:31:00
To take't
again perforce.
:31:04
Monster ingratitude.
:31:08
If thou wert
my fool, nuncle,
:31:10
I'd have thee beaten
for being old
before thy time.
:31:14
How's that?
:31:15
Thou shouldst not
have been old till
thou hadst been wise.
:31:23
O, let me
not be mad,
:31:27
not mad, sweet heaven!
:31:31
Keep me in temper.
:31:35
I would not be mad.
:31:47
How now, brother Edmund!
:31:48
What serious contemplation
are you in?
:31:50
I was thinking, brother,
of a prediction
I read this other day,
:31:53
what should follow
these eclipses.
:31:55
And do you busy
yourself with that?
:31:57
I promise you,
the effects he writes of
succeed unhappily;
:32:01
as of unnaturalness
between the child
and the parent;
:32:04
death, dearth,
:32:06
dissolution,
divisions, menaces.
:32:09
When we are sick
in fortune,
:32:10
we make guilty
of our disasters
:32:12
the sun, the moon,
the stars,
:32:15
as if we were drunkards,
liars, and adulterers
:32:19
by planetary influence.
:32:21
Why brand they me
with baseness?
:32:23
Bastardy? Base?
:32:24
My father coupled
with my mother
under the Dragon's tail,
:32:29
and I was born
under Ursa Major,
:32:31
so that it follows
that I am rough and lecherous.
:32:34
I should have been
that I am,
:32:36
had the maidenliest star
in the firmament
:32:38
twinkled on
my bastardizing.
:32:56
When sons are
at perfect age,
:32:58
and fathers
in decline,