<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
  <teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title type="main">Catiline</title>
        <author>Jonson, Ben, 1573?-1637</author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>TEI-compatible coding of text 1435</resp>
          <name>Triggs, Jeffery</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>
      <publicationStmt>
        <authority xml:id="crahu1">deposited by<name type="person">Craig, Hugh</name>
               <name type="department">Department of English</name>
               <name type="institution">University of Newcastle</name>
               <name type="place">2308 Newcastle, N.S.W.</name>
               <address><addrLine>Department of English</addrLine><addrLine>University of Newcastle</addrLine><addrLine>2308 Newcastle, N.S.W.</addrLine><addrLine><name type="email">eldhc@cc.newcastle.edu.au</name></addrLine></address>
               <date>1994-06-30</date>
            </authority>
        <distributor>
          <name>University of Oxford Text Archive</name>
          <address>
            <addrLine>Oxford University Computing Services</addrLine>
            <addrLine>13 Banbury Road</addrLine>
            <addrLine>Oxford</addrLine>
            <addrLine>OX2 6NN</addrLine>
          </address>
          <email>ota@oucs.ox.ac.uk</email>
        </distributor>
        <idno type="ota">http://ota.ox.ac.uk/id/3253</idno>
        <idno type="isbn10">1106002520</idno>
        <idno type="isbn13">9781106002525</idno>
        <availability status="restricted">
          <licence target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/">
	Distributed by the University of Oxford under a Creative Commons
	Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
      </licence>
        </availability>
      </publicationStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <bibl>Revised version of  <relatedItem type="older" target="http://ota.ox.ac.uk/id/2069"/>
            </bibl>
        <bibl>
          <note>Jonson, Ben, 1573?-1637. -- Catiline [1611]. -- s.l. : s.n., s.d. -- Short Title Catalogue 14759</note>
        </bibl>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <classDecl>
        <taxonomy xml:id="OTASH">
          <bibl>University of Oxford Text Archive Subject Headings</bibl>
        </taxonomy>
        <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
          <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
        </taxonomy>
      </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
      <creation>
        <date notAfter="1611"/>
      </creation>
      <langUsage>
        <language ident="eng">English</language>
      </langUsage>
      <textClass>
        <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
          <term type="genre">English drama -- 17th century</term>
        </keywords>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
    <revisionDesc>
      <change when="2010-10-03">Header normalised</change>
    </revisionDesc>
  </teiHeader>
  <text>
    <front>
      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart>
            <title type="main">Catiline</title>
          </titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>by </byline>
        <docAuthor>Ben Jonson</docAuthor>
        <docImprint>Prepared from 1611 Quarto (STC 14759) by Hugh Craig, D of English, U of Newcastle. OTA A-1435-A</docImprint>
      </titlePage>
    </front>
    <body>
      <div xml:id="a1" type="act">
        <div xml:id="s1.1" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Do'st thou not feele me, Rome? Not yet? Is night </l>
            <l>So heauy on thee, and my weight so light? </l>
            <l>Can Sylla's Ghost arise within thy walles, </l>
            <l>Lesse threatning, then an earth-quake, the quicke falles </l>
            <l>Of thee, and thine? shake not the frighted heads </l>
            <l>Of thy steepe towers? or shrinke to their first beds? </l>
            <l>Or, as their ruine the large Tyber fils, </l>
            <l>Make that swell up, and drowne thy seuen proud hils? </l>
            <l>What sleape is this doth seize thee, so like death, </l>
            <l>And is not it? Wake, feele her, in my breath. </l>
            <l>Behold, I come, sent from the Stygian Sound, </l>
            <l>As a dire Vapor, that had cleft the ground, </l>
            <l>To ingender with the night, and blast the day; </l>
            <l>Or like a Pestilence, that should display </l>
            <l>Infection through the world: which, thus, I do. </l>
            <l>Pluto be at thy councels; and into </l>
            <l>Thy darker bosome enter Sylla's spirit: </l>
            <l>All, that was mine, and bad, thy brest inherit. </l>
            <l>Alas, how weake is that, for Catiline! </l>
            <l>Did I but say (vaine voice) all that was mine? </l>
            <l>All, that the Gracchi, Cinna, Marius would; </l>
            <l>What now, had I a body againe, I could, </l>
            <l>Comming from hell; what Fiendes would wish should be; </l>
            <l>And Hannibal could not have wish'd to see: </l>
            <l>Think thou, and practise. Let the long-hid seedes </l>
            <l>Of treason, in thee, now shoote forth in deedes, </l>
            <l>Ranker then horror; and thy former facts </l>
            <l>Not all in mention, but to vrge new acts: </l>
            <l>Conscience of them prouoke thee on to more. </l>
            <l>Be still thy Incests, Murders, Rapes before </l>
            <l>Thy sense; thy forcing first a Vestall Nunne; </l>
            <l>Thy parricide, late, on thine owne naturall Sonne, </l>
            <l>After his Mother, to make empty way </l>
            <l>For thy last wicked Nuptials; worse, then they, </l>
            <l>That fame that act of thy incestuous life, </l>
            <l>Which got thee, at once, a Daughter, and a Wife. </l>
            <l>I leaue the slaughters, that thou didst for me, </l>
            <l>Of Senators; for which, I hid for thee </l>
            <l>Thy murder of thy Brother, (being so brib'd) </l>
            <l>And writ him in the list of my proscrib'd </l>
            <l>After thy fact, to saue thy little shame: </l>
            <l>Thy incest, with thy Sister, I not name. </l>
            <l>These are too light. Fate will have thee pursue </l>
            <l>Deedes, after which no Mischiefe can be new; </l>
            <l>The ruine of thy Countrey: Thou wert built </l>
            <l>For such a worke, and borne for no lesse guilt: </l>
            <l>What though defeated once thou hast beene, and knowne, </l>
            <l>Tempt it againe; That is thy act, or none. </l>
            <l>What all the seuerall Ills, that visite earth, </l>
            <l>(Brought forth by night, with a sinister birth) </l>
            <l>Plagues, Famine, Fire could not reach vnto, </l>
            <l>The Sword, nor Surfets; let thy fury do: </l>
            <l>Make all past, present, future ill thine owne; </l>
            <l>And conquer all example, in thy one. </l>
            <l>Nor let thy thought finde any vacant time </l>
            <l>To hate an old, but still a fresher crime </l>
            <l>Drowne the remembrance; Let not mischiefe cease, </l>
            <l>But, while it is in punishing, encrease. </l>
            <l>Conscience, and care die in thee; And be free </l>
            <l>Not Heau'n it selfe from thy impiety: </l>
            <l>Let Night grow blacker with thy plots; and Day, </l>
            <l>At shewing but thy head forth, start away </l>
            <l>From this halfe Spheare: and leaue Romes blinded walls </l>
            <l>To embrace lusts, hatreds, slaughters, funerals, </l>
            <l>And not recouer sight, till their owne flames </l>
            <l>Do light them to their ruines. All the names </l>
            <l>Of thy Confederates, too, be no less great </l>
            <l>In hell, then here; That, when we would repeate </l>
            <l>Our strengths in Muster, we may name you all, </l>
            <l>And Furies, upon you, for Furies, call. </l>
            <l>Whilst, what you do, doth strike them into feares, </l>
            <l>Or make them grieue, and with your mischiefe theirs. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s1.2" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>It is decree'd. Nor shall thy Fate, o Rome, </l>
            <l>Resist my vow. Though Hils were set on Hils, </l>
            <l>And Seas met Seas, to guarde thee; I would through: </l>
            <l>Aye, plough up rockes, steepe as the Alpes, in dust; </l>
            <l>And laue the Tyrrhene waters, into cloudes; </l>
            <l>But I would reach thy head, thy head, proud Citty: </l>
            <l>The ills, that I have done, cannot be safe </l>
            <l>But by attempting greater; and I feele </l>
            <l>A spirit, within me, chides my sluggish handes, </l>
            <l>And sayes, they have beene innocent too long. </l>
            <l>Was I a Man, bred great, as Rome her selfe? </l>
            <l>One, form'd for all her honors, all her glories? </l>
            <l>Equall to all her titles? That could stand </l>
            <l>Close up, with Atlas; and sustaine her name </l>
            <l>As strong, as he doth Heau'n? And, was I, </l>
            <l>Of all her brood, mark'd out for the repulse </l>
            <l>By her no voice, when I stood Candidate, </l>
            <l>To be Commander in the Ponticke warre? </l>
            <l>I will, hereafter, call her Stepdame, euer. </l>
            <l>If she can loose her nature, I can loose </l>
            <l>My piety; and in her stony entrailes </l>
            <l>Digge me a seate: where, I will liue, againe, </l>
            <l>The labour of her wombe, and be a burden </l>
            <l>Weightier then all the Prodigies, and Monsters, </l>
            <l>That she hath teem'd with, since she first knew Mars. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s1.3" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Who is there? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>It is I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Aurelia? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Appeare, </l>
            <l>And breake, like day, my beauty, to this circle: </l>
            <l>Upbraid shy Pho ebus, that he is so long </l>
            <l>In mounting to that point, which should give thee </l>
            <l>Thy proper splendour. Wherefore frownes my sweet? </l>
            <l>Have I too long bene absent from these lips, </l>
            <l>This cheeke, these eyes? what is my trepasse? Speake. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>It seemes, you know, that can accuse your selfe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I will redeeme it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>Still, you say so. When? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>When Orestilla by her bearing well </l>
            <l>These my retirements, and stolne times for thought </l>
            <l>Shall give their effects leaue to call her Queene </l>
            <l>Of all the world, in place of humbled Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>You court me, now. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>As I would alwaies, Loue, </l>
            <l>By this Ambrosiacke kisse, and this of Nectar, </l>
            <l>Wouldst thou but heare as gladly, as I speake. </l>
            <l>Could my Aurelia think, I meant her lesse; </l>
            <l>When, wooing her, I first remou'd a Wife, </l>
            <l>And then a Sonne, to make my bed, and house </l>
            <l>Spatious, and fit to embrace her? These were deeds </l>
            <l>Not to have begunne with, but to end with more, </l>
            <l>And greater: “He that, building, stayes at one </l>
            <l>“Floore, or the second, hath erected none. </l>
            <l>It was how to raise thee, I was meditating; </l>
            <l>To make some act of mine answere thy loue: </l>
            <l>That loue, that, when my state was now quite sunke, </l>
            <l>Came with thy wealth, and weighd it up againe, </l>
            <l>And made my 'emergent Fortune once more looke </l>
            <l>Aboue the maine; which, now, shall hit the starres, </l>
            <l>And sticke my Orestilla, there, amongst them, </l>
            <l>If any tempest can but make the billow, </l>
            <l>And any billow can but lift her greatnesse. </l>
            <l>But, I must pray my loue, she will put on </l>
            <l>Like habites with my selfe. I have to do </l>
            <l>With many men, and many natures. Some, </l>
            <l>That must be blowne, and sooth'd; as Lentulus, </l>
            <l>Whom I have heau'd, with magnifying his bloud, </l>
            <l>And a vaine dreame, out of the Sybill's bookes, </l>
            <l>That a third man of that great family </l>
            <l>Whereof he is descended, the Cornelij, </l>
            <l>Should be a King in Rome: which I have hir'd </l>
            <l>The flatt'ring Augures to interpret him, </l>
            <l>Cinna, and Sylla dead. Then, bold Cethegus, </l>
            <l>Whose valour I have turn'd into his poyson, </l>
            <l>And prais'd so into daring, as he would </l>
            <l>Goe on upon the Gods, kisse lightning, wrest </l>
            <l>The engine from the Cyclop's, and give fire </l>
            <l>At face of a full cloud, and stand his ire, </l>
            <l>When I would bid him moue. Others there are </l>
            <l>Whom enuie to the state drawes, and puts on, </l>
            <l>For contumelies receiu'd, (and such are sure ones) </l>
            <l>As Curius, and the fore-nam'd Lentulus, </l>
            <l>Both which have beene degraded, in the Senate, </l>
            <l>And must have their disgraces, still, new rub'd, </l>
            <l>To make them smart, and labour of reuenge. </l>
            <l>Others, whom meete ambition fires, and dole </l>
            <l>Of Prouinces abroade, which they have faind </l>
            <l>To their crude hopes, and I as amply promis'd: </l>
            <l>These, Lecca Vargunteius, Bestia, Autronius, </l>
            <l>Some, whom their wants oppresse, as the idle Captaines </l>
            <l>Of Sylla's troopes; and diuers Roman Knights </l>
            <l>(The profuse wasters of their patrimonies) </l>
            <l>So threatned with debts, as they will, now, </l>
            <l>Runne any desperate fortune, for a change. </l>
            <l>These, for a time, we must relieue, Aurelia, </l>
            <l>And make our house their saue-gard. Like, for those, </l>
            <l>That feare the law, or stand within her gripe, </l>
            <l>For any act past, or to come. Such will </l>
            <l>From their owne crimes, be factious, as from ours. </l>
            <l>Some more there be slight Ayrelings, will be wonne, </l>
            <l>With dogs, and horses; or, perhaps, a whore; </l>
            <l>Which must be had: And, if they venter liues, </l>
            <l>For us, Aurelia, we must hazard honors </l>
            <l>A little. Get thee store, and change of women, </l>
            <l>As I have boyes; and give them time, and place, </l>
            <l>And all conniuence: Be thy selfe, too, courtly; </l>
            <l>And entertaine, and feast, sit up, and reuell; </l>
            <l>Call all the great, the fayre, and spirited Dames </l>
            <l>Of Rome about thee, and beginne a fashion </l>
            <l>Of freedome, and community. Some will thanke thee, </l>
            <l>Though the sowre Senate frowne, whose heads must ake </l>
            <l>In feare, and feeling too. We must not spare </l>
            <l>Or cost, or modestie. It can but shew </l>
            <l>Like one of Iuno's, or of Ioue's disguises </l>
            <l>In eyther thee, or me; and will as soone, </l>
            <l>When things succeed, be throwne by, or let fall; </l>
            <l>As if a vaile put of, a visor chang'd, </l>
            <l>Or the Scene shifted, in our Theaters. </l>
            <l>Who is that? It is the voyce of Lentulus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>Or of Cethegus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>In, my faire Aurelia, </l>
            <l>And think upon these artes: They must not see, </l>
            <l>How farre you are trusted with these priuacies; </l>
            <l>Though, by their shoulders, necks, and heads you rise. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s1.4" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>It is, mee thinkes, a Morning, full of Fate. </l>
            <l>It riseth slowly, as her sollen carre </l>
            <l>Had all the weights of sleepe, and death hung at it. </l>
            <l>She is not rosy-fingerd, but swolne blacke. </l>
            <l>Her face is like a water, turnd to bloud, </l>
            <l>And her sicke head is bound about with clouds, </l>
            <l>As if she threatned night, ere noone of day. </l>
            <l>It does not looke, as it would have a Hayle </l>
            <l>Or Health, wish'd in it, as on other Mornes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Why, all the fitter, Lentulus: Our comming </l>
            <l>Is not for salutation, we have businesse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Said nobly, braue Cethegus. Where is Autronius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Is he not come? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Not here. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Not Vargunteius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Neither. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>A fire in their beds, and bosomes, </l>
            <l>That so will serue their sloth, rather then vertue. </l>
            <l>They are no Romanes, and at such high neede </l>
            <l>As now. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Both they, Longinus, Lecca, Curius, </l>
            <l>Fulnius, Gabinius, gaue me word, last night, </l>
            <l>By Lucius Bestia, they would all be here, </l>
            <l>And early. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Yes. As you, had I not call'd you. </l>
            <l>Come, we all sleepe, and are meere Dormice; Flies, </l>
            <l>A little lesse then dead: More dulnesse hangs </l>
            <l>On us, then on the Morne. We are spirit-bound, </l>
            <l>In ribs of ice; our whole blouds are one stone; </l>
            <l>And Honour cannot thaw us; nor our wants, </l>
            <l>Though they burne, hot as feuers, to our states. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I muse they would be tardy, at an houre </l>
            <l>Of so great purpose. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>If the Gods had call'd </l>
            <l>Them, to a purpose, they would iust have come </l>
            <l>With the same Tortoyse speed, that are thus slow </l>
            <l>To such an action, which the Gods will enuie. </l>
            <l>As asking no lesse meanes, then all their powers </l>
            <l>Conioyn'd, to effect. I would have seene Rome burn't, </l>
            <l>By this time; and her ashes in an Vrne: </l>
            <l>The Kingdome of the Senate, rent asunder; </l>
            <l>And the degenerate, talking Gowne, runne frighted, </l>
            <l>Out of the ayre of Italy. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Spirit of men! </l>
            <l>Thou, heart of our great enterprise! how much </l>
            <l>I Ioue these voyces in thee! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>O the daies </l>
            <l>Of Sylla's sway, when the free sword tooke leaue </l>
            <l>To act all that it would! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And was familiar </l>
            <l>With entrailes, as our Augures! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Sonnes kild Fathers, </l>
            <l>Brothers their Brothers. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And had price and praise. </l>
            <l>All hate had licence giuen it; all rage raynes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Slaughter bestrid the streets, and stretch'd himselfe </l>
            <l>To seeme more huge; whilst to his stayned thighes </l>
            <l>The gore he drew flow'd up: and carried downe </l>
            <l>Whole heapes of limmes, and bodies, through his arch. </l>
            <l>No Age was spar'd, no Sexe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Nay, no Degree. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Not Infants, in the porch of life were free. </l>
            <l>The Sicke, the Old, that could but hope a day </l>
            <l>Longer, by natures bounty, not let stay. </l>
            <l>Virgins, and Widdowes, Matrons, pregnant Wiues, </l>
            <l>All dyed. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>It was crime enough, that they had liues. </l>
            <l>To strike but only those, that could do hurt, </l>
            <l>Was dull, and poore. Some fel to make the number </l>
            <l>As some the prey. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>The rugged Charon fainted, </l>
            <l>And ask'd a nauie, rather then a boate, </l>
            <l>To ferry ouer the sad world that came: </l>
            <l>The mawes, and dennes of beasts could not receiue </l>
            <l>The bodies, that those soules were frighted from; </l>
            <l>And e'en the graues were fild with men yet liuing, </l>
            <l>Whose flight, and feare had mix'd them, with the dead. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And this shall be againe, and more, and more, </l>
            <l>Now Lentulus, the third Cornelius, </l>
            <l>Is to stand up in Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Nay, vrge not that </l>
            <l>Is so vncertaine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>How! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>I meane, not clear'd. </l>
            <l>And, therefore, not to be reflected on. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>The Sybill's leaues vncertaine? or the Comments </l>
            <l>Of our graue, deepe, diuining men not cleare? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>All Prophecies, you know, suffer the torture. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>But this, already, hath confess'd without. </l>
            <l>And so beene weigh'd, examin'd, and compar'd, </l>
            <l>As it were malicious ignorance in him, </l>
            <l>Would faint in the beliefe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Do you beleeue it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Do I loue Lentulus? or pray to see it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>The Augures all are constant, I am meant. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>They had lost their science else. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>They count from Cinna. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And Sylla next, and so make you the third; </l>
            <l>All that can say the Sunne is ris'n, must think it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Men marke me more, of late, as I come forth. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Why, what can they do lesse? Cinna, and Sylla </l>
            <l>Are set, and gone: And we must turne our eyes </l>
            <l>On him that is, and shines. Noble Cethegus, </l>
            <l>But view him with me, here: He lookes, already, </l>
            <l>As if he shooke a Scepter, o're the Senate, </l>
            <l>And the aw'd purple dropt their roddes, and axes. </l>
            <l>The Statues melt againe; and houshold Gods </l>
            <l>In grones confesse the trauaile of the City; </l>
            <l>The very walles sweate blood before the change; </l>
            <l>And stones start out to ruine, ere it comes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>But he, and we, and all are idle still. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>I am your creature, Sergius: And what ere </l>
            <l>The great Cornelian Name shall winne to be, </l>
            <l>It is not Augury, nor the Sybils Bookes, </l>
            <l>But Catiline that makes it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I am shadow </l>
            <l>To honor'd Lentulus, and Cethegus here, </l>
            <l>Who are the heires of Mars. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>By Mars himselfe, </l>
            <l>Catiline is more my parent: For whose vertue </l>
            <l>Earth cannot make a shadow great inough, </l>
            <l>Though Enuie should come too. O, there they are. </l>
            <l>Now we shall talke more, though we yet do nothing. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s1.5" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Haile Lucius Catiline. </l>
            <l>Haile noble Sergius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Haile Publius Lentulus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Haile the third Cornelius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>Caius Cethegus haile. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Haile sloth, and words, </l>
            <l>Insteed of Men, and Spirits. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Nay, deare Caius; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Are your eyes yet vnseel'd? Dare they looke day </l>
            <l>In the dull face? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>He is zealous, for the affaire; </l>
            <l>And blames your tardy comming, Gentlemen. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Vnlesse, we had sold our selues to sleepe, and ease, </l>
            <l>And would be our slaues slaues. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Pray you forbeare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>The North is not so starke, and cold. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Cethegus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>We shall redeeme all, if your fire will let us. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>You are too full of lightning, noble Caius. </l>
            <l>Boy, see all doores be shut, that none approch us, </l>
            <l>On this part of the house. Go you, and bid </l>
            <l>The Priest, he kill the slaue I mark'd last night; </l>
            <l>And bring me of his bloud, when I shall call him: </l>
            <l>Till then, waite all without. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>How is it, Autronius! </l>
            <l>Longinus? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Curius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Lecca? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Feele you nothing? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>A strange, vnwonted horror doth inuade me, </l>
            <l>I know not what it is! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>The day goes backe, </l>
            <l>Or else my senses! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>As at Atreus feast! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>G</speaker>
            <l>Darknesse growes more and more! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>The Vestall flame, </l>
            <l>I think, be out. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>What groane was that? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Our phant'sies. </l>
            <l>Strike fire, out of our selues, and force a day. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Againe it sounds! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>As all the Citie gaue it! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>We feare what our selues faine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>What light is this? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Look forth </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>It still grows greater </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>From whence comes it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>A Bloody arme it is, that holds a pine </l>
            <l>Lighted, aboue the Capitoll: And, now, </l>
            <l>It waues vnto us. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Braue, and omenous! </l>
            <l>Our enterprise is seal'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>In spight of darknesse, </l>
            <l>That would discountenance it. Looke no more; </l>
            <l>We loose time, and our selues: To what we came for, </l>
            <l>Speake Lucius, we attend you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Noblest Romanes, </l>
            <l>If you were lesse, or, that your faith, and vertue </l>
            <l>Did not hold good that title, which your bloud, </l>
            <l>I should not, now, vnprofitably spend </l>
            <l>My selfe in words, or catch at emptie hopes, </l>
            <l>By ayrie waies, for solide certainties. </l>
            <l>But since in many, and the greatest dangers, </l>
            <l>I still have knowne you no lesse true, then valiant, </l>
            <l>And that I tast, in you, the same affections, </l>
            <l>To will, or nill, to think things good, or bad, </l>
            <l>Alike with me: (which argues your firme friendship) </l>
            <l>I dare the boldlier, with you, set on foote, </l>
            <l>Or leade, vnto this great, and goodliest action. </l>
            <l>What I have thought of it afore, you all </l>
            <l>Have heard apart; I then express'd my zeale </l>
            <l>Vnto the glory; Now, the neede enflames me: </l>
            <l>When I fore-thinke the hard conditions, </l>
            <l>Our states must vndergoe, except, in time, </l>
            <l>We do redeeme our selues to liberty, </l>
            <l>And breake the yron yoake, forg'd for our necks. </l>
            <l>For, what lesse can we call it? when we see </l>
            <l>The common-wealth engross'd so by a few, </l>
            <l>The Giants of the state, that do, by turnes, </l>
            <l>Enioy her, and defile her. All the Earth; </l>
            <l>Her Kings, and Tetrarchs, are their tributaries; </l>
            <l>People, and Nations pay them hourely stipends: </l>
            <l>The riches of the world flowes to their coffers, </l>
            <l>And not, to Romes. While (but those few) the rest, </l>
            <l>How euer great we are, honest, and valiant, </l>
            <l>Are hearded with the vulgar; and so kept, </l>
            <l>As we were onely bred, to consume corne, </l>
            <l>Or weare out wooll, to drinke the Cities water: </l>
            <l>Vngrac'd, without authoritie, or marke, </l>
            <l>Trembling beneath their rods, to whom, (if all </l>
            <l>Were well in Rome) we should come forth bright axes. </l>
            <l>All Places, Honors, Offices are theirs; </l>
            <l>Or where they will conferre them: They leaue us </l>
            <l>The Dangers, the repulses, iudgements, wants; </l>
            <l>Which how long will you beare most valiant spirits? </l>
            <l>Were we not better to fall, once, with vertue, </l>
            <l>Then draw a wretched, and dishonor'd breath </l>
            <l>To loose with shame, when these mens pride will laugh? </l>
            <l>I call the faith of Gods, and Men to question; </l>
            <l>The power is in our hands; our bodies able; </l>
            <l>Our mindes as strong; On the contrary, in them, </l>
            <l>All things growne aged, with their wealth, and yeares. </l>
            <l>There wants, but onely to beginne the businesse, </l>
            <l>The issue is certaine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>X</speaker>
            <l>On, Let us go on. </l>
            <l>Go on, braue Sergius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>It doth strike my soule, </l>
            <l>(And, who can scape the stroke, that hath a soule, </l>
            <l>Or, but the smallest ayre of Man within him?) </l>
            <l>To see them swell with treasure; which they poure </l>
            <l>Out in their riots, eating, drinking, building, </l>
            <l>Aye, in the sea: planing of Hilles with Valleyes; </l>
            <l>And raysing Vallies aboue Hilles, whilst we </l>
            <l>Have not, to give our Bodies Necessaries. </l>
            <l>They have their change of Houses, Manors, Lordships; </l>
            <l>We scarce a fire, or poor houshold Lar. </l>
            <l>They buy rare Atticke statues, Tyrian hangings, </l>
            <l>Ephesian pictures, and Corinthian plate, </l>
            <l>Attalicke garments, and, now new-found, Gemmes </l>
            <l>Since Pompey went for Asia; which they purchase </l>
            <l>At price of Prouinces. The Riuer Phasis </l>
            <l>Cannot affourd them Fowle; nor Lucrine Lake </l>
            <l>Oysters enow: Circei, too, is search'd </l>
            <l>To please the witty Gluttonie of a meale. </l>
            <l>Their ancient Habitations they neglect, </l>
            <l>And set up new; Then, if the Echo like not </l>
            <l>In such a roome, they plucke downe those; build newer, </l>
            <l>Alter them too; and, by all franticke waies, </l>
            <l>Vexe their wild wealth, as they molest the people, </l>
            <l>From whom they force it; Yet, they cannot tame, </l>
            <l>Or ouercome their riches: Not, by making, </l>
            <l>Bathes, Orchards, Fish-pooles, letting in of seas, </l>
            <l>Here; and, then there, forcing them out againe, </l>
            <l>With mountaynous heapes; for which the Earth hath lost </l>
            <l>Most of her ribbes, as entrayles, being now </l>
            <l>Wounded no lesse for Marble, then for gold. </l>
            <l>We, all this while, like calme, benum'd Spectators, </l>
            <l>Sit, till our seates do cracke; and do not heare </l>
            <l>The thundring ruines, whilst, at home, our wants, </l>
            <l>Abroad, our debts do vrge us, our states daily </l>
            <l>Bending to bad, our hopes to worse: And, what </l>
            <l>Is left, but to be crush'd? Wake, wake braue Friends, </l>
            <l>And meete the liberty you oft have wish'd for, </l>
            <l>Behold, renowne, riches, and glory court you. </l>
            <l>Fortune holds out these to you, as rewards. </l>
            <l>Me thinkes (thought I were dumbe) the affaire it selfe </l>
            <l>The opportunity, your needes, and dangers, </l>
            <l>With the braue spoile the warre brings, should inuite you. </l>
            <l>Vse me your Generall, or Souldier: Neither, </l>
            <l>My Minde, nor Body shall be wanting to you. </l>
            <l>And, being Consul, I not doubt to effect, </l>
            <l>All that you wish: If Trust not flatter me, </l>
            <l>And you had, rather, still be slaues, then free. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Free, free. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>It is freedome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Freedome we all stand for. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Why, these are noble voices. Nothing wants then, </l>
            <l>But that we take a solemne, Sacrament, </l>
            <l>To strengthen our designe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>And so to act it. </l>
            <l>Differring hurts, where powers are most prepar'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yet, ere we enter into open act, </l>
            <l>(With fauour) it were no losse, if it might be enquir'd </l>
            <l>What the Condition of these Armes would be? </l>
            <l>Aye, and the meanes, to carry us through. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>How, Friendes! </l>
            <l>Think you, that I would bid you, graspe the winde? </l>
            <l>Or call you to the embracing of a cloude? </l>
            <l>Put your knowne valures of so deare a businesse, </l>
            <l>And have no other second then the Danger, </l>
            <l>Nor other Gyrlond then the losse? Become </l>
            <l>Your owne assurances. And, for the meanes, </l>
            <l>Consider, first, the starke security </l>
            <l>The common wealth is in, now; the whole Senate </l>
            <l>Sleepy, and dreaming no such violent blow; </l>
            <l>Their forces all abroade; of which the greatest, </l>
            <l>That might annoy us most, is fardest off, </l>
            <l>In Asia, vnder Pompey: Those, nearehand, </l>
            <l>Commanded, by our friendes; one Army' in Spaine, </l>
            <l>By Cneus Piso; the other in Mauritania, </l>
            <l>By Nucerinus; both which I have firme, </l>
            <l>And fast vnto our Plot. My selfe, then, standing </l>
            <l>Now to be Consul; with my hop'd Colleague </l>
            <l>Caius Antonius, one, no lesse engag'd </l>
            <l>By his wants then we: And whom I have power to melt, </l>
            <l>An least in any mould. Beside, some others </l>
            <l>That will not yet be nam'd, (both sure, and Great ones) </l>
            <l>Who, when the time comes, shall declare themselues, </l>
            <l>Strong, for our party; for, that no resistance </l>
            <l>In nature can be thought. For our reward, then; </l>
            <l>First, all our Debts are paid; Dangers of Law, </l>
            <l>Actions, Decrees, Iudgments against us quitted; </l>
            <l>The rich Men, as in Sylla's times, proscrib'd, </l>
            <l>And Publication made of all their goods; </l>
            <l>That House is yours; That Land is his; Those Waters, </l>
            <l>Orchards, and walkes a third's: He has that Honor, </l>
            <l>And he that Office. Such a Prouince fals </l>
            <l>To Vargunteius: this to Autronius: That </l>
            <l>To bold Cethegus: Rome to Lentulus: </l>
            <l>You share the World, her Magistracies, Priest-hoods, </l>
            <l>Wealth, and Felicity amongst you, Friendes; </l>
            <l>And Catiline your seruant. Would you, Curius, </l>
            <l>Reuenge the Contumelie stucke upon you, </l>
            <l>In being remoued from the Senate? Now, </l>
            <l>Now, is your time. Would Publius Lentulus </l>
            <l>Strike, for the like disgrace? Now, is his time. </l>
            <l>Would stout Longinus walke the streets of Rome, </l>
            <l>Facing the Prætor? Now, has he a time </l>
            <l>To spurne, and treade the Fasces, into dirt </l>
            <l>Made of the Vsurers, and the Lictors braines. </l>
            <l>Is there a Beauty, here in Rome, you loue? </l>
            <l>An Enemie you would kill? What Head is not yours? </l>
            <l>Whose Wife, which Boy, whose Daughter, of what race, </l>
            <l>That the Husband, or glad Parents shall not bring you, </l>
            <l>And boasting of the office? Only, spare </l>
            <l>Your selues, and you have all the earth beside, </l>
            <l>A field, to exercise your longings in. </l>
            <l>I see you rais'd, and reade your forward mindes </l>
            <l>High, in your faces. Bring the wine, and blood </l>
            <l>You have prepar'd there. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>How! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I have kill'd a slaue, </l>
            <l>And of his blood caus'd to be mixt with wine. </l>
            <l>Fill euery man his bowle. There cannot be </l>
            <l>A fitter drinke, to make this Sanction in. </l>
            <l>Here, I beginne that Sacrament to all. </l>
            <l>O, for a clap of thunder now, as loud, </l>
            <l>As to be heard through-out the Vniuerse, </l>
            <l>To tell the world the fact, and to applaude it. </l>
            <l>Be firme, my hand; not shed a drop: but poure </l>
            <l>Fiercenesse into me, with it; and fell thirst </l>
            <l>Of more, and more: Till Rome be left as blood-lesse, </l>
            <l>As euer her feares made her, or the sword. </l>
            <l>And, when I leaue to wish this to thee, Stepdame </l>
            <l>Or stop, to effect if, with my powers fainting; </l>
            <l>So may my blood be drawne, and so drunke up </l>
            <l>As is this slaues. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>And so be mine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>And mine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>And mine. </l>
            <l>And mine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Crowne me my bowle yet fuller. </l>
            <l>Here, I do drinke this, as I would do Cato's. </l>
            <l>Or the new fellow Cicero's: with that vow </l>
            <l>Which Catiline hath giuen. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>So do I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>And I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>And I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>G</speaker>
            <l>And I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>And all of us. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Why, now is the businesse safe, and each man strengthned. </l>
            <l>Sirah, what aile you? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Nothing. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>Somewhat modest. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Slaue, I will strike your soule out, with my foote, </l>
            <l>Let me but finde you againe with such a face: </l>
            <l>You Whelpe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>Nay Lucius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Are you coying it, </l>
            <l>When I command you to be free, and generall </l>
            <l>To all? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>H</speaker>
            <l>You will be obseru'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Arise, and shew </l>
            <l>But any least auersion in your looke </l>
            <l>To him that bourdes you next, and your throate opens. </l>
            <l>Noble Confederates, thus farre is perfect. </l>
            <l>Only your suffrages I will expect, </l>
            <l>At the assembly for the choosing Consuls. </l>
            <l>And all the voices you can make by friendes </l>
            <l>To my election. Then let me worke out </l>
            <l>Your fortunes, and mine owne. Mean while, all rest </l>
            <l>Seal'd up, and silent, as when rigid frosts </l>
            <l>Have bound up Brookes, and Riuers, forc'd wild beasts </l>
            <l>Vnto their caues, and birds into the woods, </l>
            <l>Clownes to their houses, and the Countrey sleepes; </l>
            <l>That, when the sodaine thaw comes, we may breake </l>
            <l>Upon them like a deluge, bearing downe </l>
            <l>Halfe Rome before us, and inuade the rest </l>
            <l>With cries, and noise able to wake the Vrnes </l>
            <l>Of those are dead, and make their ashes feare. </l>
            <l>“The horrors, that do strike the world, should come </l>
            <l>“Loud, and vnlook'd for; Till they strike, be dumbe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Oraculous Sergius: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>God-like Catiline. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>Can nothing great, and at the height </l>
            <l>Remaine so long? but its owne weight </l>
            <l>Will ruine it? Or, is it blinde Chance, </l>
            <l>That still desires new States to aduance, </l>
            <l>And quit the old? Else, why must Rome </l>
            <l>Be by it selfe; now, ouercome? </l>
            <l>Hath she not foes inow of those, </l>
            <l>Whom she hath made such, and enclose </l>
            <l>Her round about? Or, are they none, </l>
            <l>Except she first become her owne? </l>
            <l>O wretchednesse of greatest States, </l>
            <l>To be obnoxious to these Fates: </l>
            <l>That cannot keepe, what they do gaine; </l>
            <l>And what they raise so ill sustaine. </l>
            <l>Rome, now, is Mistresse of the whole </l>
            <l>World, Sea, and Land, to either Pole; </l>
            <l>And euen that Fortune will destroy </l>
            <l>The power that made it. She doth ioy </l>
            <l>So much in plenty, wealth, and ease, </l>
            <l>As, now, the excesse is her disease. </l>
            <l>She builds in gold; And, to the Starres: </l>
            <l>As, if she threatned Heau'n with warres; </l>
            <l>And seekes for Hell, in quarries deepe, </l>
            <l>Giuing the fiends, that there do keepe, </l>
            <l>A hope of day. Her Women weare </l>
            <l>The spoiles of Nations, in an eare, </l>
            <l>Chang'd for the treasure of a shell; </l>
            <l>And, in their loose attires, do swell </l>
            <l>More light then sailes, when all windes play: </l>
            <l>Yet, are the men more loose then they, </l>
            <l>More kemb'd, and bath'd, and rub'd, and trim'd, </l>
            <l>More sleek'd, more soft, and slacker limm'd; </l>
            <l>As prostitute: so much, that kinde </l>
            <l>May seeke it selfe there, and not finde. </l>
            <l>They eate on beds of silke, and gold; </l>
            <l>At yuorie tables; or, wood sold </l>
            <l>Dearer then it: and, leauing plate, </l>
            <l>Do drinke in stone of higher rate. </l>
            <l>They hunt all grounds; and draw all seas; </l>
            <l>Foule euery brooke, and bush; to please </l>
            <l>Their wanton tasts: and, in request </l>
            <l>Have new, and rare things; not the best. </l>
            <l>Hence comes that wild, a vast expence, </l>
            <l>That hath enforc'd Romes vertue, thence, </l>
            <l>Which simple pouerty first made; </l>
            <l>And, now, ambition doth inuade </l>
            <l>Her state, with eating auarice, </l>
            <l>Riot, and euery other vice. </l>
            <l>Decrees are bought, and Lawes are sold, </l>
            <l>Honors, and Offices for gold; </l>
            <l>The peoples voices: And the free </l>
            <l>Tongues, in the Senate, bribed be. </l>
            <l>Such ruine of her manners Rome </l>
            <l>Doth suffer now, as she is become </l>
            <l>(Without the Gods it soone gaine-say) </l>
            <l>Both her owne spoiler, and owne pray. </l>
            <l>So, Asia, art thou cru'lly euen </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div xml:id="a2" type="act">
        <div xml:id="s2.1" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>With us, for all the blowes thee giuen; </l>
            <l>When we, whose vertue conquer'd thee, </l>
            <l>Thus, by thy vices, ruin'd be. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Those Roomes do smell extremely; Bring my glasse, </l>
            <l>And table hither, Galla. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Looke </l>
            <l>Within, in my blew Cabinet, for the pearle </l>
            <l>I had sent me last, and bring it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>That from Clodius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>From Caius Cæsar. You are for Clodius, still. </l>
            <l>Or Curius. Sirha, if Quintus Curius come, </l>
            <l>I am not in fit moode; I keepe my Chamber: </l>
            <l>Give warning so, without. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Is this it? Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Yes, helpe to hang it in mine eare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Beleeue me, </l>
            <l>It is a rich one, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I hope so: </l>
            <l>It should not be worne there else. Make an end, </l>
            <l>And binde my haire up. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>As it was yesterday? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No, nor the the other day. When knew you me </l>
            <l>Appeare, two dayes together, in one dressing? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Will you have it in the globe, or spire? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>How thou wilt; </l>
            <l>Any way, so thou wilt do it, good Impertinence. </l>
            <l>Thy company, if I slept not very well </l>
            <l>A nights, would make me, an errant foole, with questions. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Alas Madam. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Nay gentle halfe of the Dialogue, cease. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>I do it, indeed, but for your exercise, </l>
            <l>As your Phisician bids me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>How! Does he bid you </l>
            <l>To anger me for exercise? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Not to anger you, </l>
            <l>But stirre your blood a little: There is difference </l>
            <l>Betweene luke-warme, and boyling, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Ioue! </l>
            <l>She meanes to cooke me, I think? Pray you, have done. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>I meane to dresse you, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>O my Iuno, </l>
            <l>Be friend to me! Offring at wit, too? Why, Galla! </l>
            <l>Where hast thou been. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Why, Madame? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>What hast thou done </l>
            <l>With thy poore innocent selfe? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Wherefore, sweet Madam? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Thus to come forth, so sodainly, a wit-worme? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>It pleases you to flout one. I did dreame </l>
            <l>Of Ladie Sempronia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>O, the wonder is out. </l>
            <l>That did infect thee? Well, and how? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Me thought, </l>
            <l>She did discourse the best. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>That euer thou heard'st? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>In thy sleepe? Of what was her discourse? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Of the Republicke, Madame, and the State, </l>
            <l>And how she was in debt, and where she meant </l>
            <l>To raise fresh summes: She is a great States-woman. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Thou dreamp'tst all this? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>No, but you know she is Madame, </l>
            <l>And both a Mistresse of the Latine tongue, </l>
            <l>And of the Greeke. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Aye, but I neuer dreampt it, Galla, </l>
            <l>As thou hast done, and therefore you must pardon me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Indeede, you mocke me, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Indeede, no. </l>
            <l>Forth with your learned Ladie: She has a wit, too? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>A very masculine one. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>A she-Criticke, Galla? </l>
            <l>And can compose, in verse, and make quicke iests, </l>
            <l>Modest, or otherwise? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Yes Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>She can sing, too? </l>
            <l>And play on Instruments? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Of all kindes, they say. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>And doth dance rarely? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Excellent. So well, </l>
            <l>As a bald Senator made a iest, and said, </l>
            <l>It was better, then an honest woman neede. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Tut, she may beare that. Few wise womens honesties </l>
            <l>Will do their courtship hurt. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>She is liberall too, Madam. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>What of her money, or her honor, pray thee? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Of both, you know not which she doth spare least. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>A comely commendation. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Troth, it is pitty </l>
            <l>She is in yeares. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Why Galla? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>For it is. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>O, is that all? I thought thou hadst had a reason. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Why so I have. She has beene a fine Ladie, </l>
            <l>And, yet, she dresses herselfe, (except you Madame) </l>
            <l>One of the best in Rome: and paints, and hides </l>
            <l>Her decayes very well. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>They say, it is </l>
            <l>Rather a visor, then a face she weares. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>They wrong her verily Madame, she does sleeke </l>
            <l>With crums of bread, and milke, and lies a nights </l>
            <l>In as neate gloues. But she is faine of late </l>
            <l>To seeke, more then she is sought to (the fame is) </l>
            <l>And so spends that way. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Thou knowst all. But Galla, </l>
            <l>What say you to Catilines Ladie, Orestilla? </l>
            <l>There is the Gallant. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>She does well. She has </l>
            <l>Very good sutes, and very rich: but, then, </l>
            <l>She cannot put them on. She knowes not, how </l>
            <l>To weare a garment. You shall have her all </l>
            <l>Iewels, and gold sometimes, so that her selfe </l>
            <l>Appeares the least part of her selfe. No in troth, </l>
            <l>As I liue, Madame, you put them all downe </l>
            <l>With your meere strength of iudgement; and do draw, too, </l>
            <l>The world of Rome to follow you: you attire </l>
            <l>Your selfe so diuersly, and with that spirit, </l>
            <l>Still to the noblest humors. They could make </l>
            <l>Loue to your dresse, although your face were away, they say. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>And body too, and have the better match of it? </l>
            <l>Say they not so too, Galla? Now! What newes </l>
            <l>Trauailes your count'nance with? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>If it please you, Madam </l>
            <l>The Ladie Sempronia is lighted at the gate; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Castor, my dreame, my dreame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>And comes to see you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>For Venus sake, good Madame see her. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Peace </l>
            <l>The foole is wild, I think. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>And heare her talke, </l>
            <l>Sweet Madame, of State-matters, and the Senate. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s2.2" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Fvluia, good wench, how dost thou? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Well, Sempronia, </l>
            <l>Whither are you thus early addrest? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>To see </l>
            <l>Aurelia Orestilla. She sent for me. </l>
            <l>I came to call thee, with me; wilt thou goe? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I cannot now, in troth, I have some letters </l>
            <l>To write, and send away. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Alas, I pitty thee. </l>
            <l>I have bene writing all this night, (and am </l>
            <l>So very weary) vnto all the Tribes, </l>
            <l>And Centuries, for their voyces, to helpe Catiline, </l>
            <l>In his election. We shall make him Consul </l>
            <l>I hope, amongst us. Crassus, I, and Cæsar </l>
            <l>Will carry it for him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Does he stand for it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>He is the chiefe Candidate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Who stands beside? </l>
            <l>Give me some wine, and poulder for my teeth. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Here is a good pearle in troth. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>A prettie one. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>A very orient one. There are Competitors, </l>
            <l>Caius Antonius, Publius Galba, Lucius </l>
            <l>Cassius Longinus, Quinius Cornificius, </l>
            <l>Caius Licinius, and that talker, Cicero. </l>
            <l>But Catiline, and Antonius will be chosen. </l>
            <l>For foure of the other, Licinius, Longinus, </l>
            <l>Galba, and Cornificius will give way. </l>
            <l>And Cicero they will not choose. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No? Why? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>It will be cross'd, by the Nobility. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>How she does vnderstand the common busines! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Nor, were it fit. He is but a new fellow, </l>
            <l>An In-mate here in Rome (as Catiline calls him) </l>
            <l>And, the Patricians should do very ill, </l>
            <l>To let the Consul-ship be so defil'd </l>
            <l>As it would be, if he obtain'd it? A meere upstarr, </l>
            <l>That has no pedigree, no house, no coate, </l>
            <l>No ensignes of a family? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>He has vertue. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Hang vertue, where there is no blood: it is vice </l>
            <l>And, in him, sawcinesse. Why should he presume </l>
            <l>To be more learned, or more eloquent, </l>
            <l>Then the Nobility? or boast any quality </l>
            <l>Worthie a Noble man, himselfe not noble? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It was vertue onely, at first, made all men noble. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I yeeld you, it might, at first, in Romes poore age; </l>
            <l>When both her Kings, and Consuls held the plough, </l>
            <l>Or garden'd well: But, now, we have no need, </l>
            <l>To digge, or loose our sweat for it. We have wealth, </l>
            <l>Fortune and ease, and then their stocke, to spend on, </l>
            <l>Of Name, for Vertue, which will beare us out </l>
            <l>'Gainst all new commers: and can neuer faile us, </l>
            <l>While the succession stayes. And, we must glorifie, </l>
            <l>A Mushrome? one of yesterday? a fine speaker? </l>
            <l>'Cause he has suck'd at Athens? and aduance him, </l>
            <l>To our owne losse? No Fuluia. There are they </l>
            <l>Can speake Greeke too, if need were, Cæsar and I </l>
            <l>Have sate upon him; so hath Crassus, too; </l>
            <l>And others. We have all decreed his rest, </l>
            <l>For rising farder. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Excellent rare Lady! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Sempronia, you are beholden to my woman, here, </l>
            <l>She does admire you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>O good Galla, how dost thou? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>The better, for your learned Ladiship. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Is this grey poulder, a good Dentifrice? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>You see I vse it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I have one is whiter. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It may be so. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Yet this smells well. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>And clenses </l>
            <l>Very well Madam, and resists the crudities. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Fuluia, I pray thee, who comes to thee, now? </l>
            <l>Which of our great Patricians? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Faith, I keepe </l>
            <l>No Catalogue of them. Sometimes I have one, </l>
            <l>Sometimes another, as the toy takes their blouds. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Thou hast them all. Faith, when was Quintus Curius, </l>
            <l>Thy speciall seruant, here? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>My speciall seruant? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Yes, thy Idolater, I call him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>He may be yours, </l>
            <l>If you do like him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>How! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>He comes, not, here, </l>
            <l>I have forbid him, hence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Venus forbid! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Why? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Your so constant Louer. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>So much the rather. </l>
            <l>I would have change. So would you too, I am sure. </l>
            <l>And now, you may have him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>He is fresh yet, Fuluia: </l>
            <l>Beware, how you do tempt me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Faith, for me, </l>
            <l>He is somewhat too fresh, indeed. The salt is gone, </l>
            <l>That gaue him season. His good gifts are done. </l>
            <l>He does not yeeld the crop that he was wont. </l>
            <l>And, for the act, I can have secret fellowes, </l>
            <l>With backs worth ten of him, and shall please me </l>
            <l>(Now that the Land is fled) a myriade better. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>And those one may command. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It is true, These Lordings, </l>
            <l>Your noble Faunes, they are so imperious, saucy, </l>
            <l>Rude, and as boystrous as Centaures; leaping </l>
            <l>A Ladie, at first sight. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>And must be borne </l>
            <l>Both with, and out, they think. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Tut, I will obserue </l>
            <l>None of them all: nor humor them a iot </l>
            <l>Longer, then they come laden in the hand, </l>
            <l>And say, here is the one, for the tother. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Does Cæsar give well? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>They shall all give, and pay well, that come here </l>
            <l>If they will have it: and that iewels, pearle, </l>
            <l>Plate, or round summes, to buy these. I am not taken </l>
            <l>With a Cob-Swan, or a high-mounting Bull, </l>
            <l>As foolish Leda, and Europa were, </l>
            <l>But the bright gold, with Danae. For such price, </l>
            <l>I would endure, a rough, harsh Iupiter, </l>
            <l>Or ten such thundring Gamsters, and refraine </l>
            <l>To laugh at them, till they are gone, with my much suffring. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Thou art a most happy wench, that thus canst make </l>
            <l>Vse of thy youth, and freshnesse, in the season: </l>
            <l>And hast it to make vse of. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>(Which is the happinesse.) </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I am, now, faine to give to them, and keepe </l>
            <l>Musique, and a continuall table, to invuite them; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Yes, and they studie your kitchin, more then you: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Eate my selfe out with vsury, and my Lord, too, </l>
            <l>And all my officers, and friends beside, </l>
            <l>To procure moneyes, for the needfull charge </l>
            <l>I must be at, to have them: And, yet, scarce </l>
            <l>Can I atchieue them, so. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Why, that is because </l>
            <l>You affect yong faces onely, and smooth chinnes, </l>
            <l>Sempronia. If you would loue beards, and bristles, </l>
            <l>(One with another, as others do) or wrinkles ~~ </l>
            <l>Who is that? Looke Galla. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>It is the partie, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>What party? Has he no name? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>It is Quintus Curius; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Did I not bid them, say, I kept my chamber? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>Why, so they do. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I will leaue you, Fuluia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Nay, good Sempronia, stay. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>In faith, I will not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>By Iuno, I would not see him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I will not hinder you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>K</speaker>
            <l>You know, he will not be kept out, Madam. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>No, </l>
            <l>Nor shall not, carefull Galla, by my meanes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>As I do liue, Sempronia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>What needs this? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Go, say, I am asleepe, and ill at ease. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>By Castor, no; I will tell him, you are awake; </l>
            <l>And very well. Stay Galla. Farewell Fuluia: </l>
            <l>I know my manners. Why do you labour, thus, </l>
            <l>With action, against purpose? Quintus Curius, </l>
            <l>She is, yfaith, here, and in disposition: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Spight, with your courtesie. How shall I be tortur'd! </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s2.3" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Where are you, fayre one, that conceale your selfe; </l>
            <l>And keepe your beauty, within lockes, and barres, here, </l>
            <l>Like a fooles treasure? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>True, she was a foole, </l>
            <l>When, first she shew'd it to a theefe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>How prety Solennesse! </l>
            <l>So harsh, and short? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>The fooles Artillery, sir. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Then, take my gowne off, for the encounter. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Stay sir. </l>
            <l>I am not in the moode. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I will put you into it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Best, you put your selfe, in your case againe, and keepe </l>
            <l>Your furious appetite warme, against you have place for it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>What! do you coy it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No sir. I am not proud. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I would you were. You think, this state becomes you? </l>
            <l>By Hercules, it does not. Looke in your glasse, now, </l>
            <l>And see, how sciruely that countenance shewes; </l>
            <l>You would be loth to owne it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I shall not change it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Faith, but you must; and slacke this bended brow; </l>
            <l>And shoote lesse scorne: There is a Fortune comming </l>
            <l>Towards you, Daintie, that will take thee, thus, </l>
            <l>And set thee aloft, to tread upon the head </l>
            <l>Of her owne statue here in Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I wonder, </l>
            <l>Who let this Promiser in! Did you, good Diligence? </l>
            <l>Give him his bribe, againe. Or if you had none, </l>
            <l>Pray you demand him, why he is so ventrous, </l>
            <l>To presse, thus, to my chamber, being forbidden </l>
            <l>Both, by my selfe, and seruants? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>How! This is handsome! </l>
            <l>And somewhat a new straine! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It is not strain'd, Sir. </l>
            <l>It is very naturall. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I have known it otherwise, </l>
            <l>Betweene the parties, though. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>For your fore-knowledge, </l>
            <l>Thanke that, which made it. It will not be so, </l>
            <l>Hereafter, I assure you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>No, my Mistresse? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No though you bring the same materials. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Heare me, </l>
            <l>You ouer act when you should vnderdoe. </l>
            <l>A little call your selfe againe, and think. </l>
            <l>If you do this to practise on me or finde </l>
            <l>At what forc'd distance you can hold your seruant; </l>
            <l>That it be an artificiall tricke, to enflame, </l>
            <l>And fire me more, fearing my loue may neede it, </l>
            <l>As, heretofore, you have done; why, proceede. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>As I have done, heretofore? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Yes, when you would faine </l>
            <l>Your husbands iealousie, your seruants watches, </l>
            <l>Speake softly, and runne often to the dore, </l>
            <l>Or to the windore, forme strange feares that were not; </l>
            <l>As if the pleasure were lesse acceptable, </l>
            <l>That were secure. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>You are an impudent fellow. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>And, when you might better have done it, at the gate, </l>
            <l>To take me in at the casement. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I take you in? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Yes, you my Lady. And, then, being abed with you, </l>
            <l>To have your well taught wayter, here, come running, </l>
            <l>And cry, her Lord, and hide me without cause, </l>
            <l>Crush'd in a chest, or thrust up in a chimney. </l>
            <l>When he, tame Crow, was winking at his Farme; </l>
            <l>Or, had he beene here, and present, would have kept </l>
            <l>Both eyes, and beake seal'd up, for sixe sesterces. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>You have a slanderous, beastly, vnwash'd tongue, </l>
            <l>In your rude mouth, and fauouring your selfe, </l>
            <l>Vn-manner'd Lord. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>How now! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It is your title, Sir. </l>
            <l>Who (since you have lost your owne good name, and know not </l>
            <l>What to loose more) care not, whose honor you wound, </l>
            <l>Or fame you poyson with it. You should goe, </l>
            <l>And vent your selfe, in the region, where you liue, </l>
            <l>Among the Suburbe-Brothels, Baudes, and Brokers, </l>
            <l>Whither your broken fortunes have design'd you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Nay, then I must stop your furie, I see; and plucke </l>
            <l>The tragicke visor off. Come, Ladie Cypris, </l>
            <l>Know your owne vertues, quickly. I will not be </l>
            <l>Put to the woing of you thus, afresh, </l>
            <l>At euery turne, for all the Venus in you. </l>
            <l>Yeeld, and be pliant; or by Pollux ~~ How now? </l>
            <l>Will Lais turne a Lucrece? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No, but by Castor, </l>
            <l>Hold off your Rauishers hands, I pierce your heart, else. </l>
            <l>I will not be put to kill my selfe, as she did </l>
            <l>For you, sweet Tarquine. What? do you fall off? </l>
            <l>Nay, it becomes you graciously. Put not up. </l>
            <l>You will sooner draw your weapon on me, I think it, </l>
            <l>Then on the Senate, who have cast you forth </l>
            <l>Disgracefully, to be the common tale </l>
            <l>Of the whole Citty; base, infamous Man: </l>
            <l>For, were you other, you would there imploy </l>
            <l>Your desperate dagger. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Fuluia, you do know </l>
            <l>The strengths you have upon me; Do not vse </l>
            <l>Your power too like a Tyran: I can beare, </l>
            <l>Almost vntill you breake me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I do know, Sir, </l>
            <l>So does the Senate, too, know, you can beare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>By all the Gods, that Senate will smart deepe </l>
            <l>For your upbraidings. I should be right sorry </l>
            <l>To have the meanes so to be veng'd on you, </l>
            <l>(At least, the will) as I shall shortly on them. </l>
            <l>But, goe you on still: Fare you well, deare Ladie; </l>
            <l>You could not still be faire' vnless you were proud. </l>
            <l>You will repent these moodes, and ere it be long, too. </l>
            <l>I shall have you come about, againe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Do you think so? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Yes, and I know so. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>By what Augury? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>By the faire Entrailes of the Matrons chests, </l>
            <l>Gold, Pearle, and Iewels, here in Rome, which Fuluia </l>
            <l>Will then (but late) say that she might have shar'd. </l>
            <l>And, grieuing, misse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Tut, all your promis'd Mountaines, </l>
            <l>And Seas, I am so stalely acquainted with ~~ . </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>But, when you see the vniversall floud </l>
            <l>Runne by your coffers; that my Lords, the Senators, </l>
            <l>Are sold for slaues, their Wiues for bond-women, </l>
            <l>Their Houses, and fine Gardens giuen away, </l>
            <l>And all their goods, vnder the Speare, at out-cry, </l>
            <l>And you have none of this; but are still Fuluia, </l>
            <l>Or perhaps lesse, while you are thinking of it: </l>
            <l>You will aduise then, Coynesse, with your cushion, </l>
            <l>And looke on your fingers; say, how you were wish'd; </l>
            <l>And so, he left you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Call him again, Galla: </l>
            <l>This is not vsuall, something hangs on this </l>
            <l>That I must winne out of him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>How now, melt you? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Come, you will laugh, now, at my easinesse? </l>
            <l>But, it is no miracle; Doues, they say, will bill, </l>
            <l>After their pecking, and their murmuring. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Yes, </l>
            <l>And then it is kindly. I would have my Loue </l>
            <l>Angry, sometimes, to sweeten off the rest </l>
            <l>Of her behauiour. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>You do see, I study </l>
            <l>How I may please you, then. But you think, Curius </l>
            <l>It is couetise hath wrought me; If you loue me </l>
            <l>Change that vnkinde concept. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>By my lou'd soule, </l>
            <l>I loue thee, like to it; and it is my study, </l>
            <l>More then mine owne reuenge, to make thee happy. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>And it is that iust reuenge doth make me happy </l>
            <l>To heare you prosequute: and which, indeede, </l>
            <l>Hath wonne me, to you, more, then all the hope </l>
            <l>Of what can else be promis'd. I loue valour </l>
            <l>Better, then any Ladie loues her face, </l>
            <l>Or dressing: then my selfe does. Let me grow </l>
            <l>Still, where I do embrace. But what good meanes </l>
            <l>Have you to effect it? Shall I know your proiect? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Thou shalt, if thou wilt be gracious. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>As I can be. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>And wilt thou kisse me, then? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>As close as shels </l>
            <l>Of Cockles meet. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>And print them deep? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Quite through </l>
            <l>Our subtle lips. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>And often? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I will sow them, </l>
            <l>Faster then you can reape. What is your plot? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Why, now my Fuluia lookes, like her bright name, </l>
            <l>And is her selfe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Nay, answere me, your plot: </l>
            <l>I pray thee tell me, Quintius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Aye, these sounds </l>
            <l>Become a Mistresse. Here is harmony. </l>
            <l>When you are harsh, I see, the way to bend you </l>
            <l>Is not with violence, but seruice. Cruell, </l>
            <l>A Lady is a fire, gentle, a light. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Will you not tell me, what I aske you? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>All, </l>
            <l>That I can think, sweet Loue, or my breast holds, </l>
            <l>I will poure into thee. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>What is your designe, then? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I will tell thee; Catiline shall now be Consull: </l>
            <l>But, you will heare more, shortly. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Nay, deare Loue. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I will speake it, in thine armes; Let us goe in. </l>
            <l>Rome will be sack'd, her wealth will be our prize; </l>
            <l>By publique ruine, priuate spirits must rise. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>Great Father Mars, and greater Ioue, </l>
            <l>By whose high auspice, Rome hath stood </l>
            <l>Of your great Nephew, that then stroue </l>
            <l>Not with his brother, but your Rites: </l>
            <l>Be present to her now, as then, </l>
            <l>And let not proud, and factious Men </l>
            <l>Against your willes oppose their mights. </l>
            <l>Our Consuls, now, are to be made; </l>
            <l>O, put it in the publique voice </l>
            <l>To make a free, and worthy choice; </l>
            <l>Excluding such as would inuade </l>
            <l>The Common wealth. Let whom we name </l>
            <l>Have wisedome, foresight, fortitude, </l>
            <l>Be more with faith, then face endu'd, </l>
            <l>And study conscience, aboue fame. </l>
            <l>Such, as not seeke to get the start </l>
            <l>In State, by power, parts, or bribes, </l>
            <l>Ambition's baudes; but moue the Tribes </l>
            <l>By vertue, modesty, desart. </l>
            <l>Such, as to iustice will adhære, </l>
            <l>What euer great one it offend, </l>
            <l>And from the embraced truth not bend </l>
            <l>For enuie, hatred, gifts, or feare. </l>
            <l>That, by their deedes, will make it knowne, </l>
            <l>Whose dignity they do sustaine; </l>
            <l>And life, state, glory, all they gaine, </l>
            <l>Count the Republiques, not their owne. </l>
            <l>Such the old Bruti, Decij were, </l>
            <l>The Cipi, Curtij, who did give </l>
            <l>Themselues for Rome: And would not liue, </l>
            <l>As men, good, only for a yeare, </l>
            <l>Such were the great Camilli, too; </l>
            <l>The Fabij, Scipio's; that still thought </l>
            <l>No worke, at price inough, was bought, </l>
            <l>That for their Countrey they could do. </l>
            <l>And, to her honor, so did knit; </l>
            <l>As all their acts, were vnderstood </l>
            <l>The sinewes of the Publique good: </l>
            <l>And they themselues, one soule, with it. </l>
            <l>These men were truely Magistrates; </l>
            <l>These neither practis'd force, nor formes; </l>
            <l>Nor did they leaue the helme, in stormes: </l>
            <l>And such they are make happy States. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div xml:id="a3" type="act">
        <div xml:id="s3.1" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Great Honors are great burdens: But, on whom </l>
            <l>They are cast with enuy, he doth beare two loades. </l>
            <l>His cares must still be double to his ioyes, </l>
            <l>In any Dignity; where, if he erre </l>
            <l>He findes no pardon: and, for doing well </l>
            <l>A most small praise, and that wrung out, by force. </l>
            <l>I speake this, Romanes, knowing what the weight </l>
            <l>Of the high charge, you have trusted to me, is. </l>
            <l>Not, that thereby I would with art decline </l>
            <l>The good, or greatnesse of your benefit; </l>
            <l>For, I ascribe it to your singular grace </l>
            <l>And vow, to owe it to no title else, </l>
            <l>Except the Gods, that Cicero' is your Consul. </l>
            <l>I have no vrnes; no dustie moniments; </l>
            <l>No broken images of ancestors, </l>
            <l>Wanting an eare, or nose; no forged tables </l>
            <l>Of long descents, to boast false honors from; </l>
            <l>Or be my vndertakers to your trust. </l>
            <l>But a new Man (as I am stil'd in Rome) </l>
            <l>Whom you have dignified; and more, in whom </l>
            <l>You have cut a way, and left it ope for vertue </l>
            <l>Hereafter, to that place, which our Great men </l>
            <l>Held shut up, with all rampires, for themselues. </l>
            <l>Nor have but few of them, in time bene made </l>
            <l>Your Consuls so; New men, before me, none: </l>
            <l>At my first suite; In my iust yeare: Preferd </l>
            <l>To all Competitors; and some the noblest. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Now the vaine swels. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Up glory. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>And to have </l>
            <l>Your lowde consents, from your owne vtter'd voyces; </l>
            <l>Not silent bookes: nor from the meaner tribes, </l>
            <l>But first, and last, the vniuersall concourse. </l>
            <l>This is my ioy, my gladnesse. But my care, </l>
            <l>My industrie, and vigilance now must worke, </l>
            <l>That still your counsell of me be approu'd; </l>
            <l>Both, by your selues, and those, to whom you have, </l>
            <l>With grudge, prefer'd me: Two things I must labour, </l>
            <l>That neither they upbraid, nor you repent you. </l>
            <l>For euery lapse of mine will, now, be call'd </l>
            <l>Your error; if I make such: But, my hope is, </l>
            <l>So to beare through, and out, the Consulship, </l>
            <l>As spight shall ne're wound you, though it may me. </l>
            <l>And, for my selfe, I have prepar'd this strength, </l>
            <l>To do so well; as, if there happen ill </l>
            <l>Vnto me, it shall make the Gods to blush, </l>
            <l>And be their crime, not mine, that I am enui'd; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>O confidence! more new, then is the Man! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I know well, in what termes I do receiue </l>
            <l>The Common wealth, how vexed, how perplex'd: </l>
            <l>In which, there is not that mischiefe, nor ill fate, </l>
            <l>That good men feare not, wicked men expect not. </l>
            <l>I know, beside, some turbulent practises </l>
            <l>Alreadie on foote, and rumors of more dangers, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Or you will make them, if there be none. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Last, </l>
            <l>I know, it was this, which made the enuy, and pride </l>
            <l>Of the Great Romane bloud bate, and give way </l>
            <l>To my election. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Marcus Tullius, true; </l>
            <l>Our neede made thee our Consull, and thy vertue. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Cato, you will vndoe him, with your praise. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Cæsar will hurt himselfe, with his owne enuie. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>The voyce of Cato is the voyce of Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>The voyce of Rome is the consent of Heauen; </l>
            <l>And that hath plac'd thee, Cicero, at the helme, </l>
            <l>Where thou must render, now thy selfe a Man, </l>
            <l>And Master of thy art. Each pettie hand </l>
            <l>Can steere a ship becalm'd; but he that will </l>
            <l>Gouerne, and carry her to her endes, must know </l>
            <l>His tides, his currents; how to shift his sayles; </l>
            <l>What she will beare in foule, what in faire weathers; </l>
            <l>Where her springs are, her leakes; and how to stop them; </l>
            <l>What sands, what shelues, what rocks do threaten her; </l>
            <l>The forces, and the natures of all winds, </l>
            <l>Gusts, stormes, and tempests; when her keele ploughs hell </l>
            <l>And decke knocks heauen: then, to manage her </l>
            <l>Becomes the name, and office of a Pilot. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Which I will performe, with all the diligence, </l>
            <l>And fortitude I have; nor for my yeare, </l>
            <l>But for my life; except my life be lesse, </l>
            <l>And that my yeare conclude it: If it must, </l>
            <l>Your will, lou'd Gods. This heart shall yet employ </l>
            <l>A day, an houre is left me, so, for Rome. </l>
            <l>As it shall spring a life, out of my death, </l>
            <l>To shine, for euer glorious in my facts; </l>
            <l>“The vicious count their yeares, vertuous their acts. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>Most noble Consul! Let us wait him home. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Most popular Consul he is growne, me thinkes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>How the rout cling to him! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>And Cato leads them! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>You, his colleague, Antonius, are not look't on. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>M</speaker>
            <l>Not I, nor do I care. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>He enioyes rest, </l>
            <l>And ease, the while: Let the others spirit toyle, </l>
            <l>And wake it out, that was inspir'd for turmoyle. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>If all reports be true, yet, Caius Cæsar, </l>
            <l>The time hath neede of such a watch, and spirit: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Reports? Do you beleeve them Catulus, </l>
            <l>Why, he does make, and breed them for the people; </l>
            <l>To endeare his seruice to them. Do you not tast </l>
            <l>An art, that is so common? Popular men, </l>
            <l>They must create strange Monsters, and then quell them; </l>
            <l>To make their artes seeme something. Would you have </l>
            <l>Such an Herculean Actor in the Scene, </l>
            <l>And not his Hydra? They must sweat no lesse </l>
            <l>To fit their properties, then to expresse their parts. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>“Treasons, and guiltie men are made in States </l>
            <l>“Too oft, to dignifie the Magistrates. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>“Those States be wretched, that are forc'd to buy </l>
            <l>“Their Rulers fame, with their owne infamy. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>We therefore, should prouide that ours do not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>That will Antonius make his care. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>M</speaker>
            <l>I shall. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>And watch the watcher. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Here comes Catiline. </l>
            <l>How does he brooke his late repulse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>I know not, </l>
            <l>But hardly sure. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Longinus, too, did stand? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>At first: But he gaue way vnto his friend. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Who is that come? Lentulus? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Yes. He is againe </l>
            <l>Taken into the Senate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>M</speaker>
            <l>And made Prætor. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>I know it. He had my suffrage, next the Consuls; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>True, you were there, Prince of the Senate, then. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.2" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Hayle noblest Romanes. The most worthy Consul, </l>
            <l>I gratulate your Honor. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>M</speaker>
            <l>I could wish </l>
            <l>It had beene happier, by your fellowship, </l>
            <l>Most noble Sergius, had it pleas'd the people. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>It did not please the Gods; who instruct the people. </l>
            <l>And their vnquestion'd pleasures must be seru'd. </l>
            <l>They know what is fitter for us, then our selues; </l>
            <l>And it were impiety, to think against them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>You beare it rightly, Lucius; and, it glads me, </l>
            <l>To find your thoughts so euen. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I shall still </l>
            <l>Studie to make them such to Rome, and Heauen. </l>
            <l>I would withdraw with you, a little, Iulius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>I will come home to you: Crassus would not have you </l>
            <l>To speake to him, 'fore Quintus Catulus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I apprehend you. No, when they shall iudge </l>
            <l>Honors conuenient for me, I shall have them, </l>
            <l>With a full hand: I know it. In meane time, </l>
            <l>They are no lesse part of the Common-wealth, </l>
            <l>That do obey, then those, that do command. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>O, let me kisse your forehead, Lucius. </l>
            <l>How are you wrongd! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>By whom? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Publicke report. </l>
            <l>That giues you out, to stomacke your repulse; </l>
            <l>And brooke it deadly. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Sir: she brookes not me. </l>
            <l>Belieue me rather, and your selfe, now, of me; </l>
            <l>It is a kinde of slander, to trust rumour. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>I know it. And I could be angrie with it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>So may not I. Where it concernes himselfe, </l>
            <l>Who is angry at a slander, makes it true. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Most noble Sergius! This your temper melts me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Will you do office to the Consul, Quintus? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>That Cato, and the Rout have done the other? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>I waite, when he will goe. Be still your selfe. </l>
            <l>He wants no state, or honors, that hath vertue, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Did I appeare so tame, as this man thinks me? </l>
            <l>Look'd I so poore, so dead? So like that nothing, </l>
            <l>Which he calls vertuous? O my breast, breake quickly; </l>
            <l>And shew my friends my in-parts, least they think </l>
            <l>I have betraid them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Where is Gabinius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Gone. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>And Vargunteius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Slipt away; all shrunke: </l>
            <l>Now he mist the Consul-ship. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I am </l>
            <l>The scorne of bond-men; who are next to beasts. </l>
            <l>What can I worse pronounce my selfe, that is fitter? </l>
            <l>The Owle of Rome, whom Boyes, and Girles will hout; </l>
            <l>That were I set up, for that woodden God, </l>
            <l>That keepes our gardens, could not fright the crowes, </l>
            <l>Or the least Bird from muting on my head, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>It is strange how he should misse it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Is it not stranger, </l>
            <l>The upstart Cicero should carry it so, </l>
            <l>By all consents, from men so much his Masters? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>It is true. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>To what a shadow, am I melted! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Antonius wan it but by some few voyces. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Strooke through, like ayre, and feele it not. My wounds </l>
            <l>Close faster, then they are made. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>The whole designe, </l>
            <l>And enterprise is lost by it. All handes quit it, </l>
            <l>Upon his fayle. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I grow mad at my patience. </l>
            <l>It is a Visor that hath poyson'd me. </l>
            <l>Would it had burnt me up, and I died inward: </l>
            <l>My heart first turn'd to ashes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Here is Cethegus yet. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.3" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Repulse upon repulse? An In-mate, Consul? </l>
            <l>That I could reach the axell, where the pinnes are, </l>
            <l>Which bolt this frame; that I might pull them out, </l>
            <l>And plucke all into Chaos; with my selfe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>What, are we wishing now? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Yes, my Cethegus. </l>
            <l>Who would not fall with all the world about him? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Not I, that would stand on it, when it falles; </l>
            <l>And force new Nature out, to make another. </l>
            <l>These wishing taste of woman, not of Romane. </l>
            <l>Let us seeke other armes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>What should we do? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Do, and not wish; something, that wishes take not: </l>
            <l>So sodaine, as the Gods should not preuent, </l>
            <l>Nor scarce have time, to feare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>O noble Caius! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>It likes me better, that you are not Consul. </l>
            <l>I would not goe through open dores, but breake them; </l>
            <l>Swim to my ends, through bloud; or build a bridge </l>
            <l>Of carcasses; make on, upon the heads </l>
            <l>Of men, strooke downe, like piles; to reach the liues </l>
            <l>Of those remaine, and stand: Then is it a pray, </l>
            <l>When Danger stoppes, and Ruine makes the way. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>How thou dost vtter me, braue soule, that may not, </l>
            <l>At all times, shew such as I am; but bend </l>
            <l>Vnto occasion? Lentulus, this man, </l>
            <l>If all our fire were out, would fetch downe new, </l>
            <l>Out of the hand of Ioue; and riuet him </l>
            <l>To Caucasus, should he but frowne: and let </l>
            <l>His owne gaunt Eagle flie at him, to tire. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Peace, here comes Cato. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Let him come, and heare. </l>
            <l>I will no more dissemble. Quit us all; </l>
            <l>I, and my lou'd Cethegus here, alone </l>
            <l>Will vndertake this Giants warre, and cary it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>What needs this, Lucius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Sergius be more wary. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Now, Marcus Cato, our new Consuls spie, </l>
            <l>What is your sowre austerity sent to explore. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Nothing in thee, licentious Catiline: </l>
            <l>Halters, and racks cannot expresse from thee </l>
            <l>More, then thy deeds. It is onely iudgement waits thee. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Whose? Cato's? shall he iudge me? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No, the Gods, </l>
            <l>Who, euer, follow those, they go not with: </l>
            <l>And Senate; who, with fire, must purge sicke Rome </l>
            <l>Of noysome Citizens, whereof thou art one. </l>
            <l>Be gone, or else let me. It is bane to draw </l>
            <l>The same ayre with thee. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Strike him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Hold good Caius; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Fearst thou not, Cato? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Rash Cethegus, no. </l>
            <l>It were wrong with Rome, when Catiline and thou </l>
            <l>Do threat, if Cato feard. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>The fire you speake of </l>
            <l>If any flame of it approach my fortunes, </l>
            <l>I will quench it, not with water, but with ruine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>You heare this, Romanes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Beare it to the Consul. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>I would have sent away his soule, before him. </l>
            <l>You are too heauie, Lentulus, and remisse; </l>
            <l>It is for you we labour, and the Kingdome </l>
            <l>Promis'd you by the Sibyll's. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Which his Prætorship, </l>
            <l>And some small flattery of the Senate more, </l>
            <l>Will make him to forget. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>You wrong me, Lucius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>He will not need these spurres. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>The action needs them. </l>
            <l>“These things, when they proceed not, they goe backward. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Let us consult then. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Let us, first, take armes. </l>
            <l>They that denie us iust things, now, will give </l>
            <l>All that we aske; if once they see our swords. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Our obiects must be sought with wounds, not words. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.4" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Is there a Heauen? and Gods? and can it be </l>
            <l>They should so slowly heare, so slowly see? </l>
            <l>Hath Ioue no thunder? or is Ioue become </l>
            <l>Stupide as thou art? o neare-wretched Rome, </l>
            <l>When both thy Senate, and thy Gods do sleepe, </l>
            <l>And neither thine, nor their owne States do keepe! </l>
            <l>What will awake thee, Heauen? what can excite </l>
            <l>Thine anger, if this practise be too light? </l>
            <l>His former drifts partake of former times, </l>
            <l>But this last plot was only Catilines. </l>
            <l>O, that it were his last. But he, before </l>
            <l>Hath safely done so much, he will still dare more. </l>
            <l>Ambition, like a torrent, nere lookes backe; </l>
            <l>And is a swelling, and the last affection </l>
            <l>A high minde can put off: being both a Rebell </l>
            <l>Vnto the soule, and reason, and enforceth </l>
            <l>All lawes, all conscience, treades upon religion, </l>
            <l>And offereth violence to Natures selfe. </l>
            <l>But here, is that transcends it. A blacke purpose </l>
            <l>To confound Nature: and to ruine that, </l>
            <l>Which neuer Age, nor Mankinde can repaire. </l>
            <l>Sit downe, good Lady; Cicero is lost </l>
            <l>In this your fable: for, to think it true </l>
            <l>Tempteth my reason. It so farre exceedes </l>
            <l>All insolent fictions of the tragicke Scene. </l>
            <l>The Commonwealth, yet panting, vnderneath </l>
            <l>The stripes, and wounds of a late ciuill warre, </l>
            <l>Gasping for life, and scarce restor'd to hope; </l>
            <l>To seeke to oppresse her, with new cruelty, </l>
            <l>And vtterly extinguish her long name, </l>
            <l>With so prodigious, and vnheard-of fiercenesse! </l>
            <l>What sinke of Monsters, wretches of lost minds, </l>
            <l>Mad after change, and desp'rate in their states, </l>
            <l>Wearied, and gall'd with their necessities, </l>
            <l>( For all this I allow them) durst have thought it? </l>
            <l>Would not the barbarous deeds have beene beleeu'd, </l>
            <l>Of Marius, and Sylla, by our Children, </l>
            <l>Without, this fact had rise forth greater, for them? </l>
            <l>All, that they did, was piety, to this. </l>
            <l>They, yet, but murdred Kinsfolke, Brothers, Parents, </l>
            <l>Rauish'd the Virgins, and, perhaps, some Matrons; </l>
            <l>They left the Citty standing, and the Temples: </l>
            <l>The Gods, and Maiesty of Rome were safe yet. </l>
            <l>These purpose to fire it, to dispoile them, </l>
            <l>(Beyond the other euils,) and lay wast </l>
            <l>The farre-triumphed world: For, vnto whom </l>
            <l>Rome is too little, what can be inough? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It is true, my Lord, I had the same discourse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>And, then, to take a horride Sacrament </l>
            <l>In humane blood, for execution </l>
            <l>Of this their dire designe; which might be call'd </l>
            <l>The height of wickednesse: but that, that was higher, </l>
            <l>For which they did it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I assure your Lordship, </l>
            <l>The extreme horror of it almost turn'd me </l>
            <l>To aire, when first I heard it; I was all </l>
            <l>A vapor, when it was told me; and I long'd </l>
            <l>To vent it any where; It was such a secret, </l>
            <l>I thought, it would have burnt me up. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Good Fuluia, </l>
            <l>Feare not your act; and lesse repent you of it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I do not, my good Lord. I know to whom </l>
            <l>I have vtter'd it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You have discharg'd it, safely. </l>
            <l>Should Rome, for whom you have done the happy seruice, </l>
            <l>Turne most ingrate; yet were your vertue paid </l>
            <l>In conscience of the fact: so much good deedes </l>
            <l>Reward themselues. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>My Lord, I did it not </l>
            <l>To any other ayme, but for it selfe. </l>
            <l>To no ambition. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You have learn'd the difference </l>
            <l>Of doing office to the publike weale, </l>
            <l>And priuate friendship, and have shewne it, Lady. </l>
            <l>Be still your selfe. I have sent for Quintus Curius, </l>
            <l>And (for your vertuous sake) if I can winne him, </l>
            <l>Yet, to the common wealth; He shall be safe too. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I will vndertake, my Lord, he will be wonne. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Pray, you ioyne with me, then: And helpe to worke him. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.5" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>How now? Is he come? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>He is here, my Lord. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Goe presently, </l>
            <l>Pray my Colleague Antonius, I may speake with him, </l>
            <l>About some present businesse of the State; </l>
            <l>And (as you goe) call on my brother Quintus, </l>
            <l>And pray him, with the Tribunes to come to me. </l>
            <l>Bid Curius enter. Fuluia, you will aide me? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>It is my duty. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>O, my noble Lord! </l>
            <l>I have to chide you, yfaith. Give me your hand. </l>
            <l>Nay, be not troubled; it shall be gently, Curius. </l>
            <l>You looke upon this Lady? What? Do you ghesse </l>
            <l>My businesse, yet? Come, if you growne, I thunder: </l>
            <l>Therefore, put on your better lookes, and thoughts. </l>
            <l>There is nought but faire, and good intended to you; </l>
            <l>And I would make those your complexion. </l>
            <l>Would you, of whom the Senate had that hope, </l>
            <l>As, on my knowledge, it was in their purpose, </l>
            <l>Next sitting, to restore you: as they have done </l>
            <l>The stupide, and vngratefull Lentulus; </l>
            <l>(Excuse me, that I name you thus, together, </l>
            <l>For, yet, you are not such) would you, I say, </l>
            <l>A person both of Blood and Honor, stock't </l>
            <l>In a long race of vertuous Ancestors, </l>
            <l>Embarke your selfe for such a hellish action, </l>
            <l>With Parricides, and Traitors, men turn'd Furies, </l>
            <l>Out of the wast, and ruine of their fortunes; </l>
            <l>(For it is despaire, that is the mother of madnesse) </l>
            <l>Such as want (that, which all Conspirators, </l>
            <l>But they, have first) meere colour for their mischiefe? </l>
            <l>O, I must blush with you. Come, you shall not labour </l>
            <l>To extenuate your guilt, but quit it cleane; </l>
            <l>“Bad men excuse their faults, good men will leaue them. </l>
            <l>“He acts the third crime, that defends the first. </l>
            <l>Here is a Lady, that hath got the start, </l>
            <l>In piety, of us all; and, for whose vertue, </l>
            <l>I could almost turne Louer, againe: but that </l>
            <l>Terentia would be iealous. What an honor </l>
            <l>Hath she atchieued to herselfe! What voices, </l>
            <l>Titles, and loud applauses will pursue her, </l>
            <l>Through euery street! What windores will be fill'd, </l>
            <l>To shoote eyes at her! What enuy, and griefe in Matrons, </l>
            <l>They are not she! When this her act shall seeme </l>
            <l>Worthier a Chariot, then if Pompey came, </l>
            <l>With Asia chain'd! All this is while she liues. </l>
            <l>But dead, her very name will be a Statue, </l>
            <l>Not wrought for time, but rooted in the minds </l>
            <l>Of all posterity; when Brasse, and Marble, </l>
            <l>Aye, and the Capitol it selfe is dust. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Your Honor thinks too highly of me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>No: </l>
            <l>I cannot think inough. And I would have </l>
            <l>Him emulate you. It is no shame, to follow </l>
            <l>The better precedent. She shewes you, Curius, </l>
            <l>What claime your Countrey laies to you; and what duty </l>
            <l>You owe to it: Be not afraid, to breake </l>
            <l>With Murderers, and Traytors, for the sauing </l>
            <l>A life, so neare, and necessary to you, </l>
            <l>As is your Countries. Think but on her right. </l>
            <l>“No Child can be too naturall to his Parent. </l>
            <l>She is our common Mother, and doth challenge </l>
            <l>The prime part of us; Do not stop, but give it: </l>
            <l>“He, that is void of feare, may soone be iust, </l>
            <l>“And no Religion binds men to be Traitors. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>My Lord, he vnderstands it; and will follow </l>
            <l>Your sauing counsell. But his shame, yet, stayes him. </l>
            <l>I know, that he is comming. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Do you know it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Yes, let me speake with you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>O you are — . </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>What am I? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Speake not so loud. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I am, what you should be, </l>
            <l>Come, do you think, I would walke in any plot, </l>
            <l>Where Madame Sempronia should take place of me, </l>
            <l>And Fuluia come in the rere or on the by? </l>
            <l>That I would be her second, in a businesse, </l>
            <l>Though it might vantage me all the Sunne sees? </l>
            <l>It was a seely phant'sie of yours. Apply </l>
            <l>Your selfe to me, and the Consul, and be wise; </l>
            <l>Follow the fortune I have put you into: </l>
            <l>You may be something this way, and with safety. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Nay, I must tolerate no whisperings, Lady. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Sir, you may heare. I tell him, in the way, </l>
            <l>Wherein he was, how hazardous his course was. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>How hazardous? how certaine to all ruine. </l>
            <l>Did he, or do, yet, any of them imagine </l>
            <l>The Gods would sleepe, to such a Stygian practise, </l>
            <l>Against that Commonwealth, which they have founded </l>
            <l>With so much labour, and like care have kept, </l>
            <l>Now neare seuen hundred yeares? It is a madnesse, </l>
            <l>Wherewith Heauen blinds them, when it would confound them, </l>
            <l>That they should think it. Come, my Curius, </l>
            <l>I see your nature is right; you shall no more </l>
            <l>Be mention'd with them: I will call you mine, </l>
            <l>And trouble this good shame, no farder. Stand </l>
            <l>Firme for your Countrey; and become a man </l>
            <l>Honor'd, and lou'd. It were a noble life, </l>
            <l>To be found dead, embracing her. Know you, </l>
            <l>What thanks, what titles, what rewards the Senate </l>
            <l>Will heape upon you, certaine, for your seruice? </l>
            <l>Let not a desperate action more engage you, </l>
            <l>Then safety should; and wicked friendship force </l>
            <l>What honesty, and vertue cannot worke. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>He tels you right, sweete friend: It is sauing counsaile. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Most noble Consul, I am yours, and hers; </l>
            <l>I meane my Countries: you have form'd me new. </l>
            <l>Inspiring me, with what I should be, truely. </l>
            <l>And I intreate, my faith may not seeme cheaper </l>
            <l>For springing out of penitence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Good Curius, </l>
            <l>It shall be dearer rather, and because </l>
            <l>I would make it such, heare how I trust you more. </l>
            <l>Keepe still your former face; and mixe againe </l>
            <l>With these lost spirits. Runne all their mazes with them; </l>
            <l>For such are treasons. Finde their windings out, </l>
            <l>And subtle turnings, watch their snaky waies, </l>
            <l>Through brakes, and hedges, into woods of darkenesse, </l>
            <l>Where they are faine to creepe upon their breasts </l>
            <l>In pathes nere trod by Men, but Wolues, and Panthers. </l>
            <l>Learne, beside Catiline, Lentulus, and those, </l>
            <l>Whose names I have, what new ones they draw in; </l>
            <l>Who else are likely; what those Great ones are, </l>
            <l>They do not name; what waies they meane to take; </l>
            <l>And whither their hopes point; to warre: or ruine, </l>
            <l>By some surprize. Explore all their intents, </l>
            <l>And what you finde may profit the Republique, </l>
            <l>Acquaint me with it, either, by your selfe, </l>
            <l>Or this your vertuous friend, on whom I lay </l>
            <l>The care of vrging you; I will see, that Rome </l>
            <l>Shall proue a thankefull, and a bounteous Mother: </l>
            <l>Be secret as the night. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>And constant Sir. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I do not doubt it. Though the time cut off </l>
            <l>All vowes. “The dignity of truth is lost, </l>
            <l>With much protesting: Who is there! This way, </l>
            <l>Least you be seene, and met. And when you come, </l>
            <l>Be this your token; to this fellow. Light them. </l>
            <l>O Rome, in what a sicknesse art thou fall'n! </l>
            <l>How dangerous, and deadly! when thy head </l>
            <l>Is drown'd in sleepe, and all thy body feu'ry! </l>
            <l>No noise, no pulling, no vexation wakes thee, </l>
            <l>Thy Lethargie is such: or if, by chance, </l>
            <l>Thou heau'st thy eye-lids up, thou dost forget </l>
            <l>Sooner, then thou wert told, thy proper danger. </l>
            <l>I did vnreuerendly, to blame the Gods, </l>
            <l>Who wake for thee, though thou snore to thy selfe. </l>
            <l>Is it not strange, thou shouldst be so diseas'd, </l>
            <l>And so secure? But more, that the first symptomes </l>
            <l>Of such a malady, should not rise out </l>
            <l>From any worthy member, but a base </l>
            <l>And common strumpet, worthlesse to be nam'd </l>
            <l>A haire, or part of thee? Think, think, hereafter, </l>
            <l>What thy needes were, when thou must vse such meanes: </l>
            <l>And lay it to thy breast, how much the Gods </l>
            <l>Upbraid thy foule neglect of them; by making </l>
            <l>So vile a thing, the Author of thy safety. </l>
            <l>They could have wrought by nobler waies: have strooke </l>
            <l>Thy foes which forked lightning; or ramm'd thunder; </l>
            <l>Throwne hilles upon them, in the act; have sent </l>
            <l>Death, like a dampe, to all their families; </l>
            <l>Or caus'd their consciences to burst them. But, </l>
            <l>When they will shew thee what thou art, and make </l>
            <l>A scornefull difference 'twixt their power, and thee, </l>
            <l>They helpe thee by such aides, as Geese, and Harlots. </l>
            <l>How now? What answere? Is he come? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Your Brother, </l>
            <l>Will streight be here; and your Colleague Antonius </l>
            <l>Said, coldly, he would follow me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Aye, that </l>
            <l>Troubles me somewhat, and is worth my feare; </l>
            <l>He is a man, 'gainst whom I must prouide, </l>
            <l>That (as he will do no good) he do no harme; </l>
            <l>He, though he be not of the plot, will like it, </l>
            <l>And wish it should proceede; for, vnto men, </l>
            <l>Prest with their wants, all change is euer welcome. </l>
            <l>I must with offices, and patience winne him; </l>
            <l>Make him, by art, that which he is not borne, </l>
            <l>A friend vnto the publique; and bestow </l>
            <l>The Prouince on him; which is by the Senate </l>
            <l>Decreed to me: That benefit will bind him. </l>
            <l>It is well, if some men will do well, for price; </l>
            <l>“So few are vertuous, when the reward is away: </l>
            <l>Nor must I be vnmindfull of my priuate; </l>
            <l>For which I have call'd my Brother, and the Tribunes, </l>
            <l>My Kins-folke, and my Clients to be neare me; </l>
            <l>“He that stands up 'gainst Traitors, and their ends, </l>
            <l>“Shall neede a double guard, of law, and friends: </l>
            <l>“Especially, in such an enuious State, </l>
            <l>“That sooner will accuse the Magistrate, </l>
            <l>“Then the Delinquent; and will rather grieue </l>
            <l>“The Treason is not acted, then beleeue. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.6" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>The night growes on; and you are for your meeting: </l>
            <l>I will therefore end in few. Be resolute, </l>
            <l>And put your enterprise in act: The more </l>
            <l>“Actions of depth, and danger are consider'd, </l>
            <l>“The lesse assuredly they are perform'd. </l>
            <l>And thence it hapneth, that the brauest plots </l>
            <l>(Not executed straight) have been discouer'd. </l>
            <l>Say, you are constant, or another, a third, </l>
            <l>Or more; there may be yet one wretched spirit, </l>
            <l>With whom the feare of punishment shall worke </l>
            <l>'Boue all the thoughts of honor, and reuenge. </l>
            <l>You are not, now, to think what is best to do, </l>
            <l>As in beginnings; but, what must be done, </l>
            <l>Being thus entred: and slip no aduantage </l>
            <l>That may secure you. Let them call it mischiefe; </l>
            <l>“When it is past, and prosper'd, it will be vertue. </l>
            <l>“They are petty crimes are punish'd, great rewarded. </l>
            <l>Nor must you think of perill; since, “Attempts, </l>
            <l>“Begunne with danger, still do end with glory: </l>
            <l>“And, when neede spurres, despaire will be call'd wisdome. </l>
            <l>Lesse ought the care of men, or fame to fright you; </l>
            <l>“For they, that winne, do seldome receiue shame </l>
            <l>“Of victory: how ere it be atchiu'd; </l>
            <l>And vengeance, least. For who, besieg'd with wants, </l>
            <l>Would stop at death, or any thing beyond it? </l>
            <l>Come, there was neuer any great thing thing, yet, </l>
            <l>Aspired, but by violence, or fraud: </l>
            <l>And he that stickes (for folly of a conscience) </l>
            <l>To reach it — . </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Is a good religious foole. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>A superstitious slaue, and will die beast. </l>
            <l>Good night. You know what Crassus thinks, and I, </l>
            <l>By this: Prepare you wings, as large as sayles, </l>
            <l>To cut through ayre, and leaue no print behind you. </l>
            <l>A Serpent, ere he comes to be a Dragon, </l>
            <l>Does eate a Bat: and so must you a Consul, </l>
            <l>That watches. What you do, do quickly Sergius. </l>
            <l>You shall not stir for me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Excuse me, lights there. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>By no meanes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Stay then. All good thoughts to Cæsar. </l>
            <l>And like to Crassus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Mind but your friends counsels. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.7" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Or, I will beare no mind. How now, Aurelia? </l>
            <l>Are your confederates come? the Ladies? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And is Sempronia there? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>V</speaker>
            <l>She is. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>That is well. </l>
            <l>She has a sulphurous spirit, and will take </l>
            <l>Light at a sparke. Breake with them, gentle loue, </l>
            <l>About the drawing as many of their Husbands, </l>
            <l>Into the plot, as can: if not, to rid them. </l>
            <l>That will be the easier practise, vnto some, </l>
            <l>Who have bene tir'd with them long. Sollicite </l>
            <l>Their aydes, for money; and their Seruants helpe, </l>
            <l>In firing of the Citie, at the time </l>
            <l>Shall be design'd. Promise them States, and Empires, </l>
            <l>And men, for Louers, made of better clay, </l>
            <l>Then euer the old Potter Titan knew. </l>
            <l>Who is that? O, Porcius Lecca! are they met? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>They are all, here. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Loue, you have your instructions. </l>
            <l>I will trust you with the stuffe you have to worke on. </l>
            <l>You will forme it? Porcius, fetch the siluer Eagle </l>
            <l>I gave you in charge. And pray them, they will enter. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.8" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Our Friends, your faces glad me. This will be </l>
            <l>Our last, I hope, of consultation. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>So, it had need. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>We loose occasion, daily. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Aye, and our meanes: whereof one woundes me most, </l>
            <l>That was the fairest. Piso is dead, in Spaine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>As we are, here. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>And, as it is thought, by enuy </l>
            <l>Of Pompey's followers. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>He too is comming backe, </l>
            <l>Now, out of Asia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Therefore, what we intend </l>
            <l>We must be swift in. Take your seates, and heare. </l>
            <l>I have, alreadie, sent Septimius </l>
            <l>Into the Picene territorie; and Iulius, </l>
            <l>To rayse force, for us, in Apulia: </l>
            <l>Manlius at Fesula is (by this time) up, </l>
            <l>With the old needie troopes, that follow'd Sylla; </l>
            <l>And all do but expect, when we will give </l>
            <l>The blow at home. Behold this siluer Eagle, </l>
            <l>Was Marius standard, in the Cimbrian warre, </l>
            <l>Fatall to Rome; and, as our Augures tell me, </l>
            <l>Shall still be so: For which one omenous cause, </l>
            <l>I have kept it safe, and done it sacred rites, </l>
            <l>As to a Godhead; in a Chappell built </l>
            <l>Of purpose to it. Pledge then all your hands, </l>
            <l>To follow it, with vowes of death, and ruine, </l>
            <l>Strooke silently, and home. So waters speake </l>
            <l>When they runne deepest. Now is the time, this yeare, </l>
            <l>The twenti'th, from the firing of the Capitol, </l>
            <l>As fatall too, to Rome, by all predictions; </l>
            <l>And, in which, honor'd Lentulus must rise </l>
            <l>A King, if he pursue it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>If he do not, </l>
            <l>He is not worthy the great destiny. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>It is too great for me, but what the Gods, </l>
            <l>And their great loues decree me, I must not </l>
            <l>Seeme carelesse of. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>No nor we enuious. </l>
            <l>We have enough beside, all Gallia, Belgia, </l>
            <l>Greece, Spayne, and Africke. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Aye and Asia too, </l>
            <l>Now Pompey is returning. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Noblest Romanes, </l>
            <l>Me thinkes our lookes, are not so quicke and high, </l>
            <l>As they were wont. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>No? whose is not? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>We have </l>
            <l>No anger in our eyes, no storme, no lightning; </l>
            <l>Our hate is spent, and fum'd away in vapor, </l>
            <l>Before our hands be at worke. I can accuse </l>
            <l>Not any one, but all of slacknesse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Yes, </l>
            <l>And be your selfe such, while you do it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Ha? </l>
            <l>It is sharply answerd, Caius, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Truly, truly. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Come, let us each one know his part to do, </l>
            <l>And then be accus'd. Leaue these vntimely quarrels. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I would there were more Romes then one, to ruine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>More Romes? More Worlds. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Nay then more Gods, and Natures, </l>
            <l>If they tooke part. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>When shall the time be, first? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I think the Saturnals. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>It will be too long. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>They are not now farre off, it is not a month. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>A weeke, a day, an houre is too farre off, </l>
            <l>Now, were the fitest time. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>We have not laid </l>
            <l>All things so safe, and readie. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>While we are laying, </l>
            <l>We shall all lie; and grow to earth. Would I </l>
            <l>Were nothing in it, if not now. These things </l>
            <l>They should be done, e're thought. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Nay, now your reason </l>
            <l>Forsakes you, Caius. Think, but what commodity </l>
            <l>That time will minister; the Cities custome </l>
            <l>Of being, then, in mirth, and feast. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Loos'd whole </l>
            <l>In pleasure and securitie. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Each house </l>
            <l>Resolu'd in freedome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Euery slaue a master. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>And they too no meane aides. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Made from their hope </l>
            <l>Of liberty. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Or hate vnto their Lords. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>It is sure, there cannot be a time found out </l>
            <l>More apt, and naturall. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Nay, good Cethegus, </l>
            <l>Why do your passions, now, disturbe our hopes? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Why do your hopes delude your certainties? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>You must lend him his way. Think, for the order, </l>
            <l>And processe of it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>I like not fire: </l>
            <l>It will too much wast my Citie. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Were it embers, </l>
            <l>There will be wealth enough, rak't out of them, </l>
            <l>To spring a new: It must be fire, or nothing. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>What else should fright, or terrefie them? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>True. </l>
            <l>In that confusion, must be the chiefe slaughter. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Then we shall kill them brauest. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>And in heapes. </l>
            <l>Strew Sacrifices. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Make the Earth an Altar. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>And Rome the fire. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>F</speaker>
            <l>It will be a noble night. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>And worth all Sylla's daies. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>When Husbands, Wiues, </l>
            <l>Grandsires, and Nephewes, Seruants, and their Lords, </l>
            <l>Virgins, and Priests, the Infant, and the Nurse </l>
            <l>Go all to hell, together, in a fleete. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I would have you, Longinus, and Statilius, </l>
            <l>To take the charge of the firing, which must be, </l>
            <l>At a signe giuen with a trumpet, done </l>
            <l>In twelue chiefe places of the Citie, at once. </l>
            <l>The flaxe, and sulphure, are alreadie laid </l>
            <l>In, at Cethegus house. So are the weapons. </l>
            <l>Gabinius, you, with other force, shall stop </l>
            <l>The pipes, and conduits: And kill those that come </l>
            <l>For water. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>What shall I do? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>All will have </l>
            <l>Employment, feare not: Ply the execution. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>For that, trust me, and Cethegus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I will be </l>
            <l>At hand, with the army, to meete those that scape. </l>
            <l>And Lentulus, begirt you Pompey's house, </l>
            <l>To seise his sonnes aliue: for they are they </l>
            <l>Must make our peace with him. All else cut off, </l>
            <l>As Tarquin did the Poppey heads; or mowers </l>
            <l>A field of thistles; or else, up, as ploughes </l>
            <l>Do barren lands; and strike together flints, </l>
            <l>And clods; the ungratefull Senate, and the People: </l>
            <l>Till no rage, gone before, or comming after </l>
            <l>May weigh with yours, though Horror leapt her selfe </l>
            <l>Into the scale: but, in your violent acts, </l>
            <l>The fall of torrents, and the noyse of tempests, </l>
            <l>The boyling of Charybdis, the Seas wildnesse, </l>
            <l>The eating force of flames, and wings of winds, </l>
            <l>Be all outwrought, by your transcendent furies. </l>
            <l>It had bene done, ere this, had I bene Consul; </l>
            <l>We had had no stop, no let. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>How find you Antonius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>The other has wonne him lost, that Cicero </l>
            <l>Was borne to be my opposition, </l>
            <l>And stands in all our waies. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Remoue him first. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>May that, yet, be done sooner? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Would it were done. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>I will do it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>It is my prouince; none vsurpe it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>What are your meanes? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Enquire not. He shall die. </l>
            <l>Shall, was too slowly said. He is dying. That </l>
            <l>Is, yet, too slow. He is dead. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Braue, only Romane, </l>
            <l>Whose soule might be the worlds soule, were that dying; </l>
            <l>Refuse not, yet, the aydes of these your friends: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Here is Vargunteius holds good quarter with him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>And vnder the pretext of clientele </l>
            <l>And visitation, with the morning Hayle, </l>
            <l>Will be admitted. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>What is that to me? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yes, we may kill him in his bed, and safely. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Safe is your way, then; take it. Mine is mine owne. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Follow him, Vargunteius, and perswade, </l>
            <l>The morning is the fittest time. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>The night </l>
            <l>Will turne all into tumult. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>And perhaps </l>
            <l>Misse of him too. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Intreat, and coniure him. </l>
            <l>In all our names. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>By all our vowes, and friendships. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.9" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>What! is our Councell broke up first? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>You say, </l>
            <l>Women are greatest talkers. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>We have done; </l>
            <l>And are now fit for action. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Which is passion. </l>
            <l>There is your best actiuity, Lady. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>How </l>
            <l>Knowes your wise fatnesse that? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>Your Mothers daughter </l>
            <l>Did teach me, Madam. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Come Sempronia, leaue him: </l>
            <l>He is a Giber. And our present businesse </l>
            <l>Is of more serious consequence. Aurelia </l>
            <l>Tells me, you have done most masculinely within, </l>
            <l>And plaid the Orator. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>But we must hasten </l>
            <l>To our designe as well, and execute: </l>
            <l>Not hang still, in the feuer of an accident. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>You say well, Lady. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I do like our plot </l>
            <l>Exceeding well, it is sure; and we shall leaue </l>
            <l>Little to fortune, in it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Your banquet stayes. </l>
            <l>Aurelia take her in. Where is Fuluia? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>O the two Louers are coupling. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>In good faith, </l>
            <l>She is very ill, with sitting up. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>You would have her </l>
            <l>Laugh, and lie downe. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>No, faith, Sempronia, </l>
            <l>I am not well; I will take my leaue, it drawes </l>
            <l>Toward the morning. Curius shall stay with you. </l>
            <l>Madam, I pray you pardon me, my health </l>
            <l>I must respect. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Farewell, good Fuluia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Make hast, and bid him get his guards about him. </l>
            <l>For Vargunteius, and Cornelius </l>
            <l>Have vndertane it, should Cethegus misse: </l>
            <l>Their reason, that they think his open rashnesse </l>
            <l>Will suffer easier discouerie, </l>
            <l>Then their attempt; so vailed vnder friendship. </l>
            <l>I will bring you to your Coach. Tell him, beside, </l>
            <l>Of Cæsars comming forth, here. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>My sweete Madam, </l>
            <l>Will you be gone? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>I am, my Lord, in truth, </l>
            <l>In some indisposition. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I do wish </l>
            <l>You had all your health, sweet Lady. Lentulus, </l>
            <l>You will do her seruice. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>To her coach, and duty. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.10" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>What ministers men must, for practise, vse! </l>
            <l>&gt;The rash, the ambitious, needy, desperate, </l>
            <l>&gt;Foolish, and wretched, eu'n the dregs of Mankinde, </l>
            <l>&gt;To whores, and women! Still, it must be so. </l>
            <l>&gt;Each have their proper place; and, in their roomes, </l>
            <l>&gt;They are the best. Groomes fittest kindle fires, </l>
            <l>&gt;Slaues carry burdens, Butchers are for slaughters, </l>
            <l>&gt;Apothecaries, Butlers, Cookes for poysons; </l>
            <l>&gt;As these for me: Dull, stupide Lentulus, </l>
            <l>&gt;My stale, with whom I stalke; the rash Cethegus, </l>
            <l>&gt;My executioner; and fat Longinus, </l>
            <l>&gt;Statilius, Curius, Ceparius, Cimber. </l>
            <l>&gt;My laborers, pioners, and incendiaries; </l>
            <l>&gt;With these domesticke traitors, bosome theeues, </l>
            <l>&gt;Whom custome hath call'd Wiues; the readiest helpes, </l>
            <l>&gt;To strange head-strong Husbands; rob the easie; </l>
            <l>&gt;And lend the moneyes, on returnes of lust. </l>
            <l>&gt;Shall Catiline not do, now, with these aides, </l>
            <l>&gt;So sought, so sorted, something shall be call'd </l>
            <l>&gt;Their labor, but his profit? and make Cæsar </l>
            <l>&gt;Repent his ventring counsels, to a spirit, </l>
            <l>&gt;So much his Lord in mischiefe? when all these, </l>
            <l>&gt;Shall, like the Brethren sprung of Dragons teeth, </l>
            <l>&gt;Ruine each other; and he fall amongst them: </l>
            <l>&gt;With Crassus, Pompey, or who else appeares, </l>
            <l>&gt;But like, or neare a great one. May my braine </l>
            <l>&gt;Resolue to water, and my bloud turne phlegme, </l>
            <l>&gt;My hands, drop off, vnworthy of my sword, </l>
            <l>&gt;And that be inspired, of it selfe, to rip </l>
            <l>&gt;My breast, for my lost entrailes; when I leaue </l>
            <l>&gt;A soule, that will not serue. And who will, are </l>
            <l>&gt;The same with slaues; such clay I dare not feare. </l>
            <l>&gt;The cruelty, I meane to act, I wish </l>
            <l>&gt;Should be call'd mine, and tary in my name; </l>
            <l>&gt;Whil'st after Ages do toyle out themselues </l>
            <l>&gt;In thinking for the like, but do it lesse: </l>
            <l>&gt;And, were the power of all the fiends let loose, </l>
            <l>&gt;With Fate to boote, it should be, still, example. </l>
            <l>&gt;When, what the Gaule or Moore could not effect, </l>
            <l>&gt;Nor æmulous Carthage, with their length of spight, </l>
            <l>&gt;Shall be the worke of one, and that my night. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.11" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I thanke your vigilance. Where is my brother, Quintus? </l>
            <l>&gt;Call all my seruants up. Tell noble Curius, </l>
            <l>&gt;And say it to your selfe, you are my Sauers; </l>
            <l>&gt;But that is too little for you, you are Rome's: </l>
            <l>&gt;What could I then, hope lesse? O brother! now, </l>
            <l>&gt;The engines I told you of, are working; </l>
            <l>&gt;The machine 'gin's to moue. Where are your weapons? </l>
            <l>&gt;Arme all my houshold presently. And charge </l>
            <l>&gt;The Porter, he let no man in, till day. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Not Clients, and your friends? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>They weare those names, </l>
            <l>&gt;That come to murther me. Yet send for Cato, </l>
            <l>&gt;And Quintus Catulus; those I dare trust; </l>
            <l>&gt;And Flaccus, and Pomtinius, the Prætors, </l>
            <l>&gt;By the backe way. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Take care, good brother Marcus, </l>
            <l>&gt;Your feares be not form'd greater, then they should; </l>
            <l>&gt;And make your friends grieue, while your enemies laugh. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>It is brothers counsell, and worth thankes. But do </l>
            <l>&gt;As I intreat you. I prouide, not feare. </l>
            <l>&gt;Was Cæsar there, say you? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>Curius sayes, he met him, </l>
            <l>&gt;Comming from thence. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>O, so. And, had you a counsell </l>
            <l>&gt;Of Ladies too? Who was your Speaker, Madam? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>I</speaker>
            <l>She that would be, had there bene fortie more; </l>
            <l>&gt;Sempronia, who had both her Greeke, and Figures; </l>
            <l>&gt;And, euer and anone, would aske us, if </l>
            <l>&gt;The witty Consul could have mended that? </l>
            <l>&gt;Or Orator Cicero could have said it better? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>She is my gentle enemy. Would Cethegus </l>
            <l>&gt;Had no more danger in him. But, my guards </l>
            <l>&gt;Are you, great powers; and the vnbated strengths </l>
            <l>&gt;Of a firme conscience, which shall arme each step </l>
            <l>&gt;Tane for the State; and teach me slacke no pace </l>
            <l>&gt;For feare of malice. How now, Brother? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Cato, </l>
            <l>&gt;And Quintus Catulus were comming to you, </l>
            <l>&gt;And Crassus with them. I have let them in, </l>
            <l>&gt;By the garden. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What would Crassus have? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I heare </l>
            <l>&gt;Some whispering 'bout the gate; and making doubt, </l>
            <l>&gt;Whither it be not yet too early, or no? </l>
            <l>&gt;But I do think, they are your friendes, and Clients, </l>
            <l>&gt;Are fearefull to disturbe you. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You will change </l>
            <l>&gt;To another thought, anone. Have you giu'n the Potter </l>
            <l>&gt;The charge, I will'd you? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Withdraw, and hearken. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s3.12" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>The dore is not open, yet. </l>
            <l>&gt;You were best to knocke. </l>
            <l>&gt;Let them stand close, then: And, when we are in, </l>
            <l>&gt;Rush after us. </l>
            <l>&gt;But where is Cethegus? </l>
            <l>&gt;He </l>
            <l>&gt;Has left it, since he might not do it his way. </l>
            <l>&gt;Who is there? </l>
            <l>&gt;A friend, or more. </l>
            <l>&gt;I may not let </l>
            <l>&gt;Any man in, till day. </l>
            <l>&gt;No? why? </l>
            <l>&gt;Thy reason? </l>
            <l>&gt;I am commanded so. </l>
            <l>&gt;By whom? </l>
            <l>&gt;I hope </l>
            <l>&gt;We are not discouer'd. </l>
            <l>&gt;Yes, by reuelation. </l>
            <l>&gt;Pray thee good slaue, who has commanded thee? </l>
            <l>&gt;He that may best, the Consull. </l>
            <l>&gt;We are his friends, </l>
            <l>&gt;All is one. </l>
            <l>&gt;Best give your name. </l>
            <l>&gt;Dost thou heare, fellow? </l>
            <l>&gt;I have some instant businesse with the Consull. </l>
            <l>&gt;My name is Vargunteius. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>True, he knoes it; </l>
            <l>&gt;And for what friendly office you are sent. </l>
            <l>&gt;Cornelius, too, is there? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We are betraid. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>And desperate Cethegus, is he not? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Speake you, he knowes my voice. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What say you to it? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>You are deceau'd Sir. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>No, it is you are so; </l>
            <l>&gt;Poore, misled men. Your states are yet worth pitty, </l>
            <l>&gt;If you would heare, and change your sauage minds. </l>
            <l>&gt;Leaue to be mad; forsake your purposes </l>
            <l>&gt;Of Treason, Rapine, Murder, Fire, and Horror: </l>
            <l>&gt;The common wealth hath eyes, that wake as sharply </l>
            <l>&gt;Ouer her life, as yours do for her ruine. </l>
            <l>&gt;Be not deceiu'd, to think her lenity </l>
            <l>&gt;Will be perpetuall; or, if Men be wanting, </l>
            <l>&gt;The gods will be, to such a calling cause. </l>
            <l>&gt;Consider your attempts, and while there is time, </l>
            <l>&gt;Repent you of them. It doth make me tremble </l>
            <l>&gt;There should those spirits yet breath, that when they cannot </l>
            <l>&gt;Liue honestly, would rather perish basely. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>You talke too much to them, Marcus, They are lost. </l>
            <l>&gt;Goe forth, and apprehend them. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>If you proue </l>
            <l>&gt;This practise; what should let the Common-wealth </l>
            <l>&gt;To take due vengeance? </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Let us shift, away. </l>
            <l>&gt;The darknesse hath conceal'd us, yet: We will say </l>
            <l>&gt;Some have abus'd our names. </l>
            <l>&gt;Denie it all. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Quintus, what guards have you? Call the Tribunes aide, </l>
            <l>&gt;And raise the City. Consul, you are too mild, </l>
            <l>&gt;“The foulenesse of some facts takes thence all mercy: </l>
            <l>&gt;Report it to the Senate. Heare: The Gods </l>
            <l>&gt;Grow angry with your patience. “It is their care, </l>
            <l>&gt;“And must be yours, that guilty men escape not. </l>
            <l>&gt;“As crimes do grow, Iustice should rouse it selfe. </l>
            <l>&gt;</l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>What is it, Heauens, you prepare </l>
            <l>&gt;With so much swiftnesse, and so sodaine rising? </l>
            <l>&gt;There are no Sonnes of earth, that dare, </l>
            <l>&gt;Againe, rebellion: or the Gods surprising? </l>
            <l>&gt;The World doth shake, and Nature feares, </l>
            <l>&gt;Yet is the tumult, and the horror greater </l>
            <l>&gt;Within our minds, then in our eares, </l>
            <l>&gt;So much Romes faults (now growne her Fate) do threat her. </l>
            <l>&gt;The Priests, and People runne about, </l>
            <l>&gt;Each Order, Age, and Sexe amaz'd at other; </l>
            <l>&gt;And, at the ports, all thronging out, </l>
            <l>&gt;As if their safety were to quit their Mother: </l>
            <l>&gt;Yet finde they the same dangers there, </l>
            <l>&gt;From which they make such hast to be preserued; </l>
            <l>&gt;For guilty States do euer beare </l>
            <l>&gt;The plagues about them, which they have deserued. </l>
            <l>&gt;And, till those plagues do get aboue </l>
            <l>&gt;The mountaine of our faults, and there do sit; </l>
            <l>&gt;We see them not; Thus, still we loue </l>
            <l>&gt;The euill we do, vntill we suffer it. </l>
            <l>&gt;But, most, ambition, that neare vice </l>
            <l>&gt;To vertue, hath the fate of Rome prouoked; </l>
            <l>&gt;And made, that now Rome's selfe no price, </l>
            <l>&gt;To free her from the death, wherewith she is yoked. </l>
            <l>&gt;That restlesse Ill, that still doth built </l>
            <l>&gt;upon successe; and endes not in aspiring: </l>
            <l>&gt;But there beginnes. And nere is fill'd, </l>
            <l>&gt;While ought remaines that seemes but worth desiring. </l>
            <l>&gt;Wherein the Thought, vnlike the Eye, </l>
            <l>&gt;To which things farre, seemed smaller then they are, </l>
            <l>&gt;Deemes all contentment plac'd on high: </l>
            <l>&gt;And thinks there is nothing great, but what is farre. </l>
            <l>&gt;O, that in time, Rome did not cast </l>
            <l>&gt;Her errors up, this fortune to preuent; </l>
            <l>&gt;To have seene her crimes' ere they were past: </l>
            <l>&gt;And felt her faults, before her punishment. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div xml:id="a4" type="act">
        <div xml:id="s4.1" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Can these men feare? who are not only ours, </l>
            <l>But the worlds masters? Then I see, the Gods </l>
            <l>Upbraid our suffrings, or would humble them; </l>
            <l>By sending these affrights, while we are here: </l>
            <l>That we might laugh at their ridiculous feare, </l>
            <l>Whose names, we trembled at, beyond the Alpes. </l>
            <l>Of all that passe, I do not see a face </l>
            <l>Worthy a man, that dares looke up, and stand </l>
            <l>One thunder out; but downeward all, like beasts, </l>
            <l>Running away from euery flash is made. </l>
            <l>The falling world could not deserue such basenesse. </l>
            <l>Are we emploid here, by our miseries, </l>
            <l>Like superstitious fooles (or rather slaues) </l>
            <l>To plaine our griefes, wrongs, and oppressions, </l>
            <l>To a meere clothed Senate whom our folly </l>
            <l>Hath made, and still intends to keepe our Tyrannes? </l>
            <l>It is our base petitionary breath </l>
            <l>That blowes them to this greatnesse; which this pricke </l>
            <l>Would soone let out, if we were bold, and wretched. </l>
            <l>When they have taken all we have; our goods, </l>
            <l>Crop, lands, and houses, they will leaue us this: </l>
            <l>A weapon, and an arme will still be found, </l>
            <l>Though naked left, and lower then the ground. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.2" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Do; vrge thine anger, still; good Heauen, and iust. </l>
            <l>Tell guilty men, what powers are aboue them. </l>
            <l>In such a confidence of wickednesse, </l>
            <l>It was time, they should know something fit to feare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>I neuer saw a morne more full of horror. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>To Catiline, and his: but, to iust men, </l>
            <l>Though Heauen should speake, with all his wrath at once, </l>
            <l>That, with his breath, the hinges of the world </l>
            <l>Did cracke; we should stand upright, and vnfear'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Why, so we do, good Cato. Who be these? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Ambassadours, from the Allobroges, </l>
            <l>I take them, by their habits. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Aye, these men </l>
            <l>Seeme of another race; Let us sue to these </l>
            <l>There is hope of iustice, with their fortitude. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Friends of the Senate, and of Rome, to day </l>
            <l>We pray you to forbeare us: on the morrow </l>
            <l>What sute you have, let us, by Fabius Sanga, </l>
            <l>(Whose Patronage your State doth vse) but know it, </l>
            <l>And, on the Consull's word, you shall receiue </l>
            <l>Dispatch, or else an answere, worth your patience. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We would not hope for more, most worthy Consul. </l>
            <l>This Magistrate hath strooke an awe into me, </l>
            <l>And, by his sweetnesse, wonne a more reguard </l>
            <l>Vnto his place, then all the boistrous moodes </l>
            <l>That ignorant Greatnesse practiseth, to fill </l>
            <l>The large, vnfit authority it weares. </l>
            <l>How easie is a noble spirit discern'd </l>
            <l>From harsh, and sulphurous matter, that flies out </l>
            <l>In contumelies, makes a noise, and stinkes. </l>
            <l>May we finde good, and great men, that know how </l>
            <l>To stoupe to wants, and meete necessities, </l>
            <l>And will not turne from any equall suites. </l>
            <l>“Such men, they do not succour more the cause, </l>
            <l>“They vndertake, with fauor, and successe; </l>
            <l>“Then, by it, their owne iudgments they do raise, </l>
            <l>“In turning iust mens needes, into their praise. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.3" type="scene">
          <stage type="entrance">THE SENATE.</stage>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Roome for the Consuls. Fathers, take your places. </l>
            <l>Here, in the house of Iupiter, the STAYER, </l>
            <l>By edict from the Consull, Marcus Tullius, </l>
            <l>You are met, a frequent Senate. Heare him speake. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Which may be happy, and auspicious still </l>
            <l>To Rome, and hers. Honor'd and Conscript Fathers, </l>
            <l>If I were silent, and that all the dangers </l>
            <l>Threatning the State, and you, were yet so hid </l>
            <l>In night, or darkenesse, thicker in their breats, </l>
            <l>That are the blacke contriuers; so, that no </l>
            <l>Beame of the light could pierce them: Yet the voice </l>
            <l>Of Heau'n, this morning, hath spoke loud inough, </l>
            <l>To instruct you with a feeling of the horror; </l>
            <l>And wake you from a sleepe, as dead, as death. </l>
            <l>I have, of late, spoke often in this Senate, </l>
            <l>Touching this argument, but still have wanted </l>
            <l>Either your eares, or faith: so incredible </l>
            <l>Their plots have seem'd, or I so vaine, to make </l>
            <l>These things for mine owne glory, and false greatnesse, </l>
            <l>As hath beene giuen out. But be it so: </l>
            <l>When they breake forth, and shall declare themselues, </l>
            <l>By their too foule effects, then, then, the enuy </l>
            <l>Of my iust cares will finde another name. </l>
            <l>For me, I am but one: And this poore life, </l>
            <l>So lately aim'd at, not an houre yet since, </l>
            <l>They cannot with more eagernesse pursue, </l>
            <l>Then I with gladnesse would lay downe, and loose, </l>
            <l>To buy Romes peace, if that would purchase it. </l>
            <l>But when I see, they would make it but the step </l>
            <l>To more, and greater; vnto yours, Romes, all: </l>
            <l>I would with those preserue it, or then fall. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Aye, aye, let you alone, cunning Artificer! </l>
            <l>See, how his gorget peeres aboue his gowne; </l>
            <l>To tell the people, in what danger he was. </l>
            <l>It was absurdly done of Vargunteius, </l>
            <l>To name himselfe, before he was got in. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>It matters not, so they denie it all: </l>
            <l>And can but carry the lie constantly. </l>
            <l>Will Catiline be here? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>I have sent for him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>And have you bid him to be confident? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>To that his owne necessity will prompt him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Seeme to beleeue nothing at all, that Cicero </l>
            <l>Relates us. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>It will mad him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>O, and helpe </l>
            <l>The other party. Who is that? His Brother? </l>
            <l>What new intelligence has he brought him now? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Some cautions from his Wife, how to behaue him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Place some of them without, and some bring in. </l>
            <l>Thanke their kinde loues. It is a comfort yet, </l>
            <l>That all depart not from their Countries cause. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>How now, what meanes this Muster? Consul, Antonius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>M</speaker>
            <l>I do not know, aske my Colleague, he will tell you. </l>
            <l>There is some reason in state, that I must yeeld to; </l>
            <l>And I have promis'd him: Indeede he has bought it, </l>
            <l>With giuing me the Provuince. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I professe, </l>
            <l>It grieues me. Fathers, that I am compell'd </l>
            <l>To draw these armes, and aides for your defence; </l>
            <l>And, more, against a Citizen of Rome, </l>
            <l>Borne here amongst you, a Patrician, </l>
            <l>A man, I must confesse, of no meane house, </l>
            <l>Nor no small vertue, if he had employ'd </l>
            <l>Those excellent gifts of Fortune, and of Nature, </l>
            <l>Vnto the good, not ruine of the State. </l>
            <l>But being bred in his fathers needy fortunes, </l>
            <l>Brought up in his sisters prostitution, </l>
            <l>Confirm'd in ciuill slaughter, entring first </l>
            <l>The Common-wealth, with murder of the gentry; </l>
            <l>Since, both by study, and custome, conuersant </l>
            <l>With all licentiousnesse: what could be hop'd </l>
            <l>In such a field of riot, but a course </l>
            <l>Extreme pernicious? Though, I must protest, </l>
            <l>I found his mischiefs, sooner, with mine eyes, </l>
            <l>Then with my thought; and with these hands of mine </l>
            <l>Before they touch'd, at my suspicion. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>What are his mischiefs, Consul? you declame </l>
            <l>Against his manners, and corrupt your owne; </l>
            <l>“No wise man should, for hate of guilty men, </l>
            <l>“Loose his owne innocence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>The noble Cæsar </l>
            <l>Speakes Godlike truth. But, when he heares, I can </l>
            <l>Conuince him, by his manners, of his mischiefs, </l>
            <l>He might be silent: And not cast away </l>
            <l>His sentences in vaine, where they scarse looke. </l>
            <l>Toward his subiect. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Here he comes himselfe. </l>
            <l>If he be worthy any good mans voice, </l>
            <l>That good man sit downe, by him: Cato will not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>If Cato leaue him. I will not keepe aside. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>What face is this, the Senate here puts on, </l>
            <l>Against me, Fathers! Give my modesty </l>
            <l>Leaue, to demand the cause of so much strangenesse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>It is reported here, you are the head </l>
            <l>To a strange faction, Lucius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Aye, and will </l>
            <l>Be prou'd against him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Let it be. Why, Consul, </l>
            <l>If in the Common-wealth, there be two bodies, </l>
            <l>One leane, weake, rotten, and that hath a head; </l>
            <l>The other strong, and healthfull, but hath none: </l>
            <l>If I do give it one, do I offend? </l>
            <l>Restore your selues vnto your temper, Fathers; </l>
            <l>And, without perturbation, heare me speake: </l>
            <l>Remember who I am, and of what place </l>
            <l>What petty fellow this is, that opposes; </l>
            <l>One, that hath exercis'd his eloquence, </l>
            <l>Still to the bane of the Nobility: </l>
            <l>A boasting, insolent tongue-man. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Peace leud Traitor, </l>
            <l>Or wash thy mouth. He is an honest man </l>
            <l>And loues his Countrey; would thou didst so, too. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Cato, you are too zealous for him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No, </l>
            <l>Thou art too impudent. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Catiline be silent. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Nay then, I easily feare, my iust defence </l>
            <l>Will come too late, to so much preiudice. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Will he sit downe? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Yet, let the world forsake me, </l>
            <l>My innocence must not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Thou innocent? </l>
            <l>So are the Furies. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Yes, and Ate, too. </l>
            <l>Do'st thou not blush, pernicious Catiline? </l>
            <l>Or, hath the palenesse of thy guilt drunke up </l>
            <l>Thy blood, and drawne thy vaines, as drie of that, </l>
            <l>As is thy heart of truth, thy breast of vertue? </l>
            <l>Whither at length wilt thou abuse our patience? </l>
            <l>Still shall thy fury mocke us? To what licence </l>
            <l>Dares thy vnbridled boldnesse runne it selfe? </l>
            <l>Do all the nightly guards, kept on the Palace, </l>
            <l>The Cities watches, with the Peoples feares, </l>
            <l>The concourse of all Good men, this so strong </l>
            <l>And fortified seate here of the Senate, </l>
            <l>The present lookes upon thee, strike thee nothing? </l>
            <l>Do'st thou not feele thy Councels all laid open? </l>
            <l>And see thy wild Conspiracy bound in </l>
            <l>With each mans knowledge? which of all this Order </l>
            <l>Canst thou think ignorant (if they will but vtter </l>
            <l>Their conscience to the right) of what thou didst </l>
            <l>Last night, what on the former, where thou were, </l>
            <l>Whom thou didst call together, what your plots were? </l>
            <l>O Age, and Manners! This the Consul sees, </l>
            <l>The Senate vnderstands, yet this man lives! </l>
            <l>Liues? Aye, and comes here into Councell with us; </l>
            <l>Partakes the publique cares: and with his eye </l>
            <l>Markes, and points out each man of us to slaughter. </l>
            <l>And we, good men, do satisfie the State, </l>
            <l>If we can shunne but this mans sword, and madnesse. </l>
            <l>There was that vertue, once, in Rome, when good men </l>
            <l>Would, with more sharpe coercion, have restrain'd </l>
            <l>A wicked Citizen, then the deadliest Foe. </l>
            <l>We have that law still, Catiline, for thee; </l>
            <l>An act as graue, as sharpe: The State is not wanting, </l>
            <l>Nor the authority of this Senate; we, </l>
            <l>We, that are Consuls, onely fayle our selues. </l>
            <l>This twentie daies, the edge of that decree </l>
            <l>We have let dull, a rust; kept it shut up, </l>
            <l>As in a sheath, which drawne should take thy head. </l>
            <l>Yet still thou liu'st; and liu'st not to lay by </l>
            <l>Thy wicked confidence, but to confirme it. </l>
            <l>I could desire, Fathers, to be found </l>
            <l>Still mercifull, to seeme in these maine perils, </l>
            <l>Grasping the state, a man remisse, and slacke; </l>
            <l>But then, I should condemne my self of sloth, </l>
            <l>And treachery. Their Campe is in Italy, </l>
            <l>Pitch'd in the iawes, here, of Hetruria; </l>
            <l>Their numbers daily increasing, and their Generall </l>
            <l>Within our walles: nay in our Councell, plotting </l>
            <l>Howerly some fatall mischiefe to the Publique. </l>
            <l>If, Catiline, I should command thee, now, </l>
            <l>Here, to be taken, kill'd; I make iust doubt, </l>
            <l>Whether all good men would not think it done </l>
            <l>Rather too late, then any man too cruell. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Except he were of the same meale, and batch. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>But that, which ought to have bene done long since, </l>
            <l>I will, and (for good reason) yet forbeare. </l>
            <l>Then will I take thee, when no man is found </l>
            <l>So lost, so wicked, nay so like thy selfe, </l>
            <l>But shall professe, it is done of neede, and right. </l>
            <l>While there is one, that dares defend thee, liue; </l>
            <l>Thou shalt have leaue; but so, as now thou liu'st: </l>
            <l>Watch'd at a hand, besieged, and opprest </l>
            <l>From working least commotion to the State. </l>
            <l>I have those eyes, and eares, shall still keepe guard, </l>
            <l>And spiall on thee, as they have euer done, </l>
            <l>And thou not feele it. What, then, canst thou hope? </l>
            <l>If neither Night can, with her darknesse; hide </l>
            <l>Thy wicked meetings; nor a priuate House </l>
            <l>Can, in her walles, containe the guiltie whispers </l>
            <l>Of thy conspiracy: If all breake out, </l>
            <l>All be discouered, change thy minde at last, </l>
            <l>And loose thy thoughts of ruine, flame, and slaughter. </l>
            <l>Remember, how I told, here, to the Senate, </l>
            <l>That such a day, thy Lictor, Caius Manlius, </l>
            <l>Would be in armes. Was I deceiued, Catiline, </l>
            <l>Or in the fact, or in the time? the hower? </l>
            <l>I told too, in this Senate, that thy purpose </l>
            <l>Was, on the fifth, the Kalends of Nouember, </l>
            <l>To have slaughterd this whole Order: which my caution </l>
            <l>Made many leaue the Citie. Canst thou here </l>
            <l>Denie, but this thy blacke designe was hindred, </l>
            <l>That very day, by me, thy selfe clos'd in </l>
            <l>Within my strengths, so that thou could'st not moue </l>
            <l>Against a publique reed? when thou wert heard </l>
            <l>To say, upon the parting of the rest, </l>
            <l>Thou would'st content thee, with the murder of us, </l>
            <l>That did remaine. Had'st thou not hope, beside, </l>
            <l>By a surprize, by night, to take Præneste? </l>
            <l>Where when thou canst, didst thou not finde the place </l>
            <l>Made good against thee, with my aides, my watches? </l>
            <l>My Garrisons fortified it. Thou dost nothing, Sergius, </l>
            <l>Thou canst endeuour nothing, nay not think, </l>
            <l>But I both see, and heare it; and am with thee, </l>
            <l>By, and before, about, and in thee, too. </l>
            <l>Call but to minde thy last nights businesse. Come, </l>
            <l>I will vse no circumstance: at Lecca's house, </l>
            <l>The shop, and mint of your conspiracie, </l>
            <l>Among your Sword-men, where so many associates </l>
            <l>Both of thy mischiefe, and thy madnesse, met. </l>
            <l>Dar'st thou denie this? wherefore art thou silent? </l>
            <l>Speake, and this shall conuince thee: Here they are, </l>
            <l>I see them, in this Senate, that were with thee. </l>
            <l>O you immortall Gods! In what clime are we? </l>
            <l>What region do we liue in? in what ayre? </l>
            <l>What Common-wealth, or State is this we have? </l>
            <l>Here, here, amongst us, our owne number, Fathers, </l>
            <l>In this most holy Councell of the world, </l>
            <l>They are, that seeke the spoyle of me, of you, </l>
            <l>Of ours, of all; what I can name is too narrow: </l>
            <l>Follow the Sunne, and find not their ambition. </l>
            <l>These I behold, being Consull; Nay, I aske </l>
            <l>Their counsels of the State, as from good Patriots: </l>
            <l>Whom it were fit the axe should hew in pieces, </l>
            <l>I not so much as wound, yet, with my voyce. </l>
            <l>Thou wast, last night, with Lecca, Catiline, </l>
            <l>Your shares, of Italy, you there diuided; </l>
            <l>Appointed who and whither, each should goe; </l>
            <l>What men should stay behind, in Rome, were chosen; </l>
            <l>Your offices set downe; the parts mark'd out, </l>
            <l>And places of the Citie, for the fire; </l>
            <l>Thy selfe (thou affirmd'st) wast readie to depart, </l>
            <l>Onely, a little let there was, that stay'd thee, </l>
            <l>That I yet liu'd: upon the word, stept forth </l>
            <l>Three of thy crew, to rid thee of that care; </l>
            <l>Two vndertooke this morning, before day, </l>
            <l>To kill me in my bed. All this I knew, </l>
            <l>Your conuent scarce dismiss'd, arm'd all my seruants, </l>
            <l>Call'd both my brother, and friends, shut out your clients, </l>
            <l>You sent to visite me; whose names I told </l>
            <l>To some there, of good place, before they came. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Yes, I, and Quintus Catulus can affirme it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>He is lost, and gone. His spirits have forsooke him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>If this be so, why, Catiline, dost thou stay? </l>
            <l>Goe, where thou meanst: The Ports are open; forth. </l>
            <l>The Campe abroad wants thee, their Chiefe, too long. </l>
            <l>Lead with thee all thy troupes out. Purge the Citie. </l>
            <l>Draw drie that noysome, and pernicious sinke, </l>
            <l>Which left, behind thee, would infect the world. </l>
            <l>Thou wilt free me of all my feares, at once, </l>
            <l>To see a wall betweene us. Dost thou stop </l>
            <l>To do that now, commanded; which before, </l>
            <l>Of thine owne choise, thou wert prone to? goe. The Consul </l>
            <l>Bids thee, an enemy, to depart the Citie. </l>
            <l>Whither, thou wilt aske? to exile? I not bid </l>
            <l>Thee that. But aske my counsell, I perswade it. </l>
            <l>What is there, here , in Rome, that can delight thee? </l>
            <l>Where not a soule, without thine owne soule knot, </l>
            <l>But feares, and hates thee. What domesticke note </l>
            <l>Of priuate filthinesse, but is burnt in </l>
            <l>Into thy life? What close, and secret shame, </l>
            <l>But is growne one, with thy knowne infamy? </l>
            <l>What lust was euer absent from thine eyes? </l>
            <l>What lewd fact from thy hands? what wickednesse </l>
            <l>From thy whole body? where is that youth drawne in </l>
            <l>Within thy nets, or catch'd up with thy baytes, </l>
            <l>Before whose rage, thou hast not borne a sword, </l>
            <l>And to whose lusts thou hast not held a torch? </l>
            <l>Thy latter Nuptials I let passe in silence; </l>
            <l>Where sinnes incredible, on sinnes, were heapt: </l>
            <l>Which I not name, lest, in a ciuill State, </l>
            <l>So monstrous facts should eyther appeare to be, </l>
            <l>Or not to be reueng'd. Thy Fortunes, too, </l>
            <l>I glance not at, which hang but till next Ides. </l>
            <l>I come to that, which is more knowne, more publick; </l>
            <l>The life, and safety of us all, by thee </l>
            <l>Threatned, and sought. Stood'st thou not in the field, </l>
            <l>When Lepidus, and Tullus were our Consuls, </l>
            <l>Upon the day of choyse, arm'd, and with forces, </l>
            <l>To take their liues, and our chiefe Citizens; </l>
            <l>When, not thy feare, nor conscience chang'd thy mind, </l>
            <l>But the meere fortune of the Common-wealth </l>
            <l>Withstood thy actiue malice? Speake but right. </l>
            <l>How often hast thou made attempt on me? </l>
            <l>How many of thy assaults have I declin'd </l>
            <l>With shifting but my bodie, (as we would say) </l>
            <l>Wrested thy dagger from thy hand, how oft? </l>
            <l>How often hath it falne, or slip't by chance? </l>
            <l>Yet can thy side not want it: which, how vow'd, </l>
            <l>Or with what rites, it is sacred of thee, I know not, </l>
            <l>That still thou mak'st it a necessitie, </l>
            <l>To fixe it in the bodie of a Consul. </l>
            <l>But let me loose this way, and speake to thee, </l>
            <l>Not as one mou'd with hatred, which I ought, </l>
            <l>But pitty, of which none is owing thee. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No more then vnto Tantalus, or Tityus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Thou cam'st, ere while, into this Senate. Who </l>
            <l>Of such a frequency, so many friends, </l>
            <l>And kindred thou hast here, saluted thee? </l>
            <l>Were not the seates made bare, upon thy entrance? </l>
            <l>Riss' not the Consular men? and left their places, </l>
            <l>So soone as thou sat'st downe? and fled thy side, </l>
            <l>Like a plague, or ruine; knowing, how oft </l>
            <l>They had bene, by thee, mark'd out for the Shambles? </l>
            <l>How dost thou beare this? Surely, if my Slaues </l>
            <l>At home fear'd me, with halfe the affright, and horror, </l>
            <l>That, here, thy fellow Citizens do thee, </l>
            <l>I should soone quit my house, and think it need too. </l>
            <l>Yet thou dar'st tary here? Go forth, at last; </l>
            <l>Condemne thy selfe to flight, and solitude. </l>
            <l>Discharge the Common-wealth, of her deepe feare. </l>
            <l>Goe; into banishment, if thou wait'st the word. </l>
            <l>Why do'st thou looke? They all consent vnto it. </l>
            <l>Do'st thou expect the authority of their voyces, </l>
            <l>Whose silent willes condemne thee? While they sit, </l>
            <l>They approue it; while they suffer it, they decree it; </l>
            <l>And while they are silent to it, they proclaime it. </l>
            <l>Proue thou there honest, I will endure the enuie. </l>
            <l>But there is no thought, thou should'st be euer he, </l>
            <l>Whom eyther shame should call from filthinesse, </l>
            <l>Terror from danger, or discourse from fury. </l>
            <l>Goe; I intreat thee: yet, why do I so? </l>
            <l>When I already know, they are sent afore, </l>
            <l>That tarry for thee in armes, and do expect thee </l>
            <l>On the Aurelian way. I know the day </l>
            <l>Set downe, twixt thee, and Manlius; vnto whom </l>
            <l>The siluer Eagle too is sent, before: </l>
            <l>Which I do hope shall proue, to thee as banefull, </l>
            <l>As thou conceiu'st it to the Common-wealth. </l>
            <l>But, may this wise, and sacred Senate say, </l>
            <l>What mean'st thou Marcus Tullius? If thou know'st </l>
            <l>That Catiline be look'd for, to be Chiefe </l>
            <l>Of an intestine warre; that he is the Author </l>
            <l>Of such a wickednesse; the Caller out </l>
            <l>Of men of marke in mischiefe, to an action </l>
            <l>Of so much horror; Prince of such a treason; </l>
            <l>Why do'st thou send him forth? why let him scape? </l>
            <l>This is to give him liberty, and power: </l>
            <l>Rather, thou should'st lay hold upon him, send him </l>
            <l>To deseru'd death, and a iust punishment. </l>
            <l>To these so holy voyces, thus I answere. </l>
            <l>If I did think it timely, Conscript Fathers, </l>
            <l>To punish him with death, I would not give </l>
            <l>The Fencer vse of one short hower, to breath; </l>
            <l>But when there are in this graue Order, some, </l>
            <l>Who, with soft censures, still do nource his hopes; </l>
            <l>Some, that with not beleeuing, have confirm'd </l>
            <l>His designes more, and whose authoritie </l>
            <l>The weaker, as the worst men, too, have follow'd: </l>
            <l>I would now send him, where they all should see </l>
            <l>Cleare, as the light, his heart shine; where no man </l>
            <l>Could be so wickedly, or fondly stupide, </l>
            <l>But should cry out he saw, touch'd, felt, and grasp't it. </l>
            <l>Then, when he hath runne out himselfe; led forth </l>
            <l>His desp'rate partie with him; blowne together </l>
            <l>Aids of all kinds, both shipwrack'd minds and fortunes: </l>
            <l>Not onely the growne euill, that now is sprung, </l>
            <l>And sprouted forth, would be pluck'd up, and weeded; </l>
            <l>But the stocke, roote, and seed of all the mischiefes, </l>
            <l>Choking the Common-wealth. Where, should we take </l>
            <l>Of such a swarme of traytors, onely him, </l>
            <l>Our cares, and feares might seeme a while relieu'd, </l>
            <l>But the maine perill would bide still enclos'd </l>
            <l>Deepe, in the veines, and bowels of the State. </l>
            <l>As humane bodies, laboring with feuers, </l>
            <l>While they are tost with heate, if they do take </l>
            <l>Cold water, seeme for that short space much eas'd, </l>
            <l>But afterward, are ten times more afflicted. </l>
            <l>Wherefore, I say, let all this wicked crew </l>
            <l>Depart, diuide themselues from good men, gather </l>
            <l>Their forces to one head; as I said oft, </l>
            <l>Let them leaue off attempts, upon the Consul, </l>
            <l>In his owne house; to circle in the Prætor; </l>
            <l>To girt the Court with weapons; to prepare </l>
            <l>Fire, and balles, swords, torches, sulphure, brands: </l>
            <l>In short, let it be writ in each mans forehead </l>
            <l>What thoughts he beares the Publike. I here promise, </l>
            <l>Fathers Conscript, to you, and to my selfe, </l>
            <l>That diligence in us Consulls, for my honour'd </l>
            <l>Colleague, abroad, and for my selfe, at home; </l>
            <l>So great authority in you; so much </l>
            <l>Vertue, in these, the Gentlemen of Rome; </l>
            <l>Whom I could scarce restraine to day, in zeale, </l>
            <l>From seeking out the Parricide, to slaughter; </l>
            <l>So much consent in all good men, and minds, </l>
            <l>As on the going out of this one Catiline, </l>
            <l>All shall be cleare, made plaine, oppress'd, reueng'd. </l>
            <l>And, with this omen, go, pernicious plague, </l>
            <l>Out of the Citie, to the wish'd destruction </l>
            <l>Of thee, and those, that, to the ruine of her, </l>
            <l>Have tane that bloudy, and blacke sacrament. </l>
            <l>Thou Iupiter, whom we do call the STAYER </l>
            <l>Both of this Citie, and this Empire, wilt </l>
            <l>(With the same auspice thou didst raise it first) </l>
            <l>Driue from thy Altars, and all other Temples, </l>
            <l>And Buildings of this City; from our Walles; </l>
            <l>Liues, states, and fortunes of our Citizens; </l>
            <l>This fiend, this fury, with his complices. </l>
            <l>And all the offence of good men (these knowne traitors </l>
            <l>Vnto their countrey, theeues of Italie, </l>
            <l>Ioynd'd in so damn'd a league of mischiefe) thou </l>
            <l>Wilt with perpetuall plagues, aliue, and dead, </l>
            <l>Punish for Rome, and saue her innocent head. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>If an Oration, or high language, Fathers, </l>
            <l>Could make me guilty, here is one, hath done it: </l>
            <l>He has stroue to æmulate this mornings thunder, </l>
            <l>With his prodigious rhetoricke. But I hope, </l>
            <l>This Senate is more graue, then to give credit </l>
            <l>Rashly to all he vomits, 'gainst a man </l>
            <l>Of your owne Order, a Patrician; </l>
            <l>And one, whose ancestors have more deseru'd </l>
            <l>Of Rome, then this mans eloquence could vtter, </l>
            <l>Turn'd the best way, as still, it is the worst. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>His eloquence hath more deseru'd to day, </l>
            <l>Speaking thy ill, then all thy ancestors </l>
            <l>Did, in their good: And that the State will finde, </l>
            <l>Which he hath sau'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>How he? were I that enemy, </l>
            <l>That he would make me: I would not wish the State </l>
            <l>More wretched, then to neede his preseruation. </l>
            <l>What do you make him, Cato, such a Hercules? </l>
            <l>An Atlas? A poore petty In-mate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Traitor. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>He saue the State? A Burgesse sonne of Arpinum. </l>
            <l>The Gods would rather twenty Romes should perish, </l>
            <l>Then have that contumely stucke upon them, </l>
            <l>That he should share with them, in the preseruing </l>
            <l>A shed, or signe-post. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Peace, thou prodigie. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>They would be runne themselues, againe, and lost </l>
            <l>In the first, rude, and indigested heape; </l>
            <l>Ere such a wretched name, as Cicero, </l>
            <l>Should sound with theirs. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Away, thou impudent head. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Do you all backe him? are you silent too? </l>
            <l>Well, I will leaue you Fathers; I will goe. </l>
            <l>But — my fine dainty speaker. — </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What now Fury? </l>
            <l>Wilt thou assault me here? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>Helpe, aide the Consul, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>See Fathers, laugh you not? who threatned him? </l>
            <l>In vaine thou do'st conceiue, ambitious Orator, </l>
            <l>Hope of so braue a death, as by this hand. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Out, of the Court, with the pernicious traytor. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>There is no title, that this flattering Senate, </l>
            <l>Nor honor, the base multitude can give thee, </l>
            <l>Shall make thee worthy Catilines anger. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Stop, </l>
            <l>Stop that portentous mouth. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Or, when it shall, </l>
            <l>I will looke thee dead. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Will none restraine the Monster? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Parricide. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Butcher, Traytor, leaue the Senate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I am gone, to banishment, to please you Fathers. </l>
            <l>Thrust head-long forth? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Stil, dost thou murmure, Monster? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Since, I am thus put out, and made a — </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Not guiltier then thou art. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I will not burne </l>
            <l>Without my funerall pile. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Sing out Scrich-owle. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>It shall be in — </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>Speake thy imperfect thoughts. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>The common fire, rather then mine owne. </l>
            <l>For fall I will with all, ere fall alone. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>He is lost, there is no hope of him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Vnlesse </l>
            <l>He presently take armes; and give a blow, </l>
            <l>Before the Consuls forces can be leuie'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What is your pleasure, Fathers, shall be done? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>See, that the Common-wealth receiue no losse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Commit the care thereof vnto the Consuls. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>It is time. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>And need. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Thanks to this frequent </l>
            <l>But what decree they, vnto Curius, </l>
            <l>And Fuluia? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>O</speaker>
            <l>What the Consul shall think meete. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>They must receiue reward, though it be not knowne; </l>
            <l>Lest when a State needes ministers, they have none. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Yet, Marcus Tullius, do not I beleeue, </l>
            <l>But Crassus, and this Cæsar here ring hollow. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>And would appeare so, if that we durst proue them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Why dare we not? What honest act is that, </l>
            <l>The Roman Senate should not dare, and do? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Not an vnprofitable, dangerous act, </l>
            <l>To stirre too many Serpents up at once. </l>
            <l>Cæsar, and Crassus, if they be ill men, </l>
            <l>Are mighty ones; and, we must so prouide, </l>
            <l>That, while we take one head, from this foule Hydra, </l>
            <l>There spring not twenty more. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>I 'proue your Counsell. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>They shall be watch'd, and look'd too. Till they do </l>
            <l>Declare themselues, I will not put them out </l>
            <l>By any question. There they stand. I will make </l>
            <l>My selfe no enemies, nor the State, no traitors. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.4" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>False to our selues? All our designes discouer'd </l>
            <l>To this State-Cat? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Aye, had I had my way, </l>
            <l>He had mew'd in flames, at home, not in the Senate: </l>
            <l>I had sing'd his furres, by this time. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>Well, there is, now, </l>
            <l>No time of calling backe, or standing still. </l>
            <l>Friends, be your selues; keepe the same Roman hearts, </l>
            <l>And ready minds, you had yesternight: Prepare </l>
            <l>To execute, what we resolu'd. And let not </l>
            <l>Labor, or danger, or discouery fright you. </l>
            <l>I will to the army: you (the while) mature </l>
            <l>Things, here, at home. Draw to you any aides, </l>
            <l>That you think fit, of men of all conditions, </l>
            <l>Or any fortunes, that may helpe a warre. </l>
            <l>I will bleede a life, or winne an Empire for you. </l>
            <l>Within these few dayes, looke to see my ensignes, </l>
            <l>Here, at the walles: Be you but firme within. </l>
            <l>Meane time, to draw an enuy on the Consull, </l>
            <l>And give a lesse suspicion of our course, </l>
            <l>Let it be giuen out, here in the Citty, </l>
            <l>That I am gone, an innocent man, to exile, </l>
            <l>Into Massilia, willing to give way </l>
            <l>To fortune, and the times; being vnable </l>
            <l>To stand so great a faction, without troubling </l>
            <l>The Common-wealth: whose peace I rather seeke, </l>
            <l>Then all the glory of contention, </l>
            <l>Or the support of mine owne innocence. </l>
            <l>Farewell the noble Lentulus, Longinus, </l>
            <l>Curius, the rest; and thou, my better Genius, </l>
            <l>The braue Cethegus: when we meete againe, </l>
            <l>We will sacrifice to Liberty. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>And Reuenge. </l>
            <l>That we may praise our hands once. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>O you Fates, </l>
            <l>Give Fortune now her eyes, to see with whom </l>
            <l>She goes along, that she may nere forsake him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>He needs not her, nor them. Goe but on, Sergius. </l>
            <l>“A valiant man is his owne Fate, and Fortune. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>The Fate, and Fortune of us all goe with him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>X</speaker>
            <l>And euer guard him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I am all your Creature. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Now friends, it is left with us. I have already </l>
            <l>Dealt, by Vmbrenus, with the Allobroges, </l>
            <l>Here resiant in Rome; whose State, I heare, </l>
            <l>Is discontent with the great vsuries, </l>
            <l>They are oppress'd with: and have made complaints </l>
            <l>Diuers, vnto the Senate, but all vaine. </l>
            <l>These men, I have thought, both for their owne oppressions, </l>
            <l>As also that, by nature, they are a people </l>
            <l>Warlike, and fierce, still watching after change, </l>
            <l>And now, in present hatred with our State, </l>
            <l>The fittest, and the easiest to be drawne </l>
            <l>To our society, and to aide the warre. </l>
            <l>The rather, for their seate: being next bordrers </l>
            <l>On Italie: and that they abound with horse, </l>
            <l>Of which one want our Campe doth only labor. </l>
            <l>And I have found them comming. They will meete </l>
            <l>Soone at Sempronia's house, where I would pray you </l>
            <l>All to be present, to confirme them more. </l>
            <l>The sight of such spirits hurt not, nor the store. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I will not Faile. </l>
            <l>Nor I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>D</speaker>
            <l>Nor I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Would I </l>
            <l>Had somewhat by my selfe, apart, to do. </l>
            <l>I have no genius to these many counsels. </l>
            <l>Let me kill all the Senate, for my share, </l>
            <l>I will do it at the next sitting. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Worthy Caius, </l>
            <l>Your presence will adde much. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>I shall marre more. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.5" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>The State is beholden to you, Fabius Sanga, </l>
            <l>For this great care: And those Allobroges </l>
            <l>Are more then wretched, if they lend a listning </l>
            <l>To such perswasion. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>They, most worthy Consul, </l>
            <l>As men employ'd here, from a grieued State, </l>
            <l>Groaning beneath a multitude of wrongs, </l>
            <l>And being told, there was small hope of ease </l>
            <l>To be expected, to their euils, from hence; </l>
            <l>Were willing, at the first to give an eare </l>
            <l>To any thing, that sounded liberty: </l>
            <l>But since, on better thoughts, and my vrg'd reasons, </l>
            <l>They are come about, and wonne, to the true side. </l>
            <l>The fortune of the Common-wealth hath conquer'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What is that same Vmbrenus, was the Agent? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>One that hath had negotiation </l>
            <l>In Gallia oft, and knowne vnto their State. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Are the Ambassadours come with you? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Well, bring them in, if they be firme, and honest, </l>
            <l>Neuer had men the meanes so to deserue </l>
            <l>Of Rome, as they. A happy, wish'd occasion, </l>
            <l>And thrust into my hands, for the discouery, </l>
            <l>And manifest conuiction of these traytors. </l>
            <l>Be thank'd; o Iupiter. My worthy Lords, </l>
            <l>Confederates of the Senate, you are welcome. </l>
            <l>I vnderstand by Quintus Fabius Sanga, </l>
            <l>Your carefull Patron here, you have been lately </l>
            <l>Sollicited against the Common-wealth, </l>
            <l>By one Vmbrenus (take a seate, pray you) </l>
            <l>From Publius Lentulus, to be associates </l>
            <l>In their intended warre. I could aduise, </l>
            <l>That men, whose fortunes are yet flourishig, </l>
            <l>And are Romes friends, would not, without a cause, </l>
            <l>Become her enemies; and mixe themselues </l>
            <l>And their estates, with the lost hopes of Catiline, </l>
            <l>Or Lentulus, whose meere despaire doth arme them: </l>
            <l>That were to hazard certainties, for ayre, </l>
            <l>And vndergoe all danger, for a voyce. </l>
            <l>Beleeue me, friends; “Loud tumults are not laid </l>
            <l>“With halfe the easinesse that they are rais'd. </l>
            <l>“All may beginne a warre, but few can end it. </l>
            <l>The Senate have decreed, that my Colleague </l>
            <l>Shall leade their army, against Catiline, </l>
            <l>And have declar'd both him, and Manlius traitors. </l>
            <l>Metellus Celer hath already giuen </l>
            <l>Part of their troopes defeate. Honors are promis'd </l>
            <l>Euen to slaues, that can detect their courses. </l>
            <l>Here, in the City, I have by the Prætors, </l>
            <l>And Tribunes, plac'd my guards, and watches so, </l>
            <l>That not a foote can treade, a breath can whisper, </l>
            <l>But I have knowledge. And be sure, the Senate, </l>
            <l>And People of Rome, of their accustom'd greatnesse, </l>
            <l>Will sharply, and seuerely vindicate, </l>
            <l>Not only any fact, but any practise </l>
            <l>Or purpose, 'gainst the State. Therefore, my Lords, </l>
            <l>Consult of your owne waies, and think which hand </l>
            <l>Is best to take. You, now, are present suters </l>
            <l>For some redresse of wrongs; I will vndertake </l>
            <l>Not only that shall be assur'd you, but </l>
            <l>What grace or priuiledge else, Senate, or People </l>
            <l>Can cast upon you, worthy such a seruice, </l>
            <l>As you have now the way, and meanes, to do them; </l>
            <l>If but your willes consent, with my designes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We couet nothing more, most worthy Consul. </l>
            <l>And how so ere we have beene tempted lately, </l>
            <l>To a defection, that not makes us guilty: </l>
            <l>We are not yet so wretched in our fortunes, </l>
            <l>Nor in our willes so lost, as to abandon </l>
            <l>A friendship, prodigally, of that price, </l>
            <l>As is the Senate, and the People of Romes, </l>
            <l>For hopes, that do præcipitate themselues. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You then are wise, and honest. Do but this, then: </l>
            <l>When shall you speake with Lentulus, and the rest? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We are to meete anone, at Brutus house. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Who? Decius Brutus? He is not in Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>O, but his wife, Sempronia. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You instruct me, </l>
            <l>She is a Chiefe. Well, faile not you to meete them, </l>
            <l>And to expresse the best affection </l>
            <l>You can put on, to all that they intend. </l>
            <l>Like it, applaud it, give the Common-wealth </l>
            <l>And Senate, lost to them. Promise any aides </l>
            <l>By armes, or counsell. What they can desire </l>
            <l>I would have you preuent. Only, say this, </l>
            <l>You have had dispatch, in priuate, by the Consull </l>
            <l>Of your affaires, and for the many feares </l>
            <l>The State is now in, you are will'd by him, this euening, </l>
            <l>To depart Rome: which you, by all sought meanes, </l>
            <l>Will do, of reason to decline suspicion. </l>
            <l>Now, for the more authority of the businesse </l>
            <l>They have trusted to you, and to give it credit </l>
            <l>With your owne State, at home, you would desire </l>
            <l>Their letters to your Senate, and your People, </l>
            <l>Which shewne, you durst engage both life, and honor, </l>
            <l>The rest should euery way answere their hopes. </l>
            <l>Those had, pretend sodaine departure you, </l>
            <l>And, as you give me notice, at what Port </l>
            <l>You will goe out, I will have you intercepted, </l>
            <l>And all the letters taken with you: So </l>
            <l>As you shall be redeem'd in all opinions, </l>
            <l>And they conuicted of their manifest treason. </l>
            <l>“Ill deedes are well turn'd backe, upon their Authors: </l>
            <l>“And 'gainst an Iniurer, the reuenge is iust. </l>
            <l>This must be done, now. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Chearfully, and firmely. </l>
            <l>We are they, would rather hast to vndertake it, </l>
            <l>They stay, to say so. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>With that confidence, goe: </l>
            <l>Make your selues happy, while you make Rome so. </l>
            <l>By Sanga, let me have notice from you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.6" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>When come these Creatures, the Ambassadors? </l>
            <l>I would faine see them. Are they any Schollers? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>I think not, Madame. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Have they no Greeke? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>No surely. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Fie, what do I here, wayting on them then? </l>
            <l>If they be nothing but meere States-men. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Yes, </l>
            <l>Your Ladyship shall obserue their grauity, </l>
            <l>And their reseruednesse, their many cautions, </l>
            <l>Fitting their persons. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I do wonder much, </l>
            <l>That States, and Common-wealths employ not women, </l>
            <l>To be Ambassadors, sometimes: we should </l>
            <l>Do as good publike seruice, and could make </l>
            <l>As honorable Spies (for so Thucidides </l>
            <l>Calls all Ambassadors.) Are they come, Cethegus? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Do you aske me? Am I your scout, or baud? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>O Caius, it is no such businesse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>No? </l>
            <l>What does a woman at it then? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Good Sir, </l>
            <l>There are of us can be as exquisite Traytors, </l>
            <l>As ere a male-Conspirator of you all. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Aye, at smock-treason, Matron, I beleeue you; </l>
            <l>And if I were your husband; But when I </l>
            <l>Trust to your cobweb-bosomes any other </l>
            <l>Let me there die a Flie; and feast you, Spider. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>You are too sowre, and harsh Cethegus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>You </l>
            <l>Are kinde, and courtly. I would be torne in pieces, </l>
            <l>With wilde Hippolytus, nay proue the death, </l>
            <l>Euery limbe ouer, ere I would trust a woman, </l>
            <l>With wind, could I retaine it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Sir. They will be trusted </l>
            <l>With as good secrets, yet, as you have any, </l>
            <l>And cary them too, as close, and as conceald, </l>
            <l>As you shall for your heart. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>I will not contend with you </l>
            <l>Eyther in tongue, or cariage, good Calipso: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>E</speaker>
            <l>The Ambassadors are come. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Thanks to thee Mercury, </l>
            <l>That so hast rescu'd me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>How now, Volturtius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>They do desire some speech with you, in priuate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>O! it is about the prophecie, belike, </l>
            <l>And promise of the Sibylls; </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>It may be. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Shunne they, to treat at with me, too? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>No, good Lady, </l>
            <l>You may partake: I have told them, who you are. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>I should be loath to be left out, and here too. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Can these, or such, be any aydes, to us? </l>
            <l>Looke they, as they were built to shake the world, </l>
            <l>Or be a moment to our enterprise? </l>
            <l>A thousand, such as they are, could not make </l>
            <l>One Atome of our soules. They should be men </l>
            <l>Worth Heauens feare, that looking up, but thus, </l>
            <l>Would make Ioue stand upon his guard, and draw </l>
            <l>Himselfe within his Thonder; which, amaz'd, </l>
            <l>He should discharge in vaine, and they vnhurt. </l>
            <l>Or, if they were, like Capaneus, at Thebes, </l>
            <l>They should hang dead, upon the highest spires, </l>
            <l>And aske the second charge, to be throwne downe. </l>
            <l>Why, Lentulus, talke you so long? This time </l>
            <l>Had bene enough, to have scatter'd all the Starres. </l>
            <l>To have quench'd the Sunne, and Moone, and made the World </l>
            <l>Despaire of day, or any light, but ours. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>How do you like this spirit? In such men, </l>
            <l>Mankind doth liue. They are such soules, as these, </l>
            <l>That moue the world. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>J</speaker>
            <l>Aye, though he beare me hard, </l>
            <l>I, yet, must do him right. He is a spirit </l>
            <l>Of the right Martian breed. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>He is a Mars. </l>
            <l>Would we had time to liue here, and admire him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Well, I do see you would preuent the Consul. </l>
            <l>And I commend your care: It was but reason, </l>
            <l>To aske our Letters, and we had prepar'd them. </l>
            <l>Goe in, and we will take an oath, and seale them. </l>
            <l>You shall have Letters, too, to Catiline, </l>
            <l>To visite him in the way, and to confirme </l>
            <l>The association. This our friend, Volturtius, </l>
            <l>Shall goe along with you. Tell our great Generall, </l>
            <l>That we are readie here; that Lucius Bestia </l>
            <l>The Tribune, is prouided of a speach, </l>
            <l>To lay the enuie of the warre on Cicero; </l>
            <l>That all but long for his approach, and person: </l>
            <l>And then, you are made Freemen, as our selues. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.7" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I cannot feare the warre but to succeede well, </l>
            <l>Both for the honor of the cause, and worth </l>
            <l>Of him that doth commaund. For my Colleague, </l>
            <l>Being so ill affected with the goute, </l>
            <l>Will not be able to be there in person; </l>
            <l>And then Petreius, his Lieutenant, must </l>
            <l>Of neede take charge of the army: who is much </l>
            <l>The better souldier, hauing bene a Tribune, </l>
            <l>Prefect, Lieutenant, Prætor in the warre, </l>
            <l>These thirtie yeares, so conuersant in the army, </l>
            <l>As he knowes all the souldiers, by their names. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>They will fight then, brauely, with him. </l>
            <l>Aye, and he </l>
            <l>Will lead them on, as brauely. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>They have a foe </l>
            <l>Will aske their braueries, whose necessities </l>
            <l>Will arme him like a fury. But, how euer, </l>
            <l>I will trust it to the mannage, and the fortune </l>
            <l>Of good Petreius, who is a worthy Patriot. </l>
            <l>Metellus Celer, with three Legions, too, </l>
            <l>Will stop their course, for Gallia. How now, Fabius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>The trayne hath taken. You must instantly </l>
            <l>Dispose your guards upon the Miluian bridge: </l>
            <l>For, by that way, they meane to come. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Then, thither </l>
            <l>Pomtinius, and Flaccus, I must pray you </l>
            <l>To lead that force you have; and seise them all: </l>
            <l>Let not a person scape. The Ambassadours </l>
            <l>Will yeeld themselues. If there be any tumult </l>
            <l>I will send you ayde. I, in meane time will call </l>
            <l>Lentulus to me, Gabinius, and Cethegus, </l>
            <l>Statilius, Ceparius, and all these </l>
            <l>By seuerall messengers: who no doubt will come, </l>
            <l>Without sense, or suspicion. “Prodigall men </l>
            <l>“Feele not their owne stocke wasting. When I have them, </l>
            <l>I will place those guards, upon them, that they start not, </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>But what will you do with Sempronia? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>“A State </l>
            <l>“Should not take knowledge eyther of Fooles, or Women. </l>
            <l>I do not know whether my ioy or care </l>
            <l>Ought to be greater; that I have discouer'd </l>
            <l>So foule a treason: or must vndergone </l>
            <l>The enuie of so many great mens fate. </l>
            <l>But, happen what there can, I will be iust, </l>
            <l>My fortune may forsake me, not my vertue: </l>
            <l>That shall goe with me, and before me, still, </l>
            <l>And glad me, doing well, though I heare ill. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s4.8" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Stand, who goes there? </l>
            <l>We are the Allobroges, </l>
            <l>And friends of Rome. </l>
            <l>If you be so, then yeeld </l>
            <l>Your selues vnto the Prætors, who in name </l>
            <l>Of the whole Senate, and the people of Rome, </l>
            <l>Yet, till you cleare your selues, charge you of practise </l>
            <l>Against the State. </l>
            <l>Die friends, and be not taken. </l>
            <l>What voyce is that? Downe with them all. </l>
            <l>We yeeld. </l>
            <l>What is he stands out? Kill him there. </l>
            <l>Hold, hold, hold. </l>
            <l>I yeeld upon conditions. </l>
            <l>We give none </l>
            <l>To traytors, strike him downe. </l>
            <l>My name is Volturtius: </l>
            <l>I know Pomtinius. </l>
            <l>But he knowes not you, </l>
            <l>While you stand out upon these trayterous termes. </l>
            <l>I will yeeld upon the safety of my life. </l>
            <l>If it be forfeyted, we cannot saue it. </l>
            <l>Promise to do your best. I am not so guilty, </l>
            <l>As many others, I can name; and will: </l>
            <l>If you will grant me fauour. </l>
            <l>All we can </l>
            <l>Is to deliuer you to the Consul. Take him, </l>
            <l>And thanke the Gods, that thus have saued Rome. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>U</speaker>
            <l>Now, do our eares, before our eyes, </l>
            <l>Like men in mistes, </l>
            <l>Discouer, who would the State surprise, </l>
            <l>And who resists? </l>
            <l>And, as these clouds do yeeld to light, </l>
            <l>Now, do we see, </l>
            <l>Our thoughts of things, how they did fight, </l>
            <l>Which seem'd to agree? </l>
            <l>Of what strange pieces are we made, </l>
            <l>Who nothing know; </l>
            <l>But, as new Ayres our eares inuade, </l>
            <l>Still censure so? </l>
            <l>That now do hope, and now do feare, </l>
            <l>And now enuie; </l>
            <l>And then do hate, and then loue deare, </l>
            <l>But know not, why: </l>
            <l>Or, if we do, it is so late, </l>
            <l>As our best moode, </l>
            <l>Though true, is then thought out of date, </l>
            <l>And empty of good. </l>
            <l>How have we chang'd, and come about </l>
            <l>In euery doome, </l>
            <l>Since wicked Catiline went out, </l>
            <l>And quitted Rome? </l>
            <l>One while, we thought him innocent; </l>
            <l>And, then we accus'd </l>
            <l>The Consul, for his malice spent; </l>
            <l>And power abus'd. </l>
            <l>Since, that we heare, he is in Armes, </l>
            <l>We think not so: </l>
            <l>Yet charge the Consul, with our harmes, </l>
            <l>That let him goe. </l>
            <l>So, in our censure of the state, </l>
            <l>We still do wander; </l>
            <l>And make the carefull Magistrate </l>
            <l>The marke of slaunder. </l>
            <l>What age is this, where honest men; </l>
            <l>Plac'd at the helme, </l>
            <l>A Sea of some foule mouth, or pen, </l>
            <l>Shall ouerwhelme? </l>
            <l>And call their diligence, deceipt; </l>
            <l>Their vertue, vice; </l>
            <l>Their watchfullnesse, but lying in waite: </l>
            <l>And bloud, the price. </l>
            <l>O, let us plucke till euill seede </l>
            <l>Out of our spirits; </l>
            <l>And give, to euery noble deede, </l>
            <l>The name it merits. </l>
            <l>Least we seeme falne (if this endures) </l>
            <l>Into those times, </l>
            <l>To loue disease: and brooke the cures </l>
            <l>Worse, then the crimes. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
      </div>
      <div xml:id="a5" type="act">
        <div xml:id="s5.1" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>It is my fortune, and my glory, Souldiers, </l>
            <l>This day, to lead you on; the worthy Consul </l>
            <l>Kept from the honor of it, by disease: </l>
            <l>And I am proud, to have so braue a cause </l>
            <l>To exercise your armes in. We not, now, </l>
            <l>Fight for how long, how broad, how great, and large </l>
            <l>The extent, and bounds of the people of Rome shall be; </l>
            <l>But to retaine what our great Ancestors, </l>
            <l>With all their labours, counsels, arts, and actions, </l>
            <l>For us, were purchasing so many yeares. </l>
            <l>The quarrell is not, now, of fame, of tribute, </l>
            <l>Or of wrongs, done vnto Confederates, </l>
            <l>For which, the Army of the people of Rome </l>
            <l>Was wont to moue: but for your owne Republique, </l>
            <l>For the rais'd Temples of the immortall Gods, </l>
            <l>For all your Fortunes, Altars, and your Fires, </l>
            <l>For the deere soules of your lou'd Wiues, and Children, </l>
            <l>Your Parents tombes, your Rites, Lawes, Liberty, </l>
            <l>And, briefly, for the safety of the World: </l>
            <l>Against such men, as onely by their crimes </l>
            <l>Are knowne; thrust out by riot, want, or rashnesse. </l>
            <l>One sort, Sylla's old troopes, left here in Fesulæ, </l>
            <l>Who sodainly made rich, in those dire times, </l>
            <l>Are since, by their vnbounded, vast expence, </l>
            <l>Growne needie; and poore, and have but left to expect, </l>
            <l>From Catiline, new Billes, and new Proscriptions. </l>
            <l>These men (they say) are valiant; yet, I think them </l>
            <l>Not worth your pause: For either their old vertue </l>
            <l>Is, in their sloth, and pleasures lost; or, if </l>
            <l>It tarry with them, so ill match to yours, </l>
            <l>As they are short in number, or in cause. </l>
            <l>The second sort are of those (Citty-beasts, </l>
            <l>Rather then Citizens) who whilst they reach </l>
            <l>After our fortunes, have let flie their owne; </l>
            <l>These, whelm'd in wine, swell'd up with meates, and weakned </l>
            <l>With hourely whoredomes, neuer left the side </l>
            <l>Of Catiline, in Rome; nor, here, are loos'd </l>
            <l>From his embraces: Such, as (trust me) neuer </l>
            <l>In riding, or in vsing well their armes, </l>
            <l>Watching, or other militarie labor, </l>
            <l>Did exercise their youth; but learn'd to loue, </l>
            <l>Drinke, dance, and sing, make feasts, and be fine gamsters. </l>
            <l>And there will wish more hurt to you, then they bring you. </l>
            <l>The rest are a mixt kinde, all sort of furies; </l>
            <l>Adulterers, Dicers, Fencers, Outlawes, Theeues, </l>
            <l>The Murderers of their Parents, all the sinke, </l>
            <l>And plague of Italie, met in one torrent, </l>
            <l>To take, to day, from us the punishment, </l>
            <l>Due to their mischiefs, for so many yeares. </l>
            <l>And who, in such a cause, and 'gainst such fiends, </l>
            <l>Would not now wish himselfe all arme, and weapon? </l>
            <l>To cut such poysons from the earth, and let </l>
            <l>Their blood out, to be drawne away in cloudes, </l>
            <l>And pour'd, on some inhabitable place, </l>
            <l>Where the hot Sunne, and Slime breedes nought but Monsters? </l>
            <l>Chiefly, when this sure ioy shall crowne our side, </l>
            <l>That the least man, that falles upon our party </l>
            <l>This day (as some must give their happy names </l>
            <l>To fate, and that eternall memory </l>
            <l>Of the best death, writ with it, for their Countrey) </l>
            <l>Shall walke at pleasure, in the tents of rest; </l>
            <l>And see farre off, beneath him, all their host </l>
            <l>Tormented after life: and Catiline, there, </l>
            <l>Walking a wretched, and lesse Ghost, then he. </l>
            <l>I will vrge no more: Moue forward, with your Eagles, </l>
            <l>And trust the Senates, and Romes cause to Heauen. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>X</speaker>
            <l>To thee; great Father Mars, and greater Ioue. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s5.2" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>I Euer look'd for this of Lentulus, </l>
            <l>When Catiline was gone. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>I gaue them lost, </l>
            <l>Many dayes since. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>But, wherefore did you beare </l>
            <l>Their letter to the Consul, that they sent you, </l>
            <l>To warne you from the City? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Did I know </l>
            <l>Whether he made it? It might come from him, </l>
            <l>For ought I could assure me: if they meant, </l>
            <l>I should be safe, among so many, they might </l>
            <l>Have come, as well as writ. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>There is no losse </l>
            <l>In being secure. I have, of late, too, ply'd him, </l>
            <l>Thicke, with intelligences, but they have beene </l>
            <l>Of things he knew before. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>A little serues </l>
            <l>To keepe a man upright, on these State-bridges, </l>
            <l>Although the passage were more dangerous. </l>
            <l>Let us now take the standing part. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>We must, </l>
            <l>And be as zealous for it, as Cato. Yet </l>
            <l>I would faine helpe these wretched men. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>You cannot. </l>
            <l>Who would saue them, that have betraid themselues? </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s5.3" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I will not be wrought to it, Brother Quintus. </l>
            <l>There is no mans priuate enmity shall make </l>
            <l>Me violate the dignity of another. </l>
            <l>If there were proofe 'gainst Cæsar, or who euer, </l>
            <l>To speake him guilty, I would so declare him. </l>
            <l>But Quintus Catulus, and Piso both, </l>
            <l>Shall know, the Consul will not, for their grudge, </l>
            <l>Have any man accus'd, or named falsly. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Not falsly, but if any circumstance, </l>
            <l>By the Allobroges, or from Volturtius, </l>
            <l>Would carry it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>That shall not be sought by me, </l>
            <l>If it reueale it selfe, I would not spare </l>
            <l>You, Brother, if it pointed at you, trust me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Good Marcus Tullius (which is more, then great) </l>
            <l>Thou had'st thy education, with the Gods. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Send Lentulus, forth, and bring away the rest. </l>
            <l>This office, I am sorry, Sir, to do you. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s5.4" type="scene">
          <stage type="entrance">THE SENATE.</stage>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What may be happy still, and fortunate, </l>
            <l>To Rome, and to this Senate: Please you, Fathers, </l>
            <l>To breake these letters, and to view them round. </l>
            <l>If that be not found in them, which I feare, </l>
            <l>I, yet, intreate, at such a time, as this, </l>
            <l>My diligence be not contemn'd. Have you brought </l>
            <l>The weapons hither, from Cethegus house? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>They are without. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Be ready, with Volturtius, </l>
            <l>To bring him, when the Senate calls; And see </l>
            <l>None of the rest, conferre together. Fathers, </l>
            <l>What do you reade? Is it yet worth your care, </l>
            <l>If not your feare, what you finde practis'd there? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>It hath a face of horror. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>I am amaz'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Looke there. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Gods! Can such men draw common aire? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Although the greatnesse of the mischiefe, Fathers, </l>
            <l>Hath often made my faith small, in this Senate, </l>
            <l>Yet, since my casting Catiline out (for now </l>
            <l>I do not feare the enuy of the word, </l>
            <l>Vnlesse the deede be rather to be fear'd, </l>
            <l>That he went hence aliue; when those I meant </l>
            <l>Should follow him, did not) I have spent both daies, </l>
            <l>And nights, in watching, what their fury and rage </l>
            <l>Was bent on, that so staid, against my thought: </l>
            <l>And that I might but take them in that light, </l>
            <l>Where, when you met their treason, with your eyes, </l>
            <l>Your minds, at length, would think for your owne safety. </l>
            <l>And, now, it is done. There are their hands, and seales. </l>
            <l>Their persons, too, are safe, thankes to the Gods. </l>
            <l>Bring in Volturtius, and the 'Allobroges. </l>
            <l>These be the men, were trusted with their letters. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Fathers, beleeue me, I knew nothing: I </l>
            <l>Was trauailing for Gallia, and am sorry — </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Quake not Volturtius, speake the truth, and hope </l>
            <l>Well of this Senate, on the Consuls word. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Then, I knew all. But truely I was drawne in </l>
            <l>But the other day. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Say, what thou know'st, and feare not. </l>
            <l>Thou hast the Senates faith, and Consuls word, </l>
            <l>To fortifie thee. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I was sent with letters — </l>
            <l>And had a message too — from Lentulus — </l>
            <l>To Catiline — that he should vse all aides — </l>
            <l>Seruants, or others — and come with his army, </l>
            <l>As soon, vnto the Citty as he could — </l>
            <l>For they were ready, and but staid for him — </l>
            <l>To intercept those, that should flee the fire — </l>
            <l>These Men, the Allobroges, did heare it too. </l>
            <l>Yes Fathers, and they tooke an oath, to us. </l>
            <l>Besides their letters, that we should be free; </l>
            <l>And vrg'd us, for some present aide of horse. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Nay, here be other testimonies, Fathers, </l>
            <l>Cethegus Armoury. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>What, not all these? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Here is not the hundred part. Call in the Fencer, </l>
            <l>That we may know the armes to all these weapons. </l>
            <l>Come, my braue Sword-player, to what actiue vse, </l>
            <l>Was all this steele prouided? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Had you ask'd </l>
            <l>In Syllas dayes, it had beene to cut throtes; </l>
            <l>But, now, it was to looke on, only: I lou'd </l>
            <l>To see good blades, and feele their edge, and points. </l>
            <l>To put a helme upon a blocke, and cleaue it, </l>
            <l>And, now and then, to stabbe an armour through. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Know you that paper? That will stabbe you through. </l>
            <l>Is it your hand? Hold, saue the peeces. Traytor, </l>
            <l>Hath thy guilt wak'd thy fury? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>I did write, </l>
            <l>I know not what; nor care not: That foole Lentulus </l>
            <l>Did dictate, and I the other Foole, did signe it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Bring in Statilius: Does he know his hand too? </l>
            <l>And Lentulus. Reach him that letter. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I </l>
            <l>Confesse it all. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Know you that seale yet, Publius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Yes, it is mine. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Whose image is that, on it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>My Grandfathers. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What, that renowm'd good man, </l>
            <l>That did so only' embrace his Countrey', and lou'd </l>
            <l>His fellow Citizens! Was not his picture, </l>
            <l>Though mute, of power to call thee from a fact, </l>
            <l>So foule. — </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>As what, impetuous Cicero? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>As thou art, for I do not know what is fouler. </l>
            <l>Looke upon these. Do not these faces argue </l>
            <l>Thy guilt, and impudence? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>What are these to me? </l>
            <l>I know them not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>No Publius? we were with you, </l>
            <l>At Brutus house. </l>
            <l>Last night. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>What did you there? </l>
            <l>Who sent for you? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Your selfe did. We had letters </l>
            <l>From you, Cethegus, this Statilius here, </l>
            <l>Gabinius Cimber, all, but from Longinus, </l>
            <l>Who would not write, because he was to come </l>
            <l>Shortly, in person, after us (he said) </l>
            <l>To take the charge of the horse, which we should leuy. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>And he is fled, to Catiline, I heare. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Spies? spies? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>You told us too, of the Sibylls bookes, </l>
            <l>And how you were to be a King, this yeare, </l>
            <l>The twentieth, from the burning of the Capitol. </l>
            <l>That three Cornelij were to raigne, in Rome, </l>
            <l>Of which you were the last: and prais'd Cethegus, </l>
            <l>And the great spirits, were with you, in the action. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>These are your honorable Ambassadors, </l>
            <l>My Soueraigne Lord. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Peace, that too bold Cethegus. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Besides Gabinius, your Agent, nam'd </l>
            <l>Autronius, Seruius Sulla, Vargunteius, </l>
            <l>And diuers others. </l>
            <l>I had letters from you, </l>
            <l>To Catiline, and a message, which I have told </l>
            <l>Vnto the Senate, truly, word for word: </l>
            <l>For which, I hope, they will be gracious to me. </l>
            <l>I was drawne in, by that same wicked Cimber, </l>
            <l>And thought no hurt at all. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Volturtius, peace. </l>
            <l>Where is thy visor, or thy voyce, now, Lentulus? </l>
            <l>Art thou confounded? Wherefore speak'st thou not? </l>
            <l>Is all so cleare, so plaine, so manifest, </l>
            <l>That both thy eloquence, and impudence, </l>
            <l>And thy ill nature, too, have left thee, at once? </l>
            <l>Take him aside. There is yet one more. Gabinius, </l>
            <l>The Enginer of all. Shew him that paper, </l>
            <l>If he do know it? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I know nothing. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>No? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>No. Nor I will not know. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Impudent head? </l>
            <l>Sticke it into his throate; were I the Consul, </l>
            <l>I would make thee eate the mischiefe, thou hast vented. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Is there a Law for it, Cato? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Dost thou aske </l>
            <l>After a Law, that would'st have broke all lawes, </l>
            <l>Of Nature, Manhood, Conscience, and Religion. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Yes, I may aske for it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No, pernicious Cimber. </l>
            <l>“The inquiring after good, does not belong </l>
            <l>“Vnto a wicked person. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Aye, but Cato </l>
            <l>Does nothing, but by Law. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Take him aside. </l>
            <l>There is proofe enough, though he confesse not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Stay </l>
            <l>I will confesse. All is true, your spies have told you. </l>
            <l>Make much of them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Yes, and reward them well, </l>
            <l>For feare you get no more such. See, they do not </l>
            <l>Die in a ditch, and stinke, now you have done with them; </l>
            <l>Or beg, of the bridges, here in Rome, whose Arches </l>
            <l>Their actiue industrie hath sau'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>See, Fathers, </l>
            <l>What mindes, and spirits these are, that, being conuicted </l>
            <l>Of such a treason, and by such a cloud </l>
            <l>Of witnesses, dare yet retaine their boldnesse? </l>
            <l>What would their rage have done, if they had conquerd? </l>
            <l>I thought, when I had thrust out Catiline, </l>
            <l>Neither the State, nor I, should need to have fear'd </l>
            <l>Lentulus sleepe here, or Longinus fat, </l>
            <l>Or this Cethegus rashnesse; It was he, </l>
            <l>I only watch'd, while he was in our walles, </l>
            <l>As one, that had the braine, the hand, the heart. </l>
            <l>But now, we finde the contrary. Where was there </l>
            <l>A People grieu'd, or a State discontent, </l>
            <l>Able to make, or helpe a warre 'gainst Rome, </l>
            <l>But these, the Allobroges, and those they found? </l>
            <l>Whom had not the iust Gods beene pleas'd to make </l>
            <l>More friends vnto our safety, then their owne, </l>
            <l>As it then seem'd, neglecting these mens offers, </l>
            <l>Where had we beene? or where the Common-wealth? </l>
            <l>When their great Chiefe had beene call'd home; This man, </l>
            <l>Their absolute King, (whose noble Grandfather, </l>
            <l>Arm'd in pursute of the seditious Gracchus, </l>
            <l>Tooke a braue wound, for deare defence of that, </l>
            <l>Which he would spoile) had gather'd all his aides </l>
            <l>Of Ruffins, Slaues, and other Slaughter-men; </l>
            <l>Giuen us up for murder, to Cethegus; </l>
            <l>The other ranke of Citizens, to Gabinius; </l>
            <l>The Citty, to be fir'd by Cassius; </l>
            <l>And Italie, nay the world, to be laid wast </l>
            <l>By cursed Catiline, and his complices. </l>
            <l>Lay but the thought of it, before you, Fathers, </l>
            <l>Think but with me you saw this glorious Citty, </l>
            <l>The Light of all the earth, Tower of all Nations, </l>
            <l>Sodainly falling in one flame. Imagine, </l>
            <l>You view'd your Countrey buried with the heapes </l>
            <l>Of slaughter'd Citizens, that had no graue; </l>
            <l>This Lentulus here, raigning, (as he dreamp't) </l>
            <l>And those his purple Senate; Catiline come </l>
            <l>With his fierce army; and the cries of Matrons; </l>
            <l>The flight of Children, and the rape of Virgines, </l>
            <l>Shriekes of the liuing, with the dying grones </l>
            <l>On euery side to inuade your sense; vntill </l>
            <l>The blood of Rome, were mixed with her ashes. </l>
            <l>This was the Spectacle these fiends intended </l>
            <l>To please their malice. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>Aye, and it would </l>
            <l>Have bene a braue one, Consul. But your part </l>
            <l>Had not then bene so long, as now it is: </l>
            <l>I should have quite defeated your Oration; </l>
            <l>And slit that fine rhetoricall pipe of yours, </l>
            <l>In the first Scene. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Insolent Monster! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Fathers, </l>
            <l>Is it your pleasures, they shall be committed </l>
            <l>Vnto some safe, but a free custodie, </l>
            <l>Vntill the Senate can determine farder? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>X</speaker>
            <l>It pleaseth well. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Then, Marcus Crassus, </l>
            <l>Take you charge of Gabinius: send him home </l>
            <l>Vnto your house. You Cæsar, of Statilius. </l>
            <l>Cethegus shall be sent to Cornificius; </l>
            <l>And Lentulus, to Publius Lentulus Spinther, </l>
            <l>Who now is A Edile. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>It were best, the Prætors </l>
            <l>Caried them to their houses, and deliuered them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Let it be so. Take them from hence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>But, first, </l>
            <l>Let Lentulus put off his Prætorship. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>I do resigne it here vnto the Senate. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>So, now, there is no offence done to religion. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Cæsar, it was piously, and timely vrg'd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What do you decree to the Allobroges? </l>
            <l>That were the lights to this discouery? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>A free grant from the State, of all their suites. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>And a reward, out of the publicke treasure. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Aye, and the title of honest men, to crowne them. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What to Volturtius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Life, and fauor's well. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I aske no more. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Yes, yes, some money, thou need'st it. </l>
            <l>It will keepe thee honest: Want made thee a knaue. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Let Flaccus, and Pomtinius, the Prætors, </l>
            <l>Have publicke thankes, and Quintus Fabius Sanga, </l>
            <l>For their good seruice. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>They deserue it all. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>But what do we decree vnto the Consul, </l>
            <l>Whose vertue, counsell, watchfulnesse, and wisedome, </l>
            <l>Hath free'd the Common-wealth, and without tumult, </l>
            <l>Slaughter, of bloud, or scarce raysing a force, </l>
            <l>Rescu'd us all out of the iawes of Fate? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>We owe our Liues vnto him, and our Fortunes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Our Wiues, our Children, Parents, and our Gods. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We all are saued, by his fortitude. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>The Common-wealth owes him a ciuicke gyrland. </l>
            <l>Here is the onely Father of his Countrey. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Let there be publike prayer, to all the Gods, </l>
            <l>Made in that name, for him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>And in these words, </l>
            <l>For that he hath, by his vigilance, preseru'd </l>
            <l>Rome from the flame, the Senate from the sword, </l>
            <l>And all her Citizens from massacre. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>How are my labours more then paid, graue Fathers, </l>
            <l>In these great titles, and decreed honors! </l>
            <l>Such, as to me, first, of the ciuill robe, </l>
            <l>Of any man, since Rome was Rome, have hap'ned; </l>
            <l>And from this frequent Senate: which more glads me, </l>
            <l>That I now see, you have sense of your owne safety. </l>
            <l>If those good daies come no lesse gratefull to us, </l>
            <l>Wherein we are preseru'd from some great danger, </l>
            <l>Then those, wherein we are borne, and brought, to light, </l>
            <l>Because the gladnesse of our safety is certaine, </l>
            <l>But the condition of our birth not so; </l>
            <l>And that we are sau'd with pleasure, but are borne </l>
            <l>Without the sense of ioy: why should not, then, </l>
            <l>This day, to us, and all posteritie </l>
            <l>Of ours, be had in equall fame, and honor, </l>
            <l>With that, when Romulus first reard these walles, </l>
            <l>When so much more is saued, then he built? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>It ought. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Let it be added to our Fasti. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What tumult is that? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Here is one Tarquinius taken, </l>
            <l>Going to Catiline; and sayes he was sent </l>
            <l>By Marcus Crassus: whom he names, to be </l>
            <l>Guilty of the Conspiracy. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Some lying varlet. </l>
            <l>Take him away, to prison. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Bring him in, </l>
            <l>And let me see him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>He is not worth it, Crassus. </l>
            <l>Keepe him up close, and hungry, till he tell, </l>
            <l>By whose pernicious counsell, he durst slander </l>
            <l>So great, and good a Citizen. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>By yours </l>
            <l>I feare, it will proue. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Some of the Traytors, sure, </l>
            <l>To give their action the more credit, bid him </l>
            <l>Name you, or any man. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>I know my selfe, </l>
            <l>By all the tracts, and courses of this businesse, </l>
            <l>Crassus, is noble, iust, and loues his Countrey. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Here is a Libell too, accusing Cæsar, </l>
            <l>From Lucius Vectius, and confirm'd by Curius. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Away with all, throw it out of the Court. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>A tricke on me, too? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>It is some mens malice. </l>
            <l>I said to Curius, I did not beleeue him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Was not that Curius your spie, that had </l>
            <l>Reward decreed vnto him, the last Senate, </l>
            <l>With Fuluia, upon your priuate motion? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Yes. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>But he has not that reward, yet? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>No. </l>
            <l>Let not this trouble you, Cæsar, none beleeues it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>It shall not, if that he have no reward. </l>
            <l>But if he have, sure I shall think my selfe </l>
            <l>Very vntimely, and vnsafely honest, </l>
            <l>Where such, as he is, may have pay to accuse me. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>You shall have no wrong done you, noble Cæsar, </l>
            <l>But all contentment. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Consul, I am silent. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s5.5" type="scene">
          <sp>
            <speaker>A</speaker>
            <l>I Neuer yet knew, Souldiers, that, in fight, </l>
            <l>Words added vertue vnto valiant men; </l>
            <l>Or, that a Generals oration made </l>
            <l>An Army fall, or stand: But how much prowesse </l>
            <l>Habituall, or naturall each mans breast </l>
            <l>Was owner of, so much in act it shew'd. </l>
            <l>“Whom neither glory' or danger can excite </l>
            <l>“It is vaine to attempt with speech: For the minds feare </l>
            <l>“Keepes all braue sounds from entring at that eare. </l>
            <l>I, yet, would warne you some few things, my Friends, </l>
            <l>And give you reason of my present counsailes. </l>
            <l>You know, no less then I, what state, what point </l>
            <l>Our affaires stand in; And you all have heard, </l>
            <l>What a calamitous misery the sloth, </l>
            <l>And sleepineese of Lentulus, hath pluck'd </l>
            <l>Both on himselfe, and us: How, whilst our aides </l>
            <l>There, in the Citty look'd for, are defeated, </l>
            <l>Our entrance in Gallia, too, is stopt. </l>
            <l>Two Armies waite us: One from Rome, the other </l>
            <l>From the Gaule-Prouinces. And, where we are, </l>
            <l>(Although I most desire it) the great want </l>
            <l>Of corne, and victuall, forbids longer stay. </l>
            <l>So that, of neede, we must remoue, but whither </l>
            <l>The sword must both direct, and cut the passage. </l>
            <l>I only, therefore, wish you, when you strike, </l>
            <l>To have your valours, and your soules, about you; </l>
            <l>And think, you carry in your laboring hands </l>
            <l>The things you seeke, glory, and liberty, </l>
            <l>Your Countrey, which you want now, with the Fates, </l>
            <l>That are to be instructed, by our swords, </l>
            <l>If we can give the blow, all will be safe to us. </l>
            <l>We shall not want prouision, nor supplies. </l>
            <l>The Colonies, and free Townes will lie open. </l>
            <l>Where, if we yeeld to feare, expect no place, </l>
            <l>Nor friend, to shelter those, whom their owne Fortune, </l>
            <l>And ill vs'd Armes have left without protection. </l>
            <l>You might have liu'd in seruitude, or exile, </l>
            <l>Of safe at Rome, depending on the great ones; </l>
            <l>But that you thought those things vnfit for men. </l>
            <l>And, in that thought, you then were valiant, </l>
            <l>For no man euer yet chang'd peace for warre, </l>
            <l>But he, that meant to conquer. Hold that purpose. </l>
            <l>There is more necessity, you should be such, </l>
            <l>In fighting for your selues, then they for others. </l>
            <l>“He is base, that trusts his feete, whose hands are arm'd. </l>
            <l>Me thinks, I see Death, and the Furies, waiting </l>
            <l>What we will do; and all the Heauen' at leysure </l>
            <l>For the great Spectacle. Draw, then, your swords: </l>
            <l>And, if our desteny enuy our vertue </l>
            <l>The honor of the day, yet let us care </l>
            <l>To sell our selues, at such a price, as may </l>
            <l>Vndoe the world to buy us; and make Fate, </l>
            <l>While she tempts ours, feare her own estate. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
        <div xml:id="s5.6" type="scene">
          <stage type="entrance">THE SENATE.</stage>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>What meanes this hasty calling of the Senate? </l>
            <l>We shall know straight. Waite, till the Consul speakes. </l>
            <l>Fathers Conscript, bethinke you of your safeties, </l>
            <l>And what to do, with these Conspirators; </l>
            <l>Some of their Clients, their Free'd men, and Slaues </l>
            <l>'Ginne to make head: There is one of Lentulus Bauds </l>
            <l>Runnes up and downe the shops, through euery street, </l>
            <l>With money to corrupt, the poore artificers, </l>
            <l>And needy tradesmen, to their aide. Cethegus </l>
            <l>Hath sent, too, to his seruants; who are many, </l>
            <l>Chosen, and exercis'd in bold attemptings, </l>
            <l>That forthwith they should arme themselues, and proue </l>
            <l>His rescue: All will be in instant uproare, </l>
            <l>If you preuent it not, with present counsailes. </l>
            <l>We have done what we can, to meete the fury, </l>
            <l>And will do more. Be you good to your selues. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>What is your pleasure, Fathers, shall be done? </l>
            <l>Syllanus, you are Consul next design'd. </l>
            <l>Your sentence, of these men. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>It is short, and this. </l>
            <l>Since they have sought to blot the name of Rome, </l>
            <l>Out of the world; and raze this glorious Empire </l>
            <l>With her owne hands, and armes, turn'd on her selfe: </l>
            <l>I think it fit they die. And, could my breath </l>
            <l>Now execute them, they should not enioy </l>
            <l>An article of time, or eye of light, </l>
            <l>Longer, to poyson this our common aire. </l>
            <l>I think so too. </l>
            <l>And I. </l>
            <l>And I. </l>
            <l>And I. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Your sentence, Caius Cæsar. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Conscript Fathers, </l>
            <l>In great affaires, and doubtfull, it behooues </l>
            <l>Men, that are ask'd their sentence, to be free </l>
            <l>From either hate, or loue, anger, or pitty: </l>
            <l>For, where the least of these do hinder, there </l>
            <l>The minde not easily discernes the truth. </l>
            <l>I speake this to you, in the name of Rome, </l>
            <l>For whom you stand; and to the present cause: </l>
            <l>That this foule fact of Lentulus, and the rest, </l>
            <l>Weigh not more with you, then your dignity; </l>
            <l>And you be more indulgent to your passion, </l>
            <l>Then to your honor. If there could be found </l>
            <l>A paine, or punishment, equall to their crimes, </l>
            <l>I would deuise, and helpe: But if the greatnesse </l>
            <l>Of what they have done, exceede all mans inuention, </l>
            <l>I think it fit, to stay, where our lawes do. </l>
            <l>Poore petty States may alter, upon humor, </l>
            <l>Where, if they offend with anger, few do know it, </l>
            <l>Because they are obscure; their Fame, and Fortune </l>
            <l>Is equall, and the same: But they, that are </l>
            <l>Head of the world, and liue in that seene height, </l>
            <l>All Mankinde knowes their actions. So we see </l>
            <l>The greater fortune hath the lesser licence. </l>
            <l>They must nor sauor, hate, and least be angry: </l>
            <l>For what with others is call'd anger, there, </l>
            <l>Is cruelty, and pride. I know Syllanus, </l>
            <l>Who spoke before me, an iust, valiant Man, </l>
            <l>A louer of the State, and one that would not, </l>
            <l>In such a businesse, vse or grace, or hatred; </l>
            <l>I know, too, well his manners, and his modesty: </l>
            <l>Nor do I think his sentence cruell (for </l>
            <l>'Gainst such delinquents, what can be too bloody?) </l>
            <l>But that it is is abhorring from our state; </l>
            <l>Since to a Citizen of Rome, offending, </l>
            <l>Our Lawes give exile, and not death. Why then </l>
            <l>Decrees he that? It were vaine to think, for feare; </l>
            <l>When, by the diligence of so worthy a Consul, </l>
            <l>All is made safe, and certaine. Is it for punishment? </l>
            <l>Why Death is the end of euils, and a rest, </l>
            <l>Rather then torment: It dissolues all griefes. </l>
            <l>And beyond that, is neither care, nor ioy, </l>
            <l>You heare, my sentence would not have them die. </l>
            <l>How then? set free, and increase Catilines Armie? </l>
            <l>So will they, being but banish'd. No, graue Fathers, </l>
            <l>I iudge them, first, to have their states confiscate, </l>
            <l>Then, that their persons remaine prisoners </l>
            <l>In the free townes, farre off from Rome, and seuerd': </l>
            <l>Where they might neither have relation, </l>
            <l>Hereafter, to the Senate, or the People. </l>
            <l>Or; if they had, those townes, then to be mulcted, </l>
            <l>As enemies to the State, that had their guard. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>It is good, and honourable, Cæsar, hath vtterd. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Fathers, I see your faces, and your eyes </l>
            <l>All bent on me, to note of these two censures </l>
            <l>Which I encline to. Eyther of them are graue, </l>
            <l>And answering the dignitie of the speakers, </l>
            <l>The greatnesse of the affaire, and both seuere. </l>
            <l>One vrgeth death: And he may well remember </l>
            <l>This State hath punish'd wicked Citizens so. </l>
            <l>The other bonds and those perpetuall, which </l>
            <l>He thinkes found out for the more singular plague. </l>
            <l>Decree which you shall please. You have a Consul </l>
            <l>Not readier to obey, then to defend </l>
            <l>What euer you shall act, for the Republique; </l>
            <l>And meete with willing shoulders any burden, </l>
            <l>Or any fortune, with an euen face, </l>
            <l>Though it were death: which to a valiant man </l>
            <l>Can neuer happen foule, nor to a Consul </l>
            <l>Be immature, or to a wise man wretched. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Fathers, I spake, but as I thought: the needes </l>
            <l>Of the Common-wealth requird. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Excuse it not. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Cato, speake you your sentence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>This it is. </l>
            <l>You here dispute, on kinds of punishment, </l>
            <l>And stand consulting, what you should decree </l>
            <l>'Gainst those, of whom, you rather should beware. </l>
            <l>This mischiefe is not like those common facts, </l>
            <l>Which, when they are done, the lawes may prosequute. </l>
            <l>But this, if you prouide not, ere it happen, </l>
            <l>When it is happen'd, will not waite your iudgment. </l>
            <l>Good Caius Cæsar, here, hath very well, </l>
            <l>And subtilly discours'd of life, and death, </l>
            <l>As if he thought those things, a prety fable, </l>
            <l>That are deliuer'd us of Hell, and Furies, </l>
            <l>Or of the diuers way, that ill men goe </l>
            <l>From good, to filthy, darke, and ougly places. </l>
            <l>And therefore he would have these liue; and long too; </l>
            <l>But farre from Rome, and in the small free Townes, </l>
            <l>Lest, here, they might have rescue: As if Men, </l>
            <l>Fit for such acts, were only in the City, </l>
            <l>And not throughout all Italie? or that boldnesse </l>
            <l>Could not do more, where it found least resistance? </l>
            <l>It is a vaine Counsaile, if he think them dangerous. </l>
            <l>Which, if he do not, but that he alone </l>
            <l>In so great feare of all men, stand vnfrighted, </l>
            <l>He giues me cause, and you, more to feare him. </l>
            <l>I am plaine, Fathers. Here you looke about, </l>
            <l>One at another, doubting what to do; </l>
            <l>With faces, as you trusted to the Gods, </l>
            <l>That still have sau'd you; and they can do it: But </l>
            <l>They are not wishings, or base womanish prayers </l>
            <l>Can draw their aides; but vigilance, counsell, action: </l>
            <l>Which they will be ashamed to forsake, </l>
            <l>It is sloth they hate, and cowardise. Here you have </l>
            <l>The Traytors in your houses, yet you stand </l>
            <l>Fearing what to do with them; Let them loose, </l>
            <l>And send them hence with armes too; that your Mercy </l>
            <l>May turne your misery, as soone as it can. </l>
            <l>O, but, they, are great men, and have offended </l>
            <l>But through ambition. We would spare their honor: </l>
            <l>Aye, if themselues had spar'd it, or their fame, </l>
            <l>Or modestie, or eyther God, or Man: </l>
            <l>Then I woud spare them. But, as things now stand, </l>
            <l>Fathers, to spare these men, were to commit </l>
            <l>A greater wickednesse, then you would reuenge. </l>
            <l>If there had bene but time, and place for you, </l>
            <l>To have repair'd this fault, you should have made it; </l>
            <l>It should have bene your punishment, to have felt </l>
            <l>Your tardie error: But necessity, </l>
            <l>Now, bids me say let them not liue an hower, </l>
            <l>If you meane Rome should liue a day. I have done. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Cato hath spoken like an Oracle. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>P</speaker>
            <l>Let it be so decreed. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>We all were fearefull. </l>
            <l>And had bene base, had not his vertue rais'd us. </l>
            <l>Go forth, most worthy Consul, we will assist you. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>I am not yet changd in my sentence, Fathers. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No matter. What be those? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Letters, for Cæsar. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>From whom? let them be read, in open Senate; </l>
            <l>Fathers, they come from the Conspirators. </l>
            <l>I craue to have them read, for the Republique. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>Cato, reade you it. It is a Loue-letter, </l>
            <l>From your deare sister, to me: though you hate me. </l>
            <l>Do not discouer it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>Hold thee dronkard. Consul. </l>
            <l>Goe forth, and confidently. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>Q</speaker>
            <l>You will repent </l>
            <l>This rashnesse, Cicero. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>Cæsar shall repent it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Hold friends. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>He is scarce a friend vnto the Publicke. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>No violence. Cæsar be safe. Leade on: </l>
            <l>Where are the publicke Executioners? </l>
            <l>Bid them waite on us. On to Spinthers house. </l>
            <l>Bring Lentulus forth. Here, you, the sad reuengers </l>
            <l>Of capitall crimes, against the Publicke, take </l>
            <l>This man vnto your iustice: strangle him. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>B</speaker>
            <l>Thou dost well, Consul It was a cast at dice </l>
            <l>In Fortune's hand, not long since, that thy selfe </l>
            <l>Should'st have heard these, or other words as fatall. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Leade on to Quintus Cornificius house; </l>
            <l>Bring forth Cethegus. Take him to the due </l>
            <l>Death, that he hath deserud: and let it be </l>
            <l>Said, He was once. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>A beast, or, what is worse, </l>
            <l>A slaue, Cethegus. Let that be the name </l>
            <l>For all that is base hereafter: That would let </l>
            <l>This worme pronounce on him; and not have trampled </l>
            <l>His bodie into — Ha! Art thou not mou'd? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>“Iustice is neuer angrie: Take him hence. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>C</speaker>
            <l>O the whore Fortune! and her bauds the Fates! </l>
            <l>That put these trickes on men, which knew the way </l>
            <l>To death by a sword. Strangle me, I may sleepe: </l>
            <l>I shall grow angrie with the Gods, else. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Leade </l>
            <l>To Caius Cæsars, for Statilius. </l>
            <l>Bring him, and rude Gabinius out. Here, take them </l>
            <l>To your cold hands, and let them feele death from you: </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>I thanke you, you do me a pleasure. </l>
            <l>And me too. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>So, Marcus Tullius, thou maist now stand up, </l>
            <l>And call it happie Rome, thou being Consul. </l>
            <l>Great Parent of thy Countrie, goe, and let </l>
            <l>The Old men of the Citie, ere they die, </l>
            <l>Kisse thee; the Matrons dwell about thy necke; </l>
            <l>The Youths, and Maids lay up, 'gainst they are old </l>
            <l>What kind of man thou wert, to tell their Nephewes, </l>
            <l>When, such a yeare, they reade, within our Fasti, </l>
            <l>Thy Consulship. Who is this? Petreius? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Welcome, </l>
            <l>Welcome renowned Souldier. What is the newes? </l>
            <l>This face can bring no ill with it, vnto Rome. </l>
            <l>How does the worthy Consull, my Colleague? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>As well as victory can make him, Sir. </l>
            <l>He greetes the Fathers, and to me hath trusted </l>
            <l>The sad relation of the Ciuill strife, </l>
            <l>For, in such warre, the conquest still is blacke. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Shall we withdraw into the House of Concord? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>No, happy Consul, here; let all eares take </l>
            <l>The benefit of this tale. If he had voice, </l>
            <l>To spreade vnto the Poles, and strike it through </l>
            <l>The Center, to the Antipodes; It would aske it. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>W</speaker>
            <l>The streights, and needes of Catiline being such, </l>
            <l>As he must fight, with one of the two Armies, </l>
            <l>That then had neare enclos'd him; It pleas'd Fate, </l>
            <l>To make us the obiect of his desperate choise, </l>
            <l>Wherein the danger almost paiz'd the honor: </l>
            <l>And as he riss', the day grew blacke with him; </l>
            <l>And Fate descended nearer to the earth, </l>
            <l>As if she meant to hide the name of things </l>
            <l>Vnder her wings, and make the world her quarry. </l>
            <l>At this we rous'd, least one small minutes stay </l>
            <l>Had left it to be 'enquir'd, what Rome was. </l>
            <l>And (as we ought) arm'd in the confidence </l>
            <l>Of our great cause, in forme of battaile, stood, </l>
            <l>Whilst Catiline came on, not with the face </l>
            <l>Of any man, but of a publique ruine: </l>
            <l>His Count'nance was a ciuill warre it selfe. </l>
            <l>And all his host had standing in their lookes </l>
            <l>The palenesse of the death, that was to come. </l>
            <l>Yet cryed they out like Vultures, and vrg'd on, </l>
            <l>As if they would præcipitate our fates. </l>
            <l>Nor staid we longer for them; But himselfe </l>
            <l>Strooke the first stroke: And, with it, fled a life. </l>
            <l>Which cut, it seem'd a narrow necke of land </l>
            <l>Had broke betweene two mighty Seas; and either </l>
            <l>Flow'd into other; for so did the slaughter: </l>
            <l>And whirl'd about, as when two violent Tides </l>
            <l>Meete, and not yeeld. The Furies stood, on hilles </l>
            <l>Circling the place, and trembled to see men </l>
            <l>Do more, then they: whilst Piety left the field, </l>
            <l>Grieu'd for that side, that, in so bad a cause, </l>
            <l>They knew not, what a crime their valour was. </l>
            <l>The Sunne stood still, and was, behinde the cloud </l>
            <l>The battaile made, seene sweating, to driue up </l>
            <l>His frighted Horse, whom still the noise droue backward. </l>
            <l>And now had fierce Enyo, like a flame, </l>
            <l>Consum'd all it could reach, and then it selfe; </l>
            <l>Had not the Fortune of the Common-wealth </l>
            <l>Come Pallas-like, to euery Roman thought. </l>
            <l>Which, Catiline seeing, and that now his Troopes </l>
            <l>Couer'd that earth, they had fought on, with their trunkes. </l>
            <l>Ambitious of great fame, to crowne his ill, </l>
            <l>Collected all his fury, and ranne in </l>
            <l>(Arm'd with a glory, high as his despaire) </l>
            <l>Into our battaile, like a Lybian Lion, </l>
            <l>Upon his hunters, scornefull of our weapons, </l>
            <l>Carelesse of wounds, plucking downe liues about him, </l>
            <l>Till he had circled in himselfe with death: </l>
            <l>Then fell he too, to embrace it where it lay. </l>
            <l>And as, in that rebellion 'gainst the Gods, </l>
            <l>Minerua holding forth Medusa's head, </l>
            <l>One of the Gyant Brethren felt himselfe </l>
            <l>Grow marble at the killing sight, and now, </l>
            <l>Almost made stone, beganne to inquire, what flint, </l>
            <l>What rocke it was, that crept through all his limmes, </l>
            <l>And, ere he could think more, was that he fear'd; </l>
            <l>So Catiline, at the sight of Rome in us, </l>
            <l>Became his Tombe: yet did his looke retaine </l>
            <l>Some of his fiercenesse, and his hands still mou'd, </l>
            <l>As if he labor'd, yet to graspe the State, </l>
            <l>With those rebellious parts. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>A braue bad death. </l>
            <l>Had this beene honest now, and for his Countrey, </l>
            <l>As it was against it, who had ere fallen greater? </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Honor'd Petreius, Rome, not I must thanke you. </l>
            <l>How modestly has he spoken of himselfe! </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>N</speaker>
            <l>He did the more. </l>
          </sp>
          <sp>
            <speaker>L</speaker>
            <l>Thanks to the immortall Gods, </l>
            <l>Romans, I now am paid for all my labors, </l>
            <l>My watchings, and my dangers. Here conclude </l>
            <l>Your praises, triumphes, honors, and rewards </l>
            <l>Decreed to me: only the memory </l>
            <l>Of this glad day, if I may know it liue </l>
            <l>Within your thoughts, shall much affect my conscience, </l>
            <l>Which I must alwaies study before fame. </l>
            <l>“Though both be good, the latter yet is worst, </l>
            <l>“And euer, first. </l>
          </sp>
        </div>
      </div>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI>


