Delphi Complete Works of Ben Jonson (Illustrated)
By Ben Jonson
()
About this ebook
* Beautifully illustrated with images relating to Jonson’s life and works
* Concise introductions to the plays and other texts
* Images of how the dramas were first printed, giving your eReader a taste of the original texts
* Excellent formatting of the texts
* ALL 19 plays, including rare fragments and F G Waldron’s continuation of THE SAD SHEPHERD
* Includes the complete masques and entertainments for the first time in digital print
* Special chronological and alphabetical contents tables for the poetry
* Easily locate the poems you want to read
* Includes Jonson’s rare non-fiction texts
* Features a special Jacobean Language glossary, providing easy access to difficult words and their definitions
* Special criticism section, with essays by writers such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and T. S. Eliot evaluating Jonson’s contribution to literature
* Also includes a bonus biography – discover Jonson’s turbulent life
* Scholarly ordering of texts into chronological order and literary genres
CONTENTS:
The Plays
A TALE OF A TUB
THE ISLE OF DOGS (LOST PLAY)
THE CASE IS ALTERED
EVERY MAN IN HIS HUMOUR
EVERY MAN OUT OF HIS HUMOUR
CYNTHIA’S REVELS
THE POETASTER
SEJANUS HIS FALL
EASTWARD HO
VOLPONE
EPICOENE
THE ALCHEMIST
CATILINE HIS CONSPIRACY
BARTHOLOMEW FAIR
THE DEVIL IS AN ASS
THE STAPLE OF NEWS
THE NEW INN
THE MAGNETIC LADY
THE SAD SHEPHERD (Fragment)
MORTIMER HIS FALL (Fragment)
The Masques and Entertainments
THE MASQUES OF BEN JONSON
The Poetry Collections
EPIGRAMS
THE FOREST
UNDERWOOD
EUPHEME OR, THE FAIRE FAME
EPITHALAMION
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
The Poems
LIST OF POEMS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
LIST OF POEMS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
The Non-Fiction
TIMBER, OR DISCOVERIES MADE UPON MEN AND MATTER
ENGLISH GRAMMAR
The Criticism
NOTES ON BEN JONSON by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
BEN JONSON by Jacob Feis
MASQUES AND GENERAL INFLUENCE by W. W. Greg
BEN JONSON by T. S. Eliot
The Biography
LIFE OF BEN JONSON by Felix E. Schelling
Glossary of Jacobean Language
Ben Jonson
Benjamin Jonson (c. 11 June 1572 – c. 16 August 1637 was an English playwright and poet. Jonson's artistry exerted a lasting influence upon English poetry and stage comedy. He popularised the comedy of humours; he is best known for the satirical plays Every Man in His Humour (1598), Volpone, or The Fox (c. 1606), The Alchemist (1610) and Bartholomew Fair (1614) and for his lyric and epigrammatic poetry. He is generally regarded as the second most important English dramatist, after William Shakespeare.
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Delphi Complete Works of Ben Jonson (Illustrated) - Ben Jonson
The Complete Works of
BEN JONSON
(1572-1637)
Contents
The Plays
A TALE OF A TUB
THE ISLE OF DOGS (Lost)
THE CASE IS ALTERED
EVERY MAN IN HIS HUMOUR
EVERY MAN OUT OF HIS HUMOUR
CYNTHIA’S REVELS
THE POETASTER
SEJANUS HIS FALL
EASTWARD HO
VOLPONE
EPICOENE
THE ALCHEMIST
CATILINE HIS CONSPIRACY
BARTHOLOMEW FAIR
THE DEVIL IS AN ASS
THE STAPLE OF NEWS
THE NEW INN
THE MAGNETIC LADY
THE SAD SHEPHERD (Fragment)
MORTIMER HIS FALL (Fragment)
The Masques and Entertainments
THE MASQUES OF BEN JONSON
The Poetry Collections
EPIGRAMS
THE FOREST
UNDERWOOD
EUPHEME OR, THE FAIRE FAME
EPITHALAMION
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
The Poems
LIST OF POEMS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
LIST OF POEMS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
The Non-Fiction
TIMBER, OR DISCOVERIES MADE UPON MEN AND MATTER
ENGLISH GRAMMAR
The Criticism
NOTES ON BEN JONSON by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
BEN JONSON by Jacob Feis
MASQUES AND GENERAL INFLUENCE by W. W. Greg
BEN JONSON by T. S. Eliot
The Biography
LIFE OF BEN JONSON by Felix E. Schelling
Glossary of Jacobean Language
© Delphi Classics 2013
Version 1
The Complete Works of
BEN JONSON
By Delphi Classics, 2013
The Plays
Elizabethan Westminster, Jonson’s birthplace
Map of Westminster in Elizabethan times
Another view of Elizabethan Westminster
A TALE OF A TUB
Born in 1572, Jonson began his working life as a bricklayer and then a soldier, and the experiences in these fields helped to form his plain-speaking and at times antagonistic personality. He became an actor after serving in the army in the Netherlands and, by all accounts, he was not a very good actor. Nevertheless, while working with Pembroke’s Men, he was soon penning his own dramatic works.
Although A Tale of a Tub was the last of Ben Jonson’s plays to be staged during his lifetime, it is believed by some scholars that it was in fact his first attempt at drama, as early as 1596, in the early days of Shakespeare’s career. Other critics argue that Jonson wrote the play when it premiered in 1633 and that its apparently archaic language and structure are deliberate artistic choices on the playwright’s part.
The play was licensed for publication by Sir Henry Herbert, the Master of the Revels, on 7 May 1633, and acted by Queen Henrietta’s Men at the Cockpit Theatre; it was the only one of Jonson’s post-1614 plays not premiered by the King’s Men. The play was also performed at Court on 14 January 1634, before King Charles I and Queen Henrietta Maria, though it was not well received.
In the colloquial usage of the time, a tale of a tub is the same as a cock and bull story. As in many of his plays, Jonson borrows elements from the classical plays of Aristophanes and Plautus, as well as being published with a motto from Catullus: Inficeto est inficetior rure. A main focus of interest in the play is Jonson’s ridicule of Inigo Jones, as portrayed by In-and-In Medlay.
The writer had had a long-standing grudge against Jones, feeling that the architect had always received too much credit for the success of the Court masques that were written by Jonson, with the scenery, costumes and stage effects designed by Jones.
The play opens on St. Valentine’s Day and concerns the clumsy attempts of a variety of suitors to win the hand of Audrey Turfe, the daughter of a Middlesex constable. To break Audrey’s engagement to John Clay the tilemaker, Squire Tub, a romantic rival, has the man falsely accused of theft. As Constable Turfe pursues the innocent man, yet another suitor, Justice Preamble, plays a comparable ruse against Squire Tub. Eventually, Audrey is chased after by four separate suitors and appears to have no particular preference among them.
Inigo Jones (1573–1652) was the first British architect to employ Vitruvian rules of proportion and symmetry in his buildings. He left his mark on London by single buildings, such as the Banqueting House, Whitehall, and in area design for Covent Garden square. He also made major contributions to stage design by his work as theatrical designer for several dozen masques, most by royal command and many in collaboration with Ben Jonson.
CONTENTS
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
PROLOGUE.
ACT I
SCENE I
SCENE II
SCENE III
SCENE IV
ACT II
SCENE I
ACT III
SCENE I
SCENE II
SCENE III
SCENE IV
SCENE V
ACT IV
SCENE I
SCENE II
SCENE III
SCENE IV
SCENE V
ACT V
SCENE I
SCENE II
SCENE III
SCENE IV
SCENE V
THE EPILOGUE
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
CHANON (Canon) HUGH, Vicar of Paneras, and CAPTAIN THUMS.
SQUIRE TUB, or TRIPOLY, of Totten-Court.
BASKET-HILTS, his Man and Governor.
JUSTICE PREAMBLE, alias BRAMBLE, of Maribone.
MILES METAPHOR, his Clerk.
POL MARTIN, Huisher to Lady TUB.
TOBIE TURFE, High Constable of Kentish-Town.
JOHN CLAY, of Kilborn, Tilemaker, the Bridegroom.
IN-AND-IN MEDLAY, of Islington, Cooper and Headborough.
RASI’ CLENCH, of Hamstead, Farrier and Petty Constable.
TO-PAN, Tinker, or Metal-Man of Belsise, Thirdborough.
DIOGENES SCRIBEN, of Chalcot, the great Writer.
HANNIBAL (Ball) PUPPY, the High Constable’s Man.
FATHER ROSIN, the Minstrel, and his two Boys.
BLACK JACK, Lady TUB’S Butler.
LADY TUB, of Totten, the Squire’s Mother.
DIDO WISPE, her Woman.
SIBIL TURFE, Wife to the High Constable.
AWDREY TURFE, her Daughter, the Bride.
JOAN, JOYCE, MADGE, PARNEL GRISEL, and KATE, Maids of the Bridal. Servants.
SCENE. — FINSBURY HUNDRED
PROLOGUE.
No state-affairs, nor any politic club,
Pretend we in our Tale, here, of a Tub:
But acts of clowns and constables, to-day
Stuff out the scenes of our ridiculous play.
A cooper’s wit, or some such busy spark,
Illumining the high constable, and his clerk,
And all the neighbourhood, from old records,
Of antique proverbs, drawn from Whitson-lords
And their authorities, at Wakes and Ales,
With country precedents, and old wives’ tales,
We bring you now, to shew what different things
The cotes of clowns are from the courts of kings.
ACT I
SCENE I
Totten-Court. — Before Lady TUB’S House
Enter Canon HUGH.
Hugh. Now on my faith, old bishop Valentine,
You have brought us nipping weather. — Februere
Doth cut and shear — your day and diocese
Are very cold. All your parishioners,
As well your laics as your quiristers,
Had need to keep to their warm feather beds,
If they be sped of loves: this is no season,
To seek new makes in; though sir Hugh of Paneras
Be hither come to Totten, on intelligence,
To the young lord of the manor, ‘squire Tripoly,
On such an errand as a mistress is.
What, ‘squire! I say. — [Calls.] Tub I should call him too;
Sir Peter Tub was his father, a saltpetre-man;
Who left his mother, lady Tub of Totten-
Court, here, to revel, and keep open house in;
With the young ‘squire her son, and’s governor Basket-
Hilts, both by sword and dagger: [Calls again.] Domine
Armiger Tub, ‘squire Tripoly! Expergiscere!
I dare not call aloud lest she should hear me,
And think I conjured up the spirit, her son,
In priest’s lack-Latin: O she is jealous
Of all mankind for him.
Tub. [appears at the window.] Canon, is’t you?
Hugh. The vicar of Paneras, ‘squire Tub! wa’hoh!
Tub. I come, I stoop unto the call, sir Hugh!
Hugh. He knows my lure is from his love, fair Awdrey,
The high constable’s daughter of Kentish-town here, master
Tobias Turfe.
Enter TUB in his night-gown.
Tub. What news of him?
Hugh. He has waked me
An hour before I would, sir; and my duty
To the young worship of Totten-Court, ‘squire Tripoly!’
Who hath my heart, as I have his: Your mistress
Is to be made away from you this morning,
St. Valentine’s day: there are a knot of clowns,
The council of Finsbury, so they are styled,
Met at her father’s; all the wise of the hundred;
Old Rasi’ Clench of Hamstead, petty constable,
In-and-in Medlay, cooper of Islington,
And headborough; with loud To-Pan, the tinker
Or metal-man of Belsise, the thirdborough;
And D’ogenes Scriben, the great writer of Chalcot.
Tub. And why all these?
Hugh. Sir, to conclude in council,
A husband or a make for mistress Awdrey;
Whom they have named and pricked down, Clay of Kilborn,
A tough young fellow, and a tilemaker.
Tub. And what must he do?
Hugh. Cover her, they say;
And keep her warm, sir: mistress Awdrey Turfe,
Last night did draw him for her Valentine;
Which chance, it hath so taken her father and mother,.
(Because themselves drew so on Valentine’s eve
Was thirty year,) as they will have her married
To-day by any means; they have sent a messenger
To Kilborn, post, for Clay; which when I knew,
I posted with the like to worshipful Tripoly,
The ‘squire of Totten: and my advice to cross it.
Tub. What is’t, sir Hugh?
Hugh. Where is your governor Hilts?
Basket must do it.
Tub. Basket shall be call’d. —
Hilts! can you see to rise? [Aloud.
Hilts. [appears at the window.] Cham not blind, sir,
With too much light.
Tub. Open your t’other eye,
And view if it be day.
Hilts. Che can spy that
At’s little a hole as another, through a milstone. [Exit above..
Tub. He will have the last word, though he talk bilk for’t.
Hugh. Bilk! what’s that?
Tub. Why, nothing: a word signifying
Nothing; and borrowed here to express nothing.
Hugh. A fine device!
Tub. Yes, till we hear a finer.
What’s your device now, canon Hugh?
Hugh. In private,
Lend it your ear; I will not trust the air with it,
Or scarce my shirt; my cassock shall not know it;
If I thought it did I’d burn it.
Tub. That’s the way,
You have thought to get a new one, Hugh: is’t worth it?
Let’s hear it first.
Hugh. Then hearken, and receive it. [Whispers him
This ‘tis, sir. Do you relish it?
Enter HILTS, and wallcs by, making himself ready.
Tub. If Hilts
Be close enough to carry it; there’s all.
Hilts. It is no sand, nor butter-milk: if it be,
Ich’am no zive, or watering-pot, to draw
Knots i’ your ‘casions. If you trust me, zo;
If not, praform it your zelves. Cham no man’s wife,
But resolute Hilts: you’ll vind me in the buttry. [Exit.
Tub. A testy, but a tender clown as wool,
And melting as the weather in a thaw!
He’ll weep you like all April; but he’ll roar you
Like middle March afore: he will be as mellow,
And tipsy too, as October; and as grave
And bound up like a frost (with the new year)
In January; as rigid as he is rustic.
Hugh. You know his nature, and describe it well;
I’ll leave him to your fashioning.
Tub. Stay, sir Hugh;
Take a good angel with you for your guide;
[Gives him a piece of money.
And let this guard you homeward, as the blessing
To our device. [Exit.
Hugh. I thank you, ‘squire’s worship,
Most humbly — for the next: for this I am sure of.
O for a quire of these voices, now,
To chime in a man’s pocket, and cry chink!
One doth not chirp, it makes no harmony.
Grave justice Bramble next must contribute;
His charity must offer at this wedding:
I’ll bid more to the bason and the bride-ale,
Although but one can bear away the bride.
I smile to think how like a lottery
These weddings are. Clay hath her in possession,
The ‘squire he hopes to circumvent the Tile-kin;
And now, if justice Bramble do come off,
‘Tis two to one but Tub may lose his bottom. [Exit.
SCENE II
Kentish-Town. — A Room in TURFE’S House.
Enter CLENCH, MEDLAY, D’OGE SCRIBEN, BALL, PUPPY, and PAN.
Clench. Why, it is thirty year, e’en as this day now,
Zin Valentine’s day, of all days kursin’d, look you;
And the zamè day o’ the month as this Zin Valentine,
Or I am vowly deceived —
Med. That our high constable,
Master Tobias Turfe, and his dame were married:
I think you are right. But what was that Zin Valentine?
Did you ever know ‘un, goodman Clench?
Clench. Zin Valentine!
He was a deadly zin, and dwelt at Highgate,
As I have heard; but ‘twas avore my time:
He was a cooper too, as you are, Medlay,
An In-and-in: a woundy brag young vellow,
As the ‘port went o’ hun then, and in those days.
Scri. Did he not write his name Sim Valentine?
Vor I have met no Sin in Finsbury books;
And yet I have writ them six or seven times over.
Pan. O you mun look for the nine deadly Sins,
In the church-books, D’oge: not [in] the high constable’s:
Nor in the county’s: zure, that same zin Valentine,
He was a stately zin, an’ he were a zin,
And kept brave house.
Clench. At the Cock-and-Hen in Highgate.
You have fresh’d my memory well in’t, neighbour Pan:
He had a place in last king Harry’s time,
Of sorting all the young couples; joining them,
And putting them together; which is yet
Praform’d, as on his day — zin Valentine:
As being the zin of the shire, or the whole county:
I am old Rivet still, and bear a brain,
The Clench, the varrier, and true leach of Hamstead.
Pan. You are a shrew antiquity, neighbour Clench,
And a great guide to all the parishes!
The very bell-weather of the hundred, here,
As I may zay. Master Tobias Turfe,
High constable, would not miss you, for a score on us,
When he do ‘scourse of the great charty to us.
Pup. What’s that, a horse? can ‘scourse nought but a horse,
And that in Smithveld. Charty! I ne’er read o’ hun,
In the old Fabian’s chronicles; nor I think
In any new: he may be a giant there,
For aught I know.
Scri. You should do well to study
Records, fellow Ball, both law and poetry.
Pup. Why, all’s but writing and reading, is it, Scriben?
An it be any more, it is mere cheating zure,
Vlat cheating; all your law and poets too.
Pan. Master high constable comes.
Enter TURFE.
Pup. I’ll zay’t afore hun.
Turfe. What’s that makes you all so merry and loud, sirs, ha?
I could have heard you to my privy walk.
Clench. A contrevarsie ‘twixt two learned men here:
Hannibal Puppy says that law and poetry
Are both flat cheating; all’s but writing and reading,
He says, be’t verse or prose.
Turfe. I think in conzience,
He do zay true: who is’t do thwart ‘un, ha?
Med. Why, my friend Scriben, an it please your worship.
Turfe. Who, D’oge, my D’ogenes? a great writer, marry!
He’ll vace me down [sirs,] me myself sometimes,
That verse goes upon veet, as you and I do:
But I can gi"un the hearing; zit me down,
And laugh at ‘un; and to myself conclude,
The greatest clerks are not the wisest men
Ever. Here they are both! what, sirs, disputing,
And holding arguments of verse and prose,
And no green thing afore the door, that shews,
Or speaks a wedding!
Scri. Those were verses now,
Your worship spake, and run upon vive veet.
Turfe. Feet, vrom my mouth, D’oge! leave your ‘zurd upinions,
And get me in some boughs.
Scri. Let them have leaves first.
There’s nothing green but bays and rosemary.
Pup. And they are too good for strewings, your maids say.
Turfe. You take up ‘dority still to vouch against me.
All the twelve smocks in the house, zure, are your authors.
Get some fresh hay then, to lay under foot;
Some holly and ivy to make vine the posts:
Is’t not zon Valentine’s day, and mistress Awdrey,
Your young dame, to be married? [Exit Puppy.] I wonder Clay
Should be so tedious? he’s to play son Valentine:
And the clown sluggard is not come fro’ Kilborn yet!
Med. Do you call your son-in-law clown, an’t please your worship?
Turfe. Yes and vor worship too, my neighbour Medlay,
A Middlesex clown, and one of Finsbury.
They were the first colons of the kingdom here,
The primitory colons, my Diogenes says,
Where’s D’ogenes, my writer, now? What were those
You told me, D’ogenes, were the first colons
Of the country, that the Romans brought in here? Scri. The coloni, sir; colonus is an inhabitant,
A clown original: as you’d say, a farmer,
A tiller of the earth, e’er since the Romans
Planted their colony first; which was in Middlesex.
Turfe. Why so! I thank you heartily, good Diogenes,
You ha’ zertified me. I had rather be
An ancient colon, (as they say,) a clown of Middlesex,
A good rich farmer, or high constable.
I’d play hun ‘gain a knight, or a good ‘squire,
Or gentleman of any other county
In the kingdom.
Pan. Outeept Kent, for there they landed
All gentlemen, and came in with the conqueror,
Mad Julius Cæsar, who built Dover-castle:
My ancestor To-Pan, beat the first kettle-drum
Avore ‘hun, here vrom Dover on the march.
Which piece of monumental copper hangs
Up, scour’d, at Hammersmith yet; for there they came
Over the Thames, at a low water-mark;
Vore either London, ay, or Kingston-bridge,
I doubt, were kursin’d.
Re-enter PUPPY with JOHN CLAY.
Turfe. Zee, who is here: John Clay!
Zon Valentine, and bridegroom! have you zeen
Your Valentine-bride yet, sin’ you came, John Clay?
Clay. No, wusse. Che lighted I but now in the yard,
Puppy has scarce unswaddled my legs yet.
Turfe. What, wisps on your wedding-day, zon! this is right
Originous Clay, and Clay o’ Kilborn too!
I would ha’ had boots on this day, zure, zon John.
Clay. I did it to save charges: we mun dance,
On this day, zure; and who can dance in boots?
No, I got on my best straw-colour’d stockings,
And swaddled them over to zave charges, I.
Turfe. And his new chamois doublet too witlnpoints!
I like that yet: and his long sausage-hose,
Like the commander of four smoaking tile-kilns,
Which he is captain of, captain of Kilborn;
Clay with his hat turn’d up o’ the leer side too,
As if he would leap my daughter yet ere night,
And spring a new Turfe to the old house! —
Enter JOYCE, JOAN, and the other Maids, with ribands, rosemary, and bay for the bride-men.
Look! an the wenches ha’ not found ‘un out,
And do prazent ‘un with a van of rosemary,
And bays, to vill a bow-pot, trim the head
Of my best vore-horse! we shall all ha’ bride-laces.
Or points, I zee; my daughter will be valiant,
And prove a very Mary Ambry in the business.
Clench. They zaid your worship had ‘sured her to ‘squire Tub
Of Totten-Court here; all the hundred rings on’t.
Turfe. A TALE OF A TUB, sir, a mere Tale of a Tub.
Lend it no ear, I pray you: the ‘squire Tub
Is a fine man, but he is too fine a man,
And has a lady Tub too to his mother;
I’ll deal with none of these fine silken Tubs:
John Clay and cloth-breech for my money and daughter.
Here eomes another old boy too vor his colours,
Enter ROSIN, and his two Boys.
Will stroak down my wive’s udder of purses, empty
Ofall her milk-money this winter quarter:
Old father Rosin, the chief minstrel here,
Chief minstrel too of Highgate, she has hired him
And all his two boys for a day and a half;
And now they come for ribanding and rosemary:
Give them enough, girls, give them enough, and take it
Out in his tunes anon.
Clench. I’ll have Tom Tiler,
For our John Clay’s sake, and the tile-kilns, zure.
Med. And I the Jolly Joiner for mine own sake.
Pan. I’ll have the Jovial Tinker for To-Pan’s sake.
Turfe. We’ll all be jovy this day vor son Valentine,
My sweet son John’s sake. Scri. There’s another reading now:
My master reads it Son and not Sin Valentine.
Pup. NorZim: and he’s in the right; he is high constable,
And who should read above ‘un, or avore hun?
Turfe. Son John shall bid us welcome all, this day;
We’ll zerve under his colours: lead the troop, John,
And Puppy, see the bells ring. Press all noises
Of Finsbury, in our name: Diogenes Scriben
Shall draw a score of warrants vor the business.
Does any wight perzent hir majesty’s person
This hundred, ‘bove the high constable?
All. No, no.
Turfe. Use our authority then to the utmost on’t. [Exeunt.
SCENE III
Maribone. — A Room in Justice PREAMBLE’S House.
Enter Canon HUGH and Justice PREAMBLE.
Hugh. So you are sure, sir, to prevent them all,
And throw a block in the bridegroom’s way, John Clay,
That he will hardly leap o’er.
Pre. I conceive you,
Sir Hugh; as if your rhetoric would say,
Whereas the father of her is a Turfe,
A very superficies of the earth;
He aims no higher than to match in clay,
And there hath pitch’d his rest.
Hugh. Right, justice Bramble;
You have the winding wit, compassing all.
Pre. Subtle sir Hugh, you now are in the wrong,
And err with the whole neighbourhood, I must tell you,
For you mistake my name. Justice Preamble
I write myself; which, with the ignorant clowns here,
Because of my profession of the law,
And place of the peace, is taken to be Bramble:
But all my warrants, sir, do run Preamble,
Richard Preamble.
Hugh. Sir, I thank you for it,
That your good worship would not let me run
Longer in error, but would take me up thus.
Pre. You are my learned and canonic neighbour,
I would not have you stray; but the incorrigible
Nott-headed beast, the clowns, or constables,
Still let them graze, eat sallads, chew the cud:
All the town music will not move a log.
Hugh. The beetle and wedges will where you will have them.
Pre. True, true, sir Hugh. —
Enter METAPHOR.
Here comes Miles Metaphor,
My clerk; he is the man shall carry it, canon,
By my instructions.
Hugh. He will do it ad unguem,
Miles Metaphor! he is a pretty fellow.
Pre. I love not to keep shadows, or half-wits,
To foil a business. — Metaphor, you have seen
A king ride forth in state.
Met. Sir, that I have:
King Edward our late liege, and sovereign lord;
And have set down the pomp.
Pre. Therefore I ask’d you.
Have you observ’d the messengers of the chamber,
What habits they were in?
Met. Yes, minor coats,
Unto the guard, a dragon and a greyhound,
For the supporters of the arms.
Pre. Well mark’d!
You know not any of them?
Met. Here’s one dwells
In Maribone.
Pre. Have you acquaintance with him,
To borrow his coat an hour?
Hugh. Or but his badge,
‘Twill serve; a little thing he wears on his breast.
Pre. His coat, I say, is of more authority:
Borrow his coat for an hour. I do love
To do all things completely, canon Hugh;
Borrow his coat, Miles Metaphor, or nothing.
Met. The taberd of his office I will call it,
Or the coat-armour of his place; and so
Insinuate with him by that trope.
Pre. I know
Your powers of rhetoric, Metaphor. Fetch him off
In a fine figure for his coat, I say. [Exit Metaphor.
Hugh. I’ll take my leave, sir, of your worship too,
Because I may expect the issue anon.
Pre. Stay, my diviner counsel, take your fee:
We that take fees, allow them to our counsel:
And our prime learned counsel, double fees.
There are a brace of angels to support you
In your foot-walk this frost, for fear of falling,
Or spraying of a point of matrimony,
When you come at it —
Hugh. In your worship’s service:
That the exploit is done, and you possest
Of mistress Awdrey Turfe. —
Pre. I like your project. [Exit.
Hugh. And I, of this effect of two to one;
It worketh in my pocket, ‘gainst the ‘squire,
And his half bottom here, of half a piece,
Which was not worth the stepping o’er the stile for:
His mother has quite marr’d him, lady Tub,
She’s such a vessel of faeces: all dried earth,
Terra damnata! not a drop of salt,
Or petre in her! all her nitre is gone. [Exit.
SCENE IV
Totten-Court. — Before Lady TUB’S House.
Enter Lady TUB and POL MARTIN.
Lady T. Is the nag ready, Martin? call the ‘squire,
This frosty morning we will take the air,
About the fields; for I do mean to be
Somebody’s Valentine, in my velvet gown,
This morning, though it be but a beggar-man.
Why stand you still, and do not call my son?
Pol. Madam, if he had couched with the lamb,
He had no doubt been stirring with the lark:
But he sat up at play, and watch’d the cock,
Till his first warning chid him off to rest.
Late watchers are no early wakers, madam:
But if your ladyship will have him call’d —
Lady T. Will have him call’d! wherefore did I, sir, bid him
Be call’d, you weazel, vermin of an huisher?
You will return your wit to your first stile
Of Martin Polecat, by these stinking tricks,
If you do use them; I shall no more call you
Pol Martin, by the title of a gentleman,
If you go on thus.
Pol. I am gone. [Exit.
Lady T. Be quick then,
In your come off; and make amends, you stote!
Was ever such a fulmart for an huisher,
To a great worshipful lady, as myself!
Who, when I heard his name first, Martin Polecat,
A stinking name, and not to be pronounced
In any lady’s presence without a reverence;
My very heart e’en yearn’d, seeing the fellow
Young, pretty, and handsome; being then, I say,
A basket-carrier, and a man condemn’d
To the salt-petre works; made it my suit
To master Peter Tub, that I might change it;
And call him as I do now, by Pol Martin,
To have it sound like a gentleman in an office,
And made him mine own foreman, daily waiter.
And he to serve me thus! ingratitude,
Beyond the coarseness yet of any clownage,
Shewn to a lady! —
Re-enter POL MARTIN.
What now, is he stirring?
Pol. Stirring betimes out of his bed, and ready.
Lady T. And comes he then?
Pol. No, madam, he is gone.
Lady T. Gone! whither? Ask the porter where is he gone.
Pol. I met the porter, and have ask’d him for him;
He says, he let him forth an hour ago.
Lady T. An hour ago! what business could he have
So early; where is his man, grave Basket-hilts,
His guide and governor?
Pol. Gone with his master.
Lady T. Is he gone too! O that same surly knave
Is his right-hand; and leads my son amiss.
He has carried him to some drinking match or other.
Pol Martin, — I will call you so again,
I am friends with you now — go, get your horse and ride
To all the towns about here, where his haunts are,
And cross the fields to meet, and bring me word;
He cannot be gone far, being a-foot.
Be curious to inquire him: and bid Wispe,
My woman, come, and wait on me. [Exit Pol.] The love
We mothers bear our sons we have brought with pain,
Makes us oft view them with too careful eyes,
And overlook them with a jealous fear,
Out-fitting mothers.
Enter DIDO WISPE.
Lady T. How now, Wispe! have you
A Valentine yet? I am taking the air to choose one.
Wispe. Fate send your ladyship a fit one then.
Lady T. What kind of one is that?
Wispe. A proper man
To please your ladyship.
Lady T. Out of that vanity
That takes the foolish eye! any poor creature,
Whose want may need my alms or courtesy,
I rather wish; so bishop Valentine
Left us example to do deeds of charity;
To feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit
The weak and sick; to entertain the poor,
And give the dead a Christian funeral;
These were the works of piety he did practise,
And bade us imitate; not look for lovers,
Or handsome images to please our senses. —
I pray thee, Wispe, deal freely with me now,
We are alone, and may be merry a little:
Thou art none of the court glories, nor the wonders
For wit or beauty in the city; tell me,
What man would satisfy thy present fancy,
Had thy ambition leave to choose a Valentine,
Within the queen’s dominion, so a subject?
Wispe. You have given me a large scope, madam, I confess,
And I will deal with your ladyship sincerely;
I’ll utter my whole heart to you. I would have him
The bravest, richest, and the properest, man
A tailor could make up; or all the poets,
With the perfumers: I would have him such,
As not another woman but should spite me;
Three city ladies should run mad for him,
And country madams infinite.
Lady T. You would spare me,
And let me hold my wits?
Wispe. I should with you,
For the young ‘squire, my master’s sake, dispense
A little, but it should be very little.
Then all the court-wives I’d have jealous of me,
As all their husbands jealous too of them;
And not a lawyer’s puss of any quality,
But lick her lips for a snatch in the term-time.
Lady T. Come,
Let’s walk; we’ll hear the rest as we go on:
You are this morning in a good vein, Dido;
Would I could be as merry! My son’s absence
Troubles me not a little, though I seek
These ways to put it off; which will not help:
Care that is entered once into the breast,
Will have the whole possession ere it rest. [Exeunt.
ACT II
SCENE I
The Fields near PANCRAS.
Enter, in procession, with ribands, rosemary and bay, TURFE, CLAY MEDLAY, CLENCH, TO-PAN, SCRIBEN, and PUPPY with the bride-cake, as going to church.
Turfe. Zon Clay, cheer up, the better leg avore,
This is a veat is once done, and no more.
Clench. And then ‘tis done vor ever, as they say.
Med. Right! vor a man has his hour, and a dog his day.
Turfe. True, neighbour Medlay, you are still In-and-in.
Med. I would be, master constable, if che could win.
Pan. I zay, John Clay keep still on his old gate:
Wedding and hanging both go at a rate.
Turfe. Well said, To-Pan: you have still the hap to hit
The nail o’ the head at a close: I think there never
Marriage was managed with a more avisement,
Than was this marriage, though I say it that should not;
Especially ‘gain mine own flesh and blood,
My wedded wife. Indeed my wife would ha’ had
All the young batchelors, and maids forsooth,
Of the zix parishes hereabouts; but I
Cried none, sweet Sybil; none of that gear, I:
It would lick zalt, I told her, by her leave.
No, three or vour our wise, choice, honest neighbours,
Ubstantial persons, men that have born office,
And mine own family would be enough
To eat our dinner. What! dear meat’s a thief;
I know it by the butchers and the market-volk.
Hum drum, I cry. No half ox in a pye:
A man that’s bid to a bride-ale, if he have cake
And drink enough, he need not vear his stake.
Clench.’Tis right; he has spoke as true as a gun, believe it.
Enter Dame TURFE and AWDREY, followed by JOAN, JOYCE, MADGE PARNEL, GRISEL, and KATE, dressed for the wedding.
Turfe. Come, Sybil, come; did not I tell you o’ this,
This pride and muster of women would mar all?
Six women to one daughter, and a mother!
The queen (God save her) ha’ no more herself.
Dame T. Why, if you keep so many, master Turfe,
Why should not all present our service to her?
Turfe. Your service! good! I think you’ll write to her shortly,
Your very loving and obedient mother.
Come, send your maids off, I will have them sent
Home again, wife; I love no trains of Kent,
Or Christendom, as they say.
Joyce. We will not back,
And leave our dame.
Madge. Why should her worship lack
Her tail of maids, more than you do of men?
Turfe. What, mu tilling, Madge?
Joan. Zend back your clowns agen,
And we will vollow.
All. Else we’ll guard our dame.
Turfe. I ha’ zet the nest of wasps all on a flame.
Dame T. Come, you are such another, master Turfe,
A clod you should be call’d, of a high constable:
To let no music go afore your child
To church, to chear her heart up this cold morning!
Turfe. You are for father Rosin and his consort
Of Fiddling boys, the great Feates and the less;
Because you have entertain’d them all from Highgate.
To shew your pomp, you’d have your daughters and maids
Dance o’er the fields like faies to church, this frost.
I’ll have no rondels, I, in the queen’s paths;
Let ‘em scrape the gut at home, where they have fill’d it,
At afternoon.
Dame T. I’ll have them play at dinner.
Clench. She is in the right, sir; vor your wedding-dinner
Is starv’d without the music.
Med. If the pies
Come not in piping hot, you have lost that proverb.
Turfe. I yield to truth: wife, are you sussified?
Pan. A right good man! when he knows right, he loves it.
Seri. And he will know’t and shew’t too by his place
Of being high constable, if no where else.
Enter HILTS, with a false beard, booted and spurred.
Hilts. Well overtaken, gentlemen! I pray you
Which is the queen’s high constable among you?
Pup. The tallest man; who should be else, do you think?
Hilts. It is no matter what I think, young clown;
Your answer savours of the cart.
Pup. How! cart
And clown! do you know whose team you speak to?
Hilts. No, nor I care not: Whose jade may you be?
Pup. Jade! cart! and clown! O for a lash of whip-cord,
Three-knotted cord!
Hilts. Do you mutter! sir, snorle this way,
That I may hear, and answer what you say,
With my school-dagger ‘bout your costard, sir.
Look to’t, young growse: I’ll lay it on, and sure;
Take’t off who wuil. [Draws his sword.
Clench. Nay, ‘pray you, gentleman —
Hilts. Go to, I will not bate him an ace on’t.
What rowly-powly, maple face! all fellows!
Pup. Do you hear, friend? I would wish you, for your good,
Tie up your brended bitch there, your dun, rusty,
Pannier-hilt poniard; and not vex the youth
With shewing the teeth of it. We now are going
To church in way of matrimony, some on us;
They ha’ rung all in a’ ready. If it had not,
All the horn-beasts are grazing in this close
Should not have pull’d me hence, till this ash-plant
Had rung noon on your pate, master Broombeard.
Hilts. That I would fain zee, quoth the blind George
Of Holloway: come, sir.
Awd. O their naked weapons!
Pan. For the passion of man, hold gentleman and Puppy.
Clay. Murder, O murder!
Awd. O my father and mother!
Dame T. Husband, what do you mean? son Clay, for God’s sake —
Turfe. I charge you in the queen’s name, keep the peace.
Hilts. Tell me o’ no queen or keysar; I must have
A leg or a hanch of him ere I go.
Med. But, zir,
You must obey the queen’s high officers.
Hilts. Why must I, goodman Must?
Med. You must an’ you wull.
Turfe. Gentlemen, I am here for fault, high constable —
Hilts. Are you zo! what then?
Turfe. I pray you, sir, put up
Your weapons; do, at my request: for him,
On my authority, he shall lie by the heels,
Verbatim continente, an I live.
Dame T. Out on him for a knave, what a dead fright
He has put me into! come, Awdrey, do not shake.
Awd. But is not Puppy hurt, nor the t’other man?
Clay. No bun? but had not I cried murder, I wuss —
Pup. Sweet goodman Clench, I pray you revise my master,
I may not zit in the stocks till the wedding be past,
Dame, mistress Awdrey: I shall break the bride-cake else.
Clench. Zomething must be to save authority, Puppy.
Dame T. Husband —
Clench. And gossip —
Awd. Father —
Turfe. Treat me not,
It is in vain. If he lie not by the heels,
I’ll lie there for ‘un; I will teach the hind
To carry a tongue in his head to his superiors.
Hilts. This’s a wise constable! where keeps he school?
Clench. In Kentish-town; a very servere man.
Hilts. But, as servere as he is, let me, sir, tell him
He shall not lay his man by the heels for this.
This was my quarrel; and by his office’ leave,
If it carry ‘un for this, it shall carry double;
Vor he shall carry me too.
Turfe. Breath of man!
He is my chattel, mine own hired goods:
An if you do abet ‘un in this matter,
I’ll clap you both by the heels, ankle to ankle.
Hilts. You’ll clap a dog of wax as soon, old Blurt.
Come, spare not me, sir, I am no man’s wife;
I care not, I, sir, not three skips of a louse for you,
An you were ten tall constables, not I.
Turfe. Nay, pray you, sir, be not angry, but content;
My man shall make you what amends you’ll ask ‘un.
Hilts. Let ‘un mend his manners then, and know his betters;
It’s all I ask ‘un; and ‘twill be his own,
And’s master’s too another day; che vore ‘un.
Med. As right as a club still! Zure this angry man
Speaks very near the mark when he is pleased.
Pup. I thank you, sir, an’ I meet you at Kentish-town,
I ha’ the courtesy o’ the hundred for you.
Hilts. Gramercy, good high constable’s hind! But hear you?
Mass constable, I have other manner of matter
To bring you about than this. And so it is,
I do belong to one of the queen’s captains,
A gentleman o’ the field, one captain Thums,
I know not whether you know ‘un or no: it may be
You do, and it may be you do not again.
Turfe. No, I assure you on my constableship,
I do not know ‘un.
Hilts. Nor I neither, i’faith. —
It skills not much; my captain and myself
Having occasion to come riding by here
This morning, at the corner of St. John’s-wood,
Some mile [west] o’ this town, were set upon
By a sort of country-fellows, that not only
Beat us, but robb’d us most sufficiently,
And bound us to our behaviour hand and foot;
And so they left us. Now, don constable,
I am to charge you in her majesty’s name,
As you will answer it at your apperil,
That forthwith you raise hue and cry in the hundred,
For all such persons as you can despect,
By the length and breadth of your office: for I tell you,
The loss is of some value; therefore look to’t.
Turfe. As fortune mend me now, or any office
Of a thousand pound, if I know what to zay.
Would I were dead, or vaire hang’d up at Tyburn,
If I do know what course to take, or how
To turn myself just at this time too, now
My daughter is to be married! I’ll but go
To Pancridge-church hard by, and return instantly,
And all my neighbourhood shall go about it.
Hilts. Tut, Pancridge me no Pancridge! if you let it
Slip, you will answer it, an your cap be of wool;
Therefore take heed, you’ll feel the smart else, constable. [Going.
Turfe. Nay, good sir, stay. — Neighbours, what think you of this?
Dame T. Faith, man —
Turfe. Odds precious, woman, hold your tongue,
And mind your pigs on the spit at home; you must
Have [an] oar in every thing. — Pray you, sir, what kind
Of fellows were they?
Hilts. Thieves-kind, I have told you.
Turfe. I mean, what kind of men?
Hilts. Men of our make.
Turfe. Nay, but with patience, sir: We that are officers
Must ‘quire the special marks, and all the tokens
Of the despected parties; or perhaps else
Be ne’er the near of our purpose in ‘prehending them.
Can you tell what ‘parrel any of them wore?
Hilts. Troth, no; there were so many o"em all like
So one another; now I remember me,
There was one busy fellow was their leader,
A blunt squat swad, but lower than yourself;
He had on a leather-doublet with long points,
And a pair of pinn’d-up breeches, like pudding-bags
With yellow stockings, and his hat turn’d up
With a silver clasp on his leer side.
Dame T. By these
Marks it should be John Clay, now bless the man!
Turfe. Peace, and be nought! I think the woman be phrensic.
Hilts. John Clay! what’s he, good mistress?
Awd. He that shall be
My husband.
Hilts. How! your husband, pretty one?
Awd. Yes, I shall anon be married; that is he.
Turfe. Passion o’ me, undone!
Pup. Bless master’s son!
Hilts. O, you are well ‘prehended: know you me, sir?
Clay. No’s my record; I never zaw you avore.
Hilts. You did not! where were your eyes then, out at washing?
Turfe. What should a man zay, who should he trust
In these days? Hark you, John Clay, if you have
Done any such thing, tell troth and shame the devil.
Clench. Yaith, do; my gossip Turfe zays well to you, John.
Med. Speak, man; but do not convess, nor be avraid.
Pan. A man is a man, and a beast’s a beast, look to’t.
Dame T. In the name of men or beasts, what do you do?
Hare the poor fellow out on his five wits,
And seven senses! do not weep, John Clay.
I swear the poor wretch is as guilty from it
As the child was, was born this very morning.
Clay. No, as I am a kyrsin soul, would I were hang’d
If ever I alas, I would I were out
Of my life; so I would I were, and in again —
Pup. Nay, mistress Awdrey will say nay to that;
No, in-and-out: an you were out of your life,
How should she do for a husband? who should fall
Aboard of her then? — Ball? he’s a puppy!
No, Hannibal has no breeding! well, I say little;
But hitherto all goes well, pray it prove no better. [Aside.
Awd. Come, father; I would we were married! I am a-cold.
Hilts. Well, master constable, this your fine groom here,
Bridegroom, or what groom else soe’er he be,
I charge him with the felony, and charge you
To carry him back forthwith to Paddington
Unto my captain, who stays my return there:
I am to go to the next justice of peace,
To get a warrant to raise hue and cry,
And bring him and his fellows all afore ‘un.
Fare you well, sir, and look to ‘un, I charge you
As you will answer it. Take heed; the business
If you defer, may prejudicial you
More than you think for; zay I told you so. [Exit.
Turfe. Here’s a bride-ale indeed! ah, zon John, zon Clay!
I little thought you would have proved a piece
Of such false metal.
Clay. Father, will you believe me?
Would I might never stir in my new shoes,
If ever I would do so voul a fact.
Turfe. Well, neighbours, I do charge you to assist me
With ‘un to Paddington. Be he a true man, so!
The better for ‘un. I will do mine office,
An he were my own begotten a thousand times.
Dame T. Why, do you hear, man? husband, master Turfe!
What shall my daughter do? Puppy, stay here.
[Exeunt all but Awdrey and Puppy.
Awd. Mother, I’ll go with you and with my father.
Pup. Nay, stay, sweet mistress Awdrey: here are none
But one friend, as they zay, desires to speak
A word or two, cold with you: how do you veel
Yourself this frosty morning?
Awd. What have you
To do to ask, I pray you? I am a-cold.
Pup. It seems you are hot, good mistress Awdrey.
Awd. You lie; I am as cold as ice is, feel else.
Pup. Nay, you have cool’d my courage; I am past it,
I ha’ done feeling with you.
Awd. Done with me!
I do defy you, so I do, to say
You ha’ done with me: you are a saucy Puppy.
Pup. O you mistake! I meant not as you mean.
Awd. Meant you not knavery, Puppy?
Pup. No, not I.
Clay meant you all the knavery, it seems,
Who rather than he would be married to you,
Chose to be wedded to the gallows first.
Awd. I thought he was a dissembler; he would prove
A slippery merchant in the frost. He might
Have married one first, and have been hang’d after,
If he had had a mind to’t. But you men —
Fie on you!
Pup. Mistress Awdrey, can you vind
In your heart to fancy Puppy? me poor Ball?
Awd. You are disposed to jeer one, master Hannibal. —
Re-enter HILTS.
Pity o’ me, the angry man with the beard!
Hilts. Put on thy hat, I look for no despect.
Where is thy master?
Pup. Marry, he is gone
With the picture of despair to Paddington.
Hilts. Prithee run after ‘un, and tell ‘un he shall
Find out my captain lodged at the Red-Lion,
In Paddington; that’s the inn. Let ‘un ask
Vor captain Thums; and take that for thy pains:
He may seek long enough else. Hie thee again.
Pup. Yes, sir; you’ll look to mistress bride the while?
Hilts. That I will: prithee haste. [Exit Puppy.
Awd. What, Puppy! Puppy!
Hilts. Sweet mistress bride, he’ll come again presently. —
Here was no subtle device to get a wench!
This Canon has a brave pate of his own,
A shaven pate, and a right monger y’ vaith;
This was his plot. I follow captain Thums!
We robb’d in St. John’s-wood! In my t’other hose! —
I laugh to think what a fine fool’s finger they have
O’ this wise constable, in pricking out
This captain Thums to his neighbours: you shall see
The tile-man too set fire on his own kiln,
And leap into it to save himself from hanging.
You talk of a bride-ale, here was a bride-ale broke
In the nick! Well, I must yet dispatch this bride
To mine own master, the young ‘squire, and then
My task is done. — [Aside.] — Gentlewoman, I have in sort
Done you some wrong, but now I’ll do you what right
I can: it’s true, you are a proper woman;
But to be oast away on such a clown-pipe
As Clay! methinks your friends are not so wise
As nature might have made ‘em; well, go to:
There’s better fortune coming towards you,
An you do not deject it. Take a vool’s
Counsel, and do not stand in your own light;
It may prove better than you think for, look you.
Awd. Alas, sir, what is’t you would have me do?
I’d fain do all for the best, if I knew how.
Hilts. Forsake not a good turn when it is offer’d you,
Fair mistress Awdrey — that’s your name, I take it.
Awd. No mistress, sir, my name is Awdrey.
Hilts. Well; so it is, there is a bold young ‘squire,
The blood of Totten, Tub, and Tripoly —
Awd.’Squire Tub, you mean: I know him, he knows me too.
Hilts. He is in love with you; and more, he’s mad for you.
Awd. Ay, so he told me in his wits, I think.
But he’s too fine for me; and has a lady
Tub to his mother.
Enter Tub.
Here he comes himself!
Tub. O you are a trusty governor!
Hilts. VVhat ails you?
You do not know when you are well, I think.
You’d ha’ the calf with the white face, sir, would you?
I have her for you here; what would you more?
Tub. Quietness, Hilts, and hear no more of it.
Hilts. No more of it, quoth you! I do not care
If some on us had not heard so much of it.
I tell you true; a man must carry and vetch
Like fiungy’s dog for you.
Tub. What’s he?
Hilts. A spaniel —
And scarce be spit in the mouth for’t. A good dog
Deserves, sir, a good bone, of a free master;
But, an your turns be serv’d, the devil a bit
You care for a man after, e’er a laird of you.
Like will to like, y-faith, quoth the scabb’d ‘squire
To the mangy knight, when both met in a dish
Of butter’d vish. One bad, there’s ne’er a good;
And not a barrel the better herring among you.
Tub. Nay, Hilts, I pray thee grow not frampull now.
Turn not the bad cow after thy good soap.
Our plot hath hitherto ta’en good effect,
And should it now be troubled or stopp’d up,
‘Twould prove the utter ruin of my hopes.
I pray thee haste to Pancridge, to the Canon,
And give him notice of our good success.
Will him that all things be in readiness:
Fair Awdrey and myself will cross the fields
The nearest path. Good Hilts, make thou some haste,
And meet us on the way. — Come, gentle Awdrey.
Hilts. Yaith, would I had a few more geances on’t!
An you say the word, send me to Jericho.
Outcept a man were a post-horse, I have not known
The like on it; yet, an he had [had] kind words,
‘Twould never irke ‘un: but a man may break
His heart out in these days, and get a flap
With a fox-tail, when he has done — and there is all!
Tub. Nay, say not so, Hilts: hold thee, there are crowns
My love bestows on thee for thy reward;
If gold will please thee, all my land shall drop
In bounty thus, to recompense thy merit.
Hilts. Tut, keep your land, and your gold too, sir, I
Seek neither — neither of ‘un. Learn to get
More; you will know to spend that zuin you have
Early enough; you are assured of me:
I love you too too well to live o’ the spoil —
For your own sake, would there were no worse than I!
All is not gold that glisters. I’ll to Pancridge. [Exit crying.
Tub. See how his love does melt him into tears!
An honest faithful servant is a jewel. —
Now the advent’rous ‘squire hath time and leisure
To ask his Awdrey how she does, and hear
A grateful answer from her. She not speaks. —
Hath the proud tyrant Frost usurp’d the seat
Of former beauty, in my love’s fair cheek;
Staining the roseate tincture of her blood
With the dull dye of blue congealing cold?
No, sure the weather dares not so presume
To hurt an object of her brightness. Yet,
The more I view her, she but looks so, so.
Ha! give me leave to search this mystery —
O now I have it: Bride, I know your grief;
The last night’s cold hath bred in you such horror
Of the assigned bridegroom’s constitution,
The Kilborn clay-pit; that frost-bitten marl,
That lump in courage, melting cake of ice:
That the conceit thereof hath almost kill’d thee:
But I must do thee good, wench, and refresh thee.
Awd. You are a merry man, ‘squire Tub of Totten!
I have heard much o’ your words, but not o’ your deeds.
Tub. Thou sayst true, sweet; I have been too slack in deeds.
Awd. Yet I was never so strait-laced to you, ‘squire.
Tub. Why, did you ever love me, gentle Awdrey?
Awd. Love you! I cannot tell: I must hate no body,
My father says.
Tub. Yes, Clay and Kilborn, Awdrey,
You must hate them.
Awd. It shall be for your sake then.
Tub. And for my sake shall yield you that gratuity.
[Offers to kiss her.
Awd. Soft and fair, ‘squire, there go two words to a bargain.
[Puts him back.
Tub. What are those, Awdrey?
Awd. Nay, I cannot tell.
My mother said, zure, if you married me,
You’d make me a lady the first week; and put me
In — I know not what, the very day.
Tub. What was it?
Speak, gentle Awdrey, thou shalt have it yet.
Awd. A velvet dressing for my head, it is,
They say, will make one brave; I will not know
Bess Moale, nor Margery Turn-up: I will look
Another way upon them, and be proud.
Tub. Troth, I could wish my wench a better wit;
But what she wanteth there, her face supplies.
There is a pointed lustre in her eye
Hath shot quite through me, and hath hit my heart:
And thence it is I first received the wound,
That rankles now, which only she can cure.
Fain would I work myself from this conceit;
But, being flesh, I cannot. I must love her,
The naked truth is; and I will go on,
Were it for nothing but to cross my rivals. [Aside.
Come, Awdrey, I am now resolv’d to have thee.
Enter Justice PREAMBLE, and METAPHOR disguised as a pursuivant.
Pre. Nay, do it quickly, Miles; why shak’st thou, man?
Speak but his name, I’ll second thee myself.
Met. What is his name?
Pre.’Squire Tripoly, or Tub;
Any thing —
Met.’Squire Tub, I do arrest you
In the queen’s majesty’s name, and all the council’s.
Tub. Arrest me, varlet!
Pre. Keep the peace, I charge you.
Tub. Are you there, justice Bramble! where’s your warrant?
Pre. The warrant is directed here to me,
From the whole table; wherefore I would pray you,
Be patient, ‘squire, and make good the peace.
Tub. Well, at your pleasure, justice. I am wrong’d:
Sirrah, what are you have arrested me?
Pre. He is a pursuivant at arms, ‘squire Tub.
Met. I am a pursuivant; see by my coat else.
Tub. Well, pursuivant, go with me: I’ll give you bail.
Pre. Sir, he may take no bail: it is a warrant
In special from the council, and commands
Your personal appearance. Sir, your weapon
I must require; and then deliver you
A prisoner to this officer, ‘squire Tub.
I pray you to conceive of me no other,
Than as your friend and neighbour: let my person
Be sever’d from my office in the fact,
And I am clear. Here, pursuivant, receive him
Into your hands, and use him like a gentleman.
Tub. I thank you, sir: but whither must I go now?
Pre. Nay, that must not be told you till you come
Unto the place assign’d by his instructions:
I’ll be the maiden’s convoy to her father,
For this time, ‘squire.
Tub. I thank you, master Bramble.
I doubt or fear you will make her the balance
To weigh your justice in. Pray ye do me right,
And lead not her, at least, out of the way:
Justice is blind, and having a blind guide,
She may be apt to slip aside.
Pre. I’ll see to her. [Exit Pre with Awd.
Tub. I see my wooing will not thrive. Arrested,
As I had set my rest up for a wife!
And being so fair for it as I was! — Well, fortune,
Thou art a blind bawd and a beggar too,
To cross me thus; and let my only rival
To get her from me! that’s the spight of spights.
But most I muse at, is, that I, being none
O’ the court, am sent for thither by the council:
My heart is not so light as it was in the morning.
Re-enter HILTS.
Hilts. You mean to make a hoiden or a hare
Of me, to hunt counter thus, and make these doubles:
And you mean no such thing as you send about.
Where is your sweet heart now, I marie?
Tub. Oh Hilts!
Hilts. I know you of old! ne’er halt afore a cripple.
Will you have a caudle? where’s your grief, sir? speak.
Met. Do you hear, friend, do you serve this gentleman?
Hilts. How then, sir? what if I do? peradventure yea,
Peradventure nay; what’s that to you, sir? say.
Met. Nay, pray you, sir, I meant no harm in truth;
But this good gentleman is arrested.
Hilts. How!
Say me that again.
Tub. Nay, Basket, never storm;
I am arrested here, upon command
From the queen’s council; and I must obey.
Met. You say, sir, very true, you must obey.
An honest gentleman, in faith.
Hilts. He must!
Tub. But that which most tormenteth me is this,
That justice Bramble hath got hence my Awdrey.
Hilts. How! how! stand by a little, sirrah, you
With the badge on your breast. [Draws his sword.] Let’s know, sir, what you are.
Met. I am, sir, — pray you do not look so terribly —
A pursuivant.
Hilts. A pursuivant! your name, sir?
Met. My name, sir —
Hilts. Whatis’t? speak.
Met. Miles Metaphor;
And justice Preamble’s clerk.
Tub. What says he?
Hilts. Pray you,
Let us alone. You are a pursuivant?
Met. No, faith, sir, would I might never stir from you,
I is made a pursuivant against my will.
Hilts. Ha! and who made you one? tell true, or my will
Shall make you nothing instantly.
Met. [kneels.] Put up
Your frightful blade, and your dead-doing look,
And I shall tell you all.
Hilts. Speak then the truth,
And the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
Met. My master, justice Bramble, hearing your master,
The ‘squire Tub, was coming on this way,
With mistress Awdrey, the high constable’s daughter,
Made me a pursuivant, and gave me warrant
To arrest him; so that he might get the lady,
With whom he is gone to Pancridge, to the vicar,
Not to her father’s. This was the device,
Which I beseech you do not tell my master.
Tub. O wonderful! well, Basket, let him rise;
And for my free escape forge some excuse.
I’ll post to Paddington to acquaint old Turfe
With the whole business, and so stop the marriage. [Exit.
Hilts. Well, bless thee: I do wish thee grace to keep
Thy master’s secrets better, or be hang’d.
Met. [rises.] I thank you for your gentle admonition.
Pray you, let me call you god-father hereafter:
And as your godson Metaphor, I promise
To keep my master’s privities seal’d up
In the vallies of my trust, lock’d close for ever,
Or let me be truss’d up at Tyburn shortly.
Hilts. Thine own wish save or choke thee! come away. [Exeunt.
ACT III
SCENE I
KENTISH-TOWN. tauter TURFE, CLENCH, MEDLAY, TO-PAN, SCRIBEN,