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The following transcription of the "Part of Poore" was originally prepared by David Carnegie for the Malone Society (''Collections XV'' [Oxford: OUP, 1993], 111-69). It is reproduced here by kind permission of Professor Carnegie and the Malone Society. Copies of ''Collections XV'' can be purchased through [http://malonesociety.com/publications/ the Malone Society's site]. | |||
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Square brackets are used to mark deletions, and angular brackets are used to indicate "questionably legible portions of the text" (Carnegie 115). The Act and Scene headings have been enlarged for visibility but are not distinguished as such in the original manuscript. | |||
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This text has been made available primarily to facilitate searching; the limitations of wiki-coding mean that the digitised images of the manuscript and/or Professor Carnegie's original transcription should be consulted to ensure complete accuracy. | |||
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<table style="width:60%;white-space:nowrap;"> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>THE PART OF 'POORE' </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td><big>Actus I<sup>mus</sup> Scӕna I<sup>a</sup>.</big> </td><td>[http://lostplays.org/g/poore.html#1 <nowiki>[</nowiki>FOL.21a<nowiki>]</nowiki>] </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td> Poore. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Welcome thou instrument of liberty offreth to stab himselfe </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td>Sly </td><td><strike> </strike> Hold hold </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td>Poore: </td><td>It is a most vnthankfull office; </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>To save a man vnwilling is to murder. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>What hath this world of myne that I should covet </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Longer to stay w<sup>th</sup> it? nor have you reason </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Thus to detaine mee, I must greiving say it </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Through mee you want what might have well sustaind you </td><td> </td><td>10 </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>And your last store scarce panteth nourishment </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Vnto your selfe and sister. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td>Sly </td><td><strike> </strike> How truely rich </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Though having nothing, for contemning all? </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td>Poore. </td><td>True very wise, nay rich, if hee could gett </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Even w<sup>th</sup> his best indeauour nourishment: </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>But that now wants whose rich hees only wise </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>T'is the receaved opinion, and what arts </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Are meanly shrouded in a thred bare coate </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Want theire due forme, thats a privation of it. </td><td> </td><td>20 </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>The worst of ills that is in misery </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Is that it gives a man contemptible </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>Makes him a scoffe to every painted asse </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | |||
<tr><td> </td><td>W<sup>ch</sup> beares a golden image, every slave </td><td> </td><td> </td | |||
Latest revision as of 00:23, 9 May 2016
The following transcription of the "Part of Poore" was originally prepared by David Carnegie for the Malone Society (Collections XV [Oxford: OUP, 1993], 111-69). It is reproduced here by kind permission of Professor Carnegie and the Malone Society. Copies of Collections XV can be purchased through the Malone Society's site.
Square brackets are used to mark deletions, and angular brackets are used to indicate "questionably legible portions of the text" (Carnegie 115). The Act and Scene headings have been enlarged for visibility but are not distinguished as such in the original manuscript.
This text has been made available primarily to facilitate searching; the limitations of wiki-coding mean that the digitised images of the manuscript and/or Professor Carnegie's original transcription should be consulted to ensure complete accuracy.
THE PART OF 'POORE' | |||
Actus Imus Scӕna Ia. | [FOL.21a] | ||
Poore. | |||
Welcome thou instrument of liberty offreth to stab himselfe | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | It is a most vnthankfull office; | ||
To save a man vnwilling is to murder. | |||
What hath this world of myne that I should covet | |||
Longer to stay wth it? nor have you reason | |||
Thus to detaine mee, I must greiving say it | |||
Through mee you want what might have well sustaind you | 10 | ||
And your last store scarce panteth nourishment | |||
Vnto your selfe and sister. | |||
Sly | |||
Though having nothing, for contemning all? | |||
Poore. | True very wise, nay rich, if hee could gett | ||
Even wth his best indeauour nourishment: | |||
But that now wants whose rich hees only wise | |||
T'is the receaved opinion, and what arts | |||
Are meanly shrouded in a thred bare coate | |||
Want theire due forme, thats a privation of it. | 20 | ||
The worst of ills that is in misery | |||
Is that it gives a man contemptible | |||
Makes him a scoffe to every painted asse | |||
Wch beares a golden image, every slave | |||
Wch came into this Cytty wth bare feete | |||
And since hath heap'd vp by mechanicke basenes | |||
Abundant riches will contem the state | |||
That nature brought him to and no more pitty it, | |||
Then wisedome will a snake pin'd wth much cold | |||
Sly: | 30 | ||
Poore. | No it is sacred truth, there is not one | ||
Who hath not circled wth a triple brasse | |||
His more obdurate heart, each man doth live | [FOL.21b] | ||
As hee were enemy to the whole world. | |||
There is a spatious distance twixt the heart, | |||
And tounge of every man, they speake and doe | |||
Nought that hath smallest coherence wth theire minds; | |||
They doe even strive vnto it wth theire full nerves. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | You advise well, I shall, and digg a prey | 40 | |
From out theire frosen intrailes, wch shall nourish vs, | |||
Feede vs wth laughter, cramm vs full wth gold. | |||
I'le hold as firme antipathy wth men, | |||
As doe the elements amongst themselves. | |||
Sly | | ||
Poore: | Soe will not I vnlesse a misery. | ||
And wanton spleene to laugh at it. | |||
Sly | |||
Of clyents, to your lure | |||
Poore: | And being well lured, | 50 | |
Ile cramm them soe they shall not breath to flight. | |||
Let's see they may doe well if more harsh fate | |||
Bite not our blooming fortunes. | |||
Strange | |||
Poore. | Whilst wee, Apollo's children, wch are given | ||
To the true study of whats purely good. | |||
Share not the least part of it in effect. | |||
Our merits are defects, and only staines. | |||
Disgraces to mans glosse, in mans false eyes. | |||
The heaven of our glory shines no more, | 60 | ||
Then a faint candles light, in a proud sunn. | |||
Oh Iove! oh Iove! why hast thou warn'd thy thunder [?] | |||
It should not dare to touch Apollo's tree? | |||
Yet sufferest vilder more inferiour stro<a>kes | |||
To rend, and hammer his more loved children, | [FOL.22a] | ||
To dust, to aire, to nothing, lesse then nothing. | |||
Strang: | [f] | ||
Poore: | Sr I have fellowe feeling of theire ills. | ||
Strang | | ||
Poore: | [O] | 70 | |
He doth intice you to a dangerous ill | |||
Sly: | Slight what doe you meane? | ||
Poore | |||
Sly: | You wont vndoe your selfe | ||
Poore | [A] | ||
Stra: | |||
Poore | To losse | ||
Strange: | of what? | ||
Poore: | Your wealth and reputation. | ||
Riches are not more enimyes to heaven, | 80 | ||
then To our art. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Our heaven of poetry cannot brooke such rivals. | ||
It is wellnigh[] prodigious they should meete. | |||
And or proceedes from a defect of wo<r>th, | |||
Or by excesse of some vild humour ioyned, | |||
Wch naturalists observe wthin theire subjects | |||
To cause a vitious forme; for more then perfect | |||
Is but a plurisy wch in wholsomest blood | |||
Breeds naught save malladyes, but being ill, | 90 | ||
It meerely is necessited to kill. | |||
You knowe the daunger Sr If you proceede | |||
Strange: | |||
Poore | Now comes your cue to speake goe on and roundly | ||
Sly | |||
Poore: | You may proceed and hee may <w>inn by intising. | ||
But by your pardon, you are much [deceaved] vnwise, | [FOL.22b] | ||
If all his traines cann lead you to consent. | |||
Strange: | |||
I cannot be disswaded | 100 | ||
Poore | |||
To contemplation, for you must neglect | |||
All worldly matters, and be given to this, | |||
As to the sollidst earthly happinesse. | |||
Strang | |||
Poore: | And I will vndertake to give instructions | ||
In this quainte rhetoricke, and subtile logicke, | |||
And what I cann participat in naturals | |||
Shall not be wanting, since I knowe you firme | |||
Of good capacity and ingenuous. | 110 | ||
Strange: | |||
Shall not be wanting to you | |||
Poore: | [Pish] | ||
Those were but by words wch I did object | |||
Sly: | |||
Poore | Sr It was ill donn, and no way worth your thanks. | ||
Strange: | [I would] lodge heare about | ||
Poore | |||
Strange | |||
Poore: | It should not neede but since you'l have it soe | 120 | |
I will accept it and deserve it to | |||
Strange: | 'Till when I leave you. | ||
Poore | |||
Strange: | Tis Strange anon Ile come. | ||
Poore | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | S'light what doe you meane? | ||
Sly | |||
Poore: | You wo'n't vndoe your selfe? | ||
Sly | — wth your precisenes. | 130 | |
Poore | may you have game and will not sterve and perish? | ||
Sly | | [FOL.23a] | |
Or it spoile thee | |||
Poore: | [] | ||
Sly: | Prethee vrge these no more | ||
Poore: | |||
But Ive seene honest men in as bare naps. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | Doe spare mee not, I will indure thy worst, | ||
And answer thee wth full as great a noyse. | 140 | ||
My flash shalbe as violent and as horrid. | |||
Sly: | Our lightning shall insue | ||
Poore: | |||
Now my wise wench of brantford, how now Gill, | |||
What newes bringst thou now? | |||
Sly: | Wee are quite vndon | ||
Poore: | On wth your night gowne Gill, and dresse yorselfe | ||
Ith lady fashion speedily, and returne. | |||
Theire coming in ? | |||
Gill | 150 | ||
Poore | |||
Sly: | |||
Poore: | Your witt is rich enough to play on mee | ||
Sly | |||
Poore | That shall not be indited for your death | ||
<Ieamy> hath putt it vp [<yyo>] you shall not have it | |||
Sly: | Then Ile goe hang my self: | ||
Poore | — Away away man | ||
What what in desperation, fy vpon't | |||
Heare mee sr I have heard a cunning hand | 160 | ||
May soe dispose two glasses as by them | |||
Each externe inconvenience maybe kend. | |||
Sly: | [FOL.23b] | ||
Poore. | At thy promotion, at thy exaltation. | ||
Giv'd thou mayest cheat securely free of feare. | |||
Thou feelst the worst of it, false dice, halfe cards | |||
Will doe exceeding well; [f<a>lse] if thoult be honest, | |||
Ile teach thee a more exquisite art of begging, | |||
Then ere was heard yet from the newgate dungeon. | |||
Each man ith house shall give a groat a day | 170 | ||
To have thee vndergoe theire worke, and gaine by it. | |||
For I will vndertake, in halfe a yeare. | |||
Thou shalt as palpably snatch from the grates, | |||
Of all the prisons wthin London walls, | |||
Ney and the libertyes, the penny pension | |||
As the Kings men doe from theire neighbour companyes | |||
Societyes of gallants | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Hell and misery | ||
Sly: | | 180 | |
Poore | | ||
Is't Is't I heare them, fly and putt you on | |||
Some other shape, come Lady Gillian come | |||
Have you not donn yett? oh your well enough | |||
Good morrowe to your worships Ladyship | |||
Good Madam Change. | |||
Act: II Scӕna 2da | |||
3d offi: | some kind purgation, is not that your meaning ? | ||
Poore: | Madam doe you still hold those points of complement | ||
In wch I did instruct you yesterday? | 190 | ||
When to advance, when to retire, and when | |||
To keepe your stand? at the first salutacion | |||
How to congratulate the welcome of— | |||
—A freind equall in fortune, of a superiour, | |||
How to be court<e>ous to inferiours? | |||
Gill: | [FOL.24a] | ||
Poore: | Thus farr weeve gonn i'th science, theory, | ||
Now weele proceed vnto the art, or practise. | |||
Hard | |||
Poore: | Thinke you, you cann performe what I instructed? | 200 | |
Gill | |||
Poore | Suppose mee, lordly, after what manner meete you | ||
Gill | |||
Poore: | How to a knight your equall? | ||
Hard: | — I would my kinsman had hir | ||
Poore: | Soe would I to: but for the inferiour now? | ||
Hard | |||
Poore: | Sr you bid fairely for hir, you shall have hir. | ||
Your cousen goose shall have hir | |||
Gill | 210 | ||
Poore: | |||
Soe now you are instructed, let us spend | |||
Some tyme, in matters of a more import. | |||
Madam I knowe your birth, and your deservings. | |||
But what your fortunes are Ive beene content | |||
Yet not to seeke, but now you've given your selfe | |||
Wholly to mee and doe repose alone | |||
Vpon my choyce, I will be bold to inquire | |||
That I may neither loose you on a man | |||
Belowe yourselfe in merits or in fortune | 220 | ||
Gill. | Heaven blesse vs what are you? | ||
Poore: | |||
Roalfe Gaspar Thomas where are these varlets trowe? | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | What are you ? speake, to what end doe you come? | [FOL.24b] | |
Hard | |||
Poore: | How Sly saucy groome? first enter my house | ||
Wth more then two, tis a sufficient riot | |||
And god knowes what you would, but that our eye, | |||
Our happily seeing eye prevented you; | 230 | ||
Thanks to the supreame power wch made it happy | |||
To that fore sight, what not a varlett stirr ? | |||
You are consenting to, wee might be murdred[,] | |||
And you not heare of it; where are your fellows?. | |||
You'are sometymes dubly diligent, and a word | |||
Wthin our kenn will make you fly like winde | |||
Where are your fellowes? | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | What men are these? | ||
Gill: | 240 | ||
Poore: | Ney you shall stay, the Iustice shall decide | ||
Whither your act be lawfull, tmay perchance | |||
Conclude at Tyburne or the newgate dungeon | |||
Besides a publique lash from hence to ye tower | |||
From thence to westmonest<e>r, spight of your freinds | |||
Hard. | Sr I intreat your favour. | ||
Poore | |||
To be god knowes frighted well nigh to death, | |||
Then only intreat favour, that's fine recompence. | |||
If thou beest worth a penny Ile have that | 250 | ||
And all thy freinds cann make if they will save thee. | |||
Hard. | Sr in good fayth I meant no harme | ||
Poore. | |||
That shalbe t[y]ryed, goe Gaspar fetch the Conestable | |||
Sly | Tak't least hee doe repent; | ||
Poore. | |||
That is a sweet amends, but whats your name ? | |||
Hard. | Tis Hard and please you Sr | [FOL.25a] | |
Poore | |||
Hath often named you wthin my hearing | 260 | ||
An honest creditor, and for his sake. | |||
If wth [th] your haust this lady be appeased | |||
Your peace is made; what recompence shee will | |||
You must attone hir wth, or this cannot bee. | |||
Some toy will please hir best, shee is a woman | |||
A diamond ring of twenty marke that's all | |||
Oh shee was frighted much, had shee beene married | |||
Tenn Suttons wealths could not have saved yor life | |||
Hard. | I would bestowe | ||
Poore: | Vm lett mee see the gold, | 270 | |
[Ile] offer it; oh these are [the f] Sly's attachments and his bonds. | |||
Hard. | Good Sr they are | ||
Poore: | |||
Presents to you by mee his mediate | |||
Twenty faire angells, and doth hope to appease | |||
Wth this bright sacrifice, your incensed minde: | |||
To add by glorious coulour of this gold, | |||
A pleasing tinture, to your late pale cheeke. | |||
Hard: | Is shee a lady Sr | ||
Poore | 280 | ||
Is ready now to bed hir, and but stay's | |||
The coming of some freinds vnto the ceremony. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Some five dayes hince. | ||
Hard | |||
Poore | No yet the importunitye hir freinds have vsed, | ||
Have made hir yeeld. | |||
Hard | [FOL.25b] | ||
Poore. | I have no reason sr | ||
Hard | What may hir portion be? | 290 | |
Poore | |||
Iustice of peace in Yorkeshire, hath alotted | |||
Three thousand pound wch wthin twice three months | |||
After the day of marriage shall bee payed; | |||
Vpon condition,yt shee shall have ioynter. | |||
After his death, three hundreed pound a yeare. | |||
Hir fathers age and weakenes will not suffer hĩ | |||
Present vnto these nuptials but hee sends | |||
His brother to consumate what he please. | |||
Hard. | Then he concludes all. | 300 | |
Poore | |||
Hard | |||
Poore | Shee hath refer'd hir selfe to my dispose | ||
And if I like the gentleman and the tearmes | |||
It shall goe hard but Ile prevaile so much | |||
Hard | |||
Poore: | Tis faire the gentle man concludes it | ||
Hard | |||
Hee shall | |||
Poor | [] | 310 | |
If I cann ought. | |||
Hard | |||
Poore: | It is requited i<n>th the very act | ||
If it doe prove succesfully and well | |||
Hard | |||
Poore: | Sr If hee be as you have spoken him | ||
Hee shall not come vnwelcome | |||
Gill | You'r welcome [to] | ||
Poore: | [] | ||
Sly | Footra for Hard | 320 | |
Poore | now my Sly blewcoat thou how likst thou this | [FOL.26a] | |
Is it not better then ye dolefull ditty | |||
Of Ile goe hang or stab my selfe | |||
Sly: | Of more rich witt | ||
Poore: | [Tis in] tis inforced soe now | ||
But better arts were better ways to thrift | |||
Gett you a country gentile habit, hir vncle | |||
You must be nowe. | |||
Gill | [Wh] | ||
Poor | Be neat and spruise as what you have cann make | 330 | |
You <h>have a woer coming that shall pay fort | |||
You want not my instructions how to answer | |||
Though hee how to oppose, and sett on you | |||
When fate affords no other way to live | |||
to get a living needs must | |||
Our wits [must list indeavour wee may thrive] strive | |||
Exeunt | |||
Actus 2di scӕ 2da | |||
Poore. | Whose at the dore who is it? | ||
Sly: | He yt desires to bee a scholler | 340 | |
Poor | |||
Admitt, admitt them: I must scoure my witt | |||
I feare tis spoil'd wth rust tis not acute | |||
Sly: | What are you [bett] ready for them? | ||
Poore | Ready ready. | ||
Surely twas in Domitian's tyme he lived. | |||
That Iuvenal, the wonder of all ages | |||
Wch have beene since, should live soe much vnknow̃ | |||
Soe much neglected in his owne tyme, as none | |||
Would grace theire storyes wth his sacred name, | 350 | ||
Nor praise them selves, wth giving him due fame. | |||
Yet tis enough wee knowe and wonder at thee | |||
That once thou wert and that thy works shal bee | |||
Worthy long admiration. | |||
Sly: | Noe noe hee shall not Mr Poore | [FOL.26b] | |
Poore | [] | ||
Oh Sr I cry you mercy, and your freind, | |||
Your welcom please you sitt, I was translating | |||
A poet wch is prince of all his sect | |||
Of Satyrists, theire manners should give them | 360 | ||
Princes of men, though fewe there bee are soe; | |||
Twas Iuvenall wch if it please you heare | |||
I will recite. | |||
Strang: | |||
[Though fewe there bee are soe] | |||
Poore | Tis thus Ile not repeat the Latine text. | ||
Shall I continue silent &, indure. | |||
The loude vexations Codrus doth procure | |||
Wth his rude Theseus? shall this man reherse | |||
His gouned scӕne and this his mournfull v<er>se? | 370 | ||
Shall giant Telephus consume his day | |||
And long Orestes ӕviternall play | |||
Whose margent is repleat, whose very backe | |||
Scapes not the rage but beares asselike packe. | |||
Shall these I say much endlesse still be read | |||
And only I continue as if dead | |||
Vnto these labours? shall I only feare | |||
To vex mens organs and to force a teare ? &c | |||
I only made experience what I could. | |||
Quicke | 380 | ||
Poore | The'ire sudden and they beare no more of weight | ||
Then a small tyme would give. | |||
Strang: | It is well vrged | ||
Poore: | |||
Quicke | And make a Ioviall meale. | ||
Poore | |||
Weele vse a prety schollers exercise | |||
One shall propose a theame, & each compose | |||
A couple of verses on it as they sitt | [FOL.27a] | ||
And if the first speake last, the rest shall take | 390 | ||
Theire cups of wine a peece to acuat them | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | Each in his order shall, doe you propose. | ||
Sly | |||
Poore | You observe method in your very sport | ||
Sr for the good report you give of wine | |||
Ile wish you quicker poets, and th<at> myne. | |||
Sly | What what more yet | ||
Poore: | |||
Quicke | goe call them in | 400 | |
Poore: | you shall not neede we[a]'re those | ||
they doe intend. Srs wee must intreat you | |||
Into another roome, there you shall see | |||
What passeth; if't please you disclose yor minde | |||
I will performe what my weake skill can[n] doe | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Ney pray Sr goe, wee schollers love no complement | ||
Though wee cann vse it: he hath beene yor guide | |||
And you must followe | |||
Scaena 3ia Enter Poore above | 410 | ||
Poor: | A swagerour doe you say one yt hates schollers? | ||
Hee's none of your stage railours on thẽ is hee? | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore: | I would he were a poet, one that daubd | ||
Papers wth greasy lines, wch fall away | |||
From his hoggs head, as sweat doth frõ his body. | |||
Both being excrements, of art, and nature. | |||
Such I doe knowe there are, & would faine meet wth | |||
Ide make thẽ knowe theire mungrill nature could not | |||
Produce a word, lesse vicious then themselves, | 420 | ||
And if not borrowed from ye sacred springs. | [FOL.27b] | ||
But tis to matter; Ile give them leave to envy | |||
What is beyond theire reach. but for yor creature, | |||
If I not bafle him in his proper humour | |||
Ile burne my bookes, and turne a lawyers clearke. | |||
But they are neere the doare you shall have sport. | |||
I must begonn Exit | |||
[Sly] Quicke | |||
Scaena 4ta Enter Poore | |||
Trugull | |||
Poore | The best our poore house hath. | 430 | |
Tru | | ||
Hard | |||
Poore: | Doubt not but you shall well, I like the man | ||
[That] He is a proper man[] yt will tempt much | |||
Besides grave, generous as it seems to mee | |||
Repleat wth worthy qualityes, & though rawe | |||
In Cupids ceremonyes, I must thinke | |||
A few instructions,will give him singular. | |||
Hard. | Doe you thinke soe Sr? | 440 | |
Poor. | Yes vndoubtedly | ||
I know hee's very apt: to bee a gull. | |||
Snaile | |||
Poore: | You shall Gaspar lead vp these gentlemen | ||
Vnto your mrs | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | Stay you wth mee Sr | ||
Doe you inquire hir minde and bring hir downe | |||
The whilst wee wilbe busy Gaspar lead them. | |||
Trugull. | Must not I goe to must I not? | 450 | |
Poore: | Not yet | ||
Trugull. | |||
Poore: | Sr it is best first to have mediates | [FOL.28a] | |
Shee shallbee brought downe to you | |||
Strange | |||
Poor: | Pray Sr may I inquire your name and country? | ||
[Tru: | | ||
Quicke | How say you goodman dawe? | ||
Poore | Tis a faire living Sr | ||
Tru: | 460 | ||
Poore | A very rich one Sr. | ||
Trug: | |||
Poore | But Sr after what fashion would you woe? | ||
Tru: | Why are there divers fashions | ||
Poore | [Very many.] Yes as in other things | ||
Soe wee're fantasticall in that, ney more. | |||
Your woer is or rampant or couchant: | |||
Your rampant woer, is an angry fellowe | |||
That beares downe all before him should yu heare him, | |||
You'de thinke hee were a souldier by his wounds. | 470 | ||
Heele sweare a woman in to love wth him. | |||
Or spend whole vollyes of his oaths in vaine. | |||
Though that doe seldome happen; for his thunder | |||
Battars theire fortresses vntill they fall | |||
Flatt downe before him. | |||
Trug: | |||
Poore | Sr very true, your couchant, is a creature | ||
Wch sighs and sobs out Hero & Leander, | |||
Or some more mournfull elegyes; and hee goes | |||
Alwayes crosse armed, to shewe his passions. | 480 | ||
Tru: | [FOL.28b] | ||
Poore: | Soe Sr but Ile instruct you soe effectually | ||
You shan't neede halfe yt passion. Let mee see | |||
You have a very perfect spericke eye | |||
True | Yes Ide be sory elce | ||
Poore: | |||
Tru: | Yes I am very health full. | ||
Poore | |||
Your organs are more fitt; for I must teach you | |||
To fix your eye wth iudgement, on an obiect; | 490 | ||
And Ile give such a power vnto ye radiature | |||
Emitted from it yt shall strike hir | |||
More conqueringly then Cupids golden shafte. | |||
At the first sight you shall not speake to hir | |||
But heare are lines wch when shee ginns approach | |||
Ile desire you to reade, & you shall read thẽ. | |||
Say often say you writt them in hir prayse. | |||
Trug: | And they are none of myne | ||
Poore | |||
You Imitate the gentile fashion | 500 | ||
They for the most part only live on others | |||
By borrowing of others, and shall you | |||
As well proportioned for a genltreman. | |||
As amongst them the best, not keep ye fashion? | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore: | How! feare to ly? then feare to live, all creatures | ||
Doe live by lying | |||
Tru: | som live by standing | ||
Poore: | |||
For some doe live by standing, yet they ly to. | 510 | ||
Tru: | It may bee soe | ||
Poore: | And to beginn wth gallants, for nobility, | [FOL.29a] | |
I durst not touch though they should spend themselves | |||
On waxen Images; | |||
Nor cleargy men though they should ly wth scripture. | |||
And vitiate [th] it to adulte[rate]ry. | |||
Have at your gallants, should they pay theire debts | |||
As they doe promise, I knowe some now flants | |||
In cloath of tyshue, yt would be as bare, | |||
As when they first sett foote vpon this land. | 520 | ||
These live by falsifying of theire dayes; | |||
Others by mating wth ye Cyty wives | |||
Schollers and lawyers doe' live by theire toungs | |||
And the best ground of schollers sophistry | |||
Wch you may call lyes; but your lawyers toungs | |||
Are strumpets ly wth all men yet they live by them. | |||
Your citty lying is so truly knowne. | |||
As I will not repeate it. | |||
Stran: | |||
Poore: | But to goe forward, shee hearing hir praise read | 530 | |
Cann't choose but speake to you, out of hir words | |||
Then must you take occasion, and proce<a>de. | |||
If I had tyme Ide give you actions | |||
Wch should prove charmes, and drawe hir by ye eares, | |||
Despight all propased antydotes of deafnes. | |||
Tru | |||
Poore | You shall most potently,yor eyes shall [sparkle] spread | ||
Such flames of love, as shee shall feare to stirr | |||
Least shee be scorched wth them, yor lips shall move. | |||
Such sphӕrelike harmony as you shall ravish hir. | 540 | ||
Tru: | [FOL.29b] | ||
Poore: | No, thinke not Ile vrge ought shalbe distastfull | ||
Tru | Nay nay you shant deny it. | ||
Poore: | |||
Youle wrong mee much, for I have not deservd it. | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore: | But Sr I must confesse Ive laboured | ||
And donn you more good wth ye gentlewoman. | |||
Then cann this tenn tymes doubled procure mee. | |||
Yet since you offer it soe vnrequested | 550 | ||
I doe accept it as sufficient recompence. | |||
For all my labour, not because tis worth them, | |||
I like your will, farr better then the gift. | |||
Be mindfull that you wrap a ring ith verses. | |||
Tru: | Oh I meant that, will not this serve ? | ||
Poor | |||
Strange: | Not very well | ||
Poore: | |||
Sr shall I heare them. | |||
Tru: | Attend for these are they. Poore: Sr I doe heare. | 560 | |
Tru: | That's for the ring | ||
Poore: | |||
Tru: | I would shee heard mee | ||
Poore: | Doe you vse this often ? | ||
Trug: | I would shee'de heard them read. | ||
Poore: | |||
I will present them to hir. | |||
Gill | Greater perfection to them. | ||
Poore: | |||
Tell hir theire good because theire end is good | 570 | ||
Wch is to prayse hir. | |||
Hard | When comes hir vncle Sr? | ||
Poore: | |||
A letter wch assured to morrowe night. | [FOL.30a] | ||
This night heele visit ye great bed of ware | |||
Had hee a lasse of like dimensions | |||
Twould scarce conteine them. | |||
Hand. | |||
Poore: | The northerne ale hath made him a Lucullus | ||
Hee's a meere man of fatnes, you must feede him | 580 | ||
And fee him well, if you expect ought from him | |||
He is desirous of a well greased fist | |||
As well as mouth or belly. | |||
Hard | |||
Poore: | The end will croune it ioyfully besure | ||
You'enquire not to much after hir portion: | |||
Twill vex him strangely, bee not you to strickt, | |||
In asking forraine bills for ye performance, | |||
Twill hinder all your hopes, hee's very collericke | |||
And must be humour'd to the full, or elce | 590 | ||
Hard: | Hee's fire and toe, I doe instruct you savingly. | ||
Not aske her portion! | |||
Hard: | Of what hee promiseth.<P.> Yes you may enquire but | ||
not &cӕ | |||
Poore: | Hir fathers bond and his wilbe sufficient | ||
I give you Sr the worst and yet I thinke | |||
Hee'l[e] hardly trouble any to be bound | |||
Nor love that man wch shall distrust his honesty | |||
Stran | [I] | ||
Poore: | Sr some small conference I'de desire wth you | 600 | |
Snaile | Wth mee Sr? very willingly. | ||
Poore | |||
Soe good a man as you should be soe wrong'd | |||
As my art sayth you are.Would that wrong'd mee. | |||
And that my house should be soe much vnhappy | |||
As to detaine you from yor home th<i>s tyme | |||
Snaile. | I have lost nothing have I Sr? | [FOL.30b] | |
Poore: | [] | ||
S<na>ile | I ever had | ||
Poore: | Sr tis your wife I meane. | 610 | |
Snaile: | |||
Poore: | Hir honour hath left hir, for shee hath left | ||
To bee an honest wife, you knowe on Medle? | |||
Snaile: | |||
Poore: | [Hir honour hath left hir for shee] | ||
T should seeme soe he hath go[od]tt yor best ware Sr | |||
Snaile: | I nere wrongd you | ||
Poore | |||
Snaile: | No on my life. | ||
Poore: | 620 | ||
Sir hye you home; if you now meet not wth him. | |||
Ile give you such instructions as you shall | |||
In ye named place at further tyme, meanwhile | |||
I knowe a gentleman whom he hath wrongd | |||
Will give his best indeavour, to finde out | |||
The tyme, & to prevent him if you please. | |||
Sr I will send the gentleman to morrowe. | |||
Strange: | |||
Poore | Sr I will send the gentleman to morrowe | ||
That shall intrap him. | 630 | ||
Snaile | |||
Poore: | Pray Sr be patient heare. | ||
Snaile: | I pray you Sr remember mee | ||
Poore | Be sure I will; and send the gentleman to morrow morne | ||
By [that ]eight o'th [ ] clocke. | |||
Snaile: | |||
Poore | If you mistrust him, one you shall thinke faythfull | ||
Choose to this office, I but offer Sr, | |||
Tis in your will to'accept | |||
Snaile | Be not to credulous I did thinke | 640 | |
Poore. | [FOL.31a] | ||
blaze not your owne discredite, tis to much | |||
You know't your selfe. | |||
Snaile: | |||
Poore | I would I were not | ||
Hard | Tomorrowe night he comes. | ||
Poore | |||
Tru: | |||
Poore | I doubt not but you shall | ||
Hard | 650 | ||
Poore | Are you not yet adultus? | ||
Tru: | |||
Poore: | not yet of age? | ||
Trug: | |||
Poore | Will you then suffer Sr such contradiction? | ||
Lett them determine of you appoint tymes? | |||
Trug: | Nay and I will to | ||
Poore: | — Oh Sr been't to feirce | ||
He is your vncle, you doe owe some duty | |||
Or at the least respect | 660 | ||
Hard | |||
Poore: | You must be rul<e>d, but not to much oreruld | ||
Tru: | |||
Poore | Sr Heele bee gonn ere this be not to violent | ||
Vpon your wife inquire out secretly. | |||
Hard | bee his continual rendez vouz | ||
Poore | [A] | ||
Gill | I must continue Mrs Change | ||
Poore. | |||
You must, a iustice of peaces daughter, | 670 | ||
Ith north at least | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore | Not as Snaile feares meddle, to morrowe morne | ||
You must to him, hee will initiate you | |||
Him selfe in to acquaintance wth his wife | |||
If you shall neede my counsell, Ile instruct you | [FOL.31b] | ||
How to behave yourselfe in information | |||
Quicke | to much I feare | ||
Poore | |||
You must add to his fury and augment it | 680 | ||
Quicke | Vpon ye least distastfull word | ||
Poore | |||
Nay if hee be an angry boy weele deale wth' him | |||
And fright him from his roaring humours, wee | |||
Cann talke, bristle, and vaunt, as well as hee. | |||
Exeunt | |||
Actus 3ij scӕna 2da | |||
Poore | What cheaters did heesay ? | ||
Sly | |||
Poore | And couldst thou suffer it goe thou'rt a gull | 690 | |
& that huge bulke of thyne those giant limbs | |||
Conteine not any sparke of man wthin them. | |||
Sdeath had I heard him he should have found I had | |||
A thunder in my hand Iove in my voyce | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | Pish tis a puny one easy to performe. | ||
Ile have a duble or a <no> revenge | |||
Vppon my life I think<e> [t] thou wouldst confess | |||
Vs cheaters should a man inquire of thee. | |||
Sly | Wee are noe better | 700 | |
Poore | |||
What ere of cheating's in mee it is thyne: | |||
Thou didst intice, coniure mee by our wants | |||
Didst force me too't when I god knowes was minded | |||
Never to suffer more in this vild world. | |||
Sly | But how much in ye insuing. | ||
Poore | Doe not vex mee | ||
By all good things I vowe, and will performe it | |||
If ere I learne, yt a like worde be spoken | |||
Thou hearing, suffering it, I will abiure thee; | [FOL.32a] | ||
Leave thee vnto thy selfe & spoile thy hopes | 711 | ||
Sly | You may doe as you please | ||
Poore | [G] | ||
To the Bromoodoes, or elce hire my selfe | |||
Vnto the Northwest passage; if these faile: | |||
Turne Poet stageplayer or anything, | |||
rather then live wth thee, Ile sell my selfe | |||
Vnto a Iewe or worse, an english vserour | |||
Whom have I cheated? only Ive sold Hard | |||
Fishd my young gallant Trugull vexed Snaile | 720 | ||
Intic'd my Strange to poetrie, thats poverty: | |||
Wch hee shall surely feele prevented Medle | |||
Drawne blood from Quicke, or at the least will draw it | |||
What act mongst these deserves ye name of cheating | |||
Ist not to gett from vserours charitable? | |||
And to lett him bee wise, yt is not cousned | |||
Whome nature made a foole is against nature | |||
To lett men knowe when others doe them wrong | |||
Is a great Iustice, and worth recompence. | |||
And to make him a poet that would bee one, | 730 | ||
Is att the most but to fullfill his vowes. | |||
What to prevent a lawyer since theire knowne | |||
To circumvent all others, but meere equity? | |||
And to take vengeance on who doe defame vs, | |||
Soe it bee noble, is allowed to vs | |||
by Martiall lawe, whome have I cheated now | |||
Whom have I cheated now, or against whom | |||
Have I intended more, then may bee donn? | |||
Sly | [FOL.32b] | ||
Poore. | Tis true my Sly. <I'm> in apparrell well, | 740 | |
Sufficient for a petty gentleman | |||
Where is thy rapier ? | |||
Sly. | What do'est thou intend? | ||
Poore | |||
Sly | Not well | ||
Poore | |||
Wher ist | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | If Quicke doe chance come hither, | ||
Stay him till my returne wch shalbe suddaine. | 750 | ||
If heele not stay will him, not goe to Snailes | |||
Till I may speake wth him, Gill bring down ye rapier | |||
If Trugull come lett Gill and hee be private, | |||
If hee be earnest, lett him presse hir his. | |||
Gill | | ||
Poore | Take heede my Dousabell vnto your docke | ||
Looke not to my affaires; take heede yor Trugull | |||
Bee not to hard for you hees a lusty knave | |||
Cann pitch his barr well, shoote his shaft arright | |||
And pay you home my Gill; hee cann ifayth. | 760 | ||
Gill | That shalbe tryed | ||
Poore | |||
Prepare yor selfe vnto yor part anon Exit. | |||
Actus 3ij scӕna 3ia | |||
Med | |||
Poore: | Oh Mr Medle I have sought you Sr | ||
In all your places of retreat. | |||
Me[l]d | |||
Poore | Wee are private heare | ||
Now I will give it you, you knowe one Quicke | 770 | ||
An envious raskall one that laboureth | |||
That seeketh causes to defame all men | |||
And if they want his wil's sufficient | [FOL.33a] | ||
For hee defames them; and vniustly iust | |||
Beginns wth his owne intimates; this vild wretch | |||
Hath quite supplanted all yor hopes at Snailes | |||
Med: | |||
Poore: | Nay lett it not seeme strange, I know yor hopes | ||
Your more then hopes your much assurance there | |||
Of his wives love, know all occurrances. | 780 | ||
And come to tell you yt you are abused | |||
By this same Quicke, who hath, I knowe not how, | |||
But sure it was by some sinister meanes | |||
Found first you lov'd & after whom you loved. | |||
Who hath (to what intent I doe not knowe) | |||
Yet sure hee did intend to wrong you by it | |||
Reveal'd the privacy of your love vnto | |||
Hir husband who now truly iealous | |||
Hath giv'n in charge to one of's trusty freinds. | |||
That if you chance to come thither hee should | 790 | ||
Much circumspectly watch your haviour | |||
The manner of your language to his wife | |||
And farther yt hee should bee certified | |||
Of your approach wch how suspiciously | |||
Heed take, the very premisies demonstrate. | |||
Your perill may bee much too, hee is desperate, | |||
And I doe thinke will hardly brooke to see you | |||
Wthout much fury,wch though you esteeme not; | |||
Yet poore gentlewoman. | |||
Med | Advise mee for ye best sr | 800 | |
Poore | |||
First be reveng'd on Quicke, & if you cann | |||
Make him confess that only enviously | |||
He scandald you for some small wrong you did him. | [FOL.33b] | ||
Then you devise some other means besides | |||
How to confirme hir honesty | |||
Med: | your name I pray sr | ||
Poore | |||
Med. | Sr I am much indebted to you[r lov]e | ||
Poore | 810 | ||
How you shall pay oh Sr humanity | |||
Commaunds this office | |||
Med: | Stronglier knitt betweene vs | ||
Poore | Sr I desire it may, wch to continue | ||
Ile give you intelligence, for I am ye man | |||
Snaile hath appointed as hir overseer | |||
Med | I thanke you. | ||
Poore: | When you would speake wth mee send to Poor's house | ||
The scholler, I shall heare of it, the tyme | |||
Will not afford mee farther leisure now | 820 | ||
Sr fare yow well. Exit | |||
Actus 3ij scӕna 4ta | |||
Wife | |||
Snaile: | |||
Poore | To them yt you thinke best deserve it Sr, | ||
What place commaundss hee in your credulous heart, | |||
That hee should force beleefe against your wife | |||
Shee may be chaster then the mourning aire | |||
Purg'd by the sunn of vitiating mists. | |||
But yet there is a shrewd suspition | 830 | ||
Much frequent in your freinds, they think not soe | |||
Ile vowe, Ive heard him say yt he hath knowne hir, | |||
But yet how [vn]truly 'tis vnknowne. | |||
Wife | My duty to you. | ||
Poore: | |||
Sr I doe greive, I chose soe sad a tyme | |||
For the beginning of acquaintance, but | [FOL.34a] | ||
I hope it shall continue wth more ioy. | |||
This is your fault Sr, you are to vnkind, | |||
Vnto soe sweete a wife. | 840 | ||
Snail | Be very long | ||
Poore: | Sr Ile performe it zealously. | ||
I would be private wth you Mrs | |||
Wife | Bee privat wth mee | ||
Poore | |||
Dry: | |||
Poore: | Then I dare like wise, you knowe Medle? | ||
Wife | True | ||
Poore | And he hath blabd it | ||
Wife | 850 | ||
Poore; | Oh to to truly | ||
Wife | What<,> durst ye villaine say soe? | ||
Po | [P] | ||
Wife | And soe Ime knowne. | ||
Poore | By him, for hee perceaving | ||
You now begann neglect him, likewise knowing | |||
Your love wa[ll]s fully fixed on Quicke, did thinke | |||
No better way to secure you his owne | |||
Then by revealing your intended love | |||
Wch hee hathfully donn; the other to | 860 | ||
Not knowing freelyer to settle you | |||
In your newe love, then by displacing Medle; | |||
Hath striven wth great effect to yt performance | |||
Thus have they laboured to supplant each other | |||
Wife | But only I have be<e>ne tript vp | ||
Poore | |||
Whilst they reioyce in theire high enterprise | |||
And thinke theire wits much good | |||
Wife | Ile be revenged | [FOL.34b] | |
Poore | 870 | ||
I thinke I have allready | |||
Dry | Vpon my life | ||
Poore | |||
Wife | Your love shal bee rewarded | ||
Poore | |||
That is my only ayme | |||
Dry | |||
Poore | And I will keepe it warely, by this | ||
Your envious lovers may bleed each by other | |||
Wife | 880 | ||
Poore | Tis like they will | ||
Dry | |||
Poore | If not Ile soe provide your honour shall | ||
No whitt be impeached | |||
Wife | Then I shalbee vnspotted | ||
Poore | |||
Wife | |||
Poore | Now shall my ignoramus and young witt | ||
Knowe they have found a scholler yt can iearke yẽ | |||
Who have wee heare my gull & Gillian | 890 | ||
What intend they trowe? | |||
Tru: | And you Sr | ||
Poore | |||
Wth ye like wish to you, & yt faire gentlewomã | |||
Wife | |||
Poore | And doe not you vse to carreine your selfe? | ||
What fucus have you daubd your face wth, ha ? | |||
Thinke you Ile have you vse theise plasterings | |||
And outgoe snakes in monthly casting skinns | |||
Tru: | Theide looke like eels for all ye world. | 900 | |
Poore | |||
And be more slipery as they are. but sr, | [FOL.35a] | ||
I hope you not intend hir for your wife | |||
Tru: | Beleiv't Sr but I doe | ||
Poore | |||
Tru: | |||
Poore: | You shall not need, for I cann certify you, | ||
I have reserved hir for my selfe. | |||
Tru: | |||
Poore | How Srrah cousned, such []an other word | 910 | |
And Ile lopp of a limbe send you to' the' spittle | |||
There to condole your losse. Srrah if your eares | |||
The want of them I mean cann move you ought | |||
Let mee not heare another word but give hir mee. | |||
Tru: | [Sr I doe love my eares and feare my eares] | ||
[It were a prety toy to gett hir from mee | |||
Poor | Are my words toye | ||
Tru: | Ile try what you cann doe | ||
Marry and shall trips him vp. | |||
Soe sr you see now in what plight you are | 920 | ||
Tru | |||
Poore | On the conditions yt I shall propose | ||
You are your owne man shee likewise your wife | |||
You shall give mee to hundred pounds to right | |||
My wrongs. | |||
Tru | |||
Poore: | Doe not deny'it for if you doe by this. {his hand | ||
Not forty kicks, not 20 luggs by th'are {he swears | 930 | ||
As many tweaks by the nose, your fower foreteeth | |||
A little finger shall not save your life | |||
At least a maine limbe. | |||
Wife | For my sake a lesse ransom. | ||
Poore | Your commaund. | ||
I must obay, it shalbe but a hundred. | [FOL.35b] | ||
And heare you [brin] leave it wth yor tutor Poore | |||
Be sure you faile not, if you doe you knowe. | |||
Tru: | [W] | ||
Poore | This night I knowe yu cann whẽ it please you. | 940 | |
Tru: | I will Sr | ||
Poore | |||
Gill | |||
Poore | Why, this is admirable, past my wish, | ||
I will home instantly. nay since you will not, | |||
Goe take hir to you, shee is your's but knowe | |||
Your vncle and your sire shall heare of it | |||
Gill | |||
Poore | You have yor tounge at liberty, tis your owne | 950 | |
B<u>t you ere long shall wish you'de tyed it vp | |||
Mrs I take my leave you are revenged | |||
The rivals doe bleed each by others sword. | |||
Wife | |||
Poore | I am bound to it, youngster fare you well | ||
Keepe your word duly, or: no more but [doe] keep it. | |||
And you my quondam betroathd, I will leave you | |||
But knowe, the divill, will fly love as ye sea | |||
As ships doe saile two wayes wth the same [m] winde | |||
Soe woemen leave and take wth ye same minde | 960 | ||
Actus 4ti scӕna ia | |||
Badg: | |||
Poore: | This is Quickes lodging and he []hath been heere. | ||
Badg: | [ | ||
Poore:— | This concearnes mee much | ||
Ime glad I heard of this, God save you Sr | |||
Badg: | And you if you be worth it | ||
Poore | |||
Wth Mr Quicke I pray you sr how fares hee | |||
Badg: | I wont tell you | [FOL.36a] | |
Poore | 971 | ||
Badg: | My Mr? | ||
Poore | |||
Bad | |||
Poore. | Sr I was coming to you to this lodging | ||
To knowe how the owner doth that if hee have | |||
Required ought [b]of you from yor Mr, you should | |||
Give mee the the message, you ye whilst should goe | |||
To Medle, whom if you found dangerous | |||
Then certifye him, Quicke is dead wherby | 980 | ||
Hee may fly more securely | |||
Badg: | Faithfully and earnestly? | ||
Poore | |||
Badg: | |||
Poore: | Iff I cann gett it as I hope I shall | ||
You neede not doubt | |||
Badg: | |||
Poore | |||
This day is like to prove a very rare one | |||
I never look'd for this, it came vnhoped | 990 | ||
Fifty good pound tis well, it soundeth great | |||
Flush in these slops; but I must not deferr. | |||
Things falling out soe fittly I must take | |||
All the occasions yt the tymes cann make. | |||
Exit | |||
Actus 4ti Scӕna 2da | |||
Sly. | |||
Hard | |||
Poore | But you may chance to feele a new relapse | ||
Sr I would speake wth you | 1000 | ||
Stran<g> | |||
Poore | [FOL.36b] | ||
Th'affaires are vrgent, Mr Quicke your freind | |||
Commends his best love to you, wth this letter | |||
Twill give you his full minde and his desire | |||
St | |||
Poore | In good plight but that feare of Medle's death | ||
Doth make him feare his life, but hee well hopes | |||
By yor assistant love, to avoyd all | |||
Those daungers wch as yet doe seeme to presse him | 1010 | ||
Strang | |||
Poore | Sr He intreated him to visit Medle | ||
And learne ye hopes or feares conceivd of him. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | Pray Sr commend mee to your kinsman trugull | ||
Tell him one Change expecteth him | |||
Sly | Is your name Change? | ||
Poore | — Yes my great man of worship | ||
My Sly changd to a <hee> bosse to a swod | |||
What, hast thou quilted thy faind gutts wth gold, | 1020 | ||
Cramb'd them wth baggs? | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | That was a maine one, how my Gogmagog | ||
Sly | When it is donn Ile tell you howe | ||
Poore | |||
Nay then I have out strip't thee, I did cause | |||
Those two to fight, and for my better vengeance | |||
Have gott this fifty pound, wch Quicke doth borrow | |||
Of my True strange. an other hundered | |||
[My] Gills Trugull will bring into I expect him, | 1030 | ||
And I have future hopes of ampler bootyes | |||
Wch my lawe lover, scholler hating Medle | |||
Shall yeeld vs, I will soke him and exhaust him | |||
Exantlate, pumpe out, and drawe dry his baggs | [FOL.37a] | ||
Wee play for whole baggs wee'r no puny sharks | |||
That venter to bee trust vp for the nipping | |||
A bung fraught wth no more then a scotch marke | |||
None of your Gipsyes, that prole napery | |||
Wth shirts and smocks, no pidlers, wee doe deale | |||
In wholesale wee, yett doe not feare a noose | 1040 | ||
A ginn to lift vs vp: lawe cann't condemne vs | |||
To further pennance then our eares cann satisfy | |||
Sly | Tookest thou this shape? | ||
Poore. | |||
Revenge, but stay hee comes lett vs fall of | |||
Stran: | |||
Poore | It shall not need, Sr I dare trust yor word | ||
If you'le confirme it right | |||
Stran: | Let mee inquire yor name. | ||
Poor | 1050 | ||
Sly | |||
Poore | I should have gloried to have beene admitted | ||
Into soe grave a consanguinity | |||
Sly | And lett vs see you often | ||
Poore | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | I take my leave | ||
Sly | To my freind | ||
Poore | |||
Actus 4ti scӕna 3ia | 1060 | ||
Sna[]ile | |||
Med | |||
Poore | What wth a mischeif make they heere or I | ||
This was no fitt tyme for my action | |||
I must turne honest fate will have it soe. | [FOL.37b] | ||
Yet Ile not loose my booty, ile attempt it | |||
And venter gainst Ioves thunder. | |||
Med. | — may give some ayde, oh freind! | ||
Poore | |||
I am but will not seeme soe. your'r a villaine. | 1070 | ||
Have wrong'd a matron yt deserves the stole | |||
For hir strong chastity wth the name of bad. | |||
Wife | |||
Poore | Doe not I knowe yt you did bribe ye scholler | ||
(I have learn't all theire trickes, & will perforce, | |||
Despight theire pollicy turne thẽ on themselves,) | |||
To suggest hir false to hir to credulous husband | |||
Wth Quicke, and yt [h<e>e] Quicke did outbribe him, soe | |||
To make more easy way to worke hir false | |||
Is not this true? deny it? | 1080 | ||
Med | You dare not proove t[this]. | ||
Poore | |||
What cann afford more truth to my inditement | |||
Then his even staggering toung in his owne cause | |||
Hee falters, faints, growes weake []to excusation. | |||
Snaile | |||
Poore | Oh Sr sufficient reason since h'hath tried | ||
Hir much inpregnable to all his slights | |||
Hee would accuse hir. and no way soe strongly | |||
As when hee would give crime vnto himselfe | 1090 | ||
Snaile | |||
Poore | A new vnheard of one. | ||
Snaile. | And greater love. | ||
Poore | It must bee soe you've wrongd them. [To Med: | ||
You must if tyme doe graunt deserve hir pardon] | |||
Med. | That I may merit it | ||
Poore | No, no, you cannot | ||
There is a death attends you will prevent it. | [FOL.38a] | ||
Med | | ||
Poore | You shall lett that suffice no signe of ioy | 1100 | |
Snaile | In that [nam]e [st<i>le] towards mee. | ||
Poore | You looke to fix'dly | ||
Vpon this coulour, wch will dull yor sence | |||
Of apprehension; and make mee see<m>e other | |||
Then what I am. I yeeld I closd wth him | |||
Why this sole end wch I did still propose | |||
Cann give sufficient reason: my intent | |||
Of coming hither was to free your iealousy. | |||
To give you this chast comfort you now finde | |||
Or elce to fix hir in perpetuall shame | 1110 | ||
Snaile | I still doe thinke soe. | ||
Poore | Shall still thinke true | ||
Whilst you continue in that fayth, inquire | |||
Of that ill tempting scholler, if you finde him | |||
A little differing in my maine of truth | |||
Sepose mee from the number of your freinds | |||
Snaile: | |||
Poore | That Quicke wch caused your passion by him is not | ||
Wife | |||
Poore: | Much losse must followe I even feare to death | 1120 | |
Med | |||
Poore | How pretily shee doth desire his death. | ||
But I will hope more prosperous event | |||
Then your ill boading minde suggests to you. | |||
For lett mee tell you, I doe knowe ye man | |||
Cann force the rugged lawe vnbend hir browe | |||
And fetch a smile from a more easy power; | |||
Wch shall give hir more cheerfull countenance. | |||
Then is hir genuine, vpon faire tearmes. | [FOL.38b] | ||
For honied speach, is an availing sacrifice; | 1130 | ||
But when a golden offring is prepar'd | |||
You may expect not meane successe, what though | |||
Philosophers have vrged that theire gods | |||
Were more delighted wth ye givers minde | |||
Then wth the glory of the haust was offred? | |||
Yet had not men suppos'd them more accepted | |||
They would have fitted humbler to theire altars. | |||
Spare not a free hand & strike highest powers— | |||
Theire sure ones yt I trust to, yes soe sure | |||
As should they wth strong hand, force man and wife | 1140 | ||
To seperation, soe to gaine a freind | |||
A female one I meane; murder the opposers | |||
Venter the ruine of a state, and plott | |||
To take away competitours, they might doe it | |||
Securely, and detected, be vnblam'd | |||
Att least vnpunished | |||
Med | much easily obtained | ||
Poore | Wthout much difficulty | ||
But you must thinke yt in externe affaires | |||
Theile not soe strongly labour wthout hope | 1150 | ||
Of future benefitt. | |||
Med | |||
Poore | Your life I will secure mee on myne owne | ||
If wee conclude agreement for what summ | |||
Med | Being your creature | ||
Poore | Sr prepare the summ | ||
Against I bring you life | |||
Med | |||
Poore | An easy one I dare venter it for 200 | ||
Med | [FOL.39a] | ||
Poore: | These sacred meditations strongly fitt | 1160 | |
Men given to observance of true virtue; | |||
But thinke not only, of your last good Sr. | |||
For there are many mediates wch require | |||
Some like respect wth that. | |||
Med | Who have longhope to escape that. | ||
Poore | [] | ||
For heere is that will give you lives assurance | |||
For this crime | |||
Med | Have you a pardon Sr ? | 1170 | |
Poore | |||
And Sr wthout compelling articles | |||
Your will is theire desire, what you shall please | |||
Wilbe sufficient vnto the acceptedly. | |||
Med | |||
Poore | Your hand wilbe to liberall, they procurd it | ||
Wth a small easy breath. | |||
Med | And then at last hardly obtainde. | ||
Poore | |||
I will accept for them, what you shall please | 1180 | ||
Med | and Ile deliver it | ||
Poore | I will, the waight of my deserts, how strong | ||
It is how forcible this benefitt? | |||
When should his coyne bee wth my pardon layed | |||
In a true ballance myne would bee outwaigh'd, | |||
Tost in to aire; What I receave I gett | |||
Giving him for his sterling counterfett | |||
Wth wch [hee]sIme well appayde, hee is well pleasd | |||
Hee that hath to much may of some be eas<ed>. | |||
Exit | 1190 | ||
Actus 5ti scӕna ia | [FOL.39b] | ||
Badg: | |||
Badg. | you shal bee mett wth sr | ||
Poore | I must now doffe this covert of my villainye | ||
Quicke I must thanke thee for thy words have been | |||
An ample gaine to mee, and Badger to | |||
Badg: | A sees mee not trowe, doth hee? | ||
Poore | |||
A great ayde to mee, I must give thee thanks. | |||
Badg: | 1200 | ||
Poore | How evesdropt | ||
Badg | — Hee []hath not the same beard. | ||
Poore | Ile wash and shave you, and yor greasy blewcoat | ||
My serving <d>onn I will; but I must forgoe | |||
This fifty pound now I am caught wth it. | |||
Twill make a deepe hole in my summs, a la<n>ke | |||
Wch all my letting out cann nere make full. | |||
I would some taylour would instruct me fairly | |||
To patch vp this misshapen sute againe | |||
And give it wthout bracke. Well I [will keep] Ie not loose it. | 1210 | ||
But yett to loose my vncle were worse ill | |||
Let it prove how it will Ile venter it | |||
Abide the hazard of it. Ile tosse fairly | |||
To scape, fortune must be my opposite | |||
If I doe loose it. | |||
Badg: | A mischeife on your muttering chops | ||
Poore | |||
I left it heare, and I must search it out. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | True for the savour's worse. | 1220 | |
Badg | As thinn a roome as may bee | ||
Poore: | | ||
Twas on this side I layd it; what have I heare | |||
What is it turn'd into a baskett hilt | |||
And threadbare blewe coate, twas a good exchange | [FOL.40a] | ||
For him that made it; vm, may not the snake | |||
That cast the skinn be found heare, nor ought elce ? | |||
Nay Ile search furder; oh you miching raskall | |||
What have I found you? You shall pay for it. | |||
The raskall was crept vp into a mouse hole | 1230 | ||
And lay as close as a hedge hogg: what freind Badger? | |||
Badg; | I even the same Sr | ||
Poore | What makst thou heare now? | ||
Badg | —And. | ||
Poore | What, what then? | ||
Badg | |||
Poore | What. | ||
Badg | till his anger's past. | ||
Poore | Tis well, were not thy parents puritanes? | ||
Badg: | [W] | 1240 | |
Poore | Did they not teach thee for to pray extempore | ||
Badg | But when they went to them | ||
Poore | |||
When they were gravelld | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | And when thou wert gott | ||
Badg: | I don't remember that | ||
Poore | Mee thinks they should it seem's innate to thee. | ||
But thou'st reduced it better to thy art | |||
Of lying; I doe knowe your busines mungrill | 1250 | ||
Your sett to spy my noble trencher man | |||
You've waited all this while but for small cheare | |||
An howers attendance had beene better giv'n | |||
For but a head of garlicke, see you this steele? | |||
Ile make you munch a peice of't if yu swear not | [FOL.40b] | ||
As I shall vrge, but if you sweare looke heare | |||
Crounes you mad raskall. | |||
Badg | Then I will sweare | ||
Poore | |||
Is no fitt one for quarrels, will you sweare? | 1260 | ||
Bad: | Since I am forced I will | ||
Poore | |||
Then I allready have: you shall conceale mee. | |||
Not give him notice, that I was ye factour | |||
Who tooke vp fifty pound on Quicks behalfe | |||
Badg: | Why by this hand I wont. | ||
Poore | What doe you equivocate | ||
And sweare by your leffe hand whẽ you mean to write it? | |||
Sweare you by both your hands | |||
Badg: | 1270 | ||
Poore | |||
Badg | [ne] | ||
Poore | Nor your tounge | ||
In word or signe you shall make any way: | |||
Badger | No way by signes or tokens | ||
Poore | |||
By thy sword hilts, for thats the hardest oath | |||
I cann now force thee to. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | Wthout reservances | 1280 | |
Badg | I from my heart | ||
Poore | Then heare my noble skincker heare is gold | ||
Twill give thee freise in stead of thy blew coate. | |||
Twill give thee gaudyes, thou mayst cram̃ thyselfe | |||
Wth kicksh<a>wes now, as long as this shall last | |||
Whilest this resplendant substance shall remaine | |||
Wthin ye repleat body of thy purse. | |||
This hath sufficient spirit, centinell. | [FOL.41a] | ||
Twill give thee douszens, more then perfect summs | |||
They shall exceed the prӕdicament's best number | 1290 | ||
And the 3 principals: three shall not bee all. | |||
Twill make thee looke, like a Claridiano | |||
Till it hath made thee a hebitated Zoophyton. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | Fare well good badger, I have other busines | ||
I should bee more intent to. | |||
Exit. | |||
Actus 5ti scӕ 2da (Poore sitts at his | |||
(study | |||
Sly | 1300 | ||
Stran | Heare a lector from you | ||
Poore | Most willingly though Ime not <we>ll provided. | ||
Sly. | Wee will expect the lesse | ||
Poore | |||
The texture of a speechfull composition. | |||
When the infernall h<e>lbread shades of night | |||
The hate of Phœbus, and the scorne of light | |||
A're forc'd to theire darke cells, choyce spirits arise | |||
From theire dull easyes frightlesse lethargyes. | |||
My spirits are not fresh, the subiect's mourning | 1310 | ||
Aurora wane, first the etymology | |||
The golden hower, when Phœbus first displayes | |||
Vnto the ioyed world his more ioyfull rayes | |||
Now amplyfy it frõ the propertyes | |||
Extract's the vapours, from the thickned aire | |||
Expels' the sadnes, gives it subtile, rare. | |||
The effects doe followe wch our bodyes have | |||
And wch our minds, externe and interne these | [FOL.41b] | ||
Our blood our nerves receive like purity | |||
That from the aire, wee from the purged sky | 1320 | ||
Should we dampd [aires] nights polluted aire still breath | |||
As wee receivd life wee should drawe in death. | |||
But being cleansed by that sacred fyre | |||
That aire feeds life blest life, our best desire | |||
Now for the operation in our minds. | |||
What ofspring of high witt, birth of rare art | |||
Wch from this tyme doth not acquire cheife part. | |||
I should proceede to prove this by connexion | |||
The mourning salutations were calld holy | |||
Amongst the Romans, then wee may surmise | 1330 | ||
Those studyes holy that wth Sol doe rise. | |||
For then there is a greater sympathy | |||
Betwixt the stars and vs, they stand more nye | |||
To eloquence, and helpe more or theorie. | |||
Now should be some proportioned inductions | |||
To prove that tyme most apt to meditation. | |||
Then follow individuall examples | |||
Of such as have vsed it these must be sett downe | |||
In grave words, full and sounding; well connected | |||
Agreeing in theire sence, and these not vulgar. | 1340 | ||
Hyperb<o>lyes sometymes, then Metaphors | |||
These now wthout coniunction, though not often. | |||
Yet bearing still relation on, to other. | |||
Now vse an iteration, speake w<o>rds twice. | |||
But lett them still bee increasing, and ascend | |||
Not falle to flatly, soe heare are instructions | |||
Such as the tyme, and my weake braine cann give | [FOL.42a] | ||
Quicke | |||
Poore | Not any <-> one | ||
As I remember doth sett these downe fully. | 1350 | ||
Some heare some theare, I have collected, not | |||
sucking my hony from one only flower. | |||
But From [the] best fountaines Aristotles rheth'ricke | |||
Tully in 'his oratory, from Quintilian. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | [E] | ||
Ex M Fabij Quintiliani institutionibus. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore: | Yes Sr some fewe affaires calld mee abroad | ||
And force'd mee bee lesse diligent, then I would | 1360 | ||
But now theire ended, I shall give attendance | |||
More amply to you. | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore | that's the best way to thrift [indeed] where is your neice | ||
Sly | | ||
Poore | You were to much obdurat then, to hard | ||
You may spoile all hir possibilityes | |||
Such great extreames force naught but desperatiõ | |||
Quicke | |||
Poore | Sr if my best indeavours could deserve them | 1370 | |
I should account them, very strong reward. | |||
Sr my desire of gaine is not soe stupid | |||
As is your common pedants, yet no ambition | |||
Hath grow'n soe much [vp] on mee as I should covett | |||
A meerely nominall opinion | |||
Oh affectation is a cloudy vayle | |||
Wch hidst the solidst, of our soules perfections. | [FOL.42b] | ||
Or at the least doth hinder hir free workings | |||
Quic: | [ | ||
Poore | Sr I proffesse, an essence | 1380 | |
Wch should as perfectly bee knowne as bee. | |||
But since the wretched, vild esteeme of men. | |||
Doth give the best of men but meere selfe lovers | |||
If they esteeme themselves, I gratulate | |||
Your good coniecture, that you thinke mee free | |||
Whilst I doe knowe myselfe soe, fare you well Sr | |||
Stran | |||
You may expect mee ready to yor vowes | |||
Badg | since today. | ||
Poore | Yes Badger if thoult give me ample thanks | 1390 | |
That I've remembred thee soe well. | |||
Badg | |||
Poore | Soe now they'are gonn what wouldst thou my brave pufpast. | ||
What wouldst thou wullsacke, whose inside is no better. | |||
Then 'a sheeps coate, ift bee of equall goodnesse | |||
Sly | my wandring prince of troy. | ||
Poore: | |||
I will rehearse my ephemerydes | |||
Myy dayly slights, since moondayes last meridies | |||
But thou must bee my subiect and my scӕnicke | 1400 | ||
To act my gulls in glorious wise. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Weele first beginn wth strange | ||
Sly | |||
Poore | sound tr<u>mpetts heere our play begi<nne>s | ||
Sly | and vitiated your muse. | ||
Poore | |||
I am his true begott, legitimate. | |||
Sly | [FOL.43a] | ||
Poore | And thou wouldst live soe to, well Ile instruct thee. | 1410 | |
Sly | I would. | ||
Poore: | |||
Pooets are leane and marc<e>lent | |||
Sly | |||
Poore. | Well thought of, oh I have the finest lasse | ||
Have made the bravest conquest, purchase of hir. | |||
I hope none heare<s> Ile tell thee shee excels | |||
Man in's best property of looking vpwards | |||
Hir falling eyes give heaven full viewe. | |||
Sly | 1420 | ||
Poore: | Such as your common women have shee's coy | ||
Yet wanton, shee cann laugh, and weepe, and laugh, | |||
And hould againe. shee hath an exquisite face | |||
And yet not painted wch is very rare. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | |||
But Gill hir more in witt and haviour. | |||
And heere shee comes; what may <wee> wish yu ioy | |||
Of your good match? | |||
Gill | That did indeavour cousenage | 1430 | |
Poore | |||
Sly | |||
Poor | It cannot bee, none knowes vs but ourselves | ||
And wee or selves soe finally, as no humour | |||
Could give mee knowne vnlesse yor womans tounge. | |||
Yet Ive one refuge and, it is my last | |||
The very sanctuary of our safety | |||
As I supposse it yet, but prove that wanting | [FOL.43b] | ||
I cannot guesse the consequent save ill | |||
Sly | Lets know't | 1440 | |
Poore | [] | ||
Gill | And suffer a small bafling | ||
Poore | |||
But why what proiect, what event will followe? | |||
Gill | I have revealed your disguise. | ||
Poore | |||
Ime tangled in a cobweb that have scapd | |||
Snaires and strong engines able to prevaile | |||
Against a lion, if the fox were absent | |||
But now the ridle is confirm'd, a secret, | 1450 | ||
Is much to little for one only man. | |||
For two sufficient, but for three to much. | |||
Well goe thy wayes, old Gill, Ive knowne thy equals | |||
But bedlam kept them for they could not themselvs | |||
Wthin due compasse is your Trugull heare | |||
Sly | [ | ||
Poore | Why turne a horse leech. | ||
Thou mayst sucke blood securely in yt habit | |||
Somewhat Ile doe and labour for event | |||
Wch shall alone give knowledge what I meant. | 1460 | ||
Exit Actus 5ti scӕna 5ta | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | For mee I am the obiect, may they burst. | ||
Conceale mee lett mee not bee knowne. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Oh yt nothing moves mee, I divulg'd him dead | ||
For my owne private ends | |||
Sly | And h<e>e is dead | ||
Poore. | Poets are prophets then I see! how dead? | ||
Amasement ceaseth mee, dead ? it cannot bee. | 1470 | ||
Why then a necke verse followes, oh my fate | [FOL.44a] | ||
Woemenes best witt I see is extreame folly | |||
How free[] had I beene from this certaine ruine | |||
How practis'd in more ills, had not this hapned | |||
And flourishing in them? ist not possible | |||
That I may live vnknowne to Medle? tis | |||
And I will venter it, shake of these burrs | |||
Wth easy recompence of a little nap. | |||
You shalbee a phisition, I am sicke | |||
You make me daungerously sicke, but heare you | 1480 | ||
Ile not bee purged, you shall give me out [p<ur>g'd] sicke | |||
But not give inward sicknes. Ile no figgs. | |||
Sly. | As you shall please. | ||
Poore | |||
Of your great guilty person[ages]s, who to scape | |||
A lawfull death; that is death giv'n by'th lawe | |||
Will rather choose to dy, vnnaturally | |||
By theire owne guilty hands. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Intreat Strange hither | 1490 | |
Sly | |||
Poore | |||
Strange | |||
Poore | Sr lett mee crave your pardon, I esteeme you | ||
A second parent to mee, removed by nature | |||
But one degree from it, you are my vncle | |||
I therfore will lay ope my worst acts to you, | |||
That you may veiwe them fully, as they are | |||
In theire owne essence: I have wrongd them all | |||
And giv'ne iust cause for this complaint, nay more | 1500 | ||
Wch most afflicteth mee, I have wrongd you | |||
[BLANK] | [FOL.44b] | ||
[BLANK] | [FOL.45a] | ||
Strange | by wch you did conceive mee soe. | [FOL.45b] | |
Poore | |||
sufficiently heare after. | |||
Sly | And putt it in to practise: | ||
Poore | |||
A like restraint from the vnciv<i>ll liberty | |||
Tyme and our ryoutous age doth prompt vs to | |||
Str: | |||
Poore | Wee are deficient in ability. | 1510 | |
Sly | |||
Poore | Since the whole summ of my continued actions | ||
Have been me<'>re tricks. Ile end them wth a tricke | |||
Ime sicke to death. | |||
Strang | [ | ||
Poore | |||
Give mee a gowne and nightcapp | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Wheres your phisitions habits, have yu termes. | ||
Fustian will serve sufficiently curiosity | 1520 | ||
Will stand you in no steed, heere are no Criticks | |||
Stran: | |||
Poore | Sr I am ready for them, for some meale now | ||
To make a wh[ighte]ite man of mee & a sickly. | |||
Oh, oh, oh. | |||
Sly | |||
Poore: | |||
Sly | The falling sicknes? | ||
Poore | |||
Sly | And much good doe it you. | 1530 | |
Poore | |||
Sly | How didst thou knowe him for thy vncle? | ||
Poore | |||
Some other tyme ile tell you; they are entring. | |||
Tru: | Made mee a gull. | [FOL.46a] | |
Poore | Oh, oh, oh, I confesse | ||
That, [yo]u I have beene the cause, youve suffred wrong | |||
Dry | |||
Poore: | Ime heartily sory for it, I thanke my god. | ||
He []hatth brought you hither, that I may crave |hee | 1540 | ||
(falls downe | |||
Your pardons, I would my estate were able (in his fitt | |||
Sly | |||
Poore | Why well I thancke my maker, fitt for heaven | ||
If these could be intreated to forgivenes. | |||
The remnants of what I have gott from you | |||
I will restore wth thanks to satisfy you | |||
Stran | |||
Poore | I thank[] you your carefull in my behalfe | ||
Stran | In presence of these gentlemen. | 1550 | |
Poore | |||
One Mr Medle, him I would faine speake wth | |||
Str<an>g | | ||
Poore | |||
Your pardon for Ive wrongd you. | |||
Med Hard Tru: | |||
Poore | Then thus I shake my sickenes of | ||
[Trugull | I for my loving spouse]. | ||
[Poore | happily may you live.] | ||
Med: | why did you crave my pardon? | 1560 | |
Poore | [But <wha>] | ||
But what I gave you, doe you knowe mee now? | |||
I am to all of you what you will but good. | |||
Med | Is then my pardon counterfett? | ||
Poore | |||
That I could give you; Ive no more from you | |||
Only the difference is I payd not for it | [FOL.46b] | ||
An equall price. | |||
Med. | weele both have equall parts; | ||
Poore | 1570 | ||
Sly | All thrive but my selfe. | ||
Poore | My gaine is thine; for what remaines in bank | ||
Of our last getting shall restore thy state. | |||
And give thee means of trading, one ill fate | |||
Wee equally indured, fortunes sad frowne | |||
Wee shared betwixt vs, but it is my croune | |||
That as in worst of ill thou hadst a ᵱt | |||
Soe of our [better] best state thou a sharer art | |||
This is the maine true freindship cann com[m<aun>]maund | |||
Yt hopes and fears of freinds goe hand in hand | 1580 |