A
pleasant
Comedie
entituled
An
humorous
dayes
mirth
.
Enter
the
count
Laberuele
in
his
shirt
and
night
gowne
,
with
two
iewells
in
his
hand
.
Laberuele
.
YEt
hath
the
morning
sprinckled
throwt
the
clowdes
,
But
halfe
her
tincture
and
the
soyle
of
night
stickes
stil
vpon
the
bosome
of
the
ayre
:
yet
sleepe
doth
rest
my
loue
for
Natures
debt
,
and
through
her
windowe
,
and
this
dun
twee-light
,
her
maide
,
nor
any
waking
I
can
see
.
This
is
the
holy
Greene
my
wifes
close
walke
,
to
which
not
any
but
her selfe
alone
hath
any
key
,
onelye
that
I
haue
clapt
her
key
in
waxe
,
and
made
this
counterfeite
,
to
the
which
I
steale
accesse
,
to
work
this
rare
&
politike
deuice
:
Faire
is
my
wife
and
yong
and
delicate
,
although
too
religious
in
the
purest
sorte
,
but
pure
religion
being
but
mental
stuffe
and
sence
indeed
,
al
for
it selfe
,
is
to
be
doubted
,
that
when
an
obiect
comes
fit
to
her
humour
she
wil
intercept
religious
letters
sent
vnto
her
minde
,
and
yeelde
vnto
the
motion
of
her
bloud
,
heere
haue
I
brought
then
two
rich
agots
for
her
,
grauen
with
two
poses
of
mine
own
deuising
,
for
Poets
I
le
not
trust
,
nor
friends
,
nor
any
:
shee
longs
to
haue
a
child
,
which
yet
alas
I
cannot
get
,
Yet
long
as
much
as
she
,
and
not
to
make
her
desperate
,
thus
I
write
in
this
faire
iewell
though
it
simple
be
,
yet
t
is
mine
owne
that
meaneth
well
in
nought
,
t
is
spare
,
not
of
children
,
loue
with
the
longest
,
when
man
is
at
the
weakest
,
god
is
at
str�gest
,
I
hope
t
is
plain
,
&
knowing
in
this
other
that
I
write
,
God
will
reward
her
a
thousand
fold
,
that
takes
what
age
can
and
not
what
age
would
,
I
hope
t
is
prety
&
pathetical
:
Wel
,
euen
here
lie
both
together
til
my
loue
arise
and
let
her
thinke
you
fall
out
of
the
skies
,
I
wil
to
bed
againe
.
Exit
.
Enter
Lemot
and
Colenet.
Lemot.
How
like
thou
this
morning
Colenet
?
What
,
shall
we
haue
a
faire
day
?
Colenet.
The
skie
hangs
full
of
humour
,
and
I
thinke
we
shall
haue
raine
.
Lem.
Why
raine
is
faire
wether
when
the
ground
is
dry
and
barren
,
especially
when
it
raines
humor
,
for
then
doe
men
like
hot
sparrowes
and
pigeons
open
all
their
wings
ready
to
receiue
them
.
Col.
Why
then
we
may
chaunce
to
haue
a
faire
day
,
for
we
shall
spend
it
with
so
humorous
acquaintance
,
as
raines
nothing
but
humor
al
their
life
time
.
Le.
True
Colenet
,
ouer
which
wil
I
sit
like
an
old
King
in
an
old
fashion
play
,
hauing
his
wife
,
his
counsel
,
his
children
,
and
his
foole
about
him
,
to
whome
he
will
sit
and
point
very
learnedly
as
foloweth
;
my
counsell
graue
,
and
you
my
noble
peeres
,
my
tender
wife
,
and
you
my
children
deare
,
and
thou
my
foole
.
Co.
Not
meaning
me
sir
I
hope
.
Le.
No
sir
,
but
thus
will
I
sit
,
as
it
were
,
and
point
out
all
my
humorous
companions
.
Co.
You
shal
do
maruelous
wel
sir
.
Le.
I
thanke
you
for
your
good
incouragement
,
but
Colinet
thou
shalt
see
Catalian
bring
me
hither
an
od
gentleman
presently
to
be
acquainted
withall
,
who
in
his
manner
of
taking
acquaintance
wil
make
vs
excellent
sport
.
Co.
Why
Lemot
I
thinke
thou
sendst
about
of
purpose
for
yong
gallants
to
be
acquainted
withal
,
to
make
thy selfe
merry
in
the
maner
of
taking
acquaintance
.
Le.
By
heauen
I
do
Colenet
,
for
there
is
no
better
sport
then
to
obserue
the
complement
,
for
that
's
their
word
,
complement
,
do
you
marke
sir
?
Co.
Yea
sir
,
but
what
humor
hath
this
gallant
in
his
maner
of
taking
acquaintance
?
Le.
Marry
thus
sir
,
he
will
speake
the
very
selfe
same
word
,
to
a
sillable
after
him
of
whome
he
takes
acquaintance
,
as
if
I
should
say
,
I
am
marueilous
glad
of
your
acquaintance
,
He
will
reply
,
I
am
meruailous
glad
of
your
acquaintance
,
I
haue
heard
much
good
of
your
rare
parts
&
fine
cariage
,
I
haue
heard
much
good
of
your
rare
parts
&
fine
cariage
,
so
long
as
the
complements
of
a
gentleman
last
,
he
is
your
complete
ape
.
Co.
Why
this
is
excellent
.
Le.
Nay
sirra
here
's
the
iest
of
it
,
when
hee
is
past
this
gratulation
,
he
wil
retire
himself
to
a
chimny
,
or
a
wal
standing
folding
his
armes
thus
:
and
go
you
and
speake
to
him
so
farre
as
the
roome
you
are
in
wil
afford
you
,
you
shal
neuer
get
him
from
that
most
gentlemanlike
set
,
or
behauior
.
Co.
This
makes
his
humor
perfit
,
I
would
he
would
come
once
.
Enter
Catalian
and
Blanuel
.
Le.
See
where
he
comes
,
now
must
I
say
,
Lupus
est
in
fabula
,
for
these
latine
ends
are
part
of
a
gentleman
and
a
good
scholler
.
Catalian
.
O
good
morrow
Monseur
Lemot
,
here
is
the
gentleman
you
desired
so
much
to
be
acquainted
withal
.
Le.
He
is
marueilous
welcome
,
I
shall
be
exceeding
prowd
of
your
acquaintance
.
Blan.
I
shal
be
exceeding
prowd
of
your
acquaintance
.
Le.
I
haue
heard
much
good
of
your
rare
parts
and
fine
cariages
.
Blan.
I
haue
heard
much
good
of
your
rare
parts
and
fine
cariages
.
Le.
I
shall
be
glad
to
be
commanded
by
you
.
Blan.
I
shall
be
glad
to
be
commanded
by
you
.
Le.
I
pray
do
not
you
say
so
.
Blan.
I
pray
do
not
you
say
so
.
Le.
Well
Gentlemen
,
this
day
let
's
consecrate
to
mirth
,
and
Colenet
you
know
no
man
better
,
that
you
are
mightily
in
loue
with
loue
,
by
Martia
daughter
to
old
Foyes
.
Co.
I
confesse
it
here
are
none
but
friends
.
Le.
Wel
then
,
go
to
her
this
morning
in
Countesse
Moris
name
,
and
so
perhaps
you
may
get
her
company
,
thogh
the
olde
churle
bee
so
iealous
that
he
will
suffer
no
man
to
come
at
her
,
but
the
vaine
gull
Labesha
for
his
liuing
sake
,
and
he
as
yet
she
will
not
be
acquainted
withall
.
Co.
Well
this
I
le
do
whatsoeuer
come
on
it
.
Le.
Why
nothing
but
good
wil
come
of
it
,
nere
doubt
it
man
.
Cata.
Hee
hath
taken
vp
his
stand
,
talke
a
little
further
and
see
and
you
can
remoue
him
.
Le.
I
wil
Cat
.
nowe
Monsieur
Blanuele
marke
I
pray
.
Blan.
I
do
sir
very
well
I
warrant
you
.
Le.
You
know
the
old
Count
Laberuele
,
hath
a
passing
faire
yong
Lady
,
that
is
a
passing
foule
Puritane
.
Blan.
I
know
her
very
well
sir
,
she
goes
more
like
a
milke
maide
then
a
Countesse
,
for
all
her
youth
and
beautie
.
Lemot.
True
sir
,
yet
of
her
is
the
old
Count
so
iealous
that
he
will
suffer
no
man
to
come
at
her
,
yet
I
will
find
a
meanes
,
that
two
of
vs
will
haue
accesse
to
her
tho
,
be
fore
his
face
,
which
shal
so
heate
his
ielous
humor
til
he
be
start
mad
:
but
Colenet
go
you
first
to
louely
Martia
,
for
t
is
too
soone
for
the
old
Lord
and
his
faire
yong
Lady
to
rise
.
Co.
Adue
Monseur
Blanuel
.
Blan.
A
due
good
Monsieur
Colinet
.
Exit
Col.
Le.
Monseur
Blanuel
your
kindnes
in
this
wil
bind
me
much
to
you
.
Bla.
Monseur
Lemot
your
kindnes
in
this
will
bind
me
much
to
you
.
Le.
I
pray
you
do
not
say
so
sir
.
Blan.
I
pray
you
do
not
say
so
sir
,
Le.
Wil
t
please
you
to
go
in
.
Blan.
Wil
t
please
you
to
go
in
.
Le.
I
will
follow
you
.
Blan.
I
will
follow
you
.
Le.
It
shall
be
yours
.
Blan.
It
shall
be
yours
.
Le.
Kind
Monsieur
Blanuel
.
Blan.
Kind
Monsier
Lemot
.
Exit
.
Enter
Foyes
,
and
Martia
,
and
Besha
.
Foyes.
Come
on
faire
daughter
fall
to
your
worke
of
mind
,
and
make
your
body
fit
to
imbrace
the
body
of
this
Gentlemans
,
t
is
art
:
happy
are
they
say
I
.
Be.
I
protest
sir
you
speake
the
best
that
euer
I
heard
.
Fo.
I
pray
sir
take
acquaintance
of
my
daughter
.
Be.
I
do
desire
you
of
more
acquaintance
.
Fo.
Why
dost
not
thou
say
yea
,
and
I
the
same
of
you
?
Mar.
That
euery body
sayes
.
Fo.
O
you
would
be
singular
.
Mar.
Single
indeede
.
Fo.
Single
indeede
that
's
a
prety
toy
,
Your
betters
dame
beare
double
,
and
so
shall
you
.
Be.
Fxceeding
prety
,
did
you
marke
it
forsooth
?
Mar.
What
should
I
marke
forsooth
?
Be.
Your
bearing
double
,
which
equificate
is
&
hath
fit
illusion
to
a
horse
that
beares
double
,
for
your
good
father
meanes
you
shall
indure
your
single
life
no
longer
,
not
in
worse
sence
then
bearing
double
forsooth
.
Mar.
I
crie
you
mercy
,
you
know
both
belike
.
Be.
Knowlege
forsooth
is
like
a
horse
,
and
you
that
can
beare
double
:
it
nourisheth
both
Bee
and
Spider
,
the
Bee
honnisuckle
,
the
Spider
poyson
,
I
am
that
Bee
.
Mar.
I
thought
so
by
your
stinging
witte
.
Be.
Lady
I
am
a
Bee
without
a
sting
,
no
way
hurting
any
,
but
good
to
all
,
and
before
all
,
to
your
sweete
selfe
.
Fo.
afore
God
daughter
,
thou
art
not
worthy
to
heare
him
speake
:
but
who
comes
here
?
Enter
Colinet
.
Co.
God
saue
you
sir
.
Fo.
You
are
welcome
sir
for
ought
that
I
know
yet
.
Co.
I
hope
I
shall
be
so
still
sir
.
Fo.
What
is
your
busines
sir
,
and
then
I
le
tell
you
?
Co.
Marry
thus
sir
,
the
Countesse
Morene
intreats
your
faire
daughter
to
beare
her
company
this
fore-noone
.
Fo.
This
forenoone
sir
,
doth
my
Lord
or
Lady
send
for
her
I
pray
?
Co.
My
Lady
I
assure
you
.
Fo.
My
Lady
you
assure
me
,
very
wel
sir
,
yet
that
house
is
full
of
gallant
Gentlemen
,
dangerous
thornes
to
pricke
yong
maides
I
can
tell
you
.
Co.
There
are
none
but
honest
and
honourable
Gentlemen
.
Fo.
Al
is
one
sir
for
that
,
I
le
trust
my
daughter
with
any
man
,
but
no
man
with
my
daughter
,
only
your selfe
Monser
Besha
,
whom
I
wil
intreat
to
be
her
gardian
,
&
to
bring
her
home
againe
.
Co.
I
will
waite
vpon
her
,
and
it
please
you
.
Fo
No
sir
,
your
weight
vpo�
her
wil
not
be
so
good
:
here
Monser
Besha
I
deliuer
my
daughter
vnto
you
a
perfect
maide
,
and
so
I
pray
you
looke
well
vnto
her
.
Co.
Farewell
Monser
Foyes
.
Besh.
I
warrant
I
le
looke
vnto
her
wel
enough
.
Mistris
will
it
please
you
to
preambulate
.
Ma.
With
all
my
heart
.
Exeunt
.
Enter
the
puritane
.
Florila
What
haue
I
done
?
put
on
too
many
clothes
,
the
day
is
hote
,
and
I
am
hoter
clad
then
might
suffice
health
,
my
conscience
telles
me
that
I
haue
offended
,
and
I
le
put
them
off
,
that
will
aske
time
that
might
be
better
spent
,
one
sin
will
draw
another
quickly
so
,
see
how
the
diuell
tempts
:
but
what
's
here
?
iewels
?
how
should
these
come
here
?
Enter
Laberuele
.
Lab.
Good
morrow
louely
wife
,
what
hast
thou
there
?
Flo.
Iewels
my
Lord
which
here
I
strangely
found
.
Lab.
That
's
strange
indeede
,
what
,
where
none
comes
but
when
your selfe
is
here
?
surely
the
heauens
haue
rained
thee
iewels
for
thy
holy
life
,
and
vsing
thy
olde
husbande
louingly
or
else
doe
Fairies
haunt
this
holy
greene
,
as
euermore
,
mine
auncesters
haue
thought
.
Flo.
Fairies
were
but
in
times
of
ignorance
,
not
since
the
true
pure
light
hath
beene
reuealed
,
and
that
they
come
from
heauen
I
scarce
beleeue
:
for
iewels
are
vaine
things
,
much
gold
is
giuen
for
such
fantastical
&
fruitlesse
iewels
,
and
therfore
heauen
I
know
wil
not
maintain
the
vse
of
vanitie
,
surely
I
feare
I
haue
much
sinned
to
stoupe
take
take
them
vp
,
bowing
my
bodie
to
an
idle
worke
,
the
strength
that
I
haue
had
to
this
verie
deed
might
haue
beene
vsed
to
take
a
poore
soule
vp
in
the
his
way
.
Lab.
You
are
too
curious
wise
,
behold
your
iewels
:
what
me thinks
ther
's
posies
written
on
the�
.
Dispaire
not
of
children
,
loue
with
the
longest
,
whe�
man
is
at
the
weakest
,
god
is
at
the
strongest
.
Wonderfull
rare
and
wittie
,
nay
diuine
,
why
this
is
heauenly
co�fort
for
thee
wife
,
what
is
this
other
?
God
will
reward
her
a
thousand
folde
that
takes
what
age
can
,
&
not
what
age
would
.
The
best
that
euer
I
heard
,
no
mortall
braine
I
thinke
did
euer
vtter
such
conceit
for
good
plaine
matter
,
and
for
honest
rime
.
Flo.
Vaine
Poetry
,
I
pray
you
burne
them
sir
.
La.
You
are
to
blame
wife
,
heauen
hath
sent
you
them
to
decke
your self
withall
,
like
to
your self
,
not
to
go
thus
like
a
milk-maid
,
why
there
is
difference
in
all
estats
by
al
religio�
.
Flo.
There
is
no
difference
.
Lab.
I
prethee
wife
be
of
another
mind
,
and
weare
these
iewels
and
a
veluet
hood
.
Flo
A
veluet
hood
!
O
vaine
diuelish
deuise
a
toy
made
with
a
superfluous
flap
,
which
being
cut
off
,
my
head
were
still
aswarme
.
Diogenes
did
cast
away
his
dish
,
because
his
hand
would
serue
to
help
him
drinke
,
surely
these
heathens
shall
rise
vp
against
vs
.
Lab.
Sure
wife
I
thinke
thy
keeping
alwaies
close
,
making
thee
melancholy
,
is
the
cause
we
haue
no
children
,
and
therefore
if
thou
wilt
,
be
mery
,
and
keepe
companie
a
gods
name
.
Flo.
Sure
my
lord
,
if
I
thought
I
shold
be
rid
of
this
same
banishment
of
barrennes
,
and
vse
our
marriage
to
the
end
it
was
made
which
was
for
procreation
,
I
should
sinne
,
if
by
my
keeping
house
I
should
neglect
the
lawful
means
to
be
a
fruitful
mother
,
&
therfore
if
it
please
you
I
le
vse
resort
Lab.
Gods
my
passion
what
haue
I
done
?
who
woulde
haue
thought
her
purenesse
would
yeeld
so
soone
to
courses
of
temptations
?
nay
harke
you
wife
,
I
am
not
sure
that
going
abroad
will
cause
fruitfulnesse
in
you
,
that
you
know
none
knowes
but
God
himselfe
.
Flo.
I
know
my
lord
t
is
true
,
but
the
lawfull
means
must
still
be
vsed
.
Lab.
Yea
,
the
lawfull
meanes
indeed
must
still
,
but
now
I
remember
that
lawfull
meanes
is
not
abroad
.
Flo.
Well
,
well
,
I
le
keepe
the
house
still
.
Lab.
Nay
,
heark
you
lady
,
I
would
not
haue
you
thinke
,
mary
,
I
must
tel
you
this
,
if
you
shuld
change
the
maner
of
your
life
,
the
world
would
think
you
changed
religion
too
.
Flo.
T
is
true
,
I
will
not
go
.
Lab.
Nay
,
if
you
haue
a
fancie
.
Flo
Yea
a
fancie
,
but
that
's
no
matter
.
La.
Indeed
fancies
are
not
for
iudicial
&
religious
wome�
.
Enter
Catalian
like
a
scholer
.
Cat.
God
saue
your
lordship
,
&
you
most
religious
lady
.
Lab.
Sir
you
may
say
God
saue
vs
well
indeed
that
thus
are
thrust
vpon
in
priuate
walkes
.
Cat,
A
slender
thrust
sir
,
where
I
touche
you
not
.
Lab.
Well
sir
what
is
your
busines
?
Cat.
Why
sir
,
I
haue
a
message
to
my
ladie
from
Monsieur
du
Barto
.
Lab.
To
your
lady
,
wel
sir
,
speake
your
mind
to
your
lady
.
Flo.
You
are
very
welcome
sir
,
and
I
pray
how
doth
he
.
Cat.
In
health
Madam
,
thanks
be
to
God
,
commending
his
dutie
to
your
ladiship
,
&
hath
sent
you
a
message
which
I
would
desire
your
honour
to
heare
in
priuate
.
Flo.
My
ladiship
,
and
my
honor
,
they
be
words
which
I
must
haue
you
leaue
,
they
be
ydle
woordes
,
and
you
shal
answere
for
them
truly
:
my
dutye
to
you
,
or
I
desire
you
,
were
a
great
deale
better
,
then
,
my
ladiship
,
or
my
honour
.
Cat.
I
thanke
you
for
your
christian
admonition
.
Flo.
Nay
thanke
God
for
me
:
Come
I
will
heare
your
message
with
all
my
heart
,
and
you
are
very
welcome
sir
.
Lab.
With
all
my
heart
,
and
you
are
very
welcome
sir
,
and
go
and
talke
with
a
yong
lustie
fellow
able
to
make
a
mans
haire
stand
vpright
on
his
head
,
what
puritie
is
there
in
this
trow
you
?
ha
,
what
wench
of
the
facultie
could
haue
beene
more
forward
?
Well
sir
,
I
will
know
your
message
,
you
sir
,
you
sir
,
what
sayes
the
holy
man
sir
,
come
tell
true
,
for
by
heauen
or
hell
I
will
haue
it
out
.
Cat.
Why
you
shall
sir
,
if
you
be
so
desirous
.
Lab.
Nay
sir
,
I
am
more
then
so
desirous
:
come
sir
,
study
not
for
a
new
deuice
now
.
Cat.
Not
I
my
lord
,
this
is
both
new
and
old
,
I
am
a
scholer
,
and
being
spiritually
inclined
by
your
ladies
most
godly
life
,
I
am
to
professe
the
ministerie
,
&
to
become
her
chaplaine
,
to
which
end
monsier
du
Barte
hath
commended
me
.
Lab.
Her
chaplaine
in
the
diuels
name
,
fit
to
be
vickar
of
hell
.
Flo.
My
good
head
,
what
are
you
afraid
of
?
he
comes
with
a
godly
&
neighborly
sute
:
what
think
you
his
words
or
his
looks
can
tempt
me
?
haue
you
so
litle
faith
?
if
euery
word
he
spake
were
a
serpent
,
as
suttle
as
that
which
tempted
Eue
,
he
cannot
tempt
me
I
warrant
you
.
La.
Wel
answered
for
him
lady
by
my
faith
:
wel
hark
you
I
le
keepe
your
chaplaines
place
yonder
for
a
while
,
and
at
length
put
in
one
my self
:
what
more
yet
?
Gods
my
passion
whom
do
I
see
,
the
very
imp
of
desolation
,
the
minio�
of
our
King
,
whome
no
man
sees
to
enter
his
house
but
hee
lookes
vp
,
his
wife
,
his
children
,
and
his
maides
,
for
where
hee
goes
hee
carries
his
house
vppon
his
head
like
a
snaile
:
now
sir
I
hope
your
busines
is
to
me
.
Lem.
No
sir
,
I
must
craue
a
word
with
my
ladie
.
La.
These
words
are
intollerable
,
&
she
shal
hear
no
more
Lem.
She
must
heare
me
speake
.
Lab.
Must
she
sir
,
haue
you
brought
the
kings
warrant
for
it
?
Le.
I
haue
brought
that
which
is
aboue
Kings
.
Lab.
Why
euery
man
for
her
sake
is
a
puritan
.
The
Diuill
I
thinke
wil
shortly
turne
Puritan
,
or
the
Puritan
will
turne
Diuell
.
Flo.
What
haue
you
brought
sir
?
Lem.
Mary
this
Madam
,
you
know
we
ought
to
proue
one
anothers
constancie
,
and
I
am
come
in
all
chast
and
honourable
sort
to
proue
your
constancie
.
Flo.
You
are
verie
welcome
sir
,
and
I
will
abide
your
proofe
:
it
is
my
dutie
to
abide
your
proofe
.
Lab.
You
le
bide
his
proofe
,
it
is
your
dutie
to
bide
his
proofe
,
how
the
diuell
will
you
bide
his
proofe
?
Flo
My
good
head
,
no
other
wise
then
before
your
face
in
all
honorable
and
religious
sort
,
I
tell
you
I
am
constant
to
you
,
and
he
comes
to
trie
whether
I
be
so
or
no
,
which
I
must
indure
,
begin
your
proofe
sir
.
Le.
Nay
Madam
,
not
in
your
husbands
hearing
,
thogh
in
his
sight
for
there
is
no
woman
wil
shewe
shee
is
tempted
from
her
constancie
,
though
she
be
a
little
:
withdraw
your selfe
sweete
ladie
.
Lab.
Well
I
will
see
though
I
do
not
heare
,
women
may
be
courted
without
offence
,
so
they
resist
the
courtier
.
Lem.
Deare
and
most
beautifull
ladie
,
of
al
the
sweet
honest
and
honorable
meanes
to
proue
the
puritie
of
a
ladies
constancy
,
kisses
are
the
strongest
,
I
will
therefore
be
bold
to
begin
my
proofe
with
a
kisse
.
Fo
No
sir
,
no
kissing
.
Lem.
No
kissing
Madam
?
how
shall
I
proue
you
the�
sufficiently
,
not
vsing
the
most
sufficient
proofe
?
to
flatter
your selfe
by
affection
of
spirit
,
when
it
is
not
perfitly
tried
,
is
sin
.
Flo.
You
say
well
sir
,
that
which
is
truth
is
truth
.
Le.
Then
do
you
wel
Lady
and
yeeld
to
the
truth
.
Flo.
By
your
leaue
sir
,
my
husband
sees
,
peraduenture
it
may
breed
an
offence
to
him
.
Lem.
How
can
it
breed
an
offence
to
your
husband
to
see
your
constancie
perfectly
tried
.
Flo.
You
are
an
odde
man
I
see
,
but
first
I
pray
tel
me
how
kissing
is
the
best
proofe
of
chast
Ladies
.
Lem.
To
giue
you
a
reason
for
that
,
you
must
giue
me
leaue
to
be
obscure
and
Philosophicall
.
Flo.
I
pray
yon
be
,
I
loue
Philosophie
well
.
Lem.
Then
thus
Madam
:
euery
kisse
is
made
as
the
voice
is
by
imagination
and
appetite
,
and
as
both
those
are
presented
to
the
eare
in
the
voyce
,
so
are
they
to
the
silent
spirites
in
our
kisses
.
Flo.
To
what
spirit
meane
you
?
Lem.
To
the
spirites
of
our
bloud
.
Flo.
What
if
it
doe
?
Lem:
Why
then
my
imagination
,
and
mine
appetite
working
vpon
your
eares
in
my
voyce
,
and
vpon
your
spirites
in
my
kisses
,
pearcing
therein
the
more
deeply
,
they
giue
the
stronger
assault
against
your
constancie
.
Flo.
Why
then
to
say
,
proue
my
constancy
,
is
as
much
as
to
say
,
kisse
me
.
Lem.
most
true
rare
Ladie
.
Flo.
Then
prooue
my
constancie
.
L�m.
Beleeue
me
Madam
,
you
gather
exceeding
wittily
vpon
it
.
Lab.
O
my
forehead
,
my
very
heart
akes
at
a
blowe
,
what
dost
thou
meane
wife
?
thou
wilt
loose
thy
fame
,
discredite
thy
religion
,
and
dishonour
me
for
euer
.
Flo.
Away
sir
,
I
wil
abide
no
more
of
your
proofe
,
nor
endure
any
more
of
your
triall
.
Lem.
O
she
dares
not
,
she
dares
not
I
am
as
glad
I
haue
tride
your
puritie
as
may
be
:
you
the
most
constant
Lady
in
France
?
I
know
an
hundred
Ladies
in
this
towne
that
wil
dance
,
reuill
all
night
amongst
gallants
,
and
in
the
morning
goe
to
bed
to
her
husband
as
cleere
a
woman
as
if
she
were
new
christned
,
kisse
him
,
imbrace
him
,
and
say
,
no
,
no
husband
,
thou
art
the
man
,
and
he
takes
her
for
the
woman
.
Flo.
And
all
this
can
I
doe
.
La.
Take
heede
of
it
wife
.
Flo.
Feare
not
my
good
heade
,
I
warrant
you
for
him
.
Lem.
Nay
Madam
,
triumph
not
before
the
victorie
,
howe
can
you
conquer
that
,
against
which
you
neuer
striue
,
or
striue
against
that
which
neuer
incounters
you
To
liue
idle
in
this
walke
,
to
inioy
this
companie
,
to
weare
this
habite
,
and
haue
no
more
delights
then
those
will
affoorde
you
,
is
to
make
vertue
an
idle
huswife
,
and
to
hide
herselfe
slouthfull
cobwebbes
that
still
should
be
adorned
with
actions
of
victorie
:
no
Madam
,
if
you
wil
vnworthilly
prooue
your
constancie
to
your
husband
,
you
must
put
on
rich
apparrell
,
fare
daintily
,
heare
musique
,
reade
Sonetes
be
continually
courted
,
kisse
,
daunce
,
feast
,
reuell
all
night
amongst
gallants
,
then
if
you
come
to
bed
to
your
husband
with
a
cleere
minde
,
and
a
cleere
body
,
then
are
your
vertues
ipsissima
;
then
haue
you
passed
the
ful
test
of
experiment
,
and
you
shall
haue
an
hundred
gallants
fight
thus
farre
in
bloud
for
the
defence
of
your
reputation
.
Lab.
O
vanitie
of
vanities
!
Flo.
O
husband
this
is
perfect
tryall
indeede
.
La.
And
you
wil
try
all
this
now
,
wil
you
not
?
Flo
Yea
my
good
head
,
for
it
is
written
,
we
must
passe
to
perfection
through
al
temptation
,
Abacuke
the
fourth
.
Lab.
Abacucke
,
cucke
me
no
cuckes
,
in
a doores
I
saye
,
theeues
,
Puritanes
,
murderers
,
in
a doores
I
say
.
Exit
.
Le.
So
now
is
he
start
mad
yfaith
:
but
sirra
,
as
this
is
an
old
Lorde
iealous
of
his
yong
wife
,
so
is
antient
Countesse
Moren
iealous
of
her
yong
husband
,
wee
le
thither
to
haue
some
sport
yfaith
.
Exit
.
Enter
Besha
hanging
vpon
Martia
sleeue
,
and
the
Lord
Moren
comes
to
them
.
Mar.
I
prethee
Besha
keepe
a
little
off
;
hang
not
vpon
her
shoulders
thus
for
shame
.
Be.
My
Lord
,
Pardon
a
moy
,
I
must
not
let
her
talk
alone
with
any
one
,
for
her
father
gaue
me
charge
.
Mar.
O
you
are
a
goodly
charger
for
a
Goose
.
Be.
A
Goose
,
you
are
a
Gander
to
call
me
Goose
,
I
am
a
christian
Gentleman
as
well
as
you
.
Mar.
Well
sirra
get
you
hence
,
or
by
my
troth
I
le
haue
thee
taken
out
in
a
blanket
,
tossed
from
forth
our
hearing
.
Be.
In
a
blanket
?
what
do
you
make
a
puppie
of
me
,
by
skies
and
stones
I
will
go
and
tell
your
Lady
.
Exit
.
Mor.
Nay
but
Besha
.
Mar.
Nay
he
will
tell
my
Lorde
.
Enter
the
Countesse
Moren
and
Besha
.
Co.
Why
how
now
my
Lord
,
what
thought
you
I
was
dead
,
that
you
are
wooing
of
another
thus
,
or
are
you
laying
plots
to
worke
my
death
?
Mor.
Why
neither
sweete
bird
,
what
need
you
moue
these
questions
vnto
me
,
whome
you
know
loues
you
aboue
all
the
women
in
the
world
?
Co.
How
he
can
flatter
now
he
hath
made
a
fault
.
Besh,
He
can
do
little
,
and
he
cannot
cogge
.
Mor.
Out
you
asse
.
Co.
Wel
,
come
tell
me
what
you
did
intreat
.
Mor.
Nothing
by
heauen
sweete
bird
I
sweare
,
but
to
intreat
her
loue
.
Co.
But
to
intreat
her
loue
.
Mor.
Nay
heare
me
out
.
Co.
Nay
here
you
are
out
,
you
are
out
too
much
me thinkes
,
and
put
me
in
.
Mor.
And
put
you
in
?
Co.
In
a
faire
taking
sir
I
meane
.
Mor.
O
you
may
see
what
hastie
taking
is
,
you
women
euermore
scramble
for
our
woordes
,
and
neuer
take
them
mannerly
from
our
mouths
.
Con.
Come
tell
me
what
you
did
intreat
.
Mor.
I
did
intreat
her
loue
to
Colinet
.
Con.
To
Colinet
?
O
he
is
your
deare
cousen
,
and
your
kinde
heart
yfaith
is
neuer
well
but
when
you
are
doing
good
for
euery
man
:
speake
,
do
you
loue
me
?
Mor.
Yfaith
sweete
bird
.
Con.
Best
of
all
others
.
Mor.
Best
of
all
others
?
Con.
That
's
my
good
bird
yfaith
.
Besh.
O
mistris
,
will
you
loue
me
so
?
Mor.
No
by
my
troth
will
I
not
.
Besh.
No
by
my
troth
will
I
not
:
Why
that
's
well
said
,
I
could
neuer
get
her
to
flatter
me
yet
.
Enter
Lemot
,
Blanuel
,
and
Catalian
,
and
Colinet
.
Le
Good
morrow
my
good
Lord
,
and
these
passing
louely
Ladies
.
Cat.
So
now
we
shall
haue
all
maner
of
flattering
with
Monsieur
Lemot
.
Le
You
are
all
manner
of
waies
deceiued
Madam
,
for
I
am
so
farre
from
flattering
you
,
that
I
do
not
a
whit
praise
you
.
Con.
Why
do
you
call
vs
passing
louely
then
?
Lem.
Because
you
are
passing
from
your
louelines
.
Mar.
Madam
we
shall
not
haue
one
mot
of
Monsieur
Lemot
,
but
it
shal
be
as
it
were
a
mote
to
drown
al
our
conceit
in
admiration
.
Le.
See
what
a
mote
her
quick
eye
can
spie
in
mine
,
before
she
lookes
in
it
.
Mar
So
mote
I
thee
,
thine
answer
is
as
good
as
mought
be
.
Le.
Here
's
a
poore
name
run
out
of
breath
quickly
.
Co.
Why
Monsieur
Lemot
,
your
name
is
runne
out
of
breath
at
euery
word
you
speake
.
Le.
That
's
because
my
name
signifies
word
.
Mar.
Wel
hit
,
Monsieur
verbum
.
Le.
What
are
you
good
at
latine
Lady
?
Mar.
No
sir
,
but
I
know
what
verbum
is
.
Le.
Why
t
is
greenebum
,
ver
is
greene
,
and
you
know
what
bum
is
,
I
am
sure
of
that
.
Mar.
No
sir
,
t
is
a
verbe
,
and
I
can
decline
you
.
Lem.
That
you
can
I
le
be
sworne
.
Mar.
What
can
I
do
?
Le.
Decline
me
,
or
take
me
a
hole
lower
,
as
the
prouerbe
is
.
Mar.
Nay
sir
,
I
meane
plaine
Gramatical
declination
Le.
Well
,
let
's
heare
your
schollership
,
and
decline
me
.
Mar.
I
will
sir
,
moto
,
motas
.
Besha.
O
excellent
!
she
hath
cald
him
asse
in
latine
.
Le.
Well
sir
,
forward
.
Mar.
Nay
there
's
enough
to
trie
both
our
scholerships
Le.
Moto
,
motas
,
nay
faith
forward
to
motani
,
or
motandi
.
Mar.
Nay
sir
,
I
le
leaue
when
I
am
well
.
Co.
Why
Monsieur
Lemot
,
your
name
being
in
word
general
,
is
in
nini
,
or
in
hammer
,
or
in
cock
,
or
in
buzzard
.
Le.
Or
in
wagtaile
,
or
in
woodcocke
,
or
in
dotteril
,
or
in
dizard
.
Ma.
Or
in
clotte
,
or
in
head
,
or
in
cow
,
or
in
baby
.
Le.
Or
in
maukin
,
or
in
trash
,
or
in
pape
,
or
in
Lady
.
Co.
Or
in
deed
in
euery
thing
.
Le.
Why
then
t
is
in
Thing
.
Ma.
Then
good
Monsier
Thing
,
there
let
it
rest
.
Le.
Then
aboue
all
things
I
must
haue
a
woorde
with
you
.
Be.
Hands
off
sir
,
she
is
not
for
your
mowing
.
Le.
She
is
for
your
mocking
.
Be.
And
she
mocke
me
,
I
le
tell
her
father
.
Le.
That
's
a
good
child
,
thou
smellest
of
the
mother
,
and
she
was
a
foole
I
warrant
you
.
Be.
Meddle
with
me
,
but
doe
not
meddle
with
my
mother
.
Le.
That
's
a
good
child
,
come
,
I
must
needes
haue
a
word
with
you
.
Be.
You
shall
do
none
of
your
needs
with
her
sir
.
Cata.
Why
what
will
you
do
?
Be.
What
will
I
doe
?
you
shall
see
what
I
le
do
.
Blan.
Go
to
you
asse
,
offer
to
draw
here
,
and
wee
le
draw
thee
out
of
the
house
by
the
heeles
.
Be.
What
,
three
against
one
?
now
was
euer
proper
hard
fauord
Gentleman
so
abused
?
Go
to
Mistris
Martia
,
I
see
you
well
enough
,
are
you
not
ashamed
to
stand
talking
alone
with
such
a
one
as
hee
?
Le.
How
sir
?
with
such
a
one
as
I
sir
?
Be.
Yea
sir
,
with
such
a
one
as
you
sir
.
Le.
Why
,
what
am
I
?
Be.
What
are
you
sir
?
why
I
know
you
well
enough
.
Le.
Sirra
tel
me
,
what
you
know
me
for
,
or
else
by
heauen
I
le
make
thee
better
thou
hadst
neuer
knowne
how
to
speake
.
Be.
Why
sir
,
if
you
wil
needes
know
,
I
know
you
for
an
honorable
gentleman
and
the
Kings
minion
,
and
were
it
not
to
you
,
there
's
nere
a
gentleman
in
Paris
should
haue
had
her
out
of
my
hands
.
Ma.
Nay
,
hee
s
as
tall
a
Gentleman
of
his
hands
as
auy
is
in
Paris
.
Col.
There
's
a
fauour
for
you
sir
.
Le.
But
I
can
get
no
fauour
for
you
sir
.
Blan.
I
pray
my
Lord
intreat
for
your
cossen
Colinet
.
Mo.
Alas
man
,
I
dare
not
for
my
wife
.
Cat.
Why
my
Lord
she
thinkes
it
is
for
nothing
,
but
to
speake
for
your
cosen
.
Mo.
I
pray
you
birde
,
giue
me
leaue
to
speake
for
my
cosen
.
Co.
I
am
content
for
him
.
Mo.
Then
one
woorde
with
you
more
,
curteous
ladie
Martia
.
Be.
Not
,
and
you
were
my
father
.
Mo.
Gentlemen
,
for
God
sake
thrust
this
asse
out
of
the
doores
.
Lem.
Nay
,
birladye
he
le
runne
home
and
tell
her
father
.
Ca.
Well
,
go
to
her
,
I
warrant
he
shall
not
trouble
you
(
kind
gentleman
)
how
we
dote
on
thee
:
imbrace
him
gentlemen
.
Blan.
O
sweete
Besha
how
we
honour
thee
.
Co.
Nay
Gentlemen
,
looke
what
a
pearcing
eye
hee
hath
.
Be.
An
eie
?
I
haue
an
eie
and
it
were
a
pole-cat
.
Ca.
Nay
,
looke
what
a
nose
he
hath
.
Be.
My
nose
is
nete
crimson
.
Blan.
Nay
,
looke
what
a
handsome
man
he
is
,
O
Nature
,
Nature
,
thou
neuer
madest
man
of
so
pure
a
feature
.
Be
Truly
truly
Gentlemen
,
I
do
not
deserue
this
kindnesse
.
Ca.
O
Lorde
sir
,
you
are
too
modest
,
come
shall
we
walke
?
Be.
Whither
?
to
the
alehouse
?
Le
Hearke
you
Madam
,
haue
you
no
more
care
of
the
right
of
your
husband
,
then
to
let
him
talke
thus
affectionately
with
another
?
Coun.
Why
he
speakes
not
for
himselfe
,
but
for
his
cosen
Colinet
.
Le.
Gods
my
life
?
he
telles
you
so
,
nay
and
these
excuses
may
serue
I
haue
done
.
Con.
By
the
masse
now
I
obserue
him
,
he
lookes
very
suspitiously
indeede
,
nere
trust
me
if
his
lookes
,
and
his
iesture
doe
not
plainely
shewe
himselfe
to
sweare
,
by
this
light
I
do
loue
thee
.
Lem.
Burlady
Madam
you
gesse
shrewdly
indeede
,
but
hearke
you
Madam
,
I
pray
let
not
me
be
the
author
of
discord
betweene
my
good
Lord
and
you
.
Con.
No
no
Monsieur
Lemot
,
I
were
blinde
if
I
could
not
see
this
,
I
le
slit
her
nose
by
Iesus
Me.
How
now
what
's
the
matter
?
Co.
What
's
the
matter
?
if
I
could
come
at
your
Mistris
,
she
should
know
what
's
the
matter
.
Mo.
My
Mistris
?
Co.
Yea
your
Mistris
,
O
here
's
faire
dissimulation
,
O
ye
impudent
gossip
,
do
I
send
for
you
to
my
house
to
make
you
my
co�panion
,
and
do
you
vse
me
thus
?
little
dost
thou
know
what
t
is
to
loue
a
man
truly
,
for
if
thou
didst
,
thou
wouldst
be
ashamed
to
wrong
me
so
.
Mar.
You
wrong
me
Madam
to
say
I
wrong
you
.
Co.
Go
to
,
get
you
out
of
my
house
.
Mar.
I
am
gone
Madam
.
Mor.
Well
,
come
in
sweete
bird
and
I
le
perswade
thee
,
ther
's
no
harme
done
.
C.
Well
,
we
shall
heare
your
perswasions
.
Le.
Well
God
knowes
,
and
I
can
partly
gesse
what
he
must
do
to
perswade
her
:
well
,
take
your
faire
charge
,
faire
and
manly
L.
Monsieur
Labesha
.
Co.
One
word
with
you
more
faire
ladie
.
Le.
Not
a
word
,
no
man
on
paine
of
death
,
not
a
word
,
he
comes
vpon
my
rapiers
point
,
that
comes
within
fortie
foote
on
her
.
Be.
Thankes
good
Lemot
,
and
thankes
gentlemen
all
,
and
her
father
shal
thanke
you
.
C.
Much
good
do
it
you
sir
:
come
Gentlemen
,
le
ts
go
wait
vpon
the
king
,
and
see
the
humour
of
the
young
lord
Dowseger
.
Lem.
Excuse
me
to
the
King
,
and
tell
him
I
will
meet
him
there
:
so
this
is
but
the
beginning
of
sport
betweene
this
fine
lord
and
his
old
lady
:
but
this
wench
Martia
hath
happy
starres
raigned
at
the
disposition
of
her
beautie
,
for
the
King
him selfe
doth
mightily
dote
on
her
.
Now
to
my
Puritane
,
and
see
if
I
can
make
vp
my
full
proofe
of
her
.
Enter
the
puritane
in
her
best
attyre
.
Flo.
Now
am
I
vp
and
ready
,
ready
?
why
?
because
my
cloathes
once
on
,
that
call
we
ready
:
but
readinesse
I
hope
hath
reference
to
some
fit
action
for
our
seuerall
state
:
for
when
I
am
attyred
thus
Countesse-like
,
t
is
not
to
worke
,
for
that
befittes
me
not
,
t
is
on
some
pleasure
,
whose
chiefe
obiect
is
one
mans
content
,
and
hee
my
husbande
is
,
but
what
need
I
thus
be
attyred
,
for
that
he
would
be
pleased
with
meaner
weed
?
besides
I
take
no
pleasure
thus
to
please
him
:
I
am
content
,
because
it
is
my
duty
to
keep
to
him
,
and
not
to
seeke
no
further
:
but
if
that
pleasure
be
a
thing
that
makes
the
time
seeme
short
,
if
it
do
laughter
cause
,
if
it
procure
the
tongue
but
hartily
to
say
,
I
thanke
you
,
I
haue
no
such
thing
,
nor
can
the
godliest
woman
in
the
worlde
,
against
her
nature
please
her
sense
,
or
soule
,
she
may
say
,
this
I
will
,
or
this
I
will
not
.
But
what
shall
she
reape
hereby
?
comfort
in
an other
world
,
if
she
will
stay
till
then
.
Enter
her
husband
behind
her
.
Lab.
Yea
mary
sir
now
I
must
looke
about
,
now
if
her
desolate
proouer
come
againe
,
shal
I
admit
him
to
make
farther
triall
?
I
le
haue
a
Dialogue
betweene
my selfe
and
manly
reason
:
to
that
speciall
end
reason
,
shall
I
indure
a
desolate
man
to
come
and
court
my
wife
,
and
proue
her
constancie
:
reason
,
to
court
and
proue
her
you
may
beare
my
lord
,
for
perfite
things
are
not
the
worse
for
triall
;
gold
will
not
turne
to
drosse
for
deepest
triall
:
before
God
a
comfortable
saying
;
thanks
gentle
reason
,
I
le
trouble
you
no
more
.
God
saue
sweet
wife
,
looke
vp
,
thy
tempter
comes
.
Flo.
Let
him
my
lord
,
I
hope
I
am
more
blest
then
to
relent
in
thought
of
lewde
suggestion
.
Lab.
But
if
by
frailtie
you
should
yeeld
in
thought
,
what
will
you
do
?
Flo.
Then
shall
you
keepe
me
close
,
and
neuer
let
me
see
man
but
your selfe
,
if
not
,
then
boldly
may
I
go
abroade
.
Lab.
But
how
,
shall
I
know
whether
you
yeeld
,
or
no
?
Flo.
Heare
vs
your selfe
,
my
lord
.
Lab.
Tut
,
that
were
grosse
,
for
no
woman
will
yeeld
in
her
husbands
hearing
.
Flo.
Then
to
assure
you
if
I
yeelde
or
no
,
marke
but
these
signes
:
as
hee
is
proouing
me
,
if
I
doe
yeelde
,
you
shall
perceyue
my
face
blush
and
looke
pale
,
and
put
on
heauie
lookes
.
If
I
resist
I
will
triumph
,
and
smile
,
and
when
I
hold
but
vp
my
finger
,
stop
his
vaine
lips
,
or
thrust
him
on
the
breast
,
then
is
he
ouerthrowne
both
horse
and
foote
.
Lab.
Why
,
this
doth
satisfie
me
mightily
:
see
hee
is
come
.
Lem.
Honor
to
my
good
lord
,
and
his
faire
yong
ladie
.
Lab.
Nowe
Monsieur
Sathan
,
you
are
come
to
tempt
and
prooue
at
full
the
spirit
of
my
wife
.
Lem.
I
am
my
lord
,
but
vainly
I
suppose
.
Lab.
You
see
she
dares
put
on
this
braue
attire
fit
with
the
fashion
,
which
you
think
serues
much
to
lead
a
woman
into
light
desires
.
Lem.
My
lord
I
see
it
:
and
the
sight
thereof
doth
halfe
dismay
me
to
make
further
proofe
.
Lab.
Nay
prooue
her
,
proue
her
sir
,
and
spare
not
:
what
doth
the
wittie
minion
of
our
King
thinke
any
dame
in
France
will
say
him
nay
?
but
proue
her
,
proue
her
,
see
and
spare
not
.
Lem.
Well
sir
,
though
halfe
discouraged
in
my
comming
,
yet
I
le
go
forward
:
ladie
,
by
your
leaue
.
Flo.
Nowe
sir
,
your
cunning
in
a
Ladyes
proofe
.
Lem.
Madam
,
in
prouing
you
I
find
no
proofe
against
your
piercing
glauncings
,
but
swear
I
am
shot
thorow
with
your
loue
.
Flo.
I
do
beleeue
you
:
who
will
sweare
he
loues
,
to
get
the
thing
he
loues
not
?
if
he
loue
,
what
needs
more
perfite
triall
?
Lem.
Most
true
rare
ladie
.
Flo.
Then
are
we
fitly
met
,
I
loue
you
too
.
Lem.
Exceeding
excellent
.
Flo.
Nay
,
I
knowe
you
will
applaude
mee
in
this
course
,
but
to
let
common
circumstaunces
passe
,
let
vs
be
familiar
.
Lem.
Deare
life
,
you
rauish
my
conceit
with
ioy
.
Lab.
I
long
to
see
the
signes
that
she
will
make
.
Flo.
I
told
my
husband
I
would
make
these
signes
:
if
I
resisted
,
first
hold
vp
my
finger
,
as
if
I
said
,
yfaith
sir
you
are
gone
,
but
it
shall
say
,
yfayth
sir
,
we
are
one
.
Lab.
Nowe
shee
triumphes
,
and
pointes
to
heauen
I
warrant
you
.
Flo.
Then
must
I
seeme
as
if
I
woulde
heare
no
moret
and
stoppe
your
vaine
lips
,
go
cruell
lippes
,
you
haue
bewitcht
me
,
go
.
Lab.
Now
she
stops
in
his
scorned
wordes
,
and
rates
him
for
his
paines
.
Flo.
And
when
I
thrust
you
thus
against
the
breast
,
then
are
you
ouerthrowne
both
horse
and
foote
.
Lab.
Now
is
he
ouerthrowne
both
horse
and
foote
.
Flo.
Away
vaine
man
,
haue
I
not
answered
you
?
Lem.
Madam
,
I
yeeld
and
sweare
,
I
neuer
saw
so
constant
,
nor
so
vertuous
a
ladie
.
Lab.
Now
speake
I
pray
,
and
speake
but
truly
,
haue
you
not
got
a
wrong
sow
by
the
eare
?
Lem.
My
lord
,
my
labor
is
not
altogether
lost
,
for
now
I
find
that
which
I
neuer
thought
.
Lab.
A
sirrah
,
is
the
edge
of
your
steele
wit
rebated
then
against
her
Adamant
?
Lem.
It
is
my
Lord
,
yet
one
word
more
faire
ladie
.
Lab.
Faine
would
he
haue
it
do
,
and
it
will
not
be
:
harke
you
wife
,
what
signe
will
you
make
mee
nowe
if
you
relent
not
?
Flo.
Lend
him
my
handkercher
to
wipe
his
lips
of
their
last
disgrace
.
Lab.
Excellent
good
,
go
forward
,
see
I
pray
.
Flo.
An other
signe
yfaith
,
loue
is
required
.
Lem.
Let
him
haue
signes
inowe
,
my
heauenly
loue
,
then
knowe
there
is
a
priuate
meeting
this
day
at
Verones
ordinarie
,
where
if
you
will
do
me
the
grace
to
come
,
and
bring
the
beauteous
Martia
with
you
,
I
wil
prouide
a
faire
and
priuate
roome
,
where
you
shal
be
vnseene
of
any
man
,
onely
of
me
,
and
of
the
King
himselfe
,
whom
I
will
cause
to
honour
your
repaire
with
his
high
presence
,
and
there
with
Musicke
and
quicke
reuellings
you
may
reuiue
your
spirits
so
long
time
dulled
.
Flo.
I
le
send
for
Martia
then
,
and
meete
you
there
,
and
tell
my
husband
,
I
wil
locke
my selfe
in
my
choise
walke
till
supper-time
:
we
pray
sir
,
wipe
your
lips
of
the
disgrace
they
tooke
in
their
last
labour
.
Lem.
Mary
the
diuell
was
neuer
so
dispited
.
Lab.
Nay
stay
,
see
.
Lem.
No
,
no
,
my
L
,
you
haue
the
constantst
wife
that
euer
:
wel
,
I
le
say
no
more
.
Exit
.
Lab.
Neuer
was
minion
so
disminioned
,
come
constancie
,
come
my
girle
,
I
le
leaue
thee
loose
to
twentie
of
them
yfaith
.
Flo.
Come
my
good
head
,
come
.
Exit
.
Enter
the
King
and
all
the
lords
,
with
the
Trumpets
.
King
.
Why
sound
these
Trumpets
in
the
Diuelles
name
.
C.
To
shew
the
King
comes
.
King
.
To
shew
the
King
comes
?
Go
hang
the
Trumpetters
,
they
mocke
me
boldly
,
and
euery
other
thing
that
makes
me
knowne
,
not
telling
what
I
am
,
but
what
I
seem
,
a
King
of
clouts
,
a
scarcrow
,
full
of
cobwebs
,
spiders
and
earewigs
,
that
sets
Iackdawes
long
tongue
in
my
bosome
,
and
vpon
my
head
,
and
such
are
all
the
affections
of
loue
swarming
in
me
,
without
commaund
or
reason
.
Lem.
Howe
nowe
my
liege
!
what
quackemyred
in
Philosophie
,
bounde
with
loues
whipcorde
,
and
quite
robbed
of
reason
:
and
I
le
giue
you
a
receyte
for
this
presently
.
King
.
Peace
Lemot
,
they
say
the
yong
lord
Dowseger
is
rarely
learned
,
and
nothing
lunatike
as
men
suppose
,
but
hateth
companie
,
and
worldly
trash
,
the
iudgement
and
the
iust
contempt
of
them
,
haue
in
reason
arguments
that
breake
affection
(
as
the
most
sacred
Poets
write
)
and
still
the
roughest
wind
:
and
his
rare
humour
come
we
now
to
heare
.
Lem.
Yea
,
but
hearke
you
my
hege
,
I
le
tell
you
a
better
humour
then
that
,
here
presently
will
be
your
faire
loue
Martia
,
to
see
his
humour
,
and
from
thence
faire
countesse
Florula
,
&
she
will
go
vnto
Verones
ordinarie
,
where
none
but
you
and
I
,
and
Count
Moren
,
will
be
most
merry
.
King
.
Why
Count
Moren
I
hope
dares
not
aduenture
into
any
womans
companie
,
but
his
wiues
.
Lem.
Yes
,
as
I
will
worke
,
my
liege
,
and
then
let
me
alone
to
keepe
him
there
till
his
wife
comes
.
King
.
That
will
be
royall
sport
:
see
where
all
comes
:
welcome
faire
lords
and
ladies
.
Enter
Laberuele
,
Labesha
,
and
all
the
rest
.
Lab.
My
liege
you
are
welcome
to
my
poore
house
.
Lem.
I
pray
,
my
liege
know
this
Gentleman
especially
,
he
is
a
Gentleman
borne
I
can
tell
you
.
King
.
With
all
my
heart
:
what
might
I
call
your
name
?
Lab.
Monsieur
Labesha
,
siniora
defoulasa
.
Ki.
Defoulasa
.
an
il
sounding
barendrie
of
my
word
:
but
to
the
purpose
,
lord
Laberuele
,
we
are
come
to
see
the
humour
of
your
rare
sonne
,
which
by
some
meanes
I
pray
let
vs
pertake
.
La.
Your
highnes
shal
too
vnworthily
pertake
the
sight
which
I
with
griese
and
teares
daily
behold
,
seeing
in
him
the
end
of
my
poore
house
.
King
.
You
know
not
that
(
my
lord
)
your
wife
is
yong
,
and
he
perhaps
hereafter
may
be
mooued
to
more
societie
.
La.
Would
to
God
hee
would
,
that
wee
might
do
to
your
crowne
of
France
,
more
worthy
and
more
acceptable
seruice
.
King
.
Thanks
good
my
lord
,
see
where
he
appeeres
.
Enter
Lauele
with
a
picture
,
and
a
paire
of
large
hose
,
and
a
codpeece
,
and
a
sword
.
K.
Say
Lauel
,
where
is
your
friend
the
young
lord
Dowsecer
?
La.
I
looke
my
liege
he
will
be
here
anone
,
but
then
I
must
intreat
your
Maiestie
and
all
the
rest
,
to
stand
vnseen
,
for
he
as
yet
will
brooke
no
companie
.
King
.
We
will
stand
close
Lauele
,
but
wherefore
bring
you
this
apparell
,
that
picture
,
and
that
sword
?
Lau.
To
put
him
by
the
sight
of
them
in
mind
of
their
braue
states
that
vse
them
,
or
that
at
the
least
of
the
true
vse
they
should
be
put
vnto
.
King
.
Indeede
the
sence
doth
still
stir
vp
the
soule
,
and
though
these
obiects
do
not
worke
,
yet
it
is
very
probable
in
time
she
may
,
at
least
,
we
shal
discerne
his
humor
of
the�
.
Lem.
See
where
he
comes
contemplating
,
stand
close
.
Enter
Dowsecer
.
Quid
Dei
potes
videri
magnum
in
rebus
humanis
quae
aeterni
omnes
to
thy
�sque
notas
sic
omnibus
magna
tutor
,
what
can
seeme
strange
to
him
on
earthly
things
to
whom
the
whole
course
of
eternitie
,
and
the
round
compasse
of
the
world
is
knowne
?
a
speech
diuine
,
but
yet
I
maruaile
much
how
it
should
spring
from
thee
,
Marke
Cicero
that
sold
for
glory
the
sweet
peece
of
life
,
&
make
a
torment
of
rich
natures
work
,
wearing
thy self
by
watchful
candel
light
,
when
all
the
Smithes
&
Weauers
were
at
rest
,
and
yet
was
gallant
ere
the
day
bird
sung
to
haue
a
troope
of
clyents
at
thy
gates
,
armed
with
religious
suplications
,
such
as
wold
make
sterne
Minos
laugh
to
reade
:
look
on
our
lawyers
billes
,
not
one
containes
vntrue
or
honest
drifts
;
but
he
cares
,
he
cares
,
he
cares
;
for
acorns
now
are
in
request
,
but
the
okes
poore
fruite
did
nourish
men
,
men
were
li
cokes
of
body
,
tough
,
and
strong
men
were
like
Gyants
then
,
but
Pigmies
now
,
yet
full
of
villanies
as
their
skinne
can
hold
.
Le.
How
like
you
this
humor
my
liege
?
King
.
This
is
no
humour
,
this
is
but
perfit
iudgement
.
Coun.
Is
this
a
frensie
?
Mar.
O
were
al
men
such
,
men
were
no
men
but
gods
:
this
earth
a
heauen
.
Do.
See
see
the
shamelesse
world
,
that
dares
present
her
mortall
enemie
with
these
grose
ensignes
of
her
lenity
yron
and
steele
,
vncharitable
stuffe
,
good
spittle-sounders
,
enemies
to
whole
skinnes
,
as
if
there
were
not
waies
enow
to
die
by
natural
and
casuall
accidents
,
diseases
,
surfeits
,
braue
carowses
,
old
aquavitae
,
and
too
base
wiues
,
and
thousands
more
hence
with
this
art
of
murder
.
But
here
is
goodly
geare
,
the
soule
of
man
,
for
t
is
his
better
part
,
take
away
this
,
and
take
away
their
merites
,
and
their
spirites
,
scarce
dare
they
come
in
any
publike
view
,
without
this
countenance
giuer
,
and
some
dares
not
come
,
because
they
haue
it
too
,
for
they
may
sing
,
in
written
books
they
find
it
,
what
is
it
then
the
fashion
,
or
the
cost
,
the
cost
doth
match
,
but
yet
the
fashion
more
,
for
let
it
be
but
meane
,
so
in
the
fashion
,
&
t
is
most
gentleman
like
,
is
it
so
?
make
a
hand
in
the
margent
,
and
burne
the
booke
,
a
large
house
and
a
codpeice
makes
a
man
a
codpece
,
nay
indeed
but
house
must
down
:
well
for
your
gentle
forgers
of
men
,
and
for
you
come
to
rest
me
into
fashion
,
I
le
weare
you
thus
,
and
sit
vpon
the
matter
.
La.
And
he
doth
despise
our
purposes
.
Ca.
Beare
with
him
yet
my
Lorde
,
hee
is
not
resolued
.
La.
I
would
not
haue
my
friend
mocke
worthy
men
,
for
the
vaine
pride
of
some
that
are
not
so
.
Dow.
I
do
not
here
deride
difference
of
states
,
no
not
in
shew
,
but
wish
that
such
as
want
shew
might
not
be
scorned
with
ignorant
Turkish
pride
,
beeing
pompous
in
apparel
,
and
in
mind
:
nor
would
I
haue
with
imitated
shapes
menne
make
their
natiue
land
,
the
land
of
apes
,
liuing
like
strangers
when
they
be
at
home
,
and
so
perhaps
beare
strange
hearts
to
their
home
,
nor
loose
a
snuffe
like
a
piannets
taile
,
for
nothing
but
their
tailes
and
formall
lockes
,
when
like
to
creame
boules
all
their
vertues
swim
in
their
set
faces
,
all
their
in
parts
then
fit
to
serue
pesants
or
make
curdes
for
dawes
:
but
what
a
stocke
am
I
thus
to
neglect
this
figure
of
mans
comfort
this
rare
peece
?
La.
Heauens
grant
that
make
him
more
humane
,
and
sotiable
.
King
.
Nay
hee
s
more
humane
then
all
we
are
.
La.
I
feare
he
will
be
too
sharp
to
that
sweete
sex
.
Dow.
She
is
very
faire
,
I
thinke
that
she
be
painted
;
and
if
she
be
sir
,
she
might
aske
of
mee
,
how
many
is
there
of
our
sexe
that
are
not
?
t
is
a
sharpe
question
:
marry
and
I
thinke
they
haue
small
�
skill
,
if
they
were
all
of
painting
t
were
safer
dealing
with
them
,
and
indeed
were
their
minds
strong
enough
to
guide
their
bodies
,
their
beuteous
deeds
shoulde
match
with
their
heauenly
lookes
,
t
were
necessarie
they
should
weare
them
,
and
would
they
vouchsafe
it
,
euen
I
would
ioy
in
their
societie
.
Ma.
And
who
would
not
die
with
such
a
man
?
Dow.
But
to
admire
them
as
our
gallants
do
,
O
what
an
eie
she
hath
,
O
dainty
hand
,
rare
foote
and
legge
,
and
leaue
the
minde
respectles
,
this
is
a
plague
,
that
in
both
men
and
women
make
such
pollution
of
our
earthly
beeing
:
well
I
will
practice
yet
to
court
this
peece
.
La.
O
happie
man
,
now
haue
I
hope
in
her
.
King
.
Me thinkes
I
could
indure
him
daies
and
nights
.
Dow.
Well
sir
,
now
thus
must
I
do
sir
,
ere
it
come
to
women
;
now
sir
a
plague
vpon
it
,
t
is
so
ridiculous
I
can
no
further
:
what
poore
asse
was
it
that
set
this
in
my
way
?
now
if
my
father
should
be
the
man
:
Gods
precious
coles
t
is
he
.
Lab.
Good
sonne
go
forward
in
this
gentle
humor
,
obserue
this
picture
,
it
presents
a
maide
of
noble
birth
and
excellent
of
parts
,
whom
for
our
house
and
honor
sake
,
I
wish
thou
wouldst
confesse
to
marrie
.
Dow.
To
marrie
father
?
why
we
shall
haue
children
.
La.
Why
that
's
the
ende
of
marriage
,
and
the
ioye
of
men
.
Do.
O
how
You
are
deceiued
,
you
haue
but
me
,
&
what
a
trouble
am
I
to
your
ioy
?
but
father
,
if
you
long
to
haue
some
fruite
of
me
,
see
father
I
will
creepe
into
this
stuborne
earth
and
mixe
my
flesh
with
it
,
and
they
shall
breede
grasse
,
to
fat
oxen
,
asses
and
such
like
,
and
when
they
in
the
grasse
the
spring
conuerts
into
beasts
nourishment
,
then
comes
the
fruite
of
this
my
body
forth
;
then
may
you
well
say
,
seeing
my
race
is
so
profitably
increased
,
that
good
fat
oxe
,
and
that
same
large
eard
asse
are
my
sonne
sonnes
,
that
caulfe
with
a
white
face
is
his
faire
daughter
,
with
which
,
when
your
fields
are
richly
filled
,
then
will
my
race
content
you
,
but
for
the
ioyes
of
children
,
tush
t
is
gone
,
children
will
not
deserue
,
nor
parents
take
it
:
wealth
is
the
onely
father
&
the
child
,
and
but
in
wealth
no
man
hath
any
ioy
.
La.
Some
course
deare
sonne
take
for
thy
honor
sake
.
Dow.
Then
father
here
's
a
most
excellent
course
.
La.
This
is
some
comfort
yet
.
Dow.
If
you
will
strait
be
gone
and
leaue
me
here
,
I
le
stand
as
quietlye
as
anye
lambe
,
and
trouble
none
of
you
La.
An
haplesse
man
.
Le.
How
like
you
this
humour
yet
my
liege
?
King
.
As
of
a
holy
fury
,
not
a
frensie
.
Mor.
See
see
my
liege
,
he
hath
seene
vs
sure
.
King
.
Nay
looke
how
he
viewes
Martia
and
makes
him
fine
.
Lem.
Yea
my
liege
,
and
she
as
I
hope
wel
obserued
,
hath
vttered
many
kind
conceits
of
hers
.
King
.
Well
I
le
be
gone
,
and
when
shee
comes
to
Verones
ordinarie
,
I
le
haue
her
taken
to
my
custodie
.
Lem,
I
le
stay
my
liege
,
and
see
the
euent
of
this
.
King
.
Do
so
Lemot
.
Exit
the
king
.
Dow.
What
haue
I
seene
?
howe
am
I
burnt
to
dust
with
a
new
Sun
,
and
made
a
nouell
Phoenix
,
is
she
a
woman
that
obiects
this
sight
,
able
to
worke
the
chaos
of
the
world
into
gestion
?
O
diuine
aspect
,
the
excellent
disposer
of
the
mind
shines
in
thy
beautie
,
and
thou
hast
not
chaunged
my
soule
to
sense
but
sense
vnto
my
soule
,
and
I
desire
thy
pure
societie
,
but
euen
as
angels
do
,
to
angels
flie
.
Exit
.
Mar.
Flie
soule
and
follow
him
.
Lab.
I
maruaile
much
at
my
sonnes
sodaine
straunge
behauiour
.
Lem.
Beare
with
him
yet
my
Lord
,
t
is
but
his
humour
:
come
,
what
shall
we
go
to
Verones
ordinarie
?
Lab.
Yea
for
Gods
sake
,
for
I
am
passing
hungry
.
Mor.
Yea
,
come
Monsieur
Lemot
,
will
you
walke
?
Count
.
What
,
will
you
go
?
Mor.
Yea
sweet
bird
,
I
haue
promised
so
.
Count
.
Go
to
,
you
shall
not
go
and
leaue
me
alone
.
Mor.
For
one
meale
gentle
bird
:
Veron
inuites
vs
to
buy
some
iewels
he
hath
brought
of
late
from
Italie
:
I
le
buy
the
best
,
and
bring
it
thee
,
so
thou
wilt
let
me
go
.
Count
.
Well
said
flattering
Fabian
,
but
tel
me
then
what
ladies
will
be
there
?
Mor.
Ladies
?
why
none
.
Lem.
No
ladies
vse
to
come
to
ordinaries
.
Madam
.
Count
.
Go
to
bird
,
tell
me
now
the
very
truth
.
Mor.
None
of
mine
honour
bird
,
you
neuer
heard
that
ladies
came
to
ordinaries
.
Count
O
that
's
because
I
should
not
go
with
you
.
Mar.
Why
t
is
not
fit
you
should
.
Cou.
Well
heark
you
bird
,
of
my
word
you
shall
not
go
,
vnlesse
you
will
sweare
to
me
,
you
will
neither
court
nor
kisse
a
dame
in
any
sort
,
till
you
come
home
againe
.
Mar.
Why
I
sweare
I
will
not
.
Count
.
Go
to
,
by
this
kisse
.
Mar.
Yea
,
by
this
kisse
.
Foies.
Martia
,
learne
by
this
when
you
are
a
wife
.
Lab.
I
like
the
kissing
well
.
Flo.
My
lord
I
le
leaue
you
,
your
sonne
Dowsecer
hath
made
me
melancholy
with
his
humour
,
and
I
le
go
locke
my selfe
in
my
close
walke
till
supper
time
.
Lab.
What
,
and
not
dine
to day
?
Flo.
No
my
good
head
:
come
Martia
,
you
and
I
will
fast
togither
.
Mar.
With
all
my
heart
Madam
.
Exit
.
Lab.
Well
Gentlemen
I
le
go
see
my
sonne
.
Exit
.
Foy.
Birlady
Gentlemen
I
le
go
home
to
dinner
.
Labe.
Home
to
dinner
?
birlord
but
you
shall
not
,
you
shall
go
with
vs
to
the
ordinarie
,
where
you
shall
meete
Gentlemen
of
so
good
carriage
,
and
passing
co�plements
,
it
will
do
your
hart
good
to
see
them
,
why
you
neuer
saw
the
best
sort
of
Gentlemen
if
not
at
ordinaries
.
Foy.
I
promise
you
that
's
rare
,
my
lord
,
and
Monsieur
Lemot
,
I
le
meet
you
there
presently
.
Lem.
Wee
le
expect
your
comming
.
Exeunt
all
.
Enter
Uerone
with
his
Napkin
vpon
his
shoulder
,
and
his
man
Iaques
with
another
,
and
his
sonne
bringing
in
cloth
and
napkins
.
Uer.
Come
on
my
maisters
,
shadow
these
tables
with
their
white
vailes
,
accomplish
the
court
Cupboord
,
waite
diligently
to day
for
my
credite
and
your
owne
,
that
if
the
meate
should
chance
to
be
raw
,
yet
your
behauiors
being
neither
rude
nor
raw
,
may
excuse
it
,
or
if
the
meate
should
chaunce
to
be
tough
,
be
you
tender
ouer
them
in
your
attendance
,
that
the
one
may
beare
with
the
other
.
Iaq.
Faith
some
of
them
bee
so
hard
to
please
,
finding
fault
with
your
cheere
,
and
discommending
your
wine
,
saying
,
they
fare
better
at
Verones
for
halfe
the
mony
.
Boy
.
Besides
,
if
there
be
any
cheboules
in
your
napkins
,
they
say
your
nose
or
ours
haue
dropt
on
them
,
and
then
they
throw
them
about
the
house
.
Uer.
But
these
bee
small
faultes
,
you
may
beare
with
the
,
young
Gentlemen
and
wilde
heades
will
be
doing
.
Enter
the
Maide
.
Maid
.
Come
,
whose
wit
was
it
to
couer
in
this
roome
,
name
in
the
of
God
I
trowee
.
Boy
.
Why
I
hope
this
roome
is
as
faire
as
the
other
.
Maid
.
In
your
foolish
opinion
:
you
might
haue
tolde
a
wise
body
so
,
and
kept
your selfe
a
foole
still
.
Boy
.
I
cry
you
mercie
,
how
bitter
you
are
in
your
prouerbs
.
Maid
.
So
bitter
I
am
sir
.
Uer.
O
sweet
Sateena
I
dare
not
say
I
loue
thee
.
Iaq.
Must
you
controule
vs
you
proud
baggage
you
?
Maid
.
Baggage
?
you
are
a
knaue
to
call
me
baggage
.
Iaq.
A
knaue
?
my
maister
shall
know
that
.
Ver.
I
will
not
see
them
.
Iaq.
Maister
,
here
is
your
Maid
vses
her selfe
so
sawsily
,
that
one
house
shall
not
holde
vs
two
long
,
God
willing
.
Uer.
Come
hither
huswife
.
Pardon
mee
sweete
Iacenan
,
I
must
make
an
angry
face
outwardly
,
though
I
smile
inwardly
.
Maid
.
Say
what
you
will
to
me
sir
.
Ver.
O
you
are
a
fine
Gossip
,
can
I
not
keepe
honest
seruants
in
my
house
,
but
you
must
controule
them
?
you
must
be
their
mistres
.
Maid
.
Why
I
did
but
take
vp
the
cloth
,
because
my
mistresse
would
haue
the
dinner
in
an other
roome
,
and
hee
called
me
baggage
.
Iaq.
You
called
me
knaue
and
foole
,
I
thanke
you
small
bones
.
Ma.
Go
to
,
go
to
,
she
were
wise
enough
would
talke
with
you
.
Boy
.
Go
thy
waies
for
the
prowdest
harlotrie
that
euer
came
in
our
house
.
Ver.
Let
her
alone
boy
,
I
haue
scoold
her
I
warant
thee
,
she
shall
not
be
my
maide
long
,
if
I
can
helpe
it
.
Boy
.
No
,
I
thinke
so
sir
,
but
what
,
shal
I
take
vppe
the
cloath
?
Ue.
No
,
let
the
cloth
lie
,
hither
thei
le
com
first
,
I
am
sure
of
it
,
then
If
they
will
dine
in
the
other
roome
,
they
shal
.
Enter
Rol
.
Ro.
Good
morrow
my
host
,
is
no body
come
yet
?
Ue.
Your
worship
is
the
first
sir
.
Ro.
I
was
inuited
by
my
cosen
Colinet
,
to
see
your
iewells
.
Ve.
I
thanke
his
worship
and
yours
.
Ro.
Here
's
a
prettie
place
for
an
ordinarie
,
I
am
very
sory
I
haue
not
vsed
to
come
to
ordinaries
.
Ve.
I
hope
we
shall
haue
your
company
hereafter
.
Ro.
You
are
very
like
so
.
Enter
Berger
.
Ber.
Good
morrow
my
host
,
good
morrow
good
Monsieur
Rowle
.
Ro.
Good
morrow
to
you
sir
,
Ber.
What
are
we
two
the
first
?
giue
's
the
cardes
,
here
come
,
this
gentleman
and
I
wil
go
to
cardes
while
dinner
be
ready
.
Ro.
No
truly
I
cannot
play
at
cardes
.
Ber.
How
!
not
play
,
O
for
shame
say
not
so
,
how
can
a
yong
gentleman
spend
his
time
but
in
play
,
and
in
courting
his
Mistris
:
come
use
this
,
least
youth
take
too
much
of
the
other
.
Ro.
Faith
I
cannot
play
,
and
yet
I
care
not
so
much
to
venture
two
or
three
crownes
with
you
.
Ber.
O
I
thought
what
I
shuld
find
of
you
,
I
pray
God
I
haue
not
met
with
my
match
.
Ro.
No
trust
me
sir
,
I
cannot
play
.
Ber.
Hearke
you
my
host
,
haue
you
a
pipe
of
good
Tabacco
?
Ue.
The
best
in
the
towne
:
boy
drie
a
leafe
.
Boy
.
There
's
none
in
the
house
sir
.
Ve.
Drie
a
docke
leafe
.
Be.
My
host
,
do
you
know
Monsieur
Blanuel
?
Ue.
Yea
passing
well
sir
.
Be.
Why
,
he
was
taken
learning
trickes
at
old
Lucilas
house
the
muster
mistris
of
all
the
smocktearers
in
Paris
,
and
both
the
bawde
and
the
pander
were
carried
to
the
dungeon
.
Ve.
There
was
dungeon
vpon
dungeon
,
but
call
you
her
the
muster-mistris
of
al
the
smocktearers
in
Paris
?
Be.
Yea
,
for
she
hath
them
all
trained
vp
afore
her
.
Enter
Blanuel
.
Bla.
Good
morow
my
host
,
good
morow
gentlemen
al
.
Ue.
Good
morow
Monsieur
Blanuel
,
I
am
glad
of
your
quicke
deliuery
.
Bla.
Deliuery
,
what
didst
thou
thinke
I
was
with
child
?
Ve.
Yea
of
a
dungeon
.
Bla.
Why
,
how
knew
you
that
?
Ro.
Why
Berger
told
vs
.
Bla.
Berger
who
told
you
of
it
?
Be.
One
that
I
heard
,
by
the
lord
.
Bla
O
excellent
,
you
are
still
playing
the
wagge
.
Enter
Lemot
and
Moren
.
Le
Good
morrow
Gentlemen
all
,
good
morrow
good
Monsieur
Rowle
.
Ro.
At
your
seruice
.
Le.
I
pray
my
lord
look
what
a
prety
falling
band
he
hath
,
t
is
pretty
fantasticall
,
as
I
haue
seen
made
,
with
good
iudgement
,
great
shew
,
and
but
little
cost
.
Moren.
And
so
it
is
I
promise
you
,
who
made
it
I
pray
?
Row
I
know
not
yfaith
,
I
bought
it
by
chance
.
Le.
It
is
a
very
pretty
one
,
make
much
of
it
.
Enter
Catalian
sweating
.
Ca.
Boy
,
I
prethee
call
for
a
course
napkin
.
Good
morrow
Gentlemen
,
I
would
you
had
bin
at
the
tenniscourt
,
you
should
haue
seene
me
a
beat
Monsieur
Besan
,
and
I
gaue
him
fifteene
and
all
his
faults
.
Le.
Thou
didst
more
for
him
,
then
euer
God
wil
do
for
thee
.
Ca.
Iaques
,
I
prethee
fill
me
a
cup
of
canary
,
three
parts
water
Le.
You
shall
haue
all
water
and
if
it
please
you
.
Enter
Maide
.
Ma.
Who
cald
for
a
course
napkin
?
Ca.
Marry
I
,
sweete
heart
,
do
you
take
the
paines
to
bring
it
your selfe
,
haue
at
you
by
my
hosts
leaue
.
Ma.
Away
sir
,
fie
for
shame
.
Ca.
Hearke
you
my
host
,
you
must
marry
this
young
wench
,
you
do
her
mighty
wrong
els
.
Ver.
O
sir
,
you
are
a
merry
man
.
Enter
Foyes
and
Labesha
.
Foy.
Good
morrow
gentlemen
,
you
see
I
am
as
good
as
my
word
.
Mo.
You
are
sir
,
and
I
am
very
glad
of
it
.
Le
You
are
welcome
Monsieur
Foyes
:
but
you
are
not
,
no
not
you
.
Be.
No
,
welcome
that
Gentleman
,
t
is
no
matter
for
me
.
Le.
How
sir
?
no
matter
to
you
,
by
this
rush
I
am
angry
with
you
,
as
if
al
our
loues
protested
vnto
you
were
dissembled
,
no
matter
for
you
?
Bo.
Nay
sweet
Lemot
be
not
angry
,
I
did
but
iest
,
as
I
am
a
Gentleman
.
Lem.
Yea
but
there
's
a
difference
of
iesting
,
you
wrong
all
our
affections
in
so
doing
.
Be.
Faith
and
troth
I
did
not
,
and
I
hope
sirs
you
take
it
not
so
.
All
.
No
matter
for
me
,
t
was
very
vnkindly
sayd
,
I
must
needs
say
so
.
La.
You
see
how
they
loue
me
.
Foy.
I
do
sir
,
and
I
am
very
glad
of
it
.
Be
,
And
I
hope
Lemot
,
you
are
not
angry
with
me
stil
.
Le.
No
faith
,
I
am
not
so
very
a
foole
to
be
angry
with
one
that
cares
not
for
me
.
Be.
Do
not
I
care
for
you
?
nay
then
.
Ca.
What
,
dost
thou
cry
?
Be.
Nay
I
do
not
cry
,
but
my
stomacke
waters
to
thinke
that
you
should
take
it
so
heauily
,
if
I
do
not
wish
that
I
were
cut
into
three
peeces
,
and
that
these
peeces
were
turned
into
three
blacke
puddings
,
and
that
these
three
blacke
puddings
were
turned
into
three
of
the
fairest
Ladies
in
the
land
for
your
sake
,
I
would
I
were
hanged
,
what
a
diuel
can
you
haue
more
then
my
poore
heart
?
Ca.
Well
harke
you
Lemot
,
in
good
faith
you
are
too
blame
to
put
him
to
this
vnkindnes
,
I
prethee
be
friends
with
him
.
Le.
Well
,
I
am
content
to
put
vp
this
vnkindnesse
for
this
once
,
but
while
you
liue
take
heede
of
:
no
matter
for
me
.
Be.
Why
is
it
such
a
hainous
word
?
Le.
O
the
hainousest
word
in
the
world
.
Be.
Wel
,
I
le
neuer
speake
it
more
,
as
I
am
a
gentleman
.
Le.
No
I
pray
do
not
.
Foy.
My
lord
,
will
your
lordship
go
to
cards
?
Lor.
Yea
with
you
Monsieur
Foyes
.
Ro.
Lemot
,
will
you
play
?
Le.
Pardon
good
Monsieur
Rowle
,
if
I
had
any
disposition
to
gaming
your
company
should
draw
me
before
any
mans
here
.
Foy.
Labesha
,
what
will
you
play
?
Lab.
Play
,
yea
with
all
my
heart
,
I
pray
lend
me
three
pence
.
Row
I
le
play
no
more
.
Cat.
Why
,
haue
you
wonne
or
lost
?
Row.
Faith
I
haue
lost
two
or
three
crownes
.
Cat.
Well
to
him
againe
,
I
le
be
your
halfe
.
Lem.
Sirrah
,
Catalian
,
while
they
are
playing
at
cardes
,
thou
and
I
will
haue
some
excellent
sport
:
sirrah
,
dost
thou
know
that
same
Gentleman
there
?
Cat.
No
yfaith
,
what
is
he
?
Lem.
A
very
fine
gull
,
and
a
neat
reueller
,
one
that
's
heire
to
a
great
liuing
,
yet
his
father
keepes
him
so
short
,
that
his
shirts
will
scant
couer
the
bottom
of
his
belly
,
for
all
his
gay
outside
,
but
the
linings
be
very
foule
and
sweatie
,
yea
and
perhappes
lowsie
,
with
dispising
the
vaine
shiftes
of
the
world
.
Cat.
But
he
hath
gotten
good
store
of
money
now
me thinks
.
Lem.
Yea
,
and
I
wonder
of
it
,
some
ancient
seruing
man
of
his
fathers
,
that
hath
gotten
four
shillings
in
fiftie
years
vpon
his
great
good
husbandrie
,
he
swearing
monstrous
othes
to
pay
him
againe
,
and
besides
to
doe
him
a
good
turne
(
when
God
shall
heare
his
prayer
for
his
father
)
hath
lent
it
him
I
warrant
you
,
but
howsoeuer
,
we
must
speake
him
faire
.
Cat.
O
what
else
!
God
saue
sweete
Monsieur
Rowls
,
what
loose
or
win
,
loose
or
win
?
Row.
Faith
sir
saue
myselfe
,
and
loose
my
money
.
Lem.
There
's
a
prouerbe
hit
dead
in
the
necke
like
a
Cony
,
why
hearke
thee
Catalian
,
I
could
haue
told
thee
before
what
he
would
haue
said
.
Cat.
I
do
not
thinke
so
.
Lem.
No
,
thou
seest
heer
's
a
fine
plumpe
of
gallants
,
such
as
thinke
their
wits
singular
,
and
their selues
rarely
accomplished
,
yet
to
shew
thee
how
brittle
their
wittes
be
,
I
will
speake
to
them
seuerally
,
and
I
will
tell
thee
before
what
they
shall
answer
me
.
Cat.
That
's
excellent
,
le
ts
see
that
yfaith
.
Lem.
Whatsoeuer
I
say
to
Monsieur
Rowlee
,
he
shall
say
,
O
sir
,
you
may
see
an
ill
weed
growes
apace
.
Cat.
Come
,
le
ts
see
.
Lem.
Now
Monsieur
Rowlee
,
me thinks
you
are
exceedingly
growne
since
your
comming
to
Paris
.
Row.
O
sir
,
you
may
see
an
ill
weed
growes
a pace
.
Cat.
This
is
excellent
,
forward
sir
I
pray
.
Lem.
What
soere
I
say
to
Labesha
,
he
shall
answer
me
,
blacke
will
bee
no
other
hue
,
and
that
same
olde
Iustice
,
as
greedie
of
a
stale
prouerbe
,
he
shall
come
in
the
necke
of
that
and
say
,
Blacke
is
a
pearle
in
a
womans
eye
.
Cat.
Yea
,
much
yfayth
.
Lem.
Looke
thee
,
here
comes
hither
Labesha
,
Catalian
.
and
I
haue
beene
talking
of
thy
complexion
,
and
I
say
that
all
the
faire
ladies
in
France
would
haue
beene
in
loue
with
thee
,
but
that
thou
art
so
blacke
.
Labe.
O
sir
blacke
will
beare
no
other
hue
.
Foy.
O
sir
blacke
is
a
pearle
in
a
womans
eye
.
Lem.
You
say
true
sir
,
you
say
true
sir
,
sirrah
Catalian
,
whatsoere
I
say
to
Berger
that
is
so
busie
at
Cardes
,
he
shall
answer
me
,
sblood
,
I
do
not
meane
to
die
as
long
as
I
can
see
one
aliue
.
Cat.
Come
let
vs
see
you
.
Lem.
Why
Berger
,
I
thought
thou
hadst
beene
dead
,
I
haue
not
heard
thee
chide
all
this
while
.
Ber.
Sblood
,
I
do
not
meane
to
die
,
as
long
as
I
can
see
one
aliue
.
Cat.
Why
but
hearke
you
Lemot
,
I
hope
you
cannot
make
this
lord
answer
so
roundly
.
Lem.
O
,
as
right
as
any
of
them
all
,
and
he
shall
aunswere
mee
with
an
olde
Latine
Prouerbe
,
that
is
,
usus
promptos
facit
.
Cat.
Once
more
le
ts
see
.
Lem.
My
lord
,
your
lordship
could
not
play
at
this
game
verie
latelie
,
and
nowe
me thinkes
you
are
growne
exceeding
perfite
.
Mor.
O
sir
,
you
may
see
,
vsus
promptos
facit
.
Enter
Iaques
.
Iaq.
Monsieur
Lemot
,
here
is
a
Gentleman
and
two
Gentlewomen
do
desire
to
speake
with
you
.
L�.
What
are
they
come
?
Yes
,
conuey
them
into
the
inwarde
Parlour
by
the
inwarde
roome
,
and
there
is
a
brace
of
Crownes
for
thy
labour
,
but
let
no bodie
know
of
their
being
here
.
Iaq.
I
warrant
you
sir
.
Lem.
See
where
they
come
:
welcome
my
good
lord
and
ladies
,
I
le
come
to
you
presently
:
so
,
now
the
sport
begins
,
I
shall
starte
the
disguised
King
plaguilie
,
nay
I
shall
put
the
ladie
that
loues
me
in
a
monstrous
fright
,
when
her
husband
comes
and
finds
her
here
.
Boy
.
The
Gentleman
,
and
the
two
Gentlewomen
desires
your
companie
.
Lem.
I
le
come
to
them
presently
.
Foy.
Gentlemen
,
I
le
go
speake
with
one
,
and
come
to
you
presently
.
Lem.
My
lord
,
I
would
speake
a
worde
with
your
lordship
,
if
it
were
not
for
interrupting
your
game
.
Lord
.
No
,
I
haue
done
Lemot
.
Lem.
My
lord
there
must
a
couple
of
ladies
dine
with
vs
to day
.
Lord
.
Ladies
?
Gods
my
life
I
must
be
gone
.
Lem.
Why
,
hearke
you
my
Lorde
,
I
knewe
not
of
their
comming
I
protest
to
your
Lordship
,
and
woulde
you
haue
mee
turne
such
faire
Ladies
as
these
are
away
?
Lord
Yea
but
hearke
you
Lemot
,
did
not
you
heare
mee
sweare
to
my
Wife
,
that
I
woulde
not
tarie
,
if
there
were
any
women
,
I
wonder
you
would
suffer
any
to
come
there
.
Lem.
Why
you
swore
but
by
a
kisse
,
and
kisses
are
no
holie
things
,
you
know
that
.
Lord
.
Why
but
hearke
you
Lemot
,
indeed
I
would
be
very
loath
to
do
any
thing
,
that
if
my
wife
should
know
it
,
should
displease
her
.
Le.
Nay
then
you
are
to
obsequious
,
hearke
you
,
let
me
intreate
you
,
and
I
le
tell
you
in
secrete
,
you
shall
haue
no
worse
company
then
the
Kings
.
Lord
.
Why
will
the
King
be
there
?
Lem.
Yea
,
though
disguised
.
Lord
.
Who
are
the
ladies
?
Lem.
The
flowers
of
Paris
,
I
can
tell
you
,
faire
countesse
Florila
,
and
the
ladie
Martia
.
Enter
Iaque
.
Iaq.
Monsieur
Lemot
,
the
gentleman
and
the
two
Gentlewomen
desire
your
companie
.
Lem.
I
le
come
to
them
straight
:
but
Iaques
come
hither
I
prethee
,
go
to
Labesha
,
and
tell
him
that
the
Countesse
Florila
,
and
the
ladie
Martia
be
here
at
thy
maisters
house
:
and
if
it
come
in
question
hereafter
,
denie
that
thou
tolde
him
any
such
thing
.
Iaq.
What
,
is
this
all
?
Sblood
I
le
denie
it
,
and
feare
it
too
.
Lem.
My
Lorde
,
I
le
goe
and
see
the
roome
be
neate
and
fine
,
and
come
to
you
presently
.
Lord.
Yea
but
hearke
you
Lemot
,
I
prethee
take
such
order
that
they
be
not
knowne
of
any
women
in
the
house
.
Lem.
O
how
shuld
they
now
to
his
wife
go
yfaith
!
Exit
.
Iaq.
Hearke
you
,
Monsieur
Labesha
,
I
pray
let
me
speak
a
worde
with
you
.
Labe.
With
all
my
heart
,
I
pray
looke
to
my
stake
,
there
's
three
pence
vnder
the
Candle
.
Iaq.
I
pray
see
,
do
you
know
the
Countesse
Florila
and
the
ladie
Martia
?
Lab.
Do
I
know
the
ladie
Martia
?
I
knew
her
before
she
was
borne
,
why
do
you
aske
me
?
Ia.
Why
,
they
are
both
here
at
my
masters
house
.
Lab.
What
,
is
Mistris
Martia
at
an
ordinarie
?
Ia.
Yea
that
she
is
.
La.
By
skies
and
stones
I
le
go
and
tel
her
father
.
Exit
.
Enter
Lemot
and
the
Countesse
.
Cou.
What
you
are
out
of
breath
me thinks
Monsieur
Lemot
?
Le
It
is
no
matter
Madam
,
it
is
spent
in
your
seruice
,
that
beare
your
age
with
your
honesty
,
better
then
an
hundred
of
these
nise
gallants
,
and
indeed
it
is
a
shame
for
your
husband
,
that
contrary
to
his
oath
made
to
you
before
dinner
,
he
shoud
be
now
at
the
ordinary
with
that
light
huswife
Martia
,
which
I
could
not
chuse
but
come
and
tell
you
;
for
indeede
it
is
a
shame
that
your
motherly
care
should
be
so
slightly
regarded
.
Co.
Out
on
thee
strumpet
and
accurst
,
and
miserable
dame
.
Le.
Well
,
there
they
are
:
nothing
els
now
,
to
her
husband
go
I
.
Exit
.
Co.
Nothing
els
quoth
you
,
can
there
be
more
?
O
wicked
man
,
would
he
play
false
,
that
would
so
simply
vow
,
and
sweare
his
faith
,
and
would
not
let
me
be
displeased
a
minute
,
but
he
would
sigh
,
and
weepe
til
I
were
pleased
,
I
haue
a
knife
within
that
's
rasor
sharp
,
and
I
wil
lay
an
yron
in
the
fire
,
making
it
burning
hot
to
mark
the
strumpet
,
but
t
will
bee
colde
too
ere
I
can
come
thither
,
doe
something
wretched
woman
,
staies
thou
here
?
Exit
.
Enter
Lemot
.
Le.
My
lorde
,
the
roome
is
neate
and
fine
,
wilt
please
you
go
in
?
Ue.
Gentlemen
,
your
dinner
is
ready
.
All
.
And
we
are
ready
for
it
.
Le.
Iaquis
,
shut
the
doores
let
no body
come
in
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
Laberuele
,
Foyes
,
Labesha
,
and
the
Countesse
.
La.
Where
be
these
puritanes
,
these
murderers
,
let
me
come
in
here
?
Fo.
Where
is
the
strumpet
?
Co.
where
is
this
harlot
,
let
vs
come
in
here
.
La.
What
shall
we
do
?
the
streets
do
wonder
at
vs
,
and
we
do
make
our
shame
knowne
to
the
world
,
let
vs
go
,
and
complaine
vs
to
the
King
.
Fo.
Come
Labesha
,
will
you
go
?
La.
No
no
I
scorne
to
go
;
no
King
shal
heare
my
plaint
,
I
will
in
silent
liue
a
man
forlorne
,
mad
,
and
melancholy
,
as
a
cat
,
and
neuer
more
weare
hat
band
on
my
hat
.
Enter
Moren
,
and
Martia
.
Mo.
What
dost
thou
meane
?
thou
must
not
hang
on
me
.
Mar.
O
good
lord
Moren
,
haue
me
home
with
you
,
you
may
excuse
all
to
my
father
for
me
.
Enter
Lemot
.
Lem.
O
my
lord
,
be
not
so
rude
to
leaue
her
now
.
Lor.
Alas
man
,
and
if
my
wife
should
see
it
,
I
were
vndone
.
Enter
the
King
and
another
.
Ki.
Pursue
them
sirs
,
and
taking
Martia
from
him
,
conuay
her
presently
to
Valeres
house
.
What
vilain
was
it
that
hath
vttered
this
.
Enter
the
Puritane
to
Lemot
.
Le.
Why
t
was
euen
I
,
I
thanke
you
for
your
gentle
tearmes
,
you
giue
me
vilain
at
the
first
,
I
wonder
where
's
this
old
doter
,
what
doth
he
thinke
we
feare
him
.
Flo.
O
monstrous
man
,
what
,
wouldst
thou
haue
him
take
vs
?
Le.
Would
I
quoth
you
,
yea
by
my
troth
would
I
,
I
know
he
is
but
gone
to
cal
the
constable
,
or
to
raise
the
streets
.
Flo.
What
meanes
the
man
trow
?
is
he
mad
?
Le.
No
,
no
,
I
know
what
I
do
,
I
doe
it
of
purpose
,
I
long
to
see
him
come
and
raile
at
you
,
to
call
you
harlot
,
and
to
spurne
you
too
,
O
you
'l
loue
me
a
great
deale
the
better
,
and
yet
let
him
come
,
and
if
he
touch
but
one
thread
of
you
,
I
le
make
that
thread
his
poyson
.
Flo.
I
know
not
what
to
say
.
Le.
Speake
,
do
you
loue
me
?
Flo.
Yea
surely
do
I
.
Le,
Why
then
haue
not
I
reason
that
loue
you
so
dearely
as
I
do
,
to
make
you
hatefull
in
his
sight
,
that
I
might
more
freely
enioy
you
.
Flo.
Why
let
vs
be
gon
my
kind
Lemot
,
and
not
be
wondered
at
in
the
open
streets
.
Le.
I
le
go
with
you
through
fire
,
through
death
,
throgh
hell
,
come
giue
me
your
owne
hand
,
my
owne
deare
heart
,
this
hand
that
I
adore
and
reuerence
,
and
loath
to
haue
it
,
touch
an
olde
mans
bosome
,
O
let
me
sweetely
kisse
it
;
he
bites
.
Flo.
Out
on
thee
wretch
,
he
hath
bit
me
to
the
bone
,
O
barbarous
Canibal
,
now
I
perceiue
thou
wilt
make
me
a
mocking
stocke
to
all
the
world
.
Le.
Come
,
come
,
leaue
your
passions
,
they
cannot
mooue
mee
,
my
father
and
my
mother
died
both
in
a
day
,
and
I
rung
mee
a
peale
for
them
,
and
they
were
no
sooner
brought
to
the
church
and
laide
in
their
graues
,
but
I
fetcht
me
two
or
three
fine
capers
aloft
,
and
took
my
leaue
of
them
,
as
men
do
of
their
mistresses
at
the
ending
of
a
galiard
;
Besilos
manus
.
Flo.
O
brutish
nature
,
how
accurst
was
I
euer
to
indure
the
sound
of
this
damned
voice
?
Le.
Well
,
and
you
do
not
like
my
humor
,
I
can
be
but
sory
for
it
,
I
bit
you
for
good
will
,
and
if
you
accept
it
,
so
,
if
no
,
go
.
Flo.
Vilain
,
thou
didst
it
in
contempt
of
me
.
Le.
Well
,
and
you
take
it
so
,
so
be
it
:
harke
you
Madam
,
your
wisest
course
is
,
euen
to
become
puritane
againe
,
put
off
this
vaine
attire
,
and
say
,
I
haue
despised
all
:
thanks
my
God
,
good
husband
,
I
do
loue
thee
in
the
Lord
,
and
he
(
good
man
)
will
thinke
all
this
you
haue
done
,
was
but
to
shew
thou
couldest
gouerne
the
world
,
and
hide
thee
as
a
rainebow
doth
a
storme
:
my
dainty
wench
,
go
go
,
what
shall
the
flattering
words
of
a
vaine
man
make
you
forget
your
dutie
to
your
husband
?
away
,
repent
,
amend
your
life
,
you
haue
discredited
your
religion
for
euer
.
Flo.
Well
wench
,
for
this
foule
shame
thou
puttest
on
me
,
the
curse
of
all
affection
light
on
thee
.
Exit
.
Le.
Go
Abacuck
,
go
,
why
this
is
excellent
,
I
shal
shortly
become
a
schoolemaster
,
to
whom
men
will
put
their
wiues
,
to
practise
;
well
now
wil
I
go
set
the
Queene
vpo�
the
King
,
and
tell
her
where
he
is
close
with
his
wench
:
and
he
that
mends
my
humor
,
take
the
spurres
:
sit
fast
,
for
by
heauen
,
I
le
iurke
the
horse
you
ride
on
.
Enter
my
host
,
Catalian
,
Blanuel
,
Berger
,
Iaquis
,
Maide
,
and
Boy
.
Host.
Well
Gentlemen
,
I
am
vtterly
vndone
without
your
good
helpes
,
it
is
reported
that
I
receiued
certaine
ladies
or
gentlewomen
into
my
house
:
no
here
's
my
man
,
my
maid
,
and
my
boy
,
now
if
you
saw
any
,
speak
boldly
before
these
Gentlemen
.
Ia.
I
saw
none
sir
.
Boy
.
Nor
I
,
by
my
maidenhead
.
Boy
.
Nor
I
,
as
I
am
a
man
.
Ca.
Wel
my
host
,
wee
le
go
answere
for
your
house
at
this
time
,
but
if
at
other
times
you
haue
had
wenches
,
and
would
not
let
vs
know
it
,
we
are
the
lesse
beholding
to
you
.
Exeunt
al
,
but
my
host
and
the
Gentleman
.
Ber.
Peraduenture
the
more
beholding
to
him
,
but
I
laye
my
life
Lemot
hath
deuised
some
ieast
,
he
gaue
vs
the
slip
before
dinner
.
Cat.
Well
Gentlemen
,
since
we
are
so
fitly
mette
,
I
le
tell
you
an
excellent
subiect
for
a
fit
of
myrth
,
and
if
it
bee
well
handled
.
Ber.
Why
,
what
is
it
?
Cat.
Why
man
,
Labesha
is
grown
maruelous
malecontent
,
vpon
some
amorous
disposition
of
his
mistres
,
and
you
know
he
loues
a
mease
of
cream
,
and
a
spice-cake
with
his
heart
,
and
I
am
sure
he
hath
not
dined
to day
,
and
he
hath
taken
on
him
the
humour
of
the
yong
lord
Dowsecer
,
and
we
will
set
a
mease
of
creame
,
a
spice-cake
,
and
a
spoone
,
as
the
armour
,
picture
,
and
apparell
was
set
in
the
way
of
Dowsecer
,
which
I
doubt
not
but
will
woorke
a
rare
cure
vpon
his
melancholie
.
Host.
Why
,
this
is
excellent
,
I
le
go
fetch
the
creame
.
Cat.
And
I
the
cake
.
Ber.
And
I
the
spoone
.
Exeunt
,
and
come
in
againe
.
Cat.
See
where
hee
comes
as
like
the
lord
Dowsecer
as
may
be
,
nowe
you
shall
heare
him
begin
with
some
Latin
sentence
that
hee
hath
remembred
euer
since
hee
read
his
Accidence
.
Enter
Labesha
.
La.
Felix
que�
faciunt
aliena
pericula
cantum
.
O
sillie
state
of
things
,
for
things
they
be
that
cause
this
sillie
state
:
and
what
is
a
thing
,
a
bable
,
a
toy
,
that
stands
men
in
small
stead
:
but
what
haue
we
here
?
what
vanities
haue
we
here
?
Host.
He
is
strongly
tempted
,
the
lord
strengthen
him
,
see
what
a
vaine
he
hath
.
Lab.
O
cruell
fortune
,
and
dost
thou
spit
thy
spite
at
my
poore
life
:
but
O
sowre
creame
what
thinkest
thou
that
I
loue
thee
still
?
no
,
no
,
faire
and
sweete
is
my
mistries
,
if
thou
haddest
strawberries
and
sugar
in
thee
:
but
it
may
bee
thou
art
set
with
stale
cake
to
choke
me
:
well
taste
it
,
and
trie
it
,
spoonefull
by
spoonefull
:
bitterer
and
bitterer
still
,
but
O
sowre
creame
,
wert
thou
an
Onion
,
since
Fortune
set
thee
for
mee
,
I
will
eate
thee
,
and
I
will
deuour
thee
in
spite
of
Fortunes
spite
,
choake
I
,
or
burst
I
,
mistres
for
thy
sake
,
to
end
my
life
eate
I
this
creame
and
cake
.
Cat.
So
he
hath
done
,
his
Melancholy
is
well
eased
I
warrant
you
.
Host.
Gods
my
life
Gentlemen
,
who
hath
beene
at
this
creame
?
Lab.
Creame
,
had
you
creame
?
where
is
your
creame
?
I
le
spend
my
penny
at
your
creame
.
Cat.
Why
,
did
not
you
eate
this
creame
?
Lab.
Talke
not
to
me
of
creame
,
for
such
vaine
meate
I
do
despise
as
food
,
my
stomack
dies
drowned
in
the
cream
boules
of
my
mistres
eyes
.
Cat.
Nay-stay
Labesha
.
Lab.
No
not
I
,
not
I
.
Host.
O
he
is
ashamed
yfayth
:
but
I
will
tell
thee
howe
thou
shalt
make
him
mad
indeed
,
say
his
mistres
for
loue
of
him
hath
drowned
her selfe
.
Cat.
Sblood
,
that
will
make
him
hang
himselfe
.
Exeunt
omnes
.
Enter
the
Queene
,
Lemot
,
and
all
the
rest
of
the
lordes
,
and
the
Countesse
:
Lemots
arme
in
a
scarffe
.
Lemot.
haue
at
them
yfayth
with
a
lame
counterfeite
humor
:
ake
on
rude
arme
,
I
care
not
for
thy
paine
,
I
got
it
nobly
in
the
kings
defence
,
and
in
the
gardiance
of
my
faire
Queenes
right
.
Qu.
O
tell
me
sweet
Lemot
,
how
fares
the
king
?
or
what
his
right
was
that
thou
didst
defend
?
Lem.
That
you
shall
know
when
other
things
are
told
.
Lab.
Keepe
not
the
Queene
too
long
without
her
longing
.
Foyes.
No
,
for
I
tell
you
it
is
a
daungerous
thing
.
Coun.
Little
care
cruell
men
how
women
long
.
Le.
What
would
you
haue
me
then
put
poyson
in
my
breath
,
and
burne
the
eares
of
my
attentiue
Queene
.
Quee.
Tell
me
what ere
it
be
,
I
le
beare
it
all
.
Lem.
beare
with
my
rudenesse
then
in
telling
it
,
for
alas
you
see
I
can
but
act
it
with
the
left
hande
,
this
is
my
gesture
now
.
Quee.
T
is
well
enough
.
Lem.
Yea
well
enough
you
say
,
this
recompence
haue
I
for
all
my
woundes
:
then
thus
the
King
inamoured
of
an other
ladie
compares
your
face
to
hers
,
and
saies
that
yours
is
fat
and
flat
,
and
that
your
neather
lip
was
passing
big
.
Quee.
O
wicked
man
,
doth
he
so
sodainlie
condemne
my
beautie
,
that
when
he
married
me
he
thought
diuine
:
for
euer
blasted
be
that
strumpets
face
,
as
all
my
hopes
are
blasted
,
that
did
change
them
.
Lem.
Nay
Madam
,
though
he
saide
your
face
was
fat
,
and
flat
,
and
so
forth
,
yet
he
liked
it
best
,
and
said
,
a
perfect
beautie
should
be
so
.
La.
O
did
he
so
!
why
that
was
right
euen
as
it
should
be
.
Foy.
You
see
now
Madam
,
howe
much
too
hastie
you
were
in
your
griefes
.
Que.
If
he
did
so
esteeme
of
me
indeed
,
happie
am
I
.
Coun.
So
may
your
highnesse
be
that
hath
so
good
a
husband
,
but
hell
hath
no
plague
to
such
an
one
as
I
.
Lem.
Indeed
Madam
,
you
haue
a
bad
husband
:
truly
then
did
the
king
growe
mightily
in
loue
with
the
other
ladie
,
and
swore
,
no
king
could
more
inriched
be
,
then
to
inioy
so
faire
a
dame
as
shee
.
Cat.
O
monstrous
man
,
and
acurst
most
miserable
dame
!
Le.
But
saies
the
king
I
do
inioy
as
faire
,
&
though
I
loue
in
al
honoured
sort
,
yet
I
le
not
wro�g
my
wife
for
al
the
world
Foy.
This
proues
his
constancie
as
firme
as
brasse
.
Que.
It
doth
,
it
doth
:
O
pardon
me
my
lord
,
that
I
mistake
thy
royall
meaning
so
.
Coun
In
heauen
your
highnesse
liues
,
but
I
in
hell
.
Lem.
But
when
he
vewd
her
radient
eyes
againe
,
blinde
was
hee
strooken
with
her
feruent
beames
:
and
now
good
King
he
gropes
about
in
corners
voide
of
the
chearefull
light
should
guide
vs
all
.
Que.
O
dismall
newes
,
what
is
my
soueraigne
blind
?
Le.
Blind
as
a
Beetle
madam
,
that
a
while
houering
aloft
,
at
last
in
cowsheds
fall
.
Lab.
Could
her
eyes
blind
him
?
Lem.
Eyes
or
what
it
was
I
know
not
,
but
blind
I
am
sure
he
is
as
any
stone
.
Q.
Come
bring
me
to
my
Prince
my
lord
that
I
may
leade
him
,
none
aliue
but
I
may
haue
the
honour
to
direct
his
feete
.
Lem.
How
lead
him
madam
?
why
hee
can
go
as
right
as
you
,
or
any
here
,
and
is
not
blind
of
eyesight
.
Quee.
Of
what
then
?
Lem.
Of
reason
.
Quee.
Why
thou
saidest
he
wanted
his
cheerfull
light
.
Lem.
Of
reason
still
I
meant
,
whose
light
you
knowe
should
cheerefully
guide
a
worthie
King
,
for
he
doth
loue
her
,
and
hath
forced
her
into
a
priuate
roome
where
now
they
are
.
Quee.
What
mocking
chaunges
is
there
in
thy
wordes
fond
man
,
thou
murtherest
me
with
these
exclaimes
.
Lem.
Why
madam
t
is
your
fault
,
you
cut
mee
off
before
my
words
be
halfe
done
.
Quee.
Forth
and
vnlade
the
poyson
of
thy
tongue
.
Lem.
Another
lord
did
loue
this
curious
ladie
,
who
hearing
that
the
King
had
forced
her
,
as
she
was
walking
with
another
Earle
,
ran
straightwaies
mad
for
her
,
and
with
a
friend
of
his
,
and
two
or
three
blacke
ruffians
more
,
brake
desperately
vpon
the
person
of
the
King
,
swearing
to
take
from
him
,
in
traiterous
fashion
,
the
instrument
of
procreation
:
with
them
I
fought
a
while
,
and
got
this
wound
,
but
being
vnable
to
resist
so
many
,
came
straight
to
you
to
fetch
you
to
his
ayde
.
Lab.
Why
raised
you
not
the
streetes
?
Lem.
That
I
forbore
,
because
I
would
not
haue
the
world
,
to
see
what
a
disgrace
my
liege
was
subiect
to
,
being
with
a
woman
in
so
meane
a
house
.
Foy.
Whose
daughter
was
it
that
he
forst
I
pray
?
Lem.
Your
daughter
sir
.
La.
Whose
sonne
was
that
ranne
so
mad
for
her
?
Lem.
Your
sonne
my
Lord
.
La.
O
Gods
,
and
fiends
forbid
.
Co.
I
pray
sir
,
from
whom
did
he
take
the
Ladie
?
Le.
From
your
good
Lord
.
Co.
O
Lord
I
beseech
thee
no
.
Le.
T
is
all
too
true
,
come
follow
the
Queen
and
I
,
where
I
shall
leade
you
.
Qu.
O
wretched
Queene
,
what
would
they
take
from
him
?
Le.
The
instrument
of
procreation
.
Enter
Moren
.
Mo.
Now
was
there
euer
man
so
much
accurst
,
that
when
his
minde
misgaue
him
,
such
a
man
was
haplesse
,
to
keep
him
company
?
yet
who
would
keep
him
company
but
I
,
O
vilde
Lemot
,
my
wife
and
I
are
bound
to
curse
thee
while
we
liue
,
but
chiefely
I
,
well
:
seeke
her
,
or
seek
her
not
;
find
her
,
or
find
her
not
,
I
were
as
good
see
how
hell
opens
,
as
looke
vpon
her
.
Enter
Catalian
,
and
Berger
behind
him
.
Ca.
We
haue
yfaith
,
stop
thou
him
there
,
and
I
wil
meet
him
here
.
Mo.
Well
,
I
will
venture
once
to
seek
her
.
Ber.
Gods
Lord
,
my
Lord
,
come
you
this
way
,
why
your
wife
runnes
ranging
like
as
if
she
were
mad
,
swearing
to
slit
your
nose
if
she
can
catch
you
.
Exit
.
Mo.
What
shal
I
do
at
the
sight
of
her
and
hern
.
Ca.
Gods
precious
my
Lord
,
come
you
this
way
,
your
wife
comes
ranging
with
a
troope
of
dames
,
like
Bacchus
drunken
foes
,
iust
as
you
go
,
shift
for
your selfe
my
Lord
.
Mo.
Stay
good
Catalian
.
Ca.
No
not
I
my
Lord
.
Exit
.
Mo.
How
now
Iaques
,
what
's
the
newes
?
Enter
Iaques
.
Iaq.
None
but
good
my
Lord
.
Mo.
Why
hast
not
seene
my
wife
run
round
about
the
streets
.
Ia.
Not
I
my
Lorde
,
I
come
to
you
from
my
maister
,
who
would
pray
you
to
speake
to
Lemot
,
that
Lemot
might
speake
to
the
King
,
that
my
masters
lottery
for
his
iewells
may
go
forward
,
he
hath
made
the
rarest
deuice
that
euer
you
heard
,
we
haue
fortune
in
it
,
and
she
our
maide
plaies
,
and
I
,
and
my
fellow
carrie
two
torches
,
and
our
boy
goes
before
and
speakes
a
speech
,
t
is
very
fine
yfaith
sir
.
Mo.
Sirra
in
this
thou
maiest
highly
pleasure
me
,
let
me
haue
thy
place
to
beare
a
torch
,
that
I
may
look
on
my
wife
,
and
she
not
see
me
,
for
if
I
come
into
her
sight
abruptly
,
I
were
better
be
hanged
.
Ia.
O
sir
you
shall
,
or
any
thing
that
I
can
do
,
I
le
send
for
your
wife
to
.
Mor.
I
prethee
do
.
Exeunt
both
.
Enter
the
Queene
,
and
all
that
were
in
before
.
Le.
This
is
the
house
where
the
mad
Lord
did
vow
to
do
the
deed
,
draw
all
your
swoords
couragious
gentlemen
,
I
le
bring
you
there
where
you
shall
honor
win
,
but
I
can
tell
you
,
you
must
breake
your
shinne
.
Ca.
Who
will
not
breake
his
necke
to
saue
his
King
:
set
forward
Lemot
.
Le.
Yea
,
much
good
can
I
do
with
a
wounded
arme
,
I
le
go
and
call
more
helpe
.
Qu.
Others
shall
go
,
nay
we
will
raise
the
streets
,
better
dishonor
,
then
destroy
the
King
.
Le.
Sbloud
I
know
not
how
to
excuse
my
villany
,
I
would
faine
be
gone
.
Enter
Dowsecer
,
and
his
friend
.
Dow.
I
le
geld
the
adulterous
goate
,
and
take
from
him
the
instrument
,
that
plaies
him
such
sweete
musicke
.
La.
O
rare
,
this
makes
my
fiction
true
:
now
I
le
stay
.
Quee.
Arrest
these
faithlesse
traitrous
gentlemen
.
Dow.
What
is
the
reason
that
you
call
vs
traitours
?
La.
Nay
,
why
do
you
attempt
such
violence
against
the
person
of
the
King
?
Dow.
Against
the
King
,
why
this
is
strange
to
me
.
Enter
the
King
,
and
Martia
.
Ki.
How
now
my
masters
,
what
?
weapons
drawne
,
come
you
to
murder
me
.
Qu.
How
fares
my
Lord
?
Ki.
How
fare
I
?
well
,
but
you
yfaith
shall
get
me
speak
for
you
another
time
;
he
got
me
here
to
wooe
a
curious
Lady
,
and
she
temptes
him
,
say
what
I
can
,
ouer
what
state
I
will
in
your
behalfe
Lemot
,
she
will
not
yeeld
.
Le.
Yfaith
my
liege
,
what
a
hard
heart
hath
she
,
well
hearke
you
,
I
am
content
your
wit
shall
saue
your
honesty
for
this
once
.
Ki.
Peace
,
a
plague
OR
you
,
peace
;
but
wherefore
asked
you
how
I
did
?
Queene
.
Because
I
feared
that
you
were
hurte
my
Lord
.
Ki
Hurt
,
how
I
pray
?
Lem.
Why
,
hurt
Madam
,
I
am
well
againe
.
Quee.
Do
you
aske
?
why
he
told
me
Dowsecer
and
this
his
friend
,
threatned
to
take
away
.
Ki.
To
take
away
,
what
should
they
take
away
.
Le.
Name
it
Madam
.
Qu.
Nay
,
I
pray
name
it
you
.
Le.
Why
then
,
thus
it
was
my
liege
,
I
told
her
Dowsecer
,
and
this
his
friende
threatned
to
take
away
,
and
if
they
could
the
instrument
of
procreation
,
and
what
was
that
now
,
but
Martia
beeing
a
fayre
woman
,
is
not
shee
the
instrument
of
procreation
,
as
all
women
are
.
Qu.
O
wicked
man
.
Le.
Go
to
,
go
to
,
you
are
one
of
those
fiddles
too
yfaith
.
Ki.
Well
pardon
my
minion
,
that
hath
frayd
you
thus
,
t
was
but
to
make
you
mery
in
the
end
.
Qu.
I
ioy
it
endes
so
well
,
my
gracious
Lord
.
Fo.
But
say
my
gracious
Lord
,
is
no
harme
done
,
betweene
my
louing
daughter
,
and
your
grace
?
Ki.
No
,
of
my
honor
and
my
soule
Foyes
.
Dow.
The
fire
of
loue
which
she
hath
kindled
in
me
being
greater
then
my
heate
of
vanity
,
hath
quite
expelled
.
Ki
Come
Dowsecer
,
receiue
with
your
lost
wittes
your
loue
,
though
lost
;
I
know
you
le
yeeld
,
my
lord
and
you
her
father
.
Both
Most
ioyfully
my
Lord
.
Ki.
And
for
her
part
I
know
her
dispositio�
well
enough
.
Lem.
What
,
will
you
haue
her
?
Dow.
Yea
mary
will
I
.
Le.
I
le
go
and
tell
Labesha
presently
.
Enter
Iaquis
,
and
my
Host
.
Ia.
Monsieur
I
emot
,
I
pray
let
me
speake
with
you
,
I
come
to
you
from
the
Lord
Moren
,
who
would
desire
you
to
speake
to
the
King
for
my
masters
lottery
,
and
he
hath
my
place
to
beare
a
torch
,
for
bare
faced
hee
dares
not
look
vpon
his
wife
,
for
his
life
.
Le.
O
excellent
,
I
le
further
thy
masters
lottery
and
it
be
but
for
this
iest
only
,
harke
you
my
liege
,
here
's
the
poore
man
hath
bin
at
great
charges
for
the
preparation
of
a
lottery
,
and
he
hath
made
the
rarest
deuice
,
that
I
know
you
wil
take
great
pleasure
in
it
,
I
pray
let
him
present
it
before
you
at
Valeros
house
.
Ki.
Whith
all
my
heart
,
can
you
be
ready
so
soone
?
Host.
Presently
and
if
it
like
your
grace
.
Ki.
But
hearke
you
Lemot
,
how
shall
we
do
for
euery
mans
posie
.
Le.
Will
you
all
trust
me
with
the
making
of
them
?
All
.
With
all
our
hearts
.
Le.
Why
then
I
le
go
to
make
the
poses
and
bring
I
abesha
to
the
lottery
presently
.
Enter
Florila
like
a
Puritan
.
Flo.
Surely
the
world
is
full
of
vanitie
,
a
woman
must
take
heed
she
do
not
heare
a
lewd
man
speake
,
for
euery
woman
cannot
when
shee
is
tempted
,
when
the
wicked
fiend
gets
her
into
his
snares
escape
like
me
,
for
graces
measure
is
not
so
filled
vp
,
nor
so
prest
downe
in
euery
one
as
me
,
but
yet
I
promise
you
a
little
more
:
well
,
I
le
go
seeke
my
head
,
who
shal
take
me
in
the
gates
of
his
kind
armes
vntoucht
of
any
.
King
.
What
Madam
are
you
so
pure
now
?
Flo.
Yea
,
would
not
you
be
pure
?
King
.
No
puritane
.
Flo.
You
must
be
then
a
diuell
.
I
can
tell
you
.
Lab.
O
wife
where
hast
thou
beene
?
Flo.
where
did
I
tell
you
I
would
be
I
pray
.
Lab.
In
thy
close
walke
thou
saidst
.
Flo.
And
was
'
not
?
Lab.
Truly
/
know
not
,
I
neither
looked
nor
knocked
,
for
Labesha
told
me
that
you
,
and
faire
Martia
were
at
Verones
ordinarie
.
Ki.
Labesha
?
my
lord
you
are
a
wise
man
to
beleeue
a
fool
.
Flo.
Well
my
good
head
,
for
my
part
I
forgiue
you
:
but
surely
you
do
much
offend
to
be
suspicious
:
where
there
is
no
trust
,
there
is
no
loue
,
and
where
there
is
no
loue
twixt
man
and
wife
,
there
's
no
good
dealing
surely
:
for
as
men
should
euer
loue
their
wiues
,
so
should
they
euer
trust
the�
,
for
what
loue
is
there
where
there
is
no
trust
?
King
.
She
tels
you
true
,
my
lord
.
Lab.
Shee
doth
my
liege
;
and
deare
wife
pardon
this
and
I
will
neuer
be
suspicious
more
.
Flo.
Why
I
say
,
I
do
.
Enter
Lemot
,
leading
Labesha
in
a
halter
.
Lem.
Looke
you
my
liege
,
I
haue
done
simple
seruice
amongest
you
,
here
is
one
had
hanged
himselfe
for
loue
,
thinking
his
Mistresse
had
done
so
for
him
:
well
,
see
your
Mistresse
liues
.
Labes�.
And
doth
my
Mistresse
liue
?
King
.
Shee
doth
,
O
noble
knight
,
but
not
your
Mistresse
now
.
Lab.
Sblood
,
but
she
shall
for
me
,
or
for
no body
else
.
Lem.
How
now
,
what
a
traitor
,
draw
vpon
the
King
.
Lab.
Yea
,
or
vpon
any
woman
here
in
a
good
cause
.
King
.
Well
sweete
Besha
let
her
marry
Dowsecer
,
I
le
get
thee
a
wife
worth
fifteene
of
her
,
wilt
thou
haue
one
that
cares
not
for
thee
?
Lab.
Not
I
by
the
Lord
,
I
scorne
her
,
I
le
haue
her
better
if
I
can
get
her
.
King
.
Why
that
's
well
said
.
Lem.
What
Madam
,
are
you
turned
puritan
againe
?
Elo.
When
was
I
other
,
pray
?
Lem.
Marie
I
le
tell
you
when
,
when
you
went
to
the
Ordinarie
,
and
when
you
made
false
signes
to
your
husband
,
which
I
could
tell
him
all
.
Flo.
Cursed
be
he
that
maketh
debate
twixt
man
&
wife
.
Lem.
O
rare
scripturian
!
you
haue
sealed
vp
my
lips
,
a
hall
,
a
hall
,
the
pageant
of
the
Butterie
.
Enter
two
with
torches
,
the
one
of
them
Moren
,
then
my
host
and
his
son
,
then
his
maid
drest
like
Queene
Fortune
with
two
pots
in
her
hands
.
King
.
What
is
he
?
Lem.
This
is
Verones
sonne
,
my
liege
.
King
.
What
shall
he
do
?
Cat
Speak
some
speach
that
his
father
hath
made
for
him
Qu.
Why
is
he
good
at
speeches
?
Cat.
O
he
is
rare
at
speaches
.
Boy
.
Faire
ladies
most
tender
,
and
nobles
most
slender
,
and
gentles
whose
wits
be
scarce
.
Ki.
My
host
,
why
do
you
call
vs
nobles
most
slender
?
Host.
And
it
shall
please
your
Grace
,
to
be
slender
is
to
be
proper
,
and
therfore
where
my
boy
saies
nobles
most
slender
,
it
is
as
much
to
say
,
fine
and
proper
nobles
.
Le.
Yea
,
but
why
do
you
call
vs
gentles
whose
wits
are
scarce
.
Host.
To
be
scarce
,
is
to
be
rare
:
and
therefore
where
as
he
sayes
Gentles
whose
wits
be
scarce
,
is
as
much
as
to
say
,
Gentles
whose
wits
be
rare
.
Lem.
Well
,
forwards
trunchman
.
Boy
.
Faire
ladies
most
tender
,
and
nobles
most
slender
,
and
gentles
whose
wittes
bee
scarce
,
Queene
Fortune
doth
come
with
her
trumpe
,
and
her
drumme
,
as
it
may
appeare
by
my
voice
.
Lab.
Come
hither
,
are
you
a
schoolemaister
,
where
was
Fortune
Queene
,
of
what
countrey
or
kingdome
?
Host.
Wy
sir
,
Fortune
was
Queene
ouer
all
the
world
.
Lab.
That
's
a
lie
,
there
's
none
that
euer
conquered
all
the
world
,
but
maister
Alisander
,
I
am
sure
of
that
.
Lem.
O
rare
Monsieur
Labesha
,
who
would
haue
thought
hee
could
haue
found
so
rare
a
fault
in
the
speach
.
Host.
I
le
alter
it
if
it
please
your
grace
.
King
.
No
,
t
is
very
well
.
Boy
.
Father
I
must
begin
againe
they
interrupt
me
so
.
Ho.
I
beseech
your
grace
giue
the
boy
leaue
to
begin
again
.
King
.
With
all
my
heart
,
t
is
so
good
we
cannot
heare
it
too
oft
.
Boy
.
Faire
ladies
most
tender
,
and
nobles
most
slender
,
and
gentles
whose
wittes
are
scarce
,
Queene
Fortune
doth
come
with
her
Fife
,
and
her
Drum
,
as
it
doth
appeare
by
my
voice
,
here
is
Fortune
good
,
but
il
by
the
rood
,
and
this
naught
but
good
shall
do
you
,
dealing
the
lots
out
of
our
pots
,
and
so
good
Fortune
to
you
sir
.
Lem.
Looke
you
my
liege
,
how
hee
that
caries
the
torch
trembles
extreamly
.
Kin.
I
warrant
t
is
with
care
to
carie
his
torch
well
.
Lem.
Nay
there
is
something
else
in
the
wind
:
why
my
host
what
meanes
thy
man
Iaques
to
tremble
so
?
Host.
Hold
still
thou
knaue
,
what
art
thou
afraid
to
looke
vpon
the
goodly
presence
of
a
king
:
hold
vp
for
shame
.
Lem.
Alas
poore
man
,
he
thinks
t
is
Iaques
his
man
:
poore
lord
,
how
much
is
he
bound
to
suffer
for
his
wife
?
King
Hearke
you
mine
host
,
what
goodly
person
is
that
?
is
it
Fortune
herselfe
?
Host.
I
le
tell
your
Maiestie
in
secrete
who
it
is
,
it
is
my
maide
Iaquena
.
King
.
I
promise
you
she
becomes
her
state
rarely
.
Lem.
Well
my
liege
,
you
were
all
content
that
I
should
make
your
poses
:
well
here
they
be
euery
one
:
giue
Master
Verone
his
fiue
crownes
.
King
.
There
's
mine
aud
the
Queenes
.
Labesh.
Theirs
ours
D�w.
And
there
is
mine
and
Martias
.
Lem.
Come
Labesha
thy
money
.
Lab
You
must
lend
me
some
,
for
my
boy
is
runne
away
with
my
purse
.
Le.
Thy
boy
?
I
neuer
knew
any
that
thou
hadst
.
Lab.
Had
not
I
a
boy
three
or
foure
yeares
ago
,
and
he
ran
away
.
Lem.
And
neuer
since
he
went
thou
hadst
not
a
peny
,
but
stand
by
,
I
le
excuse
you
.
But
sirrah
Catalian
,
thou
shalt
stand
on
one
side
and
reade
the
prises
,
and
I
will
stand
on
the
other
and
read
the
Poses
.
Cat.
Content
Lemot
.
Lem.
Come
on
Queene
Fortune
,
tell
eueryman
t
is
posie
,
this
is
orderly
,
the
King
and
Queene
are
first
.
King
.
Come
let
vs
see
what
goodly
poses
you
haue
giuen
vs
.
Lem.
This
is
your
Maiesties
,
At
the
fairest
,
so
it
bee
not
Martia
.
King
.
A
plague
vpon
you
,
you
are
still
playing
the
villaines
with
me
.
Le.
This
is
the
Queenes
,
Obey
the
Queene
:
and
she
speakes
it
to
her
husband
,
or
to
Fortune
,
which
she
will
.
Cat.
A
prise
:
your
Maiesties
is
the
summe
of
foure
shillings
in
gold
King
.
Why
how
can
that
be
there
is
no
such
coyne
.
Host.
Here
is
the
worth
of
it
,
if
it
please
your
grace
.
Quee.
Well
,
what
's
for
me
?
Ca.
A
heart
of
gold
.
Quee.
A
goodly
iewell
.
Le.
Count
Laberuele
and
Florila
.
La.
What
's
my
posie
sir
I
pray
?
Le.
Mary
this
my
Lord
,
Of
all
fortunes
friends
,
that
hath
ioy
in
this
life
,
He
is
most
happy
that
puts
a
sure
trust
in
his
wife
.
La.
A
very
good
one
sir
,
I
thanke
you
for
it
.
Flo.
What
's
mine
I
pray
?
Le.
Mary
this
Madam
,
Good
fortune
be
thou
my
good
fortune
bringer
,
And
make
me
amends
for
my
poore
bitten
finger
.
La.
Who
bit
your
finger
wife
?
Flo.
No body
;
t
is
vaine
posie
.
Ca.
Blanke
for
my
lord
Laberuele
,
for
his
wife
a
posie
,
a
paire
of
holy
beades
with
a
crucifix
.
Flo.
O
bommination
Idole
,
I
le
none
of
them
.
Ki.
Keepe
them
thy self
Veron
,
she
will
not
haue
them
.
Le.
Dowsecer
and
Martia
I
haue
fitted
your
lordship
for
a
posie
.
Dow.
Why
what
is
it
?
Le.
Anno
omnia
vna
.
Ma.
And
what
is
mine
sir
?
Le.
A
serious
one
I
warrant
you
change
:
for
the
better
.
Ma.
That
's
not
amisse
.
Ca.
A
price
:
Dowsecer
hath
a
cats
eyes
or
Mercuries
rod
of
gold
,
set
with
Iacinths
and
Emeralds
.
Dow
What
is
for
Martia
?
Ca.
Martia
hath
the
two
serpents
heades
set
with
Diamonds
.
Le.
What
my
host
Uerone
?
Ki.
What
?
is
he
in
for
his
owne
iewells
.
Le.
O
what
els
my
liege
,
t
is
our
bountie
,
and
his
posie
is
To
tel
you
the
truth
in
words
plaine
and
mild
,
Veron
loues
his
maide
,
and
she
is
great
with
child
.
Ki.
What
Queene
fortune
with
child
,
shall
we
haue
yong
fortunes
my
host
?
Host.
I
am
abused
,
and
if
it
please
your
Maiestie
.
Maid
.
I
le
play
no
more
.
Lem.
No
saith
you
need
not
now
,
you
haue
plaid
your
bellie
full
alreadie
Host.
Stand
still
good
Iaquena
,
they
do
but
ieast
.
Maid.
Yea
,
but
I
like
no
such
ieasting
.
Lem.
Come
great
Queene
Fortune
,
let
see
your
posies
,
what
madam
,
alas
,
your
ladiship
is
one
of
the
last
.
Coun.
What
is
my
posie
sir
I
pray
?
Lem.
Marie
Madam
your
posie
is
made
in
maner
and
forme
of
an
Eccho
,
as
if
you
were
seeking
your
husbande
,
and
fortune
should
be
the
Eccho
,
and
this
you
say
:
where
is
my
husband
his
so
long
vnmaskt
,
maskt
?
sayes
the
Eccho
,
but
in
what
place
sweete
Fortune
?
let
me
heare
:
heare
sayes
the
Eccho
.
King
.
There
you
lie
Eccho
,
for
if
he
were
here
we
must
needes
see
him
.
Lem.
Indeed
sweete
King
there
me thinkes
the
Eccho
must
needes
lie
,
if
hee
were
here
wee
must
needes
see
him
,
t
is
one
of
the�
that
caries
the
torches
:
no
that
cannot
be
neither
,
and
yet
by
the
Masse
here
's
Iaques
,
why
my
host
,
did
not
you
tell
me
that
Iaques
should
be
a
torchbearer
:
who
is
this
?
Gods
my
life
,
my
lord
.
Mor.
And
you
be
Gentlemen
let
me
go
.
Coun.
Nay
come
your
way
,
you
may
be
well
enough
ashamed
to
shew
your
face
that
is
a
periured
wretch
,
did
not
you
sweare
,
if
there
were
any
wenches
at
the
ordinarie
,
you
would
straight
come
home
.
King
.
Why
,
who
tolde
you
Madam
,
there
were
any
there
?
Coun.
He
that
will
stand
to
it
Lemot
my
liege
.
Lem.
who
I
stand
to
it
,
alas
,
I
tolde
you
in
kindnesse
,
and
good
will
,
because
I
would
not
haue
you
companie
long
from
your
husband
.
Mor.
Why
loe
you
bird
,
how
much
you
are
deceiued
.
Co.
Why
wherefore
were
you
afraid
to
be
seene
?
Mor.
Who
I
afraid
?
alas
I
bore
a
torch
to
grace
this
honorable
presence
,
for
nothing
els
sweete
bird
.
King
.
Thanks
good
Moren
,
see
lady
with
what
wrong
you
haue
pursued
your
most
inamored
lord
:
but
come
now
al
are
friends
,
now
is
this
day
spent
with
an
hurtfull
motiues
of
delight
,
and
ouer
ioyes
more
my
senses
at
the
night
:
and
now
for
Dowsecer
,
if
all
will
follow
my
deuise
,
his
beauteous
loue
and
he
shal
married
be
,
and
here
I
solemnly
inuite
you
all
home
to
my
court
,
where
with
feastes
wee
will
crowne
this
myrthfull
day
,
and
vow
it
to
renowne
.
FINIS
.