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Antony and Cleopatra

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

MARK ANTONY | | OCTAVIUS CAESAR | triumvirs. | M. AEMILIUS | LEPIDUS (LEPIDUS:) |

SEXTUS POMPEIUS (POMPEY:)

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS | | VENTIDIUS | | EROS | | SCARUS | friends to Antony. | DERCETAS | | DEMETRIUS | | PHILO |

MECAENAS | | AGRIPPA | | DOLABELLA | | PROCULEIUS | friends to Caesar. | THYREUS | | GALLUS | | MENAS |

MENECRATES | | friends to Pompey. VARRIUS |

TAURUS lieutenant-general to Caesar.

CANIDIUS lieutenant-general to Antony.

SILIUS an officer in Ventidius's army.

A Soothsayer. (Soothsayer:)

A Clown. (Clown:)

EUPHRONIUS an ambassador from Antony to Caesar.

ALEXAS | | MARDIAN a Eunuch. | | attendants on Cleopatra. SELEUCUS | | DIOMEDES |

CLEOPATRA queen of Egypt.

Officers, Soldiers, Messengers, and other Attendants. (First Officer:) (Second Officer:) (Third Officer:) (Messenger:) (Second Messenger:) (First Servant:) (Second Servant:) (Egyptian:) (Guard:) (First Guard:) (Second Guard:) (Attendant:) (First Attendant:) (Second Attendant:)

OCTAVIA sister to Caesar and wife to Antony.

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

CHARMIAN | | attendants on Cleopatra. IRAS |

SCENE In several parts of the Roman empire.

[Enter DEMETRIUS and PHILO]

ACT I

[Flourish. Enter ANTONY, CLEOPATRA, her Ladies, the Train, with Eunuchs fanning her]

Look, where they come: Take but good note, and you shall see in him. The triple pillar of the world transform'd Into a strumpet's fool: behold and see.

SCENE I Alexandria. A room in CLEOPATRA's palace.

PHILO Nay, but this dotage of our general's O'erflows the measure: those his goodly eyes, That o'er the files and musters of the war Have glow'd like plated Mars, now bend, now turn, The office and devotion of their view Upon a tawny front: his captain's heart, Which in the scuffles of great fights hath burst The buckles on his breast, reneges all temper, And is become the bellows and the fan To cool a gipsy's lust.

CLEOPATRA If it be love indeed, tell me how much.

MARK ANTONY There's beggary in the love that can be reckon'd.

[Enter an Attendant]

CLEOPATRA I'll set a bourn how far to be beloved.

MARK ANTONY Then must thou needs find out new heaven, new earth.

Attendant News, my good lord, from Rome.

MARK ANTONY Grates me: the sum.

CLEOPATRA Nay, hear them, Antony: Fulvia perchance is angry; or, who knows If the scarce-bearded Caesar have not sent His powerful mandate to you, 'Do this, or this; Take in that kingdom, and enfranchise that; Perform t, or else we damn thee.

MARK ANTONY How, my love!

[Embracing]

And such a twain can do't, in which I bind, On pain of punishment, the world to weet We stand up peerless.

CLEOPATRA Perchance! nay, and most like: You must not stay here longer, your dismission Is come from Caesar; therefore hear it, Antony. Where's Fulvia's process? Caesar's I would say? both? Call in the messengers. As I am Egypt's queen, Thou blushest, Antony; and that blood of thine Is Caesar's homager: else so thy cheek pays shame When shrill-tongued Fulvia scolds. The messengers!

MARK ANTONY Let Rome in Tiber melt, and the wide arch Of the ranged empire fall! Here is my space. Kingdoms are clay: our dungy earth alike Feeds beast as man: the nobleness of life Is to do thus; when such a mutual pair

CLEOPATRA Excellent falsehood! Why did he marry Fulvia, and not love her? I'll seem the fool I am not; Antony Will be himself.

MARK ANTONY But stirr'd by Cleopatra. Now, for the love of Love and her soft hours, Let's not confound the time with conference harsh: There's not a minute of our lives should stretch Without some pleasure now. What sport tonight?

[Exeunt MARK ANTONY and CLEOPATRA with their train]

CLEOPATRA Hear the ambassadors.

MARK ANTONY Fie, wrangling queen! Whom every thing becomes, to chide, to laugh, To weep; whose every passion fully strives To make itself, in thee, fair and admired! No messenger, but thine; and all alone To-night we'll wander through the streets and note The qualities of people. Come, my queen; Last night you did desire it: speak not to us.

DEMETRIUS Is Caesar with Antonius prized so slight?

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

PHILO Sir, sometimes, when he is not Antony, He comes too short of that great property Which still should go with Antony.

DEMETRIUS I am full sorry That he approves the common liar, who Thus speaks of him at Rome: but I will hope Of better deeds to-morrow. Rest you happy!

[Enter CHARMIAN, IRAS, ALEXAS, and a Soothsayer]

ACT I

SCENE II The same. Another room.

CHARMIAN Lord Alexas, sweet Alexas, most any thing Alexas, almost most absolute Alexas, where's the soothsayer that you praised so to the queen? O, that I knew this husband, which, you say, must charge his horns with garlands!

ALEXAS Soothsayer!

Soothsayer Your will?

CHARMIAN Is this the man? Is't you, sir, that know things?

[Enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS]

Soothsayer In nature's infinite book of secrecy A little I can read.

ALEXAS Show him your hand.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Bring in the banquet quickly; wine enough Cleopatra's health to drink.

CHARMIAN Good sir, give me good fortune.

Soothsayer I make not, but foresee.

CHARMIAN Pray, then, foresee me one.

Soothsayer You shall be yet far fairer than you are.

CHARMIAN He means in flesh.

IRAS No, you shall paint when you are old.

CHARMIAN Wrinkles forbid!

ALEXAS Vex not his prescience; be attentive.

CHARMIAN Hush!

Soothsayer You shall be more beloving than beloved.

CHARMIAN I had rather heat my liver with drinking.

ALEXAS Nay, hear him.

CHARMIAN Good now, some excellent fortune! Let me be married to three kings in a forenoon, and widow them all: let me have a child at fifty, to whom Herod of Jewry may do homage: find me to marry me with Octavius Caesar, and companion me with my mistress.

Soothsayer You shall outlive the lady whom you serve.

CHARMIAN O excellent! I love long life better than figs.

Soothsayer You have seen and proved a fairer former fortune Than that which is to approach.

CHARMIAN Then belike my children shall have no names: prithee, how many boys and wenches must I have?

Soothsayer If every of your wishes had a womb. And fertile every wish, a million.

CHARMIAN Out, fool! I forgive thee for a witch.

ALEXAS You think none but your sheets are privy to your wishes.

CHARMIAN Nay, come, tell Iras hers.

ALEXAS We'll know all our fortunes.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Mine, and most of our fortunes, to-night, shall be--drunk to bed.

IRAS There's a palm presages chastity, if nothing else.

CHARMIAN E'en as the o'erflowing Nilus presageth famine.

IRAS Go, you wild bedfellow, you cannot soothsay.

CHARMIAN Nay, if an oily palm be not a fruitful prognostication, I cannot scratch mine ear. Prithee, tell her but a worky-day fortune.

Soothsayer Your fortunes are alike.

IRAS But how, but how? give me particulars.

Soothsayer I have said.

IRAS Am I not an inch of fortune better than she?

CHARMIAN Well, if you were but an inch of fortune better than I, where would you choose it?

IRAS Not in my husband's nose.

CHARMIAN Our worser thoughts heavens mend! Alexas,--come, his fortune, his fortune! O, let him marry a woman that cannot go, sweet Isis, I beseech thee! and let her die too, and give him a worse! and let worst follow worse, till the worst of all follow him laughing to his grave, fifty-fold a cuckold! Good Isis, hear me this prayer, though thou deny me a matter of more weight; good Isis, I beseech thee!

IRAS Amen. Dear goddess, hear that prayer of the people! for, as it is a heartbreaking to see a handsome man loose-wived, so it is a deadly sorrow to behold a foul knave uncuckolded: therefore, dear Isis, keep decorum, and fortune him accordingly!

CHARMIAN Amen.

ALEXAS Lo, now, if it lay in their hands to make me a cuckold, they would make themselves whores, but they'ld do't!

[Enter CLEOPATRA]

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Hush! here comes Antony.

CHARMIAN Not he; the queen.

CLEOPATRA Saw you my lord?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS No, lady.

CLEOPATRA Was he not here?

CHARMIAN No, madam.

CLEOPATRA He was disposed to mirth; but on the sudden A Roman thought hath struck him. Enobarbus!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Madam?

CLEOPATRA Seek him, and bring him hither. Where's Alexas?

[Exeunt]

[Enter MARK ANTONY with a Messenger and Attendants]

ALEXAS Here, at your service. My lord approaches.

CLEOPATRA We will not look upon him: go with us.

Messenger Fulvia thy wife first came into the field.

MARK ANTONY Against my brother Lucius?

Messenger Ay: But soon that war had end, and the time's state Made friends of them, joining their force 'gainst Caesar; Whose better issue in the war, from Italy, Upon the first encounter, drave them.

MARK ANTONY Well, what worst?

Messenger The nature of bad news infects the teller.

MARK ANTONY When it concerns the fool or coward. On: Things that are past are done with me. 'Tis thus: Who tells me true, though in his tale lie death, I hear him as he flatter'd.

Messenger Labienus-- This is stiff news--hath, with his Parthian force, Extended Asia from Euphrates; His conquering banner shook from Syria To Lydia and to Ionia; Whilst--

MARK ANTONY Antony, thou wouldst say,--

Messenger O, my lord!

[Exit]

MARK ANTONY Speak to me home, mince not the general tongue: Name Cleopatra as she is call'd in Rome; Rail thou in Fulvia's phrase; and taunt my faults With such full licence as both truth and malice Have power to utter. O, then we bring forth weeds, When our quick minds lie still; and our ills told us Is as our earing. Fare thee well awhile.

Messenger At your noble pleasure.

MARK ANTONY From Sicyon, ho, the news! Speak there!

First Attendant The man from Sicyon,--is there such an one?

[Enter another Messenger]

What are you?

Second Attendant He stays upon your will.

MARK ANTONY Let him appear. These strong Egyptian fetters I must break, Or lose myself in dotage.

Second Messenger Fulvia thy wife is dead.

[Gives a letter]

MARK ANTONY Where died she?

[Exit Second Messenger]

There's a great spirit gone! Thus did I desire it: What our contempt doth often hurl from us, We wish it ours again; the present pleasure, By revolution lowering, does become The opposite of itself: she's good, being gone; The hand could pluck her back that shoved her on. I must from this enchanting queen break off: Ten thousand harms, more than the ills I know, My idleness doth hatch. How now! Enobarbus!

[Re-enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS]

Second Messenger In Sicyon: Her length of sickness, with what else more serious Importeth thee to know, this bears.

MARK ANTONY Forbear me.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS What's your pleasure, sir?

MARK ANTONY I must with haste from hence.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Why, then, we kill all our women: we see how mortal an unkindness is to them; if they suffer our departure, death's the word.

MARK ANTONY I must be gone.

[Exit ALEXAS]

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Under a compelling occasion, let women die; it were pity to cast them away for nothing; though, between them and a great cause, they should be esteemed nothing. Cleopatra, catching but the least noise of this, dies instantly; I have seen her die twenty times upon far poorer moment: I do think there is mettle in death, which commits some loving act upon her, she hath such a celerity in dying.

MARK ANTONY She is cunning past man's thought.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Alack, sir, no; her passions are made of nothing but the finest part of pure love: we cannot call her winds and waters sighs and tears; they are greater storms and tempests than almanacs can report: this cannot be cunning in her; if it be, she makes a shower of rain as well as Jove.

MARK ANTONY Would I had never seen her.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS O, sir, you had then left unseen a wonderful piece of work; which not to have been blest withal would have discredited your travel.

MARK ANTONY Fulvia is dead.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Sir?

MARK ANTONY Fulvia is dead.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Fulvia!

MARK ANTONY Dead.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Why, sir, give the gods a thankful sacrifice. When it pleaseth their deities to take the wife of a man from him, it shows to man the tailors of the earth; comforting therein, that when old robes are worn out, there are members to make new. If there were no more women but Fulvia, then had you indeed a cut, and the case to be lamented: this grief is crowned with consolation; your old smock brings forth a new petticoat: and indeed the tears live in an onion that should water this sorrow.

MARK ANTONY The business she hath broached in the state Cannot endure my absence.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS And the business you have broached here cannot be without you; especially that of Cleopatra's, which wholly depends on your abode.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

MARK ANTONY No more light answers. Let our officers Have notice what we purpose. I shall break The cause of our expedience to the queen, And get her leave to part. For not alone The death of Fulvia, with more urgent touches, Do strongly speak to us; but the letters too Of many our contriving friends in Rome Petition us at home: Sextus Pompeius Hath given the dare to Caesar, and commands The empire of the sea: our slippery people, Whose love is never link'd to the deserver Till his deserts are past, begin to throw Pompey the Great and all his dignities Upon his son; who, high in name and power, Higher than both in blood and life, stands up For the main soldier: whose quality, going on, The sides o' the world may danger: much is breeding, Which, like the courser's hair, hath yet but life, And not a serpent's poison. Say, our pleasure, To such whose place is under us, requires Our quick remove from hence.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I shall do't.

[Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and ALEXAS]

ACT I

SCENE III The same. Another room.

CLEOPATRA Where is he?

[Exit ALEXAS]

CHARMIAN I did not see him since.

CLEOPATRA See where he is, who's with him, what he does: I did not send you: if you find him sad, Say I am dancing; if in mirth, report That I am sudden sick: quick, and return.

CHARMIAN Madam, methinks, if you did love him dearly, You do not hold the method to enforce The like from him.

CLEOPATRA What should I do, I do not?

CHARMIAN In each thing give him way, cross him nothing.

[Enter MARK ANTONY]

CLEOPATRA Thou teachest like a fool; the way to lose him.

CHARMIAN Tempt him not so too far; I wish, forbear: In time we hate that which we often fear. But here comes Antony.

CLEOPATRA I am sick and sullen.

MARK ANTONY I am sorry to give breathing to my purpose,--

CLEOPATRA Help me away, dear Charmian; I shall fall: It cannot be thus long, the sides of nature Will not sustain it.

MARK ANTONY Now, my dearest queen,--

CLEOPATRA Pray you, stand further from me.

MARK ANTONY What's the matter?

CLEOPATRA I know, by that same eye, there's some good news. What says the married woman? You may go: Would she had never given you leave to come! Let her not say 'tis I that keep you here: I have no power upon you; hers you are.

MARK ANTONY The gods best know,--

CLEOPATRA O, never was there queen So mightily betray'd! yet at the first I saw the treasons planted.

MARK ANTONY Cleopatra,--

CLEOPATRA Why should I think you can be mine and true, Though you in swearing shake the throned gods, Who have been false to Fulvia? Riotous madness, To be entangled with those mouth-made vows, Which break themselves in swearing!

MARK ANTONY Most sweet queen,--

CLEOPATRA Nay, pray you, seek no colour for your going, But bid farewell, and go: when you sued staying, Then was the time for words: no going then; Eternity was in our lips and eyes, Bliss in our brows' bent; none our parts so poor, But was a race of heaven: they are so still, Or thou, the greatest soldier of the world, Art turn'd the greatest liar.

MARK ANTONY How now, lady!

CLEOPATRA I would I had thy inches; thou shouldst know There were a heart in Egypt.

MARK ANTONY Hear me, queen: The strong necessity of time commands Our services awhile; but my full heart Remains in use with you. Our Italy Shines o'er with civil swords: Sextus Pompeius Makes his approaches to the port of Rome: Equality of two domestic powers Breed scrupulous faction: the hated, grown to strength, Are newly grown to love: the condemn'd Pompey, Rich in his father's honour, creeps apace, Into the hearts of such as have not thrived Upon the present state, whose numbers threaten; And quietness, grown sick of rest, would purge By any desperate change: my more particular, And that which most with you should safe my going, Is Fulvia's death.

CLEOPATRA Though age from folly could not give me freedom, It does from childishness: can Fulvia die?

MARK ANTONY She's dead, my queen: Look here, and at thy sovereign leisure read The garboils she awaked; at the last, best: See when and where she died.

CLEOPATRA O most false love! Where be the sacred vials thou shouldst fill With sorrowful water? Now I see, I see, In Fulvia's death, how mine received shall be.

MARK ANTONY Quarrel no more, but be prepared to know The purposes I bear; which are, or cease, As you shall give the advice. By the fire That quickens Nilus' slime, I go from hence Thy soldier, servant; making peace or war As thou affect'st.

CLEOPATRA Cut my lace, Charmian, come; But let it be: I am quickly ill, and well, So Antony loves.

MARK ANTONY My precious queen, forbear; And give true evidence to his love, which stands An honourable trial.

CLEOPATRA So Fulvia told me. I prithee, turn aside and weep for her, Then bid adieu to me, and say the tears Belong to Egypt: good now, play one scene Of excellent dissembling; and let it look Life perfect honour.

MARK ANTONY You'll heat my blood: no more.

CLEOPATRA You can do better yet; but this is meetly.

MARK ANTONY Now, by my sword,--

CLEOPATRA And target. Still he mends; But this is not the best. Look, prithee, Charmian, How this Herculean Roman does become The carriage of his chafe.

MARK ANTONY I'll leave you, lady.

CLEOPATRA Courteous lord, one word. Sir, you and I must part, but that's not it: Sir, you and I have loved, but there's not it; That you know well: something it is I would, O, my oblivion is a very Antony, And I am all forgotten.

MARK ANTONY But that your royalty Holds idleness your subject, I should take you For idleness itself.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

CLEOPATRA 'Tis sweating labour To bear such idleness so near the heart As Cleopatra this. But, sir, forgive me; Since my becomings kill me, when they do not Eye well to you: your honour calls you hence; Therefore be deaf to my unpitied folly. And all the gods go with you! upon your sword Sit laurel victory! and smooth success Be strew'd before your feet!

MARK ANTONY Let us go. Come; Our separation so abides, and flies, That thou, residing here, go'st yet with me, And I, hence fleeting, here remain with thee. Away!

[Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, reading a letter, LEPIDUS, and their Train]

ACT I

SCENE IV Rome. OCTAVIUS CAESAR's house.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You may see, Lepidus, and henceforth know, It is not Caesar's natural vice to hate Our great competitor: from Alexandria This is the news: he fishes, drinks, and wastes The lamps of night in revel; is not more man-like Than Cleopatra; nor the queen of Ptolemy More womanly than he; hardly gave audience, or Vouchsafed to think he had partners: you shall find there A man who is the abstract of all faults That all men follow.

[Enter a Messenger]

LEPIDUS I must not think there are Evils enow to darken all his goodness: His faults in him seem as the spots of heaven, More fiery by night's blackness; hereditary, Rather than purchased; what he cannot change, Than what he chooses.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You are too indulgent. Let us grant, it is not Amiss to tumble on the bed of Ptolemy; To give a kingdom for a mirth; to sit And keep the turn of tippling with a slave; To reel the streets at noon, and stand the buffet With knaves that smell of sweat: say this becomes him,-- As his composure must be rare indeed Whom these things cannot blemish,--yet must Antony No way excuse his soils, when we do bear So great weight in his lightness. If he fill'd His vacancy with his voluptuousness, Full surfeits, and the dryness of his bones, Call on him for't: but to confound such time, That drums him from his sport, and speaks as loud As his own state and ours,--'tis to be chid As we rate boys, who, being mature in knowledge, Pawn their experience to their present pleasure, And so rebel to judgment.

LEPIDUS Here's more news.

Messenger Thy biddings have been done; and every hour, Most noble Caesar, shalt thou have report How 'tis abroad. Pompey is strong at sea; And it appears he is beloved of those That only have fear'd Caesar: to the ports The discontents repair, and men's reports Give him much wrong'd.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I should have known no less. It hath been taught us from the primal state, That he which is was wish'd until he were; And the ebb'd man, ne'er loved till ne'er worth love, Comes dear'd by being lack'd. This common body, Like to a vagabond flag upon the stream, Goes to and back, lackeying the varying tide, To rot itself with motion.

Messenger Caesar, I bring thee word, Menecrates and Menas, famous pirates, Make the sea serve them, which they ear and wound With keels of every kind: many hot inroads They make in Italy; the borders maritime Lack blood to think on't, and flush youth revolt: No vessel can peep forth, but 'tis as soon Taken as seen; for Pompey's name strikes more Than could his war resisted.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Antony, Leave thy lascivious wassails. When thou once Wast beaten from Modena, where thou slew'st Hirtius and Pansa, consuls, at thy heel Did famine follow; whom thou fought'st against, Though daintily brought up, with patience more Than savages could suffer: thou didst drink The stale of horses, and the gilded puddle Which beasts would cough at: thy palate then did deign The roughest berry on the rudest hedge; Yea, like the stag, when snow the pasture sheets, The barks of trees thou browsed'st; on the Alps It is reported thou didst eat strange flesh, Which some did die to look on: and all this-- It wounds thine honour that I speak it now-- Was borne so like a soldier, that thy cheek So much as lank'd not.

LEPIDUS 'Tis pity of him.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Let his shames quickly Drive him to Rome: tis time we twain Did show ourselves i the field; and to that end Assemble we immediate council: Pompey Thrives in our idleness.

LEPIDUS To-morrow, Caesar, I shall be furnish'd to inform you rightly Both what by sea and land I can be able To front this present time.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Till which encounter, It is my business too. Farewell.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

LEPIDUS Farewell, my lord: what you shall know meantime Of stirs abroad, I shall beseech you, sir, To let me be partaker.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Doubt not, sir; I knew it for my bond.

[Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and MARDIAN]

ACT I

SCENE V Alexandria. CLEOPATRA's palace.

CLEOPATRA Charmian!

CHARMIAN Madam?

CLEOPATRA Ha, ha! Give me to drink mandragora.

CHARMIAN Why, madam?

CLEOPATRA That I might sleep out this great gap of time My Antony is away.

CHARMIAN You think of him too much.

CLEOPATRA O, 'tis treason!

CHARMIAN Madam, I trust, not so.

CLEOPATRA Thou, eunuch Mardian!

MARDIAN What's your highness' pleasure?

CLEOPATRA Not now to hear thee sing; I take no pleasure In aught an eunuch has: 'tis well for thee, That, being unseminar'd, thy freer thoughts May not fly forth of Egypt. Hast thou affections?

MARDIAN Yes, gracious madam.

CLEOPATRA Indeed!

[Enter ALEXAS, from OCTAVIUS CAESAR]

MARDIAN Not in deed, madam; for I can do nothing But what indeed is honest to be done: Yet have I fierce affections, and think What Venus did with Mars.

CLEOPATRA O Charmian, Where think'st thou he is now? Stands he, or sits he? Or does he walk? or is he on his horse? O happy horse, to bear the weight of Antony! Do bravely, horse! for wot'st thou whom thou movest? The demi-Atlas of this earth, the arm And burgonet of men. He's speaking now, Or murmuring 'Where's my serpent of old Nile? For so he calls me: now I feed myself With most delicious poison. Think on me, That am with Phoebus amorous pinches black, And wrinkled deep in time? Broad-fronted Caesar, When thou wast here above the ground, I was A morsel for a monarch: and great Pompey Would stand and make his eyes grow in my brow; There would he anchor his aspect and die With looking on his life.

ALEXAS Sovereign of Egypt, hail!

CLEOPATRA How much unlike art thou Mark Antony! Yet, coming from him, that great medicine hath With his tinct gilded thee. How goes it with my brave Mark Antony?

ALEXAS Last thing he did, dear queen, He kiss'd,--the last of many doubled kisses,-- This orient pearl. His speech sticks in my heart.

CLEOPATRA Mine ear must pluck it thence.

ALEXAS Good friend, quoth he, Say, the firm Roman to great Egypt sends This treasure of an oyster; at whose foot, To mend the petty present, I will piece Her opulent throne with kingdoms; all the east, Say thou, shall call her mistress. So he nodded, And soberly did mount an arm-gaunt steed, Who neigh'd so high, that what I would have spoke Was beastly dumb'd by him.

CLEOPATRA What, was he sad or merry?

ALEXAS Like to the time o' the year between the extremes Of hot and cold, he was nor sad nor merry.

CLEOPATRA O well-divided disposition! Note him, Note him good Charmian, 'tis the man; but note him: He was not sad, for he would shine on those That make their looks by his; he was not merry, Which seem'd to tell them his remembrance lay In Egypt with his joy; but between both: O heavenly mingle! Be'st thou sad or merry, The violence of either thee becomes, So does it no man else. Met'st thou my posts?

ALEXAS Ay, madam, twenty several messengers: Why do you send so thick?

CLEOPATRA Who's born that day When I forget to send to Antony, Shall die a beggar. Ink and paper, Charmian. Welcome, my good Alexas. Did I, Charmian, Ever love Caesar so?

CHARMIAN O that brave Caesar!

CLEOPATRA Be choked with such another emphasis! Say, the brave Antony.

CHARMIAN The valiant Caesar!

CLEOPATRA By Isis, I will give thee bloody teeth, If thou with Caesar paragon again My man of men.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

CHARMIAN By your most gracious pardon, I sing but after you.

CLEOPATRA My salad days, When I was green in judgment: cold in blood, To say as I said then! But, come, away; Get me ink and paper: He shall have every day a several greeting, Or I'll unpeople Egypt.

[Enter POMPEY, MENECRATES, and MENAS, in warlike manner]

ACT II

SCENE I Messina. POMPEY's house.

POMPEY If the great gods be just, they shall assist The deeds of justest men.

MENECRATES Know, worthy Pompey, That what they do delay, they not deny.

POMPEY Whiles we are suitors to their throne, decays The thing we sue for.

MENECRATES We, ignorant of ourselves, Beg often our own harms, which the wise powers Deny us for our good; so find we profit By losing of our prayers.

POMPEY I shall do well: The people love me, and the sea is mine; My powers are crescent, and my auguring hope Says it will come to the full. Mark Antony In Egypt sits at dinner, and will make No wars without doors: Caesar gets money where He loses hearts: Lepidus flatters both, Of both is flatter'd; but he neither loves, Nor either cares for him.

MENAS Caesar and Lepidus Are in the field: a mighty strength they carry.

POMPEY Where have you this? 'tis false.

[Enter VARRIUS]

How now, Varrius!

MENAS From Silvius, sir.

POMPEY He dreams: I know they are in Rome together, Looking for Antony. But all the charms of love, Salt Cleopatra, soften thy waned lip! Let witchcraft join with beauty, lust with both! Tie up the libertine in a field of feasts, Keep his brain fuming; Epicurean cooks Sharpen with cloyless sauce his appetite; That sleep and feeding may prorogue his honour Even till a Lethe'd dulness!

VARRIUS This is most certain that I shall deliver: Mark Antony is every hour in Rome Expected: since he went from Egypt 'tis A space for further travel.

POMPEY I could have given less matter A better ear. Menas, I did not think This amorous surfeiter would have donn'd his helm For such a petty war: his soldiership Is twice the other twain: but let us rear The higher our opinion, that our stirring Can from the lap of Egypt's widow pluck The ne'er-lust-wearied Antony.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

MENAS I cannot hope Caesar and Antony shall well greet together: His wife that's dead did trespasses to Caesar; His brother warr'd upon him; although, I think, Not moved by Antony.

POMPEY I know not, Menas, How lesser enmities may give way to greater. Were't not that we stand up against them all, 'Twere pregnant they should square between themselves; For they have entertained cause enough To draw their swords: but how the fear of us May cement their divisions and bind up The petty difference, we yet not know. Be't as our gods will have't! It only stands Our lives upon to use our strongest hands. Come, Menas.

[Enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS and LEPIDUS]

ACT II

SCENE II Rome. The house of LEPIDUS.

LEPIDUS Good Enobarbus, 'tis a worthy deed, And shall become you well, to entreat your captain To soft and gentle speech.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I shall entreat him To answer like himself: if Caesar move him, Let Antony look over Caesar's head And speak as loud as Mars. By Jupiter, Were I the wearer of Antonius' beard, I would not shave't to-day.

LEPIDUS 'Tis not a time For private stomaching.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Every time Serves for the matter that is then born in't.

LEPIDUS But small to greater matters must give way.

[Enter MARK ANTONY and VENTIDIUS]

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Not if the small come first.

[Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, MECAENAS, and AGRIPPA]

LEPIDUS Your speech is passion: But, pray you, stir no embers up. Here comes The noble Antony.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS And yonder, Caesar.

MARK ANTONY If we compose well here, to Parthia: Hark, Ventidius.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I do not know, Mecaenas; ask Agrippa.

[Flourish]

LEPIDUS Noble friends, That which combined us was most great, and let not A leaner action rend us. What's amiss, May it be gently heard: when we debate Our trivial difference loud, we do commit Murder in healing wounds: then, noble partners, The rather, for I earnestly beseech, Touch you the sourest points with sweetest terms, Nor curstness grow to the matter.

MARK ANTONY 'Tis spoken well. Were we before our armies, and to fight. I should do thus.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Welcome to Rome.

MARK ANTONY Thank you.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Sit.

MARK ANTONY Sit, sir.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Nay, then.

MARK ANTONY I learn, you take things ill which are not so, Or being, concern you not.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I must be laugh'd at, If, or for nothing or a little, I Should say myself offended, and with you Chiefly i' the world; more laugh'd at, that I should Once name you derogately, when to sound your name It not concern'd me.

MARK ANTONY My being in Egypt, Caesar, What was't to you?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR No more than my residing here at Rome Might be to you in Egypt: yet, if you there Did practise on my state, your being in Egypt Might be my question.

MARK ANTONY How intend you, practised?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You may be pleased to catch at mine intent By what did here befal me. Your wife and brother Made wars upon me; and their contestation Was theme for you, you were the word of war.

MARK ANTONY You do mistake your business; my brother never Did urge me in his act: I did inquire it; And have my learning from some true reports, That drew their swords with you. Did he not rather Discredit my authority with yours; And make the wars alike against my stomach, Having alike your cause? Of this my letters Before did satisfy you. If you'll patch a quarrel, As matter whole you have not to make it with, It must not be with this.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You praise yourself By laying defects of judgment to me; but You patch'd up your excuses.

MARK ANTONY Not so, not so; I know you could not lack, I am certain on't, Very necessity of this thought, that I, Your partner in the cause gainst which he fought, Could not with graceful eyes attend those wars Which fronted mine own peace. As for my wife, I would you had her spirit in such another: The third o the world is yours; which with a snaffle You may pace easy, but not such a wife.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Would we had all such wives, that the men might go to wars with the women!

MARK ANTONY So much uncurbable, her garboils, Caesar Made out of her impatience, which not wanted Shrewdness of policy too, I grieving grant Did you too much disquiet: for that you must But say, I could not help it.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I wrote to you When rioting in Alexandria; you Did pocket up my letters, and with taunts Did gibe my missive out of audience.

MARK ANTONY Sir, He fell upon me ere admitted: then Three kings I had newly feasted, and did want Of what I was i' the morning: but next day I told him of myself; which was as much As to have ask'd him pardon. Let this fellow Be nothing of our strife; if we contend, Out of our question wipe him.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You have broken The article of your oath; which you shall never Have tongue to charge me with.

LEPIDUS Soft, Caesar!

MARK ANTONY No, Lepidus, let him speak: The honour is sacred which he talks on now, Supposing that I lack'd it. But, on, Caesar; The article of my oath.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR To lend me arms and aid when I required them; The which you both denied.

MARK ANTONY Neglected, rather; And then when poison'd hours had bound me up From mine own knowledge. As nearly as I may, I'll play the penitent to you: but mine honesty Shall not make poor my greatness, nor my power Work without it. Truth is, that Fulvia, To have me out of Egypt, made wars here; For which myself, the ignorant motive, do So far ask pardon as befits mine honour To stoop in such a case.

LEPIDUS 'Tis noble spoken.

MECAENAS If it might please you, to enforce no further The griefs between ye: to forget them quite Were to remember that the present need Speaks to atone you.

LEPIDUS Worthily spoken, Mecaenas.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Or, if you borrow one another's love for the instant, you may, when you hear no more words of Pompey, return it again: you shall have time to wrangle in when you have nothing else to do.

MARK ANTONY Thou art a soldier only: speak no more.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS That truth should be silent I had almost forgot.

MARK ANTONY You wrong this presence; therefore speak no more.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Go to, then; your considerate stone.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I do not much dislike the matter, but The manner of his speech; for't cannot be We shall remain in friendship, our conditions So differing in their acts. Yet if I knew What hoop should hold us stanch, from edge to edge O' the world I would pursue it.

AGRIPPA Give me leave, Caesar,--

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Speak, Agrippa.

AGRIPPA Thou hast a sister by the mother's side, Admired Octavia: great Mark Antony Is now a widower.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Say not so, Agrippa: If Cleopatra heard you, your reproof Were well deserved of rashness.

MARK ANTONY I am not married, Caesar: let me hear Agrippa further speak.

AGRIPPA To hold you in perpetual amity, To make you brothers, and to knit your hearts With an unslipping knot, take Antony Octavia to his wife; whose beauty claims No worse a husband than the best of men; Whose virtue and whose general graces speak That which none else can utter. By this marriage, All little jealousies, which now seem great, And all great fears, which now import their dangers, Would then be nothing: truths would be tales, Where now half tales be truths: her love to both Would, each to other and all loves to both, Draw after her. Pardon what I have spoke; For 'tis a studied, not a present thought, By duty ruminated.

MARK ANTONY Will Caesar speak?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Not till he hears how Antony is touch'd With what is spoke already.

MARK ANTONY What power is in Agrippa, If I would say, Agrippa, be it so, To make this good?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR The power of Caesar, and His power unto Octavia.

MARK ANTONY May I never To this good purpose, that so fairly shows, Dream of impediment! Let me have thy hand: Further this act of grace: and from this hour The heart of brothers govern in our loves And sway our great designs!

OCTAVIUS CAESAR There is my hand. A sister I bequeath you, whom no brother Did ever love so dearly: let her live To join our kingdoms and our hearts; and never Fly off our loves again!

LEPIDUS Happily, amen!

MARK ANTONY I did not think to draw my sword 'gainst Pompey; For he hath laid strange courtesies and great Of late upon me: I must thank him only, Lest my remembrance suffer ill report; At heel of that, defy him.

LEPIDUS Time calls upon's: Of us must Pompey presently be sought, Or else he seeks out us.

MARK ANTONY Where lies he?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR About the mount Misenum.

MARK ANTONY What is his strength by land?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Great and increasing: but by sea He is an absolute master.

MARK ANTONY So is the fame. Would we had spoke together! Haste we for it: Yet, ere we put ourselves in arms, dispatch we The business we have talk'd of.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR With most gladness: And do invite you to my sister's view, Whither straight I'll lead you.

[Flourish. Exeunt OCTAVIUS CAESAR, MARK ANTONY, and LEPIDUS]

MARK ANTONY Let us, Lepidus, Not lack your company.

LEPIDUS Noble Antony, Not sickness should detain me.

MECAENAS Welcome from Egypt, sir.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Half the heart of Caesar, worthy Mecaenas! My honourable friend, Agrippa!

AGRIPPA Good Enobarbus!

MECAENAS We have cause to be glad that matters are so well digested. You stayed well by 't in Egypt.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Ay, sir; we did sleep day out of countenance, and made the night light with drinking.

MECAENAS Eight wild-boars roasted whole at a breakfast, and but twelve persons there; is this true?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS This was but as a fly by an eagle: we had much more monstrous matter of feast, which worthily deserved noting.

MECAENAS She's a most triumphant lady, if report be square to her.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS When she first met Mark Antony, she pursed up his heart, upon the river of Cydnus.

AGRIPPA There she appeared indeed; or my reporter devised well for her.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I will tell you. The barge she sat in, like a burnish'd throne, Burn'd on the water: the poop was beaten gold; Purple the sails, and so perfumed that The winds were love-sick with them; the oars were silver, Which to the tune of flutes kept stroke, and made The water which they beat to follow faster, As amorous of their strokes. For her own person, It beggar'd all description: she did lie In her pavilion--cloth-of-gold of tissue-- O'er-picturing that Venus where we see The fancy outwork nature: on each side her Stood pretty dimpled boys, like smiling Cupids, With divers-colour'd fans, whose wind did seem To glow the delicate cheeks which they did cool, And what they undid did.

AGRIPPA O, rare for Antony!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Her gentlewomen, like the Nereides, So many mermaids, tended her i' the eyes, And made their bends adornings: at the helm A seeming mermaid steers: the silken tackle Swell with the touches of those flower-soft hands, That yarely frame the office. From the barge A strange invisible perfume hits the sense Of the adjacent wharfs. The city cast Her people out upon her; and Antony, Enthroned i' the market-place, did sit alone, Whistling to the air; which, but for vacancy, Had gone to gaze on Cleopatra too, And made a gap in nature.

AGRIPPA Rare Egyptian!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Upon her landing, Antony sent to her, Invited her to supper: she replied, It should be better he became her guest; Which she entreated: our courteous Antony, Whom ne'er the word of No woman heard speak, Being barber'd ten times o'er, goes to the feast, And for his ordinary pays his heart For what his eyes eat only.

AGRIPPA Royal wench! She made great Caesar lay his sword to bed: He plough'd her, and she cropp'd.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I saw her once Hop forty paces through the public street; And having lost her breath, she spoke, and panted, That she did make defect perfection, And, breathless, power breathe forth.

MECAENAS Now Antony must leave her utterly.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Never; he will not: Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale Her infinite variety: other women cloy The appetites they feed: but she makes hungry Where most she satisfies; for vilest things Become themselves in her: that the holy priests Bless her when she is riggish.

MECAENAS If beauty, wisdom, modesty, can settle The heart of Antony, Octavia is A blessed lottery to him.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

AGRIPPA Let us go. Good Enobarbus, make yourself my guest Whilst you abide here.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Humbly, sir, I thank you.

[Enter MARK ANTONY, OCTAVIUS CAESAR, OCTAVIA between them, and Attendants]

ACT II

SCENE III The same. OCTAVIUS CAESAR's house.

MARK ANTONY The world and my great office will sometimes Divide me from your bosom.

OCTAVIA All which time Before the gods my knee shall bow my prayers To them for you.

[Exeunt OCTAVIUS CAESAR and OCTAVIA]

[Enter Soothsayer]

MARK ANTONY Good night, sir. My Octavia, Read not my blemishes in the world's report: I have not kept my square; but that to come Shall all be done by the rule. Good night, dear lady. Good night, sir.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Good night.

MARK ANTONY Now, sirrah; you do wish yourself in Egypt?

Soothsayer Would I had never come from thence, nor you Thither!

MARK ANTONY If you can, your reason?

Soothsayer I see it in My motion, have it not in my tongue: but yet Hie you to Egypt again.

MARK ANTONY Say to me, Whose fortunes shall rise higher, Caesar's or mine?

Soothsayer Caesar's. Therefore, O Antony, stay not by his side: Thy demon, that's thy spirit which keeps thee, is Noble, courageous high, unmatchable, Where Caesar's is not; but, near him, thy angel Becomes a fear, as being o'erpower'd: therefore Make space enough between you.

MARK ANTONY Speak this no more.

[Exit Soothsayer]

He shall to Parthia. Be it art or hap, He hath spoken true: the very dice obey him; And in our sports my better cunning faints Under his chance: if we draw lots, he speeds; His cocks do win the battle still of mine, When it is all to nought; and his quails ever Beat mine, inhoop'd, at odds. I will to Egypt: And though I make this marriage for my peace, I' the east my pleasure lies.

[Enter VENTIDIUS]

O, come, Ventidius, You must to Parthia: your commission's ready; Follow me, and receive't.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

Soothsayer To none but thee; no more, but when to thee. If thou dost play with him at any game, Thou art sure to lose; and, of that natural luck, He beats thee 'gainst the odds: thy lustre thickens, When he shines by: I say again, thy spirit Is all afraid to govern thee near him; But, he away, 'tis noble.

MARK ANTONY Get thee gone: Say to Ventidius I would speak with him:

[Enter LEPIDUS, MECAENAS, and AGRIPPA]

ACT II

SCENE IV The same. A street.

LEPIDUS Trouble yourselves no further: pray you, hasten Your generals after.

AGRIPPA Sir, Mark Antony Will e'en but kiss Octavia, and we'll follow.

LEPIDUS Till I shall see you in your soldier's dress, Which will become you both, farewell.

MECAENAS We shall, As I conceive the journey, be at the Mount Before you, Lepidus.

LEPIDUS Your way is shorter; My purposes do draw me much about: You'll win two days upon me.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

MECAENAS | | Sir, good success! AGRIPPA |

LEPIDUS Farewell.

[Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and ALEXAS]

ACT II

SCENE V Alexandria. CLEOPATRA's palace.

[Enter MARDIAN]

CLEOPATRA Give me some music; music, moody food Of us that trade in love.

Attendants The music, ho!

CLEOPATRA Let it alone; let's to billiards: come, Charmian.

CHARMIAN My arm is sore; best play with Mardian.

CLEOPATRA As well a woman with an eunuch play'd As with a woman. Come, you'll play with me, sir?

MARDIAN As well as I can, madam.

CLEOPATRA And when good will is show'd, though't come too short, The actor may plead pardon. I'll none now: Give me mine angle; we'll to the river: there, My music playing far off, I will betray Tawny-finn'd fishes; my bended hook shall pierce Their slimy jaws; and, as I draw them up, I'll think them every one an Antony, And say 'Ah, ha! you're caught.'

[Enter a Messenger]

O, from Italy Ram thou thy fruitful tidings in mine ears, That long time have been barren.

CHARMIAN 'Twas merry when You wager'd on your angling; when your diver Did hang a salt-fish on his hook, which he With fervency drew up.

CLEOPATRA That time,--O times!-- I laugh'd him out of patience; and that night I laugh'd him into patience; and next morn, Ere the ninth hour, I drunk him to his bed; Then put my tires and mantles on him, whilst I wore his sword Philippan.

Messenger Madam, madam,--

CLEOPATRA Antonius dead!--If thou say so, villain, Thou kill'st thy mistress: but well and free, If thou so yield him, there is gold, and here My bluest veins to kiss; a hand that kings Have lipp'd, and trembled kissing.

Messenger First, madam, he is well.

CLEOPATRA Why, there's more gold. But, sirrah, mark, we use To say the dead are well: bring it to that, The gold I give thee will I melt and pour Down thy ill-uttering throat.

Messenger Good madam, hear me.

CLEOPATRA Well, go to, I will; But there's no goodness in thy face: if Antony Be free and healthful,--so tart a favour To trumpet such good tidings! If not well, Thou shouldst come like a Fury crown'd with snakes, Not like a formal man.

Messenger Will't please you hear me?

CLEOPATRA I have a mind to strike thee ere thou speak'st: Yet if thou say Antony lives, is well, Or friends with Caesar, or not captive to him, I'll set thee in a shower of gold, and hail Rich pearls upon thee.

Messenger Madam, he's well.

CLEOPATRA Well said.

Messenger And friends with Caesar.

CLEOPATRA Thou'rt an honest man.

Messenger Caesar and he are greater friends than ever.

CLEOPATRA Make thee a fortune from me.

Messenger But yet, madam,--

CLEOPATRA I do not like But yet, it does allay The good precedence; fie upon But yet! But yet is as a gaoler to bring forth Some monstrous malefactor. Prithee, friend, Pour out the pack of matter to mine ear, The good and bad together: he's friends with Caesar: In state of health thou say'st; and thou say'st free.

Messenger Free, madam! no; I made no such report: He's bound unto Octavia.

CLEOPATRA For what good turn?

Messenger For the best turn i' the bed.

CLEOPATRA I am pale, Charmian.

[Strikes him down]

Messenger Madam, he's married to Octavia.

CLEOPATRA The most infectious pestilence upon thee!

[Strikes him again]

Horrible villain! or I'll spurn thine eyes Like balls before me; I'll unhair thy head:

[She hales him up and down]

Thou shalt be whipp'd with wire, and stew'd in brine, Smarting in lingering pickle.

Messenger Good madam, patience.

CLEOPATRA What say you? Hence,

Messenger Gracious madam, I that do bring the news made not the match.

CLEOPATRA Say 'tis not so, a province I will give thee, And make thy fortunes proud: the blow thou hadst Shall make thy peace for moving me to rage; And I will boot thee with what gift beside Thy modesty can beg.

[Draws a knife]

Messenger He's married, madam.

[Exit]

CLEOPATRA Rogue, thou hast lived too long.

Messenger Nay, then I'll run. What mean you, madam? I have made no fault.

CHARMIAN Good madam, keep yourself within yourself: The man is innocent.

CLEOPATRA Some innocents 'scape not the thunderbolt. Melt Egypt into Nile! and kindly creatures Turn all to serpents! Call the slave again: Though I am mad, I will not bite him: call.

[Exit CHARMIAN]

These hands do lack nobility, that they strike A meaner than myself; since I myself Have given myself the cause.

[Re-enter CHARMIAN and Messenger]

Come hither, sir. Though it be honest, it is never good To bring bad news: give to a gracious message. An host of tongues; but let ill tidings tell Themselves when they be felt.

CHARMIAN He is afeard to come.

CLEOPATRA I will not hurt him.

Messenger I have done my duty.

CLEOPATRA Is he married? I cannot hate thee worser than I do, If thou again say Yes.

Messenger He's married, madam.

CLEOPATRA The gods confound thee! dost thou hold there still?

Messenger Should I lie, madam?

CLEOPATRA O, I would thou didst, So half my Egypt were submerged and made A cistern for scaled snakes! Go, get thee hence: Hadst thou Narcissus in thy face, to me Thou wouldst appear most ugly. He is married?

Messenger I crave your highness' pardon.

CLEOPATRA He is married?

[Exit Messenger]

Messenger Take no offence that I would not offend you: To punish me for what you make me do. Seems much unequal: he's married to Octavia.

CLEOPATRA O, that his fault should make a knave of thee, That art not what thou'rt sure of! Get thee hence: The merchandise which thou hast brought from Rome Are all too dear for me: lie they upon thy hand, And be undone by 'em!

CHARMIAN Good your highness, patience.

CLEOPATRA In praising Antony, I have dispraised Caesar.

[Exit ALEXAS]

Let him for ever go:--let him not--Charmian, Though he be painted one way like a Gorgon, The other way's a Mars. Bid you Alexas

[To MARDIAN]

Bring me word how tall she is. Pity me, Charmian, But do not speak to me. Lead me to my chamber.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

CHARMIAN Many times, madam.

CLEOPATRA I am paid for't now. Lead me from hence: I faint: O Iras, Charmian! 'tis no matter. Go to the fellow, good Alexas; bid him Report the feature of Octavia, her years, Her inclination, let him not leave out The colour of her hair: bring me word quickly.

[Flourish. Enter POMPEY and MENAS at one door, with drum and trumpet: at another, OCTAVIUS CAESAR, MARK ANTONY, LEPIDUS, DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS, MECAENAS, with Soldiers marching]

ACT II

SCENE VI Near Misenum.

POMPEY Your hostages I have, so have you mine; And we shall talk before we fight.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Most meet That first we come to words; and therefore have we Our written purposes before us sent; Which, if thou hast consider'd, let us know If 'twill tie up thy discontented sword, And carry back to Sicily much tall youth That else must perish here.

POMPEY To you all three, The senators alone of this great world, Chief factors for the gods, I do not know Wherefore my father should revengers want, Having a son and friends; since Julius Caesar, Who at Philippi the good Brutus ghosted, There saw you labouring for him. What was't That moved pale Cassius to conspire; and what Made the all-honour'd, honest Roman, Brutus, With the arm'd rest, courtiers and beauteous freedom, To drench the Capitol; but that they would Have one man but a man? And that is it Hath made me rig my navy; at whose burthen The anger'd ocean foams; with which I meant To scourge the ingratitude that despiteful Rome Cast on my noble father.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Take your time.

MARK ANTONY Thou canst not fear us, Pompey, with thy sails; We'll speak with thee at sea: at land, thou know'st How much we do o'er-count thee.

POMPEY At land, indeed, Thou dost o'er-count me of my father's house: But, since the cuckoo builds not for himself, Remain in't as thou mayst.

LEPIDUS Be pleased to tell us-- For this is from the present--how you take The offers we have sent you.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR There's the point.

MARK ANTONY Which do not be entreated to, but weigh What it is worth embraced.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR And what may follow, To try a larger fortune.

POMPEY You have made me offer Of Sicily, Sardinia; and I must Rid all the sea of pirates; then, to send Measures of wheat to Rome; this 'greed upon To part with unhack'd edges, and bear back Our targes undinted.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR | | MARK ANTONY | That's our offer. | LEPIDUS |

POMPEY Know, then, I came before you here a man prepared To take this offer: but Mark Antony Put me to some impatience: though I lose The praise of it by telling, you must know, When Caesar and your brother were at blows, Your mother came to Sicily and did find Her welcome friendly.

MARK ANTONY I have heard it, Pompey; And am well studied for a liberal thanks Which I do owe you.

POMPEY Let me have your hand: I did not think, sir, to have met you here.

MARK ANTONY The beds i' the east are soft; and thanks to you, That call'd me timelier than my purpose hither; For I have gain'd by 't.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Since I saw you last, There is a change upon you.

POMPEY Well, I know not What counts harsh fortune casts upon my face; But in my bosom shall she never come, To make my heart her vassal.

LEPIDUS Well met here.

POMPEY I hope so, Lepidus. Thus we are agreed: I crave our composition may be written, And seal'd between us.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR That's the next to do.

POMPEY We'll feast each other ere we part; and let's Draw lots who shall begin.

MARK ANTONY That will I, Pompey.

POMPEY No, Antony, take the lot: but, first Or last, your fine Egyptian cookery Shall have the fame. I have heard that Julius Caesar Grew fat with feasting there.

MARK ANTONY You have heard much.

POMPEY I have fair meanings, sir.

MARK ANTONY And fair words to them.

POMPEY Then so much have I heard: And I have heard, Apollodorus carried--

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS No more of that: he did so.

POMPEY What, I pray you?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS A certain queen to Caesar in a mattress.

POMPEY I know thee now: how farest thou, soldier?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Well; And well am like to do; for, I perceive, Four feasts are toward.

POMPEY Let me shake thy hand; I never hated thee: I have seen thee fight, When I have envied thy behavior.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Sir, I never loved you much; but I ha' praised ye, When you have well deserved ten times as much As I have said you did.

POMPEY Enjoy thy plainness, It nothing ill becomes thee. Aboard my galley I invite you all: Will you lead, lords?

[Exeunt all but MENAS and ENOBARBUS]

OCTAVIUS CAESAR | | MARK ANTONY | Show us the way, sir. | LEPIDUS |

POMPEY Come.

MENAS [Aside] Thy father, Pompey, would ne'er have made this treaty.--You and I have known, sir.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS At sea, I think.

MENAS We have, sir.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS You have done well by water.

MENAS And you by land.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I will praise any man that will praise me; though it cannot be denied what I have done by land.

MENAS Nor what I have done by water.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Yes, something you can deny for your own safety: you have been a great thief by sea.

MENAS And you by land.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS There I deny my land service. But give me your hand, Menas: if our eyes had authority, here they might take two thieves kissing.

MENAS All men's faces are true, whatsome'er their hands are.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS But there is never a fair woman has a true face.

MENAS No slander; they steal hearts.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS We came hither to fight with you.

MENAS For my part, I am sorry it is turned to a drinking. Pompey doth this day laugh away his fortune.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS If he do, sure, he cannot weep't back again.

MENAS You've said, sir. We looked not for Mark Antony here: pray you, is he married to Cleopatra?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Caesar's sister is called Octavia.

MENAS True, sir; she was the wife of Caius Marcellus.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS But she is now the wife of Marcus Antonius.

MENAS Pray ye, sir?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS 'Tis true.

MENAS Then is Caesar and he for ever knit together.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS If I were bound to divine of this unity, I would not prophesy so.

MENAS I think the policy of that purpose made more in the marriage than the love of the parties.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I think so too. But you shall find, the band that seems to tie their friendship together will be the very strangler of their amity: Octavia is of a holy, cold, and still conversation.

MENAS Who would not have his wife so?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Not he that himself is not so; which is Mark Antony. He will to his Egyptian dish again: then shall the sighs of Octavia blow the fire up in Caesar; and, as I said before, that which is the strength of their amity shall prove the immediate author of their variance. Antony will use his affection where it is: he married but his occasion here.

MENAS And thus it may be. Come, sir, will you aboard? I have a health for you.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS I shall take it, sir: we have used our throats in Egypt.

MENAS Come, let's away.

[Music plays. Enter two or three Servants with a banquet]

ACT II

SCENE VII On board POMPEY's galley, off Misenum.

First Servant Here they'll be, man. Some o' their plants are ill-rooted already: the least wind i' the world will blow them down.

Second Servant Lepidus is high-coloured.

First Servant They have made him drink alms-drink.

Second Servant As they pinch one another by the disposition, he cries out No more; reconciles them to his entreaty, and himself to the drink.

First Servant But it raises the greater war between him and his discretion.

[A sennet sounded. Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, MARK ANTONY, LEPIDUS, POMPEY, AGRIPPA, MECAENAS, DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS, MENAS, with other captains]

Second Servant Why, this is to have a name in great men's fellowship: I had as lief have a reed that will do me no service as a partisan I could not heave.

First Servant To be called into a huge sphere, and not to be seen to move in't, are the holes where eyes should be, which pitifully disaster the cheeks.

MARK ANTONY [To OCTAVIUS CAESAR] Thus do they, sir: they take the flow o' the Nile By certain scales i' the pyramid; they know, By the height, the lowness, or the mean, if dearth Or foison follow: the higher Nilus swells, The more it promises: as it ebbs, the seedsman Upon the slime and ooze scatters his grain, And shortly comes to harvest.

LEPIDUS You've strange serpents there.

MARK ANTONY Ay, Lepidus.

LEPIDUS Your serpent of Egypt is bred now of your mud by the operation of your sun: so is your crocodile.

MARK ANTONY They are so.

POMPEY Sit,--and some wine! A health to Lepidus!

LEPIDUS I am not so well as I should be, but I'll ne'er out.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Not till you have slept; I fear me you'll be in till then.

LEPIDUS Nay, certainly, I have heard the Ptolemies' pyramises are very goodly things; without contradiction, I have heard that.

MENAS [Aside to POMPEY] Pompey, a word.

POMPEY [Aside to MENAS] Say in mine ear: what is't?

MENAS [Aside to POMPEY] Forsake thy seat, I do beseech thee, captain, And hear me speak a word.

POMPEY [Aside to MENAS] Forbear me till anon. This wine for Lepidus!

LEPIDUS What manner o' thing is your crocodile?

MARK ANTONY It is shaped, sir, like itself; and it is as broad as it hath breadth: it is just so high as it is, and moves with its own organs: it lives by that which nourisheth it; and the elements once out of it, it transmigrates.

LEPIDUS What colour is it of?

MARK ANTONY Of it own colour too.

LEPIDUS 'Tis a strange serpent.

MARK ANTONY 'Tis so. And the tears of it are wet.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Will this description satisfy him?

MARK ANTONY With the health that Pompey gives him, else he is a very epicure.

POMPEY [Aside to MENAS] Go hang, sir, hang! Tell me of that? away! Do as I bid you. Where's this cup I call'd for?

[Rises, and walks aside]

MENAS [Aside to POMPEY] If for the sake of merit thou wilt hear me, Rise from thy stool.

POMPEY [Aside to MENAS] I think thou'rt mad. The matter?

MENAS I have ever held my cap off to thy fortunes.

POMPEY Thou hast served me with much faith. What's else to say? Be jolly, lords.

MARK ANTONY These quick-sands, Lepidus, Keep off them, for you sink.

MENAS Wilt thou be lord of all the world?

POMPEY What say'st thou?

MENAS Wilt thou be lord of the whole world? That's twice.

POMPEY How should that be?

MENAS But entertain it, And, though thou think me poor, I am the man Will give thee all the world.

POMPEY Hast thou drunk well?

MENAS Now, Pompey, I have kept me from the cup. Thou art, if thou darest be, the earthly Jove: Whate'er the ocean pales, or sky inclips, Is thine, if thou wilt ha't.

POMPEY Show me which way.

MENAS These three world-sharers, these competitors, Are in thy vessel: let me cut the cable; And, when we are put off, fall to their throats: All there is thine.

POMPEY Ah, this thou shouldst have done, And not have spoke on't! In me 'tis villany; In thee't had been good service. Thou must know, 'Tis not my profit that does lead mine honour; Mine honour, it. Repent that e'er thy tongue Hath so betray'd thine act: being done unknown, I should have found it afterwards well done; But must condemn it now. Desist, and drink.

MENAS [Aside] For this, I'll never follow thy pall'd fortunes more. Who seeks, and will not take when once 'tis offer'd, Shall never find it more.

POMPEY This health to Lepidus!

MARK ANTONY Bear him ashore. I'll pledge it for him, Pompey.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Here's to thee, Menas!

MENAS Enobarbus, welcome!

[Pointing to the Attendant who carries off LEPIDUS]

POMPEY Fill till the cup be hid.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS There's a strong fellow, Menas.

MENAS Why?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS A' bears the third part of the world, man; see'st not?

MENAS The third part, then, is drunk: would it were all, That it might go on wheels!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Drink thou; increase the reels.

MENAS Come.

POMPEY This is not yet an Alexandrian feast.

MARK ANTONY It ripens towards it. Strike the vessels, ho? Here is to Caesar!

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I could well forbear't. It's monstrous labour, when I wash my brain, And it grows fouler.

MARK ANTONY Be a child o' the time.

[To MARK ANTONY]

Shall we dance now the Egyptian Bacchanals, And celebrate our drink?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Possess it, I'll make answer: But I had rather fast from all four days Than drink so much in one.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Ha, my brave emperor!

POMPEY Let's ha't, good soldier.

[Music plays. DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS places them hand in hand] THE SONG.

Come, thou monarch of the vine, Plumpy Bacchus with pink eyne! In thy fats our cares be drown'd, With thy grapes our hairs be crown'd: Cup us, till the world go round, Cup us, till the world go round!

MARK ANTONY Come, let's all take hands, Till that the conquering wine hath steep'd our sense In soft and delicate Lethe.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS All take hands. Make battery to our ears with the loud music: The while I'll place you: then the boy shall sing; The holding every man shall bear as loud As his strong sides can volley.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR What would you more? Pompey, good night. Good brother, Let me request you off: our graver business Frowns at this levity. Gentle lords, let's part; You see we have burnt our cheeks: strong Enobarb Is weaker than the wine; and mine own tongue Splits what it speaks: the wild disguise hath almost Antick'd us all. What needs more words? Good night. Good Antony, your hand.

POMPEY I'll try you on the shore.

MARK ANTONY And shall, sir; give's your hand.

[Exeunt all but DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS and MENAS]

Menas, I'll not on shore.

POMPEY O Antony, You have my father's house,--But, what? we are friends. Come, down into the boat.

[Sound a flourish, with drums]

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Take heed you fall not.

MENAS No, to my cabin. These drums! these trumpets, flutes! what! Let Neptune hear we bid a loud farewell To these great fellows: sound and be hang'd, sound out!

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Ho! says a' There's my cap.

MENAS Ho! Noble captain, come.

[Enter VENTIDIUS as it were in triumph, with SILIUS, and other Romans, Officers, and Soldiers; the dead body of PACORUS borne before him]

ACT III

SCENE I A plain in Syria.

VENTIDIUS Now, darting Parthia, art thou struck; and now Pleased fortune does of Marcus Crassus' death Make me revenger. Bear the king's son's body Before our army. Thy Pacorus, Orodes, Pays this for Marcus Crassus.

SILIUS Noble Ventidius, Whilst yet with Parthian blood thy sword is warm, The fugitive Parthians follow; spur through Media, Mesopotamia, and the shelters whither The routed fly: so thy grand captain Antony Shall set thee on triumphant chariots and Put garlands on thy head.

VENTIDIUS O Silius, Silius, I have done enough; a lower place, note well, May make too great an act: for learn this, Silius; Better to leave undone, than by our deed Acquire too high a fame when him we serve's away. Caesar and Antony have ever won More in their officer than person: Sossius, One of my place in Syria, his lieutenant, For quick accumulation of renown, Which he achieved by the minute, lost his favour. Who does i' the wars more than his captain can Becomes his captain's captain: and ambition, The soldier's virtue, rather makes choice of loss, Than gain which darkens him. I could do more to do Antonius good, But 'twould offend him; and in his offence Should my performance perish.

SILIUS Thou hast, Ventidius, that Without the which a soldier, and his sword, Grants scarce distinction. Thou wilt write to Antony!

VENTIDIUS I'll humbly signify what in his name, That magical word of war, we have effected; How, with his banners and his well-paid ranks, The ne'er-yet-beaten horse of Parthia We have jaded out o' the field.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

SILIUS Where is he now?

VENTIDIUS He purposeth to Athens: whither, with what haste The weight we must convey with's will permit, We shall appear before him. On there; pass along!

[Enter AGRIPPA at one door, DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS at another]

ACT III

SCENE II Rome. An ante-chamber in OCTAVIUS CAESAR's house.

AGRIPPA What, are the brothers parted?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS They have dispatch'd with Pompey, he is gone; The other three are sealing. Octavia weeps To part from Rome; Caesar is sad; and Lepidus, Since Pompey's feast, as Menas says, is troubled With the green sickness.

AGRIPPA 'Tis a noble Lepidus.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS A very fine one: O, how he loves Caesar!

AGRIPPA Nay, but how dearly he adores Mark Antony!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Caesar? Why, he's the Jupiter of men.

AGRIPPA What's Antony? The god of Jupiter.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Spake you of Caesar? How! the non-pareil!

AGRIPPA O Antony! O thou Arabian bird!

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Would you praise Caesar, say Caesar: go no further.

AGRIPPA Indeed, he plied them both with excellent praises.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS But he loves Caesar best; yet he loves Antony: Ho! hearts, tongues, figures, scribes, bards, poets, cannot Think, speak, cast, write, sing, number, ho! His love to Antony. But as for Caesar, Kneel down, kneel down, and wonder.

[Trumpets within] So; This is to horse. Adieu, noble Agrippa.

AGRIPPA Both he loves.

[Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, MARK ANTONY, LEPIDUS, and OCTAVIA]

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS They are his shards, and he their beetle.

AGRIPPA Good fortune, worthy soldier; and farewell.

MARK ANTONY No further, sir.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR You take from me a great part of myself; Use me well in 't. Sister, prove such a wife As my thoughts make thee, and as my farthest band Shall pass on thy approof. Most noble Antony, Let not the piece of virtue, which is set Betwixt us as the cement of our love, To keep it builded, be the ram to batter The fortress of it; for better might we Have loved without this mean, if on both parts This be not cherish'd.

MARK ANTONY Make me not offended In your distrust.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I have said.

MARK ANTONY You shall not find, Though you be therein curious, the least cause For what you seem to fear: so, the gods keep you, And make the hearts of Romans serve your ends! We will here part.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Farewell, my dearest sister, fare thee well: The elements be kind to thee, and make Thy spirits all of comfort! fare thee well.

OCTAVIA My noble brother!

MARK ANTONY The April 's in her eyes: it is love's spring, And these the showers to bring it on. Be cheerful.

OCTAVIA Sir, look well to my husband's house; and--

OCTAVIUS CAESAR What, Octavia?

OCTAVIA I'll tell you in your ear.

MARK ANTONY Her tongue will not obey her heart, nor can Her heart inform her tongue,--the swan's down-feather, That stands upon the swell at full of tide, And neither way inclines.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS [Aside to AGRIPPA] Will Caesar weep?

AGRIPPA [Aside to DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] He has a cloud in 's face.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS [Aside to AGRIPPA] He were the worse for that, were he a horse; So is he, being a man.

AGRIPPA [Aside to DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS] Why, Enobarbus, When Antony found Julius Caesar dead, He cried almost to roaring; and he wept When at Philippi he found Brutus slain.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS [Aside to AGRIPPA] That year, indeed, he was troubled with a rheum; What willingly he did confound he wail'd, Believe't, till I wept too.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR No, sweet Octavia, You shall hear from me still; the time shall not Out-go my thinking on you.

MARK ANTONY Come, sir, come; I'll wrestle with you in my strength of love: Look, here I have you; thus I let you go, And give you to the gods.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Adieu; be happy!

[Kisses OCTAVIA]

LEPIDUS Let all the number of the stars give light To thy fair way!

[Trumpets sound. Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Farewell, farewell!

MARK ANTONY Farewell!

[Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, IRAS, and ALEXAS]

ACT III

SCENE III Alexandria. CLEOPATRA's palace.

CLEOPATRA Where is the fellow?

[Enter the Messenger as before]

Come hither, sir.

ALEXAS Half afeard to come.

CLEOPATRA Go to, go to.

ALEXAS Good majesty, Herod of Jewry dare not look upon you But when you are well pleased.

CLEOPATRA That Herod's head I'll have: but how, when Antony is gone Through whom I might command it? Come thou near.

Messenger Most gracious majesty,--

CLEOPATRA Didst thou behold Octavia?

Messenger Ay, dread queen.

CLEOPATRA Where?

Messenger Madam, in Rome; I look'd her in the face, and saw her led Between her brother and Mark Antony.

CLEOPATRA Is she as tall as me?

Messenger She is not, madam.

CLEOPATRA Didst hear her speak? is she shrill-tongued or low?

Messenger Madam, I heard her speak; she is low-voiced.

CLEOPATRA That's not so good: he cannot like her long.

CHARMIAN Like her! O Isis! 'tis impossible.

CLEOPATRA I think so, Charmian: dull of tongue, and dwarfish! What majesty is in her gait? Remember, If e'er thou look'dst on majesty.

Messenger She creeps: Her motion and her station are as one; She shows a body rather than a life, A statue than a breather.

CLEOPATRA Is this certain?

Messenger Or I have no observance.

CHARMIAN Three in Egypt Cannot make better note.

CLEOPATRA He's very knowing; I do perceive't: there's nothing in her yet: The fellow has good judgment.

CHARMIAN Excellent.

CLEOPATRA Guess at her years, I prithee.

Messenger Madam, She was a widow,--

CLEOPATRA Widow! Charmian, hark.

Messenger And I do think she's thirty.

CLEOPATRA Bear'st thou her face in mind? is't long or round?

Messenger Round even to faultiness.

CLEOPATRA For the most part, too, they are foolish that are so. Her hair, what colour?

[Exit Messenger]

Messenger Brown, madam: and her forehead As low as she would wish it.

CLEOPATRA There's gold for thee. Thou must not take my former sharpness ill: I will employ thee back again; I find thee Most fit for business: go make thee ready; Our letters are prepared.

CHARMIAN A proper man.

CLEOPATRA Indeed, he is so: I repent me much That so I harried him. Why, methinks, by him, This creature's no such thing.

CHARMIAN Nothing, madam.

CLEOPATRA The man hath seen some majesty, and should know.

CHARMIAN Hath he seen majesty? Isis else defend, And serving you so long!

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

CLEOPATRA I have one thing more to ask him yet, good Charmian: But 'tis no matter; thou shalt bring him to me Where I will write. All may be well enough.

CHARMIAN I warrant you, madam.

[Enter MARK ANTONY and OCTAVIA]

ACT III

SCENE IV Athens. A room in MARK ANTONY's house.

MARK ANTONY Nay, nay, Octavia, not only that,-- That were excusable, that, and thousands more Of semblable import,--but he hath waged New wars 'gainst Pompey; made his will, and read it To public ear: Spoke scantly of me: when perforce he could not But pay me terms of honour, cold and sickly He vented them; most narrow measure lent me: When the best hint was given him, he not took't, Or did it from his teeth.

OCTAVIA O my good lord, Believe not all; or, if you must believe, Stomach not all. A more unhappy lady, If this division chance, ne'er stood between, Praying for both parts: The good gods me presently, When I shall pray, O bless my lord and husband! Undo that prayer, by crying out as loud, O, bless my brother! Husband win, win brother, Prays, and destroys the prayer; no midway 'Twixt these extremes at all.

MARK ANTONY Gentle Octavia, Let your best love draw to that point, which seeks Best to preserve it: if I lose mine honour, I lose myself: better I were not yours Than yours so branchless. But, as you requested, Yourself shall go between 's: the mean time, lady, I'll raise the preparation of a war Shall stain your brother: make your soonest haste; So your desires are yours.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

OCTAVIA Thanks to my lord. The Jove of power make me most weak, most weak, Your reconciler! Wars 'twixt you twain would be As if the world should cleave, and that slain men Should solder up the rift.

MARK ANTONY When it appears to you where this begins, Turn your displeasure that way: for our faults Can never be so equal, that your love Can equally move with them. Provide your going; Choose your own company, and command what cost Your heart has mind to.

[Enter DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS and EROS, meeting]

ACT III

SCENE V The same. Another room.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS How now, friend Eros!

EROS There's strange news come, sir.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS What, man?

EROS Caesar and Lepidus have made wars upon Pompey.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS This is old: what is the success?

EROS Caesar, having made use of him in the wars 'gainst Pompey, presently denied him rivality; would not let him partake in the glory of the action: and not resting here, accuses him of letters he had formerly wrote to Pompey; upon his own appeal, seizes him: so the poor third is up, till death enlarge his confine.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Then, world, thou hast a pair of chaps, no more; And throw between them all the food thou hast, They'll grind the one the other. Where's Antony?

EROS He's walking in the garden--thus; and spurns The rush that lies before him; cries, Fool Lepidus! And threats the throat of that his officer That murder'd Pompey.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Our great navy's rigg'd.

EROS For Italy and Caesar. More, Domitius; My lord desires you presently: my news I might have told hereafter.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS 'Twill be naught: But let it be. Bring me to Antony.

EROS Come, sir.

[Enter OCTAVIUS CAESAR, AGRIPPA, and MECAENAS]

ACT III

SCENE VI Rome. OCTAVIUS CAESAR's house.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Contemning Rome, he has done all this, and more, In Alexandria: here's the manner of t: I the market-place, on a tribunal silver'd, Cleopatra and himself in chairs of gold Were publicly enthroned: at the feet sat Caesarion, whom they call my father's son, And all the unlawful issue that their lust Since then hath made between them. Unto her He gave the stablishment of Egypt; made her Of lower Syria, Cyprus, Lydia, Absolute queen.

MECAENAS This in the public eye?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I' the common show-place, where they exercise. His sons he there proclaim'd the kings of kings: Great Media, Parthia, and Armenia. He gave to Alexander; to Ptolemy he assign'd Syria, Cilicia, and Phoenicia: she In the habiliments of the goddess Isis That day appear'd; and oft before gave audience, As 'tis reported, so.

MECAENAS Let Rome be thus Inform'd.

AGRIPPA Who, queasy with his insolence Already, will their good thoughts call from him.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR The people know it; and have now received His accusations.

AGRIPPA Who does he accuse?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Caesar: and that, having in Sicily Sextus Pompeius spoil'd, we had not rated him His part o' the isle: then does he say, he lent me Some shipping unrestored: lastly, he frets That Lepidus of the triumvirate Should be deposed; and, being, that we detain All his revenue.

AGRIPPA Sir, this should be answer'd.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR 'Tis done already, and the messenger gone. I have told him, Lepidus was grown too cruel; That he his high authority abused, And did deserve his change: for what I have conquer'd, I grant him part; but then, in his Armenia, And other of his conquer'd kingdoms, I Demand the like.

[Enter OCTAVIA with her train]

MECAENAS He'll never yield to that.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Nor must not then be yielded to in this.

OCTAVIA Hail, Caesar, and my lord! hail, most dear Caesar!

OCTAVIUS CAESAR That ever I should call thee castaway!

OCTAVIA You have not call'd me so, nor have you cause.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Why have you stol'n upon us thus! You come not Like Caesar's sister: the wife of Antony Should have an army for an usher, and The neighs of horse to tell of her approach Long ere she did appear; the trees by the way Should have borne men; and expectation fainted, Longing for what it had not; nay, the dust Should have ascended to the roof of heaven, Raised by your populous troops: but you are come A market-maid to Rome; and have prevented The ostentation of our love, which, left unshown, Is often left unloved; we should have met you By sea and land; supplying every stage With an augmented greeting.

OCTAVIA Good my lord, To come thus was I not constrain'd, but did On my free will. My lord, Mark Antony, Hearing that you prepared for war, acquainted My grieved ear withal; whereon, I begg'd His pardon for return.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Which soon he granted, Being an obstruct 'tween his lust and him.

OCTAVIA Do not say so, my lord.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR I have eyes upon him, And his affairs come to me on the wind. Where is he now?

OCTAVIA My lord, in Athens.

OCTAVIUS CAESAR No, my most wronged sister; Cleopatra Hath nodded him to her. He hath given his empire Up to a whore; who now are levying The kings o' the earth for war; he hath assembled Bocchus, the king of Libya; Archelaus, Of Cappadocia; Philadelphos, king Of Paphlagonia; the Thracian king, Adallas; King Malchus of Arabia; King of Pont; Herod of Jewry; Mithridates, king Of Comagene; Polemon and Amyntas, The kings of Mede and Lycaonia, With a more larger list of sceptres.

OCTAVIA Ay me, most wretched, That have my heart parted betwixt two friends That do afflict each other!

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Welcome hither: Your letters did withhold our breaking forth; Till we perceived, both how you were wrong led, And we in negligent danger. Cheer your heart; Be you not troubled with the time, which drives O'er your content these strong necessities; But let determined things to destiny Hold unbewail'd their way. Welcome to Rome; Nothing more dear to me. You are abused Beyond the mark of thought: and the high gods, To do you justice, make them ministers Of us and those that love you. Best of comfort; And ever welcome to us.

AGRIPPA Welcome, lady.

MECAENAS Welcome, dear madam. Each heart in Rome does love and pity you: Only the adulterous Antony, most large In his abominations, turns you off; And gives his potent regiment to a trull, That noises it against us.

[Exeunt]

ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA

OCTAVIA Is it so, sir?

OCTAVIUS CAESAR Most certain. Sister, welcome: pray you, Be ever known to patience: my dear'st sister!

[Enter CLEOPATRA and DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS]

ACT III

SCENE VII Near Actium. MARK ANTONY's camp.

CLEOPATRA I will be even with thee, doubt it not.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS But why, why, why?

CLEOPATRA Thou hast forspoke my being in these wars, And say'st it is not fit.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Well, is it, is it?

CLEOPATRA If not denounced against us, why should not we Be there in person?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS [Aside] Well, I could reply: If we should serve with horse and mares together, The horse were merely lost; the mares would bear A soldier and his horse.

CLEOPATRA What is't you say?

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Your presence needs must puzzle Antony; Take from his heart, take from his brain, from's time, What should not then be spared. He is already Traduced for levity; and 'tis said in Rome That Photinus an eunuch and your maids Manage this war.

[Enter MARK ANTONY and CANIDIUS]

CLEOPATRA Sink Rome, and their tongues rot That speak against us! A charge we bear i' the war, And, as the president of my kingdom, will Appear there for a man. Speak not against it: I will not stay behind.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Nay, I have done. Here comes the emperor.

MARK ANTONY Is it not strange, Canidius, That from Tarentum and Brundusium He could so quickly cut the Ionian sea, And take in Toryne? You have heard on't, sweet?

CLEOPATRA Celerity is never more admired Than by the negligent.

MARK ANTONY A good rebuke, Which might have well becomed the best of men, To taunt at slackness. Canidius, we Will fight with him by sea.

CLEOPATRA By sea! what else?

CANIDIUS Why will my lord do so?

MARK ANTONY For that he dares us to't.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS So hath my lord dared him to single fight.

CANIDIUS Ay, and to wage this battle at Pharsalia. Where Caesar fought with Pompey: but these offers, Which serve not for his vantage, be shakes off; And so should you.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Your ships are not well mann'd; Your mariners are muleters, reapers, people Ingross'd by swift impress; in Caesar's fleet Are those that often have 'gainst Pompey fought: Their ships are yare; yours, heavy: no disgrace Shall fall you for refusing him at sea, Being prepared for land.

MARK ANTONY By sea, by sea.

DOMITIUS ENOBARBUS Most worthy sir, you therein throw away The absol