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Duke. Why, how should I believe this? Look, he's

merry,

As if he had no such charge. One with that care
Could never be so still; he holds his temper,
And 'tis the same still, with no difference,
He brought his father's corpse to the grave with.
He laugh'd thus then, you know.

Court. Aye, he may laugh, my lord;

That shews but how he glories in his cunning;
And, perhaps, done more to advance his wit,
Than to express affection to his father,
That only he has over-reach'd the law.

Duke. If a contempt can be so neatly carried,
It gives me cause of wonder.-

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Duke. Not mov'd a whit!

Constant to lightning still!

-'tis strange to meet you

Upon a ground so unfrequented, sir:

This does not fit your passion; you are for mirth,

Or I mistake you much.

Cle. But finding it

Grow to a noted imperfection in me
(For any thing too much is vicious),
I come to these disconsolate walks of
purpose
Only to dull and take away the edge on't.
I ever had a greater zeal to sadness,
A natural propension, I confess, my lord,
Before that chearful accident fell out,-
If I may call a father's funeral chearful,
Without wrong done to duty or my love.

1

Duke. It seems then you take pleasure in these walks, sir?

C. Contemplative content I do, my lord:
They bring into my mind oft meditations
So sweetly precious, that in the parting
I find a shower of grace upon my cheeks,
They take their leave so feelingly.

Duke. So, sir

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Cle. Which is a kind of grave delight, my lord.
Duke. And I've small cause, Cleanthes, to afford

you

The least delight that has a name.

Cle. My lord

Duke. In your excess of joy you have express'd
Your rancour and contempt against my law:
Your smiles deserve fining; you have profess'd
Derision openly ev'n to my face,

Which might be death, a little more incensed.
You do not come for any
freedom here,

But for a project of your own;

But all that's known to be contentful to thee,
Shall in the use prove deadly. Your life's mine,
If ever thy presumption do but lead thee

Into these walks again

-aye, or that woman

I'll have them watch'd a purpose.

1st Court. Now, now, his colour ebbs and flows.
2d Court. Mark hers too.

Hip. Oh! who shall bring food to the poor old man

now?

Speak somewhat, good sir, or we are lost for ever. (Apart to Cleanthes.) Cle. Oh! you did wondrous ill to call me again. There are not words to help us. If I intreat, 'Tis found; that will betray us worse than silence. Pr'ithee, let heaven alone, and let's say nothing. (Apart to Hippolita.) 1st Court. You have struck them dumb, my lord. 2d Court. Look how guilt looks! Cle. He is safe still, is he not? Hip. Oh! you do ill to doubt it.

Cle. Thou art all goodness.

} Apart.

2d Court. Now does your grace believe?
Duke. 'Tis too apparent.

Search, make a speedy search; for the imposture

Cannot be far off, by the fear it sends.

Cle. Ha!

2d

2d Court. He has the lapwing's cunning, I'm afraid, my

lord,

That cries most when she is farthest from the nest.
Cle, Oh! we are betrayed.11

THE TRAGEDY OF PHILIP CHABOT, ADMIRAL OF FRANCE. BY GEORGE CHAPMAN, AND JAMES

SHIRLEY.

The Admiral is accused of treason, a criminal process is instituted against him, and his faithful servant Allegre is put on the rack to make him discover: his innocence is at length established by the confession of his enemies; but the disgrace of having been suspected for a traitor by his royal Master, sinks so deep into him, that he falls into a mortal sickness.

ADMIRAL. ALLEGRE, supported between two.

Adm. Welcome my injured servant: what a misery Have they made on thee!

Al. Though some change appear

Upon my body, whose severe affliction

Hath brought it thus to be sustain❜d by others,

My heart is still the same in faith to you,

Not broken with their rage.

Adm. Alas poor man.

Were

There is an exquisiteness of moral sensibility, making one to gush out tears of delight, and a poetical strangeness in all the improbable circumstances of this wild play, which are unlike any thing in the dramas which Massinger wrote alone. The pathos is of a subtler edge. Middleton and Rowley, who assisted in this play, had both of them finer geniuses than their associate.

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Were all my joys essential, and so mighty,
As the affected world believes I taste,
This object were enough t' unsweeten all.
Though, in thy absence, I had suffering,
And felt within me a strong sympathy,
While for my sake their cruelty did vex
And fright thy nerves with horror of thy sense,
Yet in this spectacle I apprehend

More grief, than all my imagination
Could let before into me.

Upon the torture?

Al. Good my lord, let not

Didst not curse me

The thought of what I suffer'd dwell upon
Your memory; they could not punish more
Than what my duty did oblige to bear

For you and justice: but there's something in
Your looks presents more fear, than all the malice
Of my tormentors could affect my soul with.
That paleness, and the other forms you wear,
Would well become a guilty admiral, one
Lost to his hopes and honour, not the man
Upon whose life the fury of injustice,

Arm'd with fierce lightning and the power of thunder,
Can make no breach. I was not rack'd till now.
There's more death in that falling eye, than all
Rage ever yet brought forth. What accident, sir, can
blast,

Can be so black and fatal, to distract

The calm, the triumph, that should sit upon

Your noble brow: misfortune could have no

Time to conspire with fate, since you were rescued
By the great arm of Providence; nor can

Those garlands, that now grow about your forehead,
With all the poison of the world be blasted.

Adm. Allegre, thou dost bear thy wounds upon thee
In wide and spacious characters, but in
The volume of my sadness thou dost want

-An eye to read. An open force hath torn

Thy manly sinews, which some time may cure.

The

The engine is not seen that wounds thy master;
Past all the remedy of art, or time,

The flatteries of court, of fame, or honours.
Thus in the summer a tall flourishing tree,
Transplanted by strong hand, with all her leaves
And blooming pride upon her, makes a show
Of spring, tempting the eye with wanton blossoms:
But not the sun with all her amorous smiles,
The dews of morning, or the tears of night,
Can root her fibres in the earth again;

Or make her bosom kind, to growth and bearing:
But the tree withers; and those very beams,
That once were natural warmth to her soft verdure,

Dry up her sap, and shoot a fever through

The bark and rind, till she becomes a burden
To that which gave her life: so Chabot, Chabot
Al. Wander in apprehension! I must

Suspect your health indeed.

Adm. No, no, thou shalt not

Be troubled: I but stirr'd thee with a moral,
That's empty; contains nothing. I am well:

See, I can walk; poor man, thou hast not strength yet.

The father of the Admiral makes known the condition his son is in to the king.

Father. King.

King. Say, how is my admiral?

The truth upon thy life.

Fath. To secure his, I would you had.

King. Ha! who durst oppose him?

Fath. One that hath power enough, hath practis'd on him,

And made his great heart stoop.

King. I will revenge it

With crushing, crushing that rebellious power

To nothing. Name him.

Fath. He was his friend.

King. What mischief hath engender'd New storms?

Fath.

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