_ What am I then?
_Gui._ Why, any thing but she:
What should the mistress of a king do here?
_Mar._ Find him, who would be master of a king.
_Gui._ I sent not for you, madam.
_Mar._ I think, my lord, the king sent not for you.
_Gui._ Do you not fear, your visit will be known?
_Mar._ Fear is for guilty men, rebels, and traitors:
Where'er I go, my virtue is my guard.
_Gui._ What devil has sent thee here to plague my soul?
O that I could detest thee now as much
As ever I have loved, nay, even as much
As yet, in spite of all thy crimes, I love!
But 'tis a love so mixt with dark despair,
The smoke and soot smother the rising flame,
And make my soul a furnace. Woman, woman,
What can I call thee more? if devil, 'twere less.
Sure, thine's a race was never got by Adam,
But Eve played false, engendering with the serpent,
Her own part worse than his.
_Mar._ Then they got traitors.
_Gui._ Yes, angel-traitors, fit to shine in palaces,
Forked into ills, and split into deceits;
Two in their very frame. 'Twas well, 'twas well,
I saw thee not at court, thou basilisk;
For if I had, those eyes, without his guards,
Had done the tyrant's work.
_Mar._ Why then it seems
I was not false in all: I told you, Guise,
If you left Paris, I would go to court:
You see I kept my promise.
_Gui._ Still thy sex:
Once true in all thy life, and that for mischief.
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