Horat.
The SCENE London.
Enter Horner, and Quack following him at a distance.
A quack is as fit for a Pimp, as a Midwife for / a Bawd; they are still but in their way, both / helpers of Nature.---[aside.]---Well, / my dear Doctor, hast thou done what I / desired. /
I have undone you for ever with the Women, and / reported you throughout the whole Town as bad as an Eunuch, / with as much trouble as if I had made you one in / earnest. /
But have you told all the Midwives you know, the / Orange Wenches at the Playhouses, the City Husbands, and / old Fumbling Keepers of this end of the Town, for they'l be / the readiest to report it. /
I have told all the Chamber-maids, Waiting women, / Tyre women, and Old women of my acquaintance; nay, / and whisper'd it as a secret to'em, and to the Whisperers of / Whitehal; so that you need not doubt 'twill spread, and you / will be as odious to the handsome young Women, as--- /
As the small Pox.---Well--- /
And to the married Women of this end of the Town, / as--- /
As the great ones; nay, as their own Husbands. /
And to the City Dames as Annis-seed Robin of filthy / and contemptible memory; and they will frighten their Children / [25] with your name, especially their Females. /
And cry Horner's coming to carry you away: I am only / afraid 'twill not be believ'd; you told'em 'twas by an English-French / disaster, and an English-French Chirurgeon, who / has given me at once, not only a Cure, but an Antidote for the / future, against that damn'd malady, and that worse distemper, / love, and all other Womens evils. /
Your late journey into France has made it the more / credible, and your being here a fortnight before you appear'd / in publick, looks as if you apprehended the shame, / which I wonder you do not: Well I have been hired by / young Gallants to bely'em t'other way; but you are the first / wou'd be thought a Man unfit for Women. /
Dear Mr. Doctor, let vain Rogues be contented only to / be thought abler Men than they are, generally 'tis all the / pleasure they have, but mine lyes another way. /
You take, methinks, a very preposterous way to it, / and as ridiculous as if we Operators in Physick, shou'd put / forth Bills to disparage our Medicaments, with hopes to gain / Customers. /
Doctor, there are Quacks in love, as well as Physick, / who get but the fewer and worse Patients, for their boasting; / a good name is seldom got by giving it ones self, and Women / no more than honour are compass'd by bragging: Come, come / Doctor, the wisest Lawyer never discovers the merits of his / [50] cause till the tryal; the wealthiest Man conceals his riches, / and the cunning Gamster his play; Shy Husbands and Keepers / like old Rooks are not to be cheated, but by a new unpractis'd / trick; false friendship will pass now no more than / false dice upon'em, no, not in the City. /
Enter Boy.
There are two Ladies and a Gentleman coming up. /
A Pox, some unbelieving Sisters of my former acquaintance, /
who I am afraid, expect their sense shou'd be satisfy'd /
of the falsity of the report. /
Enter Sir Jasp. Fidget,
Lady Fidget, and Mrs.
Dainty Fidget.
No---this formal Fool and Women! /
His Wife and Sister. /
My Coach breaking just now before your door Sir, / I look upon as an occasional repremand to me Sir, for not / kissing your hands Sir, since your coming out of France Sir; / and so my disaster Sir, has been my good fortune Sir; and / this is my Wife, and Sister Sir. /
What then, Sir? /
My Lady, and Sister, Sir.---Wife, this is Master / Horner. /
Master Horner, Husband! /
My Lady, my Lady Fidget, Sir. /
So, Sir. /
Won't you be acquainted with her Sir? /
[So the report is true, I find by his coldness or aversion to /
the Sex; but I'll play the wag with him.] /
[Aside.]
[75] Pray salute my Wife, my Lady, Sir. /
I will kiss no Mans Wife, Sir, for him, Sir; I have taken / my eternal leave, Sir, of the Sex already, Sir. /
Hah, hah, hah; I'll plague him yet. /
[aside.]
Not know my Wife, Sir? /
I do know your Wife, Sir, she's a Woman, Sir, and / consequently a Monster, Sir, a greater Monster than a Husband, / Sir. /
A Husband; how, Sir? /
So, Sir; but I make no more Cuckholds, Sir. /
Hah, hah, hah, Mercury, Mercury. /
Pray, Sir Jaspar, let us be gone from this rude / fellow. /
Who, by his breeding, wou'd think, he had / ever been in France? /
Foh, he's but too much a French fellow, such as /
hate Women of quality and virtue, for their love to their /
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Husband, Sr. Jaspar; a Woman is hated by'em as much for /
loving her Husband, as for loving their Money: But pray, /
let's be gone. /
You do well, Madam, for I have nothing that you / came for: I have brought over not so much as a Bawdy Picture, / new Postures, nor the second Part of the Escole de / Fides; Nor--- /
Hold for shame, Sir; what d'y mean? you'l ruine your / [100] self for ever with the Sex---. /
Hah, hah, hah, he hates Women perfectly I / find. /
What pitty 'tis he shou'd. /
Ay, he's a base rude Fellow for't; but affectation / makes not a Woman more odious to them, than Virtue. /
Because your Virtue is your greatest affectation, Madam. /
How, you sawcy Fellow, wou'd you wrong / my honour? /
If I cou'd. /
How d'y mean, Sir? /
Hah, hah, hah, no he can't wrong your Ladyships / honour, upon my honour; he poor Man---hark you in your / ear---a meer Eunuch. /
O filthy French Beast, foh, foh; why do we stay? / let's be gone; I can't endure the sight of him. /
Stay, but till the Chairs come, they'l be here presently. /
No, no. /
Nor can I stay longer; 'tis---let me see, a quarter / and a half quarter of a minute past eleven; the Council / will be sate, I must away: business must be preferr'd always / before Love and Ceremony with the wise Mr. Horner. /
And the Impotent Sir Jaspar. /
Ay, ay, the impotent Master Horner, hah, ha, ha. /
What leave us with a filthy Man alone in his lodgings? /
[125] He's an innocent Man now, you know; pray stay, /
I'll hasten the Chaires to you.---Mr. Horner your Servant, I /
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shou'd be glad to see you at my house; pray, come and dine /
with me, and play at Cards with my Wife after dinner, you /
are fit for Women at that game; yet hah, ha---['Tis as /
much a Husbands prudence to provide innocent diversion /
for a Wife, as to hinder her unlawful pleasures; and he had /
better employ her, than let her employ her self. /
[Aside.
Farewel. /
Your Servant Sr. Jaspar. /
I will not stay with him, foh--- /
Nay, Madam, I beseech you stay, if it be but to see, / I can be as civil to Ladies yet, as they wou'd desire. /
No, no, foh, you cannot be civil to Ladies. /
You as civil as Ladies wou'd desire. /
No, no, no, foh, foh, foh. /
Now I think, I, or you your self rather, have done / your business with the Women. /
Thou art an Ass; don't you see already upon the report / and my carriage, this grave Man of business leaves his / Wife in my lodgings, invites me to his house and wife, who / before wou'd not be acquainted with me out of jealousy. /
Nay; by this means you may be the more acquainted / with the Husbands, but the less with the Wives. /
Let me alone, if I can but abuse the Husbands, I'll / [150] soon disabuse the Wives: Stay---I'll reckon you up the advantages, / I am like to have by my Stratagem: First, I shall / be rid of all my old Acquaintances, the most insatiable sorts / of Duns, that invade our Lodgings in a morning: And next, / to the pleasure of making a New Mistriss, is that of being / rid of an old One, and of all old Debts; Love when it comes / to be so, is paid the most unwillingly. /
Well, you may be so rid of your old Acquaintances; / but how will you get any new Ones? /
Doctor, thou wilt never make a good Chymist, thou /
art so incredulous and impatient; ask but all the young Fellows /
of the Town, if they do not loose more time like Huntsmen, /
in starting the game, than in running it down; one /
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knows not where to find'em. who will, or will not; Women /
of Quality are so civil, you can hardly distinguish love from /
good breeding, and a Man is often mistaken; but now I can /
be sure, she that shews an aversion to me loves the sport, /
as those Women that are gone, whom I warrant to be right: /
And then the next thing, is your Women of Honour, as you /
call'em, are only chary of their reputations, not their Persons, /
and 'tis scandal they wou'd avoid, not Men: Now may /
I have, by the reputation of an Eunuch, the Priviledges of /
One; and be seen in a Ladies Chamber, in a morning as /
early as her Husband; kiss Virgins before their Parents, or /
Lovers; and may be in short the Pas par tout of the Town. /
[175] Now Doctor. /
Nay, now you shall be the Doctor; and your Process / is so new, that we do not know but it may succeed. /
Not so new neither, Probatum est Doctor. /
Well, I wish you luck and many Patients whil'st I go / to mine. /
Enter Harcourt, and Dorilant to Horner.
Come, your appearance at the Play yesterday, has / I hope hardned you for the future against the Womens contempt, / and the Mens raillery; and now you'l abroad as you / were wont. /
Did I not bear it bravely? /
With a most Theatrical impudence; nay more than / the Orange-wenches shew there, or a drunken vizard Mask, / or a great belly'd Actress; nay, or the most impudent of / Creatures, an ill Poet; or what is yet more impudent, a second-hand / Critick. /
But what say the Ladies, have they no pitty? /
What Ladies? the vizard Masques you know never / pitty a Man when all's gone, though in their Service. /
And for the Women in the boxes, you'd never pitty / them, when 'twas in your power. /
They say 'tis pitty, but all that deal with common / Women shou'd be serv'd so. /
Nay, I dare swear, they won't admit you to play at /
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Cards with them, go to Plays with'em, or do the little duties /
[200] which other Shadows of men, are wont to do for'em. /
Who do you call Shadows of Men? /
Half Men. /
What Boyes? /
Ay your old Boyes, old beaux Garcons, who like super-annuated / Stallions are suffer'd to run, feed, and whinney with / the Mares as long as they live, though they can do nothing else. /
Well a Pox on love and wenching, Women serve but / to keep a Man from better Company; though I can't enjoy / them, I shall you the more: good fellowship and friendship, / are lasting, rational and manly pleasures. /
For all that give me some of those pleasures, you call / effeminate too, they help to relish one another. /
They disturb one another. /
No, Mistresses are like Books; if you pore upon them / too much, they doze you, and make you unfit for Company; / but if us'd discreetly, you are the fitter for conversation / by'em. /
A Mistress shou'd be like a little Country retreat near / the Town, not to dwell in constantly, but only for a night / and away; to tast the Town the better when a Man returns. /
I tell you, 'tis as hard to be a good Fellow, a good / Friend, and a Lover of Women, as 'tis to be a good Fellow, / a good Friend, and a Lover of Money: You cannot follow / both, then choose your side; Wine gives you liberty, Love / [225] takes it away. /
Gad, he's in the right on't. /
Wine gives you joy, Love grief and tortures; besides / the Chirurgeon's Wine makes us witty, Love only Sots: Wine / makes us sleep, Love breaks it. /
By the World he has reason, Harcourt. /
Wine makes--- /
Ay, Wine makes us---makes us Princes, Love / makes us Beggars, poor Rogues, y gad---and Wine--- /
So, there's one converted.---No, no, Love and / Wine, Oil and Vinegar. /
I grant it; Love will still be uppermost. /
Come, for my part I will have only those glorious, / manly pleasures of being very drunk, and very slovenly. /
Enter Boy.
Mr. Sparkish is below, Sir. /
What, my dear Friend! a Rogue that is fond of me, / only I think for abusing him. /
No, he can no more think the Men laugh at him, than / that Women jilt him, his opinion of himself is so good. /
Well, there's another pleasure by drinking, I thought / not of; I shall loose his acquaintance, because he cannot / drink; and you know 'tis a very hard thing to be rid of / him, for he's one of those nauseous offerers at wit, who like / the worst Fidlers run themselves into all Companies. /
One, that by being in the Company of Men of sense / [250] wou'd pass for one. /
And may so to the short-sighed World, as a false Jewel / amongst true ones, is not discern'd at a distance; his Company / is as troublesome to us, as a Cuckolds, when you have / a mind to his Wife's. /
No, the Rogue will not let us enjoy one another, but / ravishes our conversation, though he signifies no more to't, / than Sir Martin Mar-all's gaping, and auker'd thrumming upon / the Lute, does to his Man's Voice, and Musick. /
And to pass for a wit in Town, shewes himself a fool / every night to us, that are guilty of the plot. /
Such wits as he, are, to a Company of reasonable Men, / like Rooks to the Gamesters, who only fill a room at the Table, / but are so far from contributing to the play, that they / only serve to spoil the fancy of those that do. /
Nay, they are us'd like Rooks too, snub'd, check'd, and / abus'd; yet the Rogues will hang on. /
A Pox on'em, and all that force Nature, and wou'd be / still what she forbids'em; Affectation is her greatest Monster. /
Most Men are the contraries to that they wou'd seem; / your bully you see, is a Coward with a long Sword; the little / humbly fawning Physician with his Ebony cane, is he that / destroys Men. /
The Usurer, a poor Rogue, possess'd of moldy Bonds, / and Mortgages; and we they call Spend-thrifts, are only / [275] wealthy, who lay out his money upon daily new purchases of / pleasure. /
Ay, your errantest cheat, is your Trustee, or Executor; / your jealous Man, the greatest Cuckhold; your Church-man, / the greatest Atheist; and your noisy pert Rogue of a wit, the / greatest Fop, dullest Ass, and worst Company as you shall see: / For here he comes. /
Enter Sparkish to them.
How is't, Sparks, how is't? Well Faith, Harry, I / must railly thee a little, ha, ha, ha, upon the report in Town / of thee, ha, ha, ha, I can't hold y Faith; shall I speak? /
Yes, but you'l be so bitter then. /
Honest Dick and Franck here shall answer for me, I / will not be extream bitter by the Univers. /
We will be bound in ten thousand pound Bond, he / shall not be bitter at all. /
Nor sharp, nor sweet. /
What, not down right insipid? /
Nay then, since you are so brisk, and provoke me, / take what follows; you must know, I was discoursing and / raillying with some Ladies yesterday, and they hapned to / talk of the fine new signes in Town. /
Very fine Ladies I believe. /
Said I, I know where the best new sign is. Where, / says one of the Ladies? In Covent-Garden, I reply'd. Said another, / In what street? In Russel-street, answer'd I. Lord says / [300] another, I'm sure there was ne're a fine new sign there yesterday. / Yes, but there was, said I again, and it came out of / France, and has been there a fortnight. /
A Pox I can hear no more, prethee. /
No hear him out; let him tune his crowd a while. /
The worst Musick the greatest preparation. /
Nay faith, I'll make you laugh. It cannot be, says a / third Lady. Yes, yes, quoth I again. Says a fourth Lady, /
Look to't, we'l have no more Ladies. /
No.---then mark, mark, now, said I to the fourth, / did you never see Mr. Horner; he lodges in Russel-street, and / he's a sign of a Man, you know, since he came out of France, / heh, hah, he. /
But the Divel take me, is thine be the sign of a jest. /
With that they all fell a laughing, till they bepiss'd / themselves; what, but it do's not move you, methinks? well / see one had as good go to Law without a witness, as break a / jest without a laugher on ones side.---Come, come Sparks, / but where do we dine, I have left at Whitehal an Earl to dine / with you. /
Why, I thought thou hadst lov'd a Man with a title / better, than a Suit with a French trimming to't. /
Go, to him again. /
No, Sir, a wit to me is the greatest title in the World. /
But go dine with your Earl, Sir, he may be exceptious; / [325] we are your Friends, and will not take it ill to be left, / I do assure you. /
Nay, faith he shall go to him. /
Nay, pray Gentlemen. /
We'l thrust you out, if you wo'not, what disappoint / any Body for us. /
Nay, dear Gentlemen hear me. /
No, no, Sir, by no means; pray go Sir. /
Why, dear Rogues. /
No, no. /
Ha, ha, ha. /
But, Sparks, pray hear me; what d'ye think I'll eat then / with gay shallow Fops, and silent Coxcombs? I think wit as / necessary at dinner as a glass of good wine, and that's the reason / I never have any stomach when I eat alone.---Come, but / where do we dine? /
Ev'n where you will. /
At Chateline's. /
Yes, if you will. /
Or at the Cock. /
Yes, if you please. /
Or at the Dog and Partridg. /
Ay, if you have mind to't, for we shall dine at neither. /
Pshaw, with your fooling we shall loose the new / Play; and I wou'd no more miss seing a new Play the first / [350] day, than I wou'd miss setting in the wits Row; therefore I'll / go fetch my Mistriss and away. /
Manent Horner, Harcourt, Dorilant; Enter to them Mr. Pinchwife.
Who have we here, Pinchwife? /
Gentlemen, your humble Servant. /
Well, Jack, by thy long absence from the Town, the / grumness of thy countenance, and the slovenlyness of thy habit; / I shou'd give thee joy, shoud' I not, of Marriage? /
[Death does he know I'm married too? I thought /
to have conceal'd it from him at least.] /
[Aside.
My long stay in the Country will excuse my dress, and I have /
a suit of Law, that brings me up to Town, that puts me out /
of humour; besides I must give Sparkish to morrow five thousand /
pound to lye with my Sister. /
Nay, you Country Gentlemen rather than not purchase, / will buy any thing, and he is a crackt title, if we may quibble: / Well, but am I to give thee joy, I heard thou wert marry'd. /
What then? /
Why, the next thing that is to be heard, is thou'rt a / Cuckold. /
Insupportable name. /
But I did not expect Marriage from such a Whoremaster / as you, one that knew the Town so much, and Women / so well. /
Why, I have marry'd no London Wife. /
Pshaw, that's all one, that grave circumspection in marrying / [375] a Country Wife, is like refusing a deceitful pamper'd / Smithfield Jade, to go and be cheated by a Friend in the / Country. /
A Pox on him and his Simile. / At least we are a little surer of the breed there, know what her / keeping has been, whether foyl'd or unsound. /
Come, come, I have known a clap gotten in Wales, and /
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there are Cozens, Justices, Clarks, and Chaplains in the Country, /
I won't say Coach-men, but she's handsome and young. /
I'll answer as I shou'd do. /
[Aside.
No, no, she has no beauty, but her youth; no attraction, but /
here modesty, wholesome, homely, and huswifely, that's all. /
He talks as like a Grasier as he looks. /
She's too auker'd, ill favour'd, and silly to bring to / Town. /
Then methinks you shou'd bring her, to be taught / breeding. /
To be taught; no, Sir, I thank you, good Wives, and / private Souldiers shou'd be ignorant.---[I'll keep her from / your instructions, I warrant you. /
The Rogue is as jealous, as if his wife were not ignorant. /
Why, if she be ill favour'd, there will be less danger here / for you, than by leaving her in the Country; we have such / variety of dainties, that we are seldom hungry. /
But they have alwayes coarse, constant, swinging stomachs / [400] in the Country. /
Foul Feeders indeed. /
And your Hospitality is great there. /
Open house, every Man's welcome. /
So, so, Gentlemen. /
But prethee, why woud'st thou marry her? if she be / ugly, ill bred, and silly, she must be rich then. /
As rich as if she brought me twenty thousand pound / out of this Town; for she'l be as sure not to spend her moderate / portion, as a London Baggage wou'd be to spend hers, / let it be what it wou'd; so 'tis all one: then because shes / ugly, she's the likelyer to be my own; and being ill bred, / she'l hate conversation; and since silly and innocent, will not / know the difference betwixt a Man of one and twenty, and / one of forty /
Nine---to my knowledge; but if she be silly, she'l expect /
as much from a Man of forty nine, as from him of one and /
twenty: But methinks wit is more necessary than beauty, /
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and I think no young Woman ugly that has it, and no handsome /
Woman agreable without it. /
'Tis my maxime, he's a Fool that marrys, but he's a / greater that does not marry a Fool; what is wit in a Wife / good for, but to make a Man a Cuckold? /
Yes, to keep it from his knowledge. /
A Fool cannot contrive to make her husband a Cuckold. /
[425] No, but she'l club with a Man that can; and what is / worse, if she cannot make her Husband a Cuckold, she'l make / him jealous, and pass for one, and then 'tis all one. /
Well, well, I'll take care for one, my Wife shall make / me no Cuckold, though she had your help Mr. Horner; I understand / the Town, Sir. /
His help! /
He's come newly to Town it seems, and has not heard / how things are with him. /
But tell me, has Marriage cured thee of whoring, which / it seldom does. /
'Tis more than age can do. /
No, the word is, I'll marry and live honest; but a / Marriage vow is like a penitent Gamesters Oath, and entring / into Bonds, and penalties to stint himself to such a particular / small sum at play for the future, which makes him but the / more eager, and not being able to hold out, looses his Money / again, and his forfeit to boot. /
Ay, ay, a Gamester will be a Gamester, whilst his / Money lasts; and a Whoremaster, whilst his vigour. /
Nay, I have known'em, when they are broke and / can loose no more, keep a fumbling with the Box in their / hands to fool with only, and hinder other Gamesters. /
That had wherewithal to make lusty stakes. /
Well, Gentlemen, you may laugh at me, but you shall / [450] never lye with my Wife, I know the Town. /
But prethee, was not the way you were in better, is / not keeping better than Marriage? /
A Pox on't, the Jades wou'd jilt me, I cou'd never / keep a Whore to my self. /
So then you only marry'd to keep a Whore to your / self; well, but let me tell you, Women, as you say, are like / Souldiers made constant and loyal by good pay, rather than / by Oaths and Covenants, therefore I'd advise my Friends to / keep rather than marry; since too I find by your example, / it does not serve ones turn, for I saw you yesterday in the / eighteen penny place with a pretty Country-wench. /
How the Divel, did he see my Wife then? I sate there / that she might not be seen; but she shall never go to a play / again. /
What dost thou blush at nine and forty, for having / been seen with a Wench? /
No Faith, I warrant 'twas his Wife, which he seated / there out of sight, for he's a cunning Rogue, and understands / the Town. /
He blushes, then 'twas his Wife; for Men are now / more ashamed to be seen with them in publick, than with a / Wench. /
Hell and damnation, I'm undone, since Horner has seen / her, and they know 'twas she. /
[475] But prethee, was it thy Wife? she was exceedingly / pretty; I was in love with her at that distance. /
You are like never to be nearer to her. Your Servant / Gentlemen. /
Nay, prethee stay. /
I cannot, I will not. /
Come you shall dine with us. /
I have din'd already. /
Come, I know thou hast not; I'll treat thee dear / Rogue, thou sha't spend none of thy Hampshire Money to / day. /
Treat me; so he uses me already like his Cuckold. /
Nay, you shall not go. /
I must, I have business at home. /
To beat his Wife, he's as jealous of her, as a Cheapside / Husband of a Covent-garden Wife. /
Why, 'tis as hard to find an old Whoremaster without / jealousy and the gout, as a young one without fear or / the Pox. /
Mrs. Margery Pinchwife, and Alithea: Mr. Pinchwife peeping behind at the door.
Pray, Sister, where are the best Fields and Woods, / to walk in in London? /
A pretty Question; why, Sister! Mulberry Garden, and / St. James's Park; and for close walks the New Exchange. /
Pray, Sister, tell me why my Husband looks so / grum here in Town? and keeps me up so close, and will not / let me go a walking, nor let me wear my best Gown yesterday? /
O he's jealous, Sister. /
Jealous, what's that? /
He's afraid you shou'd love another Man. /
How shou'd he be afraid of my loving another / man, when he will not let me see any but himself. /
Did he not carry you yesterday to a Play? /
Ay, but we sate amongst ugly People, he wou'd / not let me come near the Gentry, who sate under us, so that / I cou'd not see'em: He told me, none but naughty Women / sate there, whom they tous'd and mous'd; but I wou'd have / ventur'd for all that. /
But how did you like the Play? /
Indeed I was aweary of the Play, but I lik'd hugeously / the Actors; they are the goodlyest proper'st Men, / Sister. /
O but you must not like the Actors, Sister. /
Ay, how shou'd I help it, Sister? Pray, Sister, / [25] when my Husband comes in, will you ask leave for me to go a / walking? /
A walking, hah, ha; Lord, a Country Gentlewomans /
leasure is the drudgery of a foot-post; and she requires as /
much airing as her Husbands Horses. /
[Aside.
Enter Mr. Pinchwife to them.
But here comes your Husband; I'll ask, though I'm sure he'l / not grant it. /He says he won't let me go abroad, for fear of / catching the Pox. /
Fye, the small Pox you shou'd say. /
Oh my dear, dear Bud, welcome home; why / dost thou look so fropish, who has nanger'd thee? /
Your a Fool. /
Faith so she is, for crying for no fault, poor tender / Creature! /
What you wou'd have her as impudent as your / self, as errant a Jilflirt, a gadder, a Magpy, and to say all a / meer notorious Town-Woman? /
Brother, you are my only Censurer; and the honour / of your Family shall sooner suffer in your Wife there, than in / me, though I take the innocent liberty of the Town. /
Hark you Mistriss, do not talk so before my Wife, / the innocent liberty of the Town! /
Why, pray, who boasts of any intrigue with me? what / Lampoon has made my name notorious? what ill Women / [50] frequent my Lodgings? I keep no Company with any Women / of scandalous reputations. /
No, you keep the Men of scandalous reputations / Company. /
Where? wou'd you not have me civil? answer'em in a / Box at the Plays? in the drawing room at Whitehal? in St. / James's Park? Mulberry-garden? or--- /
Hold, hold, do not teach my Wife, where the /
Men are to be found; I believe she's the worse for your Town /
[Page 17]
documents already; I bid you keep her in ignorance as I do. /
Indeed be not angry with her Bud, she will tell / me nothing of the Town, though I ask her a thousand times / a day. /
Then you are very inquisitive to know, I find? /
Not I indeed, Dear, I hate London; our Place-house / in the Country is worth a thousand of't, wou'd I were / there again. /
So you shall I warrant; but were you not talking / of Plays, and Players, when I came in? you are her encourager / in such discourses. /
No indeed, Dear, she chid me just now for liking / the Player Men. /
Nay, if she be so innocent as to own to me her lieking /
them, there is no hurt in't--- /
[Aside.
Come my poor Rogue, but thou lik'st none better then me? /
[75] Yes indeed, but I do, the Player Men are finer / Folks. /
But you love none better then me? /
You are mine own Dear Bud, and I know you, / I hate a Stranger. /
Ay, my Dear, you must love me only, and not / be like the naughty Town Women, who only hate their Husbands, / and love every Man else, love Plays, Visits, fine Coaches, / fine Cloaths, Fidles, Balls, Treates, and so lead a wicked / Town-life. /
Nay, if to enjoy all these things be a Town-life, / London is not so bad a place, Dear. /
How! if you love me, you must hate London. /
The Fool has forbid me discovering to her the pleasures / of the Town, and he is now setting her a gog upon / them himself. /
But, Husband, do the Town-women love the / Player Men too? /
Yes, I warrant you. /
Ay, I warrant you. /
Why, you do not, I hope? /
No, no Bud; but why have we no Player-men / in the Country? /
Ha---Mrs. Minx, ask me no more to go to a Play. /
Nay, why, Love? I did not care for going; but / [100] when you forbid me, you make me as't were desire it. /
So 'twill be in other things, I warrant. /
Pray, let me go to a Play, Dear. /
Hold your Peace, I wo'not. /
Why, Love? /
Why, I'll tell you. /
Nay, if he tell her, she'l give him more cause to forbid / her that place. /
Pray, why, Dear? /
First, you like the Actors, and the Gallants may / like you. /
What, a homely Country Girl? no Bud, no body / will like me. /
I tell you, yes, they may. /
No, no, you jest---I won't believe you, I will go. /
I tell you then, that one of the lewdest Fellows / in Town, who saw you there, told me he was in love with you. /
Indeed! who, who, pray who wast? /
I've gone too far, and slipt before I was aware; / how overjoy'd she is! /
Was it any Hampshire Gallant, any of our Neighbours? / I promise you, I am beholding to him. /
I promise you, you lye; for he wou'd but ruin / you, as he has done hundreds: he has no other love for Women, / but that, such as he, look upon Women like Basilicks, but / [125] to destroy'em. /
Ay, but if he loves me, why shou'd he ruin me? / answer me to that: methinks he shou'd not, I wou'd do / him no harm. /
Hah, ha, ha. /
'Tis very well; but I'll keep him from doing /
you any harm, or me either. /
[Page 19]
Enter Sparkish and Harcourt.
But here comes Company, get you in, get you in. /But pray, Husband, is he a pretty Gentleman, / that loves me? /
In baggage, in. /
[Thrusts her in: shuts the door.
What all the lewd Libertines of the Town brought to my /
Lodging, by this easie Coxcomb! S'death I'll not suffer it. /
Here Harcourt, do you approve my choice? Dear, / little Rogue, I told you, I'd bring you acquainted with all / my Friends, the wits, and--- /
Ay, they shall know her, as well as you your self / will, I warrant you. /
This is one of those, my pretty Rogue, that are to / dance at your Wedding to morrow; and him you must bid / welcom ever, to what you and I have. /
Monstrous!--- /
Harcourt how dost thou like her, Faith? Nay, Dear, / do not look down; I should hate to have a Wife of mine / out of countenance at any thing. /
[150] Wonderful! /
Tell me, I say, Harcourt, how dost thou like her? / thou hast star'd upon her enough, to resolve me. /
So infinitely well, that I cou'd wish I had a Mistriss / too, that might differ from her in nothing, but her love and / engagement to you. /
Sir, Master Sparkish has often told me, that his Acquaintance / were all Wits and Raillieurs, and now I find it. /
No, by the Universe, Madam, he does not railly now; / you may believe him: I do assure you, he is the honestest, / worthyest, true hearted Gentleman---A man of such perfect / honour, he wou'd say nothing to a Lady, he does not / mean. /
Praising another Man to his Mistriss! /
Sir, you are so beyond expectation obliging, that--- /
Nay, I gad, I am sure you do admire her extreamly, / I see't in your eyes.---He does admire you Madam.---By / the World, don't you? /
Yes, above the World, or, the most glorious part of / it, her whole Sex; and till now I never thought I shou'd / have envy'd you, or any Man about to marry, but you have / the best excuse for Marriage I ever knew. /
Nay, now, Sir, I'm satisfied you are of the Society / of the Wits, and Raillieurs, since you cannot spare your Friend, / even when he is but too civil to you; but the surest sign is, / [175] since you are an Enemy to Marriage, for that I hear you hate / as much as business or bad Wine. /
Truly, Madam, I never was an Enemy to Marriage, / till now, because Marriage was never an Enemy to me before. /
But why, Sir, is Marriage an Enemy to you now? / Because it robs you of your Friend here; for you look upon / a Friend married, as one gone into a Monastery, that is dead / to the World. /
'Tis indeed, because you marry him; I see Madam, / you can guess my meaning: I do confess heartily and openly, / I wish it were in my power to break the Match, by Heavens / I wou'd. /
Poor Franck! /
Wou'd you be so unkind to me? /
No, no, 'tis not because I wou'd be unkind to you. /
Poor Franck, no gad, 'tis only his kindness to me. /
Great kindness to you indeed; insensible Fop, let a / Man make love to his Wife to his face. /
Come dear Franck, for all my Wife there that shall / be, thou shalt enjoy me sometimes dear Rogue; by my honour, / we Men of wit condole for our deceased Brother in Marriage, / as much as for one dead in earnest: I think that was / prettily said of me, ha Harcourt?---But come Franck, he / not not melancholy for me. /
No, I assure you I am not melancholy for you. /
[200] Prethee, Frank, dost think my Wife that shall be / there a fine Person? /
I cou'd gaze upon her, till I became as blind as you / are. /
How, as I am! how! /
Because you are a Lover, and true Lovers are blind, / stockblind. /
True, true; but by the World, she has wit too, as / well as beauty: go, go with her into a corner, and trye if she / has wit, talk to her any thing, she's bashful before me. /
Indeed if a Woman wants wit in a corner, she has it / no where. /
Sir, you dispose of me a little before your time.--- /
Nay, nay, Madam let me have an earnest of your obedience, / or---go, go, Madam--- /
How, Sir, if you are not concern'd for the honour of a / VVife, I am for that of a Sister; he shall not debauch her: be / a Pander to your own VVife, bring Men to her, let'em make / love before your face, thrust'em into a corner together, then / leav'em in private! is this your Town wit and conduct? /
Hah, ha, ha, a silly wise Rogue, wou'd make one / laugh more then a stark Fool, hah, ha: I shall burst. Nay, / you shall not disturb'em; I'll / vex thee, by the World. /
The writings are drawn, Sir, settlements made; 'tis too / [225] late, Sir, and past all revocation. /
Then so is my death. /
I wou'd not be unjust to him. /
Then why to me so? /
I have no obligation to you. /
My love. /
I had his before. /
You never had it; he wants you see jealousie, the / only infallible sign of it. /
Love proceeds from esteem; he cannot distrust my / virtue, besides he loves me, or he wou'd not marry me. /
Marrying you, is no more sign of his love, then bribing /
your Woman, that he may marry you, is a sign of his /
generosity: Marriage is rather a sign of interest, then love; /
and he that marries a fortune, covets a Mistress, not loves /
[Page 22]
her: But if you take Marriage for a sign of love, take it /
from me immediately. /
No, now you have put a scruple in my head; but / in short, Sir, to end our dispute, I must marry him, my reputation / wou'd suffer in the World else. /
No, if you do marry him, with your pardon, Madam, / your reputation suffers in the World, and you wou'd be / thought in necessity for a cloak. /
Nay, now you are rude, Sir.---Mr. Sparkish, pray / come hither, your Friend here is very troublesom, and very / [250] loving. /
Hold, hold--- /
D'ye hear that? /
Why, d'ye think I'll seem to be jealous, like a Country / Bumpkin? /
No, rather be a Cuckold, like a credulous Cit. /
Madam, you wou'd not have been so little generous / as to have told him. /
Yes, since you cou'd be so little generous, as to / wrong him. /
Wrong him, no Man can do't, he's beneath an injury; / a Bubble, a Coward, a sensless Idiot, a Wretch so / contemptible to all the World but you, that--- /
Hold, do not rail at him, for since he is like to be / my Husband, I am resolv'd to like him: Nay, I think I am / oblig'd to tell him, you are not his Friend.---Master Sparkish, / Master Sparkish. /
What, what; now dear Rogue, has not she wit? /
Not so much as I thought, and hoped she had. /
Mr. Sparkish, do you bring People to rail at you? /
Madam--- /
How! no, but if he does rail at me, 'tis but in jest / I warrant; what we wits do for one another, and never take / any notice of it. /
He spoke so scurrilously of you, I had no patience / [275] to hear him; besides he has been making love to me. /
True damn'd tell-tale-Woman. /
Pshaw, to shew his parts---we wits rail and make / love often, but to shew our parts; as we have no affections, / so we have no malice, we--- /
He said, you were a Wretch, below an injury. /
Pshaw. /
Damn'd, sensless, impudent, virtuous Jade; well since / she won't let me have her, she'l do as good, she'l make me / hate her. /
A Common Bubble. /
Pshaw. /
A Coward. /
Pshaw, pshaw. /
A sensless driveling Idiot. /
How, did he disparage my parts? Nay, then my honour's / concern'd, I can't put up that, Sir; by the World, / Brother help me to kill him; [Aside. [I may draw now, since we have / the odds of him:---'tis a good occasion too before my / Mistriss]--- /
Hold, hold. /
What, what. /
I must not let'em kill the Gentleman neither, for / his kindness to me; I am so far from hating him, that I wish / my Gallant had his person and understanding:--- / [300] [Aside. [Nay if my honour--- /
I'll be thy death. /
Hold, hold, indeed to tell the truth, the Gentleman / said after all, that what he spoke, was but out of friendship / to you. /
How! say, I am, I am a Fool, that is no wit, out of / friendship to me. /
Yes, to try whether I was concern'd enough for you, / and made love to me only to be satisfy'd of my virtue, for / your sake. /
Kind however--- /
Nay, if it were so, my dear Rogue, I ask thee pardon; /
[Page 24]
but why wou'd not you tell me so, faith. /
Because I did not think on't, faith. /
Come, Horner does not come, Harcourt, let's be gone / to the new Play.---Come Madam. /
I will not go, if you intend to leave me alone in the / Box, and run into the pit, as you use to do. /
Pshaw, I'll leave Harcourt with you in the Box, to entertain / you, and that's as good; if I sate in the Box, I / shou'd be thought no Judge, but of trimmings.---Come / away Harcourt, lead her down. /
Well, go thy wayes, for the flower of the true Town / Fops, such as spend their Estates, before they come to'em, / and are Cuckolds before they'r married. But let me go look / [325] to my own Free-hold---How--- /
Enter my Lady Fidget, Mistriss Dainty Fidget, and Mistriss Squeamish.
Your Servant, Sir, where is your Lady? we are come / to wait upon her to the new Play. /
New Play! /
And my Husband will wait upon you presently. /
Damn your civility--- /
[Aside.
Madam, by no means, I will not see Sir Jaspar here, till I have /
waited upon him at home; nor shall my Wife see you, till /
she has waited upon your Ladyship at your lodgings. /
Now we are here, Sir--- /
No, Madam. /
Pray, let us see her. /
We will not stir, till we see her. /
A Pox on you all--- /
[Aside.
Goes to the door,
and returns.
she has lock'd the door, and is gone abroad. /
No, you have lock'd the door, and she's within. /
They told us below, she was here. /
[Will nothing do?]---Well it must out then, to /
tell you the truth, Ladies, which I was afraid to let you know /
before, least it might endanger your lives, my Wife has just /
now the Small Pox come out upon her, do not be frighten'd; /
[Page 25]
but pray, be gone Ladies, you shall not stay here in danger /
of your lives; pray get you gone Ladies. /
No, no, we have all had'em. /
Alack, alack. /
[350] Come, come, we must see how it goes with her, I / understand the disease. /
Come. /
Well, there is no being too hard for Women at their / own weapon, lying, therefore I'll quit the Field. /
Here's an example of jealousy. /
Indeed as the World goes, I wonder there are no / more jealous, since Wives are so neglected. /
Pshaw, as the World goes, to what end shou'd they / be jealous. /
Foh, 'tis a nasty World. /
That Men of parts, great acquaintance, and quality / shou'd take up with, and spend themselves and fortunes, / in keeping little Play-house Creatures, foh. /
Nay, that Women of understanding, great acquaintance, / and good quality, shou'd fall a keeping too of little / Creatures, foh. /
Why, 'tis the Men of qualities fault, they never / visit Women of honour, and reputation, as they us'd to do; / and have not so much as common civility, for Ladies of our / rank, but use us with the same indifferency, and ill breeding, / as if we were all marry'd to'em. /
She says true, 'tis an errant shame Women of quality / shou'd be so slighted; methinks, birth, birth, shou'd go for something; / I have known Men admired, courted, and followed / [375] for their titles only. /
Ay, one wou'd think Men of honour shou'd not / love no more, than marry out of their own rank. /
Fye, fye upon'em, they are come to think cross breeding / for themselves best, as well as for their Dogs, and Horses. /
They are Dogs, and Horses for't. /
One wou'd think if not for love, for vanity a / little. /
Nay, they do satisfy their vanity upon us sometimes; / and are kind to us in their report, tell all the World / they lye with us. /
Damn'd Rascals, that we shou'd be only wrong'd / by'em; to report a Man has had a Person, when he has not / had a Person, is the greatest wrong in the whole World, that / can be done to a person. /
Well, 'tis an errant shame, Noble Persons shou'd / be so wrong'd, and neglected. /
But still 'tis an erranter shame for a Noble Person, to / neglect her own honour, and defame her own Noble Person, / with little inconsiderable Fellows, foh!--- /
I suppose the crime against our honour, is the same / with a Man of quality as with another. /
How! no sure the Man of quality is likest one's Husband, / and therefore the fault shou'd be the less. /
But then the pleasure shou'd be the less. /
[400] Fye, fye, fye, for shame Sister, whither shall we ramble? / be continent in your discourse, or I shall hate you. /
Besides an intrigue is so much the more notorious / for the man's quality. /
'Tis true, no body takes notice of a private Man, / and therefore with him, 'tis more secret, and the crime's the / less, when 'tis not known. /
You say true; y faith I think you are in the right on't: / 'tis not an injury to a Husband, till it be an injury to our honours; / so that a Woman of honour looses no honour with a / private Person; and to say truth--- /
So the little Fellow is grown a private Person--- / with her--- /
But still my dear, dear Honour. /
Enter Sir Jaspar, Horner, Dorilant.
Ay, my dear, dear of honour, thou hast still so / much honour in thy mouth--- /
That she has none elsewhere--- /
Oh, what d'ye mean to bring in these upon us? /
Foh, these are as bad as Wits. /
Foh! /
Let us leave the Room. /
Stay, stay, faith to tell you the naked truth. /
Fye, Sir Jaspar, do not use that word naked. /
Well, well, in short I have business at Whitehal, / and cannot go to the play with you, therefore wou'd have / [425] you go--- /
With those two to a Play? /
No, not with t'other, but with Mr. Horner, there / can be no more scandal to go with him, than with Mr. Tatle, / or Master Limberham. /
With that nasty Fellow! no---no. /
Nay, prethee Dear, hear me. /
Ladies. /
Stand off. /
Do not approach us. /
You heard with the wits, you are obscenity all over. /
And I wou'd as soon look upon a Picture of Adam / and Eve, without fig leaves, as any of you, if I cou'd help it, / therefore keep off, and do not make us sick. /
What a Divel are these? /
Why, these are pretenders to honour, as criticks to / wit, only by censuring others; and as every raw peevish, out-of-humour'd, / affected, dull, Tea-drinking, Arithmetical Fop / sets up for a wit, by railing at men of sence, so these for honour, / by railing at the Court, and Ladies of as great honour, / as quality. /
Come, Mr. Horner, I must desire you to go with / these Ladies to the Play, Sir. /
I! Sir. /
Ay, ay, come, Sir. /
[450] I must-beg your pardon, Sir, and theirs, I will not be / seen in Womens Company in publick again for the World. /
Ha, ha, strange Aversion! /
No, he's for Womens company in private. /
He---poor Man---he! hah, ha, ha. /
'Tis a greater shame amongst lew'd fellows to be /
[Page 28]
seen in virtuous Womens company, than for the Women to /
be seen with them. /
Indeed, Madam, the time was I only hated virtuous / Women, but now I hate the other too; I beg your pardon / Ladies. /
You are very obliging, Sir, because we wou'd not be / troubled with you. /
In sober sadness he shall go. /
Nay, if he wo'not, I am ready to wait upon the Ladies; / and I think I am the fitter Man. /
You, Sir, no I thank you for that---Master Horner / is a privileg'd Man amongst the virtuous Ladies, 'twill / be a great while before you are so; heh, he, he, he's my Wive's / Gallant, heh, he, he; no pray withdraw, Sir, for as I take it, / the virtuous Ladies have no business with you. /
And I am sure, he can have none with them: 'tis / strange a Man can't come amongst virtuous Women now, but / upon the same terms, as Men are admitted into the great Turks / Seraglio; but Heavens keep me, from being an hombre / [475] Player with'em: but where is Pinchwife--- /
Come, come, Man; what avoid the sweet society / of Woman-kind? that sweet, soft, gentle, tame, noble Creature / Woman, made for Man's Companion--- /
So is that soft, gentle, tame, and more noble Creature / a Spaniel, and has all their tricks, can fawn, lye down, suffer / beating, and fawn the more; barks at your Friends, when / they come to see you; makes your bed hard, gives you Fleas, / and the mange sometimes: and all the difference is, the Spaniel's / the more faithful Animal, and fawns but upon one / Master. /
Heh, he, he. /
O the rude Beast. /
Insolent brute. /
Brute! stinking mortify'd rotten French Weather, to / dare--- /
Hold, an't please your Ladyship; for shame Master, /
[Page 29]
Horner your Mother was a Woman---[Aside. [Now shall I never /
reconcile'em] /
Hark you, Madam, take my advice in your anger; you know /
you often want one to make up your droling pack of hombre /
Players; and you may cheat him easily, for he's an ill Gamester, /
and consequently loves play: Besides you know, you /
have but two old civil Gentlemen (with stinking breaths /
too) to wait upon you abroad, take in the third, into your /
[500] service; the other are but crazy: and a Lady shou'd have a /
supernumerary Gentleman-Usher, as a supernumerary Coach-horse, /
least sometimes you shou'd be forc'd to stay at home. /
But are you sure he loves play, and has money? /
He loves play as much as you, and has money as / much as I. /
Then I am contented to make him pay for his scurrillity; / money makes up in a measure all other wants in Men.--- / Those whom we cannot make hold for Gallants, we make / fine. /
So, so; now to mollify, to wheedle him,--- /
[Aside.
Master Horner will you never keep civil Company, methinks /
'tis time now, since you are only fit for them: Come, come, /
Man you must e'en fall to visiting our Wives, eating at our /
Tables, drinking Tea with our virtuous Relations after dinner, /
dealing Cards to'em, reading Plays, and Gazets to'em, /
picking Fleas out of their shocks for'em, collecting Receipts, /
New Songs, Women, Pages, and Footmen for'em. /
I hope they'l afford me better employment, Sir. /
Heh, he, he, 'tis fit you know your work before / you come into your place; and since you are unprovided of / a Lady to flatter, and a good house to eat at, pray frequent / mine, and call my Wife Mistriss, and she shall call you Gallant, / according to the custom. /
Who I?--- /
[525] Faith, thou sha't for my sake, come for my sake / only. /
For your sake--- /
Come, come, here's a Gamester for you, let him /
[Page 30]
be a little familiar sometimes; nay, what if a little rude; Gamesters /
may be rude with Ladies, you know. /
Yes, losing Gamesters have a privilege with Women. /
I alwayes thought the contrary, that the winning / Gamester had most privilege with Women, for when you / have lost your money to a Man, you'l loose any thing you / have, all you have, they say, and he may use you as he / pleases. /
Heh, he, he, well, win or loose you shall have your / liberty with her. /
As he behaves himself; and for your sake I'll give him / admittance and freedom. /
All sorts of freedom, Madam? /
Ay, ay, ay, all forts of freedom thou can'st take, / and so go to her, begin thy new employment; wheedle her, / jest with her, and be better acquainted one with another. /
I think I know her already, therefore may venter / with her, my secret for hers--- /
Sister Cuz, I have provided an innocent Play-fellow / for you there. /
Who he! /
[550] There's a Play-fellow indeed. /
Yes sure, what he is good enough to play at Cards, / Blind-mans buff, or the fool with sometimes. /
Foh, we'l have no such Play-fellows. /
No, Sir, you shan't choose Play-fellows for us, we / thank you. /
Nay, pray hear me. /
But, poor Gentleman, cou'd you be so generous? so / truly a Man of honour, as for the sakes of us Women of honour, / to cause your self to be reported no Man? No Man! / and to suffer your self the greatest shame that cou'd fall upon / a Man, that none might fall upon us Women by your conversation; / but indeed, Sir, as perfectly, perfectly, the same Man / as before your going into France, Sir; as perfectly, perfectly, / Sir. /
As perfectly, perfectly, Madam; nay, I scorn you / shou'd take my word; I desire to be try'd only, Madam. /
Well, that's spoken again like a Man of honour, all / Men of honour desire to come to the test: But indeed, generally / you Men report such things of your selves, one does / not know how, or whom to believe; and it is come to that / pass, we dare not take your words, no more than your Taylors, / without some staid Servant of yours be bound with you; / but I have so strong a faith in your honour, dear, dear, noble / Sir, that I'd forfeit mine for yours at any time, dear Sir. /
[575] No, Madam, you shou'd not need to forfeit it for / me, I have given you security already to save you harmless / my late reputation being so well known in the World, Madam. /
But if upon any future falling out, or upon a suspition / of my taking the trust out of your hands, to employ / some other, you your self shou'd betray your trust, dear Sir; / I mean, if you'l give me leave to speak obscenely, you might / tell, dear Sir. /
If I did, no body wou'd believe me; the reputation / of impotency is as hardly recover'd again in the World, as / that of cowardise, dear Madam. /
Nay then, as one may say, you may do your worst, / dear, dear, Sir. /
Come, is your Ladyship reconciled to him yet? / have you agreed on matters? for I must be gone to Whitehal. /
Why, indeed, Sir Jaspar, Master Horner is a thousand, / thousand times a better Man, than I thought him: Cosen / Squeamish, Sister Dainty, I can name him now, truly not long / ago you know, I thought his very name obscenity, and I / wou'd as soon have lain with him, as have nam'd him. /
Very likely, poor Madam. /
I believe it. /
No doubt on't. /
Well, well---that your Ladyship is as virtuous /
as any she,---I know, and him all the Town knows---heh, he, /
[Page 32]
[600] he; therefore now you like him, get you gone to your business /
together; go, go, to your business, I say, pleasure, whilst /
I go to my pleasure, business. /
Alithea, and Mrs. Pinchwife.
Sister, what ailes you, you are grown melancholy? /
Wou'd it not make any one melancholy, / to see you go every day fluttering about abroad, whil'st / I must stay at home like a poor lonely, sullen Bird in a cage? /
Ay, Sister, but you came young, and just from the / nest to your cage, so that I thought you lik'd it; and cou'd be / as chearful in't, as others that took their flight themselves / early, and are hopping abroad in the open Air. /
Nay, I confess I was quiet enough, till my Husband / told me, what pure lives, the London Ladies live abroad, / with their dancing, meetings, and junketings, and drest every / day in their best gowns; and I warrant you, play at nine Pins / every day of the week, so they do. /
Enter Mr. Pinchwife.
Come, what's here to do? you are putting the / Town pleasures in her head, and setting her a longing. /
Yes, after Nine-pins; you suffer none to give her / those longings, you mean, but your self. /
I tell her of the vanities of the Town like a Confessor. /
A Confessor! just such a Confessor, as he that by / forbidding a silly Oastler to grease the Horses teeth, taught / him to do't. /
Come Mistriss Flippant, good Precepts are lost, / when bad Examples are still before us; the liberty you take / abroad makes her hanker after it; and out of humour at / [25] home, poor Wretch! she desired not to come to London, I / wou'd bring her. /
Very well. /
She has been this week in Town, and never desired, / till this afternoon, to go abroad. /
Was she not at a Play yesterday? /
Yes, but she ne'er ask'd me; I was my self the / cause of her going. /
Then if she ask you again, you are the cause of her / asking, and not my example. /
Well, to morrow night I shall be rid of you; and / the next day before 'tis light, she and I'll be rid of the Town, / and my dreadful apprehensions: Come, be not melancholly, / for thou sha't go into the Country after to morrow, Dearest. /
Great comfort. /
Pish, what d'ye tell me of the Country for? /
How's this! what, pish at the Country? /
Let me alone, I am not well. /
O, if that be all---what ailes my dearest? /
Truly I don't know; but I have not been well, / since you told me there was a Gallant at the Play in love / with me. /
Ha--- /
That's by my example too. /
Nay, if you are not well, but are so concern'd, / [50] because a lew'd Fellow chanc'd to lye, and say he lik'd you, / you'l make me sick too. /
Of what sickness? /
O, of that which is worse than the Plague, Jealousy. /
Pish, you jear, I'm sure there's no such disease in / our Receipt-book at home. /
No, thou never met'st with it, poor Innocent--- / well, if thou Cuckold me, 'twill be my own fault--- / for Cuckolds and Bastards, are generally makers of their own / fortune. /
Well, but pray Bud, let's go to a Play to night. /
'Tis just done, she comes from it; but why are / you so eager to see a Play? /
Faith Dear, not that I care one pin for their talk / there; but I like to look upon the Player-men, and wou'd / see, if I cou'd, the Gallant you say loves me; that's all dear Bud. /
Is that all dear Bud? /
This proceeds from my example. /
But if the Play be done, let's go abroad however, / dear Bud. /
Come have a little patience, and thou shalt go / into the Country on Friday. /
Therefore I wou'd see first some sights, to tell / my Neighbours of. Nay, I will go abroad, that's once. /
I'm the cause of this desire too. /
[75] But now I think on't, who was the cause of Horners / coming to my Lodging to day? that was you. /
No, you, because you wou'd not let him see your / handsome Wife out of your Lodging. /
Why, O Lord! did the Gentleman come hither / to see me indeed? /
No, no;---You are not cause of that damn'd / question too, Mistriss Alithea?---[Aside. [Well she's in the right / of it; he is in love with my Wife---and comes after her--- / 'tis so---but I'll nip his love in the bud; least he should follow / us into the Country, and break his Chariot-wheel near / our house, on purpose for an excuse to come to't; but I think / I know the Town. /
Come, pray Bud, let's go abroad before 'tis late; / for I will go, that's flat and plain. /
So! the obstinacy already of a Town-wife, and I /
must, whilst she's here, humour her like one. /
[Aside.
Sister, how shall we do, that she may not be seen, or known? /
Let her put on her Mask. /
Pshaw, a Mask makes People but the more inquisitive, / and is as ridiculous a disguise, as a stage-beard; her / shape, stature, habit will be known: and if we shou'd meet / with Horner, he wou'd be sure to take acquaintance with us, / must wish her joy, kiss her, talk to her, leer upon her, and / the Devil and all; no I'll not use her to a Mask, 'tis dangerous; / [100] for Masks have made more Cuckolds, than the best faces that / ever were known. /
How will you do then? /
Nay, shall we go? the Exchange will be shut, / and I have a mind to see that. /
So---I have it---I'll dress her up in the Suit, / we are to carry down to her Brother, little Sir James; nay, I / understand the Town tricks: Come let's go dress her; a / Mask! no---a Woman mask'd, like a cover'd Dish, gives a / Man curiosity, and appetite, when, it may be, uncover'd, / 'twou'd turn his stomack; no, no. /
Indeed your comparison is something a greasie one: / but I had a gentle Gallant, us'd to say, a Beauty mask'd, lik'd / the Sun in Eclipse, gathers together more gazers, than if it / shin'd out. /
The Scene changes to the new Exchange: Enter Horner, Harcourt, Dorilant.
Engag'd to Women, and not Sup with us? /
Ay, a Pox on'em all. /
You were much a more reasonable Man in the morning, / and had as noble resolutions against'em, as a Widdower / of a weeks liberty. /
Did I ever think, to see you keep company with Women / in vain. /
In vain! no---'tis, since I can't love'em, to be reveng'd / on'em. /
Now your Sting is gone, you look'd in the Box amongst / [125] all those Women, like a drone in the hive, all upon you; shov'd / and ill-us'd by'em all, and thrust from one side to t'other. /
Yet he must be buzzing amongst'em still, like other / old beetle-headed, lycorish drones; avoid'em, and hate'm as / they hate you. /
Because I do hate'em, and wou'd hate'em yet more, / I'll frequent'em; you may see by Marriage, nothing makes / a Man hate a Woman more, than her constant conversation: / In short, I converse with'em, as you do with rich Fools; to / laugh at'em, and use'em ill. /
But I wou'd no more Sup with Women, unless I cou'd / lye with'em, than Sup with a rich Coxcomb, unless I cou'd / cheat him. /
Yes, I have known thee Sup with a Fool, for his drinking, / if he cou'd set out your hand that way only, you were / satisfy'd; and if he were a Wine-swallowing mouth 'twas / enough. /
Yes, a Man drink's often with a Fool, as he tosses with / a Marker, only to keep his hand in Ure; but do the Ladies / drink? /
Yes, Sir, and I shall have the pleasure at least of laying'em / flat with a Bottle; and bring as much scandal that / way upon'em, as formerly t'other. /
Perhaps you may prove as weak a Brother amongst'em / that way, as t'other. /
[150] Foh, drinking with Women, is as unnatural, as scolding / with'em; but 'tis a pleasure of decay'd Fornicators, and / the basest way of quenching Love. /
Nay, 'tis drowning Love, instead of quenching it; / but leave us for civil Women too! /
Ay, when he can't be the better for'em; we hardly / pardon a Man, that leaves his Friend for a Wench, and that's / a pretty lawful call. /
Faith, I wou'd not leave you for'em, if they wou'd / not drink. /
Who wou'd disappoint his Company at Lewis's, for / a Gossiping? /
Foh, Wine and Women good apart, together as /
nauseous as Sack and Sugar: But hark you, Sir, before you /
go, a little of your advice, an old maim'd General, when /
unfit for action is fittest for Counsel; I have other designs /
upon Women, than eating and drinking with them: I am in /
[Page 37]
love with Sparkish's Mistriss, whom he is to marry to morrow, /
now how shall I get her? /
Enter Sparkish, looking about.
Why, here comes one will help you to her. /
He! he, I tell you, is my Rival, and will hinder my / love. /
No, a foolish Rival, and a jealous Husband assist their / Rivals designs; for they are sure to make their Women hate / them, which is the first step to their love, for another Man. /
[175] But I cannot come near his Mistriss, but in his company. /
Still the better for you, for Fools are most easily / cheated, when they themselves are accessaries; and he is to / be bubled of his Mistriss, as of his Money, the common Mistriss, / by keeping him company. /
Who is that, that is to be bubled? Faith let me / snack, I han't met with a buble since Christmas: gad; I / think bubles are like their Brother Woodcocks, go out with / the cold weather. /
A Pox, he did not hear all I hope. /
Come, you bubling Rogues you, where do we / sup---Oh, Harcourt, my Mistriss tells me, you have been / making fierce love to her all the Play long, hah, ha--- / but I--- /
I make love to her? /
Nay, I forgive thee; for I think I know thee, and / I know her, but I am sure I know my self. /
Did she tell you so? I see all Women are like these / of the Fxchange, who to enhance the price of their commodities, / report to their fond Customers offers which were / never made'em. /
Ay, Women are as apt to tell before the intrigue, as / Men after it, and so shew themselves the vainer Sex; but / hast thou a Mistriss, Sparkish? 'tis as hard for me to believe / it, as that thou ever hadst a buble, as you brag'd just now. /
[200] O your Servant, Sir; are you at your raillery, Sir? /
but we were some of us beforehand with you to day at the /
[Page 38]
Play: the Wits were something bold with you, Sir; did you /
not hear us laugh? /
Yes, But I thought you had gone to Plays, to laugh at / the Poets wit, not at your own. /
Your Servant, Sir, no I thank you; gad I go to / a Play as to a Country-treat, I carry my own wine to / one, and my own wit to t'other, or else I'm sure I shou'd / not be merry at either; and the reason why we are so / often lowder, than the Players, is, because we think we speak / more wit, and so become the Poets Rivals in his audience: / for to tell you the truth, we hate the silly Rogues; nay, so / much that we find fault even with their Bawdy upon the / Stage, whilst we talk nothing else in the Pit as lowd. /
But, why should'st thou hate the silly Poets, thou hast / too much wit to be one, and they like Whores are only hated / by each other; and thou dost scorn writing, I'am sure. /
Yes, I'd have you to know, I scorn writing; but Women, / Women, that make Men do all foolish things, make'em / write Songs too; every body does it: 'tis ev'n as common with / Lovers, as playing with fans; and you can no more help / Rhyming to your Phyllis, than drinking to your Phyllis. /
Nay, Poetry in love is no more to be avoided, than / jealousy. /
[225] But the Poets damn'd your Songs, did they? /
Damn the Poets, they turn'd'em into Burlesque, as / they call it; that Burlesque is a Hocus-Pocus-trick, they have / got, which by the virtue of Hictius doctius, topsey turvey, / they make a wise and witty Man in the World, a Fool upon / the Stage you know not how; and 'tis therefore I hate'em / too, for I know not but it may be my own case; for they'l / put a Man into a Play for looking a Squint: Their Predecessors / were contented to make Serving-men only their Stage-Fools, / but these Rogues must have Gentlemen, with a Pox / to'em, nay Knights: and indeed you shall hardly see a Fool / upon the Stage, but he's a Knight; and to tell you the truth, / they have kept me these six years from being a Knight in earnest, / for fear of being knighted in a Play, and dubb'd a Fool. /
Blame'em not, they must follow their Copy, the Age. /
But why should'st thou be afraid of being in a Play, / who expose your self every day in the Play-houses, and as / publick Places. /
'Tis but being on the Stage, instead of standing on a / Bench in the Pit. /
Don't you give money to Painters to draw you like? / and are you afraid of your Pictures, at length in a Play-house, / where all your Mistresses may see you. /
A Pox, Painters don't draw the Small Pox, or Pimples / in ones face; come damn all your silly Authors whatever, / [250] all Books and Booksellers, by the World, and all Readers, / courteous or uncourteous. /
But, who comes here, Sparkish? /
Enter Mr. Pinchwife, and his Wife in Mans Cloaths, Alithea, Lucy her Maid.
Oh hide me, there's my Mistriss / too. /
She sees you. /
But I will not see her, 'tis time to go to Whitehal, / and I must not fail the drawing Room. /
Pray, first carry me, and reconcile me to her. /
Another time, faith the King will have sup't. /
Not with the worse stomach for thy absence; thou / art one of those Fools, that think their attendance at the / King's Meals, as necessary as his Physicians, when you are / more troublesom to him, than his Doctors, or his Dogs. /
Pshaw, I know my interest, Sir, prethee hide me. /
Your Servant, Pinchwife,---what he knows us / not--- /
Come along. /
Pray, have you any Ballads, give me six-penny / worth? /
We have no Ballads. /
Then give me Covent-garden-Drollery, and a / Play or two---Oh here's Tarugos Wiles, and the Slighted / Maiden, I'll have them. /
No, Playes are not for your reading; come along, / [275] will you discover your self? /
Who is that pretty Youth with him, Sparkish? /
I believe his Wife's Brother, because he's something / like her, but I never saw her but once. /
Extreamly handsom, I have seen a face like it too; / let us follow'em. /
Come, Sparkish, your Mistriss saw you, and will be / angry you go not to her; besides I wou'd fain be reconcil'd / to her, which none but you can do, dear Friend. /
Well that's a better reason, dear Friend; I wou'd / not go near her now, for her's, or my own sake, but I can / deny you nothing; for though I have known thee a great / while, never go, if I do not love thee, as well as a new Acquaintance. /
I am oblig'd to you indeed, dear Friend, I wou'd / be well with her only, to be well with thee still; for these / tyes to Wives usually dissolve all tyes to Friends: I wou'd be / contented, she shou'd enjoy you a nights, but I wou'd have / you to my self a dayes, as I have had, dear Friend. /
And thou shalt enjoy me a dayes, dear, dear Friend, / never stir; and I'll be divorced from her, sooner than from / thee; come along--- /
So we are hard put to't, when we make our Rival / our Procurer; but neither she, nor her Brother, wou'd let / me come near her now: when all's done, a Rival is the / best cloak to steal to a Mistress under, without suspicion; / [300] and when we have once got to her as we desire, we throw / him off like other Cloaks. /
Re-enter Mr. Pinchwife, Mistress Pinchwife in Man's Cloaths.
Sister, if you will not go, we must leave you--- /
[To Alithea.
The Fool her Gallant, and she, will muster up all the young /
[Page 41]
santerers of this place, and they will leave their dear Seamstresses /
to follow us; what a swarm of Cuckolds, and Cuckold-makers /
are here? /
[Aside.
Come let's be gone Mistriss Margery. /
Don't you believe that, I han't half my belly full / of sights yet. /
Then walk this way. /
Lord, what a power of brave signs are here! / stay---the Bull's-head, the Rams-head, and the Stags-head, / Dear--- /
Nay, if every Husbands proper sign here were visible, / they wou'd be all alike. /
What d'ye mean by that, Bud? /
'Tis no matter---no matter, Bud. /
Pray tell me; nay, I will know. /
They wou'd be all Bulls, Stags, and Rams heads. /
Re-enter Sparkish, Harcourt, Alithea, Lucy, at t'other door.
Come, dear Madam, for my sake you shall be reconciled / to him. /
For your sake I hate him. /
That's something too cruel, Madam, to hate me for / his sake. /
[325] Ay indeed, Madam, too, too cruel to me, to hate my / Friend for my sake. /
I hate him because he is your Enemy; and you / ought to hate him too, for making love to me, if you love me. /
That's a good one, I hate a Man for loving you; if / he did love you, 'tis but what he can't help, and 'tis your / fault not his, if he admires you: I hate a Man for being of / my opinion, I'll ne'er do't, by the World. /
Is it for your honour or mine, to suffer a Man to make / love to me, who am to marry you to morrow? /
Is it for your honour or mine, to have me jealous? / That he makes love to you, is a sign you are handsome; and / that I am not jealous, is a sign you are virtuous, that I think / is for your honour. /
But 'tis your honour too, I am concerned for. /
But why, dearest Madam, will you be more concern'd / for his honour, than he is himself; let his honour alone for / my sake, and his, he, he, has no honour--- /
How's that? /
But what, my dear Friend can guard himself. /
O ho---that's right again. /
Your care of his honour argues his neglect of it, which / is no honour to my dear Friend here; therefore once more, / let his honour go which way it will, dear Madam. /
Ay, ay, were it for my honour to marry a Woman, / [350] whose virtue I suspected, and cou'd not trust her in a Friends / hands? /
Are you not afraid to loose me? /
He afraid to loose you, Madam! No, no---you may / see how the most estimable, and most glorious Creature in the / World, is valued by him; will you not see it? /
Right, honest Franck, I have that noble value for / her, that I cannot be jealous of her. /
You mistake him, he means you care not for me, / nor who has me. /
Lord, Madam, I see you are jealous; will you wrest / a poor Mans meaning from his words? /
You astonish me, Sir, with your want of jealousie. /
And you make me guiddy, Madam, with your jealousie, / and fears, and virtue, and honour; gad, I see virtue / makes a Woman as troublesome, as a little reading, or / learning. /
Monstrous! /
[Well to see what easie Husbands these Women of / quality can meet with, a poor Chamber-maid can never have / such Lady-like luck; besides he's thrown away upon her, / she'l make no use of her fortune, her blessing, none to a Gentleman, / for a pure Cuckold, for it requires good breeding to be / a Cuckold. /
I tell you then plainly, he pursues me to marry me. /
[375] Pshaw--- /
Come, Madam, you see you strive in vain to make / him jealous of me; my dear Friend is the kindest Creature / in the World to me. /
Poor fellow. /
But his kindness only is not enough for me, without / your favour; your good opinion, dear Madam, 'tis that must / perfect my happiness: good Gentleman he believes all I say, / wou'd you wou'd do so, jealous of me! I wou'd not wrong / him nor you for the World. /
Look you there; hear him, hear / him, and do not walk away so. /
I love you, Madam, so--- /
How's that! Nay---now you begin to go too far / indeed. /
So much I confess, I say I love you, that I wou'd / not have you miserable, and cast your self away upon so unworthy, / and inconsiderable a thing, as / what you see here, /
No faith, I believe thou woud'st not, now his meaning / is plain: but I knew before thou woud'st not wrong me / nor her. /
No, no, Heavens forbid, the glory of her Sex shou'd / fall so, low as into the embraces of such a contemptible / Wretch, the last of Mankind---my dear Friend here--- / [400] I injure him. /
Very well. /
No, no, dear Friend, I knew it Madam, you see he / will rather wrong himself than me, in giving himself such / names. /
Do not you understand him yet? /
Yes, how modestly he speaks of himself, poor / Fellow. /
Methinks he speaks impudently of your self, since--- / before your self too, insomuch that I can no longer suffer / his scurrilous abusiveness to you, no more than his love to me. /
Nay, nay, Madam, pray stay, his love to you: Lord, / Madam, has he not spoke yet plain enough? /
Yes indeed, I shou'd think so. /
Well then, by the World, a Man can't speak civilly / to a Woman now, but presently she says, he makes love to / her: Nay, Madam, you shall stay, with your pardon, since / you have not yet understood him, till he has made an eclaircisment / of his love to you, that is what kind of love it is; answer / to thy Catechisme: Friend, do you love my Mistriss / here? /
Yes, I wish she wou'd not doubt it. /
But how do you love her? /
With all my Soul. /
I thank him, methinks he speaks plain enough now. /
[425] You are out still. /
[to Alithea.
But with what kind of love, Harcourt? /
With the best, and truest love in the World. /
Look you there then, that is with no matrimonial / love, I'm sure. /
How's that, do you say matrimonial love is not best? /
Gad, I went too far e're I was aware: But speak for / thy self Harcourt, you said you wou'd not wrong me, nor / her. /
No, no, Madam, e'n take him for Heaven's sake. /
Look you there, Madam. /
Who shou'd in all justice be yours, / he that loves you most. /
Look you there, Mr. Sparkish, who's that? /
Who shou'd it be? go on Harcourt. /
Who loves you more than Women, Titles, or fortune / Fools. /
Look you there, he means me stil, for he points at / me. /
Ridiculous! /
Who can only match your Faith, and constancy in / love. /
Ay. /
Who knows, if it be possible, how to value so much / beauty and virtue. /
[450] Ay. /
Whose love can no more be equall'd in the world, / than that Heavenly form of yours. /
No--- /
Who cou'd no more suffer a Rival, than your absence, / and yet cou'd no more suspect your virtue, than his own constancy / in his love to you. /
No--- /
Who in fine loves you better than his eyes, that first / made him love you. /
Ay---nay, Madam, faith you shan't go, till--- /
Have a care, lest you make me stay too long--- /
But till he has saluted you; that I may be assur'd / you are friends, after his honest advice and declaration: Come / pray, Madam, be friends with him. /
Enter Master Pinchwife, Mistriss Pinchwife.
You must pardon me, Sir, that I am not yet so obedient / to you. /
What, invite your Wife to kiss Men? Monstrous, / are you not asham'd? I will never forgive you. /
Are you not asham'd, that I shou'd have more confidence / in the chastity of your Family, than you have; you / must not teach me, I am a man of honour, Sir, though I am / frank and free; I am frank, Sir--- /
Very frank, Sir, to share your Wife with your / friends. /
[475] He is an humble, menial Friend, such as reconciles the / differences of the Marriage-bed; you know Man and Wife / do not alwayes agree, I design him for that use, therefore / wou'd have him well with my Wife. /
A menial Friend---you will get a great many / menial Friends, by shewing your Wife as you do. /
What then, it may be I have a pleasure in't, as I have / to shew fine Clothes, at a Play-house the first day, and count / money before poor Rogues. /
He that shews his wife, or money will be in danger / of having them borrowed sometimes. /
I love to be envy'd, and wou'd not marry a Wife, / that I alone cou'd love; loving alone is as dull, as eating / alone; is it not a frank age, and I am a frank Person? and to / tell you the truth, it may be I love to have Rivals in a Wife, / they make her seem to a Man still, but as a kept Mistriss; and / so good night, for I must to Whitehal. Madam, I hope you / are now reconcil'd to my Friend; and so I wish you a good / night, Madam, and sleep if you can, for to morrow you know / I must visit you early with a Canonical Gentleman. Good / night dear Harcourt. /
Madam, I hope you will not refuse my visit to morrow, / if it shou'd be earlyer, with a Canonical Gentleman, / than Mr. Sparkish's. /
This Gentle-woman is yet under my care, therefore / [500] you must yet forbear your freedom / with her, Sir. /
Must, Sir--- /
Yes, Sir, she is my Sister. /
'Tis well she is, Sir---for I must be her Servant, Sir. / Madam--- /
Come away Sister, we had been gone, if it had / not been for you, and so avoided these lewd Rakehells, who / seem to haunt us. /
Enter Horner, Dorilant to them.
How now Pinchwife? /
Your Servant. /
What, I see a little time in the Country makes a / Man turn wild and unsociable, and only fit to converse with / his Horses, Dogs, and his Herds. /
I have business, Sir, and must mind it; your business / is pleasure, therefore you and I must go different wayes. /
Well, you may go on, but this pretty young Gentleman--- /
The Lady--- /
And the Maid--- /
Shall stay with us, for I suppose their business is the / same with ours, pleasure. /
'Sdeath he knows her, she carries it so sillily, yet / if he does not, I shou'd be more silly to discover it first. /
Pray, let us go, Sir. /
Come, come--- /
[525] Had you not rather stay with us? /
[to Mrs. Pinchwife.
Prethee Pinchwife, who is this pretty young Gentleman? /
One to whom I'm a guardian. / [Aside. [I wish I cou'd keep her out of your hands--- /
Who is he? I never saw any thing so pretty in all my / life. /
Pshaw, do not look upon him so much, he's a poor / bashful youth, you'l put him out of countenance. Come away / Brother. /
O your Brother! /
Yes, my Wifes Brother; come, come, she'l stay / supper for us. /
I thought so, for he is very like her I saw you at / the Play with, whom I told you, I was in love with. /
O Jeminy! is this he that was in love with me, /
I am glad on't I vow, for he's a curious fine Gentleman, and /
I love him already too. /
[Aside.
Is this he Bud? /
Come away, come away. /
Why, what hast are you in? why wont you let me / talk with him? /
Because you'l debauch him, he's yet young and / innocent, and I wou'd not have him debauch'd for any / thing in the World. / [Aside. How she gazes on him! the Divel--- /
[550] Harcourt, Dorilant, look you here, this is the likeness / of that Dowdey he told us of, his Wife, did you ever see a / lovelyer Creature? the Rogue has reason to be jealous of his / Wife, since she is like him, for she wou'd make all that see / her, in love with her. /
And as I remember now, she is as like him here as can be. /
She is indeed very pretty, if she be like him. /
Very pretty, a very pretty commendation---she / is a glorious Creature, beautiful beyond all things I ever / beheld. /
So, so. /
More beautiful than a Poets first Mistriss of Imagination. /
Or another Mans last Mistriss of flesh and blood. /
Nay, now you jeer, Sir; pray don't jeer me--- /
Come, come. [Aside. [By Heavens she'l discover her / self. /
I speak of your Sister, Sir. /
Ay, but saying she was handsom, if like him, made / him blush. [Aside. [I am upon a wrack--- /
Methinks he is so handsom, he shou'd not be a Man. /
O there 'tis out, he has discovered her, I am / not able to suffer any longer. / [To his Wife. [Come, come away, I say--- /
Nay, by your leave, Sir, he shall not go yet--- / Harcourt, Dorilant, let us torment this jealous Rogue a little. /
[575] How? /
I'll shew you. /
Come, pray let him go, I cannot stay fooling any / longer; I tell you his Sister stays supper for us. /
Do's she, come then we'l all go sup with her and thee. /
No, now I think on't, having staid so long for / us, I warrant she's gone to bed---[Aside. [I wish she and I / were well out of their hands--- / Come, I must rise early to morrow, come. /
Well then, if she be gone to bed, I wish her and you / a good night. But pray, young Gentleman, present my humble / service to her. /
Thank you heartily, Sir. /
S'death, she will discover her self yet in spight /
of me. /
[Aside.
[Page 49]
He is something more civil to you, for your kindness to his /
Sister, than I am, it seems. /
Tell her, dear sweet little Gentleman, for all your Brother / there, that you have reviv'd the love, I had for her at / first sight in the Play-house. /
But did you love her indeed, and indeed? /
So, so. /
[Aside.
Away, I say. /
Nay stay; yes indeed, and indeed, pray do you tell / her so, and give her this kiss from me. /
[600] O Heavens! what do I suffer; now 'tis too plain / he knows her, and yet--- /
And this, and this--- /
What do you kiss me for, I am no Woman. /
So---there 'tis out. /
[Aside.
Come, I cannot, nor will stay any longer. /
Nay, they shall send your Lady a kiss too; here Harcourt, / Dorilant, will you not? /
How, do I suffer this? was I not accusing another /
just now, for this rascally, patience, in permitting his Wife /
to be kiss'd before his face? ten thousand ulcers gnaw away /
their lips. /
[Aside.
Come, come. /
Good night dear little Gentleman; Madam goodnight; / farewel Pinchwife. [Apart to Harcourt and Dorilant.] [Did not I tell you, I wou'd / raise his jealous gall. /
So they are gone at last; stay, let me see first if / the Coach be at this door. /
What not gone yet? will you be sure to do as I desired / you, sweet Sir? /
Sweet Sir, but what will you give me then? /
Any thing, come away into / the next walk. /
Hold, hold,---what d'ye do? /
Stay, stay, hold--- /
[625] Hold Madam, hold, let him present him, he'l come / presently; nay, I will never let you go, till you answer my / question. /
For God's sake, Sir, I must follow'em. /
No, I have something to present you / with too, you shan't follow them. /
Pinchwife returns.
Where?---how?---what's become of? gone--- / whither? /
He's only gone with the Gentleman, who will give / him something, an't please your Worship. /
Something---give him something, with a Pox--- / where are they? /
In the next walk only, Brother. /
Only, only; where, where? /
What's the matter with him? why so much concern'd? / but dearest Madam--- /
Pray, let me go, Sir, I have said, and suffer'd enough / already. /
Then you will not look upon, nor pitty my sufferings? /
To look upon'em, when I cannot help'em, were / cruelty, not pitty, therefore I will never see you more. /
Let me then, Madam, have my priviledge of a banished / Lover, complaining or railing, and giving you but a / farewell reason; why, if you cannot condescend to marry me, / you shou'd not take that wretch my Rival. /
[650] He only, not you, since my honour is engag'd so far / to him, can give me a reason, why I shou'd not marry him; / but if he be true, and what I think him to me, I must be so / to him; your Servant, Sir. /
Have Women only constancy when 'tis a vice, and / like fortune only true to fools? /
Thou sha't not stir thou robust Creature, you see I /
can deal with you, thereforefore you shou'd stay the rather, /
[Page 51]
and be kind. /
Enter Pinchwife.
Gone, gone, not to be found; quite gone, ten / thousand plagues go with'em; which way went they? /
But into t'other walk, Brother. /
Their business will be done presently sure, an't please / your Worship, it can't be long in doing I'm sure on't. /
Are they not there? /
No, you know where they are, you infamous / Wretch, Eternal shame of your Family, which you do not dishonour / enough your self, you think, but you must help her to / do it too, thou legion of Bawds. /
Good Brother. /
Damn'd, damn'd Sister. /
Look you here, she's coming. /
Enter Mistriss Pinchwife in Mans cloaths, running with her hat under her arm, full of Oranges and dried fruit, Horner following.
O dear Bud, look you here what I have got, see. /
And what I have got here too, / which you can't see. /
[675] The fine Gentleman has given me better things / yet. /
Ha's he so? [Aside. [Out of breath and colour'd--- / I must hold yet. /
I have only given your little Brother an Orange, Sir. /
Thank you, Sir. /
[To Horner.
You have only squeez'd my Orange, I suppose, and given it /
me again; yet I must have a City-patience. /
[Aside.
Come, come away--- /
Stay, till I have put up my fine things, Bud. /
Enter Sir Jaspar Fidget.
O Master Horner, come, come, the Ladies stay for / you; your Mistriss, my Wife, wonders you make not more / hast to her. /
I have staid this halfhour for you here, and 'tis your / fault I am not now with your Wife. /
But pray, don't let her know so much, the truth / on't is, I was advancing a certain Project to his Majesty, about---I'll / tell you. /
No, let's go, and hear it at your house: Good night / sweet little Gentleman; one kiss more, you'l remember me / now I hope. /
What, Sir Jaspar, will you separate Friends? he promis'd / to sup with us; and if you take him to your house, you'l / be in danger of our company too. /
Alas Gentlemen my house is not fit for you, there / [700] are none but civil Women there, which are not for your turn; / he you know can bear with the society of civil Women, / now, ha, ha, ha; besides he's one of my Family;---he's--- / heh, heh, heh. /
What is he? /
Faith my Eunuch, since you'l have it, heh, he, he. /
I rather wish thou wert his, or my Cuckold: Harcourt, / what a good Cuckold is lost there, for want of a Man to / make him one; thee and I cannot have Horners privilege, / who can make use of it. /
Ay, to poor Horner 'tis like coming to an estate at / threescore, when a Man can't be the better for't. /
Come. /
Presently Bud. /
Come let us go too: Madam, your Servant. /
[To Alith.
Good night Strapper.--- /
Madam, though you will not let me have a good day, / or night, I wish you one; but dare not name the other half / of my wish. /
Good night, Sir, for ever. /
I don't know where to put this here, dear Bud, / you shall eat it; nay, you shall have part of the fine Gentlemans / good things, or treat as you call it, when we come / home. /
Indeed I deserve it, since I furnish'd the best part / [725] of it. /
In Pinchwife's house in the morning.
Lucy, Alithea dress'd in new Cloths.
Well---Madam, now have I dress'd you, and / set you out with so many ornaments, and spent / upon you ounces of essence, and pulvilio; and all this for no / other purpose, but as People adorn, and perfume a Corps, / for a stinking second-hand-grave, such or as bad I think Master / Sparkish's bed. /
Hold your peace. /
Nay, Madam, I will ask you the reason, why you / wou'd banish poor Master Harcourt for ever from your sight? / how cou'd you be so hard-hearted? /
'Twas because I was not hard-hearted. /
No, no; 'twas 'stark love and kindness, I warrant. /
It was so; I wou'd see him no more, because I love / him. /
Hey day, a very pretty reason. /
You do not understand me. /
I wish you may your self. /
I was engag'd to marry, you see, another man, whom / my justice will not suffer me to deceive, or injure. /
Can there be a greater cheat, or wrong done to a / Man, than to give him your person, without your heart, I / shou'd make a conscience of it. /
I'll retrieve it for him after I am married a while. /
The Woman that marries to love better, will be as / [25] much mistaken, as the Wencher that marries to live better. No, / Madam, marrying to encrease love, is like gaming to become / rich; alas you only loose, what little stock you had before. /
I find by your Rhetorick you have been brib'd to / betray me. /
Only by his merit, that has brib'd your heart you see / against your word, and rigid honour; but what a Divel is / this honour? 'tis sure a disease in the head, like the Megrim, / or Falling-sickness, that alwayes hurries People away to do / themselves mischief; Men loose their lives by it: Women / what's dearer to'em, their love, the life of life. /
Come, pray talk you no more of honour, nor Master / Harcourt; I wish the other wou'd come, to secure my fidelity / to him, and his right in me. /
You will marry him then? /
Certainly, I have given him already my word, and / will my hand too, to make it good when he comes. /
Well, I wish I may never stick pin more, if he be / not an errant Natural, to t'other fine Gentleman. /
I own he wants the wit of Harcourt, which I will / dispense withal, for another want he has, which is want of / jealousie, which men of wit seldom want. /
Lord, Madam, what shou'd you do with a fool to your / Husband, you intend to be honest don't you? then that husbandly / virtue, credulity, is thrown away upon you. /
[50] He only that could suspect my virtue, shou'd have / cause to do it; 'tis Sparkish's confidence in my truth, that obliges / me to be so faithful to him. /
You are not sure his opinion may last. /
I am satisfied, 'tis impossible for him to be jealous, / after the proofs I have had of him: Jealousie in a Husband, / Heaven defend me from it, it begets a thousand plagues to a / poor Woman, the loss of her honour, her quiet, and her--- /
And her pleasure. /
What d'ye mean, Impertinent? /
Liberty is a great pleasure, Madam. /
I say loss of her honour, her quiet, nay, her life sometimes; / and what's as bad almost, the loss of this Town, that / is, she is sent into the Country, which is the last ill usage of a / Husband to a Wife, I think. /
O do's the wind lye there? /
[Aside.
Then of necessity, Madam, you think a man must carry his /
Wife into the Country, if he be wise; the Country is as terrible /
I find to our young English Ladies, as a Monastery to /
those abroad: and on my Virginity, I think they wou'd rather /
marry a London-Goaler, than a high Sheriff of a County, /
since neither can stir from his employment: formerly Women /
of wit married Fools, for a great Estate, a fine seat, or the like; /
but now 'tis for a pretty seat only in Lincoln's Inn-fields, St. /
James's-fields, or the Pall-mall. /
Enter to them Sparkish, and Harcourt dress'd like a Parson.
[75] Madam, your humble Servant, a happy day to you, / and to us all. /
Amen.--- /
Who have we here? /
My Chaplain faith---O Madam, poor Harcourt remembers / his humble service to you; and in obedience to your / last commands, refrains coming into your sight. /
Is not that he? /
No, fye no; but to shew that he ne're intended to / hinder our Match has sent his Brother here to joyn our hands: / when I get me a Wife, I must get her a Chaplain, according / to the Custom; this is his Brother, and my Chaplain. /
His Brother? /
And your Chaplain, to preach in your Pulpit then--- /
His Brother! /
Nay, I knew you wou'd not believe it; I told you, / Sir, she wou'd take you for your Brother Frank. /
Believe it! /
His Brother! hah, ha, he, he has a trick left still it / seems--- /
Come my dearest, pray let us go to Church before / the Canonical hour is past. /
For shame you are abus'd still. /
By the World 'tis strange now you are so incredulous. /
'Tis strange you are so credulous. /
[100] Dearest of my life, hear me, I tell you this is Ned / Harcourt of Cambridge, by the world, you see he has a sneaking / Colledg look; 'tis true he's something like his Brother Frank / and they differ from each other no more than in their age, / for they were Twins. /
Hah, ha, he. /
Your Servant, Sir, I cannot be so deceiv'd, though / you are; but come let's hear, how do you know what you / affirm so confidently? /
Why, I'll tell you all; Frank Harcourt coming to me / this morning, to wish me joy and present his service to you: / I ask'd him, if he cou'd help me to a Parson; whereupon he / told me, he had a Brother in Town who was in Orders, and / he went straight away, and sent him, you see there, to me. /
Yes, Frank goes, and puts on a black-coat, then tell's / you, he is Ned, that's all you have for't. /
Pshaw, pshaw, I tell you by the same token, the Midwife / put her Garter about Frank's neck, to know'em asunder, / they were so like. /
Frank tell's you this too. /
Ay, and Ned there too; nay, they are both in a Story. /
So, so, very foolish. /
Lord, if you won't believe one, you had best trye / him by your Chamber-maid there; for Chamber-maids must / needs know Chaplains from other Men, they are so us'd to'em. /
[125] Let's see; nay, I'll be sworn he has the Canonical / smirk, and the filthy, clammy palm of a Chaplain. /
Well, most reverend Doctor, pray let us make an / end of this fooling. /
With all my soul, Divine, Heavenly Creature, when / you please. /
He speaks like a Chaplain indeed. /
Why, was there not, soul, Divine, Heavenly, in what / he said. /
Once more, most impertinent Black-coat, cease / your persecution, and let us have a Conclusion of this ridiculous / love. /
I had forgot, I must sute my Stile to my Coat, or I / wear it in vain. /
I have no more patience left, let us make once an / end of this troublesome Love, I say. /
So be it, Seraphick Lady, when your Honour shall / think it meet, and convenient so to do. /
Gad I'm sure none but a Chaplain cou'd speak so, I / think. /
Let me tell you Sir, this dull trick will not serve / your turn, though you delay our marriage, you shall not hinder / it. /
Far be it from me, Munificent Patroness, to delay your / Marriage, I desire nothing more than to marry you presently, / [150] which I might do, if you your self wou'd; for my Noble, / Good-natur'd and thrice Generous Patron here wou'd not / hinder it. /
No, poor man, not I faith. /
And now, Madam, let me tell you plainly, no body / else shall marry you by Heavens, I'll die first, for I'm sure I / shou'd die after it. /
How his Love has made him forget his Function, as I / have seen it in real Parsons. /
That was spoken like a Chaplain too, now you understand / him, I hope. /
Poor man, he takes it hainously to be refus'd; I / can't blame him, 'tis putting an indignity upon him not to be / suffer'd, but you'l pardon me Madam, it shan't be, he shall / marry us, come away, pray Madam. /
Hah, ha, he, more ado! 'tis late. /
Invincible stupidity, I tell you he wou'd marry me, / as your Rival, not as your Chaplain. /
Come, come Madam. /
I pray Madam, do not refuse this Reverend Divine, / the honour and satisfaction of marrying you; for I dare say, / he has set his heart upon't, good Doctor. /
What can you hope, or design by this? /
I cou'd answer her, a reprieve for a day only, often /
[Page 58]
revokes a hasty doom; at worst, if she will not take mercy /
[175] on me, and let me marry her, I have at least the Lovers second /
pleasure, hindring my Rivals enjoyment, though but /
for a time. /
Come Madam, 'tis e'ne twelve a clock, and my Mother / charg'd me never to be married out of the Canonical / hours; come, come, Lord here's such a deal of modesty, I / warrant the first day. /
Yes, an't please your Worship, married women shew / all their Modesty the first day, because married men shew all / their love the first day. /
The Scene changes to a Bed-chamber, where appear Pinchwife, Mrs. Pinchwife.
Come tell me, I say. /
Lord, han't I told it an hundred times over. /
I wou'd try, if in the repetition of the ungrateful / tale, I cou'd find her altering it in the least circumstance, for / if her story be false, she is so too. /
Come how was't Baggage? /
Lord, what pleasure you take to hear it sure! /
No, you take more in telling it I find, but speak / how was't? /
He carried me up into the house, next to the / Exchange. /
So, and you two were only in the room. /
Yes, for he sent away a youth that was there, for / some dryed fruit, and China Oranges. /
Did he so? Damn him for it---and for--- /
[200] But presently came up the Gentlewoman of the / house. /
O 'twas well she did, but what did he do whilest / the fruit came? /
He kiss'd me an hundred times, and told me he /
fancied he kiss'd my fine Sister, meaning me you know, whom /
he said he lov'd with all his Soul, and bid me be sure to tell /
her so, and to desire her to be at her window, by eleven of /
[Page 59]
the clock this morning, and he wou'd walk under it at that /
time. /
And he was as good as his word, very punctual, / a pox reward him for't. /
Well, and he said if you were not within, he / wou'd come up to her, meaning me you know, Bud, still. /
So---he knew her certainly, but for this confession, / I am oblig'd to her simplicity. /
But what you stood very still, when he kiss'd you? /
Yes I warrant you, wou'd you have had me discover'd / my self? /
But you told me, he did some beastliness to you, / as you call'd it, what was't? /
Why, he put--- /
What? /
Why he put the tip of his tongue between my / lips, and so musl'd me---and I said, I'd bite it. /
[225] An eternal canker seize it, for a dog. /
Nay, you need not be so angry with him neither, / for to say truth, he has the sweetest breath I ever knew. /
The Devil---you were satisfied with it then, / and wou'd do it again. /
Not unless he shou'd force me. /
Force you, changeling! I tell you no woman can / be forced. /
Yes, but she may sure, by such a one as he, for / he's a proper, goodly strong man, 'tis hard, let me tell you, to / resist him. /
So, 'tis plain she loves him, yet she has not love enough /
to make her conceal it from me, but the sight of him /
will increase her aversion for me, and love for him; and that /
love instruct her how to deceive me, and satisfie him, all Ideot /
as she is: Love, 'twas he gave women first their craft, /
their art of deluding; out of natures hands, they came plain, /
open, silly and fit for slaves, as she and Heaven intended'em; /
but damn'd Love---Well---I must strangle that little /
Monster, whilest I can deal with him. /
[Page 60]
Go fetch Pen, Ink and Paper out of the next room: /
Yes Bud. /
Why should Women have more invention in love / than men? It can only be, because they have more desires, / more solliciting passions, more lust, and more of the Devil. /
Mistris Pinchwife returns.
[250] Come, Minks, sit down and write. /
Ay, dear Bud, but I can't do't very well. /
I wish you cou'd not at all. /
But what shou'd I write for? /
I'll have you write a Letter to your Lover. /
O Lord, to the fine Gentleman a Letter! /
Yes, to the fine Gentleman. /
Lord, you do but jeer; sure you jest. /
I am not so merry, come write as I bid you. /
What, do you think I am a fool? /
She's afraid I would not dictate any love to him, / therefore she's unwilling; but you had best begin. /
Indeed, and indeed, but I won't, so I won't. /
Why? /
Because he's in Town, you may send for him if / you will. /
Very well, you wou'd have him brought to you; / is it come to this? I say take the pen and write, or you'll provoke / me. /
Lord, what d'ye make a fool of me for? Don't / I know that Letters are never writ, but from the Countrey to / London, and from London into the Countrey; now he's in / Town, and I am in Town too; therefore I can't write to him / you know. /
So I am glad it is no worse, she is innocent enough / [275] yet /
Yes you may when your Husband bids you write Letters to / people that are in Town. /
O may I so! Then I'm satisfied. /
Come begin---Sir--- /
Shan't I say, Dear Sir? You know one says always /
[Page 61]
something more than bare Sir. /
Write as I bid you, or I will write Whore with / this Penknife in your Face. /
Nay good Bud---Sir--- /
Though I suffer'd last night your nauseous, loath'd / Kisses and Embraces---Write /
Nay, why shou'd I say so, you know I told you, / he had a sweet breath. /
Once more write as I'd have you, and question it / not, or I will spoil thy writing with this, I will stab out those / eyes that cause my mischief. /
[300] O Lord, I will. /
So---so---Let's see now! /
Though I suffer'd last night your nauseous, loath'd kisses, / and embraces; Go on---Yet I would not have you presume / that you shall ever repeat them---So--- /
I have writ it. /
On then---I then conceal'd my self from / your knowledge, to avoid your insolencies--- /
So--- /
The same reason now I am out of your hands--- /
So--- /
Makes me own to you my unfortunate, though / innocent frolick, of being in man's cloths. /
So--- /
That you may for ever more cease to pursue her, / who hates and detests you--- /
So---h--- /
What do you sigh?---detests you---as much / as she loves her Husband and her Honour--- /
I vow Husband he'll ne'er believe, I shou'd write / such a Letter. /
What he'd expect a kinder from you? come now / your name only. /
What, shan't I say your most faithful, humble / Servant till death? /
[325] No, tormenting Fiend; her stile I find wou'd be / very soft. /
Come wrap it up now, whilest I go fetch wax and a candle; / and write on the back side, for Mr. Horner. /
For Mr. Horner---So, I am glad he has told / me his name; Dear Mr. Horner, but why should I send thee / such a Letter, that will vex thee, and make thee angry with / me;---well I will not send it---Ay but then my husband / will kill me---for I see plainly, he won't let me love / Mr. Horner---but what care I for my Husband---I won't / so I won't send poor Mr. Horner such a Letter---but then / my Husband---But oh---what if I writ at bottom, my / Husband made me write it---Ay but then my Husband / wou'd see't---Can one have no shift, ah, a London woman / wou'd have had a hundred presently; stay---what if I / shou'd write a Letter, and wrap it up like this, and write upon't / too; ay but then my Husband wou'd see't---I don't / know what to do---But yet y vads I'll try, so I will--- / for I will not send this Letter to poor Mr. Horner, come what / will on't. /
Dear, Sweet Mr. Horner---So--- /
my Husband wou'd have me send you a /
base, rude, unmannerly Letter---but /
She writes, and repeats
what she hath
writ.
I won't---so---and wou'd have me forbid you /
loving me---but I wont---so---and wou'd have me /
[350] say to you, I hate you poor Mr. Horner---but I won't tell /
a lye for him---there---for I'm sure if you and I were /
[Page 63]
in the Countrey at cards together,---so---I cou'd not /
help treading on your Toe under the Table---so---or rubbing /
knees with you, and staring in your face, 'till you saw me /
---very well---and then looking down, and blushing for an /
hour together---so---but I must make haste before my Husband /
come; and now he has taught me to write Letters: /
You shall have longer ones from me, who am /
Dear, dear, poor dear Mr. Horner, your most / Humble Friend, and Servant to command / 'till death, Margery Pinchwife. /
Stay I must give him a hint at bottom---so---now wrap / it up just like t'other---so---now write for Mr. Horner,--- / But oh now what shall I do with it? for here comes my Husband. /
Enter Pinchwife.
I have been detained by a Sparkish Coxcomb, who / pretended a visit to me; but I fear 'twas to my Wife. /
What, have you done? /
Ay, ay Bud, just now. /
Let's see't, what d'ye tremble for; what, you / wou'd not have it go? /
Here---No I must not /
give him that, so I had been served if I /
He opens, and reads
the first Letter.
had given him this. /
Come, where's the Wax and Seal? /
[375] Lord, what shall I do now? Nay then I have / it--- /
Pray let me see't, Lord you think /
Snatches the Letter from
him, changes it for the
other, seals it, and delivers
it to him.
me so errand a fool, I cannot seal a /
Letter, I will do't, so I will. /
Nay, I believe you will learn that, and other / things too, which I wou'd not have you. /
So, han't I done it curiously? /
I think I have, there's my Letter going to Mr. Horner; / since he'll needs have me send Letters to Folks. /
'Tis very well, but I warrant, you wou'd not / have it go now? /
Yes indeed, but I wou'd, Bud, now. /
Well you are a good Girl then, come let me / lock you up in your chamber, 'till I come back; and be sure / you come not within three strides of the window, when I am / gone; for I have a spye in the street. /
At least, 'tis fit she think so, if we do /
Pinchwife locks
the door.
not cheat women, they'll cheat us; and /
fraud may be justly used with secret enemies, of which a Wife is /
the most dangerous; and he that has a handsome one to keep, /
and a Frontier Town, must provide against treachery, rather /
than open Force---Now I have secur'd all within, I'll deal /
with the Foe without with false intelligence. /
The Scene changes to Horner's Lodging.
Quack and Horner.
Well Sir, how fadges the new design; have you / [400] not the luck of all your brother Projectors, to deceive only / your self at last. /
No, good Domine Doctor, I deceive you it seems, and / others too; for the grave Matrons, and old ridgid Husbands / think me as unfit for love, as they are; but their Wives, / Sisters and Daughters, know some of'em better things already. /
Already! /
Already, I say; last night I was drunk with half a / dozen of your civil persons, as you call'em, and people of / Honour, and so was made free of their Society, and dressing / rooms for ever hereafter; and am already come to the privileges / of sleeping upon their Pallats, warming Smocks, tying / Shooes and Garters, and the like Doctor, already, already / Doctor. /
You have made use of your time, Sir. /
I tell thee, I am now no more interruption to'em, /
[Page 65]
when they sing, or talk bawdy, than a little squab French /
Page, who speaks no English. /
But do civil persons, and women of Honour drink, / and sing bawdy Songs? /
O amongst Friends, amongst Friends; for your Bigots / in Honour, are just like those in Religion; they fear the / eye of the world, more than the eye of Heaven, and think / there is no virtue, but railing at vice; and no sin, but giving / scandal: They rail at a poor, little, kept Player, and keep / [425] themselves some young, modest Pulpit Comedian to be privy / to their sins in their Closets, not to tell'em of them in their / Chappels. /
Nay, the truth on't is, Priests amongst the women / now, have quite got the better of us Lay Confessors, / Physicians. /
And they are rather their Patients, but--- /
Enter my Lady Fidget, looking about her.
Now we talk of women of Honour, here comes one, step / behind the Screen there, and but observe; if I have not particular / privileges, with the women of reputation already, / Doctor, already. /
Well Horner, am not I a woman of Honour? you / see I'm as good as my word. /
And you shall see Madam, I'll not be behind hand / with you in honour; and I'll be as good as my word too, if / you please but to withdraw into the next room. /
But first, my dear Sir, you must promise to have a / care of my dear Honour. /
If you talk a word more of your Honour, you'll make / me incapable to wrong it; to talk of Honour in the mysteries / of Love, is like talking of Heaven, or the Deity in an operation / of Witchcraft, just when you are employing the / Devil, it makes the charm impotent. /
Nay, fie, let us not be smooty; but you talk of / mysteries, and bewitching to me, I don't understand you. /
[450] I tell you Madam, the word money in a Mistresses /
mouth, at such a nick of time, is not a more disheartning sound /
[Page 66]
to a younger Brother, than that of Honour to an eager Lover /
like my self. /
But you can't blame a Lady of my reputation to / be chary. /
Chary---I have been chary of it already, by the report / I have caus'd of my self. /
Ay, but if you shou'd ever let other women know that / dear secret, it would come out; nay, you must have a great / care of your conduct; for my acquaintance are so censorious, / (oh 'tis a wicked censorious world, Mr. Horner) I say, are so / censorious, and detracting, that perhaps they'll talk to the prejudice / of my Honour, though you shou'd not let them know / the dear secret. /
Nay Madam, rather than they shall prejudice your / Honour, I'll prejudice theirs; and to serve you, I'll lye with / 'em all, make the secret their own, and then they'll keep it: / I am a Machiavel in love Madam. /
O, no Sir, not that way. /
Nay, the Devil take me, if censorious women are to / be silenc'd any other way. /
A secret is better kept I hope, by a single person, / than a multitude; therefore pray do not trust any body else / with it, dear, dear Mr. Horner. /
Enter Sir Jaspar Fidget.
[475] How now! /
O my Husband---prevented---and what's almost / as bad, found with my arms about another man--- / that will appear too much---what shall I say? /
Sir Jaspar come hither, I am trying if Mr. Horner were ticklish, / and he's as ticklish as can be, I love to torment the confounded / Toad; let you and I tickle him. /
No, your Ladyship will tickle him better without / me, I suppose, but is this your buying China, I thought you / had been at the China House? /
China-House, that's my Cue, I must take it /
A Pox, can't you keep your impertinent Wives at home? /
some men are troubled with the Husbands, but I with the /
[Page 67]
Wives; but I'd have you to know, since I cannot be /
your Journey-man by night, I will not be your drudge by /
day, to squire your wife about, and be your man of straw, /
or scare-crow only to Pyes and Jays; that would be nibling /
at your forbidden fruit; I shall be shortly the Hackney Gentleman-Usher /
of the Town. /
Heh, heh, he, poor fellow he's in the right on't /
faith, to squire women about for other folks, is as ungrateful /
an employment, as to tell money for other folks; /
[Aside.
heh, he, he, ben't angry Horner--- /
No, 'tis I have more reason to be angry, who am / left by you, to go abroad indecently alone; or, what is more / [500] indecent, to pin my self upon such ill bred people of your acquaintance, / as this is. /
Nay, pr'ythee what has he done? /
Nay, he has done nothing. /
But what d'ye take ill, if he has done nothing? /
Hah, hah, hah, Faith, I can't but laugh however; / why d'ye think the unmannerly toad wou'd not come down / to me to the Coach, I was fain to come up to fetch him, or / go without him, which I 'was resolved not to do; for he / knows China very well, and has himself very good, but will / not let me see it, lest I should beg some; but I will find it / out, and have what I came for yet. /
Lock the door Madam--- /
So, she has got into my chamber, and lock'd me out; oh / the impertinency of woman-kind! Well Sir Jaspar, plain / dealing is a Jewel; if ever you suffer your Wife to trouble / me again here, she shall carry you home a pair of Horns, by / my Lord Major she shall; though I cannot furnish you my / self, you are sure, yet I'll find a way. /
Hah, ha, he, at my first coming in, and finding her / arms about him, tickling him it seems, I was half jealous, but / now I see my folly. /
Heh, he, he, poor Horner. /
Nay, though you laugh now, 'twill be my turn e're / long: Oh women, more impertinent, more cunning, and / [525] more mischievous than their Monkeys, and to me almost as / ugly---now is she throwing my things about, and rifling / all I have, but I'll get into her the back way, and so rifle her / for it--- /
Hah, ha, ha, poor angry Horner. /
Stay here a little, I'll ferret her out to you presently, / I warrant. /
Wife, my Lady Fidget, / Wife, he is coming into you the / back way. /
Let him come, and welcome, which way he / will. /
He'll catch you, and use you roughly, and be too / strong for you. /
Don't you trouble your self, let him if he can. /
This indeed, I cou'd not have believ'd / from him, nor any but my own eyes. /
Enter Mistris Squeamish.
Where's this Woman-hater, this Toad, this ugly, / greasie, dirty Sloven? /
So the women all will have him ugly, methinks / he is a comely person; but his wants make his form contemptible / to'em; and 'tis e'en as my Wife said yesterday, talking / of him, that a proper handsome Eunuch, was as ridiculous / a thing, as a Gigantick Coward. /
Sir Jaspar, your Servant, where is the odious / [550] Beast? /
He's within in his chamber, with my Wife; she's / playing the wag with him. /
Is she so, and he's a clownish beast, he'll give her / no quarter, he'll play the wag with her again, let me tell / you; come, let's go help her---What, the door's lock't? /
Ay, my Wife lock't it--- /
Did she so, let us break it open then? /
No, no, he'll do her no hurt. /
No---But is there no other way to get into / 'em, whither goes this? I will disturb'em. /
Enter old Lady Squeamish.
Where is this Harlotry, this Impudent Baggage, / this rambling Tomrigg? O Sir Jaspar, I'm glad to see / you here, did you not see my vil'd Grandchild come in hither / just now? /
Yes, /
Ay, but where is she then? where is she? / Lord Sir Jaspar I have e'ne ratled my self to pieces in pursuit / of her, but can you tell what she makes here, they say below, / no woman lodges here. /
No. /
No---What does she here then? say if it / be not a womans lodging, what makes she here? but are you / sure no woman lodges here? /
No, nor no man neither, this is Mr. Horners Lodging. /
[575] Is it so are you sure? /
Yes, yes. /
So then there's no hurt in't I hope, but / where is he? /
He's in the next room with my Wife. /
Nay if you trust him with your wife, I may / with my Biddy, they say he's a merry harmless man now, e'ne / as harmless a man as ever came out of Italy with a good voice, / and as pretty harmless company for a Lady, as a Snake without / his teeth. /
Ay. ay poor man. /
Enter Mrs. Squeamish.
I can't find'em---Oh are you here, Grandmother, / I follow'd you must know my Lady Fidget hither, 'tis / the prettyest lodging, and I have been staring on the prettyest / Pictures. /
Enter Lady Fidget with a piece of China in her hand, and Horner following.
And I have been toyling and moyling, for the / pretti'st piece of China, my Dear. /
Nay she has been too hard for me do what I cou'd. /
Oh Lord I'le have some China too, good Mr. Horner, / don't think to give other people China, and me none, / come in with me too. /
Upon my honour I have none left now. /
Nay, nay I have known you deny your China / before now, but you shan't put me off so, come--- /
This Lady had the last there. /
[600] Yes indeed Madam, to my certain knowledge he / has no more left. /
O but it may be he may have some you could not / find. /
What d'y think if he had had any left, I would / not have had it too, for we women of quality never think we / have China enough. /
Do not take it ill, I cannot make China for you all, / but I will have a Rol-waggon for you too, another time. /
Thank you dear Toad. /
What do you mean by that promise? /
Alas she has an innocent, literal / understanding. /
Poor Mr. Horner, he has enough to doe to / please you all, I see. /
Ay Madam, you see how they use me. /
Poor Gentleman I pitty you. /
I thank you Madam, I could never find pitty, but / from such reverend Ladies as you are, the young ones will never / spare a man. /
Come come, Beast, and go dine with us, for we / shall want a man at Hombre after dinner. /
That's all their use of me Madam you see. /
Come Sloven, I'le lead you / to be sure of you. /
[625] Alas poor man how she tuggs him, kiss, kiss / her, that's the way to make such nice women quiet. /
No Madam, that Remedy is worse than the Torment, / they know I dare suffer any thing rather than do it. /
Prythee kiss her, and I'le give you her Picture / in little, that you admir'd so last night, prythee do. /
Well nothing but that could bribe me, I love a woman / only in Effigie, and good Painting as much as I hate / them---I'le do't, for I cou'd adore the Devil well painted. /
Foh, you filthy Toad, nay now I've done jesting. /
Ha, ha, ha, I told you so. /
Foh a kiss of his--- /
Has no more hurt in't, than one of my Spaniels. /
Nor no more good neither. /
I will now believe any thing he tells me. /
Enter Mr. Pinchwife.
O Lord here's a man, Sir Jaspar, my Mask, my Mask, / I would not be seen here for the world. /
What not when I am with you. /
No, no my honour---let's be gone. /
Oh Grandmother, let us be gone, make hast, make / hast, I know not how he may censure us. /
Be found in the lodging of any thing like a man, / away. /
What's here another Cuckold---he looks like / one, and none else sure have any business with him, /
[650] Well what brings my dear friend hither? /
Your impertinency. /
My impertinency---why you Gentlemen that / have got handsome Wives, think you have a privilege of saying / any thing to your friends, and are as brutish, as if you were / our Creditors. /
No Sir, I'le ne're trust you any way. /
But why not, dear Jack, why diffide in me, thou / knowst so well. /
Because I do know you so well. /
Han't I been always thy friend honest Jack, always / ready to serve thee, in love, or battle, before thou wert married, / and am so still. /
I believe so you wou'd be my second now indeed. /
Well then dear Jack, why so unkind, so grum, so / strange to me, come prythee kiss me deare Rogue, gad I was / always I say, and am still as much thy Servant as--- /
As I am yours Sir. What you wou'd send a kiss / to my Wife, is that it? /
So there 'tis---a man can't shew his friendship to / a married man, but presently he talks of his wife to you, prythee / let thy Wife alone, and let thee and I be all one, as we / were wont, what thou art as shye of my kindness, as a Lumbard-street / Alderman of a Courtiers civility at Lockets. /
But you are over kind to me, as kind, as if I were / [675] your Cuckold already, yet I must confess you ought to be / kind and civil to me, since I am so kind, so civil to you, as to / bring you this, look you there Sir. /
What is't? /
Only a Love Letter Sir. /
From whom---how, this is from your Wife--- / hum---and hum--- /
Even from my Wife Sir, am I not wondrous kind / and civil to you, now too? / [Aside. But you'l not think her so. /
Ha, is this a trick of his or hers /
The Gentleman's surpriz'd I find, what you expected / a kinder Letter? /
No faith not I, how cou'd I. /
Yes yes, I'm sure you did, a man so well made as / you are must needs be disappointed, if the women declare / not their passion at first sight or opportunity. /
But what should this mean? stay the Postcript. /
Be sure you love me whatsoever my husband says to the /
contrary, and let him not see this, lest he should come /
[Page 73]
home, and pinch me, or kill my Squirrel. /
[Reads aside.
It seems he knows not what the Letter contains. /
Come ne're wonder at it so much. /
Faith I can't help it. /
Now I think I have deserv'd your infinite friendship, / [700] and kindness, and have shewed my self sufficiently an / obliging kind friend and husband, am I not so, to bring a Letter / from my Wife to her Gallant? /
Ay, the Devil take me, art thou, the most obliging, / kind friend and husband in the world, ha, ha. /
Well you may be merry Sir, but in short I / must tell you Sir, my honour will suffer no jesting. /
What do'st thou mean? /
Does the Letter want a Comment? then know / Sir, though I have been so civil a husband, as to bring you a / Letter from my Wife, to let you kiss and court her to my face, / I will not be a Cuckold Sir, I will not. /
Thou art mad with jealousie, I never saw thy Wife in / my life, but at the Play yesterday, and I know not if it were / she or no, I court her, kiss her! /
I will not be a Cuckold I say, there will be danger / in making me a Cuckold. /
Why, wert thou not well cur'd of thy last clap? /
I weare a Sword. /
It should be taken from thee, lest thou should'st do / thy self a mischiefe with it, thou art mad, Man. /
As mad as I am, and as merry as you are, I must / have more reason from you e're we part, I say again though / you kiss'd, and courted last night my Wife in man's clothes, / as she confesses in her Letter. /
[725] Ha--- /
Both she and I say you must not design it again, / for you have mistaken your woman, as you have done your / man. /
Oh---I understand something now---[Aside. / Was that thy Wife? why would'st thou not tell me 'twas / she? faith my freedome with her was your fault, not mine. /
Faith so 'twas--- /
Fye, I'de never do't to a woman before her husbands / face, sure. /
But I had rather you should do't to my wife / before my face, than behind my back, and that you shall never / doe. /
No---you will hinder me. /
If I would not hinder you, you see by her Letter, / she wou'd. /
Well, I must e'ne acquiess then, and be contented / with what she writes. /
I'le assure you 'twas voluntarily writ, I had no / hand in't you may believe me. /
I do believe thee, faith. /
And believe her too, for she's an innocent creature, / has no dissembling in her, and so fare you well Sir. /
Pray however present my humble service to her, and / tell her I will obey her Letter to a tittle, and fulfill her desires / [750] be what they will, or with what difficulty soever I do't, / and you shall be no more jealous of me, I warrant her, and / you--- /
Well then fare you well, and play with any / mans honour but mine, kiss any mans wife but mine, and welcome--- /
Ha, ha, ha, Doctor. /
It seems he has not heard the report of you, or does / not believe it. /
Ha, ha, now Doctor what think you? /
Pray let's see the Letter---hum---for--- / deare---love you--- /
I wonder how she cou'd contrive it! what say'st thou / to't, 'tis an Original. /
So are your Cuckolds too Originals: for they are / like no other common Cuckolds, and I will henceforth believe / it not impossible for you to Cuckold the Grand Signior / amidst his Guards of Eunuchs, that I say--- /
And I say for the Letter, 'tis the first love Letter that /
[Page 75]
ever was without Flames, Darts, Fates, Destinies, Lying and /
Dissembling in't. /
Enter Sparkish pulling in Mr. Pinchwife.
Come back, you are a pretty Brother-in-law, neither / go to Church, nor to dinner with your Sister Bride. /
My Sister denies her marriage, and you see is gone / away from you dissatisfy'd. /
Pshaw, upon a foolish scruple, that our Parson was / [775] not in lawful Orders, and did not say all the Common Prayer, / but 'tis her modesty only I believe, but let women be never / so modest the first day, they'l be sure to come to themselves / by night, and I shall have enough of her then; in the / mean time, Harry Horner, you must dine with me, I keep my / wedding at my Aunts in the Piazza. /
Thy wedding, what stale Maid has liv'd to despaire / of a husband, or what young one of a Gallant? /
O your Servant Sir---this Gentlemans Sister then / ---No stale Maid. /
I'm sorry for't. /
How comes he so concern'd for her---[Aside. /
You sorry for't, why do you know any ill by / her? /
No, I know none but by thee, 'tis for her sake, not / yours, and another mans sake that might have hop'd, I / thought--- /
But Harry, what have I a Rival in my Wife already? /
but withal my heart, for he may be of use to me hereafter, for /
[800] though my hunger is now my sawce, and I can fall on heartily /
without, but the time will come, when a Rival will be as /
[Page 76]
good sawce for a married man to a wife, as an Orange to /
Veale. /
O thou damn'd Rogue, thou hast set my teeth on / edge with thy Orange. /
Then let's to dinner, there I was with you againe, / come. /
But who dines with thee? /
My Friends and Relations, my Brother Pinchwife you / see of your acquaintance. /
And his Wife. /
No gad, he'l nere let her come amongst us good / fellows, your stingy country Coxcomb keeps his wife from / his friends, as he does his little Firkin of Ale, for his own / drinking, and a Gentleman can't get a smack on't, but his / servants, when his back is turn'd broach it at their pleasures, / and dust it away, ha, ha, ha, gad I am witty, I think, considering / I was married to day, by the world, but come--- /
No, I will not dine with you, unless you can fetch / her too. /
Pshaw what pleasure can'st thou have with women / now, Harry? /
My eyes are not gone, I love a good prospect yet, / and will not dine with you, unless she does too, go fetch / [825] her therefore, but do not tell her husband, 'tis for my / sake. /
Well I'le go try what I can do, in the mean time / come away to my Aunts lodging, 'tis in the way to Pinchwifes. /
The poor woman has call'd for aid, and stretch'd forth / her hand Doctor, I cannot but help her over the Pale out of / the Bryars. /
The Scene changes to Pinchwifes house.
Mrs. Pinchwife alone leaning on her elbow.
A Table, Pen, Ink, and Paper.
Well 'tis 'ene so, I have got the London disease, /
they call Love, I am sick of my Husband, and for my Gallant; /
[Page 77]
I have heard this distemper, call'd a Feaver, but methinks /
'tis liker an Ague, for when I think of my Husband, I tremble /
and am in a cold sweat, and have inclinations to vomit, /
but when I think of my Gallant, dear Mr. Horner, my hot fit /
comes, and I am all in a Feaver, indeed, & as in other Feavers, /
my own Chamber is tedious to me, and I would fain be remov'd /
to his, and then methinks I shou'd be well; ah poor /
Mr. Horner, well I cannot, will not stay here, therefore I'le /
make an end of my Letter to him, which shall be a finer Letter /
than my last, because I have studied it /
like any thing; O Sick, Sick! /
Enter Mr. Pinchwife who seeing her writing steales softly behind her, and looking over her shoulder, snatches the paper from her.
What writing more Letters? /
O Lord Budd, why d'ye fright / me so? /
How's this! nay you shall not / stir Madam. /
[850] Deare, Deare, deare, Mr Horner---very well--- /
I have taught you to write Letters to good purpose---but /
let's see't. /
First I am to beg your pardon for my boldness in writing to /
you, which I'de have you to know, I would not have done, /
had not you said first you lov'd me so extreamly, which /
if you doe, you will never suffer me to lye in the arms of another /
man, whom I loath. nauseate, and detest---[Now /
you can write these filthy words] but what follows--- /
Therefore I hope you will speedily find some way to free me /
from this unfortunate match, which was never, I assure you, /
of my choice, but I'm afraid 'tis already too far gone; however /
if you love me, as I do you, you will try what you can /
do, but you must help me away before to morrow, or else /
alass I shall be for ever out of your reach, for I can defer no /
longer our---our---what is to follow our--- /
speak what? our Journey into /
[The Letter concludes.
the Country I suppose---Oh Woman, damn'd Woman, /
[Page 78]
and Love, damn'd Love, their old Tempter, for this is one of /
his miracles, in a moment, he can make those blind that cou'd /
see, and those see that were blind, those dumb that could /
speak, and those prattle who were dumb before, nay what is /
more than all, make these dow-bak'd, sensless, indocile animals, /
Women, too hard for us their Politick Lords and Rulers /
in a moment; But make an end of your Letter, and then /
[875] I'le make an end of you thus, and all my plagues /
together. /
O Lord, O Lord you are such a Passionate Man, / Budd. /
Enter Sparkish.
How now what's here to doe. /
This Fool here now! /
What drawn upon your Wife? you shou'd never do /
that but at night in the dark when you can't hurt her, this is /
my Sister in Law is it not? ay faith e'ne our /
Pulls aside her
Handkercheife.
Country Margery, one may know her, come /
she and you must go dine with me, dinner's ready, come, but /
where's my Wife, is she not come home yet, where is she? /
Making you a Cuckold, 'tis that they all doe, as / soon as they can. /
What the Wedding day? no, a Wife that designs to / make a Cully of her Husband, will be sure to let him win the / first stake of love, by the world, but come they stay dinner / for us, come I'le lead down our Margery. /
No---Sir go we'l follow you. /
I will not wag without you. /
This Coxcomb is a sensible torment to me amidst / the greatest in the world. /
Come, come Madam Margery. /
No I'le lead her my way, /
what wou'd you treat your friends /
[900] with mine, for want of your own /
Wife? /
Leads her. to t'other
door, and locks her in
and returns.
I am contented my rage shou'd take breath--- /
I told Horner this. /
Come now. /
Lord, how shye you are of your Wife, but let me tell / you Brother, we men of wit have amongst us a saying, that / Cuckolding like the small Pox comes with a fear, and you / may keep your Wife as much as you will out of danger of / infection, but if her constitution incline her to't, she'l have it / sooner or later by the world, say they. /
What a thing is a Cuckold, that every fool can /
make him ridiculous--- /
[Aside.
Well Sir---But let me advise you, now you are come to /
be concern'd, because you suspect the danger, not to neglect /
the means to prevent it, especially when the greatest /
share of the Malady will light upon your own head, /
for--- /
Mr. Pinchwifes House.
Enter Mr. Pinchwife and Mrs. Pinchwife, a Table and Candle.
Come take the Pen and make an end of the /
Letter, just as you intended, if you are false /
in a tittle, I shall soon perceive it, and punish you with this /
as you deserve, write what was to follow---let's /
see--- /
Lays his hand on
his Sword.
[You must make haste and help me away before to morrow, /
or else I shall be for ever out of your reach, for I can defer /
no longer our---] What follows our?--- /
Must all out then Budd?--- / Look you there then. /
Let's see---[For I can defer no longer our--- /
[Page 80]
Wedding---Your slighted Alithea] What's the meaning /
of this, my Sisters name to't, speak, unriddle? /
Yes indeed Budd. /
But why her name to't speak---speak I say? /
Ay but you'l tell her then again, if you wou'd not / tell her again. /
I will not, I am stunn'd, my head turns round, / speak. /
Won't you tell her indeed, and indeed. /
No, speak I say. /
She'l be angry with me, but I had rather she should / be angry with me than you Budd; and to tell you the truth, / 'twas she made me write the Letter, and taught me what I / [25] should write. /
Ha---I thought the stile was somewhat better / than her own, but how cou'd she come to you to teach / you, since I had lock'd you up alone. /
O through the key hole Budd. /
But why should she make you write a Letter for / her to him, since she can write her self? /
Why she said because---for I was unwilling / to do it. /
Because what---because. /
Because lest Mr. Horner should be cruel, and refuse / her, or vaine afterwards, and shew the Letter, she might / disown it, the hand not being hers. /
How's this? ha---then I think I shall come to /
my self again---This changeling cou'd not invent this /
lye, but if she cou'd, why should she? she might think I should /
soon discover it---stay---now I think on't too, Horner /
said he was sorry she had married Sparkish, and her disowning /
her marriage to me, makes me think she has evaded /
it, for Horner's sake, yet why should she take this /
course, but men in love are fools, women may well be /
so.--- /
[Aside.
But hark you Madam, your Sister went out in the morning, /
and I have not seen her within since. /
A lack a day she has been crying all day above / [50] it seems in a corner. /
Where is she, let me speak with her. /
O Lord then he'l discover all--- /
[Aside.
Pray hold Budd, what d'y mean to discover me, she'l know /
I have told you then, pray Budd let me talk with her /
first--- /
I must speak with her to know whether Horner / ever made her any promise; and whether she be married to / Sparkish or no. /
Pray dear Budd don't, till I have spoken with her / and told her that I have told you all, for she'll kill me / else. /
Go then and bid her come out to me. /
Yes, yes Budd--- /
Let me see--- /
I'le go, but she is not within to come to him, I / have just got time to know of Lucy her Maid, who first set / me on work, what lye I shall tell next, for I am e'ne at my / wits end--- /
Well I resolve it, Horner shall have her, I'd rather / give him my Sister than lend him my Wife, and such an alliance / will prevent his pretensions to my Wife sure,---I'le / make him of kinn to her, and then he won't care for her, /
O Lord Budd I told you what anger you would / make me with my Sister. /
[75] Won't she come hither? /
No no, alack a day, she's asham'd to look you in / the face, and she says if you go in to her, she'l run away down / stairs, and shamefully go her self to Mr. Horner, who has promis'd / her marriage she says, and she will have no other, so / she won't--- /
Did he so---promise her marriage---then /
she shall have no other, go tell her so, and if she will come /
and discourse with me a little concerning the means, I will about /
it immediately, go--- /
[Exit Mrs. Pin.
[Page 82]
His estate is equal to Sparkish's, and his extraction as much better /
than his, as his parts are, but my chief reason is, I'd rather /
be of kin to him by the name of Brother-in-law, than that of /
Cuckold--- /
Well what says she now? /
Why she says she would only have you lead her / to Horners lodging---with whom she first will discourse the / matter before she talk with you, which yet she cannot doe; / for alack poor creature, she says she can't so much as look you / in the face, therefore she'l come to you in a mask, and you / must excuse her if she make you no answer to any question / of yours, till you have brought her to Mr. Horner, and if you / will not chide her, nor question her, she'l come out to you / immediately. /
Let her come I will not speak a word to her, nor / [100] require a word from her. /
Oh I forgot, besides she says, she cannot look you / in the face, though through a mask, therefore wou'd desire / you to put out the Candle. /
I agree to all, let her make /
haste---there 'tis out---My case /
Exit Mrs. Pin. puts
out the Candle.
is something better, I'd rather fight with Horner for not lying /
with my Sister, than for lying with my Wife, and of the /
two I had rather find my Sister too forward than my Wife; /
I expected no other from her free education, as she calls it, /
and her passion for the Town---well---Wife and /
Sister are names which make us expect Love and duty, pleasure /
and comfort, but we find'em plagues and torments, and /
are equally, though differently troublesome to their keeper; /
for we have as much a doe to get people to lye with /
our Sisters, as to keep'em from lying with our Wives. /
Enter Mrs. Pinchwife Masked, and in Hoods and Scarves, and a night Gown and Petticoat of Alitheas in the dark.
What are you come Sister? let us go then---but first let / me lock up my Wife, Mrs. Margery where are you? /Here Budd. /
Come hither, that I may lock you up, / get you in, Come Sister where are you now? /
[Mrs. Pin. gives him her hand, but when he lets her go, she steals softly on t'other side of him, and is lead away by him for his Sister Alithea.]
The Scene changes to Horners Lodging. Quack Horner.
What all alone, not so much as one of your / Cuckolds here, nor one of their Wives! they use to take / their turns with you, as if they were to watch you. /
Yes it often happens, that a Cuckold is but his Wifes / [125] spye, and is more upon family duty, when he is with her gallant / abroad hindring his pleasure, than when he is at home / with her playing the Gallant, but the hardest duty a married / woman imposes upon a lover is, keeping her husband company / always. /
And his fondness wearies you almost as soon as / hers. /
A Pox, keeping a Cuckold company after you have / had his Wife, is as tiresome as the company of a Country / Squire to a witty fellow of the Town, when he has got all his / Mony, /
And as at first a man makes a friend of the Husband / to get the Wife, so at last you are faine to fall out with the / Wife to be rid of the Husband. /
Ay, most Cuckold-makers are true Courtiers, when / once a poor man has crack'd his credit for'em, they can't abide / to come neer him. /
But at first to draw him in are so sweet, so kind, so / dear, just as you are to Pinchwife, but what becomes of that / intrigue with his Wife? /
A Pox he's as surly as an Alderman that has been bit, / and since he's so coy, his Wife's kindness is in vain, for she's a / silly innocent. /
Did she not send you a Letter by him? /
Yes, but that's a riddle I have not yet solv'd---allow /
[150] the poor creature to be willing, she is silly too, and he /
[Page 84]
keeps her up so close--- /
Yes, so close that he makes her but the more willing, / and adds but revenge to her love, which two when / met seldome faile of satisfying each other one way or other. /
What here's the man we are talking of I think. /
Enter Mr. Pinchwife leading in his Wife Masqued, Muffled, and in her Sisters Gown.
Pshaw. /
Bringing his Wife to you is the next thing to bringing / a Love Letter from her. /
VVhat means this? /
The last time you know Sir I brought you a love / Letter, now you see a Mistress, I think you'l say I am a civil / man to you. /
Ay the Devil take me will I say thou art the civillest / man I ever met with, and I have known some; I fancy, I understand / thee now, better than I did the Letter, but hark / thee in thy eare--- /
VVhat? /
Nothing but the usual question man, is she found on / thy word? /
VVhat you take her for a VVench and me for / a Pimp? /
Pshaw, wench and Pimp, paw words, I know thou / art an honest fellow, and hast a great acquaintance among / the Ladies, and perhaps hast made love for me rather than let / [175] me make love to thy VVise--- /
Come Sir, in short, I am for no fooling. /
Nor I neither, therefore prythee let's see her face / presently, make her show man, art thou sure I don't know / her? /
I am sure you doe know her. /
A Pox why dost thou bring her to me then? /
Because she's a Relation of mine. /
Is she faith man, then thou art still more civil and obliging, / dear Rogue. /
VVho desir'd me to bring her to you. /
Then she is obliging, dear Rogue. /
You'l make her welcome for my sake I hope. /
I hope she is handsome enough to make her self wellcome; / prythee let her unmask. /
Doe you speak to her, she wou'd never be rul'd / by me. /
Madam--- /
[Mrs. Pin. whispers to Hor.
She says she must speak with me in private, withdraw prythee. /
She's unwilling it seems I shou'd know all her undecent /
conduct in this business--- /
[Aside.
VVel then Ile leave you together, and hope when I am /
gone you'l agree, if not you and I shan't agree Sir.--- /
VVhat means the Fool?---if she and I agree 'tis / no matter what you and I do. /
[200] In the mean time I'le fetch a Parson, and find out / Sporkish and disabuse him. / You wou'd have me fetch a Parson, would you not, well then / ---Now I think I am rid of her, and shall have no more / trouble with her---Our Sisters and Daughters like Usurers / money, are safest, when put out; but our Wifes, like their / writings, never safe, but in our Closets under Lock and Key. /
Enter Boy.
Sir Jaspar Fidget Sir is coming up. /
Here's the trouble of a Cuckold, now we are talking / of, a pox on him, has he not enough to doe to hinder his / Wifes sport, but he must other women's too.---Step in / here Madam. /
Enter Sir Jaspar.
My best and dearest Friend. /
The old stile Doctor--- / Well be short, for I am busie, what would your impertinent / Wife have now? /
Well guess'd y' faith, for I do come from her. /
To invite me to supper, tell her I can't come, go. /
Nay, now you are out faith, for my Lady and / the whole knot of the virtuous gang, as they call themselves, / are resolv'd upon a frolick of coming to you to night in a / Masquerade, and are all drest already. /
I shan't be at home. /
Lord how churlish he is to women---nay prythee / don't disappoint'em, they'l think 'tis my fault, prythee / [225] don't, I'le send in the Banquet and the Fiddles, but make no / noise on't, for the poor virtuous Rogues would not have it / known for the world, that they go a Masquerading, and they / would come to no mans Ball, but yours. /
Well, well---get you gone, and tell'em if they / come, 'twill be at the peril of their honour and yours. /
Heh, he, he---we'l trust you for that, farewell--- /
The Scene changes to the Piazza of Covent Garden. Sparkish, Pinchwife.
But who would have thought a / woman could have been false to me, by / the world, I could not have thought it. /
You were for giving and taking liberty, she has / taken it only Sir, now you find in that Letter, you are a / frank person, and so is she you see there. /
Nay if this be her hand---for I never saw it. /
'Tis no matter whether that be her hand or no, / I am sure this hand at her desire lead her to Mr. Horner, with / whom I left her just now, to go fetch a Parson to'em at their / desire too, to deprive you of her for ever, for it seems yours / was but a mock marriage. /
Indeed she wou'd needs have it that 'twas Harcourt / himself in a Parsons habit, that married us, but I'm sure he / told me 'twas his Brother Ned. /
O there 'tis out and you were deceiv'd not she, /
[Page 87]
[250] for you are such a frank person---but I must be gone--- /
you'l find her at Mr. Horners, goe and believe your eyes. /
Nay I'le to her, and call her as many Crocodiles, / Syrens, Harpies, and other heathenish names, as a Poet would / do a Mistress, who had refus'd to heare his suit, nay more his / Verses on her. / But stay, is not that she following a Torch at t'other end of / the Piazza, and from Horners certainly---'tis so--- /
Enter Alithea following a Torch, and Lucy behind.
You are well met Madam though you don't think so; what / you have made a short visit to Mr. Horner, but I suppose you'l / return to him presently, by that time the Parson can be with / him. /Mr. Horner, and the Parson Sir--- /
Come Madam no more dissembling, no more jilting / for I am no more a frank person. /
How's this. /
So 'twill work I see--- /
Cou'd you find out no easie Country Fool to abuse? / none but me, a Gentleman of wit and pleasure about the / Town, but it was your pride to be too hard for a man of / parts, unworthy false woman, false as a friend that lends a / man mony to lose, false as dice, who undoe those that trust / all they have to'em. /
He has been a great bubble by his similes as they / say--- /
[275] You have been too merry Sir at your wedding dinner / sure. /
What d'y mock me too? /
Or you have been deluded. /
By you. /
Let me understand you. /
Have you the confidence, I should call it something /
else, since you know your guilt, to stand my just reproaches? /
you did not write an impudent Letter to Mr. Horner, who I /
find now has club'd with you in deluding me with his aversion /
[Page 88]
for women, that I might not forsooth suspect him for my /
Rival. /
D'y think the Gentleman can be jealous now Madam--- /
I write a Letter to Mr. Horner! /
Nay Madam, do not deny it, your Brother shew'd / it me just now, and told me likewise he left you at Horners / lodging to fetch a Parson to marry you to him, and I wish / you joy Madam, joy, joy, and to him too much joy, and to / my self more joy for not marrying you. /
So I find my Brother would break off the match, and I /
can consent to't, since I see this Gentleman can be made /
jealous. /
[Aside.
O Lucy, by his rude usage and jealousie, he makes me almost /
afraid I am married to him, art thou sure 'twas Harcourt himself /
and no Parson that married us. /
[300] No Madam I thank you, I suppose that was a contrivance / too of Mr. Horners and yours, to make Harcourt / play the Parson, but I would as little as you have him one / now, no not for the world, for shall I tell you another truth, / I never had any passion for you, 'till now, for now I hate you, / 'tis true I might have married your portion, as other men of / parts of the Town do sometimes, and so your Servant, and to / shew my unconcernedness, I'le come to your wedding, and / resign you with as much joy as I would a stale wench to a / new Cully, nay with as much joy as I would after the first / night, if I had been married to you, there's for you, and so / your Servant, Servant. /
How was I deceiv'd in a man! /
You'l believe then a fool may be made jealous now? / for that easiness in him that suffers him to be led by a Wife, / will likewise permit him to be perswaded against her by / others. /
But marry Mr. Horner, my brother does not intend it /
sure; if I thought he did, I would take thy advice, and Mr. /
Harcourt for my Husband, and now I wish, that if there be any /
over-wise woman of the Town, who like me would marry /
[Page 89]
a fool, for fortune, liberty, or title, first that her husband may /
love Play, and be a Cully to all the Town, but her, and suffer /
none but fortune to be mistress of his purse, then if for liberty, /
that he may send her into the Country under the conduct /
[325] of some housewifely mother-in law; and if for title, may /
the world give 'em none but that of Cuckold. /
And for her greater curse Madam, may he not deserve / it. /
Away impertinent---is not this my old Lady Lanterlus? /
Yes Madam. [Aside. [and here I hope we shall find Mr. / Harcourt--- /
The Scene changes again to Horner's Lodging.
Horner, Lady Fidget, Mrs. Daynty Fidget, Mrs. Squeamish, a Table, Banquet, and Bottles.
A Pox they are come too soon---before I have / sent back my new---Mistress, all I have now to do, is to / lock her in, that they may not see her--- /
That we may be sure of our wellcome, we have / brought our entertainment with us, and are resolv'd to treat / thee, dear Toad. /
And that we may be merry to purpose, have left Sir / Jaspar and my old Lady Squeamish quarrelling at home at Baggammon. /
Therefore let us make use of our time, lest they / should chance to interrupt us. /
Let us sit then. /
First that you may be private, let me lock this door, / and that, and I'le wait upon you presently. /
No Sir, shut 'em only and your lips for ever, for we / must trust you as much as our women. /
You know all vanity's kill'd in me, I have no occasion / for talking. /
Now Ladies, supposing we had drank each of us / [350] our two Bottles, let us speak the truth of our hearts. /
Agreed. /
By this brimmer, for truth is no where else to be / found, [Not in thy heart false man. /
You have found me a true man I'm / sure. /
Dear Brimmer, well in token of our openness and / [375] plain dealing, let us throw our Masques over our heads. /
So 'twill come to the Glasses anon. /
Lovely Brimmer, let me enjoy him first. /
No, I never part with a Gallant, till I've try'd / him. Dear Brimmer that mak'st our Husbands short / sighted. /
And our bashful gallants bold. /
And for want of a Gallant, the Butler lovely in our / eyes, drink Eunuch. /
Drink thou representative of a Husband, damn a / Husband. /
And as it were a Husband, an old keeper. /
And an old Grandmother. /
And an English Bawd, and a French Chirurgion. /
Ay we have all reason to curse 'em. /
For my sake Ladies. /
No, for our own, for the first spoils all young gallants / industry. /
And the others art makes 'em bold only with common / women. /
And rather run the hazard of the vile distemper / amongst them, than of a denial amongst us. /
The filthy Toads chuse Mistresses now, as they do / Stuffs, for having been fancy'd and worn by others. /
For being common and cheap. /
[400] Whilst women of quality, like the richest Stuffs, / lye untumbled, and unask'd for. /
Ay neat, and cheap, and new often they think / best. /
No Sir, the Beasts will be known by a Mistriss longer / than by a suit. /
And 'tis not for cheapness neither. /
No, for the vain fopps will take up Druggets, / and embroider 'em, but I wonder at the depraved appetites of / witty men, they use to be out of the common road, and hate / imitation, pray tell me beast, when you were a man, why you / rather chose to club with a multitude in a common house, / for an entertainment, than to be the only guest at a good / Table. /
Why faith ceremony and expectation are unsufferable / to those that are sharp bent, people always eat with the / best stomach at an ordinary, where every man is snatching for / the best bit. /
Though he get a cut over the fingers---but I / have heard people eat most heartily of another man's meat, / that is, what they do not pay for. /
When they are sure of their wellcome and freedome, / for ceremony in love and eating, is as ridiculous as in fighting, / falling on briskly is all should be done in those occasions. /
Well then let me tell you Sir, there is no where / [425] more freedome than in our houses, and we take freedom from / a young person as a sign of good breeding, and a person may / be as free as he pleases with us, as frolick, as gamesome, as / wild as he will. /
Han't I heard you all declaim against wild men. /
Yes, but for all that, we think wildness in a man, / as desirable a quality, as in a Duck, or Rabbet; a tame man, / foh. /
I know not, but your Reputations frightned me, as / much as your Faces invited me. /
Our Reputation, Lord! Why should you not / think, that we women make use of our Reputation, as you / men of yours, only to deceive the world with less suspicion; / our virtue is like the State-man's Religion, the Quakers / Word, the Gamesters Oath, and the Great Man's Honour, but / to cheat those that trust us. /
And that Demureness, Coyness, and Modesty, / that you see in our Faces in the Boxes at Plays, is as much a / sign of a kind woman, as a Vizard-mask in the Pit. /
For I assure you, women are least mask'd, when they / have the Velvet Vizard on. /
You wou'd have found us modest women in our / denyals only. /
Our bashfulness is only the reflection of the / Men's. /
[450] We blush, when they are shame-fac'd. /
I beg your pardon Ladies, I was deceiv'd in you devilishly, / but why, that mighty pretence to Honour? /
We have told you; but sometimes 'twas for the /
[Page 93]
same reason you men pretend business often, to avoid ill company, /
to enjoy the better, and more privately those you /
love. /
But why, wou'd you ne'er give a Friend a wink / then? /
Faith, your Reputation frightned us as much, as / ours did you, you were so notoriously lewd. /
And you so seemingly honest. /
Was that all that deterr'd you? /
And so expensive---you allow freedom you say. /
Ay, ay. /
That I was afraid of losing my little money, as well as / my little time, both which my other pleasures required. /
Money, foh---you talk like a little fellow now, / do such as we expect money? /
I beg your pardon, Madam, I must confess, I have / heard that great Ladies, like great Merchants, set but the / higher prizes upon what they have, because they are not in / necessity of taking the first offer. /
Such as we, make sale of our hearts? /
We brib'd for our Love? Foh. /
[475] With your pardon, Ladies, I know, like great men / in Offices, you seem to exact flattery and attendance only / from your Followers, but you have receivers about you, and / such fees to pay, a man is afraid to pass your Grants; besides / we must let you win at Cards, or we lose your hearts; and / if you make an assignation, 'tis at a Goldsmiths, Jewellers, / or China house, where for your Honour, you deposit to him, / he must pawn his, to the punctual Citt, and so paying for / what you take up, pays for what he takes up. /
Wou'd you not have us assur'd of our Gallants / Love? /
For Love is better known by Liberality, than / by Jealousie. /
For one may be dissembled, the other not---but /
my Jealousie can be no longer dissembled, and they are telling /
ripe: /
[Aside.
[Page 94]
Come here's to our Gallants in waiting, whom we must name, /
and I'll begin, this is my false Rogue. /
How! /
So all will out now--- /
Did you not tell me, 'twas for my sake only, you / reported your self no man? /
Oh Wretch! did you not swear to me, 'twas for my / Love, and Honour, you pass'd for that thing you / do? /
[500] So, so. /
Come, speak Ladies, this is my false Villain. /
And mine too. /
And mine. /
Well then, you are all three my false Rogues too, / and there's an end on't. /
Well then, there's no remedy, Sister Sharers, let / us not fall out, but have a care of our Honour; though we / get no Presents, no Jewels of him, we are savers of our Honour, / the Jewel of most value and use, which shines yet to / the world unsuspected, though it be counterfeit. /
Nay, and is e'en as good, as if it were true, provided / the world think so; for Honour, like Beauty now, / only depends on the opinion of others. /
Well Harry Common, I hope you can be true to / three, swear, but 'tis no purpose, to require your Oath; / for you are as often forsworn, as you swear to new women. /
Come, faith Madam, let us e'en pardon one another, / for all the difference I find betwixt we men, and you women, / we forswear our selves at the beginning of an Amour, / you, as long as it lasts. /
Enter Sir Jaspar Fidget, and old Lady Squeamish.
Oh my Lady Fidget, was this your cunning, to / come to Mr. Horner without me; but you have been no / where else I hope. /
No, Sir Jaspar. /
[525] And you came straight hither Biddy. /
Yes indeed, Lady Grandmother. /
'Tis well, 'tis well, I knew when once they were / throughly acquainted with poor Horner, they'd ne'er be from / him; you may let her masquerade it with my Wife, and Horner, / and I warrant her Reputation safe. /
Enter Boy.
O Sir, here's the Gentleman come, whom you bid / me not suffer to come up, without giving you notice, with a / Lady too, and other Gentlemen--- /
Do you all go in there, whil'st I send 'em away, and / Boy, do you desire 'em to stay below 'til I come, which shall / be immediately. /
Yes Sir. /
You wou'd not take my advice to be gone home, / before your Husband came back, he'll now discover all, yet / pray my Dearest be perswaded to go home, and leave the / rest to my management, I'll let you down the back way. /
I don't know the way home, so I don't. /
My man shall wait upon you. /
No, don't you believe, that I'll go at all; what / are you weary of me already? /
No my life, 'tis that I may love you long, 'tis to secure / my love, and your Reputation with your Husband, / he'll never receive you again else. /
What care I, d'ye think to frighten me with / [550] that? I don't intend to go to him again; you shall be my / Husband now. /
I cannot be your Husband, Dearest, since you are / married to him. /
O wou'd you make me believe that---don't I / see every day at London here, women leave their first Husband, / and go, and live with other men as their Wives, pish, / pshaw, you'd make me angry, but that I love you so mainly. /
So, they are coming up---In again, /
in, I hear 'em: /
Exit Mistris
Pinchwife.
Well, a silly Mistriss, is like a weak place, soon got, soon lost, /
a man has scarce time for plunder; she betrays her Husband, /
first to her Gallant, and then her Gallant, to her Husband. /
Enter Pinchwife, Alithea, Harcourt, Sparkish, Lucy, and a Parson.
Come Madam, 'tis not the sudden change of your / dress, the confidence of your asseverations, and your false / witness there, shall perswade me, I did not bring you hither, / just now; here's my witness, who cannot deny it, since you / must be confronted---Mr. Horner, did not I bring this Lady / to you just now? /
Now must I wrong one woman for anothers sake, but / that's no new thing with me; for in these cases I am still on / the criminal's side, against the innocent. /
Pray, speak Sir. /
It must be so---I must be impudent, and try my / luck, impudence uses to be too hard for truth. /
[575] What, you are studying an evasion, or excuse for / her, speak Sir. /
No faith, I am something backward only, to speak / in womens affairs or disputes. /
She bids you speak. /
Ay, pray Sir do, pray satisfie him, /
Then truly, you did bring that Lady to me just now, /
O ho--- /
How Sir--- /
How, Horner! /
What mean you Sir, I always took you for a man of / Honour? /
Ay, so much a man of Honour, that I must save my / Mistriss, I thank you, come what will on't. /
So if I had had her, she'd have made me believe, the / Moon had been made of a Christmas pye. /
Now cou'd I speak, if I durst, and 'solve the Riddle, / who am the Author of it. /
O unfortunate Woman! a combination against my / Honour, which most concerns me now, because you share in / my disgrace, Sir, and it is your censure which I must now suffer, / that troubles me, not theirs. /
Madam, then have no trouble, you shall now see 'tis / possible for me to love too, without being jealous, I will not / only believe your innocence my self, but make all the world / [600] believe it--- / Horner I must now be concern'd for this Ladies / Honour. /
And I must be concern'd for a Ladies Honour too. /
This Lady has her Honour, and I will protect it. /
My Lady has not her Honour, but has given it me to / keep, and I will preserve it. /
I understand you not /
I wou'd not have you. /
What's the matter with 'em all /
Come, come, Mr. Horner, no more disputing, / here's the Parson, I brought him not in vain. /
No Sir, I'll employ him, if this Lady please. /
How, what d'ye mean? /
Ay, what does he mean? /
Why, I have resign'd your Sister to him, he has my / consent. /
But he has not mine Sir, a womans injur'd Honour, / no more than a man's, can be repair'd or satisfied by any, / but him that first wrong'd it; and you shall marry her / presently, or--- /
Enter to them Mistress Pinchwife.
O Lord, they'll kill poor Mr. Horner, besides / he shan't marry her, whilest I stand by, and look on, I'll not / lose my second Husband so. /
What do I see? /
[625] My Sister in my cloaths! /
Ha! /
Nay, pray now don't quarrel about finding work /
[Page 98]
for the Parson, he shall marry me to Mr. Horner; for now I /
believe, you have enough of me. /
Damn'd, damn'd loving Changeling. /
Pray Sister, pardon me for telling so many lyes / of you. /
I suppose the Riddle is plain now. /
No, that must be my work, good Sir, hear me. /
I will never hear woman again, but make 'em all / silent, thus--- /
No, that must not be. /
You then shall go first, 'tis all one to me. /
Hold--- /
Enter Sir Jaspar Fidget, Lady Fidget, Lady Squeamish, Mrs. Dainty Fidget, Mrs. Squeamish.
What's the matter, what's the matter, pray what's / the matter Sir, I beseech you communicate Sir. /
Why my Wife has communicated Sir, as your / Wife may have done too Sir, if she knows him Sir--- /
Pshaw, with him, ha, ha, he. /
D'ye mock me Sir, a Cuckold is a kind of a wild / Beast, have a care Sir--- /
No sure, you mock me Sir---he cuckold you! / it can't be, ha, ha, he, why, I'll tell you Sir. /
I tell you again, he has whor'd my Wife, and / [650] yours too, if he knows her, and all the women he comes / near; 'tis not his dissembling, his hypocrisie can wheedle / me. /
How does he dissemble, is he a Hypocrite? nay / then---how---Wife---Sister is he an Hypocrite? /
An Hypocrite, a dissembler, speak young / Harlotry, speak how? /
Nay then---O my head too---O thou libinous / Lady! /
O thou Harloting, Harlotry, hast thou / don't then? /
Speak good Horner, art thou a dissembler, a Rogue? / hast thou--- /
Soh--- /
I'll fetch you off, and her too, if she will but hold / her tongue. /
Canst thou? I'll give thee--- /
Pray have but patience to hear me Sir, / who am the unfortunate cause of all this confusion, your Wife / is innocent, I only culpable; for I put her upon telling you / all these lyes, concerning my Mistress, in order to the breaking / off the match, between Mr. Sparkish and her, to make / way for Mr. Harcourt. /
Did you so eternal Rotten-tooth, then it seems my / Mistress was not false to me, I was only deceiv'd by you, brother / [675] that shou'd have been, now man of conduct, who is a / frank person now, to bring your Wife to her Lover--- / ha--- /
I assure you Sir, she came not to Mr. Horner out of / love, for she loves him no more--- /
Hold, I told lyes for you, but you shall tell none / for me, for I do love Mr. Horner with all my soul, and no / body shall say me nay; pray don't you go to make poor Mr. / Horner believe to the contrary, 'tis spitefully done of you, / I'm sure. /
Peace, Dear Ideot. /
Nay, I will not peace. /
Not 'til I make you. /
Enter Dorilant, Quack.
Horner, your Servant, I am the Doctors Guest, he / must excuse our intrusion. /
But what's the matter Gentlemen, for Heavens / sake, what's the matter? /
Oh 'tis well you are come---'tis a censorious world /
we live in, you may have brought me a reprieve, or else I /
had died for a crime, I never committed, and these innocent /
[Page 100]
Ladies had suffer'd with me, therefore pray satisfie these /
worthy, honourable, jealous Gentlemen /
[Whispers.
---that--- /
O I understand you, is that all---Sir Jasper, by /
heavens and upon the word of a Physician /
[Whispers to Sir
Jasper.
[700] Sir,--- /
Nay I do believe you truly---pardon me my / virtuous Lady, and dear of honour. /
What then all's right again. /
Ay, ay, and now let us satisfie / him too. /
An Eunuch! pray no fooling with me. /
I'le bring half the Chirurgions in Town to swear it. /
They---they'l sweare a man that bled to / death through his wounds died of an Apoplexy. /
Pray hear me Sir---why all the Town has / heard the report of him. /
But does all the Town believe it. /
Pray inquire a little, and first of all these. /
I'm sure when I left the Town he was the lewdest / fellow in't. /
I tell you Sir he has been in France since, pray ask / but these Ladies and Gentlemen, your friend Mr. Dorilant, / Gentlemen and Ladies, han't you all heard the late sad report / of poor Mr. Horner. /
Ay, ay, ay. /
Why thou jealous Fool do'st thou doubt it, he's an / errant French Capon. /
'Tis false Sir, you shall not disparage poor Mr. / Horner, for to my certain knowledge--- /
[725] O hold--- /
Stop her mouth--- /
Upon my honour Sir, 'tis as true. /
D'y think we would have been seen in his company--- /
Trust our unspotted reputations with him! /
This you get, and we too, by trusting your /
[Page 101]
secret to a fool--- /
Peace Madam,---[Aside to Quack. well Doctor is not this a good / design that carryes a man on unsuspected, and brings him off / safe.--- /
Well, if this were true, but my Wife--- /
Come Brother your Wife is yet innocent you see, but / have a care of too strong an imagination, least like an over-concern'd / timerous Gamester by fancying an unlucky cast / it should come, Women and Fortune are truest still to those / that trust 'em. /
And any wild thing grows but the more fierce and / hungry for being kept up, and more dangerous to the Keeper. /
There's doctrine for all Husbands Mr. Harcourt. /
I edifie Madam so much, that I am impatient till I / am one. /
And I edifie so much by example I will never be one. /
And because I will not disparage my parts I'le ne're / be one. /
And I alass can't be one. /
[750] But I must be one---against my will to a / Country-Wife, with a Country-murrain to me. /
And I must be a Country Wife still too I find, / for I can't like a City one, be rid of my musty Husband and / doe what I list. /
Now Sir I must pronounce your Wife Innocent, / though I blush whilst I do it, and I am the only man by her / now expos'd to shame, which I will straight drown in Wine, / as you shall your suspition, and the Ladies troubles we'l divert / with a Ballet, Doctor where are your Maskers. /
Indeed she's Innocent Sir, I am her witness, and her / end of coming out was but to see her Sisters Wedding, and / what she has said to your face of her love to Mr. Horner was / but the usual innocent revenge on a Husbands jealousie, was / it not Madam speak--- /
Since you'l have me tell more /
lyes--- /
Aside to Lucy
and Horner.
[Page 102]
Yes indeed Budd. /
A Dance of Cuckolds.
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