The Merchant of Venice


google search for The Merchant of Venice

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
73 74 75 76 77

Quick Jump
1 20 40 59 79

For all the world like cutler's poetry  
Upon a knife, 'Love me, and leave me not.'  
NERISSA  
What talk you of the posy or the value?  
You swore to me, when I did give it you,  
That you would wear it till your hour of death  
And that it should lie with you in your grave:  
Though not for me, yet for your vehement oaths,  
You should have been respective and have kept it.  
Gave it a judge's clerk! no, God's my judge,  
The clerk will ne'er wear hair on's face that had it.  
GRATIANO  
He will, an if he live to be a man.  
NERISSA  
Ay, if a woman live to be a man.  
GRATIANO  
Now, by this hand, I gave it to a youth,  
A kind of boy, a little scrubbed boy,  
No higher than thyself; the judge's clerk,  
A prating boy, that begg'd it as a fee:  
I could not for my heart deny it him.  
PORTIA  
You were to blame, I must be plain with you,  
To part so slightly with your wife's first gift:  
A thing stuck on with oaths upon your finger  
And so riveted with faith unto your flesh.  
I gave my love a ring and made him swear  
Never to part with it; and here he stands;  
I dare be sworn for him he would not leave it  
Nor pluck it from his finger, for the wealth  
That the world masters. Now, in faith, Gratiano,  
You give your wife too unkind a cause of grief:  
An 'twere to me, I should be mad at it.  
BASSANIO  
[Aside] Why, I were best to cut my left hand off  
And swear I lost the ring defending it.  
GRATIANO  
My Lord Bassanio gave his ring away  
Unto the judge that begg'd it and indeed  
Deserved it too; and then the boy, his clerk,  
That took some pains in writing, he begg'd mine;  
And neither man nor master would take aught  
But the two rings.  
PORTIA  
What ring gave you my lord?  
Not that, I hope, which you received of me.  
BASSANIO  


Page
73 74 75 76 77

Quick Jump
1 20 40 59 79