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← Back to browse The Tragedy Of Coriolanus
- 1 Enter a Roman and a Volsce.
- 2 ROMAN.
- 3 I know you well, sir, and you know me. Your name I think is Adrian.
- 4 VOLSCE.
- 5 It is so, sir. Truly, I have forgot you.
- 6 ROMAN.
- 7 I am a Roman, and my services are, as you are, against ’em. Know you me
- 8 yet?
- 9 VOLSCE.
- 10 Nicanor, no?
- 11 ROMAN.
- 12 The same, sir.
- 13 VOLSCE.
- 14 You had more beard when I last saw you, but your favour is well
- 15 approved by your tongue. What’s the news in Rome? I have a note from
- 16 the Volscian state to find you out there. You have well saved me a
- 17 day’s journey.
- 18 ROMAN.
- 19 There hath been in Rome strange insurrections, the people against the
- 20 senators, patricians, and nobles.
- 21 VOLSCE.
- 22 Hath been? Is it ended, then? Our state thinks not so. They are in a
- 23 most warlike preparation and hope to come upon them in the heat of
- 24 their division.
- 25 ROMAN.
- 26 The main blaze of it is past, but a small thing would make it flame
- 27 again; for the nobles receive so to heart the banishment of that worthy
- 28 Coriolanus that they are in a ripe aptness to take all power from the
- 29 people and to pluck from them their tribunes for ever. This lies
- 30 glowing, I can tell you, and is almost mature for the violent breaking
- 31 out.
- 32 VOLSCE.
- 33 Coriolanus banished?
- 34 ROMAN.
- 35 Banished, sir.
- 36 VOLSCE.
- 37 You will be welcome with this intelligence, Nicanor.
- 38 ROMAN.
- 39 The day serves well for them now. I have heard it said the fittest time
- 40 to corrupt a man’s wife is when she’s fallen out with her husband. Your
- 41 noble Tullus Aufidius will appear well in these wars, his great opposer
- 42 Coriolanus being now in no request of his country.
- 43 VOLSCE.
- 44 He cannot choose. I am most fortunate thus accidentally to encounter
- 45 you. You have ended my business, and I will merrily accompany you home.
- 46 ROMAN.
- 47 I shall between this and supper tell you most strange things from Rome,
- 48 all tending to the good of their adversaries. Have you an army ready,
- 49 say you?
- 50 VOLSCE.
- 51 A most royal one. The centurions and their charges, distinctly
- 52 billeted, already in th’ entertainment, and to be on foot at an hour’s
- 53 warning.
- 54 ROMAN.
- 55 I am joyful to hear of their readiness and am the man, I think, that
- 56 shall set them in present action. So, sir, heartily well met, and most
- 57 glad of your company.
- 58 VOLSCE.
- 59 You take my part from me, sir. I have the most cause to be glad of
- 60 yours.
- 61 ROMAN.
- 62 Well, let us go together.
- 63 [_Exeunt._]