You haue not sought her helpe, of whose soft grace 2110 For the like losse, I haue her soueraigne aid, 2111 And rest my selfe content. 2112 You the like losse? 2113 As great to me, as late, and supportable 2114 To make the deere losse, haue I meanes much weaker 2115 Then you may call to comfort you; for I 2116 Haue lost my daughter. 2117 A daughter? 2118 Oh heauens, that they were liuing both in {Naples} 2119 The King and Queene there, that they were, I wish 2120 My selfe were mudded in that oo-zie bed 2121 *Where my sonne lies: when did you lose your daughter? 2122 In this last Tempest. I perceiue these Lords 2123 At this encounter doe so much admire, 2124 That they deuoure their reason, and scarce thinke 2125 Their eies doe offices of Truth: Their words 2126 Are naturall breath: but howsoeu'r you haue 2127 Beene iustled from your sences, know for certain 2128 That I am {Prospero}, and that very Duke 2129 *Which was thrust forth of {Millaine}, who most strangely 2130 Vpon this shore (where you were wrackt) was landed 2131 To be the Lord on't: No more yet of this, 2132 For 'tis a Chronicle of day by day, 2133 Not a relation for a break- fast, nor 2134 Befitting this first meeting: Welcome, Sir; 2135 This Cell's my Court: heere haue I few attendants, 2136 And Subiects none abroad: pray you looke in: 2137 My Dukedome since you haue giuen me againe, 2138 I will requite you with as good a thing, 2139 At least bring forth a wonder, to content ye 2140 As much, as me my Dukedome. 2141 * 2143 Sweet Lord, you play me false. 2144 No my dearest loue, 2145 I would not for the world. 2146 * Yes, for a score of Kingdomes, you should |(wrangle, 2147 And I would call it faire play. 2148 If this proue 2149 A vision of the Island, one deere Sonne 2150 Shall I twice loose. 2151 A most high miracle. 2152 Though the Seas threaten they are mercifull, 2153 I haue curs'd them without cause. 2154 Now all the blessings 2155 Of a glad father, compasse thee about: 2156 Arise, and say how thou cam'st heere. 2157 O wonder! 2158 How many goodly creatures are there heere? 2159 How beauteous mankinde is? O braue new world

2160 That has such people in't. 2161 'Tis new to thee. 2162 * What is this Maid, with whom thou was't at |(play? 2163 Your eld'st acquaintance cannot be three houres: 2164 Is she the goddesse that hath seuer'd vs, 2165 And brought vs thus together? 2166 Sir, she is mortall; 2167 But by immortall prouidence, she's mine; 2168 I chose her when I could not aske my Father 2169 For his aduise: nor thought I had one: She 2170 Is daughter to this famous Duke of {Millaine}, 2171 Of whom, so often I haue heard renowne, 2172 But neuer saw before: of whom I haue 2173 Receiu'd a second life; and second Father 2174 This Lady makes him to me. 2175 I am hers. 2176 But O, how odly will it sound, that I 2177 Must aske my childe forgiuenesse? 2178 There Sir stop, 2179 Let vs not burthen our remembrances, with 2180 A heauinesse that's gon. 2181 I haue inly wept, 2182 Or should haue spoke ere this: looke downe you gods 2183 And on this couple drop a blessed crowne; 2184 For it is you, that haue chalk'd forth the way 2185 Which brought vs hither. 2186 I say Amen, {Gonzallo}. 2187 * Was {Millaine} thrust from {Millaine}, that his Issue 2188 Should become Kings of {Naples}? O reioyce 2189 Beyond a common ioy, and set it downe 2190 With gold on lasting Pillers: In one voyage 2191 Did {Claribell} her husband finde at {Tunis}, 2192 And {Ferdinand} her brother, found a wife, 2193 Where he himselfe was lost: {Prospero}, his Dukedome 2194 In a poore Isle: and all of vs, our selues, 2195 When no man was his owne. 2196 Giue me your hands: 2197 Let griefe and sorrow still embrace his heart, 2198 That doth not wish you ioy. 2199 Be it so, Amen. 2200 2202 O looke Sir, looke Sir, here is more of vs: 2203 I prophesi'd, if a Gallowes were on Land 2204 This fellow could not drowne: Now blasphemy, 2205 That swear'st Grace ore- boord, not an oath on shore, 2206 Hast thou no mouth by land? 2207 What is the newes? 2208 The best newes is, that we haue safely found 2209 Our King, and company: The next: our Ship, 2210 Which but three glasses since, we gaue out split, 2211 Is tyte, and #yare, and brauely rig'd, as when 2212 We first put out to Sea. 2213 Sir, all this seruice 2214 Haue I done since I went. 2215 My tricksey Spirit. 2216 These are not naturall euents, they strengthen 2217 From strange, to stranger: say, how came you hither? 2218 If I did thinke, Sir, I were well awake, 2219 I'ld striue to tell you: we were dead of sleepe, 2220 And (how we know not) all clapt vnder hatches, 2221 Where, but euen now, with strange, and seuerall noyses 2222 Of roring, shreeking, howling, gingling chaines, 2223 And mo diuersitie of sounds, all horrible. 2224 We were awak'd: straight way, at liberty; 2225 Where we, in all our trim, freshly beheld 2226 Our royall, good, and gallant Ship: our Master 2227 Capring to eye her: on a trice, so please you, 2228 Euen in a dreame, were we diuided from them, 2229 And were brought moaping hither. 2230 #Was't well done? 2231 Brauely (my diligence) thou shalt be free. 2232 This is as strange a Maze, as ere men trod, 2233 And there is in this businesse, more then nature 2234 Was euer conduct of: some Oracle 2235 Must rectifie our knowledge. 2236 Sir, my Leige, 2237 Doe not infest your minde, with beating on 2238 The strangenesse of this businesse, at pickt leisure 2239 (Which shall be shortly single) I'le resolue you, 2240 (Which to you shall seeme probable) of euery 2241 These happend accidents: till when, be cheerefull 2242 And thinke of each thing well: Come hither Spirit, 2243 Set {Caliban}, and his companions free: 2244 Vntye the Spell: How fares my gracious Sir? 2245 There are yet missing of your Companie 2246 Some few odde Lads, that you remember not. 2247 2249 Euery man shift for all the rest, and let 2250 No man take care for himselfe; for all is 2251 But fortune: {Coragio} Bully- Monster {Coragio}. 2252 * If these be true spies which I weare in my head, 2253 here's a goodly sight. 2254 O {Setebos}, these be braue Spirits indeede: 2255 How fine my Master is? I am afraid 2256 He will chastise me. 2257 Ha, ha: 2258 What things are these, my Lord {Anthonio}? 2259 Will money buy em? 2260 Very like: one of them 2261 Is a plaine Fish, and no doubt marketable. 2262 Marke but the badges of these men, my Lords, 2263 Then say if they be true: This mishapen knaue; 2264 His Mother was a Witch, and one so strong 2265 *That could controle the Moone; make flowes, and ebs, 2266 And deale in her command, without her power: 2267 These three haue robd me, and this demy- diuell; 2268 (For he's a bastard one) had plotted with them 2269 To take my life: two of these Fellowes, you 2270 Must know, and owne, this Thing of darkenesse, I 2271 Acknowledge mine. 2272 I shall be pincht to death. 2273 Is not this {Stephano}, my drunken Butler? 2274 He is drunke now; 2275 Where had he wine? 2276 * And {Trinculo} is reeling ripe: where should they 2277 Finde this grand Liquor that hath gilded 'em? 2278 How cam'st thou in this pickle? 2279 I haue bin in such a pickle since I saw you last, 2280 That I feare me will neuer out of my bones: 2281 I shall not feare fly- blowing. 2282 Why how now {Stephano}? 2283 * O touch me not, I am not {Stephano}, but a Cramp. 2284 You'ld be King o'the Isle, Sirha? 2285 I should haue bin a sore one then. 2286 This is a strange thing as ere I look'd on. 2287 He is as disproportion'd in his Manners 2288 As in his shape: Goe Sirha, to my Cell, 2289 Take with you your Companions: as you looke 2290 To haue my pardon, trim it handsomely. 2291 #I that I will: and Ile be wise hereafter,

2292 And seeke for grace: what a thrice double Asse 2293 Was I to take this drunkard for a god? 2294 And worship this dull foole? 2295 Goe to, away. 2296 * Hence, and bestow your luggage where you |(found it. 2297 Or stole it rather. 2298 Sir, I inuite your Highnesse, and your traine 2299 To my poore Cell: where you shall take your rest 2300 For this one night, which part of it, Ile waste 2301 With such discourse, as I not doubt, shall make it 2302 Goe quicke away: The story of my life, 2303 And the particular accidents, gon by 2304 Since I came to this Isle: And in the morne 2305 I'le bring you to your ship, and so to {Naples}, 2306 Where I haue hope to see the nuptiall 2307 Of these our deere- belou'd, solemnized, 2308 And thence retire me to my {Millaine}, where 2309 Euery third thought shall be my graue. 2310 I long 2311 To heare the story of your life; which must 2312 Take the eare strangely. 2313 I'le deliuer all, 2314 And promise you calme Seas, auspicious gales, 2315 And saile, so expeditious, that shall catch 2316 Your Royall fleete farre off: My {Ariel}; chicke 2317 That is thy charge: Then to the Elements 2318 Be free, and fare thou well: please you draw neere. 2319 2320 2322 {Now my Charmes are all ore- throwne}, 2323 {And what strength I haue's mine owne}. 2324 {Which is most faint: now 'tis true} 2325 {I must be heere confinde by you}, 2326 {Or sent to} Naples, {Let me not} 2327 {Since I haue my Dukedome got}, 2328 {And pardon'd the deceiuer, dwell} 2329 {In this bare Island, by your Spell}, 2330 {But release me from my bands} 2331 {With the helpe of your good hands:} 2332 {Gentle breath of yours, my Sailes} 2333 {Must fill, or else my proiect failes}, 2334 {Which was to please: Now I want} 2335 {Spirits to enforce: #Art to inchant}, 2336 {And my ending is despaire}, 2337 {Vnlesse I be relieu'd by praier} 2338 {Which pierces so, that it assaults} 2339 {Mercy it selfe, and frees all faults}. 2340 {As you from crimes would pardon'd be}, 2341 {Let your Indulgence set me free}. 2342 *