:25:01
Kent banished thus!
:25:05
And the king gone tonight!
:25:08
Subscribed his power!
:25:12
All this done upon the gad!
:25:34
Edmund, how now!
What news?
:25:37
So please your lordship, none.
:25:40
Why so earnestly seek you
to put up that letter?
:25:43
I know no news,
my lord.
:25:47
What paper were you reading?
:25:50
Nothing, my lord.
:25:53
Why, then, that terrible dispatch of
it into your pocket? Let's see.
:25:58
Sir, pardon me.
It is a letter from my brother.
:26:02
I find it not fit for your
o'er-Iooking.
:26:04
Give me the letter.
:26:05
I shall offend,
either to detain or give it.
:26:09
I hope, for my brother's
justification, he wrote this
:26:11
but as a taste of my virtue.
:26:13
<
bitter to the best of our times,
:26:17
keeps our fortunes from us till our
oldness cannot relish them.
:26:22
I find an idle bondage in
the oppression of aged tyranny,
:26:25
who sways,
not as it hath power,
:26:28
but as it is suffered.
:26:31
Come to me, that of this
I may speak more.
:26:34
If our father would sleep
:26:38
till I waked him,
:26:44
you should enjoy half his
revenue for ever,
:26:48
and live the beloved
of your brother, Edgar>>.
:26:52
Hum... Conspiracy!
:26:58
O villain!
Abhorred villain!