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When you are over-earnest with your Brutus,
He'll think your mother chides, and leave you so.

SHAKESPERE.

CORIOLANUS AND AUFIDIUS.-CORIOLANUS.
Cor. I plainly, Tullus, by your looks perceive
You disapprove my conduct.

Auf. I mean not to assail thee with the clamour
Of loud reproaches and the war of words;
But, pride apart, and all that can pervert
The light of steady reason, here to make
A candid, fair proposal.

Cor. Speak, I hear thee.

Auf. I need not tell thee, that I have performed
My utmost promise. Thou hast been protected;
Hast had thy amplest, most ambitious wish;
Thy wounded pride is healed, thy dear revenge
Completely sated; and to crown thy fortune
At the same time, thy peace with Rome restored.
Thou art no more a Volscian, but a Roman;
Return, return; thy duty calls upon thee
Still to protect the city thou hast saved;

It yet may be in danger from our arms;

Retire I will take care thou may'st with safety.

:

Cor. With safety? Heavens !—and thinkest thou Corio

lanus

Will stoop to thee for safety ?—No: my safeguard

Is in myself, a bosom void of fear.—

O'tis an act of cowardice and baseness

To seize the very time my hands are fettered
By the strong chain of former obligation,
The safe, sure moment to insult me.- -Gods!
Were I now free, as on that day I was,
When at Corioli I tamed thy pride,
This had not been.

Auf. Thou speakest the truth: it had not.
O for that time again! Propitious gods,

If

f you will bless me, grant it! Know, for that,
For that dear purpose, I have now proposed
Thou shouldst return; I pray thee, Marcius, do it;
And we shall meet again on nobler terms.

Cor. Till I have cleared my honour in your council,
And proved before them all, to thy confusion
The falsehood of thy charge; as soon in battle
I would before thee fly, and howl for mercy,
As quit the station they 've assigned me here.

Auf. Thou canst not hope acquittal from the Volscians. Cor. I do:-Nay, more, expect their approbation, Their thanks. I will obtain them such a peace

As thou durst never ask; a perfect union
Of their whole nation with imperial Rome,
In all her privileges, all her rights;

By the just gods, I will.-What wouldst thou more?
Auf. What would I more, proud Roman ? This I
would-

Fire the cursed forest, where these Roman wolves
Haunt and infest their nobler neighbours round them;
Extirpate from the bosom of this land
A false, perfidious people, who, beneath
The mask of freedom, are a combination
Against the liberty of human kind;

The genuine seed of outlaws and of robbers.

Cor. The seed of gods.-'Tis not for thee, vain boaster,—

"Tis not for such as thou-so often spared

By her victorious sword, to speak of Rome,
But with respect, and awful veneration.—
Whate'er her blots, whate'er her giddy factions
There is more virtue in one single year

Of Roman story, than your Volscian annals

Can boast through all their creeping, dark duration. Auf. I thank thy rage:-This full displays the traitor. [Cor. Traitor! How now?

Auf. Ay, traitor, Marcius.

Cor. Marcius!

Auf. Ay, Marcius, Caius Marcius: dost thou think
I'll grace thee with that robbery, thy stolen name,
Coriolanus, in Corioli ?

You lords, and heads of the state, perfidiously
He has betrayed your business, and given up,
For certain drops of salt, your city Rome,—

I

say, your city,-to his wife and mother;

Breaking his oath and resolution like

A twist of rotten silk; never admitting
Counsel of the war: but at his nurse's tears
He whined and roared away your victory;
That pages blushed at him, and men of heart
Looked wondering at each other.

Cor. Hearest thou, Mars?

Auf. Name not the god, thou boy of tears.
Cor. Measureless liar, thou hast made my heart
Too great for what contains it. Boy! O slave!—
Cut me to pieces, Volsces; men and lads,
Stain all your edges on me. Boy! False hound!
If you have writ your annals true, 'tis there,
That, like an eagle in a dove-cot, I

Fluttered your Volscians in Corioli,
Alone I did it. Boy!]-But let us part;
Lest my rash hand should do a hasty deed
My cooler thought forbids.

Auf. I court

The worst thy sword can do; while thou from me
Hast nothing to expect but sore destruction;

Quit then this hostile camp: once more I tell thee,
Thou art not here one single hour in safety.

[Cor. O that I had thee in the field, With six Aufidiuses, or more, thy tribe, To use my lawful sword!]

THOMSON.

The two passages in the above scene enclosed between brackets [] are extracted from Shakespere's " Coriolanus.”

EDWARD AND WARWICK.-EARL OF WARWICK.

Edw. Let me have no intruders; above all,

Keep Warwick from my sight.

Enter WARWICK.

War. Behold him here;

No welcome guest, it seems, unless I ask

My Lord of Suffolk's leave. There was a time
When Warwick wanted not his aid to gain

Admission here.

Edw. There was a time, perhaps,

When Warwick more desired, and more deserved it.

War. Never: I've been a foolish faithful slave;
All my best years, the morning of my life,
Hath been devoted to your service: what
Are now the fruits? Disgrace and infamy!
My spotless name, which never yet the breath
Of calumny had tainted, made the mock
For foreign fools to carp at: but 'tis fit
Who trust in princes, should be thus rewarded.
Edw. I thought, my lord, I had full well repaid
Your services with honours, wealth, and power
Unlimited; thy all-directing hand

Guided in secret every latent wheel

Of government, and moved the whole machine :
Warwick was all in all, and powerless Edward
Stood like a cipher in the great account.

War. Who gave that cipher worth, and seated thee
On England's throne? Thy undistinguished name
Had rotted in the dust from whence it sprang
And mouldered in oblivion, had not Warwick
Dug from its sordid mine the useless ore,
And stamped it with a diadem. Thou know'st
This wretched country, doom'd, perhaps, like Rome,
To fall by its own self-destroying hand,
Tost for so many years in the rough sea
Of civil discord, but for me had perished.
In that distressful hour I seized the helm,

Bade the rough waves subside in peace, and steered
Your shattered vessel safe into the harbour.
You may despise, perhaps, that useless aid

Which you no longer want; but know, proud youth,
He who forgets a friend deserves a foe.

Edw. Know too, reproach for benefits received
Pays every debt, and cancels obligation.

War. Why, that indeed is frugal honesty;

A thrifty saving knowledge; when the debt

Grows burdensome, and cannot be discharged,

A sponge will wipe out all and cost you nothing.

Edw. When you have counted o'er the numerous train Of mighty gifts your bounty lavished on me,

You may remember next the injuries

Which I have done you: let me know them all,

And I will make you ample satisfaction.

War. Thou can'st not thou hast robbed me of a jewel,

It is not in thy power to restore :

I was the first, shall future annals say,

That broke the sacred bond of public trust
And mutual confidence; ambassadors,
In after times, mere instruments, perhaps,
Of venal statesmen, shall recall my name
To witness, that they want not an example,
And plead my guilt, to sanctify their own.
Amidst the herd of mercenary slaves

That haunt your court, could none be found but Warwick,
To be the shameless herald of a lie?

Edw. And wouldst thou turn the vile reproach on me?
If I have broke my faith, and stained the name
Of England, thank thy own pernicious counsels
That urged me to it, and extorted from me
A cold consent to what my heart abhorred.

War. I have been abused, insulted, and betrayed;
My injured honour cries aloud for vengeance,
Her wounds will never close!

Edw. These gusts of passion

Will but inflame them: if I have been right
Informed, my lord, besides these dangerous scars
Of bleeding honour, you have other wounds
As deep, though not so fatal; such, perhaps,
As none but fair Elizabeth can cure.
War. Elizabeth !

Edw. Nay, start not; I have cause
To wonder most; I little thought, indeed,
When Warwick told me I might learn to love,
He was himself so able to instruct me:
But I've discovered all-

War. And so have I;

Too well I know thy breach of friendship here,
Thy fruitless base endeavours to supplant me.

Edw. I scorn it, sir.-Elizabeth hath charms,
And I have equal right with you to admire them :
Nor see I aught so god-like in the form,
So all-commanding, in the name of Warwick,
That he alone should revel in the charms

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