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    Act II. Scene I - Page 2

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    beheld me struggling in the crowd,
    He blushed, and bade make way.

    ALEXAS
    There's comfort yet.

    CHARMION
    Ventidius fixed his eyes upon my passage
    Severely, as he meant to frown me back,
    And sullenly gave place: I told my message,
    Just as you gave it, broken and disordered;
    I numbered in it all your sighs and tears,
    And while I moved your pitiful request,
    That you but only begged a last farewell,
    He fetched an inward groan; and every time
    I named you, sighed, as if his heart were breaking,
    But, shunned my eyes, and guiltily looked down:
    He seemed not now that awful Antony,
    Who shook and armed assembly with his nod;
    But, making show as he would rub his eyes,
    Disguised and blotted out a falling tear.

    CLEOPATRA
    Did he then weep? And was I worth a tear?
    If what thou hast to say be not as pleasing,
    Tell me no more, but let me die contented.

    CHARMION
    He bid me say,--He knew himself so well,
    He could deny you nothing, if he saw you;
    And therefore--

    CLEOPATRA
    Thou wouldst say, he would not see me?

    CHARMION
    And therefore begged you not to use a power,
    Which he could ill resist; yet he should ever
    Respect you, as he ought.

    CLEOPATRA
    Is that a word
    For Antony to use to Cleopatra?
    O that faint word, RESPECT! how I disdain it!
    Disdain myself, for loving after it!
    He should have kept that word for cold Octavia.
    Respect is for a wife: Am I that thing,
    That dull, insipid lump, without desires,
    And without power to give them?

    ALEXAS
    You misjudge;
    You see through love, and that deludes your sight;
    As, what is straight, seems crooked through the water:
    But I, who bear my reason undisturbed,
    Can see this Antony, this dreaded man,
    A fearful slave, who fain would run away,
    And shuns his master's eyes: If you pursue him,
    My life on't, he still drags a chain along.
    That needs must clog his flight.

    CLEOPATRA
    Could I believe thee!--

    ALEXAS
    By every circumstance I know he loves.
    True, he's hard prest, by interest and by honour;
    Yet he but doubts, and parleys, and casts out
    Many a long look for succour.

    CLEOPATRA
    He sends word,
    He fears to see my face.


    ALEXAS
    And would you more?
    He shows his weakness who declines the combat,
    And you must urge your fortune. Could he speak
    More plainly? To my ears, the message sounds--
    Come to my rescue, Cleopatra, come;
    Come, free me from Ventidius; from my tyrant:
    See me, and give me a pretence to leave him!--
    I hear his trumpets. This way he must pass.
    Please you, retire a while; I'll work him first,
    That he may bend more easy.

    CLEOPATRA
    You shall rule me;
    But
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