All 's Well That Ends Well
Act V.
Scene i. Marseilles. A street.
- Enter Helena, Widow, and Diana, with two Attendants
- Helena: But this exceeding posting day and night
- Must wear your spirits low; we cannot help it:
- But since you have made the days and nights as one,
- To wear your gentle limbs in my affairs,
- Be bold you do so grow in my requital
- As nothing can unroot you. In happy time;
- Enter a Gentleman
- This man may help me to his majesty's ear,
- If he would spend his power. God save you, sir.
- Gentleman: And you.
- Helena: Sir, I have seen you in the court of France.
- Gentleman: I have been sometimes there.
- Helena: I do presume, sir, that you are not fallen
- From the report that goes upon your goodness;
- An therefore, goaded with most sharp occasions,
- Which lay nice manners by, I put you to
- The use of your own virtues, for the which
- I shall continue thankful.
- Gentleman: What's your will?
- Helena: That it will please you
- To give this poor petition to the king,
- And aid me with that store of power you have
- To come into his presence.
- Gentleman: The king's not here.
- Helena: Not here, sir!
- Gentleman: Not, indeed:
- He hence removed last night and with more haste
- Than is his use.
- Widow: Lord, how we lose our pains!
- Helena: All'S Well That Ends Well yet,
- Though time seem so adverse and means unfit.
- I do beseech you, whither is he gone?
- Gentleman: Marry, as I take it, to Rousillon;
- Whither I am going.
- Helena: I do beseech you, sir,
- Since you are like to see the king before me,
- Commend the paper to his gracious hand,
- Which I presume shall render you no blame
- But rather make you thank your pains for it.
- I will come after you with what good speed
- Our means will make us means.
- Gentleman: This I'll do for you.
- Helena: And you shall find yourself to be well thank'd,
- Whate'er falls more. We must to horse again.
- Go, go, provide.
- Exeunt
Scene ii. Rousillon. Before the Count's palace.
- Enter Clown, and Parolles, following
- Parolles: Good Monsieur Lavache, give my Lord Lafeu this
- letter: I have ere now, sir, been better known to
- you, when I have held familiarity with fresher
- clothes; but I am now, sir, muddied in fortune's
- mood, and smell somewhat strong of her strong
- displeasure.
- Clown: Truly, fortune's displeasure is but sluttish, if it
- smell so strongly as thou speakest of: I will
- henceforth eat no fish of fortune's buttering.
- Prithee, allow the wind.
- Parolles: Nay, you need not to stop your nose, sir; I spake
- but by a metaphor.
- Clown: Indeed, sir, if your metaphor stink, I will stop my
- nose; or against any man's metaphor. Prithee, get
- thee further.
- Parolles: Pray you, sir, deliver me this paper.
- Clown: Foh! prithee, stand away: a paper from fortune's
- close-stool to give to a nobleman! Look, here he
- comes himself.
- Enter Lafeu
- Here is a purr of fortune's, sir, or of fortune's
- cat,—but not a musk-cat,—that has fallen into the
- unclean fishpond of her displeasure, and, as he
- says, is muddied withal: pray you, sir, use the
- carp as you may; for he looks like a poor, decayed,
- ingenious, foolish, rascally knave. I do pity his
- distress in my similes of comfort and leave him to
- your lordship.
- Exit
- Parolles: My lord, I am a man whom fortune hath cruelly
- scratched.
- Lafeu: And what would you have me to do? 'Tis too late to
- pare her nails now. Wherein have you played the
- knave with fortune, that she should scratch you, who
- of herself is a good lady and would not have knaves
- thrive long under her? There's a quart d'ecu for
- you: let the justices make you and fortune friends:
- I am for other business.
- Parolles: I beseech your honour to hear me one single word.
- Lafeu: You beg a single penny more: come, you shall ha't;
- save your word.
- Parolles: My name, my good lord, is Parolles.
- Lafeu: You beg more than 'word,' then. Cox my passion!
- give me your hand. How does your drum?
- Parolles: O my good lord, you were the first that found me!
- Lafeu: Was I, in sooth? and I was the first that lost thee.
- Parolles: It lies in you, my lord, to bring me in some grace,
- for you did bring me out.
- Lafeu: Out upon thee, knave! dost thou put upon me at once
- both the office of God and the devil? One brings
- thee in grace and the other brings thee out.
- Trumpets sound
- The king's coming; I know by his trumpets. Sirrah,
- inquire further after me; I had talk of you last
- night: though you are a fool and a knave, you shall
- eat; go to, follow.
- Parolles: I praise God for you.
- Exeunt
Scene iii. Rousillon. The Count's palace.
- Flourish. Enter King, Countess, Lafeu, the two French Lords, with Attendants
- King: We lost a jewel of her; and our esteem
- Was made much poorer by it: but your son,
- As mad in folly, lack'd the sense to know
- Her estimation home.
- Countess: 'Tis past, my liege;
- And I beseech your majesty to make it
- Natural rebellion, done i' the blaze of youth;
- When oil and fire, too strong for reason's force,
- O'erbears it and burns on.
- King: My honour'd lady,
- I have forgiven and forgotten all;
- Though my revenges were high bent upon him,
- And watch'd the time to shoot.
- Lafeu: This I must say,
- But first I beg my pardon, the young lord
- Did to his majesty, his mother and his lady
- Offence of mighty note; but to himself
- The greatest wrong of all. He lost a wife
- Whose beauty did astonish the survey
- Of richest eyes, whose words all ears took captive,
- Whose dear perfection hearts that scorn'd to serve
- Humbly call'd mistress.
- King: Praising what is lost
- Makes the remembrance dear. Well, call him hither;
- We are reconciled, and the first view shall kill
- All repetition: let him not ask our pardon;
- The nature of his great offence is dead,
- And deeper than oblivion we do bury
- The incensing relics of it: let him approach,
- A stranger, no offender; and inform him
- So 'tis our will he should.
- Gentleman: I shall, my liege.
- Exit
- King: What says he to your daughter? have you spoke?
- Lafeu: All that he is hath reference to your highness.
- King: Then shall we have a match. I have letters sent me
- That set him high in fame.
- Enter Bertram
- Lafeu: He looks well on't.
- King: I am not a day of season,
- For thou mayst see a sunshine and a hail
- In me at once: but to the brightest beams
- Distracted clouds give way; so stand thou forth;
- The time is fair again.
- Bertram: My high-repented blames,
- Dear sovereign, pardon to me.
- King: All is whole;
- Not one word more of the consumed time.
- Let's take the instant by the forward top;
- For we are old, and on our quick'st decrees
- The inaudible and noiseless foot of Time
- Steals ere we can effect them. You remember
- The daughter of this lord?
- Bertram: Admiringly, my liege, at first
- I stuck my choice upon her, ere my heart
- Durst make too bold a herald of my tongue
- Where the impression of mine eye infixing,
- Contempt his scornful perspective did lend me,
- Which warp'd the line of every other favour;
- Scorn'd a fair colour, or express'd it stolen;
- Extended or contracted all proportions
- To a most hideous object: thence it came
- That she whom all men praised and whom myself,
- Since I have lost, have loved, was in mine eye
- The dust that did offend it.
- King: Well excused:
- That thou didst love her, strikes some scores away
- From the great compt: but love that comes too late,
- Like a remorseful pardon slowly carried,
- To the great sender turns a sour offence,
- Crying, 'That's good that's gone.' Our rash faults
- Make trivial price of serious things we have,
- Not knowing them until we know their grave:
- Oft our displeasures, to ourselves unjust,
- Destroy our friends and after weep their dust
- Our own love waking cries to see what's done,
- While shame full late sleeps out the afternoon.
- Be this sweet Helen's knell, and now forget her.
- Send forth your amorous token for fair Maudlin:
- The main consents are had; and here we'll stay
- To see our widower's second marriage-day.
- Countess: Which better than the first, O dear heaven, bless!
- Or, ere they meet, in me, O nature, cesse!
- Lafeu: Come on, my son, in whom my house's name
- Must be digested, give a favour from you
- To sparkle in the spirits of my daughter,
- That she may quickly come.
- Bertram gives a ring
- By my old beard,
- And every hair that's on't, Helen, that's dead,
- Was a sweet creature: such a ring as this,
- The last that e'er I took her at court,
- I saw upon her finger.
- Bertram: Hers it was not.
- King: Now, pray you, let me see it; for mine eye,
- While I was speaking, oft was fasten'd to't.
- This ring was mine; and, when I gave it Helen,
- I bade her, if her fortunes ever stood
- Necessitied to help, that by this token
- I would relieve her. Had you that craft, to reave her
- Of what should stead her most?
- Bertram: My gracious sovereign,
- Howe'er it pleases you to take it so,
- The ring was never hers.
- Countess: Son, on my life,
- I have seen her wear it; and she reckon'd it
- At her life's rate.
- Lafeu: I am sure I saw her wear it.
- Bertram: You are deceived, my lord; she never saw it:
- In Florence was it from a casement thrown me,
- Wrapp'd in a paper, which contain'd the name
- Of her that threw it: noble she was, and thought
- I stood engaged: but when I had subscribed
- To mine own fortune and inform'd her fully
- I could not answer in that course of honour
- As she had made the overture, she ceased
- In heavy satisfaction and would never
- Receive the ring again.
- King: Plutus himself,
- That knows the tinct and multiplying medicine,
- Hath not in nature's mystery more science
- Than I have in this ring: 'twas mine, 'twas Helen's,
- Whoever gave it you. Then, if you know
- That you are well acquainted with yourself,
- Confess 'twas hers, and by what rough enforcement
- You got it from her: she call'd the saints to surety
- That she would never put it from her finger,
- Unless she gave it to yourself in bed,
- Where you have never come, or sent it us
- Upon her great disaster.
- Bertram: She never saw it.
- King: Thou speak'st it falsely, as I love mine honour;
- And makest conjectural fears to come into me
- Which I would fain shut out. If it should prove
- That thou art so inhuman,—'twill not prove so;—
- And yet I know not: thou didst hate her deadly,
- And she is dead; which nothing, but to close
- Her eyes myself, could win me to believe,
- More than to see this ring. Take him away.
- Guards seize Bertram
- My fore-past proofs, howe'er the matter fall,
- Shall tax my fears of little vanity,
- Having vainly fear'd too little. Away with him!
- We'll sift this matter further.
- Bertram: If you shall prove
- This ring was ever hers, you shall as easy
- Prove that I husbanded her bed in Florence,
- Where yet she never was.
- Exit, guarded
- King: I am wrapp'd in dismal thinkings.
- Enter a Gentleman
- Gentleman: Gracious sovereign,
- Whether I have been to blame or no, I know not:
- Here's a petition from a Florentine,
- Who hath for four or five removes come short
- To tender it herself. I undertook it,
- Vanquish'd thereto by the fair grace and speech
- Of the poor suppliant, who by this I know
- Is here attending: her business looks in her
- With an importing visage; and she told me,
- In a sweet verbal brief, it did concern
- Your highness with herself.
- King: [Reads] Upon his many protestations to marry me
- when his wife was dead, I blush to say it, he won
- me. Now is the Count Rousillon a widower: his vows
- are forfeited to me, and my honour's paid to him. He
- stole from Florence, taking no leave, and I follow
- him to his country for justice: grant it me, O
- king! in you it best lies; otherwise a seducer
- flourishes, and a poor maid is undone.
- Diana Capilet.
- Lafeu: I will buy me a son-in-law in a fair, and toll for
- this: I'll none of him.
- King: The heavens have thought well on thee Lafeu,
- To bring forth this discovery. Seek these suitors:
- Go speedily and bring again the count.
- I am afeard the life of Helen, lady,
- Was foully snatch'd.
- Countess: Now, justice on the doers!
- Re-enter Bertram, guarded
- King: I wonder, sir, sith wives are monsters to you,
- And that you fly them as you swear them lordship,
- Yet you desire to marry.
- Enter Widow and Diana
- What woman's that?
- Diana: I am, my lord, a wretched Florentine,
- Derived from the ancient Capilet:
- My suit, as I do understand, you know,
- And therefore know how far I may be pitied.
- Widow: I am her mother, sir, whose age and honour
- Both suffer under this complaint we bring,
- And both shall cease, without your remedy.
- King: Come hither, count; do you know these women?
- Bertram: My lord, I neither can nor will deny
- But that I know them: do they charge me further?
- Diana: Why do you look so strange upon your wife?
- Bertram: She's none of mine, my lord.
- Diana: If you shall marry,
- You give away this hand, and that is mine;
- You give away heaven's vows, and those are mine;
- You give away myself, which is known mine;
- For I by vow am so embodied yours,
- That she which marries you must marry me,
- Either both or none.
- Lafeu: Your reputation comes too short for my daughter; you
- are no husband for her.
- Bertram: My lord, this is a fond and desperate creature,
- Whom sometime I have laugh'd with: let your highness
- Lay a more noble thought upon mine honour
- Than for to think that I would sink it here.
- King: Sir, for my thoughts, you have them ill to friend
- Till your deeds gain them: fairer prove your honour
- Than in my thought it lies.
- Diana: Good my lord,
- Ask him upon his oath, if he does think
- He had not my virginity.
- King: What say'st thou to her?
- Bertram: She's impudent, my lord,
- And was a common gamester to the camp.
- Diana: He does me wrong, my lord; if I were so,
- He might have bought me at a common price:
- Do not believe him. O, behold this ring,
- Whose high respect and rich validity
- Did lack a parallel; yet for all that
- He gave it to a commoner o' the camp,
- If I be one.
- Countess: He blushes, and 'tis it:
- Of six preceding ancestors, that gem,
- Conferr'd by testament to the sequent issue,
- Hath it been owed and worn. This is his wife;
- That ring's a thousand proofs.
- King: Methought you said
- You saw one here in court could witness it.
- Diana: I did, my lord, but loath am to produce
- So bad an instrument: his name's Parolles.
- Lafeu: I saw the man to-day, if man he be.
- King: Find him, and bring him hither.
- Exit an Attendant
- Bertram: What of him?
- He's quoted for a most perfidious slave,
- With all the spots o' the world tax'd and debosh'd;
- Whose nature sickens but to speak a truth.
- Am I or that or this for what he'll utter,
- That will speak any thing?
- King: She hath that ring of yours.
- Bertram: I think she has: certain it is I liked her,
- And boarded her i' the wanton way of youth:
- She knew her distance and did angle for me,
- Madding my eagerness with her restraint,
- As all impediments in fancy's course
- Are motives of more fancy; and, in fine,
- Her infinite cunning, with her modern grace,
- Subdued me to her rate: she got the ring;
- And I had that which any inferior might
- At market-price have bought.
- Diana: I must be patient:
- You, that have turn'd off a first so noble wife,
- May justly diet me. I pray you yet;
- Since you lack virtue, I will lose a husband;
- Send for your ring, I will return it home,
- And give me mine again.
- Bertram: I have it not.
- King: What ring was yours, I pray you?
- Diana: Sir, much like
- The same upon your finger.
- King: Know you this ring? this ring was his of late.
- Diana: And this was it I gave him, being abed.
- King: The story then goes false, you threw it him
- Out of a casement.
- Diana: I have spoke the truth.
- Enter Parolles
- Bertram: My lord, I do confess the ring was hers.
- King: You boggle shrewdly, every feather stars you.
- Is this the man you speak of?
- Diana: Ay, my lord.
- King: Tell me, sirrah, but tell me true, I charge you,
- Not fearing the displeasure of your master,
- Which on your just proceeding I'll keep off,
- By him and by this woman here what know you?
- Parolles: So please your majesty, my master hath been an
- honourable gentleman: tricks he hath had in him,
- which gentlemen have.
- King: Come, come, to the purpose: did he love this woman?
- Parolles: Faith, sir, he did love her; but how?
- King: How, I pray you?
- Parolles: He did love her, sir, as a gentleman loves a woman.
- King: How is that?
- Parolles: He loved her, sir, and loved her not.
- King: As thou art a knave, and no knave. What an
- equivocal companion is this!
- Parolles: I am a poor man, and at your majesty's command.
- Lafeu: He's a good drum, my lord, but a naughty orator.
- Diana: Do you know he promised me marriage?
- Parolles: Faith, I know more than I'll speak.
- King: But wilt thou not speak all thou knowest?
- Parolles: Yes, so please your majesty. I did go between them,
- as I said; but more than that, he loved her: for
- indeed he was mad for her, and talked of Satan and
- of Limbo and of Furies and I know not what: yet I
- was in that credit with them at that time that I
- knew of their going to bed, and of other motions,
- as promising her marriage, and things which would
- derive me ill will to speak of; therefore I will not
- speak what I know.
- King: Thou hast spoken all already, unless thou canst say
- they are married: but thou art too fine in thy
- evidence; therefore stand aside.
- This ring, you say, was yours?
- Diana: Ay, my good lord.
- King: Where did you buy it? or who gave it you?
- Diana: It was not given me, nor I did not buy it.
- King: Who lent it you?
- Diana: It was not lent me neither.
- King: Where did you find it, then?
- Diana: I found it not.
- King: If it were yours by none of all these ways,
- How could you give it him?
- Diana: I never gave it him.
- Lafeu: This woman's an easy glove, my lord; she goes off
- and on at pleasure.
- King: This ring was mine; I gave it his first wife.
- Diana: It might be yours or hers, for aught I know.
- King: Take her away; I do not like her now;
- To prison with her: and away with him.
- Unless thou tell'st me where thou hadst this ring,
- Thou diest within this hour.
- Diana: I'll never tell you.
- King: Take her away.
- Diana: I'll put in bail, my liege.
- King: I think thee now some common customer.
- Diana: By Jove, if ever I knew man, 'twas you.
- King: Wherefore hast thou accused him all this while?
- Diana: Because he's guilty, and he is not guilty:
- He knows I am no maid, and he'll swear to't;
- I'll swear I am a maid, and he knows not.
- Great king, I am no strumpet, by my life;
- I am either maid, or else this old man's wife.
- King: She does abuse our ears: to prison with her.
- Diana: Good mother, fetch my bail. Stay, royal sir:
- Exit Widow
- The jeweller that owes the ring is sent for,
- And he shall surety me. But for this lord,
- Who hath abused me, as he knows himself,
- Though yet he never harm'd me, here I quit him:
- He knows himself my bed he hath defiled;
- And at that time he got his wife with child:
- Dead though she be, she feels her young one kick:
- So there's my riddle: one that's dead is quick:
- And now behold the meaning.
- Re-enter Widow, with Helena
- King: Is there no exorcist
- Beguiles the truer office of mine eyes?
- Is't real that I see?
- Helena: No, my good lord;
- 'Tis but the shadow of a wife you see,
- The name and not the thing.
- Bertram: Both, both. O, pardon!
- Helena: O my good lord, when I was like this maid,
- I found you wondrous kind. There is your ring;
- And, look you, here's your letter; this it says:
- 'When from my finger you can get this ring
- And are by me with child,' & c. This is done:
- Will you be mine, now you are doubly won?
- Bertram: If she, my liege, can make me know this clearly,
- I'll love her dearly, ever, ever dearly.
- Helena: If it appear not plain and prove untrue,
- Deadly divorce step between me and you!
- O my dear mother, do I see you living?
- Lafeu: Mine eyes smell onions; I shall weep anon:
- To Parolles
- Good Tom Drum, lend me a handkercher: so,
- I thank thee: wait on me home, I'll make sport with thee:
- Let thy courtesies alone, they are scurvy ones.
- King: Let us from point to point this story know,
- To make the even truth in pleasure flow.
- To Diana
- If thou be'st yet a fresh uncropped flower,
- Choose thou thy husband, and I'll pay thy dower;
- For I can guess that by thy honest aid
- Thou keep'st a wife herself, thyself a maid.
- Of that and all the progress, more or less,
- Resolvedly more leisure shall express:
- All yet seems well; and if it end so meet,
- The bitter past, more welcome is the sweet.
- Flourish
Epilogue.
- King: The king's a beggar, now the play is done:
- All is well ended, if this suit be won,
- That you express content; which we will pay,
- With strife to please you, day exceeding day:
- Ours be your patience then, and yours our parts;
- Your gentle hands lend us, and take our hearts.
- Exeunt
- --oOo-- -