{"1": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3528", "width": "2265", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.\\nChap..rw Copyright No.\\nSlielf..X6_,r/4 7\\nUNITED STATES OF AMERICA.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "ANTONY AND HERO\\nBY\\nlAiivriE.\\nF. Simon, Publisher.\\nNEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "-0^3531\\n.x.sM\\n49524\\nCopyright, 1899.\\nBy F. Simon.\\nAll Riqhts Reserved.\\nwo eoPiF-s RSCEiven.\\nSECOViO\\n^C-fN%^", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "POETICAL SELECTIONS.\\nHero s description of sunrise. Act Scene\\nWhy, I was awake, and\\nIn serious meditation, an hour before\\nO er eastern mountains in it s distant orb,\\nThe sun arose in fiery majesty.\\nAnd was admiring how the sparkling dew\\nDid grace the changing landscape hereabouts.\\nAs sol s slow creeping fire did burnish every drop.\\nAntony s praise of ambition. Act J, Scene. 1.\\nWell has he succeeded\\nIn his fight for fame, and I am proud of\\nHis acquaintance. Well do I remember,\\nHow in our youthful sports, he ever did\\nAffect commanding, a leadership\\nWas always his ambition, and on that\\nHe has built a monument of fame. I\\nWas ever known for and proud of my strength,\\nAnd age made that youthful pride a serious\\nAmbition till I became an athlete.\\nA man s life is modeled out in youth\\nBy an unseen power, and as he dies\\nSo wa^it destined.\\nAlice trying to encourage Leopole. Act 1, Scene S.\\nCome Leopole, be merry.\\nThis sullenness does not become you, and\\nYou have no cause for being so. One defeat\\nIs no disgrace, not when your victories\\nAre summed up. Twas an honor to be matched\\nTo Antony. Come let s be merry as usual.\\nAntony s praise of uniforms. Act 2, Scene 1.\\nOh such a specticle Look Look He was wise,\\nWho first suggested uniforms for soldiers,\\nFor while formidable to the enemy,\\nThey inspire a friend. Look See how more imposing\\nThan the citizens, and yet they are but people.\\nAnd this martial music,\\nMakes one almost wish for foes.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "Hero s defense of Antony. Act 2, Scene 1.\\nTis false^\\nI swear it I have been his inmost friend\\nFor many years, and have oft lieard him praise\\nYour qualities and ambition. He was\\nThe first to applaud your every promotion,\\nOf all your friends he was most eager to hear from you,.\\nAnd good news he would address as though\\nYour person with Brave Charles with but a few\\nMore strides we shall say Great Charles Twas he\\nSuggested, as my father knows, all these\\nNew entertainments for to-day, and he\\nWorked for their completion so inceasingly.\\nThere was no time for conspiring. And now\\nYou call him your enemy, and a traitor.\\nFor this small accident that only seemed to harm.\\nHero s love for Antony. Act Scene 3.\\nThink you I would encourage a man, who\\nDowned my Antony No If Antony dies,\\nWhy so do I to all the world.\\nI would live and die a dry old spinster\\nWith no occupation, but training flowers\\nFor his monument.\\nAntonys generosity and confidence in hin friends. Act 4, Scene 1.\\nNo, No. You live.\\nLive and be famous, live and be honored\\nAs an athlete, for the people must have one\\nFor their amusement and their idol, and\\nWho is there but you that is worthy, and\\nEntitled to their praise? And, Leopole,\\nAll the medals and trophys I have won,\\nI ve willed to you, they with my titles\\nWhen I am dead are yours, with my best wishes\\nThat you honor them, and there is no one\\nMore confident than I am that you will.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "-Antony, Champion Athlete,\\nCharles,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A Duke s Officer,\\nLeopole, Ex-Champioii Athlete,\\nAbraham,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Judge and Hero s Father,\\nWiggins,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Jailor,\\nSwipes, His Assistant,\\nTom Sawyer,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 i\\nTough Characters.\\nBill Judson,\\nJohnson, Prosecutor,\\nJones, Sheriff,\\nHero,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Antony s Love,\\nriargaret, Antony s Sister,\\nTheresa, Hero s Maid,\\nAlice, A Cortizan,\\nCitizens, Officers, Band, Soldiers.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "Act I. (Scene 1.) Abraham discovered.\\nAbraham. Now has father time began that day, which crowns-\\nMy liappiness, and brought sol s glowing light\\nO er eastern mountain tops to do his part.\\nOh happiness to think, my daughter weds\\nTo-day, and weds a man that s loved by men.\\nWhat luck of fortune what anything brings\\nMore Joy to a loving father, there s nothing.\\nIt has brought youth back to my mind, but not\\nMy bones, for if it had I ld dance and leap.\\nAnd somersault for Joy. But no, mine must\\nBe expressed with pleased appearances. She\\nWill wed Antony ere night, Antony\\nThe famous athlete,\\nHe who so lately conquered Leopole,\\nThe favorite of the duke his chum, called\\nHercules by all, and praised above him\\nAll for his qualities,\\nUntill Antony o erthrew him as though\\nHe had no opposition and many\\nClaim twas so for policy to lure some\\nSpicy wager on another trial.\\nNo, no\\nThat desperate aspect such tugging and\\nStraining that every muscle seemed to swell\\nAn inch, that red complexion as when\\nExertion crowds a man s blood against his\\nSkin and forces out large beads of sweat, such\\nHeaveing at the finish to catch his breath\\nAll prove that Leopole was not trifeling.\\nI ll not believe it. I have double cause\\nFor Joy, for to-day I will be relieved\\nOf my political cares for brave Charles,\\nA chum of Antony s as boys.\\nBut seperated these five years by their\\nProfessions to seek fame and fortune, and\\nWell they have succeeded, Antony the\\nMightj^ athlete and Charles the brave soldier.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0012.jp2"}, "13": {"fulltext": "T will be a sight to see those famous leaders\\nIn their callings meet, with their mutual love\\nSince childhood. Charles fame and qualities,\\nHave won for him succession to my office,\\nWhich he comes to-day to accept, and I\\nWill be relieved. But ho Come, come, be merry.\\n{Rings for and enter servant.)\\nWhere s Hero, not up yet Go make her stir.\\n(Exit servcmt.)\\nThe day s and hour gone. She must be\\nMuch contented to sleep so long this day.\\n(Enter Hero.)\\nHero. Good morning. Did you think me tardy?\\nAbr. You are not much interested in your\\nMarrying or you d been about ere this.\\nHero. Why. I was awake and in\\nSerious meditation, an hour before\\nO er eastern mountains in his distant orb\\nThe sun arose in fiery majesty.\\nAnd was admiring how the sparkling dew\\nDid grace the changing landscape hereabouts.\\nAs sol s slow creeping fire did burnish every drop.\\nAhr. You should be gay and happy, this is no time\\nFor seriousness\\nHero. But my future happiness\\nIs a serious question.\\nAbr. It was.\\nBut with such a husband as Antony\\nTo care for that you should be merry.\\nHero. It always was my nature to be serious\\nAnd I thank my maker for that fault. I\\nWould not for the world be giddy, for then\\nI ld not have Antony s love.\\nAbr.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 The happiness that comes from love lies not,\\nAs some claim, all in the procuring, there s\\nMore in the preserving. And if you would\\nKeep fresh your husbands love, take these receipts\\nFrom my experience.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0013.jp2"}, "14": {"fulltext": "First, do not be dominering, for heaven\\nDecreed that woman should not equal man.\\nThink more of comforting your husband, than\\nOf teaching him, and if in aught you think\\nHe s wrong and cannot change him with\\nA sort of suplicating modest waj\\nConvince yourself he s right. In cleanliness,\\nIn order, yea in everything be so precise\\nAs to consider all your imperfections.\\nAs transgressions. Tis the duty of\\nThe husband to furnish means of sustainance\\nFor his family. Tis the duty of\\nThe wife to use those means to best advantage.\\nFor both the happiness and comfort of\\nHer family. You are both worthj^ of each other\\nWhich is much towards making your love mutual.\\nHero. My father, glad I am to be advised\\nBy anyone with more experience,\\nAnd you can be content these maxims shall\\nFor reference ever be, deep graven in\\nMy memory. {Enter Leo.)\\nZ/eo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 -Good morrow both, and happy day.\\nHero. Good morrow, Leopole.\\nAhr. Good morrow^ to you, and your looks proclaim,\\nA wish of happiness unnecessary.\\nLeo. I have good cause for happiness for I\\nC!ome direct from your successor. The first\\nI saw of him in five long years.\\nAhr.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 How does\\nHe look and how behave himself amongst\\nHis honors? Glad to be back no doubt.\\nLeo. Tall and handsome but\\nA little stiff to me as though to say,\\nMy position sir, calls for respect.\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Tis\\nConeeitedness, tis natural to him,\\nHe was so as a boy.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0014.jp2"}, "15": {"fulltext": "9\\nLeo. Prepare\\nTo welcome him for he ll be here ere long\\nOn business. He wished me to remind you,\\nTo make all preparations for the parade.\\nAhr. Twas unnecessary. The paraders\\nWill be ready when we are. We shall march\\nAbout and arrive at the tribunal\\nSo as to install him at high noon when\\nMy term expires.\\nLeo. He is anxious to have\\nMuch celebration.\\nAhr. The preparations\\nAre the grandest I ve yet known. (E.ut Ahr. enter Theresa.)\\nTher. Oh Hero Antony is coming.\\nGood morrow Leopole.\\nLeo. Good morrow.\\nHero. He is coming for us, for there s a good view\\nFrom his porch of this parade to which we\\nAre invited. I ll go prepare myself\\nFor I promised to be waiting for him. {E.vU Hero.\\n27\u00c2\u00ab?r.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Happy are they for they ll be man and wife\\nEre night.\\nLeo. I envy Antony.\\nTher. All men do\\nThat know her. But here he comes and his sister to.\\n[Enter Ant, Marg.)\\nAnt. Good morrow.\\nLeo. Good morrow Antony.\\nTher. Good morrow Antony and Margaret.\\nMarg. Good morrow both.\\nAnt. Love must be contagious for\\nThese private interviews mean nothing else.\\nTher. \u00e2\u0080\u0094Oh I ve oft heard of two diseases\\nWhose symptoms were alike.\\n.Ant. Where s my partner\\nIn this sickness? We ll groan, and heave, and make\\nA hospital of this room.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0015.jp2"}, "16": {"fulltext": "10\\nMarg. And I ll be\\nAll your physicians.\\nAnt. No, no. The disease\\nIs very contagious, and your none\\nTo vigorous to catch it.\\nMarg.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Yes, I see\\nIt effects even those who are famous\\nFor their strength.\\nAnt. Well how goes it with LeopoleV\\nMarg. I see it effects even those, who are\\nFamous for their strength.\\nAnt\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I admit. But how is Leopole?\\nLeo. Oh fairly well. I ve just come from Charles.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094llo^\\\\ is he? He must have come this morning\\nFor I looked for him last night. But has he changed?\\nLeo. You ll see him soon yourself, for he ll be here\\nBefore the parade.\\nAnt. A live year s seperation of two such palls.\\nYou cannot imagine how this meeting s\\nLooked for. But how does he look, as large as I?\\nLeo. Tall and handsome with a military brace.\\nAnt. Well has he succeeded\\nIn his fight for fame, and I am proud of\\nHis acquaintance. Well I do remember,\\nHow in our youthful sports, he ever did\\nAffect commanding, a leadership\\nWas always his ambition. And on that\\nHe has built a monument of fame. I,\\nWas ever known for and proud of my strength.\\nAnd age made that youthful pride, a serious\\nAmbition till I became an athlete.\\nA man s life is modeled out in youth\\nBy an unseen power and as he dies,\\nSo was it destined. But no more lecturing (Enter Hero.)\\nFor here s a better subject. Good morrow,\\nif^ro.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Good morrow Antony. I see you re here.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0016.jp2"}, "17": {"fulltext": "11\\nA7it. I wish I had been these last few hours, I ld a\\nRid myself of them, for it tortured me\\nTo think that father time kept us apart.\\nMarg. I will leave, the disease is very catching,\\nAnd I must not expose myself being frail.\\nT/ier.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I ll go to. (Exit Marg., Ther.)\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I ll go have a consultation\\nWith your father. (Exit Leo.)\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What new styled bickering\\nIs this?\\nAnt. Theresa and Leopole were\\nAt some private conversation as we\\nEntered. I proclaimed it a sign of love.\\nThey turned the joke on me, and made love in me\\nA contagious disease. And love so would\\nI have it with you alone as my physician\\nx\\\\nd have you catch it.\\nHero. Why so it is Antony.\\nAnt. As we have our wishes we must be happy.\\n[He embraces her, she takes a tie from hi)h.)\\nHero. This will I keep.\\nAnt. I cannot be without it\\nFrom here to home.\\nHero. You must.\\nAnt. I ll not. [Goes to take it from her. Enter Leo.)\\nLeo. Hem, Hem.\\nLet the patient enter the consultation.\\nCome Anthony you are wanted.\\nAnt. Give me my tie.\\nHero. No, No. My father is waiting. (E.tit Ant. Leo.) Ill\\nNot give it to him. I ll hide it. But where\\nI ll make a garter of it and let him\\nTake it off to-night for then I ll be his wife\\nAnd t will please him. Oh Antony in my eyes\\nThou alone of all men art to be loved. {Ties ow the garter)\\nTis quite a novel way of pleasing him.\\nBut I guess he ll not think less of me for it. (Enter Char.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0017.jp2"}, "18": {"fulltext": "12\\nOh Charles, welcome. This is a gala clay,\\nFrom all quarters. Glad I am you have returned\\nChar. It does feel good to be amongst the old\\nFamiliar scenes and faces once again.\\nHero.) It seems more than an age since you left.\\nYou will remain amongst us now I hope.\\nChar. Yes I will remain among those I love.\\nHero. How was it abroad, did j^ou like it\\nChar. Anything that I could wish for was mine,\\nBut that is naught, wealth, station, fame or sport\\nAll are nothing without love, that I had\\nLeft behind.\\nHero. Were there no friends or ladies there\\nThat you admired\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 No, No. They say, man truly loves but once.\\nHero. And was your love here?\\nChar. Yes Hero.\\nHero. And why\\nDid you not send for her V\\nChar. Would she have come\\nHero. Why sure she would, if she loved you.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hero.\\nCan t you see, tis you I mean, tis you I love.\\nTis for you I ve pined these five long years.\\n{He embraces her. Marg. appear and exit.\\nHero. Then you must learn to forget me. I spoke\\nBut as a friend to you, not thinking you ld\\nTake this privelege. You know I never\\nLoved you even as a boy. Besides, I will\\nBe Anthony s bride ere night.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What! You ll marry\\nAntony, that drone, who dares no further\\nThan calling distance from his mother V\\nHero. \u00e2\u0080\u0094Save yourself and tell him so.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 No! I ll not\\nSpeak as much to him.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0018.jp2"}, "19": {"fulltext": "IS\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I thought so, but\\nYou would were he a woman, brave soldier.\\nChar. T was not in fear I spoke but in honor,\\nI am no more within his sphere.\\nNo, nor ever was. As a boy I used\\nHis company for pastime.\\nHero And he used you\\nAs a mop for pastime.\\nChar. With his strength h(? did,\\nBut of that the ignorant have the most.\\nAnd such he is, born to sleep and rot\\nIn his mother s lap, while I went about\\nThe world and fought through fire and smoke for fortune\\nAnd a name.\\nHero. In sham battles you might have,\\nFor you never were where courage alone\\nWould bring you. If I had Antony s name,\\nI would not trade for yours, besides, I d rather\\nHave him just plain body and soul, than you\\nWith all the polishings from titles\\nEver bestowed.\\nChar. My business now is with\\nYour father. Will you call him\\nHero. I believe,\\nHe is coming. (Enter Ant. Leo. Abr. following.)\\nAnt. If ever a man did die of ecstasy I will to-day.\\nWhy Charles, how are you? {Reaches out kis hand. Chas.\\ncoldly salute. i.)\\nChar, to Hero. I have business with\\nY our father.\\nHero. Antony, I\\nHave oft been told, that they who inherit\\nFame or fortune, use either like fools would\\nThrough ignorance of the way.\\nNow I believe it. (Char. Abr. Leo. converse.)\\nAnt. It cannot be he s grown so proud. No, Hero,\\nHe has been through much excitement the last", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0019.jp2"}, "20": {"fulltext": "14\\nFew days Avhich has quite umierved him, when that\\nIs settled he will regret this, and I ll\\nForgive him.\\nHero. Perhaps. But\\nYou should remember he was ever so.\\nAnt. Well, forget that now and give me my tie.\\nHero. No, I will not.\\nAnt. You must, I cannot venture\\nFrom here to home without it.\\nHero. You must, for I cannot give it to you now.\\nAnt. And why notV\\nHero. Never mind, I will get you\\nOne of my father s.\\nAnt. And why not my own\\nTell me.\\nHero. I ll not, another is as good.\\nAnt. I must know why not my own.\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Well, if you must know, it is my garter.\\nAnd let it be till you yourself this night\\nRemove it, for then we will be wedded.\\nAnt. A kiss and ifs a bargain. (They kiss.)\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 And\\nIf any man can show you it ere night,\\nI will not deny he has seduced me.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 And I will hold you to your word.\\nChar, aside.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I would give my office for that tie.\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Come\\nWe ll after Theresa and Margaret\\nAnd prepare us for the parade. {E.vit both.)\\nChar. Now all s\\nComplete for our exchanging offices\\nThis noon..\\nAhr. I have for weeks been getting ready,\\nWait, I will get the papers. (Exit Abr.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0020.jp2"}, "21": {"fulltext": "15\\nChar. Leopole,\\nYou are Jealous ol this Antony, who\\nConquered you by accident, and who now\\nWears your honors. He who is looked at\\nAs a hero, while you are passed by but\\nAsa common man. Say that you are.\\nLeo.~ Well,\\nNo doubt I d like the honors, but he earned th(Mn.\\nChar. But you can have them, and I will help you\\nGet them and pay you well for what you do\\nTowards getting them. I would rather see you\\nThan he looked up to.\\nLeo. I would have to conquer him ere they ed be minf\\nChar. I say no. Listen, you are a friend\\nOf Theresa, Hero s maid.\\nLeo. Yes.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Well,\\nHero wears a necktie as a garter.\\nGet that for me and I will make you rich,\\nAnd honored. With Theresa s help you can.\\nNo questions now, do as I bid and I ll\\nDo as I said, make you rich and honored.\\nLeo. I would do anything to be again\\nIn favor.\\nChar. They are in there, go do your best\\nTo get that tie, tis worth a fortune. (Enter Abr. Leo\\nstarts out.)\\nAbr. Here are the papers.\\n(Scene closes.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0021.jp2"}, "22": {"fulltext": "16\\n(Scene 2.) A Street.\\n(Enter jagged citizens from one side. Bill from the other.)\\n1st at. Hurra These sporting days don t come often. Come-\\nwe will have another drink.\\nBill. What eronicaled event has earned this holiday?\\n1st Cit. Well, if here ain t Bill and Jollying as usual. Come\\nmake up the party, we re in for a good time. Are you\\nwith us\\nBill. And Avhere are you making for\\n1st Cit. To the Cobweb first, then to see the parade. Are you\\nwith us\\nBill. Am I with you? Well I guess. But say, is Tom going\\nIst Cit. AVhy, sure Tom is with us.\\nBill. Then count me out, then count me out. I am above his\\ncompany.\\nTom. Now what is there about me causes this dislike\\nBill. Oh, that headlight, that boquet on your face.\\nTom. Why, I bought that myself, and all else that I wear.\\nBill You forgot, those clothes there re from my last donation\\nday. I will have to have another, you begin to look seedy.\\nNext Monday, Tom.\\nTom. You talk of donating. All you own that s not on your\\nback is securit}^ for your board.\\n1st Cit. No more boys, for here comes Charles, the newly\\nelected. (Enter Charles.)\\nBill, Tom, Oi^.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hurra for Charles.\\nChar, salutes. Tanks friends, come have a drink.\\nCit. Certainly.\\nBill. With pleasure.\\nTom. At your service.\\nBill.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Tlmt tickles us, ay Tom\\nTo7n. A good man for the office, the election should come\\noftener.\\nChar. Come everybody. (Exit Char.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0022.jp2"}, "23": {"fulltext": "17\\nTom. That s unnecessary coaxing. (Exit Tom, Bill.)\\nIst at A wise man is Cliarles, now we shall have good\\njudging.\\n2d Git. Wise he is, and we shall.\\nIst Cit. He looked wise.\\n2d Cit.\u00e2\u0080\u0094B.G did that.\\n1st Cit. Did you note how little he said, and how stern he\\nlooked, and how he did salute. That s wisdom, that s learn-\\ning. Now you have seen a great man.\\nM at. Ay.\\n1st at. But come, we ll be with them. {E.vit atizems.)\\n(Scene closes))\\n(Scene 3.) A Barroom.\\n(Leo. and Alice discovered.)\\nAlice. Come, Leopole be merry,\\nThis sullenness does not become you and\\nYou have no cause for being so. One defeat\\nIs no disgrace, not when your victories\\nAre summed up. Twas an honor to be matched\\nTo Antony. Come, let s be merry as usual.\\nLeo. Go way, you pratting fool. Twas such as you\\nCaused my defeat, you, who make the fortunate\\nYour victims, and prey on them so long\\nAs they have money, then cast them off for others.\\nGo way, I say. I cast you off\\nBefore I m so far gone that you ll cast me.\\nAlice. Oh I m not so sorry as you thought I ld be.\\nBut I ll get even with you for this.\\n(Enter Char., Bill, Tom., Cit., they go to the bar.)\\nAll. Hurrah for Charles.\\nChar. Come what will it be? (TJiey drink.)\\nLeo. Such is fortune s greeting no man gets it.\\nMy fortune got it once but\\nBoth have left me. Why are there two such words\\nAs fortune and favour?", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0023.jp2"}, "24": {"fulltext": "18\\nOne is. superfluous, they mean the same,\\nThey are inseperable, no man has\\nEither, they come and go together as\\nNatural, as lieat and cold to summer\\nAnd winter. They are what all are after\\nBut few get, and no man seeks them singly.\\nTis misery to want them, tis misery\\nTo have them, and yet they re wanted. They were\\nMine once but thej^ escaped me, and now I\\nSeek aga in. Charles will aid me if I will\\nBe false to Antony who has so much\\nBefriended me. Who would not if they could\\nBy crooked by-ways come to fortune, if\\nNaught but poeple s opinion Avere the punishment\\nNone but the simple.\\nAnd they alone for want of reason, would doubt\\nThe outcome of a chance. I ll not be such.\\nI will do anything to be again\\nWith fortune and with favour. Who is there\\nThat has had a leadership o er his companions.\\nAn assendancy o er all, could endure\\nBeing common and with my chance Oh fame,\\nWhy is thy charm so strong? Why is th}^ yield\\nSo great? Why is the entrance to your domain\\nSo complicated, and yet to seem so simple\\nArt thou the curse from heaven to Adam\\nBill. Hurra He has our voices. None before\\nHim was as good, ay Tom\\nTom. Hurra He s in my favour.\\nOWs. Hurra {Char, comes to Leo.)\\nChar. Well Leopole, why so gloomy? Come have one.\\nLeo. I m gloomy for your good\\nAnd mine. Tis brooding harm to Antony\\nMakes me so.\\nChar. Yes, we must down him, and that\\nTo-day. No doubt he ll be a spectator\\nTo the parade from his house. If some accident\\nShould happen there, and blame him for it", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0024.jp2"}, "25": {"fulltext": "19\\nLeo. He ll view it from his porch and that is lined\\nWith cobbles. If one of them could be pushed oft\\nWhile he is there {Alice listening.)\\nChar. And as I pass. Do that\\nAnd your fortune will return. {They whmper.) {Bill,\\nTom, Citizens shaking dice.)\\nBill. Twas a duce.\\nTom. Twas a six.\\nBill. Twas a duce.\\nTom. Twas a six I say. Afraid you ll get stuck\\nBill. No, you loggerheaded fool, but I ll not get cheated.\\nTom. Who s a loggerheaded fool\\nBill. You {They fight, Citizens fry to stop them.)\\nCit. Come, stop, be friends. Bill, Tom, stop\\nProprietor. Go outside for such business. I ll have no dis-\\nturbance in my place. {Rushes them out.)\\nLeo. And what is your motive\\nIn downing Antony\\nChar. You know Hero,\\nWhom he is to wed to-day I wished her\\nFor myself, but she this morning snubbed me\\nAnd went to praising Antony so\\nShe must have broken my gall, and I ll never\\nRest easy if they are happy.\\nLeo. What does the tie in this\\nChar. Did you get it\\nLeo. No, but I will, for I have bargained with Theresa\\nTo procure it, and what I wish she ll do.\\nChar. Then get it\\nWithout fail, for with that I ll torture him\\nIf nothing more. Well, I must away. Don t fail\\nBut have an accident before his house.\\nLeo. I will try all possible means to.\\nAlice. And I\\nWill try all possible means to stop you.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Who is this thing", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0025.jp2"}, "26": {"fulltext": "20\\nAlice. This thing is what linows all your plans.\\nChar. What, spying on us\\nAlice. No, aeeidently overheard.\\nChar. You lie. You have been spying.\\nAlice. And if I have, what of it\\nChar. Yes, what of it, even if you did hear all we said\\nAlice. Oh, I might bather you a bit, if I\\nSee Antony first.\\nChnr. You bother us, you fallen witch,\\nOne word from me would lock you up for months.\\nAlice. Then say the word and lock me up, if you can,\\nBut I ll do some mischief first, and you can blame\\nHim for it. I have befriended him\\nIn all I could for more than a year, and\\nNow he turns me off as trash and blames me\\nFor his misfortune. Leopole, that was\\nA dose of poison to me, rank poison.\\nAnd it will take something rank to drive it out.\\nI will bring your plans to Antony, that\\nMay relieve me some. So Good-Bye. I ll see\\nWhether you ll wear his honors or not. {Starts to go.)\\nChar. Stop her. (Leo stojjs her.)\\nWe ll keep you from harm until you are harmless. {To\\nproprietor.) Have you a room we can lock her in for a few\\nhours\\nProp. Eight here. Bring her in.\\nChar. I ve never been fooled by man, so I ll not let woman start\\nit. Put her in there {Alice fights and screams.) {To\\nirrop.) Let her out in a couple of hours.\\nNow, Leopole,\\nI will go meet the procession. You go\\nTo Antony s, and don t fail or weaken\\nIn our plans, for there s much for you to gain,\\nAnd my revenge.\\n{Scene closes.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0026.jp2"}, "27": {"fulltext": "21\\nAct II. Before Antonys Home.\\n(CUizeois discovered lined up like viewing a parade.)\\n{Enter Tom, Bill and Citizens.)\\nBill. We ll find no better place, lefs wait here until they have\\npassed.\\nTom. Twill be a long wait without a drink. Keep moving,\\nwe ll meet some place to stop in. It s better than standing\\nhere.\\nBill. You ve got a good load aboard now, let that settle, then\\nyou ll have time and room for another.\\nTom. Your load must bother you that you refuse.\\nBill. I have a little sense.\\nTom. I never saw you pass a barroom when you had cents\\nenough to buy a drink.\\nBill. You never got that blossom from fresh air. {Enter Ant.y\\nHero, Marg., Ther.) Look, there s Antony. Hurra, for\\nAntony\\nHurra\\nAnt. Thanks friends,\\nFor such you must be to give this greeting\\nTo one who has not earned it. You better\\nSave your lungs, for there are some coming soon\\nWho deserve your applause.\\nTom. If I had done what you have, I would knock him down,\\nwho would not greet me well.\\nAnt. Here is the porch all fitted for our comfort.\\nHero. And a lovely view for quite a distance\\nUp and down.\\nMarg. That s why we gave\\nThe invitation. Twer hardly worth one\\nFrom a lesser view.\\nA7it. We have not long to place ourselves, so we\\nMay as well use all the time. But where is\\nLeopole", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0027.jp2"}, "28": {"fulltext": "22\\nTiter.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 He had an errand to fulfil\\nBut promised to be here ere now. Here he comes.\\nYou go in the while, I ll wait for him.\\nAnt. Another private interview, still you ll\\nDeny your sick.\\nTher.\u00e2\u0080\u0094SNaW I ll not have your physician\\nFor you grow worse.\\n-Margf.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What you say Antony, seems but to feed her wit.\\n{Exit Ant, Hero, Marg. Enter Leo. Ther. helps them in.}\\nLeo. (asMe)\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .Now to my fiendish work, for such it is,\\nTo mention friendly things to Antony\\nWhile I think but of harming him, the which\\nI am sorry is necessary to\\nMy ambitious desires. Why was I\\nEver famous That now I must so envy\\nAntony to sustain myself and\\nIn the guise of friendship play the villian.\\nOh, dam this weakening. I ll not endure\\nBeing common. {Ther. comes to Leo.)\\nTher. You are very punctual.\\nLeo. There is a clock in every lover s mind,\\nThat is regular through love, and he who\\nIs tardy in his love meetings, loves not.\\nTher. You talk of love to me I doubt 3 ou,\\nYou know so many others.\\nLeo. Were we not\\nSo conspicuous here, I would prove my love.\\nIf humbling myself to you would do it.\\nTher. You seem to cold and wise for a lover.\\nLeo. These citizens, these slaves\\nOf love and passion, would mock at true love\\nWere they to see it. But tell me, have you\\nThe tie you promised to procure\\nTher. Yes, here it is,.\\nBut I would like to know what value it has\\nTo you.\\nLeo. T was Antonys, he wore it as", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0028.jp2"}, "29": {"fulltext": "23\\nA mascot, he claimed it had a charm, and\\nAs I am supersticious, I value it.\\nTher. They must not know how you came by it.\\nLeo. They never shall. (Antony appears on porch.)\\nAnt. I know a stanza\\nThat each of you could sing to the other\\nAnd save your wit, for tis just what you wish\\nTo say I love my love in the morning, I love,\\n(Hero, Marg. come on the porch.)\\nBut come up they are approaching. {Ex/it Leo, Theo.)\\nBUI. He is wide in the shoulders.\\nTom. Less than Antony and smaller legged.\\nBill. Use your eyes, use your eyes man, and see\\nThat Leopole is larger every way\\nAnd better proportioned.\\nTom. Man you talk through drink,\\nTis plain to common sense, that Antony\\nIs best man, he conquered Leopole.\\nCould he if he were worse\\n{Officer passes and places them in line.)\\nBill. Yes when Leopold let him. There was naught\\nAt stake. Leopole would wager\\nA dozen fortunes on another trial,\\nBut Antony refuses for fear.\\nTom.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 He lost\\nhis reputation that was worth a fortune.\\nBill. What is reputation V wind, nothing else.\\nTom. Tis on reputation most money s made.\\nBill. Have your way to stop your crying.\\nTom. I m not\\ncrying and I wont be. But you know I m right.\\nBill. Go sleep it off, your brain is muddy.\\nTom. No, my brain is not muddy.\\nBill. Go away. (Pushes him.)\\nTom. No, I ll not go.\\nBill. Go away I say, I m through with you. (Piuihes him again.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0029.jp2"}, "30": {"fulltext": "24\\nTom. No, you can t push me. {They fight, officer arrests them.)\\nBill. T was his fault.\\nTom.^No, he began it by insulting me.\\n(Exit officer, Bill, Tom prisoners.)\\nHero. How brutal were\\nThose men, I should think, their bones are broken.\\nAnt. They are intoxicated and cannot\\nHurt each other. They will forget this, and\\nBe friends when they are sober.\\nHero. You seem well schooled as to the effect of drink.\\nAnt. Oh well, a man needs not be a debauch\\nTo know the effects of liquor, a few\\nGood sprees will teach him.\\nHero. I thought my Antony was temperate.\\nAnt. I have been since I told you so, but I\\nHad sprees before then. (Enter the porch Leo, Ther.)\\nLeo. (aside.) This cobble must I push off\\nWhile Charles is passing as though Antony\\nMaliciously had hurled it at him. I am\\nNot myself. I would do what ere is prompted.\\nAnt,\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Oh, such a spectacle. Look Look He was wise\\nWho first suggested uniforms for soldiers,\\nFor while formidable to the enemy\\nThey inspire a friend. See how more imposing\\nThan the. citizens, and yet they are but people.\\nMarg. I think Antony chose wrong to become\\nAn athlete.\\nHero. A soldier is so much abroad. (Band passes.)\\nAnt. And this martial music.\\nMakes one almost wish for foes.\\nLeo. aside. You need not wish for them,\\nKeep interested so twill make my task\\nMore easy. (A company passes.)\\nAwt\u00e2\u0080\u0094 This is a brave company. Captain Beache s,\\nLook, that s he with the medals. They re for\\nHis bravery, they rhyme to his courage.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0030.jp2"}, "31": {"fulltext": "26\\nThe hottest fight is his delight.\\nHis comrades seem to know naught but stories\\nPraising him.\\nBut see, here comes Charles, how imposing grand.\\nLeo. aside. My cue to be prepared.\\nAnt. There is a charm\\nIn fame makes all curious to see him\\nThey would pass a thousand times unnoticed\\nWere he unknown. {Appear Char., Abr. on horseback.)\\nLeo. aside. Be steady my hand\\nFor if by accident I should down Charles,\\nI down myself. (Ant. leans far over.)\\nAnt. Hurra for Charles. {Leo. pushes cobble.)\\nChar. Treachery, traitors, a conspiracy, (he unhorses himself).\\nSoldiers seize him, surround the house, cut off\\nHis escape. Twas Antony hurled this cobble\\nTowards our person seize him he is a traitor.\\nSearch the house for more, he shall be rewarded,\\nWho ere takes him or his accomplices.\\nFor no doubt he is not alone in this.\\nHow can we govern safely with enemies\\nSo near in friendship to our person?\\nAnt. What madcap spouting do you here to call me\\nTraitor, and offer honors to my captors? {jumps doum.)\\nHere, win them yourself, for I did ever\\nWish to help you to them. {Exit above, Hero. Ther., Marg.)\\nChar. Seize him, he is\\nDangerous who so publicly olTers harm.\\nAbr. There must be some mistake, an accident.\\nChar. An accident, to come so near my life?\\nNo, tis a studied plot, I saw him hurl it.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 You lie\\nAnd know you do, but you re so used to that\\nYou have them studied and they come easy.\\nBut this is serious, I ll not deny\\nI caused that cobble to fall, but twas an accident.\\nChar. You lie I saw you hurl it", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0031.jp2"}, "32": {"fulltext": "26\\nAnt. I ll crowd\\nThat lie back in spite of your position. (Ant. downs /lim.)\\nChar. Seize him men. (Soldiers hold Ant.)\\n(Enter Hero, Marg., Ther., Leo.\\nHero. My Antony, was it\\nYour accident caused this transformation\\nFrom blissful liberty to stern captivity?\\nAnt. That s his excuse,\\nBut I swear he has some deeper motive\\nThat prompts him to it.\\nHero to Char. And do j^ou for this wish him prisoner V\\nChar. What more terrible crime could he commit.\\nThan attempt the lives of the duke s officers?\\nHero. Tis false,\\nI swear it I have been his inmost friend\\nFor many years and I know his mind,\\nAnd have oft heard him praise\\nYour qualities and ambition. He was\\nThe first to applaud your every promotion,\\nOf all your friends he was most eager to hear from you,\\nAnd good news he would address as though\\nYour person with Brave, Charles, with but a few\\nMore strides we shall say Great Charles. Twas he\\nSuggested as my father knows, all these\\nNew entertainments for to-day, and he\\nWorked for their completion so inceasingly.\\nThere was no time for conspiring. And now\\nYou call him your enemy and a traitor\\nFor this small accident that only seemed to harm.\\nChar. This is no woman s affair.\\nHero. I did not\\nWish to settle it, but I told what I know.\\nChar. It matters not what you do know, friendship\\nMust be forgot in dealing with traitors.\\n{To Cap.) Captain, deal with him quickly and severely.\\nWe ll rid ourselves of traitors. You have my orders.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0032.jp2"}, "33": {"fulltext": "27\\nAbr.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Stop, you have not mine,\\nAnd I am master yet. From noon my office\\nWill be yours, but till then I shall command.\\nChar. There s no commanding in this case, there is\\nA special decree to hang all traitors.\\nAbr. Yes, when it s proven they re traitors.\\nChar. And is he not who came so near my life\\nAbr. It is not proven.\\nChar. ^He shall be arrested and tried\\nAbr.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 That he shall.\\nChar. Captain,\\nTake him to prison and have him doubly\\nBound and guarded.\\nAbr. Citizens,\\nAs the gods with their disposing power,\\nHave thought best to place in Antony s lot\\nThis accident by which his enemies\\nDo draw suspicion on him, he shall\\nFor their satisfaction be tried just like\\nA criminal. So we must\\nPostpone our celebration, and once more\\nDo our office duties which we thought were through.\\nChar. Away with him to prison.\\n(Exit Char., Leo. one side, the rest the other.)\\n(Scene- closes.)\\n(Scene 2.) A Street.\\n[Enter Citizens Meeting.)\\n1st at. Hallo Jack Where away so fast?\\nJack. I m going to dress up and go to the trial.\\n1st Cit. What trial is to you so interesting\\nJack. You ask what trial Why, where have you been man,\\ndrunk or fishing\\n1st Cit. Neither, but what makes you so excited", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0033.jp2"}, "34": {"fulltext": "28\\nJack. And have you not heard that Bill and Tom are arrested,\\nand Antony, the athlete, too\\nCit. Bill and Tom and Antony. What s Antony done\\nJack.- Attempt on the life of Charles. While he was passing\\nAntony s house, Antony from a porch hurled a cobble at\\nhim and most killed him. Th.Qj think it is some conspiracy\\nand more are in it whom they must catch, but they will try\\nAntony right off.\\nCit. Is Charles hurt much\\nJack. Just scraped his leg, he was on horseback.\\nCit- Could nt Antony escape\\nJack. He did nt try. He was on the porch and Charles was\\noffering rewards to who would capture him, and he Jumped\\ndown and says Take me yourself.\\nCit. The fool. Got scared after he d done it, no doubt.\\nJack. No, no, he claimed twas an accident he could not help.\\nCit. The law won t excuse him from that. Accidents don t\\ncount in law. When I fell through Jerry s window twas an\\naccident, but I had to pay.\\n2d Cit. He s gone for if he monkeys with the law.\\nJack. Well, he s arrested, and I am going to see what they ll\\ndo with him. Charles wanted the soldiers to take and hang\\nhim from where they were, but old Abe would nt have it.\\nHe said he had to be tried first.\\n1st Cit. Oh, he ll go free, I bet. He goes with Abe s daughter,\\nhe s in the clique. If it were any one of us, they d a shot\\nus on the spot.\\nJack. I don t think Antony s a traitor. I think twas an\\naccident.\\n2d Cit. So do I, I don t think he s that kind.\\n1st Cit. Why should he turn traitor Sure not for gain, and\\nI d rather have his honors than Charles.\\n2d Cit. And I. But why are Bill and Tom in again Fighting\\nI suppose.\\nJack. They were arguing and neither would give the other the\\npoint and be laughed at, so they fought it out.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0034.jp2"}, "35": {"fulltext": "29\\nIst Git. Who whipped V\\nJack. Twas close, they re both game.\\nl8t at. Both brave men with lots of sand. You must knock\\nout either to make him give in.\\n,M Cit. I ve seen botli take hard trashings and not squeal.\\nJack. Twas a pretty fight as far as it went, and if it had not\\nbeen stopped, it ld a been well worth seeing through. Tom\\ngave Bill a nice uppercut,\\n2d CiY.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Who stopped them\\nJack.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Oh, thick Dugan, and if I ld a been either, I ld a given\\nhim one would a done him good.\\n2d Cit. One is allhe ld stand, he s a very coward, no more sand\\nthan a rabbit. He got a good punishment from me once\\nbefore he was officer. He s no good.\\nJack. Well, I m off, I want to see this trial. Coming\\nAZit.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Shure.\\n{Scene closes.)\\n(Scene 3.) Charles, Oncers in Courthouse.\\n(Enter Char., Leo and guards.)\\nChar. Go, guards.\\nTry and find accomplices in this plot.\\nLeave us, for I think Ave re safe within\\nThese walls. (E.vit guards.)\\nDam your clumsiness that almost\\nMade me cripple.\\nLeo. Twas not intended I\\nAssure 3 ou. But then tis well, twill make our plot\\nMore like a treacherous conspiracy\\nAgainst your person.\\nChar. What To cripple me\\nFor evidence against my enemies\\nHold you my word so light No, no, my word s\\nEnough. I, as their future judge must have\\nSome power, and I say He is a traitor.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0035.jp2"}, "36": {"fulltext": "30\\nLeo. Yes, but Abraham, the present Judge\\nWill not believe it. He has some power.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 He must believe it\\nI ll not let that gray bearded fool best me.\\nBesides he can reckon the lasting of\\nHis power in minutes, it is so short.\\nThen I will have full sway, and woe to him\\nWho interferes with or proposes aught\\nAgainst my wishes.\\nLeo. Yes, but Abe is still\\nIn power and will be through this trial.\\nChar. How can we prevent it?\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Why, I will be\\nA doubtful witness, as though I knew not\\nHow to think, neither favouring nor opposing\\nAntony. One that has seen much and yet\\nKnows little, and I ll be as though unwilling\\nTo disclose that little. And then you make\\nThe questioning of me very minute.\\nThat way this trial will easily outlast\\nThe remainder of his term.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Good point,\\nYou should have studied law.\\nLeo. But I see they re coming, twer best we were\\nNot seen together in private. I ll be\\nAway and you can learn their plans.\\nChar. Be where\\nI can fmd yon. (E.vit Leo.) Now to convince old Abe\\nThere was a plot against me. {rubs his leg.)\\nI ld much rather\\nThis had not happened. {Enter Abr. and others.)\\nAbr. Go find the officers\\nOf this court and summon them for speedy\\nBusiness. (E.vit Officers.) {To Char.) A sad task you ve\\nMade for me by accusing Antony of treason.\\nChar. Sad indeed, sad to you and sad to me,\\nFor who would have ever thought that treason", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0036.jp2"}, "37": {"fulltext": "31\\nLurked, wher I looked tor my warmest friendship,\\nTlmt makes me sad.\\nAbr. You lie, you cur, Antony s no traitor.\\nNor he never bore a treacherous thought\\nAgainst you, nor he ld never hear one spoke\\nWithout through loyalty, he would proclaim\\nIt s author. No, no, tis that empty hotbed\\nOf lies you call your brain, lied to your mind\\nThat there was cause for Jealousy, for there\\nIs nothing else to prompt this\\nTerrible accusation. But it is\\nWell you may be Jealous of one you are.\\nSo much inferior to. But until\\nYou are king of all the earth, until your\\nWord alone is law, you ll not harm Antony\\nUnjustly.\\nChar. When one has so plain to all beholders,\\nCome so near my life, is it then unjust\\nTo accuse that one of treason I think\\nIt is a loyal sacrifice when that one\\nIs so dear a friend.\\nAbr. You sacrifice\\nYour friendship, it must be very fickle,\\nI pity him whose livelihood depended\\nOn it.\\nChar. I want no more scolding. He s to\\nBe tried, then let him prove he s innocent. {Exit Char.)\\nAbr. There s no treacherj^ on record that has\\nA more contemptable object than your own,\\nThat Antony is innocent, I would\\nStake my life, my honor and my fortune\\nOn it. I am so confident that had\\nHe fled, I M stand his trial, if God above\\nWho knows his conscience, were to be Judge.\\n{Enter Officers of Court.\\nFellow officers of this court, though we\\nHave named this day a holiday and set\\nIt apart for celebration, we find", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0037.jp2"}, "38": {"fulltext": "32\\nIt necessary through an unforseen\\nHappening to retract our edict and\\nMake this one of our busiest days, for\\nGreat Antony, whom you all know, is accused\\nOf treason gainst Charles, whom we were to\\nInstall in our stead. So you all prepare\\nYourselves with your utmost speed. (Exit Officers.)\\nOh God in heaven, look down upon thy\\nNoble Antony and aid him in thy\\nMysterious way, for well thou knowest\\nHe is an innocent victim of proud\\nCharles spite. {Exit Abr., enter Char:, Leo.)\\nLeo. A well laid plot, your quite an architect.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 And if, like a builder, you follow my\\nPlans, you ll build the evidence that will crush\\nAntony, and you ll build yourself once more\\nTo fame and fortune.\\nLeo. I am to far gone\\nIn this to flinch at anything. But that tie.\\nYou have no use for it now. {Shows the tie.)\\nChar. Shure I have {takes the tie)\\nI thought at first that this should bring me my\\nRevenge, but for that we ve other means, so\\nAVith this I ll worry him and feed my spite.\\nGo you to him, wear this, wear it where he ll\\nSee it, as though by accident, wear it\\nLoosely as though it had no value, and.\\nShould he question you, why invent some lie.\\nAs, some friend of yours took it from his mistresses\\nLeg. Mention a struggle for it and how\\nSome oath went with her wearing it. Why I\\nCould coin lies forever with this start, and\\nEach would be as a knife to him. {Exit Leo.)\\nAll goes well.\\nAll seem to be in sympathy with me\\nAnd aiding me to my revenge. I never\\nMent to be so hard on Antony, but\\nThis chance offered to me when I was hot", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0038.jp2"}, "39": {"fulltext": "33\\nWith rage at Hero s refusal, seemed like\\nThe only means to sooth me, and I have\\nVentured till there is so retiring. {Enter Hero.)\\nAh Hero, you are indeed a welcome\\nSight to me in my misfortune.\\nHero. I am not here\\nTo please you, l)ut to sue to you, my lord.\\nJhar. I am not your lord. Be more intimate Hero.\\nHero. You hold Antony s liberty in your\\nPower, so you are his lord, and his lord\\nIs mine. You can proclaim him innocent\\nAnd set him free, tis for that I came to sue.\\n\u00e2\u0082\u00acluir. Hero, believe me, Antony s transgression\\nWounds me as much as you, but we must be\\nSevere with traitors to discourage them.\\nHero. Antony s no traitor as you know well.\\nYou dare speak of him l3ut not to him as sitcli.\\nChar. Why bother ourselves of him, you know a\\nTraitors doom is death. He was much to you\\nBut soon shall be no more, then may I sue\\nIn your affections to take his place\\nHero. Think you I would encourage a man who\\nDowned my Antony No If Antony\\nDies; why so do I to all the world. I\\nWould live and die a dry old spinster with\\nNo occupation but training flowers\\nFor his monument. But Charles, I came to\\nBeg of you to retract your charge and set\\nMy Antony- free.\\nChar. There s but one way to\\nSet him free, and that s at your disposal.\\nHero. And how is that\\nChar. Give your consent to be\\nMy wife and Antony shall live.\\nHero. If I wished to become your wife I would\\nNot sue for Antony s freedom, for I\\nDid not think my chance with you was doulttful.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0039.jp2"}, "40": {"fulltext": "3tt\\nChar. For your consent to marry me, and for\\nNothing else will I aid this traitor to\\nHis liberty.\\nHero. Then give me time to bring this proposition\\nTo him. If he consents, why so do I.\\nI will sacrifice myself for him. {E-vit Hero.)\\nChar. I never thought I would have her so soon\\nIn supplication fwards me, nor did she,\\nWhen she this morning so proudly spurned me.\\nBut nor his consent nor your consent\\nCan make me aid to save him now, for then\\nI ld be suspected. {Enter Alice.)\\nAlice. I like the way you kept me prisoner.\\nC/i\u00c2\u00ab -Well, no doubt it tamed you.\\nAlice. Oh no, it has made me wild and I ve heard\\nWhat you have done and what else you intend.\\nBut I will stop 3^ou by telling what I\\nOverheard this morning. That will be my\\nRevenge, and perhaps it will tame you. I\\nThought to find a lady here and tell her\\nWhat I heard but now that she is gone I ll\\nGo tell Antony, it might be useful\\nTo him.\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 No, no. Don t go to him\\nAlice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Oh, but\\nI will, for what I know is a burden\\nOn my mind, and I wish to be relieved. {Approach Abr.}\\nChar. You shall not go.\\nAlice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 ^\\\\\\\\t I m going. {Starts out.)\\nChar. I say you wont go, and you won t. {Sto2)S her.)\\nAlice. Let me go. Help {Ahr. seperaies them.)\\nAhr.\u00e2\u0080\u0094ThQ lady wishes to go. (to Alice) Go\\n{E.vit Alice.)\\n[Scene closes.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0040.jp2"}, "41": {"fulltext": "35\\nAct. III. A Prison Cell and Courtyard.\\n{Antony discovered bound.)\\nAnt. Heaven grant me depth of reason to clear\\nThe mystery which surrounds my being here,\\nThere never happened, that I remember\\nT wix Charles and I, aught that could gall him thus\\nTo disgrace me for revenge. Could my fame\\nHave made him wish to crush me, and could that\\nStar which rules my destiny, have caused that\\nCobble to fall for his opportunity\\nNo, our professions are so different.\\nThey never could cause jealousy. Can it\\nBe writ in my destiny, that this accident\\nShould seem like treachery to Charles No, no.\\nThere s something gall s him, that he gave so cold\\nA greeting for a so long seperated\\nFriend. I hope my being Hero s choice is\\nNo motive for his hateing me, but\\nWho knows Kejected lovers have become\\nSo desperate, no punishment had terrors\\nFor them. If I thought she favored him, but\\nClung to me for her promises sake I\\nWillingly would forget her for him, but\\nIf by cheat he tried to part us he would\\nHave to tear me from her each Joint singly.\\n{Enter the yard Wiggins and Assistant i.)\\nWig. Come, Swipes, there s not much time. We may use this\\ngrave to-day. You dig here.\\nSwi. Now why should I dig They won t bury him in the\\ncourt yard. Twill be unnecessary work on me and I think\\nI do enough for my pay.\\nWig.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 You ve done nothing but run for grog to-day.\\nSwi. There was nothing else to do, and there is no need of\\nlooking for unnecessarj^ work.\\nWig. If he is to be shot we ll bury him here. So you dig a\\ngrave.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0041.jp2"}, "42": {"fulltext": "36\\nSivi. I|know it Avill be unnecessary work on me and then filling\\nit up again, more unnecessary work.\\nWig. It must be done, so dig away.\\n.Swi. This way or that\\nWig. Length ways of* course.\\nSwi. How long\\nWig. Well, he s tall, make it twice your shovel.\\nAnd you joiners, here s your timbers, build a gallows.\\n{they go to ivork.) Now I ve\\nKnown Antony from boyhood until now,\\nAnd a wilder boy there never was.\\nWell liked and honest outside of what boy s\\nMotto teaches that, stolen fruit is sweetest\\nHe was the last man I thought to have as\\nPrisioner. {Joiners hanuner, Antony starts.)\\nj^ni, What fickle fear this forced confinement gives.\\nI start like one with a guilty conscience.\\n{Wig. knocking) Hallo Antony.\\nAwf.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hallo you.\\nWig. May I come in V\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 It I could let you in I ld not be here myself.\\n(Enter Wig., Joiners hammer.)\\n^^^^._What hammering is that, it quite unnerves me,\\nBut I know not why.\\nWig.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 T}S a gallows they are building.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 For who\\nW^:gf.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Perhaps for you.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094^o serious. No, no. He may take\\nMy honor but he cannot wish my life.\\nWig. I have often wished to wring your neck\\nWhen you were at my apples, but I never thought\\nI ld have to do it.\\nj^nt. You never shall,\\nNot for my crimes, for were they all summed up,\\nThere would be but a father s whipping due.\\nTis not for being a criminal that I", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0042.jp2"}, "43": {"fulltext": "37\\nAm here, but for being an impediment\\nSomehow to the desires of Charles, luit I\\nKnow not whether it be in honor or\\nIn love.\\nWig. Antony,\\nYou ve oft made me so desperate mad, I ve\\nAlmost broke my teeth in grinding them and\\nCursing you in anger. Yet I believe\\nYou innocent in this. I believe you ld\\nTake a farm for deviltry, but would not\\nSteal an apple for it s value. {Hero, Marg. enter gard.)\\nMarg. Charles made this proposition V\\nHero. Yes.\\nMarg. What will you do\\nHero. Just what my Antony\\nBids me do. If he will have his freedom,\\nI ll be the ransom, if not I ll die\\nWith him, I ll not have Antony either\\nWay, so there s no choice but death, for to\\nLive without him I will not. What s this, a\\nGallows and a grave They must lie for\\nAntony.\\nMarg. I ll ask him. {to Swipes.)\\nMay I ask you what you are doing V\\nSwi. Certainly.\\nMarg. AVell, what are you doing V\\nSwi. Unnecessary work.\\nJ/f/rry.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What is it to be\\nSwi. A grave.\\nMarg. For whom\\nSwi. For Wiggins, the jailor.\\nMarg. Is he dead\\nSwi. No.\\nMarg. Then why are you digging a grave lor him", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0043.jp2"}, "44": {"fulltext": "38\\nSwi. Tis for him, but tis not his. He has a prisioner they\\nwill either hang or shoot. If they shoot him he gets buried\\nhere, so I must dig the prisioners grave for Wiggins. He s\\nthe jailor.\\nMarg. Whose grave is it to be\\nSivL\u00e2\u0080\u0094A genuine Aillian s, I assure you. One who has often\\nplagued me most to death. I would be glad they sentenced\\nhim onl} it makes for me unnecessary work.\\nMarg.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Who is the villain\\nSicL One Antony, and I have oft wished him harm,\\nI m happy if they shoot him.\\nHero. He is not sentenced yet so don t you be\\nElated fool. And Margaret, until\\nHe is we will not mourn but try to aid him.\\nWig. I will believe you innocent no matter what the sentence\\nl3ut I cannot aid j ou for I am but hired. Good by.\\nWig. comes out of cell.\\nAwi.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Grood by Wiggins, and forget my misdemeanor.\\nHero. This must be the Jailor. I ll ask him.\\n{to Wig.) Are you the jailor, sir\\nWig. Yes, Miss.\\nHero. Have you the care of Antony V\\nWig. Yes, Miss.\\nHero. May we see him\\nWig. If he will have it certainly. He is in there.\\nMarg. I am his sister.\\nWig. Then I guess he won t refuse to see you.\\nThis way, but I must lock you in with him.\\nHero. Possession is nine points of the law. Then\\nCharles with this much start could easily find\\nMeans to hold us there, but as long as he\\nHolds Antony I wish to be held to. (they enter.)\\nAnt. You are two more that I ll swear believe me\\nInnocent.\\nHero. Oh Antony, what hellish fate is this\\nComes so abrupt into our happiness", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0044.jp2"}, "45": {"fulltext": "39\\nAnt. I know not Hero, unless it is our fate.\\nI can tiiink of nothing that could be his\\nMotive for wishing me removed, and I ll\\nSwear he knows as well as God above that\\nI m no traitor, or ever saught his life.\\nBut how goes the cry among the citizens\\nAnd my friends Do they believe me guilty V\\n3Iarg. All that I have heard do sympathize\\nWith you, not that they think you guilty, Vnit\\nFor being unjustly charged with treason.\\nAnt. What s being done towards my case V\\nMarg. They are making all preparations for a\\nSpeedy trial ere Charles term begins.\\nHero. I ve been to Charles to know his mind.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094Whsit said he\\nHero. He would have me think that your transgression\\nAs he called it, gave him much pain.\\nAnt. Then he firmly intends to convict me V\\nHero. No, he made a proposition for your life.\\nAnt. How liberal. Until now I never\\nKnew he had the power to hang or shoot\\nA man, or let him live just to his liking.\\nBut what s his proposition I will listen\\nHow ere absurd.\\nHero. He says on this condition only will he\\nKetract his charge. That I will marry him.\\nA7it. So that s the cause of his dislike for me.\\nAnd had he the nerve for this proposal V\\nHe must think me a degraded plebian\\nWho loves himself alone. No, no. Hero,\\nI love my wife and would sooner die than\\nShe should be sacrificed to him.\\nA miserable measily coward\\nAnd no one else would\\nTry to benefit himself in this way.\\nIt cannot be that you encouraged him.\\nHero. I did not encourage him, I merelv", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0045.jp2"}, "46": {"fulltext": "40\\nListened, thinking only of doing wliat\\nI could for you. And when he finished I\\nCame here in all haste for your opinion.\\nAnt. You should know me better than to think me\\nOf such fickle mettle. I M never approve\\nOf sacrificing you to save myself.\\nHero. Think Antony, he ll murder you if I refuse.\\nAnt. No, no, my Hero. He has not so much\\nPower. He has made a charge of treason\\nAgainst me, and I must stand a trial.\\nBut he must prove it ere he can harm me.\\nSo I fear him not, no more than that he\\nCan make much trouble for me if he chooses.\\n{Leo. enter court yard.)\\nLeo. Now I am to do\\nMore dirty work. I am but Charles tool.\\nOh courage, this is no time to falter,\\nI have been a fickle simpleton ever since\\nI entered this plot against Antony.\\nOne thought makes me sorry and repenting\\nAnd the next one gives me courage. I hope\\nHe will see this tie and then again I\\nHope he wont for fear of what he ll say.\\nHero. I will go to him once more, and see if I\\nCan make him sorry for what he s done.\\nj^fit, No, no, your supplication will but make him prouder.\\nHero. I ll not feel satisfied till I ve done all I can.\\nLeo. Jailor, may I see Antony\\nWig.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 He has company now. {Hero Mocks.)\\nBut I guess they wish to leave, {opens the door.)\\nMarg. You need not be lonesome for here comes\\nLeopole, so I ll go away with Hero. {E.vit Hero, Marg.)\\nLeo. Antony, accept my sympathy,.\\nFor a case like yours I never heard of.\\nAnt. Thanks, Leopole, for I am anxious that my friends\\nShould think me innocent. But Leopole,", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0046.jp2"}, "47": {"fulltext": "41\\nDid you take note of how that cobble I ell\\nI was so interested I did not.\\nLeo. I ni sure I did not, for I\\nAVas interested too. You did lean forward tl)ouL!;li.\\nAnt. I was much interested,\\nAnd so I think it happened, but it pains\\nMe most that he I ve done so much for, was\\nSo easily provoked to wish me harmed,\\nFor had he but common sense, he must know-\\nIt w^as an accident.\\nLeo. Perhaps there is\\nSome rivalry between you.\\nA7it. So it seems.\\nFor he now^ wishes Hero s hand in marriage.\\nLeo. He knows not his own mind for within this hour\\nHe told me he would never marry, as\\nHe had the using of more women now\\nThan he could tend to and stay healthy.\\nAnt. Were you with him\\nLeo. I w^ent to pump him, for why he charged you\\nWith conspiracy. But he would not talk\\nOf that, he seemed more interested in\\nSome foolish woman as he called her, who\\nLoved him unreasonably.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Would he\\nNot mention Avhat caused his sudden hate for me\\nLeo. No. As often as I broached your case, he would start off\\nabout this woman. Says he She s a maid, mind you, about\\nto be married to another, but she so loves me, she sought\\nmy aid to rid herself of this other, whom she cared not for.\\nAnt. Would he not say if it was not impulse made him accuse\\nme V\\nLeo. I tried him every way but twas no use,\\nHe would talk of nothing else but this maid. Why,\\nSays he She is so conquered by my charms.\\nShe will discard her promised husband.\\nThough not point l)lanc, through modestj^ so she", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0047.jp2"}, "48": {"fulltext": "42\\nBrought a plot to him, to lure her lover\\nFrom the scent.\\nAnt. And is he so unconcerned\\nAbout a life which almost depends on him V\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 He said this plot was to remove\\nForever this prospecting husband\\nAs an impediment. And then he laughed.\\nAnt. Who was this maid and who her promised husband\\nLeo. He would not say. It seemed to please him most\\nTo keep that secret. He claimed I know her well\\nBut could never guess.\\nSaid how she loved him ere he went av/ay\\nBut loved him more on his return.\\nHe thought his station made the extra love,\\nThat s why he cared so little for her.\\nAnt. And how came he to her V\\nLeo. She came to him,\\nAnd was overcome embracing him when\\nHer lovers sister appeared and stopped the fun.\\nBut he has seen her since and she s now stale.\\nShe had her lovers necktie as a garter,\\nTied there with an oath, this he removed\\nAnd cared so little for it, he threw it at me,\\nAnd I thought so well of it that I do wear it.\\n(Ant. sees it and starts.)\\nAnt. Who was she, say you\\nLeo. I know not, but no doubt some common strumpet.\\nAnt. You lie\\nShe who wore that tie was no such thing nor\\nEver stayed with Charles. Tis another of\\nHis dirty plots to sully her pure name.\\nHe s not content with ruining mine.\\nLeo. Do you know her\\nAnt. No, no, no. But what he s done to me makes\\nThis opinion of him. No doubt tis true\\nFor there are manj^", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0048.jp2"}, "49": {"fulltext": "43\\nThat greatness will enamor. But you say,\\nShe brought some plot which would remove her husband?\\nLeo. So he told me but he ld not mention what it was.\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 And she was stale to him\\nLeo. Yes, Antony. But why this agitation V\\nAnt. Oh nothing. Leopole, my being prisioner\\nHas quite unnerved me, I am not fit\\nTo entertain you, Leopole, leave me\\nAs a friend. (Leo. knocks.)\\nLeo.- I will Antony, and will do my best\\nTo appease your prosecutor. (Wig. unlocks.)\\nLeo. Good by, Antony.\\nAnt Good b} (E.rU Leo. to court yard.)\\nLeo. That must have hurt. Twill cause\\nThis mental agony which has nothing\\nVisable for arrousing sympathy,\\nLike the bleeding of some painless cut which\\nWould bring tears and sighs and gentleness from all. (E.vit.)\\nAnt. Hero Charles es stale and plotting against\\nHer lover, wh} that is me. No, I ll not\\nBelieve it. But he had my tie and she\\nSaid, if any man could show me that, she ld\\nNot deny he has seduced her. What brought\\nThose thoughts to her She plotted to rid herself\\nOf her intended husband. Wh} she was\\nOn the porch, could she have pushed that cobble V\\nNo, no. She would not, yet it appears I\\nDid not for I felt no jar which I would have\\nHad my weight been on it. She did admit\\nShe came from him to me and would return\\nTo him. But then I ll not believe it. Hero\\nIs true to me. He said her lover s sister\\nCaught her embraceing him.\\nWhy that is Margaret, I ll be convinced. (Calls Wig.)\\n{Enter Wig.]\\nAnt. Is Margaret about\\nWig.- Yes, she s at the gate.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0049.jp2"}, "50": {"fulltext": "44\\nAnt. Bring her to mo. .1 Wig.)\\nNow she can prove if Hero is false to nie,\\nShe will not lie, (Enter Marg.)\\nAnt. When did you first see Charles since his return?\\nMarg. Why this morning, when we had left you to\\nYour lovemaking for a while, I returned\\nTo tell you sonuething,\\nCharles must have come just ere I entered, for\\nHero was Just greeting him, and as I\\nAm not familiar with him, I retired\\nEre they had seen me.\\nAnt. Were they familiar\\nMarg. Why sure they were. Why not They are old friends.\\nWhy they embraced like lovers.\\nAnt. What s that, you too against me Have 1\\nNo friends on earth No, no, Margaret, I\\nBelieve you, but Hero is false to me.\\nShe is Charles es mistress,\\nTwas she who plotted for my life, I am\\nAn obstacle to her enjoying him,\\nShe s with her lover now, I ll soon be there\\nMyself and to catch them while embraceing\\nWill be much more convincing proof.\\n{ttigs at /lis bonds.)\\nBreak Ijreak\\nDon t think you can withstand a desperate\\nAthlete s strength, (breaks away.)\\nMarg. Why Antonj what do you mean\\nAnt. Away Don t bother me now,\\nI m not accountable for my deeds.\\n(breaks the door, Wig. tries to stop liini.)\\nAnt. Out of my way, out of my way\\n(Knocks Wig. and Assitants down and e.vit.)\\n(Scene closes.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0050.jp2"}, "51": {"fulltext": "45\\n(Scene 2.) A Street.\\nCitizens discovered.\\nIsf Cit. Think you tliey will piiiiisli Antony with liis lil e\\nJd Cit. Shure. Tis evident he is a traitor, and they cnther\\nhang or shoot them. But he went so open about it and\\nmissed.\\nIst Cit. The fool, with the risk he ran he should iiave made it\\nmore shure.\\n2d Cit. Had he killed Charles he would not suffer more.\\n1st Cit. And yet they call him so great.\\n2d Cit. He is good at Avrestling.\\n1st Cit. He has no head, so he proved to-day, and it takes a\\nhead to wrestle. I always did think Leopole ga\\\\ e him that\\nlast match.\\nJd Cit. Yes, I guess you re right. Well, if they convict him\\nLeopole will again be champion.\\n1st Cit. Yes, and I would sooner see him too.\\nM Cit. And if this ain t him, I don t know him. Speak of any\\none but the devil and they ll appear. Did you c vcr know\\nthat proverb to fail V I did nt.\\n1st Cit. Nor I either. {Enter Leo., theij .^^ntntc him.)\\nHurra for Leopole Hurra\\nLeo. How do you do, gentlemen V Happy days. [E.vit Cit.)\\nFiguring on Antony s\\nExecution they but surmise I ll rise\\nAnd already greet my fortune.\\nThey little know the sneaky way I use\\nTo gain that fortune, but. that matters not,\\nThey would not greet me for my morals. I\\nAm sorry I ever entered this plot\\nWith Charles, but he will pay me for my share\\nI ll warrant, and that before it is too late.\\n(E.vit Leo., enter Citizens.)\\n1st Cit. You never saw Leopole? I thought (nerybody knew\\nhim. There he goes, that s him.\\nSd Cit.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 A noble man, (luf proportioned.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0051.jp2"}, "52": {"fulltext": "\u00e2\u0080\u00a24H\\n:2d at. And right worthy of holding the championship.\\n1st Clt. There is none can down him.\\nM Git. He s a good spender, I often drank on him.\\nSd at. Wliere does he be often\\n1st at. Nowhere in particular, everywhere or anywhere, just\\nas it, happens.\\n:3d Ci^^What is this crowd coming\\n1st at. They re chasing some one.\\nSd at\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Who can it be V\\n:2d at. A madman.\\n1st at. Ain t that Antony\\nM at. As I live it is. He has escaped.\\n1st at. They re trying to stop him.\\n.kl at. Let s help them.\\nd at. I ll not, he looks desperate.\\n1st at. Nor I. He has a lions strength. {Enter Ant.)\\nAnt. Make waj there, I ll kill the first man hinders me.\\n(Rushes across the .stage, knocks citizens down and e.vit.)\\n(Scene closes.)\\n(Scene 3.) Charles Office.\\n[Enter Hero, Alice following.)\\nAlice. I had quite a race to overtake you,\\nSo now I hope you ll listen to me.\\nHero. Why shure I will listen, but\\nI have important business bids me haste.\\nAlice. I doubt not but what I have to say\\nConcerns your business. Tis of Antony\\nI would speak.\\nHero. What do you know of him\\nAlice. That his arrest was plotted for by those\\nHe thought were his best friends.\\nHero. How plotted for\\nAlice. Charles has some dislike for him, and he holds", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0052.jp2"}, "53": {"fulltext": "4T\\nWhat once were Leopole s honors, so they\\nPlotted for his ruin.\\nHero. How do you know all this\\nAlice. I overheard them propose an accident\\nFrom the porch as Charles would pass.\\nHero, You mean the falling of that cobble\\nAVas prearranged by Charles and Leopole\\nAlice. I do, and that Leopole pushed it purposely\\nAnd not Antony by accident as you think.\\nHero. If what you say be true twill recreate\\nMy hopes for future happiness, which I\\nThought gone forever. But Leopole is\\nAntonj^ s friend.\\nAlice. He but seems so. He was\\nMine once too. I tell 3 ou I did hear him\\nKail on fortune and on Antony for\\nBobbing him of it, and because he came\\nAnd went unnoticed, while Antony s\\nEvery move and look would bring forth cheers.\\nThen he railed on me and cursed me so, I\\nSwore revenge, and my chance soon came, for Charles\\nApproached and told him of his grudge and how\\nBy downing Antony he ld be revenged\\nAnd Leopole would be again in favour.\\nHero. ^And would you swear to this before them\\nAlice. Yes, and before God Almighty.\\nHero. Then if Charles is to be found I ll\\nBring him here and Antony will be free.\\n{E.vit Hero, enter Charles.)\\nAlice. Now you important one, we ll see who ll\\nGet the worst of this morning s quarrel.\\nC/ior.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Why, what do you mean\\nAlice. What, why that she knows all that went between-\\nYou and Leopole this morning.\\nChar. You told her of that plot\\nAlice. Cert, and I m going to swear to it at\\nThe trial, if there is one.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0053.jp2"}, "54": {"fulltext": "48\\nChar. You degraded wretch,\\nHow far will your word go aside of ours\\nAlice. I don t know or care. They may not believe me,\\nBut I ll get them thinking.\\nChar. If you don t leave this town and in a hurry,\\nI ll lock you up for what you are, not fit\\nTo mingle with respectable people.\\nAlice. Oh what I know does not amount to anything, yet you\\nwish me to leave town. Gruess not. I would sooner stay\\nand bother you. And as for your having, me arrested, ha!\\nI am in the business to long to think you can do it.\\nChar. Where is she going V\\nAlice. To look for you and make you come down from your\\nhigh perch.\\nChar. You ve ruined me.\\nAlice. I hope so, but I never thought I was so wise, {knocking.)\\nChar. Will you step in this room until I find out what is\\nwanted\\nAlice. And have you lock me in Oh no\\nChar. Then here into the hall, but don t leave for I have some\\nbusiness with you. {Exit Alice.)\\nChar. Come in. {enter Officers.) What s wanted V\\nOffic. I have a summons for you to appear at the trial of\\nAnton}\\nChar. I will not fail to be there. {Exit Officers, enter Leo.)\\nY ou never arrived at a more fortunate time.\\nLeo. What s up.\\nChar. We re lost, unless by stratagem or\\nBy some precious gem you can win Alice\\nTo our favour. She has told Hero all\\nShe overheard this morning.\\nLeo. What I ll tear her heart out.\\nChar. No, no, I have a better plan. She is\\nIn love with you, make her think you return it.\\nLeo. But I turned her from me this morning.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0054.jp2"}, "55": {"fulltext": "49\\n\u00e2\u0082\u00achar. Give some excuse for that, as,\\nYou were indisposed or so, and give lier\\nAll the gold she wants, I know she ll yield.\\nLeo. Where is she\\nChar. In the hall. Now you retire and when she gets here,\\n3^ou happen in aecidently as though j^ou ld not seen me, be\\nvery affectionate. {E.vit Leo.)\\nChar. {Opening the door.) Tis now to late to refuse a risk on\\nan obstacle. {Enter Alice.) Important business has come\\nbefore me, which I must attend to immediately, you wait\\nhere. 111 not be long and I must see you. {Exit Char.)\\nAlice. I never thought I would be so lucky as to hold secrets\\nvaluable to rich men. {Enter Leo.)\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Well, well, Alice,\\nYou re looking splendid, charming enough\\nTo tempt the coldest flesh. It seems an age\\nOf seperation I ve been through, but we ll\\nSoon be again with fortune, and able\\nTo revel to our heart s content.\\nAlice. Who do you mean hy we\\nLeo. Why, you and I, of course. You re not surprised\\nI hope, that I know of your hankering\\nFor sport I guess you ve not reformed.\\nAlice. Do you put this friendship on to mock me\\nLeo. Come, come, xilice,\\nWe ve had too many rackets together\\nTo act like moralists.\\nAlice. I don t deny my business, but do you\\nKnow that I squealed what I o erheard this morning\\n-Leo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 No To who\\nAlice. To Hero.\\nLeo. That will ruin all our sport. Why did you\\nAlice.- -Yon used me rough this morning.\\nLeo. And did you mind that\\nHave you never felt as though you hated\\nYourself That s the way I felt this morning.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0055.jp2"}, "56": {"fulltext": "50\\nI did not know what I was saying. We ve\\nGot to fix this some way or loose our sport,\\nFor with Antony away I am the hero,\\nAnd you linow me w^hen I liave money.\\nHow did you fix it with Hero\\nAlice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094I told her all I heard and she wants to\\nHave me to swear to it at the trial.\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 You go to the trial\\nAnd deny it all, deny you ever\\nSpoke to her. You will never be sorry.\\nHere s money for you to spend. See, I am\\nBut on the w^ay to fortune and I have\\nMoney, I will have much more if j^ou ll but\\nHelp me to it. Will j^ou deny all you\\nTold her for me\\nAlice. I will deny I ever saw her on a bed of bibles.\\nLeo. Good Tis not best we were seen together until all is\\nover, they might suspect.\\nAlice. 1 11 go invest this money in silk stockings.\\nLeo. Well, good by, until this is over, then we will swim in\\nwine.\\nAlice. Adieu. {E.vit Alice.)\\nLeo. More dirty work, but that was easy.\\nI say Charles. {Enter Char.)\\nChar.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Well, how is she\\nLeo. Blot her out as an obstacle.\\nChar. How did you do it\\nLeo. With little gold and big promises. But there is no time\\nto spare, I must see the prosecutor and buy him to lengthen\\nout this trial. (Exit Leo.)\\nChar. Tis not long till Antony will be no more.\\nThen I shall have proud Hero at my feet. (Enter Hero.)\\nHero. Prepare yourself\\nFor a mighty transformation. When last\\nWe met I was at your command, now bow\\nYourself in supplication.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0056.jp2"}, "57": {"fulltext": "51\\nChar. This is indeed a transformation, but\\nWhy should I bow. I am no miscreant.\\nilZero.^No, but a conspirator.\\nChar. Why, how is that\\nHero. One who o erheard you\\nPlotting to down Anton^^ has told me all.\\nChar. How absurd, that I should plot against one\\nWho awaits a death sentence.\\nHero. That death sentence\\n.When I have told them all I know, v. ill be yours.\\nChar. Come, tell me all I am interested.\\nHero. Leopole and yourself this morning did conspire\\nTo push that cobble from the porch, and then\\nCharge Antony with treason. You see I\\nKnow it all and want jow to settle\\nAntony s freedom. {Appear Ant.)\\nChar. Go away, you rave. I hope your interlect\\nIs not impaired by love.\\nHero. I do love, I admit.\\nAnt. aside. Too true, she does love him and I ve been duped,\\nTis from her own lips.\\nHero. But think well before it is too late, think\\nOf the disgrace twill cause you.\\nAnt. aside.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 She s stale to him and he ll not marry her.\\nHero. The dishonor to your name, to be arrested,\\nAnd have me prove you guilty.\\nChar. Have me arrested, if you will, tell them all you know,\\nand see if a strumpefs word will outweigh mine. Leave\\nme, I have no use for you.\\n(Antony comes forward. (Appear jailor and guards.\\nAnt. And little do I blame you Charles, for this\\nDiscarding of a strumpet.\\nHero. My Antony, and free, (goes to him, he pushes her away.)\\nAnt. Yes,\\nFree from my prison bonds, and free from you.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0057.jp2"}, "58": {"fulltext": "52\\nThank heaven. By your plot for my disposal\\nYou thought to ruin me, but you made me,\\nFor far better is an honorable death,\\nThan life that s linked to your dishonor.\\nHero.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What does my Antony mean V\\nAnt. You ll still use your dissembling gift, and play\\nThe innocent. T wer better you were quiet.\\nAnd not add lies to your dishonor.\\nHero. As my Antony wishes.\\nA7it. No, no, not yours, Just as you wished it, and\\nHappy I to know tis so. And may you\\nHave success in those desires in which I\\nHindered you. Come, olRcers, bring me back,\\nI will stand a trial, yes, and if sentenced\\nDie happy after what I have escaped.\\n{Cruards take Antony.)\\n{Curtain.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0058.jp2"}, "59": {"fulltext": "53\\nAct. IV. Scene, Court Room.\\n(Enter Leo. and Prosecutor.)\\nLeo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 You see, Antony will be tried this morning while Abra-\\nham is still in ofRce, and he being interested in Antony,\\nwho is his daughter s intended husband, will hurry things\\nthrough before Charleses term begins. Now what I want\\nis, for you to do what you can to draw this trial into\\nCharles es term.\\nPros.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 No doubt something will turn up through which I can\\ngain a stay for you.\\nLeo. You being acquainted with the way of law would see a\\nchance where others would nt.\\nPros. True, and for our friendship s sake, I will use it to your\\nadvantage, though I have nothing against this Antony.\\ni^eo.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 That s what I want. Now come, we will drink together\\nfor luck. (Exit both, enter Hero.\\nHero. Am I the first one here Well, I should be.\\nFor I am more interested than all others, (kneels.\\nHeaven look with thy allseeing eye upon\\nThe unjust misery thy righteous subject\\nSuffers, and with thy impartial mind convict\\nThe true transgressor. Give thy Judgement to\\nThy officers below that they may punish\\nThe guilty, (rises.)\\nWas ever woman in my plight No, no,\\nAntony was not himself when he did spurn me.\\nAn unjust imprisonment and charged with\\nTreachery by those he has considered\\nHis dearest friends is enough to upset\\nThe strongest mind. I have excused what he\\nHas done no matter what the source, and I\\nWill prove that I love him, though he would hate\\nMy corpse. Here will I await what is to come.\\n(Hero sits down, enter court officers, citizens, Char., Leo.)\\nHero. You are well met though not by accident\\nFor villians seek their kind for company.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0059.jp2"}, "60": {"fulltext": "54\\nChar. I wish you knew the truth and had no faith\\nIn what you heard, then would- you know us as friends\\nHero. I sought no conversation witli you, I\\nIntended to insult you, but you are\\nSo hardened that I cannot.\\nChar. We will leave you until you are convinced.\\nWe wish you well. {They leave her.)\\nHero. Hea^en only knows\\nIts object in distributing such natures\\nHere amongst us. Wickedness on earth\\nMust be decreed by heaven, or else\\nSuch minds would not exist. But,\\nWhere can this woman stay V\\n{Enter officers with Tom avd Bill.)\\nTom. Now to give the price of half a dozen good sprees to en-\\nrich a rich city.\\nBill. I m sorrier than you are, for its all your fault.\\nTom. Because I tried to stop you from making an ass of me its\\nmy fault. I ld sooner be arrested, than showed up like\\nthat. {Enter Antony guarded.)\\nBill\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hallo What s he done\\nTom. He s not been fighting I ll warrant, for no one would\\ntackle him. (As Antony passes Hero she comes to him.)\\nHero. Antony, do you not know me\\nAnt. Take this woman from me or else release me\\nThat I ma} protect myself. (Guards push her airay. she\\niveeps, enter Marg.)\\nMarg. to Hero. Why not practice what you preach V\\nHe is not sentenced yet and until ho is\\nWe will not mourn.\\nHero. He s worse than sentenced, he s mad.\\nMarg. So I thought when I last saw him, as\\nHe charged me with conspiring for his life.\\nThen forgave me, claimed j ou were false, and\\nPlotting to dispose of him, then broke his bonds\\nBushed through the court yard, passed theguards, and", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0060.jp2"}, "61": {"fulltext": "55\\nUntil now I have not seen him. I\\nWill go speak to him.\\nHero. I doubt he will know you, he did not me.\\nAnd my presence seems to aggrivate him.\\nMarg. Perhaps tis best I keep away.\\nHero. Come with me,\\nThey are not ready, and I will tell you\\nOf the plot makes Antony prisoner.\\nI heard it from a friend, and she must be found\\nAs our main witness. {Evit Hero and Marg.)\\nLeo. Can Hero have already told him what she heard\\nChar. Why no,\\nHe would not listen to her when they met.\\nAbout the necktie and what else he heard\\nFrom you worked to perfection. Now if Alice\\nWill keep her word he will not know until\\nIt is too late.\\nLeo. She would do twice as much to win my smiles\\nIf I ll but give them. I will go sympathize\\nWith Antony. {Goes over to Antony.)\\nAntony, I can bring\\nBut little consolation to you.\\nAiit. Leopole, old friend, I don t want any,\\nThe news you brought me in my cell\\nWas sufficient. You little knew how I\\nWas connected with that story, or perhaps\\nYou did, but respecting my dejection,\\nWould not be bold by bringing more, but as\\nA friend gave me a clue to proofs. Was it\\nNot so, Leopole You re silent to respect\\nMy feelings, and Leopole, twice dear you\\nMake your friendship by it. Through 3 our clue I\\nAm convinced my love was trifling with me,\\nAnd now I w^elcome death as much as ever\\nI cared to live.\\nLeo. Antony, stoj or I\\nWill wish for death mvself.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0061.jp2"}, "62": {"fulltext": "56\\n-^ni. No, no, you live,\\nLive and be famous, live and be honored\\nAs an athlete, for the people must have one\\nFor their amusement and their idol, and\\nWho is there but you that is worthy and\\nEntitled to their praise And Leopole,\\nAll the medals and trophys I have won\\nI ve willed to you, they with my titles, when\\nI am dead are yours with my best wishes\\nThat you honor them, and there is no one\\nMore confident than I am that you will.\\nLeo. Antony, you do not know me or you\\nWould not say this, you ld sooner curse me, if\\nYou knew my mind.\\n^nt. All ill feelings that have grown\\nFrom my victory over you, I do forgive.\\nFor human nature makes us all jealous\\nOf our fame. {Enter Abr., takes judge s seat.)\\nLeo. The court is about to open,\\nI will leave you, and let heaven guide\\nOur future for the best. (Leaves Antony.)\\nSheriff. Oh yes, oh yes, this court is now opened, {etc.}.\\nAbr.~ Fellow officers.\\nThough we had suspended business for this day,\\nSet it apart for holiday and rejoicing\\nAs is a custom.\\nAn unforseen accident has compelled us\\nTo convene and give speedy redress to\\nAn offended citizen. We will hear\\nAntony s case.\\nPros. Your Honor, the cases of Tom Sawyer and Bill Johnson\\nare first on the docket.\\nAbr. This court convened to-day especially for Antony s case.\\nPros. There is no law that specifies certain prisoners shall be\\nfavoui-ed either for relationship to its servants or for their\\nsocial worth. {reads) Tom Sawyer and Bill Johnson^\\nbreach of the peace.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0062.jp2"}, "63": {"fulltext": "Abr. Tis not\\nHis relationship to tlie officers\\nOf this court, nor his social standing makes\\nHis case special, but the seriousness\\nOf the charge.\\nPros. All crimes are serious, and he must await his turn,\\n(reads) Tom Sawyer and Bill Johnson, breach of the peace\\n(They are brought foricard.)\\nTom to Bill. It s your fault we re in this pickle.\\nPros. You are charged with breach of the peace. To this\\nCharge what is your plea, guilty or not guilty\\nTom. You see Bill there, was not good humored.\\nPros. Are you guilty or not guilty\\nTom. He buckeled me and I resisted.\\nPros. I did not ask to hear your case. Are j^ou\\nguilty or not guilty\\nTom.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Well, we faught. If you call that\\nguilty, I am.\\nPros, to Bill. You are charged with breach of the\\npeace. To this charge what is your plea,\\nguilty or not guilty\\nBill. The same as him. If he s guilty, I am,\\nI won t squeal and try to put it all on to him,\\nI ll take my medicine like a man.\\nAbr. This day being a holida}- we will excuse\\nYour slight offense. You are discharged.\\n(Tom and Bill start out.)\\nBill. That s luck. If they had sent us up for thirty days, how\\ncould we have stood it without a drink I am as dry as\\nthough I had lived on herring for a week. Let s hurry to\\na saloon.\\nTom. We will go drown our happiness as some would\\ndrown their sorrow. (E.vit both.)\\nAbr. Any more ahead of Antony\\nPros. Next comes Antony. (He is brought forward.)\\nYou are charged with treason and attempt on the life of", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0063.jp2"}, "64": {"fulltext": "58\\nCharles, one of the duke s officers. To this charge what is\\nyour plea, guilty or not guilty\\nAnt Not guilty.\\nProH. We will hear Charles.\\nChar. What I have to say you all know well, that\\nWhile passing with the parade, where he was stationed,\\nA large cobble hurled with murderous intent.\\nJust missed its mission and scraped my knee, and\\nTwas Antony that threw it.\\nPros. What have you to say to that\\nChar. Such an accident happened.\\nChar. Twas no accident.\\nHe had some treacherous design\\nNo doubt against this government.\\nPros. \u00e2\u0080\u0094Can you prove otherwise\\nAnt. Can he prove that V\\nPros. What is your defense\\nAnt. No more than that I was on the porch\\nSo interested in the passing parade\\nThat I leaned my weight against a cobble\\nAnd it fell, with results though not intents,\\nSimilar to those which he discribed.\\nChar. Here are more witnesses. (Points to Leo. and guards.)\\nAhr. They know no more than you so we\\nHave no need of them.\\nChar. I say he intended to murder me,\\n(Enter Hero and Marg., leading Alice.)\\nAhr. You have not proven it.\\nHero. Come quick or we ll be too late.\\nAlice. Why in such haste am I brought here V\\nChar. I say he is guilty of treason.\\nHero. I say he is not and I can prove it.\\nChar. I say he is guilty and should pay the penalty of death.\\nAbr. She says she can prove he is not and conviction goes by\\nproof alone. We will hear you.", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0064.jp2"}, "65": {"fulltext": "59\\nHero. I say he {pomting to Char.) is guilty of forming a plot to\\nruin Antony. Here is a woman who o erheard him, {to\\nAlice). You tell them, you know it better.\\nAlice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 What shall I say\\nHero. What you told nw this morning.\\nAlice.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 1 told you nothing.\\nChar. She is the prisoner s lover, and this is an excuse for\\nsome advantage.\\nHero. Why, you told me, that Charles and Leopole were plot-\\ning to dispose of Anton3\\\\\\nAlice. If ever I have set my eyes on you before\\nIt has slipped my memory.\\nLeo. aside. Tis wrong for me to be silent.\\n{Jhar. This is some ruse to work your pity,\\nShe will weep directly. I motion for\\nA death sentence as he is proven guilty.\\n(Hero places herself beside Antony.)\\nHero. If he is guilty, then so am 1 as\\nAn accomplice, for I know his mind and\\nKnow it to be as free from treachery\\nAs is God s above, {to Alice) And you know he is to be\\n{points to Charles)\\nAs full of treachery as is a snakes.\\nLeo. aside. I must speak.\\nChar. That s from the case. I motion for a sentence.\\nAbr. There has been nothing proven in this case.\\nBut I believe.\\nThis lady has some valuable proof\\nWhich she imparted to this other.\\nAlice. I know nothing.\\nLeo. You lie you do.\\nAnd so do I. Antony, I must speak.\\nI envied you for defeating me but\\nNever enough without his aid, {points to Char.) to do\\nWhat I have done.\\nHe pricked me on with golden promises", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0065.jp2"}, "66": {"fulltext": "60\\nTill I conspired with him to ruin you,\\nI pushed that cobble from the porch and Charles\\nIs my accomplice.\\nAnt. How about the tie V\\nLeo. Twas got by trickery,\\nHero is innocent and true to you.\\nAnt. Hero, will you forgive\\nMy fickle confidence in you\\nHero. I would call nothing fickle\\nThat was done amid these trials.\\n(bells ring twelve.)\\nChar, to Ahr. I claim my office, your time s expired.\\nAhr. Antony, I find no proof of guilt against you.\\nSo you are discharged.\\nChar. Soldiers, he would rob me of my privilege,\\nThis office and this case to finish are mine.\\nAnd I ll fight for what is mine.\\nAnt. And so will I. {Rushers out and stiatches a sicord, meets\\nCharles, they fight, soVdiers drive Leo. and Ahr. hack with\\nbayonets. Antony is besting Charles.)\\nChar. Help me, soldiers.\\n(Soldiers go to stab A7it. in the back. Hero steps between.\\nHero. Away, you cowards from his back\\n(Soldiers stab her, she falls.) Ant. stabs Char., turns on\\nsoldiers and drives them back.)\\nHero. Antony, I hope you think me true.\\nGood by, good by, Antony, (dies.)\\n(Antony turns and sees her, throws away his sword and kneels\\nbeside Hero.)\\nAnt.\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Hero Hero! Dead!\\nHeaven forgive me for this foul deed,\\nFor I know no sacrifice or penance\\nWith which I may redeem myself.\\n(Soldiers stab him, in the back, he offers his breast.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0066.jp2"}, "67": {"fulltext": "-.l\\nHero, strike where my mortal source is, ami end\\nMy living quick. Then if my earthly (|ualities\\nOf endurance stay with my spirit,\\nI will o ertake her.\\n{Soldiers stab Jiim in the l}reasl.)\\nNow my Hero,\\nYour Antony will soon be with you.\\n(Falls over on Hero and dies.)\\n{Curtain.)", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0067.jp2"}, "68": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0068.jp2"}, "69": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0069.jp2"}, "70": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0070.jp2"}, "71": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3459", "width": "2205", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0071.jp2"}, "72": {"fulltext": "IVIAR 29 Vo^d", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0072.jp2"}, "73": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3468", "width": "2284", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0073.jp2"}, "74": {"fulltext": "", "height": "3597", "width": "2293", "jp2-path": "anthonyhero00simo_0074.jp2"}}