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Aphra Behn
Aphra Behn, the 17th-century poet, playwright and fiction writer, was hailed by Virginia Woolf in A Room of Oneâs Own (1929) for having âearned [women] the right to speak their mindsâ.
Early life
Very little is known of Behnâs early life. She was born in 1640 during the lead-up to the English Civil Wars, possibly in Canterbury to a barber father (perhaps named Eaffrey or Bartholomew Johnson) and wet-nurse mother, though in adulthood she moved in aristocratic, courtly circles. Following the narratorâs account of her own life in Oroonoko (1688), some biographers think Behn travelled with her family to the English (later Dutch) colony of Surinam (in the Guianas of South America). There, she may have met an African slave leader who inspired her to write Oroonoko, which is regarded as one of the earliest English novels. Most biographers think Behn had returned to England by 1664, when she married a merchant named Johan Behn, though they separated soon after and by 1666 Johan had died. In any case, from 1664 she went by the name of âMrs Behnâ professionally.
Political sympathies
Behnâs politics were conservative and her sympathies were Royalist. During the Second Anglo-Dutch War, which broke out in 1665, she is said to have acted as a spy in Bruges (her code name was Astrea) on behalf of the court of Charles II. Espionage was not a lucrative career, though, and Behn seems to have returned to London within the year. Some accounts have her serving time in debtorsâ prison, although that (like much else about her life) is not officially documented.
Writing for the stage
Back in England, Behn turned her attention to writing. We know that she began working for the Kingâs Company and the Dukeâs Company, two theatre companies authorized by Charles II after the Restoration, first as a scribe and then as a playwright. Her first few works in the early 1670s (The Forceâd Marriage, The Amorous Prince, The Dutch Lover) were not commercial successes. 1677âs The Rover, however, was a critical and commercial victory, and from then on Behn had a steady career as a playwright (writing 19 plays in total and probably assisting in the composition of several more).
She also wrote novels, poems and literary translations up until her death in 1689 at the age of 49. She is buried in Westminster Abbey, though not in Poetsâ Corner.
Reputation
Much of Behnâs work was published anonymously during her own lifetime. Now, Behn is best known for her novels The Fair Jilt and Oroonoko â the latter of which, though not expressly anti-slavery, was unusual in its time for the respectful attention it pays to a non-white, non-English protagonist â and for her poetry. Her poetry is frequently frank about female sexual pleasure and humorous about male sexual dysfunction (as in âThe Disappointmentâ), and some of it was originally attributed to her male contemporary, the famously bawdy Earl of Rochester.
âAphra Behnâ adapted from the British Library and licensed under CC BY 4.0.
Introduction to The Rover
Aphra Behnâs best-known play today, The Rover, was probably also the most successful in her own time. It was often revived and many times reprinted in the first half of the 18th century. Set at carnival time in Naples in 1656, the play presents its 1677 audience with the imagined exploits of a group of âbanished Cavaliersâ. Taking its audience back to the world of Royalist continental exile, the play would have sparked ever-ready memories of the civil wars of the 1640s, which had resulted in the execution of Charles I in 1649. At that time, many of the kingâs supporters â the Cavaliers â had fled to continental Europe. Interwoven with this, the play explores the attempts of its heroines to exert some control over their destinies.
The Roverâs banished Cavaliers are spending time in Naples â an Italian city ruled by the Spanish, a place that therefore combined, in the English mind, the supposed lasciviousness of Italians with the intensely patriarchal family structures of Spain.
The playâs representative Italians are the âJilting Wenchâ Lucetta, who strips and robs Blunt and dumps him in the sewer, and the fabulously beautiful Angellica Bianca, a famous courtesan from the Venetian Republic who is much fought over. The menâs desire for these Italian women echoes a widespread Restoration libertine commitment to indulging the senses and rejecting marriage.
The Spanish sisters Florinda and Hellena (and their cousin Valeria) are dominated by their brother Pedro. Pedro is confident that he can force Florinda to marry his powerful friend Antonio, and save the cost of a dowry for Hellena by sending her back to her nunnery (1.1.5). Act 5 threatens to descend into a gang-rape: found to have the longest phallic symbol (his sword), the patriarchal Pedroâs near rape of his sister Florinda is only prevented by Valeriaâs quick-thinking intervention (5.1.71).
Within this Naples framework, Behn explores the roles available to Restoration women and men, and the implications of the libertine idea that marriage was an outmoded institution. Here, the playâs most powerful voice is that of Angellica, who sees prostitution as a better choice than marriage. When the rakish Willmore remonstrates with her for charging for sex, she points out to him that men routinely have sex for money: when a man marries he gets his wifeâs dowry. Financial advantage, not a womanâs personal characteristics, determines the choices men make:
When a Lady is proposâd to you for a Wife, you never ask, how fair â discreet â or virtuous she is; but whatâs her Fortune? â which if but small, you cry â she will not do my business â and basely leave her, though she languish for you. (2.2.27)
In one of the playâs many densely patterned ironies, Angellicaâs challenge to Willmore foresees what is to happen. Attracted to both Angellica and Hellena, the rake chooses the heiress when the courtesan unwittingly reveals to him that his attractive âgypsyâ is in fact fabulously wealthy:
⊠my Gipsie worth Two Hundred Thousand Crowns! â oh how I long to be with her. (4.2.54)
Under early modern marriage law, Hellenaâs riches will become Willmoreâs if she marries him â which, believing that she has won him through her wit, is what the nunnery-raised teenager agrees to do.
When Angellica draws a gun on Willmore as she embarks on vengeance âfor the publick safety of our Sexâ, asking him, âHow many poor believing Foolsâ he has âundoneâ (5.1.74), she makes explicit a patterning that runs throughout The Rover, where one womanâs situation is always connected to that of others. This is striking, given that the lives of these women would have been categorized as quite different from one another in their culture. For instance, both the virtuous Florinda and the courtesan Angellica use their pictures to communicate with their lovers â Angellica allowing Willmore to keep one he steals (2.1.23), Florinda handing hers to Belvile to tell him who she is (3.1.37). Both virgin and whore also believe that they can stop men fighting over them, but they are ignored (2.1.23; 4.2.50).
In a similar parallel, Willmore calls both Angellica and Hellena âAngelâ (2.2.28; 3.1.37). But, as is emphasized in the text that follows, an âangelâ is not just a celestial being but also a gold coin. Both women prove a source of wealth to Willmore, and both derive their money from the same âOld Generalâ â the uncle who left Hellena her tremendous fortune as well as the deceased keeper of Angellica (5.1.75; 5.1.82; 2.1.15). Any reading or performance of the play will offer more echoings of this kind. It is clear that Behn crafted The Rover with considerable care, expecting us to see her female characters as variants on a single theme, not as competitors.
The setting of The Rover in the Carnival in Naples provides the perfect opportunity for Behn to create chaos and, quite literally, throw the roles of all the characters into question. Hellena, taking up the cause of both her sister and herself, uses the chaos of the Carnival to allow them both to make their own choices, rather than be ruled by their brother or their father. She says, âWeâll outwit twenty brothers if youâll be ruled by me. Come, put off this dull humour with your clothes, and assume one as gay and as fantastic as the dress my cousin Valeria and I have provided, and letâs ramble.â
As the women literally take off one character and put on another, they give themselves permission to pursue their own desiresâHellena seeking to evade life as a nun, and Florinda hoping to marry her love. In her gypsy costume, Hellena is able to put off her ânice girlâ self and tease Willmore, saying that she would take some of his âworld of loveâ off his hands âbut for a foolish vow I am going to make to die a maid.â Later in the play, roles are even further subverted as Hellena and Florinda dress as men, spying on Willmore and Belvile to see if they have been true to them. Dressing as males allows them the privilege to participate in the male world in a way they would never be able to as females.
The chaos of the carnival also allows Behn to make a statement about the disturbing practice of allowing rape to go unpunished if the victim wasnât high enough on the social ladder. As the audience waits to see if the innocent Florinda will be raped at multiple points in the play and as Bluntâs lady of quality, Lucetta, turns out to be anything but, the audience is forced to think about their perceptions of who is valued and who is not. It is the masks of the Carnival that help to make this point.
Casting The Rover in 1677
The 1677 edition of The Rover includes a list of the actors who played all of its main parts. Since playwrights often created roles with the known strengths of particular actors in mind and then worked with the cast during rehearsals, reflecting on casting can help us imagine the experience of The Roverâs first audience. The famous pairing of Thomas Betterton and William Smith as the friends Belvile and Willmore, for instance, repeats their starring roles in many Restoration plays.
Similarly, when Behn has Blunt refer to his âShape and Sizeâ as features ânot to be despisâdâ, along with his âother inviting signsâ, the playwright is making use of the height and girth of the great comedian Cave Underhill (2.1.18).
The virtuous Florinda, who is so determined to think well of âgentlemenâ and is wholly committed to her Belvile, was created specifically for Mary Betterton, wife of Belvileâs creator, Thomas Betterton, and perhaps the only Restoration actress never accused of sexual improprieties.
Significant too is Behnâs confidence in the emerging talents of the woman she cast as Hellena, Elizabeth Barry. Barry went on to be widely acknowledged as Englandâs first great actress, enjoying a career that lasted until 1713 and during which she switched to the tragic role of Angellica Bianca. The wit and beauty that attracts Willmore to both Hellena and Angellica were Barryâs trademarks, along with her facility for playing young men in âbreeches rolesâ.
Reception of The Rover and Behn as the first professional female playwright
Behnâs career as a professional playwright was already well established when The Rover appeared. Her first play, The Forcâd Marriage, had had an unusually long first run (six consecutive nights) in 1670, and it had been followed by The Amorous Prince, The Dutch Lover, Abdelazer (her only tragedy) and The Town-Fopp, all with her name on their title pages. Two anonymous plays of this period, The Counterfeit Bridegroom and The Debauchee, are also often attributed to Behn. After the great success of The Rover, Behn continued to write regularly for the Dukeâs Company, and she was one of the few playwrights still having new plays performed in the 1680s after London audiences fell off as political tensions rose. At the same time she also established herself as a respected poet, translator and author of prose fiction (her most famous work, Oroonoko, which tells of a slave uprising, was published in 1688).
That success was not without its gender-specific challenges. Behnâs postscript to The Rover suggests that it was partly because she was a woman that critics were quick to accuse her of stealing her play from Thomas Killigrewâs Thomaso:
I will only say the Plot and Busâness (not to boast onât) is my own: as for the Words and Characters, I leave the Reader to judge and compare ÊŒem with Thomaso, to whom I recommend the great Entertainment of reading it; tho had this succeeded ill, I shouâd have had no need of imploring that Justice from the Criticks, who are naturally so kind to any that pretend to usurp their Dominion â especially of our Sex â they wouâd doubtless have given me the whole Honour onât. (p. 85)
Four years earlier, her preface toThe Dutch Lover had associated that playâs poor reception with the views of a man sitting in the pit on its first night â âa long, lither, phlegmatick, white, ill-favourâd, wretched Fopâ â who had loudly advised the audience âthat they were to expect a woful Play, God damn him, for it was a womansâ (The Dutch Lover, sig.A4v).
Despite such complaints, from its first known performance on Saturday 24 March 1677, The Rover was a hit. It was even performed at court in February 1680, and either it or its Second Part (1681, and dedicated to the Duke of York) was staged before a series of different monarchs on 22 January and 29 October 1685, in January 1687 and in November 1690. After 1700, performances in the public theatres were advertised in the newspapers, and from this we know that The Rover was revived at least once in every season from 1700 to 1743, with regular revivals continuing until 1760. Given that it had become a staple in the repertoire by the 18th century, we can assume that The Rover was regularly performed during the period 1678â99, too.
Of particular interest in this connection is the copy of the 1677 Rover in Senate House Library, London, which is a prompt-copy that was marked up for performances in the 1720s. This shows that although the 18th-century printed editions of the play barely changed, production might cut lines then thought improper, such as Hellenaâs spirited defence of Florinda in Act 1, Scene 1, or Angellicaâs getting the last word in her confrontation with Willmore in Act 4, Scene 2.
It is in keeping with these sorts of cuts that by 1760, The Rover had fallen out of fashion; we know of no further performances until the 20th century.
However much of a nuisance the âReport about the Townâ that Behn had stolen her play from Thomaso might have been, it could be that that concern also provided a convenient smokescreen for the ways in which The Rover might be interpreted as criticizing and mocking her Cavaliers â and, indeed, male culture more generally.
As you read, pay attention to the similarities and differences between The Rover and The Man of Mode. Do you see a different attitude toward women from a female author?
Content adapted from âThe Rover: An Introductionâ and licensed as CC BY NC 4.0.
Watch the Play
Here are two versions of The Rover. Remember, reading along with the text as you watch the plays is a great way to better understand whatâs happening in the play. If you have time to watch both versions, think about the different ways the director interprets the text.
Version 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXgSnPoY4ro
Version 2:
Text of THE ROVER or, the Banishâd Cavaliers.
(Text of The Rover is in the Public Domain.)
PART I.
PROLOGUE,
Written by a Person of Quality.
WITS, like Physicians, never can agree,
When of a different Society;
And Rabelâs Drops were never more cryâd down
By all the Learned Doctors of the Town,
Than a new Play, whose Author is unknown:
Nor can those Doctors with more Malice sue
(And powerful Purses) the dissenting Few,
Than those with an insulting Pride do rail
At all who are not of their own Cabal.
If a Young Poet hit your Humour right,
You judge him then out of Revenge and Spite;
So amongst Men there are ridiculous Elves,
Who Monkeys hate for being too like themselves:
So that the Reason of the Grand Debate,
Why Wit so oft is damnâd, when good Plays take,
Is, that you censure as you love or hate.
Thus, like a learned Conclave, Poets sit
Catholick Judges both of Sense and Wit,
And damn or save, as they themselves think fit.
Yet those who to others Faults are so severe,
Are not so perfect, but themselves may err.
Some write correct indeed, but then the whole
(Bating their own dull Stuff iâthâ Play) is stole:
8 As Bees do suck from Flowers their Honey-dew,
So they rob others, striving to please you.
Some write their Characters genteel and fine,
But then they do so toil for every Line,
That what to you does easy seem, and plain,
Is the hard issue of their labouring Brain.
And some thâ Effects of all their Pains we see,
Is but to mimick good Extempore.
Others by long Converse about the Town,
Have Wit enough to write a leud Lampoon,
But their chief Skill lies in a Baudy Song.
In short, the only Wit thatâs now in Fashion
Is but the Gleanings of good Conversation.
As for the Author of this coming Play,
I askâd him what he thought fit I should say,
In thanks for your good Company to day:
He callâd me Fool, and said it was well known,
You came not here for our sakes, but your own.
New Plays are stuffâd with Wits, and with Debauches,
That croud and sweat like Cits in May-day Coaches.
DRAMATIS PERSONĂ.
MEN. | |
Don Antonio, the Vice-Royâs Son, | Mr. Jevorne. |
Don Pedro, a Noble Spaniard, his Friend, | Mr. Medburne. |
Belvile, an English Colonel in love with Florinda, | Mr. Betterton. |
Willmore, the ROVER, | Mr. Smith. |
Frederick, an English Gentleman, and Friend to Belvile and Blunt, | Mr. Crosbie. |
Blunt, an English Country Gentleman, | Mr. Underhill. |
Stephano, Servant to Don Pedro, | Mr. Richards. |
Philippo, Lucettaâs Gallant, | Mr. Percival. |
Sancho, Pimp to Lucetta, | Mr. John Lee. |
Risky and Sebastian, two Bravoes to Angelica. | |
Diego, Page to Don Antonio. | |
Page to Hellena. | |
Boy, Page to Belvile. | |
Bluntâs Man. | |
Officers and Soldiers. | |
WOMEN. | |
Florinda, Sister to Don Pedro, | Mrs. Betterton. |
Hellena, a gay young Woman designâd for a Nun, and Sister to Florinda, | Mrs. Barrey. |
Valeria, a Kinswoman to Florinda, | Mrs. Hughes. |
Angelica Bianca, a famous Curtezan, | Mrs. Gwin. |
Moretta, her Woman, | Mrs. Leigh. |
Callis, Governess to Florinda and Hellena, | Mrs. Norris. |
Lucetta, a jilting Wench, | Mrs. Gillow. |
Servants, other Masqueraders, Men and Women. |
SCENE Naples, in Carnival-time.
ACT I.
Scene I. A chamber.
Enter Florinda and Hellena.
Flor. What an impertinent thing is a young Girl bred in a Nunnery! How full of Questions! Prithee no more, Hellena; I have told thee more than thou understandâst already.
Hell. The moreâs my Grief; I wouâd fain know as much as you, which makes me so inquisitive; nor isât enough to know youâre a Lover, unless you tell me too, who âtis you sigh for.
Flor. When you are a Lover, Iâll think you fit for a Secret of that nature.
Hell. âTis true, I was never a Lover yetâ but I begin to have a shreud Guess, what âtis to be so, and fancy it very pretty to sigh, and sing, and blush and wish, and dream and wish, and long and wish to see the Man; and when I do, look pale and tremble; just as you did when my Brother brought home the fine English Colonel to see youâ what do you call him? Don Belvile.
Flor. Fie, Hellena.
Hell. That Blush betrays youâI am sure âtis soâor is it Don Antonio the Vice-Royâs Son?âor perhaps the rich old Don Vincentio, whom my father designs for your Husband?âWhy do you blush again?
Flor. With Indignation; and how near soever my Father thinks I am to marrying that hated Object, I shall let him see I understand better whatâs due to my Beauty, Birth and Fortune, and more to my Soul, than to obey those unjust Commands.
Hell. Now hang me, if I donât love thee for that dear Disobedience. I love Mischief strangely, as most of our 11 Sex do, who are come to love nothing elseâBut tell me, dear Florinda, donât you love that fine Anglese?âfor I vow next to loving him my self, âtwill please me most that you do so, for he is so gay and so handsom.
Flor. Hellena, a Maid designâd for a Nun ought not to be so curious in a Discourse of Love.
Hell. And dost thou think that ever Iâll be a Nun? Or at least till Iâm so old, Iâm fit for nothing else. Faith no, Sister; and that which makes me long to know whether you love Belvile, is because I hope he has some mad Companion or other, that will spoil my Devotion; nay Iâm resolvâd to provide my self this Carnival, if there be eâer a handsom Fellow of my Humour above Ground, tho I ask first.
Flor. Prithee be not so wild.
Hell. Now you have provided your self with a Man, you take no Care for poor meâPrithee tell me, what dost thou see about me that is unfit for Loveâhave not I a world of Youth? a Humour gay? a Beauty passable? a Vigour desirable? well shapâd? clean limbâd? sweet breathâd? and Sense enough to know how all these ought to be employâd to the best Advantage: yes, I do and will. Therefore lay aside your Hopes of my Fortune, by my being a Devotee, and tell me how you came acquainted with this Belvile; for I perceive you knew him before he came to Naples.
Flor. Yes, I knew him at the Siege of Pampelona, he was then a Colonel of French Horse, who when the Town was ransackâd, nobly treated my Brother and my self, preserving us from all Insolencies; and I must own, (besides great Obligations) I have I know not what, that pleads kindly for him about my Heart, and will suffer no other to enterâBut see my Brother.
Enter Don Pedro, Stephano, with a Masquing Habit, and Callis.
Pedro. Good morrow, Sister. Pray, when saw you your Lover Don Vincentio?
Flor. I know not, SirâCallis, when was he here? for I consider it so little, I know not when it was.
Pedro. I have a Command from my Father here to tell you, you ought not to despise him, a Man of so vast a Fortune, and such a Passion for youâStephano, my thingsâ [Puts on his Masquing Habit.
Flor. A Passion for me! âtis more than eâer I saw, or had a desire should be knownâI hate Vincentio, and I would not have a Man so dear to me as my Brother follow the ill Customs of our Country, and make a Slave of his SisterâAnd Sir, my Fatherâs Will, Iâm sure, you may divert.
Pedro. I know not how dear I am to you, but I wish only to be rankâd in your Esteem, equal with the English Colonel BelvileâWhy do you frown and blush? Is there any Guilt belongs to the Name of that Cavalier?
Flor. Iâll not deny I value Belvile: when I was exposâd to such Dangers as the licensâd Lust of common Soldiers threatned, when Rage and Conquest flew thro the Cityâthen Belvile, this Criminal for my sake, threw himself into all Dangers to save my Honour, and will you not allow him my Esteem?
Pedro. Yes, pay him what you will in Honourâbut you must consider Don Vincentioâs Fortune, and the Jointure heâll make you.
Flor. Let him consider my Youth, Beauty and Fortune; which ought not to be thrown away on his Age and Jointure.
Pedro. âTis true, heâs not so young and fine a Gentleman as that Belvileâbut what Jewels will that Cavalier present you with? those of his Eyes and Heart?
Hell. And are not those better than any Don Vincentio has brought from the Indies?
Pedro. Why how now! Has your Nunnery-breeding taught you to understand the Value of Hearts and Eyes?
Hell. Better than to believe Vincentio deserves Value from any womanâHe may perhaps encrease her Bags, but not her Family.
Pedro. This is fineâGo up to your Devotion, you are not designâd for the Conversation of Lovers.
Hell. Nor Saints yet a while I hope. [Aside.] Isât not enough you make a Nun of me, but you must cast my Sister away too, exposing her to a worse confinement than a religious Life?
Pedro. The Girlâs madâIs it a Confinement to be carryâd into the Country, to an antient Villa belonging to the Family of the Vincentioâs these five hundred Years, and have no other Prospect than that pleasing one of seeing all her own that meets her Eyesâa fine Air, large Fields and Gardens, where she may walk and gather Flowers?
Hell. When? By Moon-Light? For Iâm sure she dares not encounter with the heat of the Sun; that were a Task only for Don Vincentio and his Indian Breeding, who loves it in the Dog-daysâAnd if these be her daily Divertisements, what are those of the Night? to lie in a wide Moth-eaten Bed-Chamber with Furniture in Fashion in the Reign of King Sancho the First; the Bed that which his Forefathers livâd and dyâd in.
Pedro. Very well.
Hell. This Apartment (new furbisht and fitted out for the young Wife) he (out of Freedom) makes his Dressing-room; and being a frugal and a jealous Coxcomb, instead of a Valet to uncase his feeble Carcase, he desires you to do that OfficeâSigns of Favour, Iâll assure you, and such as you must not hope for, unless your Woman be out of the way.
Pedro. Have you done yet?
Hell. That Honour being past, the Giant stretches it self, yawns and sighs a Belch or two as loud as a Musket, throws himself into Bed, and expects you in his foul Sheets, and eâer you can get your self undrest, calls you with a Snore or twoâ And are not these fine Blessings to a young Lady?
Pedro. Have you done yet?
Hell. And this man you must kiss, nay, you must kiss none but him tooâand nuzle thro his Beard to find his Lipsâand this you must submit to for threescore Years, and all for a Jointure.
Pedro. For all your Character of Don Vincentio, she is as like to marry him as she was before.
Hell. Marry Don Vincentio! hang me, such a Wedlock would be worse than Adultery with another Man: I had rather see her in the Hostel de Dieu, to waste her Youth there in Vows, and be a Handmaid to Lazers and Cripples, than to lose it in such a Marriage.
Pedro. You have considerâd, Sister, that Belvile has no Fortune to bring you to, is banisht his Country, despisâd at home, and pityâd abroad.
Hell. What then? the Vice-Royâs Son is better than that Old Sir Fisty. Don Vincentio! Don Indian! he thinks heâs trading to Gambo still, and wouâd barter himself (that Bell and Bawble) for your Youth and Fortune.
Pedro. Callis, take her hence, and lock her up all this Carnival, and at Lent she shall begin her everlasting Penance in a Monastery.
Hell. I care not, I had rather be a Nun, than be obligâd to marry as you wouâd have me, if I were designâd forât.
Pedro. Do not fear the Blessing of that Choiceâyou shall be a Nun.
Hell. Shall I so? you may chance to be mistaken in my way of DevotionâA Nun! yes I am like to make a fine Nun! I have an excellent Humour for a Grate: No, Iâll have a Saint of my own to pray to shortly, if I like any that dares venture on me. [Aside.
Pedro. Callis, make it your Business to watch this wild Cat. As for you, Florinda, Iâve only tryâd you all this while, and urgâd my Fatherâs Will; but mine is, that you would love Antonio, he is brave and young, and all that can compleat the Happiness of a gallant MaidâThis Absence 15 of my Father will give us opportunity to free you from Vincentio, by marrying here, which you must do to morrow.
Flor. To morrow!
Pedro. To morrow, or âtwill be too lateââtis not my Friendship to Antonio, which makes me urge this, but Love to thee, and Hatred to Vincentioâtherefore resolve uponât to morrow.
Flor. Sir, I shall strive to do, as shall become your Sister.
Pedro. Iâll both believe and trust youâAdieu. [Ex. Ped. and Steph.
Hell. As become his Sister!âThat is, to be as resolved your way, as he is hisâ [Hell. goes to Callis.
Flor. I neâer till now perceivâd my Ruin near,
Iâve no Defence against Antonioâs Love,
For he has all the Advantages of Nature,
The moving Arguments of Youth and Fortune.
Hell. But hark you, Callis, you will not be so cruel to lock me up indeed: will you?
Call. I must obey the Commands I hateâbesides, do you consider what a Life you are going to lead?
Hell. Yes, Callis, that of a Nun: and till then Iâll be indebted a World of Prayers to you, if you let me now see, what I never did, the Divertisements of a Carnival.
Call. What, go in Masquerade? âtwill be a fine farewell to the World I take itâpray what wouâd you do there?
Hell. That which all the World does, as I am told, be as mad as the rest, and take all innocent FreedomâSister, youâll go too, will you not? come prithee be not sadâWeâll out-wit twenty Brothers, if youâll be ruled by meâCome put off this dull Humour with your Clothes, and assume one as gay, and as fantastick as the Dress my Cousin Valeria and I have provided, and letâs ramble.
Flor. Callis, will you give us leave to go?
Call. I have a youthful Itch of going my self. [Aside.] âMadam, if I thought your Brother might not know it, and I might wait on you, for by my troth Iâll not trust young Girls alone.
Flor. Thou seeâst my Brotherâs gone already, and thou shalt attend and watch us.
Enter Stephano.
Steph. Madam, the Habits are come, and your Cousin Valeria is drest, and stays for you.
Flor. âTis wellâIâll write a Note, and if I chance to see Belvile, and want an opportunity to speak to him, that shall let him know what Iâve resolvâd in favour of him.
Hell. Come, letâs in and dress us. [Exeunt.
Scene II. A Long Street.
Enter Belvile, melancholy, Blunt and Frederick.
Fred. Why, what the Devil ails the Colonel, in a time when all the World is gay, to look like mere Lent thus? Hadst thou been long enough in Naples to have been in love, I should have sworn some such Judgment had befallân thee.
Belv. No, I have made no new Amours since I came to Naples.
Fred. You have left none behind you in Paris.
Belv. Neither.
Fred. I canât divine the Cause then; unless the old Cause, the want of Mony.
Blunt. And another old Cause, the want of a Wenchâ Wouâd not that revive you?
Belv. Youâre mistaken, Ned.
Blunt Nay, âSheartlikins, then thou art past Cure.
Fred. I have found it out; thou hast renewâd thy Acquaintance with the Lady that cost thee so many Sighs at the Siege of Pampelonaâpox onât, what dâye call herâher Brotherâs a noble SpaniardâNephew to the dead GeneralâFlorindaâay, FlorindaâAnd will nothing 17 serve thy turn but that damnâd virtuous Woman, whom on my Conscience thou lovâst in spite too, because thou seest little or no possibility of gaining her?
Belv. Thou art mistaken, I have Interest enough in that lovely Virginâs Heart, to make me proud and vain, were it not abated by the Severity of a Brother, who perceiving my Happinessâ
Fred. Has civilly forbid thee the House?
Belv. âTis so, to make way for a powerful Rival, the Vice-Royâs Son, who has the advantage of me, in being a Man of Fortune, a Spaniard, and her Brotherâs Friend; which gives him liberty to make his Court, whilst I have recourse only to Letters, and distant Looks from her Window, which are as soft and kind as those which Heavân sends down on Penitents.
Blunt. Hey day! âSheartlikins, Simile! by this Light the Man is quite spoilâdâFrederick, what the Devil are we made of, that we cannot be thus concernâd for a Wench?ââSheartlikins, our Cupids are like the Cooks of the Camp, they can roast or boil a Woman, but they have none of the fine Tricks to set âem off, no Hogoes to make the Sauce pleasant, and the Stomach sharp.
Fred. I dare swear I have had a hundred as young, kind and handsom as this Florinda; and Dogs eat me, if they were not as troublesom to me iâthâ Morning as they were welcome oâer night.
Blunt. And yet, I warrant, he wouâd not touch another Woman, if he might have her for nothing.
Belv. Thatâs thy Joy, a cheap Whore.
Blunt. Why, âdsheartlikins, I love a frank SoulâWhen did you ever hear of an honest Woman that took a Manâs Mony? I warrant âem good onesâBut, Gentlemen, you may be free, you have been kept so poor with Parliaments and Protectors, that the little Stock you have is not worth preservingâbut I thank my Stars, I have more Grace than to forfeit my Estate by Cavaliering.
18Belv. Methinks only following the Court should be sufficient to entitle âem to that.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, they know I follow it to do it no good, unless they pick a hole in my Coat for lending you Mony now and then; which is a greater Crime to my Conscience, Gentlemen, than to the Common-wealth.
Enter Willmore.
Will. Ha! dear Belvile! noble Colonel!
Belv. Willmore! welcome ashore, my dear Rover!âwhat happy Wind blew us this good Fortune?
Will. Let me salute you my dear Fred, and then command meâHow isât honest Lad?
Fred. Faith, Sir, the old Complement, infinitely the better to see my dear mad Willmore againâPrithee why camest thou ashore? and whereâs the Prince?
Will. Heâs well, and reigns still Lord of the watery ElementâI must aboard again within a Day or two, and my Business ashore was only to enjoy my self a little this Carnival.
Belv. Pray know our new Friend, Sir, heâs but bashful, a raw Traveller, but honest, stout, and one of us. [Embraces Blunt.
Will. That you esteem him, gives him an Interest here.
Blunt. Your Servant, Sir.
Will. But wellâ Faith Iâm glad to meet you again in a warm Climate, where the kind Sun has its god-like Power still over the Wine and Woman.âLove and Mirth are my Business in Naples; and if I mistake not the Place, hereâs an excellent Market for Chapmen of my Humour.
Belv. See here be those kind Merchants of Love you look for.
Enter several Men in masquing Habits, some playing on Musick, others dancing after; Women drest like Curtezans, with Papers pinnâd to their Breasts, and Baskets of Flowers in their Hands.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, what have we here!
Fred. Now the Game begins.
Will. Fine pretty Creatures! may a stranger have leave to look and love?âWhatâs hereâRoses for every Month! [Reads the Paper.
Blunt. Roses for every Month! what means that?
Belv. They are, or wouâd have you think theyâre Curtezans, who herein Naples are to be hirâd by the Month.
Will. Kind and obliging to inform usâPray where do these Roses grow? I would fain plant some of âem in a Bed of mine.
Wom. Beware such Roses, Sir.
Will. A Pox of fear: Iâll be bakâd with thee between a pair of Sheets, and thatâs thy proper Still, so I might but strow such Roses over me and under meâFair one, wouâd you wouâd give me leave to gather at your Bush this idle Month, I wouâd go near to make some Body smell of it all the Year after.
Belv. And thou hast need of such a Remedy, for thou stinkest of Tar and Rope-ends, like a Dock or Pesthouse.
[The Woman puts herself into the Hands of a Man, and Exit.
Will. Nay, nay, you shall not leave me so.
Belv. By all means use no Violence here.
Will. Death! just as I was going to be damnably in love, to have her led off! I could pluck that Rose out-of his Hand, and even kiss the Bed, the Bush it grew in.
Fred. No Friend to Love like a long Voyage at Sea.
Blunt. Except a Nunnery, Fred.
Will. Death! but will they not be kind, quickly be kind? Thou knowâst Iâm no tame Sigher, but a rampant Lion of the Forest.
Two Men drest all over with Horns of several sorts, making Grimaces at one another, with Papers pinnâd on their Backs, advance from the farther end of the Scene
Belv. Oh the fantastical Rogues, how they are dressâd! âtis a Satir against the whole Sex.
Will. Is this a Fruit that grows in this warm Country?
Belv. Yes: âTis pretty to see these Italian start, swell, and stab at the Word Cuckold, and yet stumble at Horns on every Threshold.
Will. See whatâs on their BackâFlowers for every Night. [Reads.
âAh Rogue! And more sweet than Roses of evâry Month! This is a Gardiner of Adamâs own breeding. [They dance.
Belv. What think you of those grave People?âis a Wake in Essex half so mad or extravagant?
Will. I like their sober grave way, âtis a kind of legal authorizâd Fornication, where the Men are not chid forât, nor the Women despisâd, as amongst our dull English; even the Monsieurs want that part of good Manners.
Belv. But here in Italy a Monsieur is the humblest best-bred GentlemanâDuels are so baffled by Bravoâs that an age shews not one, but between a Frenchman and a Hang-man, who is as much too hard for him on the Piazza, as they are for a Dutchman on the new Bridgeâ But see another Crew.
Enter Florinda, Hellena, and Valeria, drest like Gipsies; Callis and Stephano, Lucetta, Phillippo and Sancho in Masquerade.
Hell. Sister, thereâs your Englishman, and with him a handsom proper FellowâIâll to him, and instead of telling him his Fortune, try my own.
Will. Gipsies, on my LifeâSure these will prattle if a Man cross their Hands. [Goes to Hellena] âDear pretty (and I hope) young Devil, will you tell an amorous Stranger what Luck heâs like to have?
Hell. Have a care how you venture with me, Sir, lest I pick your Pocket, which will more vex your English Humour, than an Italian Fortune will please you
Will. How the Devil camâst thou to know my Country and Humour?
Hell. The first I guess by a certain forward Impudence, which does not displease me at this time; and the Loss of your Money will vex you, because I hope you have but very little to lose.
Will. Egad Child, thouârt iâthâ right; it is so little, I dare not offer it thee for a KindnessâBut cannot you divine what other things of more value I have about me, that I would more willingly part with?
Hell. Indeed no, thatâs the Business of a Witch, and I am but a Gipsy yetâYet, without looking in your Hand, I have a parlous Guess, âtis some foolish Heart you mean, an inconstant English Heart, as little worth stealing as your Purse.
Will. Nay, then thou dost deal with the Devil, thatâs certainâThou hast guessâd as right as if thou hadst been one of that Number it has languisht forâI find youâll be better acquainted with it; nor can you take it in a better time, for I am come from Sea, Child; and Venus not being propitious to me in her own Element, I have a world of Love in storeâWouâd you would be good-naturâd, and take some onât off my Hands.
Hell. WhyâI could be inclinâd that wayâbut for a foolish Vow I am going to makeâto die a Maid.
Will. Then thou art damnâd without Redemption; and as I am a good Christian, I ought in charity to divert so wicked a designâtherefore prithee, dear Creature, let me know quickly when and where I shall begin to set a helping hand to so good a Work.
Hell. If you should prevail with my tender Heart (as I begin to fear you will, for you have horrible loving Eyes) there will be difficulty inât that youâll hardly undergo for my sake.
Will. Faith, Child, I have been bred in Dangers, and wear a Sword that has been employâd in a worse Cause, 22 than for a handsom kind WomanâName the Dangerâlet it be any thing but a long Siege, and Iâll undertake it.
Hell. Can you storm?
Will. Oh, most furiously.
Hell. What think you of a Nunnery-wall? for he that wins me, must gain that first.
Will. A Nun! Oh how I love thee forât! thereâs no Sinner like a young SaintâNay, now thereâs no denying me: the old Law had no Curse (to a Woman) like dying a Maid; witness Jephthaâs Daughter.
Hell. A very good Text this, if well handled; and I perceive, Father Captain, you would impose no severe Penance on her who was inclinâd to console her self before she took Orders.
Will. If she be young and handsom.
Hell. Ay, thereâs itâbut if she be notâ
Will. By this Hand, Child, I have an implicit Faith, and dare venture on thee with all Faultsâbesides, âtis more meritorious to leave the World when thou hast tasted and provâd the Pleasure onât; then âtwill be a Virtue in thee, which now will be pure Ignorance.
Hell. I perceive, good Father Captain, you design only to make me fit for Heavenâbut if on the contrary you should quite divert me from it, and bring me back to the World again, I should have a new Man to seek I find; and what a grief that will beâfor when I begin, I fancy I shall love like any thing: I never tryâd yet.
Will. Egad, and thatâs kindâPrithee, dear Creature, give me Credit for a Heart, for faith, Iâm a very honest FellowâOh, I long to come first to the Banquet of Love; and such a swinging Appetite I bringâOh, Iâm impatient. Thy Lodging, Sweetheart, thy Lodging, or Iâm a dead man.
Hell. Why must we be either guilty of Fornication or Murder, if we converse with you Men?âAnd is there no difference between leave to love me, and leave to lie with me?
Will. Faith, Child, they were made to go together.
Lucet. Are you sure this is the Man? [Pointing to Blunt.
Sancho. When did I mistake your Game?
Lucet. This is a stranger, I know by his gazing; if he be brisk heâll venture to follow me; and then, if I understand my Trade, heâs mine: heâs English too, and they say thatâs a sort of good naturâd loving People, and have generally so kind an opinion of themselves, that a Woman with any Wit may flatter âem into any sort of Fool she pleases.
Blunt. âTis soâshe is takenâI have Beauties which my false Glass at home did not discover.
[She often passes by Blunt and gazes on him; he struts, and cocks, and walks, and gazes on her.
Flor. This Woman watches me so, I shall get no Opportunity to discover my self to him, and so miss the intent of my comingâBut as I was saying, Sirâby this Line you should be a Lover. [Looking in his Hand.
Belv. I thought how right you guessâd, all Men are in love, or pretend to be soâCome, let me go, Iâm weary of this fooling. [Walks away.
Flor. I will not, till you have confessâd whether the Passion that you have vowâd Florinda be true or false. [She holds him, he strives to get from her.
Belv. Florinda! [Turns quick towards her.
Flor. Softly.
Belv. Thou hast namâd one will fix me here for ever.
Flor. Sheâll be disappointed then, who expects you this Night at the Garden-gate, and if youâll fail notâas let me see the other Handâyou will go near to doâshe vows to die or make you happy. [Looks on Callis, who observes âem.
Belv. What canst thou mean?
Flor. That which I sayâFarewel. [Offers to go.
Belv. Oh charming Sybil, stay, complete that Joy, which, as it is, will turn into Distraction!âWhere must I be? at the Garden-gate? I know itâat night you sayâ Iâll sooner forfeit Heaven than disobey.
Enter Don Pedro and other Masquers, and pass over the Stage.
Call. Madam, your Brotherâs here.
Flor. Take this to instruct you farther. [Gives him a Letter, and goes off.
Fred. Have a care, Sir, what you promise; this may be a Trap laid by her Brother to ruin you.
Belv. Do not disturb my Happiness with Doubts. [Opens the Letter.
Will. My dear pretty Creature, a Thousand Blessings on thee; still in this Habit, you say, and after Dinner at this Place.
Hell. Yes, if you will swear to keep your Heart, and not bestow it between this time and that.
Will. By all the little Gods of Love I swear, Iâll leave it with you; and if you run away with it, those Deities of Justice will revenge me. [Ex. all the Women except Lucetta.
Fred. Do you know the Hand?
Belv. âTis Florindaâs. All Blessings fall upon the virtuous Maid.
Fred. Nay, no Idolatry, a sober Sacrifice Iâll allow you.
Belv. Oh Friends! the welcomâst News, the softest Letter!ânay, you shall see it; and could you now be serious, I might be made the happiest Man the Sun shines on.
Will. The Reason of this mighty Joy.
Belv. See how kindly she invites me to deliver her from the threatenâd Violence of her Brotherâwill you not assist me?
Will. I know not what thou meanâst, but Iâll make one at any Mischief where a Womanâs concernedâbut sheâll be grateful to us for the Favour, will she not?
Belv. How mean you?
Will. How should I mean? Thou knowâst thereâs but one way for a Woman to oblige me.
Belv. Donât prophaneâthe Maid is nicely virtuous.
Will. Who pox, then sheâs fit for nothing but a Husband; let her eâen go, Colonel.
Fred. Peace, sheâs the Colonelâs Mistress, Sir.
Will. Let her be the Devil; if she be thy Mistress, Iâll serve herâname the way.
Belv. Read here this Postscript. [Gives him a Letter.
Will. [Reads.] At Ten at nightâat the Garden-Gateâof which, if I cannot get the Key, I will contrive a way over the Wallâcome attended with a Friend or two.âKind heart, if we three cannot weave a String to let her down a Garden-Wall,âtwere pity but the Hangman wove one for us all.
Fred. Let her alone for that: your Womanâs Wit, your fair kind Woman, will out-trick a Brother or a Jew, and contrive like a Jesuit in Chainsâbut see, Ned Blunt is stoln out after the Lure of a Damsel. [Ex. Blunt and Lucet.
Belv. So heâll scarce find his way home again, unless we get him cryâd by the Bell-man in the Market-place, and âtwouâd sound prettilyâa lost English Boy of Thirty.
Fred. I hope âtis some common crafty Sinner, one that will fit him; it may be sheâll sell him for Peru, the Rogueâs sturdy and would work well in a Mine; at least I hope sheâll dress him for our Mirth; cheat him of all, then have him well-favourâdly bangâd, and turnâd out naked at Midnight.
Will. Prithee what Humour is he of, that you wish him so well?
Belv. Why, of an English Elder Brotherâs Humour, educated in a Nursery, with a Maid to tend him till Fifteen, and lies with his Grand-mother till heâs of Age; one that knows no Pleasure beyond riding to the next Fair, or going up to London with his right Worshipful Father in Parliament-time; wearing gay Clothes, or making honourable Love to his Lady Motherâs Landry-Maid; gets drunk at a Hunting-Match, and ten to one then gives some Proofs of his ProwessâA pox upon him, heâs our Banker, and has all our Cash about him, and if he fail we are all broke.
Fred. Oh let him alone for that matter, heâs of a damnâd stingy Quality, that will secure our Stock. I know not in what Danger it were indeed, if the Jilt should pretend sheâs in love with him, for âtis a kind believing Coxcomb; otherwise if he part with more than a Piece of Eightâgeld him: for which offer he may chance to be beaten, if she be a Whore of the first Rank.
Belv. Nay the Rogue will not be easily beaten, heâs stout enough; perhaps if they talk beyond his Capacity, he may chance to exercise his Courage upon some of them; else Iâm sure theyâll find it as difficult to beat as to please him.
Will. âTis a lucky Devil to light upon so kind a Wench!
Fred. Thou hadst a great deal of talk with thy little Gipsy, coudâst thou do no good upon her? for mine was hard-hearted.
Will. Hang her, she was some damnâd honest Person of Quality, Iâm sure, she was so very free and witty. If her Face be but answerable to her Wit and Humour, I would be bound to Constancy this Month to gain her. In the mean time, have you made no kind Acquaintance since you came to Town?âYou do not use to be honest so long, Gentlemen.
Fred. Faith Love has kept us honest, we have been all firâd with a Beauty newly come to Town, the famous Paduana Angelica Bianca.
Will. What, the Mistress of the dead Spanish General?
Belv. Yes, sheâs now the only adorâd Beauty of all the Youth in Naples, who put on all their Charms to appear lovely in her sight, their Coaches, Liveries, and themselves, all gay, as on a Monarchâs Birth-Day, to attract the Eyes of this fair Charmer, while she has the Pleasure to behold all languish for her that see her.
Fred. âTis pretty to see with how much Love the Men regard her, and how much Envy the Women
Will. What Gallant has she?
Belv. None, sheâs exposed to Sale, and four Days in the Week sheâs yoursâfor so much a Month.
Will. The very Thought of it quenches all manner of Fire in meâyet prithee letâs see her.
Belv. Letâs first to Dinner, and after that weâll pass the Day as you pleaseâbut at Night ye must all be at my Devotion.
Will. I will not fail you. [Exeunt.
ACT II.
Scene I. The Long Street.
Enter Belvile and Frederick in Masquing-Habits, and Willmore in his own Clothes, with a Vizard in his Hand.
Will. But why thus disguisâd and muzzlâd?
Belv. Because whatever Extravagances we commit in these Faces, our own may not be obligâd to answer âem.
Will. I should have changâd my Eternal Buff too: but no matter, my little Gipsy wouâd not have found me out then: for if she should change hers, it is impossible I should know her, unless I should hear her prattleâA Pox onât, I cannot get her out of my Head: Pray Heaven, if ever I do see her again, she prove damnable ugly, that I may fortify my self against her Tongue.
Belv. Have a care of Love, for oâ my conscience she was not of a Quality to give thee any hopes.
Will. Pox on âem, why do they draw a Man in then? She has playâd with my Heart so, that âtwill never lie still till I have met with some kind Wench, that will play the Game out with meâOh for my Arms full of soft, white, kindâWoman! such as I fancy Angelica.
Belv. This is her House, if you were but in stock to get admittance; they have not dinâd yet; I perceive the Picture is not out.
Enter Blunt.
Will. I long to see the Shadow of the fair Substance, a Man may gaze on that for nothing.
Blunt. Colonel, thy Handâand thine, Fred. I have been an Ass, a deluded Fool, a very Coxcomb from my Birth till this Hour, and heartily repent my little Faith.
Belv. What the Devilâs the matter with thee Ned?
Blunt. Oh such a Mistress, Fred, such a Girl!
Will. Ha! where?
Fred. Ay where!
Blunt. So fond, so amorous, so toying and fine! and all for sheer Love, ye Rogue! Oh how she lookt and kissâd! and soothâd my Heart from my Bosom. I cannot think I was awake, and yet methinks I see and feel her Charms stillâFred.âTry if she have not left the Taste of her balmy Kisses upon my Lipsâ [Kisses him.
Belv. Ha, ha, ha!
Will. Death Man, where is she?
Blunt. What a Dog was I to stay in dull England so longâHow have I laught at the Colonel when he sighâd for Love! but now the little Archer has revengâd him, and by his own Dart, I can guess at all his Joys, which then I took for Fancies, mere Dreams and FablesâWell, Iâm resolved to sell all in Essex, and plant here for ever.
Belv. What a Blessing âtis, thou hast a Mistress thou darâst boast of; for I know thy Humour is rather to have a proclaimâd Clap, than a secret Amour.
Will. Dost know her Name?
Blunt. Her Name? No,âsheartlikins: what care I for Names?â
Sheâs fair, young, brisk and kind, even to ravishment: and what a Pox care I for knowing her by another Title?
Will. Didst give her anything?
Blunt. Give her!âHa, ha, ha! why, sheâs a Person of QualityâThatâs a good one, give her! âsheartlikins dost think such Creatures are to be bought? Or are we provided for such a Purchase? Give her, quoth ye? Why she presented me with this Bracelet, for the Toy of a Diamond I usâd to wear: No, Gentlemen, Ned Blunt is not every BodyâShe expects me again to night.
Will. Egad thatâs well; weâll all go.
Blunt. Not a Soul: No, Gentlemen, you are Wits; I am a dull Country Rogue, I.
Fred. Well, Sir, for all your Person of Quality, I shall be very glad to understand your Purse be secure; âtis our whole Estate at present, which we are loth to hazard in one Bottom: come, Sir, unload.
Blunt. Take the necessary Trifle, useless now to me, that am belovâd by such a Gentlewomanââsheartlikins Money! Here take mine too.
Fred. No, keep that to be cozenâd, that we may laugh.
Will. Cozenâd!âDeath! wouâd I couâd meet with one, that wouâd cozen me of all the Love I couâd spare to night.
Fred. Pox âtis some common Whore upon my Life.
Blunt. A Whore! yes with such Clothes! such Jewels! such a House! such Furniture, and so attended! a Whore!
Belv. Why yes, Sir, they are Whores, tho theyâll neither entertain you with Drinking, Swearing, or Baudy; are Whores in all those gay Clothes, and right Jewels; are Whores with great Houses richly furnisht with Velvet Beds, Store of Plate, handsome Attendance, and fine Coaches, are Whores and errant ones.
Will. Pox onât, where do these fine Whores live?
Belv. Where no Rogue in Office yclepâd Constables dare give âem laws, nor the Wine-inspired Bullies of the Town break their Windows; yet they are Whores, tho this Essex Calf believe them Persons of Quality.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, yâare all Fools, there are things about this Essex Calf, that shall take with the Ladies, beyond all your Wits and PartsâThis Shape and Size, Gentlemen, are not to be despisâd; my Waste tolerably long, with other inviting Signs, that shall be nameless.
Will. Egad I believe he may have met with some Person of Quality that may be kind to him.
Belv. Dost thou perceive any such tempting things about him, should make a fine Woman, and of Quality, pick him out from all Mankind, to throw away her Youth and Beauty upon, nay, and her dear Heart too?âno, no, Angelica has raisâd the Price too high.
Will. May she languish for Mankind till she die, and be damnâd for that one Sin alone.
Enter two Bravoes, and hang up a great Picture of Angelicaâs, against the Balcony, and two little ones at each side of the Door.
Belv. See there the fair Sign to the Inn, where a Man may lodge thatâs Fool enough to give her Price. [Will. gazes on the Picture.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, Gentlemen, whatâs this?
Belv. A famous Curtezan thatâs to be sold.
Blunt.A How! to be sold! nay then I have nothing to say to herâsold! what Impudence is practisâd in this Country?âWith Order and Decency Whoringâs established here by virtue of the InquisitionâCome letâs be gone, Iâm sure weâre no Chapmen for this Commodity.
Fred. Thou art none, Iâm sure, unless thou couldâst have her in thy Bed at the Price of a Coach in the Street.
Will. How wondrous fair she isâa Thousand Crowns a Monthâby Heaven as many Kingdoms were too little. A plague of this Povertyâof which I neâer complain, but when it hinders my Approach to Beauty, which Virtue neâer could purchase. [Turns from the Picture.
Blunt. Whatâs this?â [Reads] A Thousand Crowns a Month!
ââSheartlikins, hereâs a Sum! sure âtis a mistake.
âHark you, Friend, does she take or give so much by the Month!
Fred. A Thousand Crowns! Why, âtis a Portion for the Infanta.
Blunt. Hark ye, Friends, wonât she trust?
Brav. This is a Trade, Sir, that cannot live by Credit.
Enter Don Pedro in Masquerade, followâd by Stephano.
Belv. See, hereâs more Company, letâs walk off a while.
[Pedro Reads. [Exeunt English.
Enter Angelica and Moretta in the Balcony, and draw a Silk Curtain.
Ped. Fetch me a Thousand Crowns, I never wish to buy this Beauty at an easier Rate. [Passes off.
Ang. Prithee what said those Fellows to thee?
Brav. Madam, the first were Admirers of Beauty only, but no purchasers; they were merry with your Price and Picture, laught at the Sum, and so past off.
Ang. No matter, Iâm not displeasâd with their rallying; their Wonder feeds my Vanity, and he that wishes to buy, gives me more Pride, than he that gives my Price can make me Pleasure.
Brav. Madam, the last I knew thro all his disguises to be Don Pedro, Nephew to the General, and who was with him in Pampelona.
Ang. Don Pedro! my old Gallantâs Nephew! When his Uncle dyâd, he left him a vast Sum of Money; it is he who was so in love with me at Padua, and who usâd to make the General so jealous.
Moret. Is this he that usâd to prance before our Window and take such care to shew himself an amorous Ass? if I am not mistaken, he is the likeliest Man to give your Price.
Ang. The Man is brave and generous, but of an Humour so uneasy and inconstant, that the victory over his Heart is as soon lost as won; a Slave that can add little to the Triumph of the Conqueror: but inconstancyâs the Sin of all Mankind, therefore Iâm resolvâd that nothing but Gold shall charm my Heart.
Moret. Iâm glad onât; âtis only interest that Women of our Profession ought to consider: tho I wonder what has kept you from that general Disease of our Sex so long, I mean that of being in love.
Ang. A kind, but sullen Star, under which I had the Happiness to be born; yet I have had no time for Love; the bravest and noblest of Mankind have purchasâd my Favours at so dear a Rate, as if no Coin but Gold were current with our TradeâBut hereâs Don Pedro again, fetch me my Luteâfor âtis for him or Don Antonio the Vice-Royâs Son, that I have spread my Nets.
Enter at one Door Don Pedro, and Stephano; Don Antonio and Diego [his page], at the other Door, with People following him in Masquerade, antickly attirâd, some with Musick: they both go up to the Picture.
Ant. A thousand Crowns! had not the Painter flatterâd her, I should not think it dear.
Pedro. Flatterâd her! by Heaven he cannot. I have seen the Original, nor is there one Charm here more than adorns her Face and Eyes; all this soft and sweet, with a certain languishing Air, that no Artist can represent.
Ant. What I heard of her Beauty before had firâd my Soul, but this confirmation of it has blown it into a flame.
Pedro. Ha!
Pag. Sir, I have known you throw away a Thousand Crowns on a worse Face, and tho yâ are near your Marriage, you may venture a little Love here; Florindaâwill not miss it.
Pedro. Ha! Florinda! Sure âtis Antonio. [aside.
Ant. Florinda! name not those distant Joys, thereâs not one thought of her will check my Passion here.
Pedro. Florinda scornâd! and all my Hopes defeated of the Possession of Angelica! [A noise of a Lute above. Ant. gazes up.] Her Injuries by Heaven he shall not boast of. [Song to a Lute above.
SONG.
When Damon first began to love,
He languisht in a soft Desire,
And knew not how the Gods to move,
To lessen or increase his Fire,
For CĂŠlia in her charming Eyes
Wore all Loveâs Sweet, and all his Cruelties.
II.
But as beneath a Shade he lay,
Weaving of Flowârs for CĂŠliaâs Hair,
She chancâd to lead her Flock that way,
And saw the amârous Shepherd there.
She gazâd around upon the Place,
And saw the Grove (resembling Night)
To all the Joys of Love invite,
Whilst guilty Smiles and Blushes drest her Face.
At this the bashful Youth all Transport grew,
And with kind Force he taught the Virgin how
To yield what all his Sighs couâd never do.
Ant. By Heavân sheâs charming fair!
[Angelica throws open the Curtains, and bows to Antonio, who pulls off his Vizard, and bows and blows up Kisses. Pedro unseen looks in his Face.
Pedro. âTis he, the false Antonio!
Ant. Friend, where must I pay my offering of Love? [To the Bravo.] My Thousand Crowns I mean.
Pedro. That Offering I have designâd to make,
And yours will come too late.
Ant. Prithee be gone, I shall grow angry else,
And then thou art not safe.
Pedro. My Anger may be fatal, Sir, as yours;
And he that enters here may prove this Truth.
Ant. I know not who thou art, but I am sure thouârt worth my killing, and aiming at Angelica. [They draw and fight.
Enter Willmore and Blunt, who draw and part âem.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, hereâs fine doings.
Will. Tilting for the Wench Iâm sureânay gad, if that wouâd win her, I have as good a Sword as the best of yeâPut upâput up, and take another time and place, for this is designâd for Lovers only. [They all put up.
Pedro. We are prevented; dare you meet me to morrow on the Molo?
For Iâve a Title to a better quarrel,
That of Florinda, in whose credulous Heart
Thouâst made an Intârest, and destroyâd my Hopes.
Ant. Dare?
Iâll meet thee there as early as the Day.
Pedro. We will come thus disguisâd, that whosoever chance to get the better, he may escape unknown.
Ant. It shall be so. [Ex. Pedro and Stephano.] Who shouâd this Rival be? unless the English Colonel, of whom Iâve often heard Don Pedro speak; it must be he, and time he were removed, who lays a Claim to all my Happiness.
[Willmore having gazâd all this while on the Picture, pulls down a little one.
Will. This postureâs loose and negligent,
The sight onât wouâd beget a warm desire
In Souls, whom Impotence and Age had chillâd.
âThis must along with me.
Brav. What means this rudeness, Sir?ârestore the Picture.
Ant. Ha! Rudeness committed to the fair Angelica!âRestore the Picture, Sir.
Will. Indeed I will not, Sir.
Ant. By Heavân but you shall.
35Will. Nay, do not shew your Sword; if you do, by this dear BeautyâI will shew mine too.
Ant. What right can you pretend toât?
Will. That of Possession which I will maintainâyou perhaps have 1000 Crowns to give for the Original.
Ant. No matter, Sir, you shall restore the Picture.
Ang. Oh, Moretta! whatâs the matter? [Ang. and Moret. above.
Ant. Or leave your Life behind.
Will. Death! you lyeâI will do neither.
Ang. Hold, I command you, if for me you fight.
[They fight, the Spaniards join with Antonio, Blunt laying on like mad. They leave off and bow.
Will. How heavenly fair she is!âah Plague of her Price.
Ang. You Sir in Buff, you that appear a Soldier, that first began this Insolence.
Will. âTis true, I did so, if you call it Insolence for a Man to preserve himself; I saw your charming Picture, and was wounded: quite thro my Soul each pointed Beauty ran; and wanting a Thousand Crowns to procure my Remedy, I laid this little Picture to my Bosomâwhich if you cannot allow me, Iâll resign.
Ang. No, you may keep the Trifle.
Ant. You shall first ask my leave, and this. [Fight again as before.
Enter Belv. and Fred. who join with the English.
Ang. Hold; will you ruin me?âBiskey, Sebastian, part them. [The Spaniards are beaten off.
Moret. Oh Madam, weâre undone, a pox upon that rude Fellow, heâs set on to ruin us: we shall never see good days, till all these fighting poor Rogues are sent to the Gallies.
Enter Belvile, Blunt and Willmore, with his shirt bloody.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, beat me at this Sport, and Iâll neâer wear Sword more.
Belv. The Devilâs in thee for a mad Fellow, thou art always one at an unlucky Adventure.âCome, letâs be gone whilst weâre safe, and remember these are Spaniards, a sort of People that know how to revenge an Affront.
Fred. You bleed; I hope you are not wounded. [To Will.
Will. Not much:âa plague upon your Dons, if they fight no better theyâll neâer recover Flanders.âWhat the Devil wasât to them that I took down the Picture?
Blunt. Took it! âSheartlikins, weâll have the great one too; âtis ours by Conquest.âPrithee, help me up, and Iâll pull it down.â
Ang. Stay, Sir, and eâer you affront me further, let me know how you durst commit this OutrageâTo you I speak, Sir, for you appear like a Gentleman.
Will. To me, Madam?âGentlemen, your Servant. [Belv. stays him.
Belv. Is the Devil in thee? Doâst know the danger of entring the house of an incensâd Curtezan?
Will. I thank you for your careâbut there are other matters in hand, there are, tho we have no great Temptation.âDeath! let me go.
Fred. Yes, to your Lodging, if you will, but not in here.âDamn these gay Harlotsâby this Hand Iâll have as sound and handsome a Whore for a Patacoone.âDeath, Man, sheâll murder thee.
Will. Oh! fear me not, shall I not venture where a Beauty calls? a lovely charming Beauty? for fear of danger! when by Heaven thereâs none so great as to long for her, whilst I want Money to purchase her.
Fred. Therefore âtis loss of time, unless you had the thousand Crowns to pay.
Will. It may be she may give a Favour, at least I shall have the pleasure of saluting her when I enter, and when I depart.
Belv. Pox, sheâll as soon lie with thee, as kiss thee, and sooner stab than do eitherâyou shall not go.
37Ang. Fear not, Sir, all I have to wound with, is my Eyes.
Blunt. Let him go, âSheartlikins, I believe the Gentle-woman means well.
Belv. Well, take thy Fortune, weâll expect you in the next Street.âFarewell Fool,âfarewellâ
Will. Bâye Colonelâ [Goes in.
Fred. The Rogueâs stark mad for a Wench. [Exeunt.
Scene II. A Fine Chamber.
Enter Willmore, Angelica, and Moretta.
Ang. Insolent Sir, how durst you pull down my Picture?
Will. Rather, how durst you set it up, to tempt poor amorous Mortals with so much Excellence? which I find you have but too well consulted by the unmerciful price you set uponât.âIs all this Heaven of Beauty shewn to move Despair in those that cannot buy? and can you think the effects of that Despair shouâd be less extravagant than I have shewn?
Ang. I sent for you to ask my Pardon, Sir, not to aggravate your Crime.âI thought I shouâd have seen you at my Feet imploring it.
Will. You are deceived, I came to rail at you, and talk such Truths, too, as shall let you see the Vanity of that Pride, which taught you how to set such a Price on Sin. For such it is, whilst that which is Loveâs due is meanly barterâd for.
Ang. Ha, ha, ha, alas, good Captain, what pity âtis your edifying Doctrine will do no good upon meâMoretta, fetch the Gentleman a Glass, and let him survey himself, to see what Charms he has,âand guess my Business. [Aside in a soft tone.
Moret. He knows himself of old, I believe those Breeches and he have been acquainted ever since he was beaten at Worcester.
Ang. Nay, do not abuse the poor Creature.â
Moret. Good Weather-beaten Corporal, will you march off? we have no need of your Doctrine, tho you have of our Charity; but at present we have no Scraps, we can afford no kindness for Godâs sake; in fine, Sirrah, the Price is too high iâthâ Mouth for you, therefore troop, I say.
Will. Here, good Fore-Woman of the Shop, serve me, and Iâll be gone.
Moret. Keep it to pay your Landress, your Linen stinks of the Gun-Room; for hereâs no selling by Retail.
Will. Thou hast sold plenty of thy stale Ware at a cheap Rate.
Moret. Ay, the more silly kind Heart I, but this is an Age wherein Beauty is at higher Rates.âIn fine, you know the price of this.
Will. I grant you âtis here set down a thousand Crowns a MonthâBaud, take your black Lead and sum it up, that I may have a Pistole-worth of these vain gay things, and Iâll trouble you no more.
Moret. Pox on him, heâll fret me to Death:âabominable Fellow, I tell thee, we only sell by the whole Piece.
Will. âTis very hard, the whole Cargo or nothingâFaith, Madam, my Stock will not reach it, I cannot be your Chapman.âYet I have Countrymen, in Town, Merchants of Love, like me; Iâll see if theyâl put for a share, we cannot lose much by it, and what we have no use for, weâll sell upon the Fridayâs Mart, atâWho gives more? I am studying, Madam, how to purchase you, tho at present I am unprovided of Money.
Ang. Sure, this from any other Man would anger meânor shall he know the Conquest he has madeâPoor angry Man, how I despise this railing.
Will. Yes, I am poorâbut Iâm a Gentleman,
And one that scorns this Baseness which you practise.
Poor as I am, I would not sell my self,
No, not to gain your charming high-prizâd Person.
Tho I admire you strangely for your Beauty,
Yet I contemn your Mind.
âAnd yet I wouâd at any rate enjoy you;
At your own rateâbut cannotâSee here
The only Sum I can command on Earth;
I know not where to eat when this is gone:
Yet such a Slave I am to Love and Beauty,
This last reserve Iâll sacrifice to enjoy you.
âNay, do not frown, I know you are to be bought,
And wouâd be bought by me, by me,
For a mean trifling Sum, if I could pay it down.
Which happy knowledge I will still repeat,
And lay it to my Heart, it has a Virtue inât,
And soon will cure those Wounds your Eyes have made.
âAnd yetâthereâs something so divinely powerful thereâ
Nay, I will gazeâto let you see my Strength. [Holds her, looks on her, and pauses and sighs.
By Heaven, bright CreatureâI would not for the World
Thy Fame were half so fair as is thy Face. [Turns her away from him.
Ang. His words go thro me to the very Soul. [Aside.] âIf you have nothing else to say to me.
Will. Yes, you shall hear how infamous you areâ
For which I do not hate thee:
But that secures my Heart, and all the Flames it feels
Are but so many Lusts,
I know it by their sudden bold intrusion.
The Fireâs impatient and betrays, âtis falseâ
For had it been the purer Flame of Love,
I should have pinâd and languished at your Feet,
Eâer found the Impudence to have discoverâd it.
I now dare stand your Scorn, and your Denial.
Moret. Sure sheâs bewitcht, that she can stand thus tamely, and hear his saucy railing.âSirrah, will you be gone?
Ang. How dare you take this liberty?âWithdraw. [To Moret.] âPray, tell me, Sir, are not you guilty of the same mercenary Crime? When a Lady is proposed to you for a Wife, you never ask, how fair, discreet, or virtuous she is; but whatâs her Fortuneâwhich if but small, you cryâShe will not do my businessâand basely leave her, tho she languish for you.âSay, is not this as poor?
Will. It is a barbarous Custom, which I will scorn to defend in our Sex, and do despise in yours.
Ang. Thou art a brave Fellow! put up thy Gold, and know,
That were thy Fortune large, as is thy Soul,
Thou shouldst not buy my Love,
Couldst thou forget those mean Effects of Vanity,
Which set me out to sale; and as a Lover, prize
My yielding Joys.
Canst thou believe theyâl be entirely thine,
Without considering they were mercenary?
Will. I cannot tell, I must bethink me firstâha, Death, Iâm going to believe her. [Aside.
Ang. Prithee, confirm that Faithâor if thou canst notâflatter me a little, âtwill please me from thy Mouth.
Will. Curse on thy charming Tongue! dost thou return
My feignâd Contempt with so much subtilty? [Aside.
Thouâst found the easiest way into my Heart,
Tho I yet know that all thou sayâst is false. [Turning from her in a Rage.
Ang. By all thatâs good âtis real,
I never lovâd before, tho oft a Mistress.
âShall my first Vows be slighted?
Will. What can she mean? [Aside.
Ang. I find you cannot credit me. [In an angry tone.
Will. I know you take me for an errant Ass,
An Ass that may be soothâd into Belief,
And then be usâd at pleasure.
âBut, Madam I have been so often cheated
By perjurâd, soft, deluding Hypocrites,
41That Iâve no Faith left for the cozening Sex,
Especially for Women of your Trade.
Ang. The low esteem you have of me, perhaps
May bring my Heart again:
For I have Pride that yet surmounts my Love. [She turns with Pride, he holds her.
Will. Throw off this Pride, this Enemy to Bliss,
And shew the Power of Love: âtis with those Arms
I can be only vanquisht, made a Slave.
Ang. Is all my mighty Expectation vanisht?
âNo, I will not hear thee talk,âthou hast a Charm
In every word, that draws my Heart away.
And all the thousand Trophies I designâd,
Thou hast undoneâWhy art thou soft?
Thy Looks are bravely rough, and meant for War.
Could thou not storm on still?
I then perhaps had been as free as thou.
Will. Death! how she throws her Fire about my Soul! [Aside.
âTake heed, fair Creature, how you raise my Hopes,
Which once assumâd pretend to all Dominion.
Thereâs not a Joy thou hast in store
I shall not then command:
For which Iâll pay thee back my Soul, my Life.
Come, letâs begin thâ account this happy minute.
Ang. And will you pay me then the Price I ask?
Will. Oh, why dost thou draw me from an awful Worship,
By shewing thou art no Divinity?
Conceal the Fiend, and shew me all the Angel;
Keep me but ignorant, and Iâll be devout,
And pay my Vows for ever at this Shrine. [Kneels, and kisses her Hand.
Ang. The Pay I mean is but thy Love for mine.
âCan you give that?
Will. Intirelyâcome, letâs withdraw: where Iâll renew 42 my Vows,âand breathe âem with such Ardour, thou shall not doubt my Zeal.
Ang. Thou hast a Power too strong to be resisted. [Ex. Will. and Angelica.
Moret. Now my Curse go with youâIs all our Project fallen to this? to love the only Enemy to our Trade? Nay, to love such a Shameroon, a very Beggar; nay, a Pirate-Beggar, whose Business is to rifle and be gone, a No-Purchase, No-Pay Tatterdemalion, an English Piccaroon; a Rogue that fights for daily Drink, and takes a Pride in being loyally lousyâOh, I could curse now, if I durstâThis is the Fate of most Whores.
Trophies, which from believing Fops we win,
Are Spoils to those who cozen us again.
ACT III.
Scene I. A Street.
Enter Florinda, Valeria, Hellena, in Antick different Dresses from what they were in before, Callis attending.
Flor. I wonder what should make my Brother in so ill a Humour: I hope he has not found out our Ramble this Morning.
Hell. No, if he had, we should have heard onât at both Ears, and have been mewâd up this Afternoon; which I would not for the World should have happenâdâHey ho! Iâm sad as a Loverâs Lute.
Val. Well, methinks we have learnt this Trade of Gipsies as readily as if we had been bred upon the Road to Loretto: and yet I did so fumble, when I told the Stranger his Fortune, that I was afraid I should have told my own and yours by mistakeâBut methinks Hellena has been very serious ever since.
Flor. I would give my Garters she were in love, to be revengâd upon her, for abusing meâHow isât, Hellena?
Hell. Ah!âwould I had never seen my mad Monsieur 43 âand yet for all your laughing I am not in loveâ and yet this small Acquaintance, o my Conscience, will never out of my Head.
Val. Ha, ha, haâI laugh to think how thou art fitted with a Lover, a Fellow that, I warrant, loves every new Face he sees.
Hell. Humâhe has not kept his Word with me hereâand may be taken upâthat thought is not very pleasant to meâwhat the Duce should this be now that I feel?
Val. What isât like?
Hell. Nay, the Lord knowsâbut if I should be hanged, I cannot chuse but be angry and afraid, when I think that mad Fellow should be in love with any Body but meâWhat to think of my self I know notâWould I could meet with some true damnâd Gipsy, that I might know my Fortune.
Val. Know it! why thereâs nothing so easy; thou wilt love this wandring Inconstant till thou findâst thy self hanged about his Neck, and then be as mad to get free again.
Flor. Yes, Valeria; we shall see her bestride his Baggage-horse, and follow him to the Campaign.
Hell. So, so; now you are provided for, thereâs no care taken of poor meâBut since you have set my Heart a wishing, I am resolvâd to know for what. I will not die of the Pip, so I will not.
Flor. Art thou mad to talk so? Who will like thee well enough to have thee, that hears what a mad Wench thou art?
Hell. Like me! I donât intend, every he that likes me shall have me, but he that I like: I shouâd have staid in the Nunnery still, if I had likâd my Lady Abbess as well as she likâd me. No, I came thence, not (as my wise Brother imagines) to take an eternal Farewel of the World, but to love and to be belovâd; and I will be belovâd or Iâll get one of your Men, so I will.
Val. Am I put into the Number of Lovers?
Hell. You! my Couz, I know thou art too good naturâd 44 to leave us in any Design: Thou wouât venture a Cast, tho thou comest off a Loser, especially with such a GamesterâI observâd your Man, and your willing Ears incline that way; and if you are not a Lover, âtis an Art soon learntâthat I find. [Sighs.
Flor. I wonder how you learnt to love so easily, I had a thousand Charms to meet my Eyes and Ears, eâer I couâd yield; and âtwas the knowledge of Belvileâs Merit, not the surprising Person, took my SoulâThou art too rash to give a Heart at first sight.
Hell. Hang your considering Lover; I neâer thought beyond the Fancy, that âtwas a very pretty, idle, silly kind of Pleasure to pass ones time with, to write little, soft, nonsensical Billets, and with great difficulty and danger receive Answers; in which I shall have my Beauty praisâd, my Wit admirâd (tho little or none) and have the Vanity and Power to know I am desirable; then I have the more Inclination that way, because I am to be a Nun, and so shall not be suspected to have any such earthly Thoughts about meâBut when I walk thusâand sigh thusâtheyâll think my Mindâs upon my Monastery, and cry, how happy âtis sheâs so resolvâd!âBut not a Word of Man.
Flor. What a mad Creatureâs this!
Hell. Iâll warrant, if my Brother hears either of you sigh, he cries (gravely)âI fear you have the Indiscretion to be in love, but take heed of the Honour of our House, and your own unspotted Fame; and so he conjures on till he has laid the soft-wingâd God in your Hearts, or broke the Birds-nestâBut see here comes your Lover: but whereâs my inconstant? letâs step aside, and we may learn something. [Go aside.
Enter Belvile, Fred. and Blunt.
Belv. What means this? the Pictureâs taken in.
Blunt. It may be the Wench is good naturâd, and will be kind gratis. Your Friendâs a proper handsom Fellow.
45Belv. I rather think she has cut his Throat and is fled: I am mad he should throw himself into DangersâPox onât, I shall want him to nightâletâs knock and ask for him.
Hell. My heart goes a-pit a-pat, for fear âtis my Man they talk of. [Knock, Moretta above.
More. What would you have?
Belv. Tell the Stranger that enterâd here about two Hours ago, that his Friends stay here for him.
Moret. A Curse upon him for Moretta, would he were at the Devilâbut heâs coming to you. [Enter Wilmore.
Hell. I, I, âtis he. Oh how this vexes me.
Belv. And how, and how, dear Lad, has Fortune smilâd? Are we to break her Windows, or raise up Altars to her! hah!
Will. Does not my Fortune sit triumphant on my Brow? dost not see the little wanton God there all gay and smiling? have I not an Air about my Face and Eyes, that distinguish me from the Croud of common Lovers? By Heavân, Cupidâs Quiver has not half so many Darts as her EyesâOh such a Bona Rota, to sleep in her Arms is lying in Fresco, all perfumâd Air about me.
Hell. Hereâs fine encouragement for me to fool on. [Aside.
Will. Hark ye, where didst thou purchase that rich Canary we drank to-day? Tell me, that I may adore the Spigot, and sacrifice to the Butt: the Juice was divine, into which I must dip my Rosary, and then bless all things that I would have bold or fortunate.
Belv. Well, Sir, letâs go take a Bottle, and hear the Story of your Success.
Fred. Would not French Wine do better?
Will. Damn the hungry Balderdash; cheerful Sack has a generous Virtue inât, inspiring a successful Confidence, gives Eloquence to the Tongue, and Vigour to the Soul; and has in a few Hours compleated all my Hopes and Wishes. Thereâs nothing left to raise a new Desire in meâCome letâs be gay and wantonâand, Gentlemen, study, study what you want, for here are Friends,âthat will 46 supply, Gentlemen,âhark! what a charming sound they makeââtis he and she Gold whilst here, shall beget new Pleasures every moment.
Blunt. But hark ye, Sir, you are not married, are you?
Will. All the Honey of Matrimony, but none of the Sting, Friend.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, thouârt a fortunate Rogue.
Will. I am so, Sir, let these inform you.âHa, how sweetly they chime! Pox of Poverty, it makes a Man a Slave, makes Wit and Honour sneak, my Soul grew lean and rusty for want of Credit.
Blunt. âSheartlikins, this I like well, it looks like my lucky Bargain! Oh how I long for the Approach of my Squire, that is to conduct me to her House again. Why! hereâs two provided for.
Fred. By this light yâre happy Men.
Blunt. Fortune is pleased to smile on us, Gentlemen,âto smile on us.
Enter Sancho, and pulls Blunt by the Sleeve. They go aside.
Sancho. Sir, my Lady expects youâshe has removâd all that might oppose your Will and Pleasureâand is impatient till you come.
Blunt. Sir, Iâll attend youâOh the happiest Rogue! Iâll take no leave, lest they either dog me, or stay me. [Ex. with Sancho.
Belv. But then the little Gipsy is forgot?
Will. A Mischief on thee for putting her into my thoughts; I had quite forgot her else, and this Nightâs Debauch had drunk her quite down.
Hell. Had it so, good Captain? [Claps him on the Back.
Will. Ha! I hope she did not hear.
Hell. What, afraid of such a Champion!
Will. Oh! youâre a fine Lady of your word, are you not? to make a Man languish a whole dayâ
Hell. In tedious search of me.
Will. Egad, Child, thouârt in the right, hadst thou seen what a melancholy Dog I have been ever since I was a Lover, how I have walkt the Streets like a Capuchin, with my Hands in my SleevesâFaith, Sweetheart, thou wouldst pity me.
Hell. Now, if I should be hangâd, I canât be angry with him, he dissembles so heartilyâAlas, good Captain, what pains you have takenâNow were I ungrateful not to reward so true a Servant.
Will. Poor Soul! thatâs kindly said, I see thou bearest a Conscienceâcome then for a beginning shew me thy dear Face.
Hell. Iâm afraid, my small Acquaintance, you have been staying that swinging stomach you boasted of this morning; I remember then my little Collation would have gone down with you, without the Sauce of a handsom FaceâIs your Stomach so quesy now?
Will. Faith long fasting, Child, spoils a Manâs Appetiteâyet if you durst treat, I could so lay about me still.
Hell. And would you fall to, before a Priest says Grace?
Will. Oh fie, fie, what an old out-of-fashionâd thing hast thou namâd? Thou couldâst not dash me more out of Countenance, shouldst thou shew me an ugly Face.
Whilst he is seemingly courting Hellena, enter Angelica, Moretta, Biskey, and Sebastian, all in Masquerade: Ang. sees Will. and starts.
Ang. Heavens, isât he? and passionately fond to see another Woman?
Moret. What couâd you expect less from such a Swaggerer?
Ang. Expect! as much as I paid him, a Heart intire,
Which I had pride enough to think when eâer I gave
It would have raisâd the Man above the Vulgar,
Made him all Soul, and that all soft and constant.
Hell. You see, Captain, how willing I am to be Friends 48 with you, till Time and Ill-luck make us Lovers; and ask you the Question first, rather than put your Modesty to the blush, by asking me: for alas, I know you Captains are such strict Men, severe Observers of your Vows to Chastity, that âtwill be hard to prevail with your tender Conscience to marry a young willing Maid.
Will. Do not abuse me, for fear I should take thee at thy word, and marry thee indeed, which Iâm sure will be Revenge sufficient.
Hell. Oâ my Conscience, that will be our Destiny, because we are both of one humour; I am as inconstant as you, for I have considered, Captain, that a handsom Woman has a great deal to do whilst her Face is good, for then is our Harvest-time to gather Friends; and should I in these days of my Youth, catch a fit of foolish Constancy, I were undone; âtis loitering by day-light in our great Journey: therefore declare, Iâll allow but one year for Love, one year for Indifference, and one year for Hateâand thenâgo hang your selfâfor I profess myself the gay, the kind, and the inconstantâthe Devilâs inât if this wonât please you.
Will. Oh most damnably!âI have a Heart with a hole quite thro it too, no Prison like mine to keep a Mistress in.
Ang. Perjurâd Man! how I believe thee now! [Aside.
Hell. Well, I see our Business as well as Humours are alike, yours to cozen as many Maids as will trust you, and I as many Men as have FaithâSee if I have not as desperate a lying look, as you can have for the heart of you. [Pulls off her Vizard; he starts.
âHow do you like it, Captain?
Will. Like it! by Heavân, I never saw so much Beauty. Oh the Charms of those sprightly black Eyes, that strangely fair Face, full of Smiles and Dimples! those soft round melting cherry Lips! and small even white Teeth! not to be exprest, but silently adored!âOh one Look more, and strike me dumb, or I shall repeat nothing else till I am mad. [He seems to court her to pull off her Vizard: she refuses.
Ang. I can endure no moreânor is it fit to interrupt him; for if I do, my Jealousy has so destroyâd my Reason,âI shall undo himâTherefore Iâll retire. And you Sebastian [To one of her Bravoes] follow that Woman, and learn who âtis; while you tell the Fugitive, I would speak to him instantly. [To the other Bravo. [Exit.
[This while Flor. is talking to Belvile, who stands sullenly. Fred. courting Valeria.
Val. Prithee, dear Stranger, be not so sullen; for tho you have lost your Love, you see my Friend frankly offers you hers, to play with in the mean time.
Belv. Faith, Madam, I am sorry I canât play at her Game.
Fred. Pray leave your Intercession, and mind your own Affair, theyâll better agree apart; heâs a model Sigher in Company, but alone no Woman escapes him.
Flor. Sure he does but rallyâyet if it should be trueâIâll tempt him fartherâBelieve me, noble Stranger, Iâm no common Mistressâand for a little proof onâtâwear this Jewelânay, take it, Sir, âtis right, and Bills of Exchange may sometimes miscarry.
Belv. Madam, why am I chose out of all Mankind to be the Object of your Bounty?
Val. Thereâs another civil Question askt.
Fred. Pox ofâs Modesty, it spoils his own Markets, and hinders mine.
Flor. Sir, from my Window I have often seen you; and Women of Quality have so few opportunities for Love, that we ought to lose none.
Fred. Ay, this is something! hereâs a Woman!âWhen shall I be blest with so much kindness from your fair Mouth?âTake the Jewel, Fool. [Aside to Belv.
Belv. You tempt me strangely, Madam, every way.
Flor. So, if I find him false, my whole Repose is gone. [Aside.
Belv. And but for a Vow Iâve made to a very fine Lady, this Goodness had subduâd me.
Fred. Pox onât be kind, in pity to me be kind, for I am to thrive here but as you treat her Friend.
Hell. Tell me what did you in yonder House, and Iâll unmasque.
Will. Yonder HouseâohâI went toâaâtoâwhy, thereâs a Friend of mine lives there.
Hell. What a she, or a he Friend?
Will. A Man upon my Honour! a ManâA She Friend! no, no, Madam, you have done my Business, I thank you.
Hell. And wasât your Man Friend, that had more Darts inâs Eyes than Cupid carries in a whole Budget of Arrows?
Will. Soâ
Hell. Ah such a Bona Roba: to be in her Arms is lying in Fresco, all perfumed Air about meâWas this your Man Friend too?
Will. Soâ
Hell. That gave you the He, and the SheâGold, that begets young Pleasures.
Will. Well, well, Madam, then you see there are Ladies in the World, that will not be cruelâthere are, Madam, there areâ
Hell. And there be Men too as fine, wild, inconstant Fellows as your self, there be, Captain, there be, if you go to that nowâtherefore Iâm resolvâdâ
Will. Oh!
Hell. To see your Face no moreâ
Will. Oh!
Hell. Till to morrow.
Will. Egad you frighted me.
Hell. Nor then neither, unless youâl swear never to see that Lady more.
Will. See her!âwhy! never to think of Womankind again?
Hell. Kneel, and swear. [Kneels, she gives him her hand.
Hell. I do, never to thinkâto seeâto loveânor lie with any but thy self.
Hell. Kiss the Book.
Will. Oh, most religiously. [Kisses her Hand.
Hell. Now what a wicked Creature am I, to damn a proper Fellow.
Call. Madam, Iâll stay no longer, âtis eâen dark. [To Flor.
Flor. However, Sir, Iâll leave this with youâthat when Iâm gone, you may repent the opportunity you have lost by your modesty. [Gives him the Jewel, which is her Picture, and Ex. He gazes after her.
Will. âTwill be an Age till to morrow,âand till then I will most impatiently expect youâAdieu, my dear pretty Angel. [Ex. all the Women.
Belv. Ha! Florindaâs Picture! âtwas she her selfâwhat a dull Dog was I? I would have given the World for one minuteâs discourse with her.â
Fred. This comes of your Modesty,âah pox on your Vow,âtwas ten to one but we had lost the Jewel byât.
Belv. Willmore! the blessedâst Opportunity lost!âFlorinda, Friends, Florinda!
Will. Ah Rogue! such black Eyes, such a Face, such a Mouth, such Teeth,âand so much Wit!
Belv. All, all, and a thousand Charms besides.
Will. Why, dost thou know her?
Belv. Know her! ay, ay, and a Pox take me with all my Heart for being modest.
Will. But hark ye, Friend of mine, are you my Rival? and have I been only beating the Bush all this while?
Belv. I understand thee notâIâm madâsee hereâ [Shews the Picture.
Will. Ha! whose Picture is this?ââtis a fine Wench.
Fred. The Colonelâs Mistress, Sir.
Will. Oh, oh, hereâI thought it had been another Prizeâcome, come, a Bottle will set thee right again. [Gives the Picture back.
Belv. I am content to try, and by that time âtwill be late enough for our Design.
Will. Agreed.
Love does all day the Soulâs great Empire keep,
But Wine at night lulls the soft God asleep. [Exeunt.
Scene II. Lucettaâs House.
Enter Blunt and Lucetta with a Light.
Luc. Now we are safe and free, no fears of the coming home of my old jealous Husband, which made me a little thoughtful when you came in firstâbut now Love is all the business of my Soul.
Blunt. I am transportedâPox onât, that I had but some fine things to say to her, such as Lovers useâI was a Fool not to learn of Fred, a little by Heart before I cameâsomething I must say.â [Aside. âSheartlikins, sweet Soul, I am not usâd to complement, but Iâm an honest Gentleman, and thy humble Servant.
Luc. I have nothing to pay for so great a Favour, but such a Love as cannot but be great, since at first sight of that sweet Face and Shape it made me your absolute Captive.
Blunt. Kind heart, how prettily she talks! Egad Iâll show her Husband a Spanish Trick; send him out of the World, and marry her: sheâs damnably in love with me, and will neâer mind Settlements, and so thereâs that sayâd. [Aside.
Luc. Well, Sir, Iâll go and undress me, and be with you instantly.
Blunt. Make haste then, for âdsheartlikins, dear Soul, thou canst not guess at the pain of a longing Lover, when his Joys are drawn within the compass of a few minutes.
Luc. You speak my Sense, and Iâll make haste to provide it. [Exit.
Blunt. âTis a rare Girl, and this one nightâs enjoyment with her will be worth all the days I ever past in Essex.âWould sheâd go with me into England, tho to say truth, thereâs plenty of Whores there already.âBut a pox on âem 53 they are such mercenary prodigal Whores, that they want such a one as this, thatâs free and generous, to give âem good Examples:âWhy, what a House she has! how rich and fine!
Enter Sancho.
Sancho. Sir, my Lady has sent me to conduct you to her Chamber.
Blunt. Sir, I shall be proud to followâHereâs one of her Servants too: âdsheartlikins, by his Garb and Gravity he might be a Justice of Peace in Essex, and is but a Pimp here. [Exeunt.
The Scene changes to a Chamber with an Alcove-Bed in it, a Table, &c. Lucetta in Bed. Enter Sancho and Blunt, who takes the Candle of Sancho at the Door.
Sanch. Sir, my Commission reaches no farther.
Blunt. Sir, Iâll excuse your Complement:âwhat, in Bed, my sweet Mistress?
Luc. You see, I still out-do you in kindness.
Blunt. And thou shall see what haste Iâll make to quit scoresâoh the luckiest Rogue! [Undresses himself.
Luc. Shouâd you be false or cruel now!
Blunt. False, âSheartlikins, what dost thou take me for a Jew? an insensible Heathen,âA Pox of thy old jealous Husband: and he were dead, egad, sweet Soul, it shouâd be none of my fault, if I did not marry thee.
Luc. It never shouâd be mine.
Blunt. Good Soul, Iâm the fortunatest Dog!
Luc. Are you not undrest yet?
Blunt. As much as my Impatience will permit. [Goes towards the Bed in his Shirt and Drawers.
Luc. Hold, Sir, put out the Light, it may betray us else.
Blunt. Any thing, I need no other Light but that of thine Eyes!ââsheartlikins, there I think I had it. [Aside. [Puts out the Candle, the Bed descends, he gropes about to find it.
âWhyâwhyâwhere am I got? what, not yet?âwhere 54 are you sweetest?âah, the Rogueâs silent nowâa pretty Love-trick thisâhow sheâll laugh at me anon!âyou need not, my dear Rogue! you need not! Iâm all on a fire alreadyâcome, come, now call me in for pityâSure Iâm enchanted! I have been round the Chamber, and can find neither Woman, nor BedâI lockt the Door, Iâm sure she cannot go that way; or if she couâd, the Bed couâd notâEnough, enough, my pretty Wanton, do not carry the Jest too farâHa, betrayâd! Dogs! Rogues! Pimps! help! help! [Lights on a Trap, and is let down.
Enter Lucetta, Philippo, and Sancho with a Light.
Phil. Ha, ha, ha, heâs dispatcht finely.
Luc. Now, Sir, had I been coy, we had mist of this Booty.
Phil. Nay when I saw âtwas a substantial Fool, I was mollified; but when you doat upon a Serenading Coxcomb, upon a Face, fine Clothes, and a Lute, it makes me rage.
Luc. You know I never was guilty of that Folly, my dear Philippo, but with your selfâBut come letâs see what we have got by this.
Phil. A rich Coat!âSword and Hat!âthese Breeches tooâare well linâd!âsee here a Gold Watch!âa Purseâha! Gold!âat least two hundred Pistoles! a bunch of Diamond Rings; and one with the Family Arms!âa Gold Box!âwith a Medal of his King! and his Lady Motherâs Picture!âthese were sacred Reliques, believe me!âsee, the Wasteband of his Breeches have a Mine of Gold!âOld Queen Bessâs. We have a Quarrel to her ever since Eighty Eight, and may therefore justify the Theft, the Inquisition might have committed it.
Luc. See, a Bracelet of bowâd Gold, these his Sister tyâd about his Arm at partingâbut wellâfor all this, I fear his being a Stranger may make a noise, and hinder our Trade with them hereafter.
Phil. Thatâs our security; he is not only a Stranger to us, but to the Country tooâthe Common-Shore into which 55 he is descended, thou knowâst, conducts him into another Street, which this Light will hinder him from ever finding againâhe knows neither your Name, nor the Street where your House is, nay, nor the way to his own Lodgings.
Luc. And art not thou an unmerciful Rogue, not to afford him one Night for all this?âI should not have been such a Jew.
Phil. Blame me not, Lucetta, to keep as much of thee as I can to my selfâcome, that thought makes me wanton,âletâs to Bed,âSancho, lock up these.
This is the Fleece which Fools do bear,
Designâd for witty Men to sheer. [Exeunt.
The Scene changes, and discovers Blunt, creeping out of a Common Shore, his Face, &c., all dirty.
Blunt. Oh Lord! [Climbing up.
I am got out at last, and (which is a Miracle) without a Clueâand now to Damning and Cursing,âbut if that would ease me, where shall I begin? with my Fortune, my self, or the Quean that cozenâd meâWhat a dog was I to believe in Women! Oh Coxcombâignorant conceited Coxcomb! to fancy she couâd be enamourâd with my Person, at the first sight enamourâdâOh, Iâm a cursed Puppy,âtis plain, Fool was writ upon my Forehead, she perceivâd it,âsaw the Essex Calf thereâfor what Allurements could there be in this Countenance? which I can indure, because Iâm acquainted with itâOh, dull silly Dog! to be thus soothâd into a Cozening! Had I been drunk, I might fondly have credited the young Quean! but as I was in my right Wits, to be thus cheated, confirms I am a dull believing English Country Fop.âBut my Comrades! Death and the Devil, thereâs the worst of allâthen a Ballad will be sung to Morrow on the Prado, to a lousy Tune of the enchanted Squire, and the annihilated DamselâBut Fred, that Rogue, and the Colonel, will abuse me beyond all Christian patienceâhad she left me my Clothes, I have a Bill of Exchange 56 at home wouâd have savâd my Creditâbut now all hope is taken from meâWell, Iâll home (if I can find the way) with this Consolation, that I am not the first kind believing Coxcomb; but there are, Gallants, many such good Natures amongst ye.
And tho youâve better Arts to hide your Follies,
Adsheartlikins yâare all as errant Cullies.
Scene III. The Garden, in the Night.
Enter Florinda undresâd, with a Key, and a little Box.
Flor. Well, thus far Iâm in my way to Happiness; I have got my self free from Callis; my Brother too, I find by yonder light, is gone into his Cabinet, and thinks not of me: I have by good Fortune got the Key of the Garden Back-door,âIâll open it, to prevent Belvileâs knocking,âa little noise will now alarm my Brother. Now am I as fearful as a young Thief. [Unlocks the Door.] âHark,âwhat noise is that?âOh,âtwas the Wind that plaid amongst the Boughs.âBelvile stays long, methinksâitâs timeâstayâfor fear of a surprize, Iâll hide these Jewels in yonder Jessamin. [She goes to lay down the Box.
Enter Willmore drunk.
Will. What the Devil is become of these Fellows, Belvile and Frederick? They promisâd to stay at the next corner for me, but who the Devil knows the corner of a full Moon?âNowâwhereabouts am I?âhahâwhat have we here? a Garden!âa very convenient place to sleep inâhahâwhat has God sent us here?âa Femaleâby this light, a Woman; Iâm a Dog if it be not a very Wench.â
Flor. Heâs come!âhahâwhoâs there?
Will. Sweet Soul, let me salute thy Shoe-string.
Flor. âTis not my Belvileâgood Heavens, I know him not.âWho are you, and from whence come you?
Will. Pritheeâprithee, Childânot so many hard Questionsâlet it suffice I am here, ChildâCome, come kiss me.
Flor. Good Gods! what luck is mine?
Will. Only good luck, Child, parlous good luckâCome hither,ââtis a delicate shining Wench,âby this Hand sheâs perfumâd, and smells like any Nosegay.âPrithee, dear Soul, letâs not play the Fool, and lose time,âprecious timeâfor as Gad shall save me, Iâm as honest a Fellow as breathes, tho I am a little disguisâd at present.âCome, I say,âwhy, thou mayâst be free with me, Iâll be very secret. Iâll not boast who âtwas obligâd me, not Iâfor hang me if I know thy Name.
Flor. Heavens! what a filthy beast is this!
Will. I am so, and thou oughtst the sooner to lie with me for that reason,âfor look you, Child, there will be no Sin inât, because âtwas neither designâd nor premeditated; âtis pure Accident on both sidesâthatâs a certain thing nowâIndeed should I make love to you, and you vow Fidelityâand swear and lye till you believâd and yieldedâThou art therefore (as thou art a good Christian) obligâd in Conscience to deny me nothing. Nowâcome, be kind, without any more idle prating.
Flor. Oh, I am ruinâdâwicked Man, unhand me.
Will. Wicked! Egad, Child, a Judge, were he young and vigorous, and saw those Eyes of thine, would know âtwas they gave the first blowâthe first provocation.âCome, prithee letâs lose no time, I sayâthis is a fine convenient place.
Flor. Sir, let me go, I conjure you, or Iâll call out.
Will. Ay, ay, you were best to call Witness to see how finely you treat meâdo.â
Flor. Iâll cry Murder, Rape, or any thing, if you do not instantly let me go.
Will. A Rape! Come, come, you lye, you Baggage, you lye: What, Iâll warrant you would fain have the World believe now that you are not so forward as I. No, not you,âwhy at this time of Night was your Cobweb-door set open, dear Spiderâbut to catch Flies?âHah comeâor I shall be damnably angry.âWhy what a Coil is here.â
Flor. Sir, can you thinkâ
Will. That youâd do it for nothing? oh, oh, I find what youâd be atâlook here, hereâs a Pistole for youâhereâs a work indeedâhereâtake it, I say.â
Flor. For Heavenâs sake, Sir, as youâre a Gentlemanâ
Will. Soânowâshe would be wheedling me for moreâwhat, you will not take it thenâyouâre resolvâd you will not.âCome, come, take it, or Iâll put it up again; for, look ye, I never give more.âWhy, how now, Mistress, are you so high iâthâ Mouth, a Pistole wonât down with you?âhahâwhy, what a workâs hereâin good timeâcome, no struggling, be goneâBut an yâare good at a dumb Wrestle, Iâm for ye,âlook ye,âIâm for ye.â [She struggles with him.
Enter Belvile and Frederick.
Bel. The Door is open, a Pox of this mad Fellow, Iâm angry that weâve lost him, I durst have sworn he had followâd us.
Fred. But you were so hasty, Colonel, to be gone.
Flor. Help, help,âMurder!âhelpâoh, Iâm ruinâd.
Belv. Ha, sure thatâs Florindaâs Voice. [Comes up to them.
âA Man! Villain, let go that Lady.[A noise.
[Will. turns and draws, Fred. interposes.
Flor. Belvile! Heavens! my Brother too is coming, and âtwill be impossible to escape.âBelvile, I conjure you to walk under my Chamber-window, from whence Iâll give you some instructions what to doâThis rude Man has undone us. [Exit.
Will. Belvile!
Enter Pedro, Stephano, and other Servants with Lights.
Ped. Iâm betrayâd; run, Stephano, and see if Florinda be safe. [Exit Steph.
So whoeâer they be, all is not well, Iâll to Florindaâs Chamber. [They fight, and Pedroâs Party beats âem out; going out, meets Stephano.
Steph. You need not, Sir, the poor Ladyâs fast asleep, and thinks no harm: I wouâd not wake her, Sir, for fear of frightning her with your danger.
Ped. Iâm glad sheâs thereâRascals, how came the Garden-Door open?
Steph. That Question comes too late, Sir: some of my Fellow-Servants Masquerading Iâll warrant.
Ped. Masquerading! a leud Custom to debauch our Youthâthereâs something more in this than I imagine. [Exeunt.
Scene IV. Changes to the Street.
Enter Belvile in Rage, Fred. holding him, and Willmore melancholy.
Will. Why, how the Devil shouâd I know Florinda?
Belv. Ah plague of your ignorance! if it had not been Florinda, must you be a Beast?âa Brute, a senseless Swine?
Will. Well, Sir, you see I am enduâd with PatienceâI can bearâtho egad yâre very free with me methinks,âI was in good hopes the Quarrel wouâd have been on my side, for so uncivilly interrupting me.
Belv. Peace, Brute, whilst thouârt safeâoh, Iâm distracted.
Will. Nay, nay, Iâm an unlucky Dog, thatâs certain.
Belv. Ah curse upon the Star that rulâd my Birth! or whatsoever other Influence that makes me still so wretched.
Will. Thou breakâst my Heart with these Complaints; there is no Star in fault, no Influence but Sack, the cursed Sack I drank.
Fred. Why, how the Devil came you so drunk?
Will. Why, how the Devil came you so sober?
Belv. A curse upon his thin Skull, he was always before-hand that way.
Fred. Prithee, dear Colonel, forgive him, heâs sorry for his fault.
Belv. Heâs always so after he has done a mischiefâa plague on all such Brutes.
Will. By this Light I took her for an errant Harlot.
Belv. Damn your debaucht Opinion: tell me, Sot, hadst thou so much sense and light about thee to distinguish her to be a Woman, and couldâst not see something about her Face and Person, to strike an awful Reverence into thy Soul?
Will. Faith no, I considerâd her as mere a Woman as I could wish.
Belv. âSdeath I have no patienceâdraw, or Iâll kill you.
Will. Let that alone till to morrow, and if I set not all right again, use your Pleasure.
Belv. To morrow, damn it.
The spiteful Light will lead me to no happiness.
To morrow is Antonioâs, and perhaps
Guides him to my undoing;âoh that I could meet
This Rival, this powerful Fortunate.
Will. What then?
Belv. Let thy own Reason, or my Rage instruct thee.
Will. I shall be finely informâd then, no doubt; hear me, Colonelâhear meâshew me the Man and Iâll do his Business.
Belv. I know him no more than thou, or if I did, I should not need thy aid.
Will. This you say is Angelicaâs House, I promisâd the kind Baggage to lie with her to Night. [Offers to go in.
Enter Antonio and his Page. Ant. knocks on the Hilt of his Sword.
Ant. You paid the thousand Crowns I directed?
Page. To the Ladyâs old Woman, Sir, I did.
Will. Who the Devil have we here?
Belv. Iâll now plant my self under Florindaâs Window, and if I find no comfort there, Iâll die. [Ex. Belv. and Fred.
Enter Moretta.
Moret. Page!
Page. Hereâs my Lord.
Will. How is this, a Piccaroon going to board my Frigate! hereâs one Chase-Gun for you. [Drawing his Sword, justles Ant. who turns and draws. They fight, Ant. falls.
Moret. Oh, bless us, we are all undone! [Runs in, and shuts the Door.
Page. Help, Murder! [Belvile returns at the noise of fighting.
Belv. Ha, the mad Rogueâs engagâd in some unlucky Adventure again.
Enter two or three Masqueraders.
Masq. Ha, a Man killâd!
Will. How! a Man killâd! then Iâll go home to sleep. [Puts up, and reels out. Ex. Masquers another way.
Belv. Who shouâd it be! pray Heaven the Rogue is safe, for all my Quarrel to him. [As Belvile is groping about, enter an Officer and six Soldiers.
Sold. Whoâs there?
Offic. So, hereâs one dispatchtâsecure the Murderer.
Belv. Do not mistake my Charity for Murder:
I came to his Assistance. [Soldiers seize on Belvile.
Offic. That shall be tried, Sir.âSt. Jago, Swords drawn in the Carnival time! [Goes to Antonio.
Ant. Thy Hand prithee.
Offic. Ha, Don Antonio! look well to the Villain there.âHow isât, Sir?
Ant. Iâm hurt.
Belv. Has my Humanity made me a Criminal?
Offic. Away with him.
Belv. What a curst Chance is this! [Ex. Soldiers with Belv.
Ant. This is the Man that has set upon me twiceâ 62 carry him to my Apartment till you have further Orders from me. [To the Officer. Ex. Ant. led.
ACT IV.
Scene I. A fine Room.
Discovers Belvile, as by Dark alone.
Belv. When shall I be weary of railing on Fortune, who is resolvâd never to turn with Smiles upon me?âTwo such Defeats in one Nightânone but the Devil and that mad Rogue could have contrivâd to have plagued me withâI am here a Prisonerâbut where?âHeaven knowsâand if there be Murder done, I can soon decide the Fate of a Stranger in a Nation without MercyâYet this is nothing to the Torture my Soul bows with, when I think of losing my fair, my dear Florinda.âHarkâmy Door opensâa Lightâa Manâand seems of Qualityâarmâd too.âNow shall I die like a Dog without defence.
Enter Antonio in a Night-Gown, with a Light; his Arm in a Scarf, and a Sword under his Arm: He sets the Candle on the Table.
Ant. Sir, I come to know what Injuries I have done you, that could provoke you to so mean an Action, as to attack me basely, without allowing time for my Defence.
Belv. Sir, for a Man in my Circumstances to plead Innocence, would look like Fearâbut view me well, and you will find no marks of a Coward on me, nor any thing that betrays that Brutality you accuse me of.
Ant. In vain, Sir, you impose upon my Sense,
You are not only he who drew on me last Night,
But yesterday before the same House, that of Angelica.
Yet there is something in your Face and Meinâ
Belv. I own I fought to day in the defence of a Friend of mine, with whom you (if youâre the same) and your Party were first engagâd.
Perhaps you think this Crime enough to kill me,
63But if you do, I cannot fear youâll do it basely.
Ant. No, Sir, Iâll make you fit for a Defence with this. [Gives him the Sword.
Belv. This Gallantry surprizes meânor know I how to use this Present, Sir, against a Man so brave.
Ant. You shall not need;
For know, I come to snatch you from a Danger
That is decreed against you;
Perhaps your Life, or long Imprisonment:
And âtwas with so much Courage you offended,
I cannot see you punisht.
Belv. How shall I pay this Generosity?
Ant. It had been safer to have killâd another,
Than have attempted me:
To shew your Danger, Sir, Iâll let you know my Quality;
And âtis the Vice-Royâs Son whom you have wounded.
Belv. The Vice-Royâs Son!
Death and Confusion! was this Plague reserved
To compleat all the rest?âobligâd by him!
The Man of all the World I would destroy. [Aside.
Ant. You seem disorderâd, Sir.
Belv. Yes, trust me, Sir, I am, and âtis with pain
That Man receives such Bounties,
Who wants the powâr to pay âem back again.
Ant. To gallant Spirits âtis indeed uneasy;
âBut you may quickly over-pay me, Sir.
Belv. Then I am wellâkind Heaven! but set us even,
That I may fight with him, and keep my Honour safe. [Aside.
âOh, Iâm impatient, Sir, to be discounting
The mighty Debt I owe you; command me quicklyâ
Ant. I have a Quarrel with a Rival, Sir,
About the Maid we love.
Belv. Death,âtis Florinda he meansâ
That Thought destroys my Reason, and I shall kill himâ [Aside.
Ant. My Rival, Sir.
Is one has all the Virtues Man can boast of.
Belv. Death! who shouâd this be? [Aside.
Ant. He challengâd me to meet him on the Molo,
As soon as Day appearâd; but last Nightâs quarrel
Has made my Arm unfit to guide a Sword.
Belv. I apprehend you, Sir, youâd have me kill the Man
That lays a claim to the Maid you speak of.
âIâll doâtâIâll fly to do it.
Ant. Sir, do you know her?
Belv. âNo, Sir, but âtis enough she is admired by you.
Ant. Sir, I shall rob you of the Glory onât,
For you must fight under my Name and Dress.
Belv. That Opinion must be strangely obliging that makes
You think I can personate the brave Antonio,
Whom I can but strive to imitate.
Ant. You say too much to my Advantage.
Come, Sir, the Day appears that calls you forth.
Within, Sir, is the Habit. [Exit Antonio.
Belv. Fantastick Fortune, thou deceitful Light,
That cheats the wearied Traveller by Night,
Tho on a Precipice each step you tread,
I am resolvâd to follow where you lead. [Exit.
Scene II. The Molo.
Enter Florinda and Callis in Masques, with Stephano.
Flor. Iâm dying with my fears; Belvileâs not coming,
As I expected, underneath my Window,
Makes me believe that all those Fears are true. [Aside.
âCanst thou not tell with whom my Brother fights?
Steph. No, Madam, they were both in Masquerade, I was by when they challengâd one another, and they had decided the Quarrel then, but were prevented by some Cavaliers; which made âem put it off till nowâbut I am sure âtis about you they fight.
65Flor. Nay then âtis with Belvile, for what other Lover have I that dares fight for me, except Antonio? and he is too much in favour with my BrotherâIf it be he, for whom shall I direct my Prayers to Heaven? [Aside.
Steph. Madam, I must leave you; for if my Master see me, I shall be hangâd for being your Conductor.âI escapâd narrowly for the Excuse I made for you last night iâthâ Garden.
Flor. And Iâll reward thee forâtâprithee no more. [Exit. Steph.
Enter Don Pedro in his Masquing Habit.
Pedro. Antonioâs late to day, the place will fill, and we may be prevented. [Walk about.
Flor. Antonio! sure I heard amiss. [Aside.
Pedro. But who would not excuse a happy Lover.
When soft fair Arms confine the yielding Neck;
And the kind Whisper languishingly breathes,
Must you be gone so soon?
Sure I had dwelt for ever on her Bosom.
âBut stay, heâs here.
Enter Belvile drest in Antonioâs Clothes.
Flor. âTis not Belvile, half my Fears are vanisht.
Pedro. Antonio!â
Belv. This must be he. [Aside.] Youâre early, Sir,âI do not use to be out-done this way.
Pedro. The wretched, Sir, are watchful, and âtis enough
You have the advantage of me in Angelica.
Belv. Angelica!
Or Iâve mistook my Man! Or else Antonio,
Can he forget his Interest in Florinda,
And fight for common Prize? [Aside.
Pedro. Come, Sir, you know our termsâ
Belv. By Heaven, not I. [Aside.] âNo talking, I am ready, Sir.
[Offers to fight. Flor. runs in.
Flor. Oh, hold! whoeâer you be, I do conjure you hold.
If you strike hereâI dieâ [To Belv.
Pedro. Florinda!
Belv. Florinda imploring for my Rival!
Pedro. Away, this Kindness is unseasonable. [Puts her by, they fight; she runs in just as Belv. disarms Pedro.
Flor. Who are you, Sir, that dare deny my Prayers?
Belv. Thy Prayers destroy him; if thou wouldst preserve him.
Do that thouârt unacquainted with, and curse him. [She holds him.
Flor. By all you hold most dear, by her you love,
I do conjure you, touch him not.
Belv. By her I love!
SeeâI obeyâand at your Feet resign
The useless Trophy of my Victory. [Lays his sword at her Feet.
Pedro. Antonio, youâve done enough to prove you love Florinda.
Belv. Love Florinda!
Does Heaven love Adoration, Prayâr, or Penitence?
Love her! here Sir,âyour Sword again. [Snatches up the Sword, and gives it him.
Upon this Truth Iâll fight my Life away.
Pedro. No, youâve redeemâd my Sister, and my Friendship.
Belv. Don Pedro!
[He gives him Flor. and pulls off his Vizard to shew his Face, and puts it on again.
Pedro. Can you resign your Claims to other Women,
And give your Heart intirely to Florinda?
Belv. Intire, as dying Saints Confessions are.
I can delay my happiness no longer.
This minute let me make Florinda mine:
Pedro. This minute let it beâno time so proper,
This Night my Father will arrive from Rome,
And possibly may hinder what we propose.
Flor. Oh Heavens! this Minute! [Enter Masqueraders, and pass over.
Belv. Oh, do not ruin me!
Pedro. The place begins to fill; and that we may not be observâd, do you walk off to St. Peterâs Church, where I will meet you, and conclude your Happiness.
Belv. Iâll meet you thereâif there be no more Saints Churches in Naples. [Aside.
Flor. Oh stay, Sir, and recall your hasty Doom:
Alas I have not yet preparâd my Heart
To entertain so strange a Guest.
Pedro. Away, this silly Modesty is assumâd too late.
Belv. Heaven, Madam! what do you do?
Flor. Do! despise the Man that lays a Tyrantâs Claim
To what he ought to conquer by Submission.
Belv. You do not know meâmove a little this way. [Draws her aside.
Flor. Yes, you may even force me to the Altar,
But not the holy Man that offers there
Shall force me to be thine. [Pedro talks to Callis this while.
Belv. Oh do not lose so blest an opportunity!
Seeââtis your Belvileânot Antonio,
Whom your mistaken Scorn and Anger ruins. [Pulls off his Vizard.
Flor. Belvile!
Where was my Soul it couâd not meet thy Voice,
And take this knowledge in?
[As they are talking, enter Willmore finely drest, and Frederick.
Will. No Intelligence! no News of Belvile yetâwell I am the most unlucky Rascal in Natureâha!âam I deceivâdâor is it heâlook, Fred.ââtis heâmy dear Belvile.
[Runs and embraces him. Belv. Vizard falls out onâs Hand.
Belv. Hell and Confusion seize thee!
Pedro. Ha! Belvile! I beg your Pardon, Sir. [Takes Flor. from him.
Belv. Nay, touch her not, sheâs mine by Conquest, Sir. I won her by my Sword.
Will. Didâst thou soâand egad, Child, weâll keep her by the Sword. [Draws on Pedro, Belv. goes between.
Belv. Stand off.
Thouârt so profanely leud, so curst by Heaven,
All Quarrels thou espousest must be fatal.
Will. Nay, an you be so hot, my Valourâs coy,
And shall be courted when you want it next. [Puts up his Sword.
Belv. You know I ought to claim a Victorâs Right, [To Pedro.
But youâre the Brother to divine Florinda,
To whom Iâm such a Slaveâto purchase her,
I durst not hurt the Man she holds so dear.
Pedro. âTwas by Antonioâs, not by Belvileâs Sword,
This Question should have been decided, Sir:
I must confess much to your Braveryâs due,
Both now, and when I met you last in Arms.
But I am nicely punctual in my word,
As Men of Honour ought, and beg your Pardon.
âFor this Mistake another Time shall clear.
âThis was some Plot between you and Belvile:
But Iâll prevent you. [Aside to Flor. as they are going out.
[Belv. looks after her, and begins to walk up and down in a Rage.
Will. Do not be modest now, and lose the Woman: but if we shall fetch her back, soâ
Belv. Do not speak to me.
Will. Not speak to you!âEgad, Iâll speak to you, and will be answered too.
69Belv. Will you, Sir?
Will. I know Iâve done some mischief, but Iâm so dull a Puppy, that I am the Son of a Whore, if I know how, or whereâprithee inform my Understanding.â
Belv. Leave me I say, and leave me instantly.
Will. I will not leave you in this humour, nor till I know my Crime.
Belv. Death, Iâll tell you, Sirâ
[Draws and runs at Will. he runs out; Belv. after him, Fred. interposes.
Enter Angelica, Moretta, and Sebastian.
Ang. HaâSebastianâIs not that Willmore? haste, haste, and bring him back.
Fred. The Colonelâs madâI never saw him thus before; Iâll after âem, lest he do some mischief, for I am sure Willmore will not draw on him. [Exit.
Ang. I am all Rage! my first desires defeated
For one, for ought he knows, that has no
Other Merit than her Quality,â
Her being Don Pedroâs SisterâHe loves her:
I know âtis soâdull, dull, insensibleâ
He will not see me now tho oft invited;
And broke his Word last nightâfalse perjurâd Man!
âHe that but yesterday fought for my Favours,
And would have made his Life a Sacrifice
Toâve gainâd one Night with me,
Must now be hired and courted to my Arms.
Moret. I told you what wouâd come onât, but Morettaâs an old doating FoolâWhy did you give him five hundred Crowns, but to set himself out for other Lovers? You shouâd have kept him poor, if you had meant to have had any good from him.
Ang. Oh, name not such mean Trifles.âHad I given him all
My Youth has earnâd from Sin,
I had not lost a Thought nor Sigh uponât.
But I have given him my eternal Rest,
My whole Repose, my future Joys, my Heart;
My Virgin Heart. Moretta! oh âtis gone!
Moret. Curse on him, here he comes;
How fine she has made him too!
Enter Willmore and Sebast. Ang. turns and walks away.
Will. How now, turnâd Shadow?
Fly when I pursue, and follow when I fly!
Stay gentle Shadow of my Dove, [Sings.
And tell me eâer I go,
Whether the Substance may not prove
A fleeting Thing like you.
Thereâs a soft kind Look remaining yet. [As she turns she looks on him.
Ang. Well, Sir, you may be gay; all Happiness, all Joys pursue you still, Fortuneâs your Slave, and gives you every hour choice of new Hearts and Beauties, till you are cloyâd with the repeated Bliss, which others vainly languish forâBut know, false Man, that I shall be revengâd. [Turns away in a Rage.
Will. So, âgad, there are of those faint-hearted Lovers, whom such a sharp Lesson next their Hearts would make as impotent as Fourscoreâpox oâ this whiningâmy Busâness is to laugh and loveâa pox onât; I hate your sullen Lover, a Man shall lose as much time to put you in Humour now, as would serve to gain a new Woman.
Ang. I scorn to cool that Fire I cannot raise, Or do the Drudgery of your virtuous Mistress.
Will. A virtuous Mistress! Death, what a thing thou hast found out for me! why what the Devil should I do with a virtuous Woman?âa fort of ill-naturâd Creatures, that take a Pride to torment a Lover. Virtue is but an Infirmity in Women, a Disease that renders even the 71 handsom ungrateful; whilst the ill-favourâd, for want of Solicitations and Address, only fancy themselves so.âI have lain with a Woman of Quality, who has all the while been railing at Whores.
Ang. I will not answer for your Mistressâs Virtue,
Tho she be young enough to know no Guilt:
And I could wish you would persuade my Heart,
âTwas the two hundred thousand Crowns you courted.
Will. Two hundred thousand Crowns! what Storyâs this?âwhat Trick?âwhat Woman?âha.
Ang. How strange you make it! have you forgot the Creature you entertainâd on the Piazza last night?
Will. Ha, my Gipsy worth two hundred thousand Crowns!âoh how I long to be with herâpox, I knew she was of Quality. [Aside.
Ang. False Man, I see my Ruin in thy Face.
How many vows you breathâd upon my Bosom,
Never to be unjustâhave you forgot so soon?
Will. Faith no, I was just coming to repeat âemâbut hereâs a Humour indeedâwould make a Man a SaintâWouâd sheâd be angry enough to leave me, and command me not to wait on her. [Aside.
Enter Hellena, drest in Manâs Clothes.
Hell. This must be Angelica, I know it by her mumping Matron hereâAy, ay,âtis she: my mad Captainâs with her too, for all his swearingâhow this unconstant Humour makes me love him:âpray, good grave Gentlewoman, is not this Angelica?
Moret. My too young Sir, it isâI hope âtis one from Don Antonio. [Goes to Angelica.
Hell. Well, something Iâll do to vex him for this. [Aside.
Ang. I will not speak with him; am I in humour to receive a Lover?
Will. Not speak with him! why Iâll be goneâand wait your idler minutesâCan I shew less Obedience to the thing I love so fondly? [Offers to go.
Ang. A fine Excuse thisâstayâ
Will. And hinder your Advantage: should I repay your Bounties so ungratefully?
Ang. Come hither, Boy,âthat I may let you see
How much above the Advantages you name
I prize one Minuteâs Joy with you.
Will. Oh, you destroy me with this Endearment. [Impatient to be gone.
âDeath, how shall I get away?âMadam,âtwill not be fit I should be seen with youâbesides, it will not be convenientâand Iâve a Friendâthatâs dangerously sick.
Ang. I see youâre impatientâyet you shall stay.
Will. And miss my Assignation with my Gipsy. [Aside, and walks about impatiently.
Hell. Madam, [Moretta brings Hellena, who addresses her self to Angelica.
Youâl hardly pardon my Intrusion,
When you shall know my Business;
And Iâm too young to tell my Tale with Art:
But there must be a wondrous store of Goodness
Where so much Beauty dwells.
Ang. A pretty Advocate, whoever sent thee,
âPrithee proceedâNay, Sir, you shall not go. [To Will. who is stealing off.
Will. Then shall I lose my dear Gipsy for ever.
âPox onât, she stays me out of spite. [Aside.
Hell. I am related to a Lady, Madam,
Young, rich, and nobly born, but has the fate
To be in love with a young English Gentleman.
Strangely she loves him, at first sight she lovâd him,
But did adore him when she heard him speak;
For he, she said, had Charms in every word,
That failâd not to surprize, to wound, and conquerâ
Will. Ha, Egad I hope this concerns me. [Aside.
Ang. âTis my false Man, he meansâwouâd he were gone.
This Praise will raise his Pride and ruin meâWell,
Since you are so impatient to be gone,
I will release you, Sir. [To Will.
Will. Nay, then Iâm sure âtwas me he spoke of, this cannot be the Effects of Kindness in her. [Aside.
âNo, Madam, Iâve considerâd better onât,
And will not give you cause of Jealousy.
Ang. But, Sir, Iâveâbusiness, thatâ
Will. This shall not do, I know âtis but to try me.
Ang. Well, to your Story, Boy,âtho âtwill undo me. [Aside.
Hell. With this Addition to his other Beauties,
He won her unresisting tender Heart,
He vowâd and sighâd, and swore he lovâd her dearly;
And she believâd the cunning Flatterer,
And thought her self the happiest Maid alive:
To day was the appointed time by both,
To consummate their Bliss;
The Virgin, Altar, and the Priest were drest,
And whilst she languisht for the expected Bridegroom,
She heard, he paid his broken Vows to you.
Will. So, this is some dear Rogue thatâs in love with me, and this way lets me know it; or if it be not me, she means some one whose place I may supply. [Aside.
Ang. Now I perceive
The cause of thy Impatience to be gone,
And all the business of this glorious Dress.
Will. Damn the young Prater, I know not what he means.
Hell. Madam,
In your fair Eyes I read too much concern
To tell my farther Business.
Ang. Prithee, sweet Youth, talk on, thou mayâst perhaps
Raise here a Storm that may undo my Passion,
And then Iâll grant thee any thing.
Hell. Madam,âtis to intreat you, (oh unreasonable!)
You wouâd not see this Stranger;
74For if you do, she vows you are undone,
Tho Nature never made a Man so excellent;
And sure heâad been a God, but for Inconstancy.
Will. Ah, Rogue, how finely heâs instructed! [Aside.] ââTis plain some Woman that has seen me en passant.
Ang. Oh, I shall burst with Jealousy! do you know the Man you speak of?â
Hell. Yes, Madam, he usâd to be in Buff and Scarlet.
Ang. Thou, false as Hell, what canst thou say to this? [To Will.
Will. By Heavenâ
Ang. Hold, do not damn thy selfâ
Hell. Nor hope to be believâd. [He walks about, they follow.
Ang. Oh, perjurâd Man!
Isât thus you pay my generous Passion back?
Hell. Why wouâd you, Sir, abuse my Ladyâs Faith?
Ang. And use me so inhumanly?
Hell. A Maid so young, so innocentâ
Will. Ah, young Devil!
Ang. Dost thou not know thy Life is in my Power?
Hell. Or think my Lady cannot be revengâd?
Will. So, so, the Storm comes finely on. [Aside.
Ang. Now thou art silent, Guilt has struck thee dumb.
Oh, hadst thou still been so, Iâd livâd in safety. [She turns away and weeps.
Will. Sweetheart, the Ladyâs Name and Houseâquickly: Iâm impatient to be with her.â [Aside to Hellena, looks towards Angel. to watch her turning; and as she comes towards them, he meets her.
Hell. So now is he for another Woman. [Aside.
Will. The impudentâst young thing in Nature!
I cannot persuade him out of his Error, Madam.
Ang. I know heâs in the right,âyet thouâst a Tongue
That wouâd persuade him to deny his Faith. [In Rage walks away.
75Will. Her Name, her Name, dear Boyâ [Said softly to Hell.
Hell. Have you forgot it, Sir?
Will. Oh, I perceive heâs not to know I am a Stranger to his Lady. [Aside.
âYes, yes, I do knowâbutâI have forgot theâ [Angel. turns.
âBy Heaven, such early confidence I never saw.
Ang. Did I not charge you with this Mistress, Sir?
Which you denied, tho I beheld your Perjury.
This little Generosity of thine has renderâd back my Heart. [Walks away.
Will. So, you have made sweet work here, my little mischief;
Look your Lady be kind and good-naturâd now, or
I shall have but a cursed Bargain onât. [Ang. turns towards them.
âThe Rogueâs bred up to Mischief,
Art thou so great a Fool to credit him?
Ang. Yes, I do; and you in vain impose upon me.
âCome hither, BoyâIs not this he you speak of?
Hell. I thinkâit is; I cannot swear, but I vow he has just such another lying Loverâs look. [Hell. looks in his Face, he gazes on her.
Will. Hah! do not I know that Face?â
By Heaven, my little Gipsy! what a dull Dog was I?
Had I but lookt that way, Iâd known her.
Are all my hopes of a new Woman banisht? [Aside.
âEgad, if I donât fit thee for this, hang me.
âMadam, I have found out the Plot.
Hell. Oh Lord, what does he say? am I discoverâd now?
Will. Do you see this young Spark here?
Hell. Heâll tell her who I am.
Will. Who do you think this is?
Hell. Ay, ay, he does know me.âNay, dear Captain, Iâm undone if you discover me.
Will. Nay, nay, no cogging; she shall know what a precious Mistress I have.
76Hell. Will you be such a Devil?
Will. Nay, nay, Iâll teach you to spoil sport you will not make.âThis small Ambassador comes not from a Person of Quality, as you imagine, and he says; but from a very errant Gipsy, the talkingst, pratingst, cantingst little Animal thou ever sawâst.
Ang. What news you tell me! thatâs the thing I mean.
Hell. Wouâd I were well off the place.âIf ever I go a Captain-hunting again.â [Aside.
Will. Mean that thing? that Gipsy thing? thou mayâst as well be jealous of thy Monkey, or Parrot as her: a German Motion were worth a dozen of her, and a Dream were a better Enjoyment, a Creature of Constitution fitter for Heaven than Man.
Hell. Tho Iâm sure he lyes, yet this vexes me. [Aside.
Ang. You are mistaken, sheâs a Spanish Woman
Made up of no such dull Materials.
Will. Materials! Egad, and she be made of any that will either dispense, or admit of Love, Iâll be bound to continence.
Hell. Unreasonable Man, do you think so? [Aside to him.
Will. You may Return, my little Brazen Head, and tell your Lady, that till she be handsom enough to be belovâd, or I dull enough to be religious, there will be small hopes of me.
Ang. Did you not promise then to marry her?
Will. Not I, by Heaven.
Ang. You cannot undeceive my fears and torments, till you have vowâd you will not marry her.
Hell. If he swears that, heâll be revengâd on me indeed for all my Rogueries.
Ang. I know what Arguments youâll bring against me, Fortune and Honour.
Will. Honour! I tell you, I hate it in your Sex; and those that fancy themselves possest of that Foppery, are 77 the most impertinently troublesom of all Woman-kind, and will transgress nine Commandments to keep one: and to satisfy your Jealousy I swearâ
Hell. Oh, no swearing, dear Captainâ [Aside to him.
Will. If it were possible I should ever be inclinâd to marry, it should be some kind young Sinner, one that has Generosity enough to give a favour handsomely to one that can ask it discreetly, one that has Wit enough to manage an Intrigue of Loveâoh, how civil such a Wench is, to a Man than does her the Honour to marry her.
Ang. By Heaven, thereâs no Faith in any thing he says.
Enter Sebastian.
Sebast. Madam, Don Antonioâ
Ang. Come hither.
Hell. Ha, Antonio! he may be coming hither, and heâll certainly discover me, Iâll therefore retire without a Ceremony. [Exit Hellena.
Ang. Iâll see him, get my Coach ready.
Sebast. It waits you, Madam.
Will. This is lucky: what, Madam, now I may be gone and leave you to the enjoyment of my Rival?
Ang. Dull Man, that canst not see how ill, how poor
That false dissimulation looksâBe gone,
And never let me see thy cozening Face again,
Lest I relapse and kill thee.
Will. Yes, you can spare me now,âfarewell till you are in a better HumourâIâm glad of this releaseâ
Now for my Gipsy:
For tho to worse we change, yet still we find
New Joys, New Charms, in a new Miss thatâs kind. [Ex. Will.
Ang. Heâs gone, and in this Ague of My Soul
The shivering Fit returns;
Oh with what willing haste he took his leave,
As if the longâd for Minute were arrivâd,
Of some blest Assignation.
In vain I have consulted all my Charms,
In vain this Beauty prizâd, in vain believâd
My eyes couâd kindle any lasting Fires.
I had forgot my Name, my Infamy,
And the Reproach that Honour lays on those
That dare pretend a sober passion here.
Nice Reputation, tho it leave behind
More Virtues than inhabit where that dwells,
Yet that once gone, those virtues shine no more.
âThen since I am not fit to belovâd,
I am resolvâd to think on a Revenge
On him that soothâd me thus to my undoing. [Exeunt.
Scene III. A Street.
Enter Florinda and Valeria in Habits different from what they have been seen in.
Flor. Weâre happily escapâd, yet I tremble still.
Val. A Lover and fear! why, I am but half a one, and yet I have Courage for any Attempt. Would Hellena were here. I wouâd fain have had her as deep in this Mischief as we, sheâll fare but ill else I doubt.
Flor. She pretended a Visit to the Augustine Nuns, but I believe some other design carried her out, pray Heavens we light on her.
âPrithee what didst do with Callis?
Val. When I saw no Reason wouâd do good on her, I followâd her into the Wardrobe, and as she was looking for something in a great Chest, I tumbled her in by the Heels, snatcht the Key of the Apartment where you were confinâd, lockt her in, and left her bauling for help.
Flor. âTis well you resolve to follow my Fortunes, for thou darest never appear at home again after such an Action.
Val. Thatâs according as the young Stranger and I shall agreeâBut to our businessâI deliverâd your Letter, your 79 Note to Belvile, when I got out under pretence of going to Mass, I found him at his Lodging, and believe me it came seasonably; for never was Man in so desperate a Condition. I told him of your Resolution of making your escape to day, if your Brother would be absent long enough to permit you; if not, die rather than be Antonioâs.
Flor. Thou shouâdst have told him I was confinâd to my Chamber upon my Brotherâs suspicion, that the Business on the Molo was a Plot laid between him and I.
Val. I said all this, and told him your Brother was now gone to his Devotion, and he resolves to visit every Church till he find him; and not only undeceive him in that, but caress him so as shall delay his return home.
Flor. Oh Heavens! heâs here, and Belvile with him too. [They put on their Vizards.
Enter Don Pedro, Belvile, Willmore; Belvile and Don Pedro seeming in serious Discourse.
Val. Walk boldly by them, Iâll come at a distance, lest he suspect us. [She walks by them, and looks back on them.
Will. Ha! A Woman! and of an excellent Mien!
Ped. She throws a kind look back on you.
Will. Death, tis a likely Wench, and that kind look shall not be cast awayâIâll follow her.
Belv. Prithee do not.
Will. Do not! By Heavens to the Antipodes, with such an Invitation. [She goes out, and Will. follows her.
Belv. âTis a mad Fellow for a Wench.
Enter Fred.
Fred. Oh Colonel, such News.
Belv. Prithee what?
Fred. News that will make you laugh in spite of Fortune.
Belv. What, Blunt has had some damnâd Trick put upon him, cheated, bangâd, or clapt?
Fred. Cheated, Sir, rarely cheated of all but his Shirt and Drawers; the unconscionable Whore too turnâd him 80 out before Consummation, so that traversing the Streets at Midnight, the Watch found him in this Fresco, and conducted him home: By Heaven âtis such a slight, and yet I durst as well have been hangâd as laugh at him, or pity him; he beats all that do but ask him a Question, and is in such an Humourâ
Ped. Who isât has met with this ill usage, Sir?
Belv. A Friend of ours, whom you must see for Mirthâs sake. Iâll imploy him to give Florinda time for an escape. [Aside.
Ped. Who is he?
Belv. A young Countryman of ours, one that has been educated at so plentiful a rate, he yet neâer knew the want of Money, and âtwill be a great Jest to see how simply heâll look without it. For my part Iâll lend him none, and the Rogue knows not how to put on a borrowing Face, and ask first. Iâll let him see how good âtis to play our parts whilst I play hisâPrithee, Fred. do go home and keep him in that posture till we come. [Exeunt.
Enter Florinda from the farther end of the Scene, looking behind her.
Flor. I am followâd stillâhahâmy Brother too advancing this way, good Heavens defend me from being seen by him. [She goes off.
Enter Willmore, and after him Valeria, at a little distance.
Will. Ah! There she sails, she looks back as she were willing to be boarded, Iâll warrant her Prize. [He goes out, Valeria following.
Enter Hellena, just as he goes out, with a Page.
Hell. Hah, is not that my Captain that has a Woman in chase?ââtis not Angelica. Boy, follow those People at a distance, and bring me an Account where they go in.âIâll find his Haunts, and plague him every where.âhaâmy Brother! [Exit Page.
[Bel. Wil. Ped. cross the Stage: Hell. runs off.
Scene changes to another Street. Enter Florinda.
Flor. What shall I do, my Brother now pursues me.
Will no kind Power protect me from his Tyranny?
âHah, hereâs a Door open, Iâll venture in, since nothing can be worse than to fall into his Hands, my Life and Honour are at stake, and my Necessity has no choice. [She goes in.
Enter Valeria, and Hellenaâs Page peeping after Florinda.
Pag. Here she went in, I shall remember this House. [Exit Boy.
Val. This is Belvileâs Lodgings; sheâs gone in as readily as if she knew itâhahâhereâs that mad Fellow again, I dare not venture inâIâll watch my Opportunity. [Goes aside.
Enter Willmore, gazing about him.
Will. I have lost her hereaboutsâPox onât she must not scape me so. [Goes out.
Scene changes to Bluntâs Chamber, discovers him sitting on a Couch in his Shirt and Drawers, reading.
Blunt. So, now my Mindâs a little at Peace, since I have resolvâd RevengeâA Pox on this Taylor tho, for not bringing home the Clothes I bespoke; and a Pox of all poor Cavaliers, a Man can never keep a spare Suit for âem; and I shall have these Rogues come in and find me naked; and then Iâm undone; but Iâm resolvâd to arm my selfâthe Rascals shall not insult over me too much. [Puts on an old rusty Sword and Buff-Belt.
âNow, how like a Morrice-Dancer I am equiptâa fine Lady-like Whore to cheat me thus, without affording me a Kindness for my Money, a Pox light on her, I shall never be reconciled to the Sex more, she has made me as faithless as a Physician, as uncharitable as a Churchman, and as ill-naturâd as a Poet. O how Iâll use all Women-kind hereafter! what wouâd I give to have one of âem 82 within my reach now! any Mortal thing in Petticoats, kind Fortune, send me; and Iâll forgive thy last Nightâs MaliceâHereâs a cursed Book too, (a Warning to all young Travellers) that can instruct me how to prevent such Mischiefs now âtis too late. Well âtis a rare convenient thing to read a little now and then, as well as hawk and hunt. [Sits down again and reads.
Enter to him Florinda.
Flor. This House is haunted sure,âtis well furnisht and no living thing inhabits itâhahâa Man! Heavens how heâs attirâd! sure âtis some Rope-dancer, or Fencing-Master; I tremble now for fear, and yet I must venture now to speak to himâSir, if I may not interrupt your Meditationsâ [He starts up and gazes.
Blunt. Hahâwhatâs here? Are my wishes granted? and is not that a she Creature? Adsheartlikins âtis! what wretched thing art thouâhah!
Flor. Charitable Sir, youâve told your self already what I am; a very wretched Maid, forcâd by a strange unlucky Accident, to seek a safety here, and must be ruinâd, if you do not grant it.
Blunt. Ruinâd! Is there any Ruin so inevitable as that which now threatens thee? Dost thou know, miserable Woman, into what Den of Mischiefs thou art fallân? what a Bliss of Confusion?âhahâdost not see something in my looks that frights thy guilty Soul, and makes thee wish to change that Shape of Woman for any humble Animal, or Devil? for those were safer for thee, and less mischievous.
Flor. Alas, what mean you, Sir? I must confess your Looks have something in âem makes me fear; but I beseech you, as you seem a Gentleman, pity a harmless Virgin, that takes your House for Sanctuary.
Blunt. Talk on, talk on, and weep too, till my faith return. Do, flatter me out of my Senses againâa harmless 83 Virgin with a Pox, as much one as tâother, adsheartlikins. Why, what the Devil can I not be safe in my House for you? not in my Chamber? nay, even being naked too cannot secure me. This is an Impudence greater than has invaded me yet.âCome, no Resistance. [Pulls her rudely.
Flor. Dare you be so cruel?
Blunt. Cruel, adsheartlikins as a Gally-slave, or a Spanish Whore: Cruel, yes, I will kiss and beat thee all over; kiss, and see thee all over; thou shalt lie with me too, not that I care for the Injoyment, but to let you see I have taâen deliberated Malice to thee, and will be revenged on one Whore for the Sins of another; I will smile and deceive thee, flatter thee, and beat thee, kiss and swear, and lye to thee, imbrace thee and rob thee, as she did me, fawn on thee, and strip thee stark naked, then hang thee out at my Window by the Heels, with a Paper of scurvey Verses fastenâd to thy Breast, in praise of damnable WomenâCome, come along.
Flor. Alas, Sir, must I be sacrificâd for the Crimes of the most infamous of my Sex? I never understood the Sins you name.
Blunt. Do, persuade the Fool you love him, or that one of you can be just or honest; tell me I was not an easy Coxcomb, or any strange impossible Tale: it will be believâd sooner than thy false Showers or Protestations. A Generation of damnâd Hypocrites, to flatter my very Clothes from my back! dissembling Witches! are these the Returns you make an honest Gentleman that trusts, believes, and loves you?âBut if I be not even with youâCome along, or I shallâ [Pulls her again.
Enter Frederick.
Fred. Hah, whatâs here to do?
Blunt. Adsheartlikins, Fred. I am glad thou art come, to be a Witness of my dire Revenge.
Fred. Whatâs this, a Person of Quality too, who is upon 84 the Ramble to supply the Defects of some grave impotent Husband?
Blunt. No, this has another Pretence, some very unfortunate Accident brought her hither, to save a Life pursued by I know not who, or why, and forcâd to take Sanctuary here at Fools Haven. Adsheartlikins to me of all Mankind for Protection? Is the Ass to be cajolâd again, think ye? No, young one, no Prayers or Tears shall mitigate my Rage; therefore prepare for both my Pleasure of Enjoyment and Revenge, for I am resolved to make up my Loss here on thy Body, Iâll take it out in kindness and in beating.
Fred. Now, Mistress of mine, what do you think of this?
Flor. I think he will notâdares not be so barbarous.
Fred. Have a care, Blunt, she fetchâd a deep Sigh, she is inamourâd with thy Shirt and Drawers, sheâll strip thee even of that. There are of her Calling such unconscionable Baggages, and such dexterous Thieves, theyâll flea a Man, and he shall neâer miss his Skin, till he feels the Cold. There was a Country-man of ours robbâd of a Row of Teeth whilst he was sleeping, which the Jilt made him buy again when he wakâdâYou see, Lady, how little Reason we have to trust you.
Blunt. âDsheartlikins, why, this is most abominable.
Flor. Some such Devils there may be, but by all thatâs holy I am none such, I entered here to save a Life in danger.
Blunt. For no goodness Iâll warrant her.
Fred. Faith, Damsel, you had eâen confess the plain Truth, for we are Fellows not to be caught twice in the same Trap: Look on that Wreck, a tight Vessel when he set out of Haven, well trimâd and laden, and see how a Female Piccaroon of this Island of Rogues has shatterâd him, and canst thou hope for any Mercy?
Blunt. No, no, Gentlewoman, come along, adsheartlikins we must be better acquaintedâweâll both lie with her, and then let me alone to bang her.
Fred. I am ready to serve you in matters of Revenge, that has a double Pleasure inât.
Blunt. Well said. You hear, little one, how you are condemnâd by publick Vote to the Bed within, thereâs no resisting your Destiny, Sweetheart. [Pulls her.
Flor. Stay, Sir, I have seen you with Belvile, an English Cavalier, for his sake use me kindly; you know how, Sir.
Blunt. Belvile! why, yes, Sweeting, we do know Belvile, and wish he were with us now, heâs a Cormorant at Whore and Bacon, heâd have a Limb or two of thee, my Virgin Pullet: but âtis no matter, weâll leave him the Bones to pick.
Flor. Sir, if you have any Esteem for that Belvile, I conjure you to treat me with more Gentleness; heâll thank you for the Justice.
Fred. Hark ye, Blunt, I doubt we are mistaken in this matter.
Flor. Sir, If you find me not worth Belvileâs Care, use me as you please; and that you may think I merit better treatment than you threatenâpray take this Presentâ [Gives him a Ring: He looks on it.
Blunt. HumâA Diamond! why, âtis a wonderful Virtue now that lies in this Ring, a mollifying Virtue; adsheartlikins thereâs more persuasive Rhetorick inât, than all her Sex can utter.
Fred. I begin to suspect something; and âtwouâd anger us vilely to be trussâd up for a Rape upon a Maid of Quality, when we only believe we ruffle a Harlot.
Blunt. Thou art a credulous Fellow, but adsheartlikins I have no Faith yet; why, my Saint prattled as parlously as this does, she gave me a Bracelet too, a Devil on her: but I sent my Man to sell it to day for Necessaries, and it provâd as counterfeit as her Vows of Love.
Fred. However let it reprieve her till we see Belvile.
Blunt. Thatâs hard, yet I will grant it.
Enter a Servant.
Serv. Oh, Sir, the Colonel is just come with his new 86 Friend and a Spaniard of Quality, and talks of having you to Dinner with âem.
Blunt. âDsheartlikins, Iâm undonâI would not see âem for the World: Harkye, Fred, lock up the Wench in your Chamber.
Fred. Fear nothing, Madam, whateâer he threatens, youâre safe whilst in my Hands. [Ex. Fred. and Flor.
Blunt. And, Sirrahâupon your Life, sayâI am not at homeâor that I am asleepâorâor any thingâawayâIâll, prevent them coming this way. [Locks the Door and Exeunt.
ACT V.
Scene I. Bluntâs Chamber.
After a great knocking as at his Chamber-door, enter Blunt softly, crossing the Stage in his Shirt and Drawers, as before.
Ned, Ned Blunt, Ned Blunt. [Call within.
Blunt. The Rogues are up in Arms, âdsheartlikins, this villainous Frederick has betrayâd me, they have heard of my blessed Fortune.
Ned Blunt, Ned, Nedâ [and knocking within.
Belv. Why, heâs dead, Sir, without dispute dead, he has not been seen to day; letâs break open the DoorâhereâBoyâ
Blunt. Ha, break open the Door! âdsheartlikins that mad Fellow will be as good as his word.
Belv. Boy, bring something to force the Door. [A great noise within at the Door again.
Blunt. So, now must I speak in my own Defence, Iâll try what Rhetorick will doâholdâhold, what do you mean, Gentlemen, what do you mean?
Belv. Oh Rogue, art alive? prithee open the Door, and convince us.
Blunt. Yes, I am alive, Gentlemenâbut at present a little busy.
Belv. How! Blunt grown a man of Business! come, come, open, and letâs see this Miracle. [within.
Blunt. No, no, no, no, Gentlemen, âtis no great BusinessâbutâI amâatâmy Devotion,ââdsheartlikins, will you not allow a man time to pray?
Belv. Turnâd religious! a greater Wonder than the first, therefore open quickly, or we shall unhinge, we shall. [within.
Blunt. This wonât doâWhy, hark ye, Colonel; to tell you the plain Truth, I am about a necessary Affair of Life.âI have a Wench with meâyou apprehend me? the Devilâs inât if they be so uncivil as to disturb me now.
Will. How, a Wench! Nay, then we must enter and partake; no Resistance,âunless it be your Lady of Quality, and then weâll keep our distance.
Blunt. So, the Business is out.
Will. Come, come, lend more hands to the Door,ânow heave altogetherâso, well done, my Boysâ [Breaks open the Door.
Enter Belvile, Willmore, Fred. Pedro and Belvileâs Page: Blunt looks simply, they all laugh at him, he lays his hand on his Sword, and conies up to Willmore.
Blunt. Hark ye, Sir, laugh out your laugh quickly, dâye hear, and be gone, I shall spoil your sport else; âdsheartlikins, Sir, I shallâthe Jest has been carried on too long,âa Plague upon my Taylorâ [Aside.
Will. âSdeath, how the Whore has drest him! Faith, Sir, Iâm sorry.
Blunt. Are you so, Sir? keepât to your self then, Sir, I advise you, dâye hear? for I can as little endure your Pity as his Mirth. [Lays his Hand onâs Sword.
Belv. Indeed, Willmore, thou wert a little too rough with Ned Bluntâs Mistress; call a Person of Quality Whore, and one so young, so handsome, and so eloquent!âha, ha, ha.
Blunt. Hark ye, Sir, you know me, and know I can be angry; have a careâfor âdsheartlikins I can fight tooâI can, Sir,âdo you mark meâno more.
Belv. Why so peevish, good Ned? some Disappointments, Iâll warrantâWhat! did the jealous Count her Husband return just in the nick?
Blunt. Or the Devil, Sir,âdâye laugh? [They laugh.] Look ye, settle me a good sober Countenance, and that quickly too, or you shall know Ned Blunt is notâ
Belv. Not every Body, we know that.
Blunt. Not an Ass, to be laught at, Sir.
Will. Unconscionable Sinner, to bring a Lover so near his Happiness, a vigorous passionate Lover, and then not only cheat him of his Moveables, but his Desires too.
Belv. Ah, Sir, a Mistress is a Trifle with Blunt, heâll have a dozen the next time he looks abroad; his Eyes have Charms not to be resisted: There needs no more than to expose that taking Person to the view of the Fair, and he leads âem all in Triumph.
Ped. Sir, tho Iâm a stranger to you, Iâm ashamed at the rudeness of my Nation; and could you learn who did it, would assist you to make an Example of âem.
Blunt. Why, ay, thereâs one speaks sense now, and handsomly; and let me tell you Gentlemen, I should not have shewâd my self like a Jack-Pudding, thus to have made you Mirth, but that I have revenge within my power; for know, I have got into my possession a Female, who had better have fallen under any Curse, than the Ruin I design her: âdsheartlikins, she assaulted me here in my own Lodgings, and had doubtless committed a Rape upon me, had not this Sword defended me.
Fred. I knew not that, but oâ my Conscience thou hadst ravisht her, had she not redeemâd her self with a Ringâletâs seeât, Blunt. [Blunt shews the Ring.
Belv. Hah!âthe Ring I gave Florinda when we exchangâd our Vows!âhark ye, Bluntâ [Goes to whisper to him.
Will. No whispering, good Colonel, thereâs a Woman in the case, no whispering.
Belv. Hark ye, Fool, be advisâd, and conceal both the Ring and the Story, for your Reputationâs sake; donât let People know what despisâd Cullies we English are: to be cheated and abusâd by one Whore, and another rather bribe thee than be kind to thee, is an Infamy to our Nation.
Will. Come, come, whereâs the Wench? weâll see her, let her be what she will, weâll see her.
Ped. Ay, ay, let us see her, I can soon discover whether she be of Quality, or for your Diversion.
Blunt. Sheâs in Fredâs Custody.
Will. Come, come, the Key. [To Fred. who gives him the Key, they are going.
Belv. Death! what shall I do?âstay, Gentlemenâyet if I hinder âem, I shall discover allâhold, letâs go one at onceâgive me the Key.
Will. Nay, hold there, Colonel, Iâll go first.
Fred. Nay, no Dispute, Ned and I have the property of her.
Will. Damn Propertyâthen weâll draw Cuts. [Belv. goes to whisper Will.] Nay, no Corruption, good Colonel: come, the longest Sword carries her.â [They all draw, forgetting Don Pedro, being a Spaniard, had the longest.
Blunt. I yield up my Interest to you Gentlemen, and that will be Revenge sufficient.
Will. The Wench is yoursâ (To Ped.) Pox of his Toledo, I had forgot that.
Fred. Come, Sir, Iâll conduct you to the Lady. [Ex. Fred. and Ped.
Belv. To hinder him will certainly discoverâ [Aside.] Dost know, dull Beast, what Mischief thou hast done? [Will. walking up and down out of Humour.
Will. Ay, ay, to trust our Fortune to Lots, a Devil onât, âtwas madness, thatâs the Truth onât.
Belv. Oh intolerable Sot!
Enter Florinda, running masquâd, Pedro after her, Will. gazing round her.
Flor. Good Heaven, defend me from discovery. [Aside.
Pedro. âTis but in vain to fly me, you are fallen to my Lot.
Belv. Sure she is undiscoverâd yet, but now I fear there is no way to bring her off.
Will. Why, what a Pox is not this my Woman, the same I followâd but now?
[Ped. talking to Florinda, who walks up and down.
Ped. As if I did not know ye, and your Business here.
Flor. Good Heaven! I fear he does indeedâ [Aside.
Ped. Come, pray be kind, I know you meant to be so when you enterâd here, for these are proper Gentlemen.
Will. But, Sirâperhaps the Lady will not be imposâd upon, sheâll chuse her Man.
Ped. I am better bred, than not to leave her Choice free.
Enter Valeria, and is surprized at the Sight of Don Pedro.
Val. Don Pedro here! thereâs no avoiding him. [Aside.
Flor. Valeria! then Iâm undoneâ [Aside.
Val. Oh! have I found you, Sirâ [To Pedro, running to him.] âThe strangest Accidentâif I had breathâto tell it.
Ped. Speakâis Florinda safe? Hellena well?
Val. Ay, ay, SirâFlorindaâis safeâfrom any fears of you.
Ped. Why, whereâs Florinda?âspeak.
Val. Ay, where indeed, Sir? I wish I could inform you,âBut to hold you no longer in doubtâ
Flor. Oh, what will she say! [Aside.
Val. Sheâs fled away in the Habit of one of her Pages, Sirâbut Callis thinks you may retrieve her yet, if you make haste away; sheâll tell you, Sir, the restâif you can find her out. [Aside.
Ped. Dishonourable Girl, she has undone my AimâSirâyou see my necessity of leaving you, and I hope youâll pardon it: my Sister, I know, will make her flight to you; and if she do, I shall expect she should be renderâd back.
Belv. I shall consult my Love and Honour, Sir. [Ex. Ped.
Flor. My dear Preserver, let me imbrace thee. [To Val.
Will. What the Devilâs all this?
Blunt. Mystery by this Light.
Val. Come, come, make haste and get your selves married quickly, for your Brother will return again.
Belv. I am so surprizâd with Fears and Joys, so amazâd to find you here in safety, I can scarce persuade my Heart into a Faith of what I seeâ
Will. Harkye, Colonel, is this that Mistress who has cost you so many Sighs, and me so many Quarrels with you?
Belv. It isâPray give him the Honour of your Hand. [To Flor.
Will. Thus it must be receivâd then. [Kneels and kisses her Hand.] And with it give your Pardon too.
Flor. The Friend to Belvile may command me anything.
Will. Death, wouâd I might, âtis a surprizing Beauty. [Aside.
Belv. Boy, run and fetch a Father instantly. [Ex. Boy.
Fred. So, now do I stand like a Dog, and have not a Syllable to plead my own Cause with: by this Hand, Madam, I was never thorowly confounded before, nor shall I ever more dare look up with Confidence, till you are pleased to pardon me.
Flor. Sir, Iâll be reconcilâd to you on one Condition, that youâll follow the Example of your Friend, in marrying a Maid that does not hate you, and whose Fortune (I believe) will not be unwelcome to you.
Fred. Madam, had I no Inclinations that way, I shouâd obey your kind Commands.
Belv. Who, Fred. marry; he has so few Inclinations for Womankind, that had he been possest of Paradise, he might have continuâd there to this Day, if no Crime but Love couâd have disinherited him.
Fred. Oh, I do not use to boast of my Intrigues.
Belv. Boast! why thou doâst nothing but boast; and I dare swear, werât thou as innocent from the Sin of the Grape, as thou art from the Apple, thou mightâst yet claim that right in Eden which our first Parents lost by too much loving.
Fred. I wish this Lady would think me so modest a Man.
Val. She shouâd be sorry then, and not like you half so well, and I shouâd be loth to break my Word with you; which was, That if your Friend and mine are agreed, it shouâd be a Match between you and I. [She gives him her Hand.
Fred. Bear witness, Colonel, âtis a Bargain. [Kisses her Hand.
Blunt. I have a Pardon to beg too; but adsheartlikins I am so out of Countenance, that I am a Dog if I can say any thing to purpose. [To Florinda.
Flor. Sir, I heartily forgive you all.
Blunt. Thatâs nobly said, sweet LadyâBelvile, prithee present her her Ring again, for I find I have not Courage to approach her my self. [Gives him the Ring, he gives it to Florinda.
Enter Boy.
Boy. Sir, I have brought the Father that you sent for.
Belv. âTis well, and now my dear Florinda, letâs fly to compleat that mighty Joy we have so long wishâd and sighâd for.âCome, Fred. youâll follow?
Fred. Your Example, Sir,âtwas ever my Ambition in War, and must be so in Love.
Will. And must not I see this juggling Knot tyâd?
Belv. No, thou shalt do us better Service, and be our 93 Guard, lest Don Pedroâs sudden Return interrupt the Ceremony.
Will. Content; Iâll secure this Pass. [Ex. Bel. Flor. Fred. and Val.
Enter Boy.
Boy. Sir, thereâs a Lady without wouâd speak to you. [To Will.
Will. Conduct her in, I dare not quit my Post.
Boy. And, Sir, your Taylor waits you in your Chamber.
Blunt. Some comfort yet, I shall not dance naked at the Wedding. [Ex. Blunt and Boy.
Enter again the Boy, conducting in Angelica in a masquing Habit and a Vizard, Will. runs to her.
Will. This can be none but my pretty GipsyâOh, I see you can follow as well as flyâCome, confess thy self the most malicious Devil in Nature, you think you have done my Busâness with Angelicaâ
Ang. Stand off, base Villainâ [She draws a Pistol and holds to his Breast.
Will. Hah, âtis not she: who art thou? and whatâs thy Business?
Ang. One thou hast injurâd, and who comes to kill thee forât.
Will. What the Devil canst thou mean?
Ang. By all my Hopes to kill theeâ [Holds still the Pistol to his Breast, he going back, she following still.
Will. Prithee on what Acquaintance? for I know thee not.
Ang. Behold this Face!âso lost to thy Remembrance!
And then call all thy Sins about thy Soul,
And let them die with thee. [Pulls off her Vizard.
Will. Angelica!
Ang. Yes, Traitor.
Does not thy guilty Blood run shivering thro thy Veins?
Hast thou no Horrour at this Sight, that tells thee,
Thou hast not long to boast thy shameful Conquest?
Will. Faith, no Child, my Blood keeps its old Ebbs and Flows still, and that usual Heat too, that couâd oblige thee with a Kindness, had I but opportunity.
Ang. Devil! dost wanton with my Painâhave at thy Heart.
Will. Hold, dear Virago! hold thy Hand a little,
I am not now at leisure to be killâdâhold and hear meâDeath, I think sheâs in earnest. [Aside.
Ang. Oh if I take not heed,
My coward Heart will leave me to his Mercy. [Aside, turning from him.
âWhat have you, Sir, to say?âbut should I hear thee,
Thoudâst talk away all that is brave about me: [Follows him with the Pistol to his Breast.
And I have vowâd thy Death, by all thatâs sacred.
Will. Why, then thereâs an end of a proper handsom Fellow, that might have livâd to have done good Service yet:âThatâs all I can say toât.
Ang. YetâI wouâd give theeâtime for Penitence. [Pausingly.
Will. Faith, Child, I thank God, I have ever took care to lead a good, sober, hopeful Life, and am of a Religion that teaches me to believe, I shall depart in Peace.
Ang. So will the Devil: tell me
How many poor believing Fools thou hast undone;
How many Hearts thou hast betrayâd to ruin!
â Yet these are little Mischiefs to the Ills
Thouâst taught mine to commit: thouâst taught it Love.
Will. Egad, âtwas shreudly hurt the while.
Ang. âLove, that has robbâd it of its Unconcern,
Of all that Pride that taught me how to value it,
And in its room a mean submissive Passion was conveyâd,
That made me humbly bow, which I neâer did
To any thing but Heaven.
âThou, perjurâd Man, didst this, and with thy Oaths,
Which on thy Knees thou didst devoutly make,
Softenâd my yielding HeartâAnd then, I was a Slaveâ
Yet still had been content toâve worn my Chains,
Worn âem with Vanity and Joy for ever,
Hadst thou not broke those Vows that put them on.
ââTwas then I was undone. [All this while follows him with a Pistol to his Breast.
Will. Broke my Vows! why, where hast thou lived?
Amongst the Gods! For I never heard of mortal Man,
That has not broke a thousand Vows.
Ang. Oh, Impudence!
Will. Angelica! that Beauty has been too long tempting,
Not to have made a thousand Lovers languish,
Who in the amorous Favour, no doubt have sworn
Like me; did they all die in that Faith? still adoring?
I do not think they did.
Ang. No, faithless Man: had I repaid their Vows, as I did thine, I wouâd have killâd the ungrateful that had abandonâd me.
Will. This old General has quite spoilâd thee, nothing makes a Woman so vain, as being flatterâd; your old Lover ever supplies the Defects of Age, with intolerable Dotage, vast Charge, and that which you call Constancy; and attributing all this to your own Merits, you domineer, and throw your Favours inâs Teeth, upbraiding him still with the Defects of Age, and cuckold him as often as he deceives your Expectations. But the gay, young, brisk Lover, that brings his equal Fires, and can give you Dart for Dart, heâll be as nice as you sometimes.
Ang. All this thouâst made me know, for which I hate thee.
Had I remainâd in innocent Security,
I shouâd have thought all Men were born my Slaves;
And worn my Powâr like Lightning in my Eyes,
To have destroyâd at Pleasure when offended.
âBut when Love held the Mirror, the undeceiving Glass
Reflected all the Weakness of my Soul, and made me know,
My richest Treasure being lost, my Honour,
All the remaining Spoil couâd not be worth
The Conquerorâs Care or Value.
âOh how I fell like a long worshipâd Idol,
Discovering all the Cheat!
Wouâd not the Incense and rich Sacrifice,
Which blind Devotion offerâd at my Altars,
Have fallân to thee?
Why woudâst thou then destroy my fancyâd Power?
Will. By Heaven thou art brave, and I admire thee strangely.
I wish I were that dull, that constant thing,
Which thou woudâst have, and Nature never meant me:
I must, like chearful Birds, sing in all Groves,
And perch on every Bough,
Billing the next kind She that flies to meet me;
Yet after all couâd build my Nest with thee,
Thither repairing when Iâd lovâd my round,
And still reserve a tributary Flame.
âTo gain your Credit, Iâll pay you back your Charity,
And be obligâd for nothing but for Love. [Offers her a Purse of Gold.
Ang. Oh that thou wert in earnest!
So mean a Thought of me,
Wouâd turn my Rage to Scorn, and I shouâd pity thee,
And give thee leave to live;
Which for the publick Safety of our Sex,
And my own private Injuries, I dare not do.
Prepareâ [Follows still, as before.
âI will no more be tempted with Replies.
Will. Sureâ
Ang. Another Word will damn thee! Iâve heard thee talk too long. [She follows him with a Pistol ready to shoot: he retires still amazâd.
Enter Don Antonio, his Arm in a Scarf, and lays hold on the Pistol.
Ant. Hah! Angelica!
Ang. Antonio! What Devil brought thee hither?
Ant. Love and Curiosity, seeing your Coach at Door. Let me disarm you of this unbecoming Instrument of Death.â [Takes away the Pistol.] Amongst the Number of your Slaves, was there not one worthy the Honour to have fought your Quarrel?
âWho are you, Sir, that are so very wretched
To merit Death from her?
Will. One, Sir, that couâd have made a better End of an amorous Quarrel without you, than with you.
Ant. Sure âtis some Rivalâhahâthe very Man took down her Picture yesterdayâthe very same that set on me last nightâBlest opportunityâ [Offers to shoot him.
Ang. Hold, youâre mistaken, Sir.
Ant. By Heaven the very same!
âSir, what pretensions have you to this Lady?
Will. Sir, I donât use to be examinâd, and am ill at all Disputes but thisâ [Draws, Anton. offers to shoot.
Ang. Oh, hold! you see heâs armâd with certain Death: [To Will.
âAnd you, Antonio, I command you hold,
By all the Passion youâve so lately vowâd me.
Enter Don Pedro, sees Antonio, and stays.
Ped. Hah, Antonio! and Angelica! [Aside.
Ant. When I refuse Obedience to your Will,
May you destroy me with your mortal Hate.
By all thatâs Holy I adore you so,
That even my Rival, who has Charms enough
To make him fall a Victim to my Jealousy,
Shall live, nay, and have leave to love on still.
Ped. Whatâs this I hear? [Aside.
Ang. Ah thus, âtwas thus he talkâd, and I believâd. [Pointing to Will.
âAntonio, yesterday,
Iâd not have sold my Interest in his Heart,
For all the Sword has won and lost in Battle.
âBut now to show my utmost of Contempt,
I give thee Lifeâwhich if thou wouldâst preserve,
Live where my Eyes may never see thee more,
Live to undo some one, whose Soul may prove
So bravely constant to revenge my Love. [Goes out, Ant. follows, but Ped. pulls him back.
Ped. Antonioâstay.
Ant. Don Pedroâ
Ped. What Coward Fear was that prevented thee
From meeting me this Morning on the Molo?
Ant. Meet thee?
Ped. Yes me; I was the Man that darâd thee toât.
Ant. Hast thou so often seen me fight in War,
To find no better Cause to excuse my Absence?
âI sent my Sword and one to do thee Right,
Finding my self uncapable to use a Sword.
Ped. But âtwas Florindaâs Quarrel that we fought,
And you to shew how little you esteemâd her,
Sent me your Rival, giving him your Interest.
âBut I have found the Cause of this Affront,
But when I meet you fit for the Dispute,
âIâll tell you my Resentment.
Ant. I shall be ready, Sir, eâer long to do you Reason. [Exit Ant.
Ped. If I couâd find Florinda, now whilst my Angerâs high, I think I shouâd be kind, and give her to Belvile in Revenge.
Will. Faith, Sir, I know not what you wouâd do, but I believe the Priest within has been so kind.
Ped. How! my Sister married?
Will. I hope by this time she is, and bedded too, or he has not my longings about him.
Ped. Dares he do thus? Does he not fear my Powâr?
Will. Faith not at all. If you will go in, and thank him for the Favour he has done your Sister, so; if not, Sir, my Powerâs greater in this House than yours; I have a damnâd surly Crew here, that will keep you till the next Tide, and then clap you an board my Prize; my Ship lies but a League off the Molo, and we shall show your Donship a damnâd Tramontana Roverâs Trick.
Enter Belvile.
Belv. This Rogueâs in some new Mischiefâhah, Pedro returnâd!
Ped. Colonel Belvile, I hear you have married my Sister.
Belv. You have heard truth then, Sir.
Ped. Have I so? then, Sir, I wish you Joy.
Belv. How!
Ped. By this Embrace I do, and I glad onât.
Belv. Are you in earnest?
Ped. By our long Friendship and my Obligations to thee, I am. The sudden Change Iâll give you Reasons for anon. Come lead me into my Sister, that she may know I now approve her Choice. [Exit Bel. with Ped.
[Will. goes to follow them. Enter Hellena as before in Boyâs Clothes, and pulls him back.
Will. Ha! my GipsyâNow a thousand Blessings on thee for this Kindness. Egad, Child, I was eâen in despair of ever seeing thee again; my Friends are all provided for within, each Man his kind Woman.
Hell. Hah! I thought they had servâd me some such Trick.
Will. And I was eâen resolvâd to go aboard, condemn my self to my lone Cabin, and the Thoughts of thee.
Hell. And couâd you have left me behind? wouâd you have been so ill-naturâd?
Will. Why, âtwouâd have broke my Heart, Childâbut since we are met again, I defy foul Weather to part us.
Hell. And wouâd you be a faithful Friend now, if a Maid shouâd trust you?
Will. For a Friend I cannot promise, thou art of a Form so excellent, a Face and Humour too good for cold dull Friendship; I am parlously afraid of being in love, Child, and you have not forgot how severely you have usâd me.
Hell. Thatâs all one, such Usage you must still look for, to find out all your Haunts, to rail at you to all that love you, till I have made you love only me in your own Defence, because no body else will love.
Will. But hast thou no better Quality to recommend thy self by?
Hell. Faith none, CaptainâWhy, âtwill be the greater Charity to take me for thy Mistress, I am a lone Child, a kind of Orphan Lover; and why I shouâd die a Maid, and in a Captainâs Hands too, I do not understand.
Will. Egad, I was never clawâd away with Broad-Sides from any Female before, thou hast one Virtue I adore, good-Nature; I hate a coy demure Mistress, sheâs as troublesome as a Colt, Iâll break none; no, give me a mad Mistress when mewâd, and in flying on[e] I dare trust upon the Wing, that whilst sheâs kind will come to the Lure.
Hell. Nay, as kind as you will, good Captain, whilst it lasts, but letâs lose no time.
Will. My timeâs as precious to me, as thine can be; therefore, dear Creature, since we are so well agreed, letâs retire to my Chamber, and if ever thou were treated with such savory LoveâComeâMy Bedâs preparâd for such a Guest, all clean and sweet as thy fair self; I love to steal a Dish and a Bottle with a Friend, and hate long GracesâCome, letâs retire and fall to.
Hell. âTis but getting my Consent, and the Business is soon done; let but old Gaffer Hymen and his Priest say Amen toât, and I dare lay my Motherâs Daughter by as proper a Fellow as your Fatherâs Son, without fear or blushing.
Will. Hold, hold, no Bugg Words, Child, Priest and Hymen: prithee add Hangman to âem to make up the ConsortâNo, no, weâll have no Vows but Love, Child, 101 nor Witness but the Lover; the kind Diety injoins naught but love and enjoy. Hymen and Priest wait still upon Portion, and Joynture; Love and Beauty have their own Ceremonies. Marriage is as certain a Bane to Love, as lending Money is to Friendship: Iâll neither ask nor give a Vow, tho I could be content to turn Gipsy, and become a Left-hand Bridegroom, to have the Pleasure of working that great Miracle of making a Maid a Mother, if you durst venture; âtis upse Gipsy that, and if I miss, Iâll lose my Labour.
Hell. And if you do not lose, what shall I get? A Cradle full of Noise and Mischief, with a Pack of Repentance at my Back? Can you teach me to weave Incle to pass my time with? âTis upse Gipsy that too.
Will. I can teach thee to weave a true Loveâs Knot better.
Hell. So can my Dog.
Will. Well, I see we are both upon our Guard, and I see thereâs no way to conquer good Nature, but by yieldingâhereâgive me thy Handâone Kiss and I am thineâ
Hell. One Kiss! How like my Page he speaks; I am resolvâd you shall have none, for asking such a sneaking SumâHe that will be satisfied with one Kiss, will never die of that Longing; good Friend single-Kiss, is all your talking come to this? A Kiss, a Caudle! farewel, Captain single-Kiss. [Going out he stays her.
Will. Nay, if we part so, let me die like a Bird upon a Bough, at the Sheriffâs Charge. By Heaven, both the Indies shall not buy thee from me. I adore thy Humour and will marry thee, and we are so of one Humour, it must be a Bargainâgive me thy Handâ [Kisses her hand.]
And now let the blind ones (Love and Fortune) do their worst.
Hell. Why, God-a-mercy, Captain!
Will. But harkyeâThe Bargain is now made; but is it not fit we should know each otherâs Names? That when 102 we have Reason to curse one another hereafter, and People ask me who âtis I give to the Devil, I may at least be able to tell what Family you came of.
Hell. Good reason, Captain; and where I have cause, (as I doubt not but I shall have plentiful) that I may know at whom to throw myâBlessingsâI beseech ye your Name.
Will. I am callâd Robert the Constant.
Hell. A very fine Name! pray was it your Faulkner or Butler that christenâd you? Do they not use to whistle when then call you?
Will. I hope you have a better, that a Man may name without crossing himself, you are so merry with mine.
Hell. I am callâd Hellena the Inconstant.
Enter Pedro, Belvile, Florinda, Fred. Valeria.
Ped. Hah! Hellena!
Flor. Hellena!
Hell. The very sameâhah my Brother! now, Captain, shew your Love and Courage; stand to your Arms, and defend me bravely, or I am lost for ever.
Ped. Whatâs this I hear? false Girl, how came you hither, and whatâs your Business? Speak. [Goes roughly to her.
Will. Hold off, Sir, you have leave to parly only. [Puts himself between.
Hell. I had eâen as good tell it, as you guess it. Faith, Brother, my Business is the same with all living Creatures of my Age, to love, and be loved, and hereâs the Man.
Ped. Perfidious Maid, hast thou deceivâd me too, deceivâd thy self and Heaven?
Hell. âTis time enough to make my Peace with that: Be you but kind, let me alone with Heaven.
Ped. Belvile, I did not expect this false Play from you; wasât not enough youâd gain Florinda (which I pardonâd) but your leud Friends too must be inrichâd with the Spoils of a noble Family?
Belv. Faith, Sir, I am as much surprizâd at this as you can be: Yet, Sir, my Friends are Gentlemen, and ought to be esteemâd for their Misfortunes, since they have the Glory to suffer with the best of Men and Kings; âtis true, heâs a Rover of Fortune, yet a Prince aboard his little wooden World.
Ped. Whatâs this to the maintenance of a Woman or her Birth and Quality?
Will. Faith, Sir, I can boast of nothing but a Sword which does me Right where-eâer I come, and has defended a worse Cause than a Womanâs: and since I lovâd her before I either knew her Birth or Name, I must pursue my Resolution, and marry her.
Ped. And is all your holy Intent of becoming a Nun debauchâd into a Desire of Man?
Hell. WhyâI have considerâd the matter, Brother, and find the Three hundred thousand Crowns my Uncle left me (and you cannot keep from me) will be better laid out in Love than in Religion, and turn to as good an Accountâlet most Voices carry it, for Heaven or the Captain?
All cry, a Captain, a Captain.
Hell. Look ye, Sir,âtis a clear Case.
Ped. Oh I am madâif I refuse, my Lifeâs in Dangerâ [Aside.] âComeâThereâs one motive induces meâtake herâI shall now be free from the fear of her Honour; guard it you now, if you can, I have been a Slave toât long enough. [Gives her to him.
Will. Faith, Sir, I am of a Nation, that are of opinion a Womanâs Honour is not worth guarding when she has a mind to part with it.
Hell. Well said, Captain.
Ped. This was your Plot, Mistress, but I hope you have married one that will revenge my Quarrel to youâ [To Valeria.
Val. Thereâs no altering Destiny, Sir.
104Ped. Sooner than a Womanâs Will, therefore I forgive you allâand wish you may get my Fatherâs Pardon as easily; which I fear.
Enter Blunt drest in a Spanish Habit, looking very ridiculously; his Man adjusting his Band.
Man. âTis very well, Sir.
Blunt. Well, Sir, âdsheartlikins I tell you âtis damnable ill, Sirâa Spanish Habit, good Lord! couâd the Devil and my Taylor devise no other Punishment for me, but the Mode of a Nation I abominate?
Belv. Whatâs the matter, Ned?
Blunt. Pray view me round, and judgeâ [Turns round.
Belv. I must confess thou art a kind of an odd Figure.
Blunt. In a Spanish Habit with a Vengeance! I had rather be in the Inquisition for Judaism, than in this Doublet and Breeches; a Pillory were an easy Collar to this, three Handfuls high; and these Shoes too are worse than the Stocks, with the Sole an Inch shorter than my Foot: In fine, Gentlemen, methinks I look altogether like a Bag of Bays stuffâd full of Fools Flesh.
Belv. Methinks âtis well, and makes thee look en Cavalier: Come, Sir, settle your Face, and salute our Friends, Ladyâ
Blunt. Hah! Sayâst thou so, my little Rover? [To Hell.] Ladyâ(if you be one) give me leave to kiss your Hand, and tell you, adsheartlikins, for all I look so, I am your humble ServantâA Pox of my Spanish Habit.
Will. Harkâwhatâs this? [Musick is heard to Play.
Enter Boy.
Boy. Sir, as the Custom is, the gay People in Masquerade, who make every Manâs House their own, are coming up.
Enter several Men and Women in masquing Habits, with Musick, they put themselves in order and dance.
Blunt. Adsheartlikins, wouâd âtwere lawful to pull off their false Faces, that I might see if my Doxy were not amongst âem.
Belv. Ladies and Gentlemen, since you are come so a propos, you must take a small Collation with us. [To the Masquers.
Will. Whilst weâll to the Good Man within, who stays to give us a Cast of his Office. [To Hell.
âHave you no trembling at the near approach?
Hell. No more than you have in an Engagement or a Tempest.
Will. Egad, thouârt a brave Girl, and I admire thy Love and Courage.
Lead on, no other Dangers they can dread,
Who venture in the Storms oâthâ Marriage-Bed. [Exeunt.
EPILOGUE
The banisht Cavaliers! a Roving Blade!
A popish Carnival! a Masquerade!
The Devilâs inât if this will please the Nation,
In these our blessed Times of Reformation,
When Conventicling is so much in Fashion.
And yetâ
That mutinous Tribe less Factions do beget,
Than your continual differing in Wit;
Your Judgmentâs (as your Passions) a Disease:
Nor Muse nor Miss your Appetite can please;
Youâre grown as nice as queasy Consciences,
Whose each Convulsion, when the Spirit moves,
Damns every thing that Maggot disapproves.
With canting Rule you wouâd the Stage refine,
And to dull Method all our Sense confine.
With thâ Insolence of Common-wealths you rule,
Where each gay Fop, and politick brave Fool,
On Monarch Wit impose without controul.
As for the last who seldom sees a Play,
Unless it be the old Black-Fryers way,
106Shaking his empty Noddle oâer Bamboo,
He crysâGood Faith, these Plays will never do.
âAh, Sir, in my young days, what lofty Wit,
What high-strainâd Scenes of Fighting there were writ:
These are slight airy Toys. But tell me, pray,
What has the House of Commons done to day?
Then shews his Politicks, to let you see
Of State Affairs heâll judge as notably,
As he can do of Wit and Poetry.
The younger Sparks, who hither do resort,
Cryâ
Pox oâ your gentle things, give us more Sport;
âDamn me, Iâm sure âtwill never please the Court.
Such Fops are never pleasâd, unless the Play
Be stuffâd with Fools, as brisk and dull as they:
Such might the Half-Crown spare, and in a Glass
At home behold a more accomplisht Ass,
Where they may set their Cravats, Wigs and Faces,
And practice all their Buffoonry Grimaces;
See how thisâHuff becomesâthis Dammyâflareâ
Which they at home may act, because they dare,
Butâmust with prudent Caution do elsewhere.
Oh that our Nokes, or Tony Lee could show
A Fop but half so much to thâ Life as you.
POST-SCRIPT
THIS Play had been sooner in Print, but for a Report about the Town (made by some either very Malitious or very Ignorant) that âtwas Thomaso altered; which made the Book-sellers fear some trouble from the Proprietor of that Admirable Play, which indeed has Wit enough to stock a Poet, and is not to be piecât or mended by any but the Excellent Author himself; That I have stolân some hints from it may be a proof, that I valuâd it more than to pretend to alter it: had I had the Dexterity of some Poets who are not more expert in stealing than in the Art of Concealing, and who even that way out-do the Spartan-Boys I might have appropriated all to myself, but I, vainly proud of my Judgment hang out the Sign of Angelica (the only Stolân Object) to give Notice where a great part of the Wit dwelt; though if the Play of the Novella were as well worth remembring as Thomaso, they might (bating the Name) have as well said, I took it from thence: I will only say the Plot and Busâness (not to boast onât) is my own: as for the Words and Characters, I leave the Reader to judge and compare âem with Thomaso, to whom I recommend the great Entertainment of reading it, thoâ had this succeeded ill, I shouâd have had no need of imploring that Justice from the Critics, who are naturally so kind to any that pretend to usurp their Dominion, they wouâd doubtless have given me the whole Honour onât. Therefore I will only say in English what the famous Virgil does in Latin: I make Verses and others have the Fame.
TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE, &c.
Great Sir,
I dread to appear in this Humble Dedication to Your Royal Highness, as one of those Insolent and Saucy Offenders who take occasion by Your absence to commit ill-mannered indecencies, unpardonable to a Prince of your Illustrious Birth and God-like Goodness, but that in spight of Seditious Scandal You can forgive; and all the World knows You can suffer with a Divine Patience: the proofs You have early and late given of this, have been such, as if Heaven designâd âem only to give the World an undeniable Testimony of Your Noble Vertues, Your Loyalty and True Obedience (if I may presume to say so,) both to Your Sacred Brother, and the never satisfied People, when either one Commanded, or tâother repinâd, With how chearful and intire a submission You Obeyâd? And tho the Royal Son of a Glorious Father who was renderâd unfortunate by the unexemplary ingratitude of his worst of Subjects; and sacrificâd to the insatiate and cruel Villany of a seeming sanctifiâd Faction, who couâd never hope to expiate for the unparallellâd sin, but by an intire submission to the Gracious Off-spring of this Royal Martyr: yet You, Great Sir, denying Yourself the Rights and Priviledges the meanest Subject Claims, with a Fortitude worthy Your Adorable Vertues, put Yourself upon a voluntary Exile to appease the causeless murmurs of this again gathering Faction, who make their needless and self-created fears, an occasion to Play the old Game oâre again; whilâst the Politick self-interested and malitious few betray the unconsidering Rest, with the delicious sounds of Liberty and Publick Good; that lucky Cant which so few years since so miserably reducâd all the Noble, Brave and Honest, to the Obedience of the ill-gotten Power, and worse-acted Greatness of the Rabble; so that whilâst they most unjustly cryâd down the oppression of one of the best of Monarchs, and all Kingly Government: all England found itself deplorably inslavâd by the Arbitrary Tyranny of many Pageant Kings. Oh that we shouâd so far forget with what greatness of mind You then sharâd the common Fate, as now and again to force Your Royal Person to new Perils, and new Exiles; but such ingratitude we are punisht with, and You still suffer for, and still forgive it.
This more than Human Goodness, with the incouragement Your Royal Highness was pleasâd to give the Rover at his first appearance, and the concern You were pleasâd to have for his second, makes me presume to lay him at Your feet; he is a wanderer too, distrest; belovâd, the unfortunate, 114 and ever conscent to Loyalty; were he Legions he should follow and suffer still with so Excellent a Prince and Master. Your Infant worth he knew, and all Your growing Glories; has seen you like young Cesar in the Field, when yet a Youth, exchanging Death for Laurels, and wondred at a Bravery so early, which still made double Conquest, not only by Your Sword, but by Your Vertues, Some of Oliverâs Commanders at Dunkirk which taught even Your Enemies so intire an Obedience, that ashamâd of their Rebel Gallantry, they have resignâd their guilty Commissions, and Vowâd never to Draw Sword more but in the Royal Cause; which Vow Religiously they kept: a noble Example for the busie and hot Mutineers of this Age misled by Youth, false Ambition and falser Council.
How careless since Your Glorious Restauration You have been, of Your Life for the service of Your mistaken Country, the whole World knows, and all brave men admire.
Pardon me then, Great Sir, if I presume to present my faithful Soldier, (which no Storms of Fate can ever draw from his Obedience) to so great a General: allow him, Royal Sir, a shelter and protection, who was driven from his Native Country with You, forcâd as You were, to fight for his Bread in a Strange Land, and sufferâd with You all the Ills of Poverty, War and Banishment; and still pursues Your Fortunes; and though he cannot serve Your Highness, he may possibly have the Honour of diverting You a few moments: which tho Your Highness cannot want in a place where all Hearts and Knees are justly bowâd in Adoration, where all conspire, as all the Earth (who have the blessing of Your presence) ought to entertain, serve and please You; yet this humble Tribute of a most Zealous and Devout Heart, may find amongst Your busier hours of greater moment, some one wherein it may have the Glory of Your regard, and be capable in some small degree of unbending Your great mind from Royal Cares, the weightiest Cares of all; which if it be so fortunate as to do, I have my end, and the Glory I design, a sufficient reward for her who does and will eternally pray for the Life, Health and Safety of Your Royal Highness, as in Duty all the World is bound to do, but more especially,
Illustrious Sir,
Your Highnesses most Humble,
most Faithful, and
most Obedient Servant,
A. BEHN.