Page 2305 - Shakespeare - Vol. 4
P. 2305
«Disturb his hours of rest with restless trances,
Afflict him in his bed with bedrid groans; [975]
Let there bechance him pitiful mischances,
To make him moan, but pity not his moans.
Stone him with harden’d hearts harder than stones,
And let mild women to him lose their mildness,
Wilder to him than tigers in their wildness. [980]
«Let him have time to tear his curled hair,
Let him have time against himself to rave,
Let him have time of time’s help to despair,
Let him have time to live a loathed slave,
Let him have time a beggar’s orts to crave, [985]
And time to see one that by alms doth live
Disdain to him disdained scraps to give.
«Let him have time to see his friends his foes,
And merry fools to mock at him resort;
Let him have time to mark how slow time goes [990]
In time of sorrow, and how swift and short
His time of folly and his time of sport:
And ever let his unrecalling crime
Have time to wail th’abusing of his time.
«O time, thou tutor both to good and bad, [995]
Teach me to curse him that thou taught’st this ill!
At his own shadow let the thief run mad,
Himself, himself seek every hour to kill:
Such wretched hands such wretched blood should spill,
For who so base would such an office have [1000]
As sland’rous deathsman to so base a slave?
«The baser is he, coming from a king,
To shame his hope with deeds degenerate:
The mightier man the mightier is the thing
That makes him honour’d or begets him hate, [1005]
For greatest scandal waits on greatest state.