Digital facsimile of the Bodleian First Folio of Shakespeare's plays, Arch. G c.7
Title: Search
Tit. To be a torment to mine Enemies?
Tam. Tam.
Tam. I am, therefore come downe and welcome me.
Tit. Tit.
Tit. Doe me some seruice ere I come to thee:
Tit. Loe by thy side where Rape and Murder stands,
Tit. Now giue some surance that thou art Reuenge,
Tit. Stab them, or teare them on thy Chariot wheeles,
Tit. And then Ile come and be thy Waggoner,
Tit. And whirle along with thee about the Globes.
Tit. Prouide thee two proper Palfries, as blacke as Iet,
Tit. To hale thy vengefull Waggon swift away,
Tit. And finde out Murder in their guilty cares.
Tit. And when thy Car is loaden with their heads,
Tit. I will dismount, and by the Waggon wheele,
Tit. Trot like a Seruile footeman all day long,
Tit. Euen from Eptons rising in the East,
Tit. Vntill his very downefall in the Sea.
Tit. And day by day Ile do this heauy taske,
Tit. So thou destroy Rapine and Murder there.