<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ACT 4. SCENE 4.1. </h2>
<p>A ROOM IN LOVEWIT'S HOUSE.<br/>
<br/>
ENTER FACE AND MAMMON.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O sir, you're come in the only finest time.—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Where's master?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Now preparing for projection, sir.<br/>
Your stuff will be all changed shortly.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Into gold?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. To gold and silver, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Silver I care not for.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Yes, sir, a little to give beggars.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Where's the lady?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. At hand here. I have told her such brave things of you,<br/>
Touching your bounty, and your noble spirit—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Hast thou?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. As she is almost in her fit to see you.<br/>
But, good sir, no divinity in your conference,<br/>
For fear of putting her in rage.—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I warrant thee.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Six men [sir] will not hold her down: and then,<br/>
If the old man should hear or see you—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Fear not.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. The very house, sir, would run mad. You know it,<br/>
How scrupulous he is, and violent,<br/>
'Gainst the least act of sin. Physic, or mathematics,<br/>
Poetry, state, or bawdry, as I told you,<br/>
She will endure, and never startle; but<br/>
No word of controversy.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I am school'd, good Ulen.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And you must praise her house, remember that,<br/>
And her nobility.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Let me alone:<br/>
No herald, no, nor antiquary, Lungs,<br/>
Shall do it better. Go.<br/>
<br/>
FACE [ASIDE]. Why, this is yet<br/>
A kind of modern happiness, to have<br/>
Dol Common for a great lady.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Now, Epicure,<br/>
Heighten thyself, talk to her all in gold;<br/>
Rain her as many showers as Jove did drops<br/>
Unto his Danae; shew the god a miser,<br/>
Compared with Mammon. What! the stone will do't.<br/>
<br/>
She shall feel gold, taste gold, hear gold, sleep gold;<br/>
Nay, we will concumbere gold: I will be puissant,<br/>
And mighty in my talk to her.—<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE, WITH DOL RICHLY DRESSED.]<br/>
Here she comes.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. To him, Dol, suckle him.—This is the noble knight,<br/>
I told your ladyship—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Madam, with your pardon,<br/>
I kiss your vesture.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Sir, I were uncivil<br/>
If I would suffer that; my lip to you, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I hope my lord your brother be in health, lady.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. My lord, my brother is, though I no lady, sir.<br/>
<br/>
FACE [ASIDE]. Well said, my Guinea bird.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Right noble madam—<br/>
<br/>
FACE [ASIDE]. O, we shall have most fierce idolatry.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. 'Tis your prerogative.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Rather your courtesy.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Were there nought else to enlarge your virtues to me,<br/>
These answers speak your breeding and your blood.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Blood we boast none, sir, a poor baron's daughter.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Poor! and gat you? profane not. Had your father<br/>
Slept all the happy remnant of his life<br/>
After that act, lien but there still, and panted,<br/>
He had done enough to make himself, his issue,<br/>
And his posterity noble.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Sir, although<br/>
We may be said to want the gilt and trappings,<br/>
The dress of honour, yet we strive to keep<br/>
The seeds and the materials.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I do see<br/>
The old ingredient, virtue, was not lost,<br/>
Nor the drug money used to make your compound.<br/>
There is a strange nobility in your eye,<br/>
This lip, that chin! methinks you do resemble<br/>
One of the Austriac princes.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Very like!<br/>
[ASIDE.]<br/>
Her father was an Irish costermonger.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. The house of Valois just had such a nose,<br/>
And such a forehead yet the Medici<br/>
Of Florence boast.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Troth, and I have been liken'd<br/>
To all these princes.<br/>
<br/>
FACE [ASIDE]. I'll be sworn, I heard it.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I know not how! it is not any one,<br/>
But e'en the very choice of all their features.<br/>
<br/>
FACE [ASIDE]. I'll in, and laugh.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
MAM. A certain touch, or air,<br/>
That sparkles a divinity, beyond<br/>
An earthly beauty!<br/>
<br/>
DOL. O, you play the courtier.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Good lady, give me leave—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. In faith, I may not,<br/>
To mock me, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. To burn in this sweet flame;<br/>
The phoenix never knew a nobler death.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Nay, now you court the courtier, and destroy<br/>
What you would build. This art, sir, in your words,<br/>
Calls your whole faith in question.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. By my soul—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Nay, oaths are made of the same air, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Nature<br/>
Never bestow'd upon mortality<br/>
A more unblamed, a more harmonious feature;<br/>
She play'd the step-dame in all faces else:<br/>
Sweet Madam, let me be particular—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Particular, sir! I pray you know your distance.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. In no ill sense, sweet lady; but to ask<br/>
How your fair graces pass the hours? I see<br/>
You are lodged here, in the house of a rare man,<br/>
An excellent artist; but what's that to you?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Yes, sir; I study here the mathematics,<br/>
And distillation.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. O, I cry your pardon.<br/>
He's a divine instructor! can extract<br/>
The souls of all things by his art; call all<br/>
The virtues, and the miracles of the sun,<br/>
Into a temperate furnace; teach dull nature<br/>
What her own forces are. A man, the emperor<br/>
Has courted above Kelly; sent his medals<br/>
And chains, to invite him.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Ay, and for his physic, sir—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Above the art of Aesculapius,<br/>
That drew the envy of the thunderer!<br/>
I know all this, and more.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Troth, I am taken, sir,<br/>
Whole with these studies, that contemplate nature.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. It is a noble humour; but this form<br/>
Was not intended to so dark a use.<br/>
Had you been crooked, foul, of some coarse mould<br/>
A cloister had done well; but such a feature<br/>
That might stand up the glory of a kingdom,<br/>
To live recluse! is a mere soloecism,<br/>
Though in a nunnery. It must not be.<br/>
I muse, my lord your brother will permit it:<br/>
You should spend half my land first, were I he.<br/>
Does not this diamond better on my finger,<br/>
Than in the quarry?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Why, you are like it.<br/>
You were created, lady, for the light.<br/>
Here, you shall wear it; take it, the first pledge<br/>
Of what I speak, to bind you to believe me.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. In chains of adamant?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Yes, the strongest bands.<br/>
And take a secret too—here, by your side,<br/>
Doth stand this hour, the happiest man in Europe.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. You are contended, sir!<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Nay, in true being,<br/>
The envy of princes and the fear of states.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Say you so, sir Epicure?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Yes, and thou shalt prove it,<br/>
Daughter of honour. I have cast mine eye<br/>
Upon thy form, and I will rear this beauty<br/>
Above all styles.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. You mean no treason, sir?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. No, I will take away that jealousy.<br/>
I am the lord of the philosopher's stone,<br/>
And thou the lady.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. How, sir! have you that?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I am the master of the mystery.<br/>
This day the good old wretch here o' the house<br/>
Has made it for us: now he's at projection.<br/>
Think therefore thy first wish now, let me hear it;<br/>
And it shall rain into thy lap, no shower,<br/>
But floods of gold, whole cataracts, a deluge,<br/>
To get a nation on thee.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. You are pleased, sir,<br/>
To work on the ambition of our sex.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I am pleased the glory of her sex should know,<br/>
This nook, here, of the Friars is no climate<br/>
For her to live obscurely in, to learn<br/>
Physic and surgery, for the constable's wife<br/>
Of some odd hundred in Essex; but come forth,<br/>
And taste the air of palaces; eat, drink<br/>
The toils of empirics, and their boasted practice;<br/>
Tincture of pearl, and coral, gold, and amber;<br/>
Be seen at feasts and triumphs; have it ask'd,<br/>
What miracle she is; set all the eyes<br/>
Of court a-fire, like a burning glass,<br/>
And work them into cinders, when the jewels<br/>
Of twenty states adorn thee, and the light<br/>
Strikes out the stars! that when thy name is mention'd,<br/>
Queens may look pale; and we but shewing our love,<br/>
Nero's Poppaea may be lost in story!<br/>
Thus will we have it.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. I could well consent, sir.<br/>
But, in a monarchy, how will this be?<br/>
The prince will soon take notice, and both seize<br/>
You and your stone, it being a wealth unfit<br/>
For any private subject.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. If he knew it.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Yourself do boast it, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. To thee, my life.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. O, but beware, sir! You may come to end<br/>
The remnants of your days in a loth'd prison,<br/>
By speaking of it.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. 'Tis no idle fear.<br/>
We'll therefore go withal, my girl, and live<br/>
In a free state, where we will eat our mullets,<br/>
Soused in high-country wines, sup pheasants' eggs,<br/>
And have our cockles boil'd in silver shells;<br/>
Our shrimps to swim again, as when they liv'd,<br/>
In a rare butter made of dolphins' milk,<br/>
Whose cream does look like opals; and with these<br/>
Delicate meats set ourselves high for pleasure,<br/>
And take us down again, and then renew<br/>
Our youth and strength with drinking the elixir,<br/>
And so enjoy a perpetuity<br/>
Of life and lust! And thou shalt have thy wardrobe<br/>
Richer than nature's, still to change thy self,<br/>
And vary oftener, for thy pride, than she,<br/>
Or art, her wise and almost-equal servant.<br/>
<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Sir, you are too loud. I hear you every word<br/>
Into the laboratory. Some fitter place;<br/>
The garden, or great chamber above. How like you her?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Excellent! Lungs. There's for thee.<br/>
<br/>
[GIVES HIM MONEY.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. But do you hear?<br/>
Good sir, beware, no mention of the rabbins.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. We think not on 'em.<br/>
<br/>
[EXEUNT MAM. AND DOL.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, it is well, sir.—Subtle!<br/>
[ENTER SUBTLE.]<br/>
Dost thou not laugh?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes; are they gone?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. All's clear.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. The widow is come.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And your quarrelling disciple?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Ay.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I must to my captainship again then.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Stay, bring them in first.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. So I meant. What is she?<br/>
A bonnibel?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I know not.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. We'll draw lots:<br/>
You'll stand to that?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. What else?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, for a suit,<br/>
To fall now like a curtain, flap!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. To the door, man.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. You'll have the first kiss, 'cause I am not ready.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, and perhaps hit you through both the nostrils.<br/>
<br/>
FACE [WITHIN]. Who would you speak with?<br/>
<br/>
KAS [WITHIN]. Where's the captain?<br/>
<br/>
FACE [WITHIN]. Gone, sir,<br/>
About some business.<br/>
<br/>
KAS [WITHIN]. Gone!<br/>
<br/>
FACE [WITHIN]. He'll return straight.<br/>
But master doctor, his lieutenant, is here.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER KASTRIL, FOLLOWED BY DAME PLIANT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Come near, my worshipful boy, my terrae fili,<br/>
That is, my boy of land; make thy approaches:<br/>
Welcome; I know thy lusts, and thy desires,<br/>
And I will serve and satisfy them. Begin,<br/>
Charge me from thence, or thence, or in this line;<br/>
Here is my centre: ground thy quarrel.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. You lie.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How, child of wrath and anger! the loud lie?<br/>
For what, my sudden boy?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Nay, that look you to,<br/>
I am afore-hand.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. O, this is no true grammar,<br/>
And as ill logic! You must render causes, child,<br/>
Your first and second intentions, know your canons<br/>
And your divisions, moods, degrees, and differences,<br/>
Your predicaments, substance, and accident,<br/>
Series, extern and intern, with their causes,<br/>
Efficient, material, formal, final,<br/>
And have your elements perfect.<br/>
<br/>
KAS [ASIDE]. What is this?<br/>
The angry tongue he talks in?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. That false precept,<br/>
Of being afore-hand, has deceived a number,<br/>
And made them enter quarrels, often-times,<br/>
Before they were aware; and afterward,<br/>
Against their wills.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. How must I do then, sir?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I cry this lady mercy: she should first<br/>
Have been saluted.<br/>
[KISSES HER.]<br/>
I do call you lady,<br/>
Because you are to be one, ere't be long,<br/>
My soft and buxom widow.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Is she, i'faith?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, or my art is an egregious liar.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. How know you?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. By inspection on her forehead,<br/>
And subtlety of her lip, which must be tasted<br/>
Often to make a judgment.<br/>
[KISSES HER AGAIN.]<br/>
'Slight, she melts<br/>
Like a myrobolane:—here is yet a line,<br/>
In rivo frontis, tells me he is no knight.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. What is he then, sir?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Let me see your hand.<br/>
O, your linea fortunae makes it plain;<br/>
And stella here in monte Veneris.<br/>
But, most of all, junctura annularis.<br/>
He is a soldier, or a man of art, lady,<br/>
But shall have some great honour shortly.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Brother,<br/>
He's a rare man, believe me!<br/>
<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE, IN HIS UNIFORM.]<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Hold your peace.<br/>
Here comes the t'other rare man.—'Save you, captain.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Good master Kastril! Is this your sister?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Ay, sir.<br/>
Please you to kuss her, and be proud to know her.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I shall be proud to know you, lady.<br/>
<br/>
[KISSES HER.]<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Brother,<br/>
He calls me lady too.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Ay, peace: I heard it.<br/>
<br/>
[TAKES HER ASIDE.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. The count is come.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Where is he?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. At the door.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Why, you must entertain him.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. What will you do<br/>
With these the while?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Why, have them up, and shew them<br/>
Some fustian book, or the dark glass.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. 'Fore God,<br/>
She is a delicate dab-chick! I must have her.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Must you! ay, if your fortune will, you must.—<br/>
Come, sir, the captain will come to us presently:<br/>
I'll have you to my chamber of demonstrations,<br/>
Where I will shew you both the grammar and logic,<br/>
And rhetoric of quarrelling; my whole method<br/>
Drawn out in tables; and my instrument,<br/>
That hath the several scales upon't, shall make you<br/>
Able to quarrel at a straw's-breadth by moon-light.<br/>
And, lady, I'll have you look in a glass,<br/>
Some half an hour, but to clear your eye-sight,<br/>
Against you see your fortune; which is greater,<br/>
Than I may judge upon the sudden, trust me.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT, FOLLOWED BY KAST. AND DAME P.]<br/>
<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Where are you, doctor?<br/>
<br/>
SUB [WITHIN]. I'll come to you presently.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I will have this same widow, now I have seen her,<br/>
On any composition.<br/>
<br/>
[RE-ENTER SUBTLE.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. What do you say?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Have you disposed of them?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I have sent them up.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Subtle, in troth, I needs must have this widow.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Is that the matter?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, but hear me.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Go to.<br/>
If you rebel once, Dol shall know it all:<br/>
Therefore be quiet, and obey your chance.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, thou art so violent now—Do but conceive,<br/>
Thou art old, and canst not serve—<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Who cannot? I?<br/>
'Slight, I will serve her with thee, for a—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay,<br/>
But understand: I'll give you composition.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I will not treat with thee; what! sell my fortune?<br/>
'Tis better than my birth-right. Do not murmur:<br/>
Win her, and carry her. If you grumble, Dol<br/>
Knows it directly.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Well, sir, I am silent.<br/>
Will you go help to fetch in Don in state?<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I follow you, sir. We must keep Face in awe,<br/>
Or he will over-look us like a tyrant.<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE, INTRODUCING SURLY DISGUISED AS A SPANIARD.]<br/>
Brain of a tailor! who comes here? Don John!<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Senores, beso las manos a vuestras mercedes.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Would you had stoop'd a little, and kist our anos!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Peace, Subtle.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Stab me; I shall never hold, man.<br/>
He looks in that deep ruff like a head in a platter,<br/>
Serv'd in by a short cloke upon two trestles.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Or, what do you say to a collar of brawn, cut down<br/>
Beneath the souse, and wriggled with a knife?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. 'Slud, he does look too fat to be a Spaniard.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Perhaps some Fleming or some Hollander got him<br/>
In d'Alva's time; count Egmont's bastard.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Don,<br/>
Your scurvy, yellow, Madrid face is welcome.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Gratia.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. He speaks out of a fortification.<br/>
Pray God he have no squibs in those deep sets.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Por dios, senores, muy linda casa!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. What says he?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Praises the house, I think;<br/>
I know no more but's action.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, the casa,<br/>
My precious Diego, will prove fair enough<br/>
To cozen you in. Do you mark? you shall<br/>
Be cozen'd, Diego.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Cozen'd, do you see,<br/>
My worthy Donzel, cozen'd.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Entiendo.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Do you intend it? so do we, dear Don.<br/>
Have you brought pistolets, or portagues,<br/>
My solemn Don?—Dost thou feel any?<br/>
<br/>
FACE [FEELS HIS POCKETS]. Full.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You shall be emptied, Don, pumped and drawn<br/>
Dry, as they say.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Milked, in troth, sweet Don.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. See all the monsters; the great lion of all, Don.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Con licencia, se puede ver a esta senora?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. What talks he now?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Of the sennora.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. O, Don,<br/>
This is the lioness, which you shall see<br/>
Also, my Don.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. 'Slid, Subtle, how shall we do?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. For what?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Why Dol's employ'd, you know.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. That's true.<br/>
'Fore heaven, I know not: he must stay, that's all.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Stay! that he must not by no means.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. No! why?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Unless you'll mar all. 'Slight, he will suspect it:<br/>
And then he will not pay, not half so well.<br/>
This is a travelled punk-master, and does know<br/>
All the delays; a notable hot rascal,<br/>
And looks already rampant.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. 'Sdeath, and Mammon<br/>
Must not be troubled.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Mammon! in no case.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. What shall we do then?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Think: you must be sudden.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Entiendo que la senora es tan hermosa, que codicio tan<br/>
verla, como la bien aventuranza de mi vida.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Mi vida! 'Slid, Subtle, he puts me in mind of the widow.<br/>
What dost thou say to draw her to it, ha!<br/>
And tell her 'tis her fortune? all our venture<br/>
Now lies upon't. It is but one man more,<br/>
Which of us chance to have her: and beside,<br/>
There is no maidenhead to be fear'd or lost.<br/>
What dost thou think on't, Subtle?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Who? I? why—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. The credit of our house too is engaged.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You made me an offer for my share erewhile.<br/>
What wilt thou give me, i'faith?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, by that light<br/>
I'll not buy now: You know your doom to me.<br/>
E'en take your lot, obey your chance, sir; win her,<br/>
And wear her out, for me.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. 'Slight, I'll not work her then.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. It is the common cause; therefore bethink you.<br/>
Dol else must know it, as you said.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I care not.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Senores, porque se tarda tanto?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Faith, I am not fit, I am old.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. That's now no reason, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Puede ser de hazer burla de mi amor?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. You hear the Don too? by this air, I call,<br/>
And loose the hinges: Dol!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. A plague of hell—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Will you then do?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You are a terrible rogue!<br/>
I'll think of this: will you, sir, call the widow?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Yes, and I'll take her too with all her faults,<br/>
Now I do think on't better.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. With all my heart, sir;<br/>
Am I discharged o' the lot?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. As you please.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Hands.<br/>
<br/>
[THEY TAKE HANDS.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Remember now, that upon any change,<br/>
You never claim her.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Much good joy, and health to you, sir,<br/>
Marry a whore! fate, let me wed a witch first.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Por estas honradas barbas—<br/>
<br/>
SUB. He swears by his beard.<br/>
Dispatch, and call the brother too.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT FACE.]<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Tengo duda, senores, que no me hagan alguna traycion.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How, issue on? yes, praesto, sennor. Please you<br/>
Enthratha the chambrata, worthy don:<br/>
Where if you please the fates, in your bathada,<br/>
You shall be soked, and stroked, and tubb'd and rubb'd,<br/>
And scrubb'd, and fubb'd, dear don, before you go.<br/>
You shall in faith, my scurvy baboon don,<br/>
Be curried, claw'd, and flaw'd, and taw'd, indeed.<br/>
I will the heartlier go about it now,<br/>
And make the widow a punk so much the sooner,<br/>
To be revenged on this impetuous Face:<br/>
The quickly doing of it is the grace.<br/>
<br/>
[EXEUNT SUB. AND SURLY.]<br/></p>
<p>SCENE 4.2.<br/>
<br/>
ANOTHER ROOM IN THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
ENTER FACE, KASTRIL, AND DAME PLIANT.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Come, lady: I knew the Doctor would not leave,<br/>
Till he had found the very nick of her fortune.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. To be a countess, say you, a Spanish countess, sir?<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Why, is that better than an English countess?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Better! 'Slight, make you that a question, lady?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Nay, she is a fool, captain, you must pardon her.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Ask from your courtier, to your inns-of-court-man,<br/>
To your mere milliner; they will tell you all,<br/>
Your Spanish gennet is the best horse; your Spanish<br/>
Stoup is the best garb; your Spanish beard<br/>
Is the best cut; your Spanish ruffs are the best<br/>
Wear; your Spanish pavin the best dance;<br/>
Your Spanish titillation in a glove<br/>
The best perfume: and for your Spanish pike,<br/>
And Spanish blade, let your poor captain speak—<br/>
Here comes the doctor.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER SUBTLE, WITH A PAPER.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. My most honour'd lady,<br/>
For so I am now to style you, having found<br/>
By this my scheme, you are to undergo<br/>
An honourable fortune, very shortly.<br/>
What will you say now, if some—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I have told her all, sir,<br/>
And her right worshipful brother here, that she shall be<br/>
A countess; do not delay them, sir; a Spanish countess.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Still, my scarce-worshipful captain, you can keep<br/>
No secret! Well, since he has told you, madam,<br/>
Do you forgive him, and I do.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. She shall do that, sir;<br/>
I'll look to it, 'tis my charge.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Well then: nought rests<br/>
But that she fit her love now to her fortune.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Truly I shall never brook a Spaniard.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. No!<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Never since eighty-eight could I abide them,<br/>
And that was some three year afore I was born, in truth.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Come, you must love him, or be miserable,<br/>
Choose which you will.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. By this good rush, persuade her,<br/>
She will cry strawberries else within this twelvemonth.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Nay, shads and mackerel, which is worse.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Indeed, sir!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Od's lid, you shall love him, or I'll kick you.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. Why,<br/>
I'll do as you will have me, brother.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Do,<br/>
Or by this hand I'll maul you.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, good sir,<br/>
Be not so fierce.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. No, my enraged child;<br/>
She will be ruled. What, when she comes to taste<br/>
The pleasures of a countess! to be courted—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And kiss'd, and ruffled!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Ay, behind the hangings.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And then come forth in pomp!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. And know her state!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Of keeping all the idolaters of the chamber<br/>
Barer to her, than at their prayers!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Is serv'd<br/>
Upon the knee!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And has her pages, ushers,<br/>
Footmen, and coaches—<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Her six mares—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, eight!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. To hurry her through London, to the Exchange,<br/>
Bethlem, the china-houses—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Yes, and have<br/>
The citizens gape at her, and praise her tires,<br/>
And my lord's goose-turd bands, that ride with her!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Most brave! By this hand, you are not my suster,<br/>
If you refuse.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. I will not refuse, brother.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER SURLY.]<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Que es esto, senores, que no venga?<br/>
Esta tardanza me mata!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. It is the count come:<br/>
The doctor knew he would be here, by his art.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. En gallanta madama, Don! gallantissima!<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Por todos los dioses, la mas acabada hermosura, que he visto<br/>
en mi vida!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Is't not a gallant language that they speak?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. An admirable language! Is't not French?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. No, Spanish, sir.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. It goes like law-French,<br/>
And that, they say, is the courtliest language.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. List, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. El sol ha perdido su lumbre, con el esplandor que trae<br/>
esta dama! Valgame dios!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. He admires your sister.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Must not she make curt'sy?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Ods will, she must go to him, man, and kiss him!<br/>
It is the Spanish fashion, for the women<br/>
To make first court.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. 'Tis true he tells you, sir:<br/>
His art knows all.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Porque no se acude?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. He speaks to her, I think.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. That he does, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Por el amor de dios, que es esto que se tarda?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Nay, see: she will not understand him! gull,<br/>
Noddy.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. What say you, brother?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Ass, my suster.<br/>
Go kuss him, as the cunning man would have you;<br/>
I'll thrust a pin in your buttocks else.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O no, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Senora mia, mi persona esta muy indigna de allegar<br/>
a tanta hermosura.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Does he not use her bravely?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Bravely, i'faith!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, he will use her better.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Do you think so?<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Senora, si sera servida, entremonos.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT WITH DAME PLIANT.]<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Where does he carry her?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Into the garden, sir;<br/>
Take you no thought: I must interpret for her.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Give Dol the word.<br/>
[ASIDE TO FACE, WHO GOES OUT.]<br/>
—Come, my fierce child, advance,<br/>
We'll to our quarrelling lesson again.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Agreed.<br/>
I love a Spanish boy with all my heart.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Nay, and by this means, sir, you shall be brother<br/>
To a great count.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Ay, I knew that at first,<br/>
This match will advance the house of the Kastrils.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. 'Pray God your sister prove but pliant!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Why,<br/>
Her name is so, by her other husband.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. The widow Pliant. Knew you not that?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. No, faith, sir;<br/>
Yet, by erection of her figure, I guest it.<br/>
Come, let's go practise.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Yes, but do you think, doctor,<br/>
I e'er shall quarrel well?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I warrant you.<br/>
<br/>
[EXEUNT.]<br/></p>
<p>SCENE 4.3.<br/>
<br/>
ANOTHER ROOM IN THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
ENTER DOL IN HER FIT OF RAVING, FOLLOWED BY MAMMON.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "For after Alexander's death"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Good lady—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "That Perdiccas and Antigonus, were slain,<br/>
The two that stood, Seleuc', and Ptolomee"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Madam—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "Made up the two legs, and the fourth beast,<br/>
That was Gog-north, and Egypt-south: which after<br/>
Was call'd Gog-iron-leg and South-iron-leg"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Lady—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "And then Gog-horned. So was Egypt, too:<br/>
Then Egypt-clay-leg, and Gog-clay-leg"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Sweet madam—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "And last Gog-dust, and Egypt-dust, which fall<br/>
In the last link of the fourth chain. And these<br/>
Be stars in story, which none see, or look at"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. What shall I do?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "For," as he says, "except<br/>
We call the rabbins, and the heathen Greeks"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Dear lady—<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "To come from Salem, and from Athens,<br/>
And teach the people of Great Britain"—<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER FACE, HASTILY, IN HIS SERVANT'S DRESS.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. What's the matter, sir?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "To speak the tongue of Eber, and Javan"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. O,<br/>
She's in her fit.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "We shall know nothing"—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Death, sir,<br/>
We are undone!<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "Where then a learned linguist<br/>
Shall see the ancient used communion<br/>
Of vowels and consonants"—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. My master will hear!<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "A wisdom, which Pythagoras held most high"—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Sweet honourable lady!<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "To comprise<br/>
All sounds of voices, in few marks of letters"—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, you must never hope to lay her now.<br/>
<br/>
[THEY ALL SPEAK TOGETHER.]<br/>
<br/>
DOL. "And so we may arrive by Talmud skill,<br/>
And profane Greek, to raise the building up<br/>
Of Helen's house against the Ismaelite,<br/>
King of Thogarma, and his habergions<br/>
Brimstony, blue, and fiery; and the force<br/>
Of king Abaddon, and the beast of Cittim:<br/>
Which rabbi David Kimchi, Onkelos,<br/>
And Aben Ezra do interpret Rome."<br/>
<br/>
FACE. How did you put her into't?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Alas, I talk'd<br/>
Of a fifth monarchy I would erect,<br/>
With the philosopher's stone, by chance, and she<br/>
Falls on the other four straight.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Out of Broughton!<br/>
I told you so. 'Slid, stop her mouth.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Is't best?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. She'll never leave else. If the old man hear her,<br/>
We are but faeces, ashes.<br/>
<br/>
SUB [WITHIN]. What's to do there?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, we are lost! Now she hears him, she is quiet.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER SUBTLE, THEY RUN DIFFERENT WAYS.]<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Where shall I hide me!<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How! what sight is here?<br/>
Close deeds of darkness, and that shun the light!<br/>
Bring him again. Who is he? What, my son!<br/>
O, I have lived too long.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Nay, good, dear father,<br/>
There was no unchaste purpose.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Not? and flee me<br/>
When I come in?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. That was my error.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Error?<br/>
Guilt, guilt, my son: give it the right name. No marvel,<br/>
If I found check in our great work within,<br/>
When such affairs as these were managing!<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Why, have you so?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. It has stood still this half hour:<br/>
And all the rest of our less works gone back.<br/>
Where is the instrument of wickedness,<br/>
My lewd false drudge?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Nay, good sir, blame not him;<br/>
Believe me, 'twas against his will or knowledge:<br/>
I saw her by chance.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Will you commit more sin,<br/>
To excuse a varlet?<br/>
<br/>
MAM. By my hope, 'tis true, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Nay, then I wonder less, if you, for whom<br/>
The blessing was prepared, would so tempt heaven,<br/>
And lose your fortunes.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Why, sir?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. This will retard<br/>
The work a month at least.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Why, if it do,<br/>
What remedy? But think it not, good father:<br/>
Our purposes were honest.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. As they were,<br/>
So the reward will prove.<br/>
[A LOUD EXPLOSION WITHIN.]<br/>
—How now! ah me!<br/>
God, and all saints be good to us.—<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE.]<br/>
What's that?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, sir, we are defeated! all the works<br/>
Are flown in fumo, every glass is burst;<br/>
Furnace, and all rent down, as if a bolt<br/>
Of thunder had been driven through the house.<br/>
Retorts, receivers, pelicans, bolt-heads,<br/>
All struck in shivers!<br/>
[SUBTLE FALLS DOWN AS IN A SWOON.]<br/>
Help, good sir! alas,<br/>
Coldness and death invades him. Nay, sir Mammon,<br/>
Do the fair offices of a man! you stand,<br/>
As you were readier to depart than he.<br/>
[KNOCKING WITHIN.]<br/>
Who's there? my lord her brother is come.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Ha, Lungs!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. His coach is at the door. Avoid his sight,<br/>
For he's as furious as his sister's mad.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Alas!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. My brain is quite undone with the fume, sir,<br/>
I ne'er must hope to be mine own man again.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Is all lost, Lungs? will nothing be preserv'd<br/>
Of all our cost?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Faith, very little, sir;<br/>
A peck of coals or so, which is cold comfort, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. O, my voluptuous mind! I am justly punish'd.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And so am I, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Cast from all my hopes—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, certainties, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. By mine own base affections.<br/>
<br/>
SUB [SEEMING TO COME TO HIMSELF].<br/>
O, the curst fruits of vice and lust!<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Good father,<br/>
It was my sin. Forgive it.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Hangs my roof<br/>
Over us still, and will not fall, O justice,<br/>
Upon us, for this wicked man!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, look, sir,<br/>
You grieve him now with staying in his sight:<br/>
Good sir, the nobleman will come too, and take you,<br/>
And that may breed a tragedy.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I'll go.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Ay, and repent at home, sir. It may be,<br/>
For some good penance you may have it yet;<br/>
A hundred pound to the box at Bethlem—<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. For the restoring such as—have their wits.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. I'll do't.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I'll send one to you to receive it.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Do.<br/>
Is no projection left?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. All flown, or stinks, sir.<br/>
<br/>
MAM. Will nought be sav'd that's good for med'cine,<br/>
think'st thou?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I cannot tell, sir. There will be perhaps,<br/>
Something about the scraping of the shards,<br/>
Will cure the itch,—though not your itch of mind, sir.<br/>
[ASIDE.]<br/>
It shall be saved for you, and sent home. Good sir,<br/>
This way, for fear the lord should meet you.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT MAMMON.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB [RAISING HIS HEAD]. Face!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Ay.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Is he gone?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Yes, and as heavily<br/>
As all the gold he hoped for were in's blood.<br/>
Let us be light though.<br/>
<br/>
SUB [LEAPING UP]. Ay, as balls, and bound<br/>
And hit our heads against the roof for joy:<br/>
There's so much of our care now cast away.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Now to our don.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, your young widow by this time<br/>
Is made a countess, Face; she has been in travail<br/>
Of a young heir for you.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Good sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Off with your case,<br/>
And greet her kindly, as a bridegroom should,<br/>
After these common hazards.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Very well, sir.<br/>
Will you go fetch Don Diego off, the while?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. And fetch him over too, if you'll be pleased, sir:<br/>
Would Dol were in her place, to pick his pockets now!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Why, you can do't as well, if you would set to't.<br/>
I pray you prove your virtue.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. For your sake sir.<br/>
<br/>
[EXEUNT.]<br/></p>
<p>SCENE 4.4.<br/>
<br/>
ANOTHER ROOM IN THE SAME.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER SURLY AND DAME PLIANT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Lady, you see into what hands you are fall'n;<br/>
'Mongst what a nest of villains! and how near<br/>
Your honour was t' have catch'd a certain clap,<br/>
Through your credulity, had I but been<br/>
So punctually forward, as place, time,<br/>
And other circumstances would have made a man;<br/>
For you're a handsome woman: would you were wise too!<br/>
I am a gentleman come here disguised,<br/>
Only to find the knaveries of this citadel;<br/>
And where I might have wrong'd your honour, and have not,<br/>
I claim some interest in your love. You are,<br/>
They say, a widow, rich: and I'm a batchelor,<br/>
Worth nought: your fortunes may make me a man,<br/>
As mine have preserv'd you a woman. Think upon it,<br/>
And whether I have deserv'd you or no.<br/>
<br/>
DAME P. I will, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. And for these household-rogues, let me alone<br/>
To treat with them.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER SUBTLE.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How doth my noble Diego,<br/>
And my dear madam countess? hath the count<br/>
Been courteous, lady? liberal, and open?<br/>
Donzel, methinks you look melancholic,<br/>
After your coitum, and scurvy: truly,<br/>
I do not like the dulness of your eye;<br/>
It hath a heavy cast, 'tis upsee Dutch,<br/>
And says you are a lumpish whore-master.<br/>
Be lighter, and I will make your pockets so.<br/>
[ATTEMPTS TO PICK THEM.]<br/>
<br/>
SUR [THROWS OPEN HIS CLOAK]. Will you, don bawd and<br/>
pickpurse?<br/>
[STRIKES HIM DOWN.]<br/>
how now! reel you?<br/>
Stand up, sir, you shall find, since I am so heavy,<br/>
I'll give you equal weight.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Help! murder!<br/>
<br/>
SUR. No, sir,<br/>
There's no such thing intended: a good cart,<br/>
And a clean whip shall ease you of that fear.<br/>
I am the Spanish don "that should be cozen'd,<br/>
Do you see, cozen'd?" Where's your Captain Face,<br/>
That parcel broker, and whole-bawd, all rascal!<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER FACE, IN HIS UNIFORM.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. How, Surly!<br/>
<br/>
SUR. O, make your approach, good captain.<br/>
I have found from whence your copper rings and spoons<br/>
Come, now, wherewith you cheat abroad in taverns.<br/>
'Twas here you learned t' anoint your boot with brimstone,<br/>
Then rub men's gold on't for a kind of touch,<br/>
And say 'twas naught, when you had changed the colour,<br/>
That you might have't for nothing. And this doctor,<br/>
Your sooty, smoky-bearded compeer, he<br/>
Will close you so much gold, in a bolt's-head,<br/>
And, on a turn, convey in the stead another<br/>
With sublimed mercury, that shall burst in the heat,<br/>
And fly out all in fumo! Then weeps Mammon;<br/>
Then swoons his worship.<br/>
[FACE SLIPS OUT.]<br/>
Or, he is the Faustus,<br/>
That casteth figures and can conjure, cures<br/>
Plagues, piles, and pox, by the ephemerides,<br/>
And holds intelligence with all the bawds<br/>
And midwives of three shires: while you send in—<br/>
Captain!—what! is he gone?—damsels with child,<br/>
Wives that are barren, or the waiting-maid<br/>
With the green sickness.<br/>
[SEIZES SUBTLE AS HE IS RETIRING.]<br/>
—Nay, sir, you must tarry,<br/>
Though he be scaped; and answer by the ears, sir.<br/>
<br/>
[RE-ENTER FACE, WITH KASTRIL.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Why, now's the time, if ever you will quarrel<br/>
Well, as they say, and be a true-born child:<br/>
The doctor and your sister both are abused.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Where is he? which is he? he is a slave,<br/>
Whate'er he is, and the son of a whore.—Are you<br/>
The man, sir, I would know?<br/>
<br/>
SUR. I should be loth, sir,<br/>
To confess so much.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Then you lie in your throat.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. How!<br/>
<br/>
FACE [TO KASTRIL]. A very errant rogue, sir, and a cheater,<br/>
Employ'd here by another conjurer<br/>
That does not love the doctor, and would cross him,<br/>
If he knew how.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Sir, you are abused.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. You lie:<br/>
And 'tis no matter.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Well said, sir! He is<br/>
The impudent'st rascal—<br/>
<br/>
SUR. You are indeed: Will you hear me, sir?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. By no means: bid him be gone.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Begone, sir, quickly.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. This 's strange!—Lady, do you inform your brother.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. There is not such a foist in all the town,<br/>
The doctor had him presently; and finds yet,<br/>
The Spanish count will come here.<br/>
[ASIDE.]<br/>
—Bear up, Subtle.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, sir, he must appear within this hour.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And yet this rogue would come in a disguise,<br/>
By the temptation of another spirit,<br/>
To trouble our art, though he could not hurt it!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Ay,<br/>
I know—Away,<br/>
[TO HIS SISTER.]<br/>
you talk like a foolish mauther.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Sir, all is truth she says.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Do not believe him, sir.<br/>
He is the lying'st swabber! Come your ways, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. You are valiant out of company!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Yes, how then, sir?<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER DRUGGER, WITH A PIECE OF DAMASK.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, here's an honest fellow, too, that knows him,<br/>
And all his tricks. Make good what I say, Abel,<br/>
This cheater would have cozen'd thee o' the widow.—<br/>
[ASIDE TO DRUG.]<br/>
He owes this honest Drugger here, seven pound,<br/>
He has had on him, in two-penny'orths of tobacco.<br/>
<br/>
DRUG. Yes, sir.<br/>
And he has damn'd himself three terms to pay me.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And what does he owe for lotium?<br/>
<br/>
DRUG. Thirty shillings, sir;<br/>
And for six syringes.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Hydra of villainy!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Nay, sir, you must quarrel him out o' the house.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. I will:<br/>
—Sir, if you get not out of doors, you lie;<br/>
And you are a pimp.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Why, this is madness, sir,<br/>
Not valour in you; I must laugh at this.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. It is my humour: you are a pimp and a trig,<br/>
And an Amadis de Gaul, or a Don Quixote.<br/>
<br/>
DRUG. Or a knight o' the curious coxcomb, do you see?<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER ANANIAS.]<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Peace to the household!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. I'll keep peace for no man.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Casting of dollars is concluded lawful.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Is he the constable?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Peace, Ananias.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. No, sir.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Then you are an otter, and a shad, a whit,<br/>
A very tim.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. You'll hear me, sir?<br/>
<br/>
KAS. I will not.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. What is the motive?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Zeal in the young gentleman,<br/>
Against his Spanish slops.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. They are profane,<br/>
Lewd, superstitious, and idolatrous breeches.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. New rascals!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Will you begone, sir?<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Avoid, Sathan!<br/>
Thou art not of the light: That ruff of pride<br/>
About thy neck, betrays thee; and is the same<br/>
With that which the unclean birds, in seventy-seven,<br/>
Were seen to prank it with on divers coasts:<br/>
Thou look'st like antichrist, in that lewd hat.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. I must give way.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Be gone, sir.<br/>
<br/>
SUR. But I'll take<br/>
A course with you—<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Depart, proud Spanish fiend!<br/>
<br/>
SUR. Captain and doctor.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Child of perdition!<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Hence, sir!—<br/>
[EXIT SURLY.]<br/>
Did I not quarrel bravely?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Yes, indeed, sir.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. Nay, an I give my mind to't, I shall do't.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. O, you must follow, sir, and threaten him tame:<br/>
He'll turn again else.<br/>
<br/>
KAS. I'll re-turn him then.<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
[SUBTLE TAKES ANANIAS ASIDE.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Drugger, this rogue prevented us for thee:<br/>
We had determin'd that thou should'st have come<br/>
In a Spanish suit, and have carried her so; and he,<br/>
A brokerly slave! goes, puts it on himself.<br/>
Hast brought the damask?<br/>
<br/>
DRUG. Yes, sir.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Thou must borrow<br/>
A Spanish suit. Hast thou no credit with the players?<br/>
<br/>
DRUG. Yes, sir; did you never see me play the Fool?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I know not, Nab:—Thou shalt, if I can help it.—<br/>
[ASIDE.]<br/>
Hieronimo's old cloak, ruff, and hat will serve;<br/>
I'll tell thee more when thou bring'st 'em.<br/>
[EXIT DRUGGER.]<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Sir, I know<br/>
The Spaniard hates the brethren, and hath spies<br/>
Upon their actions: and that this was one<br/>
I make no scruple.—But the holy synod<br/>
Have been in prayer and meditation for it;<br/>
And 'tis revealed no less to them than me,<br/>
That casting of money is most lawful.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. True.<br/>
But here I cannot do it: if the house<br/>
Shou'd chance to be suspected, all would out,<br/>
And we be locked up in the Tower for ever,<br/>
To make gold there for the state, never come out;<br/>
And then are you defeated.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. I will tell<br/>
This to the elders and the weaker brethren,<br/>
That the whole company of the separation<br/>
May join in humble prayer again.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. And fasting.<br/>
<br/>
ANA. Yea, for some fitter place. The peace of mind<br/>
Rest with these walls!<br/>
<br/>
[EXIT.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Thanks, courteous Ananias.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. What did he come for?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. About casting dollars,<br/>
Presently out of hand. And so I told him,<br/>
A Spanish minister came here to spy,<br/>
Against the faithful—<br/>
<br/>
FACE. I conceive. Come, Subtle,<br/>
Thou art so down upon the least disaster!<br/>
How wouldst thou ha' done, if I had not help't thee out?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. I thank thee, Face, for the angry boy, i'faith.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Who would have look'd it should have been that rascal,<br/>
Surly? he had dyed his beard and all. Well, sir.<br/>
Here's damask come to make you a suit.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Where's Drugger?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. He is gone to borrow me a Spanish habit;<br/>
I'll be the count, now.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. But where's the widow?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Within, with my lord's sister; madam Dol<br/>
Is entertaining her.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. By your favour, Face,<br/>
Now she is honest, I will stand again.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. You will not offer it.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Why?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Stand to your word,<br/>
Or—here comes Dol, she knows—<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You are tyrannous still.<br/>
<br/>
[ENTER DOL, HASTILY.]<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Strict for my right.—How now, Dol!<br/>
Hast [thou] told her,<br/>
The Spanish count will come?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Yes; but another is come,<br/>
You little look'd for!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Who's that?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Your master;<br/>
The master of the house.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. How, Dol!<br/>
<br/>
FACE. She lies,<br/>
This is some trick. Come, leave your quiblins, Dorothy.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Look out, and see.<br/>
<br/>
[FACE GOES TO THE WINDOW.]<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Art thou in earnest?<br/>
<br/>
DOL. 'Slight,<br/>
Forty of the neighbours are about him, talking.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. 'Tis he, by this good day.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. 'Twill prove ill day<br/>
For some on us.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. We are undone, and taken.<br/>
<br/>
DOL. Lost, I'm afraid.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You said he would not come,<br/>
While there died one a week within the liberties.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. No: 'twas within the walls.<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Was't so! cry you mercy.<br/>
I thought the liberties. What shall we do now, Face?<br/>
<br/>
FACE. Be silent: not a word, if he call or knock.<br/>
I'll into mine old shape again and meet him,<br/>
Of Jeremy, the butler. In the mean time,<br/>
Do you two pack up all the goods and purchase,<br/>
That we can carry in the two trunks. I'll keep him<br/>
Off for to-day, if I cannot longer: and then<br/>
At night, I'll ship you both away to Ratcliff,<br/>
Where we will meet to-morrow, and there we'll share.<br/>
Let Mammon's brass and pewter keep the cellar;<br/>
We'll have another time for that. But, Dol,<br/>
'Prythee go heat a little water quickly;<br/>
Subtle must shave me: all my captain's beard<br/>
Must off, to make me appear smooth Jeremy.<br/>
You'll do it?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. Yes, I'll shave you, as well as I can.<br/>
<br/>
FACE. And not cut my throat, but trim me?<br/>
<br/>
SUB. You shall see, sir.<br/>
<br/>
[EXEUNT.]<br/></p>
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