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soon mortal. |
BERTRAM. Madam, I desire your holy wishes. |
LAFEU. How understand we that? |
COUNTESS. Be thou blest, Bertram, and succeed thy father |
In manners, as in shape! Thy blood and virtue |
Contend for empire in thee, and thy goodness |
Share with thy birthright! Love all, trust a few, |
Do wrong to none; be able for thine enemy |
Rather in power than use, and keep thy friend |
Under thy own life's key; be check'd for silence, |
But never tax'd for speech. What heaven more will, |
That thee may furnish, and my prayers pluck down, |
Fall on thy head! Farewell. My lord, |
'Tis an unseason'd courtier; good my lord, |
Advise him. |
LAFEU. He cannot want the best |
That shall attend his love. |
COUNTESS. Heaven bless him! Farewell, Bertram. Exit |
BERTRAM. The best wishes that can be forg'd in your thoughts be |
servants to you! [To HELENA] Be comfortable to my mother, your |
mistress, and make much of her. |
LAFEU. Farewell, pretty lady; you must hold the credit of your |
father. Exeunt BERTRAM and LAFEU |
HELENA. O, were that all! I think not on my father; |
And these great tears grace his remembrance more |
Than those I shed for him. What was he like? |
I have forgot him; my imagination |
Carries no favour in't but Bertram's. |
I am undone; there is no living, none, |
If Bertram be away. 'Twere all one |
That I should love a bright particular star |
And think to wed it, he is so above me. |
In his bright radiance and collateral light |
Must I be comforted, not in his sphere. |
Th' ambition in my love thus plagues itself: |
The hind that would be mated by the lion |
Must die for love. 'Twas pretty, though a plague, |
To see him every hour; to sit and draw |
His arched brows, his hawking eye, his curls, |
In our heart's table-heart too capable |
Of every line and trick of his sweet favour. |
But now he's gone, and my idolatrous fancy |
Must sanctify his relics. Who comes here? |
Enter PAROLLES |
[Aside] One that goes with him. I love him for his sake; |
And yet I know him a notorious liar, |
Think him a great way fool, solely a coward; |
Yet these fix'd evils sit so fit in him |
That they take place when virtue's steely bones |
Looks bleak i' th' cold wind; withal, full oft we see |
Cold wisdom waiting on superfluous folly. |
PAROLLES. Save you, fair queen! |
HELENA. And you, monarch! |
PAROLLES. No. |
HELENA. And no. |
PAROLLES. Are you meditating on virginity? |
HELENA. Ay. You have some stain of soldier in you; let me ask you a |
question. Man is enemy to virginity; how may we barricado it |
against him? |
PAROLLES. Keep him out. |
HELENA. But he assails; and our virginity, though valiant in the |
defence, yet is weak. Unfold to us some warlike resistance. |
PAROLLES. There is none. Man, setting down before you, will |
undermine you and blow you up. |
HELENA. Bless our poor virginity from underminers and blowers-up! |
Is there no military policy how virgins might blow up men? |
PAROLLES. Virginity being blown down, man will quicklier be blown |
up; marry, in blowing him down again, with the breach yourselves |
made, you lose your city. It is not politic in the commonwealth |
of nature to preserve virginity. Loss of virginity is rational |
increase; and there was never virgin got till virginity was first |
lost. That you were made of is metal to make virgins. Virginity |
by being once lost may be ten times found; by being ever kept, it |
is ever lost. 'Tis too cold a companion; away with't. |
HELENA. I will stand for 't a little, though therefore I die a |
virgin. |
PAROLLES. There's little can be said in 't; 'tis against the rule |
of nature. To speak on the part of virginity is to accuse your |
mothers; which is most infallible disobedience. He that hangs |
himself is a virgin; virginity murders itself, and should be |
buried in highways, out of all sanctified limit, as a desperate |
offendress against nature. Virginity breeds mites, much like a |
cheese; consumes itself to the very paring, and so dies with |
feeding his own stomach. Besides, virginity is peevish, proud, |
idle, made of self-love, which is the most inhibited sin in the |
canon. Keep it not; you cannot choose but lose by't. Out with't. |
Within ten year it will make itself ten, which is a goodly |
increase; and the principal itself not much the worse. Away |
with't. |
HELENA. How might one do, sir, to lose it to her own liking? |
PAROLLES. Let me see. Marry, ill to like him that ne'er it likes. |
'Tis a commodity will lose the gloss with lying; the longer kept, |
the less worth. Off with't while 'tis vendible; answer the time |
of request. Virginity, like an old courtier, wears her cap out of |
fashion, richly suited but unsuitable; just like the brooch and |
the toothpick, which wear not now. Your date is better in your |
pie and your porridge than in your cheek. And your virginity, |
your old virginity, is like one of our French wither'd pears: it |
looks ill, it eats drily; marry, 'tis a wither'd pear; it was |
formerly better; marry, yet 'tis a wither'd pear. Will you |
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