100:00,023[' ]| 100:00,023[S ]| \Our Author sent me hither for a Scout,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \To spy what bloudy Criticks were come out;\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Those Piccaroons in Wit, wh' infest this Road,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \And snap both friend and Foe that come abroad.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \This Savage Party crueller appears,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Than, in the Channel\ Ostend \Privateers,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \You in this Road, or sink or plunder all,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Remorsless as a Storm on us you fall:\ 100:00,023[S ]| \But as a Merchant, when by Storms distress'd,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Flings out his bulkey Goods to save the rest,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Hoping a Calm may come, he keeps the best.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \In this black Tempest which o'r us impends,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Near Rocks and Quicksands, and no Ports of Friends,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Our Poet gives this over to your rage,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \The most irregular Play upon the Stage,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \As wild, and as extravagant as th' Age.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Now, angry Men, to all your splenes give vent;\ 100:00,023[S ]| \When all your fury has on this been spent,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Else-where you with much worse shall be content.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \The Poet has no hopes you'll be appeas'd,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Who come on purpose but to be displeas'd,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Such corrupt judges should accepted be,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Who can condemn before they hear or see.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Ne'r were such bloudy Criticks yet in fashion;\ 100:00,023[S ]| \You damn by absolute Predestination.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \But why so many to run one man down?\ 100:00,023[S ]| \It were a mighty triumph when y'have done.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Our scarcity of Plays you should not blame,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \When by foul poaching you destroy the Game.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Let him but have fair play, and he may then\ 100:00,023[S ]| \Write himself into Favour once agen.\ 100:00,023[S ]| \If after this your Anger you'll reveal,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \To Ca*esar he must make his just appeal;\ 100:00,023[S ]| \There Mercy and Judgment equally do meet,\ 100:00,023[S ]| \To pardon Faults, and to encourage Wit.\ 001:01,025[' ]| 001:01,025[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo,> 001:01,025[' ]| 001:01,025[A ]| THus far without a bound we have enjoy'd 001:01,025[A ]| Our prosp'rous pleasures, which dull Fools call Sins; 001:01,025[A ]| Laugh'd at old feeble Judges, and weak Laws; 001:01,025[A ]| And at the fond fantastick thing, call'd Conscience, 001:01,025[A ]| Which serves for nothing but to make men Cowards; 001:01,025[A ]| An idle fear of future misery; 001:01,025[A ]| And is yet worse than all that we can fear. 001:01,025[C ]| Conscience made up of dark and horrid thoughts, 001:01,025[C ]| Rais'd from the fumes of a distemper'd Spleen. 001:01,025[B ]| A sensless fear, would make us contradict 001:01,025[B ]| The only certain Guide, Infallible Nature; 001:01,025[B ]| And at the call of Melancholy Fools, 001:01,025[B ]| (Who stile all actions which they like not, Sins) 001:01,025[B ]| To silence all our Natural appetites. 001:01,025[A ]| Yet those conscientious Fools, that would perswade us 001:01,025[A ]| To I know not what, which they call Piety, 001:01,025[A ]| Have in reserve private delicious Sins, 001:01,025[A ]| Great as the happy Libertine enjoys, 001:01,025[A ]| With which, in corners, wantonly they roul. 001:01,025[C ]| Don*John, thou art our Oracle; thou hast 001:01,025[C ]| Dispell'd the Fumes which once clowded our Brains. 001:01,025[B ]| By thee, we have got loose from Education, 001:01,025[B ]| And the dull slavery of Pupillage, 001:01,025[B ]| Recover'd all the liberty of Nature, 001:01,025[B ]| Our own strong Reason now can go alone, 001:01,025[B ]| Without the feeble props of splenatick Fools, 001:01,025[B ]| Who contradict our common Mother, Nature. 001:01,026[A ]| Nature gave us our Senses, which we please: 001:01,026[A ]| Nor does our Reason war against our Sense. 001:01,026[A ]| By Natures order, Sense should guide our Reason, 001:01,026[A ]| Since to the mind all objects Sense conveys. 001:01,026[A ]| But Fools for shaddows lose substantial pleasures, 001:01,026[A ]| For idle tales abandon true delight, 001:01,026[A ]| And solid joys of day, for empty dreams at night. 001:01,026[A ]| Away, thou foolish thing, thou chollick of the mind, 001:01,026[A ]| Thou Worm by ill-digesting stomachs bred: 001:01,026[A ]| In spight of thee, we'll surfeit in delights, 001:01,026[A ]| And never think ought can be ill that's pleasant. 001:01,026[E ]| A most excellent sermon, and no doubt, Gentlemen, you have 001:01,026[E ]| edifi'd much by it. 001:01,026[A ]| Away! thou formal phlegmatick Coxcomb, thou 001:01,026[A ]| Hast neither courage, nor yet wit enough 001:01,026[A ]| To sin thus. Thou art my dull conscientious Pimp. 001:01,026[A ]| And when I am wanton with my Whore within, 001:01,026[A ]| Thou, with thy Beads and Pray'r-book keep'st the door. 001:01,026[E ]| Sir, I find your Worship is no more afraid to be damn'd, than 001:01,026[E ]| other fashionable Gentlemen of the Age: but, me-thinks, Halters and 001:01,026[E ]| Axes should terrifie you. With reverence to your Worships, I've seen 001:01,026[E ]| civiller men hang'd, and men of as pretty parts too. There's scarce a 001:01,026[E ]| City in Spain but is too hot for you, you have committed such outrages 001:01,026[E ]| wheresoe'r you come. 001:01,026[C ]| Come, for diversion, pray let's hear your Fool preach a 001:01,026[C ]| little. 001:01,026[E ]| For my part, I cannot but be troubled, that I shall lose my 001:01,026[E ]| Honour by you, Sir; for people will be apt to say, \Like Master, Like Man.\ 001:01,026[A ]| Your honour, Rascal, a Sow-gelder may better pretend 001:01,026[A ]| to it. 001:01,026[E ]| But I have another scruple, Sir. 001:01,026[A ]| What's that? 001:01,026[E ]| I fear I shall be hang'd in your company. 001:01,026[A ]| That's an honour you will ne'er have courage to deserve. 001:01,026[E ]| It is an honour I am not ambitious of. 001:01,026[C ]| Why does the Fool talk of hanging? we scorn all Laws. 001:01,026[E ]| It seems so, or you would not have cut you elder Brother's 001:01,026[E ]| Throat, Don*Lopez. 001:01,026[C ]| Why, you Coxcomb, he kept a good Estate from me, and I 001:01,026[C ]| could not Whore and Revel sufficiently without it. 001:01,026[B ]| Look you, Jacomo, had he not reason? 001:01,026[E ]| Yes, Antonio, so had you to get both your Sisters with Child; 001:01,026[E ]| 'twas very civil, I take it. 001:01,027[B ]| Yes, you fool, they were lusty young handsome Wenches, 001:01,027[B ]| and pleas'd my appetite. Besides, I sav'd the Honour of the Family by 001:01,027[B ]| it; for if I had not, some*body else would. 001:01,027[E ]| O horrid villany! 001:01,027[E ]| But you are both Saints to my hopeful Master; 001:01,027[E ]| I'll turn him looe to Belzebub himself, 001:01,027[E ]| He shall out do him at his own Weapons. 001:01,027[A ]| I, you Rascal. 001:01,027[E ]| Oh no, Sir, you are as innocent. To cause your good old 001:01,027[E ]| Father to be kill'd was nothing. 001:01,027[A ]| It was something, and a good thing too, Sirra: his whole 001:01,027[A ]| design was to debar me of my pleasures: he kept his purse from me, 001:01,027[A ]| and could not be content with that, but still would preach his sensless 001:01,027[A ]| Morals to me, his old dull foolish stuff against my pleasure. I caus'd 001:01,027[A ]| him to be sent I know not whither. But he believ'd he was to go to 001:01,027[A ]| Heaven; I care not where he is, since I am rid of him. 001:01,027[E ]| Cutting his throat was a very good return for his begetting 001:01,027[E ]| of you. 001:01,027[A ]| That was before he was aware on't, 'twas for his own sake, 001:01,027[A ]| he ne'r thought of me in the business. 001:01,027[E ]| Heav'n bless us! 001:01,027[A ]| You Dog, I shall beat out your brains, if you dare be so 001:01,027[A ]| impudent as to Pray in my company. 001:01,027[E ]| Good Sir, I have done, I have done ~~ 001:01,027[C ]| Prethee let the insipid Fool go on. 001:01,027[B ]| Let's hear the Coxcomb number up your crimes, 001:01,027[B ]| The patterns we intend to imitate. 001:01,027[E ]| Sir, let me lay your horrid crimes before you: 001:01,027[E ]| The unhappy minute may perhaps arrive, 001:01,027[E ]| When the sense of 'em may make you penitent. 001:01,027[B ]| 'Twere better thou wer't hang'd. 001:01,027[C ]| Repent! Cowards and Fools do that. 001:01,027[A ]| Your valiant well-bred Gentlemen never repent: 001:01,027[A ]| But what should I repent of? 001:01,027[E ]| After the Murther of your Father, the brave Don*Pedro, Governour 001:01,027[E ]| of Sevil, for whom the Town are still in grief, was, in his own house, 001:01,027[E ]| barb'rously kill'd by you. 001:01,027[A ]| Barbarously, you lie, you Rascal, 'twas finely done; I run him 001:01,027[A ]| through the Lungs as handsomly, and kill'd him as decently, and as like 001:01,027[A ]| a Gentleman as could be. The jealous Coxcomb deserv'd death, he kept 001:01,027[A ]| his Sister from me; her eyes would have kill'd me if I had not enjoy'd 001:01,027[A ]| her, which I could not do without killing him: Besides, I was alone, 001:01,027[A ]| and kill'd him hand to fist. 001:01,028[E ]| I never knew you go to Church but to take Sanctuary for a 001:01,028[E ]| Murder, or to rob Churches of their Plate. 001:01,028[A ]| Heav'n needs not be serv'd in Plate, but I had use on't. 001:01,028[E ]| How often have you scal'd the Walls of Monasteries? Two 001:01,028[E ]| Nuns, I know, you ravish'd, and a third you dangerously wounded for 001:01,028[E ]| her violent resistance. 001:01,028[A ]| The perverse Jades were uncivil, and deserv'd such usage. 001:01,028[E ]| Some thirty Murders, Rapes innumerable, frequent Sacrilege, 001:01,028[E ]| Parricide; in short, not one in all the Catalogue of Sins have scap'd 001:01,028[E ]| you. 001:01,028[A ]| My bus'ness is my pleasure, that end I will always compass, 001:01,028[A ]| without scrupling the means; there is no right or wrong, but what 001:01,028[A ]| conduces to, or hinders pleasure. But, you tedious insipid Rascal, if I 001:01,028[A ]| hear more of your Morality, I will Carbanado you. 001:01,028[B ]| We live in the life of Sense, which no fantastick thing, call'd 001:01,028[B ]| Reason, shall controul. 001:01,028[C ]| My reason tells me, I must please my Sense. 001:01,028[A ]| My appetites are all I'm sure I have from Heav'n, since they 001:01,028[A ]| are Natural, and them I always will obey. 001:01,028[E ]| I doubt it not, Sir, therefore I desire to shake hands and part. 001:01,028[A ]| D'ye hear, Dog, talk once more of parting, and I will saw 001:01,028[A ]| your Wind-pipe. I could find in my heart to cut your Rascals Nose off, 001:01,028[A ]| and save the Pox a labour: I'll do't, Sirra, have at you. 001:01,028[E ]| Good Sir, be not so transported; I will live, Sir, and will serve 001:01,028[E ]| you in any*thing; I'll fetch a Wench, or anything in the world, Sir. O 001:01,028[E ]| how I tremble at this Tyrants rage. 001:01,028[' ]| <\aside.\> 001:01,028[B ]| Come, 'tis night, we lose time to our adventures. 001:01,028[C ]| I have bespoke Musick for our Serenading. 001:01,028[A ]| Let's on, and live the noble life of Sense. 001:01,028[A ]| To all the powers of Love and mighty Lust, 001:01,028[A ]| In spight of formal Fops I will be just. 001:01,028[A ]| What ways soe're conduce to my delight, 001:01,028[A ]| My Sense instructs me, I must think 'em right. 001:01,028[A ]| On, on my Soul, and make no stop in pleasure, 001:01,028[A ]| They're dull insipid Fools that live by measure. 001:01,028[' ]| <\Exeunt all but\ Jacomo.> 001:01,028[E ]| What will become of me? if I should leave him, he's so 001:01,028[E ]| revengeful, he would travel o'r all Spain to find me out, and cut my 001:01,028[E ]| throat. I cannot live long with him neither: I shall be hang'd, or 001:01,028[E ]| knock'd o'th' head, or share some dreadful Fate or other with him. 'Tis 001:01,028[E ]| between him and me, as between the Devil and the Witch, Who repents 001:01,028[E ]| her bargain, and would be free from future ills, but for the fear of present 001:01,028[E ]| durst not venture. 001:01,029[' ]| <\Enter\ Leonora.> 001:01,029[E ]| Here comes Leonora, one of those multitudes of Ladies, he has Sworn, 001:01,029[E ]| li'd to, and betray'd. 001:01,029[F ]| Jacomo, where is Don*John? I could not live to endure a longer 001:01,029[F ]| absence from him. I have sigh'd and wept my*self away: I move, but 001:01,029[F ]| have no life left in me. His coldness and his absence have given me 001:01,029[F ]| fearful and killing apprehensions. Where is my Dear? 001:01,029[E ]| Your Dear, Madam! he's yours no more. 001:01,029[F ]| Heav'n! What do I hear? Speak, is he dead? 001:01,029[E ]| To you he is. 001:01,029[F ]| Ah me, has he forgot his Vows and Oaths? 001:01,029[F ]| Has he no Conscience, Faith, or Honour left? 001:01,029[E ]| Left, Madam, he ne'r had any. 001:01,029[F ]| It is impossible, you speak this out of malice, sure. 001:01,029[E ]| There's no man knows him better than I do. 001:01,029[E ]| I have a greater respect for you, than for any he has betray'd, and will 001:01,029[E ]| undeceive you: he is the most perfidious Wretch alive. 001:01,029[F ]| Has he forgot the Sacred Contract, which was made privately 001:01,029[F ]| betwixt us, and confirm'd before the altar, during the time of holy Mass? 001:01,029[E ]| All times and places are alike to him. 001:01,029[F ]| Oh how assiduous was he in his passion! how many thousand 001:01,029[F ]| vows and sighs he breath'd! What tears he wept, seeming to suffer all 001:01,029[F ]| the cruel pangs which Lovers e'r endur'd! how eloquent were all his 001:01,029[F ]| words and actions! 001:01,029[E ]| His person and his parts are excellent, but his base vices are 001:01,029[E ]| beyond all measure: why would you believe him? 001:01,029[F ]| My own love brib'd me to believe him: I saw the man I lov'd 001:01,029[F ]| more than the world. Oft on his knees, whih his eyes up to Heav'n, 001:01,029[F ]| kissing my hand with such an amorous heat, and with such ardor, breathing 001:01,029[F ]| fervent vows of loyal love, and venting sad complaints of extreme 001:01,029[F ]| sufferings. I poor easie Soul, flattering my*self to think he meant as I did, 001:01,029[F ]| lost all my Sexes faculty, Dissembling; and in a moneth must I be thus 001:01,029[F ]| betray'd? 001:01,029[E ]| Poor Lady! I cannot but have bowels for you: your sad 001:01,029[E ]| Narration makes me weep in sadness: but you are better us'd than others. 001:01,029[E ]| I ne'r knew him constant a fortnight before. 001:01,029[F ]| Then, then he promis'd he would marry me. 001:01,029[E ]| If he were to live here one moneth longer, he wou'd marry 001:01,029[E ]| half the Town, ugly and handsome, old and young: nothing that's 001:01,029[E ]| female comes amiss to him ~~ 001:01,029[F ]| Does he not fear a thunderbolt from Heav'n? 001:01,029[E ]| No, nor a Devil from Hell. He owns no Deity, but his voluptuous 001:01,029[E ]| appetite, whose satisfaction he will compass by Murders, Rapes, 001:01,030[E ]| Treasons, or ought else. But pray let me ask you one civil question; 001:01,030[E ]| Did you not give him earnest of your Body, Madam. 001:01,030[F ]| Mock not my misery. 001:01,030[F ]| Oh! that confounds me. Ah! I thought him true, and lov'd him so, I 001:01,030[F ]| could deny him nothing. 001:01,030[E ]| Why, there 'tis; I fear you have, or else he wou'd have marri'd 001:01,030[E ]| you: he has marri'd six within this moneth, and promis'd fifteen more, 001:01,030[E ]| all whom he has enjoy'd, and left, and is this night gone on some new 001:01,030[E ]| adventure, some Rape, or Murder, some such petty thing. 001:01,030[F ]| Oh Monster of Impiety! 001:01,030[F ]| Oh false Don*John! wonder of cruelty! 001:01,030[' ]| <\She swounds.\> 001:01,030[E ]| What a pox does she swound at the news! Alas! poor Soul, 001:01,030[E ]| she has mov'd me now to pity, as she did to love. Ha! the place is 001:01,030[E ]| private ~~ If I should make use of a Natural Receit to refresh her, 001:01,030[E ]| and bring her to life again, 'twould be a great pleasure to me, and no 001:01,030[E ]| trouble to her. Hum! ''tis very private, and I dare sin in private. A 001:01,030[E ]| deuce take her, she revives, and prevents me. 001:01,030[F ]| Where is the cruel Tyrant! inhumane Monster! but I will 001:01,030[F ]| strive to fortifie my*self. But Oh my misfortune! Oh my misery! 001:01,030[F ]| Under what strange Enchantments am I bound? Could he be yet a 001:01,030[F ]| thousand times more impious, I could not chuse but love his Person still. 001:01,030[E ]| Be not so passionate; if you could be discreet, and love your*self, 001:01,030[E ]| I'de put you in a way to ease your grief now, and all your cares 001:01,030[E ]| hereafter. 001:01,030[F ]| If you can now ease an afflicted Woman, who else must shortly 001:01,030[F ]| rid her*self of life, imploy your Charity: 'twas never plac'd yet on a 001:01,030[F ]| Wretch needed it more than I. 001:01,030[E ]| If Loyalty in a Lover be a Jewel! say no more, I can tell you 001:01,030[E ]| where you may have it ~~ 001:01,030[F ]| Speak not of truth in man, it is impossible. 001:01,030[E ]| Pardon me, I speak on my own knowledge. 001:01,030[F ]| Is your Master true then? and have you happily deceiv'd me? 001:01,030[F ]| Speak. 001:01,030[E ]| As true as all the power of Hell can make him. 001:01,030[F ]| If he be false, let all the world be so. 001:01,030[E ]| There's another-guess man than he, Madam. 001:01,030[F ]| Another! Who can that be? 001:01,030[' ]| <\aside.\> 001:01,030[F ]| No, no, there's no truth found in the Sex. 001:01,030[E ]| He is a civil virtuous and discreet sober person. 001:01,030[F ]| Can there be such a man? What does he mean? 001:01,030[E ]| There is, Madam, a man of goodly Presence too ~~ 001:01,030[E ]| Something inclining to be fat, of a round plump face, with quick and 001:01,030[E ]| sparkling eyes, and mouth of cheerful overture ~~ 001:01,031[E ]| His nose, which is the onely fault, is somewhat short, but that's no 001:01,031[E ]| matter; his hair and eye-brows blacks, and so forth. 001:01,031[F ]| How, he may perhaps be brib'd by some other man, and what 001:01,031[F ]| he said of his Master may be false. 001:01,031[E ]| How she surveys me! Fa-la-la. 001:01,031[' ]| <\Sings and struts about.\> 001:01,031[F ]| Who is this you speak of? 001:01,031[E ]| A man, who, envy must confess, has excellent parts, but 001:01,031[E ]| those are gifts ~~ meer gifts ~~ thanks be to Heav'n for 001:01,031[E ]| them. 001:01,031[F ]| But shall I never know his name? 001:01,031[E ]| He's one, whom many Ladies have honour'd with their affection; 001:01,031[E ]| but no more of that. They have met disdain, and so forth. But he'll 001:01,031[E ]| be content to marry you. Fa-la-la-la. 001:01,031[' ]| <\Sings.\> 001:01,031[F ]| Again I ask you who he is? 001:01,031[E ]| Lord, how inapprehensive she is? Can you not guess? 001:01,031[F ]| No. 001:01,031[E ]| Your humble Servant, Madam. 001:01,031[F ]| Yours, Sir. 001:01,031[E ]| It is my*self in person; and upon my honour, I will be true 001:01,031[E ]| and constant to you. 001:01,031[F ]| Insolent Varlet! Am I fal'n so low to be thy scorn? 001:01,031[E ]| Scorn! As I am a Christian Soul I am in earnest. 001:01,031[F ]| Audacious Villain! Impudence it*self! 001:01,031[E ]| Ah, Madam! your Servant, your true Lover must endure a 001:01,031[E ]| thousand such bobs from his Mistriss; I can bear, Madam, I can. 001:01,031[F ]| Because thy Master has betray'd me, am I become so infamous? 001:01,031[E ]| 'Tis something hard, Madam, to preserve a good reputation 001:01,031[E ]| in his company; I can scarce do't my*self. 001:01,031[F ]| Am I so miserable to descend to his man? 001:01,031[E ]| Descend, say you: Ha, ha, ha! 001:01,031[F ]| Now I perceive all's false which you have said of him. Farewel, 001:01,031[F ]| you base ingrateful Fellow. 001:01,031[E ]| Hold, Madam, come in the Morning and I will place you in 001:01,031[E ]| the next room, where you shall over-hear our discourse. You'll soon 001:01,031[E ]| discover the mistake, and find who 'tis that loves you. Retire, Madam, 001:01,031[E ]| I hear some*body coming. 001:01,031[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Jacomo, Leonora.> 001:01,031[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John \in the Street.\> 001:01,031[A ]| Let me see, here lives a Lady: I have seen Don*Octavio 001:01,031[A ]| haunting about this house, and making private signs to her. I never 001:01,031[A ]| saw her face, but am resolv'd to enjoy her, because he likes her; besides, 001:01,031[A ]| she's another Woman. 001:01,032[' ]| <\Enter\ Antonio.> 001:01,032[A ]| Antonio, Welcome to our place of randez-vous. Well, what game! what 001:01,032[A ]| adventure! 001:01,032[' ]| <\Enter\ Lopez.> 001:01,032[A ]| Come, dear Lopez. 001:01,032[B ]| I have had a rare Adventure. 001:01,032[C ]| What, dear Antonio? 001:01,032[B ]| I saw at a Villa not far off, a grave mighty bearded Fool, 001:01,032[B ]| drinking Lemonado with his Mistriss; I mislik'd his face, pluck'd him by 001:01,032[B ]| the Whiskers, pull'd all one side of his Beard off, fought with him, run 001:01,032[B ]| him through the thigh, carri'd away his Mistriss, serv'd her in her kind, 001:01,032[B ]| and then let her go. 001:01,032[A ]| Gallantly perform'd, like a brave Souldier in an Enemies 001:01,032[A ]| Countrey: When they will not pay Contribution, you fight for Forage. 001:01,032[C ]| Pox on't I have been damnably unfortunate; I have neither 001:01,032[C ]| beat man, nor lain with Woman to*night, but faln in love most furiously: 001:01,032[C ]| I dogg'd my new Mistriss to her Lodging; she's Don*Bernado's Sister, 001:01,032[C ]| and shall be my Punk. 001:01,032[A ]| I could meet with no willing Dame, but was fain to commit 001:01,032[A ]| a Rape to pass away the time. 001:01,032[B ]| Oh! a Rape is the joy of my heart; I love a Rape, upon 001:01,032[B ]| my Clavins, exceedingly. 001:01,032[A ]| But mine, my Lads, was such a Rape, it ought to be Registred; 001:01,032[A ]| a Noble and Heroick Rape. 001:01,032[C ]| ah! dear Don*John! 001:01,032[B ]| How was it? 001:01,032[A ]| 'Twas in a Church, Boys. 001:01,032[B ]| Ah! Gallant Leader! 001:01,032[C ]| Renown'd Don*John! 001:01,032[B ]| Come, let's retire, you have done enough for once. 001:01,032[A ]| Not yet, Antonio, I have an Intrigue here. 001:01,032[' ]| <\Enter Fidlers.\> 001:01,032[A ]| Here are my Fidlers, Rank your*selves close under this Window, and 001:01,032[A ]| sing the Song I prepar'd. 001:01,032[' ]| 001:01,032[U ]| \Thou joy of all hearts, and delight of all eyes,\ 001:01,032[U ]| \Nature's chief Treasure, and Beauty's chief Prize,\ 001:01,032[U ]| \Look down, you'l discover,\ 001:01,032[U ]| \Here's a faithful young vigorous Lover;\ 001:01,032[U ]| \With a heart full as true,\ 001:01,032[U ]| \As e'r languish'd for you;\ 001:01,032[U ]| \Here's a faithful young vigorous Lover.\ 001:01,033[U ]| \The Heart that was once a Monarch in's Breast,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \Is now your poor Captive, and can have no rest;\ 001:01,033[U ]| \'Twill never give over,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \But about your sweet bosom will hover.\ 001:01,033[U ]| \Dear Miss, let it in,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \By Heav'n 'tis no sin;\ 001:01,033[U ]| \Here's a faithful young vigorous vigorous Lover.\ 001:01,033[A ]| Now Fidlers, be gone. 001:01,033[' ]| <\Window opens,\ Maria \looks out, and flings a Paper down.\> 001:01,033[G ]| Retire, my dear Octavio; read that Note. Adieu. 001:01,033[' ]| <\Exit\ Mar%> 001:01,033[A ]| Good, she takes me for Octavio. I warrant you, Boys I shall succeed 001:01,033[A ]| in this adventure. Now my false Light assist me. 001:01,033[' ]| <\Reads by a dark Lanthorn.\> 001:01,033[' ]| 001:01,033[A ]| \Go from this Window, within eight minutes you shall be admitted\ 001:01,033[A ]| \to the Garden doore. You know the Sign.\ 001:01,033[A ]| Ha! the Sign, Gad she lies, I know not the Sign. 001:01,033[B ]| What will you do? you know not the Sign. Let's away, and 001:01,033[B ]| be contented this night. 001:01,033[A ]| My friends, if you love me, retire. I'le venture, though 001:01,033[A ]| Thunderbolts should fall upon my head. 001:01,033[C ]| Are you mad? as soon as she discovers the deceit, she'll raise 001:01,033[C ]| the house upon you, and you'll be murder'd. 001:01,033[A ]| She'll not raise the House for her own sake, but rather grant 001:01,033[A ]| me all I ask to keep her counsell. 001:01,033[B ]| 'Tis very dangerous: be careful of your*self. 001:01,033[A ]| The more danger the more delight: I hate the common road 001:01,033[A ]| of pleasure. What! Can I fear at such a time as this! The cowardly 001:01,033[A ]| Deer are valiant in their Rutting time. I say. Be gone ~~ 001:01,033[B ]| We'll not dispute your commands. Good luck to you. 001:01,033[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Antonio, Lopez.> 001:01,033[A ]| How shall I know this devilish Sign? 001:01,033[' ]| <\Enter\ Octavio \with Fidlers, and stands under\ Maria's \Window.\> 001:01,033[A ]| Ha! Whom have we here? Some Serenading Coxcomb. Now shall we 001:01,033[A ]| have some damn'd Song or other, a Cloris, or a Phillis at least. 001:01,033[' ]| 001:01,033[' ]| 001:01,033[U ]| \When you dispense your Influence,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \Your dazling Beams are quick and clear,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \You so surprize and wound the Sense,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \So bring a Miracle y'appear.\ 001:01,033[U ]| \Admiring Mortals you astonish so, \ 001:01,033[U ]| \No other Deity they know,\ 001:01,033[U ]| \But think that all Divinity's below ~~ \ 001:01,034[U ]| \One charming Look from your illustrious Face,\ 001:01,034[U ]| \Were able to subdue Mankind,\ 001:01,034[U ]| \So sweet, so powerful a Grace\ 001:01,034[U ]| \Makes all men Lovers but the blind:\ 001:01,034[U ]| \Nor can they freedom by resistance gain,\ 001:01,034[U ]| \For each embraces the soft Chain,\ 001:01,034[U ]| \And never struggles with the pleasant pain.\ 001:01,034[D ]| Be gone! be gone! the Window opens. 001:01,034[A ]| 'Sdeath! This is Octavia. I must dispatch him, or he'll spoil 001:01,034[A ]| all; but I would fain hear the Sign first. 001:01,034[G ]| What strange mistake is this? Sure he did not receive my Note, 001:01,034[G ]| and then I am ruin'd! 001:01,034[D ]| She expects the Sign. Where's my Whistle? O here. 001:01,034[' ]| <\Whistles.\> 001:01,034[A ]| I have found it, that must be the Sign ~~ 001:01,034[G ]| I dare not speak aloud, go to the Garden Door. 001:01,034[' ]| 001:01,034[D ]| 'Sdeath, What Ruffian's this? 001:01,034[A ]| One that will be sure to cut your throat. 001:01,034[D ]| Make not a promise to your*self of what you cann't perform. 001:01,034[' ]| <\Fight.\> 001:01,034[A ]| I warrant you. Have at you. 001:01,034[G ]| O Heav'n Octavio's Fighting! Oh my heart! 001:01,034[D ]| Oh! I am slain. ~~ 001:01,034[' ]| <\Falls.\> 001:01,034[A ]| I knew I should be as good as my word. I think you have 001:01,034[A ]| it, Sir ~~ Ha! ~~ he's dying ~~ Now for the Lady ~~ I'll draw him 001:01,034[A ]| farther off, that his groans may not disturb our pleasure ~~ Stay ~~ 001:01,034[A ]| by your leave, Sir, I'll change Hat and Cloak with you, it may help me 001:01,034[A ]| in my design. 001:01,034[D ]| O barbarous Villain! 001:01,034[' ]| <\Dies.\> 001:01,034[G ]| They have done fighting, and I hear no noise. Oh unfortunate 001:01,034[G ]| Woman! my dear Octavio's kill'd ~~ 001:01,034[K ]| Perhaps, Madam, he has kill'd the other. I'll down to the 001:01,034[K ]| Garden door; if he be well, he'll come thither, as well to satisfie his 001:01,034[K ]| appointment, as to take refuge. Your Brother's safe, he may come in 001:01,034[K ]| securely ~~ 001:01,034[' ]| <\Ex% to the door.\> 001:01,034[G ]| Haste! Haste! Fly! Fly! Oh Octavio. I'll follow her. 001:01,034[' ]| <\She follows.\> 001:01,034[A ]| Now for the Garden Door. This Whistle will do me excellent 001:01,034[A ]| Service. Now good luck ~~ 001:01,034[' ]| <\Goes to the Door and Whistles.\> 001:01,034[K ]| Octavio? 001:01,034[A ]| The same. 001:01,035[K ]| Heav'n be prais'd, my Lady thought you had been kill'd. 001:01,035[A ]| I am unhurt: let's quickly to her. 001:01,035[K ]| Oh! She'll be overjoy'd to see you alive. 001:01,035[A ]| I'll make her more overjoy'd before I have done with her. 001:01,035[A ]| This is a rare adventure! 001:01,035[' ]| <\Enter\ Maria \at the Door.\> 001:01,035[K ]| Here's your Jewel, Madam, speak softly. 001:01,035[G ]| Oh my dear Octavio! I have got you within these arms? 001:01,035[A ]| Ah, my Dear, unpierc'd by any*thing but by your eyes. 001:01,035[G ]| Those will do you no hurt. But are you sure you are not 001:01,035[G ]| wounded? 001:01,035[A ]| I am. Let me embrace my pretty Dear; and yet she maybe a 001:01,035[A ]| Blackamore for ought I know ~~ 001:01,035[G ]| We'll retire to my Chamber. Flora, go out, and prepare us a 001:01,035[G ]| Collation. 001:01,035[A ]| O admirable adventure! Come, my Delight. 001:01,035[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 001:01,035[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Lopez, Antonio, Jacomo.> 001:01,035[E ]| Where's my pious Master? 001:01,035[B ]| We left him hereabouts. I wonder what he has done in his 001:01,035[B ]| adventure: I believe he has had some bustle. 001:01,035[C ]| I thought I heard fighting hereabout. 001:01,035[E ]| Gad forgive me! fighting! where! where! 001:01,035[B ]| O thou incorrigible Coward! 001:01,035[C ]| See, here's some of his handy-work; here's a man kill'd. 001:01,035[E ]| Another murder. Heav'n, what will become of me? I shall be 001:01,035[E ]| hang'd, yet dare not run away from him. 001:01,035[' ]| <\Enter an Officer with a Guard, going the Round.\> 001:01,035[W ]| Stand! who are there? 001:01,035[C ]| We do stand, Rascal, we never use to run. 001:01,035[E ]| Now shall I be taken hang'd for my Master's murder. 001:01,035[' ]| <\Offers to run.\> 001:01,035[B ]| Stand, you Dog! offer once more to run, and I'll put Bilbow 001:01,035[B ]| in your guts. 001:01,035[E ]| Gad forgive me! what will become of me? 001:01,035[W ]| What's here? a Man murder'd? yield, you are my prisoners. 001:01,035[E ]| With all my heart! but as I hope to be saved, we did not kill him, 001:01,035[E ]| Sir. 001:01,035[W ]| These must be the murderers, disarm 'em. 001:01,035[B ]| How now, Rascal! disarm us! 001:01,035[C ]| We are not us'd to part with our Swords. 001:01,036[E ]| I care not a farthing for my Sword, 'tis at your service. 001:01,036[B ]| Do you hear, Rascal; keep it, and fight; or I'll swear the 001:01,036[B ]| murder against you. 001:01,036[C ]| Offer to flinch, and I'll run you through. 001:01,036[W ]| Take their Swords, or knock 'em down. 001:01,036[' ]| <\They fight.\ Jacomo \offers to run,\> 001:01,036[' ]| <\some of the Guards stop him.\> 001:01,036[E ]| A pox on't, I had as good fight and die, as be taken and be 001:01,036[E ]| hang'd. 001:01,036[' ]| <\Guards are beaten off.\> 001:01,036[C ]| Are you gone, you Dogs? I have pinck'd some of you. 001:01,036[E ]| Ah Rogues! Villains! I have met with you. 001:01,036[B ]| O brave Jacomo! you fought like an imprison'd Rat: The 001:01,036[B ]| Rogue had conceal'd Courage, and did not know it. 001:01,036[E ]| O Cowards! Rascals! a man can get no honour by fighting with 001:01,036[E ]| such Poletroons! but for all that, I will prudently withdraw, this place 001:01,036[E ]| will suddenly be too hot for us. 001:01,036[C ]| Once in our Life you are in the right, Jacomo. 001:01,036[E ]| O good Sir, there is as much to be ascribed to Conduct, as to 001:01,036[E ]| Courage, I assure you. 001:01,036[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 001:01,036[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John \and\ Maria \in her Chamber\.> 001:01,036[G ]| Speak softly, my Dear; should my Brother hear us, we are 001:01,036[G ]| ruin'd. 001:01,036[A ]| Thought I can scarce contain my joy, I will. O she's a rare 001:01,036[A ]| Creature in the dark, pray Heav'n she be so in the light. 001:01,036[' ]| <\Enter\ Flora \with a Candle; as soon as they discover\> 001:01,036[' ]| 001:01,036[G ]| O Heaven! I am ruin'd and betrayed. 001:01,036[K ]| He has Octavio's clothes on. 001:01,036[G ]| O he has murder'd him. My Brother shall revenge it. 001:01,036[A ]| I will cut his throat if he offers it. 001:01,036[X ]| Thieves! Murder! Murder! Thieves. 001:01,036[A ]| I will stop your shrill wind-pipes. 001:01,036[' ]| <\Enter\ Maria's \Brother, with his sword drawn.\> 001:01,036[W ]| 'Sdeath! a man in my Sister's Chamber! 001:01,036[W ]| Have at you. Villain. 001:01,036[A ]| Come on, Villain. 001:01,036[' ]| 001:01,036[K ]| Murder! Murder! 001:01,036[G ]| O Villain, thou hast kill'd my Brother, and dishonour'd me. 001:01,037[' ]| <\Enter five or six Servants, with drawn Swords.\> 001:01,037[G ]| O your Master's murdered! 001:01,037[A ]| So many of you; 'tis no matter: Your Hero's in Plays beat 001:01,037[A ]| five times as many. Have at you, Rogues. 001:01,037[' ]| 001:01,037[' ]| <\beats the Servants off, and stops\ Flora.> 001:01,037[A ]| Now give me the Key of the Garden, or I'll murder thee. 001:01,037[K ]| Murder! Murder! There, take it ~~ 001:01,037[' ]| <\She runs away.\> 001:01,037[A ]| So, thus far it is well; this was a brave adventure. 001:01,037[A ]| 'Mongst all the Joys which in the world are sought, 001:01,037[A ]| None are so great as those by dangers bought. 001:01,037[' ]| <\Exit.\> 002:01,037[' ]| 002:01,037[' ]| 002:01,037[E ]| What will this leud Master of mine do? this Town of Sevil will 002:01,037[E ]| not much care for his company after his last nights Atchievments: 002:01,037[E ]| He must either fly, or hang for't. Ha! me-thinks 002:01,037[E ]| my bloud grows chill at the naming of that dreadful word, \Hang\. What 002:01,037[E ]| will become of me? I dare not leave him, and yet I fear that I shall 002:01,037[E ]| perish with him. He's certainly the first that ever set up a Religion to the 002:01,037[E ]| Devil. 002:01,037[' ]| <\Enter\ Leonora.> 002:01,037[F ]| I come to claim your promise; is Don*John within? 002:01,037[E ]| No, Madam, but I expect him every minute. You see, Madam, 002:01,037[E ]| what honour I have for you, for I venture my ears to do this. 002:01,037[F ]| You oblige me extremly; so great is the present pain of doubt, 002:01,037[F ]| that we desire to lose it: though in exchange of certainty, that must 002:01,037[F ]| afflict us more. 002:01,037[E ]| I hear him coming, withdraw quickly. 002:01,037[' ]| <\She withdraws.\> 002:01,037[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John.> 002:01,037[A ]| How now, sir, what wise thoughts have you in your Noddle? 002:01,037[E ]| Why, Sir, I was considering how well I could endure to be hang'd. 002:01,037[A ]| And why so, Buffle? 002:01,037[E ]| Why you will force me to wait upon you in all your fortunes, and 002:01,037[E ]| you are making what haste you can to the Gallows. ~~ 002:01,038[A ]| Again at your reproofs. You insipid Rascal; I shall cut your 002:01,038[A ]| ears off, Dog ~~ 002:01,038[E ]| Good Sir, I have done; yet I cannot but admire, since you are 002:01,038[E ]| resolv'd to go to the Devil, that you cannot be content with the common 002:01,038[E ]| way of travelling, but must ride post to him. 002:01,038[A ]| Leave of your idle tales, found out by Priests to keep the Rabble 002:01,038[A ]| in awe. 002:01,038[E ]| Oh horrid wickedness! If I may be bold to ask, what noble 002:01,038[E ]| exploits did your Chivalry perform last night? 002:01,038[A ]| Why, Sir, I commited a Rape upon my Father's Monument. 002:01,038[E ]| Oh horror! 002:01,038[A ]| Do you start, you Villain? Hah! 002:01,038[E ]| I, Sir, who I, Sir? not I, Sir. 002:01,038[A ]| D'hear, Rascal, let me not see a frown upon your face; if I 002:01,038[A ]| do, I will cut your throat, you Rogue. 002:01,038[E ]| No, Sir, no, Sir, I warrant you; I am in a very good humor, I 002:01,038[E ]| assure you ~~ Heav'n deliver me! 002:01,038[A ]| Now listen and learn. I kill'd a Lady's Lover, and suppli'd 002:01,038[A ]| his place, by stratagem enjoy'd her: In came her foolish Brother and 002:01,038[A ]| surprized me, but perished by my hand; and I doubt not but I maul'd 002:01,038[A ]| three or four of his Servants. 002:01,038[' ]| 002:01,038[E ]| Oh horrid fact! 002:01,038[' ]| <\Aside.\> 002:01,038[A ]| Again, Villain, are you frowning? 002:01,038[E ]| No Sir, no Sir; don't think so ill of me, Sir. Heav'n send me 002:01,038[E ]| from this wicked Wretch! What will become of us, Sir? we shall be 002:01,038[E ]| apprehended. 002:01,038[A ]| Can you fear your Rascally Carcase, when I venture mine? I 002:01,038[A ]| observe always, those that have the most despicable persons, are most 002:01,038[A ]| careful to preserve 'em. 002:01,038[E ]| Sir, I beg your pardon; but I have an odd humor, makes me 002:01,038[E ]| something unfit for your Worship's service. 002:01,038[A ]| What's that, Sirra? 002:01,038[E ]| 'Tis a very odd one, I am almost asham'd to tell it to you. 002:01,038[A ]| Out with it Fool ~~ 002:01,038[E ]| Why Sir, I cannot tell what is the reason, but I have a most 002:01,038[E ]| unconquerable antipathy to Hemp. I could never endure a Bell-rope. 002:01,038[E ]| Hanging is a kind of death I cannot abide. I am not able to endure it. 002:01,038[A ]| I have taken care to avoid that; my friends are gone to hire a 002:01,038[A ]| Vessel, and we'll to Sea together to seek a refuge, and a new Scene of 002:01,038[A ]| pleasure. 002:01,038[E ]| All three, Sir? 002:01,038[A ]| Yes, Sir. ~~ 002:01,039[E ]| Three as civil discreet sober persons, as a man wou'd wish to 002:01,039[E ]| drink with. 002:01,039[' ]| <\Enter\ Leonora.> 002:01,039[F ]| I can hold no longer! 002:01,039[A ]| 'Sdeath, you Dog, how came she here? 002:01,039[E ]| I don't know, Sir, she stole in ~~ 002:01,039[F ]| What Witchcraft do I suffer under, that when I abhor his vices, 002:01,039[F ]| I still love his person? Ah, Don*John! have I deserv'd that you should 002:01,039[F ]| fly me? are all your Oaths and vows forgotten by you? 002:01,039[A ]| No, no; in these cases I always remember my Oaths, and 002:01,039[A ]| never forget to break them. 002:01,039[F ]| Oh impiety! 002:01,039[F ]| Did I, for this, yield up my Honour to you? after you had sigh'd and 002:01,039[F ]| languished many months, and shew'd all signs of a sincere affection, I 002:01,039[F ]| trusted in your truth and constancy, without the Bond of Marriage, yielded 002:01,039[F ]| up a Virgin's Treasure, all my Innocence, believed your solemn Contract, 002:01,039[F ]| when you invok'd all the Pow'rs above to testifie your Vows. 002:01,039[A ]| They think much of us, why don't they witness 'em for you 002:01,039[A ]| ~~ Pish, 'tis nothing but a way of speaking, which young amorous 002:01,039[A ]| Fellows have gotten. 002:01,039[F ]| Did you not love me then? What injury had I e'r done you, 002:01,039[F ]| that you shou'd feign affection to betray me? 002:01,039[A ]| Yes 'faith, I did love you, and shew'd you as frequent and 002:01,039[A ]| as hearty signs of it as I could; and i'gad y'are an ungrateful Woman 002:01,039[A ]| if you say the contrary. 002:01,039[F ]| O heav'n! Did you and do not now? What crime have I committed 002:01,039[F ]| that could make you break your Vows and Oaths, and banish all 002:01,039[F ]| your passion? Ah! with what tenderness have I receiv'd your feign'd 002:01,039[F ]| affection, and ne'r thought I liv'd but in your presence; my love was 002:01,039[F ]| too fervent to be counterfeit ~~ 002:01,039[A ]| That I know not, for since your Sex are such dissemblers, 002:01,039[A ]| they can hold out against, and seem to hate the men they love; why 002:01,039[A ]| may they not seem to love the men they hate? 002:01,039[F ]| O cruel Man! could I dissemble? had I a thousand lives, I 002:01,039[F ]| ventur'd all each time I saw your face; nay, were I now discover'd, I 002:01,039[F ]| should instantly be sacrific'd to my raging Brother's fury; and can I 002:01,039[F ]| dissemble? 002:01,039[A ]| I do not know whether you do or no; you see I don't, I am 002:01,039[A ]| something free with you. 002:01,039[F ]| And do you not love me then? 002:01,039[A ]| Faith, Madam, I lov'd you as long as I could for the heart 002:01,039[A ]| and bloud of me, and there's an end of it; what a Devil wou'd you have 002:01,039[A ]| more? 002:01,040[F ]| O cruel man! how miserable have you made me! 002:01,040[A ]| Miserable! use variety as I do, and you'll not be miserable. 002:01,040[A ]| Ah! there's nothing so sweet to frail humane flesh as variety. 002:01,040[F ]| Inhumane Creature! what have I been guilty of, that thou 002:01,040[F ]| shouldst thus remove thy Affections from me? 002:01,040[A ]| Guilty, no: but I have had enough of you, and I have done 002:01,040[A ]| what I can for you, and there's no more to be said. 002:01,040[F ]| Tigers would have more pity than thou hast. 002:01,040[A ]| Unreasonable Woman! would you have a man love after 002:01,040[A ]| enjoyment? I think the Devil's in you ~~ 002:01,040[F ]| Do you upbraid me with the rash effects of Love, which you 002:01,040[F ]| caus'd in me? and do you hate me for what you ought to love me for? 002:01,040[F ]| were you not many moneths with Vows and Oaths betraying me to that 002:01,040[F ]| weakness? Ungrateful Monster! 002:01,040[A ]| Why the Devil did you not yield before? you Women always 002:01,040[A ]| rook in Love; you'll never play upon the square with us. 002:01,040[F ]| False Man! I yielded but too soon. Unfortunate Woman! 002:01,040[A ]| Your dissembling Arts and jilting tricks, taught you by your 002:01,040[A ]| Mothers, and the phlegmatick coldness of your constitutions, make you 002:01,040[A ]| so long in yielding; that we love out almost all our love before you 002:01,040[A ]| begin, and yet you would have our love last as long as yours. I got the 002:01,040[A ]| start of you a long way, and have reason to reach the Goal before you. 002:01,040[F ]| Did you not swear you wou'd for*ever love me? 002:01,040[A ]| Why there 'tis; why did you put me to the trouble to swear 002:01,040[A ]| it? If you Women wou'd be honest, and follow the Dictates of Sense 002:01,040[A ]| and Nature, we shou'd agree about the business presently, and never be 002:01,040[A ]| forsworn for the matter. 002:01,040[F ]| Are Oaths so slighted by you, perfidious Man? 002:01,040[A ]| Oaths! Snares to catch conceited Women with, I wou'd have 002:01,040[A ]| sworn all the Oathes under the Sun; Why I wou'd have committed 002:01,040[A ]| Treason for you, and yet I knew I should be weary of you ~~ 002:01,040[F ]| I thought such love as mine might have deserv'd your constancy, 002:01,040[F ]| false and ungrateful man! 002:01,040[A ]| Thus your own vanity, not we betray you. Each Woman 002:01,040[A ]| thinks, though men are false to others, that she is so fine a person, 002:01,040[A ]| none can be so to her. You shou'd not take our words of course in 002:01,040[A ]| earnest. 002:01,040[F ]| Thus Devils do in Hell, who cruelly upbraid whom they have 002:01,040[F ]| tempted thither. 002:01,040[A ]| In short, my constitution will not let me love you longer: 002:01,040[A ]| and whatever some Hypocrites pretend, all mankind obey their constitutions, 002:01,040[A ]| and cannot do otherwise ~~ 002:01,040[F ]| Heav'n, sure, will punish this vile treachery. 002:01,041[A ]| Do you then leave it to Heav'n, and trouble your*self no farther 002:01,041[A ]| about it. 002:01,041[F ]| Ye Sacred Pow'rs, who take care of injur'd innocence assist me. 002:01,041[' ]| <\Enter\ Jacomo.> 002:01,041[E ]| Sir, Sir! Stand upon your guard. 002:01,041[A ]| How now! What's the matter? 002:01,041[E ]| Here's a whole Batallion of couragious Women come to charge 002:01,041[E ]| you. 002:01,041[' ]| <\Enter Six Women.\> 002:01,041[A ]| Keep 'em out, you Villain. 002:01,041[E ]| I cannot, they over-run me. 002:01,041[A ]| What an inundation of Strumpets is here? 002:01,041[E ]| O Heav'n! I can stay no longer to be a witness of his falshood ~~ 002:01,041[' ]| <\Exit\ Leonora.> 002:01,041[V ]| My Dear, I desire a word in private with you. 002:01,041[A ]| 'Faith my Dear, I am something busie, but I love thee dearly. 002:01,041[' ]| <\Aside.\> 002:01,041[A ]| A pox on thee! 002:01,041[V ]| Don*John, a word: 'tis time now we should declare our 002:01,041[V ]| marriage; 'tis now about three weeks. 002:01,041[A ]| Ay, we will do it suddenly ~~ 002:01,041[V ]| Pre'thee, Honey, what bus'ness can these idle Women have? 002:01,041[V ]| send them packing, that we may confer about our affairs. 002:01,041[V ]| Lord! How am I amaz'd at the confidence of some Women! 002:01,041[V ]| Who are these that will not let one converse with one's own Husband? 002:01,041[V ]| By your leave, Ladies. 002:01,041[E ]| Now it works! teaze him, Ladies, worry him soundly ~~ 002:01,041[V ]| Nay, by your leave, good Madam; if you go to that. 002:01,041[' ]| <\Pulls\ Don*John \from the other.\> 002:01,041[V ]| Ladies, by all your leaves; sure none of you will have the 002:01,041[V ]| confidence to pretend an interest in this Gentleman ~~ 002:01,041[A ]| I shall be torn in pieces: Jacomo, stand by me. 002:01,041[V ]| Lord, Madam, what's your meaning? none ought to claim 002:01,041[V ]| a right to another Woman's Husband, let me tell you that. 002:01,041[V ]| You are in the right, Madam. Therefore pre'thee, Dear, let's 002:01,041[V ]| withdraw, and leave them; I do not like their company. 002:01,041[A ]| Ay, presently, my Dear. What an excellent thing is a Woman 002:01,041[A ]| before Enjoyment, and how insipid after it! 002:01,041[V ]| Come, prethee, put these Women out of doubt, and let them 002:01,041[V ]| know our Marriage. 002:01,041[A ]| To*Morrow we'll declare and celebrate our Nuptials. 002:01,041[V ]| Ladies, the short and the long on't is, you are very uncivil 002:01,042[V ]| to press upon this Gentleman. Come, Love, e'en tell 'em the truth of 002:01,042[V ]| the story ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| Uncivil, Madam, pardon me; one cannot be so in speaking 002:01,042[V ]| to one's own. 002:01,042[V ]| That's true; she little thinks who that is. 002:01,042[V ]| To their own! Ha, ha, ha, that's true ~~ Come, Honey, 002:01,042[V ]| keep 'em no longer in Ignorance. 002:01,042[V ]| Come, Ladies, I will undeceive you all; think no further 002:01,042[V ]| of this Gentleman, I say, think no further of him ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| What can this mean? 002:01,042[A ]| Hold, for Heav'ns sake; you know not what you do. 002:01,042[V ]| Yes, yes, I do; it shall all out: I'll send 'em away with Fleas in 002:01,042[V ]| their Ears. Poor silly Creatures! 002:01,042[A ]| Now will Civil Wars arise ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| Trouble your*selves no longer about Don*John, he is mine ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| he is mine, Ladies. 002:01,042[X ]| Yours! ~~ 002:01,042[A ]| Pox on't, I must set a good face upon the bus'ness; I see 002:01,042[A ]| murder will out ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| Your's that's pleasant; he's mine ~~ 002:01,042[V ]| I have been too long patient; he is my Husband. 002:01,042[V ]| Yours, how can that be? I am sure I am his Wife. 002:01,042[V ]| Are you not asham'd, Ladies, to claim my Husband? 002:01,042[V ]| Are you all mad? I am sure I am marri'd to him. 002:01,042[X ]| You! 002:01,042[A ]| Look you, Ladies, a Man's but a Man? here's my Body, take't 002:01,042[A ]| among you as far as 'twill go. The Devil can't please you all ~~ 002:01,042[E ]| Pray Ladies, will you dispatch; for there are a matter of fifteen 002:01,042[E ]| more that are ready to put in their claims, and must be heard in their 002:01,042[E ]| order ~~ 002:01,042[A ]| How now, Rogue, this is your fault, Sirra. 002:01,042[E ]| My fault, Sir, no; the Ladies shall see I am no Traitor. Look 002:01,042[E ]| you Ladies ~~ 002:01,042[A ]| Peace, Villain, or I will cut your Throat. Well, Ladies, know 002:01,042[A ]| then, I am marri'd to one in this company; and to*morrow morning, 002:01,042[A ]| if you will repair to this place, I will declare my marriage, which now for 002:01,042[A ]| some secret Reasons, I am oblig'd to conceal ~~ Now will each 002:01,042[A ]| Strumpet think 'tis her I mean. 002:01,042[V ]| That's well enough. 002:01,042[V ]| I knew he would own me at last. 002:01,042[V ]| Now they will soon see their errors. 002:01,042[V ]| Now we'll conceal it no longer, Dearest. 002:01,042[A ]| No, no, I warrant you ~~ 002:01,043[V ]| Lord how blank these Ladies will look. 002:01,043[V ]| Poor Ladies ~~ 002:01,043[E ]| Ladies, pray let me ask a question, which of you is really marri'd 002:01,043[E ]| to him? 002:01,043[X ]| I, I, I. 002:01,043[A ]| 'Sdeath, you Son of a Baboon. Come, Pox on't, why 002:01,043[A ]| should I dally any longer! Why should I conceal my good actions! In 002:01,043[A ]| one word, I am married to every one of you, and have above four-score 002:01,043[A ]| more; nor will I ever give over, till I have as many Wives and 002:01,043[A ]| Concubines as the Grand*Signior. 002:01,043[E ]| A very modest civil Person truly ~~ 002:01,043[V ]| O horrid Villain! 002:01,043[V ]| Perfidious Monster! 002:01,043[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Lopez \and\ Antonio.> 002:01,043[B ]| How now, Don*John; Hah; you are a ravenous Bird of 002:01,043[B ]| prey indeed; do you fly at no less that a whole Covee of Whores at once? 002:01,043[B ]| you scorn a single Strumpet for your Quarry. 002:01,043[B ]| What, in Tears too! Fie, D%*John; thou art the most ungenteel 002:01,043[B ]| Knight alive: Use your Ladies civilly for shame. 002:01,043[A ]| Ah, before the Victory, I grant you; but after it, they should 002:01,043[A ]| wear Chains, and follow the conqueror's Chariot. 002:01,043[C ]| Alas, poor Harlots! 002:01,043[A ]| Peace, peace, good words; these are certain Animals call'd 002:01,043[A ]| Wives, and all of 'em are my Wives: Do you call a Man of Honour's 002:01,043[A ]| Wives, Harlots? out on't. 002:01,043[V ]| Perfidious Monster! 002:01,043[B ]| Excellent! 002:01,043[A ]| Come on, you are come very opportunely, to help to celebrate 002:01,043[A ]| my several and respective Weddings. Come, my Dears; 'faith we will 002:01,043[A ]| have a Ballad at our Weddings. Where are my Fidlers? 002:01,043[V ]| O salvage Beast! 002:01,043[V ]| Inhumane Villain! Revenge shall follow. 002:01,043[A ]| Pox on Revenge, call in my Minstrils. 002:01,043[' ]| <\Enter Fidlers.\> 002:01,043[A ]| Come, Sing my Epithalamium. 002:01,043[' ]| 002:01,043[U ]| \Since Liberty, Nature for all has design'd,\ 002:01,043[U ]| \A pox on the Fool who to one is confin'd.\ 002:01,043[U ]| \All Creatures besides,\ 002:01,043[U ]| \When they please change their Brides.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \All Females they get when they can,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Whilst they nothing but Nature obey,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \How happy, how happy are they?\ 002:01,044[U ]| \But the silly fond Animal, Man,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Makes Laws 'gainst himself, which his Appetites sway;\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Poor Fools, how unhappy are they?\ 002:01,044[' ]| 002:01,044[U ]| \Since Liberty, Nature for all has design'd,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \A pox on the Fool who to one is confin'd.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \At the first going down, a Woman is good,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \But when e'er she comes up, I'll ne'r chew the Cud,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \But out she shall go.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \And I'll serve 'em all so.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \When with One my Stomack is cloy'd,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Another shall soon be enjoy'd.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Then how happy, how happy are we?\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Let the Coxcomb when weary, drudge on,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \And foolishly stay when he wou'd fain be gone.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Poor Fool! How unhappy is he?\ 002:01,044[' ]| 002:01,044[U ]| \At the first going down, &c%\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Let the Rabble obey, I'll live like a Man,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Who, by Nature, is free to enjoy all he can:\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Wise Nature does Teach\ 002:01,044[U ]| \More truth than Fools Preach;\ 002:01,044[U ]| \They bind us, but she gives us ease.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \I'll revel, and love where I please.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \She, she's my infallible Guide.\ 002:01,044[U ]| \But were the Bless'd freedom deni'd\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Of variety in the things we love best,\ 002:01,044[U ]| \Dull Man were the slavishest Beast.\ 002:01,044[' ]| 002:01,044[U ]| \Let the Rabble obey, &c%\ 002:01,044[A ]| Come, How do you like this? Let's be merry, my Brides. 002:01,044[V ]| O monstrous Traitor! Do you mock our Misery? 002:01,044[A ]| Good Spouse, be not passionate ~~ faith we'll have a Dance. 002:01,044[A ]| Strike up ~~ 002:01,044[' ]| <\Dance.\> 002:01,044[C ]| Be comforted, good Ladies; you have Companions in your 002:01,044[C ]| misfortunes ~~ 002:01,044[B ]| He has been marri'd in all the Cities of Spain; what a breed 002:01,044[B ]| of Don*John's shall we have? 002:01,044[A ]| Come, Sweet-hearts; you must be civil to these Gentlemen; 002:01,044[A ]| they are my Friends, and men of Honour. 002:01,045[V ]| Men of Honour! They are Devils if they be your Friends. 002:01,045[A ]| I hate unreasonable, unconscionable fellows, who when they 002:01,045[A ]| are weary of their Wives, will still keep 'em from other Men. Gentlemen, 002:01,045[A ]| ye shall command mine. 002:01,045[V ]| Thinkest thou I will out-live this affront? 002:01,045[A ]| I'll trust you for that, there's ne'r a Lucrece now a-days, the 002:01,045[A ]| Sex has learnt Wit since. Let me see, Antonio, thou shalt have for thy 002:01,045[A ]| present use, let me see, my sixth Wife ~~ 'faith she's a pretty buxom 002:01,045[A ]| Wench, and deserves hearty usage from thee. 002:01,045[V ]| Traitor, I'll be reveng'd on all thy treachery. 002:01,045[B ]| A mettl'd Girl, I like her well: She'll endure a Rape gallantly. 002:01,045[B ]| I love resistance, it endears the pleasure. 002:01,045[A ]| And Lopez, thou shalt have, let me see, ay, my fourth Spouse; 002:01,045[A ]| She's a brave Virago; and Gad if I had not been something familiar with 002:01,045[A ]| her already, I would venture my Life for her. 002:01,045[V ]| Vile Wretch! Think'st thou I will out-live this affront? 002:01,045[V ]| Impious Villain! Though thou hast no sense of Vertue or Honour left, 002:01,045[V ]| thou shalt find I have. 002:01,045[A ]| Vertue and Honour! There's nothing good or ill, but as it 002:01,045[A ]| seems to each man's natural appetite, if they will consent freely. You 002:01,045[A ]| must ravish friends: that's all I know, you must ravish. 002:01,045[V ]| Unheard of Villany! Fly from this Hellish place. 002:01,045[B ]| Ladies, you shall fly, but we must ravish first. 002:01,045[C ]| Yes, I assure you we must ravish ~~ 002:01,045[V ]| No, Monster, I'll prevent you. 002:01,045[' ]| <\Stabs her*self.\> 002:01,045[B ]| S'death, she's as good as her word. 002:01,045[B ]| The first time I e're knew a Woman so. 002:01,045[C ]| Pox on't, she has prevented me; she's dead. 002:01,045[A ]| Say you so? well, go thy ways, thou wer't a Girl of 002:01,045[A ]| pretty parts, that's the truth on't; but I ne'r thought this had been in 002:01,045[A ]| thee. 002:01,045[V ]| These, sure are Devils in the shape of men. 002:01,045[A ]| Now see my providence, if I had been marri'd to none but 002:01,045[A ]| her, I had been a Widower. 002:01,045[V ]| O horror! horror! flie! flie! 002:01,045[V ]| No, I'll be reveng'd first on this barbarous Wench. 002:01,045[A ]| Why look you, here's a Wench of mettle for you; go ravish 002:01,045[A ]| quickly ~~ 002:01,045[V ]| Let's fly, and call for help, some in the street, may help us ~~ 002:01,045[' ]| <\They all run off, crying, Help, murder, murder.\> 002:01,045[B ]| Let 'em go, they are confin'd, they cann't get out. 002:01,045[A ]| It shall ne'r be said that a Woman went out of this House 002:01,045[A ]| 7Re*infecta; but after that, 'twill be time for to fly. 002:01,046[C ]| We have a hir'd Vessel, the Master is a brave Rogue of my 002:01,046[C ]| acquaintance; he has been a Bandit. 002:01,046[B ]| A brave honest wicked Fellow as heart can wish, I have ravish'd, 002:01,046[B ]| robbed, and murdered with him. 002:01,046[A ]| That's well. Hey, where are my Rogues? Hey! 002:01,046[' ]| <\Enter Servant and\ Jacomo.> 002:01,046[A ]| Here, Sirrah, do you send my Goods on Board. 002:01,046[B ]| My Man will direct you. 002:01,046[' ]| <\Exit Servant.\> 002:01,046[A ]| Come, Sirra, do you remove this Body to another Room ~~ 002:01,046[E ]| Oh horrid fact! what, another Murder! what shall I do? 002:01,046[A ]| Leave your complaints, you Dog; I'll send you after her. 002:01,046[E ]| Oh! I shall be hang'd, I shall be hang'd. 002:01,046[A ]| Take her up, Rascal; or I'll cut your throat. 002:01,046[E ]| I will, Sir. Oh mercy upon me! I shall be hang'd ~~ 002:01,046[A ]| Now, Sirrah, do you run into the streets, and force in the 002:01,046[A ]| next Woman you meet, or I'll cut your Wind-pipe; and let no*Body 002:01,046[A ]| out ~~ 002:01,046[E ]| What hellish fact will he now commit. 002:01,046[A ]| Take her up, you Hen-hearted compassionate Rascal. 002:01,046[E ]| Heaven! what will become of me? Oh! Oh ~~ 002:01,046[' ]| <\Carries her off.\> 002:01,046[A ]| Now, Gentlemen, you shall see I'll be civil to you, you shall 002:01,046[A ]| not ravish alone; indeed I am loath to meddle with mine old acquaintance, 002:01,046[A ]| but if my Man can meet with a Woman I have not lain withall, 002:01,046[A ]| I'll keep you company; let her be old or young, ugly or handsome, no 002:01,046[A ]| matter. 002:01,046[C ]| Faith I will ever say, you are a well bred man. 002:01,046[B ]| A very civil person, a man of Honour. 002:01,046[' ]| <\Enter Servant, forcing in an ugly old Woman who cries out.\> 002:01,046[A ]| This unlucky Rogue has made but a scurvy choice, but I'll 002:01,046[A ]| keep my word. Come, Bawd, you must be ravish'd, Bawd. 002:01,046[V ]| O murder! murder! help! help! I was never ravish'd in 002:01,046[V ]| my life. 002:01,046[A ]| That I dare swear; but to shew I am a very vigorous Man, I'll 002:01,046[A ]| begin with you. But, you Rascal, Jaccall, I'll make you Cater better 002:01,046[A ]| next time. 002:01,046[W ]| Indeed, Sir, this was the first I met. 002:01,046[A ]| Come on, Beldam, thy face shall not protect thee. 002:01,046[V ]| Oh my Honour! my Honour! help, help, my Honour! 002:01,046[A ]| Come to our business. 002:01,047[' ]| <\Enter\ Jacomo.> 002:01,047[E ]| O Sir! Sir! shift for your*self; we shall be hang'd the house is 002:01,047[E ]| beset. Oh what shall we do? 002:01,047[A ]| Away, Coward: were the King of Spain's Army beleagu'ring 002:01,047[A ]| us, it should not divert me from this Exploit. 002:01,047[B ]| Nor me. 002:01,047[C ]| Nor me: Let's on. 002:01,047[A ]| Keep the doors fast, Sirra. Come on. 002:01,047[E ]| Oh what will become of me! Oh Heav'n! mercy on me! Oh 002:01,047[E ]| Oh! 002:01,047[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 002:01,047[' ]| <\In Mans habit, Enter\ Maria, \and her Maid\ Flora.> 002:01,047[G ]| Thus I have abandoned all my Fortune, and laid by My Sex. 002:01,047[G ]| Revenge for thee. Assist me now, 002:01,047[G ]| You Instruments of Bloud, for my dear Brothers, 002:01,047[G ]| And for my much more dear Octavio's sake. 002:01,047[G ]| Where are my Bravo's? ~~ 002:01,047[K ]| Thay have beset the Villains House, 002:01,047[K ]| And he shall ne'r come out alive ~~ 002:01,047[G ]| O let 'em shew no more remorse, 002:01,047[G ]| Than Hungry Lions o'r their prey will. 002:01,047[G ]| How miserable am I made by that 002:01,047[G ]| Inhumane Monster! No savage Beast, 002:01,047[G ]| Wild deserts e'r brought forth, provoked 002:01,047[G ]| By all its hunger, and its natural rage, 002:01,047[G ]| Could yet have been so cruel. 002:01,047[G ]| Oh my Octavio! whether thou art fled, 002:01,047[G ]| From the most loving and most wretched 002:01,047[G ]| Creature of her Sex? What Ages of delight 002:01,047[G ]| Each hour with thee brought forth! 002:01,047[G ]| How much, when I had thee, was all the world 002:01,047[G ]| Unenvied by me! Nay, I piti'd all my Sex, 002:01,047[G ]| That cou'd have nothing worth their care, 002:01,047[G ]| Since all the treasure of Mankind was mine. 002:01,047[G ]| Methought I cou'd look down on Queens, when he 002:01,047[G ]| Was with me: but now, compared to me, 002:01,047[G ]| How happy is the Wretched, whose sinews 002:01,047[G ]| Crack upon the merciless Engine 002:01,047[G ]| Of his torture? I live with greater torments then he dies. 002:01,047[K ]| Leave your complaints. Tears are no Sacrifice for bloud. 002:01,047[G ]| Now my just grief to just revenge give place 002:01,047[G ]| I am ashamed of these soft Tears, till I've 002:01,047[G ]| Revenged thy horrid Murder, Oh that I could 002:01,048[G ]| Make the Villain linger out an Age in 002:01,048[G ]| Torments! But I will revel in his bloud: Oh 002:01,048[G ]| I could suck the last drop that warms the 002:01,048[G ]| Monsters heart, that might inspire me with 002:01,048[G ]| Such cruelty, as vile Man, with all his horrid 002:01,048[G ]| Arts of power, is yet a stranger to; 002:01,048[G ]| Then I might root out all his cursed Race. 002:01,048[K ]| I'll follow all your fortunes, my dear Lady; 002:01,048[K ]| Had I ten thousand lives, in this cause I'd 002:01,048[K ]| Venture one by one to my last stake. 002:01,048[G ]| Thou art my dear and faithful Creature; 002:01,048[G ]| Let not thy fortunes thus be wrack'd with mine. 002:01,048[G ]| Be gone, and leave thy most unhappy Mistriss; 002:01,048[G ]| One that has miseries enow to sink the Sex. 002:01,048[K ]| I will not leave you, till death takes me from you. 002:01,048[G ]| Oh that I had been some poor lost Mountain Girl, 002:01,048[G ]| Nurs'd up by Goats, or suckl'd by wild Beasts, 002:01,048[G ]| Exposed to all the rage of heats and killing colds. 002:01,048[G ]| I ne'r cou'd have been abandoned to such fury, 002:01,048[G ]| More savage cruelty reigns in Cities. 002:01,048[G ]| Than ever yet in Desarts among the 002:01,048[G ]| Most venemous Serpents, and remorsless 002:01,048[G ]| Ravenous Beasts, could once be found. 002:01,048[G ]| So much has barbarous Art debauch'd 002:01,048[G ]| Mans innocent Nature. 002:01,048[K ]| Lay by your tears, till your revenge be finish'd; 002:01,048[K ]| Then, then you may have leisure to complain. 002:01,048[G ]| I will 'tis bloud I now must spill, or 002:01,048[G ]| Lose my own in the attempt. But if I can 002:01,048[G ]| Have the fortune, with my own hand, to reach 002:01,048[G ]| The Dogs vile heart: I then shall die 002:01,048[G ]| Contented, and in the other World I'll 002:01,048[G ]| Torture him so, Devils shall learn of me to 002:01,048[G ]| Use the Damn'd. 002:01,048[K ]| Let's to our Sacred Instruments of revenge. 002:01,048[G ]| Come on: So just a cause would turn the 002:01,048[G ]| Vilest Ruffian to a Saint. 002:01,048[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 002:01,048[' ]| <\Bravo's watch at\ Don*John's\ house.\> 002:01,048[G ]| Come, friends, let once a Woman preach courage 002:01,048[G ]| To you, inspired by my just rage this Arm 002:01,048[G ]| Shall teach you wonders. I'll shew you now 002:01,049[G ]| What Love with just Revenge can do. 002:01,049[W ]| We are so practised in the trade of death, 002:01,049[W ]| We need no teaching. 002:01,049[G ]| There's Gold good store; if you dispatch the Dog, 002:01,049[G ]| I'll give you yet much more; if not, 002:01,049[G ]| If all the wealth I have can buy your lives, 002:01,049[G ]| I'll have 'em instead of his. 002:01,049[W ]| For half the sum, I'd kill a Bishop at the Altar. 002:01,049[' ]| <\They retire.\> 002:01,049[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Antonio, Don*Lopez, Jacomo.> 002:01,049[A ]| Now we have finished our design; let's make a Salley, and raise 002:01,049[A ]| the Seige. 002:01,049[B ]| Jacomo, do you lead the Van. 002:01,049[C ]| Lead on Jacomo, or we are sure to lose you; you are not good 002:01,049[C ]| at bringing up the Rear. 002:01,049[E ]| Nay, good Gentlemen, I know my*self better than to take place 002:01,049[E ]| of Men of Quality, especially upon this occasion. 002:01,049[A ]| Sirra, go on: I'll prick him forward. Remember, if you do 002:01,049[A ]| not fight, I am behind you. 002:01,049[E ]| Oh Heaven! Oh Jacomo! what will become of thy dear person? 002:01,049[E ]| Is this your Courage to put me forward, to what you dare not meet your*selves. 002:01,049[E ]| 002:01,049[A ]| No words, Rogue, on, on, I say ~~ 002:01,049[E ]| Oh I shall be murdered! murdered! Oh! Oh! 002:01,049[A ]| On, on, you Dog. 002:01,049[E ]| Inhumane Master! It must be so! Heaven have mercy on my 002:01,049[E ]| better part. 002:01,049[' ]| <\Enter\ Maria.> 002:01,049[G ]| Fall on, fall on, that's the Villain! have at you, Dog ~~ 002:01,049[A ]| Courage, Jacomo. 002:01,049[' ]| <\They fight, and are driven off, but\ Maria \and\ Flora\ remain.\> 002:01,049[E ]| Oh! Oh! 002:01,049[G ]| Oh Cowardly Villains! the Traitor will escape their hands. 002:01,049[G ]| Oh Dogs! More feeble than the feeblest of our Sex. Let's after him, 002:01,049[G ]| and try our strength. 002:01,049[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John.> 002:01,049[G ]| He is return'd ~~ Fall on. 002:01,049[A ]| Ha! Must I encounter Boys? 002:01,049[K ]| Oh I am slain ~~ 002:01,049[' ]| <\Kills\ Flora.> 002:01,049[G ]| At thy heart, base Villain. 002:01,049[' ]| 002:01,050[A ]| There, take your Sword; I'll not nip Roguery in the bud; 002:01,050[A ]| thou may'st live to be as wicked as my*self. 002:01,050[G ]| Poor \Flora\! But, Dog, I'll be reveng'd on thee yet e'er I die. 002:01,050[' ]| <\Exit.\> 002:01,050[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo.> 002:01,050[E ]| What! no thanks! no reward! 002:01,050[A ]| What's the matter, Sirra? 002:01,050[E ]| What, no acknowledgment? you are but an ungrateful man, let 002:01,050[E ]| me tell you that, to treat a man of my prowess thus. 002:01,050[A ]| What has your valour done? 002:01,050[E ]| Nothing, nothing; sav'd your life onely, that's all: But men of 002:01,050[E ]| valour are nothing now a-days. 'Tis an ungrateful Age. I fought like 002:01,050[E ]| a Hero ~~ 002:01,050[B ]| Call'd a Stag at Bay. 002:01,050[C ]| You can fight, when there's no way of escape, without it. 002:01,050[E ]| Oh! What's here! Another murder! Fly, fly; we shall be 002:01,050[E ]| hang'd! 002:01,050[A ]| Come on! let's now at Sea, to try our fortunes. 002:01,050[E ]| Ay, make haste; I've laid Horses, and will shift by Land. Farewell, 002:01,050[E ]| Sir; a good Voyage ~~ 002:01,050[A ]| I will Murder you, if you refuse to go to Sea ~~ 002:01,050[E ]| O, good Sir, consider, do but consider; I am so Sea-sick always; 002:01,050[E ]| that wicked Element does not agree with me. 002:01,050[A ]| Dare you dispute! Go on, I say. 002:01,050[E ]| O, good Sir, think, think a little; the merciless Waves will never 002:01,050[E ]| consider a man of parts: Besides, Sir, I can swim no more than I can fly. 002:01,050[A ]| I'll leave you dead upon the place, if you refuse. 002:01,050[E ]| O Sir, on my knees I beg you'l let me stay. I am the last of all 002:01,050[E ]| my Family; my Race will fail, if I should fail. 002:01,050[A ]| Damn your Race ~~ 002:01,050[B ]| Do not we venture with you? 002:01,050[E ]| You have nothing but your lives to venture, but I have a whole 002:01,050[E ]| Family to save; I think upon Posterity. Besides, Gentlemen, I can look 002:01,050[E ]| for no safety in such wicked company. 002:01,050[A ]| I'll kill the Villain. His fear will else betray us. 002:01,050[E ]| O hold! hold! For Heav'ns sake hold ~~ 002:01,050[' ]| <\Ghost of\ Don*John's \Father rises.\> 002:01,050[W ]| Hold! Hold! 002:01,050[E ]| Ay, hold, hold. Oh Heav'n! your Father's Ghost; a Ghost! a 002:01,050[E ]| Ghost! a Ghost! Oh! Oh! 002:01,050[' ]| <\Falls down and roars.\> 002:01,050[A ]| 'Sdeath! What's here? my Father alive! 002:01,050[W ]| No, no; inhumane Murderer, I am dead. 002:01,051[A ]| That's well; I was afraid the old Gentleman had come for 002:01,051[A ]| his Estate again; if you wou'd have that, 'tis too late; 'tis spent ~~ 002:01,051[W ]| Monster! behold these wounds. 002:01,051[A ]| I do; they were well meant, and well perform'd, I see. 002:01,051[B ]| This is strange! How I am amaz'd! 002:01,051[C ]| Unheard of Wonder! ~~ 002:01,051[W ]| Repent, repent of all thy Villanies; 002:01,051[W ]| My clamorous Bloud to Heav'n for vengeance cries. 002:01,051[W ]| Heav'n will pour out his judgments on you all; 002:01,051[W ]| Hell gapes for you, for you each Fiend does call, 002:01,051[W ]| And hourly waits your unrepenting Fall. 002:01,051[W ]| You with eternal horrours they'l torment, 002:01,051[W ]| Except of all your crimes you suddainly repent. 002:01,051[' ]| <\Ghost sinks.\> 002:01,051[E ]| Oh! Oh! Heav'n deliver me from these Monsters. 002:01,051[A ]| Farewell, thou art a follish Ghost; Repent, quoth he! What 002:01,051[A ]| could this mean? our senses are all in a mist sure. 002:01,051[B ]| They are not, 'twas a Ghost. 002:01,051[C ]| I ne'r believ'd those foolish Tales before. 002:01,051[A ]| Come, 'tis no matter; let it be what it will, it must be 002:01,051[A ]| natural ~~ 002:01,051[B ]| And Nature is unalterable in us too. 002:01,051[A ]| 'Tis true, the nature of a Ghost cannot change ours. 002:01,051[C ]| It was a silly Ghost, and I'll no sooner take his word than a 002:01,051[C ]| Whores. 002:01,051[A ]| Thou art in the right. Come, Fool, Fool, rise; the Ghost 002:01,051[A ]| is gone. 002:01,051[E ]| Oh! I die, I die; pray let me die in quiet. 002:01,051[B ]| Oh! If he be dying, take him up; we'll give him burial in 002:01,051[B ]| the Sea. Come on. 002:01,051[E ]| Hold, hold, Gentlemen; bury me not till I am dead, I beseech 002:01,051[E ]| you ~~ 002:01,051[A ]| If you be not, Sirra, I'll run you through. 002:01,051[E ]| Hold, hold, Sir, I'll go, I'll go ~~ 002:01,051[X ]| Let's on. 002:01,051[A ]| Should all the Bugbears Cowards feign appear, 002:01,051[A ]| I would urge on without one thought of fear. 002:01,051[B ]| And I. 002:01,051[C ]| And I. ~~ 002:01,051[' ]| <\Exeunt omnes.\> 003:01,052[' ]| 003:01,052[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo, \Captain\> 003:01,052[' ]| <\of the Ship, Master and Sailors.\> 003:01,052[W ]| Mercy upon us! What suddain dreadful storm is this? 003:01,052[W ]| we are all lost; we shall split upon the Rocks. Loof, 003:01,052[W ]| loof ~~ 003:01,052[E ]| Oh! Oh! Mercy! Oh I was afraid of this! See what your 003:01,052[E ]| wickedness has brought me to? Mercy! Mercy! 003:01,052[A ]| Take away thy Cowardly face, it offends me, Rascal. 003:01,052[W ]| Such dreadful claps of Thunder I never yet remember'd. 003:01,052[A ]| Let the Clowds roar on, and vomit all their Sulphur out, they 003:01,052[A ]| ne'r shall fright me. ~~ 003:01,052[B ]| These are the Squibs and Crackers of the Sky. 003:01,052[C ]| Fire on, fire on; we are unmov'd. 003:01,052[W ]| The Heav'ns are all on fire; these unheard of Prodigies amaze 003:01,052[W ]| me. 003:01,052[A ]| Can you that have stood so many Cannons, be frighted at the 003:01,052[A ]| farting and the belching of a Clowd? 003:01,052[W ]| Bless me, Captain! six of our Foremast men are even now struck 003:01,052[W ]| dead with Lightning. 003:01,052[W ]| O that clap has rent our Masts in sunder. 003:01,052[E ]| O we are lost! You can swim, Sir; pray save me, Sir, for my 003:01,052[E ]| own and Family's sake. ~~ 003:01,052[A ]| Toss these cowardly Rogues over-board. Captain, Courage! 003:01,052[A ]| let the Heav'ns do their worst, 'tis but drowning at last. 003:01,052[E ]| But ~~ in the name of Heav'n, but drowning, quoth he; your 003:01,052[E ]| drowning will prepare you for burning, though Oh, Oh, Oh. ~~ 003:01,052[W ]| Captain, Captain, the Ship's on fire in the Fore-castle ~ ~ 003:01,052[W ]| All hands to work upon the Forecastle. Heav'n! How it 003:01,052[W ]| blazes already! ~~ 003:01,052[' ]| <\Exit Capt%\> 003:01,052[E ]| Oh! Oh! We burn, we drown, We sink, Oh! We perish, We 003:01,052[E ]| are lost, We are lost. Oh, Oh, Oh. ~~ 003:01,052[W ]| O horrid Apparitions! Devils stand and guard the Fire, and 003:01,052[W ]| will not suffer us to quench it. We are lost. 003:01,052[' ]| <\Enter Captain.\> 003:01,052[W ]| In all the dangers I have been, such horrors I never knew; I am 003:01,052[W ]| quite unmann'd. 003:01,052[C ]| A Man and fear: 'tis but dying at last. 003:01,052[A ]| I never yet could know what that foolish thing Fear is. 003:01,053[W ]| Help, help, the fire increases. What horrid sights are these? 003:01,053[W ]| where e'er I turn me, fearful Spirits appear. 003:01,053[' ]| <\Exeunt Captain and Sailers.\> 003:01,053[A ]| Let's into the Boat, and with our Swords keep out all others. 003:01,053[B ]| While they are busie about the fire we may 'scape. 003:01,053[C ]| If we get from hence, we certainly shall perish on the 003:01,053[C ]| Rocks ~~ 003:01,053[A ]| I warrant you ~~ 003:01,053[E ]| O good Gentlemen, let us shift for our*selves, and let the rest 003:01,053[E ]| burn or drown, and be damn'd and they will. 003:01,053[A ]| No, you have been often leaving me: Now shall be the time 003:01,053[A ]| we'll part. Farewell. 003:01,053[E ]| Oh! I'll stand by you while I live. Oh the Devil, the Devil! 003:01,053[E ]| What horrors do I feel? Oh I am kill'd! I am dead! 003:01,053[' ]| <\A Thunder-clap strikes\ Don*John \and\ Jacomo \down.\> 003:01,053[A ]| 'Sdeath! Why this to me? You paltry foolish bugbear 003:01,053[A ]| Thunder, am I the mark of your sensless Rage? 003:01,053[C ]| Nothing but accident. Let's leap into the Boat. 003:01,053[B ]| The Sailors all make towards us; they'll in and sink it. 003:01,053[A ]| Sirra, if you come on, you run upon my Sword. 003:01,053[E ]| O cruel Tyrant! I burn, I drown, I sink! Oh I die, I am lost. 003:01,053[W ]| All shift abroad; we perish, we are lost. 003:01,053[W ]| All lost, all lost. 003:01,053[' ]| <\A great shriek, they all leap over-board.\> 003:01,053[' ]| <\Enter an old Hermit.\> 003:01,053[L ]| This fourty years I've liv'd in this neighb'ring Cave, and from 003:01,053[L ]| these dreadful Cliffs which are always beaten by the foaming Surges of 003:01,053[L ]| the Sea; beheld the Ocean in its wildest Rage, and ne'r yet saw a storm 003:01,053[L ]| so dreadful: such horrid flashes of lightning, and such claps of thunder, 003:01,053[L ]| never were in my remembrance. Yon Ship is all on fire, and the poor 003:01,053[L ]| miserable Wretches must all perish. The dreadful object melts my Heart, 003:01,053[L ]| and brings a floud of tears into my eyes: It is prodigious, for on the 003:01,053[L ]| suddain, all the Heavens are clear again, and the inraged Sea is become 003:01,053[L ]| more patient. 003:01,053[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Francisco.> 003:01,053[H ]| Oh Father, have you not been frighted at this prodigious 003:01,053[H ]| storm, and at yon dreadful spectacle? 003:01,053[L ]| No man that has an apprehension, but wou'd have been mov'd 003:01,053[L ]| with horrour. 003:01,053[H ]| 'Twas the most violent Tempest I ever saw. Hold, yonder 003:01,053[H ]| are some coming in a small Vessel, and must necessarily split upon the 003:01,053[H ]| Rock; I'll go and help to succour 'em. 003:01,054[L ]| Here are some this way, must come in a small Boat: 003:01,054[L ]| Go you to those, and these I will assist ~~ 003:01,054[H ]| I'le haste to their relief ~~ 003:01,054[' ]| <\Exit\ Don*Francisco.> 003:01,054[L ]| Ha! these are come safe to Land, three men, goodly men 003:01,054[L ]| they seem to be; I am bound in charity to serve them: they come 003:01,054[L ]| towards me. 003:01,054[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Antonio, \and\ Don*Lopez.> 003:01,054[A ]| Much ado, we are safe, but my Man's lost; pox on him, I shall 003:01,054[A ]| miss the Fool, it was a necessary Blockhead. 003:01,054[B ]| But you have lost your Goods, which were more necessary. 003:01,054[C ]| Our Jewels and Money we have all about us. 003:01,054[A ]| It makes me laugh to think, how the Fools we left behind 003:01,054[A ]| were puzl'd which death to chuse, burning or drowning ~~ 003:01,054[B ]| But how shall we dispose of our*selves, we are plaguy wet 003:01,054[B ]| and cold. Hah! What old Fool is that? 003:01,054[C ]| It is a Hermit, a fellow of mighty Beard and Sanctity. 003:01,054[A ]| I know not what Sanctity he may have, but he has Beard enough 003:01,054[A ]| to make an Owl's Nest, or stuff a Saddle with. 003:01,054[L ]| Gentlemen, I see you are shipwrack'd, and in distress; and 003:01,054[L ]| my Function obliges me in charity, to succour you in what I may. 003:01,054[B ]| Alas! what canst thou help us to? Doest thou know of 003:01,054[B ]| ever a house near hand, where we may be furnished with some necessaries? 003:01,054[L ]| On the other side of this vast Rock, there is a fertile and a 003:01,054[L ]| pleasant Valey, where one Don*Francisco, a rich and hospitable Man, has 003:01,054[L ]| a sweet Dwelling; he will entertain you nobly: He's gone to assist some 003:01,054[L ]| shipwrack'd Persons, and will be here presently. In the mean*time, 003:01,054[L ]| what my poor Cave can afford, you shall be welcome to. 003:01,054[C ]| What can that afford? you oblige your*self to fasting and 003:01,054[C ]| abstinence ~~ 003:01,054[L ]| I have studied Physick for the relief of needy people, and I 003:01,054[L ]| have some Cordials which will refresh you; I'll bring one to you ~~ 003:01,054[' ]| <\Exit Hermit.\> 003:01,054[A ]| A good civil old Hipocrite: but this is a pleasant kind of 003:01,054[A ]| Religion, that obliges 'em to nastiness and want of meat. I'll ha' none 003:01,054[A ]| on't ~~ 003:01,054[B ]| No, nor of any other, to my knowledge. 003:01,054[' ]| <\Enter Hermit with a Cordial.\> 003:01,054[L ]| Gentlemen, pray taste of this Vial, it will comfort your cold 003:01,054[L ]| stomachs. 003:01,054[A ]| Ha! 'tis excellent 'faith. Let it go round. 003:01,054[L ]| Heav'n bless it to you. 003:01,055[C ]| Ha! it warms. 003:01,055[B ]| Thank thee, thou art a very honest old fellow i'faith. 003:01,055[A ]| I see thou art very civil; but you must supply us with one 003:01,055[A ]| necessary more; a very necessary thing, and very refreshing. 003:01,055[L ]| What's that, Sir? 003:01,055[A ]| It is a Whore, a fine young buxom Whore. 003:01,055[X ]| A Whore, Old man, a Whore. 003:01,055[L ]| Bless me, are you Men or Devils? 003:01,055[A ]| Men, men, and men of lust and vigor. Pre'thee, old Sot, 003:01,055[A ]| leave thy prating, and help me to a Strumpet, a fine salacious Strumpet, 003:01,055[A ]| I know you Zealots have enough of 'em. Women love your godly 003:01,055[A ]| Whore-masters. 003:01,055[L ]| Oh Monsters of impiety! are you so lately scap'd the wrath of 003:01,055[L ]| Heaven, thus to provoke it? 003:01,055[B ]| How! by following the Dictates of Nature, who can do 003:01,055[B ]| otherwise? 003:01,055[C ]| All our actions are necessitated, none command their own 003:01,055[C ]| wills. 003:01,055[L ]| Oh horrid blasphemy! would you lay your dreadful and unheard 003:01,055[L ]| of Vices upon Heaven? No, ill men, that has given you free-will to good. 003:01,055[A ]| I find thou retir'st here, and never read'st or think'st. 003:01,055[A ]| Can that blind faculty the Will be free 003:01,055[A ]| When it depends upon the Understanding? 003:01,055[A ]| Which argues first before the Will can chuse; 003:01,055[A ]| And the last Dictate of the Judgment sways 003:01,055[A ]| The Will, as in a Balance, the last Weight 003:01,055[A ]| Put in the scale, lifts up the other end, 003:01,055[A ]| And with the same Necessity. 003:01,055[L ]| But foolish men, and sinners act against 003:01,055[L ]| Their Understandings, which inform 'em better. 003:01,055[B ]| None willingly do any*thing against the last 003:01,055[B ]| Dictates of their Judgments, whatsoe'r men do, 003:01,055[B ]| Their present opinions lead 'em to. 003:01,055[C ]| As fools that are afraid of sin, are by the thought 003:01,055[C ]| Of present pleasure, or some other reason, 003:01,055[C ]| Necessarily byass'd to pursue 003:01,055[C ]| The opinion they are of at that moment. 003:01,055[L ]| The Understanding yet is free, and might perswade 'em better. 003:01,055[A ]| The Understanding never can be free; 003:01,055[A ]| For what we understand, spite of our*selves we do: 003:01,055[A ]| All objects are ready form'd and plac'd 003:01,055[A ]| To our hands; and these the Senses to the Mind convey, 003:01,056[A ]| And as those represent them, this must judge: 003:01,056[A ]| How can the Will be free, when the understanding, 003:01,056[A ]| On which the Will depends, cannot be so. 003:01,056[L ]| Lay by your devillish Philosophy, and change the dangerous 003:01,056[L ]| and destructive course of your leud lives. 003:01,056[B ]| Change our naturs; God bid a Blackamore be white, we follow 003:01,056[B ]| our Constitutions, which we did not give our*selves. 003:01,056[C ]| What we are, we are by Nature, our reason tells us we must 003:01,056[C ]| follow that. 003:01,056[A ]| Our Constitutioins tell us one thing, and yours another; and 003:01,056[A ]| which must we obey? If we be bad, 'tis Natures fault that made us so. 003:01,056[L ]| Farewell. I dare no longer hear your impious discourse. Such 003:01,056[L ]| hardened Wretches I ne'r heard of yet. 003:01,056[' ]| <\Exit Hermit.\> 003:01,056[B ]| Farwell, old Fool. 003:01,056[A ]| Thus Sots condemn what they can never answer. 003:01,056[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Francisco.> 003:01,056[A ]| This I believe is Francisco, whom he spoke of, if he has but a handsome 003:01,056[A ]| Wife, or Daughters, we are happy. 003:01,056[C ]| Sir, we are shipwracked men, and if you can direct us to a place, 003:01,056[C ]| where we may be furnished with some necessaries, you will oblige us ~~ 003:01,056[H ]| Gentlemen, I have a House hard by, you shall be welcome 003:01,056[H ]| to it: I even now endeavoured to succour a Youth and beauteous Woman 003:01,056[H ]| who, with two Sailers, in a Boat, were driven towards these Rocks, but 003:01,056[H ]| were forced back again, and, I fear, are lost by this time. I desire nothing 003:01,056[H ]| more, than to assist men in extremes, and am o'rjoy'd at the opportunity 003:01,056[H ]| of serving you. 003:01,056[A ]| We thank you. 003:01,056[H ]| You shall command my House as long as you please: I see you 003:01,056[H ]| are Cavaliers, and hope you will bear with some inconvenience. I have 003:01,056[H ]| two young, and, though I say it, handsome Daughters, who are, to*morrow 003:01,056[H ]| morning to be marri'd; the Solemnity will bring much company together, 003:01,056[H ]| which, I fear, may incomode my house and you ~~ 003:01,056[B ]| You pose us with this kindness. 003:01,056[A ]| What ever pleases you, cannot be inconvenient to us. 003:01,056[C ]| On the contrary, we shall be glad to assist you at the Ceremony, 003:01,056[C ]| and help to make up the joyful Chorus. 003:01,056[H ]| You shall command my house and me; 003:01,056[H ]| I'll shew you the way to it. 003:01,056[A ]| Your humble Servant. We'll follow you. 003:01,056[' ]| <\Exit\ Don*Francisco.> 003:01,056[A ]| This is an admirable adventure. 003:01,057[A ]| He has Daughters, Boys, and to be marri'd too: 003:01,057[A ]| If they have been so foolish, to preserve those 003:01,057[A ]| Toys, they call Maidenheads; their sensless 003:01,057[A ]| Husbands shall not be troubled with them: 003:01,057[A ]| I'll ease them of those. Pox, what should those dull 003:01,057[A ]| Drudging Animals, call'd Husbands, do with such Treasures: 003:01,057[A ]| No, they are for honest Whore-masters, Boys. 003:01,057[B ]| Well said, Don; we will not be wanting in our endeavours to 003:01,057[B ]| succeed you. 003:01,057[C ]| To you alone we must give place. 9Allons. 003:01,057[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 003:01,057[' ]| <\Enter Hermit,\ Maria \in Man's habit, and\ Leonora.> 003:01,057[L ]| Heaven be praised, you are safely now on Land. 003:01,057[G ]| We thank you, reverend Father, for your assistance. 003:01,057[F ]| We never shall forget the obligation. 003:01,057[L ]| I am happy to be so good an Instrument. 003:01,057[F ]| We followed a Vessel, which we saw fired with Lightning, and 003:01,057[F ]| we fear that none of 'em escaped. 003:01,057[G ]| I hope the Villain I pursue has scap'd. I would not be revenged 003:01,057[G ]| by Heaven, but my own hand; or, if not by that, by the Hangman's. 003:01,057[F ]| Did any come to land? for I most nearly am concern'd for one; 003:01,057[F ]| the grief for whom, if he be lost, will soon, I fear destroy me. 003:01,057[L ]| Here were three of that company came safe to Land; but such 003:01,057[L ]| impious Wretches, as did not deserve to escape, and such as no vertuous 003:01,057[L ]| person can be concerned for, sure; I was stiff with fear and horrour when 003:01,057[L ]| I heard 'em talk. 003:01,057[G ]| Three, say you? 003:01,057[F ]| By this sad description it must be Don*John, and his two wicked 003:01,057[F ]| Associates; I am asham'd to confess the tenderness I have for him. Why 003:01,057[F ]| should I love that Wretch? Oh my too violent passion hurries me I know 003:01,057[F ]| not whether! into what fearful dangerous Labyrinths of misery will it 003:01,057[F ]| conduct me. 003:01,057[G ]| Were they Gentlemen? 003:01,057[L ]| By their out-side they seemed so, but their in-sides declared 003:01,057[L ]| them Devils. 003:01,057[G ]| Heaven! it must be the Villain and his barbarous 003:01,057[G ]| Companions. They are reserved for my revenge: 003:01,057[G ]| Assist me, Heaven, in that just cause. 003:01,057[G ]| Oh, Villain, Villain! inhumane Villain! 003:01,057[G ]| Each minute is, me-thinks, a tedious Age, 003:01,057[G ]| Till I have dipt my hands in thy hearts bloud. 003:01,057[L ]| You seem'd o'r-joy'd at the news of their safe arrival: Can any 003:01,057[L ]| have a kindness for such dissolute abandon'd Athiests. 003:01,058[G ]| No; 'tis revenge that I pursue against the basest of all Villains. 003:01,058[L ]| Have a care; Revenge is Heavens, and must not be usurped by 003:01,058[L ]| Mortals. 003:01,058[G ]| Mine is revenge for Rapes and cruel murders, and those Heaven 003:01,058[G ]| leaves to Earth to punish. 003:01,058[L ]| They are horrid crimes, but Magistrates must punish them. 003:01,058[F ]| What do I hear? were he the basest of all men, my love is so 003:01,058[F ]| head-strong and so wild within me, I must endeavour to preserve him, 003:01,058[F ]| or destroy my*self: To what deplorable condition am I fall'n? what 003:01,058[F ]| Chains are these that hold me? Oh that I could break them! and yet I 003:01,058[F ]| wou'd not if I cou'd; Oh my heart! 003:01,058[L ]| They are gon to one Don*Francisco's house, that Road will 003:01,058[L ]| bring you to it; 'tis on the other side of this Rock, in a pleasant Valley. 003:01,058[L ]| I have not stirr'd these fourty years from these small bounds, or I wou'd 003:01,058[L ]| give him notice what Devils he harbours in his house. You will do well 003:01,058[L ]| to do it. 003:01,058[' ]| <(\within\)> 003:01,058[E ]| Help, help, murder! I am drown'd, I am dead; Help, help! 003:01,058[L ]| hah! what voice is that? I must assist him ~~ 003:01,058[G ]| Father, farewell. Come, Madam, will you go to this house? 003:01,058[G ]| Now, Monster, for my revenge. 003:01,058[F ]| I will; but for different ends we go; 003:01,058[F ]| 'Tis Love conducts me, but Revenge brings you. 003:01,058[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Maria, Leonora.> 003:01,058[E ]| Oh help, help! I sink, I sink! 003:01,058[L ]| Poor man, sure he is almost drown'd. 003:01,058[E ]| No, not yet; I have only drunk something too much of a scurvy 003:01,058[E ]| unpleasant Liquor. 003:01,058[L ]| Reach me your hand ~~ 003:01,058[' ]| <\Pulls him out.\> 003:01,058[E ]| Ay, and my heart too; Oh! Oh! 003:01,058[E ]| Sir, a thousand Thanks to you: I vow to Gad, y'are a very civil person, 003:01,058[E ]| and, as I am an honest man, have done me the greatest kindness in the 003:01,058[E ]| world, next to the piece of the Mast which I floated upon, which I must ever 003:01,058[E ]| love and honour; I am sorry it swam away, I wou'd have preserv'd it, 003:01,058[E ]| and hung it up in the Seat of our antient Family. 003:01,058[L ]| Thank Heaven for your deliverance, and leave such vain thoughts. 003:01,058[E ]| I do with all my heart; but I am not setled enough to say my 003:01,058[E ]| prayers yet: Pray, Father, do you for me: 'tis nothing with you, you are 003:01,058[E ]| us'd to it, it is your Trade. 003:01,058[L ]| Away, vain Man; you speak as if you had drunk too deeply of 003:01,058[L ]| another Liquor than Sea-water. 003:01,058[E ]| No, I have not, but I wou'd fain: Where may a man light of 003:01,058[E ]| a Glass of good Wine? I would gladly have an Antidote to my poison. 003:01,058[E ]| Methinks, Pah! these Fishes have but a scurvy time; I am sure they have 003:01,058[E ]| very ill drinking. 003:01,059[L ]| Farewel, and learn more devotion and thankfulness to Heav'n ~~ 003:01,059[' ]| <\Exit Hermit.\> 003:01,059[E ]| Ha! 'tis uncivilly done to leave a Man in a strange Country. 003:01,059[E ]| But these Hermits have no breeding. Poor Jacomo, Dear Jacomo, how 003:01,059[E ]| I love thy person, how glad am I to see thee safe? for I swear, I think 003:01,059[E ]| thou art as honest a fellow as e'r I met with. Well, farewell, thou wicked 003:01,059[E ]| Element; if ever I trust thee again ~~ Well, Haddocks, I defie you, 003:01,059[E ]| you shall have none of me, not a Collop; no, no, I will be eaten by 003:01,059[E ]| Worms, as all my Ancestors have been. If Heaven will but preserve me 003:01,059[E ]| from the Monsters of the Land, my Master and his two Companions (who, I 003:01,059[E ]| hope, are drown'd) I'll preserve my*self from those of the Sea. Let me 003:01,059[E ]| see, here is a path ~~ this must lead to some house. I'll go, for I am 003:01,059[E ]| plaguy sick with this Salt water. Pah ~~ 003:01,059[' ]| <\Exit\ Jacomo.> 003:01,059[' ]| <\Enter\ Clara \and\ Flavia \with her two Maids.\> 003:01,059[I ]| Oh, Flavia, this will be our last happy night, to*morrow is our 003:01,059[I ]| Execution day; we must marry. 003:01,059[J ]| Ay, Clara, we are condemn'd without reprieve. 'Tis better 003:01,059[J ]| to live as we have done, kept from all men, than for each to be confin'd 003:01,059[J ]| to one, whom yet we never saw, and a thousand to one shall never like. 003:01,059[I ]| Out on't, a Spanish Wife has a worse life than a coop'd Chicken. 003:01,059[J ]| A singing Bird in a Cage is a Princely Creature, compar'd to that 003:01,059[J ]| poor Animal, call'd a Wife, here. 003:01,059[I ]| Birds are made tame by being cag'd, but Women grow wild 003:01,059[I ]| by confinement, and that, I fear, my Husband will find to his cost. 003:01,059[J ]| None live pleasantly here, but those who should be miserable, 003:01,059[J ]| Strumpets: They can choose their Mates, but we must be like Slaves 003:01,059[J ]| condemn'd to the Gallies; we have not liberty to sell our*Selves, or 003:01,059[J ]| venture one throw from our freedom. 003:01,059[I ]| O that we were in England! there, they say a Lady may chuse 003:01,059[I ]| a Footman, and run away with him, if she likes him, and no dishonour 003:01,059[I ]| to the Family. 003:01,059[J ]| That's because the Families are so very Honourable, that nothing 003:01,059[J ]| can touch them: their Wives run and ramble whither, and with whom 003:01,059[J ]| they please, and defie all censure. 003:01,059[I ]| Ay, and a jealous Husband is a more monstrous Creature there, 003:01,059[I ]| than a Wittal here, and wou'd be more pointed at: They say, if a Man 003:01,059[I ]| be jealous there, the Women will all joyn and pull him to pieces. 003:01,059[J ]| Oh happy Countrey! we ne'r touch Money, there the Wives 003:01,059[J ]| can spend their Husband's Estate for 'em. Oh Bless'd Countrey! 003:01,059[I ]| Ay, there they say the Husbands are the prettiest civil easie good 003:01,059[I ]| natur'd indifferent persons in the whole world; they ne'r mind what their 003:01,059[I ]| Wives do, not they. 003:01,060[J ]| Nay, they say, they love those men best that are kindest to their 003:01,060[J ]| Wives. Good men! poor hearts. And here, if an honest Gentleman 003:01,060[J ]| offers a Wife a civility by*the*By, our bloudy butcherly Husbands are 003:01,060[J ]| cutting of Throats presently ~~ 003:01,060[I ]| Oh that we had these frank civil Englishmen, instead of our grave 003:01,060[I ]| dull surly Spanish Blockheads, whose greatest Honour lies in preserving 003:01,060[I ]| their Beards and Foreheads inviolable. 003:01,060[J ]| In England, if a Husband and Wife like not one another, they 003:01,060[J ]| draw two several ways, and make no bones on't, while the Husband 003:01,060[J ]| treats his Mistriss openly in his Glass-Coach; the Wife, for Decency's 003:01,060[J ]| sake, puts on her Vizar, and whips away in a Hackney with a Gallant, and 003:01,060[J ]| no harm done. 003:01,060[I ]| Though of late 'tis as unfashionable for a Husband to love his 003:01,060[I ]| Wife there, as 'tis here, yet 'tis fashionable for her to love some*body 003:01,060[I ]| else, and that's something. 003:01,060[J ]| Nay, they say, Gentlemen will keep company with a Cuckold 003:01,060[J ]| there, as soon as another man, and ne'r wonder at him. 003:01,060[I ]| Oh happy countrey! there a Woman may chuse for her*self, and 003:01,060[I ]| none will into the Trap of Matrimony; unless she likes the Bait; but 003:01,060[I ]| here we are tumbled headlong and blindfold into it. 003:01,060[J ]| We are us'd as they use Hawks, never unhooded, or whistled 003:01,060[J ]| off, till they are just upon the Quarry. 003:01,060[I ]| And 'tis for others, not our*selves, we fly too. 003:01,060[J ]| No more, this does but put us in mind of our misery. 003:01,060[I ]| It does so: But prethee let's be merry one night, to*Morrow 003:01,060[I ]| is our last. Farewel all happiness. 003:01,060[J ]| O that this happy day would last our lives-time. But prethee, 003:01,060[J ]| my Dear, let's have thy Song, and divert our*selves as well as we can in 003:01,060[J ]| the mean*time. 003:01,060[I ]| 'Tis a little too wanton. 003:01,060[J ]| Prethee let's be a little wanton this evening, to*morrow we must 003:01,060[J ]| take our leaves on't. 003:01,060[I ]| Come on then; our Maids shall joyn in the Chorus': 003:01,060[I ]| Here they are. 003:01,060[' ]| 003:01,060[U ]| \Woman who is by Nature wild,\ 003:01,060[U ]| \Dull bearded men incloses;\ 003:01,060[U ]| \Of Nature's freedom we're beguil'd\ 003:01,060[U ]| \By Laws which man imposes:\ 003:01,060[U ]| \Who still himself continues free,\ 003:01,060[U ]| \Yet we poor Slaves must fetter'd be.\ 003:01,061[' ]| 003:01,061[U ]| \A shame on the Curse\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Of, For better for worse;\ 003:01,061[U ]| \'Tis a vile imposition on Nature:\ 003:01,061[U ]| \For Women should change,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \And have freedom to range,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Like to every other wild Creature.\ 003:01,061[U ]| \So gay a thing was n'er design'd\ 003:01,061[U ]| \To be restrain'd from roving\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Heav'n meant so changeable a mind\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Should have its change in loving.\ 003:01,061[U ]| \By cunning we could make men smart,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \But they by strength o'recome our Art.\ 003:01,061[' ]| 003:01,061[U ]| \A shame on the Curse\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Of, For, &c%\ 003:01,061[U ]| \How happy is the Village Maid,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Whom onely Love can fetter;\ 003:01,061[U ]| \By foolish Honour ne'r betray'd,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \She serves a Pow'r much greater:\ 003:01,061[U ]| \That lawful Prince the wisest rules,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Th' Usurper's Honour rules but Fools.\ 003:01,061[' ]| 003:01,061[U ]| \A shame on the Curse,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Of, For, &c%\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Let us resume our antient right,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Make man at distance wonder;\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Though he victorious be in fight,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \In love we'll keep him under.\ 003:01,061[U ]| \War and Ambition hence be hurl'd,\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Let Love and Beauty rule the World.\ 003:01,061[' ]| 003:01,061[U ]| \A Shame on the Curse\ 003:01,061[U ]| \Of, For better, &c%\ 003:01,061[J ]| Oh, dear Clara, that this were true! But now let's home, our 003:01,061[J ]| Father will miss us. 003:01,061[I ]| No, he's walk'd abroad with the three Shipwrack'd Gentlemen. 003:01,061[J ]| They're proper handsome Gentlemen; but the chief, whom they 003:01,061[J ]| call Don*John, exceeds the rest. 003:01,061[I ]| I never saw a finer person; pray Heaven either of our Husbands 003:01,061[I ]| prove as good. 003:01,062[J ]| Do not name 'em. Let the Maids go home, and if my Father 003:01,062[J ]| be there, let him know we are here. 003:01,062[' ]| <\Exeunt Maids.\> 003:01,062[I ]| In the mean*time, if he be thereabouts, do you go down that 003:01,062[I ]| Walk, and I'll go this way, and perhaps one of us shall light on him. 003:01,062[J ]| Agreed. 003:01,062[' ]| <\Exit Ambo%\> 003:01,062[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio.> 003:01,062[A ]| Where have you left the Old Man, Don*Francisco? 003:01,062[C ]| He's very busie at home, seeing all things prepar'd for his 003:01,062[C ]| Daughters Weddings to*Morrow. 003:01,062[A ]| His Daughters are gone this way: if you have any friendship 003:01,062[A ]| for me, go and watch the Old Man; and if he offers to come towards 003:01,062[A ]| us, divert him, that I may have freedom to attack his Daughters. 003:01,062[B ]| You may be sure of us, that have serv'd you with our lives: 003:01,062[B ]| besides, the justice of this cause will make us serve you. Adieu. 003:01,062[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Don*Lop% Don*Ant%> 003:01,062[A ]| Now for my Virgins. Assist me Love Fools, you shall have 003:01,062[A ]| no Maidenheads to*morrow-night. Husbands have Maidenheads! no, 003:01,062[A ]| no ~~ poor sneaking Fools. 003:01,062[' ]| <\Enter\ Jacomo.> 003:01,062[E ]| I have lost my way, I think I shall never find this house: But 003:01,062[E ]| I shall never think my*self out of the way, unless I meet my impious 003:01,062[E ]| Master; Heaven grant he be drown'd. 003:01,062[A ]| How now, Rascal, are you alive? 003:01,062[E ]| Oh Heaven! He's here. Why was this leud Creature sav'd; I 003:01,062[E ]| am in a worse condition than ever; now I have scap'd drowning, he 003:01,062[E ]| brings hanging fresh into my memory. 003:01,062[A ]| What mute, Sirra? 003:01,062[E ]| Sir, I am no more your Servant, you parted with me, I thank 003:01,062[E ]| you, Sir, I am beholding to you: Farewel, good Sir, I am my own man 003:01,062[E ]| now ~~ 003:01,062[A ]| No: Though you are a Rogue, you are a necessary Rogue, 003:01,062[A ]| and I'll not part with you. 003:01,062[E ]| I must be gone, I dare not venture further with you. 003:01,062[A ]| Sirra, do you know me, and dare you say this to me? have 003:01,062[A ]| at your Guts, I will rip you from the Navel to the Chin. 003:01,062[E ]| O good Sir, hold, hold. He has got me in his clutches, I shall 003:01,062[E ]| never get loose ~~ Oh! Oh! 003:01,062[A ]| Come Dog, follow me close, stinking Rascal. 003:01,062[E ]| I am too well pickl'd in the Salt water to stink, I thank you, I 003:01,062[E ]| shall keep a great while. But you were a very generous Man, to leave 003:01,062[E ]| a Gentleman, your Friend in danger, as you did me. I have reason to 003:01,063[E ]| follow you: But if I serve you not in your kind, then am I a sows'd 003:01,063[E ]| Sturgeon. 003:01,063[A ]| Follow me, Sirra; I see a Lady. 003:01,063[E ]| Are you so fierce already? 003:01,063[' ]| <\Enter\ Clara \singing,\ A shame on the Curse, \&c%\> 003:01,063[I ]| Ha! This is the stranger; 003:01,063[I ]| What makes him here? 003:01,063[A ]| A delicate Creature. Ha! This is the Lady. 003:01,063[A ]| How happy am I to meet you here ~~ 003:01,063[I ]| What mean you, Sir? 003:01,063[A ]| I was undone enough before, with seeing your Picture in 003:01,063[A ]| the Gallery; but I see you have more Excellencies than Beauty, your 003:01,063[A ]| Voice needed not have conspir'd with that to ruine me. 003:01,063[I ]| Have you seen my Picture? 003:01,063[A ]| And lov'd it above all things I ever saw, but the Original. 003:01,063[A ]| I am lost beyond beyond redemption, unless you can pity me. 003:01,063[' ]| <\Jac% (aside)\> 003:01,063[E ]| He has been lost a hundred times, but he always finds himself 003:01,063[E ]| again ~~ and me too; a pox on him. 003:01,063[A ]| When Love had taken too fast hold on me, ever to let me go, 003:01,063[A ]| I too late found you were to*morrow to be marri'd. 003:01,063[I ]| Yes, I am condemn'd to one I never saw, and you are come to 003:01,063[I ]| railly me and my misfortunes. 003:01,063[E ]| Ah, Madam, say not so, my Master is always in earnest. 003:01,063[A ]| So much I am in earnest now, that if you have no way to break 003:01,063[A ]| this marriage off, and pity me, I soon shall repent I ever came to Land; 003:01,063[A ]| I shall suffer a worse wrack upon the Shoar, here I shall linger out my 003:01,063[A ]| life in the worst of pains, despairing Love; there I should have perish'd 003:01,063[A ]| quickly ~~ 003:01,063[E ]| Ah poor man! he's in a desperate condition, I pity him with 003:01,063[E ]| all my heart ~~ 003:01,063[A ]| Peace, Rascal. Madam, this is the onely opportunity I am 003:01,063[A ]| like to have. Give me leave to improve it. 003:01,063[I ]| Sure, Sir, you cannot be in earnest. 003:01,063[A ]| If all the Oaths under the Sun can convince you, Madam, 003:01,063[A ]| I swear ~~ 003:01,063[E ]| O Sir, Sir, have a care of Swearing, for fear you should, once 003:01,063[E ]| in your life, be forsworn ~~ 003:01,063[A ]| Peace, Dog, or I shall slit your Wind-pipe. 003:01,063[E ]| Nay, I know if he be forsworn, 'tis the first time, that's certain. 003:01,063[I ]| But, Sir, if you be in earnest, and I had an inclination, 'Tis 003:01,063[I ]| impossible to bring it about, my Father has dispos'd of me. 003:01,063[A ]| Dispose of your*self, I'll do well enough with him, and my 003:01,064[A ]| Fortune and Quality are too great for him, for whom you are intended, 003:01,064[A ]| to dispute with me. 003:01,064[I ]| If this be true, wou'd you win a Woman at first sight? 003:01,064[A ]| Madam, this is like to be the first and last; to*morrow is the 003:01,064[A ]| fatal day that will undo me. 003:01,064[E ]| Courage, Don, matters go well. 003:01,064[I ]| Nay, I had rather have a Peasant of my own chusing, 003:01,064[I ]| than an Emperor of another's. He is a handsome Gentleman, and seems 003:01,064[I ]| to be of Quality: Oh that he could rid me of my intended slavery. 003:01,064[' ]| <\Aside.\> 003:01,064[I ]| Sir, talk not of impossible things; for could I wish this, my Father's 003:01,064[I ]| Honour will not suffer him to dispense with his promise. 003:01,064[A ]| I'll carry you beyond his power, and your intended Husband's 003:01,064[A ]| too. 003:01,064[I ]| It cannot be; but I must leave you, I dare not be seen with 003:01,064[I ]| you ~~ 003:01,064[A ]| Remember the short time you have to think on this: will you 003:01,064[A ]| let me perish without relief? If you will have pity on a wretched man, 003:01,064[A ]| I have a Priest in my company, I'll marry you, and we'll find means to 003:01,064[A ]| fly early in the morning, before the house are stirring. 003:01,064[I ]| I confess I am to be condemn'd to a Slavery, that nothing can 003:01,064[I ]| be worse; yet this were a rash attempt. 003:01,064[A ]| If you will not consent to my just desires, I am resolv'd to kill 003:01,064[A ]| my*self, and fall a Sacrifice to your disdain. Speak, speak my doom ~~ 003:01,064[' ]| <\Holds his Sword to his breast.\> 003:01,064[I ]| Hold, hold ~~ 003:01,064[E ]| Ay, hold, hold: poor foolish Woman, she shou'd not need to 003:01,064[E ]| bid him hold. 003:01,064[I ]| I'll find a means this night to speak with you alone; but I fear 003:01,064[I ]| this is but for your diversion. 003:01,064[E ]| Yes, 'tis for diversion indeed; the common diversion of all the 003:01,064[E ]| world. 003:01,064[A ]| By all that's great and good my Intentions are honourable. 003:01,064[I ]| Farewell, Sir, I dare not stay longer. 003:01,064[A ]| Will you keep your word, Madam? 003:01,064[E ]| You'll keep yours, no doubt ~ ~ 003:01,064[I ]| I will, any*thing rather than marry one I cannot love, as I can 003:01,064[I ]| no man of anothers choosing. 003:01,064[A ]| Remember, Madam, I perish if you do not; I have onely one 003:01,064[A ]| thing to say, Keep this Secret from your Sister, till we have effected it; 003:01,064[A ]| I'll give you sufficient reason for what I say. 003:01,064[' ]| <\Exit\ Clar%> 003:01,064[A ]| Victoria, Victoria; I have her fast, she's my own. 003:01,064[E ]| You are a hopefull man, you may come to good in time. 003:01,065[' ]| <\Enter\ Flavia.> 003:01,065[A ]| Here is the other Sister; have at her. 003:01,065[E ]| Why, Sir, Sir; have you no conscience? 003:01,065[E ]| Will not one at once serve your turn? 003:01,065[A ]| Stand by, Fool. Let me see, you are the Lady. 003:01,065[J ]| What say you Sir? 003:01,065[A ]| You have lately taken up a stray heart of mine, I hope 003:01,065[A ]| you do not intend to detain it, without giving me your own in 003:01,065[A ]| exchange. 003:01,065[J ]| I a heart of yours? since when, good Sir? you are but this day 003:01,065[J ]| shipwrack'd on this Coast, and never saw my face before. 003:01,065[A ]| I saw your Picture, and I saw your motion, both so charming, 003:01,065[A ]| I could not resist them; but now I have a nearer view, I see plainly I am 003:01,065[A ]| lost. 003:01,065[J ]| A goodly handsome man! but what can this mean? 003:01,065[A ]| Such killing Beauties I ne'r saw before; my heart is irrevocably 003:01,065[A ]| gone. 003:01,065[J ]| Whether is it gone, Sir? I assure you I have no such thing about 003:01,065[J ]| me, that I know of. 003:01,065[A ]| Ah, Madam, if you wou'd give me leave to search you, I should 003:01,065[A ]| find it in some little corner about you, that shall be nameless. 003:01,065[J ]| It cannot be about me, I have none but my own, and that I must 003:01,065[J ]| part with to*morrow to I know not whom. 003:01,065[A ]| If the most violent love that man e'r knew can e'r deserve that 003:01,065[A ]| treasure, it is mine; if you give that way, you lose the truest Lover that 003:01,065[A ]| e'er languished yet. 003:01,065[E ]| What can be the end of this; Sure Blood must follow this 003:01,065[E ]| dishonour of the Family, and I unfortunate, shall have my throat cut for 003:01,065[E ]| company. 003:01,065[J ]| Do you know where you are? 003:01,065[A ]| Yes, Madam, In Spain, where opportunities are very scarce 003:01,065[A ]| and those that are wise make use of e'm as soon as they have 'em. 003:01,065[J ]| You have a mind to divert your*self; but I must leave you, I 003:01,065[J ]| am disposed to be more serious. 003:01,065[A ]| Madam, I swear by all ~~ 003:01,065[E ]| Hold, hold! will you be forsworn again? 003:01,065[A ]| Peace, Villain, I shall cut that tongue out. 003:01,065[J ]| Farewell, I cannot stay. 003:01,065[' ]| <\Exit\ Flavia.> 003:01,065[A ]| I'll not leave her; I'll thaw her if she were Ice, before I have 003:01,065[A ]| done with her. 003:01,065[E ]| There is no end of this lewdness. Well, I must be kill'd or hang'd 003:01,065[E ]| once for all, and there's an end on't. 003:01,065[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 003:01,066[' ]| <\Enter\ Maria \and\ Leonora.> 003:01,066[F ]| I am faint with what I suffered at Sea, and with my wandring 003:01,066[F ]| since; let us repose a little, we shall not find this house to*night. 003:01,066[G ]| I n'er shall rest till I have found Don*Francisco's house; but I'll 003:01,066[G ]| sit down awhile. 003:01,066[F ]| I hope he will not find it, till I have found means to give Don*John 003:01,066[F ]| warning of his cruel intentions; I would save his life, who I fear, 003:01,066[F ]| would not do that for me. But in the miserable case that I am in, if he 003:01,066[F ]| denies his love, death would be the welcom'st thing on earth to me. 003:01,066[G ]| Oh my Octavios! how does the loss of thee perplex me with 003:01,066[G ]| despair! the honour of Mankind is gone with thee. Why do I whine? 003:01,066[G ]| grief shall no longer usurp the place of my revenge. How could I gnaw 003:01,066[G ]| the Monsters heart, Villain! I'll be with you. When I have reveng'd my 003:01,066[G ]| dear Octavio's loss, I then shall die contented. 003:01,066[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Lopez \and\ Don*Antonio.> 003:01,066[C ]| Th' old man's safe; I long to know Don*John's success. 003:01,066[B ]| He's engag'd upon a noble cause: If he succeeds, 'twill be a 003:01,066[B ]| victory worth the owning. 003:01,066[C ]| Hah! whom have we hear? a young man well habited, with 003:01,066[C ]| a Lady too; they seem to be strangers. 003:01,066[B ]| A mischief comes into my head, that's worth the doing. 003:01,066[C ]| What's that, dear Antonio? 003:01,066[B ]| We are in a strange Countrey, and may want money: I would 003:01,066[B ]| rob that young Fellow. We have not robb'd a good while; me-thinks 003:01,066[B ]| 'tis a new wickedness to me. 003:01,066[C ]| Thou art in the right. I hate to commit the same dull sin over 003:01,066[C ]| and over again, as if I were marri'd to it: variety makes all things pleasant. 003:01,066[B ]| But there's one thing we'll ne'r omit. When we have robb'd 003:01,066[B ]| the Man, we'll ravish the Woman. 003:01,066[C ]| Agreed; let's to't, man. Come on, young Gentleman, we 003:01,066[C ]| must see what riches you have about you. 003:01,066[G ]| O Villains! Thieves! Thieves! these are the inhumane Companions 003:01,066[G ]| of that bloudy Monster. 003:01,066[F ]| Have pity on poor miserable Strangers. 003:01,066[B ]| Peace; we'll use you kindly, very kindly. 003:01,066[C ]| Go you carry that young Gentleman, bind him to a Tree, 003:01,066[C ]| and bring the money, while I wait upon the Lady. 003:01,066[B ]| Will you play me no foul play in th mean*time then? For we 003:01,066[B ]| must cast Lots about the business you wot of. 003:01,066[C ]| No, upon my honour. 003:01,066[G ]| Honour, you Villain? 003:01,067[B ]| Come, young Gentleman, I'll tame you. 003:01,067[G ]| Help, help! ~~ 003:01,067[' ]| <\Exit\ Don*Ant% \haling\ Maria.> 003:01,067[F ]| Have you no humanity in you? Take our money, but leave us 003:01,067[F ]| liberty; be not so barb'rously cruel. 003:01,067[B ]| Come, I have made hast with him; now let us draw Cuts 003:01,067[B ]| who enjoys the Lady first. 003:01,067[F ]| O heav'n assist me! what do I hear? help! help! 003:01,067[' ]| <\Enter four or five Countrey Fellows, coming from work.\> 003:01,067[W ]| What, two men a robbing of a Lady! Be gone, and let 003:01,067[W ]| her alone, or we have sower Cudgels shall wasler your bones, I tell you 003:01,067[W ]| that. 003:01,067[B ]| How now, Rogues? 003:01,067[' ]| <\Fight off the Stage.\> 003:01,067[F ]| Thanks to Heav'n. I fly! where shall I hide my*self. ~~ 003:01,067[' ]| <\Exit.\> 003:01,067[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John \and\ Jacomo.> 003:01,067[A ]| I shall conquer 'em both. Now, Sirrah, what think you? 003:01,067[E ]| Why I think you manage your business as discreetly, and take as 003:01,067[E ]| much pains to have your throat cut, as any man in Spain. 003:01,067[A ]| Your fear o'r-rules your sense, mine is a life Monarchs might 003:01,067[A ]| envy. ~~ 003:01,067[E ]| 'Tis like to be a very short one at this rate. 003:01,067[A ]| Away, Fool, 'tis dark, I must be gone; I shall scarce find the 003:01,067[A ]| way home. ~~ 003:01,067[' ]| <\Enter\ Leonora.> 003:01,067[F ]| Heaven guard me from these wicked Wretches. Help! help! 003:01,067[F ]| they are here. 003:01,067[A ]| How now, Madam? what, afraid of a man! 003:01,067[F ]| Don*John, no, not of you; you are the man i'th' world I would 003:01,067[F ]| have met. 003:01,067[A ]| Leonora, you are the woman i'th' world I would have avoided. 003:01,067[A ]| 'Sdeath! she will spoil my new designs; but I have a trick for her. 003:01,067[A ]| What miracle brought you thither? 003:01,067[F ]| Love, that works the greatest miracles, made me follow you; 003:01,067[F ]| and the same Storm drove me on this shoar, on which you were thrown, 003:01,067[F ]| and thus far I've wander'd till I have found you. 003:01,067[A ]| This is the most unreasonable unsatiable loving Lady, that 003:01,067[A ]| ever was abus'd by man; she has a kind of Spaniel love, the worse you use 003:01,067[A ]| her, the more loving she is. Pox on her, I must be rid of her. 003:01,067[F ]| I am very faint and weary, yet I was resolved not to rest till I 003:01,067[F ]| had found you. 003:01,068[A ]| Your unwearied love has o'rcome and convinc'd me, there is 003:01,068[A ]| not such a Woman breathing. 003:01,068[F ]| This is a Sovereign Medicine for all my sorrows, I now, methinks 003:01,068[F ]| am happier than ever: But I am faint and ill. 003:01,068[A ]| Here, Madam, I have an Excellent Cordial, 'twill refresh you; 003:01,068[A ]| and I'll conduct you where you shall never be unhappy more. 003:01,068[F ]| From that dear hand 'tis welcome ~~ 003:01,068[F ]| To your health. 003:01,068[' ]| <\Drinks.\> 003:01,068[A ]| And to your own destruction; you have drunk your last. 003:01,068[F ]| What means my Love? 003:01,068[A ]| Y'have drunk the subtilest poison that Art e'r yet invented. 003:01,068[E ]| O murder! murder! what have you done? 003:01,068[A ]| Peace, Villain, leave your unseasonable pity ~~ 003:01,068[A ]| You cannot live two minutes. 003:01,068[F ]| O ungrateful Tyrant! thou hast murdered the onely Creature 003:01,068[F ]| living that cou'd love thee. Heaven will revenge it, though to me 'tis 003:01,068[F ]| kindness. Here all my sorrows shall for*ever cease. 003:01,068[A ]| Why would you persecute me with your love? 003:01,068[F ]| I could not help it. I came to preserve you, and am destroyed 003:01,068[F ]| for't. 003:01,068[E ]| O horrid fact! 003:01,068[A ]| To preserve me! I wear my safety by my side. 003:01,068[F ]| Oh I faint! Guard your*self. There's a young 003:01,068[F ]| Gentlemen pursues your life. Have a Care ~~ 003:01,068[F ]| I came to tell you this, and thus I am rewarded. 003:01,068[F ]| Heav'n pardon you. Farewell. I can no more. 003:01,068[' ]| <\Dies.\> 003:01,068[E ]| This object will strike your heart! Tygers would melt at this. 003:01,068[E ]| Oh the Earth will open and swallow you up, and me for company. There's 003:01,068[E ]| no end of your murders. 003:01,068[A ]| This is the first time I ever knew compassion. 003:01,068[A ]| Poor Fool, I pity her, but 'tis too late ~~ 003:01,068[A ]| Farewell all sensless thoughts of a remorse, 003:01,068[A ]| I would remove what e'r wou'd stop my course. 003:01,068[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:01,068[' ]| 004:01,068[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo.> 004:01,068[A ]| This nights success exceeded all my hopes. I had admittance 004:01,068[A ]| to their several Chambers, and I have been contracted 004:01,068[A ]| to both the Sisters, and this day resolve to marry 'em, and 004:01,069[A ]| at several times enjoy them; and, in my opinion, I shall have a brace of 004:01,069[A ]| as pretty Wives, as any man in Spain. 004:01,069[B ]| Brave Don*John, you are Master of your Art, not a Woman 004:01,069[B ]| in Spain can stand before you. 004:01,069[C ]| We can but envy you, and at a distance imitate; But both 004:01,069[C ]| their Maids shall to pot, I assure you. 004:01,069[E ]| How far will the Devil hurry you. 004:01,069[A ]| 'Tis not the Devil, 'tis the Flesh Fool. 004:01,069[E ]| Here will be fine cutting of throats. Poor Jacomo, must thou 004:01,069[E ]| be cut off in the flower of thy Age? 004:01,069[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Francisco.> 004:01,069[H ]| Gentlemen, your Servant; I hope you rested well this night. 004:01,069[C ]| We thank you, Sir; never better. 004:01,069[B ]| We never shall requite this obligation. 004:01,069[E ]| I warrant you my Master will; he's a very grateful civil person 004:01,069[E ]| indeed. 004:01,069[A ]| The favour is too great to be suddenly requited; but I shall 004:01,069[A ]| study to deserve it. 004:01,069[E ]| Good man, you will deserve it. 004:01,069[' ]| <\Enter Two Bridegrooms.\> 004:01,069[H ]| Gentlemen, you are come, you are early. 004:01,069[W ]| This joyful occasion made us think it late. 004:01,069[W ]| The expectation of so great a blessing as we this day hope 004:01,069[W ]| to enjoy, would let us have but little rest last night. 004:01,069[W ]| And the fruition will afford us less to*night. 004:01,069[A ]| Poor Fools! you shall be bob'd. How it tickles my Spleen 004:01,069[A ]| to think on't. 004:01,069[H ]| These are to be my Sons*in*law. 004:01,069[A ]| And my Cuckolds before-hand. 004:01,069[H ]| Pray know 'em, Gentlemen, they are Men of Honour. 004:01,069[A ]| I shall be glad to serve them; 004:01,069[A ]| But first I'le serve their Ladies. 004:01,069[' ]| <\Aside.\> 004:01,069[H ]| Come, Gentlemen, I'le now conduct you to my Daughters; 004:01,069[H ]| and beg your pardon for a moment, I'll wait on you again. 004:01,069[' ]| <\Exit\ Don%*Fran% \and\ Bridegrooms.> 004:01,069[B ]| These Fools will spoil your design. 004:01,069[A ]| No, poor Sots; I have perswaded the Ladies to feign sickness, 004:01,069[A ]| and put off their marriage till to*morrow morning, to gain time; as 004:01,069[A ]| the mean*while I have 'em safe, Boys. 004:01,069[C ]| But will not the Sisters betray you to one another? 004:01,069[A ]| No, I have wheedled each into a jealousie of the other, and 004:01,070[A ]| each believes that if the other knows it, she, in honour will reveal it to 004:01,070[A ]| the Father. 004:01,070[E ]| Sir, if you be so very weary of your life, why don't you make 004:01,070[E ]| use of a convenient Beam? 'tis the easier way; so you may dye without 004:01,070[E ]| the filthy pother you keep about it. 004:01,070[A ]| Away, Coward; 'tis a sign I am not weary of my life, that 004:01,070[A ]| I make so much use on't! 004:01,070[E ]| Oh Jacomo! Thou art lost; 'Tis pity a Fellow of thy neat spruce 004:01,070[E ]| parts should be destroy'd. 004:01,070[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Francisco.> 004:01,070[H ]| Come, Gentlemen, will you not refresh your*selves with 004:01,070[H ]| some cool Wines this morning? 004:01,070[C ]| We Thank you, Sir, we have already. 004:01,070[' ]| <\Enter a Servant.\> 004:01,070[W ]| Sir, here's a young Gentleman, a Stranger, desires to speak with 004:01,070[W ]| you. 004:01,070[H ]| Admit him. 004:01,070[' ]| <\Enter\ Maria \in Man's Habit.\> 004:01,070[H ]| Your humble Servant. 004:01,070[G ]| Sir, when I've told you what I come for, I doubt not not but 004:01,070[G ]| I shall deserve your thanks. I come to do you service. 004:01,070[H ]| You have 'em, Sir, already ~~ 004:01,070[G ]| You have lodg'd within your house some ship-wrack'd men, 004:01,070[G ]| who are greater Villains than the Earth e'r bore; I come to give you 004:01,070[G ]| warning of 'em, and to beg your power to revenge such horrid actions, 004:01,070[G ]| as heart could never yet conceive, or tongue could utter. Ha! they are 004:01,070[G ]| these ~~ Revenge, Revenge, cruel, unnatural Rapes and Murders. 004:01,070[G ]| They are Devils in the shapes of Men. 004:01,070[H ]| What say you, Sir? 004:01,070[E ]| Now the snare is fall'n upon me; me-thinks I feel cold Steel 004:01,070[E ]| already in my Body. Too well I know that face. 004:01,070[A ]| I know that Face. Now, Impudence assist me. What mad 004:01,070[A ]| young man is that? 004:01,070[H ]| These, by their habits and their meens, are Gentlemen, and 004:01,070[H ]| seem to be men of Honour. 004:01,070[G ]| By these two, last night I was robb'd, and bound to a Tree, and 004:01,070[G ]| there have been all night, and but this morning was reliev'd by Peasants 004:01,070[G ]| ~~ I had a Lady with me, whom they said they would ravish, and this 004:01,070[G ]| Morning I saw her dead; they must have murder'd her. 004:01,070[H ]| Heav'n! What do I hear? 004:01,071[E ]| Oh! I am noos'd already, I feel the knot, methinks, under my 004:01,071[E ]| left ear. 004:01,071[B ]| The youth raves; we never saw his face, we never stirr'd 004:01,071[B ]| from the bounds of this house since we came hither. 004:01,071[C ]| 'Sdeath, let me kill the Villain; Shall he thus affront men 004:01,071[C ]| of our quality and honour? 004:01,071[H ]| Consider I am a Magistrate. 004:01,071[A ]| The Youth was robb'd, and with the fright has lost his wits. 004:01,071[A ]| Poor Fool! let him be bound in's bed. 004:01,071[H ]| Do not persist in this, but have a care. 004:01,071[H ]| These injuries to men of Honour shall not go unpunished. 004:01,071[G ]| Whither shall injur'd Innocence fly for succour, if you so soon 004:01,071[G ]| can be corrupted? Monster, I'll revenge my*self; have at thy heart. 004:01,071[H ]| What means the Youth, put up your Sword. 004:01,071[B ]| We told you, Sir, he was mad. 004:01,071[G ]| Oh impudent Villains! I ask your pardon, Sir; My griefs 004:01,071[G ]| and Injuries transport me so, I scarce can utter them. That Villain is 004:01,071[G ]| Don*John, who basely murdered the Governour of Sevil in his house, and 004:01,071[G ]| then dishonoured his fair Sister. 004:01,071[A ]| Death and Hell! this injury is beyond all sufferance. 004:01,071[H ]| Hold Sir, think in whose house you are. 004:01,071[E ]| O Lord! what will this come to? Ah Jacomo! thy line of life is 004:01,071[E ]| short. 004:01,071[G ]| This is the Villain, who kill'd the Lover of Antonio's Sister, 004:01,071[G ]| deflow'rd her, and murder'd her Brother in his own house. 004:01,071[A ]| I'll have no longer patience. 004:01,071[B ]| Such a Villain should have his throat cut, though in a Church. 004:01,071[C ]| No man of honour will protect those, who offer such injuries. 004:01,071[A ]| Have at you, Villain. 004:01,071[H ]| Nay then; Within there: Ho! I will protect him, or 004:01,071[H ]| perish with him. 004:01,071[' ]| <\Enter two Bridegrooms.\> 004:01,071[W ]| What's the matter? 004:01,071[A ]| This rashness will spoil my design upon the Daughters; if I 004:01,071[A ]| I had perfected that, I would have own'd all this for half a Duccattoon. ~~ 004:01,071[' ]| <\To\ Ant% Lop%> 004:01,071[A ]| I ask your pardon for my ill manners; I was provok'd too far; indeed 004:01,071[A ]| the accusations are so extravagant and odd, I rather should have laughed 004:01,071[A ]| at 'em. Let the young Fool have a vein open'd, he's stark staring 004:01,071[A ]| mad. 004:01,071[B ]| A foolish Impostor. We ne'r saw Sevil till last night. 004:01,071[G ]| Oh Impudence! 004:01,072[E ]| No, not we; we never were there till yesterday. Pray Sir, lay 004:01,072[E ]| that young Fellow by the heels, for lying on us, men of Honour. 004:01,072[H ]| What is the matter, Friend, you tremble so? 004:01,072[C ]| 'Sdeath, the Dog's fear will betray us. 004:01,072[E ]| I tremble Sir? no, no, Sir: I tremble ~~ Though it would 004:01,072[E ]| make any*one tremble to hear one lie, as that young Gentleman does. 004:01,072[E ]| Have you no conscience in you? 004:01,072[G ]| Heav'n can witness for me, I speak not false. Octavio, my dear 004:01,072[G ]| Octavio, being dearest to me of all the world, I would in Sevil have 004:01,072[G ]| revenged his murder but the Villain there escaped me; I followed him 004:01,072[G ]| to Sea, and in the same Storm in which their Ship perish'd, I was thrown 004:01,072[G ]| on shoar. Oh my Octavio! if this foul unnatural murther be not reveng'd, 004:01,072[G ]| there is no Justice left among mankind. His Ghost, and all the rest whom 004:01,072[G ]| he has barbarously murder'd, will interrupt your quiet, they'll haunt you 004:01,072[G ]| in your sleep. Revenge, revenge! 004:01,072[W ]| This is wonderful. 004:01,072[H ]| There must be something in this; his passion cannot be 004:01,072[H ]| counterfeited, nor your man's fear. 004:01,072[E ]| My fear? I scorn your words; I fear nothing under the Sun. I 004:01,072[E ]| fear? Ha, ha, ha. ~~ 004:01,072[A ]| Will you believe this one false Villain against three, who are 004:01,072[A ]| Gentlemen, and men of honour? 004:01,072[E ]| Nay, against four, who are Gentlemen, and men of honour. 004:01,072[G ]| O Villain, that I had my Sword imbru'd in thy hearts bloud. 004:01,072[G ]| Oh my dear Octavio! Do Justice, Sir, or Heaven will punish you. 004:01,072[' ]| <\Enter\ Clara.> 004:01,072[H ]| Gentlemen, he is too earnest, in his grief and anger, to be 004:01,072[H ]| what you wou'd have him, an Impostor. My house has been your 004:01,072[H ]| Sanctuary, and I am obliged in honour not to act as a Magistrate, but your 004:01,072[H ]| Host, no violence shall here be offer'd to you; but you must instantly 004:01,072[H ]| leave this house, and if you would have safety, find it somewhere else. 004:01,072[H ]| Be gone. 004:01,072[A ]| This is very well. 004:01,072[G ]| Oh! will you let 'em go unpunish'd? 004:01,072[G ]| Whither shall I flie for vengeance? 004:01,072[H ]| Pray leave this place immediately. 004:01,072[E ]| Ah, good Sir, let's be gone ~~ Sir, your most humble Servant. 004:01,072[I ]| Oh, Sir, consider what you do; do not banish Don*John from 004:01,072[I ]| hence. 004:01,072[W ]| Ha! what means she? 004:01,072[H ]| What say you? 004:01,072[I ]| Oh, Sir, he is my Husband, we were last night contracted. 004:01,073[H ]| Oh! what do I hear? 004:01,073[W ]| I am dishonoured, abus'd. Villain, thou diest. 004:01,073[A ]| Villain, you lie; I will cut your throat first. 004:01,073[H ]| Hey, where are my people here. 004:01,073[' ]| <\Enter Servants and\ Flavia.> 004:01,073[J ]| Oh, Sir, hold; if you banish Don*John, I am lost for*ever. 004:01,073[H ]| Oh Devil! what do I hear? 004:01,073[J ]| He is my Husband, Sir, we were last night contracted. 004:01,073[I ]| Your Husband! Heaven! what's this? 004:01,073[W ]| Hell and Damnation! 004:01,073[H ]| Oh! I have lost my senses. 004:01,073[G ]| Oh Monster! now am I to be believ'd? 004:01,073[E ]| Oh spare my life! I am innocent as I hope to live and breath. 004:01,073[A ]| Dog, you shall fight for your life, if you have it. 004:01,073[H ]| First, I'll revenge my*self on these. 004:01,073[A ]| Hold, hold, they are both my Wives, and I will have them. 004:01,073[' ]| <\Runs at his Daughters, they run out.\> 004:01,073[H ]| Oh Devil! fall on ~~ 004:01,073[G ]| Fall on, I will assist you. 004:01,073[' ]| <\They fight.\ Maria \and\ Don*Francisco \are killed\> 004:01,073[' ]| <\the two Bridegrooms are hurt,\ Jacomo, \runs away.\> 004:01,073[A ]| Now we've done their business. 004:01,073[A ]| Ah, cowardly Rogue! are not you a Son of a Whore? 004:01,073[E ]| Ay, Sir, what you please: A man had better be a living Son of a 004:01,073[E ]| Whore, than a dead Hero, by your favour. 004:01,073[A ]| I could find in my heart to kill the Rascal; his fear, some time 004:01,073[A ]| or other, will undo us. 004:01,073[E ]| Hold, Sir, I went, Sir, to provide for your escape. Let's take 004:01,073[E ]| Horses out of the Stable, and flie; abundance of Company are coming, 004:01,073[E ]| expecting the Weding, and we are irrepairably lost if we take not this 004:01,073[E ]| time. I think my fear will now preserve you. 004:01,073[B ]| I think he councels well. Let's flie to a new place of pleasure. 004:01,073[A ]| But I shall leave my business undone with the two Women. 004:01,073[C ]| 'Tis now scarce feazible. Let's fly; you'll light on others as 004:01,073[C ]| handsom, where we come next. 004:01,073[A ]| Well, dispose of me as you please; and yet it troubles me. 004:01,073[E ]| Haste, haste, or we shall be apprehended. 004:01,073[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:01,073[' ]| <\Enter\ Clara \and\ Flavia.> 004:01,073[J ]| O that I ever liv'd to see this day! 004:01,073[J ]| This fatal day! 'Twas our vile disobedience 004:01,073[J ]| Caus'd our poor Fathers death, which Heaven 004:01,074[J ]| Will revenge on us. So lewd a Villain 004:01,074[J ]| As Don*John was never heard of yet. 004:01,074[I ]| That we should be so credulous! Oh dreadful 004:01,074[I ]| Accident Dear Father, what Expiation can 004:01,074[I ]| We make? our crimes too foul for 004:01,074[I ]| Tears to wash away, and all our lives will 004:01,074[I ]| Be too short, to spend in penitence for this 004:01,074[I ]| Our levity and disobedience. He was the 004:01,074[I ]| Best of Fathers, and of Men. 004:01,074[J ]| What will become of us, poor miserable Maids, 004:01,074[J ]| Lost in our Fortunes and our Reputations? 004:01,074[J ]| Our intended Husbands, if they recover of their 004:01,074[J ]| Wounds, will murder us; and 'tis but Justice: 004:01,074[J ]| Our lives too now cannot be worth the keeping. 004:01,074[J ]| Those Devils in the shapes of men are fled. 004:01,074[I ]| Let us not waste our time in fruitless grief; 004:01,074[I ]| Let us employ some to pursue the murderers. 004:01,074[I ]| And for our*selves, let's to the next Monastery, 004:01,074[I ]| And there spend all our weary life in penitence. 004:01,074[J ]| Let's fly to our last Sanctuary in this world, 004:01,074[J ]| And try, by a Religious life, to expiate this Crime: 004:01,074[J ]| There is no safety, or no hope but there. 004:01,074[J ]| Let's go, and bid a long farewell to all the 004:01,074[J ]| World; a thing too vain, and little worth our care. 004:01,074[I ]| Agreed; farewell to all the vanity on Earth, 004:01,074[I ]| Where wretched Mortals, toss'd 'twixt hope and fear, 004:01,074[I ]| Must of all fix'd and solid joy despair. 004:01,074[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:02,074[' ]| 004:02,074[' ]| <\Enter two Shepherds and two Nymphs.\> 004:02,074[W ]| Come Nymphs and Shepherds, hast away 004:02,074[W ]| To the happy Sports within these shady Groves, 004:02,074[W ]| In pleasant lives time slides away apace, 004:02,074[W ]| But with the wretched seems to creep too slow. 004:02,074[V ]| Our happy leisure we employ in joys, 004:02,074[V ]| As innocent as they are pleasant. We, 004:02,074[V ]| Strangers to strife, and to tumultuous noise, 004:02,074[V ]| To baneful envy, and to wretched cares, 004:02,074[V ]| In rural pleasures spend our happy days, 004:02,074[V ]| And our soft nights in calm and quiet sleeps. 004:02,074[W ]| No rude Ambition interrupts our rest, 004:02,074[W ]| Nor base and guilty thoughts how to be great. 004:02,075[V ]| In humble Cottages we have such contents, 004:02,075[V ]| As uncorrupted Nature does afford, 004:02,075[V ]| Which the great, that surfeit under gilded Roofs, 004:02,075[V ]| And wanton in Down Beds, can never know. 004:02,075[W ]| Nature is here not yet debauch'd by Art, 004:02,075[W ]| 'Tis as it was in Saturn's happy days: 004:02,075[W ]| Minds are not here by Luxury invaded; 004:02,075[W ]| A homely Plenty, with sharpe Appetite, 004:02,075[W ]| Does lightsome health, and vigorous strength impart. 004:02,075[V ]| A chast cold Spring does here refresh our thirst, 004:02,075[V ]| Which by no feavourish surfeit is increas'd; 004:02,075[V ]| Our food is such as Nature meant for Men, 004:02,075[V ]| Ere with the Vicious, Eating was an Art. 004:02,075[V ]| In noisie Cities riot is pursu'd, 004:02,075[V ]| And lew'd luxurious living softens men, 004:02,075[V ]| Effeminates Fools in Body and in Mind, 004:02,075[V ]| Weakens their Appetites, and decays their Nerves. 004:02,075[W ]| With filthy steams from their excess of Meat, 004:02,075[W ]| And clowdy vapours rais'd from dangerous Wine; 004:02,075[W ]| Their heads are never clear or free to think, 004:02,075[W ]| They wast their lives in a continual mist. 004:02,075[W ]| Some subtil and ill men chuse Temperance, 004:02,075[W ]| Not as a Vertue, but a Bawd to Vice, 004:02,075[W ]| And vigilantly wait to ruine those, 004:02,075[W ]| Whom Luxury and Ease have lull'd asleep. 004:02,075[W ]| Yes, in the clamorous Courts of tedious Law, 004:02,075[W ]| Where what is meant for a relief's a grievance; 004:02,075[W ]| Or in Kings Palaces, where Cunning strives. 004:02,075[W ]| Not to advance King's Interests, but its own. 004:02,075[V ]| There they in a continual hurry live, 004:02,075[V ]| And seldom can, for all their subtile Arts, 004:02,075[V ]| Lay their foundations sure; but some 004:02,075[V ]| Are undermin'd, others blown down by storms. 004:02,075[V ]| Their subtility is but a common Road 004:02,075[V ]| Of flattering great men, and oppressing little, 004:02,075[V ]| Smiling on all they meet, and loving none. 004:02,075[W ]| In populous Cities, life is all a storm; 004:02,075[W ]| But we enjoy a sweet perpetual calm: 004:02,075[W ]| Here our own Flocks we keep, and here 004:02,075[W ]| I and my Phillis can embrace unenvi'd. 004:02,075[W ]| And I and Celia without jealousie. 004:02,075[W ]| But hark, the Pipes begin; now for our sports. 004:02,075[' ]| <\A Symphony of Rustick Musick.\> 004:02,076[U ]| \Nymphs and Shepherds come away,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \In these Groves let's sport and play;\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Where each day is a Holy-day,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Sacred to Ease and happy Love.\ 004:02,076[U ]| \To Dancing, Musick, Poetry:\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Your Flocks may now securely rove.\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Whilst you express your jollity.\ 004:02,076[' ]| 004:02,076[X ]| \We come, we come, no joy like this.\ 004:02,076[X ]| \Now let us sing, rejoyce, and kiss.\ 004:02,076[X ]| \The Great can never know such bliss.\ 004:02,076[W ]| \As this\ 004:02,076[W ]| \As this\ 004:02,076[V ]| \As this.\ 004:02,076[X ]| \As this.\ 004:02,076[U ]| \The Great can never know such bliss.\ 004:02,076[' ]| <1> 004:02,076[U ]| \All th' Inhabitants o'th' Wood,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Now celebrate the Spring,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \That gives fresh vigour to the bloud\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Of every living thing,\ 004:02,076[' ]| 004:02,076[X ]| \The Birds have been singing and billing before us,\ 004:02,076[X ]| \And all the sweet Choristers joyn in the\ Chorus. 004:02,076[' ]| <2> 004:02,076[U ]| \The Nightingale and jugging throats,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Warble out their pretty Notes,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \So sweet, so sweet, so sweet:\ 004:02,076[U ]| \And thus our Loves and Pleasures greet.\ 004:02,076[' ]| 004:02,076[X ]| \Then let our Pipes sound, let us dance, let us sing\ 004:02,076[X ]| \Till the murmuring Groves with loud Eccho's shall ring.\ 004:02,076[' ]| 004:02,076[' ]| <3> 004:02,076[U ]| \How happy are we,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \From all jealousie free;\ 004:02,076[U ]| \No dangers or cares can annoy us:\ 004:02,076[U ]| \We toy and we kiss,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \And Love's our chief bliss;\ 004:02,076[U ]| \A-pleasure that never can cloy us.\ 004:02,076[' ]| 004:02,076[X ]| \Our days we consume in unenvied delights,\ 004:02,076[X ]| \And in love and soft rest our happy long nights.\ 004:02,076[' ]| <4> 004:02,076[U ]| \Each Nymph does impart\ 004:02,076[U ]| \Her love without Art,\ 004:02,076[U ]| \To her Swain, who thinks that his chief Treasure.\ 004:02,077[U ]| \No envy is fear'd,\ 004:02,077[U ]| \No sighs are e'r heard,\ 004:02,077[U ]| \But those which are caus'd by our pleasure.\ 004:02,077[' ]| 004:02,077[X ]| \When we feel the bless'd Raptures of innocent Love,\ 004:02,077[X ]| \No joys exceed our's but the pleasures above.\ 004:02,077[' ]| 004:02,077[X ]| \In these delightful fragrant Groves,\ 004:02,077[X ]| \Let's celebrate our happy Loves.\ 004:02,077[X ]| \Let's pipe, and dance, and laugh, and sing;\ 004:02,077[X ]| \Thus every happy living thing,\ 004:02,077[X ]| \Revels in the chearful Spring.\ 004:02,077[' ]| 004:02,077[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo.> 004:02,077[A ]| So, thus far we are safe, we have almost kill'd our Horses 004:02,077[A ]| with riding cross out of all Roads. 004:02,077[E ]| Nay, you have had as little mercy on them, as if they had been 004:02,077[E ]| Men or Women: But yet we are not safe, let us fly farther. 004:02,077[A ]| The house I lighted at was mine during my life, which I sold 004:02,077[A ]| to that fellow; he, since he holds by that tenure, will carefully conceal us. 004:02,077[E ]| 'Tis a Tenure I will not give him two moneths purchase for. 004:02,077[A ]| Besides, our Swords are us'd to conquest. 004:02,077[B ]| At worst, there is a Church hard by; we'll put it to its proper 004:02,077[B ]| use, take refuge in't. 004:02,077[C ]| Look here, here are Shepherds, and young pretty Wenches; 004:02,077[C ]| shall we be idle, Don? 004:02,077[B ]| By no means; 'tis a long time, methinks, since we were 004:02,077[B ]| vicious. 004:02,077[A ]| We'll serve 'em as the Romans did the Sabines, we'll rob 'em 004:02,077[A ]| of their Women; onely we'll return the Punks again, when we have 004:02,077[A ]| us'd them. 004:02,077[E ]| For Heavens sake hold. 004:02,077[A ]| Sirra, no more; do as we do, ravish, Rascal, or by my Sword, 004:02,077[A ]| I'll cut thee into so many pieces, it shall pose an Arithmetician to sum 004:02,077[A ]| up the fractions of thy body. 004:02,077[E ]| I ravish! Oh, good Sir! my Courage lies not that way; alas, 004:02,077[E ]| I, I am almost famish'd, I have not eat to*day. 004:02,077[A ]| Sirra, by Heaven do as I bid thee, or thou shalt never eat again. 004:02,077[A ]| Shall I keep a Rascal for a Cypher? 004:02,077[E ]| Oh! What will become of me? I must do it. 004:02,077[A ]| Come on, Rogue, fall on. 004:02,077[B ]| Which are you for? 004:02,077[A ]| 'Tis all one, I am not in Love but in Lust, and to such a one, 004:02,077[A ]| a Belly-full's a Belly-full, and there's an end on't. 004:02,078[V ]| What means this violence? 004:02,078[V ]| Oh! Heav'n protect us. 004:02,078[E ]| Well, I must have one too; if I be hang'd, I had as good be hang'd 004:02,078[E ]| for something. 004:02,078[' ]| <\Every*one runs off with a Woman.\> 004:02,078[C ]| Rogues, come not on; we'll be in your guts. 004:02,078[X ]| Help, help. 004:02,078[' ]| <\They cry out.\> 004:02,078[W ]| What Devils are these? 004:02,078[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:02,078[' ]| <\Three or four Shepherds return with\ Jacomo.> 004:02,078[W ]| Here's one Rogue. Have we caught you, Sir? We'll cool 004:02,078[W ]| your courage. 004:02,078[E ]| Am I taken prisoner? I shall be kept as an honourable Hostage 004:02,078[E ]| at least ~~ 004:02,078[W ]| Where are these Villains, these Ravishers? 004:02,078[E ]| Why you need not keep such a stir, Gentlemen, you will have 004:02,078[E ]| all your Women again, and no harm done. Let me go, I'le fetch 'em 004:02,078[E ]| to you. 004:02,078[W ]| No, you libidinous Swine; we'll revenge the Rapes on 004:02,078[W ]| you. 004:02,078[E ]| Good kind civil people pass this by: 'Tis true, my Master's a 004:02,078[E ]| very Tarquin; but I ne'r attempted to ravish before. 004:02,078[W ]| I'le secure you from ever doing of it again. Where's your 004:02,078[W ]| Knife? 004:02,078[E ]| Heav'n! What do you mean? Oh spare me! I am unprepar'd; 004:02,078[E ]| let me be confest. 004:02,078[W ]| We will not kill you, we'll but geld you: Are you so hot, 004:02,078[W ]| Sir? 004:02,078[E ]| Oh bloudy Villains! have a care, 'tis not a season for that, the 004:02,078[E ]| Sign's in Scorpio. 004:02,078[W ]| Down with him ~~ 004:02,078[E ]| O help help! murder! murder! Have a care what you do, I 004:02,078[E ]| am the last of all my Race ~~ Will you destroy a whole Stock, and 004:02,078[E ]| take away my Representers of my Family? ~~ 004:02,078[W ]| There shall be no more of the Breed of you ~~ 004:02,078[E ]| I am of an antient Family; Will you cut off all hopes of a Son 004:02,078[E ]| and Heir? Help! Help! Master, Don*John? Oh! Oh! Oh! 004:02,078[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio.> 004:02,078[A ]| How now, Rogues? do you abuse my Man? 004:02,078[E ]| O Sir, this is the first good thing you ever did: If you 004:02,078[E ]| had not come just in the Nick, I had lost my Manhood. 004:02,078[B ]| 'Tis no matter for the use you make on't. 004:02,078[C ]| But come, let's now to Supper. 004:02,078[E ]| Come on, I am almost starv'd. 004:02,078[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:02,079[' ]| <\Shepherds return.\> 004:02,079[W ]| Let's not complain, but Dog the Rogues, and when we have 004:02,079[W ]| Hous'd 'em, we will to the next Magistrate, and beg his pow'r to apprehend 004:02,079[W ]| 'em. 004:02,079[' ]| <\Exeunt.\> 004:03,079[' ]| 004:03,079[' ]| 004:03,079[A ]| Let's in and see this Church. 004:03,079[E ]| Is this a time to see Churches? But let me see whose Statue's 004:03,079[E ]| this? Oh Heav'n! this is Don*Pedro's, whom you murder'd at Sevil. 004:03,079[A ]| Say you so, Read the Inscription. 004:03,079[E ]| \Here lies\ Don*Pedro, \Governour of\ Sevil, \barbarously murder'd by\ 004:03,079[E ]| \that impious Villain\ Don*John, \'gainst whom his innocent blood cries still for\ 004:03,079[E ]| \vengeance.\ 004:03,079[A ]| Let it cry on. Art thou there i' faith? Yes, I kill'd thee, and 004:03,079[A ]| wou'd do't again upon the same occasion. Jacomo ~~ invite him to 004:03,079[A ]| Supper. 004:03,079[E ]| What, a Statue! Invite a Statue to Supper? Ha, Ha ~~ can 004:03,079[E ]| Marble eat? 004:03,079[A ]| I say, Rascal, tell him I would have him Sup with me. 004:03,079[E ]| Ha, ha, ha! who the Devil put this whimsey into your head? 004:03,079[E ]| Ha, ha, ha! Invite a Statue to Supper? 004:03,079[A ]| I shall spooil your Mirth, Sirra; I will have it done. 004:03,079[E ]| Why, 'tis impossible; wou'd you have me such a Coxcomb, 004:03,079[E ]| invite Marble to eat? Ha, ha, ha. 004:03,079[' ]| <\He goes several times towards the Statue and returns laughing.\> 004:03,079[E ]| Good Mr%*Statue, if it shall please your Worship, my Master desires 004:03,079[E ]| you to make Collation with him presently ~~ 004:03,079[' ]| <\The Statue nods his head,\ Jacomo \falls down and roars.\> 004:03,079[E ]| Oh I am dead! Oh, Oh, Oh. 004:03,079[A ]| The Statue nods its Head; 'tis odd ~~ 004:03,079[B ]| 'Tis wonderful. 004:03,079[C ]| I am amaz'd. 004:03,079[E ]| Oh I cannot stir! Help, help. 004:03,079[A ]| Well, Governour, come, take part of a Collation with me, 004:03,079[A ]| 'tis by this time ready; make haste, 'tis I invite you. 004:03,079[' ]| <\Statue nods again.\> 004:03,079[A ]| Say you so? come on, let's set all things in order quickly. 004:03,079[E ]| Oh fly, fly. 004:03,079[B ]| This is prodigious. 004:03,079[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio, Jacomo.> 004:04,080[' ]| 004:04,080[' ]| 004:04,080[A ]| Come, our meat is ready, let's Sit. Pox on this foolish Statue, 004:04,080[A ]| it pushes me to know the reason on't. Sirra, I'le give you leave to sit. 004:04,080[B ]| Let's eat, ne'r think on't. 004:04,080[E ]| Ay, come, let's eat; I am too hungry now to think on the 004:04,080[E ]| fright ~~ 004:04,080[' ]| 004:04,080[A ]| This is excellent Meat. How the Rogue eats. You'll choak 004:04,080[A ]| your*self. 004:04,080[E ]| I warrant you, look to your*self 004:04,080[B ]| Why, Jacomo, is the Devil in you? 004:04,080[E ]| No, no; if he be, 'tis a hungry Devil. 004:04,080[C ]| Will you not Drink? 004:04,080[E ]| I'le lay a good foundation first. 004:04,080[A ]| The Rascal eats like a Canibal. 004:04,080[E ]| Ay, 'tis no matter for that. 004:04,080[A ]| Some Wine, Sirra. 004:04,080[E ]| There, Sir, take it; I am in haste. 004:04,080[B ]| 'Sdeath, the Fool will be strangl'd. 004:04,080[E ]| The Fool knows what he does. 004:04,080[A ]| Here's to Don*Pedro's Ghost, he should have been welcome. 004:04,080[E ]| O name him not. 004:04,080[C ]| The Rascal is afraid of you after death. 004:04,080[E ]| Oh! Oh! Some Wime, give me some Wine. 004:04,080[' ]| <\Almost choak'd.\> 004:04,080[B ]| Take it. 004:04,080[E ]| So, now 'tis down. 004:04,080[B ]| Are you not satisfi'd yet? 004:04,080[E ]| Peace, peace; I have but just begun. 004:04,080[' ]| <\One knocks hard at the door.\> 004:04,080[E ]| Who's there? come in, I am very busie. 004:04,080[A ]| Rise, and do your duty. 004:04,080[E ]| But one morsel more, I come. 004:04,080[' ]| <\Knocks again.\> 004:04,080[E ]| What a pox, are you mad? 004:04,080[' ]| <\Opens the door.\> 004:04,080[' ]| <\Enter Ghost.\> 004:04,080[E ]| Oh! the Devil, the Devil. 004:04,080[A ]| Hah! It is the Ghost, let's rise and receive him. 004:04,080[B ]| I am amaz'd. 004:04,080[C ]| Not frighted are you? 004:04,080[B ]| I scorn the thoughts of fear. 004:04,080[' ]| <\They salute the Ghost.\> 004:04,080[A ]| Come, Governour, you are welcome, sit there; if we had 004:04,080[A ]| thought you would have come, we wou'd have staid for you. But come 004:04,080[A ]| on, Sirra, give me some Wine. 004:04,080[' ]| <\The Ghost sits.\> 004:04,080[E ]| Oh! I am dead; What shall I do? I dare not come near you. 004:04,081[A ]| Come, Rascal, or I'le cut your Throat. 004:04,081[' ]| <\Fills Wine, his hand trembles.\> 004:04,081[E ]| I come, I come, I come. Oh! Oh! 004:04,081[A ]| Why do you tremble, Rascal? Hold it steadily ~~ 004:04,081[E ]| Oh! I cannot. 004:04,081[' ]| 004:04,081[A ]| Here, Governour, your health.. Friends, put it about. Here's 004:04,081[A ]| excellent Meat; Taste of this Ragoust. If you had had a body of flesh, 004:04,081[A ]| I would have given you cher*entire ~~ but the Women care not for 004:04,081[A ]| Marble. Come, I'll help you. Come, eat, and let old quarrels be forgotten. 004:04,081[A ]| 004:04,081[W ]| I come not here to take Repast with you; 004:04,081[W ]| Heaven has permitted me to animate 004:04,081[W ]| This Marble Body, and I come to warn 004:04,081[W ]| You of that Vengeance is in store for you, 004:04,081[W ]| If you amend not your pernicious lives. 004:04,081[E ]| Oh Heav'n! 004:04,081[B ]| What, are you come to preach to us? 004:04,081[C ]| Keep your Harangues for Fools that will believe 'em. 004:04,081[A ]| We are too much confirm'd. Pox o' this dry discourse, give 004:04,081[A ]| me some Wine. Come, here's to your Mistriss; you had one when you 004:04,081[A ]| were living: not forgetting your sweet Sister. Sirra, more Wine. 004:04,081[E ]| Ay, Sir ~~ Good Sir, do not provoke the Ghost; his Marble 004:04,081[E ]| Fists may fly about your ears, and knock your brains out. 004:04,081[A ]| Peace, Fool. 004:04,081[W ]| Tremble, you impious Wretches, and repent; 004:04,081[W ]| Behold, the Pow'rs of Hell wayt for you. 004:04,081[' ]| <\~~ Devils rise.\> 004:04,081[E ]| Oh! I will steal from hence. Oh the Devil! 004:04,081[A ]| Sirra, stir not; by Heav'n I'le use thee worse than Devils can 004:04,081[A ]| do. Come, near, Coward. 004:04,081[E ]| Oh I dare not stir; what will become of me? 004:04,081[A ]| Come, Sirra, eat. 004:04,081[E ]| O, Sir, my Appetite is satisfied. 004:04,081[A ]| Drink, Dog, the Ghost's Health: Rogue, do't, or I'le run my 004:04,081[A ]| Sword down your throat. 004:04,081[E ]| Oh! Oh! Here, Mr%*Statue, your Health. 004:04,081[A ]| Now Rascal, sing to entertain him. 004:04,081[E ]| Sing, quoth he! Oh! I have lost my voice: I cannot be merry 004:04,081[E ]| in such company. Sing ~~ 004:04,081[B ]| Who are these with ugly shapes? 004:04,081[C ]| Their manner of appearing is something strange. 004:04,081[W ]| They're Devils, that wait for such hard impious 004:04,081[W ]| Men. They're Heaven's Instruments of eternal vengeance. 004:04,082[A ]| Are they some of your Retinue? Devils, say you? I am sorry 004:04,082[A ]| I have no Burnt Brandey to treat 'em with, that's Drink fit for Devils ~~ 004:04,082[A ]| Hah! they vanish. 004:04,082[' ]| <\They sink.\> 004:04,082[W ]| Cannot the fear of Hell's eternal tortures, 004:04,082[W ]| Change the horrid course of your abandon'd lives? 004:04,082[W ]| Think on those Fires, those everlasting Fires, 004:04,082[W ]| That shall without consuming burn you ever. 004:04,082[A ]| Dreams, Dreams, too slight to lose my pleasure for. 004:04,082[A ]| In spight of all you say, I will go on, 004:04,082[A ]| Till I have surfeited on all delights. 004:04,082[A ]| Youth is a Fruit that can but once be gather'd, 004:04,082[A ]| And I'll enjoy it to the full. 004:04,082[B ]| Let's push it on: Nature chalks out the way that we should 004:04,082[B ]| follow. 004:04,082[C ]| 'Tis her fault, if we do that we should not. Let's on, here's 004:04,082[C ]| a Brimmer to our Leader's health. 004:04,082[E ]| What hellish Friends are these? 004:04,082[A ]| Let me tell you, 'tis something ill bred to rail at your Host, 004:04,082[A ]| that treats you civilly. You have not yet forgot your quarrel to me. 004:04,082[W ]| 'Tis for your good; by me Heaven warns you of its wrath, and 004:04,082[W ]| gives you a longer time for your repentance. I invite you this night to 004:04,082[W ]| a repast of mine. 004:04,082[A ]| Where? 004:04,082[W ]| At my Tomb. 004:04,082[B ]| What time? 004:04,082[W ]| At dead of night. 004:04,082[A ]| We'll come. 004:04,082[W ]| Fail not. 004:04,082[C ]| I warrant you. 004:04,082[W ]| Farewell, and think upon your lost condition. 004:04,082[A ]| Farewell, Gevernour, I'll see what Treat you'll give us. 004:04,082[X ]| And I. 004:04,082[E ]| That will not I. Pox on him, I have had enough of his company, 004:04,082[E ]| I shall not recover it this week. If I eat with such an Host, I'll be hang'd. 004:04,082[A ]| If you do not, by Heaven you shall be hang'd. 004:04,082[E ]| Whither will your lewdness carry me? I do not care for having a 004:04,082[E ]| Ghost for my Landlord. Will not these Miracles do good upon you. 004:04,082[A ]| There's nothing happens but by Natural Causes, 004:04,082[A ]| Which in unusual things Fools cannot find, 004:04,082[A ]| And then they stile 'em Miracles. But no Accident 004:04,082[A ]| Can alter me from what I am by Nature. 004:04,082[A ]| Were there ~~ 004:04,083[A ]| Legions of Ghosts and Devils in my way, 004:04,083[A ]| One moment in my course of pleasure I'd not stay. 004:04,083[' ]| <\Exeunt omnes.\> 005:01,083[' ]| 005:01,083[' ]| <\Enter\ Jacomo, \with Back, Breast, and Head-piece.\> 005:01,083[E ]| Well, this damn'd Master of mine will not part with me; and 005:01,083[E ]| we must fight five or six times aday, one day with another, 005:01,083[E ]| that's certain: Therefore thou art wise, honest Jacomo, to 005:01,083[E ]| arm thy*self, I take it. Sa, sa, sa ~~ Methinks I am very valiant on 005:01,083[E ]| the suddain. Sa, sa, sa. Hah! there I have you. Paph ~~ Have 005:01,083[E ]| at you. Hah ~~ there I have you through: That was a fine thrust in 005:01,083[E ]| tierce. Hah ~~ Death! what noise is that? 005:01,083[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John.> 005:01,083[A ]| How, now Sirrah, what are you doing? 005:01,083[E ]| Nothing, but practising to run people through the bodies, that's 005:01,083[E ]| all; for I know some*body's throat must be cut before midnight. 005:01,083[A ]| In Armour too! why, that cannot help you, you are such a 005:01,083[A ]| cowardly Fool; fear will betray you faster within, than that can defend 005:01,083[A ]| you without. ~~ 005:01,083[E ]| I fear no*body breathing, I; nothing can terrifie me but the 005:01,083[E ]| Devilish Ghost. Ha! who's that coming? O Heaven! 005:01,083[' ]| <\Leaps back.\> 005:01,083[A ]| Is this your courage? you are preparing for flight before an 005:01,083[A ]| Enemy appears. 005:01,083[E ]| No, no, Sir, not I; I onely leapt back to put myself upon my 005:01,083[E ]| guard ~~ Fa, la, la. ~~ 005:01,083[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*Lopez \and\ Don*Antonio.> 005:01,083[A ]| Whom have we here? 005:01,083[E ]| Oh where! where! who are they? 005:01,083[A ]| Oh my Friends! where have you been? 005:01,083[E ]| We went to view the stately Nunnery hard by, and have 005:01,083[E ]| been chatting with the poor sanctifi'd Fools, till it's dark; we have been 005:01,083[E ]| chaffering for Nuns-flesh. 005:01,083[C ]| There I made such a discovery, if you do not assist me, I am 005:01,083[C ]| ruin'd for*ever. Don*Bernardo's Sister, whom I fell in love with in Sevil, 005:01,084[C ]| is this day plac'd there for probation; and if you cannot advise me to 005:01,084[C ]| some way or other of getting her out, for some present occasion I have 005:01,084[C ]| for her, I am a lost man, that's certain. 005:01,084[B ]| The business is difficult, and we resolve to manage it in council. 005:01,084[E ]| Now will they bring me into some wicked occasion or other of 005:01,084[E ]| shewing my prowess: a pox on 'em. 005:01,084[A ]| Have you so long followed my fortunes: to boggle at difficulty 005:01,084[A ]| upon so honourable an occasion; besides, here is no difficulty. 005:01,084[C ]| No? the Walls are so high, and the Nunnery so strongly 005:01,084[C ]| fortifi'd, 'twill be impossible to do it by force; we must find some 005:01,084[C ]| stratagem. 005:01,084[A ]| The stratagem is soon found out ~~ 005:01,084[B ]| As how, Don*John? 005:01,084[A ]| Why, I will set fire on the Nunnery; fire the Hive, and the 005:01,084[A ]| Drones must out, or be burnt within: then you may, with ease, under 005:01,084[A ]| pretence of succour, take whom you will. 005:01,084[C ]| 'Tis a gallant design. 005:01,084[B ]| I long to be about it. Well, Don, thou art the bravest Fellow 005:01,084[B ]| breathing. 005:01,084[E ]| Gentlemen, pray what became of that brave Fellow, that fir'd 005:01,084[E ]| the Temple at Ephesus? was he not hanged, Gentlemen, hum ~~ 005:01,084[B ]| We are his Rivals, Fool; and who would not suffer for so 005:01,084[B ]| brave an action? 005:01,084[A ]| He's a Scoundrel and a Poultroon, that would not have his 005:01,084[A ]| Death for his Fame. 005:01,084[C ]| That he is, a damn'd Son of a Whore, and not fit to drink 005:01,084[C ]| with. 005:01,084[E ]| 'Tis a rare thing to be a Martyr for the Devil; But what good 005:01,084[E ]| will infamy do you, when you are dead? when Honour is nothing but a 005:01,084[E ]| vapour to you, while you are living. For my part I'd not be hang'd to 005:01,084[E ]| be Alexander*the*Great. 005:01,084[B ]| What a phlegmatick dull Rascal is that, who has no Ambition 005:01,084[B ]| in him. 005:01,084[E ]| Ambition! what, to be hang'd? besides, what's the intrisick 005:01,084[E ]| value of honour when a man is under*ground? Let 'em but call me honest 005:01,084[E ]| Jacomo, as I am, while I live, and let 'em call me, when I am dead, Don*John 005:01,084[E ]| if they will. 005:01,084[A ]| Villain, dare you prophane my name? 005:01,084[E ]| Hold, Sir, think what you do; you cannot hurt me, my Arms 005:01,084[E ]| are Pistol proof. 005:01,084[' ]| <\Enter a Servant.\> 005:01,084[W ]| I come to give you notice of an approaching danger: You must 005:01,084[W ]| fly; an Officer with some Shepherds have found you were at our house, and 005:01,085[W ]| are come to apprehend you, for some outrage you have committed; I 005:01,085[W ]| came to give you notice, knowing our Family has a great respect for you. 005:01,085[A ]| Yes, I know your Family has a great respect for me, for I 005:01,085[A ]| have lain with every one in it, but thee and thy Master. 005:01,085[E ]| Why look you now, I thought what 'twoud come to: Fly, Sir, 005:01,085[E ]| fly; the darkness of the night will help us. Come I'll lead the way. 005:01,085[A ]| Stay Sirra, you shall have one occasion more of shewing your 005:01,085[A ]| valour. 005:01,085[B ]| Did ever any Knight Errant fly, that was so well appointed? 005:01,085[C ]| No; you shall stay, and get Honour, Jacomo. 005:01,085[E ]| Pox of Honour, I am content with the Stock I have already. 005:01,085[A ]| You are easily satisfied. But now let's fire the Nunnery. 005:01,085[B ]| Come on. 005:01,085[C ]| I long to be at it. 005:01,085[E ]| O Jacomo! Thy Life is not worth a piece of Eight. 'Tis in vain 005:01,085[E ]| to disswade 'em, Sir; I will never trouble you with another request, if 005:01,085[E ]| you'll be graciously pleas'd to leave me out of this adventure. 005:01,085[A ]| Well, you have your desire. 005:01,085[E ]| A thousand Thanks, and when I see you again, I will be humbly 005:01,085[E ]| content with a Halter. 005:01,085[A ]| But, do you hear, Fool? Stand Centinel here; and if any*thing 005:01,085[A ]| happens extraordinary, give us notice of it. 005:01,085[E ]| O, good Sir! What do do you mean? That's as bad as going 005:01,085[E ]| with you. 005:01,085[A ]| Let me find you here when I come again, or you are a dead 005:01,085[A ]| man ~~ 005:01,085[' ]| <\Exeunt\ Don*John, Don*Lopez, Don*Antonio.> 005:01,085[E ]| I am sure I am a dead man, if you find me here: But would my 005:01,085[E ]| Armour were off now, that I might run the lighter. Night assist me. 005:01,085[E ]| Heaven! what noise is that? to be left alone in the dark, and fear Ghosts 005:01,085[E ]| and Devils, is very horrible. But Oh! Who are these. 005:01,085[' ]| <\Enter Officer, Guards, and Shepherds.\> 005:01,085[W ]| We are thus far right, the Ravishers went this way. 005:01,085[W ]| For Heaven's sake take 'em dead or alive; such desperate Villains 005:01,085[W ]| ne'r were seen. 005:01,085[E ]| So; if I be catch'd I shall be hang'd; if not, I shall be kill'd. 005:01,085[E ]| 'Tis very fine. These are the Shepherds. I'll hide my*self. 005:01,085[' ]| <\He stands up close against the Wall.\> 005:01,085[W ]| If we catch the Rogues we'll broil 'em alive; no death can 005:01,085[W ]| be painful enough for such Wretches. 005:01,085[E ]| O bloudy-minded Men ~~ 005:01,085[W ]| O impious vile Wretches! that we had you in our clutches! 005:01,085[W ]| Open your dark Lanthorn, and let's search for 'em. 005:01,086[E ]| What will become of me, my Armour will not do now. 005:01,086[W ]| Thus far we hunted them upon a good scent: But now we are 005:01,086[W ]| at a fault. 005:01,086[E ]| Let me see; I have one trick left, I have a Disguise will fright 005:01,086[E ]| the Devil. 005:01,086[W ]| They must be hereabouts. 005:01,086[E ]| I'll in amongst them, and certainly this will fright 'em. 005:01,086[W ]| Oh Heaven! What horrid Object's this? 005:01,086[E ]| The Devil. 005:01,086[W ]| Oh fly, fly! The Devil, the Devil! fly ~~ 005:01,086[' ]| <\Exeunt Shepherds frighted.\> 005:01,086[E ]| Farewell, good Gentlemen. This is the first time my face e'r 005:01,086[E ]| did me good. But I'll not stay I take it; Yet whether shall I fly? Oh! 005:01,086[E ]| What noise is that? I am in the dark, in a strange place too; what 005:01,086[E ]| will follow? There lie. Oh! my Arms. Hah! Who's there? Let me 005:01,086[E ]| go this way ~~ Oh the Ghost! the Ghost! Gad forgive me, 'twas 005:01,086[E ]| nothing but my fear. 005:01,086[' ]| <\A noise within,\> 005:01,086[X ]| Fire, fire, the Nunnery's on fire. 005:01,086[E ]| Oh vile Wretches! they have done the deed. There is no flying; now 005:01,086[E ]| the place will be full of People, and wicked Lights that will discover 005:01,086[E ]| me, if I fly. 005:01,086[' ]| <\Within.\> 005:01,086[X ]| Fire, fire, fire; the Nunnery's on fire; help, help ~~ 005:01,086[' ]| <\Several people cross the Stage, crying\> 005:01,086[X ]| Fire. 005:01,086[E ]| What shall I do? there's no way but one, I'll go with this Crowd. 005:01,086[E ]| Fire Fire ~~ Murder! help! help! fire! fire ~~ 005:01,086[' ]| <\More people cross the stage, he runs with them.\> 005:01,086[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Antonio, Don*Lopez, \Four Nuns.\> 005:01,086[A ]| Fear not, Ladies, we'll protect you. 005:01,086[V ]| Our Sex and Habits will protect us. 005:01,086[C ]| Not enough, we will protect you better. 005:01,086[V ]| Pray leave us, we must not consort with men. 005:01,086[B ]| What would you run into the fire to avoid Mankind? you 005:01,086[B ]| are zealous Ladies indeed. 005:01,086[A ]| Come, Ladies, walk with us; we'll put you in a place of 005:01,086[A ]| safety. 005:01,086[V ]| We'll go no further, we are safe enough; be gone, and help 005:01,086[V ]| to quench the fire. 005:01,086[A ]| We have another fire to quench; come along with us. 005:01,086[C ]| Ay, come, you must go. 005:01,086[B ]| Come along, we know what's good for you; you must go 005:01,086[B ]| with us. 005:01,086[V ]| Heaven! What violence is this? what impious men are these? 005:01,086[V ]| Help! Help! 005:01,086[' ]| <\All cry\> 005:01,086[X ]| Help. 005:01,087[' ]| <\Enter\ Flavia \and\ Clara \Probationers.\> 005:01,087[J ]| Here are the bloudy Villains, the causes of our misery. 005:01,087[I ]| Inhumane Butcherts! now we'll have your Lives. 005:01,087[A ]| Hah! here are a brace of my Wives. If you have a mind to 005:01,087[A ]| this Fool, take her betwixt you; for my part, I'll have my own. Come, 005:01,087[A ]| Wives, along with me; we must consummate, my Spouses, we must 005:01,087[A ]| consummate. 005:01,087[I ]| What Monsters are these? 005:01,087[X ]| Help! help! 005:01,087[B ]| 'Sdeath! these foolish Women are their own Enemies. 005:01,087[C ]| Here are so many people, if they cry out more, they'll interrupt 005:01,087[C ]| us in our brave design. 005:01,087[A ]| I warrant you; when they cry out, let us out-noise 'em. Come, 005:01,087[A ]| Women, you must go along with us. 005:01,087[V ]| Heaven! What shall we do? Help! help! 005:01,087[A ]| Help! help! Fire! fire! fire! 005:01,087[X ]| Help! help! 005:01,087[' ]| <\They hale the Women by the hands, who still cry out, and they with them.\> 005:01,087[' ]| <\Enter several people, crying out Fire,\ Jacomo \in the rear.\> 005:01,087[E ]| Fire! fire! fire! Help! help! 005:01,087[E ]| 'Sdeath! here's my Master. 005:01,087[A ]| Sirra, come along with me, I have use of you. 005:01,087[E ]| I am caught. 005:01,087[A ]| Here, Sirra, take one of my Wives, and force her after me. 005:01,087[A ]| Do you refuse, Villain. 005:01,087[' ]| <\Enter Shepherds, with Officer and Guards.\> 005:01,087[X ]| Help! help! good people help! rescue us from these Villains. 005:01,087[W ]| Who are you, committing violence on Women? 005:01,087[W ]| Heavens! they are the Villains we seek for. 005:01,087[E ]| Where is my Armour now? Oh my Armour. 005:01,087[W ]| Fall on. 005:01,087[' ]| <\They fight, Women fly,\ Jacomo\ falls down as kill'd,\> 005:01,087[' ]| <\Two Shepherds and the Officer are kill'd.\> 005:01,087[A ]| Say you so, Rogues? 005:01,087[C ]| So, the Field's our own. 005:01,087[A ]| But a pox on't, we have bought a Victory too dear, we have 005:01,087[A ]| lost the Women. 005:01,087[B ]| We'll find 'em again. But poor Jacomo's kill'd. 005:01,087[E ]| That's a lie. 005:01,087[' ]| <\Aside.\> 005:01,087[C ]| 'Faith, let's carry off our dead. 005:01,088[A ]| Agreed; we'll bury him in the Church, while the Ghost treats 005:01,088[A ]| us, we'll treat the Worms with the body of a Rascal. 005:01,088[E ]| Not yet a while. 005:01,088[' ]| <\Aside.\> 005:01,088[C ]| Come, let's take away the Fool. 005:01,088[E ]| No, the Fool can take up himself. 'Sdeath! you resolve not to 005:01,088[E ]| let me alone dead or alive ~~ 005:01,088[E ]| Here are more Murders, Oh! 005:01,088[C ]| Oh counterfeiting Rascal! Are you alive? 005:01,088[' ]| <\The Clock strikes Twelve.\> 005:01,088[B ]| The Clock strikes Twelve. 005:01,088[A ]| 'Slife, our time's come, we must to the Tomb: I would not 005:01,088[A ]| break my word with the Ghost for a thousand Doubloons ~~ 005:01,088[E ]| Nor I keep it for ten times the Money. 005:01,088[A ]| But you shall keep your word, Sir. 005:01,088[E ]| I am resolv'd to Fast to*night, 'tis a Vigil: Besides, I care 005:01,088[E ]| not for eating in such base company. 005:01,088[X ]| Follow, follow, follow ~~ 005:01,088[C ]| D'hear that noise? The remaining Rogues have rais'd the 005:01,088[C ]| Mobile, and are coming upon us. 005:01,088[E ]| Oh! let's flie ~~ flie ~~ What will become of me? 005:01,088[B ]| Let's to the Church, and give the Rogues the Go-by. 005:01,088[A ]| Come on, since 'tis my time, and I have promis'd the Governour, 005:01,088[A ]| I'll go ~~ You had best stay, Sirra, and be taken. 005:01,088[E ]| No: Now I must go to the Church whither I will or no. Away, 005:01,088[E ]| away, flie! 005:01,088[' ]| <\Enter Two Shepherds with a great Rabble.\> 005:01,088[X ]| Here they went; follow, follow ~~ 005:01,088[' ]| <\Exeunt omnes.\> 005:02,088[' ]| 005:02;088[' ]| 005:02;088[' ]| <\Don*Francisco's, Leonora's, Flora's, Maria's\ Brothers, and others,> 005:02;088[' ]| 005:02;088[' ]| <\Enter\ Don*John, Don*Antonio, Don*Lopez, Jacomo.> 005:02;088[E ]| Good Sir, let's go no farther; look what horrid Attendants are 005:02;088[E ]| here. This wicked Ghost has no good meaning in him. 005:02;088[A ]| He resolves to treat us in State; I think he has robb'd all the 005:02;088[A ]| Graves hereabouts of their Dead, to wait upon us. 005:02;088[B ]| I see no Entertainment prepar'd. 005:02;088[C ]| He has had the manners to light off his Horse, and entertain 005:02;088[C ]| us. 005:02;088[A ]| He would not sure be so ill bred, to make us wait on him on 005:02;088[A ]| foot. 005:02;089[E ]| Pox on his Breeding, I shall dye with fear; I had as good have 005:02;089[E ]| been taken and hang'd. What horror seizes me! 005:02;089[A ]| Well, Governour, you see we are as good as our words. 005:02;089[B ]| Where's your Collation? 005:02;089[C ]| Bid some of your Attendants give us some Wine. 005:02;089[' ]| <\Ghost descends.\> 005:02;089[W ]| Have you not yet thought on your lost conditon? 005:02;089[W ]| Here are the Ghosts of some whom you have murder'd, 005:02;089[W ]| That cry for vengeance on you ~~ 005:02;089[W ]| Repent, repent of all your horrid crimes: 005:02;089[W ]| Monsters, repent, or Hell will swallow you. 005:02;089[A ]| That's my Old man's voice. D'y hear Old*Gentleman, you 005:02;089[A ]| talk idly. 005:02;089[E ]| I do repent, O spare me. I do repent of all my sins, but especially 005:02;089[E ]| of following this wicked Wretch. 005:02;089[' ]| <\Kneels.\> 005:02;089[B ]| Away, Fool. 005:02;089[' ]| 005:02;089[H ]| My bloud cries out upon thee, barbarous Wretch. 005:02;089[A ]| That's my Host Francisco, 'faith thou wert a good honest 005:02;089[A ]| Blockhead, that's the truth on't ~~ 005:02;089[K ]| Thou shalt not escape Vengeance for all thy crimes. 005:02;089[A ]| What Fool's that, I am not acquainted with her. 005:02;089[F ]| In time lay hold on mercy, and repent. 005:02;089[A ]| That was Leonora, a good natur'd silly Wench, something 005:02;089[A ]| too loving, that was all her fault. 005:02;089[G ]| Villain, this is the last moment of thy life. 005:02;089[G ]| And thou in flames eternally shalt howl. 005:02;089[A ]| Thou li'st, this is the young hot-headed Fool we kill'd at 005:02;089[A ]| Francisco's. Pox on him, he disappointed me in my design upon the 005:02;089[A ]| Daughters. Would thou wert alive again, that I might kill thee once more. 005:02;089[C ]| No more of this old foolish stuff; give us some Wine to 005:02;089[C ]| begin with. 005:02;089[B ]| Ay, Give us some Wine, Governour. 005:02;089[A ]| What, do you think to treat us thus? I offer'd you a better 005:02;089[A ]| entertainment. Prethee trouble us no more, but bid some of your 005:02;089[A ]| Attendants give us some Wine; I'll drink to you and all the good company. 005:02;089[W ]| Give 'em the Liquor they have most delighted in. 005:02;089[' ]| <\Two of the Ghosts go out, and bring four Glasses\> 005:02;089[' ]| <\full of bloud, then give 'em to\ D%*Joh% D%*Ant% D%*Lop%> 005:02;089[C ]| This is something. 005:02;089[A ]| This is civil. 005:02;089[C ]| I hope a good desert will follow. 005:02;089[' ]| <\Ghost offers a Glass to\ Jacomo, \who runs round\> 005:02;089[' ]| 005:02;090[E ]| Are you stark distracted? Will you drink of that Liquor? Oh 005:02;090[E ]| Oh! What d'you mean? Good sweet Ghost forbear your civility; Oh, 005:02;090[E ]| I am not dry, I thank you ~~ 005:02;090[A ]| Give it me. Hear, take it, Sirra. 005:02;090[E ]| By no means, Sir, I never drink between meals. Oh Sir ~~ 005:02;090[A ]| Take it, Rascal. 005:02;090[E ]| Oh Heav'ns! 005:02;090[A ]| Now, Governour, your Health; 'tis the reddest drink I ever 005:02;090[A ]| saw. 005:02;090[C ]| Hah! pah! 'tis bloud. 005:02;090[B ]| Pah! it is ~~ 005:02;090[E ]| Oh! I'll have none of it. 005:02;090[' ]| <\They throw the Glasses down.\> 005:02;090[A ]| 'Sdeath do you mean to affront us? 005:02;090[W ]| 'Tis fit for such bloud-thirsty Wretches. 005:02;090[A ]| Do you upbraid me with my killing of you; I did it, and 005:02;090[A ]| would do it again: I'd fight with all your Family one by one; and 005:02;090[A ]| cut off root and branch to enjoy your Sister. But will you Treat us yet 005:02;090[A ]| no otherwise? 005:02;090[W ]| Yes, I will, ye impious Wretches. 005:02;090[' ]| <\A Flourish.\> 005:02;090[C ]| What's here? Musick to treat us with? 005:02;090[B ]| There is some pleasure in this. 005:02;090[' ]| 005:02;090[W ]| \Prepare, prepare, new Guests draw near,\ 005:02;090[W ]| \And on the brink of Hell appear.\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Kindle fresh Flames of Sulphur there.\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Assemble all ye Fiends,\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Wait for the dreadful ends\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Of impious Men, who far excel\ 005:02;090[W ]| \All th' Inhabitants of Hell.\ 005:02;090[' ]| 005:02;090[X ]| \~~ Let 'em come, Let 'em come,\ 005:02;090[X ]| \To an eternal dreadful Doom,\ 005:02;090[X ]| \Let 'em come, Let 'em come.\ 005:02;090[W ]| \In mischiefs they have all the damn'd out-done;\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Here they shall weep, and shall unpiti'd groan,\ 005:02;090[W ]| \Here they shall howl, and make eternal moan.\ 005:02;090[W ]| \By Bloud and Lust they have deserv'd so well,\ 005:02;090[W ]| \That they shall feel the hottest flames of Hell.\ 005:02;090[W ]| \In vain they shall here their past mischiefs bewail,\ 005:02;090[W ]| \In exquisite torments that never shall fail.\ 005:02;091[W ]| \Eternal Darkness they shall find,\ 005:02;091[W ]| \And them eternal Chains shall bind.\ 005:02;091[W ]| \To infinite pain of sense and mind.\ 005:02;091[' ]| 005:02;091[X ]| \~~ Let 'em come, Let 'em come,\ 005:02;091[X ]| \To an eternal dreadful Doom,\ 005:02;091[X ]| \Let 'em come, Let 'em come.\ 005:02;091[W ]| Will you not relent and feel remorse? 005:02;091[A ]| Cou'dst thou bestow another heart on me, I might; but with 005:02;091[A ]| this heart I have, I cannot. 005:02;091[C ]| These things are prodigious. 005:02;091[B ]| I have a kind of grudging to relent, but something holds me 005:02;091[B ]| back. 005:02;091[C ]| If we could, 'tis now too late; I will not. 005:02;091[B ]| We defie thee. 005:02;091[W ]| Perish ye impious Wretches, go and find. 005:02;091[W ]| The punishments laid up in store for you. 005:02;091[' ]| <\It Thunders,\ Don*Lopez \and\ Don*Antonio> 005:02;091[' ]| <\are swallowed up.\> 005:02;091[W ]| Behold their dreadful Fates, and know, that thy last moment's come. 005:02;091[A ]| Think not to fright me, foolish Ghost; I'll break your Marble 005:02;091[A ]| body in pieces, and pull down your Horse. 005:02;091[E ]| If fear has left me my strength, I'll steal away. 005:02;091[' ]| <\Exit.\> 005:02;091[A ]| These things I see with wonder, but no fear. 005:02;091[A ]| Were all the Elements to be confounded, 005:02;091[A ]| And shuffl'd all into their former Chaos; 005:02;091[A ]| Were Seas of Sulphur flaming round about me, 005:02;091[A ]| And all Mankind roaring within those fires, 005:02;091[A ]| I could not fear or feel the least remorse. 005:02;091[A ]| To the last instant I would dare thy power. 005:02;091[A ]| Here I stand firm, and all thy threats contemn; 005:02;091[A ]| Thy Murderer stands here, now do thy worst. 005:02;091[' ]| <\It Thunders and Lightens, Devils descend\> 005:02;091[' ]| <\and sink with\ Don*John, \who is cover'd\> 005:02;091[' ]| <\with a Cloud of fire as he sinks.\> 005:02;091[W ]| Thus perish all 005:02;091[W ]| Those men, who by their words and actions dare, 005:02;091[W ]| Against the will and power of Heav'n declare. 005:02;091[' ]| <\Scene shuts.\> 101:00;092[' ]| 101:00;092[' ]| 101:00;092[E ]| \Through all the Perils of the Play I've run,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \But know not how your fury I may shun;\ 101:00;092[E ]| \I'm in new dangers now to be undone ~~ \ 101:00;092[E ]| \I had but one fierce Master there,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \But I have many cruel Tyrants here.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Who do most bloudily my life pursue;\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Who takes my Livelihood, may take that too.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \'Gainst little Players you great factions raise,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Make Solemn Leagues and Cov'nants against Plays.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \We, who by no Allies assisted are,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Against the Great Confederates must make War.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \You need not strive our Province to o'r-run,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \By our own stratagems we are undone.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \We've laid out all our Pains, nay Wealth for you,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \And yet, hard-hearted men, all will not do.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \'Tis not your Judgments sway, for you can be\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Pleas'd with damn'd Plays (as heart can wish to see)\ 101:00;092[E ]| \'Ounds, we do what we can, what wou'd you more?\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Why do you come, and rant, and damn, and roar?\ 101:00;092[E ]| \'Sdeath, what a Devil would you have us do?\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Each take a Prison, and there humbly sue,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Angling for single Money with a Shoo.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \What, will you be\ Don*Johns? \have you no remorse?\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Farewell then, bloudy men, and take your course.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Yet stay ~~ \ 101:00;092[E ]| \If you'll be civil, we will treat of Peace,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \And the Articles o'th' Treaty shall be these.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \"First, to the men of Wit we all submit;\ 101:00;092[E ]| \The rest shall swagger too within the Pit,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \And may roar out their little or no Wit.\ 101:00;092[E ]| \But do not swear so loud to fright the City,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \Who neither care for wicked men, nor witty;\ 101:00;092[E ]| \They start at ills they do not like to do,\ 101:00;092[E ]| \But shall in Shops be wickeder than you.\ 101:00;093[E ]| \Next you'll no more be troubl'd with Machines.\ 101:00;093[E ]| Item, \you shall appear behind our Scenes,\ 101:00;093[E ]| \And there make love with the sweet chink of\ Guinnies, 101:00;093[E ]| \The unresisted Eloquence of Ninnies.\ 101:00;093[E ]| \Some of our Women shall be kind to you,\ 101:00;093[E ]| \And promise free ingress and egress too.\ 101:00;093[E ]| \But if the Faces which we have w'on't do,\ 101:00;093[E ]| \We will find out some of Sixteen for you.\ 101:00;093[E ]| \We will be civil when nought else will win ye;\ 101:00;093[E ]| \We will new bait our Trap, and that will bring ye.\ 101:00;093[E ]| \Come, faith, let all old breaches now be heal'd,\ 101:00;093[E ]| \And the said Articles shall be Sign'd and Seal'd.\ 101:00;093[' ]|