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Dramatis Personae
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/ Home / Library / Complete Shakespeare / Cymbeline / Act V Scene V
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Cymbeline: Act 5 Scene 5
Scene V Cymbeline's tent.
- [Enter CYMBELINE, BELARIUS, GUIDERIUS, ARVIRAGUS,
- PISANIO, Lords, Officers, and Attendants]
- CYMBELINE
- Stand by my side, you whom the gods have made
- Preservers of my throne. Woe is my heart
- That the poor soldier that so richly fought,
- Whose rags shamed gilded arms, whose naked breast
- Stepp'd before larges of proof, cannot be found:
- He shall be happy that can find him, if
- Our grace can make him so.
- BELARIUS
- I never saw
- Such noble fury in so poor a thing;
- Such precious deeds in one that promises nought
- But beggary and poor looks.
- CYMBELINE
- No tidings of him?
- PISANIO
- He hath been search'd among the dead and living,
- But no trace of him.
- CYMBELINE
- To my grief, I am
- The heir of his reward;
- [To BELARIUS, GUIDERIUS, and ARVIRAGUS]
- which I will add
- To you, the liver, heart and brain of Britain,
- By whom I grant she lives. 'Tis now the time
- To ask of whence you are. Report it.
- BELARIUS
- Sir,
- In Cambria are we born, and gentlemen:
- Further to boast were neither true nor modest,
- Unless I add, we are honest.
- CYMBELINE
- Bow your knees.
- Arise my knights o' the battle: I create you
- Companions to our person and will fit you
- With dignities becoming your estates.
- [Enter CORNELIUS and Ladies]
- There's business in these faces. Why so sadly
- Greet you our victory? you look like Romans,
- And not o' the court of Britain.
- CORNELIUS
- Hail, great king!
- To sour your happiness, I must report
- The queen is dead.
- CYMBELINE
- Who worse than a physician
- Would this report become? But I consider,
- By medicine life may be prolong'd, yet death
- Will seize the doctor too. How ended she?
- CORNELIUS
- With horror, madly dying, like her life,
- Which, being cruel to the world, concluded
- Most cruel to herself. What she confess'd
- I will report, so please you: these her women
- Can trip me, if I err; who with wet cheeks
- Were present when she finish'd.
- CYMBELINE
- Prithee, say.
- CORNELIUS
- First, she confess'd she never loved you, only
- Affected greatness got by you, not you:
- Married your royalty, was wife to your place;
- Abhorr'd your person.
- CYMBELINE
- She alone knew this;
- And, but she spoke it dying, I would not
- Believe her lips in opening it. Proceed.
- CORNELIUS
- Your daughter, whom she bore in hand to love
- With such integrity, she did confess
- Was as a scorpion to her sight; whose life,
- But that her flight prevented it, she had
- Ta'en off by poison.
- CYMBELINE
- O most delicate fiend!
- Who is 't can read a woman? Is there more?
- CORNELIUS
- More, sir, and worse. She did confess she had
- For you a mortal mineral; which, being took,
- Should by the minute feed on life and lingering
- By inches waste you: in which time she purposed,
- By watching, weeping, tendance, kissing, to
- O'ercome you with her show, and in time,
- When she had fitted you with her craft, to work
- Her son into the adoption of the crown:
- But, failing of her end by his strange absence,
- Grew shameless-desperate; open'd, in despite
- Of heaven and men, her purposes; repented
- The evils she hatch'd were not effected; so
- Despairing died.
- CYMBELINE
- Heard you all this, her women?
- FIRST LADY
- We did, so please your highness.
- CYMBELINE
- Mine eyes
- Were not in fault, for she was beautiful;
- Mine ears, that heard her flattery; nor my heart,
- That thought her like her seeming; it had
- been vicious
- To have mistrusted her: yet, O my daughter!
- That it was folly in me, thou mayst say,
- And prove it in thy feeling. Heaven mend all!
- [Enter LUCIUS, IACHIMO, the Soothsayer, and other
- Roman Prisoners, guarded; POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- behind, and IMOGEN]
- Thou comest not, Caius, now for tribute that
- The Britons have razed out, though with the loss
- Of many a bold one; whose kinsmen have made suit
- That their good souls may be appeased with slaughter
- Of you their captives, which ourself have granted:
- So think of your estate.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- Consider, sir, the chance of war: the day
- Was yours by accident; had it gone with us,
- We should not, when the blood was cool,
- have threaten'd
- Our prisoners with the sword. But since the gods
- Will have it thus, that nothing but our lives
- May be call'd ransom, let it come: sufficeth
- A Roman with a Roman's heart can suffer:
- Augustus lives to think on't: and so much
- For my peculiar care. This one thing only
- I will entreat; my boy, a Briton born,
- Let him be ransom'd: never master had
- A page so kind, so duteous, diligent,
- So tender over his occasions, true,
- So feat, so nurse-like: let his virtue join
- With my request, which I make bold your highness
- Cannot deny; he hath done no Briton harm,
- Though he have served a Roman: save him, sir,
- And spare no blood beside.
- CYMBELINE
- I have surely seen him:
- His favour is familiar to me. Boy,
- Thou hast look'd thyself into my grace,
- And art mine own. I know not why, wherefore,
- To say 'live, boy:' ne'er thank thy master; live:
- And ask of Cymbeline what boon thou wilt,
- Fitting my bounty and thy state, I'll give it;
- Yea, though thou do demand a prisoner,
- The noblest ta'en.
- IMOGEN
- I humbly thank your highness.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- I do not bid thee beg my life, good lad;
- And yet I know thou wilt.
- IMOGEN
- No, no: alack,
- There's other work in hand: I see a thing
- Bitter to me as death: your life, good master,
- Must shuffle for itself.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- The boy disdains me,
- He leaves me, scorns me: briefly die their joys
- That place them on the truth of girls and boys.
- Why stands he so perplex'd?
- CYMBELINE
- What wouldst thou, boy?
- I love thee more and more: think more and more
- What's best to ask. Know'st him thou look'st on? speak,
- Wilt have him live? Is he thy kin? thy friend?
- IMOGEN
- He is a Roman; no more kin to me
- Than I to your highness; who, being born your vassal,
- Am something nearer.
- CYMBELINE
- Wherefore eyest him so?
- IMOGEN
- I'll tell you, sir, in private, if you please
- To give me hearing.
- CYMBELINE
- Ay, with all my heart,
- And lend my best attention. What's thy name?
- IMOGEN
- Fidele, sir.
- CYMBELINE
- Thou'rt my good youth, my page;
- I'll be thy master: walk with me; speak freely.
- [CYMBELINE and IMOGEN converse apart]
- BELARIUS
- Is not this boy revived from death?
- ARVIRAGUS
- One sand another
- Not more resembles that sweet rosy lad
- Who died, and was Fidele. What think you?
- GUIDERIUS
- The same dead thing alive.
- BELARIUS
- Peace, peace! see further; he eyes us not; forbear;
- Creatures may be alike: were 't he, I am sure
- He would have spoke to us.
- GUIDERIUS
- But we saw him dead.
- BELARIUS
- Be silent; let's see further.
- PISANIO
- [Aside] It is my mistress:
- Since she is living, let the time run on
- To good or bad.
- [CYMBELINE and IMOGEN come forward]
- CYMBELINE
- Come, stand thou by our side;
- Make thy demand aloud.
- [To IACHIMO]
- Sir, step you forth;
- Give answer to this boy, and do it freely;
- Or, by our greatness and the grace of it,
- Which is our honour, bitter torture shall
- Winnow the truth from falsehood. On, speak to him.
- IMOGEN
- My boon is, that this gentleman may render
- Of whom he had this ring.
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- [Aside] What's that to him?
- CYMBELINE
- That diamond upon your finger, say
- How came it yours?
- IACHIMO
- Thou'lt torture me to leave unspoken that
- Which, to be spoke, would torture thee.
- CYMBELINE
- How! me?
- IACHIMO
- I am glad to be constrain'd to utter that
- Which torments me to conceal. By villany
- I got this ring: 'twas Leonatus' jewel;
- Whom thou didst banish; and--which more may
- grieve thee,
- As it doth me--a nobler sir ne'er lived
- 'Twixt sky and ground. Wilt thou hear more, my lord?
- CYMBELINE
- All that belongs to this.
- IACHIMO
- That paragon, thy daughter,--
- For whom my heart drops blood, and my false spirits
- Quail to remember--Give me leave; I faint.
- CYMBELINE
- My daughter! what of her? Renew thy strength:
- I had rather thou shouldst live while nature will
- Than die ere I hear more: strive, man, and speak.
- IACHIMO
- Upon a time,--unhappy was the clock
- That struck the hour!--it was in Rome,--accursed
- The mansion where!--'twas at a feast,--O, would
- Our viands had been poison'd, or at least
- Those which I heaved to head!--the good Posthumus--
- What should I say? he was too good to be
- Where ill men were; and was the best of all
- Amongst the rarest of good ones,--sitting sadly,
- Hearing us praise our loves of Italy
- For beauty that made barren the swell'd boast
- Of him that best could speak, for feature, laming
- The shrine of Venus, or straight-pight Minerva.
- Postures beyond brief nature, for condition,
- A shop of all the qualities that man
- Loves woman for, besides that hook of wiving,
- Fairness which strikes the eye--
- CYMBELINE
- I stand on fire:
- Come to the matter.
- IACHIMO
- All too soon I shall,
- Unless thou wouldst grieve quickly. This Posthumus,
- Most like a noble lord in love and one
- That had a royal lover, took his hint;
- And, not dispraising whom we praised,--therein
- He was as calm as virtue--he began
- His mistress' picture; which by his tongue
- being made,
- And then a mind put in't, either our brags
- Were crack'd of kitchen-trolls, or his description
- Proved us unspeaking sots.
- CYMBELINE
- Nay, nay, to the purpose.
- IACHIMO
- Your daughter's chastity--there it begins.
- He spake of her, as Dian had hot dreams,
- And she alone were cold: whereat I, wretch,
- Made scruple of his praise; and wager'd with him
- Pieces of gold 'gainst this which then he wore
- Upon his honour'd finger, to attain
- In suit the place of's bed and win this ring
- By hers and mine adultery. He, true knight,
- No lesser of her honour confident
- Than I did truly find her, stakes this ring;
- And would so, had it been a carbuncle
- Of Phoebus' wheel, and might so safely, had it
- Been all the worth of's car. Away to Britain
- Post I in this design: well may you, sir,
- Remember me at court; where I was taught
- Of your chaste daughter the wide difference
- 'Twixt amorous and villanous. Being thus quench'd
- Of hope, not longing, mine Italian brain
- 'Gan in your duller Britain operate
- Most vilely; for my vantage, excellent:
- And, to be brief, my practise so prevail'd,
- That I return'd with simular proof enough
- To make the noble Leonatus mad,
- By wounding his belief in her renown
- With tokens thus, and thus; averting notes
- Of chamber-hanging, pictures, this her bracelet,--
- O cunning, how I got it!--nay, some marks
- Of secret on her person, that he could not
- But think her bond of chastity quite crack'd,
- I having ta'en the forfeit. Whereupon--
- Methinks, I see him now--
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- [Advancing] Ay, so thou dost,
- Italian fiend! Ay me, most credulous fool,
- Egregious murderer, thief, any thing
- That's due to all the villains past, in being,
- To come! O, give me cord, or knife, or poison,
- Some upright justicer! Thou, king, send out
- For torturers ingenious: it is I
- That all the abhorred things o' the earth amend
- By being worse than they. I am Posthumus,
- That kill'd thy daughter:--villain-like, I lie--
- That caused a lesser villain than myself,
- A sacrilegious thief, to do't: the temple
- Of virtue was she; yea, and she herself.
- Spit, and throw stones, cast mire upon me, set
- The dogs o' the street to bay me: every villain
- Be call'd Posthumus Leonitus; and
- Be villany less than 'twas! O Imogen!
- My queen, my life, my wife! O Imogen,
- Imogen, Imogen!
- IMOGEN
- Peace, my lord; hear, hear--
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- Shall's have a play of this? Thou scornful page,
- There lie thy part.
- [Striking her: she falls]
- PISANIO
- O, gentlemen, help!
- Mine and your mistress! O, my lord Posthumus!
- You ne'er kill'd Imogen til now. Help, help!
- Mine honour'd lady!
- CYMBELINE
- Does the world go round?
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- How come these staggers on me?
- PISANIO
- Wake, my mistress!
- CYMBELINE
- If this be so, the gods do mean to strike me
- To death with mortal joy.
- PISANIO
- How fares thy mistress?
- IMOGEN
- O, get thee from my sight;
- Thou gavest me poison: dangerous fellow, hence!
- Breathe not where princes are.
- CYMBELINE
- The tune of Imogen!
- PISANIO
- Lady,
- The gods throw stones of sulphur on me, if
- That box I gave you was not thought by me
- A precious thing: I had it from the queen.
- CYMBELINE
- New matter still?
- IMOGEN
- It poison'd me.
- CORNELIUS
- O gods!
- I left out one thing which the queen confess'd.
- Which must approve thee honest: 'If Pisanio
- Have,' said she, 'given his mistress that confection
- Which I gave him for cordial, she is served
- As I would serve a rat.'
- CYMBELINE
- What's this, Comelius?
- CORNELIUS
- The queen, sir, very oft importuned me
- To temper poisons for her, still pretending
- The satisfaction of her knowledge only
- In killing creatures vile, as cats and dogs,
- Of no esteem: I, dreading that her purpose
- Was of more danger, did compound for her
- A certain stuff, which, being ta'en, would cease
- The present power of life, but in short time
- All offices of nature should again
- Do their due functions. Have you ta'en of it?
- IMOGEN
- Most like I did, for I was dead.
- BELARIUS
- My boys,
- There was our error.
- GUIDERIUS
- This is, sure, Fidele.
- IMOGEN
- Why did you throw your wedded lady from you?
- Think that you are upon a rock; and now
- Throw me again.
- [Embracing him]
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- Hang there like a fruit, my soul,
- Till the tree die!
- CYMBELINE
- How now, my flesh, my child!
- What, makest thou me a dullard in this act?
- Wilt thou not speak to me?
- IMOGEN
- [Kneeling] Your blessing, sir.
- BELARIUS
- [To GUIDERIUS and ARVIRAGUS] Though you did love
- this youth, I blame ye not:
- You had a motive for't.
- CYMBELINE
- My tears that fall
- Prove holy water on thee! Imogen,
- Thy mother's dead.
- IMOGEN
- I am sorry for't, my lord.
- CYMBELINE
- O, she was nought; and long of her it was
- That we meet here so strangely: but her son
- Is gone, we know not how nor where.
- PISANIO
- My lord,
- Now fear is from me, I'll speak troth. Lord Cloten,
- Upon my lady's missing, came to me
- With his sword drawn; foam'd at the mouth, and swore,
- If I discover'd not which way she was gone,
- It was my instant death. By accident,
- had a feigned letter of my master's
- Then in my pocket; which directed him
- To seek her on the mountains near to Milford;
- Where, in a frenzy, in my master's garments,
- Which he enforced from me, away he posts
- With unchaste purpose and with oath to violate
- My lady's honour: what became of him
- I further know not.
- GUIDERIUS
- Let me end the story:
- I slew him there.
- CYMBELINE
- Marry, the gods forfend!
- I would not thy good deeds should from my lips
- Pluck a bard sentence: prithee, valiant youth,
- Deny't again.
- GUIDERIUS
- I have spoke it, and I did it.
- CYMBELINE
- He was a prince.
- GUIDERIUS
- A most incivil one: the wrongs he did me
- Were nothing prince-like; for he did provoke me
- With language that would make me spurn the sea,
- If it could so roar to me: I cut off's head;
- And am right glad he is not standing here
- To tell this tale of mine.
- CYMBELINE
- I am sorry for thee:
- By thine own tongue thou art condemn'd, and must
- Endure our law: thou'rt dead.
- IMOGEN
- That headless man
- I thought had been my lord.
- CYMBELINE
- Bind the offender,
- And take him from our presence.
- BELARIUS
- Stay, sir king:
- This man is better than the man he slew,
- As well descended as thyself; and hath
- More of thee merited than a band of Clotens
- Had ever scar for.
- [To the Guard]
- Let his arms alone;
- They were not born for bondage.
- CYMBELINE
- Why, old soldier,
- Wilt thou undo the worth thou art unpaid for,
- By tasting of our wrath? How of descent
- As good as we?
- ARVIRAGUS
- In that he spake too far.
- CYMBELINE
- And thou shalt die for't.
- BELARIUS
- We will die all three:
- But I will prove that two on's are as good
- As I have given out him. My sons, I must,
- For mine own part, unfold a dangerous speech,
- Though, haply, well for you.
- ARVIRAGUS
- Your danger's ours.
- GUIDERIUS
- And our good his.
- BELARIUS
- Have at it then, by leave.
- Thou hadst, great king, a subject who
- Was call'd Belarius.
- CYMBELINE
- What of him? he is
- A banish'd traitor.
- BELARIUS
- He it is that hath
- Assumed this age; indeed a banish'd man;
- I know not how a traitor.
- CYMBELINE
- Take him hence:
- The whole world shall not save him.
- BELARIUS
- Not too hot:
- First pay me for the nursing of thy sons;
- And let it be confiscate all, so soon
- As I have received it.
- CYMBELINE
- Nursing of my sons!
- BELARIUS
- I am too blunt and saucy: here's my knee:
- Ere I arise, I will prefer my sons;
- Then spare not the old father. Mighty sir,
- These two young gentlemen, that call me father
- And think they are my sons, are none of mine;
- They are the issue of your loins, my liege,
- And blood of your begetting.
- CYMBELINE
- How! my issue!
- BELARIUS
- So sure as you your father's. I, old Morgan,
- Am that Belarius whom you sometime banish'd:
- Your pleasure was my mere offence, my punishment
- Itself, and all my treason; that I suffer'd
- Was all the harm I did. These gentle princes--
- For such and so they are--these twenty years
- Have I train'd up: those arts they have as I
- Could put into them; my breeding was, sir, as
- Your highness knows. Their nurse, Euriphile,
- Whom for the theft I wedded, stole these children
- Upon my banishment: I moved her to't,
- Having received the punishment before,
- For that which I did then: beaten for loyalty
- Excited me to treason: their dear loss,
- The more of you 'twas felt, the more it shaped
- Unto my end of stealing them. But, gracious sir,
- Here are your sons again; and I must lose
- Two of the sweet'st companions in the world.
- The benediction of these covering heavens
- Fall on their heads like dew! for they are worthy
- To inlay heaven with stars.
- CYMBELINE
- Thou weep'st, and speak'st.
- The service that you three have done is more
- Unlike than this thou tell'st. I lost my children:
- If these be they, I know not how to wish
- A pair of worthier sons.
- BELARIUS
- Be pleased awhile.
- This gentleman, whom I call Polydore,
- Most worthy prince, as yours, is true Guiderius:
- This gentleman, my Cadwal, Arviragus,
- Your younger princely son; he, sir, was lapp'd
- In a most curious mantle, wrought by the hand
- Of his queen mother, which for more probation
- I can with ease produce.
- CYMBELINE
- Guiderius had
- Upon his neck a mole, a sanguine star;
- It was a mark of wonder.
- BELARIUS
- This is he;
- Who hath upon him still that natural stamp:
- It was wise nature's end in the donation,
- To be his evidence now.
- CYMBELINE
- O, what, am I
- A mother to the birth of three? Ne'er mother
- Rejoiced deliverance more. Blest pray you be,
- That, after this strange starting from your orbs,
- may reign in them now! O Imogen,
- Thou hast lost by this a kingdom.
- IMOGEN
- No, my lord;
- I have got two worlds by 't. O my gentle brothers,
- Have we thus met? O, never say hereafter
- But I am truest speaker you call'd me brother,
- When I was but your sister; I you brothers,
- When ye were so indeed.
- CYMBELINE
- Did you e'er meet?
- ARVIRAGUS
- Ay, my good lord.
- GUIDERIUS
- And at first meeting loved;
- Continued so, until we thought he died.
- CORNELIUS
- By the queen's dram she swallow'd.
- CYMBELINE
- O rare instinct!
- When shall I hear all through? This fierce
- abridgement
- Hath to it circumstantial branches, which
- Distinction should be rich in. Where? how lived You?
- And when came you to serve our Roman captive?
- How parted with your brothers? how first met them?
- Why fled you from the court? and whither? These,
- And your three motives to the battle, with
- I know not how much more, should be demanded;
- And all the other by-dependencies,
- From chance to chance: but nor the time nor place
- Will serve our long inter'gatories. See,
- Posthumus anchors upon Imogen,
- And she, like harmless lightning, throws her eye
- On him, her brother, me, her master, hitting
- Each object with a joy: the counterchange
- Is severally in all. Let's quit this ground,
- And smoke the temple with our sacrifices.
- [To BELARIUS]
- Thou art my brother; so we'll hold thee ever.
- IMOGEN
- You are my father too, and did relieve me,
- To see this gracious season.
- CYMBELINE
- All o'erjoy'd,
- Save these in bonds: let them be joyful too,
- For they shall taste our comfort.
- IMOGEN
- My good master,
- I will yet do you service.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- Happy be you!
- CYMBELINE
- The forlorn soldier, that so nobly fought,
- He would have well becomed this place, and graced
- The thankings of a king.
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- I am, sir,
- The soldier that did company these three
- In poor beseeming; 'twas a fitment for
- The purpose I then follow'd. That I was he,
- Speak, Iachimo: I had you down and might
- Have made you finish.
- IACHIMO
- [Kneeling] I am down again:
- But now my heavy conscience sinks my knee,
- As then your force did. Take that life, beseech you,
- Which I so often owe: but your ring first;
- And here the bracelet of the truest princess
- That ever swore her faith.
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- Kneel not to me:
- The power that I have on you is, to spare you;
- The malice towards you to forgive you: live,
- And deal with others better.
- CYMBELINE
- Nobly doom'd!
- We'll learn our freeness of a son-in-law;
- Pardon's the word to all.
- ARVIRAGUS
- You holp us, sir,
- As you did mean indeed to be our brother;
- Joy'd are we that you are.
- POSTHUMUS LEONATUS
- Your servant, princes. Good my lord of Rome,
- Call forth your soothsayer: as I slept, methought
- Great Jupiter, upon his eagle back'd,
- Appear'd to me, with other spritely shows
- Of mine own kindred: when I waked, I found
- This label on my bosom; whose containing
- Is so from sense in hardness, that I can
- Make no collection of it: let him show
- His skill in the construction.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- Philarmonus!
- SOOTHSAYER
- Here, my good lord.
- CAIUS LUCIUS
- Read, and declare the meaning.
- SOOTHSAYER
- [Reads] 'When as a lion's whelp shall, to himself
- unknown, without seeking find, and be embraced by a
- piece of tender air; and when from a stately cedar
- shall be lopped branches, which, being dead many
- years, shall after revive, be jointed to the old
- stock, and freshly grow; then shall Posthumus end
- his miseries, Britain be fortunate and flourish in
- peace and plenty.'
- Thou, Leonatus, art the lion's whelp;
- The fit and apt construction of thy name,
- Being Leonatus, doth import so much.
- [To CYMBELINE]
- The piece of tender air, thy virtuous daughter,
- Which we call 'mollis aer;' and 'mollis aer'
- We term it 'mulier:' which 'mulier' I divine
- Is this most constant wife; who, even now,
- Answering the letter of the oracle,
- Unknown to you, unsought, were clipp'd about
- With this most tender air.
- CYMBELINE
- This hath some seeming.
- SOOTHSAYER
- The lofty cedar, royal Cymbeline,
- Personates thee: and thy lopp'd branches point
- Thy two sons forth; who, by Belarius stol'n,
- For many years thought dead, are now revived,
- To the majestic cedar join'd, whose issue
- Promises Britain peace and plenty.
- CYMBELINE
- Well
- My peace we will begin. And, Caius Lucius,
- Although the victor, we submit to Caesar,
- And to the Roman empire; promising
- To pay our wonted tribute, from the which
- We were dissuaded by our wicked queen;
- Whom heavens, in justice, both on her and hers,
- Have laid most heavy hand.
- SOOTHSAYER
- The fingers of the powers above do tune
- The harmony of this peace. The vision
- Which I made known to Lucius, ere the stroke
- Of this yet scarce-cold battle, at this instant
- Is full accomplish'd; for the Roman eagle,
- From south to west on wing soaring aloft,
- Lessen'd herself, and in the beams o' the sun
- So vanish'd: which foreshow'd our princely eagle,
- The imperial Caesar, should again unite
- His favour with the radiant Cymbeline,
- Which shines here in the west.
- CYMBELINE
- Laud we the gods;
- And let our crooked smokes climb to their nostrils
- From our blest altars. Publish we this peace
- To all our subjects. Set we forward: let
- A Roman and a British ensign wave
- Friendly together: so through Lud's-town march:
- And in the temple of great Jupiter
- Our peace we'll ratify; seal it with feasts.
- Set on there! Never was a war did cease,
- Ere bloody hands were wash'd, with such a peace.
- [Exeunt]
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