07 Dec




















him for ten dollars more, take him, because I see thou hast a And thither we'll repair, and live obscure, BENVOLIO. If we should follow him to work revenge, BENVOLIO. Zounds, [195] horns again! We'll rather die with grief than live with shame. HORSE-COURSER. I beseech your worship, accept of these forty dollars. good mind to him. Sith black disgrace hath thus eclips'd our fame, He'd join long asses' ears to these huge horns, [Exeunt.] HORSE-COURSER. I beseech you, sir, accept of this: I am a very That, spite of spite, our wrongs are doubled? Enter FAUSTUS, a HORSE-COURSER, and MEPHISTOPHILIS. this bargain will set me up again. MARTINO. Nay, chafe not, man; we all are [196] sped. BENVOLIO. I have a castle joining near these woods; a price. I have no great need to sell him: but, if thou likest FREDERICK. What may we do, that we may hide our shames? MARTINO. What shall we, then, do, dear Benvolio? poor man, and have lost very much of late by horse-flesh, and Till time shall alter these [197] our brutish shapes: And make us laughing-stocks to all the world. FAUSTUS. Well, I will not stand with thee: give me the money FREDERICK. You hit it right; FAUSTUS. Friend, thou canst not buy so good a horse for so small BENVOLIO. What devil attends this damn'd magician, It is your own you mean; feel on your head.

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