King Lear
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:57:01
if you do love old men,
:57:04
if your sweet sway
allow obedience,

:57:08
if you yourselves are old,
:57:11
make it your cause:
:57:13
Send down and take my part.
:57:19
Art not asham'd to look
upon this beard?

:57:28
O Regan, will you take her
by the hand?

:57:33
And why not by the hand, sir?
How have I offended?

:57:37
All's not offence
that indiscretion finds,
and dotage terms so.

:57:41
O sides,
you are too tough!
Will you yet hold?

:57:47
How came my man
i' th' stocks?

:57:49
I set him there, sir.
You, did you?

:57:54
I pray you, Father,
:57:56
being weak, seem so.
:58:00
If till the expiration
of your month,

:58:02
you will return and sojourn
with my sister,

:58:05
dismissing half your train,
come then to me.

:58:09
I am now from home
and out of that provision

:58:11
which shall be needful
for your entertainment.

:58:15
Return to her,
and fifty men dismiss'd?

:58:19
No, rather I abjure all roofs,
:58:25
and choose to wage
against the enmity
o' th' air,

:58:29
to be a comrade
with the wolf and owl.

:58:32
Necessity's sharp pinch!
:58:33
At your choice, sir.
:58:36
I prithee, daughter,
do not make me mad.

:58:41
I will not trouble thee,
my child.

:58:45
Farewell.
:58:47
We'll no more meet,
:58:50
no more see
one another.

:58:53
But yet thou
art my flesh,

:58:55
my blood,
my daughter;

:58:58
or rather a disease
that's in my flesh


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