The
Roaring
Girle
.
Act.
1.
Scoe.
1.
Enter
Mary
Fitz-Allard
disguised
like
a
sempster
with
a
case
for
bands
,
and
Neatfoot
a
seruingman
with
her
,
with
a
napkin
on
his
shoulder
,
and
a
trencher
in
his
hand
as
from
table
.
Neatfoote
.
THe
yong
gentleman
(
our
young
maister
)
Sir
Alexanders
sonne
,
is
it
into
his
eares
(
sweet
Damsell
)
(
embleme
of
fragility
)
you
desire
to
haue
a
message
transported
,
or
to
be
transcendent
.
Mary
A
priuate
word
or
two
Sir
,
nothing
else
.
Neat.
You
shall
fructifie
in
that
which
you
come
for
:
your
pleasure
shall
be
satisfied
to
your
full
contentation
:
I
will
(
fairest
tree
of
generation
)
watch
when
our
young
maister
is
erected
,
(
that
is
to
say
vp
)
and
deliuer
him
to
this
your
most
white
hand
.
Mary
Thankes
sir
.
Neat.
And
withall
certifie
him
,
that
I
haue
culled
out
for
him
(
now
his
belly
is
replenished
)
a
daintier
bit
or
modicome
then
any
lay
vpon
his
trencher
at
dinner
�
hath
he
notion
of
your
name
,
I
beseech
your
chastitie
.
Mary
One
Sir
,
of
whom
he
be
spake
falling
bands
.
Neat.
Falling
bands
,
it
shall
so
be
giuen
him
,
�
�
if
you
please
to
venture
your
modesty
in
the
hall
,
amongst
a
curlepated
company
of
rude
seruingmen
,
and
take
such
as
they
can
set
before
you
,
you
shall
be
most
seriously
,
and
ingeniously
welcome
.
Mary
I
haue
dyed
indeed
already
sir
.
Neat.
�
�
Or
will
you
vouchsafe
to
kisse
the
lip
of
a
cup
of
rich
Orleans
in
the
buttry
amongst
our
waiting
women
.
Mary
Not
now
in
truth
sir
.
Neat.
Our
yong
Maister
shall
then
haue
a
feeling
of
your
being
here
presently
it
shall
so
be
giuen
him
.
Exit
Neatfoote
,
Mary
I
humbly
thanke
you
sir
,
but
that
my
bosome
Is
full
of
bitter
sorrowes
,
I
could
smile
,
To
see
this
formall
Ape
play
Antick
tricks
:
But
in
my
breast
a
poysoned
arrow
stickes
,
And
smiles
cannot
become
me
,
Loue
wouen
sleightly
(
Such
as
thy
false
heart
makes
)
weares
out
as
lightly
,
But
loue
being
truely
bred
i
th
the
soule
(
like
mine
)
Bleeds
euen
to
death
,
at
the
least
wound
it
takes
,
The
more
we
quench
this
,
the
lesse
it
slakes
:
Oh
me
!
Enter
Sebastian
Wengraue
with
Neatfoote
.
Seb.
A
Sempster
speake
with
me
,
saist
thou
.
Neat.
Yes
sir
,
she
's
there
,
viua
voce
,
to
deliuer
her
auricular
confession
.
Seb.
With
me
sweet
heart
.
What
i
st
?
Mary
I
haue
brought
home
your
bands
sir
.
Seb.
Bands
:
Neatfoote
.
Neat.
Sir
.
Seb.
Prithee
look
in
,
for
all
the
Gentlemen
are
vpon
rising
.
Neat.
Yes
sir
,
a
most
methodicall
attendance
shall
be
giuen
.
Seb.
And
dost
heare
,
if
my
father
call
for
me
,
say
I
am
busy
with
a
Sempster
.
Neat.
Yes
sir
,
hee
shall
know
it
that
you
are
busied
with
a
needle
woman
.
Seb.
In
's
eare
good
Neat-foote
,
Neat.
It
shall
be
so
giuen
him
.
Exit
Neat-foote
.
Seb.
Bands
,
y'
are
mistaken
sweete
heart
,
I
bespake
none
,
when
,
where
,
I
prithee
,
what
bands
,
let
me
see
them
.
Mary
Yes
sir
,
a
bond
fast
sealed
,
with
solemne
oathes
,
Subscribed
vnto
(
as
I
thought
)
with
your
soule
:
Deliuered
as
your
deed
in
sight
of
heauen
,
Is
this
bond
canceld
,
haue
you
forgot
me
.
Seb.
Ha!
life
of
my
life
:
Sir
Guy
Fitz-Allards
daughter
,
What
has
transform'd
my
loue
to
this
strange
shape
?
Stay
:
make
all
sure
,
�
so
:
now
speake
and
be
briefe
,
Because
the
wolfe
's
at
dore
that
lyes
in
waite
,
To
prey
vpon
vs
both
albeit
mine
eyes
Are
blest
by
thine
,
yet
this
so
strange
disguise
Holds
me
with
feare
and
wonder
.
Mary
Mines
a
loathed
sight
,
Why
from
it
are
you
banisht
else
so
long
.
Seb.
I
must
cut
short
my
speech
,
in
broken
language
,
Thus
much
sweete
Moll
,
I
must
thy
company
shun
,
I
court
another
Moll
,
my
thoughts
must
run
,
As
a
horse
runs
,
that
's
blind
,
round
in
a
Mill
,
Out
euery
step
,
yet
keeping
one
path
still
.
Mary
Vmh
:
must
you
shun
my
company
,
in
one
knot
Haue
both
our
hands
by
t'h
hands
of
heauen
bene
tyed
,
Now
to
be
broke
,
I
thought
me
once
your
Bride
:
Our
fathers
did
agree
on
the
time
when
,
And
must
another
bed-fellow
fill
my
roome
.
Seb.
Sweete
maid
,
le
ts
loose
no
time
,
t
is
in
heauens
booke
Set
downe
,
that
I
must
haue
thee
:
an
oath
we
tooke
,
To
keep
our
vowes
,
but
when
the
knight
your
father
Was
from
mine
parted
,
stormes
began
to
sit
Vpon
my
couetous
fathers
brow
:
which
fell
From
them
on
me
,
he
reckond
vp
what
gold
This
marriage
would
draw
from
him
,
at
which
he
swore
,
To
loose
so
much
bloud
,
could
not
grieue
him
more
.
He
then
diswades
me
from
thee
,
cal'd
thee
not
faire
,
And
askt
what
is
shee
,
but
a
beggars
heire
?
He
scorn'd
thy
dowry
of
(
5000
)
Markes
.
If
such
a
summe
of
mony
could
be
found
,
And
I
would
match
with
that
,
hee
'd
not
vndoe
it
,
Prouided
his
bags
might
adde
nothing
to
it
,
But
vow'd
,
if
I
tooke
thee
,
nay
more
,
did
sweare
it
,
Saue
birth
from
him
I
nothing
should
inherit
.
Mary
What
followes
then
,
my
ship-wracke
.
Seb.
Dearest
no
:
Tho
wildly
in
a
laborinth
I
go
,
My
end
is
to
meete
thee
:
with
a
side
winde
Must
I
now
saile
,
else
I
no
hauen
can
finde
But
both
must
sinke
for
euer
.
There
's
a
wench
Cal'd
Mol
,
mad
Mol
,
or
merry
Moll
,
a
creature
So
strange
in
quality
,
a
whole
citty
takes
Note
of
her
name
and
person
,
all
that
affection
I
owe
to
thee
,
on
her
in
counterfet
passion
,
I
spend
to
mad
my
father
:
he
beleeues
I
doate
vpon
this
Roaring
Girle
,
and
grieues
As
it
becomes
a
father
for
a
sonne
,
That
could
be
so
bewitcht
:
yet
I
le
go
on
This
croked
way
,
sigh
still
for
her
,
faine
dreames
,
In
which
I
le
talke
onely
of
her
,
these
streames
Shall
,
I
hope
,
force
my
father
to
consent
That
heere
I
anchor
rather
then
be
rent
Vpon
a
rocke
so
dangerous
,
Art
thou
pleas'd
,
Because
thou
seest
we
are
way-laid
,
that
I
take
A
path
that
's
safe
,
tho
it
be
farre
about
,
Mary
My
prayers
with
heauen
guide
thee
,
Seb.
Then
I
will
on
,
My
father
is
at
hand
,
kisse
and
begon
;
Howres
shall
be
watcht
for
meetings
;
I
must
now
As
men
for
feare
,
to
a
strange
I
doll
bow
.
Mary
Farewell
.
Seb.
I
le
guide
thee
forth
,
when
next
we
meete
,
A
story
of
Moll
shall
make
our
mirth
more
sweet
.
Exeunt
Enter
Sir
Alexander
Wengraue
,
Sir
Dauy
Dapper
,
Sir
Adam
Appleton
,
Goshake
,
Laxton
,
and
Gentlemen
.
Omnes
Thanks
good
Sir
Alexander
for
our
bounteous
cheere
:
Alex.
Fy
,
fy
,
in
giuing
thankes
you
pay
to
deare
.
S.
Dap.
When
bounty
spreades
the
table
,
faith
t'
were
sinne
,
(
at
going
of
)
if
thankes
should
not
step
in
.
Alex.
No
more
of
thankes
,
no
more
,
I
mary
Sir
,
Th'
inner
roome
was
too
close
,
how
do
you
like
This
Parlour
Gentlmen
?
Omnes
Oh
passing
well
.
Adam
What
a
sweet
breath
the
aire
casts
heere
,
so
coole
,
Gosh.
I
like
the
prospect
best
.
Lax.
See
how
t
is
furnisht
.
S.
Dap.
A
very
faire
sweete
roome
.
Alex.
Sir
Dauy
Dapper
,
The
furniture
that
doth
adorne
this
roome
,
Cost
many
a
faire
gray
groat
ere
it
came
here
,
But
good
things
are
most
cheape
,
when
th'
are
most
deere
,
Nay
when
you
looke
into
my
galleries
,
How
brauely
they
are
trim'd
vp
,
you
all
shall
sweare
Y
are
highly
pleasd
to
see
what
's
set
downe
there
:
Stories
of
men
and
women
(
mixt
together
Faire
ones
with
foule
,
like
sun-shine
in
wet
wether
)
Within
one
square
a
thousand
heads
are
laid
So
close
,
that
all
of
heads
,
the
roome
seeemes
made
,
As
many
faces
there
(
fill'd
with
blith
lookes
)
Shew
like
the
promising
titles
of
new
bookes
,
(
Writ
merily
)
the
Readers
being
their
owne
eyes
,
Which
seeme
to
moue
and
to
giue
plaudities
,
And
here
and
there
(
whilst
with
obsequious
eares
,
Throng'd
heapes
do
listen
)
a
cut
purse
thrusts
and
leeres
With
haukes
eyes
for
his
prey
:
I
need
not
shew
him
,
By
a
hanging
villanous
looke
,
your selues
may
know
him
,
The
face
is
drawne
so
rarely
,
Then
sir
below
,
The
very
flowre
(
as
t
were
)
waues
to
and
fro
,
And
like
a
floating
Iland
,
seemes
to
moue
,
Vpon
a
sea
bound
in
with
shores
aboue
,
Enter
Sebastian
and
M.
Greene-wit
.
Omnes
.
These
sights
are
excellent
.
Alex.
I
'le
shew
you
all
,
Since
we
are
met
,
make
our
parting
Comicall
.
Seb.
This
gentleman
(
my
friend
)
will
take
his
leaue
Sir
.
Alex.
Ha
,
take
his
leaue
(
Sebastian
)
who
?
Seb.
This
gentleman
.
Alex.
Your
loue
sir
,
has
already
giuen
me
some
time
,
And
if
you
please
to
trust
my
age
with
more
,
It
shall
pay
double
interest
:
Good
sir
stay
.
Green.
I
haue
beene
too
bold
.
Alex.
Not
so
sir
.
A
merry
day
Mongst
friends
being
spent
,
is
better
then
gold
sau'd
.
Some
wine
,
some
wine
.
Where
be
these
knaues
I
keepe
.
Enter
three
or
foure
Seruingmen
,
and
Neatfoote
.
Neat.
At
your
worshipfull
elbow
,
sir
.
Alex.
You
are
kissing
my
maids
,
drinking
,
or
fast
asleep
.
Neat.
Your
worship
has
giuen
it
vs
right
.
Alex.
You
varlets
stirre
,
Chaires
,
stooles
and
cushions
:
pre'thee
sir
Dauy
Dapper
,
Make
that
chaire
thine
.
Sir
Dap.
T
is
but
an
easie
gift
,
And
yet
I
thanke
you
for
it
sir
,
I
'le
take
it
.
Alex.
A
chaire
for
old
sir
Adam
Appleton
.
Neat.
A
backe
friend
to
your
worship
.
Adam
.
Mary
good
Neatfoot
,
I
thanke
thee
for
it
:
backe
friends
sometimes
are
good
.
Alex.
Pray
make
that
stoole
your
pearch
,
good
M.
Goshawke
.
Gosh.
I
stoope
to
your
lure
sir
.
Alex.
Sonne
Sebastian
,
Take
Maister
Greenewit
to
you
.
Seb.
Sit
deere
friend
.
Alex.
Nay
maister
Laxton
�
furnish
maister
Laxton
With
what
he
wants
(
a
stone
)
a
stoole
I
would
say
,
a
stoole
.
Laxton
.
I
had
rather
stand
sir
.
Exeunt
seruants
.
Alex.
I
know
you
had
(
good
M.
Laxton
.
)
So
,
so
�
Now
here
's
a
messe
of
friends
,
and
(
gentlemen
)
Because
times
glasse
shall
not
be
running
long
,
I
'le
quicken
it
with
a
pretty
tale
.
Sir
Dap.
Good
tales
do
well
,
In
these
bad
dayes
,
where
vice
does
so
excell
.
Adam
.
Begin
sir
Alexander
.
Alex.
Last
day
I
met
An
aged
man
vpon
whose
head
was
scor'd
,
A
debt
of
iust
so
many
yeares
as
these
,
Which
I
owe
to
my
graue
,
the
man
you
all
know
.
Omnes
.
His
name
I
pray
you
sir
.
Alex.
Nay
you
shall
pardon
me
,
But
when
he
saw
me
(
with
a
sigh
that
brake
,
Or
seem'd
to
breake
his
heart-strings
)
thus
he
spake
:
Oh
my
good
knight
,
saies
he
,
(
and
then
his
eies
Were
richer
euen
by
that
which
made
them
poore
,
They
had
spent
so
many
teares
they
had
no
more
.
)
Oh
sir
(
saies
he
)
you
know
it
,
for
you
ha
seene
Blessings
to
raine
vpon
mine
house
and
me
:
Fortune
(
who
slaues
men
)
was
my
slaue
:
her
wheele
Hath
spun
me
golden
threads
,
for
I
thanke
heauen
,
I
nere
had
but
one
cause
to
curse
my
starres
,
I
ask't
him
then
,
what
that
one
cause
might
be
.
Omnes
.
So
Sir
.
Alex.
He
paus'd
,
and
as
we
often
see
,
A
sea
so
much
becalm'd
,
there
can
be
found
No
wrinckle
on
his
brow
,
his
waues
being
drownd
In
their
owne
rage
:
but
when
th'
imperious
wind
,
Vse
strange
inuisible
tyranny
to
shake
Both
heauens
and
earths
foundation
at
their
noyse
:
The
seas
swelling
with
wrath
to
part
that
fray
Rise
vp
,
and
are
more
wild
,
more
mad
,
then
they
.
Euen
so
this
good
old
man
was
by
my
question
Stir'd
vp
to
roughnesse
,
you
might
see
his
gall
Flow
euen
in
's
eies
:
then
grew
he
fantasticall
.
Sir
Dap.
Fantasticall
,
ha
,
ha
.
Alex.
Yes
,
and
talke
odly
.
Adam
.
Pray
sir
proceed
,
How
did
this
old
man
end
?
Alex.
Mary
sir
thus
.
He
left
his
wild
fit
to
read
ore
his
cards
,
Yet
then
(
though
age
cast
snow
on
all
his
haires
)
He
ioy'd
because
(
saies
he
)
the
God
of
gold
Has
beene
to
me
no
niggard
:
that
disease
(
Of
which
all
old
men
sicken
)
Auarice
Neuer
infected
me
.
Lax.
He
meanes
not
himselfe
i
'me
sure
.
Alex.
For
like
a
lamp
,
Fed
with
continuall
oyle
,
I
spend
and
throw
My
light
to
all
that
need
it
,
yet
haue
still
Enough
to
serue
my selfe
,
oh
but
(
quoth
he
)
Tho
heauens-dew
fall
,
thus
on
this
aged
tree
,
I
haue
a
sonne
that
's
like
a
wedge
doth
cleaue
,
My
very
heart
roote
,
S
,
Dap.
Had
he
such
a
sonne
,
Seb,
Now
I
do
smell
a
fox
strongly
.
Alex.
Le
ts
see
:
no
Maister
Greene-wit
is
not
yet
So
mellow
in
yeares
as
he
;
but
as
like
Sebastian
,
Iust
like
my
sonne
Sebastian
,
�
such
another
.
Seb.
How
finely
like
a
fencer
my
father
fetches
his
by-blows
to
hit
me
,
but
if
I
beate
you
not
at
your
owne
weapon
of
subtilty
.
Alex.
This
sonne
(
saith
he
)
that
should
be
The
columne
and
maine
arch
vnto
my
house
,
The
crutch
vnto
my
age
,
becomes
a
whirlewind
Shaking
the
firme
foundation
,
Adam
T
is
some
prodigall
.
Seba.
Well
shot
old
Adam
Bell
.
Alex.
No
citty
monster
neither
,
no
prodigall
,
But
sparing
,
wary
,
ciuill
,
and
(
tho
wiuelesse
)
An
excellent
husband
,
and
such
a
traueller
,
He
has
more
tongues
in
his
head
then
some
haue
teeth
,
S.
Dap.
I
haue
but
two
in
myne
Gosh.
So
sparing
and
so
wary
,
What
then
could
vex
his
father
so
.
Alex.
Oh
a
woman
.
Seb.
A
flesh
fly
,
that
can
vex
any
man
.
Alex.
A
scuruy
woman
,
On
whom
the
passionate
old
man
swore
he
doated
:
A
creature
(
saith
he
)
nature
hath
brought
forth
To
mocke
the
sex
of
woman
.
�
It
is
a
thing
One
knowes
not
how
to
name
,
her
birth
began
Ere
she
was
all
made
.
T
is
woman
more
then
man
,
Man
more
then
woman
,
and
(
which
to
none
can
hap
)
The
Sunne
giues
her
two
shadowes
to
one
shape
,
Nay
more
,
let
this
strange
thing
,
walke
,
stand
or
sit
,
No
blazing
starre
drawes
more
eyes
after
it
.
S.
Dap.
A
Monster
,
t
is
some
Monster
.
Alex.
Shee
's
a
varlet
.
Seb.
Now
is
my
cue
to
bristle
.
Alex.
A
naughty
packe
.
Seb.
T
is
false
.
Alex.
Ha
boy
.
Seb.
T
is
false
.
Alex.
What
's
false
,
I
say
shee
's
nought
.
Seb.
I
say
that
tongue
That
dares
speake
so
(
but
yours
)
stickes
in
the
throate
Of
a
ranke
villaine
,
set
your selfe
aside
.
�
Alex.
So
sir
what
then
.
Seb.
Any
here
else
had
lyed
.
I
thinke
I
shall
fit
you
�
aside
.
Alex.
Lye
.
Seb.
Yes
.
Sir
Dap.
Doth
this
concerne
him
.
Alex.
Ah
sirra
boy
.
Is
your
bloud
heated
:
boyles
it
:
are
you
stung
,
I
le
pierce
you
deeper
yet
:
oh
my
deere
friends
,
I
am
that
wretched
father
,
this
that
sonne
,
That
sees
his
ruine
,
yet
headlong
on
doth
run
.
Adam
.
Will
you
loue
such
a
poyson
.
S.
Dap.
Fye
,
fye
.
Seb.
Y'
are
all
mad
.
Alex.
Th'
art
sicke
at
heart
,
yet
feelst
it
not
:
of
all
these
,
What
Gentleman
(
but
thou
)
knowing
his
disease
Mortall
,
would
shun
the
cure
:
oh
Maister
Greenewit
,
Would
you
to
such
an
Idoll
bow
.
Greene.
Not
I
sir
.
Alex.
Heer
's
Maister
Laxton
,
has
he
mind
to
a
woman
As
thou
hast
.
Lax.
No
not
I
sir
.
Alex.
Sir
I
know
it
.
Lax.
There
good
parts
are
so
rare
,
there
bad
so
common
,
I
will
haue
nought
to
do
with
any
woman
.
Sir
Dap.
T
is
well
done
Maister
Laxton
.
Alex.
Oh
thou
cruell
boy
,
Thou
wouldst
with
lust
an
old
mans
life
destroy
,
Because
thou
seest
I
'me
halfe
way
in
my
graue
,
Thou
shouelst
dust
vpon
me
:
wod
thou
mightest
haue
Thy
wish
,
most
wicked
,
most
vnnaturall
.
Dap.
Why
sir
,
t
is
thought
,
sir
Guy
Fitz-Allards
daughter
Shall
wed
your
sonne
Sebastian
.
Alex.
Sir
Dauy
Dapper
.
I
haue
vpon
my
knees
,
wood
this
fond
boy
,
To
take
that
vertuous
maiden
.
Seb.
Harke
you
a
word
sir
.
You
on
your
knees
haue
curst
that
vertuous
maiden
,
And
me
for
louing
her
,
yet
do
you
now
Thus
baffle
me
to
my
face
:
were
not
your
knees
In
such
intreates
,
giue
me
Fitz-Allards
daughter
.
Alex.
I
le
giue
thee
rats-bane
rather
.
Seb.
Well
then
you
know
What
dish
I
meane
to
feed
vpon
.
Alex.
Harke
Gentlemen
,
He
sweares
to
haue
this
cut-purse
drab
,
to
spite
my
gall
.
Omnes
.
Maister
Sebastian
.
Seb.
I
am
deafe
to
you
all
.
I
me
so
bewitcht
,
so
bound
to
my
desires
,
Teares
,
prayers
,
threats
,
nothing
can
quench
out
those
fires
That
burne
within
me
.
Exit
Sebastian
.
Alex.
Her
bloud
shall
quench
it
then
,
Loose
him
not
,
oh
diswade
him
Gentlemen
.
Sir
Dap.
He
shall
be
weand
I
warrant
you
.
Alex.
Before
his
eyes
Lay
downe
his
shame
,
my
griefe
,
his
miseries
.
Omnes
.
No
more
,
no
more
,
away
.
Exeunt
all
but
sir
Alexander
.
Alex.
I
wash
a
Negro
,
Loosing
both
paines
and
cost
:
but
take
thy
flight
,
I
le
be
most
neere
thee
,
when
I
'me
least
in
sight
.
Wilde
Bucke
I
le
hunt
thee
breathlesse
,
thou
shalt
run
on
,
But
I
will
turne
thee
when
I
'me
not
thought
vpon
.
Enter
Ralph
Trapdore
:
Now
sirra
what
are
you
,
leaue
your
Apes
trickes
and
speake
.
Trap.
A
letter
from
my
Captaine
to
your
Worship
.
Alex.
Oh
,
oh
,
now
I
remember
t
is
to
preferre
thee
into
my
seruice
.
Trap.
To
be
a
shifter
vnder
your
Worships
nose
of
a
clean
trencher
,
when
ther
's
a
good
bit
vpon
't
.
Alex.
Troth
honest
fellow
�
humh
�
ha
�
let
me
see
,
This
knaue
shall
be
the
axe
to
hew
that
downe
At
which
I
stumble
,
has
a
face
that
promiseth
Much
of
a
villaine
,
I
will
grind
his
wit
,
And
if
the
edge
proue
fine
make
vse
of
it
.
Come
hither
sirra
,
canst
thou
be
secret
,
ha
.
Trap.
As
two
crafty
Atturneys
plotting
the
vndoing
of
their
clyents
.
Alex.
Didst
neuer
,
as
thou
hast
walkt
about
this
towne
Heare
of
a
wench
cal'd
Moll
,
mad
merry
Moll
.
Trap.
Moll
cutpurse
sir
.
Alex.
The
same
,
dost
thou
know
her
then
,
Trap.
Aswell
as
I
know
t
will
raine
vpon
Simon
and
Iudes
day
next
,
I
will
sift
all
the
tauerns
i
th
citty
,
and
drinke
halfe
pots
with
all
the
Watermen
at
h
bankside
,
but
if
you
will
sir
I
le
find
her
out
.
Alex.
That
task
is
easy
,
do
ot
then
,
hold
thy
hand
vp
.
What
's
this
,
i
st
burnt
?
Trap.
No
sir
no
,
a
little
sindgd
with
making
fire
workes
.
Alex.
Ther
's
mony
,
spend
it
,
that
being
spent
fetch
more
.
Trap.
Oh
sir
that
all
the
poore
souldiers
in
England
had
such
a
leader
.
For
fetching
no
water
Spaniell
is
like
me
.
Alex.
This
wench
we
speake
of
,
straies
so
from
her
kind
Nature
repents
she
made
her
.
T
is
a
Mermaid
Has
told
my
sonne
to
shipwracke
.
Trap.
I
le
cut
her
combe
for
you
.
Alex.
I
le
tell
out
gold
for
thee
then
:
hunt
her
forth
,
Cast
out
a
line
hung
full
of
siluer
hookes
To
catch
her
to
thy
company
:
deepe
spendings
May
draw
her
that
's
most
chast
to
a
mans
bosome
.
Trap.
The
gingling
of
Golden
bels
,
and
a
good
foole
with
a
hobbyhorse
,
wil
draw
all
the
whoores
i
th
towne
to
dance
in
a
morris
,
Alex.
Or
rather
,
for
that
's
best
,
(
they
say
sometimes
Shee
goes
in
breeches
)
follow
her
as
her
man
.
Trap.
And
when
her
breeches
are
off
,
shee
shall
follow
me
.
Alex.
Beate
all
thy
braines
to
serue
her
.
Trap.
Zounds
sir
,
as
country
wenches
beate
creame
,
till
butter
comes
.
Alex.
Play
thou
the
suttle
spider
,
weaue
fine
nets
To
insnare
her
very
life
.
Trap.
Her
life
.
Alex.
Yes
sucke
Her
heart-bloud
if
thou
canst
,
twist
thou
but
cords
To
catch
her
,
I
le
finde
law
to
hang
her
vp
.
Trap.
Spoke
like
a
Worshipfull
bencher
.
Alex.
Trace
all
her
steps
:
at
this
shee-foxes
den
Watch
what
lambs
enter
:
let
me
play
the
sheepeheard
To
saue
their
throats
from
bleeding
,
and
cut
hers
.
Trap.
This
is
the
goll
shall
do
ot
.
Alex.
Be
firme
and
gaine
me
Euer
thine
owne
.
This
done
I
entertaine
thee
:
How
is
thy
name
.
Trap.
My
name
sir
is
Raph
Trapdore
,
honest
Raph
.
Alex.
Trapdore
,
be
like
thy
name
,
a
dangerous
step
For
her
to
venture
on
,
but
vnto
me
.
Trap.
As
fast
as
your
sole
to
your
boote
or
shooe
sir
.
Alex.
Hence
then
,
be
little
seene
here
as
thou
canst
.
I
le
still
be
at
thine
elbow
.
Trap.
The
trapdores
set
.
Moll
if
you
budge
y'
are
gon
:
this
me
shall
crowne
,
A
Roaring
Boy
,
the
Roaring
Girle
puts
downe
,
Alex.
God
a
mercy
,
loose
no
time
.
Exeunt
.
The
three
shops
open
in
a
ranke
:
the
first
a
Poticaries
shop
,
the
next
a
Fether
shop
:
the
third
a
Sempsters
shop
:
Mistresse
Gallipot
in
the
first
,
Mistresse
Tiltyard
in
the
next
,
Maister
Openworke
and
his
wife
in
the
third
,
to
them
enters
Laxton
,
Goshawke
and
Greenewit
.
Mi.
Open.
Gentlemen
what
i
st
you
lacke
.
What
i
st
you
buy
,
see
fine
bands
and
ruffes
,
fine
lawnes
,
fine
cambrickes
,
what
i
st
you
lacke
Gentlemen
,
what
i
st
you
buy
?
Lax.
Yonder
's
the
shop
.
Gosh.
Is
that
shee
.
Lax.
Peace
.
Green
Shee
that
minces
Tobacco
.
Lax.
I
:
shee
s
a
Gentlewoman
borne
I
can
tell
you
,
tho
it
be
her
hard
fortune
now
to
shread
Indian
pot-hearbes
.
Gosh.
Oh
sir
t
is
many
a
good
womans
fortune
,
when
her
husband
turns
bankrout
,
to
begin
with
pipes
and
set
vp
againe
.
Lax.
And
indeed
the
raysing
of
the
woman
is
the
lifting
vp
of
the
mans
head
at
all
times
,
if
one
florish
,
tother
will
bud
as
fast
I
warrant
ye
.
Gosh.
Come
th'
art
familiarly
acquainted
there
,
I
grope
that
.
Lax.
And
you
grope
no
better
i
th
dark
you
may
chance
lye
i
th
ditch
when
y'
are
drunke
.
Gosh.
Go
th'
art
a
misticall
letcher
.
Lax.
I
will
not
deny
but
my
credit
may
take
vp
an
ounce
of
pure
smoake
.
Gosh.
May
take
vp
an
ell
of
pure
smock
;
away
go
,
t
is
the
closest
striker
.
Life
I
think
he
co�mits
venery
40
foote
deepe
,
no
mans
aware
on
't
,
I
like
a
palpable
smockster
go
to
worke
so
openly
,
with
the
tricks
of
art
,
that
I
'me
as
aparantly
seen
as
a
naked
boy
in
a
viall
,
&
were
it
not
for
a
guift
of
trechery
that
I
haue
in
me
to
betray
my
friend
whe�
he
puts
most
trust
in
me
(
masse
yonder
hee
is
too
�
)
and
by
his
iniurie
to
make
good
my
accesse
to
her
,
I
should
appeare
as
defectiue
in
courting
,
as
a
Farmers
sonne
the
first
day
of
his
feather
,
that
doth
nothing
at
Court
,
but
woe
the
hangings
and
glasse
windowes
for
a
month
together
,
and
some
broken
wayting
woman
for
euer
after
.
I
find
those
imperfections
in
my
venerie
,
that
were
't
not
for
flatterie
and
falshood
,
I
should
want
discourse
and
impudence
,
and
hee
that
wants
impudence
among
women
,
is
worthy
to
bee
kickt
out
at
beds
feet
.
�
He
shall
not
see
me
yet
.
Greene.
Troth
this
is
finely
shred
.
Lax.
Oh
women
are
the
bèst
mincers
.
Mist.
Gal.
'
Thad
bin
a
good
phrase
for
a
Cookes
wife
sir
.
Lax.
But
't
will
serue
generally
,
like
the
front
of
a
newe
Almanacke
;
as
thus
:
Calculated
for
the
meridian
of
Cookes
wiues
,
but
generally
for
all
Englishwomen
.
Mist.
Gal.
Nay
you
shall
ha'te
sir
,
I
haue
fild
it
for
you
.
Shee
puts
it
to
the
fire
.
Lax.
The
pipe
's
in
a
good
hand
,
and
I
wish
mine
alwaies
so
.
Gree.
But
not
to
be
vs'd
a
that
fashion
.
Lax.
O
pardon
me
sir
,
I
vnderstand
no
french
.
I
pray
be
couerd
.
Iacke
a
pipe
of
rich
smoake
.
Gosh.
Rich
smoake
;
that
's
6.
pence
a
pipe
i
st
?
Green.
To
me
sweet
Lady
.
Mist.
Gal.
Be
not
forgetful
;
respect
my
credit
;
seem
strange
;
Art
and
Wit
makes
a
foole
of
suspition
:
�
pray
be
warie
.
Lax.
Push
,
I
warrant
you
:
�
come
,
how
i
st
gallants
?
Green.
Pure
and
excellent
.
Lax.
I
thought
't
was
good
,
you
were
growne
so
silent
;
you
are
like
those
that
loue
not
to
talke
at
victuals
,
tho
they
make
a
worse
noyse
i'
the
nose
then
a
common
fidlers
prentice
,
and
discourse
a
whole
Supper
with
snuffling
;
�
I
must
speake
a
word
with
you
anone
.
Mist.
Gal.
Make
your
way
wisely
then
.
(
ners
,
Gosh.
Oh
what
else
sir
,
hee
's
perfection
it selfe
,
full
of
man
-
But
not
an
acre
of
ground
belonging
to
'em
.
Green.
I
and
full
of
forme
,
h
'as
ne're
a
good
stoole
in
's
chamber
.
Gosh.
But
aboue
all
religious
:
hee
prayeth
daily
vpon
elder
brothers
.
Green.
And
valiant
aboue
measure
;
h
'as
runne
three
streets
from
a
Serieant
.
Lax.
Puh
,
Puh
.
he
blowes
tobacco
in
their
faces
.
Green.
Gosh.
Oh
,
puh
,
ho
,
ho
.
Lax.
So
,
so
.
Mist.
Gal.
What
's
the
matter
now
sir
?
Lax.
I
protest
I
'me
in
extreame
want
of
money
,
if
you
can
supply
mee
now
with
any
meanes
,
you
doe
mee
the
greatest
pleasure
,
next
to
the
bountie
of
your
loue
,
as
euer
poore
gentleman
tasted
.
Mist.
Gal.
What
's
the
summe
would
pleasure
ye
sir
?
Tho
you
deserue
nothing
lesse
at
my
hands
.
Lax.
Why
't
is
but
for
want
of
opportunitie
thou
know'st
;
I
put
her
off
with
opportunitie
still
:
by
this
light
I
hate
her
,
but
for
meanes
to
keepe
me
in
fashion
with
gallants
;
for
what
I
take
from
her
,
I
spend
vpon
other
wenches
,
beare
her
in
hand
still
;
shee
has
wit
enough
to
rob
her
husband
,
and
I
waies
enough
to
consume
the
money
:
why
how
now
?
what
the
chin-cough
?
Gosh.
Thou
hast
the
cowardliest
tricke
to
come
before
a
mans
face
and
strangle
him
ere
hee
be
aware
,
I
could
find
in
my
heart
to
make
a
quarrell
in
earnest
.
Lax.
Poxe
and
thou
do'st
,
thou
know'st
I
neuer
vse
to
fight
with
my
friends
,
thou
'l
but
loose
thy
labour
in
't
.
Iacke
Dapper
!
Enter
I.
Dapper
,
and
his
man
Gull
.
Greene.
Mounsier
Dapper
,
I
diue
downe
to
your
anckles
.
I.
Dap.
Saue
ye
gentlemen
all
three
in
a
peculiar
salute
.
Gosh.
He
were
ill
to
make
a
lawyer
,
hee
dispatches
three
at
once
.
Lax.
So
wel
said
:
but
is
this
of
the
same
Tobacco
mistresse
Gallipot
?
M.
Gal.
The
same
you
had
at
first
sir
.
Lax.
I
wish
it
no
better
:
this
will
serue
to
drinke
at
my
chamber
.
Gosh.
Shall
we
taste
a
pipe
on
't
?
Lax.
Not
of
this
by
my
troth
Gentlemen
,
I
haue
sworne
before
you
.
Gosh.
What
not
Iacke
dapper
.
Lax.
Pardon
me
sweet
Iacke
,
I
'me
sorry
I
made
such
a
rash
oath
,
but
foolish
oathes
must
stand
:
where
art
going
Iacke
.
Iac.
Dap.
Faith
to
buy
one
fether
.
Lax.
One
fether
,
the
foole
's
peculiar
still
.
Iac.
Dap.
Gul.
Gul.
Maister
.
Iac.
Dap.
Heer
's
three
halfepence
for
your
ordinary
,
boy
,
meete
me
an
howre
hence
in
Powles
.
Gul.
How
three
single
halfepence
;
life
,
this
will
scarce
serue
a
man
in
sauce
,
a
halporth
of
mustard
,
a
halporth
of
oyle
,
and
a
halporth
of
viniger
,
what
's
left
then
for
the
pickle
herring
:
this
showes
like
finall
beere
i
th
morning
after
a
great
surfet
of
wine
ore
night
,
hee
could
spend
his
three
pound
last
night
in
a
supper
amongst
girles
and
braue
baudy-house
boyes
,
I
thought
his
pockets
cackeld
not
for
nothing
,
these
are
the
egs
of
three
pound
,
I
le
go
sup
'em
vp
presently
.
Exit
Gul.
Lax.
Fight
,
nine
,
ten
Angles
,
good
wench
ifaith
,
and
one
that
loues
darkenesse
well
,
she
puts
out
a
candle
with
the
best
tricks
of
any
drugsters
wife
in
England
:
but
that
which
mads
her
I
raile
vpon
oportunity
still
,
and
take
no
notice
on
't
.
The
other
night
she
would
needs
lead
me
into
a
roome
with
a
candle
in
her
hand
to
show
me
a
naked
picture
,
where
no
sooner
entred
but
the
candle
was
sent
of
an
arrant
:
now
I
not
intending
to
vnderstand
her
,
but
like
a
puny
at
the
Innes
of
venery
,
cal'd
for
another
light
innocently
,
thus
reward
I
all
her
cunning
with
simple
mistaking
.
I
know
she
cosens
her
husband
to
keepe
me
,
and
I
le
keepe
her
honest
,
as
long
as
I
can
,
to
make
the
poore
man
some
part
of
amends
,
an
honest
minde
of
a
whooremaister
,
how
thinke
you
amongst
you
,
what
a
fresh
pipe
,
draw
in
a
third
man
.
Gosh.
No
your
a
horder
,
you
ingrose
by
th
ounces
.
At
the
Fether
shop
now
.
Iac.
Dap.
Puh
I
like
it
not
.
M.
Tiltyard
What
fether
i
st
you
'ld
haue
sir
.
These
are
most
worne
and
most
in
fashion
,
Amongst
the
Beuer
gallants
the
stone
Riders
.
The
priuate
stages
audience
,
the
twelu
peny
stool
Gentlemen
,
I
can
enforme
you
t
is
the
generall
fether
.
Iac.
Dap.
And
therefore
I
mislike
it
,
tell
me
of
generall
.
Now
a
continuall
Simon
and
Iudes
raine
Beate
all
your
fethers
as
flat
downe
as
pancakes
.
Shew
me
�
�
a
�
spangled
fether
,
Mist.
Tilt.
Oh
to
go
a
feasting
with
,
You
'd
haue
it
for
a
hinch
boy
,
you
shall
.
At
the
Sempsters
shop
now
.
Maist.
Open.
Masse
I
had
quite
forgot
,
His
Honours
footeman
was
here
last
night
wife
,
Ha
you
done
with
my
Lords
shirt
.
Mist.
Open.
What
's
that
to
you
sir
,
I
was
this
morning
at
his
Honours
lodging
,
Ere
such
a
snake
as
you
crept
out
of
your
shell
.
Maist.
Open.
Oh
't
was
well
done
good
wife
.
Mt.
Op.
I
hold
it
better
sir
,
then
if
you
had
don
't
your selfe
.
Ma.
Op.
Nay
so
say
I
:
but
is
the
Countesses
smocke
almost
donne
mouse
.
Mi.
Op.
Here
lyes
the
cambricke
sir
,
but
wants
I
feare
mee
.
Ma.
Op.
I
le
resolue
you
of
that
presently
,
Mi.
Op.
Haida
,
oh
audacious
groome
,
Dare
you
presume
to
noble
womens
linnen
,
Keepe
you
your
yard
to
measure
sheepeheards
holland
,
I
must
confine
you
I
see
that
.
At
the
Tobacco
shop
now
.
Gosh.
What
say
you
to
this
geere
.
Lax.
I
dare
the
arrants
critticke
in
Tobacco
To
lay
one
falt
vpon
't
.
Enter
Mol
in
a
freese
Jerkin
and
a
blacke
sauegard
.
Gosh.
Life
yonder
's
Mol
.
Lax.
Mol
which
Mol
.
Gosh.
honest
Mol
.
Lax.
Prithee
le
ts
call
her
�
Mol
.
All
.
Mol
,
Mol
,
pist
Mol
.
Mol.
How
now
,
what
's
the
matter
.
Gosh.
A
pipe
of
good
tobacco
Mol
.
Mol.
I
cannot
stay
.
Gosh.
Nay
Moll
puh
,
prethee
harke
,
but
one
word
ifaith
.
Mol.
Well
what
i
st
.
Green.
Prithee
come
hither
sirra
.
Lax.
Hart
I
would
giue
but
too
much
money
to
be
nibling
with
that
wench
,
life
,
sh
'as
the
Spirit
of
foure
great
parishes
,
and
a
voyce
that
will
drowne
all
the
Citty
,
me thinkes
a
braue
Captaine
might
get
all
his
souldiers
vpon
her
,
and
nere
bee
beholding
to
a
company
of
mile-end
milke
sops
,
if
hee
could
come
on
,
and
come
off
quicke
enough
:
Such
a
Moll
were
a
maribone
before
an
Italian
,
hee
would
cry
bona
roba
till
his
ribs
were
nothing
but
bone
.
I
le
lay
hard
siege
to
her
,
mony
is
that
Aqua
fortis
,
that
eates
into
many
a
maidenhead
,
where
the
wals
are
flesh
&
bloud
I
le
euer
pierce
through
with
a
golden
auguer
.
Gosh.
Now
thy
iudgement
Moll
,
i
st
not
good
?
Mol.
Yes
faith
t
is
very
good
tobacco
,
how
do
you
sell
an
an
ounce
,
farewell
.
God
b'y
you
Mistresse
Gallipot
,
Gosh.
Why
Mol
,
Mol
.
Mol.
I
cannot
stay
now
ifaith
,
I
am
going
to
buy
a
shag
cuffe
,
the
shop
will
be
shut
in
presently
.
Gosh.
T
is
the
maddest
fantasticalst
girle
:
�
I
neuer
knew
so
much
flesh
and
so
much
nimblenesse
put
together
.
Lax.
Shee
slips
from
one
company
to
another
,
like
a
fat
Eele
between
a
Dutchma�s
fingers
:
�
I
le
watch
my
time
for
her
.
Mist.
Gal.
Some
will
not
sticke
to
say
shee
s
a
man
And
some
both
man
and
woman
.
Lax.
That
were
excellent
,
she
might
first
cuckold
the
husband
and
then
make
him
do
as
much
for
the
wife
.
The
Fether
shop
againe
.
Moll
.
Saue
you
;
how
does
Mistresse
Tiltyard
?
I.
Dap.
Mol
.
Mol.
Iacke
Dappper
.
I.
Dap.
How
dost
Mol
.
Mol.
I
le
tell
the
by
and
by
,
I
go
but
toth
'
next
shop
.
I.
Dap.
Thou
shalt
find
me
here
this
howre
about
a
fether
.
Mol.
Nay
and
a
fether
hold
you
in
play
a
whole
houre
,
a
goose
will
last
you
all
the
daies
of
your
life
.
Let
me
see
a
good
shag
ruffe
.
The
Sempster
shop
.
Maist.
Open.
Mistresse
Mary
that
shalt
thou
ifaith
,
and
the
best
in
the
shop
.
Mist.
Open.
How
now
,
greetings
,
loue
tearmes
with
a
pox
betweene
you
,
haue
I
found
out
one
of
your
haunts
,
I
send
you
for
hollands
,
and
you
're
i
th
the
low
countries
with
a
mischiefe
,
I
'me
seru'd
with
good
ware
by
th
shift
,
that
makes
it
lye
dead
so
long
vpon
my
hands
,
I
were
as
good
shut
vp
shop
,
for
when
I
open
it
I
take
nothing
.
Maist.
Open.
Nay
and
you
fall
a
ringing
once
the
diuell
cannot
stop
you
,
I
le
out
of
the
Belfry
as
fast
as
I
can
�
Moll
.
Mist.
Open.
Get
you
from
my
shop
.
Mol.
I
come
to
buy
.
(
shop
Mist.
Open.
I
le
sell
ye
nothing
,
I
warne
yee
my
house
and
Mol.
You
goody
Openworke
,
you
that
prick
out
a
poore
liuing
And
sowes
many
a
bawdy
skin-coate
together
,
Thou
priuate
pandresse
betweene
shirt
and
smock
,
I
wish
thee
for
a
minute
but
a
man
:
Thou
shouldst
neuer
vse
more
shapes
,
but
as
th'
art
I
pitty
my
reuenge
,
now
my
spleenes
vp
,
Enter
a
fellow
with
a
long
rapier
by
his
side
.
I
would
not
mocke
it
willingly
�
ha
be
thankfull
.
Now
I
forgiue
thee
.
Mist.
Open.
Mary
hang
thee
,
I
neuer
askt
forgiuenesse
in
my
life
.
Mol.
You
goodman
swinesface
.
Fellow
What
wil
you
murder
me
.
Mol.
You
remember
slaue
,
how
you
abusd
me
t'other
night
in
a
Tauerne
.
Fel.
Not
I
by
this
light
.
Mol.
No
,
but
by
candlelight
you
did
,
you
haue
trickes
to
saue
your
oathes
,
reseruations
haue
you
,
and
I
haue
reserued
somewhat
for
you
,
�
as
you
like
that
call
for
more
,
you
know
the
signe
againe
.
Fel.
Pox
an
t
,
had
I
brought
any
company
along
with
mee
to
haue
borne
witlesse
on
't
,
't
wold
ne're
haue
grieu'd
me
,
but
to
be
strucke
and
nobody
by
,
t
is
my
ill
fortune
still
,
why
tread
vpon
a
worme
they
say
t
will
turne
taile
,
but
indeed
a
Gentleman
should
haue
more
manners
.
Exit
fellow
.
Lax.
Gallantly
performed
ifath
Mol
,
and
manfully
,
I
loue
thee
for
euer
for
t
,
base
rogue
,
had
he
offerd
but
the
least
counter-buffe
,
by
this
hand
I
was
prepared
for
him
.
Mol.
You
prepared
for
him
,
why
should
you
be
prepared
for
him
,
was
he
any
more
then
a
man
.
Lax.
No
nor
so
much
by
a
yard
and
a
handfull
London
measure
..
Moll
.
Why
do
you
speake
this
then
,
doe
you
thinke
I
cannot
ride
a
stone
horse
,
vnlesse
one
lead
him
by
th
snaffle
.
Lax.
Yes
and
sit
him
brauely
,
I
know
thou
canst
Mol
,
t
was
but
an
honest
mistake
through
loue
,
and
I
le
make
amends
for
t
any
way
,
prethee
sweete
plumpe
Mol
,
when
shall
thou
and
I
go
out
a
towne
together
.
Mol.
Whether
to
Tyburne
prethee
.
Lax.
Masse
that
's
out
a
towne
indeed
,
thou
hangst
so
many
iests
vpon
thy
friends
stil
.
I
meane
honestly
to
Brainford
,
Staines
or
Ware
.
Mol.
What
to
do
there
.
Lax.
Nothing
but
bee
merry
and
lye
together
,
I
'le
hire
a
coach
with
foure
horses
.
Mol.
I
thought
't
would
bee
a
beastly
iourney
,
you
may
leaue
out
one
wel
,
three
horses
will
serue
,
if
I
play
the
iade
my selfe
.
Lax.
Nay
push
th'
art
such
another
kicking
wench
,
prethee
be
kind
and
le
ts
meete
.
Mol.
T
is
hard
but
we
shall
meete
sir
.
Lax.
Nay
but
appoint
the
place
then
,
there
's
ten
Angels
in
faire
gold
Mol
,
you
see
I
do
not
trifle
with
you
,
do
but
say
thou
wilt
meete
me
,
and
I
le
haue
a
coach
ready
for
thee
.
Mol.
Why
here
's
my
hand
I
le
meete
you
sir
.
Lax.
Oh
good
gold
,
�
the
place
sweete
Mol
.
Mol.
It
shal
be
your
appointment
.
Lax.
Somewhat
neere
Holborne
Mol
.
Mol.
In
Graies-Inne
fields
then
.
Lax.
A
match
.
Mol.
I
le
meete
you
there
.
Lax.
The
houre
.
Mol.
Three
.
Lax.
That
will
be
time
enough
to
sup
at
Braineford
.
Fall
from
them
to
the
other
.
Ma.
Op.
I
am
of
such
a
nature
sir
,
I
cannot
endure
the
house
when
shee
scolds
,
sh'
has
a
tongue
will
be
hard
further
in
a
still
morning
then
Saint
Antlings-bell
,
she
railes
vpon
me
for
forraine
wenching
,
that
I
being
a
freema�
must
needs
keep
a
whore
i
th
subburbs
,
and
seeke
to
impouerish
the
liberties
,
when
we
fall
out
,
I
trouble
you
still
to
make
all
whole
with
my
wife
.
Gosh.
No
trouble
at
all
,
t
is
a
pleasure
to
mee
to
ioyne
things
together
.
Maist.
Open.
Go
thy
waies
,
I
doe
this
but
to
try
thy
honesty
Goshawke
.
The
Fether
shop
.
Iac.
Dap.
How
lik'st
thou
this
Mol
.
Mol.
Oh
singularly
,
your
fitted
now
for
a
bunch
,
he
lookes
for
all
the
world
with
those
spangled
fethers
like
a
noblemans
bedpost
:
The
purity
of
your
wench
would
I
faine
try
,
shee
seemes
like
Kent
vnconquered
,
and
I
beleeue
as
many
wiles
are
in
her
�
oh
the
gallants
of
these
times
are
shallow
letchers
,
they
put
not
their
courtship
home
enough
to
a
wench
,
t
is
impossible
to
know
what
woman
is
throughly
honest
,
because
shee
's
nere
thoroughly
try'd
,
I
am
of
that
certaine
beleefe
there
are
more
queanes
in
this
towne
of
their
owne
making
,
then
of
any
mans
prouoking
,
where
lyes
the
slacknesse
then
?
many
a
poore
soule
would
downe
,
and
ther
's
nobody
will
push
Women
are
courted
but
nere
soundly
tri'd
,
(
em
:
As
many
walke
in
spurs
that
neuer
ride
.
The
Sempsters
shop
.
Mist
,
Open.
Oh
abominable
.
Gosh.
Nay
more
I
tell
you
in
priuate
,
he
keeps
a
whore
i
th
subburbs
.
Mist.
Open.
O
spittle
dealing
,
I
came
to
him
a
Gentlewoman
borne
.
I
le
shew
you
mine
armes
when
you
please
sir
.
Gosh.
I
had
rather
see
your
legs
,
and
begin
that
way
.
Mist.
Openworke
T
is
well
knowne
he
tooke
me
from
a
Ladies
seruice
,
where
I
was
well
beloued
of
the
steward
,
I
had
my
Lattine
tongue
,
and
a
spice
of
the
French
before
I
came
to
him
,
and
now
doth
he
keepe
a
subberbian
whoore
vnder
my
nostrils
.
Gosh.
There
's
waies
enough
to
cry
quite
with
him
,
harke
in
thine
eare
.
Mist.
Open.
There
's
a
friend
worth
a
Million
.
Mol
I
'le
try
one
speare
against
your
chastity
Mist.
Tiltyard
Though
it
proue
too
short
by
the
burgh
.
Trap.
Masse
here
she
is
.
Enter
Ralph
Trapdore
I
'me
bound
already
to
serue
her
,
tho
it
be
but
a
sluttish
tricke
.
Blesse
my
hopefull
yong
Mistresse
with
long
life
and
great
limbs
,
send
her
the
vpper
hand
of
all
balifes
,
and
their
hungry
adherents
.
Mol.
How
now
,
what
art
thou
?
Trap.
A
poore
ebbing
Gentleman
,
that
would
gladly
wait
for
the
yong
floud
of
your
seruice
.
Mol.
My
seruice
!
what
should
moue
you
to
offer
your
seruice
to
me
sir
?
Trap.
The
loue
I
beare
to
your
heroicke
spirit
and
masculine
womanhood
.
Mol.
So
sir
,
put
case
we
should
retaine
you
to
vs
,
what
parts
are
there
in
you
for
a
Gentlewomans
seruice
.
Trap.
Of
two
kinds
right
Worshipfull
:
moueable
,
and
immoueable
:
moueable
to
run
of
arrants
,
and
immoueable
to
stand
when
you
haue
occasion
to
vse
me
.
Mol.
What
strength
haue
you
.
Trap.
Strength
Mistresse
Mol
,
I
haue
gon
vp
into
a
steeple
,
and
staid
the
great
bell
as
'thas
beene
ringing
;
stopt
a
windmill
going
.
Mols
trips
vp
his
heels
he
fals
.
Mol.
And
neuer
strucke
downe
your selfe
.
Trap.
Stood
as
vpright
as
I
do
at
this
present
.
Mol.
Come
I
pardon
you
for
this
,
it
shall
bee
no
disgrace
to
you
:
I
haue
strucke
vp
the
heeles
of
the
high
Germaines
size
ere
now
,
�
what
not
stand
.
Trap.
I
am
of
that
nature
where
I
loue
,
I
'le
bee
at
my
mistresse
foot
to
do
her
seruice
.
Mol.
Why
well
said
,
but
say
your
Mistresse
should
receiue
iniury
,
haue
you
the
spirit
of
fighting
in
you
,
durst
you
second
her
.
Trap.
Life
I
haue
kept
a
bridge
my selfe
,
and
droue
seuen
at
a
time
before
me
.
Mol.
I
.
Trap.
But
they
were
all
Lincolneshire
bullockes
by
my
troth
.
aside
.
Mol.
Well
,
meete
me
in
Graies-Inne
fields
,
between
three
and
foure
this
afternoone
,
and
vpon
better
consideration
wee
le
retaine
you
.
Trap.
I
humbly
thanke
your
good
Mistreship
,
I
le
crack
your
necke
for
this
kindnesse
.
Exit
Trapdore
Lax.
Remember
three
.
Mol
meets
Laxton
Moll
.
Nay
if
I
faile
you
hange
me
.
Lax.
Good
wench
Ifaith
.
then
Openworke
.
Moll
.
Whos
's
this
.
Maist.
Open.
T
is
I
Mol
.
Moll
.
Prithee
tend
thy
shop
and
preuent
bastards
.
Maist.
Open.
We
le
haue
a
pint
of
the
same
wine
ifaith
Mol
.
The
bel
rings
.
Gosh.
Harke
the
bell
rings
,
come
Gentlemen
.
Iacke
Dapper
where
shal
s
all
munch
.
Iae.
Dap.
I
am
for
Parkers
ordinary
.
Lax.
Hee
's
a
good
guest
to
'm
,
hee
deserues
his
boord
,
He
drawes
all
the
Gentlemen
in
a
terme
time
thither
,
Wee
le
be
your
followers
Iacke
,
lead
the
way
,
Looke
you
by
my
faith
the
foole
has
fetherd
his
nest
well
.
Exeunt
Gallants
.
Enter
Maister
Gallipot
,
Maister
Tiltyard
,
and
seruants
with
water
Spaniels
and
a
ducke
.
Maist.
Tilt.
Come
shut
vp
your
shops
,
where
's
Maister
Openworke
.
Mist.
Gal.
Nay
aske
not
me
Maister
Tiltyard
.
Maist.
Tilt.
Wher
's
his
water
dog
,
puh
�
pist
�
hur
�
hur-pist
Maist.
Gal.
Come
wenches
come
,
we
're
going
all
to
Hogsden
.
Mist.
Gal.
To
Hogsden
husband
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
to
Hogsden
pigs
ny
.
Mist.
Gal.
I
'me
not
ready
husband
.
spits
in
the
dogs
mouth
Maist.
Gal.
Faith
that
's
well
�
hum
�
pist
�
pist
.
Maist.
Gal.
Come
Mistresse
Openworke
you
are
so
long
.
Mist.
Open.
I
haue
no
ioy
of
my
life
Maister
Gallipot
.
Maist.
Gal,
Push
,
let
your
boy
lead
his
water
Spaniel
along
,
and
wee
le
show
you
the
brauest
sport
at
parlous
pond
,
he
trug
,
he
trug
,
he
trug
,
here
's
the
best
ducke
in
England
,
except
my
wife
,
he
,
he
,
he
,
fetch
,
fetch
,
fetch
,
come
le
ts
away
Of
all
the
yeare
this
is
the
sportfulst
day
.
Enter
Sebastian
solus
.
Seb.
If
a
man
haue
a
free
will
,
where
should
the
vse
More
perfect
shine
then
in
his
will
to
loue
.
All
creatures
haue
their
liberty
in
that
,
Enter
Sir
Alexander
and
listens
to
him
.
Tho
else
kept
vnder
seruile
yoke
and
feare
,
The
very
bondslaue
has
his
freedome
there
,
Amongst
a
world
of
creatures
voyc'd
and
silent
.
Must
my
desires
weare
fetters
�
yea
are
you
So
neere
,
then
I
must
breake
with
my
hearts
truth
;
Meete
griefe
at
a
backe
way
�
well
:
why
suppose
.
The
two
leaud
tongues
of
slander
or
of
truth
Pronounce
Mol
loathsome
:
if
before
my
loue
Shee
appeare
faire
,
what
iniury
haue
I
,
I
haue
the
thing
I
like
?
in
all
things
else
Mine
owne
eye
guides
me
,
and
I
find
'em
prosper
,
Life
what
should
aile
it
now
?
I
know
that
man
Nere
truely
loues
,
if
he
gainesa
yt
he
lyes
,
That
winkes
and
marries
with
his
fathers
eyes
.
I
le
keepe
myne
owne
wide
open
.
Enter
Mol
and
a
porter
with
a
viallon
his
backe
.
Alex.
Here
's
braue
wilfulnesse
,
A
made
match
,
here
she
comes
,
they
met
a
purpose
.
Por.
Must
I
carry
this
great
fiddle
to
your
chamber
Mistresse
Mary
.
Mol.
Fiddle
goodman
hog-rubber
,
some
of
these
porters
beare
so
much
for
others
,
they
haue
no
time
to
carry
wit
for
themselues
.
Por.
To
your
owne
chamber
Mistresse
Mary
.
Moll
.
who
'le
heare
an
Asse
speake
:
whither
else
goodman
pagent-bearer
:
the
're
people
of
the
worst
memories
.
Exit
Porter
.
Seb.
Why
't
were
too
great
a
burthen
loue
,
to
haue
them
carry
things
in
their
minds
,
and
a'ther
backes
together
.
Mol.
Pardon
me
sir
,
I
thought
not
you
so
neere
.
Alex.
So
,
so
,
so
.
Seb.
I
would
be
neerer
to
thee
,
and
in
that
fashion
,
That
makes
the
best
part
of
all
creatures
honest
.
No
otherwise
I
wish
it
.
Mol.
Sir
I
am
so
poore
to
requite
you
,
you
must
looke
for
nothing
but
thankes
of
me
,
I
haue
no
humor
to
marry
,
I
loue
to
lye
aboth
sides
at
h
bed
my selfe
;
and
againe
ath
'
other
side
,
a
wife
you
know
ought
to
be
obedient
,
but
I
feare
me
I
am
too
headstrong
to
obey
,
therefore
I
le
nere
go
about
it
,
I
loue
you
so
well
sir
for
your
good
will
I
'de
be
loath
you
should
repent
your
bargaine
after
,
and
therefore
wee
le
nere
come
together
at
first
,
I
haue
the
head
now
of
my selfe
,
and
am
man
enough
for
a
woman
,
marriage
is
but
a
chopping
and
changing
,
where
a
maiden
looses
one
head
,
and
has
a
worse
i
th
place
.
Alex.
The
most
comfortablest
answer
from
a
Roaring
Girle
,
that
euer
mine
eares
drunke
in
.
Seb.
This
were
enough
now
to
affright
a
foole
for
euer
from
thee
,
when
t
is
the
musicke
that
I
loue
thee
for
,
Alex.
There
's
a
boy
spoyles
all
againe
.
Mol.
Beleeue
it
sir
I
am
not
of
that
disdainefull
temper
,
but
I
could
loue
you
faithfully
.
Alex.
A
pox
on
you
for
that
word
.
I
like
you
not
now
,
Y'
are
a
cunning
roarer
I
see
that
already
.
Mol.
But
sleepe
vpon
this
once
more
sir
,
you
may
chance
shift
a
minde
to morrow
,
be
not
too
hasty
to
wrong
your selfe
,
neuer
while
you
liue
sir
take
a
wife
running
,
many
haue
run
out
at
heeles
that
haue
don
't
:
you
see
sir
I
speake
against
my selfe
,
and
if
euery
woman
would
deale
with
their
suter
so
honestly
,
poore
yonger
brothers
would
not
bee
so
often
gul'd
with
old
cosoning
widdowes
,
that
turne
ore
all
their
wealth
in
trust
to
some
kinsman
,
and
make
the
poore
Gentleman
worke
hard
for
a
pension
,
fare
you
well
sir
.
Seb.
Nay
prethee
one
word
more
.
Alex.
How
do
I
wrong
this
girle
,
she
puts
him
of
still
.
Moll
.
Thinke
vpon
this
in
cold
bloud
sir
,
you
make
as
much
hast
as
if
you
were
a
going
vpon
a
sturgion
voyage
,
take
deliberation
sir
,
neuer
chuse
a
wife
as
if
you
were
going
to
Virginia
.
Seb.
And
so
we
parted
,
my
too
cursed
fate
.
Alex.
She
is
but
cunning
,
giues
him
longer
time
in
't
.
Enter
a
Tailor
:
Taylor
Mistresse
Mol
,
Mistresse
Mol
:
so
ho
ho
so
ho
.
Mol.
There
boy
,
there
boy
,
what
dost
thou
go
a
hawking
after
me
with
a
red
clout
on
thy
finger
.
Taylor
I
forgot
to
take
measure
on
you
for
your
new
breeches
.
Alex.
Hoyda
breeches
,
what
will
he
marry
a
monster
with
two
trinckets
,
what
age
is
this
?
if
the
wife
go
in
breeches
,
the
man
must
weare
long
coates
like
a
foole
.
Mol.
What
fidlings
heere
,
would
not
the
old
patterne
haue
seru'd
your
turne
.
Taylor
.
You
change
the
fashion
,
you
say
you
'le
haue
the
great
Dutch
slop
Mistresse
Mary
.
Mol.
Why
sir
I
say
so
still
.
Taylor
.
Your
breeches
then
will
take
vp
a
yard
more
.
Mol.
Well
pray
looke
it
be
put
in
then
.
Taylor
.
It
shall
stand
round
and
full
I
warrant
you
,
Mol.
Pray
make
em
easy
enough
.
Taylor
.
I
know
my
fault
now
,
t'other
was
somewhat
stiffe
betweene
the
legges
,
I
le
make
these
open
enough
I
warrant
you
.
Alex.
Heer
's
good
geere
towards
,
I
haue
brought
vp
my
sonne
to
marry
a
Dutch
slop
,
.
and
a
French
dublet
,
a
codpice
daughter
.
Taylor
.
So
,
I
haue
gone
as
farre
as
I
can
go
.
Mol.
Why
then
farewell
.
Taylor
.
If
you
go
presently
to
your
chamber
Mistresse
Mary
,
pray
send
me
the
measure
of
your
thigh
,
by
some
honest
body
.
Mol.
Well
sir
,
I
le
send
it
by
a
Porter
presently
.
Exit
Mol.
Taylor
.
So
you
had
neede
,
it
is
a
lusty
one
,
both
of
them
would
make
any
porters
backe
ake
in
England
.
Exit
Taylor
.
Seb.
I
haue
examined
the
best
part
of
man
,
Reason
and
iudgement
,
and
in
loue
they
tell
me
,
They
leaue
me
vncontrould
,
he
that
is
swayd
By
an
vnfeeling
bloud
,
past
heat
of
loue
His
spring
time
must
needes
erre
,
his
watch
nere
goes
right
That
sets
his
dyall
by
a
rusty
clocke
,
Alex.
So
,
and
which
is
that
rusty
clocke
sir
you
.
Seb.
The
clocke
at
Ludgate
sir
,
it
nere
goes
true
.
Alex.
But
thou
goest
falser
:
not
thy
fathers
cares
Can
keepe
thee
right
,
when
that
insensible
worke
,
Obayes
the
workemans
art
,
le
ts
off
the
houre
And
stops
againe
when
time
is
satisfied
,
But
thou
runst
on
,
and
iudgement
,
thy
maine
wheele
,
Beats
by
all
stoppes
,
as
if
the
worke
would
breake
Begunne
with
long
paines
for
a
minutes
ruine
,
Much
like
a
suffering
man
brought
vp
with
care
.
At
last
bequeath'd
to
shame
and
a
short
prayer
,
Seb.
I
tast
you
bitterer
then
I
can
deserue
sir
.
Alex.
Who
has
bewitch
thee
sonne
,
what
diuell
or
drug
,
Hath
wrought
vpon
the
weaknesse
of
thy
bloud
,
And
betrayd
all
her
hopes
to
ruinous
folly
?
Oh
wake
from
drowsy
and
enchanted
shame
,
Wherein
thy
soule
sits
with
a
golden
dreame
Flatred
and
poysoned
,
I
am
old
my
sonne
,
(
mine
owne
Oh
let
me
preuaile
quickly
,
for
I
haue
waightier
businesse
of
Then
to
chide
thee
:
I
must
not
to
my
graue
,
As
a
drunkard
to
his
bed
,
whereon
he
lyes
Onely
to
sleepe
,
and
neuer
cares
to
rise
,
Let
me
dispatch
in
time
,
come
no
more
neere
her
.
Seb.
Not
honestly
,
not
in
the
way
of
marriage
,
Alex.
What
sayst
thou
marriage
,
in
what
place
,
the
Sessions
house
,
and
who
shall
giue
the
bride
,
prethe
,
an
inditement
.
Seb.
Sir
now
yee
take
part
with
the
world
to
wrong
her
.
Alex.
Why
,
wouldst
thou
faine
marry
to
be
pointed
at
,
Alas
the
numbers
great
,
do
not
o're
burden
't
,
Why
as
good
marry
a
beacon
on
a
hill
,
Which
all
the
country
fixe
their
eyes
vpon
As
her
thy
folly
doates
on
.
If
thou
longst
To
haue
the
story
of
thy
infamous
fortunes
,
Serue
for
discourse
in
ordinaries
and
tauernes
Th'
art
in
the
way
:
or
to
confound
thy
name
,
Keepe
on
,
thou
canst
not
misse
it
:
or
to
strike
Thy
wretched
father
to
vntimely
coldnesse
,
Keepe
the
left
hand
still
,
it
will
bring
thee
to
't
.
Yet
if
no
teares
wrung
from
thy
fathers
eyes
,
Nor
sighes
that
flye
in
sparkles
,
from
his
sorrowes
,
Had
power
to
alter
what
is
wilfull
in
thee
,
Me thinkes
her
very
name
should
fright
thee
from
her
,
And
neuer
trouble
me
.
Seb.
Why
is
the
name
of
Mol
so
fatall
sir
.
Alex.
Many
one
sir
,
where
suspect
is
entred
,
For
seeke
all
London
from
one
end
to
t'other
,
More
whoores
of
that
name
,
then
of
any
ten
other
.
Seb.
What
's
that
to
her
?
let
those
blush
for
themselues
.
Can
any
guilt
in
others
condemne
her
?
I
'ue
vowd
to
loue
her
:
let
all
stormes
oppose
me
,
That
euer
beate
against
the
brest
of
man
,
Nothing
but
deaths
blacke
tempest
shall
diuide
vs
.
Alex.
Oh
folly
that
can
dote
on
nought
but
shame
.
Seb.
Put
case
a
wanton
itch
runs
through
one
name
More
then
another
,
is
that
name
the
worse
,
Where
honesty
sits
possest
in
't
?
it
should
rather
Appeare
more
excellent
,
and
deserue
more
praise
,
When
through
foule
mists
a
brightnesse
it
can
raise
.
Why
there
are
of
the
diuels
,
honest
Gentlemen
,
And
well
descended
,
keepe
an
open
house
,
And
some
at
h
(
good
mans
)
that
are
arrant
knaues
.
He
hates
vnworthily
,
that
by
rote
contemnes
,
For
the
name
neither
saues
,
nor
yet
condemnes
,
And
for
her
honesty
,
I
haue
made
such
proofe
an
't
,
In
seuerall
formes
,
so
neerely
watcht
her
waies
,
I
will
maintaine
that
strict
,
against
an
army
,
Excepting
you
my
father
:
here
's
her
worst
,
Sh'
has
a
bold
spirit
that
mingles
with
mankind
,
But
nothing
else
comes
neere
it
:
and
oftentimes
Through
her
apparell
somewhat
shames
her
birth
,
But
she
is
loose
in
nothing
but
in
mirth
,
Would
all
Mols
were
no
worse
.
Alex.
This
way
I
toyle
in
vaine
and
giue
but
ayme
To
infamy
and
ruine
:
he
will
fall
,
My
blessing
cannot
stay
him
:
all
my
ioyes
Stand
at
the
brinke
of
a
deuouring
floud
And
will
be
wilfully
swallowed
:
wilfully
.
But
why
so
vaine
,
let
all
these
teares
be
lost
,
I
le
pursue
her
to
shame
,
and
so
al
's
crost
.
Exit
Sir
Alexander
Seb.
Hee
is
gon
with
some
strange
purpose
,
whose
effect
Will
hurt
me
little
if
he
shoot
so
wide
,
To
thinke
I
loue
so
blindly
:
I
but
feed
His
heart
to
this
match
,
to
draw
on
th'
other
.
Wherein
my
ioy
sits
with
a
full
wish
crownd
;
Onely
his
moode
excepted
which
must
change
.
By
opposite
pollicies
,
courses
indirect
,
Plaine
dealing
in
this
world
takes
no
effect
.
This
madde
girle
I
'le
acquaint
with
my
intent
,
Get
her
assistance
,
make
my
fortunes
knowne
,
Twixt
louers
hearts
,
shee
's
a
fit
instrument
,
And
has
the
art
to
help
them
to
their
owne
,
By
her
aduise
,
for
in
that
craft
shee
's
wise
,
My
loue
and
I
may
meete
,
spite
of
all
spies
.
Exit
Sebastian
.
Enter
Laxton
in
Graies-Inne
fields
with
the
Coachman
.
Lax.
Coachman
.
Coach.
Heere
sir
.
Lax.
There
's
a
tester
more
,
prethee
driue
thy
coach
to
the
hither
end
of
Marybone
parke
,
a
fit
place
for
Mol
to
get
in
.
Coach.
Marybone
parke
fir
.
Lax.
I
,
it
s
in
our
way
thou
knowst
.
Coach.
It
shall
be
done
fir
.
Lax.
Coachman
.
Coach.
A
non
sir
.
Lax.
Are
we
fitted
with
good
phrampell
iades
.
Coach.
The
best
in
Smithfield
I
warrant
your
sir
.
Lax.
May
we
safely
take
the
vpper
hand
of
any
coacht
veluet
cappe
or
tuftaffety
iacket
,
for
they
keepe
a
vilde
swaggering
in
coaches
now
a
daies
,
the
hye
waies
are
stopt
with
them
.
Coach.
My
life
for
yours
and
baffle
em
to
sir
,
�
why
they
are
the
same
iades
beleeue
it
sir
,
that
haue
drawne
all
your
famous
whores
to
Ware
.
Lax.
Nay
then
they
know
their
businesse
,
they
neede
no
more
instructions
.
Coach.
The
're
so
vsd
to
such
iourneis
sir
,
I
neuer
vse
whip
to
em
;
for
if
they
catch
but
the
sent
of
a
wench
once
,
they
runne
like
diuels
.
Exit
Coachman
with
his
whip
.
Lax.
Fine
Cerberus
,
that
rogue
will
haue
the
start
of
a
thousand
ones
,
for
whilst
others
trot
a foot
,
hee
le
ride
prauncing
to
hell
vpon
a
coach-horse
.
Stay
,
t
is
now
about
the
hourse
of
her
appointment
,
but
yet
I
see
her
not
,
harke
what
's
this
,
one
,
two
three
,
three
by
the
clock
at
Sauoy
,
this
is
the
houre
,
and
Graies-Inne
fields
the
place
,
shee
swore
she
'ed
meete
mee
:
ha
yonder
's
two
Innes
a
Court-man
with
one
wench
,
but
that
's
not
shee
,
they
walke
toward
Islington
out
of
my
way
,
I
see
none
yet
drest
like
her
,
I
must
looke
for
a
shag
ruffe
,
a
freeze
ierken
,
a
shortsword
,
and
a
safeguard
,
or
I
get
none
:
why
Mol
prethee
make
hast
,
or
the
Coachman
will
cursse
vs
anon
.
Enter
Mol
like
a
man
.
Mol.
Oh
heere
's
my
Gentleman
:
if
they
would
keepe
their
daies
as
well
with
their
Mercers
as
their
houres
with
their
harlots
,
no
bankrout
would
giue
seuen
score
pound
for
a
seriants
place
,
for
would
you
know
a
catchpoole
rightly
derived
,
the
corruption
of
a
Cittizen
,
is
the
generation
of
a
seriant
,
how
his
eye
hawkes
for
venery
.
Come
are
you
ready
sir
.
Lax.
Ready
,
for
what
sir
.
Mol.
Do
you
aske
that
now
sir
,
why
was
this
meeting
pointed
.
Lax.
I
thought
you
mistooke
me
sir
,
You
seeme
to
be
some
yong
barrister
,
I
haue
no
suite
in
law
�
all
my
land
's
sold
I
praise
heauen
for
't
;
t'
has
rid
me
of
much
trouble
,
Mol.
Then
I
must
wake
you
sir
,
where
stands
the
coach
,
Lax.
Whos
's
this
,
Mol
:
honest
Mol
.
Mol.
So
young
,
and
purblind
,
your
an
old
wanton
in
your
eyes
I
see
that
.
Lax.
Th'
art
admirably
suited
for
the
three
pigions
at
Brainford
,
I
le
sweare
I
knew
thee
not
.
Mol.
I
le
sweare
you
did
not
:
but
you
shall
know
me
now
.
Lax.
No
not
here
,
we
shall
be
spyde
efaith
,
the
coach
is
better
,
come
.
Mol.
Stay
.
Lax.
What
wilt
thou
vntrusse
a
point
Mol
.
Shee
puts
of
her
cloake
and
drawes
.
Mol.
Yes
,
heere
's
the
point
that
I
vntrusse
,
'thas
but
one
tag
,
't
will
serue
tho
to
tye
vp
a
rogues
tongue
.
Lax.
How
.
(
here
's
her
pace
,
Mol.
There
's
the
gold
with
which
you
hir'd
your
hackney
,
Shee
rackes
hard
,
and
perhaps
your
bones
will
feele
it
,
Ten
angels
of
mine
own
,
I
'ue
put
to
thine
,
win
em
,
&
weare
em
,
Lax.
Hold
Moll
,
Mistresse
Mary
.
Mol.
Draw
or
I
le
serue
an
execution
on
thee
Shall
lay
thee
vp
till
doomes
day
.
Lax.
Draw
vpon
a
woman
,
why
what
dost
meane
Mol
?
Mol.
To
teach
thy
base
thoughts
manners
:
th'
art
one
of
those
That
thinkes
each
woman
thy
fond
flexable
whore
,
If
she
but
cast
a
liberall
eye
vpon
thee
,
Turne
backe
her
head
,
shee
s
thine
,
or
amongst
company
,
By
chance
drinke
first
to
thee
:
then
shee
's
quite
gon
,
There
's
no
meanes
to
help
her
:
nay
for
a
need
,
Wilt
sweare
vnto
thy
credulous
fellow
letchers
.
That
th'
art
more
in
fauour
with
a
Lady
at
first
sight
Then
her
monky
all
her
life
time
,
How
many
of
our
sex
,
by
such
as
thou
Haue
their
good
thoughts
paid
with
a
blasted
name
That
neuer
deserued
loosly
or
did
trip
In
path
of
whooredome
,
beyond
cup
and
lip
.
But
for
the
staine
of
conscience
and
of
soule
,
Better
had
women
fall
into
the
hands
Of
an
act
silent
,
then
a
bragging
nothing
,
There
's
no
mercy
in
't
�
what
durst
moue
you
sir
,
To
think
me
whoorish
?
a
name
which
I
de
teare
out
From
the
hye
Germaines
throat
,
if
it
lay
ledger
there
To
dispatch
priuy
slanders
against
mee
.
In
thee
I
defye
all
men
,
there
worst
hates
,
And
their
best
flatteries
,
all
their
golden
witchcrafts
,
With
which
they
intangle
the
poore
spirits
of
fooles
,
Distressed
needlewomen
and
trade-fallne
wiues
.
Fish
that
must
needs
bite
,
or
themselues
be
bitten
,
Such
hungry
things
as
these
may
soone
be
tooke
With
a
worme
fastned
on
a
golden
hooke
.
Those
are
the
letchers
food
,
his
prey
,
he
watches
For
quarrelling
wedlockes
,
and
poore
shifting
sisters
,
T
is
the
best
fish
he
takes
:
but
why
good
fisherman
,
Am
I
thought
meate
for
you
,
that
neuer
yet
Had
angling
rod
cast
towards
me
?
cause
youl
'e
say
I
'me
giuen
to
sport
,
I
'me
often
mery
,
iest
,
Had
mirth
no
kindred
in
the
world
but
lust
?
O
shame
take
all
her
friends
then
:
but
how ere
Thou
and
the
baser
world
censure
my
life
,
I
le
send
'em
word
by
thee
,
and
write
so
much
Vpon
thy
breast
,
cause
thou
shalt
bear
't
in
mind
,
Tell
them
't
were
base
to
yeeld
,
where
I
haue
conquer'd
.
I
scorne
to
prostitute
my selfe
to
a
man
,
I
that
can
prostitute
a
man
to
mee
,
And
so
I
greete
thee
.
Lax.
Heare
me
.
Mol.
Would
the
spirits
of
al
my
slanders
,
were
claspt
in
thine
.
That
I
might
vexe
an
army
at
one
time
,
Lax.
I
do
repent
me
,
hold
,
They
fight
.
Mol.
You
'l
die
the
better
Christian
then
.
Lax.
I
do
confesse
I
haue
wrong'd
thee
Mol
.
Mol.
Confession
is
but
poore
amends
for
wrong
,
Vnlesse
a
rope
would
follow
.
Lax.
I
aske
thee
pardon
.
Mol.
I
'me
your
hir'd
whoore
fir
.
Lax.
I
yeeld
both
purse
and
body
.
Mol.
Both
are
mine
,
and
now
at
my
disposing
.
Lax.
Spare
my
life
.
Mol.
I
scorne
to
strike
thee
basely
.
Lax.
Spoke
like
a
noble
girle
i'faith
.
Heart
I
thinke
I
fight
with
a
familiar
,
or
the
Ghost
of
a
fencer
,
Sh'
has
wounded
me
gallantly
,
call
you
this
a
letcherous
viage
?
Here
's
bloud
would
haue
seru'd
me
this
seuen
yeare
in
broken
heads
and
cut
fingers
,
&
it
now
runs
all
out
together
,
pox
a
the
three
pigions
,
I
would
the
coach
were
here
now
to
carry
mee
to
the
Chirurgions
.
Exit
Laxton
.
Mol.
If
I
could
meete
my
enemies
one
by
one
thus
,
I
might
make
pretty
shift
with
'em
in
time
,
And
make
'em
know
,
shee
that
has
wit
,
and
spirit
,
May
scorne
to
liue
beholding
to
her
body
for
meate
,
Or
for
apparell
like
your
common
dame
,
That
makes
shame
get
her
cloathes
,
to
couer
shame
.
Base
is
that
minde
,
that
kneels
vnto
her
body
,
As
if
a
husband
stood
in
awe
on
's
wife
,
My
spirit
shall
be
Mistresse
of
this
house
,
As
long
as
I
haue
time
in
't
.
�
�
oh
Enter
Trapdore
.
Heere
comes
my
man
that
would
be
:
't
is
his
houre
.
Faith
a
good
well
set
fellow
,
if
his
spirit
Be
answerable
to
his
vmbles
;
he
walkes
stiffe
,
But
whether
he
will
stand
to
't
stifly
,
there
's
the
point
;
Has
a
good
calfe
for
't
,
and
ye
shall
haue
many
a
woman
Choose
him
shee
meanes
to
meke
her
head
,
by
his
calfe
;
I
do
not
know
their
trickes
in
't
,
faith
he
seemes
A
man
without
;
I
'le
try
what
he
is
within
,
Trap.
Shee
told
me
Graies-Inne
fields
twixt
three
&
foure
,
I
le
fit
her
Mistreship
with
a
peece
of
seruice
,
I
'me
hir'd
to
rid
the
towne
of
one
mad
girle
.
Shee
iustles
him
What
a
pox
ailes
you
sir
?
Mol.
He
beginnes
like
a
Gentleman
,
Trap.
Heart
,
is
the
field
so
narrow
,
or
your
eye-sight
:
Life
he
comes
backe
againe
.
She
comes
towards
him
.
Mol.
Was
this
spoke
to
me
sir
.
Trap.
I
cannot
tell
sir
.
Mol.
Go
y'
are
a
coxcombe
.
Trap.
Coxcombe
.
Mol.
Y'
are
a
slaue
.
Trap.
I
hope
there
's
law
for
you
sir
.
Mol.
Ye
,
do
you
see
sir
.
Turne
his
hat
.
Trap.
Heart
this
is
no
good
dealing
,
pray
let
me
know
what
house
your
off
.
Mol.
One
of
the
Temple
sir
.
Philips
him
.
Trap.
Masse
so
me thinkes
.
Mol.
And
yet
sometime
I
lye
about
chicke
lane
.
Trap.
I
like
you
the
worse
because
you
shift
your
lodging
I
le
not
meddle
with
you
for
that
tricke
sir
.
(
so
often
Mol.
A
good
shift
,
but
it
shall
not
serue
your
turne
.
Trap.
You
'le
giue
me
leaue
to
passe
about
my
businesse
sir
.
Mol.
Your
businesse
,
I
le
make
you
waite
on
mee
before
I
ha
done
,
and
glad
to
serue
me
too
.
Trap.
How
sir
,
serue
you
,
not
if
there
were
no
more
men
in
England
.
Moll
.
But
if
there
were
no
more
women
in
England
I
hope
you
'd
waite
vpon
your
Mistresse
then
,
Trap.
Mistresse
.
Mol.
Oh
your
a
tri'd
spirit
at
a
push
sir
,
Trap.
What
would
your
Worship
haue
me
do
.
Mol.
You
a
fighter
.
Trap.
No
,
I
praise
heauen
,
I
had
better
grace
&
more
maners
.
Mol.
As
how
I
pray
sir
.
Trap.
Life
,
'
thad
bene
a
beastly
part
of
me
to
haue
drawne
my
weapons
vpon
my
Mistresse
,
all
the
world
would
a
cry'd
shame
of
me
for
that
.
Mol.
Why
but
you
knew
me
not
.
Trap.
Do
not
say
so
Mistresse
,
I
knew
you
by
your
wide
straddle
,
as
well
as
if
I
had
bene
in
your
belly
.
Mol.
Well
,
we
shall
try
you
further
,
i
th
meane
time
wee
giue
you
intertainement
.
Trap.
Thanke
your
good
Mistreship
.
Mol.
How
many
suites
haue
you
.
Trap.
No
more
suites
then
backes
Mistresse
.
Mol.
Well
if
you
deserue
,
I
cast
of
this
,
next
weeke
,
And
you
may
creepe
into
't
.
Trap.
Thanke
your
good
Worship
.
Mol.
Come
follow
me
to
S.
Thomas
Apostles
,
I
le
put
a
liuery
cloake
vpon
your
backe
,
the
first
thing
I
do
,
Trap.
I
follow
my
deere
Mistresse
.
Exeunt
omnes
Enter
Mistresse
Gallipot
as
from
supper
,
her
husband
after
her
.
Maist.
Gal.
What
Pru
,
Nay
sweete
Prudence
.
Mist.
Gal.
What
a
pruing
keepe
you
,
I
thinke
the
baby
would
haue
a
teate
it
kyes
so
,
pray
be
not
so
fond
of
me
,
leaue
your
Citty
humours
,
I
'me
vext
at
you
to
see
how
like
a
calfe
you
come
bleating
after
me
.
Maist.
Gal.
Nay
hony
Pru
:
how
does
your
rising
vp
before
all
the
table
shew
?
and
flinging
from
my
friends
so
vnciuily
,
fiye
Pru
,
fye
,
come
.
Mist.
Gal.
Then
vp
and
ride
ifaith
.
Maist.
Gal.
Vp
and
ride
,
nay
my
pretty
Pru
,
that
's
farre
from
my
thought
,
ducke
:
why
mouse
,
thy
minde
is
nibbling
at
something
,
what
's
i
st
,
what
lyes
vpon
thy
Stomach
?
Mist.
Gal.
Such
an
asse
as
you
:
hoyda
,
y'
are
best
turne
midwife
,
or
Physition
:
y'
are
a
Poticary
already
,
but
I
'me
none
of
your
drugs
.
Maist.
Gal.
Thou
art
a
sweete
drug
,
sweetest
Pru
,
and
the
more
thou
art
pounded
,
the
more
pretious
.
Mist.
Gal.
Must
you
be
prying
into
a
womans
secrets
:
say
ye
?
Maist.
Gal.
Womans
secrets
.
Mist.
Gal.
What
?
I
cannot
haue
a
qualme
come
vpon
mee
but
your
teeth
waters
,
till
your
nose
hang
ouer
it
.
Maist.
Gal.
It
is
my
loue
deere
wife
.
Mist.
Gal.
Your
loue
?
your
loue
is
all
words
;
giue
mee
deeds
,
I
cannot
abide
a
man
that
's
too
fond
ouer
me
,
so
cookish
;
thou
dost
not
know
how
to
handle
a
woman
in
her
kind
,
Maist.
Gal.
No
Pru
?
why
I
hope
I
haue
handled
.
�
Mist.
Gal.
Handle
a
fooles
head
of
your
owne
,
�
fih
�
fih
.
Maist.
Gal.
Ha
,
ha
,
t
is
such
a
waspe
;
it
does
mee
good
now
to
haue
her
sing
me
,
little
rogue
.
Mist.
Gal.
Now
fye
how
you
vex
me
,
I
cannot
abide
these
aperne
husbands
:
such
cotqueanes
,
you
ouerdoe
your
things
,
they
become
you
scuruily
.
Maist.
Gal.
Vpon
my
life
she
breeds
,
heauen
knowes
how
I
haue
straind
my selfe
to
please
her
,
night
and
day
:
I
wonder
why
wee
Cittizens
should
get
children
so
fretfull
and
vntoward
in
the
breeding
,
their
fathers
being
for
the
most
part
as
gentle
as
milch
kine
:
shall
I
leaue
thee
my
Pru
.
Mist.
Gal.
Fye
,
fye
,
fye
.
Maist.
Gal.
Thou
shalt
not
bee
vext
no
more
,
pretty
kind
rogue
,
take
no
cold
sweete
Pru
.
Exit
Maist.
Gallipot
.
Mist.
Gal.
As
your
wit
has
done
:
now
Maister
Laxton
shew
your
head
,
what
newes
from
you
?
would
any
husband
suspect
that
a
woman
crying
,
Buy
any
scurui-grasse
,
should
bring
loue
letters
amongst
her
herbes
to
his
wife
,
pretty
tricke
,
fine
conueyance
?
had
iealousy
a
thousand
eyes
,
a
silly
woman
with
scuruy-grasse
blinds
them
all
;
Laxton
with
bayes
crown
I
thy
wit
for
this
,
it
deserues
praise
.
This
makes
me
affect
thee
more
,
this
prooues
thee
wise
,
Lacke
what
poore
shift
is
loue
forc't
to
deuise
?
(
toth
'
point
)
She
reads
the
letter
.
O
Sweete
Creature
�
(
a
sweete
beginning
)
pardon
my
long
absence
,
for
thou
shalt
shortly
be
possessed
with
my
presence
;
though
Demophon
was
false
to
Phillis
,
I
will
be
to
thee
as
Pan-da-rus
was
to
Cres-sida
:
tho
Eneus
made
an
asse
of
Dido
,
I
will
dye
to
thee
ere
I
do
so
;
o
sweetest
creature
make
much
of
me
,
for
no
man
beneath
the
siluer
moone
shall
make
more
of
a
woman
then
I
do
of
thee
,
furnish
me
therefore
with
thirty
pounds
,
you
must
doe
it
of
necessity
for
me
;
I
languish
till
I
see
some
comfort
come
from
thee
,
protesting
not
to
dye
in
thy
debt
,
but
rather
to
liue
so
,
as
hitherto
I
haue
and
will
.
Thy
true
Laxton
euer
.
Alas
poore
Gentleman
,
troth
I
pitty
him
,
How
shall
I
raise
this
money
?
thirty
pound
?
T
is
thirty
sure
,
a
3
before
an
0
,
I
know
his
threes
too
well
;
my
childbed
linnen
?
Shall
I
pawne
that
for
him
?
then
if
my
marke
Be
knowne
I
am
vndone
;
it
may
be
thought
My
husband's
bankrout
:
which
way
shall
I
turne
?
Laxton
,
what
with
my
owne
feares
,
and
thy
wants
,
I
'me
���
needle
twixt
two
adamants
.
Enter
Maister
Gallipot
hastily
.
Maist.
Gal.
Nay
,
nay
,
wife
,
the
women
are
all
vp
,
ha
,
how
,
reading
a
letters
?
I
smel
a
goose
,
a
couple
of
capons
,
and
a
gammon
of
bacon
from
her
mother
out
of
the
country
,
I
hold
my
life
,
�
steale
,
�
steale
.
Mist.
Gal.
O
beshrow
your
heart
.
Maist.
Gal.
What
letter
's
that
?
I
'le
see
't
.
She
teares
the
letter
.
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
would
thou
had'st
no
eyes
to
see
the
downefall
of
me
and
thy selfe
:
I
'me
for
euer
,
for
euer
I
'me
vndone
.
Maist.
Gal.
What
ailes
my
Pru
?
what
paper
's
that
thou
tear'st
?
Mist.
Gal.
Would
I
could
teare
My
very
heart
in
peeces
:
for
my
soule
Lies
on
the
racke
of
shame
,
that
tortures
me
Beyond
a
womans
suffering
.
Maist.
Gall:
What
meanes
this
?
Mist.
Gall.
Had
you
no
other
vengeance
to
throw
downe
,
But
euen
in
heigth
of
all
my
ioyes
?
Maist.
Gal.
Deere
woman
.
Mist.
Gal.
When
the
full
sea
of
pleasure
and
content
seem'd
to
flow
ouer
me
.
Maist.
Gal.
As
thou
desirest
to
keepe
mee
out
of
bedlam
,
tell
what
troubles
thee
,
is
not
thy
child
at
nurse
falne
sicke
,
or
dead
?
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
no
.
Maist.
Gal.
Heauens
blesse
me
,
are
my
barnes
and
houses
Yonder
at
Hockly
hole
consum'd
with
fire
,
I
can
build
more
,
sweete
Pru
.
Mist.
Gal.
T
is
worse
,
t
is
worse
.
Maist.
Gal.
My
factor
broke
,
or
is
the
Ionas
suncke
.
Mist.
Gal.
Would
all
we
had
were
swallowed
in
the
waues
,
Rather
then
both
should
be
the
scorne
of
slaues
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
'me
at
my
wits
end
.
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
my
deere
husband
,
Where
once
I
thought
my selfe
a
fixed
starre
,
Plac't
onely
in
the
heauen
of
thine
armes
,
I
feare
now
I
shall
proue
a
wanderer
,
Oh
Laxton
,
Laxton
,
is
it
then
my
fate
To
be
by
thee
orethrowne
?
Maist.
Gal.
Defend
me
wisedome
,
From
falling
into
frenzie
,
on
my
knees
.
(
thy
bosome
.
Sweete
Pru
,
speake
,
what
's
that
Laxton
who
so
heauy
lyes
on
Mist.
Gal.
I
shall
sure
run
mad
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
shall
run
mad
for
company
then
:
speak
to
me
,
I
'me
Gallipot
thy
husband
,
�
Pru
,
�
why
Pru
.
Art
sicke
in
conscience
for
some
villanous
deed
Thou
wert
about
to
act
,
didst
meane
to
rob
me
,
Tush
I
forgiue
thee
,
hast
thou
on
my
bed
Thrust
my
soft
pillow
vnder
anothers
head
?
I
le
winke
at
all
faults
Pru
,
las
that
's
no
more
,
Then
what
some
neighbours
neere
thee
,
haue
done
before
,
Sweete
hony
Pru
,
what
's
that
Laxton
?
Mist.
Gall.
Oh
.
Maist.
Gal.
Out
with
him
.
Mist.
Gall.
Oh
hee
's
borne
to
be
my
vndoer
,
This
hand
which
thou
calst
thine
,
to
him
was
giuen
,
To
him
was
I
made
sure
i
th
sight
of
heauen
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
neuer
heard
this
thunder
.
Mist.
Gall.
Yes
,
yes
,
before
I
was
to
thee
contracted
,
to
him
I
swore
,
Since
last
I
saw
him
twelue
moneths
three
times
told
,
The
Moone
hath
drawne
through
her
light
siluer
bow
,
For
ore
the
seas
hee
went
,
and
it
was
said
,
(
But
Rumor
lyes
)
that
he
in
France
was
dead
.
But
hee
's
aliue
,
oh
hee
's
aliue
,
he
sent
,
That
letter
to
me
,
which
in
rage
I
rent
,
Swearing
with
oathes
most
damnably
to
haue
me
,
Or
teare
me
from
this
bosome
,
oh
heauens
saue
me
,
Maist.
Gal.
My
heart
will
breake
,
�
sham'd
and
vndone
for
euer
.
Mist.
Gal.
So
black
a
day
(
poore
wretch
)
went
ore
thee
neuer
.
Maist.
Gal.
If
thou
shouldst
wrastle
with
him
at
the
law
,
Th'
art
sure
to
fall
,
no
odde
slight
,
no
preuention
.
I
le
tell
him
th'
art
with
child
.
Mist.
Gal.
Vmh
.
Maist.
Gall.
Or
giue
out
one
of
my
men
was
tane
a bed
with
thee
.
Mist.
Gal.
Vmh
,
vmh
.
Maist.
Gal.
Before
I
loose
thee
my
deere
Pru
;
I
le
driue
it
to
that
push
.
Mist.
Gal.
Worse
,
and
worse
still
,
You
embrace
a
mischiefe
,
to
preuent
an
ill
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
le
buy
thee
of
him
,
stop
his
mouth
with
Gold
,
Think'st
thou
t
will
do
.
Mist.
Gall.
Oh
me
,
heauens
grant
it
would
,
Yet
now
my
sences
are
set
more
in
tune
,
He
writ
,
as
I
remember
in
his
letter
,
That
he
in
riding
vp
and
downe
had
spent
,
(
Ere
hee
could
finde
me
)
thirty
pounds
,
send
that
,
Stand
not
on
thirty
with
him
.
Maist.
Gal.
Forty
Pru
,
say
thou
the
word
t
is
done
,
wee
venture
liues
for
wealth
,
but
must
do
more
to
keepe
our
wiues
,
thirty
or
forty
Pru
.
Mist.
Gal.
Thirty
good
sweete
Of
an
ill
bargaine
le
ts
saue
what
we
can
,
I
le
pay
it
him
with
my
teares
,
he
was
a
man
When
first
I
knew
him
of
a
meeke
spirit
,
All
goodnesse
is
not
yet
dryd
vp
I
hope
.
Maist.
Gall.
He
shall
haue
thirty
pound
,
let
that
stop
all
:
Loues
sweets
tast
best
,
when
we
haue
drunke
downe
Gall
.
Enter
Maister
Tiltyard
,
and
his
wife
,
Maister
Goshawke
,
and
Mistresse
Openworke
.
Gods
so
,
our
friends
;
come
,
come
,
smoth
your
cheeke
;
After
a
storme
the
face
of
heauen
looks
sleeke
.
Maist.
Tilt.
Did
I
not
tell
you
these
turtles
were
together
?
Mist.
Tilt.
How
dost
thou
sirra
?
why
sister
Gallipot
?
Mist.
Open.
Lord
how
shee
's
chang'd
?
Gosh.
Is
your
wife
ill
sir
?
Maist.
Gal.
Yes
indeed
la
sir
,
very
ill
,
very
ill
,
neuer
worse
,
Mist.
Tilt.
How
her
head
burnes
,
feele
how
her
pulses
work
.
Mist.
Open.
Sister
lie
downe
a
little
,
that
alwaies
does
mee
good
.
Mist.
Tilt.
In
good
sadnesse
I
finde
best
ease
in
that
too
,
Has
shee
laid
some
hot
thing
to
her
Stomach
?
Mist.
Gal.
No
,
but
I
will
lay
something
anon
.
Maist.
Tilt.
Come
,
come
fooles
,
you
trouble
her
,
shal
's
goe
Maister
Goshawke
?
Gosh.
Yes
sweete
Maister
Tiltyard
;
sirra
Rosamond
I
hold
my
life
Gallipot
hath
vext
his
wife
.
Mist.
Open.
Shee
has
a
horrible
high
colour
indeed
.
Gosh.
Wee
shall
haue
your
face
painted
with
the
same
red
soone
at
night
,
when
your
husband
comes
from
his
rubbers
in
a
false
alley
;
thou
wilt
not
beleeue
me
that
his
bowles
run
with
a
wrong
byas
.
Mist.
Open.
It
cannot
sinke
into
mee
,
that
hee
feedes
vpon
stale
mutten
abroad
,
hauing
better
and
fresher
at
home
.
Gosh.
What
if
I
bring
thee
,
where
thou
shalt
see
him
stand
at
racke
and
manger
?
Mist.
Open.
I
le
saddle
him
in
's
kind
,
and
spurre
him
till
hee
kicke
againe
.
Gosh.
Shall
thou
and
I
ride
our
iourney
then
.
Mist.
Open.
Heere
's
my
hand
.
Gosh.
No
more
;
come
Maister
Tiltyard
,
shall
we
leape
into
the
stirrops
with
our
women
,
and
amble
home
?
Maist.
Tilt.
Yes
,
yes
,
come
wife
.
Mist.
Tilt.
Introth
sister
,
I
hope
you
will
do
well
for
all
this
.
Mist.
Gal.
I
hope
I
shall
:
farewell
good
sister
:
sweet
Maister
Goshawke
.
Maist.
Gal.
Welcome
brother
,
most
kindlie
welcome
sir
.
Omnes
Thankes
sir
for
our
good
cheere
.
Exeunt
all
but
Gallipot
and
his
wife
.
Maist.
Gal.
It
shall
be
so
,
because
a
crafty
knaue
Shall
not
out
reach
me
,
nor
walke
by
my
dore
With
my
wife
arme
in
arme
,
as
't
were
his
whoore
,
I
'le
giue
him
a
golden
coxcombe
,
thirty
pound
:
Tush
Pru
what
's
thirty
pound
?
sweete
ducke
looke
cheerely
.
Mist.
Gal.
Thou
art
worthy
of
my
heart
thou
bui'st
it
deerely
.
Enter
Laxton
muffled
.
Lax.
Vds
light
the
tide
's
against
me
,
a
pox
of
your
Potticarishp
:
oh
for
some
glister
to
set
him
going
;
't
is
one
of
Hercules
labours
,
to
tread
one
of
these
Cittie
hennes
,
because
their
cockes
are
stil
crowing
ouer
them
;
there
's
no
turning
tale
here
,
I
must
on
.
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
,
husband
see
he
comes
.
Maist.
Gal.
Let
me
deale
with
him
.
Lax.
Blesse
you
sir
.
Maist.
Gal.
Be
you
blest
too
sir
if
you
come
in
peace
.
Lax.
Haue
you
any
good
pudding
Tobacco
sir
?
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
picke
no
quarrels
gentle
sir
,
my
husband
Is
not
a
man
of
weapon
,
as
you
are
,
He
knowes
all
,
I
haue
opned
all
before
him
,
concerning
you
.
Lax.
Zounes
has
she
showne
my
letters
.
Mist
Gal.
Suppose
my
case
were
yours
,
what
would
you
do
.
At
such
a
pinch
,
such
batteries
,
such
assaultes
�
Of
father
,
mother
,
kinred
,
to
dissolue
The
knot
you
tyed
,
and
to
be
bound
to
him
?
How
could
you
shift
this
storme
off
?
Lax.
If
I
know
hang
me
.
Mist.
Gal.
Besides
a
story
of
your
death
was
read
Each
minute
to
me
.
Lax.
What
a
pox
meanes
this
ridling
?
Maist.
Gal.
Be
wise
sir
,
let
not
you
and
I
be
tost
On
Lawiers
pens
;
they
haue
sharpe
nibs
and
draw
Mens
very
heart
bloud
from
them
;
what
need
you
sir
To
beate
the
drumme
of
my
wifes
infamy
,
And
call
your
friends
together
sir
to
prooue
Your
precontact
,
when
sh'
has
confest
it
?
Lax.
Vmh
sir
,
�
has
she
confest
it
?
Maist.
Gal.
Sh'
has
'faith
to
me
sir
,
vpon
your
letter
sending
.
M.
i
st
.
Gal.
I
haue
,
I
haue
.
Lax.
If
I
let
this
yron
coole
call
me
slaue
,
Do
you
heare
,
you
dame
Prudence
?
think'st
thou
vile
woman
I
'le
take
these
blowes
and
winke
?
Mist.
Gal.
Vpon
my
knees
.
Lax.
Out
impudence
.
Maist.
Gal.
Good
sir
.
Lax.
You
goatish
slaues
,
No
wilde
foule
to
cut
vp
but
mine
?
Maist.
Gal.
Alas
sir
,
You
make
her
flesh
to
tremble
,
fright
her
not
,
Shee
shall
do
reason
,
and
what
's
fit
.
Lax.
I
'le
haue
thee
,
wert
thou
more
common
Then
an
hospitall
,
and
more
diseased
.
�
Maist.
Gal.
But
one
word
good
sir
.
Lax.
So
sir
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
married
her
,
haue
line
with
her
,
and
got
Two
children
on
her
body
,
thinke
but
on
that
;
Haue
you
so
beggarly
an
appetite
When
I
vpon
a
dainty
dish
haue
fed
To
dine
vpon
my
scraps
,
my
leauings
?
ha
sir
?
Do
I
come
neere
you
uow
sir
?
Lax.
Be
Lady
you
touch
me
.
Maist.
Gal.
Would
not
you
scorne
to
weare
my
cloathes
sir
?
Lax.
Right
sir
.
Maist.
Gal.
Then
pray
sir
weare
not
her
,
for
shee
's
a
garment
So
fitting
for
my
body
,
I
'me
loath
Another
should
put
it
on
,
you
will
vndoe
both
.
Your
letter
(
as
shee
said
)
complained
you
had
spent
In
quest
of
her
,
some
thirty
pound
,
I
'le
pay
it
;
Shall
that
sir
stop
this
gap
vp
twixt
you
two
?
Lax.
Well
if
I
swallow
this
wrong
,
let
her
thanke
you
:
The
mony
being
paid
sir
,
I
am
gon
:
Farewell
,
oh
women
happy
's
hee
trusts
none
.
Mist.
Gall.
Dispatch
him
hence
sweete
husband
.
Maist.
Gal.
Yes
deere
wife
:
pray
sir
come
in
,
ere
Maister
Thou
shalt
in
wine
drinke
to
him
,
Exit
Maister
Gallipot
and
his
wife
.
(
Laxton
part
Mist.
Gal.
With
all
my
heart
;
�
how
dost
thou
like
my
wit
?
Lax.
Rarely
,
that
wile
By
which
the
Serpent
did
the
first
woman
beguile
,
Did
euer
since
,
all
womens
bosomes
fill
;
Y'
are
apple
eaters
all
,
deceiuers
still
.
Exit
Laxton
.
Enter
Sir
Alexander
Wengraue
:
Sir
Dauy
Dapper
,
Sir
Adam
Appleton
,
at
one
dore
,
and
Trapdore
at
another
doore
.
Alex.
Out
with
your
tale
Sir
Dauy
,
to
Sir
Adam
.
A
Knaue
is
in
mine
eie
deepe
in
my
debt
.
Sir
Da.
Nay
:
if
hee
be
a
knaue
sir
,
hold
him
fast
.
Alex.
Speake
softly
,
what
egge
is
there
hatching
now
.
Trap.
A
Ducks
egge
sir
,
a
ducke
that
has
eaten
a
frog
,
I
haue
crackt
the
shell
,
and
some
villany
or
other
will
peep
out
presently
;
the
ducke
that
sits
is
the
bouncing
Rampe
(
that
Roaring
Girle
my
Mistresse
)
the
drake
that
must
tread
is
your
sonne
Sebastian
.
Alex.
Be
quicke
.
Trap.
As
the
tongue
of
an
oister
wench
.
Alex.
And
see
thy
newes
be
true
.
Trap.
As
a
barbars
euery
satterday
night
�
mad
Mol
.
Alex.
Ah
.
Trap.
Must
be
let
in
without
knocking
at
your
backe
gate
.
Alex.
So
.
Trap.
Your
chamber
will
be
made
baudy
.
Alex.
Good
.
Trap.
Shee
comes
in
a
shirt
of
male
.
Alex.
How
shirt
of
male
?
Trap.
Yes
sir
or
a
male
shirt
,
that
's
to
say
in
mans
apparell
.
Alex.
To
my
sonne
.
Trap.
Close
to
your
sonne
:
your
sonne
and
her
Moone
will
be
in
coniunction
,
if
all
Alminacks
lie
not
,
her
blacke
saueguard
is
turned
into
a
deepe
sloppe
,
the
holes
of
her
vpper
body
to
button
holes
,
her
wastcoate
to
a
dublet
,
her
placket
to
the
ancient
seate
of
a
codpice
,
and
you
shall
take
'em
both
with
standing
collers
.
Alex.
Art
sure
of
this
?
Trap.
As
euery
throng
is
sure
of
a
pick-pocket
,
as
sure
as
a
whoore
is
of
the
clyents
all
Michaelmas
Tearme
,
and
of
the
pox
after
the
Tearme
.
Alex.
The
time
of
their
tilting
?
Trap.
Three
.
Alex.
The
day
?
Trap.
This
.
Alex.
Away
ply
it
,
watch
her
.
Trap.
As
the
diuell
doth
for
the
death
of
a
baud
,
I
'le
watch
her
,
do
you
catch
her
.
Alex.
Shee
's
fast
:
heere
weaue
thou
the
nets
;
harke
,
Trap.
They
are
made
.
(
maintain
't
.
Alex.
I
told
them
thou
didst
owe
mee
money
;
hold
it
vp
:
Trap.
Stifly
;
as
a
Puritan
does
contention
,
Foxe
I
owe
thee
not
the
value
of
a
halfepenny
halter
.
Alex.
Thou
shalt
be
hang'd
in
't
ere
thou
scape
so
.
Varlet
I
'le
make
thee
looke
through
a
grate
.
Trap.
I
'le
do
't
presently
,
through
a
Tauerne
grate
,
drawer
:
pish
.
Exit
Trapdore
Adam
.
Has
the
knaue
vext
you
sir
?
Alex.
Askt
him
my
mony
,
He
sweares
my
sonne
receiu'd
it
:
oh
that
boy
Will
nere
leaue
heaping
sorrowes
on
my
heart
,
Till
he
has
broke
it
quite
.
Adam
.
Is
he
still
wild
?
Alex.
As
is
a
russian
Beare
.
Adam
.
But
he
has
left
His
old
haunt
with
that
baggage
.
Alex.
Worse
still
and
worse
,
He
laies
on
me
his
shame
,
I
on
him
my
curse
.
S.
Dauy.
My
sonne
Iacke
Dapper
then
shall
run
with
him
,
All
in
one
pasture
.
Adam
.
Proues
your
sonne
bad
too
sir
?
S.
Dauy.
As
villany
can
make
him
:
your
Sebastian
Doares
but
on
one
drabb
,
mine
on
a
thousand
,
A
noyse
of
fiddlers
,
Tobacco
,
wine
and
a
whoore
,
A
Mercer
that
will
let
him
take
vp
more
,
Dyce
,
and
a
water
spaniell
with
a
Ducke
:
oh
,
Bring
him
a bed
with
these
,
when
his
purse
gingles
,
Roaring
boyes
follow
at
's
tale
,
fencers
and
ningles
,
(
Beasts
Adam
nere
gaue
name
to
)
these
horse-leeches
sucke
My
sonne
,
he
being
drawne
dry
,
they
all
liue
on
smoake
.
Alex.
Tobacco
?
S.
Dauy
Right
,
but
I
haue
in
my
braine
A
windmill
going
that
shall
grind
to
dust
The
follies
of
my
sonne
,
and
make
him
wise
,
Or
a
starke
foole
;
pray
lend
me
your
aduise
.
Both
.
That
shall
you
good
sir
Dauy
.
S.
Dauy.
Heere
's
the
sprindge
Iha
set
to
catch
this
woodcocke
in
:
an
action
In
a
false
name
(
vnknowne
to
him
)
is
entred
.
I'
th
Counter
to
arrest
Iacke
Dapper
.
Both
.
Ha
,
ha
,
he
.
S.
Dauy.
Thinke
you
the
Counter
cannot
breake
him
?
Adam
.
Breake
him
?
Yes
and
bre�ake
's
heart
too
if
he
lie
there
long
.
S.
Dauy.
I
'le
make
him
sing
a
Counter
tenor
sure
.
Adam
.
No
way
to
tame
him
like
it
,
there
hee
shall
learne
What
mony
is
indeed
,
and
how
to
spend
it
.
S.
Dauy.
Hee
's
bridled
there
.
Alex.
I
,
yet
knowes
not
how
to
mend
it
,
Bedlam
cures
not
more
madmen
in
a
yeare
,
Then
one
of
the
Counters
does
,
men
pay
more
deere
There
for
there
wit
then
any where
;
a
Counter
Why
't
is
an
vniuersity
,
who
not
sees
?
As
schollers
there
,
so
heere
men
take
degrees
,
And
follow
the
same
studies
(
all
alike
.
)
Schollers
learne
first
Logicke
and
Rhetoricke
.
So
does
a
prisoner
;
with
fine
honied
speech
At
's
first
comming
in
he
doth
perswade
,
beseech
,
He
may
be
lodg'd
with
one
that
is
not
itchy
;
To
lie
in
a
cleane
chamber
,
in
sheets
not
lowsy
,
But
when
he
has
no
money
,
then
does
he
try
,
By
subtile
Logicke
,
and
quaint
sophistry
,
To
make
the
keepers
trust
him
.
Adam
.
Say
they
do
.
Alex.
Then
hee
's
a
graduate
.
S.
Dauy.
Say
they
trust
him
not
,
Alex.
Then
is
he
held
a
freshman
and
a
sot
,
And
neuer
shall
commence
,
but
being
still
bar'd
Be
expulst
from
the
Maisters
side
,
toth
'
twopenny
ward
,
Or
else
i'
th
hole
,
beg
plac't
.
Adam
.
When
then
I
pray
proceeds
a
prisoner
.
Alex.
When
mony
being
the
theame
,
He
can
dispute
with
his
hard
creditors
hearts
,
And
get
out
cleere
,
hee
's
then
a
Maister
of
Arts
;
Sir
Dauy
send
your
sonne
to
Woodstreet
Colledge
,
A
Gentleman
can
no where
get
more
knowledge
.
S.
Dauy.
There
Gallants
study
hard
.
Alex.
True
:
to
get
mony
.
S.
Dauy.
'
lies
by
th'
heeles
i'faith
,
thankes
,
thankes
,
I
ha
sent
For
a
couple
of
beares
shall
paw
him
.
Enter
Seriant
Curtilax
and
Yeoman
Hanger
.
Adam
.
Who
comes
yonder
?
S.
Dauy.
They
looke
like
puttocks
,
these
should
be
they
.
Alex.
I
know
'em
,
they
are
officers
,
sir
wee
'l
leaue
you
.
S.
Dauy.
My
good
knights
.
Leaue
me
,
you
see
I
'me
haunted
now
with
spirits
.
Both
.
Fare
you
well
sir
.
Exeunt
Alex.
and
Adam
,
Curt.
This
old
muzzle
chops
should
be
he
By
the
fellowes
discription
:
Saue
you
sir
.
S.
Dauy.
Come
hither
you
mad
varlets
,
did
not
my
man
tell
you
I
watcht
here
for
you
.
Curt.
One
in
a
blew
coate
sir
told
vs
,
that
in
this
place
an
old
Gentleman
would
watch
for
vs
,
a
thing
contrary
to
our
oath
,
for
we
are
to
watch
for
euery
wicked
member
in
a
Citty
.
S.
Dauy.
You
'l
watch
then
for
ten
thousand
,
what
's
thy
name
honesty
?
Curt.
Seriant
Curtilax
I
sir
.
S.
Dauy.
An
excellent
name
for
a
Seriant
,
Curtilax
.
Seriants
indeed
are
weapons
of
the
law
,
When
prodigall
ruffians
farre
in
debt
are
growne
,
Should
not
you
cut
them
;
Cittizens
were
orethrowne
,
Thou
dwel'st
hereby
in
Holborne
Curtilax
.
Curt.
That
's
my
circuit
sir
,
I
coniure
most
in
that
circle
.
S.
Dauy.
And
what
yong
toward
welp
is
this
?
Hang.
Of
the
same
litter
,
his
yeoman
sir
,
my
name's
Hanger
.
S.
Dauy.
Yeoman
Hanger
.
One
paire
of
sheeres
sure
cut
out
both
your
coates
,
You
haue
two
names
most
dangerous
to
mens
throates
,
You
two
are
villanous
loades
on
Gentlemens
backs
,
Deere
ware
,
this
Hanger
and
this
Curtilax
.
Curt.
We
are
as
other
men
are
sir
,
I
cannot
see
but
hee
who
makes
a
show
of
honesty
and
religion
,
if
his
clawes
can
fasten
to
his
liking
,
he
drawes
bloud
;
all
that
liue
in
the
world
,
are
but
great
fish
and
little
fish
,
and
feede
vpon
one
another
,
some
eate
vp
whole
men
,
a
Seriant
cares
but
for
the
shoulder
of
a
man
,
they
call
vs
knaues
and
curres
,
but
many
times
hee
that
sets
vs
on
,
worries
more
lambes
one
yeare
,
then
we
do
in
seuen
.
S.
Dauy.
Spoke
like
a
noble
Cerberus
,
is
the
action
entred
?
Hang.
His
name
is
entred
in
the
booke
of
vnbeleeuers
.
S.
Dauy.
What
booke
's
that
?
Curt.
The
booke
where
all
prisoners
names
stand
,
and
not
one
amongst
forty
,
when
he
comes
in
,
beleeues
to
come
out
in
hast
.
S.
Da.
Be
as
dogged
to
him
as
your
office
allowes
you
to
be
.
Both
.
Oh
sir
.
S.
Dauy.
You
know
the
vnthrift
Iacke
Dapper
.
Curt.
I
,
I
,
sir
,
that
Gull
?
aswell
as
I
know
my
yeoman
.
S.
Dauy.
And
you
know
his
father
too
,
Sir
Dauy
Dapper
?
Curt.
As
damn'd
a
vsurer
as
euer
was
among
Iewes
;
if
hee
were
sure
his
fathers
skinne
would
yeeld
him
any
money
,
hee
would
when
he
dyes
flea
it
off
,
and
sell
it
to
couer
drummes
for
children
at
Bartholmew
faire
.
S.
Dauy.
What
toades
are
these
to
spit
poyson
on
a
man
to
his
face
?
doe
you
see
(
my
honest
rascals
?
)
yonder
gray-hound
is
the
dog
he
hunts
with
,
out
of
that
Tauerne
Iacke
Dapper
will
sally
sa
,
sa
;
giue
the
counter
,
on
,
set
vpon
him
.
Both
.
Wee
'l
charge
him
vppo'
th
backe
sir
.
S.
Dauy.
Take
no
baile
,
put
mace
enough
into
his
caudle
,
double
your
files
,
trauerse
your
ground
.
Both
.
Braue
sir
.
S.
Dauy
:
Cry
arme
,
arme
,
arme
.
Both
.
Thus
sir
.
S.
Dauy.
There
boy
,
there
boy
,
away
:
looke
to
your
prey
my
trew
English
wolues
,
and
and
so
I
vanish
.
Exit
S.
Dauy
Curt.
Some
warden
of
the
Seriants
begat
this
old
fellow
vpon
my
life
,
stand
close
.
Hang.
Shall
the
ambuscado
lie
in
one
place
?
Curt.
No
uooke
thou
yonder
.
Enter
Mol
and
Trapdore
.
Mol.
Ralph
.
Trap.
What
sayes
my
braue
Captaine
male
and
female
?
Mol.
This
Holborne
is
such
a
wrangling
streete
,
Trap.
That
's
because
Lawiers
walkes
to
and
fro
in
't
.
Mol.
Heere
's
such
iustling
,
as
if
euery
one
wee
met
were
drunke
and
reel'd
.
Trap.
Stand
Mistresse
do
you
not
smell
carrion
?
Mol.
Carryon
?
no
,
yet
I
spy
rauens
.
Trap.
Some
poore
winde-shaken
gallant
will
anon
fall
into
sore
labour
,
and
these
men-midwiues
must
bring
him
to
bed
i'
the
counter
,
there
all
those
that
are
great
with
child
with
debts
,
lie
in
.
Mol.
Stand
vp
.
Trap.
Like
your
new
maypoll
.
Hang.
Whist
,
whew
.
Curt.
Hump
,
no
.
Mol.
Peeping
?
it
shall
go
hard
huntsmen
,
but
I
'le
spoyle
your
game
,
they
looke
for
all
the
world
like
two
infected
maltmen
comming
muffled
vp
in
their
cloakes
in
a
frosty
morning
to
London
.
Trap.
A
course
,
Captaine
;
a
beare
comes
to
the
stake
.
Enter
Iacke
Dapper
and
Gul.
Mol.
It
should
bee
so
,
for
the
dogges
struggle
to
bee
let
loose
.
Hang.
Whew
.
Curt.
Hemp
.
Moll
.
Harke
Trapdore
,
follow
your
leader
.
Iacke
Dap.
Gul.
Gul.
Maister
.
Iacke
Dap.
Did'st
euer
see
such
an
asse
as
I
am
boy
?
Gul.
No
by
my
troth
sir
,
to
loose
all
your
mony
,
yet
haue
false
dice
of
your
owne
,
why
't
is
as
I
saw
a
great
fellow
vsed
t'other
day
,
he
had
a
faire
sword
and
buckler
,
and
yet
a
butcher
dry
beate
him
with
a
cudgell
.
Both
.
Honest
Serieant
fly
,
flie
Maister
Dapper
you
'l
be
arrested
else
.
Iacke
Dap.
Run
Gul
and
draw
.
Gul.
Run
Maister
,
Gull
followes
you
.
Exit
Dapper
and
Gull
.
Curt.
I
know
you
well
enough
,
you
'r
but
a
whore
to
hang
vpon
any
man
.
Mol.
Whores
then
are
like
Serieants
,
so
now
hang
you
,
draw
rogue
,
but
strike
not
:
for
a
broken
pate
they
'l
keepe
their
beds
,
and
recouer
twenty
markes
damages
.
Curt.
You
shall
pay
for
this
rescue
,
runne
downe
shoelane
and
meete
him
.
Trap.
Shu
,
is
this
a
rescue
Gentlemen
or
no
?
Mol.
Rescue
?
a
pox
on
'em
,
Trapdore
let
's
away
,
I
'me
glad
I
haue
done
perfect
one
good
worke
to day
,
If
any
Gentleman
be
in
Scriueners
bands
,
Send
but
for
Mol
,
she
'll
baile
him
by
these
hands
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Sir
Alexander
Wengraue
solus
.
Alex.
Vnhappy
in
the
follies
of
a
sonne
,
Led
against
iudgement
,
sence
,
obedience
,
And
all
the
powers
of
noblenesse
and
wit
;
Enter
Trapdore
Oh
wretched
father
,
now
Trapdore
will
she
come
?
Trap.
In
mans
apparell
sir
,
I
am
in
her
heart
now
,
And
share
in
all
her
secrets
.
Alex.
Peace
,
peace
,
peace
.
Here
take
my
Germane
watch
,
hang
't
vp
in
sight
,
That
I
may
see
her
hang
in
English
for
't
.
Trap.
I
warrant
you
for
that
now
,
next
Sessions
rids
her
sir
,
This
watch
will
bring
her
in
better
then
a
hundred
constables
.
Alex.
Good
Trapdore
saist
thou
so
,
thou
cheer'st
my
heart
After
a
storme
of
sorrow
,
�
my
gold
chaine
too
,
Here
take
a
hundred
markes
in
yellow
linkes
.
Trap.
That
will
do
well
to
bring
the
watch
to
light
sir
.
And
worth
a
thousand
of
your
Headborowes
lanthornes
.
Alex.
Place
that
a'
the
Court
cubbart
,
let
it
lie
Full
in
the
veiw
of
her
theefe-whoorish
eie
.
Trap.
Shee
cannot
misse
it
sir
,
I
see
't
so
plaine
,
that
I
could
steal
't
my selfe
.
Alex.
Perhaps
thou
shalt
too
,
That
or
something
as
weighty
;
what
shee
leaues
,
Thou
shalt
come
closely
in
,
and
filch
away
,
And
all
the
weight
vpon
her
backe
I
'le
lay
.
Trap.
You
cannot
assure
that
sir
.
Alex.
No
,
what
lets
it
?
Trap.
Being
a
stout
girle
,
perhaps
shee
'l
desire
pressing
,
Then
all
the
weight
must
ly
vpon
her
belly
.
Alex.
Belly
or
backe
I
care
not
so
I
'ue
one
.
Trap.
You
'r
of
my
minde
for
that
sir
.
Alex.
Hang
vp
my
ruffe
band
with
the
diamond
at
it
,
It
may
be
shee
'l
like
that
best
.
Trap.
It
's
well
for
her
,
that
shee
must
haue
her
choice
,
hee
thinkes
nothing
too
good
for
her
,
if
you
hold
on
this
minde
a
little
longer
,
it
shall
bee
the
first
worke
I
doe
to
turne
theefe
my selfe
;
would
do
a
man
good
to
be
hang'd
when
he
is
so
wel
prouided
for
.
Alex.
So
,
well
sayd
;
all
hangs
well
,
would
shee
hung
so
too
,
The
sight
would
please
me
more
,
then
all
their
gilsterings
:
Oh
that
my
mysteries
to
such
streights
should
runne
,
That
I
must
rob
my selfe
to
blesse
my
sonne
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Sebastian
,
with
Mary
Fitz-Allard
like
a
page
,
and
Mol.
Seb.
Thou
hast
done
me
a
kind
office
,
without
touch
Either
of
sinne
or
shame
,
our
loues
are
honest
.
Mol.
I
'de
scorne
to
make
such
shift
to
bring
you
together
else
.
Seb.
Now
haue
I
time
and
opportunity
Without
all
feare
to
bid
thee
welcome
loue
.
Kisse
.
Mary
.
Neuer
with
more
desire
and
harder
venture
.
Mol.
How
strange
this
shewes
one
man
to
kisse
another
.
Seb.
I
'de
kisse
such
men
to
chuse
Moll
,
Me thinkes
a
womans
lip
tasts
well
in
a
dublet
:
Mol.
Many
an
old
madam
has
the
better
fortune
then
,
Whose
breathes
grew
stale
before
the
fashion
came
,
If
that
will
help
'em
,
as
you
thinke
't
will
do
,
They
'l
learne
in
time
to
plucke
on
the
hose
too
.
Seb.
The
older
they
waxe
Moll
,
troth
I
speake
seriously
,
As
some
haue
a
conceit
their
drinke
tasts
better
In
an
outlandish
cup
then
in
our
owne
,
So
me thinkes
euery
kisse
she
giues
me
now
In
this
strange
forme
,
is
worth
a
paire
of
two
,
Here
we
are
safe
,
and
furthest
from
the
eie
Of
all
suspicion
,
this
is
my
fathers
chamber
,
Vpon
which
floore
he
neuer
steps
till
night
.
Here
he
mistrusts
me
not
,
nor
I
his
comming
,
At
mine
owne
chamber
he
still
pries
vnto
me
,
My
freedome
is
not
there
at
mine
owne
finding
,
Still
checkt
and
curb'd
,
here
he
shall
misse
his
purpose
.
Mol.
And
what
's
your
businesse
now
,
you
haue
your
mind
sir
;
At
your
great
suite
I
promisd
you
to
come
,
I
pittied
her
for
names
sake
,
that
a
Moll
Should
be
so
crost
in
loue
,
when
there
's
so
many
,
That
owes
nine
layes
a
peece
,
and
not
so
little
:
My
taylor
fitted
her
,
how
like
you
his
worke
?
Seb.
So
well
,
no
Art
can
mend
it
,
for
this
purpose
,
But
to
thy
wit
and
helpe
we
're
chiefe
in
debt
,
And
must
liue
still
beholding
.
Mol.
Any
honest
pitty
I
'me
willing
to
bestow
vpon
poore
Ring-doues
.
Seb.
I
'le
offer
no
worse
play
.
Moll
.
Nay
and
you
should
sir
,
I
should
draw
first
and
prooue
the
quicker
man
,
Seb.
Hold
,
there
shall
neede
no
weapon
at
this
meeting
,
But
cause
thou
shalt
not
loose
thy
fury
idle
,
Heere
take
this
viall
,
runne
vpon
the
guts
,
And
end
thy
quarrell
singing
.
Mol.
Like
a
swan
aboue
bridge
,
For
looke
you
heer
's
the
bridge
,
and
heere
am
I
.
Seb.
Hold
on
sweete
Mol
.
Mary
.
I
'ue
heard
her
much
commended
sir
,
for
one
that
was
nere
taught
.
Mol.
I
'me
much
beholding
to
'em
,
well
since
you
'l
needes
put'
vs
together
sir
,
I
'le
play
my
part
as
wel
as
I
can
;
it
shall
nere
be
said
I
came
into
a
Gentlemans
chamber
,
and
let
his
instrument
hang
by
the
walls
.
Seb.
Why
well
said
Mol
i'faith
,
it
had
bene
a
shame
for
that
Gentleman
then
,
that
would
haue
let
it
hung
still
,
and
nere
offred
thee
it
.
Mol.
There
it
should
haue
bene
stil
then
for
Mol
,
for
though
the
world
iudge
impudently
of
mee
,
I
nere
came
into
that
chamber
yet
,
where
I
tooke
downe
the
instrument
my selfe
.
Seb.
Pish
let
'em
prate
abroad
,
th'
art
heere
where
thou
art
knowne
and
lou'd
,
there
be
a
thousand
close
dames
that
wil
cal
the
viall
an
vnmannerly
instrument
for
a
woman
,
and
therefore
talke
broadly
of
thee
,
when
you
shall
haue
them
sit
wider
to
a
worse
quality
.
Mol.
Push
,
I
euer
fall
a sleepe
and
thinke
not
of
'em
sir
,
and
thus
I
dreame
.
Seb.
Prithee
let
's
heare
thy
dreame
Mol
.
Mol.
I
dreame
there
is
a
Mistresse
,
And
she
layes
out
the
money
,
The
song
.
Shee
goes
vnto
her
Sisters
,
Shee
neuer
comes
at
any
.
Enter
Sir
Alexander
behind
them
Shee
sayes
shee
went
to
'th
Bursse
for
patternes
,
You
shall
finde
her
at
Saint
Katherns
,
And
comes
home
with
neuer
a
penny
.
Seb.
That
's
a
free
Mistresse
'
faith
.
Alex.
I
,
I
,
I
,
like
her
that
sings
it
,
one
of
thine
own
choosing
.
Mol.
But
shall
I
dreame
againe
?
Here
comes
a
wench
will
braue
ye
,
Her
courage
was
so
great
,
Shee
lay
with
one
o'
the
Nauy
,
Her
husband
lying
i'
the
Fleet
.
Yet
oft
with
him
she
cauel'd
,
I
wonder
what
shee
ailes
,
Her
husbands
ship
lay
grauel'd
,
When
her's
could
hoyse
vp
sailes
,
Yet
shee
beganne
like
all
my
foes
,
To
call
whoore
first
:
for
so
do
those
;
A
pox
of
all
false
tayles
.
Seb.
Marry
amen
say
I
.
Alex.
So
say
I
too
.
Mol.
Hang
vp
the
viall
now
sir
:
all
this
while
I
was
in
a
dreame
,
one
shall
lie
rudely
then
;
but
being
awake
,
I
keepe
my
legges
together
;
a
watch
,
what
's
a clocke
here
.
Alex.
Now
,
now
,
shee
's
trapt
.
Moll
.
Betweene
one
and
two
;
nay
then
I
care
not
:
a
watch
and
a
musitian
are
cossen
Germanes
in
one
thing
,
they
must
both
keepe
time
well
,
or
there
's
no
goodnesse
in
'em
,
the
one
else
deserues
to
be
dasht
against
a
wall
,
and
tother
to
haue
his
braines
knockt
out
with
a
fiddle
case
,
what
?
a
loose
chaine
and
a
dangling
Diamond
.
Here
were
a
braue
booty
for
an
euening-theefe
now
,
There
's
many
a
younger
brother
would
be
glad
To
looke
twice
in
at
a
window
for
't
,
And
wriggle
in
and
out
,
like
an
eele
in
a
sandbag
,
Oh
if
mens
secret
youthfull
faults
should
iudge
'em
,
'T
would
be
the
general'st
execution
,
That
ere
was
seene
in
England
;
there
would
bee
but
few
left
to
sing
the
ballets
,
there
would
be
so
much
worke
:
most
of
our
brokers
would
be
chosen
for
hangmen
,
a
good
day
for
them
:
they
might
renew
their
wardrops
of
free
cost
then
.
Seb.
This
is
the
roaring
wench
must
do
vs
good
.
Mary
.
No
poyson
sir
but
serues
vs
for
some
vse
,
which
is
confirm'd
in
her
.
Seb.
Peace
,
peace
,
foot
I
did
here
him
sure
,
where
ere
he
be
.
Mol.
Who
did
you
heare
?
Seb.
My
father
,
't
was
like
a
sight
of
his
,
I
must
be
wary
,
Alex.
No
wilt
not
be
,
am
I
alone
so
wretched
That
nothing
takes
?
I
'le
put
him
to
his
plundge
for
't
.
Seb.
Life
,
heere
he
comes
,
�
sir
I
beseech
you
take
it
,
Your
way
of
teaching
does
so
much
content
me
,
I
'le
make
it
foure
pound
,
here
's
forty
shillings
sir
.
I
thinke
I
name
it
right
:
helpe
me
good
Mol
,
Forty
in
hand
.
Mol.
Sir
you
shall
pardon
me
,
I
haue
more
of
the
meanest
scholler
I
can
teach
,
This
paies
me
more
,
then
you
haue
offred
yet
.
Seb.
At
the
next
quarter
When
I
receiue
the
meanes
my
father
'
lowes
me
.
You
shall
haue
tother
forty
,
Alex.
This
were
well
now
,
Wer
't
to
a
man
,
whose
sorrowes
had
blind
eies
,
But
mine
behold
his
follies
and
vntruthes
,
With
two
cleere
glasses
�
how
now
?
Seb.
Sir
.
Alex.
What
's
he
there
?
Seb.
You
'r
come
in
good
time
sir
,
I
'ue
a
suite
to
you
,
I
'de
craue
your
present
kindnesse
.
Alex.
What
is
he
there
?
Seb.
A
Gentleman
,
a
musitian
sir
,
one
of
excellent
fingring
.
Alex.
I
,
I
thinke
so
,
I
wonder
how
they
scapt
her
.
Seb.
Has
the
most
delicate
stroake
sir
,
Alex.
A
stroake
indeed
,
I
feele
it
at
my
heart
,
Seb.
Puts
downe
all
your
famous
musitians
.
Alex.
I
,
a
whoore
may
put
downe
a
hundred
of
'em
.
Seb.
Forty
shillings
is
the
agrement
sir
betweene
vs
,
Now
sir
,
my
present
meanes
,
mounts
but
to
halfe
on
't
.
Alex.
And
he
stands
vpon
the
whole
.
Seb.
I
indeed
does
he
sir
.
Alex.
And
will
doe
still
,
hee
'l
nere
be
in
other
taile
,
Seb.
Therefore
I
'de
stop
his
mouth
sir
,
and
I
could
,
Alex.
Hum
true
,
there
is
no
other
way
indeed
,
His
folly
hardens
,
shame
must
needs
succeed
.
Now
sir
I
vnderstand
you
professe
musique
.
Mol.
I
am
a
poore
seruant
to
that
liberall
science
sir
.
Alex.
Where
is
it
you
teach
?
Mol.
Right
against
Cliffords
Inne
.
Alex.
Hum
that
's
a
fit
place
for
it
:
you
haue
many
schollers
.
Mol.
And
some
of
worth
,
whom
I
may
call
my
maisters
.
Alex.
I
true
,
a
company
of
whooremaisters
;
you
teach
to
sing
too
?
Mol.
Marry
do
I
sir
.
Alex.
I
thinke
you
'l
finde
an
apt
scholler
of
my
sonne
,
especially
for
pricke-song
.
Mol.
I
haue
much
hope
of
him
.
Alex.
I
am
sory
for
't
,
I
haue
the
lesse
for
that
:
you
can
play
any
lesson
.
Mol.
At
first
sight
sir
.
Alex.
There
's
a
thing
called
the
witch
,
can
you
play
that
?
Mol.
I
would
be
sory
any
one
should
mend
me
in
't
.
Alex.
I
,
I
beleeue
thee
,
thou
hast
so
bewitcht
my
sonne
,
No
care
will
mend
the
worke
that
thou
hast
done
,
I
haue
bethought
my selfe
since
my
art
failes
,
I
'le
make
her
pollicy
the
Art
to
trap
her
.
Here
are
foure
Angels
markt
with
holes
in
them
Fit
for
his
crackt
companions
,
gold
he
will
giue
her
,
These
will
I
make
induction
to
her
ruine
,
And
rid
shame
from
my
house
,
griefe
from
my
heart
Here
sonne
,
in
what
you
take
content
and
pleasure
,
Want
shall
not
curbe
you
,
pay
the
Gentleman
His
latter
halfe
in
gold
.
Seb.
I
thanke
you
sir
.
Alex.
Oh
may
the
operation
an
't
,
end
three
,
In
her
,
life
:
shame
,
in
him
;
and
griefe
,
in
mee
.
Exit
Alexander
.
Seb.
Faith
thou
shalt
haue
'em
't
is
my
fathers
guift
,
Neuer
was
man
beguild
with
better
shift
.
Mol.
Hee
that
can
take
mee
for
a
male
musitian
,
I
cannot
choose
but
make
him
my
instrument
,
And
play
vpon
him
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Mistresse
Gallipot
,
and
Mistresse
Openworke
.
Mi.
Gal.
Is
then
that
bird
of
yours
(
Maister
Goshawke
)
so
wild
?
Mist.
Open.
A
Goshawke
,
a
Puttocke
;
all
for
prey
:
he
angles
for
fish
,
but
he
loues
flesh
better
.
Mist.
Gal.
Is
't
possible
his
smoth
face
should
haue
wrinckles
in
't
,
and
we
not
see
them
?
Mist.
Open.
Possible
?
why
haue
not
many
handsome
legges
in
silke
stockins
villanous
splay
feete
for
all
their
great
roses
?
Mist.
Gal.
Troth
firra
thou
saist
true
.
Mist.
Op.
Didst
neuer
see
an
archer
(
as
tho
'ast
walkt
by
Bun-hill
)
looke
a squint
when
he
drew
his
bow
?
Mist.
Gal.
Yes
,
when
his
arrowes
haue
flin'e
toward
Islington
,
his
eyes
haue
shot
cleane
contrary
towards
Pimlico
.
Mist.
Open.
For
all
the
world
so
does
Maister
Goshawke
double
with
me
.
Mist.
Gal.
Oh
fie
vpon
him
,
if
he
double
once
he
's
not
for
me
.
Mist.
Open.
Because
Goshawke
goes
in
a
shag-ruffe
band
,
with
a
face
sticking
vp
in
't
,
which
showes
like
an
agget
set
in
acrampe
ring
,
he
thinkes
I
'me
in
loue
with
him
.
Mist.
Gal.
'Las
I
thinke
he
takes
his
marke
amisse
in
thee
.
Mist.
Open.
He
has
by
often
beating
into
me
made
mee
beleeue
that
my
husband
kept
a
whore
.
Mist.
Gal.
Very
good
.
Mist.
Open.
Swore
to
me
that
my
husband
this
very
morning
went
in
a
boate
with
a tilt
ouer
it
,
to
the
three
pidgions
at
Brainford
,
and
his
puncke
with
him
vnder
his
tilt
.
Mist.
Gal.
That
were
wholesome
.
Mist.
Open.
I
beleeu'd
it
,
fell
a
swearing
at
him
,
curssing
of
harlots
,
made
me
ready
to
hoyse
vp
saile
,
and
be
there
as
soone
as
hee
.
Mist.
Gal.
So
,
so
.
Mist.
Open.
And
for
that
voyage
Goshawke
comes
hither
incontinently
,
but
sirra
this
water-spaniell
diues
after
no
ducke
but
me
,
his
hope
is
hauing
mee
at
Braineford
to
make
mee
cry
quack
.
Mist.
Gall.
Art
sure
of
it
?
Mist.
Open.
Sure
of
it
?
my
poore
innocent
Openworke
came
in
as
I
was
poking
my
ruffe
,
presently
hit
I
him
i'
the
teeth
with
the
three
pidgions
:
he
forswore
all
,
I
vp
and
opened
all
,
and
now
stands
he
(
in
a
shop
hard
by
)
like
a
musket
on
a
rest
,
to
hit
Goshawke
i'
the
eie
,
when
he
comes
to
fetch
me
to
the
boate
.
Mist.
Gal.
Such
another
lame
Gelding
offered
to
carry
mee
through
thicke
and
thinne
,
(
Laxton
sirra
)
but
I
am
ridd
of
him
now
.
Mist.
Open.
Happy
is
the
woman
can
bee
ridde
of
'em
all
;
'las
what
are
your
whisking
gallants
to
our
husbands
,
weigh
'em
rightly
man
for
man
.
Mist.
Gall.
Troth
meere
shallow
things
.
Mist.
Open.
Idle
simple
things
,
running
heads
,
and
yet
let
'em
run
ouer
vs
neuer
so
fast
,
we
shop-keepers
(
when
all
's
done
)
are
sure
to
haue
'em
in
our
pursnets
at
length
,
and
when
they
are
in
,
Lord
what
simple
animalls
they
are
.
Mist.
Open.
Then
they
hang
head
.
Most
.
Gal.
Then
they
droupe
.
Mist.
Open.
Then
they
write
letters
.
Mist.
Gal.
Then
they
cogge
.
Mist.
Open.
Then
they
deale
vnder
hand
with
vs
,
and
wee
must
ingle
with
our
husbands
a bed
,
and
wee
must
sweare
they
are
our
cosens
,
and
able
to
do
vs
a
pleasure
at
Court
.
Mist.
Gal.
And
yet
when
wee
haue
done
our
best
,
al
's
but
put
into
a
riuen
dish
,
wee
are
but
frumpt
at
and
libell'd
vpon
.
Mist.
Open.
Oh
if
it
were
the
good
Lords
will
,
there
were
a
law
made
,
no
Cittizen
should
trust
any
of
'em
all
.
Enter
Goshawke
.
Mist.
Gal.
Hush
sirra
,
Goshawke
flutters
.
Gosh.
How
now
,
are
you
ready
?
Mist.
Open.
Nay
are
you
ready
?
a
little
thing
you
see
makes
vs
ready
.
Gosh.
Vs
?
why
,
must
shee
make
one
i'
the
voiage
?
Mist.
Open.
Oh
by
any
meanes
,
do
I
know
how
my
husband
will
handle
mee
?
Gosh.
'Foot
,
how
shall
I
find
water
,
to
keepe
these
two
mils
going
?
Well
since
you
'l
needs
bee
clapt
vnder
hatches
,
if
I
sayle
not
with
you
both
till
all
split
,
hang
mee
vp
at
the
maine
yard
,
&
duck
mee
;
it
's
but
lickering
them
both
soundly
,
&
then
you
shall
see
their
corke
heeles
flie
vp
high
,
like
two
swannes
when
their
tayles
are
aboue
water
,
and
their
long
neckes
vnder
water
,
diuing
to
catch
gudgions
:
come
,
come
,
oares
stand
ready
,
the
tyde
's
with
vs
,
on
with
those
false
faces
,
blow
winds
and
thou
shalt
take
thy
husband
,
casting
out
his
net
to
catch
fresh
Salmon
at
Brainford
.
Mist.
Gal.
I
beleeue
you
'l
eate
of
a
coddes
head
of
your
owne
dressing
,
before
you
reach
halfe
way
thither
.
Gosh.
So
,
so
,
follow
close
,
pin
as
you
go
.
Enter
Laxton
muffled
.
Lax.
Do
you
heare
?
Mist.
Gal.
Yes
,
I
thanke
my
eares
.
Lax.
I
must
haue
a
bout
with
your
Poticariship
,
Mist.
Gal.
At
what
weapon
?
Lax.
I
must
speake
with
you
.
Mist.
Gal.
No
.
Lax
No
?
you
shall
.
Mist.
Gal.
Shall
?
away
soust
Sturgion
,
halfe
fish
,
halfe
flesh
.
Lax.
'Faith
gib
,
are
you
spitting
,
I
'le
cut
your
tayle
puscat
for
this
,
Mist.
Gal.
'Las
poore
Laxton
,
I
thinke
thy
tayle
's
cut
already
:
your
worst
;
Lax.
If
I
do
not
,
�
Exit
Laxton
.
Gosh.
Come
,
ha'
you
done
?
Enter
Maister
Openworke
.
Sfoote
Rosamond
,
your
husband
.
welcome
,
Maist.
Open.
How
now
?
sweete
Maist
Goshawke
,
none
more
I
haue
wanted
your
embracements
:
when
friends
meete
,
The
musique
of
the
spheares
sounds
not
more
sweete
,
Then
does
their
conferenc
:
who
is
this
?
Rosamond
:
Wife
:
how
now
sister
?
Gosh.
Silence
if
you
loue
mee
.
Maist.
Open.
Why
maskt
?
Mist.
Open.
Does
a
maske
grieue
you
sir
?
Maist.
Open.
It
does
.
Mist.
Open.
Then
y'
are
best
get
you
a
mumming
.
Gosh.
S'foote
you
'l
spoyle
all
.
Mist.
Gall.
May
not
wee
couer
our
bare
faces
with
maskes
As
well
as
you
couer
your
bald
heads
with
hats
?
Ma.
Op.
No
maskes
,
why
,
th'
are
theeues
to
beauty
,
that
rob
Of
admiration
in
which
true
loue
lies
,
(
eies
Why
are
maskes
worne
?
why
good
?
or
why
desired
?
Vnlesse
by
their
gay
couers
wits
are
fiered
To
read
the
vild'st
lookes
;
many
bad
faces
,
(
Because
rich
gemmes
are
treasured
vp
in
cases
)
Passe
by
their
priuiledge
currant
,
but
as
caues
Dambe
misers
Gold
,
so
maskes
are
beauties
graues
,
Men
nere
meete
women
with
such
muffled
eies
,
But
they
curse
her
,
that
first
did
maskes
deuise
,
And
sweare
it
was
some
beldame
.
Come
off
with
't
.
Mist.
Open.
I
will
not
.
Maist.
Open.
Good
faces
maskt
are
Iewels
kept
by
spirits
.
Hide
none
but
bad
ones
,
for
they
poyson
mens
sights
,
Show
then
as
shop-keepers
do
their
broidred
stuffe
,
(
By
owle
light
)
fine
wares
cannot
be
open
enough
,
Prithee
(
sweete
Rose
)
come
strike
this
sayle
.
Mist.
Open.
Saile
?
(
eyes
:
Maist.
Op.
Ha
?
yes
wife
strike
saile
,
for
stormes
are
in
thine
Mist.
Open.
Th'
are
here
sir
in
my
browes
if
any
rise
.
Maist.
Open.
Ha
browes
?
(
what
sayes
she
friend
)
pray
tel
me
Your
two
flagges
were
aduaunst
;
the
Comedy
,
(
why
Come
what
's
the
Comedy
?
Mist.
Open.
Westward
hoe
.
Maist.
Open.
How
?
Mist.
Open.
'T
is
Westward
hoe
shee
saies
.
Gosh.
Are
you
both
madde
?
Mist.
Open.
Is
't
Market
day
at
Braineford
,
and
your
ware
not
sent
vp
yet
?
Maist.
Open.
What
market
day
?
what
ware
?
Mist.
Open.
Apy
with
three
pidgions
in
't
,
't
is
drawne
and
staies
your
cutting
vp
.
Gosh.
As
you
regard
my
credit
.
Maist.
Open.
Art
madde
?
Mist.
Open.
Yes
letcherous
goate
;
Baboone
.
Maist.
Open.
Baboone
?
then
tosse
mee
in
a
blancket
,
Mist.
Open.
Do
I
it
well
?
Mist.
Gall.
Rarely
.
Gosh.
Belike
sir
shee
's
not
well
;
best
leaue
her
.
Maist.
Open.
No
,
I
'le
stand
the
storme
now
how
fierce
so ere
it
blow
.
Mist.
Open.
Did
I
for
this
loose
all
my
friends
?
refuse
Rich
hopes
,
and
golden
fortunes
,
to
be
made
A
stale
to
a
common
whore
?
Maist.
Open.
This
does
amaze
mee
.
Mist.
Open.
Oh
God
,
oh
God
,
feede
at
reuersion
now
?
A
Strumpets
leauing
?
Maist.
Open.
Rosamond
,
Gosh.
I
sweate
,
wo'ld
I
lay
in
cold
harbour
.
Mist.
Open.
Thou
hast
struck
ten
thousand
daggers
through
my
heart
.
Maist.
Open.
Not
I
by
heauen
sweete
wife
.
(
thee
Mist.
Open.
Go
diuel
go
;
that
which
thou
swear'st
by
,
damnes
Gosh.
S'heart
will
you
vndo
mee
?
Mist.
Open.
Why
stay
you
heere
?
the
starre
,
by
which
you
saile
,
shines
yonder
aboue
Chelsy
;
you
loose
your
shore
if
this
moone
light
you
:
seeke
out
your
light
whore
.
Maist.
Open.
Ha
?
Mist.
Gal.
Push
;
your
Westerne
pug
.
Gosh,
Zounds
now
hell
roares
.
Mist.
Open.
With
whom
you
tilted
in
a
paire
of
oares
,
this
very
morning
.
Maist.
Open.
Oares
?
Mist.
Open.
At
Brainford
sir
.
Maist.
Open.
Racke
not
my
patience
:
Maister
Goshawke
,
some
slaue
has
buzzed
this
into
her
,
has
he
not
?
I
run
a tilt
in
Brainford
with
a
woman
?
't
is
a
lie
:
What
old
baud
tels
thee
this
?
S'death
't
is
a
lie
.
Mist.
Open.
'T
is
one
to
thy
face
shall
iustify
all
that
I
speake
.
Maist.
Open.
Vd'soule
do
but
name
that
rascall
.
Mist.
Open.
No
sir
I
will
not
.
Gosh.
Keepe
thee
there
girle
:
�
then
!
Mist.
Open.
Sister
know
you
this
varlet
?
Mist.
Gall.
Yes
.
Maist.
Open.
Sweare
true
,
Is
there
a
rogue
so
low
damn'd
?
a
second
Iudas
?
a
common
hangman
?
cutting
a
mans
throate
?
does
it
to
his
face
?
bite
mee
behind
my
backe
?
a
cur
dog
?
sweare
if
you
know
this
hell-hound
.
Mist.
Gall.
In
truth
I
do
,
Maist.
Open.
His
name
?
Mist.
Gall.
Not
for
the
world
;
To
haue
you
to
stab
him
.
Gosh.
Oh
braue
girles
:
worth
Gold
.
Maist.
Open.
A
word
honest
maister
Goshawke
.
Draw
out
his
sword
Gosh.
What
do
you
meane
sir
?
Maist.
Open.
Keepe
off
,
and
if
the
diuell
can
giue
a
name
to
this
new
fury
,
holla
it
throngh
my
eare
,
or
wrap
it
vp
in
some
hid
character
:
I
'le
ride
to
Oxford
,
and
watch
out
mine
eies
,
but
I
'le
heare
the
brazen
head
speak
:
or
else
shew
me
but
one
haire
of
his
head
or
beard
,
that
I
may
sample
it
;
if
the
fiend
I
meet
(
in
myne
owne
house
)
I
'le
kill
him
:
�
the
streete
.
Or
at
the
Church
dore
:
�
there
�
(
cause
he
seekes
to
vnty
The
knot
God
fastens
)
he
deserues
most
to
dy
.
Mist.
Open.
My
husband
titles
him
.
Maist.
Open.
Maister
Goshawke
,
pray
sir
Sweare
to
me
,
that
you
know
him
or
know
him
not
,
(
wiues
,
Who
makes
me
at
Brainford
to
take
vp
a
peticote
beside
my
Gosh.
By
heauen
that
man
I
know
not
.
Mist.
Open.
Come
,
come
,
you
lie
.
Gosh.
Will
you
not
haue
all
out
?
By
heauen
I
know
no
man
beneath
the
moon
Should
do
you
wrong
,
but
if
I
had
his
name
,
I
'de
print
it
in
text
letters
.
Mist.
Open.
Print
thine
owne
then
,
Did'st
not
thou
sweare
to
me
he
kept
his
whoore
?
Mist.
Gal.
And
that
in
sinfull
Brainford
they
would
commit
That
which
our
lips
did
water
at
sir
,
�
ha
?
Mist.
Open.
Thou
spider
,
that
hast
wouen
thy
cunning
web
In
mine
owne
house
t'
insnare
me
:
hast
not
thou
Suck't
nourishment
euen
vnderneath
this
roofe
,
And
turned
it
all
to
poyson
?
spitting
it
,
On
thy
friends
face
(
my
husband
?
)
he
as
t'
were
sleeping
:
Onely
to
leaue
him
vgly
to
mine
eies
,
That
they
might
glance
on
thee
.
Mist.
Gal.
Speake
,
are
these
lies
?
Gosh.
Mine
owne
shame
me
confounds
:
Mist.
Open.
No
more
,
hee
's
stung
;
who
'd
thinke
that
in
one
body
there
could
dwell
Deformitie
and
beauty
,
(
heauen
and
hell
)
Goodnesse
I
see
is
but
outside
,
wee
all
set
,
In
rings
of
Gold
,
stones
that
be
counterfet
:
I
thought
you
none
.
Gosh.
Pardon
mee
.
Maist.
Open.
Truth
I
doe
.
This
blemish
growes
in
nature
not
in
you
,
For
mans
creation
sticke
euen
moles
in
scorne
On
fairest
cheeks
,
wife
nothing
is
perfect
borne
.
Mist.
Open.
I
thought
you
had
bene
borne
perfect
.
Maist.
Open.
What
's
this
whole
world
but
a
gilt
rotten
pill
?
For
at
the
heart
lies
the
old
chore
still
.
I
'le
tell
you
Maister
Goshawke
,
I
in
your
eie
I
haue
seene
wanton
fire
,
and
then
to
try
The
soundnesse
of
my
iudgement
,
I
told
you
I
kept
a
whoore
,
made
you
beleeue
't
was
true
,
Onely
to
feele
how
your
pulse
beate
,
but
find
,
The
world
can
hardly
yeeld
a
perfect
friend
.
Come
,
come
,
a
tricke
of
youth
,
and
't
is
forgiuen
,
This
rub
put
by
,
our
loue
shall
runne
more
euen
.
Mist.
Open
,
You
'l
deale
vpon
mens
wiues
no
more
?
Gosh.
No
:
�
you
teach
me
a
tricke
for
that
.
Mist.
Open.
Troth
do
not
,
they
'l
o're-reach
thee
.
Mai.
Open.
Make
my
house
yours
sir
still
.
Gosh.
No
.
Maist.
Open.
I
say
you
shall
:
Seeing
(
thus
besieg'd
)
it
holds
out
,
't
will
neuer
fall
.
Enter
Maister
Gallipot
,
and
Greenewit
like
a
Somner
,
Laxton
muffled
a
loofo
off
.
Omnes
How
now
?
Maist.
Gall.
With
mee
sir
?
Greene.
You
sir
?
I
haue
gon
snaffling
vp
and
downe
by
your
dore
this
houre
to
watch
for
you
.
Mist.
Gall.
What
's
the
matter
husband
?
Greene.
�
I
haue
caught
a
cold
in
my
head
sir
,
by
sitting
vp
late
in
the
rose
tauerne
,
but
I
hope
you
vnderstand
my
speech
.
Maist.
Gal.
So
sir
.
Greene.
I
cite
you
by
the
name
of
Hippocrates
Gallipot
,
and
you
by
the
name
of
Prudence
Gallipot
,
to
appeare
vpon
Crastino
,
doe
you
see
,
Crastino
sancti
Dunstani
(
this
Easter
Tearme
)
in
Bow
Church
.
Maist.
Gall.
Where
sir
?
what
saies
he
?
Greene.
Bow
:
Bow
Church
,
to
answere
to
a
libel
of
precontract
on
the
part
and
behalfe
of
the
said
Prudence
and
another
;
y'
are
best
sir
take
a
coppy
of
the
citation
,
't
is
but
tweluepence
.
Omnes
A
Citation
?
Maist.
Gal.
You
pocky-nosed
rascall
,
what
slaue
fees
you
to
this
?
Lax.
Slaue
?
I
ha
nothing
to
do
with
you
,
doe
you
heare
sir
?
Gosh.
Laxton
i
st
not
?
�
what
fagary
is
this
?
Maist.
Gal.
Trust
me
I
thought
sir
this
storme
long
ago
had
bene
full
laid
,
when
(
if
you
be
remembred
)
I
paid
you
the
last
fifteene
pound
,
besides
the
thirty
you
had
first
,
�
for
then
you
swore
.
Lax.
Tush
,
tush
sir
,
oathes
,
Truth
yet
I
'me
loth
to
vexe
you
,
�
tell
you
what
;
Make
vp
the
mony
I
had
an
hundred
pound
,
And
take
your
belly
full
of
her
.
Maist.
Gall.
An
hundred
pound
?
Mist.
Gal.
What
a
100
pound
?
he
gets
none
:
what
a
100
pound
?
Maist.
Gal.
Sweet
Pru
be
calme
,
the
Gentleman
offers
thus
,
If
I
will
make
the
monyes
that
are
past
A
100
pound
,
he
will
discharge
all
courts
,
And
giue
his
bond
neuer
to
vexe
vs
more
.
Mist.
Gal.
A
100
pound
?
'Las
;
take
sir
but
threescore
,
Do
you
seeke
my
vndoing
?
Lax.
I
'le
not
bate
one
sixpence
,
�
I
'le
mall
you
pusse
for
spitting
.
Mist.
Gal.
Do
thy
worst
,
Will
fourescore
stop
thy
mouth
?
Lax.
No
.
Mist.
Gal.
Y'
are
a
slaue
,
Thou
Cheate
,
I
'le
now
teare
mony
from
thy
throat
,
Husband
lay
hold
on
yonder
tauny-coate
.
Greene.
Nay
Gentlemen
,
seeing
your
woemen
are
so
hote
,
I
must
loose
my
haire
in
their
company
I
see
.
Mist.
Ope.
His
haire
sheds
off
,
and
yet
he
speaks
not
so
much
in
the
nose
as
he
did
before
.
Gosh.
He
has
had
the
better
Chirurgion
,
Maister
Greenewit
,
is
your
wit
so
raw
as
to
play
no
better
a
part
then
a
Somners
?
Maist.
Gal.
I
pray
who
playes
a
knacke
to
know
an
honest
man
in
this
company
?
Mist.
Gall.
Deere
husband
,
pardon
me
,
I
did
dissemble
,
Told
thee
I
was
his
precontracted
wife
,
When
letters
came
from
him
for
thirty
pound
,
I
had
no
shift
but
that
.
Maist.
Gal.
A
very
cleane
shift
:
but
able
to
make
mee
lowsy
,
On
.
Mist.
Gal.
Husband
,
I
pluck'd
(
when
he
had
tempted
mee
to
thinke
well
of
him
)
Get
fethers
from
thy
wings
,
to
make
him
flie
more
lofty
.
Maist.
Gall.
A'
the
top
of
you
wife
:
on
.
Mist.
Gal.
He
hauing
wasted
them
,
comes
now
for
more
,
Vsing
me
as
a
ruffian
doth
his
whore
,
Whose
sinne
keepes
him
in
breath
:
by
heauen
I
vow
,
Thy
bed
he
neuer
wrong'd
,
more
then
he
does
now
.
Maist.
Gal.
My
bed
?
ha
,
ha
,
like
enough
,
a
shop-boord
will
serue
to
haue
a
cuckolds
coate
cut
out
vpon
:
of
that
wee
'l
talke
hereafter
:
y'
are
a
villaine
.
Lax.
Heare
mee
but
speake
sir
,
you
shall
finde
mee
none
.
Omnes
Pray
sir
,
be
patient
and
heare
him
.
Maist.
Gal.
I
am
muzzled
for
biting
sir
,
vse
me
how
you
will
.
Lax.
The
first
howre
that
your
wife
was
in
my
eye
,
My selfe
with
other
Gentlemen
sitting
by
,
(
In
your
shop
)
tasting
smoake
,
and
speech
beng
vsed
,
That
men
who
haue
fairest
wiues
are
most
abused
,
And
hardly
scapt
the
horne
,
your
wife
maintain'd
That
onely
such
spots
in
Citty
dames
were
stain'd
,
Iustly
,
but
by
mens
slanders
:
for
her
owne
part
,
Shee
vow'd
that
you
had
so
much
of
her
heart
;
No
man
by
all
his
wit
,
by
any
wile
,
Neuer
so
fine
spunne
,
should
your selfe
be
guile
,
Of
what
in
her
was
yours
.
Maist.
Gal.
Yet
Pru
't
is
well
:
play
out
your
game
at
Irish
sir
:
Who
winnes
?
Mist.
Open.
The
triall
is
when
shee
comes
to
bearing
:
Lax.
I
scorn'd
one
woman
,
thus
,
should
braue
all
men
,
And
(
which
more
vext
me
)
a
shee-citizen
.
Therefore
I
laid
siege
to
her
,
out
she
held
,
Gaue
many
a
braue
repulse
,
and
me
compel'd
With
shame
to
sound
retrait
to
my
hot
lust
,
Then
seeing
all
base
desires
rak'd
vp
in
dust
,
And
that
to
tempt
her
modest
eares
,
I
swore
Nere
to
presume
againe
:
she
said
,
her
eie
Would
euer
giue
me
welcome
honestly
,
And
(
since
I
was
a
Gentlman
)
if
it
runne
low
,
Shee
would
my
state
relieue
,
not
to
o'rethrow
Your
owne
and
hers
:
did
so
;
then
seeing
I
wrought
Vpon
her
meekenesse
,
mee
she
set
at
nought
,
And
yet
to
try
if
I
could
turne
that
tide
,
You
see
what
streame
I
stroue
with
,
but
sir
I
sweare
By
heauen
,
and
by
those
hopes
men
lay
vp
there
,
I
neither
haue
,
nor
had
a
base
intent
To
wrong
your
bed
,
what
's
done
,
is
meriment
:
Your
Gold
I
pay
backe
with
this
interest
,
When
I
had
most
power
to
do
't
I
wrong'd
you
least
.
Maist.
Gal.
If
this
no
gullery
be
sir
,
Omnes
No
,
no
,
on
my
life
,
Maist.
Gal.
Then
sir
I
am
beholden
(
not
to
you
wife
)
But
Maister
Laxton
to
your
want
of
doing
ill
,
Which
it
seemes
you
haue
not
Gentlemen
,
Tarry
and
dine
here
all
.
Maist.
Open.
Brother
,
we
haue
a
iest
,
As
good
as
yours
to
furnish
out
a
feast
.
Maist.
Gal.
Wee
'l
crowne
our
table
with
it
:
wife
brag
no
more
,
Of
holding
out
:
who
most
brags
is
most
whore
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Iacke
Dapper
,
Moll
,
Sir
Beautious
Ganymed
,
and
Sir
Thomas
Long
.
Iacke
Dap.
But
prethee
Maister
Captaine
Iacke
be
plaine
and
perspicuous
with
mee
;
was
it
your
Megge
of
Westminsters
courage
,
that
rescued
mee
from
the
Poultry
puttockes
indeed
.
Mol.
The
valour
of
my
wit
I
ensure
you
sir
fetcht
you
off
brauely
,
when
you
werre
i'
the
forlorne
hope
among
those
desperates
,
Sir
Bewtious
Ganymed
here
,
and
sir
Thomas
Long
heard
that
cuckoe
(
my
man
Trapdore
)
sing
the
note
of
your
ransome
from
captiuty
.
Sir
Bewt.
Vds
so
Mol
,
where
's
that
Trapdore
?
Mol.
Hang'd
I
thinke
by
this
time
,
a
Iustice
in
this
towne
,
(
that
speakes
nothing
but
make
a
Mittimus
a
way
with
him
to
Newgate
)
vsed
that
rogue
like
a
fire-worke
to
run
vpon
a
line
betwixt
him
and
me
.
Omnes
how
,
how
?
Mol.
Marry
to
lay
traines
of
villany
to
blow
vp
my
life
;
I
smelt
the
powder
,
spy'd
what
linstocke
gaue
fire
to
shoote
against
the
poore
Captaine
of
the
Gallifoyst
,
&
away
slid
I
my
man
,
like
a
shouell-board
shilling
,
hee
stroutes
vp
and
downe
the
suburbes
I
thinke
:
and
eates
vp
whores
:
feedes
vpon
a
bauds
garbadg
.
T.
Long
.
Sirra
Iacke
Dapper
.
Iac
,
Dap.
What
sai'st
Tom
Long
?
T.
Long
.
Thou
hadst
a
sweet
fac't
boy
haile
fellow
with
thee
to
your
little
Gull
:
how
is
he
spent
?
Iack.
Dap.
Troth
I
whistled
the
poore
little
buzzard
of
a
my
fist
,
because
when
hee
wayted
vpon
mee
at
the
ordinaries
,
the
gallants
hit
me
i'
the
teeth
still
,
and
said
I
lookt
like
a
painted
Aldermans
tomb
,
and
the
boy
at
my
elbow
like
a
deaths
head
.
Sirra
Iacke
,
Mol
.
Mol.
What
saies
my
little
Dapper
?
Sir
Bewt.
Come
,
come
,
walke
and
talke
,
walke
and
talke
.
Iack.
Dap.
Mol
and
I
'le
be
i'
the
midst
.
Mol.
These
Knights
shall
haue
squiers
places
belike
then
:
well
Dapper
what
say
y
ou
?
Iack.
Dap.
Sirra
Captaine
mad
Mary
,
the
gull
my
owne
father
(
Dapper
)
Sir
Dauy
)
laid
these
London
boote-halers
the
catch
poles
in
ambush
to
set
vpon
mee
.
Omnes
Your
father
?
away
Iacke
.
Iack.
Dap.
By
the
tassels
of
this
handkercher
't
is
true
,
and
what
was
his
warlicke
stratageme
thinke
you
?
hee
thought
because
a
wicker
cage
tames
a
nightingale
,
a
lowsy
prison
could
make
an
asse
of
mee
.
Omnes
A
nasty
plot
.
Iack.
Dap.
I
;
as
though
a
Counter
,
which
is
a
parke
,
in
which
all
the
wilde
beasts
of
the
Citty
run
head
by
head
could
tame
mee
.
Enter
the
Lord
Noland
.
Moll
.
Yonder
comes
my
Lord
Noland
.
Omnes
Saue
you
my
Lord
.
L.
Nol.
Well
met
Gentlemen
all
,
good
Sir
Bewtious
Ganymed
,
Sir
Thomas
Long
?
,
and
how
does
Maister
Dapper
?
Iack.
Dap.
Thankes
my
Lord
.
Mol.
No
Tobacco
my
Lord
?
L.
Nol
No
faith
Iacke
.
Iack.
Dap.
My
Lord
Noland
will
you
goe
to
Pimlico
with
vs
?
wee
are
making
a
boone
voyage
to
that
happy
land
of
spice-cakes
L.
Nol.
Heere
's
such
a
merry
ging
,
I
could
find
in
my
heart
to
saile
to
the
worlds
end
with
such
company
,
come
Gentlemen
let
's
on
.
Iack.
Dap.
Here
's
most
amorous
weather
my
Lord
.
Omnes
Amorous
weather
.
They
walke
.
Iac.
Dap.
Is
not
amorous
a
good
word
?
Enter
Trapdore
like
a
poore
Souldier
with
a
patch
o're
one
eie
,
and
Teare-Cat
with
him
,
all
tatters
.
Trap.
Shall
we
set
vpon
the
infantry
,
these
troopes
of
foot
?
Zounds
yonder
comes
Mol
my
whoorish
Maister
&
Mistresse
,
would
I
had
her
kidneys
betweene
my
teeth
.
Tear-Cat
.
I
had
rather
haue
a
cow
heele
.
Trap.
Zounds
I
am
so
patcht
vp
,
she
cannot
discouer
mee
:
wee
'l
on
.
T.
Cat.
Alla
corago
then
.
Trap.
Good
your
Honours
,
and
Worships
,
enlarge
the
eares
of
commiseration
,
and
let
the
sound
of
a
hoarse
military
organ-pipe
,
penetrate
your
pittiful
bowels
to
extract
out
of
them
so
many
small
drops
of
siluer
,
as
may
giue
a
hard
strawbed
lodging
to
a
couple
of
maim'd
souldiers
.
Iacke
Dap.
Where
are
you
maim'd
?
T
Cat.
In
both
our
neather
limbs
.
Mol.
Come
,
come
,
Dapper
,
le
ts
giue
'em
something
,
las
poore
men
,
what
mony
haue
you
?
by
my
troth
I
loue
a
souldier
with
my
soule
.
Sir
Bewt.
Stay
,
stay
,
where
haue
you
seru'd
?
T.
Long
.
In
any
part
of
the
Low
countries
?
Trap.
Not
in
the
Low
countries
,
if
it
please
your
manhood
,
but
in
Hungarie
against
the
Turke
at
the
siedge
of
Belgrad
.
L.
Nol.
Who
seru'd
there
with
you
sirra
?
Trap.
Many
Hungarians
,
Moldauians
,
Valachians
,
and
Transiluanians
,
with
some
Sclauonians
,
and
retyring
home
sir
,
the
Venetian
Gallies
tooke
vs
prisoners
,
yet
free'd
vs
,
and
suffered
vs
to
beg
vp
and
downe
the
country
.
Iack.
Dap.
You
haue
ambled
all
ouer
Italy
then
.
Trap.
Oh
sir
,
from
Venice
to
Roma
,
Uecchio
,
Bononia
,
Romania
,
Bolonia
,
Modena
,
Piacenza
,
and
Tuscana
,
with
all
her
Cities
,
as
Pistoia
,
Valteria
,
Mountepulchena
,
Arrezzo
,
with
the
Siennois
,
and
diuerse
others
.
Mol.
Meere
rogues
,
put
spurres
to
'em
once
more
.
Iack.
Dap.
Thou
look'st
like
a
strange
creature
,
a
fat
butter-box
,
yet
speak'st
English
,
What
art
thou
?
T.
Cat.
Ick
mine
Here
.
Ick
bin
den
ruffling
Teare-Cat
.
Den
,
braue
Soldade
,
Ick
bin
dorick
all
Dutchlant
.
Gueresen
:
Der
Shellum
das
meere
Ine
Beasa
Ine
woert
gaeb
.
Ick
slaag
vin
stroakes
ou
tom
Cop
.
Dastick
Den
hundred
touzun
Diuell
halle
,
Frollick
miue
Here
.
Sir
Bewt.
Here
,
here
,
let
's
be
rid
of
their
iobbering
,
Moll
.
Not
a
crosse
Sir
Bewtiout
,
you
base
rogues
,
I
haue
taken
measure
of
you
,
better
then
a
taylor
can
,
and
I
'le
fit
you
,
as
you
(
monster
with
one
eie
)
haue
fitted
mee
,
Trap.
Your
Worship
will
not
abuse
a
souldier
.
Moll
.
Souldier
?
thou
deseru'st
to
bee
hang'd
vp
by
that
tongue
which
dishonours
so
noble
a
profession
,
souldier
you
skeldering
varlet
?
hold
,
stand
,
there
should
be
a
trapdore
here abouts
.
Pull
off
his
patch
Trap.
The
balles
of
these
glasiers
of
mine
(
mine
eyes
)
shall
be
shot
vp
and
downe
in
any
hot
peece
of
seruice
for
my
inuincible
Mistresse
.
Iacke
Dap.
I
did
not
thinke
there
had
bene
such
knauery
in
blacke
patches
as
now
I
see
.
Mol.
Oh
sir
he
hath
bene
brought
vp
in
the
I
le
of
dogges
,
and
can
both
fawne
like
a
Spaniell
,
and
bite
like
a
Mastiue
,
as
hee
finds
occasion
.
L.
Nol.
What
are
you
sirra
?
a
bird
of
this
feather
too
.
T.
Cat.
A
man
beaten
from
the
wars
sir
.
T.
Long
.
I
thinke
so
,
for
you
neuer
stood
to
fight
.
Iac.
Dap.
What
's
thy
name
fellow
souldier
?
T.
Cat.
I
am
cal'd
by
those
that
haue
seen
my
valour
,
Tear-Cat
.
Omnes
Teare-Cat
?
Moll
.
A
meere
whip-Iacke
,
and
that
is
in
the
Common-wealth
of
rogues
,
a
slaue
,
that
can
talke
of
sea-fight
,
name
all
your
chiefe
Pirats
,
discouer
more
countries
to
you
,
then
either
the
Dutch
,
Spanish
,
French
,
or
English
euer
found
out
,
yet
indeed
all
his
seruice
is
by
land
,
and
that
is
to
rob
a
Faire
,
or
some
such
venturous
exploit
;
Teare-Cat
,
foot
sirra
I
haue
your
name
now
I
remember
me
in
my
booke
of
horners
,
hornes
for
the
thumbe
,
you
know
how
.
T.
Cat.
No
indeed
Captaine
Mol
(
for
I
know
you
by
sight
)
I
am
no
such
nipping
Christian
,
but
a
maunderer
vpon
the
pad
I
confesse
,
and
meeting
with
honest
Trapdore
here
,
whom
you
had
cashierd
from
bearing
armes
,
out
at
elbowes
vnder
your
colours
,
I
instructed
him
in
the
rudements
of
roguery
,
and
by
my
map
made
him
saile
ouer
any
Country
you
can
name
,
so
that
now
he
can
maunder
better
then
my selfe
.
Iack.
Dap.
So
then
Trapdore
thou
art
turn'd
souldier
now
.
Trap.
Alas
sir
,
now
there
's
no
warres
,
't
is
the
safest
course
of
life
I
could
take
.
Mol.
I
hope
then
you
can
cant
,
for
by
your
cudgels
,
you
sirra
are
an
vpright
man
.
Trap.
As
any
walkes
the
hygh
way
I
assure
you
.
Mol.
And
Teare-Cat
what
are
you
?
a
wilde
rogue
,
an
angler
,
or
a
ruffler
?
T.
Cat.
Brother
to
this
vpright
man
,
flesh
and
bloud
,
ruffling
Teare-Cat
is
my
name
,
and
a
ruffler
is
my
stile
,
my
title
,
my
profession
.
Mol.
Sirra
where
's
your
Doxy
,
halt
not
with
mee
.
Omnes
Doxy
Mol
,
what
's
that
?
Mol.
His
wench
.
Trap.
My
doxy
I
haue
by
the
Salomon
a
doxy
,
that
carries
a
kitchin
mort
in
her
slat
at
her
backe
,
besides
my
dell
and
my
dainty
wilde
del
,
with
all
whom
I
'le
tumble
this
next
darkmans
in
the
strommel
,
and
drinke
ben
baufe
,
and
eate
a
fat
gruntling
cheate
,
a
cackling
cheate
,
and
a
quacking
cheate
.
Iack.
Dap.
Here
's
old
cheating
.
Trap.
My
doxy
stayes
for
me
in
a
bousing
ken
,
braue
Captaine
.
Mol.
Hee
sayes
his
wench
staies
for
him
in
an
alehouse
:
you
are
no
pure
rogues
.
T.
Cat.
Pure
rogues
?
no
,
wee
scorne
to
be
pure
rogues
,
but
if
you
come
to
our
lib
ken
,
or
our
stalling
ken
,
you
shall
finde
neither
him
nor
mee
,
a
quire
cuffin
.
Mol.
So
sir
,
no
churle
of
you
.
T.
Cat.
No
,
but
a
ben
caue
,
a
braue
caue
,
a
gentry
cuffin
.
L.
Nol.
Call
you
this
canting
?
Iack.
Dap.
Zounds
,
I
'le
giue
a
schoolemaister
halfe
a
crowne
a
week
,
and
teach
mee
this
pedlers
French
.
Trap.
Do
but
strowle
sir
,
halfe
a
haruest
with
vs
sir
,
and
you
shall
gabble
your
belly-full
.
Mol.
Come
you
rogue
cant
with
me
.
T.
Long
.
Well
sayd
Mol
,
cant
with
her
sirra
,
and
you
shall
haue
mony
,
else
not
a
penny
.
Trap.
I
'le
haue
a
bout
if
she
please
.
Mol.
Come
on
sirra
.
Trap.
Ben
mort
,
shall
you
and
I
heaue
a
booth
,
mill
a
ken
or
nip
a
bung
,
and
then
wee
'l
couch
a
hogshead
vnder
the
Ruffemans
,
and
there
you
shall
wap
with
me
,
&
I
le
niggle
with
you
.
Mol.
Out
you
damn'd
impudent
rascall
.
Trap.
Cut
benar
whiddes
,
and
hold
your
fambles
and
your
stampes
.
L
Nol.
Nay
,
nay
,
Mol
,
why
art
thou
angry
?
what
was
his
gibberish
?
Mol.
Marry
this
my
Lord
sayes
hee
;
Ben
mort
(
good
wench
)
shal
you
and
I
heaue
a
booth
,
mill
a
ken
,
or
nip
a
bung
?
shall
you
and
I
rob
a
house
,
or
cut
a
purse
?
Omnes
Very
Good
.
(
mans
:
Mol.
And
then
wee
'l
couch
a
hogshead
vnder
the
Ruffe
-
And
then
wee
'l
lie
vnder
a
hedge
.
Trap.
That
was
my
desire
Captaine
,
as
't
is
fit
a
souldier
should
lie
.
Mol.
And
there
you
shall
wap
with
mee
,
and
I
'le
niggle
with
you
,
and
that
's
all
.
Sir
Bewt.
Nay
,
nay
Mol
what
's
that
wap
?
Iack.
Dap.
Nay
teach
mee
what
niggling
is
,
I
'de
faine
bee
niggling
.
Mol.
Wapping
and
niggling
is
all
one
,
the
rogue
my
man
can
tell
you
.
Trap.
'T
is
fadoodling
:
if
it
please
you
.
Sir
Bewt.
This
is
excellent
,
one
fit
more
good
Moll
,
Mol.
Come
you
rogue
sing
with
me
.
A
gage
of
ben
Rom-bouse
In
a
bousing
ken
of
Rom-vile
.
T.
Cat.
Is
Benar
then
a
Caster
,
Pecke
,
pennam
,
lay
or
popler
,
Which
we
mill
in
deuse
a
vile
.
Oh
I
wud
lib
all
the
lightmans
.
The
song
.
Oh
I
woud
lib
all
the
darkemans
,
By
the
sollamon
vnder
the
Ruffemans
.
By
the
sollamon
in
the
Hartmans
.
T.
Cat.
And
scoure
the
Quire
cramp
ring
,
And
couch
till
a
pallyard
docked
my
dell
,
So
my
bousy
nab
might
skew
rome
bouse
well
Auast
to
the
pad
,
let
vs
bing
,
Auast
to
the
pad
,
let
vs
bing
.
Omnes
Fine
knaues
i'faith
.
Iack.
Dap.
The
grating
of
ten
new
cart-wheeles
,
and
the
gruntling
of
fiue
hundred
hogs
co�ming
from
Rumford
market
,
cannot
make
a
worse
noyse
then
this
canting
language
does
in
my
eares
;
pray
my
Lord
Noland
,
let
's
giue
these
souldiers
their
pay
.
Sir
Bewt.
Agreed
,
and
let
them
march
.
L.
Nol.
Heere
Mol
.
Mol.
Now
I
see
that
you
are
stal'd
to
the
rogue
,
and
are
not
ashamed
of
your
professions
,
looke
you
:
my
Lord
Noland
heere
and
these
Gentlemen
,
bestowes
vpon
you
two
,
two
boordes
and
a
halfe
,
that
's
two
shillings
sixe
pence
.
Trap.
Thankes
to
your
Lordship
.
T.
Cat.
Thankes
heroicall
Captaine
.
Mol.
Away
.
Trap.
Wee
shall
cut
ben
whiddes
of
your
Maisters
and
Mistreship
,
wheresoeuer
we
come
.
Moll
.
You
'l
maintaine
sirra
the
old
Iustices
plot
to
his
face
.
Trap.
Else
trine
me
on
the
cheats
:
hang
me
.
Mol.
Be
sure
you
meete
mee
there
.
Trap.
Without
any
more
maundring
I
'le
doo
't
,
follow
braue
Tear-Cat
.
Exeunt
they
two
manet
the
rest
.
T.
Cat.
I
prae
,
sequor
,
let
vs
go
mouse
.
L.
Nol.
Mol
what
was
in
that
canting
song
?
(
onely
milke
Mol.
Troth
my
Lord
,
onely
a
praise
of
good
drinke
,
the
Which
these
wilde
beasts
loue
to
sucke
,
and
thus
it
was
:
A
rich
cup
of
wine
,
oh
it
is
iuyce
Diuine
,
More
wholesome
for
the
head
,
:
hen
meate
,
drinke
,
or
bread
,
To
fill
my
drunken
pate
,
with
that
,
I
'de
sit
vp
late
,
By
the
heeles
wou'd
I
lie
,
vnder
a
lowsy
hedge
die
,
Let
a
slaue
haue
a
pull
at
my
whore
,
so
I
be
full
Of
that
precious
liquor
;
And
a
parcell
of
such
stuffe
my
Lord
Not
worth
the
opening
.
Enter
a
Cutpurse
very
gallant
,
with
foure
or
fiue
men
after
him
,
one
with
a
wand
.
L.
Nol.
What
gallant
comes
yonder
?
T.
Long
.
Masse
I
thinke
I
know
him
,
't
is
one
of
Cumberland
.
1
Cut.
Shall
we
venture
to
shuffle
in
amongst
yon
heap
of
Gallants
,
and
strike
?
2
Cut.
'T
is
a
question
whether
there
bee
any
siluer
shels
amongst
them
,
for
all
their
sattin
outsides
.
Omnes
Let
's
try
?
Mol.
Pox
on
him
,
a
gallant
?
shaddow
mee
,
I
know
him
:
't
is
one
that
cumbers
the
land
indeed
;
if
hee
swimme
neere
to
the
shore
of
any
of
your
pockets
,
looke
to
your
purses
.
Omnes
Is
't
possible
?
Mol.
This
braue
fellow
is
no
better
then
a
foyst
.
Omnes
.
Foyst
,
what
's
that
?
Mol.
A
diuer
with
two
fingers
,
a
picke-pocket
;
all
his
traine
study
the
figging
law
,
that
's
to
say
;
cutting
of
purses
and
foysting
;
one
of
them
is
a
nip
,
I
tooke
him
once
i'
the
twopenny
gallery
at
the
Fortune
;
then
there
's
a
cloyer
,
or
snap
,
that
dogges
any
new
brother
in
that
trade
,
and
snappes
will
haue
halfe
in
any
booty
;
Hee
with
the
wand
is
both
a
stale
,
whose
office
is
,
to
face
a
man
i'
the
streetes
,
whil'st
shels
are
drawne
by
an other
,
and
then
with
his
blacke
coniuring
rod
in
his
hand
,
he
by
the
nimblenesse
of
his
eye
and
iugling
sticke
,
will
in
cheaping
a
peece
of
plate
at
a
goldsmithes
stall
,
make
foure
or
fiue
ringes
mount
from
the
top
of
his
caduceus
,
and
as
if
it
were
at
leape-frog
,
they
skip
into
his
hand
presently
.
2.
Cut.
Zounds
wee
are
smoakt
.
Omnes
.
Ha
?
2.
Cut.
Wee
are
boyl'd
,
pox
on
her
;
see
Moll
the
roaring
drabbe
.
1.
Cut.
All
the
diseases
of
sixteene
hospitals
boyle
her
:
away
.
Mol.
Blesse
you
sir
.
1.
Cut.
And
you
good
sir
.
Mol.
Do'st
not
ken
mee
man
?
1.
Cut.
No
trust
mee
sir
.
Mol.
Heart
,
there
's
a
Knight
to
whom
I
'me
bound
for
many
fauours
,
lost
his
purse
at
the
last
new
play
i'
the
Swanne
,
seuen
Angels
in
't
,
make
it
good
you
'r
best
;
do
you
see
?
no
more
.
1.
Cut.
A
Sinagogue
shall
be
cal'd
Mistresse
Mary
,
disgrace
mee
not
;
pacus
palabros
,
I
will
coniure
for
you
,
farewell
:
Mol.
Did
not
I
tell
you
my
Lord
?
L.
Nol.
I
wonder
how
thou
cam'st
to
the
knowledge
of
these
nasty
villaines
.
T.
Long
.
And
why
doe
the
foule
mouthes
of
the
world
call
thee
Mol
cutpursse
?
a
name
,
me thinkes
,
damn'd
and
odious
.
Mol.
Dare
any
step
forth
to
my
face
and
say
,
I
haue
tane
thee
doing
so
Mol
?
I
must
confesse
,
In
younger
dayes
,
when
I
was
apt
to
stray
,
I
haue
sat
amongst
such
adders
;
seene
their
stings
,
As
any
here
might
,
and
in
full
play-houses
Watcht
their
quicke-diuing
hands
,
to
bring
to
shame
Such
rogues
,
and
in
that
streame
met
an
ill
name
:
When
next
my
Lord
you
spie
any
one
of
those
,
So
hee
bee
in
his
Art
a
scholler
,
question
him
,
Tempt
him
with
gold
to
open
the
large
booke
Of
his
close
villanies
:
and
you
your selfe
shall
cant
Better
then
poore
Mol
can
,
and
know
more
lawes
Of
cheaters
,
lifters
,
nips
,
foysts
,
puggards
,
curbers
,
Withall
the
diuels
blacke
guard
,
then
it
is
fit
Should
be
discouered
to
a
noble
wit
.
I
know
they
haue
their
orders
,
offices
,
Circuits
and
circles
,
vnto
which
they
are
bound
,
To
raise
their
owne
damnation
in
.
Iack.
Dap.
How
do'st
thou
know
it
?
Moll
.
As
you
do
,
I
shew
it
you
,
they
to
me
show
it
.
Suppose
my
Lord
you
were
in
Venice
.
L.
Nol.
Well
.
Mol.
If
some
Italian
pander
there
would
tell
All
the
close
trickes
of
curtizans
;
would
not
you
Hearken
to
such
a
fellow
?
L.
Nol.
Yes
.
Mol.
And
here
,
Being
come
from
Uenice
,
to
a
friend
most
deare
That
were
to
trauell
thither
,
you
would
proclaime
Your
knowledge
in
those
villanies
,
to
saue
Your
friend
from
their
quicke
danger
:
must
you
haue
A
blacke
ill
name
,
because
ill
things
you
know
,
Good
troth
my
Lord
,
I
am
made
Mol
cut
purse
so
.
How
many
are
whores
,
in
small
ruffes
and
still
lookes
?
How
many
chast
,
whose
names
fill
slanders
bookes
?
Were
all
men
cuckolds
,
whom
gallants
in
their
scornes
Cal
so
,
we
should
not
walke
for
goring
hornes
,
Perhaps
for
my
madde
going
some
reproue
mee
,
I
please
my selfe
,
and
care
not
else
who
loues
mee
.
Omnes
A
braue
minde
Mol
i'faith
.
T.
Long
.
Come
my
Lord
,
shal
's
to
the
Ordinary
?
L.
Nol.
I
,
't
is
noone
sure
.
(
or
to
the
world
:
Mol.
Good
my
Lord
,
let
not
my
name
condemne
me
to
you
A
fencer
I
hope
may
be
cal'd
a
coward
,
is
he
so
for
that
?
If
all
that
haue
ill
names
in
London
,
were
to
be
whipt
,
(
ther
And
to
pay
but
twelue
pence
a
peece
to
the
beadle
,
I
would
ra
-
Haue
his
office
,
then
a
Constables
.
Iack.
Dap.
So
would
I
Captaine
Moll
:
't
were
a
sweete
tickling
office
i'faith
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Sir
Alexander
Wengraue
,
Goshawke
and
Greenewit
,
and
others
.
Alex.
My
sonne
marry
a
theefe
,
that
impudent
girle
,
Whom
all
the
world
sticke
their
worst
eyes
vpon
?
Greene.
How
will
your
care
preuent
it
?
Gosh.
'T
is
impossible
.
They
marry
close
,
thei
'r
gone
,
but
none
knowes
whether
.
Alex.
Oh
Gentlemen
,
when
ha's
a
fathers
heart-strings
Enter
a
seruant
.
Held
out
so
long
from
breaking
:
now
what
newes
sir
?
Seruant
.
They
were
met
vppo'
th
water
an
houre
since
,
sir
,
Putting
in
towards
the
Sluce
.
Alex.
The
Sluce
?
come
Gentlemen
,
'T
is
Lambith
workes
against
vs
.
Greene.
And
that
Lambith
,
ioynes
more
mad
matches
,
then
your
sixe
wet
townes
,
twixt
that
and
Windsor-bridge
,
where
fares
lye
soaking
.
Alex.
Delay
no
time
sweete
Gentlemen
:
to
Blacke
Fryars
,
Wee
'l
take
a
paire
of
Oares
and
make
after
'em
.
Enter
Trapdore
.
Trap.
Your
sonne
,
and
that
bold
masculine
rampe
My
mistresse
,
are
landed
now
at
Tower
.
Alex.
Hoyda
,
at
Tower
?
Trap.
I
heard
it
now
reported
.
Alex.
Which
way
Gentlemen
shall
I
bestow
my
care
?
I
'me
drawne
in
peeces
betwixt
deceipt
and
shame
.
Enter
sir
Fitz-Allard
.
Fitz-Alla.
Sir
Alexander
.
You
'r
well
met
,
and
most
rightly
serued
,
My
daughter
was
a
scorne
to
you
.
Alex.
Say
not
so
fir
.
Fitz-All.
A
very
abiect
,
shee
poore
Gentlewoman
,
Your
house
had
bene
dishonoured
.
Giue
you
ioy
sir
,
Of
your
sons
Gaskoyne-Bride
,
you
'l
be
a
Grandfather
shortly
To
a
fine
crew
of
roaring
sonnes
and
daughters
,
'T
will
helpe
to
stocke
the
suburbes
passing
well
sir
.
Alex.
O
play
not
with
the
miseries
of
my
heart
,
Wounds
should
be
drest
and
heal'd
,
not
vext
,
or
left
Wide
open
,
to
the
anguish
of
the
patient
,
And
scornefull
aire
let
in
:
rather
let
pitty
And
aduise
charitably
helpe
to
refresh
'em
.
Fitz-All.
who
'd
place
his
charity
so
vnworthily
.
Like
one
that
giues
almes
to
a
cursing
beggar
,
Had
I
but
found
one
sparke
of
goodnesse
in
you
Toward
my
deseruing
child
,
which
then
grew
fond
Of
your
sonnes
vertues
,
I
had
cased
you
now
.
But
I
perceiue
both
fire
of
youth
and
goodnesse
,
Are
rak'd
vp
in
the
ashes
of
your
age
,
Else
no
such
shame
should
haue
come
neere
your
house
,
Nor
such
ignoble
sorrowe
touch
your
heart
,
Alex.
If
not
for
worth
,
for
pitties
sake
assist
mee
.
Greene.
You
vrge
a
thing
past
sense
,
how
can
he
helpe
you
?
All
his
assistance
is
as
fraile
as
ours
,
Full
as
vncertaine
,
where
's
the
place
that
holds
'em
?
One
brings
vs
water-newes
;
then
comes
an other
With
a
full
charg'd
mouth
,
like
a
culuerins
voyce
,
And
he
reports
the
Tower
;
whose
sounds
are
truest
?
Gosh.
In
vaine
you
flatter
him
sir
Alexander
.
Fitz-All.
I
flatter
him
,
Gentlemen
you
wrong
mee
grosly
.
Greene,
Hee
doe's
it
well
i'faith
.
Fitz-All.
Both
newes
are
false
,
Of
Tower
or
water
:
they
tooke
no
such
way
yet
.
(
plundges
?
Alex.
Oh
strange
:
heare
you
this
Gentlemen
,
yet
more
Fiz-Alla.
Th'
are
neerer
then
you
thinke
for
yet
more
close
,
then
if
they
were
further
off
.
Alex.
How
am
I
lost
in
these
distractions
?
Fitz-Alla.
For
your
speeches
Gentlemen
,
In
taxing
me
for
rashnesse
;
fore
you
all
,
I
will
engage
my
state
to
halfe
his
wealth
,
Nay
to
his
sonnes
reuenewes
,
which
are
lesse
,
And
yet
nothing
at
all
,
till
they
come
from
him
;
That
I
could
(
if
my
will
stucke
to
my
power
)
,
Preuent
this
mariage
yet
,
nay
banish
her
For
euer
from
his
thoughts
,
much
more
his
armes
.
Alex.
Slacke
not
this
goodnesse
,
though
you
heap
vpon
me
Mountaines
of
malice
and
reuenge
hereafter
:
I
'de
willingly
resigne
vp
halfe
my
state
to
him
,
So
he
would
marry
the
meanest
drudge
I
hire
.
Greene.
Hee
talkes
impossibilites
,
and
you
beleeue
'em
.
Fitz-Alla.
I
talke
no
more
,
then
I
know
how
to
finish
,
My
fortunes
else
are
his
that
dares
stake
with
me
,
The
poore
young
Gentleman
I
loue
and
pitty
:
And
to
keepe
shame
from
him
,
(
because
the
spring
Of
his
affection
was
my
daughters
first
,
Till
his
frowne
blasted
all
,
)
do
but
estate
him
In
those
possessions
,
which
your
loue
and
care
Once
pointed
out
for
him
,
that
he
may
haue
roome
,
To
entertaine
fortunes
of
noble
birth
,
Where
now
his
desperate
wants
casts
him
vpon
her
:
And
if
I
do
not
for
his
owne
sake
chiefly
,
Rid
him
of
this
disease
,
that
now
growes
on
him
,
I
'le
forfeit
my
whole
state
,
before
these
Gentlemen
.
Greene.
Troth
but
you
shall
not
vndertake
such
matches
,
Wee
'l
perswade
so
much
with
you
.
Alex.
Heere
's
my
ring
,
He
will
beleeue
this
token
:
fore
these
Gentlemen
,
I
will
confirme
it
fully
:
all
those
lands
,
My
first
loue
lotted
him
,
he
shall
straight
possesse
In
that
refusall
.
Fitz-All.
If
I
change
it
not
,
change
mee
into
a
beggar
.
Green.
Are
you
mad
sir
?
Fitz-All.
'T
is
done
.
Gosh.
Will
you
vndoe
your selfe
by
doing
,
And
shewe
a
prodigall
tricke
in
your
old
daies
?
Alex.
'T
is
a
match
Gentlemen
.
Fitz-All.
I
,
I
,
sir
I
.
I
akse
no
fauour
;
trust
to
you
for
none
,
My
hope
rests
in
the
goodnesse
of
your
son
.
Exit
Fitz-Allard
.
Greene.
Hee
holds
it
vp
well
yet
.
Gosh.
Of
an
old
knight
i'faith
.
Alex.
Curst
be
the
time
,
I
laid
his
first
loue
barren
,
Wilfully
barren
,
that
before
this
houre
Had
sprung
forth
friutes
,
of
comfort
and
of
honour
;
He
lou'd
a
vertuous
Gentlewoman
.
Enter
Moll
.
Gosh.
Life
,
heere
's
Mol
.
Green.
Iack
.
Gosh.
How
dost
thou
Iacke
?
Mol.
How
dost
thou
Gallant
?
Alex.
Impudence
,
where
's
my
sonne
?
Moll
.
Weakensse
,
go
looke
him
.
Alex.
Is
this
your
wedding
gowne
?
Mol.
The
man
talkes
monthly
:
Hot
broth
and
a
darke
chamber
for
the
knight
,
I
see
hee
'l
be
starke
mad
at
our
next
meeting
.
Exit
Moll
Gosh.
Why
sir
,
take
comfort
now
,
there
's
no
such
matter
,
No
Priest
will
marry
her
,
sir
,
for
a
woman
,
Whiles
that
shape
's
on
,
and
it
was
neuer
knowne
,
Two
men
were
married
and
conioyn'd
in
one
:
Your
sonne
hath
made
some
shift
to
loue
another
.
Alex.
What ere
'
she
be
,
she
has
my
blessing
with
her
,
May
they
be
rich
,
and
fruitfull
,
and
receiue
Like
comfort
to
their
issue
,
as
I
take
in
them
,
Ha's
pleas'd
me
now
,
marrying
not
this
,
Through
a
whole
world
he
could
not
chuse
amisse
.
Green.
Glad
y'
are
so
penitent
,
for
your
former
sinne
sir
.
Gosh.
Say
he
should
take
a
wench
with
her
smocke-dowry
,
No
portion
with
her
,
but
her
lips
and
armes
?
Alex.
Why
?
who
thriue
better
sir
?
they
haue
most
blessing
,
Though
other
haue
more
wealth
,
and
least
repent
,
Many
that
want
most
,
know
the
most
content
.
Greene.
Say
he
should
marry
a
kind
youthfull
sinner
.
Alex.
Age
will
quench
that
,
any
offence
but
theft
and
drunkennesse
Nothing
but
death
can
wipe
away
.
,
There
sinnes
are
greene
,
euen
when
there
heads
are
gray
,
Nay
I
dispaire
not
now
,
my
heart
's
cheer'd
Gentlemen
,
No
face
can
come
vnfortunately
to
me
,
Now
sir
,
your
newes
?
Enter
a
seruant
.
Seruant
.
Your
sonne
with
his
faire
Bride
is
neere
at
hand
,
Alex.
Faire
may
their
fortunes
be
.
Green.
Now
you
'r
resolu'd
sir
,
it
was
neuer
she
,
Alex.
I
finde
it
in
the
musicke
of
my
heart
,
Enter
Mol
maskt
,
in
Sebastians
hand
,
and
Fitz-Allard
.
See
where
they
come
.
Gosh.
A
proper
lusty
presence
sir
.
Alex.
Now
has
he
pleas'd
me
right
,
I
alwaies
counseld
him
To
choose
a
goodly
personable
creature
,
Iust
of
her
pitch
was
my
first
wife
his
mother
.
Seb.
Before
I
dare
discouer
my
offence
,
I
kneele
for
pardon
.
Alex
;
My
heart
gaue
it
thee
,
before
thy
tongue
could
aske
it
,
Rise
,
thou
hast
rais'd
my
ioy
to
greater
height
.
Then
to
that
seat
where
griefe
deiected
it
,
Both
welcome
to
my
loue
,
and
care
for
euer
,
Hide
not
my
happinesse
too
long
,
al
's
pardoned
,
Here
are
our
friends
,
salute
her
,
Gentlemen
.
They
vnmaske
her
.
Omnes
.
Heart
,
who
this
Mol
?
Alex.
O
my
reuiuing
shame
,
is
't
I
must
liue
,
To
be
strucke
blind
,
be
it
the
worke
of
sorrow
,
Before
age
take
't
in
hand
.
Fitz-All.
Darkenesse
and
death
.
Haue
you
deceau'd
mee
thus
?
did
I
engage
My
whole
estate
for
this
.
Alex.
You
askt
no
fauour
,
And
you
shall
finde
as
little
,
since
my
comforts
,
Play
false
with
me
,
I
'le
be
as
cruell
to
thee
As
griefe
to
fathers
hearts
.
Mol.
Why
what
's
the
matter
with
you
?
Lesse
too
much
ioy
,
should
make
your
age
forgetfull
,
Are
you
too
well
,
too
happy
?
Alex.
With
a
vengeance
.
Mol.
Me thinkes
you
should
be
proud
of
such
a
daughter
,
As
good
a
man
,
as
your
sonne
.
Alex.
O
monstrous
impudence
.
Mol.
You
had
no
note
before
,
an
vnmarkt
Kinght
,
Now
all
the
towne
will
take
regard
on
you
,
And
all
your
enemies
feare
you
for
my
sake
,
You
may
passe
where
you
list
,
through
crowdes
most
thicke
,
And
come
of
brauely
with
your
pursse
vnpickt
,
You
do
not
know
the
benefits
I
bring
with
mee
,
No
cheate
dares
worke
vpon
you
,
with
thumbe
or
knife
,
While
y
'aue
a
roaring
girle
to
your
sonnes
wife
.
Alex.
A
diuell
rampant
.
Fitz-Alla.
Haue
you
so
much
charity
?
Yet
to
release
mee
of
my
last
rash
bargaine
,
And
I
'le
giue
in
your
pledge
.
Alex.
No
sir
,
I
stand
to
't
,
I
'le
worke
vpon
aduantage
,
As
all
mischiefes
do
vpon
mee
.
Aitz-All.
Content
,
beare
witnesse
all
then
His
are
the
lands
,
and
so
contention
ends
.
Here
comes
your
sonnes
Bride
,
twixt
two
noble
friends
.
Enter
the
Lord
Noland
,
and
Sir
Bewtious
Ganymed
,
with
Mary
Fitz-Allard
betweene
them
,
the
Cittizens
and
their
wiues
with
them
.
Mol.
Now
are
you
gull'd
as
you
would
be
,
thanke
me
for
't
,
I
'de
a
fore-singer
in
't
.
Seb.
Forgiue
mee
father
,
Though
there
before
your
eyes
my
sorrow
fain'd
,
This
still
was
shee
,
for
whom
true
loue
complain'd
.
Alex.
Blessings
eternall
,
and
the
ioyes
of
Angels
,
Beginne
your
peace
heere
,
to
be
sign'd
in
heauen
,
How
short
my
sleepe
of
sorrow
seemes
now
to
me
,
To
this
eternity
of
boundlesse
comforts
,
That
finds
no
want
but
vtterance
,
and
expression
.
My
Lord
your
office
heere
appeares
so
honourably
:
So
full
of
ancient
goodnesse
,
grace
,
and
worthinesse
,
I
neuer
tooke
more
ioy
in
sight
of
man
,
Then
in
your
comfortable
presence
now
.
L.
Nol.
Nor
I
more
delight
in
doing
grace
to
vertue
,
Then
in
this
worthy
Gentlewoman
,
your
sonnes
Bride
,
Noble
Fitz-Alards
daughter
,
to
whose
honour
And
modest
fame
,
I
am
a
seruant
vow'd
,
So
is
this
Knight
.
Alex.
Your
loues
make
my
ioyes
proud
,
Bring
foorth
those
deeds
of
land
,
my
care
layd
ready
,
And
which
,
old
knight
,
thy
noblenesse
may
challenge
,
Ioyn'd
with
thy
daughters
vertues
,
whom
I
prise
now
,
As
deerely
as
that
flesh
,
I
call
myne
owne
.
Forgiue
me
worthy
Gentlewoman
,
't
was
my
blindnesse
When
I
reiected
thee
,
I
saw
thee
not
,
Sorrow
and
wilfull
rashnesse
grew
like
filmes
Ouer
the
eyes
of
iudgement
,
now
so
cleere
I
see
the
brightnesse
of
thy
worth
appeare
.
Mary
.
Duty
and
loue
may
I
deserue
in
those
,
And
all
my
wishes
haue
a
perfect
close
,
Alex.
That
tongue
can
neuer
erre
,
the
sound
's
so
sweete
,
Here
honest
sonne
,
receiue
into
thy
hands
,
The
keyes
of
wealth
,
possession
of
those
lands
,
Which
my
first
care
prouided
,
thei
'r
thine
owne
,
Heauen
giue
thee
a
blessing
with
'em
,
the
best
ioyes
,
That
can
in
worldly
shapes
to
man
betide
,
Are
fertill
lands
,
and
a
faire
fruitfull
Bride
,
Of
which
I
hope
thou'
rt
sped
.
Seb.
I
hope
so
too
sir
.
Mol.
Father
and
sonne
,
I
ha'
done
you
simple
seruice
here
,
Seb.
For
which
thou
shalt
not
part
Moll
vnrequited
.
Alex.
Thou
art
a
madd
girle
,
and
yet
I
cannot
now
condemne
thee
.
Mol.
Condemne
mee
?
troth
and
you
should
sir
,
I
'de
make
you
seeke
out
one
to
hang
in
my
roome
,
I
'de
giue
you
the
slip
at
Gallowes
,
and
cozen
the
people
.
Heard
you
this
iest
my
Lord
?
L.
Nol.
What
is
it
Iacke
?
Mol.
He
was
in
feare
his
sonne
would
marry
mee
,
But
neuer
dreamt
that
I
would
nere
agree
.
L.
Nol.
Why
?
thou
had'st
a
suiter
once
Iacke
,
when
wilt
marry
?
Mol.
Who
I
my
Lord
,
I
'le
tell
you
when
ifaith
,
When
you
shall
heare
,
Gallants
voyd
from
Serieants
feare
,
Honesty
and
truth
vnslandred
,
Woman
man'd
,
but
neuer
pandred
,
Cheates
booted
,
but
not
coacht
,
Vessels
older
e're
they
'r
broacht
.
If
my
minde
be
then
not
varied
,
Next
day
following
,
I
'le
be
married
.
L.
Nol.
This
sounds
like
domes-day
,
Moll
.
Then
were
marriage
best
,
For
if
I
should
repent
,
I
were
soone
at
rest
.
Alex.
Introth
tho'
art
a
good
wench
,
I
'me
sorry
now
,
The
opinion
was
so
hard
,
I
conceiu'd
of
thee
.
Some
wrongs
I
'ue
done
thee
.
Enter
Trapdore
.
Trap.
Is
the
winde
there
now
?
'T
is
time
for
mee
to
kneele
and
confesse
first
,
For
feare
it
come
too
late
,
and
my
braines
feele
it
,
Vpon
my
pawes
,
I
aske
you
pardon
mistresse
.
Mol.
Pardon
?
for
what
sir
?
what
ha's
your
rogueship
done
now
?
Trap.
I
haue
bene
from
time
to
time
hir'd
to
confound
you
,
by
this
old
Gentleman
.
Mol.
How
?
Trap.
Pray
forgiue
him
,
But
may
I
connsell
you
,
you
should
neuer
doo
't
.
Many
a
snare
to
entrapp
your
Worships
life
,
Haue
I
laid
priuily
,
chaines
,
watches
,
Iewels
,
And
when
hee
saw
nothing
could
mount
you
vp
,
Foure
hollow-hearted
Angels
he
then
gaue
you
,
By
which
he
meant
to
trap
you
,
I
to
saue
you
.
Alex.
To
all
which
,
shame
and
griefe
in
me
cry
guilty
,
Forgiue
mee
now
,
I
cast
the
worlds
eyes
from
mee
,
And
looke
vpon
thee
freely
with
mine
owne
:
I
see
the
most
of
many
wrongs
before
hee
,
Cast
from
the
iawes
of
enuy
and
her
people
,
And
nothing
foule
but
that
,
I
l'e
neuer
more
Condemne
by
common
voyce
,
for
that
's
the
whore
,
That
deceiues
mans
opinion
;
mockes
his
trust
,
Cozens
his
loue
,
and
makes
his
heart
vniust
.
Mol.
Here
be
the
Angels
Gentlemen
,
they
were
giuen
me
As
a
Musitian
,
I
pursue
no
pitty
,
Follow
the
law
,
and
you
can
cucke
mee
,
spare
not
Hang
vp
my
vyall
by
me
,
and
I
care
not
.
Alex.
So
farre
I
'me
sorry
,
I
'le
thrice
double
'em
To
make
thy
wrongs
amends
,
Come
worthy
friends
my
honourable
Lord
,
Sir
Bewteous
Ganymed
,
and
Noble
Fitz-Allard
,
And
you
kind
Gentlewoman
,
whose
sparkling
presence
,
Are
glories
set
in
mariage
,
beames
of
society
,
For
all
your
loues
giue
luster
to
my
ioyes
,
The
happinesse
of
this
day
shall
be
remembred
,
At
the
returne
of
euery
smiling
spring
:
In
my
time
now
't
is
borne
,
and
may
no
sadnesse
Sit
on
the
browes
of
men
vpon
that
day
,
But
as
I
am
,
so
all
goe
pleas'd
away
.