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<tr><td>Poore: </td><td>[O] <strike> </strike> O S<sup>r</sup> beleeve him not </td><td> </td><td>70 </td></tr> | <tr><td>Poore: </td><td>[O] <strike> </strike> O S<sup>r</sup> beleeve him not </td><td> </td><td>70 </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td> </td><td>He doth intice you to a dangerous ill </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td> </td><td>He doth intice you to a dangerous ill </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Sly: </td><td>Slight what doe you meane? <strike> </strike> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td>Sly: </td><td>Slight what doe you meane? <strike> </strike> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Poore </td><td><strike> </strike>Hee is a strange hyaena </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td>Poore </td><td><strike> </strike>Hee is a strange hyaena </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Sly: </td><td>You wont vndoe your selfe <strike> | <tr><td>Sly: </td><td>You wont vndoe your selfe <strike> </strike> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Poore </td><td>[A] <strike> | <tr><td>Poore </td><td>[A] <strike> </strike> And drawes you on </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Stra: </td><td><strike> </strike> wants much connexion </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td>Stra: </td><td><strike> </strike> wants much connexion </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Poore </td><td>To losse <strike> | <tr><td>Poore </td><td>To losse <strike> </strike> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Strange: </td><td> | <tr><td>Strange: </td><td><td></td><td></td><td></td>of what? <strike> </strike> </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td>Poore:<strike>  </strike> </td><td> Your wealth and reputation. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td>Poore:<strike> </strike> </td><td> Your wealth and reputation. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td> </td><td>Riches are not more enimyes to heaven, </td><td> </td><td>80 </td></tr> | <tr><td> </td><td>Riches are not more enimyes to heaven, </td><td> </td><td>80 </td></tr> | ||
<tr><td> </td><td>then To our art. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> | <tr><td> </td><td>then To our art. </td><td> </td><td> </td></tr> |
Revision as of 00:18, 4 December 2015
of what?
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: | ||||||
Poore: | Your wealth and reputation. | |||||
Riches are not more enimyes to heaven, | 80 | |||||
then To our art. | ||||||
Sly | ———— honest men in as bare naps. | |||||
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: | ————————You cannot fright mee. | |||||
Poore | Now comes your cue to speake goe on and roundly | |||||
Sly | ————————— not shewe his matchlesse skill | |||||
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: | ————————— vnto your art | |||||
I cannot be disswaded————— . | 100 | |||||
Poore | ——————————then resolve | |||||
To contemplation, for you must neglect | ||||||
All worldly matters, and begiven to this, | ||||||
As to the sollidst earthly happinesse. | ||||||
Strang | —————————you knowe my minde | |||||
Poore: | And I will vndertake to give instructions | |||||
In this quainte rhetoricke, and subtile logicke, | ||||||
And what I cann participat in naturals | ||||||
Shall not bewanting, since I knowe you firme | ||||||
Of good capacity and ingenuous. | 110 | |||||
Strange: | ————————What I possesse | |||||
Shall not be wanting to you | ||||||
Poore: | [Pish] ——— pish no no you shall not. | |||||
Those were but by words wch I did object | ||||||
Sly: | — into your minde, I told you soe. | |||||
Poore | Sr It was ill donn, and no way worth your thanks. | |||||
Strange: | [I would] lodge heare about ————— | |||||
Poore | ————— Twil be best | |||||
Strange | —————— only take this as earnest | |||||
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 | ————— pray good sr your name | |||||
Strange: | Tis Strange anon Ile come. ———— | |||||
Poore | ——— you shalbe welcome. | |||||
Sly | to quircks and quillets soe they'de help to thrive | |||||
Poore: | S'light what doe you meane? | |||||
Sly | ——— my tender Iuvenall | |||||
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 | —————————Leave it scholler leave it | [FOL.23a] | ||||
Or it spoile thee | ||||||
Poore: | [] ——You'r spoild you may turne ballad munger. | |||||
Sly: | Prethee vrge these no more ——— | |||||
Poore: | — you may thrive, tis possible, | |||||
But Ive seene honest men in as bare naps. | ||||||
Sly | ———— Ile pay thee for it | |||||
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: | ————— content content. | |||||
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 | ——— I I ——— | 150 | ||||
Poore | — Begonn, be gonn. | |||||
Sly: | —-as poore indeed as thou in name | |||||
Poore: | Your witt is rich enough to play on mee | |||||
Sly | ———— I will stab myselfe | |||||
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: | — laugh[]t at my afflictions ? | [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 | ———————— death and damnation | |||||
Poore | Hell and misery ——————— | |||||
Sly: | — light on the head, | 180 | ||||
Poore | ——— of thy destroying Hard. | |||||
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. | ||||||
Actus 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: | wtha greater matter | [FOL.24a] | ||||
Poore: | Thus farr weeve gonn i'th science, theory, | |||||
Now weele proceed evnto the art, or practise. | ||||||
Hard | ———— wee shall see fine sport. | |||||
Poore: | Thinke you, you cann performe what I instructed? | 200 | ||||
Gill | ———————-make experience Sr | |||||
Poore | Suppose mee, lordly, after what manner meete you | |||||
Gill | ————vnworthy roofe of ours. | |||||
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 | —————should be hir ioynter | |||||
Poore: | Sr you bid fairely for hir, you shall have hir. | |||||
Your cousen goose shall have hir | ||||||
Gill | — If I cann helpe it | 210 | ||||
Poore: | — — come come mind them not. | |||||
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: | ———— Murder, murder | |||||
Roalfe Gaspar Thomas where are these varlets trowe? | ||||||
Sly | ————— you shalbe held doe you heare. | |||||
Poore: | What are you ? speake, to what end doe you come? | [FOL.24b] | ||||
Hard | ———— arrest that Sly | |||||
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 foresight, what not a varlett stirr ? | ||||||
You are consenting to, wee mightbe 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 | — troth Sr, I doe not knowe | |||||
Poore: | What men are these? | |||||
Gill: | nor heare of any thing. | 240 | ||||
Poore: | Ney you shall stay, the justice shall decide | |||||
Whither your act be lawfull, tmay perchance | ||||||
Conclude at Tyburne or the newgate dungeon | ||||||
Besides a publique lash from henceto ye tower | ||||||
From thence to westmonest<e>r, spight of your freinds | ||||||
Hard. | Sr I intreat your favour.— — | |||||
Poore | — That were pretty. | |||||
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. | thats better. | |||||
Thatshalbe t[y]ryed, goe Gaspar fetch the Conestable | ||||||
Sly | Tak't least hee doe repent; | |||||
Poore. | ———————————— how! forty pound? | |||||
That is a sweet amends, but whats your name ? | ||||||
Hard. | Tis Hard and please you Sr | [FOL.25a] | ||||
Poore | —————— Hard? mr Sly | |||||
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 seethe gold, | 270 | ||||
[Ile] offer it; oh these are [the f] Sly's attachments and his bonds. | ||||||
Hard. | Good Sr they are— | |||||
Poore: | ————————Madam this gentleman | |||||
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: | I see a lady Sr | |||||
Poore | not yet, a knight | 280 | ||||
Is ready now to bed hir, and but stay's | ||||||
The coming of some freinds vnto the ceremony. | ||||||
Sly | oh! it takes rarely | |||||
Poore | Some five dayes hince. | |||||
Hard | And is shee well affected ? | |||||
Poore | No yet the importunitye hir freinds have vsed, | |||||
Have made hir yeeld. | ||||||
Hard | so much into hir <e>state | [FOL.25b] | ||||
Poore. | I have no reason sr | |||||
Hard | What may hir portion be? | 290 | ||||
Poore | Hir father Sr | |||||
Iustice of peace inYorkeshire, hath alotted | ||||||
Three thousand pound wch wthin twice three months | ||||||
After the day of marriage shall bee payed; | ||||||
Vpon condition,ye 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 | —All— | |||||
Hard | —————— in my behalfe | |||||
Poore | Shee hath refer'd hirselfe to my dispose | |||||
And if I like the gentleman and the tearmes | ||||||
It shall goe hard but Ile prevaile so much | ||||||
Hard | ———————shalbee assured hir | |||||
Poore: | Tis faire the gentle man concludes it | |||||
Hard | ———————————— yes | |||||
Hee shall ———————— | ||||||
Poor | [] — as I like him it takes effect | 310 | ||||
If I cann ought. | ||||||
Hard | — your care shalbe requited | |||||
Poore: | It is requited i<n>th the very act | |||||
If it doe prove succesfully and well | ||||||
Hard | —— in the meanewhile plant for battery | |||||
Poore: | Sr If hee be as you have spoken him | |||||
Hee shall not come vnwelcome | ||||||
Gill | You'r welcome [to] | |||||
Poore: | [] — to your cost Sr — | |||||
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] —what shall become of mee | |||||
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 | —————————Goe Sly, | |||||
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 Juvenal, the wonder of all ages | ||||||
Wch have beene since, should live soe much vnknow | ||||||
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 | [] ——— whose there? | |||||
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 beeare soe; | ||||||
Twas Juvenall wch if it please you heare | ||||||
I will recite. | ||||||
Strang: | ———————Yes very willingly | |||||
[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 scaene 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 | —————you've made vs knowe you soe. | 380 | ||||
Poore | The'ire sudden and they beare no more of weight | |||||
Then a small tyme would give. | ||||||
Strang: | It is well vrged ———— | |||||
Poore: | ———and no way worth deniall. | |||||
Quicke | And make a Ioviall meale. | |||||
Poore | ———— in the meane while | |||||
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 | -————— who doth propose? | |||||
Poore: | Each in his order shall, doe you propose. | |||||
Sly | —— wine doth cheare the heart. | |||||
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: | ———— who ereit bee admitt him | |||||
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; ift please you disclose yor minde | ||||||
I will performe what my weake skill can[n] doe | ||||||
Sly | —— Ile lead the way | |||||
Poore | Ney pray Sr goe, wee schollers love no complement | |||||
Though wee cann vseit: 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 the is hee? | ||||||
Quicke | ——— Inns of courtman that cann raile | |||||
Poore: | I would he were a poet, one that daubd | |||||
Papers wth greasy lines, wch fall away | ||||||
From his hoggs head, as sweat doth fro his body. | ||||||
Both being excrements,of art, and nature. | ||||||
Such I doe knowe there are, & would faine meet wth | ||||||
Ide make the 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 | ||||||
He burne my bookes, and turne a lawyers clearke. | ||||||
But they are neere the doare you shall have sport. | ||||||
I must begonn Exit | ||||||
[Sly] Quicke — worth cherishing — | ||||||
Scaena 4ta Enter Poore | ||||||
Trugull | ————— what, is't a hall ? | |||||
Poore | best our poore house hath. — | 430 | ||||
Tru | — Pray whats your name? — | |||||
Hard | — the gentlewoman minded | |||||
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 | — Pray Sr lets see the gentlewoman | |||||
Poore: | You shall Gaspar lead vp these gentlemen | |||||
Vnto your mrs | ||||||
Sly | — I will — | |||||
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. | ——— and kisse and talke wth hir. | |||||
Poore: | Sr it is best first to have mediates | [FOL.28a] | ||||
Shee shallbee brought downe to you | ||||||
Strange | —————— speake lower | |||||
Poor: Pray Sr may I inquire your name and country? | ||||||
[Tru: ————— of the name Ime sure] | ||||||
Quicke | How say you goodman dawe? | |||||
Poore | Tis a faire living Sr | |||||
Tru: | — But a faire living? | 460 | ||||
Poore | A very rich one | |||||
Trug: | ———— I cry you mercy | |||||
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: | —————Is it possible? | |||||
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: | ————— I wilbe that woer | [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 sperick eeye | ||||||
True | Yes Ide be sory elce ——— | |||||
Poore: | —————And of congruous health | |||||
Tru: | Yes I am very health full. | |||||
Poore | —————————Sr the better | |||||
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 the. | ||||||
Say often say you writt them in hir prayse. | ||||||
Trug: | And they are none of myne ———— | |||||
Poore | ——————oh Sr the better | |||||
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 | ————— will raile on the whole world | |||||
Poore: | How! feare to ly? then feare to live, all creatures | |||||
Doe live by lying | ||||||
Tru: | som live by standing——————— | |||||
Poore: | ———— Indeede I am deceaved. | |||||
For some doe live by standing, yet they ly to. | 510 | |||||
Tru: | It may bee soe ———— | |||||
Poore: | And to beginn wth gallants, for nobility, | |||||
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: | —————wth out cessation | |||||
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 | ———— and speake soe? | |||||
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: | —————— for ravishing | [FOL.29b] | ||||
Poore: | No, thinke not Ile vrge ought shalbe distastfull | |||||
Tru | Nay nay you shant deny it. —————— | |||||
Poore: | ——————— <Come>good Sr | |||||
Youle wrong mee much, for I have not deservd it. | ||||||
Quicke | ————— and it shalbe kept. | |||||
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 | ———— it will | |||||
Strange: | Not very well —————— | |||||
Poore: | ———— be ready they are coming, | |||||
Sr shall I heare them. | ||||||
Tru: | Attend for these are they. | |||||
Poore: | Sr I doe heare. | 560 | ||||
Tru: | That's for the ring —————— | |||||
Poore: | ———— Sr these are very good | |||||
Tru: | I would shee heard mee | |||||
Poore: | Doe you vse this often ? | |||||
Trug: | I would shee'de heard them read. — | |||||
Poore: | ————— Sr ift please you, | |||||
I will present them to hir. | ||||||
Gill | Greater perfection to them. | |||||
Poore: | ——— tickle hir wth prayse. | |||||
Tell hir theire good because theire end is good | 570 | |||||
Wch is to prayse hir. | ||||||
Hard | When comes hir vncle Sr? | |||||
Poore: | ————I did receave | |||||
A letter wch assured tomorrowe night. | [FOL.30a] | |||||
This night heele visit ye great bed of ware | ||||||
Had hee a lasse of like dimensions | ||||||
Twould scarce conteine them. | ||||||
Hand. | —— is hee soe burlye? | |||||
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 | —————I was so rash | |||||
Poore: | The end will croune it ioyfully be sure | |||||
You'enquire not to much after hir portion: | ||||||
Twill vex himstrangely, 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] — hee's [ ] now about it | |||||
Poore: | Sr some small conference I'de desire wth you | 600 | ||||
Snaile | Wth mee Sr? very willingly. | |||||
Poore | ——————————I must greive | |||||
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: | [] ——— A rare iewell | |||||
S<na>ile I ever had ———— | ||||||
Poore: | Sr tis your wife I meane. | 610 | ||||
Snaile: | ————— Not gonn Sr is shee? | |||||
Poore: | Hir honour hath left hir, for shee hath left | |||||
To bee an honest wife, you knowe on Medle? | ||||||
Snaile: | ————————————— my good cu[ ]stomer. | |||||
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 | ———— nor ere mistrusted him ? | |||||
Snaile: | No on my life. — | |||||
Poore: | ————— nor wife, I knowe it well | 620 | ||||
Sir hye you home; if you now meet not wth him. | ||||||
He 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: | ———————to what you please | |||||
Poore | Sr I will send the gentleman to morrowe | |||||
That shall intrap him. | 630 | |||||
Snaile | ——————— indeede shee told mee soe | |||||
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: | —————— heele deale honestly? | |||||
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. | —————————— fy fy | [FOL.31a] | ||||
blaze not your owne discredite, tis tomuch | ||||||
You know't your selfe. | ||||||
Snaile: | ————— but are you sure tis true | |||||
Poore | I would I were not ——————— | |||||
Hard | Tomorrowe night he comes. | |||||
Poore | ————— yes yes tomorrowe | |||||
Tru: | ————— wee shalbe married. | |||||
Poore | I doubt not but you shall | |||||
Hard | —— you sha'nt soe suddenly | 650 | ||||
Poore | Are you not yet adultus? | |||||
Tru: | —— what doe you meane | |||||
Poore: | not yet of age? | |||||
Trug: | ———— yes that I hope I am | |||||
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 | ——— A second father to him. | |||||
Poore: | You must be rul<e>d, but not to much oreruld | |||||
Tru: | ———————— Ile warrant you | |||||
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] ——— and reason. | |||||
Gill | I must continue Mrs Change ——————— | |||||
Poore. | —————— They heare | |||||
You must, a iustice of peaces daughter, | 670 | |||||
Ith north at least | ||||||
Quicke | ————————— did you feare us | |||||
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 | ———— no hee must bee inraged | |||||
You must add to his fury and augment it | 680 | |||||
Quicke | Vpon ye least distastfull word ——— | |||||
Poore | ———— and lett him | |||||
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 | —— that was the word | |||||
Poore | And couldst thou suffer it goe thou'rt a gull | 690 | ||||
& that huge bulke of thyne those giant limbs | ||||||
Conteine not any sparkeof man wthin them. | ||||||
Sdeath had I heard him he should have found I had | ||||||
A thunder in my hand Iove in my voyce | ||||||
Sly | ———— and sayth vs cheaters | |||||
Poore: | Pish tis a puny oneeasy 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 | ————— I thought this, thou lyest | |||||
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 alike 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] ——— goe to Virginia | |||||
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 | ———— their end maks actions good | [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 | — What cannst thou guesse? | |||||
Sly | Not well ———————— | |||||
Poore | — then aske not, for thou shalt not knowe. | |||||
Wher ist ————————— | ||||||
Sly | —— above —— | |||||
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 | ——— spirit on his bankes. | |||||
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 | ————— bee wary and doe well | |||||
Prepare yor selfe vnto yor part anon Exit. | ||||||
Actus 3ij scӕna 3ia | ||||||
Med | — wish hee had not inquired. Enter Poore disguisd | |||||
Poore: | Oh Mr Medle I have sought you Sr | |||||
In all your places of retreat. | ||||||
Me[l]d | — [—] Vnto what end Sr | |||||
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: | —— may bee supplanted | |||||
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 | —— trust mee I will | |||||
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 | —— change a Yorkeshireman | |||||
Med. | Sr I am much indebted to you[r lov]e | |||||
Poore | ————— and I will study [asside | 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 | |||||
He 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 | — occasion to vnsluce them —— Enter Poore. | |||||
Snaile: | ———— to whom should I give credite? | |||||
Poore | To them yt you thinke best deserve it Sr, | |||||
What place commaunds shee 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: | —— your knowledge I desire | |||||
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 | —— I have strong occasions. | |||||
Dry: —— wth hir privatest counsell | ||||||
Poore: | Then I dare like wise, you knowe Medle? | |||||
Wife | True | |||||
Poore | And he hath blabd it | |||||
Wife | ———— as you meane | 850 | ||||
Poore; | Oh to to truly | |||||
Wife | What<,> durst ye villaine say soe? —— | |||||
Po | [P] —— Positively. | |||||
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 | —— most true | |||||
Whilst they reioyce in theire high enterprise | ||||||
And thinke theire wits much good ———— | ||||||
Wife | Ile be revenged | [FOL.34b] | ||||
Poore | —You must that Ile performe | 870 | ||||
I thinke I have allready —— | ||||||
Dry | Vpon my life ———— | |||||
Poore | You shall not finde mee otherwise. | |||||
Wife | Your love shal bee rewarded —— | |||||
Poore | — wth your I hope | |||||
That is my only ayme | ||||||
Dry | —— — deserve to have it | |||||
Poore | And I will keepe it warely, by this | |||||
Your envious lovers may bleed each by other | ||||||
Wife | —— I shall reioyce | 880 | ||||
Poore | Tis like they will ——— | |||||
Dry | —— no matter lett them sinke | |||||
Poore | If not Ile soe provide your honour shall | |||||
No whitt be impeached | ||||||
Wife | Then I shalbee vnspotted —— | |||||
Poore | —— not knowne otherwise | |||||
Wife | — be holding to you Sr | |||||
Poore | Now shall my ignoramus and young witt | |||||
Knowe they have found a scholler yt can iearke ye | ||||||
Who have wee heare my gull & Gillian | 890 | |||||
What intend they trowe? | ||||||
Tru: | And you Sr — | |||||
Poore | — I returne your complement | |||||
Wth ye like wish to you, & yt faire gentlewoma | ||||||
Wife | — — Ile give my indeavour | |||||
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 | —Spraule soe | |||||
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 | —— beleive't you must not | |||||
Tru: | ———— Ile aske hir | |||||
Poore: | You shall not need, for I cann certify you, | |||||
I have reserved hir for my selfe. | ||||||
Tru: | —————— be cousned of my wife? | |||||
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 myeares] | |||||
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 | ———— doe not hurt mee | |||||
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 | — but trust mee sr yts somewhat hard | |||||
Poore: | Doe not deny'it for if you doe by this. | |||||
Not forty kicks, not 20 luggs by th'are | 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] —— when shall I carry it? | |||||
Poore | This night I knowe yu cann whĕ it please you. | 940 | ||||
Tru: | I will Sr —— | |||||
Poore | —— Gill how goe things at home? | |||||
Gill | —— will vnto him | |||||
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 | ———— into a di'vell | |||||
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 | ——— heare againe ere long | |||||
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 1ia | ||||||
Badg: | —— and forsake his blewe trash —— (Enter Poore | |||||
Poore: | This is Quickes lodging and he []hath been heere. | |||||
Badg: | [ ————] The cheating scholler —————— | |||||
Poore: | — This concearnes mee much | |||||
Ime glad I heard of this, God save you Sr | ||||||
Badg: | And you if you be worth it —— | |||||
Poore | —— you have beene [wth Mr Quicke] | |||||
Wth Mr Quicke I pray you sr how fares hee | ||||||
Badg: | I wont tell you ———— | [FOL.36a] | ||||
Poore | —— Sr I came from your Mr | 971 | ||||
Badg: | My Mr? —— | |||||
Poore | [Yes,] Your name is Badger [is it not] e<n>t it | |||||
Bad | —— wth mee from my Mr? | |||||
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 | ——As you would your selfe | |||||
Badg: | —— he doth demaund ? —— [Badg: gives him ye Ire | |||||
Poore: | Iff I cann gett it as I hope I shall | |||||
You neede not doubt | ||||||
Badg: | —— then fare you well —————— | |||||
Poore | ———— Ile gull you he opens ye Ire. | |||||
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. ————— would it had beene a hundred. Enter | ||||||
Hard | ———— I am not quite cheated | |||||
Poore | But you may chance to feele a new relapse | |||||
Sr I would speake wth you —————— | 1000 | |||||
Stran<g> — you may —————— | ||||||
Poore | ——————————— In privat [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 | —— how fares hee Sr | |||||
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 | —————— why came not my knave! | |||||
Poore | Sr He intreated him to visit Medle | |||||
And learne ye hopes or feares conceivd of him. | ||||||
Sly | ———— fare you well good brother | |||||
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 | ———— of my neice Gillian | |||||
Poore | That was a maine one, how my Gogmagog | |||||
Sly | When it is donn Ile tell you howe | |||||
Poore | —————— . what doubtfull ? | |||||
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 hisbaggs | [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. | ——— to that is perfected | |||||
Revenge, but stay hee comes lett vs fall of | ||||||
Stran: | ——— you may tell't please it you | |||||
Poore | It shall not need, Sr I dare trust yor word | |||||
If you'le confirme it right | ||||||
Stran: | Let mee inquire yor name. | |||||
Poor | ——— my name is change | 1050 | ||||
Sly | —— as I knowe. | |||||
Poore | I should have gloried to have beene admitted | |||||
Into soe grave a consanguinity | ||||||
Sly | And lett vs see you often —————— | |||||
Poore | ——— I shall trouble you | |||||
Sly | —— quaffe drunke wth all | |||||
Poore | I take my leave | |||||
Sly | To my freind | |||||
Poore | ——— I shall Exit. | |||||
Actus 4ti scӕna 3ia | 1060 | |||||
Sna[]ile | —— sr shee is mine. Enter Poore | |||||
Med | —— acquitt wth my deniall | |||||
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.37h] | |||||
Yet He not loose my booty, ile attempt it | ||||||
And venter gainst loves thunder. | ||||||
Med. | — may give some ayde, oh freind! —— | |||||
Poore | ————— Why Sr your freind? | |||||
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 | ————— Peace. | |||||
Poore | Doe not I knowe yt you did bribe ye scholler | |||||
(I have learn't all theire trickes, & will perforce, | ||||||
Despight theire pollicy turne the 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 | —— oh frontlesse impudence! | |||||
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 | —— receave this guilt soe pronely? | |||||
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 | ————Then your crime was great | |||||
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 | —— — but cann't I fly it? | |||||
Poore | You shall lett that suffice no signe of joy | 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: | ———— why doth hee feare death | |||||
Poore | That Quicke wch caused your passion by him is not | |||||
Wife | ——— much daunger may succeed | |||||
Poore: | Much losse must followe I even feare to death | 1120 | ||||
Med | — I thanke you fare yow well | |||||
Poore | How pretily shee doth desire his death. | |||||
But I will hope more prosperous event | ||||||
Then your ill boading minde suggests to you. | ||||||
For lettmee 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 givehir morecheerfull 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 mine 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 | —— blood and spirit away ? | |||||
Poore | Your life I will secure mee on myne owne | |||||
If wee conclude agreementfor what summ | ||||||
Med | Being your creature | |||||
Poore | Sr prepare the summ | |||||
Against I bring you life —— | ||||||
Med | —— I shall, what is it? | |||||
Poore | An easy one I dare venter it for | 200 | ||||
Med | ———— vnlesse my tombe | [FOL.39a] | ||||
Poore: | These sacred meditations strongly fitt | 1161 | ||||
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 | [] —— then wth you | |||||
For heere is that will give you lives assurance | ||||||
For this crime | ||||||
Med | Have you a pardon Sr ? | 1170 | ||||
Poore | ———— probatum est | |||||
And Sr wthout compelling articles | ||||||
Your will is theire desire, what you shall please | ||||||
Wilbe sufficient vnto the acceptedly. | ||||||
Med | ——— a deniere from it | |||||
Poore | Your hand wilbe to liberall, they procurd it | |||||
Wth a small easy breath. | ||||||
Med | And then at last hardly obtainde. —— | |||||
Poore | —————— tis true | |||||
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: | —— Slid heare comes somebody Ente Poore. | |||||
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 | ————— thou hast binn | |||||
A great ayde to mee, I must give thee thanks. | ||||||
Badg: | ——— when you knowe all. | 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 instruc tme fairly | ||||||
To patch vp this misshapen sute againe | ||||||
And give it wth out bracke. Well I [will keep] Ie not looseit. | 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 | ————— Have at you | |||||
I left it heare, and I must search it out. | ||||||
Badg | ———— but not soe well | |||||
Poore | True for the savour's worse. | 1220 | ||||
Badg | As thinn a roome asmay bee | |||||
Poore: | I remember | |||||
Twas on this side Llayd it; what have I heare | ||||||
What is it turn'd into a baskett hilt | ||||||
And threadbare blewe coate, twas agood exchange [Fol.40a] | ||||||
For him that made it; vm, maynot the snake | ||||||
That cast the skinn be found heare, nor ought elce ? | ||||||
Nay ile search furder; oh you michingraskall | ||||||
What have I found you? You shall pay for it. | ||||||
The raskall was crept vp into a mousehole | 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. —— and — . | |||||
Poore | What, what then? | |||||
Badg | —— [you doe knowe his humour] And I dare not venter. | |||||
Poore | What. | |||||
Badg | till his anger'spast. | |||||
Poore | Tis well, were not thy parents puritanes? | |||||
Badg: | [W] —— why doe you aske | 1240 | ||||
Poore | Did they not teach thee for to pray extempore | |||||
Badg | But when they went to them | |||||
Poore | ———— did they not hum and ha | |||||
When they were gravelld | ||||||
Badg | —— yes perchance they did | |||||
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 | —— tis well sayed but this place | |||||
Is no fitt one for quarrels,will you sweare? | 1260 | |||||
Bad: | Since I am forced I will | |||||
Poore | ————— thou shalt no furder | |||||
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 whe you mean to write it? | ||||||
Sweare you by both your hands | ||||||
Badg: | —— by my both hands | 1270 | ||||
Poore | — nor either of them. | |||||
Badg | [ne] — neither | |||||
Poore | Nor your tounge | |||||
In word or signe you shall make any way: | ||||||
Badger | No way by signes or tokens | |||||
Poore | —— this thou swearst | |||||
thy sword hilts, for thats the hardest oath | ||||||
I cann now force thee to. | ||||||
Badg | ——— I doe sweare this. | |||||
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 cram 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 | ————— wth your conjuring tearmes | |||||
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 | ——— and ready in that art, I would faine h<ear>e him | 1300 | ||||
Stran | Heare a lector from you | |||||
Poore | Most willingly though Ime not <we>ll provided. | |||||
Sly. | Wee will expect the lesse | |||||
Poore | ———— Ile give you breifly | |||||
The texture of a speechfull composition. | ||||||
When the infernall h<e>lbread shades of night | ||||||
The hate of Phoebus, 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 Phoebus first displayes | ||||||
Vnto the ioyed world his more ioyfull rayes | ||||||
Now amplyfy it fro 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 bearingstill 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 | how to composea speech | |||||
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 | —————— doe you meane | |||||
Poore | [E] ———— No badger no . | |||||
Ex M Fabij Quintiliani institutionibus. | ||||||
Badg | —————— by fifty pound. | |||||
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 | — ————— tis best. | |||||
Poore | that's the best way to thrift [indeed] where is your neice | |||||
Sly | —— a dodkinn wth my will. | |||||
Poore | You were to much obdurat then, to hard | |||||
You may spoile all hir possibilityes | ||||||
Such great extreames force naught but desperatiõ | ||||||
Quicke | ————— for your great labours | |||||
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'ns oe 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: | [ ———— ] of your free soule —— | |||||
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 | — anon Ile make a second visitation | |||||
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 | ————— oh Lord Sr! | |||||
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: | ——— why thou shallt knowe | |||||
I will rehearse my ephemerydes | ||||||
Myy dayly slights, since moondayes last meridies | ||||||
But thou must bee my subiect and my scӕnicke | 1400 | |||||
To act mygulls in gloriouswise. | ||||||
Sly | —————— content | |||||
Poore | Weele first beginn wth strange | |||||
Sly | —————Heare I come | |||||
Poore | sound tr<u>mpetts heere our play begi<nne>s | |||||
Sly | and vitiated your muse. | |||||
Poore | ———— fy thou art out | |||||
I am his true begott, legitimate. | ||||||
Sly | —— <b>y making pallinodes | [FOL.43a] | ||||
Poore | And thou wouldst live soe to, well Ile instruct thee. | 1410 | ||||
Sly | I would. ———— | |||||
Poore: | ——— but first you must putt of your fatnesse. | |||||
Pooets are leane and marc<e>lent | ||||||
Sly | ————— hir burden dead | |||||
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 | — no more deserving qualityes | 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 | — transccends shee Gill ? | |||||
Poore | ————— yes fayth in feature | |||||
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 | —— How, certainly? | |||||
Sly | — a rocke quite shipwrackt | |||||
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.43h] | |||||
I cannot guesse the consequent save ill | ||||||
Sly | Lets know't | 1440 | ||||
Poore | [] — ney much of ill must force yt from mee. | |||||
Gill | And suffer a small hafling | |||||
Poore | ———— oh I cannot | |||||
But why what proiect, what event will followe? | ||||||
Gill | I have revealed your disguise. | |||||
Poore | ————————————— how, how ? | |||||
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 | [—] what new shape may I take ———— | |||||
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 | ———— houle like sterved currs. | |||||
Poore | For mee I am the obiect, may they burst. | |||||
Conceale mee lett mee not bee knowne. | ||||||
Sly | ———— knowe you not Quick's death? | |||||
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 | I doe not like [, I doe no] the humour | |||||
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 | ——— wth mature iudgement. | |||||
Poore | Intreat Strange hither | 1490 | ||||
Sly | ——— to prevent my labour ? | |||||
Poore | ——————— fittly. | |||||
Strange | — termes wth one consent | |||||
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 ch you did conceive mee soe. | [FOL.45b] | ||||
Poore | — I shalbee knowne | |||||
sufficiently heare after. | ||||||
Sly | And putt it in to practise: —— | |||||
Poore | ———— — I doe promise | |||||
A like restraint from the vnciv<i>ll liberty | ||||||
Tyme and our ryoutous age doth prompt vs to | ||||||
Str: | ——— choakd wth recompence | |||||
Poore | Wee are deficient in ability. | 1510 | ||||
Sly | ————— stop'd till cramm'd | |||||
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 | [———] the reast Ile vndertake ——————— | |||||
Poore | ———— —Let them fly in | |||||
Give mee a gowne and night capp | ||||||
Sly | ———heare they are. | |||||
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: | —————Ile admitt them | |||||
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 | ——— whats the disease ? | |||||
Poore: | ——— The epylepsye | |||||
Sly | The falling sicknes? | |||||
Poore | ——— I ——— | |||||
Sly | And much good doe it you. | 1530 | ||||
Poore | — I hope it will | |||||
Sly | How didst thou knowe him for thy vncle? | |||||
Poore | —————— Strangly | |||||
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 | —— agree to it. (— shee gives him gold. | |||||
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 | — present at, how cheare you? | |||||
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 | ——— that Ile not vndertake | |||||
Poore | I thank []you your careful lin my behalfe | |||||
Stran | In presence of these gentlemen. | 1550 | ||||
Poore | ——— there is one absent | |||||
One Mr Medle, him I would faine speake wth | ||||||
Str<an>g — whom you desirde to speake wth | ||||||
Poore | ——— I must intreat | |||||
Your pardon for Ive wrongd you. | ||||||
Med | Hard Tru: —— wee doe to wch beare witnesse | |||||
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>] — 'Sr I craved | |||||
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 | ——— twas the best | |||||
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 | ——— tis fairely offred | 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 pt | ||||||
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 |