Shakespeare Plays and Sonnets
Timon of Athens
Players:
- Timon, a noble Athenian
- Lucius, a flattering lord
- Lucullus, a flattering lord
- Sempronius, a flattering lord
- Ventidius, a false friend of Timon
- Alcibiades, an Athenian captain
- Apemantus, a churlish philosopher
- Flavius, steward to Timon
- Flaminius, Timon's servant
- Lucilius, Timon's servant
- Servilius, Timon's servant
- Caphis, Philotus, Titus, Lucius, and Hortensius,
servants of Timon's creditors
- Poet, Painter, Jeweler, Merchant
- An Old Athenian
- Servants to Varro and Isidore
- Three Strangers
- A Page
- A Fool
- Phrynia, mistress of Alcibiades
- Timandra, mistress of Alcibiades
- Lords, Senators, Officers, Soldiers, Thieves, and Attendants
- Cupid and Masque Amazons
ACT I, SCENE I.
Athens. A hall in Timon's house.
[Enter Poet, Painter, Jeweller, Merchant, and others, at several doors]
Painter:
I am glad you're well.
Poet:
I have not seen you long: how goes the world?
Painter:
It wears, sir, as it grows.
Poet:
Ay, that's well known:
- But what particular rarity? what strange,
- Which manifold record not matches? See,
- Magic of bounty! all these spirits thy power
- Hath conjured to attend. I know the merchant.
Painter:
I know them both; th' other's a jeweller.
Merchant:
O, 'tis a worthy lord.
Jeweller:
Nay, that's most fix'd.
Merchant:
A most incomparable man, breathed, as it were,
- To an untirable and continuate goodness:
- He passes.
- Jeweller: I have a jewel here--
Merchant:
O, pray, let's see't: for the Lord Timon, sir?
- Jeweller: If he will touch the estimate: but, for that--
Poet:
[Reciting to himself]
- 'When we for recompense have
- praised the vile,
- It stains the glory in that happy verse
- Which aptly sings the good.'
Merchant:
'Tis a good form.
-
[Looking at the jewel]
Jeweller:
And rich: here is a water, look ye.
Painter:
You are rapt, sir, in some work, some dedication
- To the great lord.
Poet:
A thing slipp'd idly from me.
- Our poesy is as a gum, which oozes
- From whence 'tis nourish'd: the fire i' the flint
- Shows not till it be struck; our gentle flame
- Provokes itself and like the current flies
- Each bound it chafes. What have you there?
Painter:
A picture, sir. When comes your book forth?
Poet:
Upon the heels of my presentment, sir.
- Let's see your piece.
Painter:
'Tis a good piece.
Poet:
So 'tis: this comes off well and excellent.
Poet:
Admirable: how this grace
- Speaks his own standing! what a mental power
- This eye shoots forth! how big imagination
- Moves in this lip! to the dumbness of the gesture
- One might interpret.
Painter:
It is a pretty mocking of the life.
- Here is a touch; is't good?
Painter:
How this lord is follow'd!
Poet:
The senators of Athens: happy man!
Poet:
You see this confluence, this great flood
- of visitors.
- I have, in this rough work, shaped out a man,
- Whom this beneath world doth embrace and hug
- With amplest entertainment: my free drift
- Halts not particularly, but moves itself
- In a wide sea of wax: no levell'd malice
- Infects one comma in the course I hold;
- But flies an eagle flight, bold and forth on,
- Leaving no tract behind.
Painter:
How shall I understand you?
Poet:
I will unbolt to you.
- You see how all conditions, how all minds,
- As well of glib and slippery creatures as
- Of grave and austere quality, tender down
- Their services to Lord Timon: his large fortune
- Upon his good and gracious nature hanging
- Subdues and properties to his love and tendance
- All sorts of hearts; yea, from the glass-faced flatterer
- To Apemantus, that few things loves better
- Than to abhor himself: even he drops down
- The knee before him, and returns in peace
- Most rich in Timon's nod.
Painter:
I saw them speak together.
Poet:
Sir, I have upon a high and pleasant hill
- Feign'd Fortune to be throned: the base o' the mount
- Is rank'd with all deserts, all kind of natures,
- That labour on the bosom of this sphere
- To propagate their states: amongst them all,
- Whose eyes are on this sovereign lady fix'd,
- One do I personate of Lord Timon's frame,
- Whom Fortune with her ivory hand wafts to her;
- Whose present grace to present slaves and servants
- Translates his rivals.
Painter:
'Tis conceived to scope.
- This throne, this Fortune, and this hill, methinks,
- With one man beckon'd from the rest below,
- Bowing his head against the sleepy mount
- To climb his happiness, would be well express'd
- In our condition.
Poet:
Nay, sir, but hear me on.
- All those which were his fellows but of late,
- Some better than his value, on the moment
- Follow his strides, his lobbies fill with tendance,
- Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ear,
- Make sacred even his stirrup, and through him
- Drink the free air.
Painter:
Ay, marry, what of these?
Poet:
When Fortune in her shift and change of mood
- Spurns down her late beloved, all his dependants
- Which labour'd after him to the mountain's top
- Even on their knees and hands, let him slip down,
- Not one accompanying his declining foot.
TIMON:
Imprison'd is he, say you?
Messenger:
Ay, my good lord: five talents is his debt,
- His means most short, his creditors most strait:
- Your honourable letter he desires
- To those have shut him up; which failing,
- Periods his comfort.
TIMON:
Noble Ventidius! Well;
- I am not of that feather to shake off
- My friend when he must need me. I do know him
- A gentleman that well deserves a help:
- Which he shall have: I'll pay the debt,
- and free him.
Messenger:
Your lordship ever binds him.
TIMON:
Commend me to him: I will send his ransom;
- And being enfranchised, bid him come to me.
- 'Tis not enough to help the feeble up,
- But to support him after. Fare you well.
Messenger:
All happiness to your honour!
-
[Exit]
-
[Enter an old Athenian]
Old Athenian:
Lord Timon, hear me speak.
TIMON:
Freely, good father.
Old Athenian:
Thou hast a servant named Lucilius.
TIMON:
I have so: what of him?
Old Athenian:
Most noble Timon, call the man before thee.
TIMON:
Attends he here, or no? Lucilius!
LUCILIUS:
Here, at your lordship's service.
Old Athenian:
This fellow here, Lord Timon, this thy creature,
- By night frequents my house. I am a man
- That from my first have been inclined to thrift;
- And my estate deserves an heir more raised
- Than one which holds a trencher.
TIMON:
Well; what further?
Old Athenian:
One only daughter have I, no kin else,
- On whom I may confer what I have got:
- The maid is fair, o' the youngest for a bride,
- And I have bred her at my dearest cost
- In qualities of the best. This man of thine
- Attempts her love: I prithee, noble lord,
- Join with me to forbid him her resort;
- Myself have spoke in vain.
TIMON:
The man is honest.
Old Athenian:
Therefore he will be, Timon:
- His honesty rewards him in itself;
- It must not bear my daughter.
TIMON:
Does she love him?
Old Athenian:
She is young and apt:
- Our own precedent passions do instruct us
- What levity's in youth.
TIMON:
[To LUCILIUS]
- Love you the maid?
LUCILIUS:
Ay, my good lord, and she accepts of it.
Old Athenian:
If in her marriage my consent be missing,
- I call the gods to witness, I will choose
- Mine heir from forth the beggars of the world,
- And dispossess her all.
TIMON:
How shall she be endow'd,
- if she be mated with an equal husband?
Old Athenian:
Three talents on the present; in future, all.
TIMON:
This gentleman of mine hath served me long:
- To build his fortune I will strain a little,
- For 'tis a bond in men. Give him thy daughter:
- What you bestow, in him I'll counterpoise,
- And make him weigh with her.
Old Athenian:
Most noble lord,
- Pawn me to this your honour, she is his.
TIMON:
My hand to thee; mine honour on my promise.
Poet:
Vouchsafe my labour, and long live your lordship!
TIMON:
I thank you; you shall hear from me anon:
- Go not away. What have you there, my friend?
Painter:
A piece of painting, which I do beseech
- Your lordship to accept.
TIMON:
Painting is welcome.
- The painting is almost the natural man;
- or since dishonour traffics with man's nature,
- He is but outside: these pencill'd figures are
- Even such as they give out. I like your work;
- And you shall find I like it: wait attendance
- Till you hear further from me.
Painter:
The gods preserve ye!
TIMON:
Well fare you, gentleman: give me your hand;
- We must needs dine together. Sir, your jewel
- Hath suffer'd under praise.
Jeweller:
What, my lord! dispraise?
TIMON:
A more satiety of commendations.
- If I should pay you for't as 'tis extoll'd,
- It would unclew me quite.
Jeweller:
My lord, 'tis rated
- As those which sell would give: but you well know,
- Things of like value differing in the owners
- Are prized by their masters: believe't, dear lord,
- You mend the jewel by the wearing it.
Merchant:
No, my good lord; he speaks the common tongue,
- Which all men speak with him.
TIMON:
Look, who comes here: will you be chid?
-
[Enter APEMANTUS]
- Jeweller: We'll bear, with your lordship.
Merchant:
He'll spare none.
TIMON:
Good morrow to thee, gentle Apemantus!
APEMANTUS:
Till I be gentle, stay thou for thy good morrow;
- When thou art Timon's dog, and these knaves honest.
TIMON:
Why dost thou call them knaves? thou know'st them not.
APEMANTUS:
Are they not Athenians?
APEMANTUS:
Then I repent not.
- Jeweller: You know me, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Thou know'st I do: I call'd thee by thy name.
TIMON:
Thou art proud, Apemantus.
APEMANTUS:
Of nothing so much as that I am not like Timon.
TIMON:
Whither art going?
APEMANTUS:
To knock out an honest Athenian's brains.
TIMON:
That's a deed thou'lt die for.
APEMANTUS:
Right, if doing nothing be death by the law.
TIMON:
How likest thou this picture, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
The best, for the innocence.
TIMON:
Wrought he not well that painted it?
APEMANTUS:
He wrought better that made the painter; and yet
- he's but a filthy piece of work.
APEMANTUS:
Thy mother's of my generation: what's she, if I be a dog?
TIMON:
Wilt dine with me, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
No; I eat not lords.
TIMON:
An thou shouldst, thou 'ldst anger ladies.
APEMANTUS:
O, they eat lords; so they come by great bellies.
TIMON:
That's a lascivious apprehension.
APEMANTUS:
So thou apprehendest it: take it for thy labour.
TIMON:
How dost thou like this jewel, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Not so well as plain-dealing, which will not cost a
- man a doit.
TIMON:
What dost thou think 'tis worth?
APEMANTUS:
Not worth my thinking. How now, poet!
Poet:
How now, philosopher!
APEMANTUS:
Art not a poet?
APEMANTUS:
Then thou liest: look in thy last work, where thou
- hast feigned him a worthy fellow.
Poet:
That's not feigned; he is so.
APEMANTUS:
Yes, he is worthy of thee, and to pay thee for thy
- labour: he that loves to be flattered is worthy o'
- the flatterer. Heavens, that I were a lord!
TIMON:
What wouldst do then, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
E'en as Apemantus does now; hate a lord with my heart.
APEMANTUS:
That I had no angry wit to be a lord.
- Art not thou a merchant?
APEMANTUS:
Traffic confound thee, if the gods will not!
Merchant:
If traffic do it, the gods do it.
APEMANTUS:
Traffic's thy god; and thy god confound thee!
- Trumpet sounds. Enter a Messenger
TIMON:
What trumpet's that?
Messenger:
'Tis Alcibiades, and some twenty horse,
- All of companionship.
APEMANTUS:
So, so, there!
- Aches contract and starve your supple joints!
- That there should be small love 'mongst these
- sweet knaves,
- And all this courtesy! The strain of man's bred out
- Into baboon and monkey.
ALCIBIADES:
Sir, you have saved my longing, and I feed
- Most hungerly on your sight.
First Lord:
What time o' day is't, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Time to be honest.
First Lord:
That time serves still.
APEMANTUS:
The more accursed thou, that still omitt'st it.
Second Lord:
Thou art going to Lord Timon's feast?
APEMANTUS:
Ay, to see meat fill knaves and wine heat fools.
Second Lord:
Fare thee well, fare thee well.
APEMANTUS:
Thou art a fool to bid me farewell twice.
Second Lord:
Why, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Shouldst have kept one to thyself, for I mean to
- give thee none.
First Lord:
Hang thyself!
APEMANTUS:
No, I will do nothing at thy bidding: make thy
- requests to thy friend.
Second Lord:
Away, unpeaceable dog, or I'll spurn thee hence!
APEMANTUS:
I will fly, like a dog, the heels o' the ass.
-
[Exit]
First Lord:
He's opposite to humanity. Come, shall we in,
- And taste Lord Timon's bounty? he outgoes
- The very heart of kindness.
Second Lord:
He pours it out; Plutus, the god of gold,
- Is but his steward: no meed, but he repays
- Sevenfold above itself; no gift to him,
- But breeds the giver a return exceeding
- All use of quittance.
First Lord:
The noblest mind he carries
- That ever govern'd man.
Second Lord:
Long may he live in fortunes! Shall we in?
First Lord:
I'll keep you company.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT I, SCENE II.
A banqueting-room in Timon's house.
[Hautboys playing loud music. A great banquet served in;
FLAVIUS and others attending;
then enter TIMON, ALCIBIADES, Lords, Senators, and VENTIDIUS.
Then comes, dropping, after all, APEMANTUS, discontentedly, like himself ]
VENTIDIUS:
Most honour'd Timon,
- It hath pleased the gods to remember my father's age,
- And call him to long peace.
- He is gone happy, and has left me rich:
- Then, as in grateful virtue I am bound
- To your free heart, I do return those talents,
- Doubled with thanks and service, from whose help
- I derived liberty.
TIMON:
O, by no means,
- Honest Ventidius; you mistake my love:
- I gave it freely ever; and there's none
- Can truly say he gives, if he receives:
- If our betters play at that game, we must not dare
- To imitate them; faults that are rich are fair.
VENTIDIUS:
A noble spirit!
TIMON:
Nay, my lords,
- They all stand ceremoniously looking on TIMON
- Ceremony was but devised at first
- To set a gloss on faint deeds, hollow welcomes,
- Recanting goodness, sorry ere 'tis shown;
- But where there is true friendship, there needs none.
- Pray, sit; more welcome are ye to my fortunes
- Than my fortunes to me.
-
[They sit]
First Lord:
My lord, we always have confess'd it.
APEMANTUS:
Ho, ho, confess'd it! hang'd it, have you not?
TIMON:
O, Apemantus, you are welcome.
APEMANTUS:
No;
- You shall not make me welcome:
- I come to have thee thrust me out of doors.
TIMON:
Fie, thou'rt a churl; ye've got a humour there
- Does not become a man: 'tis much to blame.
- They say, my lords, 'ira furor brevis est;' but yond
- man is ever angry. Go, let him have a table by
- himself, for he does neither affect company, nor is
- he fit for't, indeed.
APEMANTUS:
Let me stay at thine apperil, Timon: I come to
- observe; I give thee warning on't.
TIMON:
I take no heed of thee; thou'rt an Athenian,
- therefore welcome: I myself would have no power;
- prithee, let my meat make thee silent.
APEMANTUS:
I scorn thy meat; 'twould choke me, for I should
- ne'er flatter thee. O you gods, what a number of
- men eat Timon, and he sees 'em not! It grieves me
- to see so many dip their meat in one man's blood;
- and all the madness is, he cheers them up too.
- I wonder men dare trust themselves with men:
- Methinks they should invite them without knives;
- Good for their meat, and safer for their lives.
- There's much example for't; the fellow that sits
- next him now, parts bread with him, pledges the
- breath of him in a divided draught, is the readiest
- man to kill him: 't has been proved. If I were a
- huge man, I should fear to drink at meals;
- Lest they should spy my windpipe's dangerous notes:
- Great men should drink with harness on their throats.
TIMON:
My lord, in heart; and let the health go round.
Second Lord:
Let it flow this way, my good lord.
APEMANTUS:
Flow this way! A brave fellow! he keeps his tides
- well. Those healths will make thee and thy state
- look ill, Timon. Here's that which is too weak to
- be a sinner, honest water, which ne'er left man i' the mire:
- This and my food are equals; there's no odds:
- Feasts are too proud to give thanks to the gods.
- Apemantus' grace.
- Immortal gods, I crave no pelf;
- I pray for no man but myself:
- Grant I may never prove so fond,
- To trust man on his oath or bond;
- Or a harlot, for her weeping;
- Or a dog, that seems a-sleeping:
- Or a keeper with my freedom;
- Or my friends, if I should need 'em.
- Amen. So fall to't:
- Rich men sin, and I eat root.
-
[Eats and drinks]
- Much good dich thy good heart, Apemantus!
TIMON:
Captain Alcibiades, your heart's in the field now.
ALCIBIADES:
My heart is ever at your service, my lord.
TIMON:
You had rather be at a breakfast of enemies than a
- dinner of friends.
ALCIBIADES:
So the were bleeding-new, my lord, there's no meat
- like 'em: I could wish my best friend at such a feast.
APEMANTUS:
Would all those fatterers were thine enemies then,
- that then thou mightst kill 'em and bid me to 'em!
First Lord:
Might we but have that happiness, my lord, that you
- would once use our hearts, whereby we might express
- some part of our zeals, we should think ourselves
- for ever perfect.
TIMON:
O, no doubt, my good friends, but the gods
- themselves have provided that I shall have much help
- from you: how had you been my friends else? why
- have you that charitable title from thousands, did
- not you chiefly belong to my heart? I have told
- more of you to myself than you can with modesty
- speak in your own behalf; and thus far I confirm
- you. O you gods, think I, what need we have any
- friends, if we should ne'er have need of 'em? they
- were the most needless creatures living, should we
- ne'er have use for 'em, and would most resemble
- sweet instruments hung up in cases that keep their
- sounds to themselves. Why, I have often wished
- myself poorer, that I might come nearer to you. We
- are born to do benefits: and what better or
- properer can we can our own than the riches of our
- friends? O, what a precious comfort 'tis, to have
- so many, like brothers, commanding one another's
- fortunes! O joy, e'en made away ere 't can be born!
- Mine eyes cannot hold out water, methinks: to
- forget their faults, I drink to you.
APEMANTUS:
Thou weepest to make them drink, Timon.
Second Lord:
Joy had the like conception in our eyes
- And at that instant like a babe sprung up.
APEMANTUS:
Ho, ho! I laugh to think that babe a bastard.
Third Lord:
I promise you, my lord, you moved me much.
APEMANTUS:
Much!
-
[Tucket, within]
TIMON:
What means that trump?
-
[Enter a Servant]
- How now?
Servant:
Please you, my lord, there are certain
- ladies most desirous of admittance.
TIMON:
Ladies! what are their wills?
Servant:
There comes with them a forerunner, my lord, which
- bears that office, to signify their pleasures.
TIMON:
I pray, let them be admitted.
-
[Enter Cupid]
Cupid:
Hail to thee, worthy Timon, and to all
- That of his bounties taste! The five best senses
- Acknowledge thee their patron; and come freely
- To gratulate thy plenteous bosom: th' ear,
- Taste, touch and smell, pleased from thy tale rise;
- They only now come but to feast thine eyes.
TIMON:
They're welcome all; let 'em have kind admittance:
- Music, make their welcome!
-
[Exit Cupid]
APEMANTUS:
Hoy-day, what a sweep of vanity comes this way!
- They dance! they are mad women.
- Like madness is the glory of this life.
- As this pomp shows to a little oil and root.
- We make ourselves fools, to disport ourselves;
- And spend our flatteries, to drink those men
- Upon whose age we void it up again,
- With poisonous spite and envy.
- Who lives that's not depraved or depraves?
- Who dies, that bears not one spurn to their graves
- Of their friends' gift?
- I should fear those that dance before me now
- Would one day stamp upon me: 't has been done;
- Men shut their doors against a setting sun.
-
[The Lords rise from table, with much adoring of TIMON;
and to show their loves, each singles out an Amazon, and all dance,
men with women, a lofty strain or two to the hautboys, and cease]
TIMON:
You have done our pleasures much grace, fair ladies,
- Set a fair fashion on our entertainment,
- Which was not half so beautiful and kind;
- You have added worth unto 't and lustre,
- And entertain'd me with mine own device;
- I am to thank you for 't.
First Lady:
My lord, you take us even at the best.
APEMANTUS:
'Faith, for the worst is filthy; and would not hold
- taking, I doubt me.
TIMON:
Ladies, there is an idle banquet attends you:
- Please you to dispose yourselves.
TIMON:
The little casket bring me hither.
FLAVIUS:
Yes, my lord. More jewels yet!
- There is no crossing him in 's humour;
-
[Aside]
- Else I should tell him,--well, i' faith I should,
- When all's spent, he 'ld be cross'd then, an he could.
- 'Tis pity bounty had not eyes behind,
- That man might ne'er be wretched for his mind.
-
[Exit]
First Lord:
Where be our men?
Servant:
Here, my lord, in readiness.
TIMON:
O my friends,
- I have one word to say to you: look you, my good lord,
- I must entreat you, honour me so much
- As to advance this jewel; accept it and wear it,
- Kind my lord.
First Lord:
I am so far already in your gifts,--
All:
So are we all.
-
[Enter a Servant]
Servant:
My lord, there are certain nobles of the senate
- Newly alighted, and come to visit you.
TIMON:
They are fairly welcome.
FLAVIUS:
I beseech your honour,
- Vouchsafe me a word; it does concern you near.
TIMON:
Near! why then, another time I'll hear thee:
- I prithee, let's be provided to show them
- entertainment.
FLAVIUS:
[Aside]
- I scarce know how.
-
[Enter a Second Servant]
Second Servant:
May it please your honour, Lord Lucius,
- Out of his free love, hath presented to you
- Four milk-white horses, trapp'd in silver.
TIMON:
I shall accept them fairly; let the presents
- Be worthily entertain'd.
-
[Enter a third Servant]
- How now! what news?
Third Servant:
Please you, my lord, that honourable
- gentleman, Lord Lucullus, entreats your company
- to-morrow to hunt with him, and has sent your honour
- two brace of greyhounds.
TIMON:
I'll hunt with him; and let them be received,
- Not without fair reward.
FLAVIUS:
[Aside]
- What will this come to?
- He commands us to provide, and give great gifts,
- And all out of an empty coffer:
- Nor will he know his purse, or yield me this,
- To show him what a beggar his heart is,
- Being of no power to make his wishes good:
- His promises fly so beyond his state
- That what he speaks is all in debt; he owes
- For every word: he is so kind that he now
- Pays interest for 't; his land's put to their books.
- Well, would I were gently put out of office
- Before I were forced out!
- Happier is he that has no friend to feed
- Than such that do e'en enemies exceed.
- I bleed inwardly for my lord.
-
[Exit]
TIMON:
You do yourselves
- Much wrong, you bate too much of your own merits:
- Here, my lord, a trifle of our love.
Second Lord:
With more than common thanks I will receive it.
Third Lord:
O, he's the very soul of bounty!
TIMON:
And now I remember, my lord, you gave
- Good words the other day of a bay courser
- I rode on: it is yours, because you liked it.
Second Lord:
O, I beseech you, pardon me, my lord, in that.
TIMON:
You may take my word, my lord; I know, no man
- Can justly praise but what he does affect:
- I weigh my friend's affection with mine own;
- I'll tell you true. I'll call to you.
All Lords:
O, none so welcome.
TIMON:
I take all and your several visitations
- So kind to heart, 'tis not enough to give;
- Methinks, I could deal kingdoms to my friends,
- And ne'er be weary. Alcibiades,
- Thou art a soldier, therefore seldom rich;
- It comes in charity to thee: for all thy living
- Is 'mongst the dead, and all the lands thou hast
- Lie in a pitch'd field.
ALCIBIADES:
Ay, defiled land, my lord.
First Lord:
We are so virtuously bound--
TIMON:
And so
- Am I to you.
Second Lord:
So infinitely endear'd--
TIMON:
All to you. Lights, more lights!
First Lord:
The best of happiness,
- Honour and fortunes, keep with you, Lord Timon!
APEMANTUS:
What a coil's here!
- Serving of becks and jutting-out of bums!
- I doubt whether their legs be worth the sums
- That are given for 'em. Friendship's full of dregs:
- Methinks, false hearts should never have sound legs,
- Thus honest fools lay out their wealth on court'sies.
TIMON:
Now, Apemantus, if thou wert not sullen, I would be
- good to thee.
APEMANTUS:
No, I'll nothing: for if I should be bribed too,
- there would be none left to rail upon thee, and then
- thou wouldst sin the faster. Thou givest so long,
- Timon, I fear me thou wilt give away thyself in
- paper shortly: what need these feasts, pomps and
- vain-glories?
TIMON:
Nay, an you begin to rail on society once, I am
- sworn not to give regard to you. Farewell; and come
- with better music.
-
[Exit]
APEMANTUS:
So:
- Thou wilt not hear me now; thou shalt not then:
- I'll lock thy heaven from thee.
- O, that men's ears should be
- To counsel deaf, but not to flattery!
-
[Exit]
ACT II, SCENE I.
A Senator's house.
[Enter Senator, with papers in his hand]
Senator:
And late, five thousand: to Varro and to Isidore
- He owes nine thousand; besides my former sum,
- Which makes it five and twenty. Still in motion
- Of raging waste? It cannot hold; it will not.
- If I want gold, steal but a beggar's dog,
- And give it Timon, why, the dog coins gold.
- If I would sell my horse, and buy twenty more
- Better than he, why, give my horse to Timon,
- Ask nothing, give it him, it foals me, straight,
- And able horses. No porter at his gate,
- But rather one that smiles and still invites
- All that pass by. It cannot hold: no reason
- Can found his state in safety. Caphis, ho!
- Caphis, I say!
-
[Enter CAPHIS]
CAPHIS:
Here, sir; what is your pleasure?
Senator:
Get on your cloak, and haste you to Lord Timon;
- Importune him for my moneys; be not ceased
- With slight denial, nor then silenced when--
- 'Commend me to your master'--and the cap
- Plays in the right hand, thus: but tell him,
- My uses cry to me, I must serve my turn
- Out of mine own; his days and times are past
- And my reliances on his fracted dates
- Have smit my credit: I love and honour him,
- But must not break my back to heal his finger;
- Immediate are my needs, and my relief
- Must not be toss'd and turn'd to me in words,
- But find supply immediate. Get you gone:
- Put on a most importunate aspect,
- A visage of demand; for, I do fear,
- When every feather sticks in his own wing,
- Lord Timon will be left a naked gull,
- Which flashes now a phoenix. Get you gone.
Senator:
'I go, sir!'--Take the bonds along with you,
- And have the dates in contempt.
ACT II, SCENE II.
A hall in Timon's house.
[Enter FLAVIUS, with many bills in his hand]
CAPHIS:
Good even, Varro: what,
- You come for money?
- Varro's Servant Is't not your business too?
CAPHIS:
It is: and yours too, Isidore?
- Isidore's Servant It is so.
CAPHIS:
Would we were all discharged!
- Varro's Servant I fear it.
TIMON:
So soon as dinner's done, we'll forth again,
- My Alcibiades. With me? what is your will?
CAPHIS:
My lord, here is a note of certain dues.
TIMON:
Dues! Whence are you?
CAPHIS:
Of Athens here, my lord.
CAPHIS:
Please it your lordship, he hath put me off
- To the succession of new days this month:
- My master is awaked by great occasion
- To call upon his own, and humbly prays you
- That with your other noble parts you'll suit
- In giving him his right.
TIMON:
Mine honest friend,
- I prithee, but repair to me next morning.
CAPHIS:
Nay, good my lord,--
TIMON:
Contain thyself, good friend.
- Varro's Servant One Varro's servant, my good lord,--
- Isidore's Servant From Isidore;
- He humbly prays your speedy payment.
CAPHIS:
If you did know, my lord, my master's wants--
- Varro's Servant 'Twas due on forfeiture, my lord, six weeks And past.
- Isidore's Servant Your steward puts me off, my lord;
- And I am sent expressly to your lordship.
FLAVIUS:
Please you, gentlemen,
- The time is unagreeable to this business:
- Your importunacy cease till after dinner,
- That I may make his lordship understand
- Wherefore you are not paid.
TIMON:
Do so, my friends. See them well entertain'd.
-
[Exit]
CAPHIS:
Stay, stay, here comes the fool with Apemantus:
- let's ha' some sport with 'em.
- Varro's Servant Hang him, he'll abuse us.
- Isidore's Servant A plague upon him, dog!
- Varro's Servant How dost, fool?
APEMANTUS:
Dost dialogue with thy shadow?
- Varro's Servant I speak not to thee.
APEMANTUS:
No,'tis to thyself.
-
[To the Fool]
- Come away.
Isidore's Servant:
There's the fool hangs on your back already.
APEMANTUS:
No, thou stand'st single, thou'rt not on him yet.
CAPHIS:
Where's the fool now?
APEMANTUS:
He last asked the question. Poor rogues, and
- usurers' men! bawds between gold and want!
All Servants:
What are we, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
That you ask me what you are, and do not know
- yourselves. Speak to 'em, fool.
FOOL:
How do you, gentlemen?
All Servants:
Gramercies, good fool: how does your mistress?
FOOL:
She's e'en setting on water to scald such chickens
- as you are. Would we could see you at Corinth!
APEMANTUS:
Good! gramercy.
-
[Enter Page]
FOOL:
Look you, here comes my mistress' page.
Page:
[To the Fool]
- Why, how now, captain! what do you
- in this wise company? How dost thou, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Would I had a rod in my mouth, that I might answer
- thee profitably.
Page:
Prithee, Apemantus, read me the superscription of
- these letters: I know not which is which.
APEMANTUS:
Canst not read?
APEMANTUS:
There will little learning die then, that day thou
- art hanged. This is to Lord Timon; this to
- Alcibiades. Go; thou wast born a bastard, and thou't
- die a bawd.
Page:
Thou wast whelped a dog, and thou shalt famish a
- dog's death. Answer not; I am gone.
-
[Exit]
APEMANTUS:
E'en so thou outrunnest grace. Fool, I will go with
- you to Lord Timon's.
FOOL:
Will you leave me there?
APEMANTUS:
If Timon stay at home. You three serve three usurers?
All Servants:
Ay; would they served us!
APEMANTUS:
So would I,--as good a trick as ever hangman served thief.
FOOL:
Are you three usurers' men?
FOOL:
I think no usurer but has a fool to his servant: my
- mistress is one, and I am her fool. When men come
- to borrow of your masters, they approach sadly, and
- go away merry; but they enter my mistress' house
- merrily, and go away sadly: the reason of this?
- Varro's Servant I could render one.
APEMANTUS:
Do it then, that we may account thee a whoremaster
- and a knave; which not-withstanding, thou shalt be
- no less esteemed.
- Varro's Servant What is a whoremaster, fool?
FOOL:
A fool in good clothes, and something like thee.
- 'Tis a spirit: sometime't appears like a lord;
- sometime like a lawyer; sometime like a philosopher,
- with two stones moe than's artificial one: he is
- very often like a knight; and, generally, in all
- shapes that man goes up and down in from fourscore
- to thirteen, this spirit walks in.
- Varro's Servant Thou art not altogether a fool.
FOOL:
Nor thou altogether a wise man: as much foolery as
- I have, so much wit thou lackest.
APEMANTUS:
That answer might have become Apemantus.
APEMANTUS:
Come with me, fool, come.
FLAVIUS:
Pray you, walk near: I'll speak with you anon.
-
[Exeunt Servants]
TIMON:
You make me marvel: wherefore ere this time
- Had you not fully laid my state before me,
- That I might so have rated my expense,
- As I had leave of means?
FLAVIUS:
You would not hear me,
- At many leisures I proposed.
TIMON:
Go to:
- Perchance some single vantages you took.
- When my indispos ition put you back:
- And that unaptness made your minister,
- Thus to excuse yourself.
FLAVIUS:
O my good lord,
- At many times I brought in my accounts,
- Laid them before you; you would throw them off,
- And say, you found them in mine honesty.
- When, for some trifling present, you have bid me
- Return so much, I have shook my head and wept;
- Yea, 'gainst the authority of manners, pray'd you
- To hold your hand more close: I did endure
- Not seldom, nor no slight cheques, when I have
- Prompted you in the ebb of your estate
- And your great flow of debts. My loved lord,
- Though you hear now, too late--yet now's a time--
- The greatest of your having lacks a half
- To pay your present debts.
TIMON:
Let all my land be sold.
FLAVIUS:
'Tis all engaged, some forfeited and gone;
- And what remains will hardly stop the mouth
- Of present dues: the future comes apace:
- What shall defend the interim? and at length
- How goes our reckoning?
FLAVIUS:
O my good lord, the world is but a word:
- Were it all yours to give it in a breath,
- How quickly were it gone!
FLAVIUS:
If you suspect my husbandry or falsehood,
- Call me before the exactest auditors
- And set me on the proof. So the gods bless me,
- When all our offices have been oppress'd
- With riotous feeders, when our vaults have wept
- With drunken spilth of wine, when every room
- Hath blazed with lights and bray'd with minstrelsy,
- I have retired me to a wasteful cock,
- And set mine eyes at flow.
FLAVIUS:
Heavens, have I said, the bounty of this lord!
- How many prodigal bits have slaves and peasants
- This night englutted! Who is not Timon's?
- What heart, head, sword, force, means, but is
- Lord Timon's?
- Great Timon, noble, worthy, royal Timon!
- Ah, when the means are gone that buy this praise,
- The breath is gone whereof this praise is made:
- Feast-won, fast-lost; one cloud of winter showers,
- These flies are couch'd.
TIMON:
Come, sermon me no further:
- No villanous bounty yet hath pass'd my heart;
- Unwisely, not ignobly, have I given.
- Why dost thou weep? Canst thou the conscience lack,
- To think I shall lack friends? Secure thy heart;
- If I would broach the vessels of my love,
- And try the argument of hearts by borrowing,
- Men and men's fortunes could I frankly use
- As I can bid thee speak.
FLAVIUS:
Assurance bless your thoughts!
Servants:
My lord? my lord?
TIMON:
I will dispatch you severally; you to Lord Lucius;
- to Lord Lucullus you: I hunted with his honour
- to-day: you, to Sempronius: commend me to their
- loves, and, I am proud, say, that my occasions have
- found time to use 'em toward a supply of money: let
- the request be fifty talents.
FLAMINIUS:
As you have said, my lord.
FLAVIUS:
[Aside]
- Lord Lucius and Lucullus? hum!
TIMON:
Go you, sir, to the senators--
- Of whom, even to the state's best health, I have
- Deserved this hearing--bid 'em send o' the instant
- A thousand talents to me.
FLAVIUS:
I have been bold--
- For that I knew it the most general way--
- To them to use your signet and your name;
- But they do shake their heads, and I am here
- No richer in return.
TIMON:
Is't true? can't be?
FLAVIUS:
They answer, in a joint and corporate voice,
- That now they are at fall, want treasure, cannot
- Do what they would; are sorry--you are honourable,--
- But yet they could have wish'd--they know not--
- Something hath been amiss--a noble nature
- May catch a wrench--would all were well--'tis pity;--
- And so, intending other serious matters,
- After distasteful looks and these hard fractions,
- With certain half-caps and cold-moving nods
- They froze me into silence.
TIMON:
You gods, reward them!
- Prithee, man, look cheerly. These old fellows
- Have their ingratitude in them hereditary:
- Their blood is caked, 'tis cold, it seldom flows;
- 'Tis lack of kindly warmth they are not kind;
- And nature, as it grows again toward earth,
- Is fashion'd for the journey, dull and heavy.
-
[To a Servant]
- Go to Ventidius.
-
[To FLAVIUS]
- Prithee, be not sad,
- Thou art true and honest; ingeniously I speak.
- No blame belongs to thee.
-
[To Servant]
- Ventidius lately
- Buried his father; by whose death he's stepp'd
- Into a great estate: when he was poor,
- Imprison'd and in scarcity of friends,
- I clear'd him with five talents: greet him from me;
- Bid him suppose some good necessity
- Touches his friend, which craves to be remember'd
- With those five talents.
-
[Exit Servant]
-
[To FLAVIUS]
- That had, give't these fellows
- To whom 'tis instant due. Ne'er speak, or think,
- That Timon's fortunes 'mong his friends can sink.
FLAVIUS:
I would I could not think it: that thought is
- bounty's foe;
- Being free itself, it thinks all others so.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE I.
A room in Lucullus' house.
[FLAMINIUS waiting. Enter a Servant to him ]
Servant:
I have told my lord of you; he is coming down to you.
FLAMINIUS:
I thank you, sir.
-
[Enter LUCULLUS]
LUCULLUS:
[Aside]
- One of Lord Timon's men? a gift, I
- warrant. Why, this hits right; I dreamt of a silver
- basin and ewer to-night. Flaminius, honest
- Flaminius; you are very respectively welcome, sir.
- Fill me some wine.
-
[Exit Servants]
- And how does that honourable, complete, free-hearted
- gentleman of Athens, thy very bountiful good lord
- and master?
FLAMINIUS:
His health is well sir.
LUCULLUS:
I am right glad that his health is well, sir: and
- what hast thou there under thy cloak, pretty Flaminius?
FLAMINIUS:
'Faith, nothing but an empty box, sir; which, in my
- lord's behalf, I come to entreat your honour to
- supply; who, having great and instant occasion to
- use fifty talents, hath sent to your lordship to
- furnish him, nothing doubting your present
- assistance therein.
Servant:
Please your lordship, here is the wine.
LUCULLUS:
Flaminius, I have noted thee always wise. Here's to thee.
FLAMINIUS:
Your lordship speaks your pleasure.
LUCULLUS:
I have observed thee always for a towardly prompt
- spirit--give thee thy due--and one that knows what
- belongs to reason; and canst use the time well, if
- the time use thee well: good parts in thee.
-
[To Servant]
- Get you gone, sirrah.
-
[Exit Servant]
- Draw nearer, honest Flaminius. Thy lord's a
- bountiful gentleman: but thou art wise; and thou
- knowest well enough, although thou comest to me,
- that this is no time to lend money, especially upon
- bare friendship, without security. Here's three
- solidares for thee: good boy, wink at me, and say
- thou sawest me not. Fare thee well.
LUCULLUS:
Ha! now I see thou art a fool, and fit for thy master.
-
[Exit]
FLAMINIUS:
May these add to the number that may scald thee!
- Let moulten coin be thy damnation,
- Thou disease of a friend, and not himself!
- Has friendship such a faint and milky heart,
- It turns in less than two nights? O you gods,
- I feel master's passion! this slave,
- Unto his honour, has my lord's meat in him:
- Why should it thrive and turn to nutriment,
- When he is turn'd to poison?
- O, may diseases only work upon't!
- And, when he's sick to death, let not that part of nature
- Which my lord paid for, be of any power
- To expel sickness, but prolong his hour!
-
[Exit]
ACT III, SCENE II.
A public place.
[Enter LUCILIUS, with three Strangers]
LUCILIUS:
Who, the Lord Timon? he is my very good friend, and
- an honourable gentleman.
First Stranger:
We know him for no less, though we are but strangers
- to him. But I can tell you one thing, my lord, and
- which I hear from common rumours: now Lord Timon's
- happy hours are done and past, and his estate
- shrinks from him.
LUCILIUS:
Fie, no, do not believe it; he cannot want for money.
Second Stranger:
But believe you this, my lord, that, not long ago,
- one of his men was with the Lord Lucullus to borrow
- so many talents, nay, urged extremely for't and
- showed what necessity belonged to't, and yet was denied.
Second Stranger:
I tell you, denied, my lord.
LUCILIUS:
What a strange case was that! now, before the gods,
- I am ashamed on't. Denied that honourable man!
- there was very little honour showed in't. For my own
- part, I must needs confess, I have received some
- small kindnesses from him, as money, plate, jewels
- and such-like trifles, nothing comparing to his;
- yet, had he mistook him and sent to me, I should
- ne'er have denied his occasion so many talents.
-
[Enter SERVILIUS]
SERVILIUS:
See, by good hap, yonder's my lord;
- I have sweat to see his honour. My honoured lord,--
-
[To LUCIUS]
LUCILIUS:
Servilius! you are kindly met, sir. Fare thee well:
- commend me to thy honourable virtuous lord, my very
- exquisite friend.
SERVILIUS:
May it please your honour, my lord hath sent--
LUCILIUS:
Ha! what has he sent? I am so much endeared to
- that lord; he's ever sending: how shall I thank
- him, thinkest thou? And what has he sent now?
SERVILIUS:
Has only sent his present occasion now, my lord;
- requesting your lordship to supply his instant use
- with so many talents.
LUCILIUS:
I know his lordship is but merry with me;
- He cannot want fifty five hundred talents.
SERVILIUS:
But in the mean time he wants less, my lord.
- If his occasion were not virtuous,
- I should not urge it half so faithfully.
LUCILIUS:
Dost thou speak seriously, Servilius?
SERVILIUS:
Upon my soul,'tis true, sir.
LUCILIUS:
What a wicked beast was I to disfurnish myself
- against such a good time, when I might ha' shown
- myself honourable! how unluckily it happened, that I
- should purchase the day before for a little part,
- and undo a great deal of honoured! Servilius, now,
- before the gods, I am not able to do,--the more
- beast, I say:--I was sending to use Lord Timon
- myself, these gentlemen can witness! but I would
- not, for the wealth of Athens, I had done't now.
- Commend me bountifully to his good lordship; and I
- hope his honour will conceive the fairest of me,
- because I have no power to be kind: and tell him
- this from me, I count it one of my greatest
- afflictions, say, that I cannot pleasure such an
- honourable gentleman. Good Servilius, will you
- befriend me so far, as to use mine own words to him?
SERVILIUS:
Yes, sir, I shall.
LUCILIUS:
I'll look you out a good turn, Servilius.
-
[Exit SERVILIUS]
- True as you said, Timon is shrunk indeed;
- And he that's once denied will hardly speed.
-
[Exit]
First Stranger:
Do you observe this, Hostilius?
Second Stranger:
Ay, too well.
First Stranger:
Why, this is the world's soul; and just of the
- same piece
- Is every flatterer's spirit. Who can call him
- His friend that dips in the same dish? for, in
- My knowing, Timon has been this lord's father,
- And kept his credit with his purse,
- Supported his estate; nay, Timon's money
- Has paid his men their wages: he ne'er drinks,
- But Timon's silver treads upon his lip;
- And yet--O, see the monstrousness of man
- When he looks out in an ungrateful shape!--
- He does deny him, in respect of his,
- What charitable men afford to beggars.
Third Stranger:
Religion groans at it.
First Stranger:
For mine own part,
- I never tasted Timon in my life,
- Nor came any of his bounties over me,
- To mark me for his friend; yet, I protest,
- For his right noble mind, illustrious virtue
- And honourable carriage,
- Had his necessity made use of me,
- I would have put my wealth into donation,
- And the best half should have return'd to him,
- So much I love his heart: but, I perceive,
- Men must learn now with pity to dispense;
- For policy sits above conscience.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE III.
A room in Sempronius' house.
[Enter SEMPRONIUS, and a Servant of TIMON's]
SEMPRONIUS:
Must he needs trouble me in 't,--hum!--'bove
- all others?
- He might have tried Lord Lucius or Lucullus;
- And now Ventidius is wealthy too,
- Whom he redeem'd from prison: all these
- Owe their estates unto him.
Servant:
My lord,
- They have all been touch'd and found base metal, for
- They have au denied him.
SEMPRONIUS:
How! have they denied him?
- Has Ventidius and Lucullus denied him?
- And does he send to me? Three? hum!
- It shows but little love or judgment in him:
- Must I be his last refuge! His friends, like
- physicians,
- Thrive, give him over: must I take the cure upon me?
- Has much disgraced me in't; I'm angry at him,
- That might have known my place: I see no sense for't,
- But his occasion might have woo'd me first;
- For, in my conscience, I was the first man
- That e'er received gift from him:
- And does he think so backwardly of me now,
- That I'll requite its last? No:
- So it may prove an argument of laughter
- To the rest, and 'mongst lords I be thought a fool.
- I'ld rather than the worth of thrice the sum,
- Had sent to me first, but for my mind's sake;
- I'd such a courage to do him good. But now return,
- And with their faint reply this answer join;
- Who bates mine honour shall not know my coin.
-
[Exit]
Servant:
Excellent! Your lordship's a goodly villain. The
- devil knew not what he did when he made man
- politic; he crossed himself by 't: and I cannot
- think but, in the end, the villainies of man will
- set him clear. How fairly this lord strives to
- appear foul! takes virtuous copies to be wicked,
- like those that under hot ardent zeal would set
- whole realms on fire: Of such a nature is his
- politic love.
- This was my lord's best hope; now all are fled,
- Save only the gods: now his friends are dead,
- Doors, that were ne'er acquainted with their wards
- Many a bounteous year must be employ'd
- Now to guard sure their master.
- And this is all a liberal course allows;
- Who cannot keep his wealth must keep his house.
-
[Exit]
ACT III, SCENE IV.
A hall in Timon's house.
[Enter two Servants of Varro, and the Servant of LUCIUS,
meeting TITUS, HORTENSIUS, and other Servants of TIMON's creditors,
waiting his coming out]
Varro's First Servant:
Well met; good morrow, Titus and Hortensius.
TITUS:
The like to you kind Varro.
HORTENSIUS:
Lucius!
- What, do we meet together?
- Lucilius' Servant Ay, and I think
- One business does command us all; for mine Is money.
TITUS:
So is theirs and ours.
-
[Enter PHILOTUS]
Lucilius' Servant:
And Sir Philotus too!
PHILOTUS:
Good day at once.
Lucilius' Servant :
Welcome, good brother.
- What do you think the hour?
PHILOTUS:
Labouring for nine.
Lucilius' Servant :
So much?
PHILOTUS:
Is not my lord seen yet?
Lucilius' Servant :
Not yet.
PHILOTUS:
I wonder on't; he was wont to shine at seven.
- Lucilius' Servant Ay, but the days are wax'd shorter with him:
- You must consider that a prodigal course
- Is like the sun's; but not, like his, recoverable.
- I fear 'tis deepest winter in Lord Timon's purse;
- That is one may reach deep enough, and yet
- Find little.
PHILOTUS:
I am of your fear for that.
TITUS:
I'll show you how to observe a strange event.
- Your lord sends now for money.
HORTENSIUS:
Most true, he does.
TITUS:
And he wears jewels now of Timon's gift,
- For which I wait for money.
HORTENSIUS:
It is against my heart.
Lucilius' Servant :
Mark, how strange it shows,
- Timon in this should pay more than he owes:
- And e'en as if your lord should wear rich jewels,
- And send for money for 'em.
HORTENSIUS:
I'm weary of this charge, the gods can witness:
- I know my lord hath spent of Timon's wealth,
- And now ingratitude makes it worse than stealth.
Varro's First Servant:
Yes, mine's three thousand crowns: what's yours?
Lucilius' Servant :
Five thousand mine.
Varro's First Servant:
'Tis much deep: and it should seem by the sun,
- Your master's confidence was above mine;
- Else, surely, his had equall'd.
-
[Enter FLAMINIUS.]
TITUS:
One of Lord Timon's men.
Lucilius' Servant :
Flaminius! Sir, a word: pray, is my lord ready to
- come forth?
FLAMINIUS:
No, indeed, he is not.
TITUS:
We attend his lordship; pray, signify so much.
Lucilius' Servant :
Ha! is not that his steward muffled so?
- He goes away in a cloud: call him, call him.
Varro's Second Servant:
By your leave, sir,--
FLAVIUS:
What do ye ask of me, my friend?
TITUS:
We wait for certain money here, sir.
FLAVIUS:
Ay,
- If money were as certain as your waiting,
- 'Twere sure enough.
- Why then preferr'd you not your sums and bills,
- When your false masters eat of my lord's meat?
- Then they could smile and fawn upon his debts
- And take down the interest into their
- gluttonous maws.
- You do yourselves but wrong to stir me up;
- Let me pass quietly:
- Believe 't, my lord and I have made an end;
- I have no more to reckon, he to spend.
Lucilius' Servant :
Ay, but this answer will not serve.
FLAVIUS:
If 'twill not serve,'tis not so base as you;
- For you serve knaves.
-
[Exit]
Varro's First Servant:
How! what does his cashiered worship mutter?
Varro's Second Servant:
No matter what; he's poor, and that's revenge
- enough. Who can speak broader than he that has no
- house to put his head in? such may rail against
- great buildings.
-
[Enter SERVILIUS]
TITUS:
O, here's Servilius; now we shall know some answer.
SERVILIUS:
If I might beseech you, gentlemen, to repair some
- other hour, I should derive much from't; for,
- take't of my soul, my lord leans wondrously to
- discontent: his comfortable temper has forsook him;
- he's much out of health, and keeps his chamber.
- Lucilius' Servant: Many do keep their chambers are not sick:
- And, if it be so far beyond his health,
- Methinks he should the sooner pay his debts,
- And make a clear way to the gods.
TITUS:
We cannot take this for answer, sir.
TIMON:
What, are my doors opposed against my passage?
- Have I been ever free, and must my house
- Be my retentive enemy, my gaol?
- The place which I have feasted, does it now,
- Like all mankind, show me an iron heart?
Lucilius' Servant :
Put in now, Titus.
TITUS:
My lord, here is my bill.
- Lucilius' Servant Here's mine.
HORTENSIUS:
And mine, my lord.
- Both
- Varro's Servants And ours, my lord.
TIMON:
Knock me down with 'em: cleave me to the girdle.
Lucilius' Servant :
Alas, my lord,-
TIMON:
Cut my heart in sums.
TITUS:
Mine, fifty talents.
TIMON:
Tell out my blood.
Lucilius' Servant :
Five thousand crowns, my lord.
TIMON:
Five thousand drops pays that.
- What yours?--and yours?
Varro's First Servant:
My lord,--
Varro's Second Servant:
My lord,--
TIMON:
Tear me, take me, and the gods fall upon you!
-
[Exit]
TIMON:
They have e'en put my breath from me, the slaves.
- Creditors? devils!
TIMON:
What if it should be so?
TIMON:
I'll have it so. My steward!
TIMON:
So fitly? Go, bid all my friends again,
- Lucius, Lucullus, and Sempronius:
- All, sirrah, all:
- I'll once more feast the rascals.
FLAVIUS:
O my lord,
- You only speak from your distracted soul;
- There is not so much left, to furnish out
- A moderate table.
TIMON:
Be't not in thy care; go,
- I charge thee, invite them all: let in the tide
- Of knaves once more; my cook and I'll provide.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT III, SCENE V.
The senate-house
. The Senate sitting.
First Senator:
My lord, you have my voice to it; the fault's
- Bloody; 'tis necessary he should die:
- Nothing emboldens sin so much as mercy.
ALCIBIADES:
Honour, health, and compassion to the senate!
First Senator:
Now, captain?
ALCIBIADES:
I am an humble suitor to your virtues;
- For pity is the virtue of the law,
- And none but tyrants use it cruelly.
- It pleases time and fortune to lie heavy
- Upon a friend of mine, who, in hot blood,
- Hath stepp'd into the law, which is past depth
- To those that, without heed, do plunge into 't.
- He is a man, setting his fate aside,
- Of comely virtues:
- Nor did he soil the fact with cowardice--
- An honour in him which buys out his fault--
- But with a noble fury and fair spirit,
- Seeing his reputation touch'd to death,
- He did oppose his foe:
- And with such sober and unnoted passion
- He did behave his anger, ere 'twas spent,
- As if he had but proved an argument.
First Senator:
You undergo too strict a paradox,
- Striving to make an ugly deed look fair:
- Your words have took such pains as if they labour'd
- To bring manslaughter into form and set quarrelling
- Upon the head of valour; which indeed
- Is valour misbegot and came into the world
- When sects and factions were newly born:
- He's truly valiant that can wisely suffer
- The worst that man can breathe, and make his wrongs
- His outsides, to wear them like his raiment,
- carelessly,
- And ne'er prefer his injuries to his heart,
- To bring it into danger.
- If wrongs be evils and enforce us kill,
- What folly 'tis to hazard life for ill!
First Senator:
You cannot make gross sins look clear:
- To revenge is no valour, but to bear.
ALCIBIADES:
My lords, then, under favour, pardon me,
- If I speak like a captain.
- Why do fond men expose themselves to battle,
- And not endure all threats? sleep upon't,
- And let the foes quietly cut their throats,
- Without repugnancy? If there be
- Such valour in the bearing, what make we
- Abroad? why then, women are more valiant
- That stay at home, if bearing carry it,
- And the ass more captain than the lion, the felon
- Loaden with irons wiser than the judge,
- If wisdom be in suffering. O my lords,
- As you are great, be pitifully good:
- Who cannot condemn rashness in cold blood?
- To kill, I grant, is sin's extremest gust;
- But, in defence, by mercy, 'tis most just.
- To be in anger is impiety;
- But who is man that is not angry?
- Weigh but the crime with this.
Second Senator:
You breathe in vain.
ALCIBIADES:
In vain! his service done
- At Lacedaemon and Byzantium
- Were a sufficient briber for his life.
First Senator:
What's that?
ALCIBIADES:
I say, my lords, he has done fair service,
- And slain in fight many of your enemies:
- How full of valour did he bear himself
- In the last conflict, and made plenteous wounds!
Second Senator:
He has made too much plenty with 'em;
- He's a sworn rioter: he has a sin that often
- Drowns him, and takes his valour prisoner:
- If there were no foes, that were enough
- To overcome him: in that beastly fury
- He has been known to commit outrages,
- And cherish factions: 'tis inferr'd to us,
- His days are foul and his drink dangerous.
ALCIBIADES:
Hard fate! he might have died in war.
- My lords, if not for any parts in him--
- Though his right arm might purchase his own time
- And be in debt to none--yet, more to move you,
- Take my deserts to his, and join 'em both:
- And, for I know your reverend ages love
- Security, I'll pawn my victories, all
- My honours to you, upon his good returns.
- If by this crime he owes the law his life,
- Why, let the war receive 't in valiant gore
- For law is strict, and war is nothing more.
First Senator:
We are for law: he dies; urge it no more,
- On height of our displeasure: friend or brother,
- He forfeits his own blood that spills another.
ALCIBIADES:
Must it be so? it must not be. My lords,
- I do beseech you, know me.
ALCIBIADES:
Call me to your remembrances.
ALCIBIADES:
I cannot think but your age has forgot me;
- It could not else be, I should prove so base,
- To sue, and be denied such common grace:
- My wounds ache at you.
First Senator:
Do you dare our anger?
- 'Tis in few words, but spacious in effect;
- We banish thee for ever.
ALCIBIADES:
Banish me!
- Banish your dotage; banish usury,
- That makes the senate ugly.
First Senator:
If, after two days' shine, Athens contain thee,
- Attend our weightier judgment. And, not to swell
- our spirit,
- He shall be executed presently.
-
[Exeunt Senators]
ALCIBIADES:
Now the gods keep you old enough; that you may live
- Only in bone, that none may look on you!
- I'm worse than mad: I have kept back their foes,
- While they have told their money and let out
- Their coin upon large interest, I myself
- Rich only in large hurts. All those for this?
- Is this the balsam that the usuring senate
- Pours into captains' wounds? Banishment!
- It comes not ill; I hate not to be banish'd;
- It is a cause worthy my spleen and fury,
- That I may strike at Athens. I'll cheer up
- My discontented troops, and lay for hearts.
- 'Tis honour with most lands to be at odds;
- Soldiers should brook as little wrongs as gods.
-
[Exit]
ACT III, SCENE VI.
A banqueting-room in Timon's house.
[Music. Tables set out: Servants attending.
Enter divers Lords, Senators and others, at several doors]
First Lord:
The good time of day to you, sir.
Second Lord:
I also wish it to you. I think this honourable lord
- did but try us this other day.
First Lord:
Upon that were my thoughts tiring, when we
- encountered: I hope it is not so low with him as
- he made it seem in the trial of his several friends.
Second Lord:
It should not be, by the persuasion of his new feasting.
First Lord:
I should think so: he hath sent me an earnest
- inviting, which many my near occasions did urge me
- to put off; but he hath conjured me beyond them, and
- I must needs appear.
Second Lord:
In like manner was I in debt to my importunate
- business, but he would not hear my excuse. I am
- sorry, when he sent to borrow of me, that my
- provision was out.
First Lord:
I am sick of that grief too, as I understand how all
- things go.
Second Lord:
Every man here's so. What would he have borrowed of
- you?
First Lord:
A thousand pieces.
Second Lord:
A thousand pieces!
TIMON:
With all my heart, gentlemen both; and how fare you?
First Lord:
Ever at the best, hearing well of your lordship.
Second Lord:
The swallow follows not summer more willing than we
- your lordship.
TIMON:
[Aside]
- Nor more willingly leaves winter; such
- summer-birds are men. Gentlemen, our dinner will not
- recompense this long stay: feast your ears with the
- music awhile, if they will fare so harshly o' the
- trumpet's sound; we shall to 't presently.
First Lord:
I hope it remains not unkindly with your lordship
- that I returned you an empty messenger.
TIMON:
O, sir, let it not trouble you.
Second Lord:
My noble lord,--
TIMON:
Ah, my good friend, what cheer?
Second Lord:
My most honourable lord, I am e'en sick of shame,
- that, when your lordship this other day sent to me,
- I was so unfortunate a beggar.
TIMON:
Think not on 't, sir.
Second Lord:
If you had sent but two hours before,--
TIMON:
Let it not cumber your better remembrance.
-
[The banquet brought in]
- Come, bring in all together.
Second Lord:
All covered dishes!
First Lord:
Royal cheer, I warrant you.
Third Lord:
Doubt not that, if money and the season can yield
- it.
First Lord:
How do you? What's the news?
Third Lord:
Alcibiades is banished: hear you of it?
First Lord Second Lord:
Alcibiades banished!
Third Lord:
'Tis so, be sure of it.
Second Lord:
I pray you, upon what?
TIMON:
My worthy friends, will you draw near?
Third Lord:
I'll tell you more anon. Here's a noble feast toward.
Second Lord:
This is the old man still.
Third Lord:
Will 't hold? will 't hold?
Second Lord:
It does: but time will--and so--
Third Lord:
I do conceive.
Some Speak:
What does his lordship mean?
TIMON:
May you a better feast never behold,
- You knot of mouth-friends I smoke and lukewarm water
- Is your perfection. This is Timon's last;
- Who, stuck and spangled with your flatteries,
- Washes it off, and sprinkles in your faces
- Your reeking villany.
-
[Throwing the water in their faces]
- Live loathed and long,
- Most smiling, smooth, detested parasites,
- Courteous destroyers, affable wolves, meek bears,
- You fools of fortune, trencher-friends, time's flies,
- Cap and knee slaves, vapours, and minute-jacks!
- Of man and beast the infinite malady
- Crust you quite o'er! What, dost thou go?
- Soft! take thy physic first--thou too--and thou;--
- Stay, I will lend thee money, borrow none.
-
[Throws the dishes at them, and drives them out]
- What, all in motion? Henceforth be no feast,
- Whereat a villain's not a welcome guest.
- Burn, house! sink, Athens! henceforth hated be
- Of Timon man and all humanity!
-
[Exit]
-
[Re-enter the Lords, Senators, & c]
First Lord:
How now, my lords!
Second Lord:
Know you the quality of Lord Timon's fury?
Third Lord:
Push! did you see my cap?
Fourth Lord:
I have lost my gown.
First Lord:
He's but a mad lord, and nought but humour sways him.
- He gave me a jewel th' other day, and now he has
- beat it out of my hat: did you see my jewel?
Third Lord:
Did you see my cap?
Fourth Lord:
Here lies my gown.
First Lord:
Let's make no stay.
Second Lord:
Lord Timon's mad.
Third Lord:
I feel 't upon my bones.
Fourth Lord:
One day he gives us diamonds, next day stones.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT IV, SCENE I.
Without the walls of Athens.
[Enter TIMON]
TIMON:
Let me look back upon thee. O thou wall,
- That girdlest in those wolves, dive in the earth,
- And fence not Athens! Matrons, turn incontinent!
- Obedience fail in children! slaves and fools,
- Pluck the grave wrinkled senate from the bench,
- And minister in their steads! to general filths
- Convert o' the instant, green virginity,
- Do 't in your parents' eyes! bankrupts, hold fast;
- Rather than render back, out with your knives,
- And cut your trusters' throats! bound servants, steal!
- Large-handed robbers your grave masters are,
- And pill by law. Maid, to thy master's bed;
- Thy mistress is o' the brothel! Son of sixteen,
- pluck the lined crutch from thy old limping sire,
- With it beat out his brains! Piety, and fear,
- Religion to the gods, peace, justice, truth,
- Domestic awe, night-rest, and neighbourhood,
- Instruction, manners, mysteries, and trades,
- Degrees, observances, customs, and laws,
- Decline to your confounding contraries,
- And let confusion live! Plagues, incident to men,
- Your potent and infectious fevers heap
- On Athens, ripe for stroke! Thou cold sciatica,
- Cripple our senators, that their limbs may halt
- As lamely as their manners. Lust and liberty
- Creep in the minds and marrows of our youth,
- That 'gainst the stream of virtue they may strive,
- And drown themselves in riot! Itches, blains,
- Sow all the Athenian bosoms; and their crop
- Be general leprosy! Breath infect breath,
- at their society, as their friendship, may
- merely poison! Nothing I'll bear from thee,
- But nakedness, thou detestable town!
- Take thou that too, with multiplying bans!
- Timon will to the woods; where he shall find
- The unkindest beast more kinder than mankind.
- The gods confound--hear me, you good gods all--
- The Athenians both within and out that wall!
- And grant, as Timon grows, his hate may grow
- To the whole race of mankind, high and low! Amen.
-
[Exit]
ACT IV, SCENE II.
Athens. A room in Timon's house.
[Enter FLAVIUS, with two or three Servants]
First Servant:
Hear you, master steward, where's our master?
- Are we undone? cast off? nothing remaining?
FLAVIUS:
Alack, my fellows, what should I say to you?
- Let me be recorded by the righteous gods,
- I am as poor as you.
First Servant:
Such a house broke!
- So noble a master fall'n! All gone! and not
- One friend to take his fortune by the arm,
- And go along with him!
Second Servant:
As we do turn our backs
- From our companion thrown into his grave,
- So his familiars to his buried fortunes
- Slink all away, leave their false vows with him,
- Like empty purses pick'd; and his poor self,
- A dedicated beggar to the air,
- With his disease of all-shunn'd poverty,
- Walks, like contempt, alone. More of our fellows.
-
[Enter other Servants]
FLAVIUS:
All broken implements of a ruin'd house.
Third Servant:
Yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery;
- That see I by our faces; we are fellows still,
- Serving alike in sorrow: leak'd is our bark,
- And we, poor mates, stand on the dying deck,
- Hearing the surges threat: we must all part
- Into this sea of air.
ACT IV, SCENE III.
Woods and cave, near the seashore.
[Enter TIMON, from the cave]
TIMON:
O blessed breeding sun, draw from the earth
- Rotten humidity; below thy sister's orb
- Infect the air! Twinn'd brothers of one womb,
- Whose procreation, residence, and birth,
- Scarce is dividant, touch them with several fortunes;
- The greater scorns the lesser: not nature,
- To whom all sores lay siege, can bear great fortune,
- But by contempt of nature.
- Raise me this beggar, and deny 't that lord;
- The senator shall bear contempt hereditary,
- The beggar native honour.
- It is the pasture lards the rother's sides,
- The want that makes him lean. Who dares, who dares,
- In purity of manhood stand upright,
- And say 'This man's a flatterer?' if one be,
- So are they all; for every grise of fortune
- Is smooth'd by that below: the learned pate
- Ducks to the golden fool: all is oblique;
- There's nothing level in our cursed natures,
- But direct villany. Therefore, be abhorr'd
- All feasts, societies, and throngs of men!
- His semblable, yea, himself, Timon disdains:
- Destruction fang mankind! Earth, yield me roots!
[Digging]
- Who seeks for better of thee, sauce his palate
- With thy most operant poison! What is here?
- Gold? yellow, glittering, precious gold? No, gods,
- I am no idle votarist: roots, you clear heavens!
- Thus much of this will make black white, foul fair,
- Wrong right, base noble, old young, coward valiant.
- Ha, you gods! why this? what this, you gods? Why, this
- Will lug your priests and servants from your sides,
- Pluck stout men's pillows from below their heads:
- This yellow slave
- Will knit and break religions, bless the accursed,
- Make the hoar leprosy adored, place thieves
- And give them title, knee and approbation
- With senators on the bench: this is it
- That makes the wappen'd widow wed again;
- She, whom the spital-house and ulcerous sores
- Would cast the gorge at, this embalms and spices
- To the April day again. Come, damned earth,
- Thou common whore of mankind, that put'st odds
- Among the route of nations, I will make thee
- Do thy right nature.
[March afar off]
- Ha! a drum ? Thou'rt quick,
- But yet I'll bury thee: thou'lt go, strong thief,
- When gouty keepers of thee cannot stand.
- Nay, stay thou out for earnest.
[Keeping some gold]
[Enter ALCIBIADES, with drum and fife,
in warlike manner; PHRYNIA and TIMANDRA]
ALCIBIADES:
What art thou there? speak.
TIMON:
A beast, as thou art. The canker gnaw thy heart,
- For showing me again the eyes of man!
ALCIBIADES:
What is thy name? Is man so hateful to thee,
- That art thyself a man?
TIMON:
I am Misanthropos, and hate mankind.
- For thy part, I do wish thou wert a dog,
- That I might love thee something.
ALCIBIADES:
I know thee well;
- But in thy fortunes am unlearn'd and strange.
TIMON:
I know thee too; and more than that I know thee,
- I not desire to know. Follow thy drum;
- With man's blood paint the ground, gules, gules:
- Religious canons, civil laws are cruel;
- Then what should war be? This fell whore of thine
- Hath in her more destruction than thy sword,
- For all her cherubim look.
PHRYNIA:
Thy lips rot off!
TIMON:
I will not kiss thee; then the rot returns
- To thine own lips again.
ALCIBIADES:
How came the noble Timon to this change?
TIMON:
As the moon does, by wanting light to give:
- But then renew I could not, like the moon;
- There were no suns to borrow of.
ALCIBIADES:
Noble Timon,
- What friendship may I do thee?
TIMON:
None, but to
- Maintain my opinion.
ALCIBIADES:
What is it, Timon?
TIMON:
Promise me friendship, but perform none: if thou
- wilt not promise, the gods plague thee, for thou art
- a man! if thou dost perform, confound thee, for
- thou art a man!
ALCIBIADES:
I have heard in some sort of thy miseries.
TIMON:
Thou saw'st them, when I had prosperity.
ALCIBIADES:
I see them now; then was a blessed time.
TIMON:
As thine is now, held with a brace of harlots.
TIMANDRA:
Is this the Athenian minion, whom the world
- Voiced so regardfully?
TIMON:
Art thou Timandra?
TIMON:
Be a whore still: they love thee not that use thee;
- Give them diseases, leaving with thee their lust.
- Make use of thy salt hours: season the slaves
- For tubs and baths; bring down rose-cheeked youth
- To the tub-fast and the diet.
TIMANDRA:
Hang thee, monster!
ALCIBIADES:
Pardon him, sweet Timandra; for his wits
- Are drown'd and lost in his calamities.
- I have but little gold of late, brave Timon,
- The want whereof doth daily make revolt
- In my penurious band: I have heard, and grieved,
- How cursed Athens, mindless of thy worth,
- Forgetting thy great deeds, when neighbour states,
- But for thy sword and fortune, trod upon them,--
TIMON:
I prithee, beat thy drum, and get thee gone.
ALCIBIADES:
I am thy friend, and pity thee, dear Timon.
TIMON:
How dost thou pity him whom thou dost trouble?
- I had rather be alone.
ALCIBIADES:
Why, fare thee well:
- Here is some gold for thee.
TIMON:
Keep it, I cannot eat it.
ALCIBIADES:
When I have laid proud Athens on a heap,--
TIMON:
Warr'st thou 'gainst Athens?
ALCIBIADES:
Ay, Timon, and have cause.
TIMON:
The gods confound them all in thy conquest;
- And thee after, when thou hast conquer'd!
ALCIBIADES:
Why me, Timon?
TIMON:
That, by killing of villains,
- Thou wast born to conquer my country.
- Put up thy gold: go on,--here's gold,--go on;
- Be as a planetary plague, when Jove
- Will o'er some high-viced city hang his poison
- In the sick air: let not thy sword skip one:
- Pity not honour'd age for his white beard;
- He is an usurer: strike me the counterfeit matron;
- It is her habit only that is honest,
- Herself's a bawd: let not the virgin's cheek
- Make soft thy trenchant sword; for those milk-paps,
- That through the window-bars bore at men's eyes,
- Are not within the leaf of pity writ,
- But set them down horrible traitors: spare not the babe,
- Whose dimpled smiles from fools exhaust their mercy;
- Think it a bastard, whom the oracle
- Hath doubtfully pronounced thy throat shall cut,
- And mince it sans remorse: swear against objects;
- Put armour on thine ears and on thine eyes;
- Whose proof, nor yells of mothers, maids, nor babes,
- Nor sight of priests in holy vestments bleeding,
- Shall pierce a jot. There's gold to pay soldiers:
- Make large confusion; and, thy fury spent,
- Confounded be thyself! Speak not, be gone.
ALCIBIADES:
Hast thou gold yet? I'll take the gold thou
- givest me,
- Not all thy counsel.
TIMON:
Dost thou, or dost thou not, heaven's curse
- upon thee!
PHRYNIA and TIMANDRA:
Give us some gold, good Timon: hast thou more?
TIMON:
Enough to make a whore forswear her trade,
- And to make whores, a bawd. Hold up, you sluts,
- Your aprons mountant: you are not oathable,
- Although, I know, you 'll swear, terribly swear
- Into strong shudders and to heavenly agues
- The immortal gods that hear you,--spare your oaths,
- I'll trust to your conditions: be whores still;
- And he whose pious breath seeks to convert you,
- Be strong in whore, allure him, burn him up;
- Let your close fire predominate his smoke,
- And be no turncoats: yet may your pains, six months,
- Be quite contrary: and thatch your poor thin roofs
- With burthens of the dead;--some that were hang'd,
- No matter:--wear them, betray with them: whore still;
- Paint till a horse may mire upon your face,
- A pox of wrinkles!
PHRYNIA and TIMANDRA:
Well, more gold: what then?
- Believe't, that we'll do any thing for gold.
TIMON:
Consumptions sow
- In hollow bones of man; strike their sharp shins,
- And mar men's spurring. Crack the lawyer's voice,
- That he may never more false title plead,
- Nor sound his quillets shrilly: hoar the flamen,
- That scolds against the quality of flesh,
- And not believes himself: down with the nose,
- Down with it flat; take the bridge quite away
- Of him that, his particular to foresee,
- Smells from the general weal: make curl'd-pate
- ruffians bald;
- And let the unscarr'd braggarts of the war
- Derive some pain from you: plague all;
- That your activity may defeat and quell
- The source of all erection. There's more gold:
- Do you damn others, and let this damn you,
- And ditches grave you all!
PHRYNIA and TIMANDRA:
More counsel with more money, bounteous Timon.
TIMON:
More whore, more mischief first; I have given you earnest.
ALCIBIADES:
Strike up the drum towards Athens! Farewell, Timon:
- If I thrive well, I'll visit thee again.
TIMON:
If I hope well, I'll never see thee more.
ALCIBIADES:
I never did thee harm.
TIMON:
Yes, thou spokest well of me.
ALCIBIADES:
Call'st thou that harm?
TIMON:
Men daily find it. Get thee away, and take
- Thy beagles with thee.
TIMON:
That nature, being sick of man's unkindness,
- Should yet be hungry! Common mother, thou,
- Digging
- Whose womb unmeasurable, and infinite breast,
- Teems, and feeds all; whose self-same mettle,
- Whereof thy proud child, arrogant man, is puff'd,
- Engenders the black toad and adder blue,
- The gilded newt and eyeless venom'd worm,
- With all the abhorred births below crisp heaven
- Whereon Hyperion's quickening fire doth shine;
- Yield him, who all thy human sons doth hate,
- From forth thy plenteous bosom, one poor root!
- Ensear thy fertile and conceptious womb,
- Let it no more bring out ingrateful man!
- Go great with tigers, dragons, wolves, and bears;
- Teem with new monsters, whom thy upward face
- Hath to the marbled mansion all above
- Never presented!--O, a root,--dear thanks!--
- Dry up thy marrows, vines, and plough-torn leas;
- Whereof ungrateful man, with liquorish draughts
- And morsels unctuous, greases his pure mind,
- That from it all consideration slips!
-
[Enter APEMANTUS]
- More man? plague, plague!
APEMANTUS:
I was directed hither: men report
- Thou dost affect my manners, and dost use them.
TIMON:
'Tis, then, because thou dost not keep a dog,
- Whom I would imitate: consumption catch thee!
APEMANTUS:
This is in thee a nature but infected;
- A poor unmanly melancholy sprung
- From change of fortune. Why this spade? this place?
- This slave-like habit? and these looks of care?
- Thy flatterers yet wear silk, drink wine, lie soft;
- Hug their diseased perfumes, and have forgot
- That ever Timon was. Shame not these woods,
- By putting on the cunning of a carper.
- Be thou a flatterer now, and seek to thrive
- By that which has undone thee: hinge thy knee,
- And let his very breath, whom thou'lt observe,
- Blow off thy cap; praise his most vicious strain,
- And call it excellent: thou wast told thus;
- Thou gavest thine ears like tapsters that bid welcome
- To knaves and all approachers: 'tis most just
- That thou turn rascal; hadst thou wealth again,
- Rascals should have 't. Do not assume my likeness.
TIMON:
Were I like thee, I'ld throw away myself.
APEMANTUS:
Thou hast cast away thyself, being like thyself;
- A madman so long, now a fool. What, think'st
- That the bleak air, thy boisterous chamberlain,
- Will put thy shirt on warm? will these moss'd trees,
- That have outlived the eagle, page thy heels,
- And skip where thou point'st out? will the
- cold brook,
- Candied with ice, caudle thy morning taste,
- To cure thy o'er-night's surfeit? Call the creatures
- Whose naked natures live in an the spite
- Of wreakful heaven, whose bare unhoused trunks,
- To the conflicting elements exposed,
- Answer mere nature; bid them flatter thee;
- O, thou shalt find--
TIMON:
A fool of thee: depart.
APEMANTUS:
I love thee better now than e'er I did.
TIMON:
I hate thee worse.
TIMON:
Thou flatter'st misery.
APEMANTUS:
I flatter not; but say thou art a caitiff.
TIMON:
Why dost thou seek me out?
TIMON:
Always a villain's office or a fool's.
- Dost please thyself in't?
TIMON:
What! a knave too?
APEMANTUS:
If thou didst put this sour-cold habit on
- To castigate thy pride, 'twere well: but thou
- Dost it enforcedly; thou'ldst courtier be again,
- Wert thou not beggar. Willing misery
- Outlives encertain pomp, is crown'd before:
- The one is filling still, never complete;
- The other, at high wish: best state, contentless,
- Hath a distracted and most wretched being,
- Worse than the worst, content.
- Thou shouldst desire to die, being miserable.
TIMON:
Not by his breath that is more miserable.
- Thou art a slave, whom Fortune's tender arm
- With favour never clasp'd; but bred a dog.
- Hadst thou, like us from our first swath, proceeded
- The sweet degrees that this brief world affords
- To such as may the passive drugs of it
- Freely command, thou wouldst have plunged thyself
- In general riot; melted down thy youth
- In different beds of lust; and never learn'd
- The icy precepts of respect, but follow'd
- The sugar'd game before thee. But myself,
- Who had the world as my confectionary,
- The mouths, the tongues, the eyes and hearts of men
- At duty, more than I could frame employment,
- That numberless upon me stuck as leaves
- Do on the oak, hive with one winter's brush
- Fell from their boughs and left me open, bare
- For every storm that blows: I, to bear this,
- That never knew but better, is some burden:
- Thy nature did commence in sufferance, time
- Hath made thee hard in't. Why shouldst thou hate men?
- They never flatter'd thee: what hast thou given?
- If thou wilt curse, thy father, that poor rag,
- Must be thy subject, who in spite put stuff
- To some she beggar and compounded thee
- Poor rogue hereditary. Hence, be gone!
- If thou hadst not been born the worst of men,
- Thou hadst been a knave and flatterer.
APEMANTUS:
Art thou proud yet?
TIMON:
Ay, that I am not thee.
APEMANTUS:
I, that I was
- No prodigal.
TIMON:
I, that I am one now:
- Were all the wealth I have shut up in thee,
- I'ld give thee leave to hang it. Get thee gone.
- That the whole life of Athens were in this!
- Thus would I eat it.
-
[Eating a root]
APEMANTUS:
Here; I will mend thy feast.
-
[Offering him a root]
TIMON:
First mend my company, take away thyself.
APEMANTUS:
So I shall mend mine own, by the lack of thine.
TIMON:
'Tis not well mended so, it is but botch'd;
- if not, I would it were.
APEMANTUS:
What wouldst thou have to Athens?
TIMON:
Thee thither in a whirlwind. If thou wilt,
- Tell them there I have gold; look, so I have.
APEMANTUS:
Here is no use for gold.
TIMON:
The best and truest;
- For here it sleeps, and does no hired harm.
APEMANTUS:
Where liest o' nights, Timon?
TIMON:
Under that's above me.
- Where feed'st thou o' days, Apemantus?
APEMANTUS:
Where my stomach finds meat; or, rather, where I eat
- it.
TIMON:
Would poison were obedient and knew my mind!
APEMANTUS:
Where wouldst thou send it?
TIMON:
To sauce thy dishes.
APEMANTUS:
The middle of humanity thou never knewest, but the
- extremity of both ends: when thou wast in thy gilt
- and thy perfume, they mocked thee for too much
- curiosity; in thy rags thou knowest none, but art
- despised for the contrary. There's a medlar for
- thee, eat it.
TIMON:
On what I hate I feed not.
APEMANTUS:
Dost hate a medlar?
TIMON:
Ay, though it look like thee.
APEMANTUS:
An thou hadst hated meddlers sooner, thou shouldst
- have loved thyself better now. What man didst thou
- ever know unthrift that was beloved after his means?
TIMON:
Who, without those means thou talkest of, didst thou
- ever know beloved?
TIMON:
I understand thee; thou hadst some means to keep a
- dog.
APEMANTUS:
What things in the world canst thou nearest compare
- to thy flatterers?
TIMON:
Women nearest; but men, men are the things
- themselves. What wouldst thou do with the world,
- Apemantus, if it lay in thy power?
APEMANTUS:
Give it the beasts, to be rid of the men.
TIMON:
Wouldst thou have thyself fall in the confusion of
- men, and remain a beast with the beasts?
TIMON:
A beastly ambition, which the gods grant thee t'
- attain to! If thou wert the lion, the fox would
- beguile thee; if thou wert the lamb, the fox would
- eat three: if thou wert the fox, the lion would
- suspect thee, when peradventure thou wert accused by
- the ass: if thou wert the ass, thy dulness would
- torment thee, and still thou livedst but as a
- breakfast to the wolf: if thou wert the wolf, thy
- greediness would afflict thee, and oft thou shouldst
- hazard thy life for thy dinner: wert thou the
- unicorn, pride and wrath would confound thee and
- make thine own self the conquest of thy fury: wert
- thou a bear, thou wouldst be killed by the horse:
- wert thou a horse, thou wouldst be seized by the
- leopard: wert thou a leopard, thou wert german to
- the lion and the spots of thy kindred were jurors on
- thy life: all thy safety were remotion and thy
- defence absence. What beast couldst thou be, that
- were not subject to a beast? and what a beast art
- thou already, that seest not thy loss in
- transformation!
APEMANTUS:
If thou couldst please me with speaking to me, thou
- mightst have hit upon it here: the commonwealth of
- Athens is become a forest of beasts.
TIMON:
How has the ass broke the wall, that thou art out of the city?
APEMANTUS:
Yonder comes a poet and a painter: the plague of
- company light upon thee! I will fear to catch it
- and give way: when I know not what else to do, I'll
- see thee again.
TIMON:
When there is nothing living but thee, thou shalt be
- welcome. I had rather be a beggar's dog than Apemantus.
APEMANTUS:
Thou art the cap of all the fools alive.
TIMON:
Would thou wert clean enough to spit upon!
APEMANTUS:
A plague on thee! thou art too bad to curse.
TIMON:
All villains that do stand by thee are pure.
APEMANTUS:
There is no leprosy but what thou speak'st.
TIMON:
If I name thee.
- I'll beat thee, but I should infect my hands.
APEMANTUS:
I would my tongue could rot them off!
TIMON:
Away, thou issue of a mangy dog!
- Choler does kill me that thou art alive;
- I swound to see thee.
APEMANTUS:
Would thou wouldst burst!
TIMON:
Away,
- Thou tedious rogue! I am sorry I shall lose
- A stone by thee.
-
[Throws a stone at him]
TIMON:
Rogue, rogue, rogue!
- I am sick of this false world, and will love nought
- But even the mere necessities upon 't.
- Then, Timon, presently prepare thy grave;
- Lie where the light foam the sea may beat
- Thy grave-stone daily: make thine epitaph,
- That death in me at others' lives may laugh.
-
[To the gold]
- O thou sweet king-killer, and dear divorce
- 'Twixt natural son and sire! thou bright defiler
- Of Hymen's purest bed! thou valiant Mars!
- Thou ever young, fresh, loved and delicate wooer,
- Whose blush doth thaw the consecrated snow
- That lies on Dian's lap! thou visible god,
- That solder'st close impossibilities,
- And makest them kiss! that speak'st with
- every tongue,
- To every purpose! O thou touch of hearts!
- Think, thy slave man rebels, and by thy virtue
- Set them into confounding odds, that beasts
- May have the world in empire!
APEMANTUS:
Would 'twere so!
- But not till I am dead. I'll say thou'st gold:
- Thou wilt be throng'd to shortly.
TIMON:
Thy back, I prithee.
APEMANTUS:
Live, and love thy misery.
TIMON:
Long live so, and so die.
-
[Exit APEMANTUS]
- I am quit.
- Moe things like men! Eat, Timon, and abhor them.
-
[Enter Banditti]
First Bandit:
Where should he have this gold? It is some poor
- fragment, some slender sort of his remainder: the
- mere want of gold, and the falling-from of his
- friends, drove him into this melancholy.
Second Bandit:
It is noised he hath a mass of treasure.
Third Bandit:
Let us make the assay upon him: if he care not
- for't, he will supply us easily; if he covetously
- reserve it, how shall's get it?
Second Bandit:
True; for he bears it not about him, 'tis hid.
First Bandit:
Is not this he?
Second Bandit:
'Tis his description.
Third Bandit:
He; I know him.
Banditti:
Save thee, Timon.
Banditti:
Soldiers, not thieves.
TIMON:
Both too; and women's sons.
Banditti:
We are not thieves, but men that much do want.
TIMON:
Your greatest want is, you want much of meat.
- Why should you want? Behold, the earth hath roots;
- Within this mile break forth a hundred springs;
- The oaks bear mast, the briers scarlet hips;
- The bounteous housewife, nature, on each bush
- Lays her full mess before you. Want! why want?
First Bandit:
We cannot live on grass, on berries, water,
- As beasts and birds and fishes.
TIMON:
Nor on the beasts themselves, the birds, and fishes;
- You must eat men. Yet thanks I must you con
- That you are thieves profess'd, that you work not
- In holier shapes: for there is boundless theft
- In limited professions. Rascal thieves,
- Here's gold. Go, suck the subtle blood o' the grape,
- Till the high fever seethe your blood to froth,
- And so 'scape hanging: trust not the physician;
- His antidotes are poison, and he slays
- Moe than you rob: take wealth and lives together;
- Do villany, do, since you protest to do't,
- Like workmen. I'll example you with thievery.
- The sun's a thief, and with his great attraction
- Robs the vast sea: the moon's an arrant thief,
- And her pale fire she snatches from the sun:
- The sea's a thief, whose liquid surge resolves
- The moon into salt tears: the earth's a thief,
- That feeds and breeds by a composture stolen
- From general excrement: each thing's a thief:
- The laws, your curb and whip, in their rough power
- Have uncheque'd theft. Love not yourselves: away,
- Rob one another. There's more gold. Cut throats:
- All that you meet are thieves: to Athens go,
- Break open shops; nothing can you steal,
- But thieves do lose it: steal no less for this
- I give you; and gold confound you howsoe'er! Amen.
Third Bandit:
Has almost charmed me from my profession, by
- persuading me to it.
First Bandit:
'Tis in the malice of mankind that he thus advises
- us; not to have us thrive in our mystery.
Second Bandit:
I'll believe him as an enemy, and give over my trade.
First Bandit:
Let us first see peace in Athens: there is no time
- so miserable but a man may be true.
-
[Exeunt Banditti]
-
[Enter FLAVIUS]
FLAVIUS:
O you gods!
- Is yond despised and ruinous man my lord?
- Full of decay and failing? O monument
- And wonder of good deeds evilly bestow'd!
- What an alteration of honour
- Has desperate want made!
- What viler thing upon the earth than friends
- Who can bring noblest minds to basest ends!
- How rarely does it meet with this time's guise,
- When man was wish'd to love his enemies!
- Grant I may ever love, and rather woo
- Those that would mischief me than those that do!
- Has caught me in his eye: I will present
- My honest grief unto him; and, as my lord,
- Still serve him with my life. My dearest master!
TIMON:
Away! what art thou?
FLAVIUS:
Have you forgot me, sir?
TIMON:
Why dost ask that? I have forgot all men;
- Then, if thou grant'st thou'rt a man, I have forgot thee.
FLAVIUS:
An honest poor servant of yours.
TIMON:
Then I know thee not:
- I never had honest man about me, I; all
- I kept were knaves, to serve in meat to villains.
FLAVIUS:
The gods are witness,
- Ne'er did poor steward wear a truer grief
- For his undone lord than mine eyes for you.
TIMON:
What, dost thou weep? Come nearer. Then I
- love thee,
- Because thou art a woman, and disclaim'st
- Flinty mankind; whose eyes do never give
- But thorough lust and laughter. Pity's sleeping:
- Strange times, that weep with laughing, not with weeping!
FLAVIUS:
I beg of you to know me, good my lord,
- To accept my grief and whilst this poor wealth lasts
- To entertain me as your steward still.
TIMON:
Had I a steward
- So true, so just, and now so comfortable?
- It almost turns my dangerous nature mild.
- Let me behold thy face. Surely, this man
- Was born of woman.
- Forgive my general and exceptless rashness,
- You perpetual-sober gods! I do proclaim
- One honest man--mistake me not--but one;
- No more, I pray,--and he's a steward.
- How fain would I have hated all mankind!
- And thou redeem'st thyself: but all, save thee,
- I fell with curses.
- Methinks thou art more honest now than wise;
- For, by oppressing and betraying me,
- Thou mightst have sooner got another service:
- For many so arrive at second masters,
- Upon their first lord's neck. But tell me true--
- For I must ever doubt, though ne'er so sure--
- Is not thy kindness subtle, covetous,
- If not a usuring kindness, and, as rich men deal gifts,
- Expecting in return twenty for one?
FLAVIUS:
No, my most worthy master; in whose breast
- Doubt and suspect, alas, are placed too late:
- You should have fear'd false times when you did feast:
- Suspect still comes where an estate is least.
- That which I show, heaven knows, is merely love,
- Duty and zeal to your unmatched mind,
- Care of your food and living; and, believe it,
- My most honour'd lord,
- For any benefit that points to me,
- Either in hope or present, I'ld exchange
- For this one wish, that you had power and wealth
- To requite me, by making rich yourself.
TIMON:
Look thee, 'tis so! Thou singly honest man,
- Here, take: the gods out of my misery
- Have sent thee treasure. Go, live rich and happy;
- But thus condition'd: thou shalt build from men;
- Hate all, curse all, show charity to none,
- But let the famish'd flesh slide from the bone,
- Ere thou relieve the beggar; give to dogs
- What thou deny'st to men; let prisons swallow 'em,
- Debts wither 'em to nothing; be men like
- blasted woods,
- And may diseases lick up their false bloods!
- And so farewell and thrive.
FLAVIUS:
O, let me stay,
- And comfort you, my master.
ACT V, SCENE I.
The woods. Before Timon's cave.
[Enter Poet and Painter; TIMON watching them from his cave]
Painter:
As I took note of the place, it cannot be far where
- he abides.
Poet:
What's to be thought of him? does the rumour hold
- for true, that he's so full of gold?
Painter:
Certain: Alcibiades reports it; Phrynia and
- Timandra had gold of him: he likewise enriched poor
- straggling soldiers with great quantity: 'tis said
- he gave unto his steward a mighty sum.
Poet:
Then this breaking of his has been but a try for his friends.
Painter:
Nothing else: you shall see him a palm in Athens
- again, and flourish with the highest. Therefore
- 'tis not amiss we tender our loves to him, in this
- supposed distress of his: it will show honestly in
- us; and is very likely to load our purposes with
- what they travail for, if it be a just true report
- that goes of his having.
Poet:
What have you now to present unto him?
Painter:
Nothing at this time but my visitation: only I will
- promise him an excellent piece.
Poet:
I must serve him so too, tell him of an intent
- that's coming toward him.
TIMON:
[Aside]
- Excellent workman! thou canst not paint a
- man so bad as is thyself.
Poet:
I am thinking what I shall say I have provided for
- him: it must be a personating of himself; a satire
- against the softness of prosperity, with a discovery
- of the infinite flatteries that follow youth and opulency.
TIMON:
[Aside]
- Must thou needs stand for a villain in
- thine own work? wilt thou whip thine own faults in
- other men? Do so, I have gold for thee.
Poet:
Nay, let's seek him:
- Then do we sin against our own estate,
- When we may profit meet, and come too late.
Painter:
True;
- When the day serves, before black-corner'd night,
- Find what thou want'st by free and offer'd light. Come.
TIMON:
[Aside]
- I'll meet you at the turn. What a
- god's gold,
- That he is worshipp'd in a baser temple
- Than where swine feed!
- 'Tis thou that rigg'st the bark and plough'st the foam,
- Settlest admired reverence in a slave:
- To thee be worship! and thy saints for aye
- Be crown'd with plagues that thee alone obey!
- Fit I meet them.
-
[Coming forward]
Poet:
Hail, worthy Timon!
Painter:
Our late noble master!
TIMON:
Have I once lived to see two honest men?
Poet:
Sir,
- Having often of your open bounty tasted,
- Hearing you were retired, your friends fall'n off,
- Whose thankless natures--O abhorred spirits!--
- Not all the whips of heaven are large enough:
- What! to you,
- Whose star-like nobleness gave life and influence
- To their whole being! I am rapt and cannot cover
- The monstrous bulk of this ingratitude
- With any size of words.
TIMON:
Let it go naked, men may see't the better:
- You that are honest, by being what you are,
- Make them best seen and known.
Painter:
He and myself
- Have travail'd in the great shower of your gifts,
- And sweetly felt it.
TIMON:
Ay, you are honest men.
Painter:
We are hither come to offer you our service.
TIMON:
Most honest men! Why, how shall I requite you?
- Can you eat roots, and drink cold water? no.
Both:
What we can do, we'll do, to do you service.
TIMON:
Ye're honest men: ye've heard that I have gold;
- I am sure you have: speak truth; ye're honest men.
Painter:
So it is said, my noble lord; but therefore
- Came not my friend nor I.
TIMON:
Good honest men! Thou draw'st a counterfeit
- Best in all Athens: thou'rt, indeed, the best;
- Thou counterfeit'st most lively.
Painter:
So, so, my lord.
TIMON:
E'en so, sir, as I say. And, for thy fiction,
- Why, thy verse swells with stuff so fine and smooth
- That thou art even natural in thine art.
- But, for all this, my honest-natured friends,
- I must needs say you have a little fault:
- Marry, 'tis not monstrous in you, neither wish I
- You take much pains to mend.
Both:
Beseech your honour
- To make it known to us.
TIMON:
You'll take it ill.
Both:
Most thankfully, my lord.
Both:
Doubt it not, worthy lord.
TIMON:
There's never a one of you but trusts a knave,
- That mightily deceives you.
TIMON:
Ay, and you hear him cog, see him dissemble,
- Know his gross patchery, love him, feed him,
- Keep in your bosom: yet remain assured
- That he's a made-up villain.
Painter:
I know none such, my lord.
TIMON:
Look you, I love you well; I'll give you gold,
- Rid me these villains from your companies:
- Hang them or stab them, drown them in a draught,
- Confound them by some course, and come to me,
- I'll give you gold enough.
Both:
Name them, my lord, let's know them.
FLAVIUS:
It is in vain that you would speak with Timon;
- For he is set so only to himself
- That nothing but himself which looks like man
- Is friendly with him.
First Senator:
Bring us to his cave:
- It is our part and promise to the Athenians
- To speak with Timon.
Second Senator:
At all times alike
- Men are not still the same: 'twas time and griefs
- That framed him thus: time, with his fairer hand,
- Offering the fortunes of his former days,
- The former man may make him. Bring us to him,
- And chance it as it may.
TIMON:
Thou sun, that comfort'st, burn! Speak, and
- be hang'd:
- For each true word, a blister! and each false
- Be as cauterizing to the root o' the tongue,
- Consuming it with speaking!
First Senator:
Worthy Timon,--
TIMON:
Of none but such as you, and you of Timon.
First Senator:
The senators of Athens greet thee, Timon.
TIMON:
I thank them; and would send them back the plague,
- Could I but catch it for them.
First Senator:
O, forget
- What we are sorry for ourselves in thee.
- The senators with one consent of love
- Entreat thee back to Athens; who have thought
- On special dignities, which vacant lie
- For thy best use and wearing.
Second Senator:
They confess
- Toward thee forgetfulness too general, gross:
- Which now the public body, which doth seldom
- Play the recanter, feeling in itself
- A lack of Timon's aid, hath sense withal
- Of its own fail, restraining aid to Timon;
- And send forth us, to make their sorrow'd render,
- Together with a recompense more fruitful
- Than their offence can weigh down by the dram;
- Ay, even such heaps and sums of love and wealth
- As shall to thee blot out what wrongs were theirs
- And write in thee the figures of their love,
- Ever to read them thine.
TIMON:
You witch me in it;
- Surprise me to the very brink of tears:
- Lend me a fool's heart and a woman's eyes,
- And I'll beweep these comforts, worthy senators.
First Senator:
Therefore, so please thee to return with us
- And of our Athens, thine and ours, to take
- The captainship, thou shalt be met with thanks,
- Allow'd with absolute power and thy good name
- Live with authority: so soon we shall drive back
- Of Alcibiades the approaches wild,
- Who, like a boar too savage, doth root up
- His country's peace.
Second Senator:
And shakes his threatening sword
- Against the walls of Athens.
First Senator:
Therefore, Timon,--
TIMON:
Well, sir, I will; therefore, I will, sir; thus:
- If Alcibiades kill my countrymen,
- Let Alcibiades know this of Timon,
- That Timon cares not. But if be sack fair Athens,
- And take our goodly aged men by the beards,
- Giving our holy virgins to the stain
- Of contumelious, beastly, mad-brain'd war,
- Then let him know, and tell him Timon speaks it,
- In pity of our aged and our youth,
- I cannot choose but tell him, that I care not,
- And let him take't at worst; for their knives care not,
- While you have throats to answer: for myself,
- There's not a whittle in the unruly camp
- But I do prize it at my love before
- The reverend'st throat in Athens. So I leave you
- To the protection of the prosperous gods,
- As thieves to keepers.
FLAVIUS:
Stay not, all's in vain.
TIMON:
Why, I was writing of my epitaph;
- it will be seen to-morrow: my long sickness
- Of health and living now begins to mend,
- And nothing brings me all things. Go, live still;
- Be Alcibiades your plague, you his,
- And last so long enough!
First Senator:
We speak in vain.
TIMON:
But yet I love my country, and am not
- One that rejoices in the common wreck,
- As common bruit doth put it.
First Senator:
That's well spoke.
TIMON:
Commend me to my loving countrymen,--
First Senator:
These words become your lips as they pass
- thorough them.
Second Senator:
And enter in our ears like great triumphers
- In their applauding gates.
TIMON:
Commend me to them,
- And tell them that, to ease them of their griefs,
- Their fears of hostile strokes, their aches, losses,
- Their pangs of love, with other incident throes
- That nature's fragile vessel doth sustain
- In life's uncertain voyage, I will some kindness do them:
- I'll teach them to prevent wild Alcibiades' wrath.
First Senator:
I like this well; he will return again.
TIMON:
I have a tree, which grows here in my close,
- That mine own use invites me to cut down,
- And shortly must I fell it: tell my friends,
- Tell Athens, in the sequence of degree
- From high to low throughout, that whoso please
- To stop affliction, let him take his haste,
- Come hither, ere my tree hath felt the axe,
- And hang himself. I pray you, do my greeting.
FLAVIUS:
Trouble him no further; thus you still shall find him.
TIMON:
Come not to me again: but say to Athens,
- Timon hath made his everlasting mansion
- Upon the beached verge of the salt flood;
- Who once a day with his embossed froth
- The turbulent surge shall cover: thither come,
- And let my grave-stone be your oracle.
- Lips, let sour words go by and language end:
- What is amiss plague and infection mend!
- Graves only be men's works and death their gain!
- Sun, hide thy beams! Timon hath done his reign.
-
[Retires to his cave]
First Senator:
His discontents are unremoveably
- Coupled to nature.
Second Senator:
Our hope in him is dead: let us return,
- And strain what other means is left unto us
- In our dear peril.
First Senator:
It requires swift foot.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE II.
Before the walls of Athens.
[Enter two Senators and a Messenger]
First Senator:
Thou hast painfully discover'd: are his files
- As full as thy report?
Messenger:
have spoke the least:
- Besides, his expedition promises
- Present approach.
Second Senator:
We stand much hazard, if they bring not Timon.
Messenger:
I met a courier, one mine ancient friend;
- Whom, though in general part we were opposed,
- Yet our old love made a particular force,
- And made us speak like friends: this man was riding
- From Alcibiades to Timon's cave,
- With letters of entreaty, which imported
- His fellowship i' the cause against your city,
- In part for his sake moved.
Third Senator:
No talk of Timon, nothing of him expect.
- The enemies' drum is heard, and fearful scouring
- Doth choke the air with dust: in, and prepare:
- Ours is the fall, I fear; our foes the snare.
-
[Exeunt]
ACT V, SCENE III.
The woods. Timon's cave, and a rude tomb seen.
[Enter a Soldier, seeking TIMON]
Soldier:
By all description this should be the place.
- Who's here? speak, ho! No answer! What is this?
- Timon is dead, who hath outstretch'd his span:
- Some beast rear'd this; there does not live a man.
- Dead, sure; and this his grave. What's on this tomb
- I cannot read; the character I'll take with wax:
- Our captain hath in every figure skill,
- An aged interpreter, though young in days:
- Before proud Athens he's set down by this,
- Whose fall the mark of his ambition is.
-
[Exit]
ACT V, SCENE IV.
Before the walls of Athens.
[Trumpets sound. Enter ALCIBIADES with his powers]
First Senator:
Noble and young,
- When thy first griefs were but a mere conceit,
- Ere thou hadst power or we had cause of fear,
- We sent to thee, to give thy rages balm,
- To wipe out our ingratitude with loves
- Above their quantity.
Second Senator:
So did we woo
- Transformed Timon to our city's love
- By humble message and by promised means:
- We were not all unkind, nor all deserve
- The common stroke of war.
First Senator:
These walls of ours
- Were not erected by their hands from whom
- You have received your griefs; nor are they such
- That these great towers, trophies and schools
- should fall
- For private faults in them.
Second Senator:
Nor are they living
- Who were the motives that you first went out;
- Shame that they wanted cunning, in excess
- Hath broke their hearts. March, noble lord,
- Into our city with thy banners spread:
- By decimation, and a tithed death--
- If thy revenges hunger for that food
- Which nature loathes--take thou the destined tenth,
- And by the hazard of the spotted die
- Let die the spotted.
First Senator:
All have not offended;
- For those that were, it is not square to take
- On those that are, revenges: crimes, like lands,
- Are not inherited. Then, dear countryman,
- Bring in thy ranks, but leave without thy rage:
- Spare thy Athenian cradle and those kin
- Which in the bluster of thy wrath must fall
- With those that have offended: like a shepherd,
- Approach the fold and cull the infected forth,
- But kill not all together.
Second Senator:
What thou wilt,
- Thou rather shalt enforce it with thy smile
- Than hew to't with thy sword.
First Senator:
Set but thy foot
- Against our rampired gates, and they shall ope;
- So thou wilt send thy gentle heart before,
- To say thou'lt enter friendly.
Second Senator:
Throw thy glove,
- Or any token of thine honour else,
- That thou wilt use the wars as thy redress
- And not as our confusion, all thy powers
- Shall make their harbour in our town, till we
- Have seal'd thy full desire.
ALCIBIADES:
Then there's my glove;
- Descend, and open your uncharged ports:
- Those enemies of Timon's and mine own
- Whom you yourselves shall set out for reproof
- Fall and no more: and, to atone your fears
- With my more noble meaning, not a man
- Shall pass his quarter, or offend the stream
- Of regular justice in your city's bounds,
- But shall be render'd to your public laws
- At heaviest answer.
Both:
'Tis most nobly spoken.
Soldier:
My noble general, Timon is dead;
- Entomb'd upon the very hem o' the sea;
- And on his grave-stone this insculpture, which
- With wax I brought away, whose soft impression
- Interprets for my poor ignorance.
ALCIBIADES:
[Reads the epitaph]
- 'Here lies a
- wretched corse, of wretched soul bereft:
- Seek not my name: a plague consume you wicked
- caitiffs left!
- Here lie I, Timon; who, alive, all living men did hate:
- Pass by and curse thy fill, but pass and stay
- not here thy gait.'
- These well express in thee thy latter spirits:
- Though thou abhorr'dst in us our human griefs,
- Scorn'dst our brain's flow and those our
- droplets which
- From niggard nature fall, yet rich conceit
- Taught thee to make vast Neptune weep for aye
- On thy low grave, on faults forgiven. Dead
- Is noble Timon: of whose memory
- Hereafter more. Bring me into your city,
- And I will use the olive with my sword,
- Make war breed peace, make peace stint war, make each
- Prescribe to other as each other's leech.
- Let our drums strike.
-
[Exeunt]