Thomas Dekker Edited, with an introd and notes . justice of the duke, the law shall havethy life—What, dost thou hold him ? let go, his hand. Ifthou dost not forsake him, a fathers everlasting blessingfall upon both your heads ! Away, go, kiss out of mysight, play thou the whore no more, nor thou the thiefagain; my house shall be thine, my meat shall be thine,and so shall my wine, but my money shall be mine,and yet when I die, so thou dost not fly high, take all;Yet, good Matheo, for joy weeps Orlando, and doth end. Duke. Then hear, Matheo : all your woes are stayedBy your good fathe


Thomas Dekker Edited, with an introd and notes . justice of the duke, the law shall havethy life—What, dost thou hold him ? let go, his hand. Ifthou dost not forsake him, a fathers everlasting blessingfall upon both your heads ! Away, go, kiss out of mysight, play thou the whore no more, nor thou the thiefagain; my house shall be thine, my meat shall be thine,and so shall my wine, but my money shall be mine,and yet when I die, so thou dost not fly high, take all;Yet, good Matheo, for joy weeps Orlando, and doth end. Duke. Then hear, Matheo : all your woes are stayedBy your good father-in-law : all your illsAre clear purged from you by his working pills.—Come, Signor Candido, these green young wits,We see by circumstance, this plot have laid,Still to provoke thy patience, which they findA wall of brass ; no armours like the hast taught the city patience, now our courtShall be thy sphere, where from thy good report,Rumours this truth unto the world shall sing,A patient mans a pattern for a king. [Exeunt THE TLEcASAUXJ COiMEVY OF


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Keywords: ., bookauthordekkerthomasca15721632, bookcentury1800, bookyear1887