Actus
primi
,
Scena
prima
.
Enter
Maister
Touch-stone
,
and
Quick-siluer
at
Seuerall
dores
,
Quick-siluer
with
his
hat
,
pumps
,
short
sword
and
dagger
,
and
a
Racket
trussed
vp
vnder
his
cloake
.
At
the
middle
dore
,
Enter
Golding
discouering
a
Gold-smiths
shoppe
,
and
walking
short
turns
before
it
.
Touch-stone
.
AND
whether
with
you
now
?
what
loose
action
are
you
bound
for
?
come
what
comrades
are
you
to
meete
withall
?
wher
's
the
supper
?
wher
's
the
supper
?
wher
's
the
randeuous
?
Quick.
Indeed
,
and
in
very
good
sober
truth
,
Sir
.
Touch.
Indeed
,
and
in
very
good
sober
truth
Sir
?
Behinde
my
backe
thou
wilt
sweare
faster
then
a
french
foot
boy
,
and
talke
more
bawdily
then
a
common
midwife
,
and
now
indeede
and
in
very
good
sober
truth
Sir
:
but
if
a
priuie
search
should
be
made
,
with
what
furniture
are
you
riggd
now
?
Sirrah
I
tell
thee
,
I
am
thy
maister
William
Tutchstone
Goldsmith
:
and
thou
my
Prentise
Francis
Quick-siluer
:
and
will
see
whether
you
are
running
.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Quick.
Why
Sir
I
hope
a
man
may
vse
his
recreation
with
his
maisters
profit
.
Touch.
Prentises
recreations
are
seldome
with
their
maisters
profit
.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
You
shall
giue
vp
your
cloake
tho
you
be
no
Alderman
.
Heyday
,
Ruffins
hall
.
Sword
,
pumps
,
heer
's
a
Racket
indeed
.
Touch
.
vncloakes
Quick
.
Quick.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Touch.
Thou
shamlesse
Varlet
dost
thou
iest
at
thy
lawfull
maister
contrary
to
thy
Indentures
?
Quick.
Why
zbloud
sir
,
my
mother
's
a
Gentlewoman
:
and
my
father
a
Iustice
of
Peace
,
and
of
Quorum
,
and
tho
I
am
a
yonger
brother
and
a
prentise
yet
I
hope
I
am
my
fathers
sonne
:
and
by
Gods
lidde
,
t
is
for
your
worship
and
for
your
commoditie
that
I
keepe
companie
.
I
am
intertaind
among
gallants
,
true
:
They
call
me
coozen
Franke
,
right
;
I
lend
them
monnies
,
good
;
they
spend
it
,
well
.
But
when
they
are
spent
,
must
not
they
striue
to
get
more
?
must
not
their
land
flye
?
and
to
whom
?
shall
not
your
worship
ha
,
the
refusall
?
well
,
I
am
a
good
member
of
the
Citty
if
I
were
well
considered
.
How
would
Morchants
thriue
,
if
Gentlemen
would
not
be
vnthriftes
?
How
could
Gentlemen
be
vnthrists
if
their
humours
were
not
fed
?
How
should
their
humours
be
fedde
but
by
whit
meate
,
and
cunning
secondings
?
well
,
the
Cittie
might
consider
vs
.
I
am
going
to
an
Ordinary
now
;
the
gallants
fall
to
play
,
I
carry
light
golde
with
me
:
the
gallants
call
coozen
Francke
some
golde
for
siluer
,
I
change
,
gaine
by
it
,
the
gallants
loose
the
gold
;
and
then
call
coozen
Francke
lend
me
some
siluer
.
Why
�
Tou.
Why
?
I
cannot
tell
,
seue�
score
pound
art
thou
out
in
the
cash
,
but
looke
to
it
,
I
will
not
be
gallanted
out
of
my
monies
.
And
as
for
my
rising
by
other
mens
fall
;
God
shield
me
.
Did
I
gaine
my
wealth
by
Ordinaries
?
no
:
by
exchanging
of
gold
?
no
:
by
keeping
of
gallants
company
?
no
.
I
hired
me
a
little
shop
,
fought
low
,
tooke
small
gaine
,
kept
no
debt
booke
,
garnished
my
shop
for
want
of
Plate
,
with
good
wholsome
thriftie
sentences
;
As
,
Touchstone
,
keepe
thy
shopp
,
and
thy
shoppe
will
keepe
thee
.
Light
gaines
makes
heauy
purses
.
T
is
good
to
be
merry
and
wise
:
And
when
I
was
wiu'd
,
hauing
something
to
stick
too
,
I
had
the
horne
of
Suretiship
euer
before
my
eyes
:
You
all
know
the
deuise
of
the
Horne
,
where
the
young
fellow
slippes
in
at
the
Butte
end
,
and
comes
squesd
out
at
the
Buckall
:
and
I
grew
vp
,
and
I
praise
prouidence
,
I
beare
my
browes
now
as
high
as
the
best
of
my
neighbours
:
but
thou-well
looke
to
the
accounts
,
your
fathers
bond
lyes
for
you
:
seuen
score
pound
is
yet
in
the
reere
.
Quick.
Why
Slid
sir
,
I
haue
as
good
,
as
proper
gallants
wordes
for
it
as
any
are
in
London
,
Gentlemen
of
good
phrase
,
perfect
language
,
passingly
behau'd
,
Gallants
that
weare
socks
and
cleane
linnen
,
and
call
me
kinde
coozen
Francke
,
good
coozen
Francke
,
for
they
know
my
Father
;
and
by
god
;
lidde
shall
not
I
trust
hem
?
not
trust
?
Enter
a
Page
as
inquiring
for
Touch-stones
Shoppe
.
Golding
.
What
doe
yee
lacke
Sir
?
What
i
st
you
'le
buye
Sir
?
Touch-stone
.
I
marry
Sir
,
there
's
a
youth
of
another
peece
.
There
's
thy
fellowe-Prentise
,
as
good
a
Gentleman
borne
as
thou
art
:
nay
,
and
better
mean'd
.
But
dos
he
pumpe
it
,
or
Racket
it
?
Well
,
if
he
thriue
not
,
if
he
out-last
not
a
hundred
such
crackling
Bauins
as
thou
art
,
God
and
men
neglect
industrie
.
Gold.
It
is
his
Shop
,
and
here
my
M.
walkes
.
To
the
Page
.
Touch.
With
me
Boy
?
Page
.
My
Maister
,
Sir
Petronel
Flash
,
recommends
his
loue
to
you
,
and
will
instantly
visite
you
,
Touch.
To
make
vp
the
match
with
my
eldest
daughter
,
my
wiues
Dilling
,
whom
she
longs
to
call
Maddam
.
He
shall
finde
me
vnwillingly
readie
Boy
.
Exit
Page
.
Ther
's
another
afliction
too
.
As
I
haue
two
Prentises
:
the
one
of
a
boundlesse
prodigalitie
,
the
other
of
a
most
hopefull
Industrie
.
So
haue
I
onely
two
daughters
:
the
eldest
,
of
a
proud
ambition
and
nice
wantonnesse
:
the
other
of
a
modest
humilitie
and
comely
sobernesse
.
The
one
must
bee
Ladyfied
forsooth
:
and
be
attir'd
just
to
the
Court-cut
,
and
long
tayle
.
So
farre
is
she
ill
naturde
to
the
place
and
meanes
of
my
preferment
and
fortune
,
that
shee
throwes
all
the
contempt
and
dispight
,
hatred
it selfe
can
cast
vpon
it
.
Well
,
a
peece
of
Land
she
has
,
t'
was
her
Grandmothers
gift
:
let
her
,
and
her
Sir
Petronel
,
flash
out
that
.
But
as
for
my
substance
,
shee
that
skornes
mee
,
as
I
am
a
Citizen
and
Trades-man
,
shall
neuer
pamper
her
pride
with
my
industrie
:
shall
neuer
vse
me
as
men
doe
Foxes
;
keepe
themselues
warme
in
the
skinne
,
and
throwe
the
body
that
bare
it
to
the
dung-hill
.
I
must
goe
intertaine
this
Sir
Petronell
.
Goulding
,
My
vtmost
care
's
for
thee
,
and
onely
trust
in
thee
,
looke
to
the
shoppe
,
as
for
you
,
Maister
Quick-siluer
,
thinke
of
huskes
,
for
thy
course
is
running
directly
to
the
prodigaills
hogs
trough
.
huskes
Sra.
Works
vpon
that
now
.
Exit
.
Tuch
.
Quick.
Mary
sough
goodman
flat-cap
:
Sfoot
tho
I
am
a
prentise
I
can
giue
armes
,
and
my
father
's
a
iustice
a
peace
by
discent
:
and
zbloud
�
Goul.
Fye
how
you
sweare
.
Qui.
Sfoot
man
I
am
a
Gentleman
,
and
may
sweare
by
my
pedegree
,
God
's
my
life
.
Sirrah
Goulding
,
wilt
be
ruled
by
a
foole
?
turne
good
fellow
,
turne
swaggering
gallant
,
and
let
the
Welkin
roare
,
and
Erebus
also
:
Looke
not
Westward
to
the
fall
of
Don
Phoebus
,
but
to
the
East
;
Eastward
Hoe
,
"
Where
radiant
beames
of
lusty
Sol
appeare
,
"
And
bright
Eovs
makes
the
welkin
cleare
.
We
are
both
Gentlemen
,
and
therefore
should
be
no
coxcombes
:
le
ts
be
no
longer
fooles
to
this
flat-cap
Touchstone
.
Eastward
Bully
:
this
Sattin
belly
,
&
Canuas
backt
Touchstone
;
Slife
man
his
father
was
a
Malt-man
,
and
his
mother
sould
Ginger-bread
in
Christ-church
.
Goul.
What
would
yee
ha
me
doe
?
Quick.
Why
do
nothing
,
be
like
a
gentleman
,
be
idle
the
cursse
of
man
is
labour
.
Wipe
thy
bum
with
testones
,
&
make
Duckes
and
Drakes
with
shillings
:
What
Eastward
hoe
.
Wilt
thou
crie
,
what
i
st
yee
lack
?
stand
with
a
bare
pate
,
and
a
dropping
nose
,
vnder
a
wodden
pent-house
,
and
art
a
gentleman
?
wilt
thou
beare
Tankards
,
and
maist
beare
Aimes
?
be
rul'd
,
turne
gallant
,
Eastward
hoe
,
ta
lyre
,
lyre
,
ro
.
,
Who
calls
Ieronimo
?
speake
here
I
am
:
gods
so
,
how
like
a
sheepe
thou
lookst
,
a
my
conscience
some
cowheard
begot
thee
,
thou
Goulding
of
Goulding-hall
,
ha
boy
?
Gou.
Goe
,
yee
are
a
prodigall
coxcombe
,
I
a
cowheards
sonne
,
because
I
turne
not
a
drunke�
whore-hunting
rake-hell
like
thy selfe
?
Offers
to
draw
,
&
Goulding
trips
vp
his
heeles
and
holds
him
.
Quick.
Rakehell
?
rakehell
?
Goul.
Pish
,
in
soft
termes
yee
are
a
cowardly
bragging
boy
.
I
le
ha
you
whipt
.
Quic.
Whipt
,
that
's
good
ifaith
,
vntrusse
me
?
Goul.
No
,
thou
wilt
vndoe
thy selfe
.
Alas
I
behold
thee
with
pitty
,
not
with
anger
;
thou
common
shot-clog
,
gull
of
all
companies
:
mee thinkes
I
see
thee
already
walking
in
Moore
fields
without
a
Cloake
,
with
halfe
a
Hatte
,
without
a
band
,
a
Doublet
with
three
Buttons
,
without
a
girdle
,
a
hose
with
one
point
and
no
Garter
,
with
a
cudgell
vnder
thine
arme
borrowing
and
begging
three
pence
.
Quic.
Nay
Slife
,
take
this
and
take
all
:
as
I
am
a
Gentleman
borne
,
I
le
be
drunke
,
grow
valiant
,
and
beate
thee
.
Exit
.
Goul.
Goe
thou
most
madly
vaine
,
whom
nothing
can
recouer
but
that
which
reclaimes
Athiests
,
and
makes
great
persons
sometimes
religious
:
Calamitie
.
As
for
my
place
and
life
thus
I
haue
read
:
What ere
some
vainer
youth
may
terme
disgrace
,
The
gaine
of
honest
paines
is
neuer
base
:
From
trades
from
artes
,
from
valor
honor
springs
,
These
three
are
founts
of
gentry
,
yea
of
Kings
.
Enter
Girtred
,
Mildrid
,
Bettrice
,
and
Poldauy
a
Taylor
,
Poldauy
with
a
faire
gowne
,
Scotch
Varthing
all
,
and
French
fall
in
his
armes
,
girted
in
a
French
head
attire
,
&
Cittizens
gowne
;
Mildred
sowing
,
&
Bettrice
leading
a
Monkey
after
her
.
Gir.
For
the
passion
of
patience
,
looke
if
sir
Petronell
approach
;
that
sweet
,
that
fine
,
that
delicate
,
that
�
for
loues
sake
tell
me
if
he
come
.
O
sister
Mill
,
though
my
father
be
a
low
capt
tradsman
,
yet
I
must
be
a
Lady
:
and
I
praise
God
my
mother
must
call
me
Medam
,
(
does
he
come
?
)
off
with
this
gowne
for
shames
sakes
,
off
with
this
gowne
:
let
not
my
Knight
take
me
in
the
Citty
cut
in
any
hand
:
tear
't
,
pax
on
t
(
does
he
come
)
tear
't
of
.
Thus
whilst
shee
sleepes
I
sorrow
,
for
her
sake
,
&c.
Mil.
Lord
sister
,
with
what
an
immodest
impaciencie
and
disgracefull
scorne
,
doe
you
put
off
your
Citty
tier
:
I
am
sorrie
to
thinke
you
imagin
to
right
your selfe
,
in
wronging
that
which
hath
made
both
you
and
vs
.
Gir.
I
tell
you
I
cannot
indure
it
,
I
must
be
a
Lady
:
do
you
weare
your
Quoiffe
with
a
London
licket
;
your
Stammell
petticoate
with
two
guardes
,
the
Buffin
gowne
with
the
Tuftaffitic
cape
,
and
the
Veluet
lace
.
I
must
be
a
Lady
,
and
I
will
be
a
Lady
.
I
like
some
humors
of
the
Cittie
Dames
well
,
to
eate
Cherries
onely
at
an
Angell
a
pound
,
good
;
to
dye
rich
Scarlet
black
,
pretty
:
to
line
a
Grogaram
gowne
cleane
thorough
with
veluet
,
tollerable
;
their
pure
linnen
,
their
smocks
of
3.
li.
a
smock
are
to
be
borne
withall
.
But
your
minsing
niceryes
,
taffata
pipkins
,
durance
petticotes
,
&
siluer
bodkins
:
�
Gods
my
life
,
as
I
shall
be
a
Lady
I
cannot
indure
it
.
Is
hee
come
yet
?
Lord
what
a
long
knight
t
is
!
And
euer
shee
cride
shoute
home
,
and
yet
I
knew
one
longer
,
and
euer
she
cryde
shoute
home
,
fa
,
la
,
ly
,
re
,
lo
,
la
.
Mil.
Well
Sister
,
those
that
scorne
their
nest
,
oft
flye
with
a
sicke
wing
.
Gir.
Boe-bell
.
Mil.
Where
Titles
presume
to
thrust
before
fit
meanes
to
second
them
,
Wealth
and
respect
often
growe
sullen
and
will
not
follow
.
For
sure
in
this
,
I
would
for
your
sake
I
spake
not
truth
.
Where
ambition
of
place
goes
before
fitnesse
of
birth
,
contempt
and
disgrace
follow
.
I
heard
a
Scholler
once
say
,
that
Ulisses
when
he
counterfeited
himselfe
madde
,
yoakt
cattes
,
and
foxes
,
and
dogges
togither
to
draw
his
plowe
,
whilst
he
followed
and
sowed
salt
:
But
sure
I
judge
them
truely
madde
,
that
yoake
citizens
and
courtiers
,
trades
men
and
souldiers
,
a
gold-smiths
daughter
and
a
knight
:
well
sister
,
pray
God
my
father
sowe
not
salt
too
.
Gir.
Alas
,
poore
Mil
.
when
I
am
a
Lady
,
I
le
pray
for
thee
yet
I faith
:
Nay
,
and
I
le
vouchsafe
to
call
thee
sister
Mil
still
,
for
though
thou
art
not
like
to
be
a
Lady
as
I
am
,
yet
sure
thou
art
a
creature
of
Gods
making
;
and
mayest
paraduenture
to
bee
sau'd
as
soone
as
I
,
(
dos
he
come
?
)
And
euer
and
anon
she
doubled
in
her
song
.
Now
(
Ladyes
my
comfort
)
What
a
prophane
Ape
's
here
!
Tailer
,
Poldavis
,
prethee
fit
it
fit
it
:
is
this
a
right
Scot
?
Does
it
clip
close
?
and
beare
vp
round
?
Pold.
Fine
and
stifly
i faith
,
t
will
keepe
your
thighes
so
coole
and
make
your
waste
so
small
:
here
was
a
fault
in
your
bodie
,
but
I
haue
supplyed
the
defect
,
with
the
effect
of
my
steele
instrument
which
,
though
it
haue
but
one
eye
,
can
see
to
rectifie
the
imperfection
of
the
proportion
.
Gir.
Most
aedefying
Tailer
!
I
protest
you
Tailers
are
most
sanctified
members
,
and
make
many
crooked
thing
goe
vpright
.
How
must
I
beare
my
hands
?
light
?
light
?
Pold.
O
I
,
now
you
are
in
the
Lady-fashion
,
you
must
doe
all
things
light
.
Tread
light
,
light
.
I
and
fall
so
:
that
's
the
court-Amble
.
She
trips
about
the
stage
.
Gir.
Has
the
Court
nere
a
trot
?
Pold.
No
,
but
a
false
gallop
,
Ladie
.
Gir.
And
if
she
will
not
goe
to
bed
Cantat
.
Bett.
The
knights
come
forsooth
.
Enter
Sir
Petronell
,
M.
Touch-stone
,
and
Mistris
Touchstone
.
Gir.
Is
my
knight
come
?
O
the
Lord
.
my
band
?
Sister
doo
my
cheekes
looke
well
?
giue
me
a
little
boxe
a
the
eare
that
I
may
see
me
to
blush
:
now
,
now
.
So
,
there
,
there
,
there
!
here
he
is
:
O
my
dearest
delight
,
Lord
,
Lord
,
and
how
doe
my
Knight
?
Touch:
Fye
,
with
more
modestie
.
Gir.
Modestie
!
why
I
am
no
cittizen
now
,
modestie
?
am
I
not
to
bee
married
?
y'
are
best
to
keepe
me
modest
now
I
am
to
be
a
Ladie
.
Sir
Petro.
Boldnes
is
good
fashion
and
courtlike
.
Gir.
I
,
in
a
countrie
Ladie
I
hope
it
is
:
as
I
shall
be
.
And
how
chaunce
ye
came
no
sooner
knight
?
Sir
Petro.
Faith
,
I
was
so
intertaind
in
the
Progresse
with
one
Count
Epernoum
a
welch
knight
:
wee
had
a
match
at
Baloone
too
,
with
my
Lord
Whachum
,
for
foure
crownes
.
Gir.
At
Baboone
?
Iesu
!
you
and
I
will
play
at
Baboone
in
the
countrey
?
Knight
.
Sir
Pet.
O
sweet
Lady
:
t
is
a
strong
play
with
the
arme
.
Gir.
With
arme
,
or
legge
,
or
any
other
member
,
if
it
bee
a
court-sport
.
And
when
shal
's
be
married
my
Knight
?
Sir
Pet.
I
come
now
to
consumate
it
;
and
your
father
may
call
a
poore
Knight
,
Sonne
in
Law
.
M.
Touch.
Sir
,
ye
are
come
,
what
is
not
mine
to
keepe
,
I
must
not
be
sorry
to
forgoe
:
A
100.
li.
Land
her
Grandmother
left
her
,
t
is
yours
,
her selfe
(
as
her
mothers
gift
)
is
yours
.
But
if
you
expect
ought
from
me
,
know
,
my
hand
and
mine
eyes
open
together
;
I
doe
not
giue
blindly
:
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Sir
Pet.
Sir
,
you
mistrust
not
my
meanes
?
I
am
a
Knight
.
Touch.
Sir
,
Sir
;
What
I
know
not
,
you
will
giue
me
leaue
to
say
,
I
am
ignorant
of
.
Mistris
Touch.
Yes
,
that
he
is
a
Knight
;
I
know
where
he
had
money
to
pay
the
Gentlemen
Vshers
,
and
Heralds
their
Fees
.
I
,
that
he
is
a
Knight
:
and
so
might
you
haue
beene
too
,
if
you
had
beene
ought
else
then
an
Asse
,
aswell
as
some
of
your
neighbours
.
And
I
thought
you
would
not
ha
beene
Knighted
,
(
as
I
am
an
honest
woman
)
I
would
ha
dub'd
you
my self
,
I
praise
God
I
haue
wherewithall
.
But
as
for
you
daughter
.
�
Gir.
I
mother
,
I
must
bee
a
Ladie
to morrow
:
and
by
your
leaue
mother
(
I
speake
it
not
without
my
dutie
,
but
onely
in
the
right
of
my
husband
)
I
must
take
place
of
you
,
Mother
.
Mistris
Touch.
That
you
shall
Lady-daughter
,
and
haue
a
Coach
as
well
as
I
too
.
Cir.
Yes
mother
.
But
by
your
leaue
mother
,
(
I
speake
it
not
without
my
dutie
but
onely
in
my
husbands
right
)
my
Coach-horses
must
take
the
wall
of
your
Coach-horses
.
Touch-stone
.
Come
,
come
,
the
day
growes
low
:
t
is
supper
time
;
vse
my
house
the
wedding
solemnitie
is
at
my
wifes
cost
;
thanke
mee
for
nothing
but
my
willing
blessing
:
for
(
I
cannot
faine
)
my
hopes
are
faint
.
And
Sir
,
respect
my
daughter
,
shee
has
refus'd
for
you
wealthy
and
honest
matches
,
knowne
good
men
,
well
monied
,
better
traded
,
best
reputed
.
Gir.
Boddy
a
truth
,
Chittizens
,
Chittizens
.
Sweet
Knight
,
as
soone
as
euer
wee
are
married
,
take
mee
to
to
thy
mercie
out
of
this
miserable
Chittie
,
presently
,
carry
me
out
of
the
sent
of
New-castle
Coale
,
and
the
hearing
of
Boe-bell
,
I
beseech
thee
downe
with
me
for
God
sake
.
Touch.
Well
daughter
,
I
haue
read
,
that
olde
wit
sings
:
The
greatest
riuers
flow
from
little
springs
.
Though
thou
art
full
,
skorne
not
thy
meanes
at
first
,
He
that
's
most
drunke
may
soonest
be
a
thirst
.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
All
but
Touch-stone
,
Mildred
,
and
Goulding
depart
.
No
,
no
;
yon'd
stand
my
hopes
.
Milared
,
Come
hither
daughter
.
And
how
approue
you
your
sisters
fashion
?
how
doe
you
phantsie
her
cho
yee
?
what
dost
thou
thinke
?
Mil
I
hope
as
a
sister
,
well
.
Touch.
Nay
but
,
nay
but
how
dost
thou
like
her
behauiour
and
humour
?
speake
freely
.
Mil.
I
am
loath
to
speake
ill
:
and
yet
I
am
sorry
of
this
,
I
cannot
speake
well
.
Touch.
Well
:
very
good
,
as
I
would
wish
:
A
modest
answere
�
Goulding
,
come
hither
:
hither
Golding
.
How
dost
thou
like
the
Knight
.
Sir
Flash
?
dos
he
not
looke
bigge
?
how
likst
thou
the
Elephant
?
he
sayes
he
has
a
castle
in
the
Countrey
.
Gould
.
Pray
heauen
,
the
Elephant
carry
not
his
Castle
on
his
backe
.
Touch.
Fore
heauen
,
very
well
:
But
seriously
,
how
dost
repute
him
?
Gould
.
The
best
I
can
say
of
him
is
,
I
know
him
not
.
Touch.
Ha
Gulding
?
I
commend
thee
,
I
approoue
thee
,
and
will
make
it
appeare
my
affection
is
strong
to
thee
.
My
wife
has
her
humour
,
and
I
will
ha
,
mine
.
Dost
thou
see
my
daughter
here
?
shee
is
not
faire
,
well-fauoured
or
so
,
indifferent
,
which
modest
measure
of
beautie
,
shall
not
make
it
thy
onely
worke
to
watch
her
,
nor
sufficient
mischaunce
,
to
suspect
her
.
Thou
art
towardly
,
shee
is
modest
,
thou
art
prouident
,
shee
is
carefull
.
Shee
's
nowe
mine
:
giue
me
thy
hand
,
shee
's
now
thine
.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Gould
.
Sir
,
as
your
sonne
,
I
honour
you
;
and
as
your
seruant
obey
you
.
Touch.
Sayest
thou
so
,
come
hither
Mildred
.
Doe
you
see
yon'd
fellow
?
he
is
a
gentleman
(
tho
my
Prentise
)
&
has
somewhat
to
take
too
:
a
Youth
of
good
hope
;
well
friended
,
wel
parted
.
Are
you
mine
?
You
are
his
.
Worke
(
you
)
vpon
that
now
.
Mil.
Sir
,
I
am
all
yours
:
your
body
gaue
mee
life
,
your
care
and
loue
hapinesse
of
life
:
let
your
vertue
still
direct
it
,
for
to
your
wisedome
I
wholy
dispose
my selfe
.
Touch.
Sayst
thou
so
?
be
you
two
better
acquainted
.
Lip
her
,
Lip
her
knaue
.
So
shut
vp
shop
:
in
�
We
must
make
holiday
.
This
match
shal
on
,
for
I
intend
to
prooue
Ex.
Gol.
&
Mil.
Which
thriues
the
best
,
the
meane
or
loftie
loue
.
Whether
fit
Wedlock
vowd
twixt
like
and
like
.
Or
prouder
hopes
,
which
daringly
ore
strike
Their
place
and
meanes
:
t
is
honest
Times
expence
.
When
seeming
lightnesse
beares
a
moral
sense
.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Exit
.
Actus
secundi
.
Scena
Prima
.
Touchstone
,
Quickesiluer
,
Goulding
and
Mildred
,
sitting
on
eyther
side
of
the
stall
.
Touch.
Quickesiluer
,
maister
Frances
Quickesiluer
,
maister
Quickesiluer
?
Enter
Quickesiluer
.
Qui.
Here
sir
;
(
vmp
.
)
Touch.
So
sir
;
nothing
but
flat
Maister
Quickesiluer
(
without
any
familiar
addition
)
will
fetch
you
:
will
you
trusse
my
points
sir
?
Quick.
I
forsooth
:
(
vmp
.
)
Touch.
How
now
sir
?
the
druncken
hyckop
,
so
soone
this
morning
?
Quick.
T
is
but
the
coldnesse
of
my
stomack
forsooth
.
Touch.
What
?
haue
you
the
cause
naturall
for
it
?
y'
are
a
very
learned
drunckerd
:
I
beleeue
I
shall
misse
some
of
my
siluer
spoones
with
your
learning
.
The
nuptiall
night
will
not
moisten
your
throate
sufficiently
,
but
the
morning
likewise
must
raine
her
dews
into
your
gluttonous
wesand
.
Quick.
An
't
please
you
sir
,
we
did
but
drinke
(
vmp
,
)
to
the
comming
off
,
of
the
Knightly
Bridegrome
.
Touch.
To
the
comming
off
an'him
?
Quick.
I
forsooth
:
we
druncke
to
his
comming
on
(
vmp
,
)
when
we
went
to
bed
;
and
now
we
are
vp
,
we
must
drinke
to
his
comming
off
:
for
that
's
the
chiefe
honour
of
a
Souldier
sir
,
and
therfore
we
must
drinke
so
much
the
more
to
it
,
forsooth
.
(
vmp
.
)
Touch.
A
very
capitall
reason
.
So
that
you
goe
to
bed
late
,
and
rise
early
to
commit
drunkennesse
?
you
fullfill
the
Scripture
very
sufficient
wickedly
forsooth
.
Quick.
The
Knights
men
forsooth
be
still
a
their
knees
at
it
,
(
vmp
)
&
because
t
is
for
your
credit
sir
,
I
wold
be
loth
to
flinch
.
Touch.
I
pray
sir
,
een
to
'hem
againe
then
;
y'
are
one
of
the
seperated
crew
,
one
of
my
wiues
faction
,
&
my
young
Ladies
,
with
who�
&
with
their
great
match
,
I
wil
haue
nothing
to
do
.
Quick.
So
sir
,
now
I
will
go
keepe
my
(
vmp
)
credit
with
'hem
an
't
please
you
sir
.
Touch.
In
any
case
Sir
,
lay
one
cup
of
Sack
more
alyour
cold
stomack
,
I
beseech
you
.
Quick.
Yes
forsooth
.
Exit
.
Quick
.
Touch.
This
is
for
my
credit
Seruants
euer
maintaine
drunkennesse
in
their
maisters
house
,
for
their
maisters
credit
;
a
good
idle
Seruing-mans
reason
:
I
thanke
Time
,
the
night
is
past
;
I
nere
wakt
to
such
cost
;
I
thinke
we
haue
stowd
more
sorts
of
flesh
in
our
bellies
,
then
euer
Noahs
Arke
receiued
:
and
for
Wine
,
why
my
house
turnes
giddie
with
it
,
and
more
noise
in
it
then
at
a
Conduict
;
Aye
me
,
euen
beasts
condemne
our
gluttonie
.
Well
,
't
is
our
Citties
fault
,
which
because
we
commit
seldome
,
we
commit
the
more
sinfully
,
wee
lose
no
time
in
our
sensualitie
,
but
we
make
amends
for
it
;
O
that
we
would
do
so
in
vertue
,
and
religious
negligences
;
But
see
here
are
all
the
sober
parcels
my
house
can
showe
,
I
le
cauesdrop
,
heare
what
thoughts
they
vtter
this
morning
.
Enter
Goulding
.
Goul.
But
is
it
possible
,
that
you
seeing
your
sister
preferd
to
the
bed
of
a
Knight
,
should
containe
your
affections
in
the
armes
of
a
Prentice
?
Myl.
I
had
rather
make
vp
the
garment
of
my
affections
in
some
of
the
same
peece
,
then
like
a
foole
weare
gownes
of
two
coulours
,
or
mix
Sackcloth
with
Sattin
.
Goul.
And
doe
the
costly
garments
;
the
title
and
fame
of
a
Lady
the
fashion
;
obseruation
,
and
reuerence
proper
to
such
preferment
,
no
more
enflame
you
,
then
such
conuenience
as
my
poore
meanes
and
industrie
can
offer
to
your
vertues
?
Mil.
I
haue
obseru'd
that
the
bridle
giuen
to
those
violent
flatteries
of
fortune
,
is
seldome
recouer'd
;
they
beare
one
headlong
in
desire
from
one
noueltie
to
another
:
and
where
those
ranging
appetites
raigne
,
there
is
euer
more
passion
then
reasons
no
staye
,
and
so
no
happinesse
.
These
hastie
aduancements
are
not
naturall
;
Nature
hath
giuen
vs
legges
,
to
goe
to
our
obiects
;
not
wings
to
flie
to
them
.
Goul.
How
deare
an
obiect
you
are
to
my
desires
I
cannot
expresse
,
whose
fruition
would
my
maisters
absolute
consent
and
yours
vouchsafe
me
,
I
should
be
absolutely
happy
.
And
though
it
were
a
grace
so
farre
beyond
my
merit
,
that
I
should
blush
with
vnworthinesse
to
receiue
it
,
yet
thus
farre
both
my
loue
&
my
meanes
shall
assure
your
requitall
;
you
shall
want
nothing
fit
for
your
birth
and
education
;
what
encrease
of
wealth
and
aduancement
the
honest
and
orderly
industrie
&
skill
of
our
trade
will
affoorde
in
any
,
I
doubt
not
will
be
aspirde
by
me
;
I
will
euer
make
your
contenment
the
end
of
my
endeuours
;
I
will
loue
you
aboue
all
;
and
onely
your
griefe
shall
be
my
miserie
;
and
your
delight
,
my
felicitie
.
Touch.
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
By
my
hopes
,
he
woes
honestly
and
orderly
;
he
shal
be
Anchor
of
my
hopes
.
Looke
,
see
the
ill
yoakt
monster
his
fellow
.
Enter
Quickesiluer
vnlac'd
,
a
towell
about
his
necke
,
in
his
flat
Cap
,
drunke
.
Quick.
Eastward
Hoe
;
Holla
ye
pampered
Iades
of
Asia
.
Touch.
Drunke
now
downe
right
,
a
,
my
fidelitie
.
Quic.
(
Vmp
)
pulldo
,
Pulldo
;
showse
quoth
the
Caliuer
.
Goul.
Fie
fellow
Quickesiluer
,
what
a
pickle
are
you
in
?
Quic.
Pickle
?
pickle
in
thy
throate
;
zounes
pickle
?
wa
ha
ho
,
good
morow
knight
Petronell
:
morow
lady
Gouldsmith
.
come
of
,
Knight
,
with
a
counterbuff
,
for
the
honor
of
knighthood
.
Goul.
Why
how
now
sir
?
doe
yee
know
where
you
are
?
Quic.
Where
I
am
?
why
sbloud
you
loulthead
where
I
am
?
Goul.
Go
to
,
go
to
,
for
shame
go
to
bed
,
and
sleepe
out
this
immodestie
:
thou
sham'st
both
my
maister
and
his
house
.
Quick.
Shame
?
what
shame
?
I
thought
,
thou
wouldst
show
thy
bringing
vp
:
and
thou
wert
a
Gentleman
as
I
am
,
thou
wouldst
thinke
it
no
shame
to
be
drunke
.
Lend
me
some
money
,
saue
my
credit
,
I
must
dine
with
the
Seruing
men
and
their
wiues
;
and
their
wiues
sirha
.
Gou.
E'ene
who
you
will
,
I
le
not
lend
thee
three
pence
.
Quic.
Sfoote
lend
me
some
money
,
hast
thou
not
Hyren
here
?
Touch.
Why
how
now
sirha
?
what
vain
's
this
,
hah
?
Quic.
Who
cries
on
murther
?
lady
was
it
you
?
how
does
our
maister
?
pray
thee
crie
Eastward
ho
?
Touch.
Sirha
,
sirrha
,
y'
are
past
your
hickvp
now
,
I
see
y'
are
drunke
.
Quic.
T
is
for
your
credit
maister
.
Touch.
And
heare
you
keepe
a
whore
in
towne
.
Quic.
T
is
for
your
credit
Maister
.
Touch.
And
what
you
are
out
in
Cashe
,
I
know
.
Quick.
So
do
I
.
my
fathers
a
Gentleman
,
Worke
vpon
that
now
;
Eastward
hoe
.
Touch.
Sir
,
Eastward
hoe
,
will
make
you
go
Westward
ho
;
I
will
no
longer
dishonest
my
house
,
nor
endanger
my
stocke
with
your
licence
;
There
sir
,
there
's
your
Indenture
,
all
your
apparell
(
that
I
must
know
)
is
on
your
back
;
and
from
this
time
my
doore
is
shut
to
you
:
from
me
be
free
;
but
for
other
freedome
,
and
the
moneys
you
haue
wasted
;
Eastward
ho
,
shall
not
serue
you
.
Quic.
Am
I
free
a
,
my
fetters
?
Rense
;
Flye
with
a
Duck
in
thy
mouth
:
and
now
I
tell
thee
Touchstone
�
Touch.
Good
sir
.
Quic.
When
this
eternall
substance
of
my
soule
,
Touch.
Well
said
,
chandge
your
gould
ends
for
your
play
ends
.
Quick.
Did
liue
imprison'd
in
my
wanton
flesh
.
Touch.
What
then
sir
?
Quic.
I
was
a
Courtier
in
the
Spanish
court
,
and
Don
Andrea
was
my
name
.
Touch.
Good
maister
Don
Andrea
will
you
marche
?
Quic.
Sweete
Touchstone
,
will
you
lend
me
two
shillings
?
Touch.
Not
a
penny
.
Quic.
Not
a
penny
?
I
haue
friends
,
&
I
haue
acquaintance
,
I
will
pisse
at
thy
shop
posts
,
and
throw
rotten
Egges
at
thy
signe
:
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Exit
,
staggering
.
Touch.
Now
sirha
,
you
?
heare
you
?
you
shall
serue
me
no
more
neither
;
not
an
houre
longer
.
Goul.
What
meane
you
sir
?
Touch.
I
meane
to
giue
thee
thy
freedome
;
&
with
thy
freedome
my
daughter
:
&
with
my
daughter
a
fathers
loue
.
And
with
all
these
such
a
portion
,
as
shall
make
Knight
Petronell
himselfe
enuie
thee
:
y'
are
both
agreed
?
are
yee
not
?
Ambo.
With
all
submission
,
both
of
thanks
and
dutie
.
Tou.
Well
then
,
the
great
powre
of
heaue�
blesse
&
confirme
you
.
And
,
Goulding
,
that
my
loue
to
thee
may
not
showe
lesse
then
my
wiues
loue
to
my
eldest
daughter
;
thy
mariage
feast
shall
equall
the
Knights
and
hers
.
Goul.
Let
me
beseech
you
,
no
Sir
,
the
superfluitie
and
colde
meate
left
at
their
Nuptialls
,
will
with
bountie
furnish
ours
.
The
grossest
prodigallitie
is
superfluous
cost
of
the
Bellye
:
nor
would
I
wish
any
invitement
of
States
or
friendes
,
onely
your
reuerent
presence
and
witnesse
shall
sufficiently
grace
and
confirme
vs
.
Touch.
Sonne
to
mine
owne
bosome
,
take
her
and
my
blessing
:
The
nice
fondling
,
my
Lady
sir-reuerence
,
that
I
must
not
nowe
presume
to
call
daughter
,
is
so
rauish't
with
desire
to
hansell
her
new
Coche
,
and
see
her
knights
Eastward
Castle
,
that
the
next
morning
will
sweate
with
her
busie
setting
foorth
,
awaye
will
she
and
her
mother
,
and
while
their
preparation
is
making
,
our selues
with
some
two
or
three
other
friends
will
consumate
the
humble
matche
,
we
haue
in
Gods
name
concluded
.
T
is
to
my
wish
;
for
I
haue
often
read
,
Fit
birth
,
fit
age
,
keepes
long
a
quiet
bed
.
T
is
to
my
wish
;
For
Tradesmen
(
well
t
is
knowne
)
Get
with
more
ease
,
then
Gentrie
keepes
his
owne
.
Exit
.
Securitie
solus
.
Secu.
My
priuie
Guest
,
lustie
Quickesiluer
,
has
drunke
too
deepe
of
the
Bride-boule
,
but
with
a
little
sleepe
he
is
much
recouered
;
And
I
thinke
is
making
himselfe
readie
,
to
bee
drunke
in
a
gallanter
likenes
:
My
house
is
as
t'
were
the
Caue
,
where
the
yong
Out-lawe
hoords
the
stolne
vayles
of
his
occupation
;
And
here
when
he
will
reuell
it
in
his
prodigall
similitude
,
he
retires
to
his
Trunks
,
and
(
I
may
say
softly
)
his
Punks
:
he
dares
trust
me
with
the
keeping
of
both
:
for
I
am
Securitie
it selfe
,
my
name
is
Securitie
,
the
famous
Vsurer
.
Enter
Quickesiluer
in
his
Prentises
Cote
and
Cap
his
gallant
Breeches
and
Stockings
,
gartering
himselfe
.
Securitie
following
.
Quic.
Come
old
Securitie
,
thou
father
of
destruction
:
th'
indented
Sheepeskinne
is
burn'd
wherein
I
was
wrapt
,
and
I
am
now
loose
,
to
get
more
children
of
perdition
into
thy
vsurous
Bonds
.
Thou
feed'st
my
Lecherie
,
and
I
thy
Couetousnes
:
Thou
art
Pandar
to
me
for
my
wench
,
and
I
to
thee
for
thy
coosenages
:
K.
mee
,
K.
thee
,
runnes
through
Court
and
Countrey
.
Secu.
Well
said
my
subtle
Quickesiluer
,
These
K's
ope
the
dores
to
all
this
worldes
felicitie
:
the
dullest
forehead
sees
it
.
Let
not
mast
.
Courtier
thinke
hee
carries
all
the
knauery
on
his
shoulders
:
I
haue
poore
Hob
in
the
countrie
,
that
has
worne
hob-nayles
on
's
shoes
,
haue
as
much
villanie
in
's
head
,
as
he
that
weares
gold
bottons
in
's
cap
.
Quic.
Why
man
,
t
is
the
London
high-way
to
thrift
,
if
vertue
bee
vsde
;
t
is
but
as
a
scrappe
to
the
nette
of
villanie
.
They
that
vse
it
simplie
,
thriue
simplie
I
warrant
:
Waight
and
fashion
makes
Goldsmiths
Cockolds
.
Enter
Syndefie
,
with
Quicke-siluers
doublet
,
Cloake
,
Rapier
,
and
Dagger
.
Synd.
Here
sir
,
put
of
the
other
halfe
of
your
Prentiship
.
Quick.
Well
sayd
sweet
Syn
:
bring
forth
my
brauerie
.
Now
let
my
Truncks
shoote
foor
their
silkes
concealde
,
I
now
am
free
;
and
now
will
iustifie
My
Trunkes
and
Punkes
:
Auant
dull
Flat-cap
then
,
Via
,
the
curtaine
that
shaddowed
Borgia
;
There
lie
thou
huske
of
my
envassail'd
State
.
I
Sampson
now
,
haue
burst
the
Philistins
Bands
,
And
in
thy
lappe
my
louely
Dalida
,
I
le
lie
and
snore
out
my
enfranchisde
state
.
When
Sampson
was
a
tall
yong
man
His
power
and
strength
increased
than
,
He
sould
no
more
,
nor
cup
,
nor
can
,
But
did
them
all
dispise
.
Old
Touchstone
,
now
wright
to
thy
friends
,
For
one
to
sell
thy
base
gold
ends
Quickesiluer
,
now
no
more
attends
Thee
Touchstone
.
But
Dad
,
hast
thou
seene
my
running
Gelding
drest
to day
?
Secu.
That
I
haue
Franck
,
the
Ostler
a'
th
Cocke
,
drest
him
for
a
Breakefast
.
Quick.
What
did
he
eate
him
?
Secu.
No
,
but
he
eate
his
breakefast
for
dressing
him
:
and
so
drest
him
for
breakfast
.
Quicksiluer
.
O
wittie
Age
,
where
age
is
young
in
witte
,
And
al
youths
words
haue
gray
beards
full
of
it
!
Hyn.
But
ah-las
Francke
,
how
will
all
this
bee
maintain'd
now
?
Your
place
maintain'd
it
before
.
Quickesiluer
.
Why
and
I
maintainde
my
place
.
I
le
to
the
Court
,
another
manner
of
place
for
maintenance
I
hope
then
the
silly
Cittie
.
I
heard
my
father
say
,
I
heard
my
mother
sing
an
olde
Song
and
a
true
:
Tou
art
a
shee
foole
,
and
know'st
not
what
belongs
to
our
male
wisedome
.
I
shall
bee
a
Marchaunt
for-sooth
:
trust
my
estate
in
a
wooden
Troughe
as
hee
does
?
What
are
these
Shippes
,
but
Tennis
Balles
for
the
windes
to
play
withall
?
Tost
from
one
waue
to
another
;
Nowe
vnder-line
;
Nowe
ouer
the
house
;
Sometimes
Bricke-wal'd
against
a
Rocke
,
so
that
the
guttes
flye
out
againe
:
sometimes
strooke
vnder
the
wide
Hazzard
,
and
farewell
Mast
.
Marchant
.
Synnedefie
.
Well
Francke
,
well
;
the
Seas
you
say
are
vncertaine
:
But
hee
that
sayles
in
your
Court
Seas
,
shall
finde
'hem
tenne
times
fuller
of
hazzard
;
wherein
to
see
what
is
to
bee
seene
,
is
torment
more
then
a
free
Spirite
can
indure
;
But
when
you
come
to
suffer
,
howe
many
Iniuries
swallowe
you
?
What
care
and
deuotion
must
you
vse
,
to
humour
an
imperious
Lord
?
proportion
your
lookes
to
his
lookes
?
smiles
to
his
smiles
?
fit
your
sayles
to
the
winde
of
his
breath
?
Quick.
Tush
hee
's
no
Iourney-man
in
his
craft
,
that
can
not
doe
that
.
Sinnedefie
.
But
hee
's
worse
then
a
Prentise
that
does
it
,
not
onely
humouring
the
Lorde
,
but
euery
Trencherbearer
,
euery
Groome
that
by
indulgence
and
intelligence
crept
into
his
fauour
,
and
by
Pandatisme
into
his
Chamber
;
He
rules
the
roste
:
And
when
my
honourable
Lorde
sayes
it
shall
bee
thus
,
my
worshipfull
Rascall
(
the
Groome
of
his
close
stoole
)
sayes
it
shall
not
bee
thus
,
claps
the
doore
after
him
,
and
who
dares
enter
?
A
Prentise
,
quoth
you
?
t
is
but
to
learne
to
liue
,
and
does
that
disgrace
a
man
?
hee
that
rises
hardly
,
stands
firmely
:
but
hee
that
rises
with
ease
,
Alas
,
falles
as
easily
.
Quickesiluer
.
A
pox
on
you
,
who
taught
you
this
morrallitie
?
Securitie
.
T
is
long
of
this
wittie
Age
,
Maister
Francis
.
But
indeede
,
Mistris
Synnedefie
,
all
Trades
complaine
of
inconuenience
,
and
therefore
t
is
best
to
haue
none
.
The
Marchaunt
hee
complaines
,
and
sayes
,
Trafficke
is
subiect
to
much
vncertaintie
and
losse
:
let
'hem
keepe
their
goods
on
dry
land
with
a
vengeaunce
,
and
not
expose
other
mens
substances
to
the
mercie
of
the
windes
,
vnder
protection
of
a
woodden
wall
(
as
Maister
Francis
sayes
)
and
all
for
greedie
desire
,
to
enrich
themselues
with
vnconscionable
gaine
,
two
for
one
,
or
so
:
where
I
,
and
such
other
honest
men
as
liue
by
lending
money
,
are
content
with
moderate
profite
;
Thirtie
,
or
Fortie
i'
th'
hundred
:
so
wee
may
haue
it
with
quietnesse
,
and
out
of
perill
of
winde
and
weather
,
rather
then
runne
those
daungerous
courses
of
trading
,
as
they
doe
.
Quick.
I
Dad
thou
mayst
well
bee
called
Securitie
,
for
thou
takest
the
safest
course
.
Securitie
.
Faith
the
quieter
,
and
the
more
contented
;
and
,
out
of
doubt
,
the
more
godly
.
For
Marchants
in
their
courses
are
neuer
pleas'd
,
but
euer
repining
against
Heauen
:
One
prayes
for
a
Westerly
winde
to
carry
his
shippe
foorth
;
another
for
an
Easterly
to
bring
his
shippe
home
;
and
at
euery
shaking
of
a
lease
,
hee
falles
into
an
agonie
,
to
thinke
what
daunger
his
Shippe
is
in
on
such
a
Coast
,
and
so
foorth
.
The
Farmer
hee
is
euer
at
oddes
with
the
Weather
,
sometimes
the
clowdes
haue
beene
too
barren
;
Sometimes
the
Heauens
forgette
themselues
,
their
Haruests
answere
not
their
hopes
;
Sometimes
the
Season
falles
out
too
fruitefull
,
Corne
will
beare
no
price
,
and
so
foorth
.
Th'
Artificer
,
hee
's
all
for
a
stirring
worlde
,
if
his
Trade
bee
too
full
and
fall
short
of
his
expectation
,
then
falles
he
out
of
ioynt
.
Where
we
that
trade
nothing
but
money
,
are
free
from
all
this
,
wee
are
pleas'd
with
all
weathers
:
let
it
raine
or
hold
vp
,
bee
calme
or
windy
,
let
the
season
be
whatsoeuer
,
let
Trade
goe
how
it
will
,
wee
take
all
in
good
part
;
een
what
please
the
heauens
to
send
vs
;
so
the
Sunne
stand
not
still
;
and
the
Moone
keepe
her
vsuall
returnes
;
and
make
vp
dayes
,
moneths
,
and
yeares
.
Quick.
And
you
haue
good
securitie
?
Secu.
I
mary
Francke
,
that
's
the
speciall
point
.
Quick.
And
yet
forsooth
wee
must
haue
Trades
to
liue
withall
;
For
wee
cannot
stand
without
legges
,
nor
flye
without
wings
;
and
a
number
of
such
skurvie
phrases
.
No
,
I
say
still
;
hee
that
has
wit
,
let
him
liue
by
his
wit
:
hee
that
has
none
,
let
him
be
a
Trades-man
.
Secu.
Witty
Maister
Francis
!
T
is
pittie
any
Trade
should
dull
that
quicke
braine
of
yours
.
Doe
but
bring
Knight
Petronell
into
my
Parchment
Toyles
once
,
and
you
shall
neuer
neede
to
toyle
in
any
trade
,
a
my
credit
!
You
know
his
wiues
Land
?
Quickesiluer
.
Euen
to
a
foote
Sir
,
I
haue
beene
often
there
:
a
pretie
fine
Seate
,
good
Land
,
all
intire
within
it selfe
.
Secu.
Well
wooded
?
Quick.
Two
hundered
pounds
woorth
of
wood
readye
to
fell
.
And
a
fine
sweete
house
that
stands
iust
in
the
midst
an
't
,
like
a
Pricke
in
the
midst
of
a
Circle
;
would
I
were
your
Farmer
,
for
a
hundred
pound
a
yeere
.
Secu.
Excellent
M.
Francis
;
how
I
do
long
to
doe
thee
good
:
How
I
doe
hunger
,
and
thirst
to
haue
the
honour
to
inrich
thee
?
I
,
euen
to
die
,
that
thou
mightest
inherite
my
liuing
:
euen
hunger
and
thirst
,
for
a
my
Religion
,
M.
Francis
.
And
so
tell
Knight
Petrouell
I
doe
it
to
doe
him
a
pleasure
.
Quickesiluer
.
Marry
Dad
,
his
horses
are
now
comming
vp
,
to
beare
downe
his
Ladie
,
wilt
thou
lend
him
thy
stable
to
set
'hem
in
?
Secur.
Faith
M.
Francis
,
I
would
be
lothe
to
lend
my
Stable
out
of
dores
,
in
a
greater
matter
I
will
pleasure
him
,
but
not
in
this
.
Quick.
A
pox
of
your
hunger
and
thirst
.
Well
Dad
,
let
him
haue
money
:
All
he
could
any
way
get
,
is
bestowed
on
a
Ship
,
now
bound
for
Virginia
:
the
frame
of
which
voiage
is
so
closely
conuaide
,
that
his
new
Ladie
nor
any
of
her
friendes
know
it
.
Notwithstanding
,
as
soone
as
his
Ladyes
hand
is
gotten
to
the
sale
of
her
inheritance
,
and
you
haue
furnisht
him
with
money
,
he
will
instantly
hoyst
Saile
,
and
away
.
Secur.
Now
a
Franck
gale
of
winde
goe
with
him
,
Maister
Franke
,
we
haue
too
few
such
knight
aduenturers
:
who
would
not
sell
away
competent
certainties
,
to
purchase
(
with
any
danger
)
excellent
vncertainties
?
your
true
knight
venturer
euer
does
it
.
Let
his
wife
seale
to day
,
he
shall
haue
his
money
to day
.
Qui.
To morrow
she
shall
,
Dad
,
before
she
goes
into
the
cou�try
,
to
worke
her
to
which
actio
,
with
the
more
engines
,
I
purpose
presently
to
preferre
my
sweete
Sinne
here
,
to
the
place
of
her
Gentlewoman
;
whom
you
(
for
the
more
credit
)
shall
present
as
your
friends
daughter
,
a
Gentlewoman
of
the
countrie
,
new
come
vp
with
a
will
for
a
while
to
learne
fashions
for-sooth
,
and
be
toward
some
Ladie
;
and
she
shall
buzz
prettie
deuises
into
her
Ladies
eare
;
feeding
her
humors
so
seruiceablie
(
as
the
manner
of
such
as
she
is
you
know
.
)
Secur.
True
good
Maister
Fraunces
.
Enter
Sindefie
.
Quic.
That
she
shall
keepe
her
Port
open
to
any
thing
she
commends
to
her
.
Secur.
A'
my
religion
,
a
most
fashionable
proiect
;
as
good
she
spoile
the
Lady
,
as
the
Lady
spoile
her
;
for
t
is
three
to
one
of
one
side
:
sweete
mistresse
Sinne
,
how
are
you
bound
to
maister
Frances
!
I
doe
not
doubt
to
see
you
shortly
wedde
one
of
the
head
men
of
our
cittie
.
Sinne.
But
sweete
Franke
,
when
shall
my
father
Securitie
present
me
?
Quic.
With
all
festination
;
I
haue
broken
the
Ice
to
it
already
;
and
will
presently
to
the
Knights
house
,
whether
,
my
good
old
Dad
,
let
me
pray
thee
with
all
formallitie
to
man
her
.
Secur.
Commaund
me
Maister
Frances
;
I
doe
hunger
and
thirst
to
doe
thee
seruice
.
Come
sweete
Mistresse
Sinne
,
take
leaue
of
my
Wynnifride
,
and
we
will
instantly
meete
francke
Maister
Frances
at
your
Ladies
.
Enter
Winnifride
aboue
.
Win.
Where
is
my
Cu
there
?
Cu
?
Secur.
I
Winnie
.
Win.
Wilt
thou
come
in
,
sweete
Cu
?
Secur.
I
Wynney
,
presently
.
Exeunt
.
Quic.
I
Wynney
,
quod
he
?
that
's
all
he
can
doe
poore
man
;
he
may
well
cut
off
her
name
at
Wynney
.
O
t
is
an
egregious
Pandare
!
what
will
not
an
vsurous
knaue
be
,
so
he
may
bee
riche
?
O
't
is
a
notable
lewes
trump
!
I
hope
to
liue
to
see
dogs
meate
made
of
the
old
Vsurers
flesh
;
Dice
of
his
bones
;
and
Indentures
of
his
skinne
:
and
yet
his
skinne
is
too
thicke
to
make
Parchment
,
't
would
make
good
Bootes
for
a
Peeter
man
to
catch
Salmon
in
.
Your
onely
smooth
skinne
to
make
fine
Vellam
is
your
Puritanes
skinne
;
they
be
the
smoothest
and
slickest
knaues
in
a
countrie
.
Enter
Sir
Tetronell
in
Bootes
with
a
riding
wan
.
Petr.
I
le
out
of
this
wicked
towne
as
fast
as
my
horse
can
trot
:
Here
's
now
no
good
action
for
a
man
to
spend
his
time
in
.
Tauerns
growe
dead
;
Ordinaries
are
blowne
vp
;
Playes
are
at
a
stand
;
Howses
of
Hospitallitie
at
a
fall
;
not
a
Feather
wauing
,
nor
a
Spurre
gingling
any where
:
I
le
away
instantlie
.
Qui.
Y
'ad
best
take
some
crownes
in
your
purse
Knight
,
or
else
your
Eastward
Castle
will
smoake
but
miserably
.
Petr.
O
Francke
!
my
castle
?
Alas
all
the
Castles
I
haue
,
are
built
with
ayre
,
thou
know'st
.
Quic.
I
know
it
Knight
,
and
therefore
wonder
whether
your
Lady
is
going
.
Pet.
Faith
to
seeke
her
Fortune
I
thinke
.
I
said
I
had
a
castle
and
land
Eastward
,
and
Eastward
she
will
without
contradiction
;
her
coach
,
and
the
coach
of
the
Sunne
must
meete
full
butt
:
And
the
Sunne
being
out
shined
with
her
Lady-ships
glorie
,
she
feares
hee
goes
Westward
to
hange
himselfe
.
Quic.
And
I
feare
,
when
her
enchanted
Castle
becomes
inuisible
,
her
Ladyship
will
returne
and
follow
his
example
.
Petr.
O
that
she
would
haue
the
grace
,
for
I
shall
neuer
be
able
to
pacific
her
,
when
she
sees
her selfe
deceiued
so
.
Quic.
As
easely
as
can
be
.
Tell
her
she
mistooke
your
directions
,
and
that
shortly
,
your selfe
will
downe
with
her
to
approoue
it
;
and
then
,
cloath
but
her
croupper
in
a
new
Gowne
,
and
you
may
driue
her
any
way
you
list
:
for
these
wome�
Sir
,
are
like
Essex
Calues
,
you
must
wriggle
'hem
on
by
the
tayle
still
,
or
they
will
neuer
driue
orderly
.
Petr.
But
alas
sweet
Francke
,
thou
know'st
my
habilitie
will
not
furnish
her
bloud
with
those
costly
humors
.
Quic.
Cast
that
cost
on
me
Sir
,
I
haue
spoken
to
my
olde
Pandare
Securitie
,
for
money
or
commoditie
;
and
commoditie
(
if
you
will
)
I
know
he
will
procure
you
.
Petr.
Commoditie
!
Alas
what
commoditie
?
Qui.
Why
Sir
?
what
say
you
to
Figges
,
and
Raysons
?
Petr.
A
plague
of
Figges
and
Raysons
,
and
all
such
fraile
commodities
,
we
shall
make
nothing
of
'hem
.
Quic.
Why
then
Sir
,
what
say
you
to
Fortie
pound
in
rosted
Beefe
?
Petr.
Out
vpon
't
,
I
haue
lesse
stomacke
to
that
,
then
to
the
Figges
and
Raysons
:
I
le
out
of
Towne
,
though
I
soiourne
with
a
friend
of
mine
,
for
staye
here
I
must
not
;
my
creditors
haue
laide
to
arrest
me
,
and
I
haue
no
friend
vnder
heauen
but
my
Sword
to
baile
me
.
Qui.
Gods
me
Knight
,
put
'hem
in
sufficient
sureties
,
rather
then
let
your
Sworde
bayle
you
;
Let
'hem
take
their
choice
,
eyther
the
Kings
Benche
,
or
the
Fleete
,
or
which
of
the
two
Counters
they
like
best
,
for
by
the
Lord
I
like
none
of
'hem
.
Petr.
Well
Francke
there
is
no
iesting
with
my
earnest
necessitie
;
thou
know'st
if
I
make
not
present
money
to
further
my
voyage
begun
all
's
lost
,
and
all
I
haue
laid
out
about
it
.
Qui.
Why
then
Sir
in
earnest
,
if
you
can
get
your
wise
Lady
to
set
her
hand
to
the
sale
of
her
Inheritance
,
the
bloud
hound
Securitie
will
smell
out
ready
money
for
you
instantly
.
Petro.
There
spake
an
Angell
.
To
bring
her
to
which
conformitie
,
I
must
faine
my selfe
extreamly
amorous
;
and
alledging
vrgent
excuses
for
my
stay
,
behinde
,
part
with
her
as
passionately
,
as
she
would
from
her
foysting
hound
.
Qui.
You
haue
the
Sowe
by
the
right
eare
Sir
:
I
warrant
there
was
neuer
Childe
longd
more
to
ride
a
Cock
horse
,
or
weare
his
new
coate
,
the�
she
longs
to
ride
in
her
new
Coache
:
She
would
long
for
euery
thing
when
she
was
a
maide
;
and
now
she
will
runne
mad
for
'hem
:
I
laye
my
life
she
will
haue
euery
yeare
foure
children
;
and
what
charge
and
change
of
humour
you
must
endure
while
she
is
with
childe
;
and
how
she
will
tie
you
to
your
tackling
till
she
be
with
child
,
a
Dog
would
not
endure
:
Nay
,
there
is
no
Turne-spit
Dog
bound
to
his
wheele
more
seruily
,
then
you
shall
be
to
her
wheele
;
For
as
that
Dogge
can
neuer
climbe
the
top
of
his
wheele
,
but
when
the
toppe
comes
vnder
him
:
so
shall
you
neuer
clime
the
top
of
her
contentment
,
but
when
she
is
vnder
you
.
Petr.
Slight
how
thou
terrifiest
me
?
Quic.
Nay
harke
you
sir
;
what
Nurses
,
what
Midwiues
,
what
Fooles
,
what
Phisitions
,
what
cunning
women
must
be
sought
for
(
fearing
sometimes
she
is
bewitcht
,
some
times
in
a
consumption
)
to
tell
her
tales
,
to
talke
bawdy
to
her
,
to
make
her
laughe
,
to
giue
her
glisters
,
to
let
her
bloud
vnder
the
tongue
,
and
betwixt
the
toes
;
how
she
will
reuile
and
kisse
you
;
spit
in
your
face
,
and
lick
it
off
againe
;
how
she
will
vaunt
you
are
her
Creature
;
shee
made
you
of
nothing
;
how
shee
could
haue
had
thousand
marke
ioyntures
;
she
could
haue
bin
made
a
Lady
by
a
Scotche
Knight
;
&
neuer
ha'
married
him
:
Shee
could
haue
had
Poynados
in
her
bed
euery
morning
;
how
she
set
you
vp
,
and
how
she
will
pull
you
downe
:
you
le
neuer
be
able
to
stand
of
your
legges
to
endure
it
.
Petr.
Out
of
my
fortune
,
what
a
death
is
my
life
bound
face
to
face
too
?
The
best
is
,
a
large
Time-fitted
conscience
is
bound
to
nothing
:
Marriage
is
but
a
forme
in
the
Schoole
of
Policie
,
to
which
Schollers
sit
fastned
onely
with
painted
chaines
,
old
Securities
young
wife
is
nere
the
further
of
with
me
.
Quic.
Thereby
lyes
a
tale
sir
.
The
old
vsurer
will
be
here
instantly
,
with
my
Puncke
Syndefie
,
whome
you
know
your
Lady
has
promist
mee
to
entertaine
for
her
Gentlewoman
:
and
he
(
with
a
purpose
to
feede
on
you
)
inuites
you
most
solemnly
by
me
to
supper
.
Petr.
It
falls
out
excellently
fitly
:
I
see
desire
of
gaine
makes
Iealousie
venturous
:
Enter
Gyrt
:
See
Francke
here
comes
my
Lady
;
Lord
how
she
viewes
thee
,
she
knowes
thee
not
I
thinke
in
this
brauerie
.
Gyr.
How
now
?
who
be
you
I
pray
?
Quic.
One
maister
Frances
Quickesiluer
,
an
't
please
your
Ladiship
.
Gyr.
Gods
my
dignitie
!
as
I
am
a
Lady
,
if
he
did
not
make
me
blush
so
that
mine
eyes
stood
awater
,
would
I
were
vnmaried
againe
:
Enter
Securitie
and
Sindefie
.
Where
's
my
woman
I
pray
?
Qui.
See
Madam
,
she
now
comes
to
attend
you
.
Secur.
God
saue
my
honourable
Knight
,
and
his
worshipfull
Lady
.
Gyr.
Y'
are
very
welcome
!
you
must
not
put
on
your
Hat
yet
.
Secur.
No
Madam
;
till
I
know
your
Ladiships
further
pleasure
,
I
will
not
presume
.
Gyr.
And
is
this
a
Gentlemans
daughter
new
come
out
of
the
countrie
?
Secur.
She
is
Madam
;
&
one
that
her
Father
hath
a
speciall
care
to
bestowe
in
some
honourable
Ladies
seruice
,
to
put
her
out
of
her
honest
humours
forsooth
,
for
she
had
a
great
desire
to
be
a
Nun
,
an
't
please
you
.
Gyr.
A
Nun
?
what
Nun
?
a
Nun
Substantiue
?
or
a
Nun
Adiectiue
?
Secur.
A
Nun
Substantiue
Madam
I
hope
,
if
a
Nun
be
a
Noune
.
But
I
meane
,
Lady
,
a
vowd
maide
of
that
order
.
Gyr.
I
le
teach
her
to
be
a
maide
of
the
order
I
warrant
you
:
and
can
you
doe
any
worke
belongs
to
a
Ladyes
Chamber
?
Synde.
What
I
cannot
doe
,
Madam
,
I
would
bee
glad
to
learne
.
Gyr.
Well
said
,
hold
vp
then
;
hold
vp
your
head
I
say
,
come
hether
a
little
.
Synd.
I
thanke
your
Ladiship
.
Gyr.
And
harke
you
;
Good
man
,
you
may
put
on
your
Hatt
now
,
I
doe
not
looke
on
you
:
I
must
haue
you
of
my
faction
now
;
not
of
my
Knights
,
maide
.
Synd.
No
forsooth
Madam
of
yours
.
Gyr.
And
draw
all
my
seruants
in
my
Bowe
,
and
keepe
my
counsell
,
and
tell
me
tales
,
and
put
me
Riddles
and
reade
on
a
booke
sometimes
when
I
am
busie
,
and
laugh
at
countrie
Gentlewomen
,
and
command
any
thing
in
the
house
for
my
reteiners
,
and
care
not
what
you
spend
,
for
it
is
all
mine
;
and
in
any
case
,
be
still
a
Maide
what soeuer
you
doe
,
or
whatsoeuer
any
man
can
doe
vnto
you
.
Secur.
I
warrant
your
Ladiship
for
that
.
Gyr.
Very
well
,
you
shall
ride
in
my
coach
with
me
into
the
country
to morrow
morning
;
Come
Knight
,
pray
thee
le
ts
make
a
short
supper
,
and
to
bed
presently
.
Secur.
Nay
good
Madam
,
this
night
I
haue
a
short
Supper
at
home
,
waites
on
his
worships
acceptation
.
Gyr.
By
my
faith
but
he
shall
not
goe
Sir
;
I
shall
swoune
and
he
sup
from
me
.
Petr.
Pray
thee
forbeare
;
shall
he
lose
his
prouision
?
Gyr.
I
by
Lady
Sir
,
rather
then
I
lose
my
longing
;
come
in
I
say
:
as
I
am
a
Lady
you
shall
not
goe
.
Quic.
I
told
him
what
a
Burre
he
had
gotten
.
Secur.
If
you
will
not
sup
from
your
Knight
Madam
,
let
me
entreate
your
Ladiship
to
sup
at
my
house
with
him
.
Gyr.
No
by
my
faith
Sir
,
then
we
cannot
be
a bed
soone
enough
,
after
supper
.
Petr.
What
a
Medcine
is
this
?
well
Maister
Securitie
,
you
are
new
married
as
well
as
I
;
I
hope
you
are
bound
as
well
:
we
must
honour
our
young
wiues
you
know
.
Quic.
In
pollicie
Dad
,
till
to morrow
she
has
seald
.
Secur.
I
hope
in
the
morning
yet
your
Knight-hood
will
breake-fast
with
me
.
Petr.
As
early
as
you
will
Sir
.
Secur.
Thanke
your
good
worship
;
I
do
hunger
and
thirst
to
do
you
good
Sir
.
Gyr.
Come
sweete
Knight
come
,
I
do
hunger
and
thyrst
to
be
a bed
with
thee
.
Exeunt
.
Actus
Quartus
.
Scena
Prima
.
Enter
Slitgut
,
with
a
paire
of
Oxe
hornes
,
discouering
Cuckolds-Hauen
aboue
.
Slit.
All
haile
,
faire
Hauen
of
married
men
onely
,
for
there
are
none
but
married
men
Cuckolds
.
For
my
part
,
I
presume
not
to
arriue
here
,
but
in
my
Maisters
behalfe
,
(
a
poore
Butcher
of
East-cheape
)
who
sends
me
to
set
vp
(
in
honour
of
Saint
Luke
)
these
necessarie
Ensignes
of
his
homage
:
And
vp
I
got
this
morning
,
thus
early
,
to
get
vp
to
the
toppe
of
this
famous
Tree
,
that
is
all
fruite
and
no
leaues
,
to
aduance
this
Crest
of
my
Maisters
occupation
.
Vp
then
,
Heauen
and
Saint
Luke
blesse
me
,
that
I
be
not
blowne
into
the
Thames
as
I
clime
,
with
this
furious
Tempest
;
Slight
,
I
thinke
the
Deuill
be
abroade
,
in
likenesse
of
a
storme
,
to
rob
me
of
my
Hornes
:
Harke
how
he
roares
.
Lord
!
what
a
coyle
the
Thames
keepes
!
she
beares
some
vniust
burthen
I
beleeue
,
that
she
kicks
and
curuets
thus
to
cast
it
:
Heauen
blesse
all
honest
passengers
,
that
are
vpon
her
back
now
,
for
the
Bitte
is
out
of
her
mouth
I
see
,
and
shee
will
runne
away
with
'hem
.
So
,
so
,
I
thinke
I
haue
made
it
looke
the
right
way
,
it
runnes
against
London-Bridge
(
as
it
were
)
euen
full
butt
.
And
now
,
let
mee
discouer
from
this
loftie
prospect
,
what
pranckes
the
rude
Thames
playes
in
her
desperate
lunacie
.
O
me
,
here
's
a
Boate
has
beene
cast
away
hard
by
.
Alas
,
alas
,
See
one
of
her
passengers
,
labouring
for
his
life
,
to
land
at
this
Hauen
here
;
pray
heauen
he
may
recouer
it
:
His
next
land
is
eue�
iust
vnder
me
;
hold
out
yet
a
little
:
whatsoeuer
thou
art
,
pray
,
and
take
a
good
heart
to
thee
.
T
is
a
man
,
take
a
mans
heart
to
thee
;
yet
a
little
further
,
get
vp
a
thy
legges
man
:
now
,
t
is
snallowe
enough
.
So
,
so
,
so
!
Alas
,
hee
's
downe
againe
;
hold
thy
winde
Father
:
t
is
a
man
in
a
Night-cappe
.
So
!
now
hee
's
got
vp
againe
:
now
hee
's
past
the
worst
:
yet
thankes
be
to
heauen
;
he
comes
toward
me
pretie
and
strongly
.
Enter
Securitie
without
his
hat
,
in
an
Night-cap
,
wett
,
band
,
&c.
Secu.
Heauen
,
I
beseech
thee
,
how
haue
I
offended
thee
!
where
am
I
cast
a shore
nowe
,
that
I
may
goe
a
righter
way
home
by
land
?
Let
me
see
.
O
I
am
scarce
able
to
looke
about
me
!
where
is
there
any
Sea-marke
that
I
am
acquainted
withall
?
Slit.
Looke
vp
Father
,
are
you
acquainted
with
this
Marke
?
Secu.
What!
landed
at
Cuckolds
hauen
?
Hell
and
damnation
.
I
will
runne
backe
and
drowne
my selfe
.
He
falles
downe
.
Slit.
Poore
man
how
weake
hee
is
!
the
weake
water
ha's
washt
away
his
strength
.
See.
Landed
at
Cuckolds
hauen
?
if
it
had
not
bin
to
die
twentie
times
a
liue
,
I
should
neuer
haue
scapt
death
:
I
will
neuer
arise
more
:
I
will
grouell
here
,
and
eate
durt
till
I
be
choak't
:
I
will
make
the
gentle
earth
doe
that
,
which
the
cruell
water
ha's
denied
me
.
Slit.
Alas
good
father
,
be
not
so
desperate
;
Rise
man
:
if
you
will
,
I
le
come
presently
and
lead
you
home
.
Secu.
Home
?
shall
I
make
any
know
my
Home
,
that
has
knowne
me
thus
abrode
?
how
I
owe
shall
I
crouch
away
,
that
no
eye
may
see
mee
?
I
will
creepe
on
the
earth
while
I
liue
,
and
neuer
looke
heauen
in
the
face
more
.
Exit
creep
.
Slit.
What
yong
Planet
raignes
now
troe
,
that
olde
men
are
so
foolish
?
What
desperate
yong
Swaggerer
would
haue
bin
abroad
such
a
wether
as
this
,
vpon
the
water
?
Ay
me
,
see
a
nother
remnant
of
this
vnfortunate
ship-wrack
!
or
some
other
.
A
woman
!
yfaith
,
a
woman
,
though
it
be
almost
at
S.
Kath'rins
,
I
discerne
it
to
be
a
woman
for
al
her
bodie
is
aboue
the
water
,
&
her
clothes
swim
about
her
most
handsomely
.
O
they
beare
her
vp
most
brauely
!
has
not
a
woman
reason
to
loue
the
taking
vp
of
her
cloathes
the
better
while
she
liues
,
for
this
?
Alas
,
how
busie
the
rude
Thames
is
about
her
?
A
pox
a'th
at
waue
.
It
wil
drowne
her
,
yfaith
,
t
will
drowne
her
.
Crye
God
mercie
,
shee
has
scapt
it
!
I
thanke
heauen
she
has
scapt
it
.
O
,
how
she
swimmes
like
a
Mermaide
!
some
vigilant
body
looke
out
,
and
saue
her
.
That
's
well
said
,
iust
where
the
Priest
fell
in
,
there
's
one
sets
downe
a
Ladder
,
and
goes
to
take
her
vp
:
Gods
blessing
a
thy
heart
boy
,
now
take
her
vp
in
thy
armes
and
to
bedde
with
her
.
Shee
's
vp
,
shee
's
vp
!
Shee
's
a
beautifull
woman
I
warrant
her
,
the
Billowes
durst
not
deuoure
her
.
Enter
the
Drawer
in
the
Tauerne
before
with
Wynnyfrid
.
Draw.
How
fare
you
now
Lady
?
Wynn.
Much
better
,
my
good
friende
then
I
wishe
:
as
one
desperate
of
her
Fame
,
now
my
Life
is
preseru'd
.
Draw.
Comfort
your selfe
;
That
power
that
preserued
you
from
death
:
can
likewise
defend
you
from
infamie
,
howsoeuer
you
deserue
it
.
Were
not
you
one
that
tooke
Bote
,
late
this
night
,
with
a
Knight
,
and
other
Gentlemen
at
Billings-gate
?
Wynn.
Vnhappy
that
I
am
,
I
was
.
Draw.
I
am
glad
it
was
my
good
happe
to
come
downe
thus
farre
after
you
,
to
a
house
of
my
friends
heere
in
S.
Kath'rines
,
since
I
am
now
happily
made
a
meane
to
your
rescue
,
from
the
ruthlesse
tempest
;
which
(
when
you
tooke
Bote
)
was
so
extreame
,
and
the
Gentleman
that
brought
you
forth
,
so
desperate
and
vnsober
,
that
I
fear'd
long
ere
this
I
should
heare
of
your
ship-wracke
,
and
therefore
(
with
little
other
reason
)
made
thus
farre
this
way
:
And
this
I
must
tell
you
,
since
perhappes
you
may
make
vse
of
it
,
there
was
left
behinde
you
at
our
Tauerne
,
brought
by
a
Porter
(
hyr'd
by
the
yong
Gentleman
that
brought
you
)
a
Gentle
womans
Gowne
,
Hat
,
Stockings
,
and
Shooes
;
which
if
they
be
yours
,
and
you
please
to
shift
you
,
taking
a
hard
bed
here
,
in
this
house
of
my
friend
,
I
will
presently
goe
fetch
you
.
Wynn.
Thanks
my
good
friend
,
for
your
more
then
good
newes
.
The
Gowne
with
all
things
bounde
with
it
are
myne
;
which
if
you
please
to
fetch
as
you
haue
promist
,
I
will
bouldly
receiue
the
kinde
fauour
you
haue
offered
,
till
your
returne
:
intreating
you
,
by
all
the
good
you
haue
done
in
preseruing
me
hitherto
,
to
let
none
take
knowledge
of
what
fauour
you
doe
me
,
or
where
such
a
one
as
I
am
bestowed
,
lest
you
incurre
mee
much
more
damage
in
my
fame
,
then
you
haue
done
me
pleasure
in
preseruing
my
life
.
Draw.
Come
in
Lady
,
and
shift
your selfe
;
resolue
,
that
nothing
,
but
your
owne
pleasure
,
shall
bee
vsde
in
your
discouery
.
Wynn.
Thanke
you
good
friende
:
the
time
may
come
,
I
shall
requite
you
.
Exeunt
.
Slit.
See
,
see
,
see
!
I
hold
my
life
,
there
's
some
other
a
taking
vp
at
Wapping
,
now
!
Looke
,
what
a
sort
of
people
cluster
about
the
Gallows
there
!
in
good
troth
it
is
so
.
O
me
!
a
fine
yong
Gentleman
!
What
?
and
taken
vp
at
the
Gallowes
?
Heauen
graunt
he
be
not
one
day
taken
downe
there
:
A
,
my
life
it
is
ominous
.
Well
,
hee
is
deliuered
for
the
time
,
I
see
the
people
haue
all
left
him
;
yet
will
I
keepe
my
prospect
a
while
,
to
see
if
any
more
haue
bin
shipwrackt
.
Enter
Quick
,
bareheade
.
Quick.
Accur'st
,
that
euer
I
was
sau'd
,
or
borne
.
How
fatall
is
my
sad
ariuall
here
?
As
if
the
Starres
,
and
Prouidence
spake
to
mee
,
And
sayd
,
the
drift
of
all
vnlawfull
courses
,
(
What euer
ende
they
dare
propose
themselues
,
In
frame
of
their
licentious
policyes
.
)
In
the
firme
order
of
iust
Destinie
,
They
are
the
ready
high
wayes
to
our
Ruines
.
I
know
not
what
to
doe
,
my
wicked
hopes
Are
,
with
this
Tempest
,
torne
vp
by
the
rootes
.
O
,
which
way
shall
I
bend
my
desperate
steppes
,
In
which
vnsufferable
Shame
and
Miserie
Will
not
attend
them
?
I
will
walke
this
Banck
,
And
see
if
I
can
meete
the
other
reliques
Of
our
poore
ship-wrackt
Crew
,
or
heare
of
them
.
The
Knight
(
alas
)
was
so
farre
gone
with
wine
,
And
th'
other
three
,
that
I
refus
de
their
Boate
,
And
tooke
the
haplesse
Woman
in
another
,
Who
cannot
but
be
suncke
,
what euer
Fortune
Hath
wrought
vpon
the
others
desperate
liues
.
Enter
Petronel
,
and
Seagul
,
bareheaded
.
Pet.
Zounds
Captaine
,
I
tell
thee
,
we
are
cast
vp
o'
the
Coast
of
France
,
Sfoote
,
I
am
not
drunke
still
,
(
I
hope
?
)
Dost
remember
where
we
were
last
Night
?
Sea.
No
by
my
troth
Knight
,
not
I
.
but
me thinkes
wee
haue
bin
a
horrible
while
vpon
the
water
,
and
in
the
water
.
Pet.
Aye
me
we
are
vndone
for
euer
:
hast
any
money
about
thee
?
Sea.
Not
a
pennie
by
heauen
.
Pet.
Not
a
pennie
betwixt
vs
,
and
cast
a shore
in
France
?
Sea.
Faith
I
cannot
tell
that
;
my
braines
,
nor
mine
eyes
are
not
mine
owne
,
yet
.
Enter
2.
Gentlemen
Pet.
Sfoote
wilt
not
beleeue
me
?
I
know
't
by
th'
eleuation
of
the
Pole
;
and
by
the
altitude
and
latitude
of
the
Climate
.
See!
hers
comes
a
coople
of
French
Gentlemen
;
I
knew
we
were
in
France
:
dost
thou
think
our
Englishmen
are
so
Frenchyfied
,
that
a
man
knowes
not
whether
he
be
in
France
,
or
in
England
,
whe�
he
sees
'hem
?
What
shal
we
doe
?
we
must
cene
to
'hem
,
and
intreat
some
reliefe
of
hem
:
Life
is
sweete
,
and
we
haue
no
other
meanes
to
relieue
our
liues
now
,
but
their
Charities
;
Sea.
Pray
you
,
do
you
beg
on
'hem
the�
,
you
can
speak
French
.
Pet.
Monsieur
,
plaist
il
d'auoir
pitie
de
nostre
grand
infortunes
?
Iesuis
vn
poure
Cheualier
D'Angloterre
qui
a
souffris
infortune
de
Naufrage
.
1.
Gent.
Vn
poure
Cheualier
D'Angliterre
?
Pet.
Oui
Monsieur
,
il
est
trop
vraye
;
mais
vovs
scaves
bien
nous
somes
toutes
subiect
a
fortune
.
2.
Gent.
A
poore
Knight
of
England
?
a
poore
Knight
of
Windsore
,
are
you
not
?
Why
speake
you
this
broken
French
,
when
y'
are
a
whole
English
man
?
on
what
coaste
are
you
,
thinke
you
?
Pet.
on
the
coast
of
France
,
sir
.
1.
Gen.
On
the
cost
of
Doggs
Sir
:
Y'
are
i
th'
I
le
a
Doggs
I
tell
you
.
I
see
y
'aue
bene
washt
in
the
Thames
here
,
&
I
beleeue
ye
were
drownd
in
a
Tauerne
before
,
or
els
you
would
neuer
haue
tooke
boate
in
such
a
dawning
as
this
was
.
Farewel
,
farewel
,
we
wil
not
know
you
for
shaming
of
you
.
I
ken
the
man
wee
l
,
hee
's
one
of
my
thirty
pound
Knights
.
2.
Gen.
No
no
,
this
is
he
that
stole
his
knighthood
o'
the
grand
day
,
for
foure
pound
giuing
to
a
Page
,
all
the
money
in
's
purse
I
wot
well
.
Exeunt
.
Sea.
Death
,
Collonell
,
I
knew
you
were
ouer
shot
.
Pet.
Sure
I
thinke
now
indeede
,
Captaine
Seagull
,
we
were
something
ouershot
.
Enter
Quicksiluer
.
What
!
my
sweete
Franck
Quicksiluer
!
dost
thou
surviue
to
reioyce
me
?
But
what
?
no bodie
at
thy
heels
,
Franck
?
Ay
me
,
what
is
become
of
poore
Mistresse
Securitie
.
Quick.
Faith
gone
quite
from
her
Name
,
as
she
is
from
her
Fame
I
thinke
;
I
left
her
to
the
mercie
of
the
water
.
Sea.
Let
her
goe
,
let
her
goe
:
let
vs
go
to
our
ship
at
Blackwall
and
shift
vs
.
Pet.
Nay
by
my
troth
,
let
our
clothes
rotte
vpon
vs
.
and
let
vs
rotte
in
them
:
twentie
to
one
our
Ship
is
attacht
by
this
time
?
if
we
set
her
not
vnder
Saile
this
last
Tide
,
I
neuer
lookt
for
any
other
.
Woe
,
woe
is
me
,
what
shall
become
of
vs
?
the
last
money
we
could
make
,
the
greedy
Thams
has
deuourde
;
and
if
our
Ship
be
attach't
,
there
is
no
hope
can
relieue
vs
.
Quic.
Sfoote
Knight
,
what
an
vn-knightly
faintnesse
transports
thee
?
let
our
Ship
sinck
,
and
all
the
world
that
's
without
vs
be
taken
from
vs
,
I
hope
I
haue
some
tricks
,
in
this
braine
of
mine
,
shall
not
let
vs
perish
.
Sea.
Well
said
Francke
faith
.
O
my
nimble-spirited
Quick-siluer
,
Foregod
,
would
thou
hadst
beene
our
Colonell
.
Petr.
I
like
his
spirit
rarely
,
but
I
see
no
meanes
he
has
to
support
that
spirit
.
Quic.
Go
to
Knight
,
I
haue
more
meanes
then
thou
art
aware
off
:
I
haue
not
liu'd
amongst
Gould-smiths
and
Gouldmakers
all
this
while
,
but
I
haue
learned
something
worthy
of
my
time
with
'hem
.
And
,
not
to
let
thee
stinck
where
thou
standst
,
Knight
,
I
le
let
thee
know
some
of
my
skill
presently
.
Sea.
Doe
good
Francke
I
beseech
thee
.
Quic.
I
will
blanche
Copper
so
cunningly
,
that
it
shall
endure
all
proofes
,
but
the
Test
:
it
shall
endure
malleation
,
it
shal
haue
the
ponderositie
of
Luna
,
and
the
tenacitie
of
Luna
,
by
no
meanes
friable
.
Petr.
Slight
,
where
learn'st
thou
these
tearmes
,
tro
?
Quic.
Tush
Knight
,
the
tearmes
of
this
Arte
,
euery
ignorant
Quack-saluer
is
perfect
in
:
but
I
le
tell
you
how
your selfe
shal
blanche
Copper
thus
cunningly
.
Take
Arsnicke
,
otherwise
called
Realga
,
(
which
indeede
is
plaine
Ratsbane
)
Sublime
'hem
three
or
foure
times
,
then
take
the
Sublimate
of
this
Realga
,
and
put
'hem
into
a
Glasse
,
into
Chymia
,
&
let
'hem
haue
a
conuenient
decoction
Naturall
,
foure
and
twentie
houres
,
&
he
will
become
perfectly
fixt
:
Then
take
this
fixed
powder
,
&
proiect
him
vpon
wel-purgd
Copper
,
et
habebis
Magistriu�
.
Ambo.
Excellent
Francke
,
let
vs
hugge
thee
.
Quick.
Nay
this
I
will
do
besides
;
I
le
take
you
off
twelue
pence
from
euery
Angell
,
with
a
kind
of
Aquafortis
,
and
neuer
deface
any
part
of
the
Image
.
Pet.
But
then
it
will
want
weight
?
Quic.
You
shall
restore
that
thus
:
Take
your
sal
Achyme
prepar'd
,
and
your
distild
Vrine
;
and
let
your
Angels
lie
in
it
but
foure
and
twenty
howres
,
and
they
shall
haue
their
perfect
weight
againe
:
come
on
now
I
hope
this
is
enough
to
put
some
spirit
into
the
liuers
of
you
,
I
le
infuse
more
an other
time
.
We
haue
saluted
the
proud
Ayre
long
enough
with
our
bare
skonces
,
now
will
I
haue
you
to
a
wenches
house
of
mine
at
London
,
there
make
shift
to
shift
vs
,
and
after
such
fortunes
as
the
stars
shal
assigne
vs
.
Ambo.
Notable
Franck
!
we
will
euer
adore
thee
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Drawer
with
Wynifrid
,
new
attird
.
Wyn.
Nowe
sweete
friende
you
haue
brought
me
nere
enough
your
Tauerne
,
which
I
desired
that
I
might
with
some
colour
be
seene
neare
,
enquiring
for
my
husband
;
who
I
must
tel
you
stale
thither
last
with
my
wet
gowne
we
haue
left
at
your
friends
:
which
,
to
continue
your
former
honest
kindnes
,
let
me
pray
you
to
keepe
close
from
the
knowledge
of
any
;
and
so
,
with
all
vow
of
your
requitall
,
let
me
now
entreate
you
to
leaue
me
to
my
womans
wit
,
and
fortune
.
Draw.
All
shall
be
done
you
desire
;
and
so
,
all
the
fortune
you
can
wish
for
,
attend
you
.
Exit
Draw
.
Enter
Securitie
.
Secu.
I
wil
once
more
to
this
vnhappy
Tauerne
before
I
shift
one
ragge
of
me
more
,
that
I
may
there
know
what
is
left
behind
,
and
what
newes
of
their
passengers
.
I
haue
bought
me
a
Hat
and
band
with
the
little
money
I
had
about
me
,
and
made
the
streets
a
litle
leaue
staring
at
my
night-cap
.
Win.
O
my
deare
husband
!
where
haue
you
bin
to night
?
al
night
abroade
at
Tauernes
?
rob
me
of
my
garments
?
and
fare
as
one
run
away
from
me
?
Ahlas
!
is
this
seemely
for
a
man
of
your
credit
?
of
your
age
?
and
affection
to
your
wife
?
Secu.
What
should
I
say
?
how
miraculously
sorts
this
?
was
not
I
at
home
,
and
cald
thee
last
night
?
Win.
Yes
Sir
,
the
harmelesse
sleepe
you
broke
,
and
my
answer
to
you
would
haue
witnest
it
,
if
you
had
had
the
patience
to
haue
staid
and
answered
me
;
but
your
so
sodaine
retreate
,
made
me
imagine
you
were
gone
to
Maister
Brambles
,
and
so
rested
patient
,
and
hopefull
of
your
comming
againe
,
till
this
your
unbeleeued
absence
brought
me
abroade
with
no
lesse
then
wonder
,
to
seeke
you
,
where
the
false
Knight
had
carried
you
.
Secu.
Villaine
,
and
Monster
that
I
was
,
howe
haue
I
abus'd
thee
,
I
was
sodainly
gone
indeede
!
for
my
sodaine
ielousie
transferred
me
.
I
will
say
no
more
but
this
deare
wife
I
suspected
thee
.
Win.
Did
you
suspect
me
?
Secu.
Talke
not
of
it
I
beseech
thee
,
I
am
ashamed
to
imagine
it
;
I
will
home
,
I
will
home
,
and
euery
morning
on
my
knees
aske
thee
hartely
forgiuenes
.
Exeunt
.
Nowe
will
I
descend
my
honourable
Prospect
;
the
farthiest
seeing
Sea
marke
of
the
World
:
Noe
maruaile
then
if
I
could
see
two
miles
about
me
.
I
hope
the
redde
Tempests
anger
be
nowe
ouer
blowne
,
which
sure
I
thinke
Heauen
sent
as
a
punishment
,
for
prophaning
holy
Saint
Lukes
memorie
,
with
so
ridiculous
a
custome
.
Thou
dishonest
Satyre
,
farewel
to
honest
married
Men
;
Farewel
,
to
all
sorts
,
and
degrees
of
thee
.
Farewel
thou
horne
of
hu�ger
that
calst
th'
Inns
a
court
to
their
Manger
;
Farewel
thou
horne
of
abounda�ce
,
that
adornest
the
headsmen
of
the
Common-wealth
;
Farewell
thou
home
of
Direction
,
that
is
the
Cittie
Lanthorne
;
Farewell
thou
Horne
of
Pleasure
,
the
Ensigne
of
the
huntsman
;
Farewell
thou
Horne
of
Destinie
,
the
signe
of
the
married
man
;
Farewell
thou
Horne
Tree
that
bearest
nothing
but
Stone
fruite
Exit
.
Enter
Touchstone
.
Touch.
Ha
Sirah
!
Thinkes
my
Knight
Aduenturer
we
can
no
point
of
our
compasse
?
Doe
wee
not
knowe
North-north-east
?
North-east
and
by
East
?
East
and
by
North
!
nor
plaine
Eastward
?
Ha
?
haue
we
neuer
heard
of
Virginia
?
nor
the
Cauallaria
?
not
the
Colonoria
?
Can
we
discouer
no
discoueries
?
well
,
mine
errant
Sir
Flash
,
and
my
runnagate
Quicksiluer
,
you
may
drinke
dronke
,
crack
cannes
,
hurle
away
a
browne
dozen
of
Monmouth
Capps
or
so
,
in
sea-ceremonie
to
your
boon
voyage
but
for
reaching
any
Coast
saue
the
coast
of
Kent
;
or
Essex
,
with
this
Tide
,
or
with
this
fleete
,
I
le
be
your
warrant
for
a
Grauesend
Tost
:
There
's
that
gone
afore
,
wil
stay
your
Admiral
and
Vice-admirall
,
and
Rere-admirall
,
were
they
al
(
as
they
are
)
but
one
Pinnace
,
and
vnder
saile
,
as
wel
as
a
Remora
,
doubt
it
not
;
and
from
this
Sconce
,
without
eyther
pouder
or
shot
,
worke
vpon
that
now
.
Nay
,
and
you
'll
shew
trickes
,
wee
'l
vie
with
you
,
a
little
.
My
Daughter
,
his
Lady
,
was
sent
Eastward
,
by
land
,
to
a
Castle
of
his
,
i'
the
ayre
(
in
what
region
I
knowe
not
)
and
(
as
I
heare
)
was
glad
to
take
vp
her
lodging
in
her
Coach
,
she
and
her
two
waiting
women
,
her
maide
,
and
her
mother
,
like
three
Snailes
in
a
shall
,
and
the
Coachman
a top
on
'hem
,
I
thinke
.
Since
they
haue
all
found
the
way
back
againe
by
weeping
Crosse
.
But
I
le
not
see
them
.
And
for
two
on
'hem
,
Madam
,
and
her
Malkm
,
they
are
like
to
bite
o
the
bridle
for
William
,
as
the
poore
horses
haue
done
al
this
while
that
hurried
'hem
,
or
else
go
graze
o'
the
co�mon
:
So
should
my
Dame
Touchstone
too
,
but
she
has
bene
my
Crosse
these
thirty
yeares
,
and
I
le
now
keepe
her
,
to
fright
away
sprights
;
Ifaith
.
I
wonder
I
heare
no
news
of
my
sonne
Goulding
!
He
was
sent
for
to
the
Guild-hall
,
this
Morning
betimes
,
and
I
maruaile
at
the
matter
,
if
I
had
not
layd
vp
Comfort
,
&
hope
in
him
,
I
should
grow
desperate
of
al
.
See
,
He
is
come
I'
my
thought
!
How
now
Sonne
?
what
newes
at
the
Court
of
Aldermen
?
Enter
Goulding
.
Gould
.
Troth
Sir
,
an
Accident
somewhat
strange
,
els
it
hath
litle
in
it
worth
the
reporting
.
Touch.
What
?
It
is
not
borrowing
of
money
then
?
Gold.
No
sir
it
hath
pleasd
the
worshipful
Commoners
of
the
citty
,
to
take
me
one
i'
their
number
at
presentation
of
the
inquest
Touch.
Ha!
Gould
.
And
the
Alderman
of
the
warde
wherein
Idwel
,
to
appoint
me
his
Deputy
�
Touch.
Howe
!
Gold.
In
which
place
,
I
haue
had
an
oath
ministred
me
,
since
I
went
.
Touch.
Now
my
deare
,
&
happy
Sonnellet
we
kisse
thy
new
worship
,
&
a
litle
boast
mine
own
happines
in
thee
:
What
a
fortune
was
it
(
or
rather
my
iudgment
indeed
)
for
me
,
first
to
see
that
in
his
disposition
,
which
a
whole
Citty
so
conspires
to
second
?
Tane
into
the
Liuory
of
his
copany
,
the
first
day
of
his
freedo�e
?
now
(
not
a
weeke
maried
)
chosen
Commoner
?
and
Aldermans
Deputie
in
a
day
?
note
but
the
reward
of
a
thrifty
course
.
The
wo�der
of
his
Time
!
Wel
,
I
wil
honour
M.
Alderman
,
for
this
act
,
(
as
becomes
me
)
&
shall
think
the
better
of
the
cômon
Councels
wisdo�e
,
&
worship
,
while
I
liue
,
for
thus
meeting
,
or
but
co�ming
after
me
in
the
opinion
of
his
desert
.
Forward
,
my
sufficient
Sonne
,
and
as
this
is
the
first
,
so
esteeme
it
the
least
step
,
to
that
high
and
prime
honour
that
expects
thee
.
Goul.
Sir
,
as
I
was
not
ambitious
of
this
,
so
I
couet
no
higher
place
;
it
hath
dignity
enough
,
if
it
will
but
saue
me
from
contempt
:
and
I
had
rather
my
bearing
,
in
this
,
or
any
other
office
,
should
adde
worth
to
it
;
then
the
Place
giue
the
least
opinion
to
me
.
Touch.
Excellently
spoken
:
This
modest
Answer
of
thine
blushes
,
as
if
it
said
,
I
will
weare
Scarlet
shortly
.
Worshipfull
Sonne
!
I
cannot
containe
my selfe
,
I
must
tell
thee
,
I
hope
to
see
thee
one
o'
the
Monuments
of
our
Citty
,
and
reckon'd
among
her
worthies
,
to
be
remembred
the
same
day
with
the
Lady
Ramsey
,
and
graue
Gresham
:
when
the
famous
fable
of
Whittington
,
and
his
Pusse
,
shall
be
forgotten
,
and
thou
and
thy
Actes
become
the
Posies
for
Hospitals
,
when
thy
name
shall
be
written
vpon
Conduits
,
and
thy
deeds
plaid
i'
thy
life
time
,
by
the
best
companies
of
Actors
,
and
be
call'd
their
Get-peny
.
This
I
diuine
.
This
I
Prophecie
.
Gold.
Sir
,
engage
not
your
expectation
farder
,
then
my
abilities
will
answer
:
I
that
know
mine
owne
strengths
,
feare
'hem
;
and
there
is
so
seldome
a
losse
in
promising
the
least
,
that
commonly
it
brings
with
it
a
welcome
deceipt
.
I
haue
other
newes
for
you
Sir
.
Touch.
None
more
welcome
,
I
am
sure
?
Gould
.
They
haue
their
degree
of
welcome
,
I
dare
affirme
.
The
Colonell
,
and
all
his
company
,
this
morning
putting
forth
drunke
from
Belinsgate
,
had
like
to
haue
been
cast
away
o'th
is
side
Greenwich
:
and
(
as
I
haue
intelligence
,
by
a
false
Brother
,
)
are
come
dropping
to
towne
,
like
so
many
Masterlesse
men
,
i'
their
doublets
and
hose
,
without
Hatte
,
or
Cloake
,
or
any
other
�
Touch.
A
miracle
!
the
Iustice
of
Heauen
!
where
are
they
?
le
ts
goe
presently
and
lay
for
'hem
.
Goul.
I
haue
done
that
already
Sir
,
both
by
Constables
,
and
other
officers
,
who
shall
take
'hem
at
their
old
Anchor
;
and
with
lesse
tumult
,
or
suspition
,
then
if
your selfe
were
seene
in
't
:
vnder
coulour
of
a
great
Presse
,
that
is
now
abroad
,
and
they
shall
here
be
brought
afore
me
.
Touch.
Prudent
,
&
politique
sonne
!
Disgrace
'hem
all
that
euer
thou
canst
;
their
Ship
I
haue
already
arrested
.
How
to
my
wish
it
falls
out
,
that
thou
hast
the
place
of
a
Iusticer
vpon
'hem
!
I
am
partly
glad
of
the
iniury
done
to
me
,
that
thou
maist
punish
it
.
Be
seuere
i'
thy
place
,
like
a
new
officer
o'
the
first
quarter
,
vnreflected
:
you
heare
how
our
Lady
is
come
back
with
her
traine
,
from
the
inuisible
Castle
?
Gould
.
No
,
where
is
she
?
Touch.
Within
,
but
I
ha'
not
seene
her
yet
,
not
her
mother
;
who
now
begins
to
wish
her
daughter
vndub'd
,
they
say
,
and
that
she
had
walkd
a
foot-pase
with
her
sister
.
Here
they
come
,
stand
back
.
Touchstone
,
Mistresse
Touchstone
,
Gyrtrude
,
Goulding
,
Mildred
,
Syndefie
.
God
saue
your
Ladiship
;
'saue
your
good
Ladiship
:
your
Ladiship
is
welcome
from
your
inchanted
Castell
;
so
are
your
beautious
Retinew
.
I
heare
your
Knight
errant
is
trauayld
on
strange
aduentures
:
Surely
in
my
minde
,
your
Ladiship
hath
fish'd
faire
,
and
caught
a
Frog
,
as
the
saying
is
.
Mist.
Tou.
Speake
to
your
Father
,
Madam
,
&
kneele
downe
.
Gyrt.
Kneele
?
I
hope
I
am
not
brought
so
low
yet
:
though
my
Knight
be
run
away
,
&
has
sold
my
land
,
I
am
a
Lady
,
stil
.
Touch.
Your
Ladiship
says
true
,
Madam
,
&
it
is
fitter
,
and
a
greater
decorum
,
that
I
should
curtsie
to
you
that
are
a
knights
wife
,
and
a
Lady
,
then
you
be
brought
a'
your
knees
to
me
,
who
am
a
poore
Cullion
,
and
your
Father
.
Gyr.
Law
!
my
Father
knowes
his
duty
.
Mist.
Tou.
O
child
!
Touch.
And
therefore
I
doe
desire
your
Ladiship
,
my
good
Lady
Flash
in
all
humility
,
to
depart
my
obscure
Cottage
,
and
returne
in
quest
of
your
bright
,
and
most
transparent
Castell
,
how euer
presently
conceald
to
mortall
eyes
.
And
as
for
one
poore
woman
of
your
traine
here
,
I
will
take
that
order
,
she
shall
no
longer
be
a
charge
vnto
you
,
nor
helpe
to
spend
your
Ladiship
;
she
shall
stay
at
home
with
me
,
and
not
goe
abroad
,
not
put
you
to
the
pawning
of
an
odde
Coach-horse
,
or
three
wheeles
,
but
take
part
with
the
Touchstone
:
If
we
lacke
,
we
wil
not
complaine
to
your
Ladiship
.
And
so
good
Madam
,
with
your
Damoselle
here
,
please
you
to
let
vs
see
your
straight
backs
,
in
equipage
;
for
truly
,
here
is
no
roust
for
such
Chickens
as
you
are
,
or
birds
o'
your
feather
,
if
it
like
your
Ladiship
.
Gyrt.
Mary
,
fyste
o'
your
kindnesse
.
I
thought
as
much
.
Come
away
Sinne
,
we
shall
assoone
get
a
fart
from
a
dead
man
,
as
a
farthing
of
court'sie
here
.
Mild.
O
,
good
Sister
!
Gyrt.
Sister
,
sir
reuerence
?
come
away
,
I
say
,
Hunger
drops
out
at
his
nose
.
Goul.
O
Madam
,
Faire
words
neuer
hurt
the
tongue
.
Gyrt.
How
say
you
by
that
?
you
come
out
with
your
golde
ends
now
!
Mi.
Tou.
Stay
Lady-daughter
:
good
husband
.
Touch.
Wife
,
no
man
loues
his
fetters
,
be
they
made
of
gold
:
I
list
not
ha'
my
head
fastned
vnder
my
childs
girdle
;
as
she
has
brew'd
,
so
let
her
drinke
,
a
Gods
name
:
she
went
witlesse
to
wedding
,
now
she
may
goe
wisely
a begging
.
It
's
but
hony-Moone
yet
with
her
Ladiship
;
she
has
Coach
horses
,
Apparell
,
Iewels
yet
left
,
she
needs
care
for
no
friends
,
nor
take
knowledge
of
Father
,
Mother
,
Brother
,
Sister
,
or
any body
:
When
those
are
pawn'd
,
or
spent
,
perhaps
we
shall
returne
into
the
list
of
her
acquaintance
.
Gyrt.
I
scorne
it
ifaith
.
Come
Sinne
.
(
Exit
Gyrt
.
Mi.
Tou.
O
Madam
,
why
do
you
prouoke
your
Father
,
thus
?
Touch.
Nay
,
nay
,
eene
let
Pride
goe
afore
,
Shame
wil
follow
after
,
I
warrant
you
.
Come
,
why
doost
thou
weepe
now
?
thou
art
not
the
first
good
Cow
hast
had
an
ill
Calfe
,
I
trust
.
What
's
the
newes
,
with
that
fellow
?
Enter
Constable
.
Goul.
Sir
,
the
Knight
,
and
your
man
Quickesiluer
are
without
,
will
you
ha
'hem
brought
in
?
Touch.
O
by
any
meanes
.
And
Sonne
,
here
's
a
Chaire
;
appeare
terrible
vnto
'hem
,
on
the
first
enter
view
.
Let
them
behold
the
melancholy
of
a
Magistrate
,
and
taste
the
fury
of
a
Citizen
in
office
.
Goul.
Why
Sir
,
I
can
do
nothing
to
'hem
,
except
you
charge
'hem
with
somwhat
.
Touch.
I
will
charge
'hem
,
and
recharge
'hem
,
rather
then
Authority
should
want
foyle
to
set
it
of
.
Gould
.
No
good
Sir
,
I
will
not
.
Touch.
Sonne
,
it
is
your
place
;
by
any
meanes
.
Goul.
Beleeue
it
,
I
will
not
Sir
.
Enter
Knight
Petronell
,
Quickesiluer
,
Constable
,
Officers
.
Pet.
How
Misfortune
pursues
vs
still
in
our
misery
!
Quic.
Would
it
had
beene
my
fortune
,
to
haue
beene
trust
vp
at
Wapping
,
rather
then
euer
ha'
come
here
.
Pet.
Or
mine
,
to
haue
famisht
in
the
Iland
.
Quic.
Must
Goulding
sit
vpon
vs
?
Consta.
You
might
carry
an
M.
vnder
your
girdle
to
Maister
Deputis
worship
.
Gould
.
What
are
those
,
maister
Constable
?
Const.
And
't
please
your
worship
,
a
couple
of
Maisterlesse
men
,
I
prest
for
the
Low-countries
,
Sir
.
Goul.
Why
do
you
not
cary
'hem
to
Bridewell
,
according
to
your
order
,
they
may
be
shipt
away
?
Const.
An
't
please
your
Worship
,
one
of
'hem
sayes
he
is
a
Knight
;
and
we
thought
good
to
shew
him
to
your
worship
,
for
our
discharge
.
Goul.
Which
is
he
?
Const.
This
Sir
.
Goul.
And
what
's
the
other
?
Const.
A
Knights
Fellow
Sir
,
an
't
please
you
.
Goul.
What
?
a
Knight
,
and
his
Fellow
thus
accoutred
?
Where
are
their
Hattes
and
Feathers
,
their
Rapiers
,
and
their
Cloakes
?
Quic.
O
they
mock
vs
.
Const.
Nay
truely
sir
,
they
had
cast
both
their
Feathers
,
and
Hattes
too
,
before
wee
see
'hem
.
Here
's
all
their
furniture
,
an
't
please
you
,
that
we
found
.
They
say
,
Knights
are
now
to
be
knowne
without
Feathers
,
like
Cockrels
by
their
Spurres
,
Sir
.
Goul.
What
are
their
names
,
say
they
?
Touch.
Very
well
this
.
He
should
not
take
knowledge
of
'hem
in
his
place
,
indeeed
.
Con.
This
is
Sir
Petronell
Flash
.
Touch.
How
!
Con.
And
this
Francis
Quickesiluer
.
Touch.
Is
't
possible
?
I
thought
your
Worship
had
beene
gone
for
Virginia
,
Sir
.
You
are
welcome
home
sir
.
Your
Worship
has
made
a
quick
returne
,
it
seemes
and
no
doubt
a
good
voyage
.
Nay
pray
you
be
couer'd
Sir
.
How
did
your
Bisquet
hold
out
Sir
?
Me thought
,
I
had
seene
this
Gentlemen
afore
;
good
Maister
Quickesiluer
!
How
a
degree
to
the
Southward
has
chang'd
you
.
Gould
.
Doe
you
know
'hem
Father
?
Forbeare
your
offers
a
litle
,
you
shall
be
heard
anon
.
Touch.
Yes
,
Maister
Deputy
:
I
had
a
small
venture
with
them
in
the
voyage
,
a
Thing
,
cald
a
Sonne
in
Lawe
,
or
so
.
Officers
,
you
may
let
'hem
stand
alone
,
they
will
not
runne
away
,
I
le
giue
my
word
for
them
.
A
couple
of
very
honest
Gentlemen
.
One
of
'hem
was
my
Prentise
,
M.
Quicksiluer
,
here
,
&
whe�
he
had
2.
yeare
to
serue
,
kept
his
whore
,
&
his
hunting
Nag
,
would
play
his
100.
pound
at
Gresco
,
or
Primero
,
as
familiarly
(
&
al
a'
my
purse
)
as
any
bright
peice
of
Crimson
on
'hem
all
,
had
his
changable
trunks
of
Apparel
,
standing
at
liuery
,
with
his
Mare
,
his
Chest
of
perfumd
linnen
,
and
his
Bathing
Tubbs
,
which
whe�
I
told
him
off
,
why
he
�
he
was
a
Gentleman
,
and
I
a
poore
Cheapeside
Groome
.
The
remedie
was
,
we
must
part
.
Since
when
he
hath
had
the
gift
of
gathering
vp
some
small
parcels
of
mine
,
to
the
value
of
500.
pound
disperst
among
my
customers
to
furnish
this
his
Virginian
ve�ture
;
wherin
this
knight
was
the
chiefe
,
sir
Flash
:
one
that
married
a
daughter
of
mine
,
Ladefied
her
,
turn'd
two
thousand
poundes
worth
of
good
land
of
hers
,
into
Cash
,
within
the
first
weeke
,
bought
her
a
new
Gowne
,
&
a
Coach
,
sent
her
to
seeke
her
fortune
by
land
,
whilst
himselfe
prepared
for
his
fortune
by
sea
,
tooke
in
fresh
flesh
at
Belingsgate
,
for
his
owne
diet
,
to
serue
him
the
whole
voyage
,
the
wife
of
a
certaine
vsurer
,
cald
Securitie
,
who
hath
bene
the
broker
for
'hem
in
all
this
businesse
:
Please
Maister
Deputy
,
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
Goul.
If
my
worshipfull
Father
haue
ended
.
Touch.
I
haue
,
it
shall
please
M.
Deputy
.
Goul.
Well
then
,
vnder
correction
.
�
Touch.
Now
sonne
,
come
ouer
'hem
with
some
fine
guird
,
as
thus
,
Knight
you
shall
be
encountred
,
that
is
,
had
to
the
Counter
;
or
Quicksiluer
,
I
will
put
you
in
a
crucible
or
so
.
Gould
.
Sir
Petronell
Flash
,
I
am
sory
to
see
such
flashes
as
these
proceede
from
a
Gentleman
of
your
Quality
,
&
Rancke
;
For
mine
own
part
,
I
could
wish
,
I
could
say
,
I
could
not
see
the�
:
but
such
is
the
misery
of
Magistrates
,
and
men
in
Place
,
that
they
must
not
winke
at
Offenders
.
Take
him
aside
,
I
wil
heare
you
anone
sir
.
Tou.
I
like
this
wel
yet
:
there
's
some
grace
i'
the
knight
,
left
,
He
cries
.
Goul.
Francis
Quick-siluer
,
would
God
thou
hadst
turnd
Quack-saluer
,
rather
then
run
into
these
dissolute
,
&
lewd
courses
;
It
is
great
pitty
,
thou
art
a
proper
yong
man
,
of
an
honest
and
cleane
face
,
somewhat
neere
a
good
one
,
(
God
hath
done
his
part
in
thee
)
but
,
thou
haste
made
too
much
,
and
beene
to
proud
of
that
face
,
with
the
rest
of
thy
body
;
for
maintenance
of
which
in
neate
and
garish
attire
,
(
onely
to
be
look'd
vpon
by
some
light
houswifes
)
thou
hast
prodigally
consumed
much
of
thy
Masters
estate
:
and
being
by
him
gently
admonish'd
,
at
seueral
times
,
hast
returnd
thy selfe
haughty
,
and
rebellious
,
in
thine
answers
,
thundring
out
vnciuill
comparisons
,
requiting
al
his
kindnes
with
a
course
and
harsh
behauiour
,
neuer
returning
thanks
for
any
one
benefit
,
but
receiuing
all
,
as
if
they
had
bin
Debts
to
thee
,
&
no
Courtesies
.
I
must
tel
thee
Francis
,
these
are
manifest
signes
of
an
ill
nature
;
and
God
doth
often
punish
such
pride
,
and
outrecuidance
,
with
scorne
and
infamy
,
which
is
the
worst
of
misfortune
.
My
worshipfull
father
,
what
do
you
please
to
charge
them
withall
?
from
the
presse
I
wil
free
'hem
Maister
Constable
.
Const.
Then
I
le
leaue
your
worship
,
Sir
.
Gold.
No
,
you
may
stay
,
there
will
be
other
matters
against
'hem
.
Touch.
Sir
I
do
charge
this
Gallant
,
Maister
Quicksiluer
,
on
suspicion
of
Felony
;
and
the
Knight
as
being
accessary
,
in
the
receipt
of
my
goods
.
Quick.
O
God
Sir
!
Touch.
Hold
thy
peace
,
impude�t
varlot
,
hold
thy
peace
.
With
what
forehead
or
face
,
dost
thou
offer
to
choppe
Logick
with
me
,
hauing
run
such
a
race
of
Riot
,
as
thou
hast
done
?
Do's
not
the
sight
of
this
worshipful
mans
fortune
&
temper
,
confound
thee
,
that
was
thy
yonger
fellow
in
houshold
,
and
now
come
to
haue
the
place
of
a
Iudge
vpon
thee
?
Dost
not
obserue
this
?
Which
of
al
thy
Gallants
,
&
Gasters
,
thy
Swearers
&
thy
Swaggerers
,
will
come
now
to
mone
thy
misfortune
,
or
pitty
thy
penurie
?
They
le
looke
out
at
a
window
,
as
thou
rid'st
in
triumph
to
Tiborne
,
and
crye
,
yonder
goes
honest
Franck
,
mad
Quicksiluer
;
He
was
a
free
boone
companion
,
when
hee
had
money
,
sayes
one
;
Hang
him
foole
,
saies
another
,
he
could
not
keepe
it
when
he
had
it
;
A
pox
o'
the
Cullio�
his
Mr.
(
sais
a
third
)
he
has
brought
him
to
this
:
when
their
Pox
of
pleasure
,
&
their
piles
of
perdition
,
would
haue
bene
better
bestowed
vpon
thee
,
that
hast
ventred
for
'hem
with
the
best
,
and
by
the
clew
of
thy
knauery
,
brought
thy selfe
weeping
,
to
the
Cart
of
Calamity
.
Quic.
Worshipfull
Maister
.
Touch.
Offer
not
to
speake
,
Crocodile
,
I
will
not
heare
a
sound
come
from
thee
.
Thou
hast
learnt
to
whine
at
the
Play
yonder
.
Maister
Deputy
,
pray
yon
commit
'hem
both
to
safe
custody
,
till
I
be
able
farther
to
charge
'hem
.
Quic.
O
me
,
what
an
infortunate
thing
am
I
!
Pet.
Will
you
not
take
security
Sir
.
Touch.
Yes
mary
will
I
sir
Flash
,
if
I
can
find
him
,
&
charge
him
as
deepe
as
the
best
on
you
.
He
has
beene
the
plotter
of
all
this
:
he
is
your
Inginer
,
I
heare
.
Maister
Deputy
,
you
'll
dispose
of
these
?
In
the
meane
time
,
I
le
to
my
Lo.
Mayor
,
&
get
his
warrant
,
to
seize
that
Serpent
Securitie
into
my
hands
,
&
seale
vp
both
house
,
and
goods
,
to
the
Kings
vse
,
or
my
satisfaction
.
Goul.
Officers
take
'hem
to
the
Counter
.
Qui.
&
Pet.
O
God
.
Touch.
Nay
on
,
on
:
you
see
the
issue
of
your
Sloth
.
Of
Sloth
commeth
Pleasure
,
of
Pleasure
commeth
Riot
,
of
Ryot
comes
Whoring
,
of
Whoring
comes
Spending
,
of
Spending
comes
Want
,
of
Want
comes
Theft
,
of
Theft
comes
Hanging
;
and
there
is
my
Quickesiluer
fixt
.
Exeunt
.
Actus
Quintus
.
Scena
Prima
.
-
Gyrtrude
.
-
Sindefie
.
Gyr.
Ah
Sinne
!
hast
thou
euer
read
i'
the
Chronicle
of
any
Lady
,
and
her
waiting-woman
,
driuen
to
that
extremity
,
that
we
are
,
Sinne
?
Syn.
Not
I
truely
,
Madam
,
and
if
I
had
,
it
were
but
colde
comfort
,
should
come
out
of
bookes
,
now
.
Gyr.
Why
,
good
faith
Sinne
,
I
could
dine
with
a
lamentable
storie
,
now
.
O
hone
,
hone
,
o
no
nera
,
&c.
Canst
thou
tell
nere
a
one
,
Synne
?
Sin.
None
,
but
mine
owne
,
Madam
,
which
is
lamentable
inough
;
first
to
be
stolne
from
my
Friends
,
which
were
worshipfull
,
and
of
good
accompt
,
by
a
Prentile
,
in
the
habite
and
disguise
of
a
Gentleman
,
and
here
brought
vp
to
London
,
and
promis'd
mariage
,
and
now
likely
to
be
forsaken
(
for
he
is
in
possibility
to
be
hangd
.
)
Gyr.
Nay
weepe
not
good
Sinne
.
My
Petronell
,
is
in
as
good
possibilitie
as
he
.
Thy
miseries
,
are
nothing
to
mine
,
Sinne
:
I
was
more
then
promis'd
marriage
,
Sinne
,
I
had
it
Sinne
:
&
was
made
a
Lady
;
and
by
a
Knight
,
Sin
:
which
is
now
as
good
as
no
Knight
,
Sin
:
And
I
was
borne
in
London
,
which
is
more
then
brought
vp
,
Sin
:
and
already
forsaken
;
which
is
past
likelihood
,
Sin
:
and
in
stead
of
Land
i'
the
Countrey
,
all
my
Knights
Liuing
lies
i'
the
Counter
,
Syn
.
there
's
his
Castle
now
?
Syn.
Which
hee
cannot
be
forc't
out
off
,
Madam
.
Gyr.
Yes
,
if
he
would
liue
hungry
a
weeke
,
or
two
.
Hunger
they
say
breakes
stone
wals
.
But
he
is
eene
wel
inough
seru'd
,
Sin
,
that
so
soone
as
euer
he
had
got
my
hand
to
the
sale
of
my
inheritance
run
away
from
me
,
and
I
had
bene
his
Punke
,
God
blesse
vs
.
Would
the
Knight
o'
the
Sunne
,
or
Palmerin
of
England
,
haue
vsd
their
Ladies
so
,
Syn
?
or
sir
Lancelot
?
or
sir
Tristram
?
Syn.
I
doe
not
know
,
Madam
.
Gry,
Then
thou
know'st
nothing
,
Syn
.
Thou
art
a
Foole
,
Syn
.
The
Knighthood
now
a
daies
,
are
nothing
like
the
Knighthood
of
old
time
.
They
rid
a
horseback
Ours
goe
afoote
.
They
were
attended
by
their
Squires
.
Our
by
their
Lacquaies
.
They
went
buckled
in
their
Armor
,
Ours
muffled
in
their
Cloaks
.
They
trauaild
wildernesses
;
&
desarts
,
Ours
dare
scarce
walke
the
streets
.
They
were
stil
prest
to
engage
their
Honour
,
Ours
stil
ready
to
paune
their
cloaths
.
They
would
gallop
on
at
sight
of
a
Mo�ster
,
Ours
run
away
at
sight
of
a
Serieant
.
They
would
helpe
poore
Ladies
,
Ours
make
poore
Ladies
.
Syn.
I
Madam
,
they
were
Knights
of
the
Round-Table
at
Winchester
,
that
sought
Adue�tures
,
but
these
of
the
Square
Table
at
Ordinaries
,
that
sit
at
Hazard
.
Gyr.
True
Syn
,
let
him
vanish
And
tel
me
,
what
shal
we
pawne
next
Syn.
I
mary
,
Mada�
,
a
timely
consideration
,
for
our
Hostes
(
prophane
woman
)
has
sworne
by
bread
,
&
salt
,
she
will
not
trust
vs
another
meale
.
Gyr.
Let
it
stinke
in
her
hand
the�
:
I
le
not
be
beholding
to
her
.
Let
me
see
,
my
Iewels
begone
,
&
my
Gownes
,
&
my
red
veluet
Petticote
,
that
I
was
maried
in
,
&
my
wedding
silke
stockings
,
&
al
thy
best
apparel
,
poore
Syn
.
Good
faith
,
rather
the�
thou
shouldest
pawne
a
ragge
more
,
I
l'd
lay
my
Ladiship
in
lauender
,
if
I
knew
where
.
Syn.
Alas
,
Madam
,
your
Ladiship
?
Gir.
I
,
why
?
you
do
not
scorne
my
Ladiship
,
though
it
is
in
a
Wastcoate
?
Gods
my
life
,
you
are
a
Peate
indeed
!
do
I
offer
to
morgage
my
Ladiship
,
for
you
,
and
for
your
auaile
,
and
do
you
turne
the
Lip
,
and
the
Alas
to
my
Ladiship
?
Syn.
No
Madam
,
but
I
make
question
,
who
will
lend
any
thing
vpon
it
?
Gyr.
Who
?
marry
inow
,
I
warrant
you
,
if
you
'le
seeke
'hem
out
.
I
'm
sure
I
remember
the
time
,
when
I
would
ha'
giuen
a
thousand
pound
,
(
if
I
had
had
it
)
to
haue
bin
a
Ladie
;
and
I
hope
I
was
not
bred
and
borne
with
that
appetite
alone
:
some
other
gentle-borne
o'
the
Citie
,
haue
the
same
longing
I
trust
.
And
for
my
part
,
I
would
afford
'hem
a
peny'rth
,
my
Ladiship
is
little
the
worse
,
for
the
wearing
,
and
yet
I
would
bate
a
good
deale
of
the
summe
.
I
would
lend
it
(
let
me
see
)
for
40
li.
in
hand
,
Syn
,
that
would
apparrell
vs
;
and
ten
pound
a
yeare
:
that
would
keepe
me
,
and
you
,
Syn
,
(
with
our
needles
)
and
wee
should
neuer
need
to
be
beholding
to
our
sciruy
Parents
?
Good
Lord
,
that
there
are
no
Fayries
now
adayes
,
Syn
.
Syn.
Why
Madame
?
Gyr.
To
doe
Miracles
,
and
bring
Ladyes
money
.
Sure
,
if
we
lay
in
a
cleanly
house
,
they
would
haunt
it
,
Synne
?
I
le
trie
.
I
le
sweepe
the
Chamber
soone
at
night
,
&
set
a
dish
of
water
o'
the
Hearth
.
A
Fayrie
may
come
,
and
bring
a
Pearle
,
or
a
Diamonde
Wee
do
not
know
Syn
?
Or
,
there
may
be
a
pot
of
Gold
hid
o'
the
backe-side
,
if
we
had
tooles
to
digge
for
't
?
why
may
not
wee
two
rise
earely
i'
the
morning
(
Syn
)
afore
any body
is
vp
,
and
find
a
Iewell
,
i'
the
streets
,
worth
a
100.
li.
?
May
not
some
great
Court-Lady
,
as
she
comes
from
Reuels
at
midnight
,
looke
out
of
her
Coach
,
as
't
is
running
,
and
loose
such
a
Iewell
,
and
wee
finde
it
?
Ha
?
Syn.
They
are
prettie
waking
dreames
;
these
.
Gyr.
Or
may
not
some
olde
Vsurer
bee
drunke
ouer-night
,
with
a
Bagge
of
money
,
and
leaue
it
behinde
him
on
a
Stall
?
for
God-sake
,
Syn
,
let
's
rise
to morrow
by
breake
of
day
,
and
see
.
I
protest
law
,
If
I
had
as
much
money
as
an
Alderman
,
I
would
seatter
some
on
't
,
i'
th'
streetes
for
poore
Ladyes
to
finde
,
when
their
Knights
were
layd
vp
.
And
,
nowe
I
remember
my
Song
o'
the
Golden
showre
,
why
may
not
I
haue
such
a
fortune
?
I
le
sing
it
,
and
try
what
luck
I
shall
haue
after
it
.
Fond
Fables
tell
of
olde
,
How
loue
in
Danaes
lappe
Fell
in
a
showre
of
Gold
,
By
which
shee
caught
a
clappe
;
O
,
had
it
beene
my
hap
,
(
How ere
the
blow
doth
threaten
)
So
well
I
like
the
play
,
That
I
could
wish
all
day
And
night
to
be
so
beaten
.
Enter
Mistris
Touchstone
.
O
,
heer
's
my
Mother
!
good
lucke
,
I
hope
.
Ha'
you
brought
any
money
,
Mother
?
Pray
you
Mother
,
your
Blessing
.
Nay
,
sweet
Mother
,
doe
not
weepe
.
Mistris
Touch.
God
blesse
you
;
I
would
I
were
in
my
Graue
.
Gyr.
Nay
,
deare
Mother
,
can
you
steale
no
more
money
from
my
father
?
dry
your
eyes
,
&
comfort
me
.
Alas
,
it
is
my
Knights
fault
,
and
not
mine
,
that
I
am
in
a
Wast-coate
,
and
attyred
thus
simply
.
Mistris
Touch.
Simply
?
T
is
better
then
thou
deseru'st
.
Neuer
whimper
for
the
matter
.
Thou
shouldst
haue
look'd
,
before
thou
hadst
leap't
.
Thou
wert
a fire
to
be
a
Lady
,
and
now
your
Ladishippe
and
you
may
both
blowe
at
the
Cole
,
for
ought
I
know
.
Selfe
doe
,
selfe
haue
.
The
hastie
person
neuer
wants
woe
,
they
say
.
Gyr.
Nay
then
Mother
,
you
should
ha
look'd
to
it
;
A
bodie
would
thinke
you
were
the
older
:
I
did
but
my
kinde
,
l.
He
was
a
Knight
,
and
I
was
fit
to
be
a
Lady
.
T
is
not
lacke
of
liking
,
but
lacke
of
liuing
,
that
seuers
vs
.
And
you
talke
like
your selfe
and
a
Cittiner
in
this
,
yfaith
.
You
shew
what
Husband
you
come
on
Iwys
.
You
smell
the
Touch-stone
.
He
that
will
doe
more
for
his
daughter
,
that
he
has
marryed
a
sciruie
Gold-end
man
,
and
his
Prentise
,
then
he
will
for
his
t'other
Daughter
,
that
has
wedded
a
Knight
,
and
his
Customer
.
By
this
light
,
I
thinke
hee
is
not
my
legittimate
Father
.
Syn.
O
good
Madam
,
doe
not
take
vp
your
mother
so
.
Mistris
.
Touch.
Nay
,
nay
,
let
her
cene
alone
.
Let
her
Ladishippe
grieue
me
still
,
with
her
bitter
taunts
and
termes
.
I
haue
not
dole
inough
to
see
her
in
this
miserable
case
,
l
?
without
her
Veluet
gownes
,
without
Ribbands
,
without
Iewels
,
without
French-wires
,
or
Cheat
bread
,
or
Quailes
,
or
a
little
Dog
,
or
a
Genttleman
Vsher
,
or
any
thing
indeed
,
that
's
fit
for
a
Lady
.
�
Syn.
Except
her
tongue
.
Mistris
Touch.
And
I
not
able
to
releiue
her
neither
,
being
kept
so
short
,
by
my
husband
.
Well
,
God
knowes
my
heart
.
I
did
little
thinke
,
that
euer
shee
should
haue
had
need
of
her
sister
Golding
.
Gyr.
Why
Mother
,
I
ha
not
yet
.
Alas
,
good
Mother
,
bee
not
intoxicate
for
mee
,
I
am
well
inough
.
I
would
not
change
husbands
with
my
Sister
,
I
.
The
legge
of
a
Larke
is
better
then
the
body
of
a
Kight
.
Mistris
Touch.
I
know
that
.
But
�
Gyr.
What
sweete
Mother
,
What
?
Mistris
Touchstone
.
It
's
but
ill
food
,
when
nothing's
left
but
the
Claw
.
Gyr.
That
's
true
Mother
;
Aye
me
.
Mistris
Touchstone
.
Nay
,
sweete
Lady-bird
,
sigh
not
.
Child
,
Madame
.
Why
doe
you
weepe
thus
?
Bee
of
good
cheere
.
I
shall
die
,
if
you
crye
,
and
marre
your
complexion
,
thus
?
Gyr.
Alas
Mother
,
what
should
I
doe
,
Mistris
Touch.
Goe
to
thy
Sister's
Childe
,
Shee
'le
be
proude
,
thy
Lady-ship
will
come
vnder
her
roofe
.
Shee
'le
winne
thy
Father
to
release
thy
Knight
,
and
redeeme
thy
Gownes
,
and
thy
Coach
,
and
thy
Horses
,
and
set
thee
vp
againe
.
Gyr.
But
will
shee
get
him
to
set
my
Knight
vp
,
too
?
Mistris
Touchstone
.
That
shee
will
,
or
any
thing
else
thou'lt
aske
her
.
Gyr.
I
will
begin
to
loue
her
,
if
I
thought
she
would
doe
this
.
Mistris
.
Touch.
Try
her
good
Chucke
,
I
warrant
thee
.
Gyr.
Doost
thou
thinke
shee
'le
doo
't
?
Syn.
I
Madame
,
and
be
glad
you
will
receiue
it
.
Mistris
.
Touch.
That
's
a
good
Mayden
,
shee
tells
you
trew
.
Come
,
I
le
take
order
for
your
debts
i
the
Ale-house
.
Gyr.
Goe
,
Syn
,
and
pray
for
thy
Franck
,
as
I
will
,
for
my
Pet
.
Enter
Touchstone
,
Goulding
,
Woolfe
.
Touch.
I
will
receiue
no
Letters
,
M
Woolf
,
you
shal
pardon
me
.
Gould
.
Good
Father
let
me
entreat
you
.
Touch.
Sonne
Goulding
,
I
will
not
be
tempted
,
I
finde
mine
owne
easie
nature
,
and
I
know
not
what
a
well-pend
subtile
Letter
may
worke
vpon
it
:
There
may
be
Tricks
,
Packing
,
doe
you
see
?
Returne
with
your
Packet
,
Sir
.
Woolfe
.
Beleeue
it
Sir
,
you
need
feare
no
packing
here
.
These
are
but
Letters
of
Submission
,
all
.
Touch.
Sir
,
I
doe
looke
for
no
Submission
.
I
will
beare
my selfe
in
this
like
Blinde
Iustice
,
Worke
vpon
that
now
.
When
the
Sessions
come
,
they
shall
heare
from
me
.
Gould
.
From
whom
come
your
Letters
,
M.
Woolfe
?
Woolfe
.
And
't
please
you
Sir
.
One
from
Sir
Petronell
.
Another
from
Francis
Quickesiluer
.
And
a
third
,
from
old
Securitie
,
who
is
almost
madde
in
Prison
.
There
are
two
,
to
your
worship
:
One
from
M.
Francis
,
Sir
.
Another
from
the
Knight
.
Touch.
I
doe
wonder
,
M.
Woolfe
,
why
you
should
trauaile
thus
,
in
a
businesse
so
contrarie
to
kinde
,
or
the
nature
o'
your
Place
!
that
you
beeing
the
Keeper
of
a
Prison
,
should
labour
the
release
of
your
Prisoners
!
Whereas
mee thinkes
,
it
were
farre
more
Naturall
,
&
Kindely
in
you
,
to
be
ranging
about
for
more
,
&
not
let
these
scape
you
haue
alreadie
vnder
the
Tooth
.
But
they
say
,
you
Wolues
,
when
you
ha'
suck't
the
blood
once
,
that
they
are
drie
,
you
ha'
done
.
Woolfe
.
Sir
,
your
Worship
may
descant
as
you
please
o'
my
name
,
but
I
protest
,
I
was
neuer
so
mortified
with
any
mens
discourse
,
or
behauiour
in
Prison
;
yet
I
haue
had
of
all
sorts
of
men
i'
the
Kingdome
,
vnder
my
Keyes
,
&
almost
of
all
Religions
i'
the
land
,
as
Papist
,
Protestant
,
Puritane
,
Brownist
,
Anabaptist
,
Millenary
,
Family
o'
Loue
,
Iewe
,
Turke
,
Infidell
,
Atheist
,
Good
Fellow
,
&c.
Gould
.
And
which
of
all
these
(
thinkes
M.
Woolfe
)
was
the
best
Religion
?
Woolfe
.
Troth
,
M.
Deputie
,
they
that
pay
Fees
best
:
we
neuer
examine
their
consciences
farder
.
Gould
.
I
beleeue
you
M.
Woolfe
.
Good
faith
,
Sir
,
Here
's
a
great
deale
of
humilitie
i'these
Letters
.
Woolfe
.
Humilitie
,
Sir
?
I
,
were
your
Worshippe
an
Eye-witnesse
of
it
,
you
would
say
so
.
The
Knight
will
i'
the
Knights-Ward
,
doe
what
wee
can
Sir
,
and
Maister
Quickesiluer
,
would
be
i'
the
Hole
,
if
we
would
let
him
.
I
neuer
knew
,
or
saw
Prisoners
more
penitent
,
or
more
deuout
.
They
will
sit
you
vp
all
night
singing
of
Psalmes
,
and
aedifying
the
whole
Prison
onely
,
Securitie
sings
a
note
to
high
,
sometimes
,
because
he
lyes
i'
the
Two-penny
ward
.
farre
of
,
and
can
not
take
his
tune
.
The
Neighbours
can
not
rest
for
him
,
but
come
euery
Morning
to
aske
,
what
godly
Prisoners
we
haue
.
Touch.
Which
on
'hem
is
't
is
so
deuout
,
the
Knight
,
or
the
to'ther
?
Woolfe
.
Both
Sir
.
But
the
young
Man
especially
!
I
neuer
heard
his
like
!
He
has
cut
his
hayre
too
.
He
is
so
well
giuen
,
and
has
such
good
gifts
!
Hee
can
tell
you
,
almost
all
the
Stories
of
the
Booke
of
Martyrs
,
and
speake
you
all
the
Sicke-mans
Salue
without
Booke
.
Touch
I
,
if
he
had
had
grace
,
he
was
brought
vp
where
it
grew
,
I
wis
.
On
Maister
Wolfe
.
Wolfe
.
And
he
has
conuerted
one
Fangs
a
Sarieant
,
a
fellow
could
neither
write
,
nor
read
,
he
was
call'd
the
Bandog
o'
the
Counter
:
and
he
has
brought
him
already
to
pare
his
nailes
,
and
say
his
prayers
,
and
't
is
hop'd
,
he
will
sell
his
place
shortly
,
and
become
an
Intelligencer
.
Touch.
No
more
,
I
am
comming
all
ready
.
If
I
should
giue
any
farder
eare
,
I
were
take�
.
Adue
good
Maister
Wolfe
.
Sonne
,
I
doe
feele
mine
owne
weaknesses
,
do
not
importune
me
.
Pity
is
a
Rheume
,
that
I
am
subiect
too
,
but
I
will
resist
it
.
Maister
Wolfe
,
Fish
is
cast
away
,
that
is
cast
in
drye
Pooles
:
Tell
Hipocrisie
,
it
will
not
do
,
I
haue
touchd
,
and
tried
too
often
;
I
am
yet
proofe
,
and
I
will
remaine
so
:
when
the
Sessions
come
,
they
shall
heare
from
me
.
In
the
meane
time
,
to
all
suites
,
to
all
intreaties
,
to
all
letters
,
to
all
trickes
,
I
will
be
deafe
as
an
Adder
,
and
blind
as
a
Beetle
,
lay
mine
care
to
the
ground
,
and
lock
mine
eyes
i'
my
hand
,
against
all
temptations
.
Exit
.
Gold.
You
see
,
maister
Wolfe
,
how
inexorable
he
is
.
There
is
no
hope
to
recouer
him
Pray
you
commend
me
to
my
brother
Knight
,
and
to
my
fellow
Francis
,
present
'hem
with
this
small
token
of
my
loue
;
tell
'hem
,
I
wish
I
could
do
'hem
any
worthier
office
,
but
in
this
,
't
is
desperate
:
yet
I
will
not
faile
to
trie
the
vttermost
of
my
power
for
'hem
.
And
sir
,
as
farre
as
I
haue
any
credit
with
you
pray
you
let
'hem
want
nothing
:
though
I
am
not
ambitious
,
they
should
know
so
much
.
Wolse.
Sir
,
both
your
actions
,
and
words
speake
you
to
be
a
true
Gentleman
.
They
shall
know
onely
what
is
fit
,
and
no
more
.
Exeunt
.
-
Holdfast
.
-
Bramble
.
-
Security
.
Hold.
Who
would
you
speake
with
,
Sir
?
Bra�.
I
would
speake
with
one
Securitie
,
that
is
prisoner
here
.
Hold.
You'
are
welcome
Sir
.
Stay
there
I
le
call
him
to
you
.
Maister
Securitie
.
Secu.
Who
call's
?
Hold.
Here
's
a
Gentleman
would
speake
with
you
.
Secu.
What
is
he
?
Is
't
one
that
grafts
my
forehead
now
I
am
in
prison
,
and
comes
to
see
how
the
Hornes
shoote
vp
,
and
prosper
.
Hold.
You
must
pardon
him
Sir
:
The
old
man
is
a
little
craz'd
with
his
imprisonment
.
Secu.
What
say
you
to
me
,
Sir
?
Looke
you
here
.
My
learned
Counsaile
,
M.
Bramble
!
Crye
you
mercie
,
Sir
:
when
sawe
you
my
wife
?
Bram.
Shee
is
now
at
my
house
,
Sir
,
and
desir'd
mee
that
I
would
come
to
Visite
you
and
inquire
of
you
your
Case
,
that
we
might
worke
some
meanes
to
get
you
foorth
.
Secur.
My
Case
,
M.
Bramble
,
is
stone
walles
,
and
yron
grates
;
you
see
it
,
this
is
the
weakest
part
on
't
.
And
,
for
getting
me
forth
,
no
meanes
but
hang
my selfe
,
and
so
to
be
carryed
foorth
,
from
which
they
haue
here
bound
me
,
in
intollerable
bands
.
Bram.
Why
but
what
is
't
you
are
in
for
,
Sir
?
Secu.
For
my
Sinnes
,
for
my
Sinnes
Sir
,
whereof
Mariage
,
is
the
greatest
.
O
,
had
I
neuer
marryed
,
I
had
neuer
knowne
this
Purgatorie
,
to
which
Hell
is
a
kinde
of
coole
Bathe
in
respect
:
My
wiues
confederacie
Sir
,
with
olde
Touchstone
,
that
shee
might
keepe
her
Iubilaee
,
and
the
Feast
of
her
New-Moone
.
Doe
you
vnderstand
me
Sir
?
Enter
Quickesiluer
.
Quick.
Good
Sir
,
goe
in
and
talke
with
him
.
The
Light
dos
him
harme
,
and
his
example
will
bee
hurtfull
to
the
weake
Prisoneis
.
Fit
,
Father
Securitie
,
that
you
'le
bee
still
so
prophane
,
will
nothing
humble
you
?
Enter
two
Prisoners
,
with
a
Friend
.
Friend
.
What
's
he
?
Pri.
1.
O
hee
is
a
rare
yong
man
.
Doe
you
not
know
him
?
Frien.
Not
I
.
I
neuer
saw
him
.
I
can
remember
.
Pri.
2.
Why
,
it
is
he
that
was
the
gallant
Prentise
of
London
,
M.
Touchstones
man
.
Frien.
Who
Quickesiluer
?
Pri.
1.
I
,
this
is
hee
.
Frien.
Is
this
hee
?
They
say
,
he
has
beene
a
Gallant
indeede
.
Pris.
O
,
the
royall
est
fellow
,
that
euer
was
bred
vp
i'
the
Citie
.
He
would
play
you
his
thousand
pound
,
a
night
at
Dice
;
keepe
Knights
and
Lords
Companie
;
go
with
them
to
baudie
houses
;
had
his
fixe
men
in
a
Liuerie
;
kept
a
stable
of
Hunting
horses
;
and
his
Wench
in
her
veluet
Gowne
,
and
her
Cloth
of
siluer
.
Here
's
one
Knight
with
him
here
in
Prison
.
Frien.
And
how
miserably
he
is
chaung'd
!
Pris.
1.
O
,
that
's
voluntary
in
him
;
he
gaue
away
all
his
rich
clothes
,
assoone
as
euer
hee
came
in
here
,
among
the
Prisoners
:
and
will
eate
o'
the
Basket
,
for
humilitie
.
Friend
.
Why
will
he
doe
so
?
Pris.
2.
Alas
hee
has
no
hope
of
life
.
Hee
mortifies
himselfe
.
He
dos
but
linger
on
,
till
the
Sessions
.
Pris.
2.
O
,
he
has
pen'd
the
best
thing
,
that
hee
calles
his
Repentance
,
or
his
Last
Fare-well
,
that
euer
you
heard
:
Hee
is
a
pretie
Poet
,
and
for
Prose
�
You
would
wonder
how
many
Prisoners
he
has
help't
out
,
with
penning
Petitions
for
'hem
,
and
not
take
a
penny
.
Looke
,
this
is
the
Knight
,
in
the
rugge
Gowne
.
Standby
.
Enter
Petronel
,
Bramble
,
Quickesiluer
,
Woolfe
.
Bram.
Sir
,
for
Securities
Case
,
I
haue
told
him
;
Say
he
should
be
condemned
to
be
carted
,
or
whipt
,
for
a
Bawde
,
or
so
,
why
I
le
lay
an
Execution
on
him
o'two
hundred
pound
,
let
him
acknowledge
a
Iudgement
,
he
shal
do
it
in
halfe
an
howre
,
they
shal
not
all
fetch
him
out
,
without
paying
the
Execution
,
o'
my
word
.
Pet.
But
can
we
not
be
bay'ld
M.
Bramble
?
Bram.
Hardly
,
there
are
none
of
the
Iudges
in
Towne
,
else
you
should
remoue
your selfe
(
in
spight
of
him
)
with
a
Habeas
Corpus
:
But
if
you
haue
a
Friend
to
deliuer
your
tale
sensibly
to
some
Iustice
o'
the
Towne
,
that
hee
may
haue
feeling
of
it
,
(
doe
you
see
)
you
may
be
bayl'd
.
For
as
I
vnderstand
the
Case
,
t
is
onely
done
,
In
Terrorem
,
and
you
shall
haue
an
Action
of
false
Imprisonment
against
him
,
when
you
come
out
:
and
perhaps
a
thousand
pound
Costes
.
Enter
M.
Woolfe
.
Quick.
How
now
,
M
,
Woolfe
?
What
newes
?
what
returne
?
Woolfe
.
Faith
,
bad
all
:
yonder
will
bee
no
Letters
receiued
.
He
sayes
the
Sessions
shall
determine
it
.
Onely
,
M.
Deputie
Golding
commends
him
to
you
,
and
with
this
token
,
wishes
he
could
doe
you
other
good
.
Quick.
I
thanke
him
.
Good
M.
Bramble
,
trouble
our
quiet
no
more
;
doe
not
molest
vs
in
Prison
thus
,
with
your
winding
deuises
:
Pray
you
depart
.
For
my
pat
,
I
my
cause
to
him
that
can
succour
mee
,
let
God
worke
his
will
.
M.
Woolfe
,
I
pray
you
let
this
be
distributed
,
among
the
Prisoners
,
and
desire
'hem
to
pray
for
vs
.
Woolfe
.
It
shall
bee
done
,
M.
Francis
.
Pris.
1.
An
excellent
temper
!
Pris.
2.
Nowe
God
send
him
good-lucke
.
Exeunt
.
Pet.
But
what
said
my
Father
in
Lawe
,
M.
Woolfe
?
Enter
Hold
.
Hold.
Here
's
one
would
speake
with
you
,
Sir
.
Woolfe
.
I
le
tell
you
anon
Sir
Petronell
.
who
is
't
?
Hold.
A
Gentleman
,
Sir
,
that
will
not
be
seene
.
Enter
Gold
.
Woolfe
.
Where
is
he
?
M.
Deputie
!
your
wor:
is
wel-come
.
�
Gold.
Peace
!
Woolfe
.
Away
,
Srah
.
Gold.
Good
faith
,
M.
Woolfe
,
the
estate
of
these
Gentlemen
,
for
whome
you
were
so
late
and
willing
a
Sutor
,
doth
much
affect
mee
:
and
because
I
am
desirous
to
doe
them
some
faire
office
,
and
find
there
is
no
meanes
to
make
my
Father
relent
,
so
likely
,
as
to
bring
him
to
be
a
Spectator
of
their
Miseries
;
I
haue
ventur'd
on
a
deuice
,
which
is
,
to
make
make
my selfe
your
Prisoner
:
entreating
,
you
will
presently
goe
report
it
to
my
Father
,
and
(
fayning
,
an
Action
,
at
sute
of
some
third
person
)
pray
him
by
this
Token
,
that
he
will
presently
,
and
with
all
secrecie
,
come
hether
for
my
Bayle
;
which
trayne
,
(
if
any
)
I
know
will
bring
him
abroad
;
and
then
,
hauing
him
here
,
I
doubt
not
but
we
shall
be
all
fortunate
,
in
the
Euent
.
Woolf.
Sir
,
I
wil
put
on
my
best
speede
,
to
effect
it
.
Please
you
come
in
.
Gold.
Yes
;
And
let
me
rest
conceal'd
,
I
pray
you
.
VVoolfe
.
See
,
here
a
Benefit
,
truely
done
;
when
it
is
done
timely
,
freely
,
and
to
no
Ambition
.
Exit
.
Enter
Touchstone
,
VVife
,
Daughters
,
Syn
,
VVinyfred
.
Touch-stone
.
I
will
sayle
by
you
,
and
not
heare
you
,
like
the
wise
Vlisses
.
Mild.
Deare
Father
.
Mistris
Touch.
Husband
.
Gyr.
Father
.
VVin.
&
Syn.
M.
Touchstone
.
Touc.
away
syrens
,
I
will
inmure
my selfe
,
against
your
cryes
;
and
locke
my selfe
vpto
our
Lamentations
.
Mistris
Touch.
Gentle
Husband
,
heare
me
.
Gyr.
Father
,
It
is
I
Father
;
my
Lady
Flash
:
my
sister
and
I
am
Friends
.
Mil.
Good
Father
.
VVyn.
Be
not
hardned
,
good
M.
Touchstone
.
Syn.
I
pray
you
,
Sir
,
be
mercifull
.
Touch.
I
am
dease
,
I
doe
not
heare
you
;
I
haue
stopt
mine
eares
,
with
Shoomakers
waxe
,
and
drunke
Lethe
,
and
Mandragora
to
forget
you
:
All
you
speake
to
mee
,
I
commit
to
the
Ayre
.
Enter
VVoolfe
.
Mil.
How
now
,
M.
VVoolfe
?
VVoolfe
.
Where
's
M.
Touchstone
?
I
must
speake
with
him
presently
:
I
haue
lost
my
breath
for
hast
.
Mild.
What
's
the
matter
Sir
?
pray
all
be
well
.
Wolfe
.
Maister
Deputy
Goulding
is
arrested
vpon
an
execution
,
and
desires
him
presently
to
come
to
him
,
forthwith
.
Mild.
Aye
me
;
doe
you
heare
Father
?
Touch.
Tricks
,
tricks
,
confederacie
,
tricks
,
I
haue
'hem
in
my
nose
,
I
sent
'hem
.
Wol.
Who
's
that
?
maister
Touchstone
?
Mi.
Tou.
Why
it
is
M.
Wolfe
himselfe
,
husband
.
Mil.
Father
.
Touch.
I
am
dease
still
,
I
say
:
I
will
neither
yeeld
to
the
song
of
the
Syren
,
nor
the
voice
of
the
Hyena
,
the
teares
of
the
Crocodile
,
nor
the
howling
o'
the
Wolfe
:
auoid
my
habitatio
mo�sters
,
Wolfe
.
Why
you
are
not
mad
Sir
?
I
pray
you
looke
forth
,
and
see
the
token
I
haue
brought
you
,
Sir
.
Touch.
Ha!
what
token
is
it
?
Wolf.
Do
you
know
it
Sir
?
Tou.
My
sonne
Gouldings
ring
!
Are
you
in
earnest
Mai
Wolfe
?
Wolf.
I
by
my
faith
sir
.
He
is
in
prison
,
and
requir'd
me
to
vse
all
speed
,
and
secrecie
to
you
.
Touch.
My
Cloake
there
(
pray
you
be
patient
)
I
am
plagu'd
for
my
Austeritie
;
my
Cloake
:
at
whose
suite
maister
Wolfe
?
Wolfe
.
I
le
tell
you
as
we
goe
sir
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
Friend
.
Prisoners
.
Frie.
Why
,
but
is
his
offence
such
as
he
cannot
hope
of
life
?
Pri.
1.
Troth
it
should
seeme
so
:
and
't
is
great
pity
;
for
he
is
exceeding
penitent
.
Fri.
They
say
he
is
charg'd
but
on
suspicion
of
Felony
,
yet
.
Pri.
2.
I
but
his
maister
is
a
shrewd
fellow
,
Hee
le
proue
great
matter
against
him
.
Fri.
I
'de
as
liue
as
any
thing
,
I
could
see
his
Farewell
.
Pri.
1.
O
t
is
rarely
written
:
why
Tobis
may
get
him
to
sing
it
to
you
,
hee
's
not
curious
to
any body
.
Pri.
1.
O
no
.
He
would
that
all
the
world
should
take
knowledge
of
his
Repentance
,
and
thinkes
he
merits
in
't
,
the
more
shame
he
suffers
.
Pri.
1.
Pray
thee
try
,
what
thou
canst
doe
.
Pri.
2.
I
warrant
you
,
he
will
not
deny
it
;
if
he
be
not
hoarce
with
the
often
repeating
of
it
.
Exit
.
Pri.
1.
You
neuer
saw
a
more
courteous
creature
,
then
he
is
;
and
the
Knight
too
:
the
poorest
Prisoner
of
the
house
may
command
'hem
.
You
shall
heare
a
thing
,
admirably
pend
.
Fri.
Is
the
Knight
any
,
Scholler
too
?
Pris.
1.
No
,
but
he
will
speake
verie
well
,
and
discourse
admirably
of
running
Horses
,
and
White-Friers
,
and
against
Baudes
;
and
of
Cocks
;
and
talke
as
loude
as
a
Hunter
,
but
is
none
.
Enter
Wolfe
and
Touchstone
.
Wolf.
Please
you
stay
here
sir
,
I
le
cal
his
worship
downe
to
you
.
Pris.
1.
See
,
he
has
brought
him
,
and
the
Knight
too
.
Salute
him
I
pray
,
Sir
,
this
Gentleman
,
vpon
our
report
,
is
very
desirous
to
heare
some
piece
of
your
Repentance
.
Enter
Quick
.
Pet.
&c.
Quic.
Sir
,
with
all
my
heart
,
&
as
I
told
M.
Tobie
,
I
shall
be
glad
to
haue
any
man
a
witnesse
of
it
.
And
the
more
openly
I
prosesse
it
,
I
hope
it
will
appeare
the
hartier
and
the
more
vnfained
.
Touch.
Who
is
this
?
my
man
Francis
?
and
my
sonne
in
Lawe
?
Quick.
Sir
,
it
is
all
the
Testmonie
I
shall
leaue
behind
me
to
the
World
,
and
my
Master
,
that
I
haue
so
offended
.
Friend
.
Good
Sir
Qui.
I
writ
it
,
whe�
my
spirits
were
opprest
.
Pet.
I
,
I
le
be
sworne
for
you
Francis
.
Quick.
It
is
in
imitation
of
Maningtons
;
he
that
was
hangd
at
Cambridge
,
that
cut
of
the
Horses
head
at
a
blow
.
Frie.
So
sir
.
Quick.
To
the
tune
of
I
waile
in
woe
,
I
plunge
in
paine
.
Pet.
An
excellent
Ditty
it
is
,
and
worthy
of
a
new
tune
.
Qui.
In
Cheapside
famous
for
Gold
&
Plate
,
Quicksiluer
I
did
dwel
of
late
:
I
had
a
Master
good
,
and
kind
,
That
vvould
haue
vvrought
me
to
his
mind
.
He
bad
me
still
,
VVorke
vpon
that
,
But
alas
I
vvrought
I
knevv
not
vvhat
.
He
vvas
a
Touchstone
black
,
but
true
:
And
told
me
still
,
vvhat
vvould
ensue
,
Yet
,
vvoe
is
me
,
I
vvould
not
learne
,
I
savv
,
alas
,
but
could
not
discerne
.
Frien.
Excellent
,
excellent
well
.
Gould
.
O
let
him
alone
,
Hee
is
taken
already
.
Quic.
I
cast
my
Coat
,
and
Cap
avvay
,
I
vvent
in
silkci
,
and
saitens
gay
,
False
Mettall
of
good
manners
,
I
Did
dayly
coint
valavvsully
.
I
scornd
my
Master
,
being
drunke
.
I
kept
my
Golding
,
and
my
Punke
,
And
vvith
a
knight
,
sir
Flash
,
by
name
,
(
VVho
novv
is
sory
for
the
same
)
Pet.
I
thanke
you
Francis
.
I
thought
by
sea
to
runne
,
But
Thames
,
and
Tempest
did
me
stay
.
Touch.
This
cannot
be
fained
sure
.
Heauen
pardon
my
seucrity
.
The
Ragged
Colt
,
may
prooue
a
good
Horse
.
Gould
.
How
he
listens
!
and
is
transported
?
He
has
forgot
me
.
Quic.
Still
Eastward
hoe
vvas
all
my
word
:
But
VVestward
I
had
no
regard
.
Nor
neuer
thought
,
vvhat
vvould
coine
after
As
did
alas
his
youngest
Daughter
,
At
last
the
black
Oxe
trode
o'
my
foote
,
And
I
savv
then
vvhat
longd
vntoo
't
,
Novv
try
I
,
Touchstone
,
touch
me
stil
,
And
make
me
currant
by
thy
skill
.
Touch.
And
I
will
do
it
,
Francis
.
Wolfe
.
Stay
him
M.
Deputie
,
now
is
the
time
,
we
shall
loose
the
song
else
.
Frie.
I
protest
it
is
the
best
that
euer
I
heard
.
Quick.
How
like
you
it
Gentlemen
?
All
.
O
admirable
,
sir
!
Quic.
This
Stanze
now
following
,
alludes
to
the
story
of
Mannington
from
whence
I
tooke
my
proiect
for
my
inuention
.
Frin.
Pray
you
goe
on
sir
.
Quic.
O
Manington
thy
stories
shevv
,
Thou
cutst
a
Horse-head
off
at
a
blovv
But
I
confesse
,
I
haue
not
the
force
For
to
cut
off
the
head
of
a
horse
,
Yet
I
desire
this
grace
to
vvinne
,
That
I
may
cut
off
the
Horse-head
of
Sin
.
And
leaue
his
body
in
the
dust
Of
sinnes
high
vvay
and
bogges
of
Lust
,
VVherby
I
may
take
Vertues
purse
,
And
liue
vvith
her
for
better
,
for
vvorse
.
Frin.
Admirable
sir
,
&
excellently
conceited
.
Quic.
Alas
sir
.
Touch.
Sonne
Goulding
&
M.
Wolfe
,
I
thank
you
:
the
deceipt
is
welcome
,
especially
from
thee
whose
charitable
soule
in
this
hath
shewne
a
high
point
of
wisedome
and
honesty
.
Listen
.
I
am
rauished
with
his
Repentance
,
and
could
stand
here
a
whole
prentiship
to
heare
him
,
Frien.
Forth
good
sir
.
Quick.
This
is
the
last
,
and
the
Farewell
.
Farevvel
Cheapside
,
farewell
svveet
trade
Of
Goldsmithes
all
,
that
neuer
shall
fade
Farevvell
deare
fellovv
Prentises
all
And
be
you
vvarned
by
my
sall
:
Shun
Vsurers
,
Bauds
,
and
dice
,
and
drabs
.
Auoide
them
as
you
vvould
French
scabs
Seeke
not
to
goe
beyond
your
Tether
,
But
cut
your
Thongs
vnto
your
Lether
So
shall
you
thriue
by
little
and
little
,
Scape
Tiborne
,
Cou�ters
,
&
the
Spitle
Touch.
And
scape
them
shalt
thou
my
penitent
,
&
deare
Frances
.
Quick.
Master
!
Pet.
Father
!
Touch.
I
can
no
longer
forbeare
to
doe
your
humility
right
:
Arise
,
and
let
me
honour
your
Repentance
,
with
the
hearty
and
ioyfull
embraces
,
of
a
Father
,
and
Friends
loue
.
Quicksiluer
,
thou
hast
eate
into
my
breast
,
Quicksiluer
,
with
the
dropps
of
thy
sorrow
,
and
kild
the
desperate
opinion
I
had
of
thy
reclaime
:
Quick.
O
sir
,
I
am
not
worthy
to
see
your
worshipfull
face
.
Pet.
Forgiue
me
Father
.
Touch.
Speake
no
more
,
all
former
passages
,
are
forgotten
,
and
here
my
word
shall
release
you
.
Thanke
this
worthy
Brother
&
kind
friend
,
Francis
.
�
M.
Wolfe
.
I
am
their
Bayle
;
A
shoute
in
the
Prison
.
Secu.
Maister
Touchstone
?
Maister
Touchstone
?
Touch.
Who
's
that
?
Wolfe
.
Securitie
,
Sir
.
Secu.
Pray
you
Sir
,
if
you
le
be
wonne
with
a
Song
,
heare
my
lamentable
tune
,
too
:
SONG
.
O
Maister
Touchstone
,
My
heart
is
full
of
vvoe
;
Alasse
,
I
am
a
Cuckold
:
And
,
vvhy
should
it
be
so
?
Because
I
vvas
a
Usurer
,
And
Bavvd
,
as
all
you
knovv
,
For
vvhich
,
againe
I
tell
you
,
My
heart
is
full
of
vvot
.
Touch.
Bring
him
forth
,
Maister
Wolfe
,
and
release
his
bands
.
This
day
shal
be
sacred
to
Mercy
,
&
the
mirth
of
this
Encounter
,
in
the
Counter
.
�
See
,
we
are
encountred
with
more
Suters
.
Enter
Mist.
Touchst.
Gyr.
Mil.
Synd.
Winnif
.
&c.
Saue
your
Breath
,
saue
your
Breath
;
All
things
haue
succeeded
to
your
wishes
:
&
we
are
heartely
satisfied
in
their
euents
.
Gyr.
Ah
Runaway
,
Runaway
!
haue
I
caught
you
?
And
,
how
has
my
poore
Knight
done
all
this
while
?
Pet.
Deare
Lady-wife
;
forgiue
me
.
Gert.
As
heartely
,
as
I
would
be
forgiuen
,
Knight
.
Deare
Father
,
giue
me
your
blessing
,
and
forgiue
me
too
;
I
ha'
bene
proud
,
and
lasciuious
,
Father
;
and
a
Foole
,
Father
;
and
being
raisd
to
the
state
of
a
wanton
coy
thing
,
calld
a
Lady
,
Father
;
haue
scorn'd
you
,
Father
;
and
my
Sister
;
&
my
Sisters
Veluet
Cap
,
too
;
and
would
make
a
mouth
at
the
Citty
,
as
I
ridde
through
it
;
and
stop
mine
eares
at
Bow-bell
:
I
haue
said
your
Beard
was
a
Base
one
,
Father
;
and
that
you
look'd
like
Twierpipe
,
the
Taberer
;
and
that
my
Mother
was
but
my
Midwife
.
Mi.
Tou.
Now
God
forgi'
you
,
Child
Madame
.
Touch.
No
more
Repetitions
.
What
is
else
wanting
,
to
make
our
Harmony
full
?
Gould
Only
this
,
sir
.
That
my
fellow
Francis
make
amends
to
mistresse
Sindefie
,
with
mariage
.
Quic.
With
all
my
heart
.
Gould
.
And
Security
giue
her
a
dower
,
which
shall
be
all
the