Cymbeline
Please see the bottom of the page for explanatory notes.
ACT IV SCENE III | A room in Cymbeline's palace. | |
| Enter CYMBELINE, Lords, PISANIO, and Attendants | |
CYMBELINE | Again; and bring me word how 'tis with her. | |
| [ Exit an Attendant. | |
| A fever with the absence of her son, | |
| A madness, of which her life's in danger. Heavens, | |
| How deeply you at once do touch me! Imogen, |
| The great part of my comfort, gone; my queen | |
| Upon a desperate bed, and in a time | |
| When fearful wars point at me; her son gone, | |
| So needful for this present: it strikes me, past | |
| The hope of comfort. But for thee, fellow, |
| Who needs must know of her departure and | 10 |
| Dost seem so ignorant, we'll enforce it from thee | |
| By a sharp torture. | |
PISANIO | Sir, my life is yours; | |
| I humbly set it at your will; but, for my mistress, |
| I nothing know where she remains, why gone, | |
| Nor when she purposes return. Beseech your highness, | |
| Hold me your loyal servant. | |
First Lord | Good my liege, | |
| The day that she was missing he was here: |
| I dare be bound he's true and shall perform | |
| All parts of his subjection loyally. For Cloten, | |
| There wants no diligence in seeking him, | 20 |
| And will, no doubt, be found. | |
CYMBELINE | The time is troublesome. |
| [ To PISANIO ] | |
| We'll slip you for a season; but our jealousy | |
| Does yet depend. | |
First Lord | So please your majesty, | |
| The Roman legions, all from Gallia drawn, | |
| Are landed on your coast, with a supply |
| Of Roman gentlemen, by the senate sent. | |
CYMBELINE | Now for the counsel of my son and queen! | |
| I am amazed with matter. | |
First Lord | Good my liege, | |
| Your preparation can affront no less |
| Than what you hear of: come more, for more | |
| you're ready: | 40 |
| The want is but to put those powers in motion | |
| That long to move. | |
CYMBELINE | I thank you. Let's withdraw; |
| And meet the time as it seeks us. We fear not | |
| What can from Italy annoy us; but | |
| We grieve at chances here. Away! | |
| [ Exeunt all except Pisanio. | |
PISANIO | I heard no letter from my master since | |
| I wrote him Imogen was slain: 'tis strange: |
| Nor hear I from my mistress who did promise | |
| To yield me often tidings: neither know I | |
| What is betid to Cloten; but remain | 40 |
| Perplex'd in all. The heavens still must work. | |
| Wherein I am false I am honest; not true, to be true. |
| These present wars shall find I love my country, | |
| Even to the note o' the king, or I'll fall in them. | |
| All other doubts, by time let them be clear'd: | |
| Fortune brings in some boats that are not steer'd. | |
| [ Exit. | |
Cymbeline, Act 4, Scene 4
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Explanatory Notes for Act 4, Scene 3
From Cymbeline. A.W. Verity. Cambridge, University Press.
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19. subjection, duty as subject.
21. And will, and he will (easily supplied from him).
22, 23. i.e. his suspicions are not satisfied: "if I do not condemn
you, I likewise have not acquitted you" -- Johnson. Judgment, as we
say, is suspended.
28. amazed: a stronger word then 'confounded.'
29, 30. "Your forces are able to face such an army as we hear the
enemy will bring against us" -- Johnson.
34. annoy; in the old and stronger sense -- 'harm.'
44. Even to the note o' the king, so that even the king shall
remark it.
How to cite the explanatory notes:
Shakespeare, William. Cymbeline. Ed. A.W. Verity. Cambridge, University Press, 1899. Shakespeare Online. 10 Dec. 2013. < http://www.shakespeare-online.com/plays/cymbel_4_3.html >.
How to cite the sidebar:
Mabillard, Amanda. Notes on Shakespeare. Shakespeare Online. 10 Dec. 2013. < http://www.shakespeare-online.com/plays/cymbel_4_3.html >.
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Cymbeline Sources Shakespeare relied upon Holinshed's Chronicles for the setting of the play and the name of the main character, Cymbeline. Holinshed reports on a king named Kymbeline, a descendant of King Lear, who ruled Britain from 33 B.C. to 2 A.D. The main plot of Cymbeline is an old and well-known story, retold time and again throughout the ages. Shakespeare no doubt had heard the tale, in many forms, of a man wagering that his lover is virtuous only to be made the fool. It seems that Shakespeare liked best the rendition of this timeless story told in Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron (second day, ninth novel), written in 1353. Read on...
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More to Explore
Cymbeline: The Play with Commentary
Cymbeline Plot Summary
Famous Quotations from Cymbeline
How to pronounce the names in Cymbeline
Sources for Cymbeline
Introduction to Imogen
Introduction to Guiderius and Arviragus
Introduction to Cloten
Introduction to Cymbeline
Introduction to Posthumus
Introduction to Iachimo
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