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Tigr. Do I refuse her, that I doubt her worth? Arb. Is that all the cause? Tigr. Sir, I have learnd a prisoners sufferance, Arb. Some do await him forth, and see him safe; [Exit Tigranes with Attendants. Is full of wisdom, valour, all the graces Man can receive. Mar. And yet you conquerd him. Arb. And yet I conquerd him, and could have done, Bes. An please your majesty, I was afraid at first Mar. When wert thou other? Arb. Of what? Bes. That you would not have spied your best advantages; for your majesty, in my opinion, lay too high; methinks,under favour, you should have lain thus. Mar. Like a tailor at a wake. Bes. And then, ift please your majesty to remember, at one timeby my troth, I wishd myself wi you. Mar. By my troth, thou wouldst ha stunk em both out o th lists. Arb. What to do? Bes. To put your majesty in mind of an occasion: you lay thus, and Tigranes falsified a blow at your leg, which you, by doing thus, avoided; but, if you had whipped up your leg thus, and reachd him on the ear, you had made the blood-royal run about his head. Mar. What country fence-school didst thou learn that at? Arb. Puff! did not I take him nobly? Mar. Why, you did, and you have talkd enough ont. Arb. Talk enough! |
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