William Congreve

Love for Love





Source text for this digital edition:
Congreve, William. Love for Love. In: Salgado, Gamini (ed.) Three Restoration Comedies. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1968, 258-365.
Digital text editor for EMOTHE:
  • Tronch Pérez, Jesus

Note on this digital edition

Reproduced with kind permission by Fenella Copplestone.

With the support of research project GVAICO2016-094, funded by Generalitat Valenciana.




Dramatis Personae

SIR SAMPSON LEGEND father to Valentine and Ben
VALENTINE fallen under his father's displeasure by his expensive way of lining, in love with Angelica
SCANDAL his friend, a free speaker
TATTLE a half-witted beau, vain of his amours, yet valuing himself for secrecy
BEN Sir Sampson's younger son, half home-bred and half sea-bred, designed to marry Miss Prue
FORESIGHT an illiterate old fellow, peevish and positive, superstitious, and pretending to understand astrology, palmistry, physiognomy, omens, dreams, etc., uncle to Angelica
JEREMY servant to Valentine
TRAPLAND a scrivener
BUCKRAM a lawyer
ANGELICA niece to Foresight, of a considerable fortune in her own hands
MRS FORESIGHT second wife to Foresight
MRS FRAIL sister to Mrs Foresight, a woman of the town
MISS PRUE daughter to Foresight by a former, a silly, awkward country girl
NURSE to Miss (Prue)
JENNY maid to Angelica
A Steward, Officers, Sailors, and several Servants

LONDON


ACT ONE

SCENE ONE

Valentine in this chamber reading. Jeremy waiting. Several books upon the table.

Valentine
1Jeremy.

Jeremy
2Sir.

Valentine
3Here, take away; I'll walk a turn, and digest what I have read.

Jeremy
4[aside, and taking away the books] You'll grow devilish fat upon this paper diet.

Valentine
5And d'ye hear, go you to breakfast. –There's a page doubled down in Epictetus that is a feast for an emperor.

Jeremy
6Was Epictetus a real cook, or did he only write receipts?

Valentine
7Read, read, sirrah, and refine your appetite. Learn to live upon instruction; feast your mind, and mortify your flesh; read, and take your nourishment in at your eyes; shut up your mouth and chew the cud of understanding. So Epictetus advises.

Jeremy
8O Lord! I have heard much of him when I waited upon a gentleman at Cambridge. Pray what was that Epictetus?

Valentine
9A very rich man –not worth a groat.

Jeremy
10Humph, and so he has made a very fine feast where there is nothing to be eaten.

Valentine
11Yes.

Jeremy
12Sir, you're a gentleman, and probably understand this fine feeding. But if you please, I had rather be at board wages. Does your Epictetus, or your Seneca here, or any of these poor rich rogues, teach you how to pay your debts without money? Will they shut up the mouths of your creditors? Will Plato be bail for you? Or Diogenes, because he understands confinement, and lived in a tub, go to prison for you? 'Slife sir, what do you mean, to mew your self up here with three or four musty books in commendation of starving and poverty?

Valentine
13Why, sirrah, I have no money, you know it; and therefore resolve to rail at all that have. And in that I but follow the examples of the wisest and wittiest men in all ages; these poets and philosophers whom you naturally hate, for just such another reason; because they abound in sense, and you are a fool.

Jeremy
14Ay, sir, I am a fool, I know it. And yet, heav'n help me, I'm poor enough to be a wit. But I was always a fool, when I told you what your expenses would bring you to: your coaches and your liveries, your treats and your balls; your being in love with a lady that did nor care a farthing for you in your prosperity, and Mrsa keeping company with wits, that cared for nothing but your prosperity, and now when you are poor, hate you as much as they do one another.

Valentine
15Well, and now I am poor, I have an opportunity to be revenged on 'em all. I'll pursue Angelica with more love than ever, and appear more notoriously her admirer in this restraint than when I openly rivalled the rich fops that made court to her. So shall my poverty be a mortification to her pride, and perhaps make her compassionate that love which has principally reduced me to this lowness of fortune. And for the wits, I'm sure I'm in a condition to be even with them.

Jeremy
16Nay, your condition is pretty even with theirs, that's the truth on't.

Valentine
17I'll take some of their trade out of their hands.

Jeremy
18Now Heav'n of mercy continue the tax upon paper! You don't mean to write!

Valentine
19Yes, I do; I'll write a play.

Jeremy
20Hem! Sir, if you please to give me a small certificate of three lines –only to certify those whom it may concern that the bearer hereof, Jeremy Fetch by name, has for the space of sev'n years truly and faithfully served Valentine Legend Esq, and that he is not now turned away for any misdemeanour, but does voluntarily dismiss his master from any future authority over him–

Valentine
21No, sirrah, you shall live with me still.

Jeremy
22Sir, it's impossible –I may die with you, starve with you, or be damned with your works; but to live even three days, the life of a play, I no more expect it than to be canonized for a muse after my decease.

Valentine
23You are witty, you rogue. I shall want your help. I'll have you learn to make couplets to tag the ends of acts. D'ye hear, get the maids to crambo in an evening, and learn the knack of rhyming. You may arrive at the height of a song sent by an unknown hand, or a chocolate-house lampoon.

Jeremy
24But sir, is this the way to recover your father's favour? Why, Sir Sampson will be irreconcilable. If your younger brother should come from sea, he'd never look upon you again. You're undone, sir, you're ruined; you won't have a friend left in the world if you turn poet. Ah, pox confound that Will's coffee-house, it has ruined more young men than the Royal Oak Lottery. Nothing thrives that belongs to't. The man of the house would have been an alderman by this time with half the trade, if he had set up in the city. For my part, I never sit at the door that I don't get double the stomach that I do at a horse-race. The air upon Banstead-Downs is nothing to it for a whetter. Yet I never see it but the spirit of famine appears to me; sometimes like a decayed porter, worn out with pimping and carrying billet-doux and songs, not like other potters for hire, but for the jest's sake; now like a thin chairman, melted down to half his proportion with carrying a poet upon tick to visit some great fortune, and his fare to be paid him like the wages of sin, either at the day of marriage, or the day of death.

Valentine
25Very well, sir. Can you proceed?

Jeremy
26Sometimes like a bilked bookseller, with a meagre terrified countenance, that looks as if he had written for himself, or were resolved to turn author and bring the rest of his brethren into the same condition; and lastly, in the form of a worn-out punk, with verses in her hand, which her vanity had preferred to settlements, without a whole tatter to her tail, but as ragged as one of the muses, or as if she were carrying her linen to the paper-mill, to be converted into folio books of warning to all young maids not to prefer poetry to good sense, or lying in the arms of a needy wit before the embraces of a wealthy fool.

Enter Scandal.

Scandal
27What, Jeremy holding forth?

Valentine
28The rogue has, with all the wit he could muster up, been declaiming against wit.

Scandal
29Ay? Why then I'm afraid Jeremy has wit, for wherever it is, it's always contriving its own ruin.

Jeremy
30Why so I have been telling my master, sir. Mr Scandal, for Heaven's sake, sir, try if you can dissuade him from turning poet.

Scandal
31Poet! He shall turn soldier first, and rather depend upon the outside of his head than the lining. Why, what the devil! Has not your poverty made you enemies enough? Must you needs shew your wit to get more?

Jeremy
32Ay, more indeed, For who cares for anybody that has more wit than himself?

Scandal
33Jeremy speaks like an oracle. Don't you see how worthless great men and dull rich rogues avoid a witty man of small fortune? Why, he looks like writ of inquiry into their titles and estates, and seems commissioned by Heav'n to seize the better half.

Valentine
34Therefore I would rail in my writings, and be revenged.

Scandal
35Rail? At whom? The whole world? Impotent and vain! Who would die a martyr to sense in a country where the religion is folly? You may stand at bay a while, but when the full cry is against you, you won't have fair play for your life. If you can't be fairly run down by the hounds, you will be treacherously shot by the huntsmen. –No, turn pimp, flatterer, quack, lawyer, parson, be chaplain to an atheist, or stallion to an old woman, anything but poet. A modern poet is worse, more servile, timorous and fawning than any I have named: without you could retrieve the ancient honours of the name, recall the stage of Athens, and be allowed the force of open honest satire.

Valentine
36You are as inveterate against our poets as if your character had lately exposed upon the stage. Nay, I am not violently bent upon the trade. – [One knocks.] Jeremy, see who's there. Exit Jeremy. 37But tell me what you would me do. What do the world say of me, and of my forced confinement?

Scandal
38The world behaves itself as it used to do on such occasions; some pity you and condemn your father: others excuse him, and blame you. Only the ladies are merciful and wish you well, since love and pleasurable expense have been your greatest faults.

Enter Jeremy.

Valentine
39How now?

Jeremy
40Nothing new, sir. I have dispatched some half a dozen duns with as much dexterity as a hungry judge does causes at dinner-time.

Valentine
41What answer have you given 'em?

Scandal
42Patience, I suppose, the old receipt.

Jeremy
43No, faith, sir. I have put 'em off so long with patience and forbearance and other fair words that I was forced now to tell 'em in plain downright English –

Valentine
44What?

Jeremy
45That they should be paid.

Valentine
46When?

Jeremy
47Tomorrow.

Valentine
48And how the devil do you mean to keep your word?

Jeremy
49Keep it? Not at all; it has been so very much stretched that I reckon it will break of course by tomorrow, and nobody be surprised at the matter. – [Knocking] Again! Sir, if you don't like my negotiation, will you be pleased to answer these yourself?

Valentine
50See who they are. Exit Jeremy. 51But this, Scandal, you may see what it is to be great; Secretaries of State, presidents of the council, and generals of an army lead just such a life as I do: have just such crowds of visitants in a morning, all soliciting of past promises, which are but a civiller sort of duns, that lay claim to voluntary debts.

Scandal
52And you, like a true great man, having engaged their attendance and promised more than ever you intend to perform, are more perplexed to find evasions than you would be to invent the honest means of keeping your word and gratifying your creditors.

Valentine
53Scandal, learn to spare your friends, and do not provoke your enemies; this liberty of your tongue will one day bring a confinement on your body, my friend.

Re-enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
54O sir, there's Trapland the scrivener, with two suspicious fellows like lawful pads, that would knock a man down with pocket-tipstaves, and there's your father's steward, and the nurse with one of your children from Twitnam.

Valentine
55Pox on her, could she find no other time to fling my sins in my face? Here, give her this, [gives money] and bid her trouble me no more. A thoughtless two-handed whore, she knows my condition well enough, and might have overlaid the child a fortnight ago if she had had any forecast in her.

Scandal
56What, is it bouncing Margery and my godson?

Jeremy
57Yes, sir.

Scandal
58My blessing to the boy, with this token [gives money] of my love. And d'ye hear, bid Margery put more flocks in her bed, shift twice a week, and not work so hard, that she may not smell so vigorously. I shall take the air shortly.

Valentine
59Scandal, don't spoil my boy's milk. [To Jeremy] Bid Trapland come in. Exit Jeremy. 60If I can give that Cerberus a sop, I shall be at ret for one day. Enter Trapland and Jeremy. 61O Mr Trapland! My old friend! Welcome! Jeremy, a chair, quickly. A bottle of sack and a toast –fly! –a chair first.

Trapland
62A good morning to you Mr Valentine, and to you Mr Scandal.

Scandal
63The morning's a very good morning, if you don't spoil it.

Valentine
64Come, sit you down, you know his way.

Trapland
65 [sits] There is a debt, Mr Valentine, of £ 1,500, of pretty long standing –

Valentine
66I cannot talk about business with a thirsty palate. [To Jeremy] Sirrah, the sack.

Trapland
67And I desire to know what course you have taken for the payment.

Valentine
68Faith and troth, I am heartily glad to see you. My service to you. Fill, fill, to honest Mr Trapland, fuller.

Trapland
69Hold, sweetheart. This is not our business. My service to you, Mr Scandal – [drinks] – I have forborne as long –

Valentine
70T'other glass, and then we'll talk. Fill, Jeremy.

Trapland
71No more, in truth. I have forborne, I say–

Valentine
72Sirrah, fill when I bid you. And how does your handsome daughter? Come, a good husband to her.

[Drinks.]

Trapland
73Thank you: I have been out of this money –

Valentine
74Drink first. Scandal, why do you not drink?

[They drink.]

Trapland
75And in short, I can be put off no longer.

Trapland
76I was much obliged to you for your supply. It did me signal service in my necessity. But you delight in doing good. – Scandal, drink to me, my friend Trapland's health. An honester man lives not, nor one more ready to serve his friend in distress, tho' I say it to his face. Come, fill each man his glass.

Scandal
77What! I know Trapland has been a whoremaster, and loves a wench still. You never knew a whoremaster that was not an honest fellow.

Trapland
78Fie, Mr Scandal, you never knew –

Scandal
79What don't I know? I know the buxom black widow in the Poultry - £800 a year jointure, and £20,000 in money. Ahah! Old Trap!

Valentine
80Say you so, i'faith. Come, we'll remember the widow. I know whereabouts you are. Come, to the widow –

Trapland
81No more indeed.

Valentine
82What, the widow's health! Give it him –off with it. [They drink.] A lovely girl, i'faith; black sparkling eyes, soft pouting ruby lips! Better sealing there than a bond for a million, hah?

Trapland
83No, no, there's no such thing. We'd better mind our business. You're a wag.

Valentine
84No faith, we'll mind the widow's business, fill again. Pretty round heaving breasts, a Barbary shape, and a jut with her bum, would stir an anchoret. And the prettiest food! Oh, if a man could but fasten his eyes to her feet as they steal in and out and play at Bo-peep under her petticoats, ah, Mr Trapland?

Trapland
85Verily, give me a glass –you're a wag – and here's to the widow.

[Drinks.]

Scandal
86 [to Valentine] He begins to chuckle. Ply him close, or he'll relapse into a dun.

Enter Officer.

Officer
87By your leave, gentlemen. Mr Trapland, if we must do our office, tell us. We have half a dozen gentlemen to arrest in Pall Mall and Covent-Garden, and if we don't make haste the chair-men will be abroad and block up the chocolate-houses, and then our labour's lost.

Trapland
88Udso, that's true. Mr Valentine, I love mirth, but business must be done. Are you ready to –

Jeremy
89Sir, your father's steward says he comes to make proposals concerning your debts.

Valentine
90Bid him come in. Mr Trapland, send away your officer. You shall have an answer presently.

Trapland
91Mr Snaps, stay within call.

Exit Officer.
Enter Steward and whispers to Valentine.

Scandal
92Here's a dog now, a traitor in his wine. [To Trapland] Sirrah, refund the sack: Jeremy, fetch him some warm water, or I'll rip up his stomach, and go the shortest way to his conscience.

Trapland
93Mr Scandal, you are uncivil. I did not value your sack, but you cannot expect in again, when I have drunk it.

Scandal
94And how do you expect to have your money again, when a gentleman has spent it?

Valentine
95 [to Steward] You need say no more, I understand the conditions. They are very hard, but my necessity is very pressing. I agree to 'em. Take Mr Trapland with you, and let him draw the writing. – Mr Trapland, you know this man. He shall satisfy you.

Trapland
96Sincerely, I am loth to be thus pressing, but my necessity –

Valentine
97No apology, good Mr Scrivener, you shall be paid.

Trapland
98I hope you forgive me. My business requires –

Exeunt Steward, Trapland and Jeremy.

Scandal
99He begs pardon like a hangman at an execution.

Valentine
100But I have got a reprieve.

Scandal
101I am surprised. What, does your father relent?

Valentine
102No; he has sent me the hardest conditions in the world. You have heard of a booby brother of mine that was sent to sea three years ago? This brother, my father hears, is landed; whereupon he very affectionately sends me word, if I will make a deed of conveyance of my right to his estate after his death to my younger brother, he will immediately furnish me with four thousand pound to pay my debts and make my fortune. This was once proposed before, and I refused it; but the present impatience of my creditors for their money, and my own impatience of confinement and absence from Angelica, force me to consent.

Scandal
103A very desperate demonstration of your love to Angelica; and I think she has never given you any assurance of hers.

Valentine
104You know her temper; she never gave me any great reason either for hope or despair.

Scandal
105Women of her airy temper, as they seldom think before they act, so they rarely give us any light to guess at what they mean. But you have little reason to believe that a woman of this age, who has had an indifference four you in your prosperity, will fall in love with your ill fortune; besides, Angelica has a great fortune of her own, and great fortunes either expect another great fortune, or a fool.

Enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
106More misfortunes, sir.

Valentine
107What, another dun?

Jeremy
108No sir, but Mr Tattle is come to wait upon you.

Valentine
109Well, I can't help it. You must bring him up; he knows I don't go abroad.

Exit Jeremy.

Scandal
110Pox on him, I'll be gone.

Valentine
111No, prithee stay. Tattle and you should never be asunder; you are light and shadow, and shew one another. He is perfectly thy reverse both in humour and understanding, and as you set up for defamation, he is a mender of reputations.

Scandal
112A mender of reputations! Ay, just as he is a keeper of secrets, another virtue that he sets up for in the same manner. For the rogue will speak aloud in the posture of a whisper, and deny a woman's name while he gives you the marks of her person. He will forswear receiving a letter from her, and at the same time shew you her hand upon the superscription. And yet perhaps he has counterfeited the hand too, and sworn to a truth. But he hopes not be believed and refuses the reputation of a lady's favour, as a Doctor says "No" to a bishopric, only that it may be granted him. In short, he is a public professor of secrecy, and makes proclamation that he holds intelligence. –He's here.

Enter Tattle.

Tattle
113Valentine, good morrow, Scandal I am yours – that is, when you speak well of me.

Scandal
114That is, when I am yours; for while I am my own, or anybody's else, that will never happen.

Tattle
115How inhumane!

Valentine
116Why, Tattle, you need not be much concerned at anything that he says, for to converse with Scandal is to play Losing Loadum; you must lose a good name to him before you can win it for yourself.

Tattle
117But how barbarous that is, and how unfortunate for him, that the world shall think the better of any person for his calumniation! I thank heaven it has always been a part of my character to handle the reputation of others very tenderly.

Scandal
118Ay, such rotten reputations as you have to deal with are to be handled tenderly indeed.

Tattle
119Nay, but why rotten? Why should you say rotten, when you know not the persons of whom you speak? How cruel that is!

Scandal
120Not know 'em? Why, thou never hadst to do with anybody that did not stink to all the town.

Tattle
121Ha, ha, ha; nay, now you make a jest of it indeed. For there is nothing more known than that nobody knows anything of that nature of me. As I hope to be saved, Valentine, I never exposed a woman since I knew what woman was.

Valentine
122And yet you have conversed with several.

Tattle
123To be free with you, I have. I don't care if I own that. Nay more, I'm going to say a bold word now, I never could meddle with a woman that had to do with anybody else.

Scandal
124How!

Valentine
125Nay faith, I'm apt to believe him. Except her husband, Tattle.

Tattle
126Oh that –

Scandal
127What think you of that noble commoner, Mrs Drab?

Tattle
128Pooh, I know Madam Drab has made her brags in three or four places, that I said this and that, and writ to her, and did I know not what. But, upon my reputation, she did me wrong. Well, well, that was malice. But I know the bottom of it. She was bribed to that by one that we all know –a man too. Only to bring me into disgrace with a certain woman of quality –

Scandal
129Whom we all know.

Tattle
130No matter for that. Yes, yes, everybody knows. No doubt on't, everybody knows my secrets. But I soon satisfied the lady of my innocence. For I told her: Madam, says I, there are some persons who make it their business to tell stories and say this and that of one and t'other, and everything in the world, and, says I, if your Grace –

Scandal
131Grace!

Tattle
132O Lord, what have I said? My unlucky tongue!

Valentine
133Ha, ha, ha!

Scandal
134Why, Tattle, thou hast more impudence than one can in reason expect. I shall have an esteem for thee. Well, and –ha, ha, ha– well, go on, and what did you say to her Grace?

Valentine
135I confess this is something extraordinary.

Tattle
136Not a word I hope to be saved; an errant lapsus linguae. –Come, let's talk of something else.

Valentine
137Well, but how did you acquit yourself?

Tattle
138Pooh, pooh, nothing at all, I only rallied with you. A woman of ord'nary rank was a little jealous of me, and I told her something or other –faith, I know not what. – Come, let's talk of something else.

[Hums a song.]

Scandal
139Hang him, let him alone, he has a mind we should inquire.

Tattle
140Valentine, I supped last night with your mistress, and her uncle, Old Foresight: I think your father lies at Foresight's.

Valentine
141Yes.

Tattle
142Upon my soul, Angelica's a fine woman, and so is Mrs Foresight, and her sister Mrs Frail.

Scandal
143Yes, Mrs Frail is a very fine woman, we all know her.

Tattle
144Oh, that is not fair.

Scandal
145What?

Tattle
146To tell.

Scandal
147To tell what? Why, what do you know of Mrs Frail?

Tattle
148Who, I? Upon honour I don't know whether she be man or woman, but by the smoothness of her chin and roundness of her lips.

Scandal
149No?

Tattle
150No.

Scandal
151She says otherwise.

Tattle
152Impossible!

Scandal
153Yes faith. Ask Valentine else.

Tattle
154Why then, as I hope to be saved, I believe a woman only obliges a man to secrecy that she may have the pleasure of telling herself.

Scandal
155No doubt on't. Well, but has she done you wrong, or no? You have had her, ha?

Tattle
156Tho' I have more honour than to tell first, I have more manners than to contradict what a lady has declared.

Scandal
157Well, you own it?

Tattle
158I am strangely surprised! Yes, yes, I can't deny't, if she taxes me with it.

Scandal
159She'll be here by and by, she sees Valentine every morning.

Tattle
160How?

Valentine
161She does me the favour –I mean of a visit sometimes. I did think she had granted more to anybody.

Scandal
162Nor I, faith. But Tattle does not use to belie a lady; it is contrary to his character. How one may be deceived in a woman, Valentine!

Tattle
163Nay, what do you mean, gentlemen?

Scandal
164I'm resolved I'll ask her.

Tattle
165O barbarous! Why, did you not tell me –

Scandal
166No, you told us.

Tattle
167And bid me ask Valentine?

Valentine
168What did I say? I hope you won't bring me to confess an answer when you never asked me the question.

Tattle
169But, gentlemen, this is the most inhumane proceeding.

Valentine
170Nay, if you have known Scandal thus long, and cannot avoid such a palpable decoy as this was, the ladies have a fine time whose reputations are in your keeping.

Enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
171Sir, Mrs Frail has sent to know if you are stirring.

Valentine
172Shew her up when she comes.

Exit Jeremy.

Tattle
173I'll be gone.

Valentine
174You'll meet her.

Tattle
175Have you not a back way?

Valentine
176If there were, you have more discretion than to give Scandal such an advantage. Why, your running away will prove all that he can tell her.

Tattle
177Scandal, you will not be so ungenerous. – Oh, I shall lose my reputation of secrecy for ever –I shall never be received but upon public days, and my visits will never be admitted beyond a drawing-room. I shall never see a bedchamber again, never be locked in a closer, nor run behind a screen or under a table; never be distinguished among the waiting-women by the name of Trusty Mr Tattle more. You will not be so cruel?

Valentine
178Scandal, have pity on him, he'll yield to any conditions.

Tattle
179Any, any terms.

Scandal
180Come then, sacrifice half a dozen women of good reputation to me presently. Come, where are you familiar? And see that they are women of quality too, the first quality.

Tattle
181'Tis very hard. Won't a baronet's lady pass?

Scandal
182No, nothing under a Right Honourable.

Tattle
183O inhumane! You don't expect their names?

Scandal
184No, their titles shall serve.

Tattle
185Alas, that's the same thing. Pray spare me their titles –I'll describe their persons.

Scandal
186Well, begin then. But take notice, if you are so ill a painter that I cannot know the person by your picture of her, you must be condemned, like other bad painters, to write the name at the bottom.

Tattle
187Well, first then – Enter Mrs Frail. 188O unfortunate! she's come already; will you have patience till another time – I'll double the number.

Scandal
189Well, on that condition. Take heed you don't fail me.

Mrs Frail
190Hey-day! I shall get a fine reputation by coming to see fellows in a morning. Scandal, you devil, are you here too? Oh Mr Tattle, everything is safe with you, we know.

Scandal
191Tattle?

Tattle
192Mum – O madam, you do me too much honour.

Valentine
193Well Lady Galloper, how does Angelica?

Mrs Frail
194Angelica? Manners!

Valentine
195What, you will allow an absent lover –

Mrs Frail
196No, I'll allow a lover present with his mistress to be particular. But otherwise I think his passion ought to give place to his manners.

Valentine
197But what if he have more passion than manners?

Mrs Frail
198Then let him marry and reform.

Valentine
199Marriage indeed may qualify the fury of his passion, but it very rarely mends a man's manners.

Mrs Frail
200You are the most mistaken in the world. There is no creature perfectly civil but a husband. For in a little time he grows only rude to his wife, and that is the highest good breeding, for it begets his civility to other people. Well, I'll tell you news; but I suppose you hear your brother Benjamin is landed. And my brother Foresight's daughter is come out of the country –I assure you, there's a match talked of by the old people. Well, if he be but as great a sea beast as she is a land monster, we shall have a most amphibious breed. The progeny will be all otters: he has been bred at sea, and she has never been out of the country.

Valentine
201Pox take 'em, their conjunction bodes no good, I'm sure.

Mrs Frail
202Now you talk of conjunction, my brother Foresight has cast both their nativities, and prognosticates an Admiral and an eminent Justice of the Peace to be the issue-male of their two bodies; 'tis the most superstitious old fool! He would have persuaded me that this was an unlucky day, and would not let me come abroad. But I invented a dream, and sent him to Artimodorus for interpretation, and so stole out to see you. Well, and what will you give me now? Come, I must have something.

Valentine
203Step into the next room and I'll give you something.

Scandal
204Ay, we'll all give you something.

Mrs Frail
205Well, what will you all give me?

Valentine
206Mine's a secret.

Mrs Frail
207I thought you would give me something that would be a trouble to you to keep.

Valentine
208And Scandal shall give you a good name.

Mrs Frail
209That's more than he has for himself. And what will you give me, Mr Tattle?

Tattle
210I? My soul, madam.

Mrs Frail
211Pooh, no, I thank you. I have enough to do to take care of my own. Well, but I'll come and see you one of these mornings. I hear you have a great many pictures.

Tattle
212I have a pretty good collection at your service, some originals.

Scandal
213Hang him, he has nothing but the Seasons and the Twelve Caesars, paltry copies, and the Five Senses, as ill represented as they are in himself. And he himself is the only original you will see these.

Mrs Frail
214Ay, but I hear he has a closet of beauties.

Scandal
215Yes, all that have done him favours, if you will believe him.

Mrs Frail
216Ay, let me see those, Mr Tattle.

Tattle
217Oh, madam, those are sacred to love and contemplation. No man but the painter and myself was ever blest with the sight.

Mrs Frail
218Well, but a woman –

Tattle
219Nor woman, till she consented to have her picture there too, for then she is obliged to keep the secret.

Scandal
220No, no. Come to me if you would see pictures.

Mrs Frail
221You?

Scandal
222Yes faith, I can shew you your own picture and most of your acquaintance to the life, and as like as at Knellers.

Mrs Frail
223O lying creature! Valentine, does not he lie? I can't believe a word he says.

Valentine
224No indeed, he speaks truth now. For as Tattle has pictures of all that have granted him favours, he has the pictures of all that have refused him –if satires, descriptions, characters and lampoons are pictures.

Scandal
225Yes, mine are most in black and white. And yet there are some set out in their true colours, both men and women. I can shew you Pride, Folly, Affectation, Wantonness, Inconstancy, Covetousness, Dissimulation, Malice, and Ignorance, all in one piece. Then I can shew you Lying, Foppery, Vanity, Cowardice, Bragging, Lechery, Impotence and Ugliness in another piece; and yet one of these is a celebrated beauty, and t'other a profess'd beau. I have paintings too, some pleasant enough.

Mrs Frail
226Come, let's hear 'em.

Scandal
227Why, I have a beau in a bagnio, cupping for a complexion, and sweating for a shape.

Mrs Frail
228So.

Scandal
229Then I have a lady burning of brandy in a cellar with a hackney coachman.

Mrs Frail
230O devil! Well, but that story is not true.

Scandal
231I have some hieroglyphics too. I have a lawyer with a hundred hands, two heads and but one face; a divine with two faces and one head; and I have a soldier with his brains in his belly and his heart where his head should be.

Mrs Frail
232And no head?

Scandal
233No head.

Mrs Frail
234Pooh, this is all invention. Have you ne'er a poet?

Scandal
235Yes, I have a poet weighing words, and selling praise for praise, and a critic picking his pocket. I have another large piece too, representing a school where there are huge proportioned critics, with long wigs, laced coats, Steinkirk cravats, and terrible faces, with cat-calls in their hands, and horn-books about their necks. I have many more of this kind, very well painted, as you shall see.

Mrs Frail
236Well, I'll come, if it be only to disprove you.

Enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
237Sir, here's the steward again from your father.

Valentine
238I'll come to him. Will you give me leave? I'll wait on you again presently.

Mrs Frail
239No, I'll be gone. Come, who squires me to the Exchange? I must call my sister Foresight there.

Scandal
240I will. I have a mind to your sister.

Mrs Frail
241Civil!

Tattle
242I will, because I have a tender for your ladyship.

Mrs Frail
243That's somewhat the better reason, to my opinion.

Scandal
244Well, if Tattle entertains you, I have the better opportunity to engage your sister.

Valentine
245Tell Angelica I am about making hard conditions to come abroad and be at liberty to see her.

Scandal
246I'll give an account of you and your proceedings. If indiscretion be a sign of love, you are the most a lover of anybody that I know. You fancy that parting with your estate will help you to your mistress. In my mind he is a thoughtless adventurer,
247
Who hopes to purchase wealth, by selling land,
248
Or win a mistress with a losing hand.

Exeunt.
THE END OF THE FIRST ACT

ACT TWO

SCENE ONE

A room in Foresight's house.
Foresight and Servant.

Foresight
249Hey-day! What, are all the women of my family abroad? Is not my wife come home, nor my sister, nor my daughter?

Servant
250No, sir.

Foresight
251Mercy on us, what can be meaning of it? Sure the moon is in all her fortitudes. Is my niece Angelica at home?

Servant
252Yes, sir.

Foresight
253I believe you lie, sir.

Servant
254Sir?

Foresight
255I say you lie, sir. It is impossible that anything should be as I would have it; for I was born, sir, when the crab was ascending, and all my affairs go backward.

Servant
256I can't tell indeed, sir.

Foresight
257No, I know you can't, sir. But I can tell, sir, and foretell, sir. Enter Nurse. 258Nurse, where's your young mistress?

Nurse
259Wee'st heart, I know not, they're none of 'em come home yet. Poor child, I warrant she's fond o' seeing the town. Marry, pray Heav'n they ha'given her any dinner. Good lack-a-day! Ha, ha, ha! O strange! I'll vow and swear now. Ha, ha, ha! Marry, and did you ever see the like?

Foresight
260Why, how now, what's the matter?

Nurse
261Pray Heav'n send your worship good luck, marry, and amen with all my heart, for you have put on one stocking with the wrong side outward.

Foresight
262Ha, how? Faith and troth I'm glad of it, and so I have that may be good luck in troth, in troth it may, very good luck. Nay I have had some omens: I got out of bed backwards too this morning, without premeditation; pretty good that too. But then I stumbled coming down stairs, and met a weasel; bad omens those. Some bad, some good, our lives are chequer'd. Mirth and sorrow, want and plenty, night and day, make up our time. –But in troth I am pleas'd at my stocking, very well pleas'd at my stocking. –Oh, here's my niece! Enter Angelica. 263Sirrah, go tell Sir Sampson Legend I'll wait on him, if he's at leisure – 'tis now three a clock, a very good hour for business; Mercury governs this hour.

Exit Servant.

Angelica
264Is not it a good hour for pleasure too? Uncle, pray lend me your coach, mine's out of order.

Foresight
265What, would you be gadding too? Sure all females are mad today. It is of evil portent, and bodes mischief to the master of a family. I remember an old prophecy written by Messahalah the Arabian, and thus translated by a Reverend Buckinghamshire Bard.
266
When housewifes all the house forsake,
267
And leave good man to brew and bake,
268
Withouten guile, then be it said,
269
That house doth stand upon its head;
270
And when the head is set in grond,
271
Ne marl if it be fruitful fond.
272Fruitful, the head fruitful, that bodes horns; the fruit of the head is horns. Dear niece, stay at home, for by the head of the house is meant the husband. The prophecy needs no explanation.

Angelica
273Well, but I can neither make you a cuckold, uncle, by going abroad, nor secure you from being one by staying at home.

Foresight
274Yes, yes. While there's one woman left, the prophecy is not in full force.

Angelica
275But my inclinations are in force. I have a mind to go abroad, and if you won't lend me your coach, I'll take a hackney, or a chair, and leave you erect a scheme, and find who's in conjunction with your wife. Why don't you keep her at home, if you're jealous when she's abroad? You know my aunt is a little retrograde (as you call it) in her nature. Uncle, I'm afraid you are not lord of the ascendant, ha, ha, ha.

Foresight
276Well, jill-flirt, you are very pert, and always ridiculing that celestial science.

Angelica
277Nay, uncle, don't be angry. If you are, I'll reap up all your false prophecies, ridiculous dreams, and idle divinations. I'll swear you are a nuisance to the neighbourhood. What a bustle did you keep against the last invisible eclipse, laying in provision as 'twere for a siege! What a world of fire and candle, matches and tinderboxes did you purchase! One would have thought we were ever after to live underground, or at least making a voyage to Greenland, to inhabit there all the dark season.

Foresight
278Why, you malapert slut –

Angelica
279Will you lend me your coach, or I'll go on. Nay, I'll declare how you prophesied popery was coming, only because the butler had mislaid some of the Apostle spoons, and thought they were lost. Away went religion and spoonmeat together. –Indeed, uncle, I'll indite you for a wizard.

Foresight
280How, hussy? Was there ever such a provoking minx?

Nurse
281O merciful Father, how she talks!

Angelica
282Yes, I can make oath of your unlawful midnight practices; you and the old nurse there.

Nurse
283Marry, Heaven defend –I at midnight practices! O Lord, what's here to do? I in unlawful doings with my master's worship! Why, did you ever hear the like now? Sir, did ever I do any thing of your midnight concerns but warm your bed and tuck you up, and set the candle and your tobacco box and your urinal by you, and now and then rub the soles of your feet? –O Lord, I!

Angelica
284Yes, I saw you together, through the key-hole of the closet one night, like Saul and the Witch of Endor, turning the sieve and shears, and pricking your thumbs to write poor innocent servants' names in blood about a little nutmeg grater which she had forgot in the caudle-cup. Nay, I know something worse, if I would speak of it.

Foresight
285I defie you, hussy; but I'll remember this, I'll be revenged on you, cockatrice; I'll hamper you. You have your fortune in your own hands, but I'll find a way to make your lover, your prodigal spendthrift gallant, Valentine, pay for all, I will.

Angelica
286Will you? I care not, but all shall out then. Look to it, nurse. I can bring witness that you have a great unnatural teat under your left arm, and he another, and that you suckle a young devil in the shape of a tabby cat turns, I can.

Nurse
287A teat, a teat, I an unnatural teat! O the false slanderous thing; feel here, if I have anything but like another Christian, [crying] or any teats, but two that ha'n't given suck this thirty years.

Foresight
288I will have patience, since it is the will of the stars I should be thus tormented. This is the effect of the malicious conjunctions and oppositions in the third house of my nativity. There the curse of kindred was foretold. But I will have my doors locked up. I'll punish you. Not a man shall enter my house.

Angelica
289Do, uncle, lock 'em up quickly before my aunt come home. You'll have a letter for alimony tomorrow morning. But let me be gone first, and then let no mankind come near the house, but converse with spirits and the celestial signs, the bull, and the ram, and the goat. Bless me! there are a great many horned beast among the twelve signs, uncle. But cuckolds go to Heav'n.

Foresight
290But there's but one virgin among the twelve signs, spitfire, but one virgin.

Angelica
291Nor there had not been that one, if she had had to do with anything but astrologers, uncle. That makes my aunt go abroad.

Foresight
292How, how? Is that the reason? Come, you know something. Tell me, and I'll forgive you. Do, good niece. Come, you shall have my coach and horses, faith and troth you shall. Does my wife complain? Come, I know women tell one another. She is young and sanguine, has a wanton hazel eye, and was born under Gemini, which may incline her to society. She has a mole upon her lip, with a moist palm, and an open liberality on the Mount of Venus.

Angelica
293Ha, ha, ha!

Foresight
294Do you laugh? Well, gentlewoman, I'll –But come, be a good girl, don't perplex your poor uncle, tell me. Won't you speak? Odd, I'll –

Enter Servant.

Servant
295Sir Sampson is coming down to wait upon you.

Angelica
296Goodbye, uncle. Call me a chair. I'll find out my aunt, and tell her she must not come home.

Exit Angelica and Servant.

Foresight
297I'm so perplexed and vexed, I am not fit to receive him. I shall scarce recover myself before the hour be past. Go, nurse, tell Sir Sampson I'm ready wait on him.

Nurse
298Yes, sir.

Foresight
299Well – Why, if I was born to be a cuckold, there's no more to be said.

Enter Sir Sampson Legend with a paper.

Sir Sampson
300Nor no more to be done, old boy, that's plain. Here 'tis, I have it in my hand, old Ptolomee. I'll make the ungracious prodigal know who begat him, I will, old Nostrodamus. What, I warrant my son thought nothing belonged to a father but forgiveness and affection. No authority, no correction, no arbitrary power, nothing to be done but for him to offend and me to pardon. I warrant you, if he danced till doomsday, he thought I was to pay the piper. Well, but here it is under black and white, signatum, sigillatum, and deliberatum; that as soon as my son Benjamin is arrived, he is to make over to him his right of inheritance. Where's my daughter that is to be? Hah! Old Merlin, body o' me, I'm so glad I'm revenged on this undutiful rogue.

Foresight
301Odso, let me see. Let me see the paper. Ay, faith and troth, here 'tis, if it will but hold. I wish thing were done, and the conveyance made. When was this signed, what hour? Odso, you should have consulted me for the time. Well, but we'll make haste.

Sir Sampson
302Haste, ay, ay, haste enough. My son Ben will be in town tonight. I have ordered my lawyer to draw up writings of settlement and jointure. All shall be done tonight. No matter for the time. Prithee, brother Foresight, leave superstition. Pox o'th'time! There's no time but the time present; there's no more to be said of what's past, and all that is to come will happen. If the sun shine by day, and the stars by night, why, we shall know one another's faces without the help of a candle, and that's all the stars are good for.

Foresight
303How, how, Sir Sampson, that all? Give me leave to contradict you, and tell you you are ignorant.

Sir Sampson
304I tell you I am wise, and sapiens dominabitur astris; there's Latin for you to prove it, and an argument to confound your Ephemeris. Ignorant! I tell you, I have travelled, old Fircu, and know the globe. I have seen the antipodes, where the sun rises at midnight and sets at noonday.

Foresight
305But I tell you, I have travelled, and travelled in the celestial spheres, know the signs and the planets, and their houses, can judge of motions direct and retrograde, of sextiles, quadrates, trines and oppositions, fiery trigons and aquatical trigons, know whether life shall be long or short, happy or unhappy, whether diseases are curable or incurable, if journeys shall be prosperous, undertakings successful, or goods stol'n recovered. I know –

Sir Sampson
306I know the length of the Emperor of China's foot, have kissed the Great Mogul's slipper, and rid a hunting upon an elephant with the Cham of Tartary. Body of me, I have made a cuckold of a king, and the present majesty of Bantam is the issue of these loins.

Foresight
307I know when travellers lie or speak truth, when they don't know it themselves.

Sir Sampson
308I have known an astrologer made a cuckold in the twinkling of a star, and seen a conjurer that could not keep the devil out of his wife's circle.

Foresight
309[aside] What, does he twit me with my wife too? I must be better informed of this. –Do you mean my wife, Sir Sampson? Tho' you made a cuckold of the King of Bantam, yet by the body of the sun –

Sir Sampson
310By the horns of the moon, you would say, Brother Capricorn.

Foresight
311Capricorn in your teeth, thou modern Mandevil; Ferdinand Mendez Pinto was but a type of thee thou liar of the first magnitude. Take back your paper of inheritance; send your son to sea again. I'll wed my daughter to an Egyptian mummy ere she shall incorporate with a contemner of sciences, and a defamer of virtue.

Sir Sampson
312[aside] Body of me, I have gone too far. I must not provoke honest Albumazar. [Aloud] An Egyptian mummy is an illustrious creature, my trusty hieroglyphic, and may have significations of futurity about him. Odsbud, I would my son were an Egiptian mummy for thy sake. What, thou art not angry for a jest, my good Haly? I reverence the sun, moon and stars with all my heart. What, I'll make thee a present of a mummy. Now I think on't, body of me, I have a shoulder of an Egyptian King, that I purloined from one of the pyramids, powdered with hieroglyphics. Thou shalt have it sent home to thy house, and make an entertainment for all the philomaths, and students in physic and astrology in and about London.

Foresight
313But what do you know of my wife, Sir Sampson?

Sir Sampson
314Thy wife is a constellation of virtues. She's the moon, and thou art the man in the moon. Nay, she is more illustrious than the moon, for she has her chastity without her inconstancy. 'S'bud, I was but in jest. Enter Jeremy. 315How now, who sent for you? Ha! What would you have?

Foresight
316Nay, if you were but in jest. Who's that fellow? I don't like his physiognomy.

[Jeremy whispers to Sir Sampson.]

Sir Sampson
317My son, sir; what son, sir? My son Benjamin, hoh?

Jeremy
318No, sir, Mr Valentine, my master. 'Tis the first time he has been abroad since his confinement, and he comes to pay his duty to you.

Sir Sampson
319Well, sir.

Enter Valentine.

Jeremy
320He is here, sir.

Valentine
321Your blessing, sir.

Sir Sampson
322You've had it already, sir, I think I sent it you today in a bill of four thousand pound. A great deal of money, brother Foresight.

Foresight
323Ay indeed, Sir Sampson, a great deal of money for a young man. I wonder what he can do with it!

Sir Sampson
324Body o' me, so do I. Hark ye, Valentine, if there is too much, refund the superfluity, do'st hear, boy?

Valentine
325Superfluity, sir, it will scarce pay my debts. I hope you will have more indulgence than to oblige me to those hard conditions which my necessity signed to.

Sir Sampson
326Sir, how I beseech you, what were you pleased to intimate concerning indulgence?

Valentine
327Why, sir, that you would not go to the extremity of the conditions, but release me at least from some part –

Sir Sampson
328Oh, sir, I understand you. That's all, ha?

Valentine
329Yes, sir, all that I presume to ask. But what you, out of fatherly fondness, will be pleased to add, shall be doubly welcome.

Sir Sampson
330No doubt of it, sweet sir, but your filial piety and my fatherly fondness would fit like two tallies. Here's a rogue, brother Foresight, makes a bargain under hand and seal in the morning, and would be released from it in the afternoon! Here's a rogue, dog, here's conscience and honesty! This is your wit now, this is the morality of your wits! You are a wit, and have been a beau, and may be a –Why sirrah, is it not here under hand and seal? Can you deny it?

Valentine
331Sir, I don't deny it.

Sir Sampson
332Sirrah, you'll be hanged. I shall live to see you go up Holborn Hill. Has he not a rogue's face? Speak, brother, you understand physiognomy. A hanging look to me; of all my boys the most unlike me. A has a damned Tyburn face, without the benefit o'the clergy.

Foresight
333Hum. Truly I don't care to discourage a young man. He has a violent death in his face; but I hope no danger of hanging.

Valentine
334Sir, is this usage for your son? For that old, weather-headed fool, I know how to laugh at him; but you, sir –

Sir Sampson
335You, sir, and you, sir! Why, who are you, sir?

Valentine
336Your son, sir.

Sir Sampson
337That's more than I know, sir, and I believe not.

Valentine
338Faith, I hope not.

Sir Sampson
339What, would you have your mother a whore? Did you ever hear the like! Did you ever hear the like! Body o' me –

Valentine
340I would have an excuse for your barbarity and unnatural usage.

Sir Sampson
341Excuse! Impudence! Why sirrah, mayn't I do what I please? Are not you my slave? Did not I beget you? And might not I have chosen whether I would have begot you or no? Ouns, who are you? Whence came you? What brought you into the world? How came you here, sir? Here, to stand here, upon those two legs, and look erect with than audacious face, hah! Answer me that! Did you come a volunteer into the world? Or did I beat up for you with the lawful authority of a parent, and press you to the service?

Valentine
342I know no more why I came than you do why you called me. But here I am, and if you don't mean to provide for me, I desire you would leave me as you found me.

Sir Sampson
343With all my heart. Come, uncase, strip, and go naked out of the world as you came into't.

Valentine
344My clothes are soon put off; but you must also deprive me of reason, thought, passions, inclinations, affections, appetites, senses, and the huge train of attendants that you begot along with me.

Sir Sampson
345Body o' me, what a many-headed monster have I propagated!

Valentine
346I am of myself, a plain easy simple creature, and to be kept at small expense, but the retinue that you gave me are craving and invincible. They are so many devils that you have raised, and will have employment.

Sir Sampson
347Ouns, what had I to do to get children? Can't a private man be born without all these followers? Why, nothing under an emperor should be born with appetites. Why, at this rate a fellow that has but a groat in his pocket may have a stomach capable of a ten shilling ordinary.

Jeremy
348Nay, that's as clear as the sun; I'll make oath of it before any justice in Middlesex.

Sir Sampson
349Here's a cormorant too. 'S'heart, this fellow was not born with you? I did not beget him, did I?

Jeremy
350By the provision that's made for me, you might have begot me too. Nay, and to tell your worship another truth, I believe you did, for I find I was born with those same whoreson appetites, too, that my master speaks of.

Sir Sampson
351Why, look you there now, I'll maintain it that by the rule of right reason this fellow ought to have been born without a palate. 'S'heart, what should he do with a distinguishing taste? I warrant now he'd rather eat a pheasant than a piece of poor John. And smell, now, why, I warrant he can smell, and loves perfumes above a stink. Why, there's it. And music, don't you love music, scoundrel?

Jeremy
352Yes, I have a reasonable good ear, sir, as to jigs and country dances and the like. I don't much matter your Solas or Sonatas, they give me the spleen.

Sir Sampson
353The spleen! Ha, ha, ha! A pox confound you – Solas and Sonatas? Ouns, whose son are you? How were you engendered, muckworm?

Jeremy
354I am by father, the son of a chairman; my mother sold oysters in winter and cucumbers in summer; and I came upstairs into the world, for I was born in a cellar.

Foresight
355By your looks, you should go upstairs out of the world too, friend.

Sir Sampson
356And if this rogue were anatomized now, and dissected, he has his vessels of digestion and concoction and so forth large enough for the inside of a cardinal, this son of a cucumber. These things are unaccountable and unreasonable. Body of me, why was not I a bear, that my cubs might have lived upon sucking their paws? Nature has been provident only to bears and spiders; the one has its nutriment in his own hands, and t'other spins his habitation out of his entrails.

Valentine
357Fortune was provident enough to supply all the necessities of my nature, if I had my right of inheritance.

Sir Sampson
358Again! Ouns han't you four thousand pound? If I had it again, I would not give thee a groat. What, wouldst thou have me turn pelican, and feed thee out of my own vitals? S'heart, live by your wits. You were always fond of the wits; now let's see if you have wit enough to keep yourself. Your brother will be in town tonight or tomorrow morning, and then look you perform covenants – and so your friend and servant. Come, brother Foresight.

Exeunt Sir Sampson and Foresight.

Jeremy
359I told what your visit would come to.

Valentine
360'Tis as much as I expected. I did not come to see him, I came to Angelica. But since she was gone abroad, it was easily turned another way, and at least looked well on my side. What's here? Mrs Foresight and Mrs Frail? They are earnest –I'll avoid 'em. Come this way, and go and enquire when Angelica will return.

Exeunt.
Enter Mrs Foresight and Mrs Frail.

Mrs Frail
361What have you to do watch me? 'S'life, I'll do what I please.

Mrs Foresight
362You will?

Mrs Frail
363Yes, marry will I. A great piece of business to go to Covent-Garden Square in a hackney coach and take a turn with one's friend.

Mrs Foresight
364Nay, two or three turns, I'll take my oath.

Mrs Frail
365Well, what if I took twenty? I'll warrant if you had been there, it had been only innocent recreation. Lord, where's the comfort of this life, if we can't have the happiness of conversing where we like?

Mrs Foresight
366But can't you converse at home? I own it, I think there's no happiness like conversing with an agreeable man. I don't quarrel at that, nor I don't think but your conversation was very innocent; but the place is public, and to be seen with a man in a hackney coach is scandalous. What if anybody else should have seen you alight as I did? How can anybody be happy while they're in perpetual fear of being seen and censured? Besides, it would not only reflect upon you, sister, but me.

Mrs Frail
367Pooh, here’s a clutter. Why should it reflect upon you? I don’t doubt but you have thought yourself happy in a hackney coach before now. If I had gone to Knightsbridge, or to Chelsea, or to Spring Garden, or Barn Elms with a man alone, something might have been said.

Mrs Foresight
368Why, was I ever in any of these places? What do you mean, sister?

Mrs Frail
369Was I? What do you mean?

Mrs Foresight
370You have been at a worse place.


Mrs Frail
371I at a worse place, and with a man!


Mrs Foresight
372I suppose you would not go alone to the World’s End.

Mrs Frail
373The World’s End! What, do you mean to banter me?


Mrs Foresight
374Poor innocent! You don’t know that there’s a place called the World’s End? I’ll swear you can keep your countenance purely, you’d make an admirable player.


Mrs Frail
375I’ll swear you have a great deal of impudence, and in my mind too much for the stage.


Mrs Foresight
376Very well, that will appear who has most. You never were at the World’s End?


Mrs Frail
377No.


Mrs Foresight
378You deny it positively to my face?


Mrs Frail
379Your face, what’s your face?


Mrs Foresight
380No matter for that, it’s as good a face as yours.


Mrs Frail
381Not by a dozen years’ wearing. But I do deny it positively to your face then.


Mrs Foresight
382I’ll allow you now to find fault with my face; for I’ll swear your impudence has put me out of countenance. But look you here now, where did you lose this gold bodkin? O sister, sister!


Mrs Frail
383My bodkin!


Mrs Foresight
384Nay, ’tis yours, look at it.


Mrs Frail
385Well, if you go to that, where did you find this bodkin? O sister, sister! Sister every way!


Mrs Foresight
386[aside] O devil on't, that I could not discover her without betraying myself!

Mrs Frail
387I have heard gentlemen say, sister, that one should take great care when one makes a thrust in fencing, not to lie open oneself.

Mrs Foresight
388It's very true, sister. Well, since all's out, and as you say, since we are both wounded, let us do that is often done in duels, take care of one another, and grow better friends than before.

Mrs Frail
389With all my heart. Ours are but slight flesh wounds, and if we keep 'em from air, not at all dangerous. Well, give me your hand in token of sisterly secrecy and affection.

Mrs Foresight
390Here 'tis, with all my heart.

Mrs Frail
391Well, as an earnest of friendship and confidence, I'll acquaint you with a design that I have. To tell truth, and speak openly one to another, I'm afraid the world have observed us more than we have observed one another. You have a rich husband, and are provided for; I am at a loss, and have no great stock either of fortune or reputation, and therefore must look sharply about me. Sir Sampson has a son that is expected tonight, and by the account I have heard of his education can be no conjurer. The estate you know is to be made over to him. Now if I could wheedle him, sister, ha? You understand me?

Mrs Foresight
392I do, and will help you to the utmost of my power. And I can tell you one thing that falls out luckily enough; my awkard daughter-in-law, who you know is designed for his wife, is grown fond of Mr Tattle. Now if we can improve that, and make her have an aversion for the booby, it may go a great way towards his liking of you. Here they come together; and let us contrive some way or other to leave 'em together.

Enter Tattle and Miss Prue.

Miss Prue
393Mother, mother, mother, look you here.

Mrs Foresight
394Fie, fie, Miss, how you bawl! Besides, I have told you, you must call me mother.

Miss Prue
395What must I call you then? Are not you my father's wife?

Mrs Foresight
396Madam, you must say madam. By my soul, I shall fancy myself old indeed, to have this great girl call me mother. Well, but Miss, what are you so overjoyed at?

Miss Prue
397Look you here, cousin, here's a snuff-box; nay, there's snuff in't. Here, will you have any? Oh, good! How sweet it is! Tattle is all over sweet: his peruke is sweet, and his gloves are sweet, and his handkerchief is sweet, pure sweet, sweeter than roses. Smell him mother, madam, I mean. He gave me this ring for a kiss.

Tattle
398O fie, Miss, you must not kiss and tell.

Miss Prue
399Yes; I may tell my mother. And he says he'll give me something to make me smell so. Oh pray lend me your handkerchief. Smell, cousin; he says, he'll give me something that will make my smocks smell this way. Is not it pure? It's better than lavender mun. I'm resolved I won't let nurse put any more lavender among my smocks. Ha, cousin?

Mrs Frail
400Fie, Miss, amongst your linen, you must say. You must never say smock.

Miss Prue
401Why, it is not bawdy, is it cousin?

Tattle
402Oh, madam, you are too severe upon Miss. You must not find fault with her pretty simplicity, it becomes her strangely. Pretty Miss, don't let 'em persuade you out of your innocency.

Mrs Foresight
403Oh, demm you, toad. I wish you don't persuade her out of her innocency.

Tattle
404Who, I madam? O Lord, how cam your ladyship have such a thought? Sure you don't know me.

Mrs Frail
405Ah devil, sly devil. He's as close, sister, as a confessor. He think we don't observe him.

Mrs Foresight
406A cunning cur. How soon he could find out a fresh harmless creature and left us, sister, presently.

Tattle
407Upon reputation –

Mrs Foresight
408They're all so, sister, these men. They love to have the spoiling of a young thing, they are as fond of it as being first in the fashion or of seeing a new play the first day. I warrant it would break Mr Tattle's heart to think that anybody else should be beforehand with him.

Tattle
409O Lord, I swear I would not for the world.

Mrs Frail
410O hang you, who'll believe you? You'd be hanged before you'd confess. We know you. She's very pretty. Lord, what pure red and white! She looks so wholesome. Ne'er stir, I don't know, but I fancy, if I were a man –

Miss Prue
411How you love to jeer one, cousin.

Mrs Foresight
412Hark'ee, sister, by my soul the girl is spoiled already. D'ye think she'll ever endure a great lubberly tarpaulin? Gad, I warrant you she won't let him come near her, after Mr Tattle.

Mrs Frail
413O'my soul, I'm afraid nor. Eh! filthy creature, that smells all of pitch and tar! [To Tattle] Devil take you, you confounded toad! Why did you see her before she was married?

Mrs Foresight
414Nay, why did we let him? My husband will hang us. He'll think we brought 'em acquainted.

Mrs Frail
415Come, faith, let us be gone. If my brother Foresight should find us with them, he'd think so sure enough.

Mrs Foresight
416So he would. But then, leaving 'em together is as bad. And he's such a sly devil, he'll never miss an opportunity.

Mrs Frail
417I don't care; I won't be seen in't.

Mrs Foresight
418Well, if you should, Mr Tattle, you'll have a world to answer for, remember I wash my hands of it, I'm thoroughly innocent.

Exeunt Mrs Foresight and Mrs Frail.

Miss Prue
419What makes 'em go away, Mr Tattle? What do they mean, do you know?

Tattle
420Yes, my dear, I think I can guess. But hang me if I know the reason of it.

Miss Prue
421Come, must not we go too?

Tattle
422No, no, they don't mean that.

Miss Prue
423No! What then? What shall you and I do together?

Tattle
424I must make love to you, pretty Miss. Will you let me make love to you?

Miss Prue
425Yes, if you please.

Tattle
426[aside] Frank, egad, at least. What a pox does Mrs Foresight mean by this civility? Is it to make a fool of me? Or does she leave us together out of good morality, and do as she would be done by? Gad, I'll understand it so.

Miss Prue
427Well, and how will you make love to me? Come, I long to have you begin. Must I make love too? You must tell me how.

Tattle
428You must let me speak Miss, you must not speak first. I must ask you questions, and you must answer.

Miss Prue
429What, is it like the catechism? Come then, ask me.

Tattle
430De'e you think you can love me?

Miss Prue
431Yes.

Tattle
432Pooh, pox, you must not say yes already. I shan't care a farthing for you then in a twinkling.

Miss Prue
433What must I say then?

Tattle
434Why you must say no, or you believe not, or you can't tell.

Miss Prue
435Why, must I tell a lie then?

Tattle
436Yes, if you would be well-bred. All well-bred persons lie. Besides, you are a woman, you must never speak what you think. Your words must contradict your thoughts, but your actions may contradict your words. So, when I ask you if you can love me, you must say no, but you must love me too. If I tell you you are handsome, you must deny it, and say I flatter you. But you must think yourself more charming than I speak you, and like me, for the beauty which I say you have, as much as if I had it myself. If I ask you to kiss me, you must be angry, but you must not refuse me. If I ask you for more, you must be more angry, but more complying. And as soon as ever I make you say you'll cry out, you must be sure to hold your tongue.

Miss Prue
437O Lord, I swear this is pure. I like it better than our old-fashioned country way of speaking one's mind. And must not you lie too?

Tattle
438Hum –yes. But you must believe I speak truth.

Miss Prue
439O Gemeni! Well, I always had a great mind to tell lies, but they frighted me, and said it was a sin.

Tattle
440Well, my pretty creature, will you make me happy by giving me a kiss?

Miss Prue
441No, indeed, I'm angry at you.

[Runs and kisses him.]

Tattle
442Hold, hold, that's pretty well, but you should not have given it me, but have suffered me to take it.

Miss Prue
443Well, we'll do it again.

Tattle
444With all my heart. Now then, my little angel.

[Kisses her.]

Miss Prue
445Pish.

Tattle
446That's right. Again, my charmer.

[Kisses again.]

Miss Prue
447O fie, nay, now I can't abide you.

Tattle
448Admirable! That was as well as if you had been born and bred in Covent-Garden all the days of your life. And won't you shew me, pretty Miss, where your bed-chamber is?

Miss Prue
449No, indeed won't I. But I'll run there, and hide myself from you behind the curtains.

Tattle
450I'll follow you.

Miss Prue
451Ah, but I'll hold the door with both hands and be angry –and you shall push me down before you come in.

Tattle
452No, I'll come in first, and push you down afterwards.

Miss Prue
453Will you? Then I'll be more angry, and more complying.

Tattle
454Then I'll make you cry out.

Miss Prue
455Oh, but you shan't, for I'll hold my tongue.

Tattle
456O my dear apt scholar.

Miss Prue
457Well, now I'll run and make more haste than you.

[Exit Miss Prue.]

Tattle
458You shall not fly so fast as I'll pursue.

[Exit after her.]
THE END OF THE SECOND ACT

ACT THREE

SCENE ONE

A room in Foresight's house.
Enter Nurse.

Nurse
459Miss, Miss, Miss Prue. Mercy on me, marry and amen. Why, what's become of the child? Why Miss, Miss Foresight. Sure she has not locked herself up in her chamber, and gone to sleep, or to prayers. Miss, Miss! I hear her. Come to you father, child. Open the door. Open the door, Miss. I hear you cry husht. O Lord, who's there? [Peeps.] What's here to do? O the Father! a man with her! Why, Miss I say, God's my life, here's fine doings towards. O Lord, we're all undone. O you young harlotry! [Knocks.] Ods my life, won't you open the door? I'll come in the back way.

Exit.
Tattle and Miss Prue at the door.

Miss Prue
460O Lord, she's coming –and she'll tell my father. What shall I do now?

Tattle
461Pox take her! If she had stayed two minutes longer, I should have wished for her coming.

Miss Prue
462O dear, what shall I say? Tell me, Mr Tattle, tell me a lie.

Tattle
463There's no occasion for a lie; I could never tell a lie to no purpose. But since we have done nothing, we must say nothing, I think. I hear her. I'll leave you together, and come off as you can.

[Thrusts her in and shuts the door.]
Enter Valentine, Scandal, and Angelica.

Angelica
464You can't accuse me of inconstancy; I never told you that I love you.

Valentine
465But I can accuse you of uncertainty, for not telling me whether you did or no.

Angelica
466You mistake indifference for uncertainty; I never had concern enough to ask myself the question.

Scandal
467Nor good nature enough to answer him that did ask you, I'll say that for you, madam.

Angelica
468What, are you setting up for good nature?

Scandal
469Only for the affectation of it, as the women do for ill nature.

Angelica
470Persuade your friend that it is all affectation.

Valentine
471I shall receive no benefit from the opinion, for I know no effectual difference between continued affectation and reality.

Tattle
472 [coming up, aside to Scandal] Scandal, are you in private discourse, anything of secrecy?

Scandal
473Yes, but I dare trust you. We were talking of Angelica's love for Valentine. You won't speak of it?

Tattle
474No, no, not a syllable. I know that's a secret, for it's whispered everywhere.

Scandal
475Ha, ha, ha!

Angelica
476What is, Mr Tattle? I heard you say something was whispered everywhere.

Scandal
477Your love of Valentine.

Angelica
478How!

Tattle
479No, madam, his love for your ladyship. Gad take me, I beg your pardon, for I never heard a word of your ladyship's passion till this instant.

Angelica
480My passion! And who told you of my passion, pray, sir?

Scandal
481 [to Tattle] Why, is the devil in you? Did not I tell it you for a secret?

Tattle
482Gadso, but I thought she might have been trusted with her own affairs.

Scandal
483Is that your discretion? Trust a woman with herself?

Tattle
484You say true. I beg your pardon, I'll bring all off. [To Angelica] It was impossible, madam, for me to imagine that a person of your ladyship's wit and gallantry could have so long received the passionate addresses of the accomplished Valentine, and yet remain insensible; therefore you will pardon me, if from a just weight of his merit, with your ladyship's good judgement, I formed the balance of a reciprocal affection.

Valentine
485O the devil, what damned costive poet has given thee this lesson of fustian to get by rote?

Angelica
486I dare swear you wrong him, it is his own. And Mr Tattle only judges of the success of others from the effects of his own merit. For certainly Mr Tattle was never denied anything in his life.

Tattle
487O Lord! Yes indeed madam, several times.

Angelica
488I swear I don't think 'tis possible.

Tattle
489Yes, I vow and swear I have. Lord, madam, I'm the most unfortunate man in the world, and the most cruelly used by the ladies.

Angelica
490Nay, now you're ungrateful.

Tattle
491No, I hope not. 'Tis as much ingratitude to own some favours as to conceal others.

Valentine
492There, now it's out.

Angelica
493I don't understand you now. I thought you had never asked anything but what a lady might modestly grant and you confess.

Scandal
494So faith, your business is done here. Now you may go brag somewhere else.

Tattle
495Brag! O heavens! Why, did I name anybody?

Angelica
496No; I suppose that is not in your power; but you would if you could, no doubt on't.

Tattle
497Not in my power, madam! What does your ladyship mean, that I have no woman's reputation in my power?

Scandal
498[aside] Ouns, why, you won't own it, will you?

Tattle
499Faith, madam, you're in the right. No more I have, as I hope to be saved. I never had it in my power to say anything a lady's prejudice in my life. For as I was telling you, madam, I have been the most unsuccessful creature living in things of that nature, and never had the good fortune to be trusted once with a lady's secret, not once.

Angelica
500No?

Valentine
501Not once, I dare answer for him.

Scandal
502And I'll answer for him, for I'm sure if he had he would have told me. I find, madam, you don't know Mr Tattle.

Tattle
503No indeed, madam, you don't know me at all, I find. For sure my intimate friends would have known.

Angelica
504Then it seems you would have told, if you had been trusted.

Tattle
505O pox, Scandal, that was too far put. Never have told particulars, madam. Perhaps I might have talked as of a third person, or have introduced an amour of my own, in conversation, by way of novel, but never have explained particulars.

Angelica
506But whence comes the reputation of Mr Tattle's secrecy, if he was never trusted?

Scandal
507Why thence it arises. The thing is proverbially spoken, but may be applied to him. As if we should say in general terms, he only is secret who never was trusted; a satirical proverb upon our sex. There's another upon yours: as she is chaste, who was never asked the question. That's all.

Valentine
508A couple of very civil proverbs, truly. 'Tis hard to tell whether the lady or Mr Tattle be the more obliged to you. For you found her virtue upon the backwardness of the men, and his secrecy upon the mistrust of the women.

Tattle
509Gad, it's very true, madam, I think we are obliged to acquit ourselves. And for my part –But your ladyship is to speak first.

Angelica
510Am I? Well, I freely confess I have resisted a great deal of temptation.

Tattle
511And egad, I have given some temptation that has not been resisted.

Valentine
512Good.

Angelica
513I cite Valentine here to declare to the court how fruitless he has found his endeavours, and to confess all his solicitations and my denials.

Valentine
514I am ready to plead not guilty for you, and guilty for myself.

Scandal
515So, why this is fair. Here's demonstration with a witness.

Tattle
516Well, my witnesses are not present, but I confess I have had favours from persons. But as the favours are numberless, so the persons are nameless.

Scandal
517Pooh, pox, this proves nothing.

Tattle
518No? I can shew letters, lockets, pictures and rings; and if there be occasion for witnesses, I can summon the maids at the chocolate houses, all the porters of Pall-Mall and Covent-Garden, the door-keepers at the Playhouse, the drawers at Locket's, Pontack's, the Rummer, Spring-Garden; my own landlady and valet de chambre, all who shall make oath that I receive more letters than the secretary's office, and that I have more vizor-masks to enquire for me than ever went to see the hermaphrodite or the naked prince. And it is notorious that in a country church once, an enquiry being made who I was, it was answered I was the famous Tattle, who had ruined so many women.

Valentine
519It was there, I suppose, you got the nickname of the Great Turk.

Tattle
520True: I was called Turk Tattle all over the parish. The next Sunday all the old women kept their daughters at home, and the parson had not half his congregation. He would have brought me into the Spiritual Court, but I was revenged upon him, for he had a handsome daughter whom I initiated into the science. But I repented it afterwards, for it was talked of in town. And a lady of quality that shall be nameless, in a raging fit of jealousy, came down in her coach and six horses and exposed herself upon my account. Gad, I was sorry for it with all my heart –you know whom I mean. You know where we raffled –

Scandal
521Mum, Tattle.

Valentine
522'Sdeath, are not you ashamed?

Angelica
523O barbarous! I never heard so insolent a piece of vanity. Fie, Mr Tattle, I'll swear I could not have believed it. Is this your secrecy?

Tattle
524Gadso, the heat of my story carried me beyond my discretion, as the heat of the lady's passion hurried her beyond her reputation. But I hope you don't know whom I mean; for there were a great many ladies raffled. Pox on't, now could I bite off my tongue.

Scandal
525No, don't; for then you'll tell us no more. Come, I'll recommend a song to upon the hint of my two proverbs, and I see one in the next room that will sing it.

[Goes to the door.]

Tattle
526For Heavn's sake, if you do guess, say nothing. Gad, I'm very unfortunate.

Re-enter Scandal, with one to sing.

Scandal
527Pray sing the first song in the last new play.

SONG
1
528
A nymph and a swain to Apollo once prayed,
529
The swain had been jilted, the nymph been betrayed.
530
Their intent was to try if his oracle knew
531
E'er a nymph that was chaste, or a swain that was true.
2
532
Apollo was mute, and had like't have been posed,
533
But sagely at length he this secret disclosed:
534
He alone won't betray in whom none will confide,
535
And the nymph may be chaste that has never been tried.

Exit Singer.
Enter Sir Sampson, Mrs Frail, Miss Prue and Servant.

Sir Sampson
536Is Ben come? Odso, my son Ben come? Odd, I'm glad on't. Where is he? I long to see him. Now, Mrs Frail, you shall see my son Ben. Body o' me, he's the hopes of my family. I ha'n't seen him these three years. I warrant he's grown. Call him in, bid him make haste. I'm ready to cry for joy.

Exit Servant.

Mrs Frail
537Now, Miss, you shall see husband.

Miss Prue
538[aside to Mrs Frail] Pish, he shall be none of my husband.

Mrs Frail
539Hush. Well he shan't, leave that to me. I'll beckon Mr Tattle to us.

Angelica
540Won't you stay and see your brother?

Valentine
541We are the twin stars, and cannot shine in one sphere; when he rises I must set. Besides, if I should stay, I don't know but my father in good nature may press one to the immediate signing the deed of conveyance of my estate, and I'll defer it as long as I can. Well, you'll come to a resolution.

Angelica
542I can't. Resolution must come to me, or I shall never have one.

Scandal
543Come, Valentine, I'll go with you; I've something in my head to communicate to you.

Exit Valentine and Scandal.

Sir Sampson
544What, is my son Valentine gone? What, is he sneaked off, and would not see his brother? There's an unnatural whelp! There's an ill-natures dog! What, were you here too, madam, and could not keep him? Could neither love, nor duty, nor natural affection oblige him? Odsbud, madam, have no more to say to him; he is not worth your consideration. The rogue has not a drachm of generous love about him. All interest, all interest. He's an undone scoundrel, and courts your estate. Body o' me, he does not care a doit for your person.

Angelica
545I'm pretty even with him, Sir Sampson; for if ever I could have liked anything in him, it should have been his estate too. But since that's gone, the bait's off, and the naked hook appears.

Sir Sampson
546Odsbud, well spoken! And you are a wiser woman than I thought you were. For most young women nowadays are to be tempted with a naked hook.

Angelica
547If I marry, Sir Sampson, I'm for a good estate with any man, and for any man with a good estate. Therefore if I were obliged to make a choice, I declare I'd rather have you than your son.

Sir Sampson
548Faith and troth, you're a wise woman, and I'm glad to hear you say so. I was afraid you were in love with the reprobate. Odd, I was sorry for you with all my heart. Hang him, mungrel! Cast him off, you shall see the rogue shew himself, and make love to some desponding cadua of fourscore for sustenance. Odd, I love see a young spendthrift forced to cling to an old woman for support, like ivy round a dead oak, faith I do. I love to see 'em hug and cotton together, like down upon a thistle.

Enter Ben Legend and Servant.

Ben
549Where's father?

Servant
550There, sir, his back's toward you.

Sir Sampson
551My son Ben! Bless thee, my dear boy. Body o' me, thou art heartily welcome.

Ben
552Thank you, father, and I'm glad to see you.

Sir Sampson
553Odsbud, and I'm glad to see thee. Kiss me, boy, kiss me again and again, dear Ben.

[Kisses him.]

Ben
554So, so, enough, father. Mess, I'd rather kiss these gentlewomen.

Sir Sampson
555And so thou shalt. Mrs Angelica, my son Ben.

Ben
556Forsooth, an you please. [Salutes her.] Nay, mistress, I'm not for dropping anchor here. About ship, i'faith. [Kisses Mrs Frail.] Nay, and you too, my little cock-boat. So!

[Kisses Miss Prue.]

Tattle
557Sir, you're welcome ashore.

Ben
558Thank you, thank you, friend.

Sir Sampson
559Thou hast been many a weary league, Ben, since I saw thee.

Ben
560Ey, ey, been! Been far enough, an that be all. Well father, and how do all at home? How does brother Dick, and brother Val?

Sir Sampson
561Dick? Body o' me, Dick has been dead these two years! I writ you word when you were at Legorne.

Ben
562Mess, and that's true; marry I had forgot. Dick's dead, as you say. Well, and how? I have a many questions to ask you. Well, you be'nt married again, father, be you?

Sir Sampson
563No, I intend you shall marry, Ben. I would not marry for thy sake.

Ben
564Nay, what does that signify? An you marry again, why then, I'll go to sea again, so there's one for t'other, an that be all. Pray don't let me be your hindrance. E'en marry a God's name an the wind sit that way. As for my part, mayhap I have no mind to marry.

Mrs Frail
565That would be pity, such a handsome young gentleman.

Ben
566Handsome! He, he, he! Nay forsooth, an you be for joking, I'll joke with you, for I love my jest, an the ship were sinking, as we sayn at sea. But I'll tell you why I don't much stand towards matrimony. I love to roam about from port to port, and from land to land. I could never abide to be port-bound as we call it. Now a man that is married has as it were, d'ye see, his feet in the bilboes, and mayhap mayn't get 'em out again when he would.

Sir Sampson
567Ben's a wag.

Ben
568A man that is married, d'ye see, is no more like another man than a galley-slave is like one of us free sailors. He is chained to an oar all his life, and mayhap forced to tug a leaky vessel into the bargain.

Sir Sampson
569A very wag, Ben's a very wag. Only a little rough, he wants a little polishing.

Mrs Frail
570Not at all. I like his humour mightily, it's plain and honest. I should like such a humour in a husband extremely.

Ben
571Sayn you so forsooth? Marry and I should like such a handsome gentlewoman for a bed-fellow hugely. How say you, mistress, would you like going to sea? Mess, you're a tight vessel, and well rigged, an you were but as well manned.

Mrs Frail
572I should not doubt that, if you were master of me.

Ben
573But I'll tell you one thing, an you come to sea in a high wind, or that, lady, you mayn't carry so much sail o'your head. Top and top-gallant, by the Mess.

Mrs Frail
574No, why so?

Ben
575Why an you do, you may run the risk to be overset, and then you'll carry your keels above water, he, he, he!

Angelica
576I swear, Mr Benjamin is the veriest wag in nature, an absolute sea-wit.

Sir Sampson
577Nay, Ben has parts, but as I told you before, they want a little polishing. You must not take anything ill, madam.

Ben
578No, I hope the gentlewoman is not angry. I mean all in good part, for if I give a jest, I'll take a jest, and so forsooth you may be as free with me.

Angelica
579No, I hope the gentlewoman is not angry. I mean all in good part, for if I give a jest, I'll take a jest, and so forsooth you may be as free with me.

Angelica
580I thank you, sir, I am not at all offended. But methinks, Sir Sampson, you should leave him alone with his mistress. Mr Tattle, we must not hinder lovers.

Tattle
581[aside to Miss Prue.] Well, Miss, I have your promise.

Sir Sampson
582Body o' me, madam, you say true. Look you, Ben, this is tour mistress. Come, Miss, you must not be shamefaced, we'll leave you together.

Miss Prue
583I can't abide to be left alone. Mayn't my cousin stay with me?

Sir Sampson
584No, no. Come, let's away.

Ben
585Look you, father, mayhap the young woman mayn't take a liking to me.

Sir Sampson
586I warrant thee, boy. Come, come, we'll be gone. I'll venture that.

Exeunt all but Ben and Miss Prue.

Ben
587Come mistress, will you please to sit down? For an you stand a stern a that'n, we shall never grapple together. Come, I'll haul a chair. There, an you please to sit, I'll sit by you.

Miss Prue
588You need not sit so near one. If you have anything to say, I can hear farther off, I an't deaf.

Ben
589Why, that's true as you say, nor I an't dumb; I can be heard as far as another. I'll heave off to please you. [Sits farther off.] An we were a league asunder, I'd undertake to hold discourse with you, an 'twere not a main high wind indeed, and full in my teeth. Look you forsooth, I am as it were bound for the land of matrimony. 'Tis a voyage d'ye see that was none of my seeking. I was commanded by father, and if you like of it, mayhap I may steer into your harbour. How say you, mistress? The short of the thing is this, that if you like me, and I like you, we may chance to swing in a hammock together.

Miss Prue
590I don't know what to say to you, nor I don't care to speak with you at all.

Ben
591No? I'm sorry for that. But pray, why are you so scornful?

Miss Prue
592As long as one must not speak one's mind, one had better not speak at all, I think, and truly I won't tell a lie for the matter.

Ben
593Nay, you say true in that, it's but a folly to lie. For to speak one thing and to think just the contrary way is, as it were, to look one way and to row another. Now for my part d'ye see, I'm for carrying things above board. I'm not for keeping anything under hatches. So that if you ben't as willing as I, say so a God's name, there's no harm done. Mayhap you may be shamefac'd. Some maidens, thof they love a man well enough, yet they don't care to tell'n so to's face. If that's the case, why, silence gives consent.

Miss Prue
594But I'm sure it is not so, for I'll speak sooner than you should believe that. And I'll speak truth, tho' one should always tell a lie a man. And I don't care, let my father do what he will. I'm too big to be whipped, so I'll tell you plainly, I don't like you, nor love you at all, nor never will, that's more. So, there's your answer for you, and don't trouble me no more, you ugly thing.

Ben
595Look you, young woman. You may learn to give good words, however. I spoke you fair, d'ye see, and civil. As for your love or your liking, I don't value it of a rope's end. And mayhap I like you as little as you do me. What I said was in obedience to father. Gad, I fear a whipping no more than you do. But I tell you one thing, if you should give such language at sea, you'd have a cat o' nine tails laid' cross your shoulders. Flesh, who are you? You heard t'other handsome young woman speak civilly to me, of her own accord. Whatever you think of yourself, Gad I don't think you are any more to compare to her than a can of small beer to a bowl of punch.

Miss Prue
596Well, and there's a handsome gentleman, and a fine gentleman, and a sweet gentleman, that was here that loves me, and I love him; and if he sees you speak to me any more, he'll thrash your jacket for you, he will, you great sea-calf.

Ben
597What, do you mean that fair-weather spark that was here just now? Will he thrash my jacket? Let'n, let'n. But an he comes near me, mayhap I may giv'n a salt eel for's supper for all that. What does father mean to leave me alone as soon as I come home with such a dirty dowdy? Sea-calf! I an't calf enough to lick your chalked face, you cheese-curd you. Marry thee! Ouns! I'll marry a Lapland with as soon, and wracked vessels.

Miss Prue
598I won't be called names, nor I won't be abused thus, so I won't. If I were a man [cries.] you durst not talk at this rate. No you durst not, you stinking tar-barrel.

Enter Mrs Foresight and Mrs Frail.

Mrs Foresight
599They have quarrelled just as we could wish.

Ben
600Tar-barrel? Let your sweetheart there call me so, if he'll take your part, your Tom Essence, and I'll say something to him. Gad I'll lace his musk-doublet for him! I'll make him stink! He shall smell more like a weasel than a civet cat afore I ha'done with 'en.

Mrs Foresight
601Bless me, what's the matter, Miss? What, does she cry? Mr Benjamin, what have you done to her?

Ben
602Let her cry: the more she cries, the less she'll –she has been gathering foul weather in her mouth, and now it rains out at her eyes.

Mrs Foresight
603Come, Miss, come along with me, and tell me, poor child.

Mrs Frail
604Lord, what shall we do, there's my brother Foresight, and Sir Sampson coming. Sister, do you take Miss down into the parlour, and I'll carry Mr Benjamin into my chamber, for they must not know that they are fall'n out. Come, sir, will you venture yourself with me?

[Looks kindly on him.]

Ben
605Venture? Mess, and that I will, tho' 'twere to sea in a storm.

Exeunt.
Enter Sir Sampson and Foresight.

Sir Sampson
606I left 'em together here. What, are they gone? Ben's a brisk boy. He has got her into a corner. Father's own son, faith, he'll touzle her, and mouzle her. The rogue's sharp set, coming from sea, if he should not stay for saving grace, old Foresight, but fall to without the help of a parson, ha? Odd, if he should I could not be angry with him. 'Twould be but like me, a chip of the old block. Ha! Thou'rt melancholy, old Prognostication, as melancholy as if thou hadst spilt the salt, or pared thy nails of a Sunday. Come, cheer up, look about thee. Look up, old star-gazer. Now is he poring upon the ground for a crooked pin, or an old horse-nail, with the head towards him.

Foresight
607Sir Sampson, we'll have the wedding tomorrow morning.

Sir Sampson
608With all my heart.

Foresight
609At ten a clock, punctually at ten.

Sir Sampson
610To a minute, to a second. Thou shall set thy watch, and the bridegroom shall observe its motions. They shall be married to a minute, go to bed to a minute, and when the alarm strikes, they shall keep time like the figures of St Dunstan's clock, and consummatum est shall ring all over de parish.

Enter Scandal.

Scandal
611Sir Sampson, sad news.

Foresight
612Bless us!

Sir Sampson
613Why, what's the matter?

Scandal
614Can't you guess at what ought to afflict you and him, and all of us, more than anything else?

Sir Sampson
615Body o' me, I don't know any universal grievance but a new tax, and the loss of the Canary Fleet, without popery should be landed in the West, or the French fleet were at anchor at Blackwall.

Scandal
616No. Undoubtedly Mr Foresight knew all this, and might have prevented it.

Foresight
617'Tis no earthquake!

Scandal
618No, no yet, nor whirlwind. But we don't know what it may come to. But it has had a consequence already that touches us all.

Sir Sampson
619Why, body o' me, out with't.

Scandal
620Something has appeared to your son Valentine. He's gone to bed upon't, and very ill. He speaks little, yet says he has a world to say. Asks for his father and the wise Foresight; talk of Raymond Lully, and the ghost of Lilly. He has secrets to impart, I suppose, to you two. I can get nothing out of him but sighs. He desires he may see you in the morning, but would not be disturbed tonight, because he has some business to do in a dream.

Sir Sampson
621Hoity toity, what have I to do with his dreams or his divination? Body o' me, this is a trick to defer signing the conveyance. I warrant the devil will tell in a dream that he must not part with his estate. But I'll bring him a parson to tell him that the devil's a liar. Or if that won't do, I'll bring a lawyer that shall out-lie the devil. And so I'll try whether my blackguard or his shall get the better of the day.

[Exit.]

Scandal
622Alas, Mr Foresight, I'm afraid all is not right. You are a wise man, and a conscientious man, a searcher into obscurity and futurity, and if you commit an error, it is with a great deal of consideration, and discretion, and caution.

Foresight
623Ah, good Mr Scandal –

Scandal
624Nay, nay, 'tis manifest; I do not flatter you. But Sir Sampson is hasty, very hasty. I'm afraid he is not scrupulous enough, Mr Foresight. He has been wicked, and heaven grant he may mean well in his affair with you. But my mind gives me, these things cannot be wholly insignificant. You are wise, and should not be overreached, methinks you should not –

Foresight
625Alas, Mr Scandal – Humanum est errare.

Scandal
626You say true, man will err, mere man will err; but you are something more. There have been wise men, but they were such as you, men who consulted the stars, and were observers of omens. Solomon was wise, but how? By his judgement in astrology. So says Pineda in his third book and eighth chapter.

Foresight
627You are learned, Mr Scandal.

Scandal
628A trifler, but a lover of art. And the wise men of the East owed their instruction to a star, which is rightly observed by Gregory the Great in favour of astrology. And Albertus Magnus makes it the most valuable science, because, says he, it teaches us to consider the causation of causes in the causes of things.

Foresight
629I protest I honour you, Mr Scandal. I did not think you had been read in these matters. Few young men are inclined –

Scandal
630I thank my stars that have inclined me. But I fear this marriage and making over this estate, this transferring of a rightful inheritance, will bring judgements upon us. I prophesy it, and I would not have the fate of Cassandra, not to be believe. Valentine is disturbed; what can be the cause of that? And Sir Sampson is hurried on by an unusual violence. I fear he does not act wholly from himself; methinks he does not look as he used to do.

Foresight
631He was always of an impetuous nature. But as to this marriage, I have consulted the stars; and all appearances are prosperous.

Scandal
632Come, come, Mr Foresight, let not the prospect of worldly lucre carry you beyond your judgement, nor against your conscience. You are not satisfied that you act justly.

Foresight
633How?

Scandal
634You are not satisfied, I say. I am loath to discourage you. But it is palpable that you are not satisfied.

Foresight
635How does it appear, Mr Scandal? I think I am very well satisfied.

Scandal
636Either you suffer yourself to deceive yourself, or you do not know yourself.

Foresight
637Pray explain yourself.

Scandal
638Do you sleep well o'nights?

Foresight
639Very well.

Scandal
640Are you certain? You do not look so.

Foresight
641I am in health, I think.

Scandal
642So was Valentine this morning, and looked just so.

Foresight
643How? Am I altered any way? I don't perceive it.

Scandal
644Thar may be, but your beard is longer that it was two hours ago.

Foresight
645Indeed? Bless me!

Enter Mrs Foresight.

Mrs Foresight
646Husband, will you go to bed? It's ten a clock. Mr Scandal, your servant.

Scandal
647[aside] Pox on her, she has interrupted my design. But I must work her into the project. [Aloud] You keep early hours, madam.

Mrs Foresight
648Mr Foresight is punctual, we sit up after him.

Foresight
649My dear, pray lend me your glass, your little looking-glass.

Scandal
650Pray lend it him, madam. I'll tell you the reason. [She gives him the glass: Scandal and she whisper.] 651My passion for you is grown so violent that I am no longer master of my self. I was interrupted in the morning, when you had charity enough to give me your attention, and I had hopes of finding another opportunity of explaining myself to you, but was disappointed all this day, and the uneasiness that has attended me ever since bring me now hither at this unseasonable hour.

Mrs Foresight
652Was there ever such impudence? To make love to me before my husband's face! I'll swear I'll tell him.

Scandal
653Do, I'll die a martyr rather than disclaim my passion. But come a little farther this way, and I'll tell you what project I had to get him out of the way, that I might have an opportunity of waiting upon you.

[Whispers.]

Foresight
654 [looking in the glass] I do not see any revolution here. Methinks I look with a serene and benign aspect –pale, a little pale– but the roses of these cheeks have been gathered many years. Ha! I do not like that suddain flushing. Gone already! Hem, hem, hem! Faintish. My heart is pretty good, yet it beats; and my pulses? Ha! I have none. Mercy on me! Hum. Yes, here they are. Gallop, gallop, gallop, gallop, gallop, gallop. Hey, whither will they hurry me? Now they're gone again, and now I'm faint again, and pale again, and hem! and my –hem? –breath, hem! –grows short. Hem, hem! He, he, hem!

Scandal
655[aside to Mrs Foresight] It takes. Pursue it in the name of love and pleasure.

Mrs Foresight
656How do you do, Mr Foresight?

Foresight
657Hum, not so well as I thought I was. Lend me your hand.

Scandal
658Look you there now. Your lady says your sleep has been unquiet of late.

Foresight
659Very likely.

Mrs Foresight
660Oh, mighty restless, but I was afraid to tell him so. He has been subject to talking and starting.

Scandal
661And did not use to be so?

Mrs Foresight
662Never, never, till within these three nights. I cannot say that he has once broken my rest since we have been married.

Foresight
663I will go to bed.

Scandal
664Do so, Mr Foresight, and say your prayers. He looks better than he did.

Mrs Foresight
665 [calls] Nurse, nurse!

Foresight
666Do you think so, Mr Scandal?

Scandal
667Yes, yes, I hope this will be gone by morning, taking it in time.

Foresight
668I hope so.

Enter Nurse.

Mrs Foresight
669Nurse, your master is not well; put him to bed.

Scandal
670I hope you will be able to see Valentine in the morning. You had best take a little diacodion and cowslip water, and lie upon your back. Maybe you may dream.

Foresight
671I thank you, Mr Scandal, I will. Nurse, let me have a watch-light, and lay the Crumbs of Comfort by me.

Nurse
672Yes, sir.

Foresight
673And – Hem, hem! I am very faint.

Scandal
674No, no, you look much better.

Foresight
675Do I? And d'ye hear, bring me, let me see, within a quarter of twelve –hem –he, hem! –just upon the turning of the tide, bring me the urinal. And I hope neither the lord of my ascendants not the moon will be combust, and then I may do well.

Scandal
676I hope so. Leave that to me; I will erect a scheme; and I hope I shall find both Sol and Venus in the sixth house.

Foresight
677I thank you, Mr Scandal. Indeed, that would be a great comfort to me. Hem, hem! Good night.

[Exit.]

Scandal
678Good night, good Mr Foresight. And I hope Mars and Venus will be in conjunction while your wife and I are together.

Mrs Foresight
679Well, and what use do you hope to make of this project? You don't think that you are ever like to succeed in your design upon me?

Scandal
680Yes, faith, I do. I have a better opinion both of you and myself than to despair.

Mrs Foresight
681Did you ever hear such a toad? Hark'ee devil, do you think any woman honest?

Scandal
682Yes, several, very honest. They'll cheat a little at cards sometimes, but that's nothing.

Mrs Foresight
683Pshaw! but virtuous, I mean?

Scandal
684Yes, faith, I believe some women are virtuous too; but 'tis as I believe some men are valiant, thro' fear. For why should a man court danger, or a woman shun pleasure?

Mrs Foresight
685O monstrous! What are conscience and honour?

Scandal
686Why, honour is a public enemy, and conscience a domestic thief; and he that would secure his pleasure must pay a tribute to one and go halves with the other. As for honour, that you have secured, for you have purchased a perpetual opportunity for pleasure.

Mrs Foresight
687An opportunity for pleasure?

Scandal
688Ay, your husband, a husband is an opportunity for pleasure. So you have taken care of honour, and 'tis the least I can do to take care conscience.

Mrs Foresight
689And so you think we are free for one another?

Scandal
690Yes faith, I think so. I love to speak my mind.

Mrs Foresight
691Why then, I'll speak my mind. Now as to this affair between you and me: Here you make love to me. Why, I'll confess it does not displease me. Your person is well enough and your understanding is not amiss.

Scandal
692I have no great opinion of myself, yet I think I'm neither deformed nor a fool.

Mrs Foresight
693But you have a villainous character. You are a libertine in speech as well as practice.

Scandal
694Come, I know what you would say. You think it more dangerous to be seen in conversation with me than to allow some other men the last favour. You mistake; the liberty I take in talking is purely affected for the service of your sex. He that first cries out 'stop thief' is often he that has stolen the treasure. I am a juggler, that act by confederacy; and if you please, we'll put a trick upon the world.

Mrs Foresight
695Ay, but you are such an universal juggler that I'm afraid you have a great many confederates.

Scandal
696Faith, I'm sound.

Mrs Foresight
697O fie, I'll swear you're impudent.

Scandal
698I'll swear you're handsome.

Mrs Foresight
699Pish, you'd tell me so, tho' you did not think so.

Scandal
700And you'd think so, tho' I should not tell you so. And now I think we know one another pretty well.

Mrs Foresight
701O Lord, who's here?

Enter Mrs Frail and Ben.

Ben
702Mess, I love to speak my mind. Father has nothing to do with me. Nay, I can't say that neither, he has something to do with me. But what does that signify? If so be that I ben't minded to be steered by him, 'tis as thof he should drive against wind and tide.

Mrs Frail
703Ay, but my dear, we must keep it secret till the state be settled. For, you know, marrying without an estate is like sailing in a ship without ballast.

Ben
704He, he, he! Why, that's true. Just so for all the world it is indeed, as like as two cable ropes.

Mrs Frail
705And tho' I have a good portion, you know one would not venture all in one bottom.

Ben
706Why, that's true again, for mayhap one bottom may spring a leak. You have hit it indeed, Mess, you've nick'd the channel.

Mrs Frail
707Well, but if you should forsake me after all, you'd break my heart.

Ben
708Break your heart? I'd rather the Mary-gold should break her cable in a storm, as well as I love her. Flesh, you don't think I'm false-hearted, like a land-man. A sailor will be honest, thof mayhap he has never a penny of money in his pocket. Mayhap I may not have so fair a face as a citizen or a courtier, but for all that I've as good in my veins, and a heart as sound as a biscuit.

Mrs Frail
709And will you love me always?

Ben
710Nay, an I love once, I'll stick like pitch, I'll tell you that. Come I'll sing you a song of a sailor.

Mrs Frail
711Hold, there's my sister. I'll her to hear it.

Mrs Foresight
712Well, I won't go to bed to my husband tonight, because I'll retire to my own chamber and think of what you have said.

Scandal
713Well, you'll give me leave to wait upon you to your chamber-door and leave you my last instructions?

Mrs Foresight
714Hold, here's my sister coming toward us.

Mrs Frail
715If it won't interrupt you, I'll entertain you with a song.

Ben
716The song was made upon one of our ship's crew's wife; our boatswain made the song. Mayhap you may know her, sir. Before she was married, she was called buxom Joan of Deptford.

Scandal
717I have heard of her.

Ben
718
(sings: 1)
A soldier and a sailor,
719
A tinker, and a tailor,
720
Had once a doubtful strife, sir,
721
To make a maid a wife, sir,
722
Whose name was buxom Joan.
723
For now the time was ended,
724
When she no more intended,
725
To lick her lips at men, sir,
726
And gnaw the sheers in vain, sir,
727
And lie o'nights alone.
2
728
The soldier swore like thunder,
729
He loved her more than plunder,
730
And shewed her many a scar, sir,
731
That he had brought from far, sir,
732
With fighting for her sake.
733
The tailor thought to please her,
734
With off'ring her this measure.
735
The tinker, too, with mettle,
736
Said he could mend her kettle,
737
And stop up ev'ry leak.
3
738
But while these three were prating,
739
The sailor slily waiting,
740
Thought if it came about, sir,
741
That they should all fall out, sir:
742
He then might pray his part.
743
And just e'en as he meant, sir,
744
To loggerheads they went, sir,
745
And then he let fly at her,
746
A shot 'twixt wind and water,
747
That won this fair maid's heart.

Ben
748If some of our crew that came to see me are not gone, you shall see that we sailors can dance sometimes, as well as other folks. [Whistles.] I warrant that brings 'em, an' they be within hearing. Enter Seamen. 749Oh here they be, and fiddles along with 'em. Come my lads, let's have a round, and I'll make one. Dance. 750We're merry folk, we sailors, we han't much to care for. Thus we live at sea; eat biscuit, and drink flip, put on a clean shirt once a quarter, come home and lie with our landladies once a year, get rid of a little money, and then put off with the next fair wind. How d'ye like us?

Mrs Frail
751Oh, you are the happiest, merriest men alive.

Mrs Foresight
752We're beholding to Mr Benjamin for this entertainment. I believe it's late.

Ben
753Why, forsooth, an you think so, you had best go to bed. For my part, I mean to toss a can and remember my sweetheart afore I turn in. Mayhap I may dream of her.

Mrs Foresight
754Mr Scandal, you had best go to bed and dream too.

Scandal
755Why, faith, I have a good lively imagination, and can dream as much to the purpose as another, if I set about it. But dreaming is the poor retreat of a lazy, hopeless, and imperfect lover. 'Tis the last glimpse of love to worn-out sinners, and the faint dawning of a bliss to wishing girls and growing boys.
756
There's nought but willing, waking love that can
757
Make blest the ripened maid, and finished man.

Exeunt.
THE END OF THE THIRD ACT

ACT FOUR

SCENE ONE

Valentine's lodging.
Enter Scandal and Jeremy.

Scandal
758Well, is your master ready? Does he look madly and talk madly?

Jeremy
759Yes, sir, you need make no great doubt of that. He that was so near turning poet yesterday morning can't be much to seek in playing the madman today.

Scandal
760Would he have Angelica acquainted with the reason of his design?

Jeremy
761No sir, not yet. He has a mind to try whether his playing the madman won't make her play the fool and fall in love with him, or at least own that she has loved him all this while, and concealed it.

Scandal
762I saw her take coach just now with her maid, and think I heard her bid the coachman drive hither.

Jeremy
763Like enough, sir, for I told her maid this morning my master was run stark mad only for love of her mistress. I hear a coach stop; if it should be she, sir, I believe he would not see her till he hears how she takes it.

Scandal
764Well, I'll try her. 'Tis she, here she comes.

Enter Angelica with Jenny.

Angelica
765Mr Scandal, I suppose you don't think it a novelty to see a woman visit a man at his own lodgings in a morning?

Scandal
766Not upon a kind occasion, madam. But when a lady comes tyrannically to insult a ruined lover, and make manifest the cruel triumphs of her beauty, the barbarity of it something surprises me.

Angelica
767I don't like raillery from a serious face. Pray tell me what is the matter.

Jeremy
768No strange matter, madam; my master's mad, that's all. I suppose your ladyship has thought him so a great while?

Angelica
769How d'you mean, mad?

Jeremy
770Why faith, madam, he's mad for want of his wits, just as he was (poor) for want of money. His head is e'en as light as his pockets, and anybody that has a mind to a bad bargain can't do better than to beg him for his estate.

Angelica
771If you speak truth, your endeavouring at wit is very unseasonable.

Scandal
772[aside] She's concerned, and loves him.

Angelica
773Mr Scandal, you can't think me guilty of so much inhumanity as not to be concerned for a man I must own myself obliged to. Pray tell me truth.

Scandal
774Faith, madam, I wish telling a lie would mend the matter. But this is no new effect of an unsuccessful passion.

Angelica
775[aside] I know not what to think –yet I should be vexed to have a trick put upon me. [Aloud] May I not see him?

Scandal
776I'm afraid the physician is not willing you should see him yet. Jeremy, go in and enquire.

Exit Jeremy.

Angelica
777Ha! I saw him wink and smile –I fancy 'tis a trick. I'll try. I would disguise to all the world a failing, which I must own to you. I fear my happiness depends upon the recovery of Valentine. Therefore I conjure you as you are his friend, and as you have compassion upon one fearful of affliction, to tell me what I am to hope for. I cannot speak, but you may tell me. Tell me, for you know what I would ask.

Scandal
778[aside] So, this is pretty plain. [Aloud] Be not too much concerned, madam; I hope his condition is not desperate. An acknowledgement of love from you, perhaps, may work a cure, as the fear of your aversion occasioned his distemper.

Angelica
779[aside] Say you so? Nay, then I'm convinced, and if I don't play trick for trick, may I never taste the pleasure of revenge. [Aloud] Acknowledgement of love! I find you have mistaken my compassion, and think me guilty of a weakness I am a stranger to. But I have too much sincerity to deceive you, and too much charity to suffer him to be deluded with vain hopes. Good nature and humanity oblige me to be concerned for him, but to love is neither in my power nor inclination, and if he can't be cured without I suck the poison from his wounds, I'm afraid he won't recover his sense till I lose mine.

Scandal
780Hey, brave woman, i'faith. Won't you see him, then, if he desire it?

Angelica
781What signify a madman's desires? Besides, 'twould make me uneasy. If I don't see him, perhaps my concern for him may lessen. If I forget him, 'tis no more than he has done by himself; and now the surprise is over, methinks I am not half so sorry for him as I was.

Scandal
782So, faith, good nature works apace; you were confessing just now an obligation to his love.

Angelica
783But I have considered that passions are unreasonable and involuntary. If he loves, he can't help it, and if I don't love. I can't help it; no more than he can help his being a man, or I my being a woman; or no more than I can help my want of inclination to stay longer here. Come, Jenny.

Exit Angelica and Jenny.

Scandal
784Humh! An admirable composition, faith, this same womankind.

Enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
785What, is she gone, sir?

Scandal
786Gone? Why, she was never here, nor anywhere else, nor I don't know her if I see her, nor you neither.

Jeremy
787Good lack! What's the matter now? Are any more of us to be mad! Why, sir, my master longs to see her, and is almost mad in good earnest with the joyful news of her being here.

Scandal
788We are all under a mistake. Ask no questions, for I can't resolve you; but I'll inform your master. In the meantime, if our project succeed no better with his father than it does with his mistress, he may descend from his exaltation of madness into the road of commonsense and be content only to be made a fool with other reasonable people. I hear Sir Sampson. You know your cue; I'll to your master.

[Exit.]
Enter Sir Sampson Legend with a Lawyer.

Sir Sampson
789D'ye see, Mr Buckram, here's the paper signed with his own hand.

Buckram
790Good, sir. And the conveyance is ready drawn in this box, if he be ready to sing and seal.

Sir Sampson
791Ready? Body o' me, he must be ready. His sham sickness shan't excuse him. Oh, here's his scoundrel. Sirrah, where's your master?

Jeremy
792Ah, sir, he's quite gone.

Sir Sampson
793Gone! What, he is not dead?

Jeremy
794No, sir, not dead.

Sir Sampson
795What, is he gone out of town, run away, ha? Has he tricked me? Speak, varlet.

Jeremy
796No, no, sir, he's safe enough, sir, an he were but as sound, poor gentleman. He is indeed here, sir, and not here, sir.

Sir Sampson
797Hey-day, rascal, do you banter me? Sirrah, d'ye banter me? Speak, sirrah, where is he, for I will find him.

Jeremy
798Would you could sir, for he has lost himself. Indeed, sir, I have a'most broke my heart about him. I can't refrain tears when I think of him, sir. I'm as melancholy for him as a passing-bell, sir, or a horse in a pound.

Sir Sampson
799A pox confound your similitudes, sir. Speak to be understood, and tell me in plain terms what the matter is with him, or I'll crack your fool's skull.

Jeremy
800Ah, you've hit it, sir. That's the matter with him, sir. His skull's cracked, poor gentleman; he's stark mad, sir.

Sir Sampson
801Mad!

Buckram
802What, is he non compos?

Jeremy
803Quite non compos, sir.

Buckram
804Why, then all's obliterated, Sir Sampson. If he be non compos mentis, his act and deed will be of no effect, it is not good in law.

Sir Sampson
805Ouns, I won't believe it. Let me see him, sir. Mad! I'll make him find his senses.

Jeremy
806Mr Scandal is with him, sir; I'll knock at the door.

Goes to the scene, which opens and discovers Valentine upon a couch disorderly dressed, Scandal by him.

Sir Sampson
807How now, what's here to do?

Valentine
808 [starting] Ha! Who's that?

Scandal
809For Heav'ns sake softly, sir, and gently. Don't provoke him.

Valentine
810Answer me. Who is that? And that?

Sir Sampson
811Gads-bobs, does he not know me? Is he mischievous? I'll speak gently. Val, Val, dost thou not know me, boy? Not know thy own father, Val? I am thy own father, and this is honest Brief Buckram, the lawyer.

Valentine
812It may be so. I did not know you. The world is full. These are people that we do know, and people that we do not know; and yet the sun shines upon all alike. There are fathers that have many children, and there are children that have many fathers. 'Tis strange! But I am truth, and come to give the world the lie.

Sir Sampson
813Body o' me, I know not what to say to him.

Valentine
814Why does that lawyer wear black? Does he carry his conscience without-side? Lawyer, what art thou? Dost thou know me?

Buckram
815O Lord, what must I say? Yes, sir.

Valentine
816Thou liest, for I am truth. 'Tis hard, I cannot get a livelihood amongst you. I have been sworn out of Westminster Hall the first day of every term. Let me see –no matter how long –But I'll tell you one thing; it's a question that would puzzle an arithmetician, if you should ask him, whether the Bible saves more souls in Westminster Abbey, or damns more in Westminster Hall. For my part, I am truth, and can't tell; I have very few acquaintance.

Sir Sampson
817Body o' me, he talks sensibly in his madness. Has he no intervals?

Jeremy
818Very short, sir.

Buckram
819Sir, I can do you no service while he's in this condition. Here's your paper, sir. He may do me a mischief if I stay. The conveyance is ready, sir, if he recover his senses.

[Exit.]

Sir Sampson
820Hold, hold, don't you go yet.

Scandal
821You'd better let him go, sir, and send for him if there be occasion, for I fancy his presence provokes him more.

Valentine
822Is the lawyer gone? 'Tis well, then we may drink about without going together by the ears. Heigh ho! What a clock is't? My father here? Your blessing, sir.

Sir Sampson
823He recovers. Bless thee, Val. How dost thou do, boy?

Valentine
824Thank you, sir, pretty well. I have been a little out of order. Won't you please to sit, sir?

Sir Sampson
825Ay, boy. Come, thou shalt sit down by me.

Valentine
826Sir, 'tis my duty to wait.

Sir Sampson
827No, no; come, come, sit you down, honest Val, How dost thou do? Let me feel thy pulse. Oh, pretty well now, Val. Body o' me, I was sorry to see thee indisposed. But I'm glad thou'rt better, honest Val.

Valentine
828I thank you, sir.

Scandal
829[aside] Miracle! the monster grows loving.

Sir Sampson
830Let me feel thy hand again, Val. It does not shake. I believe thou canst write, Val. Ha, boy? Thou can'st write name, Val? [In whisper to Jeremy] Jeremy, step and overtake Mr Buckram, bid him make haste black with the conveyance. Quick, quick!

[Exit Jeremy.]

Scandal
831[aside] That ever I should suspect such a heathen of any remorse!

Sir Sampson
832Dost thou know this paper, Val? I know thou'rt honest, and wilt perform articles.

Shews him the paper, but holds it out of his reach.

Valentine
833Pray let me see it, sir. You hold it so far off that I can't tell whether I know it or no.

Sir Sampson
834See it, boy? Ay, ay, why thou dost see it. 'Tis thy own hand, Val. Why let me see, I can read it as plain as can be. Look you here: [reads] The condition of this obligation – Look you, as plain as can be, so it begins. And then at the bottom, as witness my hand, Valentine Legend, in great letters. Why, 'tis as plain as the nose in one's face. What, are my eyes better than thine? I believe I can read it farther off yet. Let me see.

[Stretches his arm as far as he can.]

Valentine
835Will you please to let me hold it, sir?

Sir Sampson
836Let thee hold it, say'st thou? Ay, with all my heart. What matter is it who holds it? What need anybody hold it? I'll put it put in my pocket, Val. And then nobody need hold it. [Puts the paper in his pocket.] There, Val: it's safe enough, boy. But thou shalt have it as soon as thou hast ser thy hand to another paper, little Val.

Re-enter Jeremy with Buckram.

Valentine
837What, is my bad genius here again? On no, 'tis the lawyer with an itching palm, and he's come to be scratched. My nails are not long enough. Let me have a pair of red-hot tongs quickly, quickly, and you shall see me act St Dunstan, and lead the devil by the nose.

Buckram
838O Lord, let me be gone; I'll not venture myself with a madman.

[Exit Buckram.]

Valentine
839Ha, ha, ha! You need not run so fast, honesty will not overtake you. Ha, ha, ha! The rogue found me out to be in forma pauperis presently.

Sir Sampson
840Ouns! What a vexation is here! I know not what to do or say, nor which way to go.

Valentine
841Who's that, that's out of his way? I am truth, and can set him right. Hearkee, friend, the straight road is the worst way you can go. He that follows his nose always will very often be led into a stink. Probatum est. But what are you for? Religion or politics? There's a couple of topics for you, no more like one another than oil and vinegar. And yet those two beaten together by a state-cook make sauce for the whole nation.

Sir Sampson
842What the devil had I to do, ever to beget sons! Why did I ever marry?

Valentine
843Because thou wert a monster, old boy. The two greatest monsters in the world are a man and a woman. What's thy opinion?

Sir Sampson
844Why, my opinion is that those two monsters joined together make yet a greater, that's a man and his wife.

Valentine
845Aha! Old truepenny, say'st thou so? Thou hast nick'd it. But it's wonderful strange, Jeremy!

Jeremy
846What is, sir?

Valentine
847That grey hairs should cover a green head –and I make a fool of my father.

Enter Foresight, Mrs Foresight, and Frail.

Valentine
848What's here! Erra Pater? Or a bearded sybil? If prophecy comes, truth must give place.

[Exit with Jeremy.]

Foresight
849What says he? What, did he prophesy? Ha, Sir Sampson, bless us! How are we?

Sir Sampson
850Are we? A pox o'your prognostication. Why, we are fools as we use to be. Ouns, that you could not foresee that the moon would predominate; and my son be mad. –Where's your oppositions, your trines, and your quadrates? What did you Cardan and your Ptolomee tell you? Your Messahalah and your Longomontanus, your harmony of chiromancy with astrology? Ah! pox on't, that I that know the world, and men and manners, that don't believe a syllable in the sky and stars, and sun and almanacs, and trash, should be directed by a dreamer, an omen-hunter, and defer business in expectation of a lucky hour. When, body o' me, there never was a lucky hour after the first opportunity.

[Exit Sir Sampson.]

Foresight
851Ah, Sir Sampson, heaven help your head. This is none of your lucky hour; nemo omnibus horis sapit. What, is he gone, and in contempt of science? Ill stars and unconverted ignorance attend him!

Scandal
852You must excuse his passion, Mr Foresight, for he has been heartily vexed. His son is non compos mentis, and thereby incapable of making any conveyance in law, so that all his measures are disappointed.

Foresight
853Ha! say you so?

Mrs Frail
854[aside to Mrs Foresight] What, has my sea lover lost his anchor of hope then?

Mrs Foresight
855Oh, sister, what will you do with him?

Mrs Frail
856Do with him? Send him to sea again in the next foul weather. He's used to an inconstant element, and won't be surprised to see the tide turned.

Foresight
857 [considers] Wherein was I mistaken, not to foresee this?

Scandal
858[aside to Mrs Foresight] Madam, you and I can tell him something else that he did not foresee, and more particularly relating to his own fortune.

Mrs Foresight
859What do you mean? I don't understand you.

Scandal
860Hush, softy. The pleasures of last night, my dear, too considerable to be forgot so soon.

Mrs Foresight
861Last night! And what would your impudence infer from last night? Last night was like the night before, I think.

Scandal
862'S'death, do you make no difference between me and your husband?

Mrs Foresight
863Not much; he's superstitious, and you are mad, in my opinion.

Scandal
864You make me mad. You are not serious. Pray recollect yourself.

Mrs Foresight
865Oh, yes, now I remember. You were very impertinent and impudent, and would have come to bed with me.

Scandal
866And did not?

Mrs Foresight
867Did not! With that face can you ask the question?

Scandal
868(aside) This I have heard of before, but never believed. I have been told she had that admirable quality of forgetting to a man's face in the morning that she had lain with him all night, and denying favours with more impudence than she could grant 'em. (Aloud) Madam, I'm your humble servant, and honour you. You look pretty well, Mr Foresight. How did you rest last night?

Foresight
869Truly Mr Scandal, I was so taken up with broken dreams and distracted visions that I remember little.

Scandal
870'Twas a very forgetting night. But would you not talk with Valentine? Perhaps you may understand him. I'm apt to believe there is something mysterious in his discourses, and sometimes rather think him inspired than mad.

Foresight
871You speak with singular good judgement, Mr Scandal, truly. I am inclining to your Turkish opinion in this matter, and do reverence a man whom the vulgar think mad. Let us go in to him.

Mrs Frail
872Sister, do you stay with them; I'll find out my lover and give him his discharge, and come to you. O' my conscience, here he comes.

Exeunt Foresight, Mrs Foresight and Scandal.
Enter Ben.

Ben
873All mad, I think. Flesh, I believe all the calentures of the sea are come ashore, for my part.

Mrs Frail
874Mr Benjamin in choler?

Ben
875No, I'm pleased well enough, now I have found you. Mess, I've had such a hurricane upon your account yonder.

Mrs Frail
876My account? Pray, what's the matter?

Ben
877Why, father came and found me squabbling with yon chitty-faced thing, as he would have me marry, so he asked what was the matter. He asked in a surly sort of a way. It seems brother Val is gone mad, and so that put'n into a passion; but what, did I know that, what's that to me? So he asked in a surly sort of manner, and gad, I answered'n as surlily. What thof he be my father, I an't bound prentice to 'n. So, faith I told'n in plain terms, if I were minded to marry, I'd marry to please myself, not him. And for the young woman that he provided for me, I thought it more fitting for her to learn her sampler, and make dirt-pies, than to look after a husband. For my part I was none of her man. I had another voyage to make, let him take it as he will.

Mrs Frail
878So then you intend to go to sea again?

Ben
879Nay, nay, my mind run upon you, but I would not tell him so much. So he said he'd make my heart ache, and if so be that he could get a woman to his mind, he'd marry himself. Gad, says I, an you play the fool and marry at these years, there's more danger of your head's aching than my heart. He was woundy angry when I gav'n that wipe. He hadn't a word to say, and so I left'n, and the green girl together. Mayhap the bee may bite, and he'll marry her himself, with all my heart.

Mrs Frail
880And were you this undutiful and graceless wretch to your father?

Ben
881Then why was he graceless first? If I am undutiful and graceless, why did he beget me so? I did not get myself.

Mrs Frail
882O Impiety! How have I been mistaken! What an inhumane merciless creature have I set my heart upon? Oh, I am happy to have discovered the shelves and quicksands that lurk beneath that faithless smiling face.

Ben
883Hey toss! What's the matter now? Why, you ben't angry, be you?

Mrs Frail
884Oh, see me no more, for thou wert born amongst rocks, suckled by whales, credled in a tempest, and whistled to by winds; and thou art come forth with fins and scales, and three rows of teeth, a most outrageous fish of prey.

Ben
885O Lord, O Lord, she's mad, poor young woman. Love has turned her senses, her brain is quite overset. Well-a-day, how shall I do to set her to rights?

Mrs Frail
886No, no, I am not mad, monster, I am wise enough to find you out. Hadst thou the impudence to aspire at being a husband with that stubborn and disobedient temper? You that know not how to submit to a father, presume to have a sufficient stock of duty to undergo a wife? I should have been finely fobbed indeed, very finely fobbed.

Ben
887Harkee, forsooth. If so be that you are in your right senses, d'ye see, for ought as I perceive I'm like to be finely fobbed, if I have got anger here upon your account, and you are tacked about already. What d'ye mean, after all your fair speeches, and stroking my cheeks, and kissing and hugging, what, would you sheer off so? Would you, and leave me aground?

Mrs Frail
888No, I'll leave you adrift, and go which way you will.

Ben
889What, are you false-hearted then?

Mrs Frail
890Only the wind's changed.

Ben
891More shame for you! The wind's changed? It's an ill wind blows nobody good. Mayhap I have good riddance on you, if these be your tricks. What d'ye mean all this while, to make a fool of me?

Mrs Frail
892Any fool, but a husband.

Ben
893Husband! Gad I would not be your husband if you would have me, now I know your mind, thof you had your weight in gold and jewels, and thof I loved you never so well.

Mrs Frail
894Why, canst thou love, porpoise?

Ben
895No matter what I can do, don't call names. I don't love you so well as to bear that, whatever I did. I'm glad you shew yourself, mistress. Let them marry you as don't know you. Gad, I know you too well, by sad experience. I believe he that marries you will go to sea in a hen-pecked frigate –I believe that, young woman– and mayhap may come to an anchor at Cuckold's Point. So there's a dash for you, take it as you will. Mayhap you may holla after me when I won't come too.

[Exit.]

Mrs Frail
896Ha, ha, ha! No doubt on't.
[Sings.]
897
My true love is gone to sea. –
[Enter Mrs Foresight.]
898O sister, had you come a minute sooner, you would have seen the resolution of a lover. Honest Tar and I are parted; and with the same indifference that we met. O' my life, I am half vexed at the insensibility of a brute that I despised.

Mrs Foresight
899What then, he bore it most heroically?

Mrs Frail
900Most tyrannically, for you see he has got the start of me, and I, the poor forsaken maid, am left complaining on the shore. But I'll tell you a hint that he has given me. Sir Sampson is enraged, and talks desperately of committing matrimony himself. If he has a mind to throw himself away, he can't do it more effectually than upon me, if we could bring it about.

Mrs Foresight
901Oh, hang him old fox, he's too cunning; besides, he hates both you and me. But I have a project in my head for you, and I have gone a good way towards it. I have almost made a bargain with Jeremy, Valentine's man, to sell his master to us.

Mrs Frail
902Sell him, how?

Mrs Foresight
903Valentine raves upon Angelica, and took me for her, and Jeremy says will take anybody for her that he imposes on him. Now I have promised him mountains if in one of his mad fits he will bring you to him in her stead, and get you married together, and put to bed together; and after consummation, girl, there's no revoking. And if he should recover his senses, he'll be glad at least to make you a good settlement. Here they come, stand aside a little, and tell me how you like the design.

Enter Valentine, Scandal, Foresight, and Jeremy.

Scandal
904 [to Jeremy] And have you given your master a hint of their plot upon him?

Jeremy
905Sir, sir; he says he'll favour it, and mistake her for Angelica.

Scandal
906It may make sport.

Foresight
907Mercy on us!

Valentine
908Husht. Interrupt me not. I'll whisper prediction to thee, and thou shalt prophesy. I am truth, and can teach thy tongue a new trick. I have told thee what's past; now I tell what's to come. Dost thou know what will happen tomorrow? Answer me not, for I will tell thee. Tomorrow, knaves will thrive thro' craft, and fools thro' fortune; and honesty will go as it did, frost-nipped in a summer suit. Ask me questions concerning tomorrow.

Scandal
909Ask him, Mr Foresight.

Foresight
910Pray what will be done at court?

Valentine
911Scandal will tell you. I am truth, I never come there.

Foresight
912In the city?

Valentine
913Oh, prayers will be said in empty churches at the usual hours. Yet you will see such zealous faces behind counters, as if religion were to be sold in every shop. Oh, things will go methodically in the city, the clocks will strike twelve at noon, and the horned herd buzz in the Exchange at two. Wives and husbands will drive distinct trades, and care and pleasure separately occupy the family. Coffeehouses will be full of smoke and stratagem. And the cropped prentice, that sweeps his master's shop in the morning, may, ten to one, dirty his sheets before night. But there are two things that you will see very strange; which are wanton wives, with their legs at liberty, and tame cuckolds, with chains about their necks. But hold, I must examine you before I go farther, you look suspiciously. Are you a husband?

Foresight
914I am married.

Valentine
915Poor creature! Is your wife of Covent-Garden parish?

Foresight
916No. St Martins-in-the-Fields.

Valentine
917Alas, poor man! His eyes are sunk, and his hands shrivelled, his legs dwindled, and his back bowed. Pray, pray, for a metamorphosis. Change thy shape, and shake off age; get thee Medea's kettle, and be boiled anew, come forth with lab'ring callous hands, a chine of steel, and Atlas shoulders. Let Taliacotus trim the calves of twenty chairmen, and make thee pedestals to stand erect upon, and look matrimony in the face. Ha, ha, ha! That a man should have a stomach to a wedding supper, when the pigeons ought rather to be laid to his feet, ha, ha, ha!

Foresight
918His frenzy is very high now, Mr Scandal.

Scandal
919I believe it is a spring tide.

Foresight
920Very likely, truly. You understand these matters, Mr Scandal. I shall be very glad to confer with you about these things which he has uttered. His sayings are very mysterious and hieroglyphical.

Valentine
921Oh, why would Angelica be absent from my eyes so long?

Jeremy
922She's here, sir.

Mrs Foresight
923Now, sister.

Mrs Frail
924O Lord, what must I say?

Scandal
925Humour him, madam, by all means.

Valentine
926Where is she? Oh, I see her. She comes, like riches, health, and liberty at once, to a despairing, starving, and abandoned wretch. Oh, welcome, welcome.

Mrs Frail
927How de'e you, sir? Can I serve you?

Valentine
928Harkee; I have a secret to tell you. Endymion and the moon shall meet us upon Mount Latmos, and we'll be married in the dead of night. But say not a word. Hymen shall put his torch into a dark lanthorn, that it may be secret; and Juno shall give her peacock poppy-water, that he may fold his ogling tail, and Argus's hundred eyes be shut, ha? Nobody shall know, but Jeremy.

Mrs Frail
929No, no, we'll keep it secret. It shall be done presently.

Valentine
930The sooner the better. Jeremy, come hither; closer, that none may overhear us. Jeremy, I can tell you news. Angelica is turned nun, and I am turning friar, and yet we'll marry one another in spite of the Pope. Get me a cowl and beads, that I may play my part, for she'll meet me two hours hence in black and white, and a long veil to cover the project, and we won't see one another's faces, till we have done something to be ashamed of; and then we'll blush once for all.

Enter Tattle and Angelica.

Jeremy
931I'll take care, and –

Valentine
932Whisper.

Angelica
933Nay, Mr Tattle, if you make love to me you spoil my design, for I intended to make you my confidant.

Tattle
934But, madam, to throw away your person –such a person!– and such a fortune, on a madman!

Angelica
935I never loved him till he was mad; but don't tell anybody so.

Scandal
936(aside) How's this? Tattle making love to Angelica!

Tattle
937Tell, madam? Alas, you don't know me. I have much ado to tell your ladyship how long I have been in love with you. But encouraged by the impossibility of Valentine's making any more addresses to you, I have ventured to declare the very inmost passion of my heart. Oh madam, look upon us both. There you see the ruins of a poor decayed creature. Here, a complete and lively figure, with youth and health, and all his five senses in perfection, madam, and to all this, the most passionate lover –

Angelica
938O fie, for shame, hold your tongue. A passionate lover, and five senses in perfection! When you are as mad as Valentine, I'll believe you love me, and the maddest shall take me.

Valentine
939It is enough. Ha, who's here?

Mrs Frail
940 [to Jeremy] O Lord, her coming will spoil all.

Jeremy
941No, no, madam, he won't know her; if he should, I can persuade him.

Valentine
942 [whispers] Scandal, who are all these? Foreigners? If they are, I'll tell you what I think. Get away all the company but Angelica, that I may discover my design to her.

Scandal
943 (whispers) I will. I have discovered something of Tattle, that is of a piece with Mrs Frail. He courts Angelica. If we could contrive to couple 'em together. –Heark'ee –

Mrs Foresight
944He won't know you, cousin, he knows nobody.

Foresight
945But he knows more than anybody. O niece, he knows things past and to come, and all the profound secrets of time.

Tattle
946Look you, Mr Foresight, it is not my way to make many words of matters, and so I shan't say much, but in short, d'ye see, I will hold you a hundred pound now that I know more secrets that he.

Foresight
947How? I cannot read that knowledge in your face, Mr Tattle. Pray, what do you know?

Tattle
948Why, d'ye think I'll tell you, sir? Read it in my face? No, sir, 'tis written in my heart. And safer there, sir, than letters writ in juice of lemon, for no fire can fetch it out. I am no blab, sir.

Valentine
949 [to Scandal] Acquaint Jeremy with it, he may easily bring it about. They are welcome, and I'll tell 'em so myself. (Aloud) What, do you look strange upon me? Then I must be plain. [Coming up to them.] I am truth, and hate an old acquaintance with a new face.

Scandal goes aside with Jeremy.

Tattle
950Do you know me, Valentine?

Valentine
951You? Who are you? No, I hope not.

Tattle
952I am Jack Tattle, your friend.

Valentine
953My friend, what to do? I am no married man, and thou canst not lie with my wife; I am very poor, and thou canst not borrow money of me. Then what employment have I for a friend?

Tattle
954Hah! A good open speaker, and not to be trusted with a secret.

Angelica
955Do you know me, Valentine?

Valentine
956Oh, very well.

Angelica
957Who am I?

Valentine
958You're a woman; one to whom heaven gave beauty, when it grafted roses on a briar. You are the reflection of heaven in a pond, and he that leaps at you is sunk. You are all white, a sheet of lovely spotless paper, when you first are born; but you are to be scrawled and blotted by every goose's quill. I know you; for I loved a woman, and loved her so long, that I found out a strange thing: I found out what a woman was good for.

Tattle
959Ay, prithee, what's that?

Valentine
960Why, to keep a secret.

Tattle
961O Lord!

Valentine
962O exceeding good to keep a secret. For tho' she should tell, yet she is not to be believed.

Tattle
963Hah! Good again, faith.

Valentine
964I would have music. Sing me the song that I like.
Song
1
965
I tell thee, Charmion, could I time retrieve,
966
And could again begin to love and live,
967
To you I should my earliest off' ring give;
968
I know my eyes would lead my heart to you,
969
And I should all my vows and oaths renew,
970
But to be plain, I never would be true.
2
971
For by our weak and weary truth, I find,
972
Love hates to centre in a point assigned,
973
But runs with joy the circle of the mind.
974
Then never let us chain what should be free,
975
But for relief of either sex agree,
976
Since women love to change, and so do we.
977No more, for I am melancholy.

[Walks musing.]

Jeremy
978 [to Scandal] I'll do't, sir.

Scandal
979Mr Foresight, we had best leave him. He may grow outrageous, and do mischief.

Foresight
980I will be directed by you.

Jeremy
981 [to Mrs Frail] You'll meet, Madam; I'll take care everything shall be ready.

Mrs Frail
982Thou shalt do what thou wilt, have what thou wilt; in short, I will deny thee nothing.

Tattle
983 [to Angelica] Madam, shall I wait upon you?

Angelica
984No, I'll stay with him. Mr Scandal will protect me. Aunt, Mr Tattle desires you would give him leave to wait on you.

Tattle
985(aside) Pox on't, there's no coming off, now she has said that. (Aloud) Madam, will you do me the honour?

Mrs Foresight
986Mr Tattle might have used less ceremony.

Exeunt Foresight, Mrs Foresight, Tattle, Mrs Frail, Jeremy.

Scandal
987Jeremy, follow Tattle.

Angelica
988Mr Scandal, I only stay till my maid comes, and because I had a mind to be rid of Mr Tattle.

Scandal
989Madam, I am very glad that I overheard a better reason, which you gave to Mr Tattle; for his impertinence forced you to acknowledge a kindness for Valentine, which you denied to all his sufferings and my solicitations. So I'll leave him to make use of the discovery, and your ladyship to the free confession of your inclinations.

Angelica
990O heavens! You won't leave me alone with a madman?

Scandal
991No, madam; I only leave a madman to his remedy.

[Exit Scandal.]

Valentine
992Madam, you need not be very much afraid, for I fancy I begin to come to myself.

Angelica
993[aside] Ay, but if I don't fit you, I'll be hanged.

Valentine
994You see what disguises love makes us put on. Gods have been in counterfeited shapes for the same reason; and the divine part of me, my mind, has worn this mask of madness, and this motley livery only as the slave of love, and menial creature of your beauty.

Angelica
995Mercy on me, how he talks! Poor Valentine!

Valentine
996Nay, faith, now let us understand one another, hypocrisy apart. The comedy draws toward an end, and let us think of leaving acting, and be ourselves; and since you have loved me, you must own I have at length deserved you should confess it.

Angelica
997 [sighs] I would I had loved you, for Heaven knows I pity you; and could I have foreseen the sad effects, I would have striven. But that's too late.

[Sighs.]

Valentine
998What sad effects? What's too late? My seeming madness has deceived my father, and procured me time to think of means to reconcile me to him, and preserve the right of my inheritance to his estate, which otherwise, by articles, I must this morning have resigned. And this I had informed you of today, but you were gone before I knew you had been here.

Angelica
999How? I thought your love of me had caused this transport in your soul, which it seems you only counterfeited for by mercenary ends and sordid interest.

Valentine
1000Nay, now you do me wrong, for if any interest was considered, it was yours, since I thought I wanted more than love to make me worthy of you.

Angelica
1001Then you thought me mercenary. But how am I deluded by this interval of sense, to reason with a madman?

Valentine
1002Oh, 'tis barbarous to misunderstand me longer.

Enter Jeremy.

Angelica
1003Oh, here's a reasonable creature; sure he will not have the impudence to persevere. Come, Jeremy, acknowledge your trick, and confess your master's madness counterfeit.

Jeremy
1004Counterfeit, madam? I'll maintain him to be as absolutely and substantially mad as any freeholder in Bethlehem. Nay, he's as mad as any projector, fanatic, chymist, lover, or poet in Europe.

Valentine
1005Sirrah, you lie. I am not mad.

Angelica
1006Ha, ha, ha! You see, he denies it.

Jeremy
1007O Lord, madam, did you ever know any madman mad enough to own it?

Valentine
1008Sot, can't you apprehend?

Angelica
1009Why, he talked very sensibly just now.

Jeremy
1010Yes, madam, he has intervals: but you see he begins to look wild again now.

Valentine
1011Why, you thick-skulled rascal, I tell you the farce is done, and I will be mad no longer.

[Beats him.]

Angelica
1012Ha, ha, ha! Is he mad or no, Jeremy?

Jeremy
1013Partly, I think, for he does not know his mind two hours. I'm sure I left him just now in a humour to be mad. And I think I have not found him very quiet at this present. 1014 [One knocks.] Who's there?

Valentine
1015Go see, you sot. [Exit Jeremy.] 1016I'm very glad that I can move your mirth, tho' not your compassion.

Angelica
1017I did not think you had apprehension enough to be exceptious. But madmen shew themselves most by overpretending to a sound understanding, as drunken men do by over-acting sobriety. I was half inclining to believe you, till I accidentally touched upon your tender part. But now you have restored me to my former opinion and compassion.

Enter Jeremy.

Jeremy
1018Sir, your father has sent to know if you are any better yet. Will you please to be mad, sir, or how?

Valentine
1019Stupidity! You know the penalty of all I'm worth must pay for the confession of my senses. I'm mad, and will be mad to everybody but this lady.

Jeremy
1020So: just the very backside of truth. But lying is a figure in speech that interlards the greatest part of my conversation. Madam, your ladyship's woman.

[Goes to the door.]
Enter Jenny.

Angelica
1021Well, have you been there? Come hither.

Jenny
1022[aside to Angelica] Yes, madam, Sir Sampson will wait upon you presently.

Valentine
1023You are not leaving me in this uncertainty?

Angelica
1024Would anything but a madman complain of uncertainty? Uncertainty and expectation are the joys of life. Security is an insipid thing, and the overtaking and possessing of a wish discovers the folly of the chase. Never let us know one another better, for the pleasure of a masquerade is done when we come to shew faces. But I'll tell you two things before I leave you. I am not the fool you take me for, and you are mad and don't know it.

Exeunt Angelica and Jeremy.

Valentine
1025From a riddle you can expect nothing but a riddle. There's my instruction and the moral of my lesson.

Jeremy
1026What, is the lady gone again, sir? I hope you understood one another before she went.

Valentine
1027Understood! She is harder to be understood than a piece of Egyptian antiquity, or an Irish manuscript; you may pore till you spoil your eyes, and not improve your knowledge.

Jeremy
1028I have heard 'em say, sir, they read hard Hebrew books backwards; maybe you begin to read at the wrong end.

Valentine
1029They say so of a witches' prayer, and dreams and Dutch almanacks are to be understood by contraries. But there's regularity and method in that. She is a medal without a reverse or inscription, for indifference has both sides alike. Yet while she does nor seem to hate me, I will pursue her, and know her if it be possible, in spite of the opinion of my satirical friend, Scandal, who says,
1030
That women are like tricks by slight of hand,
1031
Which, to admire, we should not understand.

Exeunt.
THE END OF THE FOURTH ACT

ACT FIVE

SCENE ONE

A room in Foresight's house.
Enter Angelica and Jenny.

Angelica
1032Where is Sir Sampson? Did you not tell me he would be here before me?

Jenny
1033He's at the great glass in the dining-room, madam, setting his cravat and wig.

Angelica
1034How! I'm glad on't. If he has a mind I should like him, it's a sign he likes me; and that's more than half my design.

Jenny
1035I hear him, madam.

Angelica
1036Leave me, and d'ye hear, if Valentine should come or send, I am not to be spoken with.

Exit Jenny.
Enter Sir Sampson.

Sir Sampson
1037I have not been honoured with the commands of a fair lady a great while. Odd, madam, you have revived me; not since I was five and thirty.

Angelica
1038Why, you have no great reason to complain, Sir Sampson, that is not long ago.

Sir Sampson
1039Zooks, but it is, madam, a very great while to a man that admires a fine woman as much as I do.

Angelica
1040You're an absolute courtier, Sir Sampson.

Sir Sampson
1041Not at all, madam. Odsbud, you wrong me; I am not so old neither to be a bare courtier, only a man of words. Odd, I have warm blood about me yet, I can serve a lady any way. Come, come, let me tell you, you women think a man old too soon, faith and troth you so. Come, don't despise fifty; odd, fifty, in a hale constitution, is no such contemptible age.

Angelica
1042Fifty a contemptible age! Not at all, a very fashionable age I think. I assure you I know very considerable beaus that set a good face upon fifty. Fifty! I have seen fifty in a side-box by candle-light out-blossom five and twenty.

Sir Sampson
1043O pox, outsides, outsides, a pise take 'em, mere outsides. Hang your side-box beaus; no, I'm none of those, none of your forced trees that pretend to blossom in the fall, and bud when they should bring forth fruit. I am of a long-lived race, and inherit vigour. None of my family married till fifty, yet they begot sons and daughters till four-score. I am of your patriarchs, I, a branch of one of your antediluvian families, fellows that the flood could not wash away. Well, madam, what are your commands? Has any young rogue affronted you, and shall I cut his throat? Or –

Angelica
1044No, Sir Sampson, I have no quarrel upon my hands. I have more occasion for your conduct than your courage at this time. To tell you the truth, I'm weary of living single, and want a husband.

Sir Sampson
1045Odsbud, and 'tis a pity you should. 1046[Aside] Odd, would she would like me, then I should hamper my young rogues. Odd, would she would; faith and troth she's devilish handsome. (Aloud) Madam, you deserve a good husband, and 'twere a pity you should be thrown away upon any of these young idle rogues about the town. Odd, there's ne'er a young fellow worth hanging, that is, a very young fellow. Pise on 'em, they never think beforehand of anything; and if they commit matrimony, 'tis as they commit murder, out of a frolic: and are ready to hang themselves, or to be hanged by the law, the next morning. Odso, have a care, madam.

Angelica
1047Therefore I ask your advice, Sir Sampson. I have fortune enough to make any man easy that I can like, if there were such a thing as a young agreeable man, with a reasonable stock of good nature and sense –for I would neither have an absolute wit nor a fool.

Sir Sampson
1048Odd, you are hard to please, madam. To find a young fellow that is neither a wit in his own eye nor a fool in the eye of the world is a very hard task. But, faith and troth, you speak very discreetly; for I hate both a wit and a fool.

Angelica
1049She that marries a fool, Sir Sampson, commits the reputation of her honesty or understanding to the censure of the world. And she that marries a very witty man submits both to the severity and insolent conduct of her husband. I should like a man of wit for a lover, because I would have such an one in my power; but I would no more be his wife than his enemy. For his malice is not a more terrible consequence of his aversion than his jealousy is of his love.

Sir Sampson
1050None of old Foresight's sybils ever uttered such a truth. Odsbud, you have won my heart. I hate a wit. I had a son that was spoiled among 'em; a good hopeful lad, till he learned to be a wit –and might have risen in the state –But a pox on't, his wit run him out of his money, and now his poverty has run him out of his wits.

Angelica
1051Sir Sampson, as your friend I must tell you you are very much abused in that matter. He's no more mad than you are.

Sir Sampson
1052How, madam? Would I could prove it.

Angelica
1053I can tell you how that may be done. But it is a thing that would make me appear to be too much concerned in your affairs.

Sir Sampson
1054[aside] Odsbud, I believe she likes me. (Aloud) Ah, madam, all my affairs are scarce worthy to be laid at your feet; and I wish, madam, they stood in a better posture, that I might make a more becoming offer to a lady of your incomparable beauty and merit. If I had Peru in one hand, and Mexico in t'other, and the Eastern empire under my feet, it would make me only a more glorious victim to be offered at the shrine of your beauty.

Angelica
1055Bless me, Sir Sampson, what's the matter?

Sir Sampson
1056Odd, madam, I love you. And if you would take my advice in a husband –

Angelica
1057Hold, hold, Sir Sampson. I asked your advice for a husband, and you are giving me your consent. I was indeed thinking to propose something like it in a jest, to satisfy you about Valentine. For if a match were seemingly carried on, between you and me, it would oblige him to throw off his disguise of madness, in apprehension of losing me. For you know he has long pretended a passion for me.

Sir Sampson
1058Gadzooks, a most ingenious contrivance, if we were to go through with it. But why must the match only be seemingly carried on? Odd, let it be a real contract.

Angelica
1059O fie, Sir Sampson, what would the world say?

Sir Sampson
1060Say? They would say you were a wise woman, and I a happy man. Odd, madam, I'll love you as long as I live, and leave you a good jointure when I die.

Angelica
1061Ay, but that is not in your power, Sir Sampson; for when Valentine confesses himself in his senses, he must make over his inheritance to his younger brother.

Sir Sampson
1062Odd, you're cunning, a wary baggage! Faith and troth, I like you the better. But I warrant you, I have a proviso in the obligation in favour of myself. Body o' me I have a trick to turn the settlement upon the issue male of our two bodies begotten. Odsbud, let us find children, and I'll find an estate.

Angelica
1063Will you? Well, do you find the estate, and leave the other to me.

Sir Sampson
1064O rogue! But I'll trust you. And will you consent? Is it a match then?

Angelica
1065Let me consult my lawyer concerning this obligation, and if I find what you propose practicable, I'll give you my answer.

Sir Sampson
1066With all my heart. Come in with me and I'll lend you the bond. You shall consult your lawyer and I'll consult a parson. Odzooks, I'm a young man. Odzooks I'm a young man, and I'll make it appear. Odd, you're devilish handsome. Faith and troth, you're very handsome, and I'm very young, and very lusty. Odsbud, hussy, you know how to choose, and so do I. Odd, I think we are very well met: Give me your hand, odd, let me kiss it. 'Tis as warm and as soft –as what? Odd, as t'other hand. Give me t'other hand, and I'll mumble 'em, and kiss 'em till they melt in my mouth.

Angelica
1067Hold, Sir Sampson, you're profuse of your vigour before your time. You'll spend your estate before you come to it.

Sir Sampson
1068No, no, only give you a rent-roll of my possessions. Ah, baggage! I warrant you for little Sampson. Odd, Sampson's a very good name for an able fellow. Your Sampsons were strong dogs from the beginning.

Angelica
1069Have a care, and don't over-act your part. If you remember, the strongest Sampson of your name pulled an old house over his head at last.

Sir Sampson
1070Say you so, hussy? Come, let's go then. Odd, I long to be pulling down too; come away. Odso, here's somebody coming.

Exeunt.
Enter Tattle and Jeremy.

Tattle
1071Is not that she, gone out just now?

Jeremy
1072Ay, sir, she's just going to the place of appointment. Ah sir, if you are not very faithful and close in this business, you'll certainly be the death of a person that has a most extraordinary passion for your honour's service.

Tattle
1073Ay, who's that?

Jeremy
1074Even my unworthy self, sir. Sir, I have had an appetite to be fed with your commands a great while. And now, sir, my former master having much troubled the fountain of his understanding, it is a very plausible occasion for me to quench my thirst at the spring of your bounty. I thought I could not recommend myself better to you, sir, than by the delivery of a great beauty and fortune into your arms, whom I have heard you sigh for.

Tattle
1075I'll make thy fortune; say no more. Thou art a pretty fellow, and canst carry a message to a lady in a pretty soft kind of phrase, and with a good persuading accent.

Jeremy
1076Sir, I have the seeds of rhetoric and oratory in my head. I have been at Cambridge.

Tattle
1077Ay. 'Tis well enough for a servant to be bred at an university, but the education is a little too pedantic for a gentleman. I hope you are secret in your nature, private, close, ha?

Jeremy
1078O sir, for that sir, 'tis my chief talent. I'm as secret as the head of Nilus.

Tattle
1079Ay? Who's he, tho'? A Privy Counsellor?

Jeremy
1080[aside] O ignorance! (Aloud) A cunning Egyptian, sir, that with his arms would overrun the country, yet nobody could ever find out his headquarters.

Tattle
1081Close dog! A good whoremaster, I warrant him. The time draws nigh, Jeremy. Angelica will veiled like a nun, and I must be hooded like a friar. Ha, Jeremy?

Jeremy
1082Ay, sir, hooded like a hawk, to seize at first sight upon the quarry. It is the whim of my master's madness to be so dressed. And she is so in love with him, she'll comply with any thing to please him. Poor lady, I'm sure she'll have reason to pray for me, when she finds what a happy exchange she has made, between a madman and so accomplished a gentleman.

Tattle
1083Ay, faith, so she will, Jeremy. You're a good friend to her, poor creature. I swear I do it hardly so much in consideration of myself as compassion to her.

Jeremy
1084'Tis an act of charity, sir, to save a fine woman with thirty thousand pound from throwing herself away.

Tattle
1085So 'tis, faith. I might have saved several others in my time. But i'Gad I could never find in my heart to marry anybody before.

Jeremy
1086Well, sir, I'll go and tell her my master's coming, and meet you in half a quarter of an hour, with your disguise, at your own lodgings. You must talk a little madly, she won't distinguish the tone of your voice.

Tattle
1087No, no, let me alone for a counterfeit. I'll be ready for you.

Enter Miss Prue.

Miss Prue
1088O Mr Tattle, are you here! I'm glad I have found you. I have been looking up and down for you like any thing, till I'm as tired as any thing in the world.

Tattle
1089[aside] O pox, how shall I get rid of this foolish girl?

Miss Prue
1090Oh I have pure news, I can tell you pure news. I must not marry the seaman now –my father says so. Why won't you be my husband? You say you love me, and you won't be my husband. And I know you may be my husband now if you please.

Tattle
1091O fie, Miss. Who told you so, child?

Miss Prue
1092Why, my father. I told him that you loved me.

Tattle
1093O fie, Miss, why did you do so? And who told you so, child?

Miss Prue
1094Who? Why, you did, did not you?

Tattle
1095O pox, that was yesterday, Miss, that was a great while ago, child. I have been asleep since; slept a whole night, and did not so much as dream of the matter.

Miss Prue
1096Pshaw! Oh, but I dreamt that it was so, tho'.

Tattle
1097Ay, but your father will tell you that dreams come by contraries, child. O fie! What, we must not love one another now. Pshaw! That would be a foolish thing indeed. Fie, fie, you're a woman now, and must think of a new man every morning, and forget him every night. No, no, to marry is to be a child again, and play with the same rattle always. O fie, marrying is a paw thing.

Miss Prue
1098Well, but don't you love me as well as you did last night then?

Tattle
1099No, no, child, you would not have me.

Miss Prue
1100No? yes, but I would, tho'.

Tattle
1101Pshaw, but tell you, you would not. You forget you're a woman, and don't know your own mind.

Miss Prue
1102But here's my father, and he knows my mind.

Enter Foresight.

Foresight
1103Oh, Mr Tattle, your servant; you are a close man. But methinks your love to my daughter was a secret I might have been trusted with. Or had you a mind to try if I could discover it by my art, hum, ha? I think there is something in your physiognomy that has a resemblance of her, and the girl is like me.

Tattle
1104[aside] And so you would infer that you and I are alike. What does the old prig mean? I'll banter him, and laugh at him, and leave him. (Aloud) I fancy you have a wrong notion of faces.

Foresight
1105How? What? A wrong notion? How so?

Tattle
1106In the way of art. I have some taking features, not obvious to vulgar eyes, that are indications of a sudden turn of good fortune in the lottery of wives, and promise a great beauty and great fortune reserved alone for me by a private intrigue of destiny, kept secret from the piercing eye of perspicuity, from all astrologers, and the stars themselves.

Foresight
1107How? I will make it appear that what you say is impossible.

Tattle
1108Sir, I beg your pardon, I'm in haste.

Foresight
1109For what?

Tattle
1110To be married, sir, married.

Foresight
1111Ay, but pray take me along with you, sir.

Tattle
1112No, sir, 'tis to be done privately. I never make confidants.

Foresight
1113Well, but my consent I mean. You won't marry my daughter without my consent?

Tattle
1114Who, I sir? I'm an absolute stranger to you and your daughter, sir.

Foresight
1115Hey-day! What time of the moon is this?

Tattle
1116Very true, sir, and desire to continue so. I have no more love for your daughter than I have likeness be glad to know, and shan't know; and yet you shall know it too, and be sorry for't afterwards. I'd have you to know, sir, that I am as knowing as the stars and as secret as the night. And I'm going to be married just now, yet did not know of it half an hour ago, and the lady stays for me, and does not know of it yes. There's a mystery for you. I know you love to untie difficulties. Or if you can't solve this, stay here a quarter of an hour, and I'll come and explain it to you.

[Exit.]

Miss Prue
1117O father, why will you let him go? Won't you make him be my husband?

Foresight
1118Mercy on us, what do these lunacies portend? Alas, he's mad, child, stark wild.

Miss Prue
1119What, and must not I have e'er a husband then? What, must I go to bed to nurse again, and be a child as long as she's an old woman? Indeed but I won't. For now my mind is set upon a man, I will have a man some way or other. Oh! Methinks I'm would go to sleep all my life. For when I'm awake, it makes me wish and long, and I don't know for what. And I'd rather be always a sleeping than sick with thinking.

Foresight
1120O fearful! I think the girl's influenced too. Hussy, you shall have a rod.

Miss Prue
1121A fiddle of a rod, I'll have a husband, and if you won't get me one, I'll get one for myself. I'll marry our Robin the butler; he says he loves me, and he's a handsome man, and shall be my husband. I warrant he'll be my husband and thank me too, for he told me so.

Enter Scandal, Mrs Foresight, and Nurse.

Foresight
1122Did he so? I'll dispatch him for't presently. Rogue! O nurse, come hither.

Nurse
1123What is your worship's pleasure?

Foresight
1124Here, take your young mistress and lock her up presently, till farther orders from me. Not a word, hussy. Do what I bid you, no reply, away! And bid Robin make ready to give an account of his plate and linen, d'ye hear, be gone when I bid you.

Exit Nurse and Miss Prue.

Mrs Foresight
1125What's the matter, husband?

Foresight
1126'Tis not convenient to tell you now. Mr Scandal, heav'n keep us all in our senses. I fear there is a contagious frenzy abroad. How does Valentine?

Scandal
1127Oh, I hope he will do well again. I have a message from him to your niece Angelica.

Foresight
1128I think she has not returned since she went abroad with Sir Sampson.

Enter Ben.

Mrs Foresight
1129Here's Mr Benjamin; he can tell us if his father be come home.

Ben
1130Who, father? Ay, he's come home with a vengeance.

Mrs Foresight
1131Why, what's the matter?

Ben
1132Matter! Why, he's mad.

Foresight
1133Mercy on us, I was afraid of this.

Ben
1134And there's the handsome young woman, she as they say Brother Val went mad for, she's mad too, I think.

Foresight
1135O my poor niece, my poor niece, is she gone too? Well, I shall run mad next.

Mrs Foresight
1136Well, but how mad? How d'ye mean?

Ben
1137Nay, I'll give you leave to guess. I'll undertake to make a voyage to Antegoa. No, hold, I mayn't say so neither –but I'll sail as far as Ligorn and back again before you shall guess at the matter, and do nothing else. Mess, you may take in all the points of the compass and not hit right.

Mrs Foresight
1138Your experiment will take up a little too much time.

Ben
1139Why, then I'll tell you, there's a new wedding upon the stocks, and they two are a going to be married to rights.

Scandal
1140Who?

Ben
1141Why father and –the young woman. I can't hit of her name.

Scandal
1142Angelica?

Ben
1143Ay, the same.

Mrs Foresight
1144Sir Sampson and Angelica? Impossible!

Ben
1145That may be, but I'm sure it is as I tell you.

Scandal
1146'S'death, it's a jest. I can't believe it.

Ben
1147Look you, friend, it's nothing to me, whether you believe it or no. What I say is true, d'ye see? They are married, or just going to be marries, I know not which.

Foresight
1148Well, but they are not mad, that is, not lunatic?

Ben
1149I don't know what you may call madness, but she's mad for a husband, and he's horn mad, I think, or they'd ne'er make a match together. Here they come.

Enter Sir Sampson, Angelica, with Buckram.

Sir Sampson
1150Where is this old soothsayer? This uncle of mine elect? Aha, old Foresight, uncle Foresight, wish me joy uncle Foresight, double joy, both as uncle and astrologer. Here's a conjunction that was not foretold in all your Ephemeris. The brightest star in the blue firmament is 'shot from above in a jelly of love', and so forth; and I'm lord of the ascendant. Odd, you're an old fellow, Foresight –uncle I mean, a very old fellow, uncle Foresight; and yet you shall live to dance at my wedding, faith and troth you shall. Odd, we'll have the music of the spheres for thee, old Lilly, that we will, and thou shalt lead up a dance in via Lactea.

Foresight
1151I'm thunder-strook! You are not married to my niece?

Sir Sampson
1152Not absolutely married, uncle, but very near it, within a kiss of the matter, as you see.

[Kisses Angelica.]

Angelica
1153'Tis very true indeed, uncle. I hope you'll be my father, and give me.

Sir Sampson
1154That he shall, or I'll burn his globes. Body o' me, he shall be thy father, I'll make him thy father, and thou shalt make me a father, and I'll make thee a mother, and we'll beget sons and daughters enough to put the weekly bills out of countenance.

Scandal
1155Death and hell! Where's Valentine?

[Exit.]

Mrs Foresight
1156This is so surprising –

Sir Sampson
1157How! What does my aunt say? Surprising, aunt? Not at all, for a young couple to make a match in winter? Not at all. It's a plot to undermine cold weather, and destroy that usurper of a bed called a warming-pan.

Mrs Foresight
1158I'm glad to hear you have so much fire in you, Sir Sampson.

Ben
1159Mess, I fear his fire's little better than tinder. Mayhap it will only serve to light up a match for somebody else. The young woman's a handsome young woman, I can't deny it. But, father, if I might be your pilot in this case, you should not marry her. It's just the same thing as if so be you should sail so far as the Straits without provision.

Sir Sampson
1160Who gave you authority to speak, sirrah? To your element, fish, be mute, fish, and to sea. Rule your helm, sirrah, don't direct me.

Ben
1161Well, well, take you care of your own helm, or you mayn't keep your own vessel steady.

Sir Sampson
1162Why, you impudent tarpaulin! Sirrah, do you bring your forecastle jest upon your father? But I shall be even with you, I won't give you a groat. Mr Buckram, is he conveyance so worded that nothing can possibly descend to this scoundrel? I would not so much as have him have the prospect of an estate, tho' there were no way to come to it but by the north-east passage.

Buckram
1163Sir, it is drawn according to your directions; there is not the least cranny of the law unstopped.

Ben
1164Lawyer, I believe there's many a cranny and leak unstopped in your conscience. If so be that one had a pump to your bosom, I believe we should discover a foul hold. They say a witch will sail in a sieve. But I believe the devil would not venture aboard o'your conscience. And that's for you.

Sir Sampson
1165Hold your tongue, sirrah. How now, who's there?

Enter Tattle and Mrs Frail.

Mrs Frail
1166Oh, sister, the most unlucky accident!

Mrs Foresight
1167What's the matter?

Tattle
1168Oh, the two most unfortunate poor creatures in the world we are!

Foresight
1169Bless us! How so?

Mrs Frail
1170Ah Mr Tattle and I, poor Mr Tattle and I are –I can't speak it out.

Tattle
1171Nor I. But poor Mrs Frail and I are –

Mrs Frail
1172Married.

Mrs Foresight
1173Married! How?

Tattle
1174Suddenly –before we knew where we were –that villain Jeremy, by the help of disguises, tricked us into one another.

Foresight
1175Why, you told me just now you went hence in haste to be married.

Angelica
1176But I believe Mr Tattle meant the favour to me, I thank him.

Tattle
1177I did, as hope to be saved, madam, my intentions were good. But this is the most cruel thing, to marry one does not know how, nor why, nor wherefore. The devil take me if ever I was so much concerned at anything in my life.

Angelica
1178'Tis very unhappy, if you don't care for one another.

Tattle
1179The least in the world. That is for my part, I speak for myself. Gad, I never had the least thought of serious kindness. I never liked anybody less in my life. Poor woman! Gad, I'm sorry for her too, for I have no reason to hate her neither; but I believe I shall lead her a damned sort of a life.

Mrs Foresight
1180[aside to Mrs Frail] He's better than no husband at all, tho' he's a coxcomb.

Mrs Frail
1181 [to her] Ay, ay, it's well it's no worse. (Aloud) Nay, for my part I always despised Mr Tattle of all things. Nothing but his being my husband could have made me like him less.

Tattle
1182Look you there, I thought as much. Pox on't, I wish we could keep it secret. Why, I don't believe any of this company would speak of it.

Mrs Frail
1183But, my dear, that's impossible. The parson and that rogue Jeremy will publish it.

Tattle
1184Ay, my dear, so they will, as you say.

Angelica
1185Oh, you'll agree very well in a little time. Custom will make it easy to you.

Tattle
1186Easy! Pox on't, I don't believe I shall sleep tonight.

Sir Sampson
1187Sleep, quotha? No, why, you would not sleep o'your wedding night? I'm an older fellow than you and don't mean to sleep.

Ben
1188Why there's another match now, as thof a couple of privateers were looking for a prize, and should fall foul of one another. I'm sorry for the young man with all my heart. Look you, friend, if I may advise you, when she's going (for that you must expect, I have experience of her), when she's going, let her go. For no matrimony is tough enough to hold her, and if she can't drag anchor along with her, she'll breal her cable, I can tell you that. Who's here, the madman?

Enter Valentine dressed, Scandal and Jeremy.

Valentine
1189No here's the fool, and if occasion be, I'll give it under my hand.

Sir Sampson
1190How now?

Valentine
1191Sir, I'm come to acknowledge my errors, and ask your pardon.

Sir Sampson
1192What, have you found your senses at last, then? In good time, sir.

Valentine
1193You were abused, sir, I never was distracted.

Foresight
1194How? Not mad, Mr Scandal?

Scandal
1195No, really, sir; I'm his witness, it was all counterfeit.

Valentine
1196I thought I had reasons. But it was a poor contrivance, the effect has shewn it such.

Sir Sampson
1197Contrivance! What, to cheat me? To cheat your father? Sirrah, could you hope to prosper?

Valentine
1198Indeed, I thought, sir, when the father endeavoured to undo the son, it was a reasonable return of nature.

Sir Sampson
1199Very good, sir. Mr Buckram, are you ready? Come, sir, will you sign and seal?

Valentine
1200If you please, sir. But first I would ask this lady one question.

Sir Sampson
1201Sir, you must ask my leave first. That lady? No, sir, you shall ask that lady no questions till you have asked her blessing, sir. That lady is to be my wife.

Valentine
1202I have heard as much, sir, but I would have it from her own mouth.

Sir Sampson
1203That's as much as to say, I lie, sir, and you don't believe what I say.

Valentine
1204Pardon me, sir. But I reflect that I very lately counterfeited madness. I don't know but the frolic may go round.

Sir Sampson
1205Come, chuck, satisfy him, answer him. Come, come, Mr Buckram, the pen and ink.

Buckram
1206Here it is, sir, with the deed, all is ready.

Valentine goes to Angelica.

Angelica
1207'Tis true, you have a great while pretended love to me; nay, what if you were sincere? Still you must pardon me if I think my own inclinations have a better right to dispose of my person than yours.

Sir Sampson
1208Are you answered now, sir?

Valentine
1209Yes, sir.

Sir Sampson
1210Where's your plot, sir, and your contrivance now, sir? Will you sign, sir? Come will you sign and seal?

Valentine
1211With all my heart, sir.

Scandal
1212'S'death, you are not mad indeed, to ruin yourself?

Valentine
1213I have been disappointed of my only hope, and he that loses hope may part with any thing. I never valued fortune but as it was subservient to my pleasure, and my only pleasure was to please this lady. I have made many vain attempts, and find at last that nothing but my ruin can effect it, which for that reason I will sign to. Give me the paper.

Angelica
1214[aside] Generous Valentine!

Buckram
1215Here is the deed, sir.

Valentine
1216But where is the bond by which I am obliged to sign this?

Buckram
1217Sir Sampson, you have it.

Angelica
1218No, I have it. And I'll use it, as I would every thing that is an enemy to Valentine.

[Tears the paper.]

Sir Sampson
1219How now?

Valentine
1220Ha!

Angelica
1221 [to Valentine] Had I the world to give you, it could not make me worthy of so generous and faithful a passion. Here's my hand, my heart was always yours, and struggled very hard to make this utmost trial of your virtue.

Valentine
1222Between pleasure and amazement I am lost. But on my knees I take the blessing.

Sir Sampson
1223Ouns, what is the meaning of this?

Ben
1224Mess, here's the wind changed again. Father, you and I may make a voyage together now.

Angelica
1225Well, Sir Sampson, since I have played you a trick, I'll advise you how you may avoid such another. Learn to be a good father, or you'll never get a second wife. I always loved your son, and hated your unforgiving nature. I was resolved to try him to the utmost. I have tried you too, and know you both. You have not more faults than he has virtues, and 'tis hardly more pleasure to me that I can make him and myself happy than that I can punish you.

Valentine
1226If my happiness could receive addition, this kind surprise would make it double.

Sir Sampson
1227Ouns, you're a crocodile.

Foresight
1228Really, Sir Sampson, this is a sudden eclipse.

Sir Sampson
1229You're an illiterate fool, and I'm another, and the stars are liars, and if I had breath enough, I'd curse them and you, myself and everybody. Ouns! Cullied, bubbled, jilted, woman-bobbed at last –I have not patience.

[Exit Sir Sampson.]

Tattle
1230If the gentleman is in this disorder for want of a wife, I can spare him mine. [To Jeremy] Oh, are you there, sir? I'm indebted to you for my happiness.

Jeremy
1231Sir, I ask you ten thousand pardons, 'twas an errant mistake. You see, sir, my master was never mad, or anything like it. Then how could it be otherwise?

Valentine
1232Tattle, I thank you, you would have interposed between me and heaven, but Providence laid Purgatory in your way. You have but justice.

Scandal
1233I hear the fiddles that Sir Sampson provided for his own wedding. Methinks 'tis pity they should not be employed when the match is so much mended. Valentine, tho' it be morning, we may have a dance.

Valentine
1234Anything, my friend, everything that looks like joy and transport.

Scandal
1235Call 'em, Jeremy.

Angelica
1236I have done dissembling now, Valentine, and if that coldness which I have always worn before you should turn to an extreme fondness, you must suspect it.

Valentine
1237I'll prevent that suspicion, for I intend to dote on at that immoderate rate, that your fondness shall never distinguish itself enough to be taken notice of. If ever you seem to love too much, it must be only when I can't love enough.

Angelica
1238Have a care of large promises; you know you are apt to run more in debt than you are able (to) pay.

Valentine
1239Therefore I yield my body as your prisoner, and make your best on't.

Scandal
1240The music stays for you. Dance 1241Well, madam, you have done exemplary justice, in punishing an inhumane father and rewarding a faithful lover. But there is a third good work, which I, in particular, must thank you for. I was an infidel to your sex, and you have converted me. For now I am convinced that all women are not like fortune, blind in bestowing favours, either on those who do not merit, or who do not want 'em.

Angelica
1242'Tis an unreasonable accusation that you lay upon our sex. You tax us with injustice, only to cover your own want of merit. You would all have the reward of love, but few have the constancy to stay till it becomes your due. Men are generally hypocrites and infidels. They pretend to worship, but have neither zeal nor faith. How few, like Valentine, would persevere even unto martyrdom, and sacrifice their interest to their constancy. In admiring me you misplace the novelty.
1243
The miracle today is that we find
1244
A lover true, not that a woman's kind.

Exeunt omnes.
FINIS