THE
SECOND PART
OF THE
ROVER.
As it is Acted by the Servants
OF HIS
Royal Highness.
Written by
A. Behn.
LONDON:
Printed for
Jacob Tonson
at the
Judges-Head
in
Chancery-Lane. MDCLXXXI.
PROLOGUE,
Spoken by Mr. SMITH.
In vain we labour to reform the Stage; |
1 |
Poets have caught too the Disease o'th' Age, |
2 |
That Pest, Of not being quiet when they'r Well, |
3 |
That restless Feaver, in the Brethren Zeal: |
4 |
In publick Spirits call'd, Good o'th' Commonweal. |
5 |
Some for this Faction cry, others for that, |
6 |
The pious Mobily for they know not what: |
7 |
So tho by different ways the Feaver seize, |
8 |
In all 'tis one and the same mad Disease. |
9 |
Our Author too, as all new Zealots do |
10 |
Full of conceit and contradiction too; |
11 |
Cause the first Project took, is now so vain, |
12 |
To attempt to Play the old Game o're again: |
13 |
The Scene is only chang'd, for who wou'd lay |
14 |
A plot, so hopeful, just the same dull way. |
15 |
Poets, like States-men, with a little change, |
16 |
Pass off old Politicks for new and strange; |
17 |
Tho the few men of sense decry's aloud, |
18 |
The cheat will pass with the unthinking Crowd: |
19 |
The Rabble 'tis we Court, those powerful things, |
20 |
Whose voices can impose even Laws on Kings. |
21 |
A Pox of Sense and Reason, or dull Rules, |
22 |
Give us an Audience that declares for fools; |
23 |
Our Play will then stand fair, we've Monsters too, |
24 |
Which far exceed your City Pope for show. |
25 |
Almighty Rahhle, 'tis to you this day, |
26 |
Our humble Author Dedicates the Play, |
27 |
From those who in our lofty Tyre sit, |
28 |
Down to the dull State-Cullies of the Pit, |
29 |
Who have much Money, and but little Wit. |
30 |
Whose useful Purses, and whose empty Skulls, |
31 |
To private Int'rest make ye Publick Tools: |
32 |
To work on Projects which the wiser frame, |
33 |
And of fine men of business get the Name. |
34 |
You who have left Caballing here of late, |
35 |
Imploy'd in matters of a mightier weight, |
36 |
To you we make our humble Application, |
37 |
You'd spare some time from your dear new Vocation: |
38 |
(Of drinking deep, then ettleing the Nation,) |
39 |
To countenance us, whom Commonwealths of old, |
40 |
Did the most Politick diversion hold, |
41 |
Plays were so useful thought to Government, |
42 |
That Laws were made fr their establishment; |
43 |
How e're in Schools differing Opinions jar. |
44 |
Yet all agree i'th'crowded Theatre, |
45 |
Which none forsook in any Change or War: |
46 |
That like their Gods unviolated stood, |
47 |
Equally needful to the publick Good. |
48 |
Throw then, Great Sirs, some vacant hours away, |
49 |
And your Petitioners shall Humbly Pray,&c. |
50 |
Actors Names
-
Willmore |
The Rover in Love with La Nuche.
|
Mr. Smith.
|
Beaumond |
The English Ambassadors Nephew in Love with La Nuche, Contracted to Ariadne.
|
Mr. Williams.
|
Ned Blunt |
An English Country Gentleman.
|
Mr. Underhill.
|
Nicholas Fetherfool |
An English Esq; his friend.
|
Mr. Nokes.
|
Shift |
An English Lieutenant.
|
Mr. Wiltshier.
|
Hunt |
An Ensign, Friends and Officers to William. |
Mr. Richards.
|
Harliquin |
Willmore's Man.
|
|
Abevile |
Page to Beaumond. |
|
Don Carlo |
An old Grandee, in Love with La Nuche. |
Mr. Norice.
|
SCENE Madrid.
TO HIS
Royal Highness
THE
DUKE, &.
Great SIR,
I Dread to appear in this Humble Dedication to Your Royal
Highness, as one of those Insolent and Saucy Offenders
who take occasion by Your absence to commit ill-manner'd
indecencies, unpardonable to a Prince of your Illustrious
Birth and God-like Goodness, but that in spight of Seditiou Scandal
You can forgive; and all the World knows You can suffer with a Divine
Patience : the proofs You have early and late given of this, have
been such, as if Heaven design'd 'em only to give the World an undeniable
Testimony of Your Noble Vertues, Your Loyalty and True Obedience
(if I may presume to say so,) both to Your Sacred Brother, and the
never satisfied People when either one Commanded, or t'other repin'd,
With how chearful and intire a submission You Obey'd? And tho the
Royal Son of a Glorious Father who was render'd unfortunate by the
unexemplary ingratitude of his worst of Subjects; and sacrific'd to
the insatiate and cruel Villany of a seeming sanctifi'd Faction, who
cou'd never hope to expiate for the unparallell'd sin, but by an intire
submission to the Gracious Off-spring of this Royal Martyr: yet You,
Great Sir, denying Your self the Rights and Priviledges the meanest
Subject Claims, with a Fortitude worthy Your Adorable Virtues, put
Your self upon a voluntary Exile to appease the causeless murmurs of
this again gathering Faction, who make their needless and self-created
fears, an occasion to Play the old Game o're again; whil'st
the Politick self-interested and malitious few betray the unconsidering
Rest, with the delicious sounds of Liberty and Publick Good; that
lucky Cant which so few years since so miserably reduc'd all the Noble,
Brave and Honest, to the Obedienc of the ill-gotten Power, and
worse-acted Greatness of the Rabble; so that whil'st they most unjustly
cry'd down the oppression of one of the best of Monarchs, and all
Kingly Government: all Englandfound it self deplorably inslav'd
by the Arbitrary Tyranny of many Pageant Kings. Oh that we shou'd
so far forget with what greatness of mind You then shar'd the common
Fate, as now again to force Your Royal Person to new Perils,
and new Exiles; but such ingratitude we are punisht with, and You
still suffer for, and still forgive it.
This more than Human Goodess, with the incouragement Your
Royal Highness was pleas'd to give the Rover at his first appearance,
and the concern You were pleas'd to have for his second, makes me
presume to lay him at Your feet; he is a wanderer too, distrest; belov'd,
tho unfortunate, and ever constant to Loyalty; were he Legions
he shou'd follow and suffer still with so Excellent a Prince and Master.
Your Infant worth he knew, and all Your growing Glories; has
seen you like young
Cæsar
in the Field, when yet a Youth, exchanging
Death for Laurels, and wondred at a Bravery so early, which still
made double Conquest, not only by Your Sword, but by Your Vertues,
which taught even Your Enemies so intire an Obedience, that asham'd
of their Rebel Gallantry, they have resign'd their
Some of
Oliver
's Commanders at
Dunkirk
guilty Commissions, and Vow'd never to Draw Sword
more but in the Royal Cause; which Vow Religiously
they kept: a noble Example for the busie and hot Mutineers
of this Age misled by Youth, false Ambition, and falser
Council.
How careless since Your Glorious Restauration You have been, of
Your Life for the service of Your mistaken Country, the whole World
knows, and all brave men admire.
Pardon me then, Great Sir, if I presume to present my faithful
Soldier, (which no Storms of Fate can ever draw from his Obedi-
ence) to so great a General: allow him, Royal Sir, a shelter and
protection, who was driven from his Native Country with You, forc'd
as You were, to fight for his Bread in a strange Land, and suffer'd with
You all the Ills of Poverty, War and Banishment, and still pursues
Your Fortunes; and though he cannot serve Your Highness, he may
possibly have the Honour of diverting You a few moments: which tho
Your Highness cannot want in a place where all Hearts and Knees are
justly bow'd in Adoration, where all all conspire, as all the Earth (who
have the blessing of Your presence) ought to entertain, serve and
please You; yet this humble Tribute of a most Zealous and Devout
Heart, may find amongst Your busier hours of greater moment, some
one wherein it may have the Glory of Your regard, and be capable in
some small degree of unbendingYor great mind from Royal Cares,
the weightiest Cares of all; which if is be so fortunate as to do, I have
my end, and the Glory I design, a sufficient reward for her who does
and will eternally pray for the Life, Health and Safety of Your Royal
Highness, as in Duty all the World is boud to do, but more especially,
Illustrious Sir,
Your Highnesses most Humble,
most Faithful, and
most Obedient Servant,
A. Behn.
THE
SECOND PART
OF THE
ROVER.
ACT I. Scene I.
Enter Willmore
,
Blunt
,
Fetherfool and Hunt, two more in
Campania Dresses, Rag the Captains Boy.
Willmore
Stay, this is the
English
Ambassadors, I'le inquire if
Beaumond
be return'd from
Paris
.
Fetherfool
Prithee dear Captain no more delays unless thou thinkest he will invite us to dinner;
for this fine thin sharp Air of Madrid has a most notable faculty of provoking an
Appetite: Prithee let's to the ordinary.
Willmore
I will not stay—
—Friend, is the Ambassadors Nephew, Mr.
Beaumond
, return'd to
Madrid
yet? If he be, I would speak with him.
Porter
I'le let him know so much.
Blunt
Whe how now, What's the door shut upon us?
Fetherfool
And reason
Ned
, 'tis dinner time in the Ambassidors kitchen, and should they let the savory steem
out, what a world of Castillians would there be at the door feeding upon't. —Oh there's
no living in
Spain
when the Pot's uncover'd.
Blunt
Nay, 'tis a Nation of the finest clean teeth—
Fetherfool
Teeth, 'Gad and they use their Swords no oftner, a Scabbard will last an Age.
Enter Shift from the House.
Willmore
Shift
My Noble Captain—Welcom to
Madrid
. What Mr.
Blunt
, and my Honoured Friend
Nicholas Fetherfool
, Esq;
Fetherfool
Willmore
And how Lieutenant, how stand affairs in this unsanctifi'd Town?—How does Loves great
Artillery, the fair
La Nuche
! from whose bright eyes the little wanton God throws darts to wound Mankind.
Shift
Faith, she carries all before her still; undoes her fellow-traders in Loves Art: and
amongst the number, old
Carlo de Minalta Segosa
pays high for two nights in a week.
Willmore
Hah—
Carlo
! Death, what a greeting's here,
Carlo
the happy man! a Dog! a Rascal, gain the bright
La Nuche
Oh Fortune! Cursed blind mistaken Fortune: eternal friend to fools! Fortune! that
takes the noblerate from man, to place it on her Idol interest.
Shift
Whe faith Captain, I should think her heart might stand as fair for you as any, could
you be less Satyrical—but by this light, Captain, you return her raillery a little
too roughly.
Willmore
Her raillery: by this hand I had rather be handsomly abus'd than dully flatter'd ;
but when she touches on my poverty, my honourable poverty, she presses me too sensibly—for
nothing is so nice as poverty—but Damn her, I'le think of her no more: For she's a
Devil though her form be Angel! Is
Beaumond
come from
Paris
yet?
Shift
He is, I came with him; he's impatient of your return: I'le let him know you're here.
Fetherfool
Whe what a Pox ails the Captain o'th suddain? he looks as sullenly as a routed General,
or a Lover, after hard service.
Blunt
Oh—something the Lieutenant has told him about a Wench, and when Cupid's in his Breeches
the Devil's ever in's head—how now—what a pox is the matter with you, you look so
scurvily now—What's the Gentlewoman otherwise
provided, has she cashier'd ye for want of pay? or what other dire mischance—hah—
Willmore
Blunt
Adshartlikins, but I will, and beat thee too, but I'le know the Cause, I heard
Shift
tell thee something about
La Nuche
, a Damzel I have often heard thee fool enough to sigh for.
Willmore
Confound the mercenary Jilt!
Blunt
Nay, adshartlikins they are all so; though I thought you had been whore-proof, 'tis
enough for us fools, Country Gentlemen, Esquires, and Cullies, to miscarry in their
Amorous Adventures, you men of Wit weather all storms you.
Willmore
Oh Sir, you're become a new man, wise and wary, and can no more be cousen'd.
Blunt
Not by Woman-kind, and for man I think my Sword will secure me, Pox I thought a two
months absence and a Siege would have put such trifles out of thy head: you do not
use to be such a miracle of Constancy.
Willmore
That absence makes me think of her so much; and all the passions thou find'st about
me, are to the Sex alone! give me a Woman
Ned
, a fine young Amorous wanton, who would allay this fire that makes me rave thus,
and thou shouldst find me no longer particular; but cold as Winter nights to this
La Nuche
: yet since I lost my little charming Gipsey, nothing has gone so near my heart as
this.
Blunt
Ay there was a Girl, the only she thing that could reconcile me to the Petticoats
agen after my
Naples
adventure, when the Quean rob'd and stript me.
Willmore
Oh name not
Hellena
! she was a Saint to be ador'd on Holy-days.
Enter Beaumond
.
Beaumond
Willmore
! my careless wild Inconstant—how is't my lucky Rover?
Willmore
>My Life! my Soul! how glad am I to find thee in my Arms again—and well—When left
you
Paris
?
Paris
that City of Pottage and Crab-Wine, swarming with Laquies and Philoes, whose Government
is carried on by most hands, not most voices—and prethee how does
Bellvill
and his Lady?
Beaumond
I left 'em both in health at
St. Germans
.
Willmore
Faith I have wisht my self with ye at the old Temple of
Bacchus
and
St. Clo
, to Sacrifice a Bottle and a Damzel to his Deity.
Beaumond
My constant place of Worship whilst there, tho for want of new Saints my zeal grew
something cold, which I was ever fain to supply with a Bottle, the old remedy when
Phillis
is sullen or absent.
Willmore
Now thou talk'st of
Phillis
, prithee dear
Harry
what Women hast in store?
Beaumond
I'le tell thee; but first inform me whom these two Sparks are.
Willmore
'Egad and so they, are Child: Salute 'em—they are my friends—true Blades
Hall
, highly guilty of the Royal Crime, poor and brave, Loyal Fugitives.
Beaumond
I Love and Honour 'em, Sir, as such—
Blunt
Sir, there's neither Love nor Honour lost.
Fetherfool
Sir, I scorn to be behind hand in Civilities.
Beaumond
At first sight I find I am much yours, Sir.
Fetherfool
Sir, I Love and Honour any man that's a friend to Captain
Willmore
—and therefore I am Yours—
—Well honest Lieutenant how does thy body—when shall
Ned
, and thou and I, crack a Bisket o're a glass of Wine, have a slice of Treason, and
settle the Nation, hah?
Shift
You know, Squire I am devoted yours
Beaumond
Willmore
Whe the first you saluted is the same
Ned Blunt
you have often heard
Bellvill
and I speak of: the other is a rarity of another Nature, one Squire
Fetherfool
of
Croydon
, a tame Justice o'th'Peace, Who liv'd as innocently as Ale and Fool could keep him,
till for a mistaken kindness to one of the Royal Parry he lost his Commission, and
got the reputation of a Suffrer: he's Rich, but Covetous as an Alderman.
Beaumond
What a Pox do'st keep 'em Company for, who have neither Wit enough to divert thee,
nor good Nature enough to serve thee?
Willmore
Faith
Harry
'tis true, and if there were no more Charity than Profit in't, a man would sooncr
keep a Cough o'th'
Lungs than be troubled with 'em, but the Rascals have a blind side as all conceited
Coxcombs have, which when I've nothing else to do, I shall expose to advance our mirth;
the Rogues must be cozened, because they're so positive they never can be so—but I
am now for softer joys, for Woman, for Woman in abundance—dear
Hall
inform me where I may safely unlaid my heart.
Beaumond
The same man still, wild and wanton!
Willmore
And would not change to be the Catholick King.
Beaumond
I perceive Marriage has not tam'd you, nor a Wife who had all the charms of her Sex.
Willmore
Ay—she was too good for Mortals.
Beaumond
I think thou hadst her but a month, prithee how dy'd she?
Willmore
Faith, e'ne with a fit of kindness, poor soul—she would to Sea with me and in a Storm—far
from Land she gave up the Ghost—'twas a loss, but I must bear it with a Christian
Fortitude.
Beaumond
Short happinesses vanish like to dreams.
Willmore
Ay faith, and nothing remains with me but the sad remembrance —not so much as the
least part of her hundred thousand crowns;
Bruxels
that inchanted Court has eas'd me of that grief, where our Hero's Act
Tantalus
better than ever
Ovid
describ'd him, condemn'd daily to see an Apparition of meat, food in Vision only:
faith I had Bowels, was good natur'd and lent upon the publick faith as far as 'twould
go —but come—let's leave this mortifying discourse, and tell me how the price of Pleasure
goes.
Beaumond
At the old rates still, he that gives most is happiest, some few there are for Love!
Willmore
Ah one of the last dear
Beaumond
, and if a Heart or Sword can purchase her, I'le bid as fair as the best. Damn it,
I hate a Whore that asks me money.
Beaumond
Yet I have known thee venture all thy stock for a new Woman.
Willmore
Ay, such a fool I was in my dull days of Constancy, but I am now for change, (and
should I pay as often, 'twould undo me)—for change, my dear, of Place, Cloathes, Wine,
and Women, Variety is the soul of pleasure, a good unknown, and we want faith to find
it.
Beaumond
Thou wouldst renounce that fond opinion, Willmore, didst thou but see a Beauty here
in Town, whose charms have power to fix inconstant Nature or Fortune were she tottering
on her Wheel.
Willmore
Her Name, my dear, her Name!
Beaumond
I would not breath it even in my complaints, lest amorous winds should bear it o're
the World, and make mankind her Slaves. But that it is a name too cheaply known, And
She that owns it may be as cheaply purchas'd.
Willmore
Hah! cheaply purchas'd too: I languish for her.
Beaumond
Ay there's the Devil on't, She is—a Whore—
Willmore
Ah; what a charming sound that mighty word bears.
Beaumond
Damn her, she'l be thine or any bodies.
Willmore
Beaumond
Willmore
No more—ye Gods, I ask no more. Be she but fair and much a Whore—come let's to her.
Beaumond
Perhaps to morrow you may see this Woman.
Willmore
Fetherfool
Oh, Captain, the strangest news, Captain.
Willmore
Fetherfool
Whe Lieutenant
Shift
here, tells us of two Monsters arriv'd from Mexico, Jews of vast fortunes, with an
old Jew Uncle their Guardian; they are worth a hundred thousand pounds a piece—Marcy
upon's, whe 'tis a sum able to purchase all
Flanders
again from his most Christian Majesty.
Willmore
Beaumond
He tells you truth
Willmore
.
Blunt
But harkye, Lieutenant, are you sure they are not married.
Beaumond
Marry'd, who the Devil would venture on such formidable Ladies.
Fetherfool
How, venture on'em, by the Lord,
Harry
, and that would I, though I'me a Justice o'th'Peace, and they be Jews, (which to
a Christian is a thousand reasons)
Blunt
Is the Devil in you to declare our design.
Fetherfool
Mum, as close as a Jesuit.
Beaumond
I admire your courage, Sir, but one of them is so little, and so deform'd, 'tis thought
she is nocapable of Marriage;
and the other is so huge an overgrown Gyant, no man dares venture on her.
Willmore
Prithee let's go see 'em; what do they pay for going in?
Fetherfool
Pay—I'de have you to kow they are Monsters of Quality.
Shift
And not to be seen but by particular favour of their Guardian, whom I am got acquainted
with, from the friendship I have with the Merchant where they lay. The Gyant, Sir,
is in love with me, the Dwarf with Ensign
Hunt
, and as we may manage matters it may prove lucky.
Beaumond
And didst thou see the Show; the Elephant and the Mouse?
Shift
Yes, and pleas'd 'em wondrously with News I brought 'em of a famous Mountibank who
is coming to
Madrid
, here are his Bills—who amongst other his marvellous Cures, pretends to restore mistakes
in Nature, to new- mould a Face and Body though never so mishapen, to exact Proportion
and Beauty. This News has made me gracious to the Ladies, and I am to bring 'em Word
of the arrival of this famous Empirick, and to negotiate the business of their Reformation.
Willmore
And do they think to be restor'd to moderate sizes?
Shift
Much pleas'd with the hope, and are resolv'd to try at any rate.
Fetherfool
Mum, Lieutenant—not too much of their transformation; we shall have the Captain put
in for a share, and the Devil Would not have him his Rival:
Ned
and I are resolv'd to venture a cast for 'em as they are—Hah,
Ned.
[
Willmore and Beaumond read the Bill.
Blunt
Yes, if there were any hopes of your keeping a secret.
Fetherfool
Nay, Nay,
Ned
, the World knows I am a plaguy fellow at your secrets; that, and my share of the
charge shall be my part, for Shift says the Guardian must be brib'd for consent: Now
the other moyety of the money and the speeches shall be thy part, for thou hast a
pretty knack that way. Now Shift shall bring matters neatly about, and we'l pay him
by the day, or in gross, when we are marry'd.—hah
Shift
.
Shift
Sir, I shall be reasonable.
Willmore
I am sure
Fetherfool
and
Blunt
have some wise design upon these two Monsters—it must be so—and this Bill has put
an extravagant thought into my head—harkye
Shift
—
Blunt
The Devil's in't if this will not redeem my reputation with the Captain, and give
him to understand that all the wit does not lye in the Family of the
Willmore
's, but that this noddle of mine can be fruitful too upon occasion.
Fetherfool
Ay, and Lord how we'l domineer,
Ned
, hah—over
Willmore
and the rest of the Renegado Officers, when we have married these Lady Monsters,
hah,
Ned,!
Blunt
—Then to return back to
Essex
worth a Million.
Fetherfool
Blunt
—Lolling in Coach and Six—
Fetherfool
—Be dub'd Right Worshipful—
Blunt
And stand for Knight o'th'Shire.
Willmore
Enough—I must have my share of this jest, and for divers and sundry reasons thereunto
belonging, must be this very Mountibank expected.
Shift
Faith, Sir, and that were no hard matter, for a day or two the Town will believe
it, the same they look for; and the Bank Operators and Musick are all ready.
Willmore
Well enough, add but a
Harliquin
and
Scaramouche
, and I shall mount in querpo.
Shift
Take no care for that, Sir, your Man, and Ensign
Hunt
, are excellent at those two; I saw 'em Act 'em the other day to a wonder, they'l
be glad of the employment, my self will be an Operator.
Willmore
No more, get 'em ready, and give it out, the man of Art's arriv'd: be diligent and
secret, for these two politick Asses must be cozened.
Shift
I will about the business instantly.
Beaumond
This fellow will do feats if he keep his word.
Willmore
I'le give you mine he shall—but, dear
Beaumond
, Where shall we meet anon?
Beaumond
I thank ye for that—'Gad ye shall dine with me.
Fetherfool
Willmore
I beg your Pardon now, dear
Beaumond
—I having lately nothing else to do, took a Command of Horse from the General at
the last Siege, from which I am just arriv'd, and my Baggage is behind, which I must
take order for.
Fetherfool
Pox on't now there's a Dinner lost, 'twas ever an unlucky Rascal.
Beaumond
To tempt thee more thou shalt see my Wife that is to be.
Willmore
Pox on't, I am the lewdest company in Christendom with your honest Women—but—what
art thou to be noos'd then?
Beaumond
'Tis so design'd by my Uncle, if an old Grandee my Rival prevent it not; the Wench
is very pretty, young, and rich, and lives in the same house with me, for 'tis my
Aunts Daughter.
Willmore
Much good may it d' ye
Harry
, I pity you, but 'tis the common grievance of you happy men of fortune.
Enter La Nuche
,
Aurelia
,
Petronella
,
Sancho
,
Women veil'd a little.
Aurelia
Heavens, Madam, is not that the
English
Captain?
La Nuche
'Tis, and with him
Don Henrick
the Ambassadors Nephew—how my heart pants and heaves at sight of him! some fire of
the old flame's remaining, which I must strive to extinguish. For I'le not bate a
Ducat of this price I've set upon my self, for all the pleasures Youth or Love can
bring me—for see
Aurelia
—the sad Memento of a decay'd poor old forsaken Whore, in
Petronella
, consider her, and then commend my prudence.
Willmore
Fetherfool
Egad and fine ones too I'le tell you that.
Willmore
No matter, Kindness is better sawce to Women than Beauty! By this hand she looks
at me.—Why dost hold me?
Fetherfool
Whe what a Devil art Mad?
Willmore
Raging! as vigorous Youth kept long from Beauty: Wild for the charming Sex, eager
for Woman! I long to give a loose to Love and Pleasure.
Blunt
These are not Women, Sir, for you to ruffle—
Willmore
Have a care of your Persons of Quality,
Ned
!
Thoes lovely eyes were never made to throw their Darts in vain!
La Nuche
The Conquest would be hardly worth the pain—
Willmore
Hah,
La Nuche
, with what a proud disdain she flung away—stay, I will not part so with you—
Enter Ariadne and Lucia with Footmen.
Ariadne
Who are these before us,
Lucia
?
Lucia
I know not, Madam, but if you make not haste home you'l be troubled with
Carlo
your importunate Lover! Who is just behind us?
Ariadne
Hang me, a lovely Man! what Lady's that, stay.
Petronella
What insolence is this? this Villain will spoil all—
Fetherfool
Whe, Captain, are you quite distracted?—dost know where thou art? Prithee be civil—
Willmore
Enter Carlo, and two or three
Spanish
Servants following:
Petronella goes to him.
Carlo
Hah, affronted by a drunken Islander, a sawcy Tramontane—Draw—
Whilst I lead her off—fear not, Lady, you have the honour of my Sword to guard ye!
Willmore
Hah
Carlo
—ye lye—it cannot guard the boasting Fool that wears it—be gone—and look not back
upon this Woman—
One single glance destroys thee—
[
They Draw and Fight; Carlo getting hindmost of his
Spaniards
, the
English
beat 'em off: The Ladies run away, all but Ariadne and Lucia
.
Lucia
Heav'ns, Madam, why de ye stay?
Ariadne
To pray for that dear stranger—and see my Prayers are heard, and he's return'd in
safety—this Door shall shelter me to o're hear the Quarrel.
Enter Willmore
,
Blunt
,
Fetherfool looking big and putting up his Sword.
Fetherfool
The Noble Captain be affronted by a starch'd Ruff and
Beard, a Coward in querpo, a walking Bunch of Garlick, a pickl'd Pilchard! abuse the
Noble Captain, and bear it off in State, boto a Chistmas sweet heart, these things
must not be whilst
Nicholas Fetherfool
wears a Sword.
Blunt
Pox o'these Women, I thought no good would come on't, besides where's the jest in
affronting honest Women, if there be such a thing in the Nation.
Fetherfool
Hang't, 'twas the Devil and all—
Willmore
Ha, ha, ha! Why good honest homespun Countrey Gentlemen, Who do ye think those were?
Fetherfool
Were! whe Ladies of Quality going to their Devotion, Who should they be?
Blunt
Whe faith and so I thought too.
Willmore
Whe that very one Woman I spoke too, is ten Whores in
Surrey
.
Fetherfool
Prithee speak softly Man, 'Slife we shall be Poniarded for keeping thee Company.
Willmore
Wise Mr. Justice, give me your Warrant, and if I do not prove 'em Whores, whip me.
Fetherfool
Prithee hold thy Scandalous Blasphemous Tongue, as if I did not know Whores from
Persons of Quality.
Willmore
Will you believe me when you lie with her, for thou'rt a rich Ass and may'st do't.
Fetherfool
Willmore
'Tis strange Logick now because your Band is better than mine, I must not know a
Whore better than you.
Blunt
If this be a Whore, as thou say'st, I understand nothing—by this Light such a Wench
would pass for a Person of Quality in
London
.
Fetherfool
Few Ladies have I seen at a Sheriffs Feast have better Faces, or worn so good Cloaths,
and by the Lord,
Harry
, if these be of the Gentle-craft, I'de not give a Real for a honest Woman for my
use.
Willmore
Come follow me into the Church, for thither I am sure they're gone: And I will let
you see what a wretched thing you had been had you liv'd seven years longer in
Surrey
, stew'd in Ale and Beef-Broth.
Fetherfool
Oh dear
Willmore
name not those savory things, there's no jesting with my Stomach; it sleeps now,
but if it wakes wo be to your shares at the ordinary.
Blunt
I'le say that for
Fetherfool
, if his heart were but half so good as his Stomach, he were a brave Fellow.
Ariadne
I am resolv'd to follow—and learn, if possible, who 'tis has made this sudden Conquest
o're me.
[
Scene Draws, and discovers a Church, a great many People as at Devotion, soft Musick
Playing. Enter La Nuche
,
Aurelia
,
Petronella
,
and Sancho: To them Willmore
,
Fetherfool
,
Blunt
;
then Ariadne
,
Lucia
.
Fetherfool bows to La Nuche and Petronella
.
Fetherfool
Now as I hope to be sav'd,
Blunt
, she's a most Melodious Lady: Would I were worthy to purchase a sin or so with her.
Would not such a Beauty reconcile thy quarrel to the Sex?
Blunt
No, were she an Angel in that shape.
Fetherfool
Why, what a Pox couldst not lie with her if she'd let thee? by the Lord,
Harry
, as errant a Dog as I am, I'de fain see any of Cupid's Cook-Maids put me out of countenance
with such, a Shoulder of Mutton.
Ariadne
See how he gazes on her—
Lucia
go nearer and o're- hear 'em.
Willmore
Death, how the charming Hypocrite looks to day, with such a soft Devotion in her
eyes: as if even now she were a praising Heav'n for all th' advantages t'has blest
her with.
Blunt
Look how
Willmore
eyes her, the Rogue's smitten heart-deep—Whores—
Fetherfool
Only a trick to keep her to himself—he thought the Name of a
Spanish
Harlot would fright us from attempting—I must divert him—how is't Captain—prithee
mind this Mu- sick—is it not most Seraphical.
Willmore
Pox, let the Fidlers mind and Tune their Pipes, I've higher pleasures now.
Fetherfool
Oh have ye so; what with Whores Captain—
'Tis a most delicious Gentlewoman.
Petronella
Pray, Madam, mind that Cavalier, who takes such pains to recommend himself to you?
La Nuche
Yes, for a fine conceited fool—
Petronella
Catso, a fool, what else?
La Nuche
Right, they are our noblest Chapmen, fool, and a rich fool, and an
English
rich fool—
Fetherfool
'Sbud she eyes me,
Ned
, I'le set my self in order, it may take—hah—
Petronella
Let me alone to manage him, I'le to him—
La Nuche
Or to the Devil, so I had one Minutes time to speak to
Willmore
in.
Petronella
And accosting him thus—Tell him—
La Nuche
(
In a hasty tone
)
—I am desperately in Love with him, and am Daughter, Wife, or Mistriss to some Grandee—be-
mone the condition of Women of Quality in
Spain
, who by too much constraint are obliged to speak first—but were we blest like other
Nations where Men and Women meet—
Petronella
What herds of Cuckolds wou'd
Spain
breed—'Slife, I could find in my heart to forswear your service, have I taught ye
your Trade to become my instructer, how to couzen a dull Phlegmatick greasy braind
English
Man—go and expect your wishes.
Willmore
So, she has sent her Matron to our Coxcomb: she saw he was a Cully fit for game—who
would not be a Rascal to be rich, a Dog, an Ass, a beaten hardned Coward—by Hea-
ven, I will possess this gay Insensible, to make me hate her— most extremely curse
her—see—if she be not fall'n to Prayer again, from thence to Flattery, Jilting and
Purse-taking, to make the Proverb good—my fair false
Sybil
, what Inspirations are you waiting from Heav'n; new Arts to cheat Mankind!—tell
me, with what face canst thou be Devout, or ask any thing from thence who hast made
so lewd a use of what it has already lavisht on thee?
La Nuche
Oh my careless Rover! I perceive all your hot shot is not yet spent in Barrel, you
have a Volley in reserve for me still—Faith, Officer, the Town has wanted mirth in
your absence.
Willmore
And so might all the wiser part for thee, who hast no mirth, no gayety about thee,
but when thou wouldst design some Coxcombs ruin; to all the rest, a soul thou hast
so dull, that neither Love nor Mirth, not Wit or Wine can wake it to good nature—thou'rt
one who lazily workst in thy Trade, and sell'st for ready money so much kindness;
a tame cold sufferer only, and no more.
La Nuche
What, you would have a Mistress like a Squirrel in a Cage, always in Action—one who
is as free of her favours as I am sparing of mine—well, Captain—I have known the
time when
La Nuche
was such a Wit, such a Humor, such a Shape, and such a Voice, (tho to say truth I
sing but scurvily) 'twas Comedy to see and hear me!
Willmore
Whe yes faith for once thou wer't, and for once may'st be again, till thou know'st
thy Man, and know'st him to be Poor; at first you lik'd me too! you saw me Gay! no
marks of Poverty dwelt in my face or dress! and then I was the dearest loveli'st
man—all this was to my out-side; death, you made love to my Breeches, caress'd my
Garniture and Feather, an
English
fool of Quality you thought me—'Shart, I have known a Woman doat on Quality, tho
he has stunk through all his Perfumes; one who never went all to Bed to her, but
left his Teeth, an Eye, false Back and Breast, sometimes his Palate too upon her Toylite,
whilst her fair Arms hug'd the dismember'd Carcase, and swore him all perfection,
because of Quality.
La Nuche
But he was rich, good Captain, was he not?
Willmore
Oh most damnably, and a confounded Blockhead, two certain Remedies against your Pride
and Scorn.
La Nuche
Willmore
With thee and all thy Sex, of which I've try'd a hundred and found none true or honest.
La Nuche
Oh, I doubt not the number! for you are one of those healthy stomacht Lovers, that
can digest a Mistriss in a Night, and Hunger again next Morning; a Pox of your whining
Consumptive constitution, who are only constant for want of Appetite : you have 'a
swinging stomachic variety, and want having set ark edg upon your invention (With
which you eut through all all difficulties) you grow more impudent by success.
Willmore
I am not always scorn'd then.
La Nuche
I have known you as confidently put your hand into your Pockets for money in a Morning,
as if the Devil had been your Banker, When you knew you put 'em off at Night as empty
as your Gloves.
Willmore
And it may be found money there too.
La Nuche
Then with this Poverty so proud you are, you will not give the Wall to the Catholick
King, unless his Picture hung upon't; no Servants, no Money, no Meat, always on foot,
and yet undaunted still.
Willmore
La Nuche
I wonder what the Devil makes you so termagant on our Sex, 'tis not your high feeding,
for your Grandees only dine, and that but when fortune pleases—for your parts'Who
are the poor Dependant, brown Bread and old
Adams
Ale is only currant amongst ye, yet if little
Eve
walk in the Garden, the starv'd lean Rogues neigh after her, as if they were in Paradise.
Willmore
Still true to Love you see—
La Nuche
I heard an
English
Capuchin swear, that if the Kings followers could be brought to Pray as well as Fast,
there would be more Saints amongst 'em than the Church has ever Canonis'd.
Willmore
All this with pride I own, since 'tis a Royal Cause I suffer for, go pursue your business
your own way, insnare the fool—I saw the toyls you set, and how that face was ordered
for the Conquest, your eyes brimful of dying Lying Love! and now and then a wishing
glance or sigh thrown as by chance! which when the happy Coxcomb caught—you feign'd
a blush, as angry and asham'd of the discovery, and all this Cunning's for a little
Mercenary gain—fine Cloaths, perhaps some Jewels too, whilst all the finery cannot
hide the Whore!
La Nuche
There's your eternal quarrel to our Sex, 'twere a fine Trade indeed to keep Shop and
give our Ware for Love, would it turn to account think ye, Captain, to trick and dress,
to receive all wou'd enter, faith, Captain, try the Trade.
Petronella
What in Discourse with this Railer—Come away—Poverty's catching.
Willmore
So is the Pox, good Matron, of which you can afford good penniworths.
La Nuche
He charms me even with his angry looks, and will undo me yet.
Petronella
Let's leave this place, I'le tell you my success as we go.
[
Exit all, some one way, some another, the fore-part of the Church shuts over, except
Willmore
,
Blunt
,
Ariadne
,
and Lucia
.
Willmore
She's gone, and all the Plagues of Pride go With her.
Blunt
Hartlikins follow her—Pox on't, an I'de but as good a hand at this Game as thou hast,
I'de venture upon any Chance—
Willmore
Damn her, come, let's to Dinner, Where's
Fetherfool
?
Blunt
Follow'd a good Woodman, who gave him the sign, he'l lodg the Deer e're Night.
Willmore
Follow'd her—he durst not' the fool wants confidence to look on her.
Blunt
Oh you know not how a Country Justice may be improv'd by Travel; the Rogue was hedg'd
in at home with the fear of his Neighbours and the Penal Statutes, now he's broke
loose, he runs neighing like a Stone-Horse upon the Common.
Willmore
However I'le not believe this—let's follow 'em.
Ariadne
He is in Love, but With a Curtizan—some comfort that. We'l after him—'Tis a faint
hearted Lover who for the first discouragement gives over.
The End of the First Act.
ACT II. Scene I.
Enter Fetherfool and Sancho passing over the Stage; after them Willmore and Blunt followed by Ariadne and Lucia
.
Willmore
'Tis so, by Heaven, he's chattering with her Pimp. I'le spate my Curses on him, for
having her, he has a Plague beyond 'em.
—Harkye, I'le never love, nor lie with Woman more, those slaves to Lust, to Vanity
and Intrest.
Blunt
Willmore
Come, let's go drink Damnation to 'em all.
Blunt
Willmore
Ariadne
Heavens! if he should indeed!
Blunt
But,
Robert
, I have found you most inclined to a Damzel when you had a Bottle in your Head.
Willmore
Give me thy hand,
Ned
—Curse me, despise me, point me out for Cowardize if e're thou see'st me Court a
Woman more: Nay, when thou know'st I ask any of the Sex a civil question again—a
Plague upon 'em, how they've handled me— come, let's go drink, I say—Confusion to
the Race—a Woman!
—no, will be burnt with my own fire to Cinders e're any of the brood shall lay my
Flame—
Ariadne
He cannot be so wicked to keep this resolution sure—
Faith I must be resolv'd—you've made a Pious resolution, Sir, had you the Grace to
keep it—
Willmore
Blunt
That—O,—nothing—but a Woman—come away.
Willmore
A Woman! Damn her, what mischief made her cross my way just on the point of Reformation.
Blunt
I find the Devil will not lose so hopeful a sinner. Hold, hold, Captain, have you
no regard to your own Soul, 'Dshartlikins 'tis a Woman, a very errant Woman.
Ariadne
Your friend informs you right, Sir, I am a Woman.
Willmore
Ay Child, or I were a lost man—therefore dear lovely Creature—
Ariadne
Willmore
Oh, I have naturally a large faith, Child, and thou'st a promising form , a tempting
motion, clean Limbs, well drest, and a most damnable inviting Air.
Ariadne
I am not to be sold, and so not fond of praise, I merit not.
Willmore
How, not to be sold too! by this light, Child, thou speakest like a Cherubim, I have
not heard so obliging a sound, from the mouth of Woman-kind, this many a day—I find
we must be better acquainted, my Dear.
Ariadne
Your reason, good familiar, Sir, I see no such necessity.
Willmore
Child, you are mistaken, I am in great necessity; for first I love thee—desperately—have
I not damn'd my Soul al- ready for thee, and wouldst thou be so wicked to refuse
a little consolation to my Body? Then Secondly, I see thou art frank and good natur'd,
and wilt do reason gratis.
Ariadne
How prove ye that, good Mr. Philosopher.
Willmore
Thou say'st thou'rt not to be sold, and I'me sure thou'rt to be had—that lovely Body
of so Divine a form, those soft smooth Arms and Hands, were made t'imbrace as well
as be im- rac'd, that delicate white rising Bosom to be prest, and all thy other
charms to be injoy'd.
Ariadne
By one that can esteem 'em to their worth,can set a value and a rate upon 'em.
Willmore
Name not those words, they grate my ears like Jointure, that dull conjugal cant that
frights the generous Lover! Rate— Death, let the old Dotards talk of Rates, and pay
it t'atone for the defects of Impotence. Let the sly States-man, who Jilts the Commonwealth
with his grave Politiques, pay for the sin that he may doat in secret ; let the brisk
fool Inch out his scanted sense with a large purse more eloquent than he: but tell
not me of rates who bring a Heart, Youth, Vigor, and a Tongue to sing the praise
of every single pleasure thou shalt give me.
Ariadne
Then if I should be kind, I perceive you would not keep the secret.
Willmore
Secresie is a damn'd ungrateful sin, Child, known only where Religion and Small-beer
are currant, despis'd where
Apollo
and the Vine bless the Country, you find none of
Jove
's Mistresses hid in Roots and Plants; but fixt Stars in Heaven, for all to gaze
and wonder at—and though I am no God, my Dear, I'le do a Mortals part, and generously
tell th' admiring World what hidden Charms thou hast: Come, lead me to some place
of happiness—
Blunt
Prithee, honest Damzel, be not so full of Questions, will a Pistol or two do thee
any hurt?
Lucia
Blunt
Thou speak'st like a hearty Wench—and I believe hast not been one of
Venus
Hand-maids so long, but thou understandst thy Trade—in short, fair Damzel, this honest
Fellow here, who is to Termagant upon thy Lady, is my friend, my particular friend,
and therefore I would have him handsomly, and well-favourdly abus'd—you conceive me.
Lucia
Truly, Sir, a friendly request—but in what nature abus'd?
Blunt
Nature!—why any of your Tricks would serve—but if he could be conveniently stript
and beaten, or tost in a Blanket, or any such trivial business, thou wouldst do me
a singular kindness; as for Robbery he defies the Devil: an empty Pocket is an Antidote
against that ill.
Lucia
Your money, Sir? and if he be not couzen'd, say a
Spanish
Woman has neither Wit nor Invention upon occasion.
Blunt
Shartlikins, how I shall Love and Honour thee for't— here's earnest—and—
Ariadne
But who was that you entertain'd at Church but now?—
Willmore
Faith one, who for her Beauty merits that glorious Title that she wears, it was—a
Whore, Child.
Ariadne
That's but a scurvy Name; yet, if I'me not mistaken, in those false eyes of yours,
they lookt with longing Love upon that—Whore, Child.
Willmore
Thou art i'th'right, and by this hand, my Soul was full as wishing as my eyes: but
a Pox on't, you Women have all a certain Jargon, or Giberish, peculiar to your selves:
of Value, Rate, Present, Interest, Settlement, Advantage, Price, Maintenance, and
the Devil and all of Fopperies, which in plain terms signifie Ready Money, by way
of Fine before entrance, so that an honest well-meaning Merchant of Love finds no
credit amongst ye, without his Bill of Lading.
Ariadne
We are not all so cruel—but the Devil on't is, your good natur'd heart is likely accompanied
with an i face—and worse Wit.
Willmore
Faith, Child a ready Dish when a mans stomach is up, is better than a tedious Feast.
I never saw any Man yet cut my piece; some are for Beauty, some for Wit, and some
for the secret, but I for all, so it be in a kind Girl: and for Wit in Woman, so she
say prety fond things, we understand, though true or false no matter.
Ariadne
Give the Devil his due, you are a very consciencious Lover: I love a man that scorns
to impose dull truth and constancy a Mistriss.
Willmore
Constancy, that currant Coyn with fools! no Child, Heaven keep that Curse from our
Doors.
Ariadne
Hang it, it loses time and profit new Lovers have new Vows and new Presents, whilst
the old feed upon a dull repetition of what they did when they were Lovers; 'tis like
eating the cold meat ones self, after having given a friend a Feast—
Willmore
—Yes, that's the thrifty food for the Family when the Guests are gone. Faith, Child,
thou hast made a neat and a hearty speech: but prithee, my Dear, for the future leave
out that same Profit and Present, for I have a natural aversion to hard words: and
for matter of quick dispatch in the business—give
me thy hand, Child—let us but start fair, and if thou outstripst me, thou'rt a nimble
Racer.
Lucia
Oh, Madam, let's be gone: yonder's Lieutenant
Shift
, who if he see us, will certainly give an account of it to Mr.
Beaumond
Let's get in through the Garden, I have the key—
Ariadne
Here's company coming, and for several reasons, I wou'd not be seen.
Willmore
Gad, Child, nor I; reputation is tender—therefore prithee let's retire—
Ariadne
You must not stir a step.
Willmore
Not stir! no Magick Circle can detain me if you go.
Ariadne
Follow me then at a distance, and observe where I enter; and at Night (if your passion
lasts so long) return, and you shall find admittance into a Garden.
Enter Shift
.
Shift
Well, Sir, the Mountibank's come, and just going to begin in the
Piazza
: I have order'd matters so, that you shall have a sight of the Monsters, and leave
to Court 'em, and when won, to give the Guardian a fourth part of the Portions.
Blunt
Good: but Mum—here's the Captain, who must by no means know our good fortune, till
he see us in State—
Enter Willmore
,
Shift goes to him.
Shift
All things are ready, Sir, for our design, the House prepar'd as you directed me,
the Guardian wrought, by the persuasions of the two Monsters, to take a Lodging there,
and try the Baths of Reformation: the Bank's preparing, and the Operators and Musick
all ready, and the impatient Town flockt together to behold the Man of Wonders, and
nothing wanting but your Donship and a proper Speech.
Willmore
'Tis well, I'le go fit my self with a Dress, and think of a Speech the while: in the
mean time, go you and amuse the gaping fools that expect my coming.
Enter Fetherfool Singing and Dancing.
Fetherfool
Have you ehard a
Spanish
Lady, |
1 |
How she woo'd an
English
Man; |
2 |
Blunt
Fetherfool
Garments gay and rich as may be |
3 |
Deckt with Jewels, had she on. |
4 |
Blunt
Whe how now, Justice, what, run madout of the Dog-days?
Fetherfool
Of a comely Countenance and Grace is she, |
5 |
A sweeter Creature in the World there could not be. |
6 |
Shift
Whe what the Devil's the matter, Sir?
Blunt
Stark mad, 'Sdhartlikins.
Fetherfool
Of a comely Countenance
—well, Lieutenant, the most Heroick and Illustrious Madona! thou sawst her,
Ned
:
And of a comely Counte
—the most Magnetick face—well—I knew the Charms of these eyes of mine were not made
in vain: I was design'd for great things, that's certain—
And a sweeter Creature in the World there could not be.
Blunt
What, then the two Lady Monsters are forgotten? the design upon the Million of Money,
the Coach and Six, and Patent for Right Worshipful? All drown'd in the joy of this
new Mistress.
Blunt
But well, Lieutenant, since he is so Well provided for, you may put in with me for
a Monster; such a jest, and such a sum is not to be lost.
Shift
Nor shall not, or I have lost my Aim.
Fetherfool
(
Putting off his Hat
)
Your Pardons, good Gentlemen, and tho I perceive I shall have no great need for so
trifling a sum as a hundred thousand Pound, or so, yet a Bargain's a Bargain, Gentlemen.
Blunt
Nay, 'Dshartlikins, the Lieutenant scorns to do a foul thing, do see, but we would
not have the Monsters slighted.
Fetherfool
Slighted! no, Sir, I scorn your words, I'de have ye to know, that I have as high a
respect for Madam Monster, as any Gentleman in Christendom , and so I desire she should
understand.
Blunt
Whe this is that that's handsom.
Shift
Well, the Mountibank's come, Lodgings are taken at his House, and the Guardian prepar'd
to receive you, on the aforesaid terms; and some fifty Pistols to the Mountibank to
stand your friend, and the business is done.
Fetherfool
Which shall be perform'd accordingly, I have it ready about me.
Blunt
And here's mine, put 'em together, and let be speedy lest some should bribe higher,
and put in before us.
Fetherfool
'Tis a plaguy round sum,
Ned
, pray God it turn to Account.
Blunt
Account, 'Dshartlikins, 'tis not in the power of mortal man to couzen me.
Shift
Oh fie, Sir, couzen you, Sir,—well, you'l stay here and see the Mountibank, he's coming
forth.
[
A Hollowing. Enter from the Front a Bank, a Pageant, which they fix on the Stage at
one side: a little Pavillion on't, Musick Playing, and Operators round below or Antiquers.
[
Musick Plays, and an Antique Dance.Enter Willmore like a Mountibank, with a Dagger in one hand, and a Viol in the other; Carlo with other
Spaniards
below, and Rabble: Ariadne and Lucia above in the Balcony, others on the other side, Fetherfool and Blunt below.
Willmore
(
bowing
)
Behold this little Viol, which contains in its narrow bounds, what the whole Universe
cannot purchase, if sold to its true value; this admirable, this miraculous Elixir,
drawn from the Hearts of Mandrakes, Phenix Livers, and Tongues of Maremaids, and distill'd
by contracted Sun-Beams; has, besides the unknown vertue of curing all Distempers
both of Mind and Body: that Divine one of animating the heart of man to that degree,
that however remiss, cold and cowardly by Nature, he shall become vigorous and brave.
Oh stupid and insensible man, when Honour and secure Renown invites your, to treat
it with neg- lect, even when you need but passive Valour, to become the He- roes
of the Age; receive a thousand wounds, each of which wou'd let out fleeting Life:
Here's that can snatch the parting Soul in its full career, and bring it back to
its Native Mansion; baffles grim Death, and disappoints even Fate.
Fetherfool
Oh Pox, and a Man were sure of that now.
Willmore
Behold, here's Demonstration—
[
Harliquin Stabs himself and falls as dead.Fetherfool
Hold, hold, whe, what the Devil, is the Fellow mad?
Blunt
Why, do'st think he'as hurt himself.
Fetherfool
Hurt himself! whe he's murder'd Man; 'tis flat
Felo de fe
, in any ground in
England
, if I understand Law, and I have been a Justice o'th' Peace.
Willmore
See, Gentlemen, he's dead—
Fetherfool
ook ye there now, I'le be gone lest I be taken as an Accessary.
Willmore
Coffin him. Inter him, yet after four and twenty hours, as many drops of this divine
Elixer gives him new life again; this will recover whole Fields of slain, and all
the dead shall rise and fight again—'twas this that made the
Roman
Legions numerous, and now makes
France
so formidable, and this alone—may be the occasion of the loss of
Germany
[
Pours in Harliquin's Wound, he rises.Fetherfool
Whe this Fellow's the Devil,
Ned
, that's certain.
Blunt
Oh Plague, a damn'd Conjurer, this—
Willmore
Come, buy this Coward's comfort, quickly buy; what Fop would be abus'd, mimick'd and
scorn'd, for fear of Wounds can be so easily cured? Who is't wou'd bear the Insolence
and Pride of Domineering great men, proud Officers or Magistrates? or who wou'd cringe
to States-Men out of fear? What Cully wou'd be Cuckolded? What foolish Heir undone
by cheating Gamesters? What Lord Wou'd be Lampoon'd? What Poet fear the malice of
his Satyrical Brother, or Atheist fear to fight for fear of death. Come, buy my Cowards
Comfort, quickly buy.
Fetherfool
Egad,
Ned
, a very excellent thing this; I'le lay out ten Reals upon this Commodity.
[
They buy, whilst another part of the Dance is danc'd.Willmore
Behold, this little paper, which contains a Powder, whose value surmounts that of
Rocks of Diamonds and Hills of Gold; 'twas this made
Venus
a Goddess, and given her by
Apollo
, from her deriv'd to
Hellen
, and in the Sack of
Troy
lost, 'till recover'd by me out of some Ruins of
Asia
Come, buy it, Ladies, you that wou'd be fair and wear eternal Youth; and you in whom
the Amorous Fire remains, when all the Charms are fled: you that dress young and gay,
and would be thought so, that
Patch and Paint, to fill up times old furrows on your brows, and set your selves for
Conquest though in vain; here's that will give your aubern Hair, white Teeth, red
Lips, and dimples on your Cheeks: Come, buy it all you that are past bewitching, and
wou'd have handsom, young and active Lovers.
Fetherfool
Another good thing,
Ned
.
Carlo
I'le lay out a Pistol or two on this, if it have the same effect on Men.
Willmore
Come, all you City Wives, that wou'd advance your Husbands to Lord Mayors, come, buy
of me new Beauty; this will give it though now decay'd, as are your Shop Commodities,
this will retrieve your Customers, and vend your false and out of fashion'd Wares:
cheat, lye, protest and couzen as you please, a handsom Wife makes all a lawful gain.
Come, City Wives, come, buy.
Fetherfool
A most Prodigious Fellow.
[
They buy, he sits, the other part is Danc'd.Willmore
'Tis this that Cures the Lovers pain, |
7 |
And
Celia
of her cold disdain. |
8 |
But here, behold the Life and Soul of Man! this is the Amorous Powder, which Venus
made gave the God of Love, which made him first a Deity; you talk of Arrows, Bows,
and killing Darts; Fables, Poetical Fictions and no more: 'tis this alone that wounds
and fires the Heart, makes Women kind, and equals Men to Gods! 'tis this that makes
your great Lady doat on the ill-favour'd Fop; your great Man be Jilted by his little
Mistriss, the Judg cajol'd by his Semstress, and your Politician by his Comedian:
your young Lady doat on her decrepit Husband, your Chaplain on my Ladies Waiting-Woman,
and the young Squire on the Landry-Maid—in fine Messieurs.
Fetherfool
A most devillish Fellow this!
Blunt
Hold, shartlikins,
Fetherfool
, let's have a Dose or two of this Powder for quick dispatch with our Monsters.
Fetherfool
Who Pox, Man, Jugg, my Giant would swallow a whole Cart-Load before 'twould operate.
Blunt
No hurt in trying a Paper or two however.
Carlo
A most admirable Receipt, I shall have need on't.
Willmore
I need say nothing of my Divine Baths of Reformation, nor the wonders of the old Oracle
of the Box, which Resolves all Questions, my Bills sufficiently declare their Vertue.
[
They buy.Enter Petronella Elenora carried in a Chair, Dress'd like a Girl of Fifteen.
Shift
Room there, Gentlemen, room for a Patient.
Blunt
Pray, Seignior, who may this be thus muz'led by old Gaffer time?
Carlo
One
Petronella Elenora
, Sir, a famous out-worn Curtezan.
Blunt
Elenora
, she may be that of
Troy
for her Antiquity, tho fitter for God
Priapus
to ravish than
Paris
.
Shift
Hunt
, a word, dost thou see that same formal Politician yonder, on the Jennet, the Nobler
Animal of the two?
Hunt
Shift
'Tis the same Drew on the Captain this Morning, and I must revenge the affront.
Hunt
Have a care of Revenges in
Spain
, upon Persons of his Quality.
Shift
Nay—I'le only steal his Horse from under him.
Hunt
Steal it, thou may'st take it by force perhaps, but how safely is a Question.
Shift
I'le warrant thee—shoulder you up one side of his great Saddle, I'le do the like on
t'other; then heaving him gently up,
Harliquin
shall lead the Horse from between his Worships Legs: all this in the Crowd will not
be perceiv'd, where all eyes are imploy'd on the Mountibank.
Hunt
[
Whil'st they are lifting Petronella on the Stage of the Mountibank, they go into the Crowd, shoulder up Carlo's Saddle,Harliquin leads the Horse forward, whilst Carlo is gazing, and turning up his Mustacho's—they hold him up a little while, then let
him drop—he rises and stares about for his Horse—Carlo
Shift
What's your Worship on foot?
Hunt
I never saw his Worship on foot before.
Carlo
Sirra, none of your Jests, this must be by Diabolical Art, and shall cost the Seignior
dear—Men of my Garb affronted— my Jennet vanisht—most miraculous, by
St. Jago
, I'le be revenged—hah, what here—La Nuche—
[
Surveys her at a distance.Enter La Nuche
,
Aurelia
,
Sancho
.
La Nuche
We are pursu'd by
Beaumond
, who will certainly hinder our speaking to
Willmore
, should we have the good fortune to see him in this Crowd—and yet there's no avoiding
him.
Beaumond
'Tis she, How carefully she shuns me?
Aurelia
I'me satisfied he knows us by that Jealous concern which appears in that prying countenance
of his.
Beaumond
Stay, Cruel, is it Love or Curiosity that wings those nimble feet?
Lucia above and Ariadne
.
Ariadne
Beaumond
Have you forgot this is the glorious day that ushers in the night shall make you mine?
the happiest night that ever favour'd Love!
La Nuche
Or if I have, I find you'l take care to remember me.
Beaumond
Sooner I could forget the Aids Of Life, sooner forget how first that Beauty Charm'd
me.
La Nuche
Well, since your memory's so good, I need not doubt your coming.
Beaumond
Still cold and unconcern'd! How have I doated, and how sacrific'd, regardless of my
Fame, lain idleing here, when all the Youth of
Spain
were gaining Honour, valuing one smile of thine above their Laurels?
La Nuche
And in return, I do submit to yield, preferring you above those fighting fools, who
safe in Multitudes reap Honour cheaper
Beaumond
Yet there is one—one of those fighting fools, which should'st thou see, I fear I were
undone; brave, handsom, gay, and all that Women doat on, unfortunate in every good
of life, but that one blessing of obtaining Women: be wise, for if thou seest. him
thou art lost—Why dost thou blush?
La Nuche
Because you doubt my heart, 'tis
Willmore
that he means.
—We've eyes upon us,
Don Carlo
may grow Jealous, and he's a powerful Rival—at Night I shall expect ye.
Beaumond
Whilst I prepare my self for such a blessing.
Carlo
Hah! a Cavalier in conference with La Nuche! and en- tertain'd without my knowledg!
I must prevent this Lover, for he's young—and this Night will surprise her—
Willmore
And you would be restor'd.
Petronella
Yes, if there be that Divinity in your Baths of Reformation.
Willmore
New Flames shall sparkle in those Eyes; |
9 |
And these Gray Hairs flowing and bright shall rise: |
10 |
These Cheeks fresh Buds of Roses wear, |
11 |
And all your wither'd Limbs so smooth and cleer, |
12 |
As shall a general Wonder move, |
13 |
And wound a thousand Hearts with Love. |
14 |
There are.
Petronella Elenora
A Blessing on you Sir, there's fifty Pistols for you, and as I earn it you shall
have more.
[
Exit Willmore bowing.Shift
Messieurs, 'tis late, and the Seignior's Patients stay for him at his Laboraty, to
morrow you shall see the conclusion of this Experiment, and so I humbly take my leave
at this time.
Enter Willmore below sees La Nuche, makes up to her, whilst the last part of the Dance is Dancing.
La Nuche
What makes you follow me, Sir?
Willmore
Madam, I see something in that lvely Face of yours, which if not timely prevented,
will be your ruin: I'me now in haste, but I have more to say—
La Nuche
Stay, sir,—he's gone—and fill'd me with a curiosity that will not let me rest till
it be satisfied: follow me,
Aurelia
for I must know my Destiny.
[
The Dance ended, the Bank removes, the People go off.Fetherfool
Come,
Ned
, now for our Amorous Visit to the two Lady Monsters.
SCENE
Changes to a fine Chamber
Enter Ariadne and Lucia
.
Ariadne
I'me thoughtful: Prithee, Cousin, sing some foolish Song—
SONG.
Phillis
whose heart was unconfin'd, |
1 |
And free as Flowers on Meads and Plains. |
2 |
None boasted of her being kind, |
3 |
'Mongst all the Languishing and Amorous Swains: |
4 |
No sighs nor tears the Nymph could move |
5 |
[
Bis.
To pity, or return their Love. |
6 |
'Till on a time, the hapless Maid |
7 |
Retir'd, to shun the heat o'th'day, |
8 |
Into a Grove beneath, whose Shade, |
9 |
Strephon
, the careless Shepherd, sleeping lay: |
10 |
But oh such charms the youth adorn, |
11 |
[
Bis.
Love is reveng'd for all her scorn. |
12 |
Her Cheeks with Blushes covered were, |
13 |
And tender sighs her Bosom warm; |
14 |
A softness in her eyes appear, |
15 |
Unusual pains she feels from every Charm: |
16 |
To Woods and Ecchoes now she cries, |
17 |
[
Bis.
For Modesty to speak denies. |
18 |
|
Ariadne
Come, help to undress me, for I'le to this Mountebank to know what success I shall
have with my Cavalier.
Lucia
You are resolv'd then to give him admittance.
Ariadne
Where's the danger of a handsom young fellow.
Lucia
But you don't know him, Madam.
Ariadne
But I desire to do, and time may bring it about without miracle.
Lucia
Your Cousin,
Beaumond
, will forbid the Banes.
Ariadne
No, nor old
Carlos
neither: my Mothers previous choice who is as solicitous for the old Gentleman, as
my Father in Law is for his Nephew. Therefore,
Lucia
, like a good and gracious Child, I'le end the dispute between my Father and Mother,
and please my self in the choice of this Stranger, if he be to be had.
Lucia
I should as soon be enamour'd on the North Wind, a Tempest, or a Clap of Thunder.
Bless me from such a blast.
Ariadne
I'de have my Lover rough as Seas in Storms upon occasion; I hate your dull temperate
Lover, 'tis such a husbandly quality! like
Beaumond
's addresses to me, whom neither joy nor anger puts in motion; or if it do, 'tis visibly
forc'd—I'me glad I saw him entertain a Woman to day, not that I care, but wou'd be
fairly rid of him.
Lucia
You'l hardly mend your self in this.
Ariadne
What, because he held Discourse with a Curtezan.
Lucia
Why, is there no danger in her eyes, do ye think?
Ariadne
None that I fear, that Stranger's not such a fool to give his heart to a common Woman,
and she that's concern'd where her Lover bestows his Body, were I the man, I should
think she had a mind to't her self.
Lucia
And reason, Madam, in a lawful way, 'tis your due.
Ariadne
What all! unconscionable
Lucia
! I am more merciful; but be he what he will, I'le to this Cunning Man to know whether
ever any part of him shall be mine.
Lucia
Lord, Madam, sure he's a Conjurer.
Ariadne
Let him be the Devil, I'le try his skill, and to that end, will put on a Suit of my
Cousin
Endymion
; there are two or three very pretty ones of his in the Wardrobe, go carry 'em to
my Chamber, and we'l fit our selves and away—Go haste whilst I undress
Enter Beaumond tricking himself, and looks on himself.
Beaumond
Now for my charming Beauty, fair
La Nuche
—hah—
Ariadne
—damn the dull Property, how shall I free my self.
[
She turns, sees him, and walks from the Glass, he takes no notice of her, but tricks
himself in the Glass, humming a Song.
Ariadne
Somme nous pas trope heureux |
19 |
Belle Irise que nous ensemble. |
20 |
La Nuite est se sombre voiles |
21 |
Coverie, nous desires ardant; |
22 |
Et l'Amour est les Etoyles, |
23 |
Son nous secret confidents. |
24 |
Beaumond
, what Devil brought him hither to prevent me: I hate the formal Matrimonial Fop.
—A Devil on him, he may chance to plague me till night, and hinder my dear assignation.
Beaumond
A Pox of Love and Woman-kind, |
25 |
And all the Fops adore 'em. |
26 |
Pox on't, how dull am I at an excuse.
How is't Cuz?
Ariadne
So, here's the sawcy freedom of a Husband Lover—a blest invention this of marrying
who e're first found it out.
Beaumond
Damn this
English
Dog of a Periwig-maker, what an ungainly Air it gives the face, and for a Wedding
Periwig too— how do'st thou like it
Ariadne
—
Ariadne
As ill as the man—I perceive you have taken more care for your Periwig than your Bride.
Beaumond
And with reason,
Ariadne
, the Bride was never the care of the Lover, but the business of the Parents; 'tis
a serious affair, and ought to be manag'd by the grave and wise: thy Mother and my
Uncle have agreed the matter, and would it not look very sillily in me now to whine
a tedious tale of Love in your ear, when the business is at an end, 'tis like saying
a Grace when a Man should give Thanks.
Ariadne
Why did not you begin sooner then?
Beaumond
Faith,
Ariadne
, because I know nothing of the design in hand; had I had civil warning, thou shouldst
have had as pretty smart Speeches from me as any Coxcomb Lover of 'em all could have
made thee.
Ariadne
I shall never marry like a Jew in my own Tribe; I'de rather be possest by honest old
doating Age, than by sawcy conceited Youth, whose inconstancy never leaves a Woman
safe or quiet.
Beaumond
You know the Proverb of the half Loaf,
Ariadne
, a Husband that will deal thee some Love is better than one who can give thee none;
you would have a blessed time on't with old father
Carlo
.
Ariadne
No matter, a Woman may with some lawful excuse Cuckold him, and 'twould be scarce
a sin—
Beaumond
Not so much as lying with him, whose Reverend Age wou'd make it look like Incest.
Ariadne
But to marry thee—would be a Tyranny from whence there's no Appeal: a Drinking Whoring
Husband, 'tis the Devil—
Beaumond
You are deceived if you think
Don Carlo
more chaste than I; only duller, and more a Miser, one that fears his Flesh more,
and loves his Money better.
—Then to be condemn'd to lye with him—oh, who would not rejoice to meet a Woollen
Waistcoat and knit Nightcap without a Lining, a Shirt so nasty, a cleanly Ghost would
not appear in't at the latter Day; then the compound of nasty smells about him, stinking
Breath, Mustachoes stuft with villanous snush Tobacco and hollow teeth; thus prepar'd
for delight, you meet in Bed, where you may lye and sigh whole Nights away, he snores
it out 'till Morning, and then rises to his sordid business.
Ariadne
All this frights me not; 'tis still much better than a keeping Husband, whom neither
Beauty nor Honour in a Wife can oblige.
Beaumond
Oh you know not the good Nature of a Man of Wit, at least I shall bear a conscience,
and do thee reason, Which Heaven denies to old
Carlo
were he willing.
Ariadne
Oh, he talks as high, and thinks as well of himself as any young Coxcomb of ye all.
Beaumond
He has reason, for if his Faith were no better than his Works, he'd be damn'd.
Ariadne
Death, who wou'd marry, who wou'd be chasten'd thus, and sold to slavery; I'de rather
buy a friend at any price that I could Love and Trust.
Beaumond
Ay! could we but drive on such a Bargain!
Ariadne
A Pox of Love and Woman-kind, |
27 |
And all the Fops adore 'em. |
28 |
You should not be the Man; you have a Mistress, Sir, that has your heart, and all
your softer hours: I know't, and if I were so wretched as to marry thee, must see
my Fortune lavisht out on her, her Coaches Dress and Equipage exceed mine by far:
possess she all the day thy hours of mirth, good humour and expence, thy smiles, thy
kisses, and thy Charms of Wit. Oh how you talk and look when in her Presence! but
when with me,
How is't Cuz—then slap, on goes the Beaver, which being cock'd, you bear up briskly,
with the Second Part to the same Tune—Harkye, Sir, let me advise you to pack up your
trumpery and be gone: your Honourable Love, your Matrimonial Foppery, with your other
Trinkets thereunto belonging, or I shall talk aloud, and let your Uncle hear you.
Beaumond
Sure she cannot know I love
La Nuche
.
The Devil take me, spoil'd! What Rascal has inveagled thee? What lying fawning Coward
has abus'd thee? When fell you into this Lewdness? Pox thou art hardly worth the loving
now, that canst be such a fool to Wish me Chaste, or love me for that Vertue: or that
wouldst have me a Ceremonious Whelp, one that makes handsom Legs to Knights without
laughing, or with a sneaking modest Squirish Countenance, assure you, I have my Maiden
head: a Curse upon thee, the very thought of Wife has made thee formal.
Ariadne
I must dissemble, or he'le stay all day to make his peace again—Why, have you ne're—a
Mistriss then?
Beaumond
A hundred, by this day, as many as I like, they are my mirth, the business of my loose
and wanton hours; but thou art my Devotion: the grave, the solemn pleasure of my soul—Pox,
would I were handsomly rid of thee too.
—Come, I have business,—send me pleas'd away.
Ariadne
Would to Heaven thou wert gone—
—You'r going to some Woman now—
Beaumond
Oh damn the Sex, I hate 'em all—but thee—farewel my pretty jealous—sullen—fool—
Ariadne
Farewel, believing Coxcomb—
Lucia
Madam, the Cloaths are ready in your Chamber.
Ariadne
Let's hast and put 'em on then.
The End of the Second Act.
ACT III. Scene I.
A House.
Enter Fetherfool and Blunt, staring about, after them Shift
.
Shift
Well, Gentlemen, this is the Doctors House, and your fifty Pistols has made him intirely
yours; the Ladies too are here in safe Custody—Come, draw Lots who shall have the
Dwarf, and who the Giant.
Fetherfool
Blunt
And I the little Tiny Gentlewoman.
Shift
Well, you shall first see the Ladies, and then prepare for your Uncle
Moses
, the old
Jew
Guardian, before whom you must be very grave and sententious: you know the old Law
was full of Ceremony.
Fetherfool
Well, I long to see the Ladies, and to have the first onset over.
Shift
I'le cause 'em to walk forth immediately.
Fetherfool
My heart begins to fail me plaguily.—would I could see 'em a little at a distance
before they come slap dash upon a man,
—hah!—Mercy upon us!—What's yonder!—Ah
Ned
, my Monster as big as the Whore of
Babylon
—On I'me in a Cold sweat—
—Oh Lord! she's as Tall as the St.
Christopher
in
Notre dam
at
Paris
, and the little one looks like the Christo upon his Shoulders—I shall ne're be able
to stand the first brunt.
Blunt
'Dshartlikins whither art going?
Fetherfool
—Whe only—to—say my Prayers a little—I'le be with thee presently.
Blunt
What a Pox art thou afraid of a Woman—
Fetherfool
Not of a Woman,
Ned
, but of a She
Garigantua
. I am a
Hercules
in Petticoats.
Blunt
The less resemblance the better, 'shartlikins, I'de rather mine were a
Centaure
than a Woman: no, since my
Naples
Adventure, I am clearly for your Monster.
Fetherfool
Prithee,
Ned
. there's reason in all things—
Blunt
But villanous Woman—'Dshartlikins' stand your ground, or I'le nail ye to't: Whe what
a Pox are you to quezy stomach'd, a Monster wont down with you, with a hundred thousand
pound to boot,
Fetherfool
Nay,
Ned
, that mollifies something; and I scorn it should be said of
Nich. Fetherfool
that he left his friend in danger, or did an ill thing: therefore, as thou say'st,
Ned
, tho she were a
Centaure
, I'le not budg an inch.
Blunt
Enter the Giant and Dwarf, with them Shift as an Operator.
Fetherfool
Oh—they come—Prithee,
Ned
, advance—
Shift
Fetherfool
Whe what a flattering Son of a Whore's this.
Shift
These are the illustrious persons your Uncle designs your humble Servants, and who
have so extraordinary a passion for your Seignioraships.
Fetherfool
Oh yes, a most damnable one: wou'd I were cleanlily off the lay, and had my money
again.
Blunt
Think or a Million, Rogue, and do not hang an Arse thus.
Giant
What, does the Cavalier think I'le devour him?
Fetherfool
Somthing inclin'd to such a fear.
Blunt
Go and salute her, or, Adshartlikins, I'le leave you to her mercy.
Fetherfool
Oh dear,
Ned
, have pity on me—but as for saluting her, you speak of more than may be done, dear
heart, without a Scaling Ladder.
Dwarf
Sure, Segnior
Harliquin
, these Gentlemen are dumb.
Blunt
No, my little diminutive Mistress, my small Epitome of Woman-kind, we can prattle
when our hands are in, but we are raw and bashful, young beginners, for this is the
first time we ever were in Love: we are something aukard, or so, but we shall come
on in time, and mend upon incouragement.
Fetherfool
Pox on him, what a delicate Speech has he made now,—Gad I'de give thousand pound a
year for
Neds
Concise
Wit, but not a groat for his Judgment in Woman-kind.
Enter Shift with a Ladder, sets it against the Giant, and bows to Fetherfool
.
Shift
Here Segnior, Don, Approach, Mount, and salute the Lady.
Fetherfool
Mount, who 'twould turn my Brains to look down from her Shoulders—but hang't, 'Gad
I will be brave and venture.
And Egad this was an Adventure and a bold one—but since I am come off with a whole
skin, I am flesht for the next onset.—Madam,—has your Greatness any mind to marry—
Giant
Fetherfool
Whe then, Madam, without inchanted Sword of Buckler I am your Man.
Giant
My Man! my Mouse. I'le marry none whoe Person and Courage shall not bear some proportion
to mine.
Fetherfool
Your Mightiness, I fear, will die a Maid then.
Giant
I doubt you'l scarce secure me from that fear, who Court my Fortune, not my Beauty.
Fetherfool
Ho, how scornful she is I'le warrant you—whe I must confess, your Person is something
Heroical and Masculine, but I protest to your Highness, I Love and Honour ye.
Dwarf
Prithee, Sister, be not so coy, I like my Lover well enough, and if Seignior Mountebank
keep his word in making us of reasonable Proportions, I think the Gentlemen may serve
for Husbands.
Shift
Dissemble, or you betray your Love for us.
Giant
And if he do keep his word, I should make a better choice, not that I would change
this Noble frame of mine, cou'd I but meet my Match, and keep upthe first Race of
Man intire: but since this scanty World affords none such, I to be happy, must be
new Created, and then I shall expect a wiser Lover.
Fetherfool
Whe what a peevish Tit's this; nay look ye, Madam, as for that matter, your Extraordinariness
may do what you please, —but 'tis not done like a Monster of Honour, when a man has
set his heart upon you, to cast him off—therefore I hope
you'l pity a despairing Lover, and cast down an eye of Consolation upon me, for I
vow, most Amazonian Princess, I love ye as if Heaven and Earth wou'd come together.
Dwarf
My Sister will do much, I'me sure, to save the Man that loves her so passionately—she
has a heart.
Fetherfool
And a swinger 'tis—'Sbud—she moves like the Royal Soveraign, and is as long a Tacking
about.
Giant
Fetherfool
Nay, as for that, Madam, We are
English
, a Nation, I thank God, that stands as little upon Religion as any Nation under the
Sun, unless it be in contradiction; and at this time, have so many amongst us, a man
knows not which to turn his hand to—neither will I stand with your Hugeness for a
small matter of faith or so—Religion shall break no squares.
Dwarf
I hope, Sir, you are of your friends opinion.
Blunt
My little spark of a Diamond, I am, I was born a
Jew
, with an aversion to Swines flesh.
Dwarf
Well, Sir, I shall hasten Seignior Doctor to compleat my Beauty, by some small addition,
to appear the more grateful to you.
Blunt
Lady, do not trouble your self with transitory parts, 'Dshartlikins thou'rt as handsom
as needs be for a Wife.
Dwarf
A little taller, Seignior, would not do amiss, my younger Sister has got so much the
start of me.
Blunt
In troth she has, and now I think on't, a little taller wou'd do well for Propagation;
I should be loth the Posterity of the Antient Family of the
Blunts
of
Essex
should dwindle into Pigmies or Fayries.
Giant
Well, Seigniors, since you come with our Uncles liking, we give ye leave to hope,
hope—and be happy—
Fetherfool
Egad, and that's great and gracious—
Enter Willmore and an Operator.
Willmore
Well, Gentlemen, and how like you the Ladies?
Blunt
Faith well enough for the first course, Sir.
Willmore
The Uncle, by my indeavour, is intirely yours—but whilst the Baths are preparing,
'twould be well if you would think of what Age, Shape, and Complexion you would have
your Ladies form'd in.
Fetherfool
Why, may we chuse, Mr. Doctor?
Willmore
What Beauties you please.
Fetherfool
Then will I have my Giant,
Ned
, just such another Gentlewoman as I saw at Church to day—and about some 15.
Blunt
Hum, 15—I begin to have a plaguie itch about me too, towards a handsome Damzel of
15. but first let's marry, lest they should be boyled away in these Baths of Reformation.
Fetherfool
—But, Doctor, can you do all this without the help of the Devil?
Willmore
Hum, some small hand he has in the business: we make an exchange with him, give him
the clippings of the Giant for so much of his store as will serve to build the Dwarf.
Blunt
Whe then mine will be more than three parts Devil, Mr. Doctor.
Willmore
Not so, the stock is only Devil, the graft is your own little Wife inoculated.
Blunt
Well, let the Devil and you agree about this matter as soon as you please.
Enter Shift as an Operator.
Shift
Sir, there is without a Person of an extraordinary Size wou'd speak with you.
Willmore
Enter Harliquin, Ushers in Hunt as a Giant.
Fetherfool
Hah—some o'ergrown Rival on my Life.
Willmore
What the Devil have we here?
Hunt
Bezolos mano's
, Seignior, I understand there is a Lady whose Beauty and Proportion can only merit
me; I'le say no more—but shall be grateful to you for your assistance—
Fetherfool
Hunt
The Devil's in't if this does not fright 'em from a farther Courtship—
Willmore
Fear nothing, Seignior—Seignior, you may try your chance, and visit the Ladies.
Fetherfool
Whe where the Devil could this Monster conceal himself all this while, that we should
neither see nor hear of him?
Blunt
Oh—he lay disguis'd; I have heard of an Army that has done so.
Fetherfool
Pox, no single house cou'd hold him.
Blunt
No—he dispos'd himself in several parcels up and down the Town, here a Leg, and there
an Arm; and hearing of this proper Match for him, put himself together to Court his
fellow Monster.
Fetherfool
Good Lord! I wonder what Religion he's of.
Blunt
Some Heathen Papist by his notable Plots and Contrivances.
Willmore
'Tis
Hunt
, that Rogue—
Sir, I confess there is great power in simpathy—Conduct him to the Ladies—
—I am sorry you cannot enter at that low door, Seignior, I'le have it broken down—
Hunt
No, Seignior, I can go in at twice.
Fetherfool
How, at twice, what a pox can he mean?
Willmore
Oh, Sir, 'tis a frequent thing by way of Inchantment.
[
Hunt being all Doublet, leaps off from another Man who is all Britches, and goes out,
Britches follows stalking.Fetherfool
Oh Pox, Mr. Doctor, this must be the Devil.
Willmore
Oh fie, Sir, the Devil, no, 'tis all done by an inchanted Girdle—these damn'd Rascals
will spoil all by too gross an imposition on the fools.
Fetherfool
This is the Devil,
Ned
, that's certain—but harkye, Mr. Doctor, I hope I shall not have my Mistress inchanted
from me by this inchanted Rival, hah?
Willmore
Oh, no, Sir, the Inquisition will never let em marry, for fear of a Race of Giants,
'twill be worse than the Invasion of the
Moors
, or the
French
, but go—think of your Mistrisses Names and Ages, here's company, and you wou'd not
be seen.
Enter La Nuche
,
Aurelia
,
Willmore bows to her.
La Nuche
Sir, the fame of your excellent knowledg, and what you said to me this day, has given
me a Curiosity to learn my Fate, at least that Fate you threatned.
Willmore
Madam, from the Oracle in the Box you may be resolved any Question—
—how lovely every absent minute makes her—Madam, be pleas'd to draw from out this
Box what Ball you will.
Madam, upon this little Globe is Character'd your Fate and Fortune; the History of
your Life to come and past—first, Madam,—you're—a Whore.
La Nuche
Willmore
My Art speaks simple truth; the Moon is your Ascendant, that covetous Planet that
borrows all his Light, and is in opposition still to
Venus
, and—Interest more prevails with you than Love! yet here I find a cross—intruding
Line—that does inform me—you have an itch that way, but Interest still opposes: you
are a slavish mercenary Prostitute.
La Nuche
Your Art is so, though call'd Divine! and all the Universe is sway'd by Interest,
and wou'd you wish this Beauty which adorns me, should be dispos'd about for Charity:
proceed, and speak more reason.
Willmore
—But
Venus
here gets the Ascent again, and—spight of—Interest, spight of all aversion, will
make you doat upon a Man—
—Wild, fickle—restless, faithless as the Winds!—a Man of Arms he is—and by this Line—a
Captain—
—for
Mars
and
Venus
were in Conjunction at his Birth—and Love and War's his business—
La Nuche
There thou hast toucht my heart! and spoke so true, that all thou sayst I shall receive
as Oracle: well, grant I Love, that shall not make me yield.
Willmore
I must confess you're ruin'd if you yield, and yet not all your Pride, not all your
Vows, your Wit, your Resolution or your Cunning, can hinder him from Conquering absolutely,
your Stars are fixt, and Fate irrevocable.
La Nuche
No,—I will controul my Stars and Inclinations, and though I love him more than Power
or Interest, I will be Mistress of my fixt Resolves—One Question more—Does this same
Captain, this wild happy Man—love me?
Willmore
—I do not—find—it here—only a possibility incourag'd by your love—oh that you cou'd
resist—but you are
destin'd his, and to be ruin'd—
La Nuche
Why do you tell me this—I am betray'd and every caution blows my kindling Flame—hold—tell
me no more—I might have guest my Fate, from my own soul have guest it— but yet I will
be brave, I will resist in spight of Inclinations, Stars or Devils.
Willmore
Strive not, fair Creature, with the Net that holds you, you'le but intangle more:
Alas!—you must submit and be undone.
La Nuche
Damn your false Art!—had he but lov'd me too, it had excus'd the malice of my Stars.
Willmore
Indeed his love is doubtful: for here—I trace him in a new pursuit—which if you can
this Night prevent, perhaps you fix him.
La Nuche
Hah, pursuing a new Mistriss! there thou hast met the little resolution I had left,
and dasht it into nothing—but I have vowed Allegiance to my interest—Curse on my Stars,
they could not give me love where that might be advance'd—I'le hear no more—
Enter Shift
.
Shift
Sir, there are several Strangers arriv'd who talk of the old Oracle: How will you
receive 'em?
Willmore
I've business now—and must be excus'd a while:—thus far—I'me well, but I may tell
my Tale so often o're till, like the trick of Love, I spoil the pleasure by the repetition,—now
I'le uncase, and see what effects my Art has wrought on
La Nuche
, for she's the promis'd good, the Philosophick treasure that terminates my toyl and
industry: wait you here.
Enter Ariadne in mens Cloaths, with Lucia so Drest, and other Strangers.
.
Ariadne
How now, Seignior Operator, Where's this renowned Man of Arts and Sciences, this
Don Of Wonders?—hah? may a Man have a Pistols worth or two of his Tricks, will he
show, Seignior?
Shift
What-ever you dare see, Sir.
Ariadne
And I dare see the greatest Bug-bear he can Conjure up, my Mistresses face in a Glass
excepted.
Shift
That he can show, Sir, but is now buried in weighty affairs With a Grandee.
Ariadne
Pox, must we wait the leisure of formal Grandees and States-men—ha, who's this?—the
lovely Conqueress of my heart,
La Nuche
.
La Nuche
What foolish thing art thou?
Ariadne
Nay, do not frown; nor fly, for if you do, I must Arrest you, fair one.
La Nuche
Ariadne
At Loves—you've stoln a heart of mine and us'd it scurvily.
La Nuche
By what marks do you know the Toy, that may be no longer troubled with it.
Ariadne
By a fresh Wound, which toucht by her that gave it bleeds anew, a heart all over Kind
and Amorous.
La Nuche
When was this pretty Robbery committed?
Ariadne
To day, most Sacrilegiously, at Church, where you debauch'd my Zeal, and when I wou'd
have pray'd, your eyes had put the change upon my tongue, and made it utter Railings,
Heav'n forgive ye!
La Nuche
You are the gayest thing, without a heart, I ever saw.
Ariadne
I scorn to flinch for a bare Wound or too; nor is he routed that has lost the day,
he may again Rally, renew the Fight and Vanquish.
La Nuche
You have a good opinion of that Beauty which I find not so forcible, nor that fond
prattle uttered with such confidence.
Ariadne
But I have Quality and Fortune too.
La Nuche
So you had need, I should have guest the first by your pertness, for your sawcy thing
of Quality acts the Man as impudently at fourteen as another at thirty: nor is there
any thing so hateful as to hear it talk of Love, Women and Drinking; nay, to see it
Marry too at that Age, and get it self a Play-fellow in its Son and Heir.
Ariadne
This Satyr on my Youth shall never put me out of countenance, or make me think you
wish me one day older; and Egad I'le warrant 'em that tries me, shall find me ne're
an hour too young.
La Nuche
You mistake my humour; I hate the Person of a fair conceited Boy.
Enter Willmore Drest, Singing.
Willmore
Vole Vole dans ceste Cage, |
1 |
Petite Oyso dans cet bocage. |
2 |
—How now, fool, Where's the Doctor?
Shift
Willmore
Call him, I am in haste, and come to cheapen the Price of Monster.
Shift
Willmore
In an honourable way, I will lawfully marry one of 'em, and have pitcht upon the Giant:
I'le bid as fair as any Man.
Shift
No doubt but you will speed, Sir, please you, Sir, to walk in.
Willmore
I'le follow—
Vole Vole dans ceste Cage,
&c.
Lucia
Whe 'tis the Captain, Madam—
La Nuche
Hah—marry—harkye, Sir—a word pray.
Willmore
Your Servant, Madam, your Servant
Vole Vole,
&c.
Lucia
And to be marry'd, mark that.
Ariadne
Then there's one doubt over, I'me glad he is not married.
La Nuche
Come back—Death, I shall burst with anger—this coldness blows my Flame, which if once
visible, makes him a Tyrant—
Willmore
Fool, what's a Clock, fool, this noise hinders me from hearing it strike.
La Nuche
A blessed sound if no Hue and Cry pursue it.—what—you are resolv'd then upon this
notable exploit.
Willmore
What exploit, good Madam?
La Nuche
Whe marrying of a Monster, and an ugly Monster.
Willmore
Yea faith, Child, here stands the bold Knight that singly, and unarm'd, designs to
enter the List with
Thogogandiga
the Giant; a good Sword will defend a worse cause than an ugly Wife: I know no danger
worse than fighting for my Living, and I have done't this dozen years for Bread.
La Nuche
This is the common trick of all Rogues, when they have done an ill thing to face it
out.
Willmore
An ill thing—your Pardon, sweet-heart, compare it but to Banishment, a frozen Centry
with brown George and
Spanish
Pay, and if it be not better to be Master of a Monster than Slave to a damn'd Commonwealth—I
submit—and since my fortune has thrown this good in my way—
La Nuche
You'l not be so ungrateful to refuse it; besides then you may hope to sleep again,
without dreaming of Famin or the Sword, two plagues a Soldier of fortune is subject
to.
Willmore
Besides Cashiering, a third plague.
La Nuche
Still unconcern'd!—you call me mercenary, but I would starve e're suffer my self to
be possest by a thing of horror.
Willmore
You lie, you would by any thing of horror; yet these things of horror have beauties
too, beauties thou canst not boast of, beauties that will not fade: Diamonds to supply
the lustre of their eyes, and Gold the brightness of their hair, a well got Million
to atone for shape, and Orient Pearls, more white, more plump and smooth, than that
fair body men so languish for, and thou hast set such price on.
Ariadne
I like not this so well, 'tis a trick to make her Jealous.
Willmore
Their hands too have their beauties, whose very mark finds credit and respect, their
Bills are currant o're the Universe; besides these you shall see waiting at my door,
four Foot-men, a Velvet Coach with six
Flanders
beauties more: and are not these most comely vertues in a Soldiers Wife, in this most
wicked peaceable Age?
Lucia
He's poor too, there's another comfort.
Ariadne
The most incouraging one I have met with yet.
Willmore
Pox on't, I grew weary of this vertuous Poverty. There goes a gallant fellow, says
one, but gives him-not an Onion; the Women too, faith 'tis a handsom Gentleman; but
the Devil a kiss he gets gratis.
Ariadne
Oh how I long to undeceive him of that error.
La Nuche
He speaks not of me: sure he knows me not.
Willmore
—No, Child, money speaks sense in a Langauge all Nations understand, 'tis Beauty,
Wit, Courage, Honour, and undisputable Reason—see the vertue of a Wager, that new
Philosophical way lately found out of deciding all hard Questions—
Socrates
, without ready money to lay down, must yield.
Ariadne
Well, I must have this gallant fellow.
La Nuche
Sure he has forgot this trivial thing.
Willmore
—Even thou—who seest me dying unregarded wo't then be fond and kind, and flatter me.
By Heaven, I'le hate thee then; nay, I will marry to be rich to hate thee: the worst
of that, is but to suffer nine days wonderment, Is not that better than an Age of
scorn from a proud faithless Beauty
La Nuche
Oh, there's resentment left—whe, yes faith, such a Wedding would give theTown diversion:
we should have a lamentable Ditty made on it, Entituled, The Captains Wedding, with
the doleful relation of his being over-laid by an o'er-grown Monster.
Willmore
I'le Warrant ye I escape that as sure as Cuckolding, for I would fain see that hardy
Wight that dares attempt my Lady bright, either by force or flattery.
La Nuche
So, then you intend to Bed her?
Willmore
Yes faith, and beget a Race of Heroes, the Mothers Form with all the Fathers Qualities.
La Nuche
Faith such a Brood may prove a pretty Livelihood for a poor decay'd Officer; you may
chance to get a Patent to Show 'em in
England
, that Nation of Change and Novelty.
Willmore
A provision old
Carlo
cannot make for you against the abandon'd day.
La Nuche
He can supply the want of issue a better way, and tho he be not so fine a fellow as
your self; he's a better friend, he can keep a Mistress: give me a Man can feed and
cloath me, as well as hug and all to bekiss me, and tho his Sword be not so good as
yours, his Bond's worth a thousand Captains. This will not do, I'le try what Jealousie
will do.
Your Servant Captain—your Hand, Sir.
Willmore
Hah, what new Coxcomb's that—hold, Sir.—
Ariadne
What would you, Sir, ought with this lady?
Willmore
Yes, that which thy Youth will only let thee guess at—this—(Child) is Mans meat; there
are other Toys for Children.
La Nuche
Oh insolent, and whither would'st thou lead me?
Willmore
Only out of harms way, Child, here are pretty neat conveniences within: the Doctor
will be civil—'tis part of's Calling—Your Servant, Sir—
Ariadne
I must huff now tho I may chance to be beaten—come back—or I have something here that
will oblige ye to't.
Willmore
Yes faith, thou'rt a pretty Youth; but at this time I've more occasion for a thing
in Petticoats—go home, and do not walk the Streets so much: that tempting face of
thine will debauch the grave men of business, and make the Magistrates Lust after
wickedness.
Ariadne
You are a scurvy fellow, Sir.
Willmore
Keep in your Sword, for fear it cut your Fingers, Child.
Ariadne
So 'twill your Throat, Sir—here's Company coming that Will part us, and I'le venture
to Draw.
Enter Beaumond
.
Beaumond
Hold, hold—hah, Willmore! thou Man of constant mischief, What's the matter?
La Nuche
Ariadne
Willmore
Whe here's a young Spark will take my Lady bright from me: the unmanner'd hot-spur
would not have patience till I had finisht my small affair with her.
Ariadne
Death he'l know me—Sir, you see we are prevented
—or—
Beaumond
'Tis she, Madam, this Veil's too thin to hide the perjur'd Beauty underneath: Oh,
have I been searching thee, with all the diligence of impatient Love, and am I thus
rewarded, to find thee here incompass'd round with Strangers, fighting, who first
should take my right away—Gods take your reason back; take all your Love! for easie
Man's unworthy of the blessings.
Willmore
Harkye,
Harry
,—the Woman—the almighty Whore—thou told'st me of to day.
Beaumond
Death, do'st thou mock my grief—Unhand me strait, for tho I cannot blame thee, I must
hate thee—
Willmore
Ariadne
You will be sure to come.
Willmore
At Night in the
Piazzo
; I have an assignation with a Woman, that once dispatch'd, I will not fail ye, Sir.
Lucia
And will you leave him with her.
Ariadne
Oh yes, he'l be ne're the worse for my use when he has done with her.
Willmore
Now you may go o'ertake him, lye with him—and ruin him, the fool was made for such
a destiny—if he escapes my Sword.
La Nuche
I must prevent his visit to this Woman—but dare not tell him so.
—I would not have ye meet this angry Youth.
Willmore
Oh you would preserve him for a farther use—
La Nuche
—Stay—you must not fight—by Heaven, I cannot see—that Bosom—wounded—
Willmore
Hah! weep'st thou! curse me when I refuse a faith to that obliging Language of thy
eyes—oh give me one proof more, and after that, thou Conquerest all my Soul: Thy eyes
speak Love—come, let us in my Dear! e're the bright fire allays that warms my heart.
La Nuche
Your Love grows rude, and saucily demands it.
Willmore
Love knows no Ceremony, no respect when once approacht so near the happy minute.
La Nuche
What desperate easiness have you seen in me, or what mistaken merit in your self,
should make you so ridiculously vain, to think I'de give my felt to such a wretch,
one fal'n even to the last degree of Poverty, whil'st all the World is prostrate at
my feet, whence I might chuse the brave, the great, the rich.
—Still as he fires I find my pride augment, and when he cools I burn.
Willmore
Death, thou'rt a—vain, conceited, taudry Jilt, who'st drawn me in as Rooks their Cullies
do, to make me venture all my stock of Love, And then you turn me out despis'd and
poor—
La Nuche
You think you're gone now—
Willmore
Not all thy Arts nor Charms can hold me longer—
La Nuche
I must submit—and can you part thus from me?—
Willmore
I can—nay—by Heaven, I will not turn, nor look at thee: no, when I do, or trust that
faithless tongue again—may I be!
La Nuche
Willmore
La Nuche
You shall not go—Plague!—of this needless Pride.
—stay—and I'le follow—all the dictates of my Love.
Willmore
Oh never hope to flatter me to faith again.
La Nuche
I must, I will; what would you have me do?
Willmore
(
Willmore turning softly to her
)
Never—deceive me more, it may be fatal to wind me up to an impatient height, then
dash my eager hopes.
forgive my roughness—and be kind,
La Nuche
, I know thou wo't—
La Nuche
And will you then be ever kind and true?
Willmore
Ask thy own Charms, and to confirm thee more, yield and disarm me quite:
La Nuche
Will you not marry then? for tho you never can be mine that way, I cannot think that
you should be anothers.
Willmore
No more delays, by Heaven 'twas but a trick—
La Nuche
And will you never see that Woman neither, whom you're this night to visit.
Willmore
Damn all the rest of thy weak Sex, when thou look'st thus, and art so soft and charming.
La Nuche
Willmore
La Nuche
Not to be pointed at by all the envying Women of the Town, who'l laugh and cry, Is
this the high priz'd Lady, now fall'n so low to doat upon a Captain, a poor disbanded
Captain! defend me, from that Infamy.
Willmore
Now all the Plagues—but yet I will not curse thee, 'tis lost on thee, for thou art
destin'd damn'd.
La Nuche
Willmore
Whe—I am so indifferent grown—that I can tell thee now—to a Woman, young, fair and
honest, for she'l be kind and thankful—farewel Jilt—now—should'st thou die
for one sight more of me—thou shoulds't not ha't; nay, should'st thou Sacrifice all
thou hast couzen'd other Coxcombs of, to buy one single visit—I am so proud, by Heaven,
thou should'st not have it—to grieve thee more, see here, insatiate Woman.
The Charm that makes me lovely in thine eyes: 'thad all been thine hadst thou not
basely bargain'd with me, now 'tis the prize of some well-meaning Whore, whose Modesty
will trust my Generosity.
La Nuche
Now I cou'd rave, t've lost an opportunity which industry nor chance can give again—when
on the yielding point, a cursed fit of Pride comes cross Soul, and stops the kind
Career—I'le follow him—yes, I will follow him, even to the Arms of her to whom he's
gone.
Aurelia
Madam, 'tis dark, and we may meet with Insolence.
La Nuche
No Matter,
Sancho
, let the Coach go home, and do you follow me—Women may boast their Honour and their
Pride, But Love soon lays those feebler Pow'rs aside.
The End of the Third Act.
ACT IV. Scene I.
The Street or back-side of the Piazza dark.
Enter Willmore alone.
Willmore
A Pox upon this Woman that has Jilted me, and I forbeing a fond believing puppy to
be in earnest with so great a Devil; where be these Coxcombs too, this
Blunt
and
Fetherfool
: when a Man needs 'em not, they are plaguing him with their unseasonable Jests—could
I but light on them, I would be very drunk to night—but first I'le try my fortune
with this Woman—let me see—here abouts is the door—
Enter Beaumond follow'd by La Nuche and Sancho
.
La Nuche
'Tis he, I know it by his often and uneasie pauses—
Beaumond
—And shall I home and sleep upon my injury—whilst this more happy Rover takes my right
away—no, damn me then for a cold senseless Coward!
Willmore
This Damzel, by the part o'th' Town she lives in, should be of Quality, and therefore
can have no dishonest design on me, it must be right down substantial Love that's
Certain.
Beaumond
Yet I'le in and Arm my self for the Incounter, for 'twill be rough between us, tho
we're friends.
Willmore
Oh 'tis this I'm sure, because the Door is open.
Beaumond
Willmore
That voice is of Authority, some Husband, Lover, or a Brother, on my Life this is
a Nation of a word and a blow, therefore I'le betake me to Toledo—
Willmore in Drawing hits his Sword against that of Beaumond, who turns and fights, La Nuche runs into the Garden frighted.Beaumond
Sancho
I'le draw in defence of the Captain—
Willmore
Beaumond
The Garden Door clapt to; sure he's got in: nay, then I have him sure.
The
SCENE
changes to a Garden, La Nuche in it; to
her Beaumond who takes hold of her Sleeve.
La Nuche
Beaumond
Hah—a Woman! and by these Jewels—should be
Ariadne
—
'Tis so! Death, are all Women false!
—Oh, 'tis in Vain thou fly'st, thy Infamy will stay behind thee still.
La Nuche
Hah, 'tis
Beaumond
's voice! Now for an Art to turn the trick upon him: I must not lose his Friendship.
Enter Willmore softly, peeping behind.
Willmore
—What a Devil have we here, more mischief yet:—hah—my Woman with a Man—I shall spoil
all—I ever had an excellent knack of doing so.
Beaumond
Oh Modesty, where art thou! Is this the effect of all your put on Jealousie, that
Mask to hide your own new falshood in ? now—by Heaven, I believe thou'rt old in cunning,
that couldst contrive, so near thy Wedding night, this, to deprive me of the rights
of Love!
La Nuche
Willmore
How a Maid, and young, and to be marr'd too; a rare Wench this to contrive matters
so conveniently: oh for some mischief now to send him neatly off.
Beaumond
Now you are silent: but you could talk to day loudly of Virtue! and upbraid my Vice!
oh how you hated a young keeping Husband! whom neither Beauty nor Honour in a Wife
cou'd oblige to reason—oh, damn your Honour, 'tis that's the sly pretence of all your
domineering insolent Wives—death—what didst thou see in me, should make thee think
that I would be a tame contented Cuckold?
La Nuche
I must not lose this lavish loving-fool—
Willmore
So, I hope he will be civil and withdraw, and leave me in possession—
Beaumond
No, though my fortune should depend on thee; nay, ever hope of future happiness—by
Heaven, I scorn to marry thee, unless thou cou'dst convince me thou wert honest—a
Whore!—Death how it cools my Blood—
Willmore
And fires mine extreamly—
La Nuche
Nay, then I am provok'd tho I spoil all—
—and is a Whore—a thing so much despis'd? Turn back thou false forsworn,—turn back,
and blush at thy mistaken folly—
Beaumond
Enter Ariadne peeping, advancing cautiously undrest, Lucia following.
Ariadne
Oh he is here—
Lucia
, attend me in the
Orange-Grove
—
Hah, a Woman with him!
Willmore
Hum—what have we here, another Damzel—she's gay too, and seems young and handsom—sure
one of these will fall to my share; no matter which, so I am sure of one.
La Nuche
Who's silent now! are you struck dumb with guilt? thou shame to noble Love! thou scandal
to all brave debauchery, thou fop of fortune; thou slavish Heir to Estate and Wife,
born rich and damn'd to Matrimony.
Willmore
Egad noble Wench—I am divided yet.
La Nuche
Thou formal Ass disguis'd in generous Lewdness, see— when the vizor's off, How sneakingly
that empty form appears—Nay, 'tis thy own— Make much on't, marry with it, and be damn'd.
Willmore
I hope she'l beat him for suspecting her.
Ariadne
Hah—who the Devil can these be—
La Nuche
What silly honest fool did you mistake me for; what sensless modest thing? Death,
am I Grown so despicable, have I deserv'd no better from thy Love than to be taken
for a vertuous changeling?
Willmore
La Nuche
I'me glad I've found thee out to be an errant Coxcomb, one that esteems a Woman for
being Cast, forsooth! 'Shart, I shall have thee call me pious shortly, a most Religious
Matron.
Willmore
Beaumond
Forgive me,— for I took ye—for another—
La Nuche
Oh did you so, it seems you keep fine company the while—Death, that l should e're
be seen with such a vile dissembler, with one so vain, so dull and so impertinent,
as can be entertain'd by honest Women!
Willmore
A Heavenly soul, and to my wish, were I but sure of her.
Beaumond
Oh you do wondrous well t'accuse me first! yes, I am a Coxcomb—a confounded one, to
doat upon so false a Prostitute; nay to love seriously, and tell it too, yet such
an amorous Coxcomb I was born, to hate the injoyment of the loveliest Woman, without
I have the heart: the fond soft prattle, and the lolling dalliance, the frowns, the
little quarrels, and the kind degrees of making peace again, are joys which I prefer
to all the sensual, whilst I endeavour to forget the Whore, and pay my vows to Wit,
to Youth and Beauty.
Ariadne
Now hang me, if it be not
Beaumond
!
Beaumond
Would any Devil less than common Woman have serv'd me as thou didst? say, Was not
this my Night? my paid for Night? my own by right of Bargain, and by Love? and hast
not thou deceiv'd me for a Stranger?
Willmore
So—make me thankful, then she will be kind.
Beaumond
—Was this done like a Whore of Honour think ye, and would not such an injury make
me forswear all joys of Womankind, and marry in meer spight?
La Nuche
Why where had been the crime had I been kind?
Beaumond
Thou do'st confess it then.
La Nuche
Beaumond
Those Bills of Love the oftner paid and drawn, make Women better Merchants than Lovers.
La Nuche
And 'tis the better Trade.
Willmore
Oh Pox, there she dasht all again. I find they calm upon't, and will agree, therefore
I'le bear up to this small Frigot and lay her Aboard.
La Nuche
However I am glad the Vizor's off; you might have fool'd me on, and sworn I was the
only Conquerer of your heart, had not good nature made me follow you, to undeceive
your false suspicions of me: How have you sworn never to marry? How rail'd at Wives,
and satyr'd fools oblig'd to Wedlock? and now at last, to thy eternal shame, thou
hast betray'd thy self to be a most pernicious honorable Lover, a perjur'd—honest—nay,
a Very Husband.
Ariadne
Hah, sure 'tis the Captain.
Willmore
Prithee, Child, let's leave 'em to themselves, they'l agree matters I'le warrant them
when they're alone, and let us try how love and will provide for us.
Ariadne
Sure he cannot know me—us—pray who are you, and who am I?
Willmore
Who look ye Child, I am a very honest civil fellow, for my part, and thou'rt a Woman
for thine ; and I desire to know no more at present.
Ariadne
'Tis he, and knows not me to be the same he appointed to day—Sir, pursue that path
on your right hand, that Grove of Orange Trees, and I'le follow you immediately.
Willmore
Kind and Civil—prithee make haste, dear Child.
Beaumond
And did you come to call me back again?
La Nuche
No matter, you're to be marry'd, Sir—
Beaumond
No more, 'tis true, to please my Uncle, I have talk'd of some such thing; but I'le
pursue it no farther, so thou wilt yet be mine, and mine entirely—I hate this
Ariadne
—for a Wife—by Heaven I do.
Ariadne
Beaumond
La Nuche
I'me glad of this, now I shall be rid of him.
—how is't, Sir, I see you struggle hard 'twixt Love and Honour, and I'le resign my
place—
Ariadne
Hold, if she take him not away I shall disappoint my Man—faith I'le not be out-done
in Generosity.
Here—Love deserves him best—and I resign him—Pox on't I'me honest, tho that's no fault
of mine; 'twas fortune who has made a worse exchange, and you and I should suit most
damnably together.
Beaumond
I am sure there's something in the Wind, she being in the Garden, and the door left
open.
—yes, I believe you are willing enough to part with me, when you expect another you
like better.
Ariadne
I'me glad I was before-hand with you then.
Beaumond
Very good, and the Door was left open to give admittance to a Lover.
Ariadne
'Tis visible it was to let one in to you, false as you are.
La Nuche
Faith, Madam, you mistake my constitution, my Beauty and my business, is only to be
belov'd not to Love; I leave that slavery for you Women of Quality, who must invite,
or die
without the blessing, for likely the fool you make choice of wants wit or confidence—ask
first; you are fain to whistle before the Dogs will fetch and carry, and then too
they approach by stealth: and having done the Drudgery, the submissive Curs are turn'd
out for fear or dirtying your Apartment, or that the Mungrels shuld scandalize ye.
While'st all my Lovers of the noble kind, throng to adore and fill my presence daily,
gay, as if each were triumphing for Victory.
Ariadne
Ay this is something; What a poor sneaking thing an honest Woman is.
La Nuche
—And if we chance to Love still there's a disterence, your hours of Love are like
the deeds of darkness, and mine like chearful Birds in open day.
Ariadne
You may, you have no Honour to lose.
La Nuche
Or if I had, why should I double the sin by Hypocrisie.
Ariadne
Heavens, that's
Lucia
's voice.
Beaumond
Enter Lucia in haste.
Lucia
Oh, Madam, we're undone, and, Sir, for Heavens sake do you retire.
Beaumond
Lucia
Oh you have brought the most villainous mad friend with you—he found me sitting on
a bank—and did so ruffle me.
Ariadne
Death, she takes
Beaumond
for the Stranger, and will ruin me.
Lucia
Nay, made Love so loud, that my Lord your Father-in-law, who was in his Cabinet, heard
us from the Orange-Grove, and has sent to search the Garden—and should he find a Stranger
with you—do but you retire, Sir, and all's well—yet
Ariadne
The Devil's in her tongue.
Lucia
For if Mr.
Beaumond
be in the House, we shall have the Devil to do with his Jealousie.
Ariadne
Beaumond
She takes me for another—I am Jilted every where—what friend?—I brought none with
me.
—Madam, do you retire—
La Nuche
A clashing of Swords within. Enter Willmore fighting, prest back by 3 or 4 men and Abevile, Ariadne, and Lucia run out.
Beaumond
Hah, set on by odds; hold, tho thou be'st my Rival, I will free thee, on condition
thou wilt meet me to morrow Morning in the
Piazzo
by day break.
Willmore
Beaumond
Retire in safety then, you have your pass.
Abevile
Fall, fall on, the number is increas'd.
Beaumond
Rascals do you not know me.
Willmore
Nay, and you be so well acquainted I'le leave you—unfortunate still I am; my own well
meaning, but ill management, is my eternal foe: Plague on 'em, they have wounded me—yet
not one drop of blood's departed from me that warm'd my heart for Woman! and I'me
not willing to quit this Fairy-ground till some kind Devil have been civil to me.
Enter Ariadne and Lucia
.
Ariadne
I say, 'tis he: thou'st made so many dull mistakes to Night, thou darest not trust
thy senses when they'r true—
—how do you, Sir—
Willmore
That voice has comfort in't, for 'tis a Woman's: hah, more interruption?
Ariadne
Enter Beaumond
,
Abevile in a submissive posture.
Beaumond
No more excuses—by all these circumstances, I know this
Ariadne
is a Gypsie. What difference then between a money-taking Mistress and her that gives
her Love, only perhaps this sins the closer by'r, and talks of Honour more: What fool
wou'd be a slave to empty name, or value Woman for dissembling well—I'le to
La Nuche
the honester o'th' two—
Abevile
—get me my Musick ready, and attend me at
La Nuche
's.
Lucia
He's gone, and to his Mistress too.
Enter Ariadne pursu'd by Willmore
.
Willmore
My little
Daphne
, 'tis in vain to fly, unless like her you cou'd be chang'd into a Tree:
Apollo
's self pursu'd not with more eager fire than I.
Ariadne
Will you not grant a Parly e're I yield—
Willmore
Ariadne
Besides, you're wounded too.
Willmore
Oh leave those wounds of Honour to my Surgeon, thy business is to Cure those of Love:
your true bred Soldier ever fights with the more heat for a Wound or too.
Ariadne
Willmore
Her self ne're thought so when she snatcht her Joys between the rough Incounters of
the God of War. Come, let's pursue the business we came for: see the kind Night invites,
and all the ruffling Winds are husht and still, only the Zeaphiers spread their tender
Wings, courting in gentle murmurs the gay Boughs; 'twas in a Night like this,
Diana
taught the mysteries of Love to the fair Boy
Endymion
: I am plaguy full of History and Simily to Night—
Ariadne
You see how well he far'd for being modest.
Willmore
He might be modest, but 'twas not over-civil to put her Goddessship to asking first;
thou seest I'me better bred—come let's haste to silent Grots that attend us, dark
Groves where none can see—and murmuring Fountains.
Ariadne
Stay, let me consider first, you are a stranger, inconstant too as Island Winds, and
every day are Fighting for your Mistrisses of which you've had at least four since
I saw you first, which is not a whole day.
Willmore
I grant ye, before I was a Lover I ran at random, but I'le take up now, be a patient
Man, and keep to one Woman a Month.
Ariadne
Willmore
And a fair reason, Child, time was, I wou'd have worn one Shirt, or one pair of Shoos
so long as have let the Sun set twice upon the same sin; but see the power of Love:
thou hast bewitch'd me that's certain.
Ariadne
Have a care of giving me the ascendant over ye, for fear I make ye marry me.
Willmore
Hold, I bar that cast, Child; no, I'm none of those Spirits that can be conjur'd into
a Wedding-ring, and dance in the dull Matrimonial Circle all my days.
Ariadne
But what think you of a hundred thousand Crowns, and a Beauty of sixteen.
Willmore
As of most admirable blessings—but harkye, Child, I am plaguily afraid thou art some
scurvy honest thing of Quality by these odd Questions of thine, and hast some wicked
design upon by Body.
Ariadne
What, to have and to hold I'le warrant.
—No faith, Sir, Maids of my Quality expect better Jointures than a Buff-coat, Scarf
and Feather: such Portions as mine are better ornaments in a Family than a Captain
and his Commission.
Willmore
Whe well said, now thou hast explain'd thy self like a Woman of Honour—Come, come,
let's away.
Ariadne
Explain'd my self! how mean ye?
Willmore
—Thou say'st I am not fit to marry thee—and I believe this assignation was not made
to tell me so, nor yet to hear me whistle to the Birds.
Ariadne
Faith no, I saw you, lik'd ye, and had a mind to ye.
Willmore
Ariadne
In short, I took ye for a man of Honour.
Willmore
Nay, if I tell the Devil take me.
Ariadne
I am a Virgin in distress.
Willmore
Ariadne
To be marry'd within a day or two to one I like not.
Willmore
Hum—and therefore wou'dst dispose of a small Virgin Treasure (too good for silly Husbands)
in a friends hands: faith, Child,—I Was ever a good Religious Charitable Christian,
and shall acquit my self as honestly and piously in this affair as becomes a Gentleman.
Enter Abevile with Musick.
Abevile
Come away, are ye all Arm'd forthe business?
Ariadne
Hah, Arm'd, we are surpriz d again.
Willmore
Ariadne
Oh God, Sir, haste away, you are already wounded! but I conjure you, as a Man of
Honour, be here at the Garden Gate to night again, and bring a friend, in case of
danger, with you, and if possible I'le put my self into your hands, for this nights
work has ruin'd me—
Abevile
—My Master sure not gone yet.
Willmore
Rascals, tho you are odds, you'le find hot work in vanquishing
Abevile
Hold, Sir, I am your Page. Do you not know me? and these the Musick you Commanded—shall
I carry 'em where you order'd, Sir?
Willmore
They take me for some other, this was lucky.
O, Aye—'tis well—I'le follow—but whither?—Plague of my dull mistakes, the Woman's
gone—yet stay—
for now I think on't, this mistake may help me to another—stay—I must dispose of this
mad fire about me, which all these disappointments cannot lay—oh for some young kind
sinner in the nick—how I cou'd souse upon her like a Bird of Prey, and worry her with
kindness—go on, I follow.
SCENE
Changes to La Nuche's House.
Enter Petronella and Aurelia with light.
Aurelia
Well, the Stranger is in Bed, and most impatiently expects our Patrona, who is not
yet returned.
Petronella
Curse of this Love! I know she's in pursuit of this Rover, this
English
piece of Impudence; Pox on 'em, I know nothing good in the whole race of 'em, but
giving all to their shirts when they're drunk: what shall we do,
Aurelia
? this Stranger must not be put off, nor
Carlo
neither, who has sin'd again as if for a new Maidenhead.
Aurelia
You are so covetous, you might have put 'em off, but now 'tis too late.
Petronella
Put off, are these fools to be put off think ye, a fine fop
English-man
, and an old doating Grandee?—no, I cou'd put the old trick on 'em still, had she
been here but to have entertain'd 'em: but hark' one knocks, 'tis
Carlo
on my life—
Enter Carlo, gives Petronella Gold.
Carlo
Petronella
Sweet Don—you are the most Eloquent person—
Carlo
I would regale to Night—I know it is not mine, but I've sent five hundred Crowns to
purchase it, because I saw anoother bargaining for't; and persons of my Quality must
not be refus'd: you apprehend me.
Petronella
Most rightly—that was the reason then she came so out of humor home—and is gone to
Bed in such a sullen fit—
Carlo
To Bed, and all alone?—I wou'd surprise her there: Oh how it pleases me to think
of stealing into her Arms like a fine dream, wench, hah.
Aurelia
'Twill be a pleasant one no doubt.
Petronella
He lays the way out how he'l be couzen'd—
The Seigniora perhaps may be angry, Sir, but I'le venture that to accommodate you,
and that you may surprise her the more readily, be pleas'd to stay in my Chamber,
'till you think she may be asleep.
Carlo
Thou art a perfect Mistress of thy Trade.
Petronella
So, now will I to the Seignioras Bed my self, drest and perfum'd, and finish two good
works at once; earn five hundred Crowns, and keep up the honour of the House—softly
sweet Don.
Aurelia
And I will do two more good things, disappoint your expectations; Jilt the young
English
fool, and have old
Carlo
well bang'd, if 'tother have any Courage.
Enter La Nuche in Rage, and Sancho
.
La Nuche
Aurelia
, help, help me to be reveng'd upon this wretched unconsidering heart.
Aurelia
Heavens, have you made the Rover happy, Madam?
La Nuche
Oh wou'd I had, or that or any sin wou'd change this rage into some easier passion:
sickness and poverty, disgrace and pity, all met in one, were kinder than this Love,
this raging fire of a proud amorous heart.
Enter Petronella
.
Petronella
Heavens, what's the matter?
Aurelia
Here's
Petronella
, dissemble but your rage a little.
La Nuche
Damn all dissembling now, it is too late—the Tyrant Love reigns absolute within, and
I'm lost,
Aurelia
Petronella
How, Love! forbid it Heaven! will Love maintain ye?
La Nuche
Curse on your Maxims, will they ease my heart? Can your wise Counsel fetch me back
my Rover?
Petronella
Hah, your Rover, a Pox upon him.
La Nuche
He's gone—gone to the Arms of some gay generous Maid, who Nobly follows Loves diviner
Dictates, whilst I'gainst Nature studying thy dull precepts; and to be base and infamously
rich, have barter'd all the joys of human Life—oh give me Love! I will be poor and
Love!
Petronella
La Nuche
I won't, from Childhood thou hast trained me up in cunning, read Lectures to me of
the use of Man, but kept me from the knowledg of the right; taught me to Jilt, to
flatter and deceive, and hard it was to learn th' ungrateful Lessons: but oh how soon
plain Nature taught me Love! and show'd me all the cheat of thy false Tenents—no—give
me Love with any other Curse.
Petronella
But who will give you that when you are poor? when you are wretchedly despis'd and
poor—
La Nuche
Petronella
Do you not daily see—fine Cloaths, rich Furniture, Jewels and Plate are more inviting
than Beauty unadorn'd: be old, diseas'd, deform'd, be any thing, so you be rich and
splendidly attended, you'l find your self Lov'd and Ador'd by all—but I'm an old fool
still—Well,
Petronella
, hadst thou been half as industrious in thy Youth as in thy Age—thou hadst not come
to this—
La Nuche
Petronella
What can this mad poor Captain do for you, love you whil'st you can buy him Britches,
and then leave you; a Woman has a sweet time on't with any Soldier Lover of 'em all,
with their Iron minds and Buff hearts: feather'd Inamorato's have nothing that belongs
to Love but his Wings, the Devil clip 'em for
Petronella
—
La Nuche
True—he can ne're be constant.
Petronella
Heaven forbid he should, no, if you are so unhappy as that you must have him; give
him a Night or two and pay him for't, and send him to feed again: but for your heart,
'Sdeath I would as soon part with my Beauty or Youth, and as necessary a tool 'tis
for your Trade—a Curtezan and Love!—but all my Counsel's thrown away upon ye.
La Nuche
No more, I will be rul'd—I will be wise, be rich, and since I must yield somewhere
and some time
Beaumond
shall be the Man, and this the Night; he's handsom, young, and lavishly profuse:
this Night he comes, and I'le submit to Interest. Let the Gilded Apartment be made
ready, and strew it o're with Flowers, adorn my Bed of State; let all be fine: Perfurne
my Chamber like the Phenix's Nest, I'le be luxurious in my Pride to Night, and make
the Amorous Prodigal Youth my Slave.
Petronella
Nobly resolv'd, and for these other two who wait your coming, let me alone to manage.
SCENE
changes to a Chamber, discovers Fetherfool in Bed.
Fetherfool
This Gentlewoman is plaguy long in coming—some nicety now; some Perfum'd Smock, or
Point Night-cloaths to make her more lovely in my eyes: well, these Women are right
City Cooks, they stay so long to garnish the Dish 'till the meat be Cold—but hark,the
Door opens—
Enter Carlo softly, half undrest.
Carlo
This Wench stays long, and Love's impatient; this is the Chamber of
La Nuche
, I take it: if she be awake I'le let her know who I am, if not, I'le steal a joy
before she thinks of it.
Fetherfool
Sure 'tis she, pretty modest Rogue, she comes i'th' dark to hide her blushes—hum,
I'm plaguy Eloquent o'th'suddain—Who's there?
Carlo
Fetherfool
Hah, sweet Soul, make haste: there 'twas again.
Carlo
So kind, sure she takes me for some other, or has some inkling of my design—
Where are you sweetest?
Fetherfool
Here my Love, give me your hand—
Carlo
Here let me worship the fair shrine before I dare approach so fair a Saint—
Fetherfool
Hah, what a Pox have we here—wou'd I were well out o'th' 'tother side—perhaps 'tis
her Husband, and then I'm a dead Man if I'm discover'd.
Carlo
Nay, do not fly—I know you took me for some happier person—
Fetherfool
Carlo
Hah, that Voice is not
La Nuche
's—Lights there, Lights.
Fetherfool
Nay, I can hold a Bearded
Venus
, Sir, as well as any Man.
Carlo
What art thou, Rogue, Villain, Slave?
Enter Petronella Elenora, Sancho, and Aurelia.
Petronella
Heaven, what noise is this—we are undone, part 'em
Sancho
.
Fetherfool
Give me my Sword; nay, give me but a knife, that I may cut yon fellow's Throat—
Carlo
Sirra, I'm a Grandee, and a
Spaniard
, and will be reveng'd.
Fetherfool
And I'm an
English-man
, and a Justice, and will have Law, Sir.
Petronella
Say 'tis her Husband, or any thing to get him hence.
—these
English
, Sir, are Devils, and on my life 'tis unknown to the Seigniora that he's i'th' House.
Carlo
Come, I'm abus'd, but I must put it up for fear of my Honour; a States-man's reputation
is a tender thing: Convey me out the back way. I'le be reveng'd.
Fetherfool
(
Aurelia aside to him whispers
)
How, her Husband; prithee convey me out: my Clothes, my Cloaths quickly—
Aurelia
Out, Sir, he has lock'd the door, and designs to have ye murther'd.
Fetherfool
Oh gentle Soul—take pity on me—where, oh what shall I do?—my Cloaths, my Sword and
Money.
Aurelia
Quickly,
Sancho
, tye a Sheet to the Window, and let him slide down by that—be speedy, and we'l throw
your Cloaths out after ye: here, follow me to the Window—
Fetherfool
Oh, any whither, any whither; that I could not be warn'd from Whoring in a strange
Country, by my friend
Ned Blunt
's Example—if I can but keep it secret now, I care not—
SCENE
the Street, a Sheet ty'd to the Ballcony, and Fetherfool sitting cross to slide down.
Fetherfool
So—now your Neck or your Throat, chuse ye either, wise Mr.
Nicholas Fetherfool
—but stay, I hear Company : now dare not I budg an inch.
Enter Beaumond alone.
Beaumond
Where can this Rascal, my Page, be all this while, I waited in the
Piazzo
so long that I believ'd he had mistook my order, and gone directly to
La Nuche
's House—but here's no sign of him—
Fetherfool
Hah—I hear no noise, I'le venture down.
Enter Abevile, Musick, and Willmore
.
Willmore
Whither will this Boy conduct me—but since to a Woman, no matter whither 'tis.
Fetherfool
Hah, more Company: now dare not I stir up nor down they may be Bravoes to cut my Throat.
Beaumond
Willmore
Come, my heart, lose no time, but tune your Pipes.
Beaumond
How, sure this is some Rival.
Willmore
Harkye, Child, hast thou ne're an Amorous Ditty, short and sweet, hah—
Abevile
Shall I not sing that you gave me, Sir—
Willmore
I shall spoil all with hard Questions—Ay, Child—that, that—
SONG
A Pox upon this needless Scorn, |
1 |
Silvia
for shame the Cheat give o're, |
2 |
The end to which the fair are born, |
3 |
Is not to keep their Charms in store, |
4 |
But lavishly dispose in haste, |
5 |
Of Joys which none but Youth improve; |
6 |
Joys which decay when Beauty's past: |
7 |
And who when Beauty's past will Love. |
8 |
When Age those Glories shall deface, |
9 |
Revenging all your cold disdain, |
10 |
And
Silvia
shall neglected pass, |
11 |
By every once admiring Swain; |
12 |
And we can only pity pay, |
13 |
When you in vain too late shall burn: |
14 |
If Love increase, and Youth delay, |
15 |
Ah,
Silvia
, who will make return? |
16 |
Then haste, my
Silvia
, to the Grove, |
17 |
Where all the sweets of
May
conspire, |
18 |
To teach us every Art of Love, |
19 |
And raise our Charms of Pleasure higher; |
20 |
Where whil'st embracing, we should lie |
21 |
Loosely in Shades, on Banks of Flowers: |
22 |
The Duller World whil'st we defie, |
23 |
Years will be Minutes, Ages Hours. |
24 |
|
Beaumond
'Sdeath, that's my Pages voice: who the Devil is't that Ploughs with my Heifer!
Aurelia
Don
Henrick
, Don
Henrick
—
Willmore
How now, what intruding Slave art thou?
Beaumond
What Thief art thou that basely, and by dark, rob'st me of all my rights?
[
Sancho throws Fetherfool's Cloaths out, Harliquin takes 'em up in confusion; they fight out Beaumond, all go off, but Willmore gets into the House: Harliquin and Fetherfool remain. Fetherfool gets down, runs against Harliquin in the dark, both seem frighted.Harliquin
Fetherfool
Ah,
un pouer dead Home
, murther'd, kill'd.
Harliquin
(
In Italian
)
You are the first dead Man I ever saw walk.
Fetherfool
Hah, Seignior
Harliquin
!
Harliquin
Fetherfool
A Pox
Nicholas
ye, I have been mall'd and beaten within doors, and hang'd and bastinado'd without
doors, lost my Cloaths, my Money, and all my moveables; but this is nothing to the
secret taking Air: Ah, dear Seignior, convey me to the Mountibanks, there I may have
recruit and Cure under one—
The End of the Fourth Act.
ACT V. Scene I.
A Chamber, La Nuche on a Couch in an undress, Willmore at her Feet, on his knees, all unbrac'd: his Hat, Sword, &c. on the Table at which
she is dressing her Head.
Willmore
Oh Gods! no more! I see a yielding in thy Charming Eyes, The Blushes on thy face,
thy trembling Arms, Thy panting Breast, and short breath'd Sighs confess, Thou wo't
be mine, in spight of all thy Art.
La Nuche
What need you urge my tongue then to repeat what from my eyes you can so well interpret.
—or if—it must—dispose—me as you please—
Willmore
Heaven, I thank thee!
—Who wou'd not Plough an Age in Winter Seas, Or wade seven long years in ruder Camps,
To find out this rest at last—
Upon thy tender Bosom to repose; To gaze upon thy eyes, and taste thy balmy kisses
—Sweeter than everlasting Groves of Spices, When the soft Winds display the opening
Buds:—Come, haste, my Soul, to Bed—
La Nuche
You can be soft I find when you wou'd Conquer absolutely—
Willmore
Not Infant Angels, not young sighing Cupids can be more; this Ravishing joy that thou
hast promis'd me, has formed my Soul to such a calm of Love, it melts even at my eyes—
La Nuche
What have I done; that promise will undo me:—This Chamber was prepar'd, and I was
drest to give admittance to another Lover.
Willmore
But Love and Fortune both were on my side—Come, come to Bed—consider nought but Love—
La Nuche
Beaumond
By Heav'n I will have entrance—
La Nuche
'Tis he whom I expect : as thou lov'st life and me, retire a little into this Closet—
Willmore
La Nuche
He's the most fiercely jealous of his Sex, and disappointment will inrage him more.
Willmore
Death, let him rage whoe're he be; do'st think I'le hide me from him, and leave thee
to his Love? Shall I pent up through the thin Wainscot hear your sighs, your amorous
words and sound of kisses? No, if thou canst couzen me, do't but discreetly, and I
shall think thee true: I have thee now, and when I tamely part with thee, may Cowards
Huff and Bully me.
La Nuche
And must I be undone because I love ye? This is the Mine from whence I fetcht my Gold!
Willmore
Damn the base trash, I'le have thee poor, and mine; 'tis nobler far, to starve with
him thou lov'st, than gay without, and pining all within.
La Nuche
Heavens, here will be murther done—he must not see him.
[
As Beaumond breaks open the Door, she runs away with the Candle, they are by dark, Beaumond enters with his Sword drawn.Willmore
Beaumond
A Man.
—Oh thou false Woman, falser than thy smiles, which serve but to delude good natur'd
man, and when thou hast him fast, betray'st his heart.
Willmore
Beaumond
Willmore
! Is it with thee that I must tug for Empire? For I lay claim to all this World of
Beauty.
La Nuche
Heavens, how got this Ruffian in.
Willmore
Hold, hold, dear Harry, lay no hands on her till thou canst make thy claim good.
Beaumond
She's mine, by bargain mine, and that's sufficient.
Willmore
In Law perhaps, it may for ought I know, but'tis not so in Love; but thou'rt my friend,
and I'le therefore give thee fair Play—if thou canst win her take her: but a Sword
and a Mistriss are not to be lost if a man can keep 'em.
Beaumond
I cannot blame thee, thou but acts thy self—But thou fair Hypocrite, to whom I gave
my heart, And this—exception made of all Man-kind? Why Would'st thou; as in malice
to my Love, Give it the only Wound that cou'd destroy it?
Willmore
Nay, if thou didst forbid her loving me, I have her sure.
Beaumond
I yield him many Charms; he's nobly Born, Has Wit, Youth, Courage, all that takes
the heart, And only wants what pleases Womens Vanity,
Estate: the only good that I can boast, And that I sacrifice to buy thy smiles.
La Nuche
See, sir—here's a much fairer Chapman—you may be gone—
Willmore
Faith and so there is, Child' for me; I carry all about me, and that, by Heaven, is
thine: I'le settle all upon thee but my Sword, and that will buy us bread. I've two
led Horses too, one thou shalt manage, and follow me through dangers.
La Nuche
A very hopeful Comfortable life; no, I was made for better Exercises.
Willmore
Whe every thing in its turn, Child, but a Man's but a Man.
Beaumond
No more, but if thou valuest her, Leave her to ease and plenty.
Willmore
Leave her to love, my dear; one hour of right-down Love, is worth an Age of living
dully on: What is't to be adorn'd and shine with Gold, Drest like a God, but never
know the pleasure.—No, no, I have much finer things in store for thee.
La Nuche
What shall I do? here's powerful interest prostrate at my feet,
Glory, and all that vanity can boast;—But there—Love unadorn'd, no covering but his
Wings,
No wealth, but a full Quiver to do mischiefs. Laughs at those meaner trifles—
Beaumond
Mute as thou art, Are not there minutes mine? But thou—ah false—hast dealt 'em out
already, with all thy Charms of Love, to this unknown—Silence and guilty blushes say
thou hast: He all disorder'd too, loose and undrest, with Love and Pleasure dancing
in his eyes, tell me too plainly how thou hast deceiv'd me.
La Nuche
Or if I have not 'tis a trick soon done, And this ungrateful Jealousie wou'd put it
in my head.
Beaumond
Wou'd! by Heaven thou hast—he is not to be fool'd, be sooth'd into belief of distant
Joys, as easie I have been; I've lost so kind an opportunity, where night and silence
both conspire with Love, had made him rage like Waves blown up by Storms:—No more—I
know he has—Oh what,
La Nuche
Robb'd me of all that I have languish'd for—
La Nuche
If it were so, you should not dare believe it—
Beaumond
Forgive me; oh so very well I love: Did I not know that thou hadst been a Whore, I'de
give thee the last proof of Love—and marry thee—
Willmore
The last indeed—for there's an end of Loving.
—Do, marry him, and be curst by all his Family: Marry him, and ruin him, that he may
curse thee too. But harkye, friend, this is not fair; 'tis drawing Sharps on a Man
that's only arm'd with the defensive Cudgel, I'm for no such dead-doing Arguments:
if thou'rt for me, Child, it must be without the folly, for better for worse, there's
a kind of Nonsense in that Vow fools only swallow.
La Nuche
But when I've worn out all my Youth and Beauty, and suffer'd every ill of Poverty,
I shall be compell'd to begin the World again without a Stock to set up with; no faith,
I'm for a substantial Merchant in Love, who can repay the loss of time and Beauty:
with whom to make one thriving Voyage sets me up for ever, and I need never put to
Sea again.
Beaumond
Nor be expos'd to storms of Poverty, the Indies shall come to thee—see here—this is
the Merchandize my Love affords.
La Nuche
Look ye, Sir, will not these Pearls do better round my Neck than those kind Arms of
yours? these Pendants in my Ears than all the tales of Love you can whisper there?
Willmore
So—I am deceiv'd—deal on for trash—and barter all thy joys of Life for Baubles—this
Night presents me one Adventure more—I'le try thee once again inconstant Fortune,
and if thou fail'st me then—I will forswear thee—
—Death, hadst thou lov'd my friend for his own value, I had esteem'd thee; but when
this Youth and Beauty cou'd not plead, to be the mercenary Conquest of his Presents,
was poor, below thy Wit: I cou'd have Conquer'd so, but I scorn thee at that rate—my
Purse shall never be my Pimp—farewel, Harry—
Beaumond
Thou'st sham'd me out of folly—stay—
Willmore
Faith—I have an Assignation—with a Woman—a Woman friend! young as the infant day,
and sweet as Roses e're the morning Sun—have kiss'd their Dew away—she will not ask
me money neither.
La Nuche
Beaumond
She loves him, and her eyes betray her heart.
Willmore
No, no, I will not hire your Bed, |
1 |
Nor Tenant to your favours be; |
2 |
I will not farm your white and red, |
3 |
You shall not let your love to me: |
4 |
I Court a Mistriss—not a Landlady. |
5 |
I am not for your turn, Child—Death, I shall lose my Mistress fooling here—I must
be gone—
Beaumond
He's in the right; and shall I waste my Youth and Powerful fortune on one who all
this while has Jilted me, seeing I was a lavish loving fool!—no—this Soul and Body
shall not be divided—
Willmore
I am so much thy friend, another time I might be drawn to take a bad bargain off thy
hands—but I have other business at present: wo't do a kind thing, Harry—lend me thy
aid to carry off my Woman to Night, 'tis hard by in the
Piazzo
, perhaps we may find resistance.
Beaumond
My self and sword are yours. I have a Chair waits below too may do you service.
Willmore
I thank ye—Madam—your Servant—
La Nuche
Beaumond
You see our affairs are pressing—
La Nuche
Gone! Where's all your power, ye poor deluded eyes, Curse on your feeble fires that
cannot warm a heart which every common Beauty kindles: oh—he is gone for ever—
Enter Petronella
.
Petronella
Yes he is gone, to your eternal ruin, not all the race of man cou'd have produc'd
so bountiful and credulous a fool—
La Nuche
No, never, fetch him back my
Petronella
: Bring me my wild inconstant or I die—
Petronella
The Devil fetch him back for
Petronella
is't he you mean, you've had too much of him: a Curse upon him, he's ruin'd you.
La Nuche
He has, he shall, he must compleat my ruin.
Petronella
She raves, the Rogue has given her a
Spanish
Philtre.
La Nuche
My Coach, my Veil—or let 'em all alone; undrest thus loosely to the Winds commit me
to darkness, and no guide but pittying Cupid.
Petronella
La Nuche
As Winds let loose, or Storms when they rage high.
Petronella
She's lost, and I'le shift for my self, seize all her Money and Jewels, of which I
have the Keys; and if Seignior Mountibank keeps his word, be transform'd to Youth
and Beauty again, and undoe this
La Nuche
at her own Trade—
SCENE
the Street.
Enter Willmore, Beaumond, Chair following.
Willmore
Set down the Chair; you're now within call, I'le to the Garden Door and see if any
Lady bright appear—dear
Beaumond
, stay here a minute, and if I find occasion, I'le give you the Word.
Beaumond
'Tis hard by my Lodgings, if you want conveniences, I have the key of the back way
through the Garden, whither you may carry your Mistriss.
Willmore
I Thank thee—let me first secure my Woman—
Beaumond
—I thought I'd lov'd this false, this Jilting fair, even above my friendship; but
I find I can forgive this Rogue, though I am sure he's robb'd me of my joys.
Enter Ariadne with a casket of Jewels.
Ariadne
Not yet, a Devil on him, he's dear hearting it with some other kind Damzel—faith
'tis most wickedly done of me to venture my Body with a mad unknown fellow; thus
a little more delay will put me into a serious consideration, and I shall e'n go
home again, sleep and be sober.
Beaumond
Hah, a Woman! perhaps the same he looks for—I'le counterfeit his voice and try my
chance—fortune may set us even.
Ariadne
Hah, is not that a man? yes—and a Chair waiting.
Beaumond
Ariadne
Beaumond
A miracle—oh art thou come, Child.
Ariadne
'Tis he, you're a civil Captain, are you not, to make a longing Maid expect thus.
What Woman has detain'd you?
Beaumond
Faith, my dear, tho flesh and blood be frail, yet the dear hopes of thee has made
me hold out with a Herculean courage,—stay, where shall I carry her, not to my own
Apartment;
Ariadne
may surprise me: I'le to the Mountebank here i'th'
Piazzo
, he has a Cure for all things, even for longing Love, and for a Pistol or two will
do reason.—Hah, Company: here step into this Chair.
Willmore
Hum, a Woman of Quality and Jilt me—Egad tha's strange now—well, who shall a Man trust
in this wicked World!
Enter La Nuche as before.
La Nuche
This should be he, he saunters about like an expecting Lover.
Willmore
By this Light a Woman, if she be the right—but right or wrong so she be Feminine:
harkye, Child, I fancy thee some kind thing that belongs to me.
La Nuche
Willmore
A Wandering Lover that has lost his heart, and I have a shrewd guess 'tis in thy
dear Bosom, Child.
La Nuche
Oh you're a pretty Lover, a Woman's like to have a sweet time on't, if you're always
so tedious.
Willmore
By yon bright Star-light, Child, I walk'd here in short turns like a Centinel, all
this live long Evening, and was just going (Gad forgive me) to kill my self.
La Nuche
I rather think some Beauty has detain'd you: Have you not seen
La Nuche
?
Willmore
La Nuche
!—whe she's a Whore—I hope you take me for a civiller Person, than to throw my self
away on Whores,—No, Child, I lye with none but honest Women I: but no disputing now,
come—to my Lodging, my dear—here's a Chair waits hard by—
SCENE
Willmore's Lodging.
Enter Harliquin with Fetherfool's Cloaths on his Shoulder, leading him halting by one hand, Blunt (drunk) by the other by dark—Fetherfool bloody, his Coat put over his Shoulders.
Fetherfool
Peano, Peano,
Seignior, gently good
Edward
—for I'le not halt before a Cripple; I have lost a great part of my agil faculties.
Blunt
Ah—see the inconstancy of fickle fortune,
Nicholas
—a Man to day, and beaten to morrow: but take comfort, there's many a proper fellow
has been robb'd and beaten on this Highway of Whoring.
Fetherfool
Ay
Ned
, thou speak'st by woful experience—but that I should miscarry after thy wholsome
documents; but we are all Mortal as thou say'st,
Ned
—would I had never crost the Ferry from
Croydon
: a few such Nights as these wou'd learn a Man experience enough to be a Wizard, if
he have but the ill luck to escape hanging.
Blunt
'Dshartlikins, I wonder in what Country our kinder Stars rule in
England
, plunder'd, sequester'd, imprison'd and banish'd; in
France
starv'd, walking like the Sign of the Naked Boy, with
Plimouth
Cloaks in our hands: in
Italy
and
Spain
robb'd, beaten and thrown out at Windows.
Fetherfool
Well—how happy am I—in having so true a friend to condole me in affliction—
I am oblig'd to Seignior
Harliquin
too, for bringing me hither to the Mountebank's, where I shall not only conceal this
Catastrophe from those fortunate Rogues our Comrades, but procure a little Album Grecum
for my Backside, come, Seignior, my Cloaths—but Seignior—
un Portavera Poco palauca.
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Entende vos Signoria Englesa?
Harliquin
Em Poco, em Poco,
Seignior.
Fetherfool
Per quelq arts,
Did your Seigniorship escape Cudgeling?
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Transformatio
—Whe, wert thou not born a Man?
Harliquin
No Seignior,
un vieule Famme.
Fetherfool
Blunt
Good Lord! born an old Woman! and so by transformation became invulnerable.
Fetherfool
Ay—in—invulnerable—what would I give to be invulerable: and Egad I am almost weary
of being a Man, and subject to beating: wou'd I were a Woman, a Man has but an ill
time on't: if he has a mind to a Wench, the making Love is so plaguy tedious—then
paying is to my Soul insupportable, but to be a Woman, to be Courted with presents,
and have both the pleasure and the profit—to be without a Beard, and sing a fine treble—and
squeak if the Men but kiss me—'twere fine—and what's better, I am sure never to be
beaten again.
Blunt
Pox on't, do not use an old friend so scurvily; consider the misery thou't indure
to have the heart and mind of a Jilting Whore possess thee: what a fit of the Devil
must he suffer who Acts her part from fourteen to fourscore, no, 'tis resolv'd thou
remain
Nicholas Fetherfool
still, shalt marry the Monster, and laugh at Fortune.
Fetherfool
'Tis true, should I turn Whore to the disgrace of my Family—what wou'd the World say,
Who wou'd have thought it, cries one; I cou'd never have believ'd, cries another;
no, as thou say'st: I'le remain as I am—marry and live honestly.
Blunt
Well resolv'd, I'le leave you, for I was just going to Serenade my Fayrie Queen, when
I met thee at the Door—some deeds of Gallantry must be perform'd, Seignior,
Bonus Nochus.
Enter Shift with Light.
Fetherfool
Harliquin
Patientia, Patientia,
Seignior.
Shift
Where the Devil can this Rogue
Hunt
be; Just now all things are ready for marrying those two Monsters: they wait, the
House is husht, and in the lucky minute to have him out of the Way, sure the Devil
owes me a spight.
Harliquin
Shift
'Tis
Harliquin
, Pox on't, is't you?
Harliquin
Peace, here's
Fetherfool
, I'le secure him, whil'st you go about your affair.
Fetherfool
Oh, I hear a noise, dear
Harliquin
secure me, if I am discover'd I am undone—hold, hold—here's a Door—
SCENE
changes to a Chamber, discovers the She-Giant asleep in a great great Chair.
Enter Fetherfool and Harliquin
.
Fetherfool
—hah—my Lady Monster, have I to avoid
Scylla
run upon
Caribdis
—hah she sleeps; now wou'd fome magnanimous Lover make good use of this opportunity,
take fortune by the fore-lock; put her to't, and make sure work—but Egad he must have
a better heart, or a better Mistress than I.
Harliquin
Try your strength, I'le be civil and leave you.
Fetherfool
Exeuse me, Seignior, I should crackle like a wicker Bottle in her Arms—no, Seignior,
there's no venturing without a grate between us; the Devil wou'd not give her due
Benevolence—no, when I'm marry'd, I'le e'ne show her a fair pair of Heels, her Portion
will pay postage—but what if the Giant should carry her, that's to be fear'd, then
I have cock'd and drest, and feed and ventur'd all this while for nothing.
Harliquin
Faith, seignior, if I were you, I wou'd make sure of something, see how rich she is
in Jems.
Fetherfool
Right, as thou say'st, I ought to make sure of something, and she is rich in Jems:
How amiable looks that Neck with that delicious row of Pearls about it.
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Ay, she sleeps as 'twere her last. What if I made bold to unrig her? so if I miss
the Lady, I have at least my charges paid, what vigorous Lover can resist her Charms—
but shou'd she wake and miss it, and find it about me, I shou'd be hang'd—
—so then, I lose my Lady too—but flesh and blood cannot resist—What if I left the
Town? then I lose my Lady still, and who wou'd lose a Hog for the rest of the Proverb—and
yet a Bird in hand, friend
Nicholas
—yet sweet meat may have sour sauce—and yet refuse when fortune offers—yet honesty's
a Jewel
—but a Pox upon Pride when folks go naked—
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Ay—I'le do't—but what remedy now against discovery and restitution—
Harliquin
Oh, Sir, take no care, you shall—swallow 'em.
Fetherfool
How, swallow 'em, I shall ne're be able to do't.
Harliquin
I'le show you, Seignior, 'tis easie.
Fetherfool
'Gad that may be, 'twere excellent if I cou'd do't; but first—by your leave.
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Hold, hold, Seignior, an you be so nimble, I shall pay dear for my Learning—let me
see—friend
Nicholas
, thou hast swallow'd many a Pill for the Disease of the Body, let's fee what thou
canst perform for that of the Purse.
—so—a comfortable business this—three or four thousand pound in Cordial Pearl: 'Sbud
Mark Anthony
was never so treated by his
Egyptian
Crocodile—hah, what noise is that?
Harliquin
Operator, Operator, Seignior.
Fetherfool
How, an Operator, whe what the Devil makes he here? some Plot upon my Ladies Chastity;
were I given to be Jealous now, danger wou'd insue—oh, he's entring, I wou'd not be
seen for all the World: oh some place of refuge—
Harliquin
Fetherfool
Hah, whats this—a Clock-Case—
Harliquin
Good, good—look you, Sir, do you do thus, and 'tis imposslble to discover ye.
Enter Shift and Hunt
.
Fetherfool
Shift
See where she sleeps; get you about your business, see your own little Marmoset and
the Priest be ready, that we may Marry and Consummate before day: and in the morning
our
friends shall see us abed together, give us the good morrow, and the work's done.
Fetherfool
Oh Traytor to my Bed, what a Hellish Plot's here discover'd.
Giant
Oh are you come my sweetest?
Fetherfool
Hah, the Mistress of my Bosom false too; ah, who wou'd trust faithless Beauty—oh that
I durst speak—
Shift
Come let's away, your Uncle and the rest of the House are fast asleep, let's away
e're the two fools,
Blunt
and
Fetherfool
, arrive.
Giant
Hang 'em Pigeon-hearted slaves—
Shift
A Clock—let's see what hour 'tis—
—how! betray'd—I'le kill the Villain.
Fetherfool
Say you so, then 'tis time for me to uncase.
Shift
Have you your Lovers hid?
Giant
Softly or we're undone; give me your hand and be undeceiv'd.
Fetherfool
'Tis she, now shall I be reveng'd.
Shift
What gone! Death, has this Monster got the Arts of Woman.
[
Exit all.Enter Willmore and La Nuche by dark.
Willmore
Now we are safe and free let's in my Soul, and gratefully first Sacrifice to Love,
then to the Gods of Mirth and Wine, my dear.
Enter Blunt with Petronella, imbracing her, his Sword in his hand, and a Box of Jewels.
Petronella
I was damnably afraid I was pursu'd.
Blunt
Something in the fray I've got, pray Heaven it prove a Prize, after my Cursed ill
luck of losing my Lady Dwarf: Why do you tremble fair one?—you're in the hands of
an honest Gentleman, Adshartlikins.
Petronella
Alas, Sir, Just as I approacht Seignior Doctor's Door, to have my self surrounded
with naked Weapons, then to drop with the fear my Casket of Jewels, which had not
you by chance stumbled on and taken up, I had lost a hundred thousand Crowns with
it.
Blunt
Ha um—a hundred thousand Crowns—a pretty trifling sum—I'le marry her out of hand.
Petronella
This is an
English-man
of a dull honest Nation, and might be manag'd to advantage, were but I transform'd
now.
I hope you are a Man of Honour, Sir, I am a Virgin, fled from the rage of an incens'd
Brother; cou'd you but secure me with my Treasure, I wou'd be devoted yours.
Blunt
Secure thee, by this light sweet Soul, I'le marry thee: —
Bellvile
's Lady ran just so away with him—this must be a Prize—
but hark—prithee, my Dear, step in a little, I'le keep my good fortune to my self.
Petronella
See what trust I repose in your hands, those Jewels, Sir.
Blunt
So—there can be no Jilting here, I am secur'd from being couzen'd however.
[
Exit Petronella
.
Enter Fetherfool
.
Fetherfool
Pox on all fools, I say, and a double Pox on all fighting fools; just when I had miraculously
got my Monster by a mistake in the dark, convey'd her out, and within a moment of
marrying her, to have my friend set upon me and occasion my losing her, was a Catastrophe
which none but thy termagant Courage (which never did any man good) cou'd have procur'd.
Blunt
'Dshartlikins I cou'd kill my self—
Fetherfool
To fight away a couple of such hopeful Monsters, and two Millions—'owns, was ever
Valour so improvident?
Blunt
Your fighting made me mistake—for who the Pox wou'd have look'd for
Nicholas Fetherfool
in the person of a Hero.
Fetherfool
Fight, 'Sbud a Million of Money wou'd have provok'd a Bully; besides, I took you for
the damn'd Rogue my Rival.
Blunt
Just as I had finish'd my Serenade, and had put up my Pipes to be gone, out-stalk'd
me your two-handed Lady, with a Man at her Girdle like a bunch of Keys, whom I taking
for nothing
less than some one who had some foul design upon the Gentlewoman, like a true Knight
Errant, did my best to rescue her.
Fetherfool
Yes, yes, I feel you did, a Pox of your heavy hand.
Blunt
So whil'st we two were lovingly cutting each other, comes the Rival, I suppose, and
carry's off the Prize.
Fetherfool
Who must be Seignior
Lucifer
himself, he cou'd never have Vanisht with that Celerity else with such a carriage—but
come, all we have to do is to raise the Mountebank and the Guardian, pursue the Rogues,
have 'em hang'd by Law for a Rape and Theft, and then we stand fair again.
Blunt
Faith, you may if you please, but fortune has provided otherwise for me.
[
Exit Blunt and Fetherfool
.
Enter Beaumond and Ariadne
.
Beaumond
Sure none lives here, or Thieves are broken in, the Doors are all left open.
Ariadne
Pray Heaven this stranger prove but honest now.
Beaumond
Now my dear Creature every thing conspires to make us happy, let us not defer it.
Ariadne
Hold, dear Captain, I yield but on conditions, which are these—I give you up a Maid
of Youth and Beauty, ten thousand Pound in ready Jewels here—three times the value
in Estate to come, of which here be the Writings, you delivering me a handsom proper
fellow, heart-whole and sound, that's all—your Name I ask not till the Priest declare
it, who is to seal the bargain: I cannot deceive, for I let you know I am Daughter-in-law
to the
English
Ambassador.
Beaumond
Ariadne
How vain is all Man's industry and care to make him accomplished; when the gay fluttering
fool, or the half-witted rough unmanner'd brute, who in plain terms comes right down
to the business, out-Rivals him in all his Love and Fortunes.
Ariadne
—Methinks you cool upon't, Captain.
Beaumond
Ariadne
Beaumond
Oh what a world of time have I mispent for want of being a Blockhead—'Sdeath and Hell,
wou'd I had been some brawny ruffilng fool, some forward impudent unthinking sloven,
a Womans tool; for all besides unmanageable.—Come, swear that all this while you thought
'twas I: the Devil has taught ye tricks to bring your falshood off.
Ariadne
Know 'twas you? no, faith, I took you for as errant a right-down Captain as ever Woman
wisht for: and twas uncivil Egad to undeceive me, I tell you that now.
Enter Willmore and La Nuche by dark.
Willmore
Thou art all Charms, a Heaven of sweets all over, plump smooth round Limbs, small
rising Breasts, a Bosom soft and panting—I long to wound each sense: Lights there—who
waits—there yet remains a Pleasure unpossest, the light of that dear face.—Lights
there—where are my Vermin?
Ariadne
My Captain with a Woman—and is it so—
Enter Willmore with Lights, sees Ariadne and goes to her.
Willmore
By Heaven a glorious Beauty! now a blessing on thee for showing me so dear a face—come,
Child, let's retire, and begin where we left off.
La Nuche
Ariadne
Where we left off, pray, where was that good Captain?
Willmore
Within upon the Bed, Child—come—I'le show thee—
Beaumond
Willmore
Beaumond
come fit to celebrate my happiness: ah such a Woman friend!
Beaumond
Willmore
All ore, to be the softest sweetest Creature—
Beaumond
I mean, do ye know who she is?
Willmore
Nor care; 'tis the last Question I ever ask a fine Woman.
Beaumond
And you are sure you are thus well acquainted.
Willmore
I cannot boast of much acquaintance—but I have pluckt a Rose from her Bosom—or so—and
given it her
again—we've past the hour of the Berjere together, that's all—
Beaumond
And do you know—this Lady is my—Wife?
Willmore
Beaumond
Did you not hear me—
Draw.
Willmore
Draw, Sir—what—on my friend.
Beaumond
On your Cuckold, Sir, for so you've doubly made me: Draw, or I'le kill thee—
Willmore
La Nuche
Put up your Sword, this Lady's innocent, at least in what concerns this Evenings business:
I own—with pride I own I am the Woman that pleas'd so well to Night.
Willmore
La Nuche
! kind Soul to bring me off with so handsom a lie: how lucky 'twas she happen'd to
be here.
Beaumond
False as thou art, why shou'd I credit thee?
La Nuche
By Heav'n, 'tis true, I will not lose the glory on't.
Willmore
Oh the dear Perjur'd Creature, how I Love thee for this dear lying Vertue—harkye,
Child, hast thou nothing to say for thy self to help us out withal?—
Ariadne
I! Renounce ye—false Man.
Beaumond
Yes, yes, I know she's innocent of this, for which I owe no thanks to either of you,
but to my self who mistook her in the dark.
La Nuche
And you it seems mistook me for this Lady; I favour'd your design to gain your heart,
for I was told, that if this Night I lost you, I shou'd never regain you: now I am
yours, and o're the habitable World will follow you; and live and starve by turns
as fortune pleases.
Willmore
Nay, by this light, Child, I knew when once thou'dst try'd me, thou'dst ne'r part
with me—give me thy hand, no poverty shall part us.
—so—now here's a bargain made without the formal foppery of Marriage.
La Nuche
Nay, faith Captain, she that will not take thy word as soon as the Parsons of the
Parish deserves not the blessing.
Willmore
Thou art reform'd, and I adore the change.
Enter the Guardian
,
Blunt and Fetherfool
.
Guardian
My Nieces stoln, and by a couple of the Seigniors Men! the Seignior fled too, undone,
undone.
Willmore
Hah, now's my Cue; I must finish this Jest.
Enter Shift and Giant
,
Hunt and Dwarf
.
Guardian
Oh impudence, my Nieces, and the Villains with 'em; I charge ye Gentlemen to lay hold
on 'em.
Dwarf
For what good Uncle, for being so couragious to marry us.
Guardian
How, married to Rogues, Rascals,
John Potages!
Blunt
Who the Devil wou'd have look'd for Jilting in such Hobgoblins?
Fetherfool
And hast thou deceiv'd me, thou foul filthy Synagogue.
Enter Willmore like a Mountebank as before.
Blunt
The Mountebank! oh thou cheating Quack, thou sophisticated adulterated Villain.
Fetherfool
Thou cozening, lying, fortune-telling, fee-taking Rascal.
Blunt
Thou Jugling, Conjuring, Canting Rogue!
Willmore
What's the matter, Gentlemen?
Blunt
Hast thou the impudence to ask who took my money to marry me to this ill-favour'd
Baboon.
Fetherfool
And me to this foul filthy o'er-grown Chronacle.
Blunt
And hast suffered Rogues, thy Servants, to marry 'em: Sirra, I will beat thee past
Cure of all thy hard nam'd Drugs, thy
Guzman
Medicines.
Fetherfool
Nay, I'le Peach him in the inquisition for a Wizard, and have him hang'd for a Witch.
Shift
Sir, we are Gentlemen, and you shall have the thirds of their Portion, what wou'd
you more.
Look ye, Sir.
Blunt
Fetherfool
Shift
! we are betray'd! all will out to the Captain.
Willmore
He shall know no more of it than he does already for me,
Gentlemen.
Blunt
Fetherfool
Blunt
Willmore
For one that 'tis impossible to couzen.
Beaumond
Have a care, Sir, we are all for the Captain.
Fetherfool
As for that, Sir, we fear ye not, de see, were you
Hercules
and all his Mermidons.
Willmore
Fools, put up your Swords, fools, and do not publish the Jest; your money you shall
have again, on condition you never pretend to be wiser than your other men, but modestly
believe you may be cozened as well as your Neighbours.
Fetherfool
La you,
Ned
, why, shou'd friends fall out?
Blunt
Couzen'd, it may be not, Sir, for look ye, Sir, the
Essex
fool; the couzen'd dull Rogue can show moveables or so—nay, they are right too—
This is no
Naples
Adventure, Gentlemen, no Copper Chains; all substantial Diamonds, Pearls and Rubies—
La Nuche
Hah, do not I know that Casket, and those Jewels.
Fetherfool
How the Pox came this Rogue by these?
Willmore
Hum,
Edward
, I confess you have redeem'd your reputation, and shall hereafter pass for a Wit—by
what good fortune came you by this treasure?—what Lady?—
Blunt
Lady, Sir! alas no, I am a fool, a Country fop, an ass, I; but that you may perceive
your selves mistaken, Gentlemen, this is but an earnest of what's to come, a small
token of remembrance, or so—and yet I have no Charms, I; the fine Captain has all
the Wit and Beauty—but thou'rt my friend, and I'le impart.
Enter Aurelia and Sancho
.
Aurelia
Hither we trac'd her, and see she's yonder.
Sancho
Sir, in the Kings Name lay hold of this, old cheat; she has this Night robb'd our
Pattona of a hundred thousand Crowns in Money and Jewels.
Blunt
La Nuche
You are mistaken, friend
Sancho
, she only seiz'd 'em for my use, and has deliver'd 'em in trust to my friend the
Captain.
Petronella
Blunt
Willmore
Look ye, Sir, she's so Beautiful, you need no Portion, that alone's sufficient for
a Wit.
Fetherfool
Much good may do you with your rich Lady,
Edward
.
Blunt
Death, this fool laugh at me too—Well, I am an errant right-down Logerhead, a dull
conceited couzen'd silly fool, and he that ever takes me for any other, 'Dshartlikins,
I'le beat him: I forgive you all, and will henceforth be good natur'd: wo't borrow
any money, Pox on't, I'le lend as far as e're 'twill go, for I am now reclaim'd.
Guardian
Here is a Necklace of Pearl lost, which, Sir, I lay to your Charge.
Fetherfool
Hum, I was bewitcht I did not rub off with it when it was mine—who I, if e're I saw
a Necklace of Pearl, I wish 'twere in my Belly.
Blunt
How, a Necklace, unconscionable Rogue, not to let me share, well there is no friendship
in this World: I hope they'l hang him.
Shift
He'l ne'r confess without the Rack—come, we'l toss him in a Blanket.
Fetherfool
Hah, toss me in a Blanket, that will turn my Stomach most villainously, and I shall
disimbogue and discover all.
Shift
Fetherfool
Hold, hold, I do confess, I do confess—
Shift
Restore, and have your Pardon.
Fetherfool
That is not in Nature at present, for Gentlemen, I have eat 'em.
Shift
'Sdeath, I'le dissect ye.
Willmore
Let me redeem him; here Boy, take him to my Chamber, and let the Doctor Glyster him
soundly, and I'le warrant you your Pearl again.
Fetherfool
If this be the end of Travelling, I'le e'ne to old
England
again, taketh Covenant, get a Sequestrators place, grow rich, and defie all Cavaliering.
Beaumond
'Tis Morning, let's home,
Ariadne
, and try, if possible, to love so well to be content to marry; if we find that amendment
in our hearts, to say we dare believe and trust each other, then let it be a match.
Ariadne
Willmore
You have a hankering after Marriage still, but I am for Love and Gallantry. So tho
by several Ways we gain our End, Love still, like Death, does to one Center tend.
FINIS.