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MEASURE FOR MEASURE
In the city of Vienna there once reigned a duke of such a mild and gentle
temper, that he suffered his subjects to neglect the laws with impunity;
and there was in particular one law, the existence of which was almost
forgotten, the duke never having put it in force during his whole reign.
This was a law dooming any man to the punishment of death, who should live
with a woman that was not his wife; and this law, through the lenity of the
duke, being utterly disregarded, the holy institution of marriage became
neglected, and complaints were every day made to the duke by the parents of
the young ladies in Vienna, that their daughters had been seduced from
their protection, and were living as the companions of single men.
The good duke perceived with sorrow this growing evil among his subjects;
but he thought that a sudden change in himself from the indulgence he had
hitherto shown, to the strict severity requisite to check this abuse, would
make his people (who had hitherto loved him) consider him as a tyrant;
therefore he determined to absent himself a while from his dukedom, and
depute another to the full exercise of his power, that the law against
these dishonourable lovers might be put in effect, without giving offence
by an unusual severity in his own person.
Angelo, a man who bore the reputation of a saint in Vienna for his strict
and rigid life, was chosen by the duke as a fit person to undertake this
important change; and when the duke imparted his design to lord Escalus,
his chief counsellor, Escalus said: 'If any man in Vienna be of worth to
undergo such ample grace and honour, it is lord Angelo.' And now the duke
departed from Vienna under pretence of making a journey into Poland,
leaving Angelo to act as the lord deputy in his absence; but the duke's
absence was only a feigned one, for he privately returned to Vienna,
habited like a friar, with the intent to watch unseen the conduct of the
saintly seeming Angelo.
It happened just about the time that Angelo was invested with his new
dignity, that a gentleman, whose name was Claudio, had seduced a young lady
from her parents; and for this offence, by command of the new lord deputy,
Claudio was taken up and committed to prison, and by virtue of the old law
which had been so long neglected, Angelo sentenced Claudio to be beheaded.
Great interest was made for the pardon of young Claudio, and the good old
lord Escalus himself interceded for him. 'Alas,' said he, 'this gentleman
whom I would save had an honourable father, for whose sake I pray you
pardon the young man's transgression.' But Angelo replied: 'We must not
make a scare-crow of the law, setting it up to frighten birds of prey, till
custom, finding it harmless, makes it their perch, and not their terror.
Sir, he must die.'
Lucio, the friend of Claudio, visited him in the priso |