Two Gentlemen of Verona Act 2, Scene 3
Two Gentlemen of Verona Act 2, Scene 3 Summary In Act 2, Scene 3 of The Two Gentlemen of Verona , the scene shifts from the lovers' high emotion to low comedy, as Proteus's servant Lance prepares to depart. He enters, weeping, accompanied by his indifferent dog, Crab. Lance laments that his weeping will last an hour, blaming his family's temperament. He says he has received his "proportion" (share of the estate) like the Prodigal Son and is off to court with Proteus. His main complaint, however, is his dog Crab's utter lack of empathy. He describes the emotional parting at his home: his mother, father, sister, maid, and even the cat were in distress, yet Crab shed not a single tear. He calls Crab a "pibble stone" (pebble) and jokes that even a Jew (a stereotype of hard-heartedness in Elizabethan drama) would have wept. To illustrate the scene, Lance launches into a comic routine using his props. He uses his shoes to represent his parents (...