Page:Romeo and Juliet, a Comedy by Lopez de Vega. William Griffin, 1770.pdf/31

 victim of your ambition, and I have acrificed my life to the huband whom Heaven had given me: this is the doing; this is the fruit of your rigour. I now exhort you never to conpire the ruin of thy on-in-law, but to love and cherih him as if he had been your own choice: be aured, that if you treat him ill, I will continually torment thee; you hall hear me, you hall ee me every where; my avenging fury hall not leave thee a quiet moment.

Who then is this huband? Tell me his name, my dear child?

He is the conqueror of Octavio, Romeo, the on of the head of the Montague faction: conider that Heaven has formed him to appeae the odious dicords which have o long deolated our country.

Romeo your huband! Could I have ever thought it? But it does not ignify, I conent to make a acrifice to you of my hatred; I call to witnes this day every thing which is mot acred, that Romeo hall in my heart find the real entiments of a father.

During this cene, Theobald, and the ret of the Capulet party, dicover Romeo, Anelmo and Rh