| |
Enter CLEOPATRA, IRAS and ALEXAS | |
| |
| Cleo. What shall I do, or whither shall I turn? | |
| Ventidius has oercome, and he will go. | |
| Alex. He goes to fight for you. | |
| Cleo. Then he would see me, ere he went to fight: | 5 |
| Flatter me not: If once he goes, hes lost, | |
| And all my hopes destroyed. | |
| Alex. Does this weak passion | |
| Become a mighty queen? | |
| Cleo. I am no queen: | 10 |
| Is this to be a queen, to be besieged | |
| By yon insulting Roman, and to wait | |
| Each hour the victors chain? These ills are small: | |
| For Antony is lost, and I can mourn | |
| For nothing else but him. Now come, Octavius, | 15 |
| I have no more to lose! prepare thy bands; | |
| Im fit to be a captive: Antony | |
| Has taught my mind the fortune of a slave. | |
| Iras. Call reason to assist you. | |
| Cleo. I have none, | 20 |
| And none would have: My loves a noble madness, | |
| Which shows the cause deserved it. Moderate sorrow | |
| Fits vulgar love, and for a vulgar man: | |
| But I have loved with such transcendent passion, | |
| I soared, at first, quite out of reasons view, | 25 |
| And now am lost above it. No, Im proud | |
| Tis thus: Would Antony could see me now | |
| Think you he would not sigh, though he must leave me? | |
| Sure he would sigh; for he is noble-natured, | |
| And bears a tender heart: I know him well. | 30 |
| Ah, no, I know him not; I knew him once, | |
| But now tis past. | |
| Iras. Let it be past with you: | |
| Forget him, madam. | |
| Cleo. Never, never, Iras. | 35 |
| He once was mine; and once, though now tis gone, | |
| Leaves a faint image of possession still. | |
| Alex. Think him inconstant, cruel, and ungrateful. | |
| Cleo. I cannot: If I could, those thoughts were vain. | |
| Faithless, ungrateful, cruel, though he be, | 40 |
| I still must love him. | |
| |
Enter CHARMION | |
| Now, what news, my Charmion? | |
| Will he be kind? and will he not forsake me? | |
| Am I to live, or die?nay, do I live? | 45 |
| Or am I dead? for when he gave his answer, | |
| Fate took the word, and then I lived or died. | |
| Char. I found him, madam | |
| Cleo. A long speech preparing? | |
| If thou bringst comfort, haste, and give it me, | 50 |
| For never was more need. | |
| Iras. I know he loves you. | |
| Cleo. Had he been kind, her eyes had told me so, | |
| Before her tongue could speak it: Now she studies, | |
| To soften what he said; but give me death, | 55 |
| Just as he sent it, Charmion, undisguised, | |
| And in the words he spoke. | |
| Char. I found him, then, | |
| Encompassed round, I think, with iron statues; | |
| So mute, so motionless his soldiers stood, | 60 |
| While awfully he cast his eyes about, | |
| And every leaders hopes or fears surveyed: | |
| Methought he looked resolved, and yet not pleased. | |
| When he beheld me struggling in the crowd, | |
| He blushed, and bade make way. | 65 |
| Alex. Theres comfort yet. | |
| Char. Ventidius fixed his eyes upon my passage | |
| Severely, as he meant to frown me back, | |
| And sullenly gave place: I told my message, | |
| Just as you gave it, broken and disordered; | 70 |
| I numbered in it all your sighs and tears, | |
| And while I moved your pitiful request, | |
| That you but only begged a last farewell, | |
| He fetched an inward groan; and every time | |
| I named you, sighed, as if his heart were breaking, | 75 |
| But, shunned my eyes, and guiltily looked down: | |
| He seemed not now that awful Antony, | |
| Who shook and armed assembly with his nod; | |
| But, making show as he would rub his eyes, | |
| Disguised and blotted out a falling tear. | 80 |
| Cleo. Did he then weep? And was I worth a tear? | |
| If what thou hast to say be not as pleasing, | |
| Tell me no more, but let me die contented. | |
| Char. He bid me say,He knew himself so well, | |
| He could deny you nothing, if he saw you; | 85 |
| And therefore | |
| Cleo. Thou wouldst say, he would not see me? | |
| Char. And therefore begged you not to use a power, | |
| Which he could ill resist; yet he should ever | |
| Respect you, as he ought. | 90 |
| Cleo. Is that a word | |
| For Antony to use to Cleopatra? | |
| O that faint word, respect! how I disdain it! | |
| Disdain myself, for loving after it! | |
| He should have kept that word for cold Octavia. | 95 |
| Respect is for a wife: Am I that thing, | |
| That dull, insipid lump, without desires, | |
| And without power to give them? | |
| Alex. You misjudge; | |
| You see through love, and that deludes your sight; | 100 |
| As, what is straight, seems crooked through the water: | |
| But I, who bear my reason undisturbed, | |
| Can see this Antony, this dreaded man, | |
| A fearful slave, who fain would run away, | |
| And shuns his masters eyes: If you pursue him, | 105 |
| My life ont, he still drags a chain along. | |
| That needs must clog his flight. | |
| Cleo. Could I believe thee! | |
| Alex. By every circumstance I know he loves. | |
| True, hes hard prest, by interest and by honour; | 110 |
| Yet he but doubts, and parleys, and casts out | |
| Many a long look for succour. | |
| Cleo. He sends word, | |
| He fears to see my face. | |
| Alex. And would you more? | 115 |
| He shows his weakness who declines the combat, | |
| And you must urge your fortune. Could he speak | |
| More plainly? To my ears, the message sounds | |
| Come to my rescue, Cleopatra, come; | |
| Come, free me from Ventidius; from my tyrant: | 120 |
| See me, and give me a pretence to leave him! | |
| I hear his trumpets. This way he must pass. | |
| Please you, retire a while; Ill work him first, | |
| That he may bend more easy. | |
| Cleo. You shall rule me; | 125 |
| But all, I fear, in vain. [Exit with CHARMION and IRAS. | |
| Alex. I fear so too; | |
| Though I concealed my thoughts, to make her bold; | |
| But tis our utmost means, and fate befriend it! [Withdraws. | |
| |
Enter Lictors with Fasces; one bearing the Eagle; then enter ANTONY with VENTIDIUS, followed by other Commanders | 130 |
| Ant. Octavius is the minion of blind chance, | |
| But holds from virtue nothing. | |
| Vent. Has he courage? | |
| Ant. But just enough to season him from coward. | |
| Oh, tis the coldest youth upon a charge, | 135 |
| The most deliberate fighter! if he ventures | |
| (As in Illyria once, they say, he did, | |
| To storm a town), tis when he cannot choose; | |
| When all the world have fixt their eyes upon him; | |
| And then he lives on that for seven years after; | 140 |
| But, at a close revenge he never fails. | |
| Vent. I heard you challenged him. | |
| Ant. I did, Ventidius. | |
| What thinkst thou was his answer? Twas so tame! | |
| He said, he had more ways than one to die; | 145 |
| I had not. | |
| Vent. Poor! | |
| Ant. He has more ways than one; | |
| But he would choose them all before that one. | |
| Vent. He first would choose an ague, or a fever. | 150 |
| Ant. No; it must be an ague, not a fever; | |
| He Has not warmth enough to die by that. | |
| Vent. Or old age and a bed. | |
| Ant. Ay, theres his choice, | |
| He would live, like a lamp, to the last wink, | 155 |
| And crawl the utmost verge of life. | |
| O Hercules! Why should a man like this, | |
| Who dares not trust his fate for one great action, | |
| Be all the care of Heaven? Why should he lord it | |
| Oer fourscore thousand men, of whom each one | 160 |
| Is braver than himself? | |
| Vent. You conquered for him: | |
| Philippi knows it; there you shared with him | |
| That empire, which your sword made all your own. | |
| Ant. Fool that I was, upon my eagles wings | 165 |
| I bore this wren, till I was tired with soaring, | |
| And now he mounts above me. | |
| Good heavens, is this,is this the man who braves me? | |
| Who bids my age make way? Drives me before him, | |
| To the worlds ridge, and sweeps me off like rubbish? | 170 |
| Vent. Sir, we lose time; the troops are mounted all. | |
| Ant. Then give the word to march: | |
| I long to leave this prison of a town, | |
| To join thy legions; and, in open field, | |
| Once more to show my face. Lead, my deliverer. | 175 |
| |
Enter ALEXAS | |
| Alex. Great emperor, | |
| In mighty arms renowned above mankind, | |
| But, in soft pity to the opprest, a god; | |
| This message sends the mournful Cleopatra | 180 |
| To her departing lord. | |
| Vent. Smooth sycophant! | |
| Alex. A thousand wishes, and ten thousand prayers, | |
| Millions of blessings wait you to the wars; | |
| Millions of sighs and tears she sends you too, | 185 |
| And would have sent | |
| As many dear embraces to your arms, | |
| As many parting kisses to your lips; | |
| But those, she fears, have wearied you already. | |
| Vent. [aside]. False crocodile! | 190 |
| Alex. And yet she begs not now, you would not leave her; | |
| That were a wish too mighty for her hopes, | |
| Too presuming | |
| For her low fortune, and your ebbing love; | |
| That were a wish for her more prosperous days, | 195 |
| Her blooming beauty, and your growing kindness. | |
| Ant. [aside]. Well, I must man it out:What would the queen? | |
| Alex. First, to these noble warriors, who attend | |
| Your daring courage in the chase of fame, | |
| Too daring, and too dangerous for her quiet, | 200 |
| She humbly recommends all she holds dear, | |
| All her own cares and fears,the care of you. | |
| Vent. Yes, witness Actium. | |
| Ant. Let him speak, Ventidius. | |
| Alex. You, when his matchless valour bears him forward, | 205 |
| With ardour too heroic, on his foes, | |
| Fall down, as she would do, before his feet; | |
| Lie in his way, and stop the paths of death: | |
| Tell him, this god is not invulnerable; | |
| That absent Cleopatra bleeds in him; | 210 |
| And, that you may remember her petition, | |
| She begs you wear these trifles, as a pawn, | |
| Which, at your wished return, she will redeem [Gives jewels to the Commanders. | |
| With all the wealth of Egypt: | |
| This to the great Ventidius she presents, | 215 |
| Whom she can never count her enemy, | |
| Because he loves her lord. | |
| Vent. Tell her, Ill none ont; | |
| Im not ashamed of honest poverty; | |
| Not all the diamonds of the east can bribe | 220 |
| Ventidius from his faith. I hope to see | |
| These and the rest of all her sparkling store, | |
| Where they shall more deservingly be placed. | |
| Ant. And who must wear them then? | |
| Vent. The wronged Octavia. | 225 |
| Ant. You might have spared that word. | |
| Vent. And he that bribe. | |
| Ant. But have I no remembrance? | |
| Alex. Yes, a dear one; | |
| Your slave the queen | 230 |
| Ant. My mistress. | |
| Alex. Then your mistress; | |
| Your mistress would, she says, have sent her soul, | |
| But that you had long since; she humbly begs | |
| This ruby bracelet, set with bleeding hearts, | 235 |
| The emblems of her own, may bind your arm. [Presenting a bracelet. | |
| Vent. Now, my best lord,in honours name, I ask you, | |
| For manhoods sake, and for your own dear safety, | |
| Touch not these poisoned gifts, | |
| Infected by the sender; touch them not; | 240 |
| Myriads of bluest plagues lie underneath them, | |
| And more than aconite has dipt the silk. | |
| Ant. Nay, now you grow too cynical, Ventidius: | |
| A ladys favours may be worn with honour. | |
| What, to refuse her bracelet! On my soul, | 245 |
| When I lie pensive in my tent alone, | |
| Twill pass the wakeful hours of winter nights, | |
| To tell these pretty beads upon my arm, | |
| To count for every one a soft embrace, | |
| A melting kiss at such and such a time: | 250 |
| And now and then the fury of her love, | |
| WhenAnd what harms in this? | |
| Alex. None, none, my lord, | |
| But whats to her, that now tis past for ever. | |
| Ant. [going to tie it]. We soldiers are so awkwardhelp me tie it. | 255 |
| Alex. In faith, my lord, we courtiers too are awkward | |
| In these affairs: so are all men indeed: | |
| Even I, who am not one. But shall I speak? | |
| Ant. Yes, freely. | |
| Alex. Then, my lord, fair hands alone | 260 |
| Are fit to tie it; she, who sent it can. | |
| Vent. Hell, death! this eunuch pander ruins you. | |
| You will not see her? [ALEXAS whispers an Attendant, who goes out. | |
| Ant. But to take my leave. | |
| Vent. Then I have washed an Æthiop. Youre undone; | 265 |
| Y are in the toils; y are taken; y are destroyed: | |
| Her eyes do Cæsars work. | |
| Ant. You fear too soon. | |
| Im constant to myself: I know my strength; | |
| And yet she shall not think me barbarous neither | 270 |
| Born in the depths of Afric: I am a Roman, | |
| Bred in the rules of soft humanity. | |
| A guest, and kindly used, should bid farewell. | |
| Vent. You do not know | |
| How weak you are to her, how much an infant: | 275 |
| You are not proof against a smile, or glance: | |
| A sigh will quite disarm you. | |
| Ant. See, she comes! | |
| Now you shall find your error.Gods. I thank you: | |
| I formed the danger greater than it was, | 280 |
| And now tis near, tis lessened. | |
| Vent. Mark the end yet. | |
| |
Enter CLEOPATRA, CHARMION, and IRAS | |
| Ant. Well, madam, we are met. | |
| Cleo. Is this a meeting? | 285 |
| Then, we must part? | |
| Ant. We must. | |
| Cleo. Who says we must? | |
| Ant. Our own hard fates. | |
| Cleo. We make those fates ourselves. | 290 |
| Ant. Yes, we have made them; we have loved each other, | |
| Into our mutual ruin. | |
| Cleo. The gods have seen my joys with envious eyes; | |
| I have no friends in heaven; and all the world, | |
| As twere the business of mankind to part us, | 295 |
| Is armed against my love: even you yourself | |
| Join with the rest; you, you are armed against me. | |
| Ant. I will be justified in all I do | |
| To late posterity, and therefore hear me. | |
| If I mix a lie | 300 |
| With any truth, reproach me freely with it; | |
| Else, favour me with silence. | |
| Cleo. You command me, | |
| And I am dumb. | |
| Vent. I like this well; he shows authority. | 305 |
| Ant. That I derive my ruin | |
| From you alone | |
| Cleo. O heavens! I ruin you! | |
| Ant. You promised me your silence, and you break it | |
| Ere I have scarce begun. | 310 |
| Cleo. Well, I obey you. | |
| Ant. When I beheld you first, it was in Egypt. | |
| Ere Cæsar saw your eyes, you gave me love, | |
| And were too young to know it; that I settled | |
| Your father in his throne, was for your sake; | 315 |
| I left the acknowledgment for time to ripen. | |
| Cæsar stept in, and, with a greedy hand, | |
| Plucked the green fruit, ere the first blush of red. | |
| Yet cleaving to the bough. He was my lord, | |
| And was, beside, too great for me to rival; | 320 |
| But, I deserved you first, though he enjoyed you. | |
| When, after, I beheld you in Cilicia, | |
| An enemy to Rome, I pardoned you. | |
| Cleo. I cleared myself | |
| Ant. Again you break your promise. | 325 |
| I loved you still, and took your weak excuses, | |
| Took you into my bosom, stained by Cæsar, | |
| And not half mine: I went to Egypt with you, | |
| And hid me from the business of the world, | |
| Shut out inquiring nations from my sight, | 330 |
| To give whole years to you. | |
| Vent. Yes, to your shame bet spoken. [Aside | |
| Ant. How I loved. | |
| Witness, ye days and nights, and all ye hours, | |
| That danced away with down upon your feet, | 335 |
| As all your business were to count my passion! | |
| One day passed by, and nothing saw but love; | |
| Another came, and still twas only love: | |
| The suns were wearied out with looking on, | |
| And I untired with loving. | 340 |
| I saw you every day, and all the day; | |
| And every day was still but as the first, | |
| So eager was I still to see you more. | |
| Vent. Tis all too true. | |
| Ant. Fulvia, my wife, grew jealous, | 345 |
| (As she indeed had reason) raised a war | |
| In Italy, to call me back. | |
| Vent. But yet | |
| You went not. | |
| Ant. While within your arms I lay, | 350 |
| The world fell mouldering from my hands each hour, | |
| And left me scarce a graspI thank your love fort. | |
| Vent. Well pushed: that last was home. | |
| Cleo. Yet may I speak? | |
| Ant. If I have urged a falsehood, yes; else, not. | 355 |
| Your silence says, I have not. Fulvia died, | |
| (Pardon, you gods, with my unkindness died); | |
| To set the world at peace, I took Octavia, | |
| This Cæsars sister; in her pride of youth, | |
| And flower of beauty, did I wed that lady, | 360 |
| Whom blushing I must praise, because I left her. | |
| You called; my love obeyed the fatal summons: | |
| This raised the Roman arms; the cause was yours. | |
| I would have fought by land, where I was stronger | |
| You hindered it: yet, when I fought at sea, | 365 |
| Forsook me fighting; and (O stain to honour! | |
| O lasting shame!) I knew not that I fled; | |
| But fled to follow you. | |
| Vent. What haste she made to hoist her purple sails! | |
| And, to appear magnificent in flight, | 370 |
| Drew half our strength away. | |
| Ant. All this you caused. | |
| And, would you multiply more ruins on me? | |
| This honest man, my best, my only friend, | |
| Has gathered up the shipwreck of my fortunes; | 375 |
| Twelve legions I have left, my last recruits. | |
| And you have watched the news, and bring your eyes | |
| To seize them too. If you have aught to answer, | |
| Now speak, you have free leave. | |
| Alex. [aside]. She stands confounded: | 380 |
| Despair is in her eye as. | |
| Vent. Now lay a sigh in the way to stop his passage: | |
| Prepare a tear, and bid it for his legions; | |
| Tis like they shall be sold. | |
| Cleo. How shall I plead my cause, when you, my judge, | 385 |
| Already have condemned me? Shall I bring | |
| The love you bore me for my advocate? | |
| That now is turned against me, that destroys me; | |
| For love, once past, is, at the best, forgotten; | |
| But oftener sours to hate: twill please my lord | 390 |
| To ruin me, and therefore Ill be guilty. | |
| But, could I once have thought it would have pleased you, | |
| That you would pry, with narrow searching eyes, | |
| Into my faults, severe to my destruction, | |
| And watching all advantages with care, | 395 |
| That serve to make me wretched? Speak, my lord, | |
| For I end here. Though I deserved this usage, | |
| Was it like you to give it? | |
| Ant. Oh, you wrong me, | |
| To think I sought this parting, or desired | 400 |
| To accuse you more than what will clear myself, | |
| And justify this breach. | |
| Cleo. Thus low I thank you; | |
| And, since my innocence will not offend, | |
| I shall not blush to own it. | 405 |
| Vent. After this, | |
| I think shell blush at nothing. | |
| Cleo. You seem grieved | |
| (And therein you are kind) that Cæsar first | |
| Enjoyed my love, though you deserved it better: | 410 |
| I grieve for that, my lord, much more than you; | |
| For, had I first been yours, it would have saved | |
| My second choice: I never had been his, | |
| And neer had been but yours. But Cæsar first, | |
| You say, possessed my love. Not so, my lord: | 415 |
| He first possessed my person; you, my love: | |
| Cæsar loved me; but I loved Antony. | |
| If I endured him after, twas because | |
| I judged it due to the first name of men; | |
| And, half constrained, I gave, as to a tyrant, | 420 |
| What he would take by force. | |
| Vent. O Syren! Syren! | |
| Yet grant that all the love she boast were true, | |
| Has she not ruined you? I still urge that, | |
| The fatal consequence. | 425 |
| Cleo. The consequence indeed | |
| For I dare challenge him, my greatest foe, | |
| To say it was designed: tis true, I loved you, | |
| And kept you far from an uneasy wife, | |
| Such Fulvia was. | 430 |
| Yes, but hell say, you left Octavia for me; | |
| And, can you blame me to receive that love, | |
| Which quitted such desert, for worthless me? | |
| How often have I wished some other Cæsar, | |
| Great as the first, and as the second young, | 435 |
| Would court my love, to be refused for you! | |
| Vent. Words, words; but Actium, sir; remember Actium. | |
| Cleo. Even there, I dare his malice. True, I counselled | |
| To fight at sea; but I betrayed you not. | |
| I fled, but not to the enemy. Twas fear; | 440 |
| Would I had been a man, not to have feared! | |
| For none would then have envied me your friendship, | |
| Who envy me your love. | |
| Ant. We are both unhappy: | |
| If nothing else, yet our ill fortune part us. | 445 |
| Speak; would you have me perish by my stay? | |
| Cleo. If, as a friend, you ask my judgment, go; | |
| If, as a lover, stay. If you must perish | |
| Tis a hard wordbut stay. | |
| Vent. See now the effects of her so boasted love! | 450 |
| She strives to drag you down to ruin with her; | |
| But, could she scape without you, oh, how soon | |
| Would she let go her hold, and haste to shore, | |
| And never look behind! | |
| Cleo. Then judge my love by this. [Giving ANTONY a writing. | 455 |
| Could I have borne | |
| A life or death, a happiness or woe, | |
| From yours divided, this had given me means. | |
| Ant. By Hercules, the writing of Octavius! | |
| I know it well: tis that proscribing hand, | 460 |
| Young as it was, that led the way to mine, | |
| And left me but the second place in murder. | |
| See, see, Ventidius! here he offers Egypt, | |
| And joins all Syria to it, as a present; | |
| So, in requital, she forsake my fortunes, | 465 |
| And join her arms with his. | |
| Cleo. And yet you leave me! | |
| You leave me, Antony; and yet I love you, | |
| Indeed I do: I have refused a kingdom; | |
| That is a trifle; | 470 |
| For I could part with life, with anything, | |
| But only you. Oh, let me die but with you! | |
| Is that a hard request? | |
| Ant. Next living with you, | |
| Tis all that Heaven can give. | 475 |
| Alex. He melts; we conquer. [Aside. | |
| Cleo. No; you shall go: your interest calls you hence; | |
| Yes; your dear interest pulls too strong, for these | |
| Weak arms to hold you here. [Takes his hand. | |
| Go; leave me, soldier | 480 |
| (For youre no more a lover): leave me dying: | |
| Push me, all pale and panting, from your bosom, | |
| And, when your march begins, let one run after, | |
| Breathless almost for joy, and cryShes dead. | |
| The soldiers shout; you then, perhaps, may sigh, | 485 |
| And muster all your Roman gravity: | |
| Ventidius chides; and straight your brow clears up, | |
| As I had never been. | |
| Ant. Gods, tis too much; too much for man to bear. | |
| Cleo. What ist for me then, | 490 |
| A weak, forsaken woman, and a lover? | |
| Here let me breathe my last: envy me not | |
| This minute in your arms: Ill die apace, | |
| As fast as eer I can, and end your trouble. | |
| Ant. Die! rather let me perish; loosened nature | 495 |
| Leap from its hinges, sink the props of heaven, | |
| And fall the skies, to crush the nether world! | |
| My eyes, my soul, my all! [Embraces her. | |
| Vent. And whats this toy. | |
| In balance with your fortune, honour, fame? | 500 |
| Ant. What ist, Ventidius?it outweighs them all; | |
| Why, we have more than conquered Cæsar now: | |
| My queens not only innocent, but loves me. | |
| This, this is she, who drags me down to ruin! | |
| But, could she scape without me, with what haste | 505 |
| Would she let slip her hold, and make to shore, | |
| And never look behind! | |
| Down on thy knees, blasphemer as thou art, | |
| And ask forgiveness of wronged innocence. | |
| Vent. Ill rather die, than take it. Will you go? | 510 |
| Ant. Go! whither? Go from all thats excellent? | |
| Faith, honour, virtue, all good things forbid, | |
| That I should go from her, who sets my love | |
| Above the price of kingdoms! Give, you gods, | |
| Give to your boy, your Cæsar, | 515 |
| This rattle of a globe to play withal, | |
| This gewgaw world, and put him cheaply off: | |
| Ill not be pleased with less than Cleopatra. | |
| Cleo. Shes wholly yours. My hearts so full of joy, | |
| That I shall do some wild extravagance | 520 |
| Of love, in public; and the foolish world, | |
| Which knows not tenderness, will think me mad. | |
| Vent. O women! women! women! all the gods | |
| Have not such power of doing good to man, | |
| As you of doing harm. [Exit. | 525 |
| Ant. Our men are armed: | |
| Unbar the gate that looks to Cæsars camp: | |
| I would revenge the treachery he meant me; | |
| And long security makes conquest easy. | |
| Im eager to return before I go; | 530 |
| For, all the pleasures I have known beat thick | |
| On my remembrance.How I long for night! | |
| That both the sweets of mutual love may try, | |
| And triumph once oer Cæsar ere we die. [Exeunt. | |
| |