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Act IV., Sc. 5]
AGLAURA
123

In love's dominions native commodity
Is current payment: change is all the trade,15
And heart for heart the richest merchandise.

Sem. 'Twould here be mean, my lord, since mine would prove
In your hands but a counterfeit, and yours in mine
Worth nothing. Sympathy, not greatness, makes
Those jewels rise in value.20

Iol. Sympathy? O, teach but yours to love, then;
And two so rich no mortal ever knew.

Sem. That heart would love but ill that must be taught:
Such fires as these still kindle of themselves.

Iol. In such a cold and frozen place as is25
Thy breast, how should they kindle of themselves,
Semanthe?

Sem. Ask how the flint can carry fire within!
'Tis the least miracle that love can do.

Iol. Thou art thyself the greatest miracle;30
For thou art fair to all perfection,
And yet dost want the greatest part of beauty—
Kindness. Thy cruelty (next to thyself)
Above all things on earth takes up my wonder.

Sem. Call not that cruelty, which is our fate.35
Believe me, Iolas, the honest swain,
That from the brow of some steep cliff far off
Beholds a ship labouring in vain against
The boisterous and unruly elements, ne'er had
Less power or more desire to help than I.40
At every sigh I die; and every look
Does move; and any passion you will have
But love, I have in store. I will be angry,
Quarrel with destiny and with myself,
That it is no better: be melancholy;45
And (though mine own disasters well might plead
To be in chief) yours only shall have place.
I'll pity, and (if that's too low) I'll grieve,
As for my sins, I cannot give you ease.
All this I do; and this I hope will prove,50
'Tis greater torment not to love than love.[Exit

Iol. So perishing sailors pray to storms, and so
They hear again. So men, with death about them,
Look on physicians, that have given them o'er;
And so they turn away. Two fixed stars,55
That keep a constant distance, and, by laws