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.
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!
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.
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 –
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.
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.
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