- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Volpone; Or, The Fox, by Ben Jonson
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- Title: Volpone; Or, The Fox
- Author: Ben Jonson
- Release Date: May, 2003 [Etext #4039]
- Posting Date: February 16, 2010
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VOLPONE; OR, THE FOX ***
- Produced by Amy E Zelmer, Robert Prince, Sue Asscher
- VOLPONE; OR, THE FOX
- By Ben Jonson
- INTRODUCTION
- The greatest of English dramatists except Shakespeare, the first
- literary dictator and poet-laureate, a writer of verse, prose, satire,
- and criticism who most potently of all the men of his time affected the
- subsequent course of English letters: such was Ben Jonson, and as such
- his strong personality assumes an interest to us almost unparalleled, at
- least in his age.
- Ben Jonson came of the stock that was centuries after to give to the
- world Thomas Carlyle; for Jonson's grandfather was of Annandale, over
- the Solway, whence he migrated to England. Jonson's father lost his
- estate under Queen Mary, "having been cast into prison and forfeited."
- He entered the church, but died a month before his illustrious son was
- born, leaving his widow and child in poverty. Jonson's birthplace was
- Westminster, and the time of his birth early in 1573. He was thus nearly
- ten years Shakespeare's junior, and less well off, if a trifle better
- born. But Jonson did not profit even by this slight advantage. His
- mother married beneath her, a wright or bricklayer, and Jonson was for a
- time apprenticed to the trade. As a youth he attracted the attention of
- the famous antiquary, William Camden, then usher at Westminster School,
- and there the poet laid the solid foundations of his classical learning.
- Jonson always held Camden in veneration, acknowledging that to him he
- owed,
- "All that I am in arts, all that I know;"
- and dedicating his first dramatic success, "Every Man in His Humour,"
- to him. It is doubtful whether Jonson ever went to either university,
- though Fuller says that he was "statutably admitted into St. John's
- College, Cambridge." He tells us that he took no degree, but was later
- "Master of Arts in both the universities, by their favour, not his
- study." When a mere youth Jonson enlisted as a soldier, trailing his
- pike in Flanders in the protracted wars of William the Silent against
- the Spanish. Jonson was a large and raw-boned lad; he became by his
- own account in time exceedingly bulky. In chat with his friend William
- Drummond of Hawthornden, Jonson told how "in his service in the Low
- Countries he had, in the face of both the camps, killed an enemy, and
- taken opima spolia from him;" and how "since his coming to England,
- being appealed to the fields, he had killed his adversary which had hurt
- him in the arm and whose sword was ten inches longer than his." Jonson's
- reach may have made up for the lack of his sword; certainly his prowess
- lost nothing in the telling. Obviously Jonson was brave, combative, and
- not averse to talking of himself and his doings.
- In 1592, Jonson returned from abroad penniless. Soon after he married,
- almost as early and quite as imprudently as Shakespeare. He told
- Drummond curtly that "his wife was a shrew, yet honest"; for some
- years he lived apart from her in the household of Lord Albany. Yet two
- touching epitaphs among Jonson's "Epigrams," "On my first daughter," and
- "On my first son," attest the warmth of the poet's family affections.
- The daughter died in infancy, the son of the plague; another son grew up
- to manhood little credit to his father whom he survived. We know nothing
- beyond this of Jonson's domestic life.
- How soon Jonson drifted into what we now call grandly "the theatrical
- profession" we do not know. In 1593, Marlowe made his tragic exit from
- life, and Greene, Shakespeare's other rival on the popular stage,
- had preceded Marlowe in an equally miserable death the year before.
- Shakespeare already had the running to himself. Jonson appears first in
- the employment of Philip Henslowe, the exploiter of several troupes of
- players, manager, and father-in-law of the famous actor, Edward Alleyn.
- From entries in "Henslowe's Diary," a species of theatrical account book
- which has been handed down to us, we know that Jonson was connected with
- the Admiral's men; for he borrowed 4 pounds of Henslowe, July 28, 1597,
- paying back 3s. 9d. on the same day on account of his "share" (in what
- is not altogether clear); while later, on December 3, of the same year,
- Henslowe advanced 20s. to him "upon a book which he showed the plot unto
- the company which he promised to deliver unto the company at Christmas
- next." In the next August Jonson was in collaboration with Chettle and
- Porter in a play called "Hot Anger Soon Cold." All this points to an
- association with Henslowe of some duration, as no mere tyro would be
- thus paid in advance upon mere promise. From allusions in Dekker's play,
- "Satiromastix," it appears that Jonson, like Shakespeare, began life as
- an actor, and that he "ambled in a leather pitch by a play-wagon" taking
- at one time the part of Hieronimo in Kyd's famous play, "The Spanish
- Tragedy." By the beginning of 1598, Jonson, though still in needy
- circumstances, had begun to receive recognition. Francis Meres--well
- known for his "Comparative Discourse of our English Poets with the
- Greek, Latin, and Italian Poets," printed in 1598, and for his mention
- therein of a dozen plays of Shakespeare by title--accords to Ben Jonson
- a place as one of "our best in tragedy," a matter of some surprise, as
- no known tragedy of Jonson from so early a date has come down to us.
- That Jonson was at work on tragedy, however, is proved by the entries in
- Henslowe of at least three tragedies, now lost, in which he had a
- hand. These are "Page of Plymouth," "King Robert II. of Scotland,"
- and "Richard Crookback." But all of these came later, on his return to
- Henslowe, and range from August 1599 to June 1602.
- Returning to the autumn of 1598, an event now happened to sever for
- a time Jonson's relations with Henslowe. In a letter to Alleyn, dated
- September 26 of that year, Henslowe writes: "I have lost one of my
- company that hurteth me greatly; that is Gabriel [Spencer], for he is
- slain in Hogsden fields by the hands of Benjamin Jonson, bricklayer."
- The last word is perhaps Henslowe's thrust at Jonson in his displeasure
- rather than a designation of his actual continuance at his trade up to
- this time. It is fair to Jonson to remark however, that his adversary
- appears to have been a notorious fire-eater who had shortly before
- killed one Feeke in a similar squabble. Duelling was a frequent
- occurrence of the time among gentlemen and the nobility; it was an
- impudent breach of the peace on the part of a player. This duel is the
- one which Jonson described years after to Drummond, and for it Jonson
- was duly arraigned at Old Bailey, tried, and convicted. He was sent to
- prison and such goods and chattels as he had "were forfeited." It is
- a thought to give one pause that, but for the ancient law permitting
- convicted felons to plead, as it was called, the benefit of clergy,
- Jonson might have been hanged for this deed. The circumstance that the
- poet could read and write saved him; and he received only a brand of the
- letter "T," for Tyburn, on his left thumb. While in jail Jonson became a
- Roman Catholic; but he returned to the faith of the Church of England a
- dozen years later.
- On his release, in disgrace with Henslowe and his former associates,
- Jonson offered his services as a playwright to Henslowe's rivals,
- the Lord Chamberlain's company, in which Shakespeare was a prominent
- shareholder. A tradition of long standing, though not susceptible
- of proof in a court of law, narrates that Jonson had submitted the
- manuscript of "Every Man in His Humour" to the Chamberlain's men and had
- received from the company a refusal; that Shakespeare called him back,
- read the play himself, and at once accepted it. Whether this story is
- true or not, certain it is that "Every Man in His Humour" was accepted
- by Shakespeare's company and acted for the first time in 1598, with
- Shakespeare taking a part. The evidence of this is contained in the list
- of actors prefixed to the comedy in the folio of Jonson's works, 1616.
- But it is a mistake to infer, because Shakespeare's name stands first
- in the list of actors and the elder Kno'well first in the dramatis
- personae, that Shakespeare took that particular part. The order of a
- list of Elizabethan players was generally that of their importance or
- priority as shareholders in the company and seldom if ever corresponded
- to the list of characters.
- "Every Man in His Humour" was an immediate success, and with it Jonson's
- reputation as one of the leading dramatists of his time was established
- once and for all. This could have been by no means Jonson's earliest
- comedy, and we have just learned that he was already reputed one of "our
- best in tragedy." Indeed, one of Jonson's extant comedies, "The Case
- is Altered," but one never claimed by him or published as his, must
- certainly have preceded "Every Man in His Humour" on the stage. The
- former play may be described as a comedy modelled on the Latin plays of
- Plautus. (It combines, in fact, situations derived from the "Captivi"
- and the "Aulularia" of that dramatist). But the pretty story of the
- beggar-maiden, Rachel, and her suitors, Jonson found, not among the
- classics, but in the ideals of romantic love which Shakespeare had
- already popularised on the stage. Jonson never again produced so fresh
- and lovable a feminine personage as Rachel, although in other respects
- "The Case is Altered" is not a conspicuous play, and, save for the
- satirising of Antony Munday in the person of Antonio Balladino and
- Gabriel Harvey as well, is perhaps the least characteristic of the
- comedies of Jonson.
- "Every Man in His Humour," probably first acted late in the summer of
- 1598 and at the Curtain, is commonly regarded as an epoch-making play;
- and this view is not unjustified. As to plot, it tells little more than
- how an intercepted letter enabled a father to follow his supposedly
- studious son to London, and there observe his life with the gallants of
- the time. The real quality of this comedy is in its personages and in
- the theory upon which they are conceived. Ben Jonson had theories about
- poetry and the drama, and he was neither chary in talking of them nor in
- experimenting with them in his plays. This makes Jonson, like Dryden
- in his time, and Wordsworth much later, an author to reckon with;
- particularly when we remember that many of Jonson's notions came for
- a time definitely to prevail and to modify the whole trend of English
- poetry. First of all Jonson was a classicist, that is, he believed in
- restraint and precedent in art in opposition to the prevalent ungoverned
- and irresponsible Renaissance spirit. Jonson believed that there was a
- professional way of doing things which might be reached by a study of
- the best examples, and he found these examples for the most part among
- the ancients. To confine our attention to the drama, Jonson objected to
- the amateurishness and haphazard nature of many contemporary plays, and
- set himself to do something different; and the first and most striking
- thing that he evolved was his conception and practice of the comedy of
- humours.
- As Jonson has been much misrepresented in this matter, let us quote his
- own words as to "humour." A humour, according to Jonson, was a bias of
- disposition, a warp, so to speak, in character by which
- "Some one peculiar quality
- Doth so possess a man, that it doth draw
- All his affects, his spirits, and his powers,
- In their confluctions, all to run one way."
- But continuing, Jonson is careful to add:
- "But that a rook by wearing a pied feather,
- The cable hat-band, or the three-piled ruff,
- A yard of shoe-tie, or the Switzers knot
- On his French garters, should affect a humour!
- O, it is more than most ridiculous."
- Jonson's comedy of humours, in a word, conceived of stage personages
- on the basis of a ruling trait or passion (a notable simplification
- of actual life be it observed in passing); and, placing these typified
- traits in juxtaposition in their conflict and contrast, struck the
- spark of comedy. Downright, as his name indicates, is "a plain squire";
- Bobadill's humour is that of the braggart who is incidentally, and with
- delightfully comic effect, a coward; Brainworm's humour is the finding
- out of things to the end of fooling everybody: of course he is fooled
- in the end himself. But it was not Jonson's theories alone that made the
- success of "Every Man in His Humour." The play is admirably written
- and each character is vividly conceived, and with a firm touch based on
- observation of the men of the London of the day. Jonson was neither in
- this, his first great comedy (nor in any other play that he wrote),
- a supine classicist, urging that English drama return to a slavish
- adherence to classical conditions. He says as to the laws of the old
- comedy (meaning by "laws," such matters as the unities of time and place
- and the use of chorus): "I see not then, but we should enjoy the same
- licence, or free power to illustrate and heighten our invention as they
- [the ancients] did; and not be tied to those strict and regular forms
- which the niceness of a few, who are nothing but form, would thrust upon
- us." "Every Man in His Humour" is written in prose, a novel practice
- which Jonson had of his predecessor in comedy, John Lyly. Even the word
- "humour" seems to have been employed in the Jonsonian sense by Chapman
- before Jonson's use of it. Indeed, the comedy of humours itself is only
- a heightened variety of the comedy of manners which represents life,
- viewed at a satirical angle, and is the oldest and most persistent
- species of comedy in the language. None the less, Jonson's comedy
- merited its immediate success and marked out a definite course in which
- comedy long continued to run. To mention only Shakespeare's Falstaff
- and his rout, Bardolph, Pistol, Dame Quickly, and the rest, whether in
- "Henry IV." or in "The Merry Wives of Windsor," all are conceived in
- the spirit of humours. So are the captains, Welsh, Scotch, and Irish
- of "Henry V.," and Malvolio especially later; though Shakespeare never
- employed the method of humours for an important personage. It was not
- Jonson's fault that many of his successors did precisely the thing
- that he had reprobated, that is, degrade "the humour: into an oddity of
- speech, an eccentricity of manner, of dress, or cut of beard. There was
- an anonymous play called "Every Woman in Her Humour." Chapman wrote "A
- Humourous Day's Mirth," Day, "Humour Out of Breath," Fletcher later,
- "The Humourous Lieutenant," and Jonson, besides "Every Man Out of His
- Humour," returned to the title in closing the cycle of his comedies in
- "The Magnetic Lady or Humours Reconciled."
- With the performance of "Every Man Out of His Humour" in 1599, by
- Shakespeare's company once more at the Globe, we turn a new page in
- Jonson's career. Despite his many real virtues, if there is one feature
- more than any other that distinguishes Jonson, it is his arrogance; and
- to this may be added his self-righteousness, especially under criticism
- or satire. "Every Man Out of His Humour" is the first of three "comical
- satires" which Jonson contributed to what Dekker called the poetomachia
- or war of the theatres as recent critics have named it. This play as a
- fabric of plot is a very slight affair; but as a satirical picture
- of the manners of the time, proceeding by means of vivid caricature,
- couched in witty and brilliant dialogue and sustained by that righteous
- indignation which must lie at the heart of all true satire--as a
- realisation, in short, of the classical ideal of comedy--there had been
- nothing like Jonson's comedy since the days of Aristophanes. "Every Man
- in His Humour," like the two plays that follow it, contains two kinds
- of attack, the critical or generally satiric, levelled at abuses
- and corruptions in the abstract; and the personal, in which specific
- application is made of all this in the lampooning of poets and others,
- Jonson's contemporaries. The method of personal attack by actual
- caricature of a person on the stage is almost as old as the drama.
- Aristophanes so lampooned Euripides in "The Acharnians" and Socrates in
- "The Clouds," to mention no other examples; and in English drama this
- kind of thing is alluded to again and again. What Jonson really did,
- was to raise the dramatic lampoon to an art, and make out of a casual
- burlesque and bit of mimicry a dramatic satire of literary pretensions
- and permanency. With the arrogant attitude mentioned above and his
- uncommon eloquence in scorn, vituperation, and invective, it is no
- wonder that Jonson soon involved himself in literary and even personal
- quarrels with his fellow-authors. The circumstances of the origin of
- this 'poetomachia' are far from clear, and those who have written on the
- topic, except of late, have not helped to make them clearer. The origin
- of the "war" has been referred to satirical references, apparently to
- Jonson, contained in "The Scourge of Villainy," a satire in regular form
- after the manner of the ancients by John Marston, a fellow playwright,
- subsequent friend and collaborator of Jonson's. On the other hand,
- epigrams of Jonson have been discovered (49, 68, and 100) variously
- charging "playwright" (reasonably identified with Marston) with
- scurrility, cowardice, and plagiarism; though the dates of the epigrams
- cannot be ascertained with certainty. Jonson's own statement of the
- matter to Drummond runs: "He had many quarrels with Marston, beat
- him, and took his pistol from him, wrote his "Poetaster" on him; the
- beginning[s] of them were that Marston represented him on the stage."*
- * The best account of this whole subject is to be
- found in the edition of "Poetaster" and "Satiromastrix" by
- J. H. Penniman in "Belles Lettres Series" shortly to appear.
- See also his earlier work, "The War of the Theatres," 1892,
- and the excellent contributions to the subject by H. C. Hart
- in "Notes and Queries," and in his edition of Jonson, 1906.
- Here at least we are on certain ground; and the principals of the
- quarrel are known. "Histriomastix," a play revised by Marston in 1598,
- has been regarded as the one in which Jonson was thus "represented on
- the stage"; although the personage in question, Chrisogonus, a poet,
- satirist, and translator, poor but proud, and contemptuous of the common
- herd, seems rather a complimentary portrait of Jonson than a caricature.
- As to the personages actually ridiculed in "Every Man Out of His
- Humour," Carlo Buffone was formerly thought certainly to be Marston,
- as he was described as "a public, scurrilous, and profane jester," and
- elsewhere as the "grand scourge or second untruss [that is, satirist], of
- the time" (Joseph Hall being by his own boast the first, and Marston's
- work being entitled "The Scourge of Villainy"). Apparently we must now
- prefer for Carlo a notorious character named Charles Chester, of whom
- gossipy and inaccurate Aubrey relates that he was "a bold impertinent
- fellow... a perpetual talker and made a noise like a drum in a room. So
- one time at a tavern Sir Walter Raleigh beats him and seals up his mouth
- (that is his upper and nether beard) with hard wax. From him Ben Jonson
- takes his Carlo Buffone ['i.e.', jester] in "Every Man in His Humour"
- ['sic']." Is it conceivable that after all Jonson was ridiculing
- Marston, and that the point of the satire consisted in an intentional
- confusion of "the grand scourge or second untruss" with "the scurrilous
- and profane" Chester?
- We have digressed into detail in this particular case to exemplify the
- difficulties of criticism in its attempts to identify the allusions in
- these forgotten quarrels. We are on sounder ground of fact in recording
- other manifestations of Jonson's enmity. In "The Case is Altered" there
- is clear ridicule in the character Antonio Balladino of Anthony Munday,
- pageant-poet of the city, translator of romances and playwright as well.
- In "Every Man in His Humour" there is certainly a caricature of Samuel
- Daniel, accepted poet of the court, sonneteer, and companion of men of
- fashion. These men held recognised positions to which Jonson felt his
- talents better entitled him; they were hence to him his natural enemies.
- It seems almost certain that he pursued both in the personages of his
- satire through "Every Man Out of His Humour," and "Cynthia's Revels,"
- Daniel under the characters Fastidious Brisk and Hedon, Munday as
- Puntarvolo and Amorphus; but in these last we venture on quagmire once
- more. Jonson's literary rivalry of Daniel is traceable again and again,
- in the entertainments that welcomed King James on his way to London, in
- the masques at court, and in the pastoral drama. As to Jonson's personal
- ambitions with respect to these two men, it is notable that he became,
- not pageant-poet, but chronologer to the City of London; and that, on
- the accession of the new king, he came soon to triumph over Daniel as
- the accepted entertainer of royalty.
- "Cynthia's Revels," the second "comical satire," was acted in 1600, and,
- as a play, is even more lengthy, elaborate, and impossible than "Every
- Man Out of His Humour." Here personal satire seems to have absorbed
- everything, and while much of the caricature is admirable, especially in
- the detail of witty and trenchantly satirical dialogue, the central idea
- of a fountain of self-love is not very well carried out, and the persons
- revert at times to abstractions, the action to allegory. It adds to our
- wonder that this difficult drama should have been acted by the Children
- of Queen Elizabeth's Chapel, among them Nathaniel Field with whom Jonson
- read Horace and Martial, and whom he taught later how to make plays.
- Another of these precocious little actors was Salathiel Pavy, who died
- before he was thirteen, already famed for taking the parts of old men.
- Him Jonson immortalised in one of the sweetest of his epitaphs. An
- interesting sidelight is this on the character of this redoubtable
- and rugged satirist, that he should thus have befriended and tenderly
- remembered these little theatrical waifs, some of whom (as we know) had
- been literally kidnapped to be pressed into the service of the theatre
- and whipped to the conning of their difficult parts. To the caricature
- of Daniel and Munday in "Cynthia's Revels" must be added Anaides
- (impudence), here assuredly Marston, and Asotus (the prodigal),
- interpreted as Lodge or, more perilously, Raleigh. Crites, like
- Asper-Macilente in "Every Man Out of His Humour," is Jonson's
- self-complaisant portrait of himself, the just, wholly admirable, and
- judicious scholar, holding his head high above the pack of the yelping
- curs of envy and detraction, but careless of their puny attacks on his
- perfections with only too mindful a neglect.
- The third and last of the "comical satires" is "Poetaster," acted, once
- more, by the Children of the Chapel in 1601, and Jonson's only avowed
- contribution to the fray. According to the author's own account, this
- play was written in fifteen weeks on a report that his enemies had
- entrusted to Dekker the preparation of "Satiromastix, the Untrussing of
- the Humorous Poet," a dramatic attack upon himself. In this attempt to
- forestall his enemies Jonson succeeded, and "Poetaster" was an immediate
- and deserved success. While hardly more closely knit in structure than
- its earlier companion pieces, "Poetaster" is planned to lead up to
- the ludicrous final scene in which, after a device borrowed from the
- "Lexiphanes" of Lucian, the offending poetaster, Marston-Crispinus, is
- made to throw up the difficult words with which he had overburdened his
- stomach as well as overlarded his vocabulary. In the end Crispinus with
- his fellow, Dekker-Demetrius, is bound over to keep the peace and never
- thenceforward "malign, traduce, or detract the person or writings of
- Quintus Horatius Flaccus [Jonson] or any other eminent man transcending
- you in merit." One of the most diverting personages in Jonson's comedy
- is Captain Tucca. "His peculiarity" has been well described by Ward as
- "a buoyant blackguardism which recovers itself instantaneously from the
- most complete exposure, and a picturesqueness of speech like that of a
- walking dictionary of slang."
- It was this character, Captain Tucca, that Dekker hit upon in his reply,
- "Satiromastix," and he amplified him, turning his abusive vocabulary
- back upon Jonson and adding "an immodesty to his dialogue that did not
- enter into Jonson's conception." It has been held, altogether plausibly,
- that when Dekker was engaged professionally, so to speak, to write
- a dramatic reply to Jonson, he was at work on a species of chronicle
- history, dealing with the story of Walter Terill in the reign of William
- Rufus. This he hurriedly adapted to include the satirical characters
- suggested by "Poetaster," and fashioned to convey the satire of his
- reply. The absurdity of placing Horace in the court of a Norman king is
- the result. But Dekker's play is not without its palpable hits at the
- arrogance, the literary pride, and self-righteousness of Jonson-Horace,
- whose "ningle" or pal, the absurd Asinius Bubo, has recently been shown
- to figure forth, in all likelihood, Jonson's friend, the poet Drayton.
- Slight and hastily adapted as is "Satiromastix," especially in a
- comparison with the better wrought and more significant satire of
- "Poetaster," the town awarded the palm to Dekker, not to Jonson; and
- Jonson gave over in consequence his practice of "comical satire." Though
- Jonson was cited to appear before the Lord Chief Justice to answer
- certain charges to the effect that he had attacked lawyers and soldiers
- in "Poetaster," nothing came of this complaint. It may be suspected that
- much of this furious clatter and give-and-take was pure playing to the
- gallery. The town was agog with the strife, and on no less an authority
- than Shakespeare ("Hamlet," ii. 2), we learn that the children's company
- (acting the plays of Jonson) did "so berattle the common stages... that
- many, wearing rapiers, are afraid of goose-quills, and dare scarce come
- thither."
- Several other plays have been thought to bear a greater or less part
- in the war of the theatres. Among them the most important is a college
- play, entitled "The Return from Parnassus," dating 1601-02. In it a
- much-quoted passage makes Burbage, as a character, declare: "Why here's
- our fellow Shakespeare puts them all down; aye and Ben Jonson, too. O
- that Ben Jonson is a pestilent fellow; he brought up Horace, giving the
- poets a pill, but our fellow Shakespeare hath given him a purge that
- made him bewray his credit." Was Shakespeare then concerned in this
- war of the stages? And what could have been the nature of this "purge"?
- Among several suggestions, "Troilus and Cressida" has been thought by
- some to be the play in which Shakespeare thus "put down" his friend,
- Jonson. A wiser interpretation finds the "purge" in "Satiromastix,"
- which, though not written by Shakespeare, was staged by his company,
- and therefore with his approval and under his direction as one of the
- leaders of that company.
- The last years of the reign of Elizabeth thus saw Jonson recognised as
- a dramatist second only to Shakespeare, and not second even to him as
- a dramatic satirist. But Jonson now turned his talents to new fields.
- Plays on subjects derived from classical story and myth had held the
- stage from the beginning of the drama, so that Shakespeare was making
- no new departure when he wrote his "Julius Caesar" about 1600. Therefore
- when Jonson staged "Sejanus," three years later and with Shakespeare's
- company once more, he was only following in the elder dramatist's
- footsteps. But Jonson's idea of a play on classical history, on the one
- hand, and Shakespeare's and the elder popular dramatists, on the other,
- were very different. Heywood some years before had put five straggling
- plays on the stage in quick succession, all derived from stories in Ovid
- and dramatised with little taste or discrimination. Shakespeare had
- a finer conception of form, but even he was contented to take all his
- ancient history from North's translation of Plutarch and dramatise his
- subject without further inquiry. Jonson was a scholar and a classical
- antiquarian. He reprobated this slipshod amateurishness, and wrote
- his "Sejanus" like a scholar, reading Tacitus, Suetonius, and
- other authorities, to be certain of his facts, his setting, and his
- atmosphere, and somewhat pedantically noting his authorities in the
- margin when he came to print. "Sejanus" is a tragedy of genuine dramatic
- power in which is told with discriminating taste the story of the
- haughty favourite of Tiberius with his tragical overthrow. Our drama
- presents no truer nor more painstaking representation of ancient
- Roman life than may be found in Jonson's "Sejanus" and "Catiline his
- Conspiracy," which followed in 1611. A passage in the address of the
- former play to the reader, in which Jonson refers to a collaboration
- in an earlier version, has led to the surmise that Shakespeare may have
- been that "worthier pen." There is no evidence to determine the matter.
- In 1605, we find Jonson in active collaboration with Chapman and Marston
- in the admirable comedy of London life entitled "Eastward Hoe." In
- the previous year, Marston had dedicated his "Malcontent," in terms
- of fervid admiration, to Jonson; so that the wounds of the war of the
- theatres must have been long since healed. Between Jonson and Chapman
- there was the kinship of similar scholarly ideals. The two continued
- friends throughout life. "Eastward Hoe" achieved the extraordinary
- popularity represented in a demand for three issues in one year. But
- this was not due entirely to the merits of the play. In its earliest
- version a passage which an irritable courtier conceived to be derogatory
- to his nation, the Scots, sent both Chapman and Jonson to jail; but the
- matter was soon patched up, for by this time Jonson had influence at
- court.
- With the accession of King James, Jonson began his long and successful
- career as a writer of masques. He wrote more masques than all his
- competitors together, and they are of an extraordinary variety
- and poetic excellence. Jonson did not invent the masque; for such
- premeditated devices to set and frame, so to speak, a court ball had
- been known and practised in varying degrees of elaboration long before
- his time. But Jonson gave dramatic value to the masque, especially in
- his invention of the antimasque, a comedy or farcical element of relief,
- entrusted to professional players or dancers. He enhanced, as well, the
- beauty and dignity of those portions of the masque in which noble lords
- and ladies took their parts to create, by their gorgeous costumes and
- artistic grouping and evolutions, a sumptuous show. On the mechanical
- and scenic side Jonson had an inventive and ingenious partner in
- Inigo Jones, the royal architect, who more than any one man raised
- the standard of stage representation in the England of his day. Jonson
- continued active in the service of the court in the writing of masques
- and other entertainments far into the reign of King Charles; but,
- towards the end, a quarrel with Jones embittered his life, and the two
- testy old men appear to have become not only a constant irritation to
- each other, but intolerable bores at court. In "Hymenaei," "The Masque
- of Queens," "Love Freed from Ignorance," "Lovers made Men," "Pleasure
- Reconciled to Virtue," and many more will be found Jonson's aptitude,
- his taste, his poetry and inventiveness in these by-forms of the drama;
- while in "The Masque of Christmas," and "The Gipsies Metamorphosed"
- especially, is discoverable that power of broad comedy which, at
- court as well as in the city, was not the least element of Jonson's
- contemporary popularity.
- But Jonson had by no means given up the popular stage when he turned to
- the amusement of King James. In 1605 "Volpone" was produced, "The Silent
- Woman" in 1609, "The Alchemist" in the following year. These comedies,
- with "Bartholomew Fair," 1614, represent Jonson at his height, and for
- constructive cleverness, character successfully conceived in the manner
- of caricature, wit and brilliancy of dialogue, they stand alone in
- English drama. "Volpone, or the Fox," is, in a sense, a transition play
- from the dramatic satires of the war of the theatres to the purer comedy
- represented in the plays named above. Its subject is a struggle of
- wit applied to chicanery; for among its dramatis personae, from the
- villainous Fox himself, his rascally servant Mosca, Voltore (the
- vulture), Corbaccio and Corvino (the big and the little raven), to Sir
- Politic Would-be and the rest, there is scarcely a virtuous character in
- the play. Question has been raised as to whether a story so forbidding
- can be considered a comedy, for, although the plot ends in the
- discomfiture and imprisonment of the most vicious, it involves no mortal
- catastrophe. But Jonson was on sound historical ground, for "Volpone"
- is conceived far more logically on the lines of the ancients' theory
- of comedy than was ever the romantic drama of Shakespeare, however
- repulsive we may find a philosophy of life that facilely divides the
- world into the rogues and their dupes, and, identifying brains
- with roguery and innocence with folly, admires the former while
- inconsistently punishing them.
- "The Silent Woman" is a gigantic farce of the most ingenious
- construction. The whole comedy hinges on a huge joke, played by a
- heartless nephew on his misanthropic uncle, who is induced to take to
- himself a wife, young, fair, and warranted silent, but who, in the end,
- turns out neither silent nor a woman at all. In "The Alchemist," again,
- we have the utmost cleverness in construction, the whole fabric building
- climax on climax, witty, ingenious, and so plausibly presented that we
- forget its departures from the possibilities of life. In "The Alchemist"
- Jonson represented, none the less to the life, certain sharpers of
- the metropolis, revelling in their shrewdness and rascality and in the
- variety of the stupidity and wickedness of their victims. We may object
- to the fact that the only person in the play possessed of a scruple
- of honesty is discomfited, and that the greatest scoundrel of all is
- approved in the end and rewarded. The comedy is so admirably written and
- contrived, the personages stand out with such lifelike distinctness
- in their several kinds, and the whole is animated with such verve and
- resourcefulness that "The Alchemist" is a new marvel every time it is
- read. Lastly of this group comes the tremendous comedy, "Bartholomew
- Fair," less clear cut, less definite, and less structurally worthy
- of praise than its three predecessors, but full of the keenest and
- cleverest of satire and inventive to a degree beyond any English comedy
- save some other of Jonson's own. It is in "Bartholomew Fair" that we are
- presented to the immortal caricature of the Puritan, Zeal-in-the-Land
- Busy, and the Littlewits that group about him, and it is in this
- extraordinary comedy that the humour of Jonson, always open to this
- danger, loosens into the Rabelaisian mode that so delighted King James
- in "The Gipsies Metamorphosed." Another comedy of less merit is "The
- Devil is an Ass," acted in 1616. It was the failure of this play that
- caused Jonson to give over writing for the public stage for a period of
- nearly ten years.
- "Volpone" was laid as to scene in Venice. Whether because of the success
- of "Eastward Hoe" or for other reasons, the other three comedies declare
- in the words of the prologue to "The Alchemist":
- "Our scene is London, 'cause we would make known
- No country's mirth is better than our own."
- Indeed Jonson went further when he came to revise his plays for
- collected publication in his folio of 1616, he transferred the scene
- of "Every Man in His Humour" from Florence to London also, converting
- Signior Lorenzo di Pazzi to Old Kno'well, Prospero to Master Welborn,
- and Hesperida to Dame Kitely "dwelling i' the Old Jewry."
- In his comedies of London life, despite his trend towards caricature,
- Jonson has shown himself a genuine realist, drawing from the life about
- him with an experience and insight rare in any generation. A happy
- comparison has been suggested between Ben Jonson and Charles Dickens.
- Both were men of the people, lowly born and hardly bred. Each knew
- the London of his time as few men knew it; and each represented it
- intimately and in elaborate detail. Both men were at heart moralists,
- seeking the truth by the exaggerated methods of humour and caricature;
- perverse, even wrong-headed at times, but possessed of a true pathos and
- largeness of heart, and when all has been said--though the Elizabethan
- ran to satire, the Victorian to sentimentality--leaving the world better
- for the art that they practised in it.
- In 1616, the year of the death of Shakespeare, Jonson collected his
- plays, his poetry, and his masques for publication in a collective
- edition. This was an unusual thing at the time and had been attempted
- by no dramatist before Jonson. This volume published, in a carefully
- revised text, all the plays thus far mentioned, excepting "The Case is
- Altered," which Jonson did not acknowledge, "Bartholomew Fair," and "The
- Devil is an Ass," which was written too late. It included likewise a
- book of some hundred and thirty odd "Epigrams," in which form of brief
- and pungent writing Jonson was an acknowledged master; "The Forest," a
- smaller collection of lyric and occasional verse and some ten "Masques"
- and "Entertainments." In this same year Jonson was made poet laureate
- with a pension of one hundred marks a year. This, with his fees and
- returns from several noblemen, and the small earnings of his plays
- must have formed the bulk of his income. The poet appears to have done
- certain literary hack-work for others, as, for example, parts of the
- Punic Wars contributed to Raleigh's "History of the World." We know
- from a story, little to the credit of either, that Jonson accompanied
- Raleigh's son abroad in the capacity of a tutor. In 1618 Jonson was
- granted the reversion of the office of Master of the Revels, a post
- for which he was peculiarly fitted; but he did not live to enjoy its
- perquisites. Jonson was honoured with degrees by both universities,
- though when and under what circumstances is not known. It has been said
- that he narrowly escaped the honour of knighthood, which the satirists
- of the day averred King James was wont to lavish with an indiscriminate
- hand. Worse men were made knights in his day than worthy Ben Jonson.
- From 1616 to the close of the reign of King James, Jonson produced
- nothing for the stage. But he "prosecuted" what he calls "his wonted
- studies" with such assiduity that he became in reality, as by report,
- one of the most learned men of his time. Jonson's theory of authorship
- involved a wide acquaintance with books and "an ability," as he put it,
- "to convert the substance or riches of another poet to his own use."
- Accordingly Jonson read not only the Greek and Latin classics down to
- the lesser writers, but he acquainted himself especially with the Latin
- writings of his learned contemporaries, their prose as well as their
- poetry, their antiquities and curious lore as well as their more solid
- learning. Though a poor man, Jonson was an indefatigable collector of
- books. He told Drummond that "the Earl of Pembroke sent him 20 pounds
- every first day of the new year to buy new books." Unhappily, in 1623,
- his library was destroyed by fire, an accident serio-comically described
- in his witty poem, "An Execration upon Vulcan." Yet even now a book
- turns up from time to time in which is inscribed, in fair large Italian
- lettering, the name, Ben Jonson. With respect to Jonson's use of his
- material, Dryden said memorably of him: "[He] was not only a professed
- imitator of Horace, but a learned plagiary of all the others; you track
- him everywhere in their snow.... But he has done his robberies so openly
- that one sees he fears not to be taxed by any law. He invades authors
- like a monarch, and what would be theft in other poets is only victory
- in him." And yet it is but fair to say that Jonson prided himself, and
- justly, on his originality. In "Catiline," he not only uses Sallust's
- account of the conspiracy, but he models some of the speeches of Cicero
- on the Roman orator's actual words. In "Poetaster," he lifts a whole
- satire out of Horace and dramatises it effectively for his purposes. The
- sophist Libanius suggests the situation of "The Silent Woman"; a Latin
- comedy of Giordano Bruno, "Il Candelaio," the relation of the dupes
- and the sharpers in "The Alchemist," the "Mostellaria" of Plautus, its
- admirable opening scene. But Jonson commonly bettered his sources, and
- putting the stamp of his sovereignty on whatever bullion he borrowed
- made it thenceforward to all time current and his own.
- The lyric and especially the occasional poetry of Jonson has a peculiar
- merit. His theory demanded design and the perfection of literary finish.
- He was furthest from the rhapsodist and the careless singer of an
- idle day; and he believed that Apollo could only be worthily served in
- singing robes and laurel crowned. And yet many of Jonson's lyrics will
- live as long as the language. Who does not know "Queen and huntress,
- chaste and fair." "Drink to me only with thine eyes," or "Still to be
- neat, still to be dressed"? Beautiful in form, deft and graceful in
- expression, with not a word too much or one that bears not its part
- in the total effect, there is yet about the lyrics of Jonson a
- certain stiffness and formality, a suspicion that they were not quite
- spontaneous and unbidden, but that they were carved, so to speak,
- with disproportionate labour by a potent man of letters whose habitual
- thought is on greater things. It is for these reasons that Jonson is
- even better in the epigram and in occasional verse where rhetorical
- finish and pointed wit less interfere with the spontaneity and emotion
- which we usually associate with lyrical poetry. There are no such
- epitaphs as Ben Jonson's, witness the charming ones on his own children,
- on Salathiel Pavy, the child-actor, and many more; and this even though
- the rigid law of mine and thine must now restore to William Browne of
- Tavistock the famous lines beginning: "Underneath this sable hearse."
- Jonson is unsurpassed, too, in the difficult poetry of compliment,
- seldom falling into fulsome praise and disproportionate similitude, yet
- showing again and again a generous appreciation of worth in others, a
- discriminating taste and a generous personal regard. There was no man in
- England of his rank so well known and universally beloved as Ben Jonson.
- The list of his friends, of those to whom he had written verses, and
- those who had written verses to him, includes the name of every man of
- prominence in the England of King James. And the tone of many of these
- productions discloses an affectionate familiarity that speaks for the
- amiable personality and sound worth of the laureate. In 1619, growing
- unwieldy through inactivity, Jonson hit upon the heroic remedy of a
- journey afoot to Scotland. On his way thither and back he was hospitably
- received at the houses of many friends and by those to whom his friends
- had recommended him. When he arrived in Edinburgh, the burgesses met to
- grant him the freedom of the city, and Drummond, foremost of Scottish
- poets, was proud to entertain him for weeks as his guest at Hawthornden.
- Some of the noblest of Jonson's poems were inspired by friendship.
- Such is the fine "Ode to the memory of Sir Lucius Cary and Sir Henry
- Moryson," and that admirable piece of critical insight and filial
- affection, prefixed to the first Shakespeare folio, "To the memory of
- my beloved master, William Shakespeare, and what he hath left us," to
- mention only these. Nor can the earlier "Epode," beginning "Not to know
- vice at all," be matched in stately gravity and gnomic wisdom in its own
- wise and stately age.
- But if Jonson had deserted the stage after the publication of his folio
- and up to the end of the reign of King James, he was far from inactive;
- for year after year his inexhaustible inventiveness continued to
- contribute to the masquing and entertainment at court. In "The Golden
- Age Restored," Pallas turns the Iron Age with its attendant evils into
- statues which sink out of sight; in "Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue,"
- Atlas figures represented as an old man, his shoulders covered with
- snow, and Comus, "the god of cheer or the belly," is one of the
- characters, a circumstance which an imaginative boy of ten, named John
- Milton, was not to forget. "Pan's Anniversary," late in the reign
- of James, proclaimed that Jonson had not yet forgotten how to write
- exquisite lyrics, and "The Gipsies Metamorphosed" displayed the old
- drollery and broad humorous stroke still unimpaired and unmatchable.
- These, too, and the earlier years of Charles were the days of the Apollo
- Room of the Devil Tavern where Jonson presided, the absolute monarch of
- English literary Bohemia. We hear of a room blazoned about with Jonson's
- own judicious "Leges Convivales" in letters of gold, of a company made
- up of the choicest spirits of the time, devotedly attached to their
- veteran dictator, his reminiscences, opinions, affections, and enmities.
- And we hear, too, of valorous potations; but in the words of Herrick
- addressed to his master, Jonson, at the Devil Tavern, as at the Dog, the
- Triple Tun, and at the Mermaid,
- "We such clusters had
- As made us nobly wild, not mad,
- And yet each verse of thine
- Outdid the meat, outdid the frolic wine."
- But the patronage of the court failed in the days of King Charles,
- though Jonson was not without royal favours; and the old poet returned
- to the stage, producing, between 1625 and 1633, "The Staple of News,"
- "The New Inn," "The Magnetic Lady," and "The Tale of a Tub," the last
- doubtless revised from a much earlier comedy. None of these plays met
- with any marked success, although the scathing generalisation of Dryden
- that designated them "Jonson's dotages" is unfair to their genuine
- merits. Thus the idea of an office for the gathering, proper dressing,
- and promulgation of news (wild flight of the fancy in its time) was
- an excellent subject for satire on the existing absurdities among
- newsmongers; although as much can hardly be said for "The Magnetic
- Lady," who, in her bounty, draws to her personages of differing humours
- to reconcile them in the end according to the alternative title, or
- "Humours Reconciled." These last plays of the old dramatist revert to
- caricature and the hard lines of allegory; the moralist is more than
- ever present, the satire degenerates into personal lampoon, especially
- of his sometime friend, Inigo Jones, who appears unworthily to have used
- his influence at court against the broken-down old poet. And now disease
- claimed Jonson, and he was bedridden for months. He had succeeded
- Middleton in 1628 as Chronologer to the City of London, but lost the
- post for not fulfilling its duties. King Charles befriended him, and
- even commissioned him to write still for the entertainment of the court;
- and he was not without the sustaining hand of noble patrons and devoted
- friends among the younger poets who were proud to be "sealed of the
- tribe of Ben."
- Jonson died, August 6, 1637, and a second folio of his works, which
- he had been some time gathering, was printed in 1640, bearing in its
- various parts dates ranging from 1630 to 1642. It included all the plays
- mentioned in the foregoing paragraphs, excepting "The Case is Altered;"
- the masques, some fifteen, that date between 1617 and 1630; another
- collection of lyrics and occasional poetry called "Underwoods", including
- some further entertainments; a translation of "Horace's Art of Poetry"
- (also published in a vicesimo quarto in 1640), and certain fragments and
- ingatherings which the poet would hardly have included himself. These
- last comprise the fragment (less than seventy lines) of a tragedy called
- "Mortimer his Fall," and three acts of a pastoral drama of much beauty
- and poetic spirit, "The Sad Shepherd." There is also the exceedingly
- interesting "English Grammar" "made by Ben Jonson for the benefit of all
- strangers out of his observation of the English language now spoken and
- in use," in Latin and English; and "Timber, or Discoveries" "made upon
- men and matter as they have flowed out of his daily reading, or had
- their reflux to his peculiar notion of the times." The "Discoveries,"
- as it is usually called, is a commonplace book such as many literary
- men have kept, in which their reading was chronicled, passages that took
- their fancy translated or transcribed, and their passing opinions noted.
- Many passages of Jonson's "Discoveries" are literal translations from
- the authors he chanced to be reading, with the reference, noted or not,
- as the accident of the moment prescribed. At times he follows the line
- of Macchiavelli's argument as to the nature and conduct of princes; at
- others he clarifies his own conception of poetry and poets by recourse
- to Aristotle. He finds a choice paragraph on eloquence in Seneca the
- elder and applies it to his own recollection of Bacon's power as an
- orator; and another on facile and ready genius, and translates it,
- adapting it to his recollection of his fellow-playwright,
- Shakespeare. To call such passages--which Jonson never intended for
- publication--plagiarism, is to obscure the significance of words.
- To disparage his memory by citing them is a preposterous use of
- scholarship. Jonson's prose, both in his dramas, in the descriptive
- comments of his masques, and in the "Discoveries," is characterised by
- clarity and vigorous directness, nor is it wanting in a fine sense of
- form or in the subtler graces of diction.
- When Jonson died there was a project for a handsome monument to his
- memory. But the Civil War was at hand, and the project failed. A
- memorial, not insufficient, was carved on the stone covering his grave
- in one of the aisles of Westminster Abbey:
- "O rare Ben Jonson."
- FELIX E. SCHELLING.
- THE COLLEGE,
- PHILADELPHIA, U.S.A.
- The following is a complete list of his published works:--
- DRAMAS:
- Every Man in his Humour, 4to, 1601;
- The Case is Altered, 4to, 1609;
- Every Man out of his Humour, 4to, 1600;
- Cynthia's Revels, 4to, 1601;
- Poetaster, 4to, 1602;
- Sejanus, 4to, 1605;
- Eastward Ho (with Chapman and Marston), 4to, 1605;
- Volpone, 4to, 1607;
- Epicoene, or the Silent Woman, 4to, 1609 (?), fol., 1616;
- The Alchemist, 4to, 1612;
- Catiline, his Conspiracy, 4to, 1611;
- Bartholomew Fayre, 4to, 1614 (?), fol., 1631;
- The Divell is an Asse, fol., 1631;
- The Staple of Newes, fol., 1631;
- The New Sun, 8vo, 1631, fol., 1692;
- The Magnetic Lady, or Humours Reconcild, fol., 1640;
- A Tale of a Tub, fol., 1640;
- The Sad Shepherd, or a Tale of Robin Hood, fol., 1641;
- Mortimer his Fall (fragment), fol., 1640.
- To Jonson have also been attributed additions to Kyd's Jeronymo,
- and collaboration in The Widow with Fletcher and Middleton, and
- in the Bloody Brother with Fletcher.
- POEMS:
- Epigrams, The Forrest, Underwoods, published in fols., 1616, 1640;
- Selections: Execration against Vulcan, and Epigrams, 1640;
- G. Hor. Flaccus his art of Poetry, Englished by Ben Jonson, 1640;
- Leges Convivialis, fol., 1692.
- Other minor poems first appeared in Gifford's edition of Works.
- PROSE:
- Timber, or Discoveries made upon Men and Matter, fol., 1641;
- The English Grammar, made by Ben Jonson for the benefit of
- Strangers, fol., 1640.
- Masques and Entertainments were published in the early folios.
- WORKS:
- Fol., 1616, volume. 2, 1640 (1631-41);
- fol., 1692, 1716-19, 1729;
- edited by P. Whalley, 7 volumes., 1756;
- by Gifford (with Memoir), 9 volumes., 1816, 1846;
- re-edited by F. Cunningham, 3 volumes., 1871;
- in 9 volumes., 1875;
- by Barry Cornwall (with Memoir), 1838;
- by B. Nicholson (Mermaid Series), with Introduction by
- C. H. Herford, 1893, etc.;
- Nine Plays, 1904;
- ed. H. C. Hart (Standard Library), 1906, etc;
- Plays and Poems, with Introduction by H. Morley (Universal
- Library), 1885;
- Plays (7) and Poems (Newnes), 1905;
- Poems, with Memoir by H. Bennett (Carlton Classics), 1907;
- Masques and Entertainments, ed. by H. Morley, 1890.
- SELECTIONS:
- J. A. Symonds, with Biographical and Critical Essay,
- (Canterbury Poets), 1886;
- Grosart, Brave Translunary Things, 1895;
- Arber, Jonson Anthology, 1901;
- Underwoods, Cambridge University Press, 1905;
- Lyrics (Jonson, Beaumont and Fletcher), the Chap Books,
- No. 4, 1906;
- Songs (from Plays, Masques, etc.), with earliest known
- setting, Eragny Press, 1906.
- LIFE:
- See Memoirs affixed to Works;
- J. A. Symonds (English Worthies), 1886;
- Notes of Ben Jonson Conversations with Drummond of Hawthornden;
- Shakespeare Society, 1842;
- ed. with Introduction and Notes by P. Sidney, 1906;
- Swinburne, A Study of Ben Jonson, 1889.
- VOLPONE; OR, THE FOX
- By Ben Jonson
- TO THE MOST NOBLE AND MOST EQUAL SISTERS,
- THE TWO FAMOUS UNIVERSITIES,
- FOR THEIR LOVE AND ACCEPTANCE SHEWN TO HIS POEM IN THE PRESENTATION,
- BEN JONSON,
- THE GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGER,
- DEDICATES BOTH IT AND HIMSELF.
- Never, most equal Sisters, had any man a wit so presently excellent, as
- that it could raise itself; but there must come both matter, occasion,
- commenders, and favourers to it. If this be true, and that the fortune
- of all writers doth daily prove it, it behoves the careful to provide
- well towards these accidents; and, having acquired them, to preserve
- that part of reputation most tenderly, wherein the benefit of a friend
- is also defended. Hence is it, that I now render myself grateful, and am
- studious to justify the bounty of your act; to which, though your mere
- authority were satisfying, yet it being an age wherein poetry and the
- professors of it hear so ill on all sides, there will a reason be looked
- for in the subject. It is certain, nor can it with any forehead be
- opposed, that the too much license of poetasters in this time, hath much
- deformed their mistress; that, every day, their manifold and manifest
- ignorance doth stick unnatural reproaches upon her: but for their
- petulancy, it were an act of the greatest injustice, either to let
- the learned suffer, or so divine a skill (which indeed should not be
- attempted with unclean hands) to fall under the least contempt. For,
- if men will impartially, and not asquint, look toward the offices
- and function of a poet, they will easily conclude to themselves the
- impossibility of any man's being the good poet, without first being a
- good man. He that is said to be able to inform young men to all good
- disciplines, inflame grown men to all great virtues, keep old men in
- their best and supreme state, or, as they decline to childhood, recover
- them to their first strength; that comes forth the interpreter and
- arbiter of nature, a teacher of things divine no less than human, a
- master in manners; and can alone, or with a few, effect the business
- of mankind: this, I take him, is no subject for pride and ignorance
- to exercise their railing rhetoric upon. But it will here be hastily
- answered, that the writers of these days are other things; that not only
- their manners, but their natures, are inverted, and nothing remaining
- with them of the dignity of poet, but the abused name, which every
- scribe usurps; that now, especially in dramatic, or, as they term it,
- stage-poetry, nothing but ribaldry, profanation, blasphemy, all license
- of offence to God and man is practised. I dare not deny a great part of
- this, and am sorry I dare not, because in some men's abortive features
- (and would they had never boasted the light) it is over-true; but that
- all are embarked in this bold adventure for hell, is a most uncharitable
- thought, and, uttered, a more malicious slander. For my particular, I
- can, and from a most clear conscience, affirm, that I have ever trembled
- to think toward the least profaneness; have loathed the use of such
- foul and unwashed bawdry, as is now made the food of the scene: and,
- howsoever I cannot escape from some, the imputation of sharpness, but
- that they will say, I have taken a pride, or lust, to be bitter, and not
- my youngest infant but hath come into the world with all his teeth;
- I would ask of these supercilious politics, what nation, society, or
- general order or state, I have provoked? What public person? Whether I
- have not in all these preserved their dignity, as mine own person, safe?
- My works are read, allowed, (I speak of those that are intirely mine,)
- look into them, what broad reproofs have I used? where have I been
- particular? where personal? except to a mimic, cheater, bawd, or
- buffoon, creatures, for their insolencies, worthy to be taxed? yet to
- which of these so pointingly, as he might not either ingenuously have
- confest, or wisely dissembled his disease? But it is not rumour can make
- men guilty, much less entitle me to other men's crimes. I know, that
- nothing can be so innocently writ or carried, but may be made obnoxious
- to construction; marry, whilst I bear mine innocence about me, I fear
- it not. Application is now grown a trade with many; and there are that
- profess to have a key for the decyphering of every thing: but let wise
- and noble persons take heed how they be too credulous, or give leave to
- these invading interpreters to be over-familiar with their fames, who
- cunningly, and often, utter their own virulent malice, under other men's
- simplest meanings. As for those that will (by faults which charity hath
- raked up, or common honesty concealed) make themselves a name with the
- multitude, or, to draw their rude and beastly claps, care not whose
- living faces they intrench with their petulant styles, may they do it
- without a rival, for me! I choose rather to live graved in obscurity,
- than share with them in so preposterous a fame. Nor can I blame the
- wishes of those severe and wise patriots, who providing the hurts these
- licentious spirits may do in a state, desire rather to see fools and
- devils, and those antique relics of barbarism retrieved, with all other
- ridiculous and exploded follies, than behold the wounds of private
- men, of princes and nations: for, as Horace makes Trebatius speak among
- these,
- "Sibi quisque timet, quanquam est intactus, et odit."
- And men may justly impute such rages, if continued, to the writer, as
- his sports. The increase of which lust in liberty, together with the
- present trade of the stage, in all their miscelline interludes, what
- learned or liberal soul doth not already abhor? where nothing but the
- filth of the time is uttered, and with such impropriety of phrase, such
- plenty of solecisms, such dearth of sense, so bold prolepses, so racked
- metaphors, with brothelry, able to violate the ear of a pagan, and
- blasphemy, to turn the blood of a Christian to water. I cannot but be
- serious in a cause of this nature, wherein my fame, and the reputation
- of divers honest and learned are the question; when a name so full of
- authority, antiquity, and all great mark, is, through their insolence,
- become the lowest scorn of the age; and those men subject to the
- petulancy of every vernaculous orator, that were wont to be the care of
- kings and happiest monarchs. This it is that hath not only rapt me to
- present indignation, but made me studious heretofore, and by all my
- actions, to stand off from them; which may most appear in this my latest
- work, which you, most learned Arbitresses, have seen, judged, and to
- my crown, approved; wherein I have laboured for their instruction and
- amendment, to reduce not only the ancient forms, but manners of the
- scene, the easiness, the propriety, the innocence, and last, the
- doctrine, which is the principal end of poesie, to inform men in the
- best reason of living. And though my catastrophe may, in the strict
- rigour of comic law, meet with censure, as turning back to my promise;
- I desire the learned and charitable critic, to have so much faith in
- me, to think it was done of industry: for, with what ease I could have
- varied it nearer his scale (but that I fear to boast my own faculty) I
- could here insert. But my special aim being to put the snaffle in their
- mouths, that cry out, We never punish vice in our interludes, etc., I
- took the more liberty; though not without some lines of example, drawn
- even in the ancients themselves, the goings out of whose comedies are
- not always joyful, but oft times the bawds, the servants, the rivals,
- yea, and the masters are mulcted; and fitly, it being the office of a
- comic poet to imitate justice, and instruct to life, as well as purity
- of language, or stir up gentle affections; to which I shall take the
- occasion elsewhere to speak.
- For the present, most reverenced Sisters, as I have cared to be thankful
- for your affections past, and here made the understanding acquainted
- with some ground of your favours; let me not despair their continuance,
- to the maturing of some worthier fruits; wherein, if my muses be true to
- me, I shall raise the despised head of poetry again, and stripping her
- out of those rotten and base rags wherewith the times have adulterated
- her form, restore her to her primitive habit, feature, and majesty,
- and render her worthy to be embraced and kist of all the great and
- master-spirits of our world. As for the vile and slothful, who never
- affected an act worthy of celebration, or are so inward with their own
- vicious natures, as they worthily fear her, and think it an high point
- of policy to keep her in contempt, with their declamatory and windy
- invectives; she shall out of just rage incite her servants (who are
- genus irritabile) to spout ink in their faces, that shall eat farther
- than their marrow into their fames; and not Cinnamus the barber, with
- his art, shall be able to take out the brands; but they shall live, and
- be read, till the wretches die, as things worst deserving of themselves
- in chief, and then of all mankind.
- From my House in the Black-Friars,
- this 11th day of February, 1607.
- DRAMATIS PERSONAE
- VOLPONE, a Magnifico.
- MOSCA, his Parasite.
- VOLTORE, an Advocate.
- CORBACCIO, an old Gentleman.
- CORVINO, a Merchant.
- BONARIO, son to Corbaccio.
- SIR POLITICK WOULD-BE, a Knight.
- PEREGRINE, a Gentleman Traveller.
- NANO, a Dwarf.
- CASTRONE, an Eunuch.
- ANDROGYNO, an Hermaphrodite.
- GREGE (or Mob).
- COMMANDADORI, Officers of Justice.
- MERCATORI, three Merchants.
- AVOCATORI, four Magistrates.
- NOTARIO, the Register.
- LADY WOULD-BE, Sir Politick's Wife.
- CELIA, Corvino's Wife.
- SERVITORI, Servants, two Waiting-women, etc.
- SCENE: VENICE.
- THE ARGUMENT.
- V olpone, childless, rich, feigns sick, despairs,
- O ffers his state to hopes of several heirs,
- L ies languishing: his parasite receives
- P resents of all, assures, deludes; then weaves
- O ther cross plots, which ope themselves, are told.
- N ew tricks for safety are sought; they thrive: when bold,
- E ach tempts the other again, and all are sold.
- PROLOGUE.
- Now, luck yet sends us, and a little wit
- Will serve to make our play hit;
- (According to the palates of the season)
- Here is rhime, not empty of reason.
- This we were bid to credit from our poet,
- Whose true scope, if you would know it,
- In all his poems still hath been this measure,
- To mix profit with your pleasure;
- And not as some, whose throats their envy failing,
- Cry hoarsely, All he writes is railing:
- And when his plays come forth, think they can flout them,
- With saying, he was a year about them.
- To this there needs no lie, but this his creature,
- Which was two months since no feature;
- And though he dares give them five lives to mend it,
- 'Tis known, five weeks fully penn'd it,
- From his own hand, without a co-adjutor,
- Novice, journey-man, or tutor.
- Yet thus much I can give you as a token
- Of his play's worth, no eggs are broken,
- Nor quaking custards with fierce teeth affrighted,
- Wherewith your rout are so delighted;
- Nor hales he in a gull old ends reciting,
- To stop gaps in his loose writing;
- With such a deal of monstrous and forced action,
- As might make Bethlem a faction:
- Nor made he his play for jests stolen from each table,
- But makes jests to fit his fable;
- And so presents quick comedy refined,
- As best critics have designed;
- The laws of time, place, persons he observeth,
- From no needful rule he swerveth.
- All gall and copperas from his ink he draineth,
- Only a little salt remaineth,
- Wherewith he'll rub your cheeks, till red, with laughter,
- They shall look fresh a week after.
- ACT 1. SCENE 1.1.
- A ROOM IN VOLPONE'S HOUSE.
- ENTER VOLPONE AND MOSCA.
- VOLP: Good morning to the day; and next, my gold:
- Open the shrine, that I may see my Saint.
- [MOSCA WITHDRAWS THE CURTAIN, AND DISCOVERS PILES OF GOLD,
- PLATE, JEWELS, ETC.]
- Hail the world's soul, and mine! more glad than is
- The teeming earth to see the long'd-for sun
- Peep through the horns of the celestial Ram,
- Am I, to view thy splendour darkening his;
- That lying here, amongst my other hoards,
- Shew'st like a flame by night; or like the day
- Struck out of chaos, when all darkness fled
- Unto the centre. O thou son of Sol,
- But brighter than thy father, let me kiss,
- With adoration, thee, and every relick
- Of sacred treasure, in this blessed room.
- Well did wise poets, by thy glorious name,
- Title that age which they would have the best;
- Thou being the best of things: and far transcending
- All style of joy, in children, parents, friends,
- Or any other waking dream on earth:
- Thy looks when they to Venus did ascribe,
- They should have given her twenty thousand Cupids;
- Such are thy beauties and our loves! Dear saint,
- Riches, the dumb God, that giv'st all men tongues;
- That canst do nought, and yet mak'st men do all things;
- The price of souls; even hell, with thee to boot,
- Is made worth heaven. Thou art virtue, fame,
- Honour, and all things else. Who can get thee,
- He shall be noble, valiant, honest, wise,--
- MOS: And what he will, sir. Riches are in fortune
- A greater good than wisdom is in nature.
- VOLP: True, my beloved Mosca. Yet I glory
- More in the cunning purchase of my wealth,
- Than in the glad possession; since I gain
- No common way; I use no trade, no venture;
- I wound no earth with plough-shares; fat no beasts,
- To feed the shambles; have no mills for iron,
- Oil, corn, or men, to grind them into powder:
- I blow no subtle glass; expose no ships
- To threat'nings of the furrow-faced sea;
- I turn no monies in the public bank,
- Nor usure private.
- MOS: No sir, nor devour
- Soft prodigals. You shall have some will swallow
- A melting heir as glibly as your Dutch
- Will pills of butter, and ne'er purge for it;
- Tear forth the fathers of poor families
- Out of their beds, and coffin them alive
- In some kind clasping prison, where their bones
- May be forth-coming, when the flesh is rotten:
- But your sweet nature doth abhor these courses;
- You lothe the widdow's or the orphan's tears
- Should wash your pavements, or their piteous cries
- Ring in your roofs, and beat the air for vengeance.
- VOLP: Right, Mosca; I do lothe it.
- MOS: And besides, sir,
- You are not like a thresher that doth stand
- With a huge flail, watching a heap of corn,
- And, hungry, dares not taste the smallest grain,
- But feeds on mallows, and such bitter herbs;
- Nor like the merchant, who hath fill'd his vaults
- With Romagnia, and rich Candian wines,
- Yet drinks the lees of Lombard's vinegar:
- You will not lie in straw, whilst moths and worms
- Feed on your sumptuous hangings and soft beds;
- You know the use of riches, and dare give now
- From that bright heap, to me, your poor observer,
- Or to your dwarf, or your hermaphrodite,
- Your eunuch, or what other household-trifle
- Your pleasure allows maintenance.
- VOLP: Hold thee, Mosca,
- [GIVES HIM MONEY.]
- Take of my hand; thou strik'st on truth in all,
- And they are envious term thee parasite.
- Call forth my dwarf, my eunuch, and my fool,
- And let them make me sport.
- [EXIT MOS.]
- What should I do,
- But cocker up my genius, and live free
- To all delights my fortune calls me to?
- I have no wife, no parent, child, ally,
- To give my substance to; but whom I make
- Must be my heir: and this makes men observe me:
- This draws new clients daily, to my house,
- Women and men of every sex and age,
- That bring me presents, send me plate, coin, jewels,
- With hope that when I die (which they expect
- Each greedy minute) it shall then return
- Ten-fold upon them; whilst some, covetous
- Above the rest, seek to engross me whole,
- And counter-work the one unto the other,
- Contend in gifts, as they would seem in love:
- All which I suffer, playing with their hopes,
- And am content to coin them into profit,
- To look upon their kindness, and take more,
- And look on that; still bearing them in hand,
- Letting the cherry knock against their lips,
- And draw it by their mouths, and back again.--
- How now!
- [RE-ENTER MOSCA WITH NANO, ANDROGYNO, AND CASTRONE.]
- NAN: Now, room for fresh gamesters, who do will you to know,
- They do bring you neither play, nor university show;
- And therefore do entreat you, that whatsoever they rehearse,
- May not fare a whit the worse, for the false pace of the verse.
- If you wonder at this, you will wonder more ere we pass,
- For know, here is inclosed the soul of Pythagoras,
- That juggler divine, as hereafter shall follow;
- Which soul, fast and loose, sir, came first from Apollo,
- And was breath'd into Aethalides; Mercurius his son,
- Where it had the gift to remember all that ever was done.
- From thence it fled forth, and made quick transmigration
- To goldy-lock'd Euphorbus, who was killed in good fashion,
- At the siege of old Troy, by the cuckold of Sparta.
- Hermotimus was next (I find it in my charta)
- To whom it did pass, where no sooner it was missing
- But with one Pyrrhus of Delos it learn'd to go a fishing;
- And thence did it enter the sophist of Greece.
- From Pythagore, she went into a beautiful piece,
- Hight Aspasia, the meretrix; and the next toss of her
- Was again of a whore, she became a philosopher,
- Crates the cynick, as it self doth relate it:
- Since kings, knights, and beggars, knaves, lords and fools gat it,
- Besides, ox and ass, camel, mule, goat, and brock,
- In all which it hath spoke, as in the cobler's cock.
- But I come not here to discourse of that matter,
- Or his one, two, or three, or his greath oath, BY QUATER!
- His musics, his trigon, his golden thigh,
- Or his telling how elements shift, but I
- Would ask, how of late thou best suffered translation,
- And shifted thy coat in these days of reformation.
- AND: Like one of the reformed, a fool, as you see,
- Counting all old doctrine heresy.
- NAN: But not on thine own forbid meats hast thou ventured?
- AND: On fish, when first a Carthusian I enter'd.
- NAN: Why, then thy dogmatical silence hath left thee?
- AND: Of that an obstreperous lawyer bereft me.
- NAN: O wonderful change, when sir lawyer forsook thee!
- For Pythagore's sake, what body then took thee?
- AND: A good dull mule.
- NAN: And how! by that means
- Thou wert brought to allow of the eating of beans?
- AND: Yes.
- NAN: But from the mule into whom didst thou pass?
- AND: Into a very strange beast, by some writers call'd an ass;
- By others, a precise, pure, illuminate brother,
- Of those devour flesh, and sometimes one another;
- And will drop you forth a libel, or a sanctified lie,
- Betwixt every spoonful of a nativity pie.
- NAN: Now quit thee, for heaven, of that profane nation;
- And gently report thy next transmigration.
- AND: To the same that I am.
- NAN: A creature of delight,
- And, what is more than a fool, an hermaphrodite!
- Now, prithee, sweet soul, in all thy variation,
- Which body would'st thou choose, to keep up thy station?
- AND: Troth, this I am in: even here would I tarry.
- NAN: 'Cause here the delight of each sex thou canst vary?
- AND: Alas, those pleasures be stale and forsaken;
- No, 'tis your fool wherewith I am so taken,
- The only one creature that I can call blessed:
- For all other forms I have proved most distressed.
- NAN: Spoke true, as thou wert in Pythagoras still.
- This learned opinion we celebrate will,
- Fellow eunuch, as behoves us, with all our wit and art,
- To dignify that whereof ourselves are so great and special a part.
- VOLP: Now, very, very pretty! Mosca, this
- Was thy invention?
- MOS: If it please my patron,
- Not else.
- VOLP: It doth, good Mosca.
- MOS: Then it was, sir.
- NANO AND CASTRONE [SING.]: Fools, they are the only nation
- Worth men's envy, or admiration:
- Free from care or sorrow-taking,
- Selves and others merry making:
- All they speak or do is sterling.
- Your fool he is your great man's darling,
- And your ladies' sport and pleasure;
- Tongue and bauble are his treasure.
- E'en his face begetteth laughter,
- And he speaks truth free from slaughter;
- He's the grace of every feast,
- And sometimes the chiefest guest;
- Hath his trencher and his stool,
- When wit waits upon the fool:
- O, who would not be
- He, he, he?
- [KNOCKING WITHOUT.]
- VOLP: Who's that? Away!
- [EXEUNT NANO AND CASTRONE.]
- Look, Mosca. Fool, begone!
- [EXIT ANDROGYNO.]
- MOS: 'Tis Signior Voltore, the advocate;
- I know him by his knock.
- VOLP: Fetch me my gown,
- My furs and night-caps; say, my couch is changing,
- And let him entertain himself awhile
- Without i' the gallery.
- [EXIT MOSCA.]
- Now, now, my clients
- Begin their visitation! Vulture, kite,
- Raven, and gorcrow, all my birds of prey,
- That think me turning carcase, now they come;
- I am not for them yet--
- [RE-ENTER MOSCA, WITH THE GOWN, ETC.]
- How now! the news?
- MOS: A piece of plate, sir.
- VOLP: Of what bigness?
- MOS: Huge,
- Massy, and antique, with your name inscribed,
- And arms engraven.
- VOLP: Good! and not a fox
- Stretch'd on the earth, with fine delusive sleights,
- Mocking a gaping crow? ha, Mosca?
- MOS: Sharp, sir.
- VOLP: Give me my furs.
- [PUTS ON HIS SICK DRESS.]
- Why dost thou laugh so, man?
- MOS: I cannot choose, sir, when I apprehend
- What thoughts he has without now, as he walks:
- That this might be the last gift he should give;
- That this would fetch you; if you died to-day,
- And gave him all, what he should be to-morrow;
- What large return would come of all his ventures;
- How he should worship'd be, and reverenced;
- Ride with his furs, and foot-cloths; waited on
- By herds of fools, and clients; have clear way
- Made for his mule, as letter'd as himself;
- Be call'd the great and learned advocate:
- And then concludes, there's nought impossible.
- VOLP: Yes, to be learned, Mosca.
- MOS: O no: rich
- Implies it. Hood an ass with reverend purple,
- So you can hide his two ambitious ears,
- And he shall pass for a cathedral doctor.
- VOLP: My caps, my caps, good Mosca. Fetch him in.
- MOS: Stay, sir, your ointment for your eyes.
- VOLP: That's true;
- Dispatch, dispatch: I long to have possession
- Of my new present.
- MOS: That, and thousands more,
- I hope, to see you lord of.
- VOLP: Thanks, kind Mosca.
- MOS: And that, when I am lost in blended dust,
- And hundred such as I am, in succession--
- VOLP: Nay, that were too much, Mosca.
- MOS: You shall live,
- Still, to delude these harpies.
- VOLP: Loving Mosca!
- 'Tis well: my pillow now, and let him enter.
- [EXIT MOSCA.]
- Now, my fain'd cough, my pthisic, and my gout,
- My apoplexy, palsy, and catarrhs,
- Help, with your forced functions, this my posture,
- Wherein, this three year, I have milk'd their hopes.
- He comes; I hear him--Uh! [COUGHING.] uh! uh! uh! O--
- [RE-ENTER MOSCA, INTRODUCING VOLTORE, WITH A PIECE OF PLATE.]
- MOS: You still are what you were, sir. Only you,
- Of all the rest, are he commands his love,
- And you do wisely to preserve it thus,
- With early visitation, and kind notes
- Of your good meaning to him, which, I know,
- Cannot but come most grateful. Patron! sir!
- Here's signior Voltore is come--
- VOLP [FAINTLY.]: What say you?
- MOS: Sir, signior Voltore is come this morning
- To visit you.
- VOLP: I thank him.
- MOS: And hath brought
- A piece of antique plate, bought of St Mark,
- With which he here presents you.
- VOLP: He is welcome.
- Pray him to come more often.
- MOS: Yes.
- VOLT: What says he?
- MOS: He thanks you, and desires you see him often.
- VOLP: Mosca.
- MOS: My patron!
- VOLP: Bring him near, where is he?
- I long to feel his hand.
- MOS: The plate is here, sir.
- VOLT: How fare you, sir?
- VOLP: I thank you, signior Voltore;
- Where is the plate? mine eyes are bad.
- VOLT [PUTTING IT INTO HIS HANDS.]: I'm sorry,
- To see you still thus weak.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: That he's not weaker.
- VOLP: You are too munificent.
- VOLT: No sir; would to heaven,
- I could as well give health to you, as that plate!
- VOLP: You give, sir, what you can: I thank you. Your love
- Hath taste in this, and shall not be unanswer'd:
- I pray you see me often.
- VOLT: Yes, I shall sir.
- VOLP: Be not far from me.
- MOS: Do you observe that, sir?
- VOLP: Hearken unto me still; it will concern you.
- MOS: You are a happy man, sir; know your good.
- VOLP: I cannot now last long--
- MOS: You are his heir, sir.
- VOLT: Am I?
- VOLP: I feel me going; Uh! uh! uh! uh!
- I'm sailing to my port, Uh! uh! uh! uh!
- And I am glad I am so near my haven.
- MOS: Alas, kind gentleman! Well, we must all go--
- VOLT: But, Mosca--
- MOS: Age will conquer.
- VOLT: 'Pray thee hear me:
- Am I inscribed his heir for certain?
- MOS: Are you!
- I do beseech you, sir, you will vouchsafe
- To write me in your family. All my hopes
- Depend upon your worship: I am lost,
- Except the rising sun do shine on me.
- VOLT: It shall both shine, and warm thee, Mosca.
- MOS: Sir,
- I am a man, that hath not done your love
- All the worst offices: here I wear your keys,
- See all your coffers and your caskets lock'd,
- Keep the poor inventory of your jewels,
- Your plate and monies; am your steward, sir.
- Husband your goods here.
- VOLT: But am I sole heir?
- MOS: Without a partner, sir; confirm'd this morning:
- The wax is warm yet, and the ink scarce dry
- Upon the parchment.
- VOLT: Happy, happy, me!
- By what good chance, sweet Mosca?
- MOS: Your desert, sir;
- I know no second cause.
- VOLT: Thy modesty
- Is not to know it; well, we shall requite it.
- MOS: He ever liked your course sir; that first took him.
- I oft have heard him say, how he admired
- Men of your large profession, that could speak
- To every cause, and things mere contraries,
- Till they were hoarse again, yet all be law;
- That, with most quick agility, could turn,
- And [re-] return; [could] make knots, and undo them;
- Give forked counsel; take provoking gold
- On either hand, and put it up: these men,
- He knew, would thrive with their humility.
- And, for his part, he thought he should be blest
- To have his heir of such a suffering spirit,
- So wise, so grave, of so perplex'd a tongue,
- And loud withal, that would not wag, nor scarce
- Lie still, without a fee; when every word
- Your worship but lets fall, is a chequin!--
- [LOUD KNOCKING WITHOUT.]
- Who's that? one knocks; I would not have you seen, sir.
- And yet--pretend you came, and went in haste:
- I'll fashion an excuse.--and, gentle sir,
- When you do come to swim in golden lard,
- Up to the arms in honey, that your chin
- Is born up stiff, with fatness of the flood,
- Think on your vassal; but remember me:
- I have not been your worst of clients.
- VOLT: Mosca!--
- MOS: When will you have your inventory brought, sir?
- Or see a coppy of the will?--Anon!--
- I will bring them to you, sir. Away, be gone,
- Put business in your face.
- [EXIT VOLTORE.]
- VOLP [SPRINGING UP.]: Excellent Mosca!
- Come hither, let me kiss thee.
- MOS: Keep you still, sir.
- Here is Corbaccio.
- VOLP: Set the plate away:
- The vulture's gone, and the old raven's come!
- MOS: Betake you to your silence, and your sleep:
- Stand there and multiply.
- [PUTTING THE PLATE TO THE REST.]
- Now, shall we see
- A wretch who is indeed more impotent
- Than this can feign to be; yet hopes to hop
- Over his grave.--
- [ENTER CORBACCIO.]
- Signior Corbaccio!
- You're very welcome, sir.
- CORB: How does your patron?
- MOS: Troth, as he did, sir; no amends.
- CORB: What! mends he?
- MOS: No, sir: he's rather worse.
- CORB: That's well. Where is he?
- MOS: Upon his couch sir, newly fall'n asleep.
- CORB: Does he sleep well?
- MOS: No wink, sir, all this night.
- Nor yesterday; but slumbers.
- CORB: Good! he should take
- Some counsel of physicians: I have brought him
- An opiate here, from mine own doctor.
- MOS: He will not hear of drugs.
- CORB: Why? I myself
- Stood by while it was made; saw all the ingredients:
- And know, it cannot but most gently work:
- My life for his, 'tis but to make him sleep.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Ay, his last sleep, if he would take it.
- MOS: Sir,
- He has no faith in physic.
- CORB: 'Say you? 'say you?
- MOS: He has no faith in physic: he does think
- Most of your doctors are the greater danger,
- And worse disease, to escape. I often have
- Heard him protest, that your physician
- Should never be his heir.
- CORB: Not I his heir?
- MOS: Not your physician, sir.
- CORB: O, no, no, no,
- I do not mean it.
- MOS: No, sir, nor their fees
- He cannot brook: he says, they flay a man,
- Before they kill him.
- CORB: Right, I do conceive you.
- MOS: And then they do it by experiment;
- For which the law not only doth absolve them,
- But gives them great reward: and he is loth
- To hire his death, so.
- CORB: It is true, they kill,
- With as much license as a judge.
- MOS: Nay, more;
- For he but kills, sir, where the law condemns,
- And these can kill him too.
- CORB: Ay, or me;
- Or any man. How does his apoplex?
- Is that strong on him still?
- MOS: Most violent.
- His speech is broken, and his eyes are set,
- His face drawn longer than 'twas wont--
- CORB: How! how!
- Stronger then he was wont?
- MOS: No, sir: his face
- Drawn longer than 'twas wont.
- CORB: O, good!
- MOS: His mouth
- Is ever gaping, and his eyelids hang.
- CORB: Good.
- MOS: A freezing numbness stiffens all his joints,
- And makes the colour of his flesh like lead.
- CORB: 'Tis good.
- MOS: His pulse beats slow, and dull.
- CORB: Good symptoms, still.
- MOS: And from his brain--
- CORB: I conceive you; good.
- MOS: Flows a cold sweat, with a continual rheum,
- Forth the resolved corners of his eyes.
- CORB: Is't possible? yet I am better, ha!
- How does he, with the swimming of his head?
- B: O, sir, 'tis past the scotomy; he now
- Hath lost his feeling, and hath left to snort:
- You hardly can perceive him, that he breathes.
- CORB: Excellent, excellent! sure I shall outlast him:
- This makes me young again, a score of years.
- MOS: I was a coming for you, sir.
- CORB: Has he made his will?
- What has he given me?
- MOS: No, sir.
- CORB: Nothing! ha?
- MOS: He has not made his will, sir.
- CORB: Oh, oh, oh!
- But what did Voltore, the Lawyer, here?
- MOS: He smelt a carcase, sir, when he but heard
- My master was about his testament;
- As I did urge him to it for your good--
- CORB: He came unto him, did he? I thought so.
- MOS: Yes, and presented him this piece of plate.
- CORB: To be his heir?
- MOS: I do not know, sir.
- CORB: True:
- I know it too.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: By your own scale, sir.
- CORB: Well,
- I shall prevent him, yet. See, Mosca, look,
- Here, I have brought a bag of bright chequines,
- Will quite weigh down his plate.
- MOS [TAKING THE BAG.]: Yea, marry, sir.
- This is true physic, this your sacred medicine,
- No talk of opiates, to this great elixir!
- CORB: 'Tis aurum palpabile, if not potabile.
- MOS: It shall be minister'd to him, in his bowl.
- CORB: Ay, do, do, do.
- MOS: Most blessed cordial!
- This will recover him.
- CORB: Yes, do, do, do.
- MOS: I think it were not best, sir.
- CORB: What?
- MOS: To recover him.
- CORB: O, no, no, no; by no means.
- MOS: Why, sir, this
- Will work some strange effect, if he but feel it.
- CORB: 'Tis true, therefore forbear; I'll take my venture:
- Give me it again.
- MOS: At no hand; pardon me:
- You shall not do yourself that wrong, sir. I
- Will so advise you, you shall have it all.
- CORB: How?
- MOS: All, sir; 'tis your right, your own; no man
- Can claim a part: 'tis yours, without a rival,
- Decreed by destiny.
- CORB: How, how, good Mosca?
- MOS: I'll tell you sir. This fit he shall recover.
- CORB: I do conceive you.
- MOS: And, on first advantage
- Of his gain'd sense, will I re-importune him
- Unto the making of his testament:
- And shew him this.
- [POINTING TO THE MONEY.]
- CORB: Good, good.
- MOS: 'Tis better yet,
- If you will hear, sir.
- CORB: Yes, with all my heart.
- MOS: Now, would I counsel you, make home with speed;
- There, frame a will; whereto you shall inscribe
- My master your sole heir.
- CORB: And disinherit
- My son!
- MOS: O, sir, the better: for that colour
- Shall make it much more taking.
- CORB: O, but colour?
- MOS: This will sir, you shall send it unto me.
- Now, when I come to inforce, as I will do,
- Your cares, your watchings, and your many prayers,
- Your more than many gifts, your this day's present,
- And last, produce your will; where, without thought,
- Or least regard, unto your proper issue,
- A son so brave, and highly meriting,
- The stream of your diverted love hath thrown you
- Upon my master, and made him your heir:
- He cannot be so stupid, or stone-dead,
- But out of conscience, and mere gratitude--
- CORB: He must pronounce me his?
- MOS: 'Tis true.
- CORB: This plot
- Did I think on before.
- MOS: I do believe it.
- CORB: Do you not believe it?
- MOS: Yes, sir.
- CORB: Mine own project.
- MOS: Which, when he hath done, sir.
- CORB: Publish'd me his heir?
- MOS: And you so certain to survive him--
- CORB: Ay.
- MOS: Being so lusty a man--
- CORB: 'Tis true.
- MOS: Yes, sir--
- CORB: I thought on that too. See, how he should be
- The very organ to express my thoughts!
- MOS: You have not only done yourself a good--
- CORB: But multiplied it on my son.
- MOS: 'Tis right, sir.
- CORB: Still, my invention.
- MOS: 'Las, sir! heaven knows,
- It hath been all my study, all my care,
- (I e'en grow gray withal,) how to work things--
- CORB: I do conceive, sweet Mosca.
- MOS: You are he,
- For whom I labour here.
- CORB: Ay, do, do, do:
- I'll straight about it.
- [GOING.]
- MOS: Rook go with you, raven!
- CORB: I know thee honest.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: You do lie, sir!
- CORB: And--
- MOS: Your knowledge is no better than your ears, sir.
- CORB: I do not doubt, to be a father to thee.
- MOS: Nor I to gull my brother of his blessing.
- CORB: I may have my youth restored to me, why not?
- MOS: Your worship is a precious ass!
- CORB: What say'st thou?
- MOS: I do desire your worship to make haste, sir.
- CORB: 'Tis done, 'tis done, I go.
- [EXIT.]
- VOLP [LEAPING FROM HIS COUCH.]: O, I shall burst!
- Let out my sides, let out my sides--
- MOS: Contain
- Your flux of laughter, sir: you know this hope
- Is such a bait, it covers any hook.
- VOLP: O, but thy working, and thy placing it!
- I cannot hold; good rascal, let me kiss thee:
- I never knew thee in so rare a humour.
- MOS: Alas sir, I but do as I am taught;
- Follow your grave instructions; give them words;
- Pour oil into their ears, and send them hence.
- VOLP: 'Tis true, 'tis true. What a rare punishment
- Is avarice to itself!
- MOS: Ay, with our help, sir.
- VOLP: So many cares, so many maladies,
- So many fears attending on old age,
- Yea, death so often call'd on, as no wish
- Can be more frequent with them, their limbs faint,
- Their senses dull, their seeing, hearing, going,
- All dead before them; yea, their very teeth,
- Their instruments of eating, failing them:
- Yet this is reckon'd life! nay, here was one;
- Is now gone home, that wishes to live longer!
- Feels not his gout, nor palsy; feigns himself
- Younger by scores of years, flatters his age
- With confident belying it, hopes he may,
- With charms, like Aeson, have his youth restored:
- And with these thoughts so battens, as if fate
- Would be as easily cheated on, as he,
- And all turns air!
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- Who's that there, now? a third?
- MOS: Close, to your couch again; I hear his voice:
- It is Corvino, our spruce merchant.
- VOLP [LIES DOWN AS BEFORE.]: Dead.
- MOS: Another bout, sir, with your eyes.
- [ANOINTING THEM.]
- --Who's there?
- [ENTER CORVINO.]
- Signior Corvino! come most wish'd for! O,
- How happy were you, if you knew it, now!
- CORV: Why? what? wherein?
- MOS: The tardy hour is come, sir.
- CORV: He is not dead?
- MOS: Not dead, sir, but as good;
- He knows no man.
- CORV: How shall I do then?
- MOS: Why, sir?
- CORV: I have brought him here a pearl.
- MOS: Perhaps he has
- So much remembrance left, as to know you, sir:
- He still calls on you; nothing but your name
- Is in his mouth: Is your pearl orient, sir?
- CORV: Venice was never owner of the like.
- VOLP [FAINTLY.]: Signior Corvino.
- MOS: Hark.
- VOLP: Signior Corvino!
- MOS: He calls you; step and give it him.--He's here, sir,
- And he has brought you a rich pearl.
- CORV: How do you, sir?
- Tell him, it doubles the twelfth caract.
- MOS: Sir,
- He cannot understand, his hearing's gone;
- And yet it comforts him to see you--
- CORV: Say,
- I have a diamond for him, too.
- MOS: Best shew it, sir;
- Put it into his hand; 'tis only there
- He apprehends: he has his feeling, yet.
- See how he grasps it!
- CORV: 'Las, good gentleman!
- How pitiful the sight is!
- MOS: Tut! forget, sir.
- The weeping of an heir should still be laughter
- Under a visor.
- CORV: Why, am I his heir?
- MOS: Sir, I am sworn, I may not shew the will,
- Till he be dead; but, here has been Corbaccio,
- Here has been Voltore, here were others too,
- I cannot number 'em, they were so many;
- All gaping here for legacies: but I,
- Taking the vantage of his naming you,
- "Signior Corvino, Signior Corvino," took
- Paper, and pen, and ink, and there I asked him,
- Whom he would have his heir? "Corvino." Who
- Should be executor? "Corvino." And,
- To any question he was silent too,
- I still interpreted the nods he made,
- Through weakness, for consent: and sent home th' others,
- Nothing bequeath'd them, but to cry and curse.
- CORV: O, my dear Mosca!
- [THEY EMBRACE.]
- Does he not perceive us?
- MOS: No more than a blind harper. He knows no man,
- No face of friend, nor name of any servant,
- Who 'twas that fed him last, or gave him drink:
- Not those he hath begotten, or brought up,
- Can he remember.
- CORV: Has he children?
- MOS: Bastards,
- Some dozen, or more, that he begot on beggars,
- Gipsies, and Jews, and black-moors, when he was drunk.
- Knew you not that, sir? 'tis the common fable.
- The dwarf, the fool, the eunuch, are all his;
- He's the true father of his family,
- In all, save me:--but he has giv'n them nothing.
- CORV: That's well, that's well. Art sure he does not hear us?
- MOS: Sure, sir! why, look you, credit your own sense.
- [SHOUTS IN VOL.'S EAR.]
- The pox approach, and add to your diseases,
- If it would send you hence the sooner, sir,
- For your incontinence, it hath deserv'd it
- Thoroughly, and thoroughly, and the plague to boot!--
- You may come near, sir.--Would you would once close
- Those filthy eyes of yours, that flow with slime,
- Like two frog-pits; and those same hanging cheeks,
- Cover'd with hide, instead of skin--Nay help, sir--
- That look like frozen dish-clouts, set on end!
- CORV [ALOUD.]: Or like an old smoked wall, on which the rain
- Ran down in streaks!
- MOS: Excellent! sir, speak out:
- You may be louder yet: A culverin
- Discharged in his ear would hardly bore it.
- CORV: His nose is like a common sewer, still running.
- MOS: 'Tis good! And what his mouth?
- CORV: A very draught.
- MOS: O, stop it up--
- CORV: By no means.
- MOS: 'Pray you, let me.
- Faith I could stifle him, rarely with a pillow,
- As well as any woman that should keep him.
- CORV: Do as you will: but I'll begone.
- MOS: Be so:
- It is your presence makes him last so long.
- CORV: I pray you, use no violence.
- MOS: No, sir! why?
- Why should you be thus scrupulous, pray you, sir?
- CORV: Nay, at your discretion.
- MOS: Well, good sir, begone.
- CORV: I will not trouble him now, to take my pearl.
- MOS: Puh! nor your diamond. What a needless care
- Is this afflicts you? Is not all here yours?
- Am not I here, whom you have made your creature?
- That owe my being to you?
- CORV: Grateful Mosca!
- Thou art my friend, my fellow, my companion,
- My partner, and shalt share in all my fortunes.
- MOS: Excepting one.
- CORV: What's that?
- MOS: Your gallant wife, sir,--
- [EXIT CORV.]
- Now is he gone: we had no other means
- To shoot him hence, but this.
- VOLP: My divine Mosca!
- Thou hast to-day outgone thyself.
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- --Who's there?
- I will be troubled with no more. Prepare
- Me music, dances, banquets, all delights;
- The Turk is not more sensual in his pleasures,
- Than will Volpone.
- [EXIT MOS.]
- Let me see; a pearl!
- A diamond! plate! chequines! Good morning's purchase,
- Why, this is better than rob churches, yet;
- Or fat, by eating, once a month, a man.
- [RE-ENTER MOSCA.]
- Who is't?
- MOS: The beauteous lady Would-be, sir.
- Wife to the English knight, Sir Politick Would-be,
- (This is the style, sir, is directed me,)
- Hath sent to know how you have slept to-night,
- And if you would be visited?
- VOLP: Not now:
- Some three hours hence--
- MOS: I told the squire so much.
- VOLP: When I am high with mirth and wine; then, then:
- 'Fore heaven, I wonder at the desperate valour
- Of the bold English, that they dare let loose
- Their wives to all encounters!
- MOS: Sir, this knight
- Had not his name for nothing, he is politick,
- And knows, howe'er his wife affect strange airs,
- She hath not yet the face to be dishonest:
- But had she signior Corvino's wife's face--
- VOLP: Has she so rare a face?
- MOS: O, sir, the wonder,
- The blazing star of Italy! a wench
- Of the first year! a beauty ripe as harvest!
- Whose skin is whiter than a swan all over,
- Than silver, snow, or lilies! a soft lip,
- Would tempt you to eternity of kissing!
- And flesh that melteth in the touch to blood!
- Bright as your gold, and lovely as your gold!
- VOLP: Why had not I known this before?
- MOS: Alas, sir,
- Myself but yesterday discover'd it.
- VOLP: How might I see her?
- MOS: O, not possible;
- She's kept as warily as is your gold;
- Never does come abroad, never takes air,
- But at a window. All her looks are sweet,
- As the first grapes or cherries, and are watch'd
- As near as they are.
- VOLP: I must see her.
- MOS: Sir,
- There is a guard of spies ten thick upon her,
- All his whole household; each of which is set
- Upon his fellow, and have all their charge,
- When he goes out, when he comes in, examined.
- VOLP: I will go see her, though but at her window.
- MOS: In some disguise, then.
- VOLP: That is true; I must
- Maintain mine own shape still the same: we'll think.
- [EXEUNT.]
- ACT 2. SCENE 2.1.
- ST. MARK'S PLACE; A RETIRED CORNER BEFORE CORVINO'S HOUSE.
- ENTER SIR POLITICK WOULD-BE, AND PEREGRINE.
- SIR P: Sir, to a wise man, all the world's his soil:
- It is not Italy, nor France, nor Europe,
- That must bound me, if my fates call me forth.
- Yet, I protest, it is no salt desire
- Of seeing countries, shifting a religion,
- Nor any disaffection to the state
- Where I was bred, and unto which I owe
- My dearest plots, hath brought me out; much less,
- That idle, antique, stale, gray-headed project
- Of knowing men's minds, and manners, with Ulysses!
- But a peculiar humour of my wife's
- Laid for this height of Venice, to observe,
- To quote, to learn the language, and so forth--
- I hope you travel, sir, with license?
- PER: Yes.
- SIR P: I dare the safelier converse--How long, sir,
- Since you left England?
- PER: Seven weeks.
- SIR P: So lately!
- You have not been with my lord ambassador?
- PER: Not yet, sir.
- SIR P: Pray you, what news, sir, vents our climate?
- I heard last night a most strange thing reported
- By some of my lord's followers, and I long
- To hear how 'twill be seconded.
- PER: What was't, sir?
- SIR P: Marry, sir, of a raven that should build
- In a ship royal of the king's.
- PER [ASIDE.]: This fellow,
- Does he gull me, trow? or is gull'd?
- --Your name, sir.
- SIR P: My name is Politick Would-be.
- PER [ASIDE.]: O, that speaks him.
- --A knight, sir?
- SIR P: A poor knight, sir.
- PER: Your lady
- Lies here in Venice, for intelligence
- Of tires, and fashions, and behaviour,
- Among the courtezans? the fine lady Would-be?
- SIR P: Yes, sir; the spider and the bee, ofttimes,
- Suck from one flower.
- PER: Good Sir Politick,
- I cry you mercy; I have heard much of you:
- 'Tis true, sir, of your raven.
- SIR P: On your knowledge?
- PER: Yes, and your lion's whelping, in the Tower.
- SIR P: Another whelp!
- PER: Another, sir.
- SIR P: Now heaven!
- What prodigies be these? The fires at Berwick!
- And the new star! these things concurring, strange,
- And full of omen! Saw you those meteors?
- PER: I did, sir.
- SIR P: Fearful! Pray you, sir, confirm me,
- Were there three porpoises seen above the bridge,
- As they give out?
- PER: Six, and a sturgeon, sir.
- SIR P: I am astonish'd.
- PER: Nay, sir, be not so;
- I'll tell you a greater prodigy than these.
- SIR P: What should these things portend?
- PER: The very day
- (Let me be sure) that I put forth from London,
- There was a whale discover'd in the river,
- As high as Woolwich, that had waited there,
- Few know how many months, for the subversion
- Of the Stode fleet.
- SIR P: Is't possible? believe it,
- 'Twas either sent from Spain, or the archdukes:
- Spinola's whale, upon my life, my credit!
- Will they not leave these projects? Worthy sir,
- Some other news.
- PER: Faith, Stone the fool is dead;
- And they do lack a tavern fool extremely.
- SIR P: Is Mass Stone dead?
- PER: He's dead sir; why, I hope
- You thought him not immortal?
- [ASIDE.]
- --O, this knight,
- Were he well known, would be a precious thing
- To fit our English stage: he that should write
- But such a fellow, should be thought to feign
- Extremely, if not maliciously.
- SIR P: Stone dead!
- PER: Dead.--Lord! how deeply sir, you apprehend it?
- He was no kinsman to you?
- SIR P: That I know of.
- Well! that same fellow was an unknown fool.
- PER: And yet you knew him, it seems?
- SIR P: I did so. Sir,
- I knew him one of the most dangerous heads
- Living within the state, and so I held him.
- PER: Indeed, sir?
- SIR P: While he lived, in action.
- He has received weekly intelligence,
- Upon my knowledge, out of the Low Countries,
- For all parts of the world, in cabbages;
- And those dispensed again to ambassadors,
- In oranges, musk-melons, apricocks,
- Lemons, pome-citrons, and such-like: sometimes
- In Colchester oysters, and your Selsey cockles.
- PER: You make me wonder.
- SIR P: Sir, upon my knowledge.
- Nay, I've observed him, at your public ordinary,
- Take his advertisement from a traveller
- A conceal'd statesman, in a trencher of meat;
- And instantly, before the meal was done,
- Convey an answer in a tooth-pick.
- PER: Strange!
- How could this be, sir?
- SIR P: Why, the meat was cut
- So like his character, and so laid, as he
- Must easily read the cipher.
- PER: I have heard,
- He could not read, sir.
- SIR P: So 'twas given out,
- In policy, by those that did employ him:
- But he could read, and had your languages,
- And to't, as sound a noddle--
- PER: I have heard, sir,
- That your baboons were spies, and that they were
- A kind of subtle nation near to China:
- SIR P: Ay, ay, your Mamuluchi. Faith, they had
- Their hand in a French plot or two; but they
- Were so extremely given to women, as
- They made discovery of all: yet I
- Had my advices here, on Wednesday last.
- From one of their own coat, they were return'd,
- Made their relations, as the fashion is,
- And now stand fair for fresh employment.
- PER: 'Heart!
- [ASIDE.]
- This sir Pol will be ignorant of nothing.
- --It seems, sir, you know all?
- SIR P: Not all sir, but
- I have some general notions. I do love
- To note and to observe: though I live out,
- Free from the active torrent, yet I'd mark
- The currents and the passages of things,
- For mine own private use; and know the ebbs,
- And flows of state.
- PER: Believe it, sir, I hold
- Myself in no small tie unto my fortunes,
- For casting me thus luckily upon you,
- Whose knowledge, if your bounty equal it,
- May do me great assistance, in instruction
- For my behaviour, and my bearing, which
- Is yet so rude and raw.
- SIR P: Why, came you forth
- Empty of rules, for travel?
- PER: Faith, I had
- Some common ones, from out that vulgar grammar,
- Which he that cried Italian to me, taught me.
- SIR P: Why this it is, that spoils all our brave bloods,
- Trusting our hopeful gentry unto pedants,
- Fellows of outside, and mere bark. You seem
- To be a gentleman, of ingenuous race:--
- I not profess it, but my fate hath been
- To be, where I have been consulted with,
- In this high kind, touching some great men's sons,
- Persons of blood, and honour.--
- [ENTER MOSCA AND NANO DISGUISED, FOLLOWED BY PERSONS WITH
- MATERIALS FOR ERECTING A STAGE.]
- PER: Who be these, sir?
- MOS: Under that window, there 't must be. The same.
- SIR P: Fellows, to mount a bank. Did your instructor
- In the dear tongues, never discourse to you
- Of the Italian mountebanks?
- PER: Yes, sir.
- SIR P: Why,
- Here shall you see one.
- PER: They are quacksalvers;
- Fellows, that live by venting oils and drugs.
- SIR P: Was that the character he gave you of them?
- PER: As I remember.
- SIR P: Pity his ignorance.
- They are the only knowing men of Europe!
- Great general scholars, excellent physicians,
- Most admired statesmen, profest favourites,
- And cabinet counsellors to the greatest princes;
- The only languaged men of all the world!
- PER: And, I have heard, they are most lewd impostors;
- Made all of terms and shreds; no less beliers
- Of great men's favours, than their own vile med'cines;
- Which they will utter upon monstrous oaths:
- Selling that drug for two-pence, ere they part,
- Which they have valued at twelve crowns before.
- SIR P: Sir, calumnies are answer'd best with silence.
- Yourself shall judge.--Who is it mounts, my friends?
- MOS: Scoto of Mantua, sir.
- SIR P: Is't he? Nay, then
- I'll proudly promise, sir, you shall behold
- Another man than has been phant'sied to you.
- I wonder yet, that he should mount his bank,
- Here in this nook, that has been wont t'appear
- In face of the Piazza!--Here, he comes.
- [ENTER VOLPONE, DISGUISED AS A MOUNTEBANK DOCTOR, AND
- FOLLOWED BY A CROWD OF PEOPLE.]
- VOLP [TO NANO.]: Mount zany.
- MOB: Follow, follow, follow, follow!
- SIR P: See how the people follow him! he's a man
- May write ten thousand crowns in bank here. Note,
- [VOLPONE MOUNTS THE STAGE.]
- Mark but his gesture:--I do use to observe
- The state he keeps in getting up.
- PER: 'Tis worth it, sir.
- VOLP: Most noble gentlemen, and my worthy patrons! It may seem
- strange, that I, your Scoto Mantuano, who was ever wont to fix
- my bank in face of the public Piazza, near the shelter of the
- Portico to the Procuratia, should now, after eight months'
- absence from this illustrious city of Venice, humbly retire
- myself into an obscure nook of the Piazza.
- SIR P: Did not I now object the same?
- PER: Peace, sir.
- VOLP: Let me tell you: I am not, as your Lombard proverb saith,
- cold on my feet; or content to part with my commodities at a
- cheaper rate, than I accustomed: look not for it. Nor that the
- calumnious reports of that impudent detractor, and shame to our
- profession, (Alessandro Buttone, I mean,) who gave out, in
- public, I was condemn'd a sforzato to the galleys, for
- poisoning the cardinal Bembo's--cook, hath at all attached,
- much less dejected me. No, no, worthy gentlemen; to tell you
- true, I cannot endure to see the rabble of these ground
- ciarlitani, that spread their cloaks on the pavement, as if
- they meant to do feats of activity, and then come in lamely,
- with their mouldy tales out of Boccacio, like stale Tabarine,
- the fabulist: some of them discoursing their travels, and of
- their tedious captivity in the Turks' galleys, when, indeed,
- were the truth known, they were the Christians' galleys, where
- very temperately they eat bread, and drunk water, as a
- wholesome penance, enjoined them by their confessors, for base
- pilferies.
- SIR P: Note but his bearing, and contempt of these.
- VOLP: These turdy-facy-nasty-paty-lousy-fartical rogues, with
- one poor groat's-worth of unprepared antimony, finely wrapt up
- in several scartoccios, are able, very well, to kill their
- twenty a week, and play; yet, these meagre, starved spirits,
- who have half stopt the organs of their minds with earthy
- oppilations, want not their favourers among your shrivell'd
- sallad-eating artizans, who are overjoyed that they may have
- their half-pe'rth of physic; though it purge them into another
- world, it makes no matter.
- SIR P: Excellent! have you heard better language, sir?
- VOLP: Well, let them go. And, gentlemen, honourable gentlemen,
- know, that for this time, our bank, being thus removed from the
- clamours of the canaglia, shall be the scene of pleasure and
- delight; for I have nothing to sell, little or nothing to sell.
- SIR P: I told you, sir, his end.
- PER: You did so, sir.
- VOLP: I protest, I, and my six servants, are not able to make
- of this precious liquor, so fast as it is fetch'd away from my
- lodging by gentlemen of your city; strangers of the Terra-firma;
- worshipful merchants; ay, and senators too: who, ever since my
- arrival, have detained me to their uses, by their splendidous
- liberalities. And worthily; for, what avails your rich man to
- have his magazines stuft with moscadelli, or of the purest
- grape, when his physicians prescribe him, on pain of death,
- to drink nothing but water cocted with aniseeds? O health!
- health! the blessing of the rich, the riches of the poor! who
- can buy thee at too dear a rate, since there is no enjoying
- this world without thee? Be not then so sparing of your purses,
- honourable gentlemen, as to abridge the natural course of life--
- PER: You see his end.
- SIR P: Ay, is't not good?
- VOLP: For, when a humid flux, or catarrh, by the mutability of
- air, falls from your head into an arm or shoulder, or any other
- part; take you a ducat, or your chequin of gold, and apply to
- the place affected: see what good effect it can work. No, no,
- 'tis this blessed unguento, this rare extraction, that hath
- only power to disperse all malignant humours, that proceed
- either of hot, cold, moist, or windy causes--
- PER: I would he had put in dry too.
- SIR P: 'Pray you, observe.
- VOLP: To fortify the most indigest and crude stomach, ay, were
- it of one, that, through extreme weakness, vomited blood,
- applying only a warm napkin to the place, after the unction
- and fricace;--for the vertigine in the head, putting but a drop
- into your nostrils, likewise behind the ears; a most sovereign
- and approved remedy. The mal caduco, cramps, convulsions,
- paralysies, epilepsies, tremor-cordia, retired nerves, ill
- vapours of the spleen, stopping of the liver, the stone, the
- strangury, hernia ventosa, iliaca passio; stops a disenteria
- immediately; easeth the torsion of the small guts: and cures
- melancholia hypocondriaca, being taken and applied according to
- my printed receipt.
- [POINTING TO HIS BILL AND HIS VIAL.]
- For, this is the physician, this the medicine; this counsels,
- this cures; this gives the direction, this works the effect;
- and, in sum, both together may be termed an abstract of the
- theorick and practick in the Aesculapian art. 'Twill cost you
- eight crowns. And,--Zan Fritada, prithee sing a verse extempore
- in honour of it.
- SIR P: How do you like him, sir?
- PER: Most strangely, I!
- SIR P: Is not his language rare?
- PER: But alchemy,
- I never heard the like: or Broughton's books.
- NANO [SINGS.]: Had old Hippocrates, or Galen,
- That to their books put med'cines all in,
- But known this secret, they had never
- (Of which they will be guilty ever)
- Been murderers of so much paper,
- Or wasted many a hurtless taper;
- No Indian drug had e'er been famed,
- Tabacco, sassafras not named;
- Ne yet, of guacum one small stick, sir,
- Nor Raymund Lully's great elixir.
- Ne had been known the Danish Gonswart,
- Or Paracelsus, with his long-sword.
- PER: All this, yet, will not do, eight crowns is high.
- VOLP: No more.--Gentlemen, if I had but time to discourse to you
- the miraculous effects of this my oil, surnamed Oglio del Scoto;
- with the countless catalogue of those I have cured of the
- aforesaid, and many more diseases; the pattents and privileges of
- all the princes and commonwealths of Christendom; or but the
- depositions of those that appeared on my part, before the signiory
- of the Sanita and most learned College of Physicians; where I was
- authorised, upon notice taken of the admirable virtues of my
- medicaments, and mine own excellency in matter of rare and unknown
- secrets, not only to disperse them publicly in this famous city,
- but in all the territories, that happily joy under the government
- of the most pious and magnificent states of Italy. But may some
- other gallant fellow say, O, there be divers that make profession
- to have as good, and as experimented receipts as yours: indeed,
- very many have assayed, like apes, in imitation of that, which is
- really and essentially in me, to make of this oil; bestowed great
- cost in furnaces, stills, alembecks, continual fires, and
- preparation of the ingredients, (as indeed there goes to it six
- hundred several simples, besides some quantity of human fat, for
- the conglutination, which we buy of the anatomists,) but, when
- these practitioners come to the last decoction, blow, blow, puff,
- puff, and all flies in fumo: ha, ha, ha! Poor wretches! I rather
- pity their folly and indiscretion, than their loss of time and
- money; for these may be recovered by industry: but to be a fool
- born, is a disease incurable.
- For myself, I always from my youth have endeavoured to get the
- rarest secrets, and book them, either in exchange, or for money;
- I spared nor cost nor labour, where any thing was worthy to be
- learned. And gentlemen, honourable gentlemen, I will undertake,
- by virtue of chemical art, out of the honourable hat that covers
- your head, to extract the four elements; that is to say, the
- fire, air, water, and earth, and return you your felt without
- burn or stain. For, whilst others have been at the Balloo, I
- have been at my book; and am now past the craggy paths of study,
- and come to the flowery plains of honour and reputation.
- SIR P: I do assure you, sir, that is his aim.
- VOLP: But, to our price--
- PER: And that withal, sir Pol.
- VOLP: You all know, honourable gentlemen, I never valued this
- ampulla, or vial, at less than eight crowns, but for this time,
- I am content, to be deprived of it for six; six crowns is the
- price; and less, in courtesy I know you cannot offer me; take it,
- or leave it, howsoever, both it and I am at your service. I ask
- you not as the value of the thing, for then I should demand of
- you a thousand crowns, so the cardinals Montalto, Fernese, the
- great Duke of Tuscany, my gossip, with divers other princes, have
- given me; but I despise money. Only to shew my affection to you,
- honourable gentlemen, and your illustrious State here, I have
- neglected the messages of these princes, mine own offices,
- framed my journey hither, only to present you with the fruits of
- my travels.--Tune your voices once more to the touch of your
- instruments, and give the honourable assembly some delightful
- recreation.
- PER: What monstrous and most painful circumstance
- Is here, to get some three or four gazettes,
- Some three-pence in the whole! for that 'twill come to.
- NANO [SINGS.]: You that would last long, list to my song,
- Make no more coil, but buy of this oil.
- Would you be ever fair and young?
- Stout of teeth, and strong of tongue?
- Tart of palate? quick of ear?
- Sharp of sight? of nostril clear?
- Moist of hand? and light of foot?
- Or, I will come nearer to't,
- Would you live free from all diseases?
- Do the act your mistress pleases;
- Yet fright all aches from your bones?
- Here's a med'cine, for the nones.
- VOLP: Well, I am in a humour at this time to make a present of
- the small quantity my coffer contains; to the rich, in
- courtesy, and to the poor for God's sake. Wherefore now mark:
- I ask'd you six crowns, and six crowns, at other times, you
- have paid me; you shall not give me six crowns, nor five, nor
- four, nor three, nor two, nor one; nor half a ducat; no, nor a
- moccinigo. Sixpence it will cost you, or six hundred pound--
- expect no lower price, for, by the banner of my front, I will
- not bate a bagatine, that I will have, only, a pledge of your
- loves, to carry something from amongst you, to shew I am not
- contemn'd by you. Therefore, now, toss your handkerchiefs,
- cheerfully, cheerfully; and be advertised, that the first
- heroic spirit that deignes to grace me with a handkerchief, I
- will give it a little remembrance of something, beside, shall
- please it better, than if I had presented it with a double
- pistolet.
- PER: Will you be that heroic spark, sir Pol?
- [CELIA AT A WINDOW ABOVE, THROWS DOWN HER HANDKERCHIEF.]
- O see! the window has prevented you.
- VOLP: Lady, I kiss your bounty; and for this timely grace you
- have done your poor Scoto of Mantua, I will return you, over and
- above my oil, a secret of that high and inestimable nature,
- shall make you for ever enamour'd on that minute, wherein your
- eye first descended on so mean, yet not altogether to be
- despised, an object. Here is a powder conceal'd in this paper,
- of which, if I should speak to the worth, nine thousand volumes
- were but as one page, that page as a line, that line as a word;
- so short is this pilgrimage of man (which some call life) to the
- expressing of it. Would I reflect on the price? why, the whole
- world is but as an empire, that empire as a province, that
- province as a bank, that bank as a private purse to the purchase
- of it. I will only tell you; it is the powder that made Venus a
- goddess (given her by Apollo,) that kept her perpetually young,
- clear'd her wrinkles, firm'd her gums, fill'd her skin, colour'd
- her hair; from her deriv'd to Helen, and at the sack of Troy
- unfortunately lost: till now, in this our age, it was as happily
- recovered, by a studious antiquary, out of some ruins of Asia,
- who sent a moiety of it to the court of France, (but much
- sophisticated,) wherewith the ladies there, now, colour their
- hair. The rest, at this present, remains with me; extracted to a
- quintessence: so that, whereever it but touches, in youth it
- perpetually preserves, in age restores the complexion; seats your
- teeth, did they dance like virginal jacks, firm as a wall; makes
- them white as ivory, that were black, as--
- [ENTER CORVINO.]
- COR: Spight o' the devil, and my shame! come down here;
- Come down;--No house but mine to make your scene?
- Signior Flaminio, will you down, sir? down?
- What, is my wife your Franciscina, sir?
- No windows on the whole Piazza, here,
- To make your properties, but mine? but mine?
- [BEATS AWAY VOLPONE, NANO, ETC.]
- Heart! ere to-morrow, I shall be new-christen'd,
- And call'd the Pantalone di Besogniosi,
- About the town.
- PER: What should this mean, sir Pol?
- SIR P: Some trick of state, believe it. I will home.
- PER: It may be some design on you:
- SIR P: I know not.
- I'll stand upon my guard.
- PER: It is your best, sir.
- SIR P: This three weeks, all my advices, all my letters,
- They have been intercepted.
- PER: Indeed, sir!
- Best have a care.
- SIR P: Nay, so I will.
- PER: This knight,
- I may not lose him, for my mirth, till night.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 2.2.
- A ROOM IN VOLPONE'S HOUSE.
- ENTER VOLPONE AND MOSCA.
- VOLP: O, I am wounded!
- MOS: Where, sir?
- VOLP: Not without;
- Those blows were nothing: I could bear them ever.
- But angry Cupid, bolting from her eyes,
- Hath shot himself into me like a flame;
- Where, now, he flings about his burning heat,
- As in a furnace an ambitious fire,
- Whose vent is stopt. The fight is all within me.
- I cannot live, except thou help me, Mosca;
- My liver melts, and I, without the hope
- Of some soft air, from her refreshing breath,
- Am but a heap of cinders.
- MOS: 'Las, good sir,
- Would you had never seen her!
- VOLP: Nay, would thou
- Had'st never told me of her!
- MOS: Sir 'tis true;
- I do confess I was unfortunate,
- And you unhappy: but I'm bound in conscience,
- No less than duty, to effect my best
- To your release of torment, and I will, sir.
- VOLP: Dear Mosca, shall I hope?
- MOS: Sir, more than dear,
- I will not bid you to dispair of aught
- Within a human compass.
- VOLP: O, there spoke
- My better angel. Mosca, take my keys,
- Gold, plate, and jewels, all's at thy devotion;
- Employ them how thou wilt; nay, coin me too:
- So thou, in this, but crown my longings, Mosca.
- MOS: Use but your patience.
- VOLP: So I have.
- MOS: I doubt not
- To bring success to your desires.
- VOLP: Nay, then,
- I not repent me of my late disguise.
- MOS: If you can horn him, sir, you need not.
- VOLP: True:
- Besides, I never meant him for my heir.--
- Is not the colour of my beard and eyebrows,
- To make me known?
- MOS: No jot.
- VOLP: I did it well.
- MOS: So well, would I could follow you in mine,
- With half the happiness!
- [ASIDE.]
- --and yet I would
- Escape your Epilogue.
- VOLP: But were they gull'd
- With a belief that I was Scoto?
- MOS: Sir,
- Scoto himself could hardly have distinguish'd!
- I have not time to flatter you now; we'll part;
- And as I prosper, so applaud my art.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 2.3.
- A ROOM IN CORVINO'S HOUSE.
- ENTER CORVINO, WITH HIS SWORD IN HIS HAND, DRAGGING
- IN CELIA.
- CORV: Death of mine honour, with the city's fool!
- A juggling, tooth-drawing, prating mountebank!
- And at a public window! where, whilst he,
- With his strain'd action, and his dole of faces,
- To his drug-lecture draws your itching ears,
- A crew of old, unmarried, noted letchers,
- Stood leering up like satyrs; and you smile
- Most graciously, and fan your favours forth,
- To give your hot spectators satisfaction!
- What; was your mountebank their call? their whistle?
- Or were you enamour'd on his copper rings,
- His saffron jewel, with the toad-stone in't,
- Or his embroider'd suit, with the cope-stitch,
- Made of a herse-cloth? or his old tilt-feather?
- Or his starch'd beard? Well; you shall have him, yes!
- He shall come home, and minister unto you
- The fricace for the mother. Or, let me see,
- I think you'd rather mount; would you not mount?
- Why, if you'll mount, you may; yes truly, you may:
- And so you may be seen, down to the foot.
- Get you a cittern, lady Vanity,
- And be a dealer with the virtuous man;
- Make one: I'll but protest myself a cuckold,
- And save your dowry. I'm a Dutchman, I!
- For, if you thought me an Italian,
- You would be damn'd, ere you did this, you whore!
- Thou'dst tremble, to imagine, that the murder
- Of father, mother, brother, all thy race,
- Should follow, as the subject of my justice.
- CEL: Good sir, have pacience.
- CORV: What couldst thou propose
- Less to thyself, than in this heat of wrath
- And stung with my dishonour, I should strike
- This steel into thee, with as many stabs,
- As thou wert gaz'd upon with goatish eyes?
- CEL: Alas, sir, be appeas'd! I could not think
- My being at the window should more now
- Move your impatience, than at other times.
- CORV: No! not to seek and entertain a parley
- With a known knave, before a multitude!
- You were an actor with your handkerchief;
- Which he most sweetly kist in the receipt,
- And might, no doubt, return it with a letter,
- And point the place where you might meet: your sister's,
- Your mother's, or your aunt's might serve the turn.
- CEL: Why, dear sir, when do I make these excuses,
- Or ever stir abroad, but to the church?
- And that so seldom--
- CORV: Well, it shall be less;
- And thy restraint before was liberty,
- To what I now decree: and therefore mark me.
- First, I will have this bawdy light damm'd up;
- And till't be done, some two or three yards off,
- I'll chalk a line: o'er which if thou but chance
- To set thy desperate foot; more hell, more horror
- More wild remorseless rage shall seize on thee,
- Than on a conjurer, that had heedless left
- His circle's safety ere his devil was laid.
- Then here's a lock which I will hang upon thee;
- And, now I think on't, I will keep thee backwards;
- Thy lodging shall be backwards; thy walks backwards;
- Thy prospect, all be backwards; and no pleasure,
- That thou shalt know but backwards: nay, since you force
- My honest nature, know, it is your own,
- Being too open, makes me use you thus:
- Since you will not contain your subtle nostrils
- In a sweet room, but they must snuff the air
- Of rank and sweaty passengers.
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- --One knocks.
- Away, and be not seen, pain of thy life;
- Nor look toward the window: if thou dost--
- Nay, stay, hear this--let me not prosper, whore,
- But I will make thee an anatomy,
- Dissect thee mine own self, and read a lecture
- Upon thee to the city, and in public.
- Away!
- [EXIT CELIA.]
- [ENTER SERVANT.]
- Who's there?
- SERV: 'Tis signior Mosca, sir.
- CORV: Let him come in.
- [EXIT SERVANT.]
- His master's dead: There's yet
- Some good to help the bad.--
- [ENTER MOSCA.]
- My Mosca, welcome!
- I guess your news.
- MOS: I fear you cannot, sir.
- CORV: Is't not his death?
- MOS: Rather the contrary.
- CORV: Not his recovery?
- MOS: Yes, sir,
- CORV: I am curs'd,
- I am bewitch'd, my crosses meet to vex me.
- How? how? how? how?
- MOS: Why, sir, with Scoto's oil;
- Corbaccio and Voltore brought of it,
- Whilst I was busy in an inner room--
- CORV: Death! that damn'd mountebank; but for the law
- Now, I could kill the rascal: it cannot be,
- His oil should have that virtue. Have not I
- Known him a common rogue, come fidling in
- To the osteria, with a tumbling whore,
- And, when he has done all his forced tricks, been glad
- Of a poor spoonful of dead wine, with flies in't?
- It cannot be. All his ingredients
- Are a sheep's gall, a roasted bitch's marrow,
- Some few sod earwigs pounded caterpillars,
- A little capon's grease, and fasting spittle:
- I know them to a dram.
- MOS: I know not, sir,
- But some on't, there, they pour'd into his ears,
- Some in his nostrils, and recover'd him;
- Applying but the fricace.
- CORV: Pox o' that fricace.
- MOS: And since, to seem the more officious
- And flatt'ring of his health, there, they have had,
- At extreme fees, the college of physicians
- Consulting on him, how they might restore him;
- Where one would have a cataplasm of spices,
- Another a flay'd ape clapp'd to his breast,
- A third would have it a dog, a fourth an oil,
- With wild cats' skins: at last, they all resolved
- That, to preserve him, was no other means,
- But some young woman must be straight sought out,
- Lusty, and full of juice, to sleep by him;
- And to this service, most unhappily,
- And most unwillingly, am I now employ'd,
- Which here I thought to pre-acquaint you with,
- For your advice, since it concerns you most;
- Because, I would not do that thing might cross
- Your ends, on whom I have my whole dependance, sir:
- Yet, if I do it not, they may delate
- My slackness to my patron, work me out
- Of his opinion; and there all your hopes,
- Ventures, or whatsoever, are all frustrate!
- I do but tell you, sir. Besides, they are all
- Now striving, who shall first present him; therefore--
- I could entreat you, briefly conclude somewhat;
- Prevent them if you can.
- CORV: Death to my hopes,
- This is my villainous fortune! Best to hire
- Some common courtezan.
- MOS: Ay, I thought on that, sir;
- But they are all so subtle, full of art--
- And age again doting and flexible,
- So as--I cannot tell--we may, perchance,
- Light on a quean may cheat us all.
- CORV: 'Tis true.
- MOS: No, no: it must be one that has no tricks, sir,
- Some simple thing, a creature made unto it;
- Some wench you may command. Have you no kinswoman?
- Odso--Think, think, think, think, think, think, think, sir.
- One o' the doctors offer'd there his daughter.
- CORV: How!
- MOS: Yes, signior Lupo, the physician.
- CORV: His daughter!
- MOS: And a virgin, sir. Why? alas,
- He knows the state of's body, what it is;
- That nought can warm his blood sir, but a fever;
- Nor any incantation raise his spirit:
- A long forgetfulness hath seized that part.
- Besides sir, who shall know it? some one or two--
- CORV: I prithee give me leave.
- [WALKS ASIDE.]
- If any man
- But I had had this luck--The thing in't self,
- I know, is nothing--Wherefore should not I
- As well command my blood and my affections,
- As this dull doctor? In the point of honour,
- The cases are all one of wife and daughter.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: I hear him coming.
- CORV: She shall do't: 'tis done.
- Slight! if this doctor, who is not engaged,
- Unless 't be for his counsel, which is nothing,
- Offer his daughter, what should I, that am
- So deeply in? I will prevent him: Wretch!
- Covetous wretch!--Mosca, I have determined.
- MOS: How, sir?
- CORV: We'll make all sure. The party you wot of
- Shall be mine own wife, Mosca.
- MOS: Sir, the thing,
- But that I would not seem to counsel you,
- I should have motion'd to you, at the first:
- And make your count, you have cut all their throats.
- Why! 'tis directly taking a possession!
- And in his next fit, we may let him go.
- 'Tis but to pull the pillow from his head,
- And he is throttled: it had been done before,
- But for your scrupulous doubts.
- CORV: Ay, a plague on't,
- My conscience fools my wit! Well, I'll be brief,
- And so be thou, lest they should be before us:
- Go home, prepare him, tell him with what zeal
- And willingness I do it; swear it was
- On the first hearing, as thou mayst do, truly,
- Mine own free motion.
- MOS: Sir, I warrant you,
- I'll so possess him with it, that the rest
- Of his starv'd clients shall be banish'd all;
- And only you received. But come not, sir,
- Until I send, for I have something else
- To ripen for your good, you must not know't.
- CORV: But do not you forget to send now.
- MOS: Fear not.
- [EXIT.]
- CORV: Where are you, wife? my Celia? wife?
- [RE-ENTER CELIA.]
- --What, blubbering?
- Come, dry those tears. I think thou thought'st me in earnest;
- Ha! by this light I talk'd so but to try thee:
- Methinks the lightness of the occasion
- Should have confirm'd thee. Come, I am not jealous.
- CEL: No!
- CORV: Faith I am not I, nor never was;
- It is a poor unprofitable humour.
- Do not I know, if women have a will,
- They'll do 'gainst all the watches of the world,
- And that the feircest spies are tamed with gold?
- Tut, I am confident in thee, thou shalt see't;
- And see I'll give thee cause too, to believe it.
- Come kiss me. Go, and make thee ready, straight,
- In all thy best attire, thy choicest jewels,
- Put them all on, and, with them, thy best looks:
- We are invited to a solemn feast,
- At old Volpone's, where it shall appear
- How far I am free from jealousy or fear.
- [exeunt.]
- ACT 3. SCENE 3.1.
- A STREET.
- ENTER MOSCA.
- MOS: I fear, I shall begin to grow in love
- With my dear self, and my most prosperous parts,
- They do so spring and burgeon; I can feel
- A whimsy in my blood: I know not how,
- Success hath made me wanton. I could skip
- Out of my skin, now, like a subtle snake,
- I am so limber. O! your parasite
- Is a most precious thing, dropt from above,
- Not bred 'mongst clods, and clodpoles, here on earth.
- I muse, the mystery was not made a science,
- It is so liberally profest! almost
- All the wise world is little else, in nature,
- But parasites, or sub-parasites.--And yet,
- I mean not those that have your bare town-art,
- To know who's fit to feed them; have no house,
- No family, no care, and therefore mould
- Tales for men's ears, to bait that sense; or get
- Kitchen-invention, and some stale receipts
- To please the belly, and the groin; nor those,
- With their court dog-tricks, that can fawn and fleer,
- Make their revenue out of legs and faces,
- Echo my lord, and lick away a moth:
- But your fine elegant rascal, that can rise,
- And stoop, almost together, like an arrow;
- Shoot through the air as nimbly as a star;
- Turn short as doth a swallow; and be here,
- And there, and here, and yonder, all at once;
- Present to any humour, all occasion;
- And change a visor, swifter than a thought!
- This is the creature had the art born with him;
- Toils not to learn it, but doth practise it
- Out of most excellent nature: and such sparks
- Are the true parasites, others but their zanis.
- [ENTER BONARIO.]
- MOS: Who's this? Bonario, old Corbaccio's son?
- The person I was bound to seek.--Fair sir,
- You are happily met.
- BON: That cannot be by thee.
- MOS: Why, sir?
- BON: Nay, pray thee know thy way, and leave me:
- I would be loth to interchange discourse
- With such a mate as thou art
- MOS: Courteous sir,
- Scorn not my poverty.
- BON: Not I, by heaven;
- But thou shalt give me leave to hate thy baseness.
- MOS: Baseness!
- BON: Ay; answer me, is not thy sloth
- Sufficient argument? thy flattery?
- Thy means of feeding?
- MOS: Heaven be good to me!
- These imputations are too common, sir,
- And easily stuck on virtue when she's poor.
- You are unequal to me, and however,
- Your sentence may be righteous, yet you are not
- That, ere you know me, thus proceed in censure:
- St. Mark bear witness 'gainst you, 'tis inhuman.
- [WEEPS.]
- BON [ASIDE.]: What! does he weep? the sign is soft and good;
- I do repent me that I was so harsh.
- MOS: 'Tis true, that, sway'd by strong necessity,
- I am enforced to eat my careful bread
- With too much obsequy; 'tis true, beside,
- That I am fain to spin mine own poor raiment
- Out of my mere observance, being not born
- To a free fortune: but that I have done
- Base offices, in rending friends asunder,
- Dividing families, betraying counsels,
- Whispering false lies, or mining men with praises,
- Train'd their credulity with perjuries,
- Corrupted chastity, or am in love
- With mine own tender ease, but would not rather
- Prove the most rugged, and laborious course,
- That might redeem my present estimation,
- Let me here perish, in all hope of goodness.
- BON [ASIDE.]: This cannot be a personated passion.--
- I was to blame, so to mistake thy nature;
- Prithee, forgive me: and speak out thy business.
- MOS: Sir, it concerns you; and though I may seem,
- At first to make a main offence in manners,
- And in my gratitude unto my master;
- Yet, for the pure love, which I bear all right,
- And hatred of the wrong, I must reveal it.
- This very hour your father is in purpose
- To disinherit you--
- BON: How!
- MOS: And thrust you forth,
- As a mere stranger to his blood; 'tis true, sir:
- The work no way engageth me, but, as
- I claim an interest in the general state
- Of goodness and true virtue, which I hear
- To abound in you: and, for which mere respect,
- Without a second aim, sir, I have done it.
- BON: This tale hath lost thee much of the late trust
- Thou hadst with me; it is impossible:
- I know not how to lend it any thought,
- My father should be so unnatural.
- MOS: It is a confidence that well becomes
- Your piety; and form'd, no doubt, it is
- From your own simple innocence: which makes
- Your wrong more monstrous, and abhorr'd. But, sir,
- I now will tell you more. This very minute,
- It is, or will be doing; and, if you
- Shall be but pleas'd to go with me, I'll bring you,
- I dare not say where you shall see, but where
- Your ear shall be a witness of the deed;
- Hear yourself written bastard; and profest
- The common issue of the earth.
- BON: I am amazed!
- MOS: Sir, if I do it not, draw your just sword,
- And score your vengeance on my front and face;
- Mark me your villain: you have too much wrong,
- And I do suffer for you, sir. My heart
- Weeps blood in anguish--
- BON: Lead; I follow thee.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 3.2.
- A ROOM IN VOLPONE'S HOUSE.
- ENTER VOLPONE.
- VOLP: Mosca stays long, methinks. Bring forth your sports,
- And help to make the wretched time more sweet.
- [ENTER NANO, ANDROGYNO, AND CASTRONE.]
- NAN: Dwarf, fool, and eunuch, well met here we be.
- A question it were now, whether of us three,
- Being all the known delicates of a rich man,
- In pleasing him, claim the precedency can?
- CAS: I claim for myself.
- AND: And so doth the fool.
- NAN: 'Tis foolish indeed: let me set you both to school.
- First for your dwarf, he's little and witty,
- And every thing, as it is little, is pretty;
- Else why do men say to a creature of my shape,
- So soon as they see him, It's a pretty little ape?
- And why a pretty ape, but for pleasing imitation
- Of greater men's actions, in a ridiculous fashion?
- Beside, this feat body of mine doth not crave
- Half the meat, drink, and cloth, one of your bulks will have.
- Admit your fool's face be the mother of laughter,
- Yet, for his brain, it must always come after:
- And though that do feed him, 'tis a pitiful case,
- His body is beholding to such a bad face.
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- VOLP: Who's there? my couch; away! look! Nano, see:
- [EXE. AND. AND CAS.]
- Give me my caps, first--go, enquire.
- [EXIT NANO.]
- --Now, Cupid
- Send it be Mosca, and with fair return!
- NAN [WITHIN.]: It is the beauteous madam--
- VOLP: Would-be?--is it?
- NAN: The same.
- VOLP: Now torment on me! Squire her in;
- For she will enter, or dwell here for ever:
- Nay, quickly.
- [RETIRES TO HIS COUCH.]
- --That my fit were past! I fear
- A second hell too, that my lothing this
- Will quite expel my appetite to the other:
- Would she were taking now her tedious leave.
- Lord, how it threats me what I am to suffer!
- [RE-ENTER NANO, WITH LADY POLITICK WOULD-BE.]
- LADY P: I thank you, good sir. 'Pray you signify
- Unto your patron, I am here.--This band
- Shews not my neck enough.--I trouble you, sir;
- Let me request you, bid one of my women
- Come hither to me.--In good faith, I, am drest
- Most favorably, to-day! It is no matter:
- 'Tis well enough.--
- [ENTER 1 WAITING-WOMAN.]
- Look, see, these petulant things,
- How they have done this!
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: I do feel the fever
- Entering in at mine ears; O, for a charm,
- To fright it hence.
- LADY P: Come nearer: Is this curl
- In his right place, or this? Why is this higher
- Then all the rest? You have not wash'd your eyes, yet!
- Or do they not stand even in your head?
- Where is your fellow? call her.
- [EXIT 1 WOMAN.]
- NAN: Now, St. Mark
- Deliver us! anon, she will beat her women,
- Because her nose is red.
- [RE-ENTER 1 WITH 2 WOMAN.]
- LADY P: I pray you, view
- This tire, forsooth; are all things apt, or no?
- 1 WOM: One hair a little, here, sticks out, forsooth.
- LADY P: Does't so, forsooth? and where was your dear sight,
- When it did so, forsooth! What now! bird-eyed?
- And you too? 'Pray you, both approach and mend it.
- Now, by that light, I muse you are not ashamed!
- I, that have preach'd these things so oft unto you,
- Read you the principles, argued all the grounds,
- Disputed every fitness, every grace,
- Call'd you to counsel of so frequent dressings--
- NAN [ASIDE.]: More carefully than of your fame or honour.
- LADY P: Made you acquainted, what an ample dowry
- The knowledge of these things would be unto you,
- Able, alone, to get you noble husbands
- At your return: and you thus to neglect it!
- Besides you seeing what a curious nation
- The Italians are, what will they say of me?
- "The English lady cannot dress herself."
- Here's a fine imputation to our country:
- Well, go your ways, and stay, in the next room.
- This fucus was too course too, it's no matter.--
- Good-sir, you will give them entertainment?
- [EXEUNT NANO AND WAITING-WOMEN.]
- VOLP: The storm comes toward me.
- LADY P [GOES TO THE COUCH.]: How does my Volpone?
- VOLP: Troubled with noise, I cannot sleep; I dreamt
- That a strange fury enter'd, now, my house,
- And, with the dreadful tempest of her breath,
- Did cleave my roof asunder.
- LADY P: Believe me, and I
- Had the most fearful dream, could I remember't--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Out on my fate! I have given her the occasion
- How to torment me: she will tell me hers.
- LADY P: Me thought, the golden mediocrity,
- Polite and delicate--
- VOLP: O, if you do love me,
- No more; I sweat, and suffer, at the mention
- Of any dream: feel, how I tremble yet.
- LADY P: Alas, good soul! the passion of the heart.
- Seed-pearl were good now, boil'd with syrup of apples,
- Tincture of gold, and coral, citron-pills,
- Your elicampane root, myrobalanes--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Ah me, I have ta'en a grass-hopper by the wing!
- LADY P: Burnt silk, and amber: you have muscadel
- Good in the house--
- VOLP: You will not drink, and part?
- LADY P: No, fear not that. I doubt, we shall not get
- Some English saffron, half a dram would serve;
- Your sixteen cloves, a little musk, dried mints,
- Bugloss, and barley-meal--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: She's in again!
- Before I fain'd diseases, now I have one.
- LADY P: And these applied with a right scarlet cloth.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Another flood of words! a very torrent!
- LADY P: Shall I, sir, make you a poultice?
- VOLP: No, no, no;
- I am very well: you need prescribe no more.
- LADY P: I have a little studied physic; but now,
- I'm all for music, save, in the forenoons,
- An hour or two for painting. I would have
- A lady, indeed, to have all, letters, and arts,
- Be able to discourse, to write, to paint,
- But principal, as Plato holds, your music,
- And, so does wise Pythagoras, I take it,
- Is your true rapture: when there is concent
- In face, in voice, and clothes: and is, indeed,
- Our sex's chiefest ornament.
- VOLP: The poet
- As old in time as Plato, and as knowing,
- Says that your highest female grace is silence.
- LADY P: Which of your poets? Petrarch, or Tasso, or Dante?
- Guarini? Ariosto? Aretine?
- Cieco di Hadria? I have read them all.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Is every thing a cause to my distruction?
- LADY P: I think I have two or three of them about me.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: The sun, the sea will sooner both stand still,
- Then her eternal tongue; nothing can 'scape it.
- LADY P: Here's pastor Fido--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Profess obstinate silence,
- That's now my safest.
- LADY P: All our English writers,
- I mean such as are happy in the Italian,
- Will deign to steal out of this author, mainly:
- Almost as much, as from Montagnie;
- He has so modern and facile a vein,
- Fitting the time, and catching the court-ear!
- Your Petrarch is more passionate, yet he,
- In days of sonetting, trusted them with much:
- Dante is hard, and few can understand him.
- But, for a desperate wit, there's Aretine;
- Only, his pictures are a little obscene--
- You mark me not.
- VOLP: Alas, my mind is perturb'd.
- LADY P: Why, in such cases, we must cure ourselves,
- Make use of our philosophy--
- VOLP: Oh me!
- LADY P: And as we find our passions do rebel,
- Encounter them with reason, or divert them,
- By giving scope unto some other humour
- Of lesser danger: as, in politic bodies,
- There's nothing more doth overwhelm the judgment,
- And cloud the understanding, than too much
- Settling and fixing, and, as 'twere, subsiding
- Upon one object. For the incorporating
- Of these same outward things, into that part,
- Which we call mental, leaves some certain faeces
- That stop the organs, and as Plato says,
- Assassinate our Knowledge.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Now, the spirit
- Of patience help me!
- LADY P: Come, in faith, I must
- Visit you more a days; and make you well:
- Laugh and be lusty.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: My good angel save me!
- LADY P: There was but one sole man in all the world,
- With whom I e'er could sympathise; and he
- Would lie you, often, three, four hours together
- To hear me speak; and be sometimes so rapt,
- As he would answer me quite from the purpose,
- Like you, and you are like him, just. I'll discourse,
- An't be but only, sir, to bring you asleep,
- How we did spend our time and loves together,
- For some six years.
- VOLP: Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh!
- LADY P: For we were coaetanei, and brought up--
- VOLP: Some power, some fate, some fortune rescue me!
- [ENTER MOSCA.]
- MOS: God save you, madam!
- LADY P: Good sir.
- VOLP: Mosca? welcome,
- Welcome to my redemption.
- MOS: Why, sir?
- VOLP: Oh,
- Rid me of this my torture, quickly, there;
- My madam, with the everlasting voice:
- The bells, in time of pestilence, ne'er made
- Like noise, or were in that perpetual motion!
- The Cock-pit comes not near it. All my house,
- But now, steam'd like a bath with her thick breath.
- A lawyer could not have been heard; nor scarce
- Another woman, such a hail of words
- She has let fall. For hell's sake, rid her hence.
- MOS: Has she presented?
- VOLP: O, I do not care;
- I'll take her absence, upon any price,
- With any loss.
- MOS: Madam--
- LADY P: I have brought your patron
- A toy, a cap here, of mine own work.
- MOS: 'Tis well.
- I had forgot to tell you, I saw your knight,
- Where you would little think it.--
- LADY P: Where?
- MOS: Marry,
- Where yet, if you make haste, you may apprehend,
- Rowing upon the water in a gondole,
- With the most cunning courtezan of Venice.
- LADY P: Is't true?
- MOS: Pursue them, and believe your eyes;
- Leave me, to make your gift.
- [EXIT LADY P. HASTILY.]
- --I knew 'twould take:
- For, lightly, they, that use themselves most license,
- Are still most jealous.
- VOLP: Mosca, hearty thanks,
- For thy quick fiction, and delivery of me.
- Now to my hopes, what say'st thou?
- [RE-ENTER LADY P. WOULD-BE.]
- LADY P: But do you hear, sir?--
- VOLP: Again! I fear a paroxysm.
- LADY P: Which way
- Row'd they together?
- MOS: Toward the Rialto.
- LADY P: I pray you lend me your dwarf.
- MOS: I pray you, take him.--
- [EXIT LADY P.]
- Your hopes, sir, are like happy blossoms, fair,
- And promise timely fruit, if you will stay
- But the maturing; keep you at your couch,
- Corbaccio will arrive straight, with the Will;
- When he is gone, I'll tell you more.
- [EXIT.]
- VOLP: My blood,
- My spirits are return'd; I am alive:
- And like your wanton gamester, at primero,
- Whose thought had whisper'd to him, not go less,
- Methinks I lie, and draw--for an encounter.
- [THE SCENE CLOSES UPON VOLPONE.]
- SCENE 3.3
- THE PASSAGE LEADING TO VOLPONE'S CHAMBER.
- ENTER MOSCA AND BONARIO.
- MOS: Sir, here conceal'd,
- [SHEWS HIM A CLOSET.]
- you may here all. But, pray you,
- Have patience, sir;
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- --the same's your father knocks:
- I am compell'd to leave you.
- [EXIT.]
- BON: Do so.--Yet,
- Cannot my thought imagine this a truth.
- [GOES INTO THE CLOSET.]
- SCENE 3.4.
- ANOTHER PART OF THE SAME.
- ENTER MOSCA AND CORVINO, CELIA FOLLOWING.
- MOS: Death on me! you are come too soon, what meant you?
- Did not I say, I would send?
- CORV: Yes, but I fear'd
- You might forget it, and then they prevent us.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: Prevent! did e'er man haste so, for his horns?
- A courtier would not ply it so, for a place.
- --Well, now there's no helping it, stay here;
- I'll presently return.
- [EXIT.]
- CORV: Where are you, Celia?
- You know not wherefore I have brought you hither?
- CEL: Not well, except you told me.
- CORV: Now, I will:
- Hark hither.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 3.5.
- A CLOSET OPENING INTO A GALLERY.
- ENTER MOSCA AND BONARIO.
- MOS: Sir, your father hath sent word,
- It will be half an hour ere he come;
- And therefore, if you please to walk the while
- Into that gallery--at the upper end,
- There are some books to entertain the time:
- And I'll take care no man shall come unto you, sir.
- BON: Yes, I will stay there.
- [ASIDE.]--I do doubt this fellow.
- [EXIT.]
- MOS [LOOKING AFTER HIM.]: There; he is far enough;
- he can hear nothing:
- And, for his father, I can keep him off.
- [EXIT.]
- SCENE 3.6.
- VOLPONE'S CHAMBER.--VOLPONE ON HIS COUCH.
- MOSCA SITTING BY HIM.
- ENTER CORVINO, FORCING IN CELIA.
- CORV: Nay, now, there is no starting back, and therefore,
- Resolve upon it: I have so decreed.
- It must be done. Nor would I move't, afore,
- Because I would avoid all shifts and tricks,
- That might deny me.
- CEL: Sir, let me beseech you,
- Affect not these strange trials; if you doubt
- My chastity, why, lock me up for ever:
- Make me the heir of darkness. Let me live,
- Where I may please your fears, if not your trust.
- CORV: Believe it, I have no such humour, I.
- All that I speak I mean; yet I'm not mad;
- Nor horn-mad, see you? Go to, shew yourself
- Obedient, and a wife.
- CEL: O heaven!
- CORV: I say it,
- Do so.
- CEL: Was this the train?
- CORV: I've told you reasons;
- What the physicians have set down; how much
- It may concern me; what my engagements are;
- My means; and the necessity of those means,
- For my recovery: wherefore, if you be
- Loyal, and mine, be won, respect my venture.
- CEL: Before your honour?
- CORV: Honour! tut, a breath:
- There's no such thing, in nature: a mere term
- Invented to awe fools. What is my gold
- The worse, for touching, clothes for being look'd on?
- Why, this is no more. An old decrepit wretch,
- That has no sense, no sinew; takes his meat
- With others' fingers; only knows to gape,
- When you do scald his gums; a voice; a shadow;
- And, what can this man hurt you?
- CEL [ASIDE.]: Lord! what spirit
- Is this hath enter'd him?
- CORV: And for your fame,
- That's such a jig; as if I would go tell it,
- Cry it on the Piazza! who shall know it,
- But he that cannot speak it, and this fellow,
- Whose lips are in my pocket? save yourself,
- (If you'll proclaim't, you may,) I know no other,
- Shall come to know it.
- CEL: Are heaven and saints then nothing?
- Will they be blind or stupid?
- CORV: How!
- CEL: Good sir,
- Be jealous still, emulate them; and think
- What hate they burn with toward every sin.
- CORV: I grant you: if I thought it were a sin,
- I would not urge you. Should I offer this
- To some young Frenchman, or hot Tuscan blood
- That had read Aretine, conn'd all his prints,
- Knew every quirk within lust's labyrinth,
- And were professed critic in lechery;
- And I would look upon him, and applaud him,
- This were a sin: but here, 'tis contrary,
- A pious work, mere charity for physic,
- And honest polity, to assure mine own.
- CEL: O heaven! canst thou suffer such a change?
- VOLP: Thou art mine honour, Mosca, and my pride,
- My joy, my tickling, my delight! Go bring them.
- MOS [ADVANCING.]: Please you draw near, sir.
- CORV: Come on, what--
- You will not be rebellious? by that light--
- MOS: Sir,
- Signior Corvino, here, is come to see you.
- VOLP: Oh!
- MOS: And hearing of the consultation had,
- So lately, for your health, is come to offer,
- Or rather, sir, to prostitute--
- CORV: Thanks, sweet Mosca.
- MOS: Freely, unask'd, or unintreated--
- CORV: Well.
- MOS: As the true fervent instance of his love,
- His own most fair and proper wife; the beauty,
- Only of price in Venice--
- CORV: 'Tis well urged.
- MOS: To be your comfortress, and to preserve you.
- VOLP: Alas, I am past, already! Pray you, thank him
- For his good care and promptness; but for that,
- 'Tis a vain labour e'en to fight 'gainst heaven;
- Applying fire to stone--
- [COUGHING.] uh, uh, uh, uh!
- Making a dead leaf grow again. I take
- His wishes gently, though; and you may tell him,
- What I have done for him: marry, my state is hopeless.
- Will him to pray for me; and to use his fortune
- With reverence, when he comes to't.
- MOS: Do you hear, sir?
- Go to him with your wife.
- CORV: Heart of my father!
- Wilt thou persist thus? come, I pray thee, come.
- Thou seest 'tis nothing, Celia. By this hand,
- I shall grow violent. Come, do't, I say.
- CEL: Sir, kill me, rather: I will take down poison,
- Eat burning coals, do any thing.--
- CORV: Be damn'd!
- Heart, I'll drag thee hence, home, by the hair;
- Cry thee a strumpet through the streets; rip up
- Thy mouth unto thine ears; and slit thy nose,
- Like a raw rotchet!--Do not tempt me; come,
- Yield, I am loth--Death! I will buy some slave
- Whom I will kill, and bind thee to him, alive;
- And at my window hang you forth: devising
- Some monstrous crime, which I, in capital letters,
- Will eat into thy flesh with aquafortis,
- And burning corsives, on this stubborn breast.
- Now, by the blood thou hast incensed, I'll do it!
- CEL: Sir, what you please, you may, I am your martyr.
- CORV: Be not thus obstinate, I have not deserved it:
- Think who it is intreats you. 'Prithee, sweet;--
- Good faith, thou shalt have jewels, gowns, attires,
- What thou wilt think, and ask. Do but go kiss him.
- Or touch him, but, for my sake.--At my suit.--
- This once.--No! not! I shall remember this.
- Will you disgrace me thus? Do you thirst my undoing?
- MOS: Nay, gentle lady, be advised.
- CORV: No, no.
- She has watch'd her time. Ods precious, this is scurvy,
- 'Tis very scurvy: and you are--
- MOS: Nay, good, sir.
- CORV: An arrant Locust, by heaven, a locust!
- Whore, crocodile, that hast thy tears prepared,
- Expecting how thou'lt bid them flow--
- MOS: Nay, 'Pray you, sir!
- She will consider.
- CEL: Would my life would serve
- To satisfy--
- CORV: S'death! if she would but speak to him,
- And save my reputation, it were somewhat;
- But spightfully to affect my utter ruin!
- MOS: Ay, now you have put your fortune in her hands.
- Why i'faith, it is her modesty, I must quit her.
- If you were absent, she would be more coming;
- I know it: and dare undertake for her.
- What woman can before her husband? 'pray you,
- Let us depart, and leave her here.
- CORV: Sweet Celia,
- Thou may'st redeem all, yet; I'll say no more:
- If not, esteem yourself as lost,--Nay, stay there.
- [SHUTS THE DOOR, AND EXIT WITH MOSCA.]
- CEL: O God, and his good angels! whither, whither,
- Is shame fled human breasts? that with such ease,
- Men dare put off your honours, and their own?
- Is that, which ever was a cause of life,
- Now placed beneath the basest circumstance,
- And modesty an exile made, for money?
- VOLP: Ay, in Corvino, and such earth-fed minds,
- [LEAPING FROM HIS COUCH.]
- That never tasted the true heaven of love.
- Assure thee, Celia, he that would sell thee,
- Only for hope of gain, and that uncertain,
- He would have sold his part of Paradise
- For ready money, had he met a cope-man.
- Why art thou mazed to see me thus revived?
- Rather applaud thy beauty's miracle;
- 'Tis thy great work: that hath, not now alone,
- But sundry times raised me, in several shapes,
- And, but this morning, like a mountebank;
- To see thee at thy window: ay, before
- I would have left my practice, for thy love,
- In varying figures, I would have contended
- With the blue Proteus, or the horned flood.
- Now art thou welcome.
- CEL: Sir!
- VOLP: Nay, fly me not.
- Nor let thy false imagination
- That I was bed-rid, make thee think I am so:
- Thou shalt not find it. I am, now, as fresh,
- As hot, as high, and in as jovial plight,
- As when, in that so celebrated scene,
- At recitation of our comedy,
- For entertainment of the great Valois,
- I acted young Antinous; and attracted
- The eyes and ears of all the ladies present,
- To admire each graceful gesture, note, and footing.
- [SINGS.]
- Come, my Celia, let us prove,
- While we can, the sports of love,
- Time will not be ours for ever,
- He, at length, our good will sever;
- Spend not then his gifts in vain;
- Suns, that set, may rise again:
- But if once we loose this light,
- 'Tis with us perpetual night.
- Why should we defer our joys?
- Fame and rumour are but toys.
- Cannot we delude the eyes
- Of a few poor household spies?
- Or his easier ears beguile,
- Thus remooved by our wile?--
- 'Tis no sin love's fruits to steal:
- But the sweet thefts to reveal;
- To be taken, to be seen,
- These have crimes accounted been.
- CEL: Some serene blast me, or dire lightning strike
- This my offending face!
- VOLP: Why droops my Celia?
- Thou hast, in place of a base husband, found
- A worthy lover: use thy fortune well,
- With secrecy and pleasure. See, behold,
- What thou art queen of; not in expectation,
- As I feed others: but possess'd, and crown'd.
- See, here, a rope of pearl; and each, more orient
- Than that the brave Egyptian queen caroused:
- Dissolve and drink them. See, a carbuncle,
- May put out both the eyes of our St Mark;
- A diamond, would have bought Lollia Paulina,
- When she came in like star-light, hid with jewels,
- That were the spoils of provinces; take these,
- And wear, and lose them: yet remains an ear-ring
- To purchase them again, and this whole state.
- A gem but worth a private patrimony,
- Is nothing: we will eat such at a meal.
- The heads of parrots, tongues of nightingales,
- The brains of peacocks, and of estriches,
- Shall be our food: and, could we get the phoenix,
- Though nature lost her kind, she were our dish.
- CEL: Good sir, these things might move a mind affected
- With such delights; but I, whose innocence
- Is all I can think wealthy, or worth th' enjoying,
- And which, once lost, I have nought to lose beyond it,
- Cannot be taken with these sensual baits:
- If you have conscience--
- VOLP: 'Tis the beggar's virtue,
- If thou hast wisdom, hear me, Celia.
- Thy baths shall be the juice of July-flowers,
- Spirit of roses, and of violets,
- The milk of unicorns, and panthers' breath
- Gather'd in bags, and mixt with Cretan wines.
- Our drink shall be prepared gold and amber;
- Which we will take, until my roof whirl round
- With the vertigo: and my dwarf shall dance,
- My eunuch sing, my fool make up the antic.
- Whilst we, in changed shapes, act Ovid's tales,
- Thou, like Europa now, and I like Jove,
- Then I like Mars, and thou like Erycine:
- So, of the rest, till we have quite run through,
- And wearied all the fables of the gods.
- Then will I have thee in more modern forms,
- Attired like some sprightly dame of France,
- Brave Tuscan lady, or proud Spanish beauty;
- Sometimes, unto the Persian sophy's wife;
- Or the grand signior's mistress; and, for change,
- To one of our most artful courtezans,
- Or some quick Negro, or cold Russian;
- And I will meet thee in as many shapes:
- Where we may so transfuse our wandering souls,
- Out at our lips, and score up sums of pleasures,
- [SINGS.]
- That the curious shall not know
- How to tell them as they flow;
- And the envious, when they find
- What there number is, be pined.
- CEL: If you have ears that will be pierc'd--or eyes
- That can be open'd--a heart that may be touch'd--
- Or any part that yet sounds man about you--
- If you have touch of holy saints--or heaven--
- Do me the grace to let me 'scape--if not,
- Be bountiful and kill me. You do know,
- I am a creature, hither ill betray'd,
- By one, whose shame I would forget it were:
- If you will deign me neither of these graces,
- Yet feed your wrath, sir, rather than your lust,
- (It is a vice comes nearer manliness,)
- And punish that unhappy crime of nature,
- Which you miscall my beauty; flay my face,
- Or poison it with ointments, for seducing
- Your blood to this rebellion. Rub these hands,
- With what may cause an eating leprosy,
- E'en to my bones and marrow: any thing,
- That may disfavour me, save in my honour--
- And I will kneel to you, pray for you, pay down
- A thousand hourly vows, sir, for your health;
- Report, and think you virtuous--
- VOLP: Think me cold,
- Frosen and impotent, and so report me?
- That I had Nestor's hernia, thou wouldst think.
- I do degenerate, and abuse my nation,
- To play with opportunity thus long;
- I should have done the act, and then have parley'd.
- Yield, or I'll force thee.
- [SEIZES HER.]
- CEL: O! just God!
- VOLP: In vain--
- BON [RUSHING IN]: Forbear, foul ravisher, libidinous swine!
- Free the forced lady, or thou diest, impostor.
- But that I'm loth to snatch thy punishment
- Out of the hand of justice, thou shouldst, yet,
- Be made the timely sacrifice of vengeance,
- Before this altar, and this dross, thy idol.--
- Lady, let's quit the place, it is the den
- Of villany; fear nought, you have a guard:
- And he, ere long, shall meet his just reward.
- [EXEUNT BON. AND CEL.]
- VOLP: Fall on me, roof, and bury me in ruin!
- Become my grave, that wert my shelter! O!
- I am unmask'd, unspirited, undone,
- Betray'd to beggary, to infamy--
- [ENTER MOSCA, WOUNDED AND BLEEDING.]
- MOS: Where shall I run, most wretched shame of men,
- To beat out my unlucky brains?
- VOLP: Here, here.
- What! dost thou bleed?
- MOS: O that his well-driv'n sword
- Had been so courteous to have cleft me down
- Unto the navel; ere I lived to see
- My life, my hopes, my spirits, my patron, all
- Thus desperately engaged, by my error!
- VOLP: Woe on thy fortune!
- MOS: And my follies, sir.
- VOLP: Thou hast made me miserable.
- MOS: And myself, sir.
- Who would have thought he would have harken'd, so?
- VOLP: What shall we do?
- MOS: I know not; if my heart
- Could expiate the mischance, I'd pluck it out.
- Will you be pleased to hang me? or cut my throat?
- And I'll requite you, sir. Let us die like Romans,
- Since we have lived like Grecians.
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- VOLP: Hark! who's there?
- I hear some footing; officers, the saffi,
- Come to apprehend us! I do feel the brand
- Hissing already at my forehead; now,
- Mine ears are boring.
- MOS: To your couch, sir, you,
- Make that place good, however.
- [VOLPONE LIES DOWN, AS BEFORE.]
- --Guilty men
- Suspect what they deserve still.
- [ENTER CORBACCIO.]
- Signior Corbaccio!
- CORB: Why, how now, Mosca?
- MOS: O, undone, amazed, sir.
- Your son, I know not by what accident,
- Acquainted with your purpose to my patron,
- Touching your Will, and making him your heir,
- Enter'd our house with violence, his sword drawn
- Sought for you, call'd you wretch, unnatural,
- Vow'd he would kill you.
- CORB: Me!
- MOS: Yes, and my patron.
- CORB: This act shall disinherit him indeed;
- Here is the Will.
- MOS: 'Tis well, sir.
- CORB: Right and well:
- Be you as careful now for me.
- [ENTER VOLTORE, BEHIND.]
- MOS: My life, sir,
- Is not more tender'd; I am only yours.
- CORB: How does he? will he die shortly, think'st thou?
- MOS: I fear
- He'll outlast May.
- CORB: To-day?
- MOS: No, last out May, sir.
- CORB: Could'st thou not give him a dram?
- MOS: O, by no means, sir.
- CORB: Nay, I'll not bid you.
- VOLT [COMING FORWARD.]: This is a knave, I see.
- MOS [SEEING VOLTORE.]: How! signior Voltore!
- [ASIDE.] did he hear me?
- VOLT: Parasite!
- MOS: Who's that?--O, sir, most timely welcome--
- VOLT: Scarce,
- To the discovery of your tricks, I fear.
- You are his, ONLY? and mine, also? are you not?
- MOS: Who? I, sir?
- VOLT: You, sir. What device is this
- About a Will?
- MOS: A plot for you, sir.
- VOLT: Come,
- Put not your foists upon me; I shall scent them.
- MOS: Did you not hear it?
- VOLT: Yes, I hear Corbaccio
- Hath made your patron there his heir.
- MOS: 'Tis true,
- By my device, drawn to it by my plot,
- With hope--
- VOLT: Your patron should reciprocate?
- And you have promised?
- MOS: For your good, I did, sir.
- Nay, more, I told his son, brought, hid him here,
- Where he might hear his father pass the deed:
- Being persuaded to it by this thought, sir,
- That the unnaturalness, first, of the act,
- And then his father's oft disclaiming in him,
- (Which I did mean t'help on,) would sure enrage him
- To do some violence upon his parent,
- On which the law should take sufficient hold,
- And you be stated in a double hope:
- Truth be my comfort, and my conscience,
- My only aim was to dig you a fortune
- Out of these two old rotten sepulchres--
- VOLT: I cry thee mercy, Mosca.
- MOS: Worth your patience,
- And your great merit, sir. And see the change!
- VOLT: Why, what success?
- MOS: Most happless! you must help, sir.
- Whilst we expected the old raven, in comes
- Corvino's wife, sent hither by her husband--
- VOLT: What, with a present?
- MOS: No, sir, on visitation;
- (I'll tell you how anon;) and staying long,
- The youth he grows impatient, rushes forth,
- Seizeth the lady, wounds me, makes her swear
- (Or he would murder her, that was his vow)
- To affirm my patron to have done her rape:
- Which how unlike it is, you see! and hence,
- With that pretext he's gone, to accuse his father,
- Defame my patron, defeat you--
- VOLT: Where is her husband?
- Let him be sent for straight.
- MOS: Sir, I'll go fetch him.
- VOLT: Bring him to the Scrutineo.
- MOS: Sir, I will.
- VOLT: This must be stopt.
- MOS: O you do nobly, sir.
- Alas, 'twas labor'd all, sir, for your good;
- Nor was there want of counsel in the plot:
- But fortune can, at any time, o'erthrow
- The projects of a hundred learned clerks, sir.
- CORB [LISTENING]: What's that?
- VOLT: Will't please you, sir, to go along?
- [EXIT CORBACCIO, FOLLOWED BY VOLTORE.]
- MOS: Patron, go in, and pray for our success.
- VOLP [RISING FROM HIS COUCH.]: Need makes devotion:
- heaven your labour bless!
- [EXEUNT.]
- ACT 4. SCENE 4.1.
- A STREET.
- [ENTER SIR POLITICK WOULD-BE AND PEREGRINE.]
- SIR P: I told you, sir, it was a plot: you see
- What observation is! You mention'd me,
- For some instructions: I will tell you, sir,
- (Since we are met here in this height of Venice,)
- Some few perticulars I have set down,
- Only for this meridian, fit to be known
- Of your crude traveller, and they are these.
- I will not touch, sir, at your phrase, or clothes,
- For they are old.
- PER: Sir, I have better.
- SIR P: Pardon,
- I meant, as they are themes.
- PER: O, sir, proceed:
- I'll slander you no more of wit, good sir.
- SIR P: First, for your garb, it must be grave and serious,
- Very reserv'd, and lock'd; not tell a secret
- On any terms, not to your father; scarce
- A fable, but with caution; make sure choice
- Both of your company, and discourse; beware
- You never speak a truth--
- PER: How!
- SIR P: Not to strangers,
- For those be they you must converse with, most;
- Others I would not know, sir, but at distance,
- So as I still might be a saver in them:
- You shall have tricks else past upon you hourly.
- And then, for your religion, profess none,
- But wonder at the diversity, of all:
- And, for your part, protest, were there no other
- But simply the laws o' the land, you could content you,
- Nic. Machiavel, and Monsieur Bodin, both
- Were of this mind. Then must you learn the use
- And handling of your silver fork at meals;
- The metal of your glass; (these are main matters
- With your Italian;) and to know the hour
- When you must eat your melons, and your figs.
- PER: Is that a point of state too?
- SIR P: Here it is,
- For your Venetian, if he see a man
- Preposterous in the least, he has him straight;
- He has; he strips him. I'll acquaint you, sir,
- I now have lived here, 'tis some fourteen months
- Within the first week of my landing here,
- All took me for a citizen of Venice:
- I knew the forms, so well--
- PER [ASIDE.]: And nothing else.
- SIR P: I had read Contarene, took me a house,
- Dealt with my Jews to furnish it with moveables--
- Well, if I could but find one man, one man
- To mine own heart, whom I durst trust, I would--
- PER: What, what, sir?
- SIR P: Make him rich; make him a fortune:
- He should not think again. I would command it.
- PER: As how?
- SIR P: With certain projects that I have;
- Which I may not discover.
- PER [ASIDE.]: If I had
- But one to wager with, I would lay odds now,
- He tells me instantly.
- SIR P: One is, and that
- I care not greatly who knows, to serve the state
- Of Venice with red herrings for three years,
- And at a certain rate, from Rotterdam,
- Where I have correspendence. There's a letter,
- Sent me from one of the states, and to that purpose:
- He cannot write his name, but that's his mark.
- PER: He's a chandler?
- SIR P: No, a cheesemonger.
- There are some others too with whom I treat
- About the same negociation;
- And I will undertake it: for, 'tis thus.
- I'll do't with ease, I have cast it all: Your hoy
- Carries but three men in her, and a boy;
- And she shall make me three returns a year:
- So, if there come but one of three, I save,
- If two, I can defalk:--but this is now,
- If my main project fail.
- PER: Then you have others?
- SIR P: I should be loth to draw the subtle air
- Of such a place, without my thousand aims.
- I'll not dissemble, sir: where'er I come,
- I love to be considerative; and 'tis true,
- I have at my free hours thought upon
- Some certain goods unto the state of Venice,
- Which I do call "my Cautions;" and, sir, which
- I mean, in hope of pension, to propound
- To the Great Council, then unto the Forty,
- So to the Ten. My means are made already--
- PER: By whom?
- SIR P: Sir, one that, though his place be obscure,
- Yet he can sway, and they will hear him. He's
- A commandador.
- PER: What! a common serjeant?
- SIR P: Sir, such as they are, put it in their mouths,
- What they should say, sometimes; as well as greater:
- I think I have my notes to shew you--
- [SEARCHING HIS POCKETS.]
- PER: Good sir.
- SIR P: But you shall swear unto me, on your gentry,
- Not to anticipate--
- PER: I, sir!
- SIR P: Nor reveal
- A circumstance--My paper is not with me.
- PER: O, but you can remember, sir.
- SIR P: My first is
- Concerning tinder-boxes. You must know,
- No family is here, without its box.
- Now, sir, it being so portable a thing,
- Put case, that you or I were ill affected
- Unto the state, sir; with it in our pockets,
- Might not I go into the Arsenal,
- Or you, come out again, and none the wiser?
- PER: Except yourself, sir.
- SIR P: Go to, then. I therefore
- Advertise to the state, how fit it were,
- That none but such as were known patriots,
- Sound lovers of their country, should be suffer'd
- To enjoy them in their houses; and even those
- Seal'd at some office, and at such a bigness
- As might not lurk in pockets.
- PER: Admirable!
- SIR P: My next is, how to enquire, and be resolv'd,
- By present demonstration, whether a ship,
- Newly arrived from Soria, or from
- Any suspected part of all the Levant,
- Be guilty of the plague: and where they use
- To lie out forty, fifty days, sometimes,
- About the Lazaretto, for their trial;
- I'll save that charge and loss unto the merchant,
- And in an hour clear the doubt.
- PER: Indeed, sir!
- SIR P: Or--I will lose my labour.
- PER: 'My faith, that's much.
- SIR P: Nay, sir, conceive me. It will cost me in onions,
- Some thirty livres--
- PER: Which is one pound sterling.
- SIR P: Beside my water-works: for this I do, sir.
- First, I bring in your ship 'twixt two brick walls;
- But those the state shall venture: On the one
- I strain me a fair tarpauling, and in that
- I stick my onions, cut in halves: the other
- Is full of loop-holes, out at which I thrust
- The noses of my bellows; and those bellows
- I keep, with water-works, in perpetual motion,
- Which is the easiest matter of a hundred.
- Now, sir, your onion, which doth naturally
- Attract the infection, and your bellows blowing
- The air upon him, will show, instantly,
- By his changed colour, if there be contagion;
- Or else remain as fair as at the first.
- --Now it is known, 'tis nothing.
- PER: You are right, sir.
- SIR P: I would I had my note.
- PER: 'Faith, so would I:
- But you have done well for once, sir.
- SIR P: Were I false,
- Or would be made so, I could shew you reasons
- How I could sell this state now, to the Turk;
- Spite of their galleys, or their--
- [EXAMINING HIS PAPERS.]
- PER: Pray you, sir Pol.
- SIR P: I have them not about me.
- PER: That I fear'd.
- They are there, sir.
- SIR P: No. This is my diary,
- Wherein I note my actions of the day.
- PER: Pray you let's see, sir. What is here?
- [READS.]
- "Notandum,
- A rat had gnawn my spur-leathers; notwithstanding,
- I put on new, and did go forth: but first
- I threw three beans over the threshold. Item,
- I went and bought two tooth-picks, whereof one
- I burst immediatly, in a discourse
- With a Dutch merchant, 'bout ragion del stato.
- From him I went and paid a moccinigo,
- For piecing my silk stockings; by the way
- I cheapen'd sprats; and at St. Mark's I urined."
- 'Faith, these are politic notes!
- SIR P: Sir, I do slip
- No action of my life, but thus I quote it.
- PER: Believe me, it is wise!
- SIR P: Nay, sir, read forth.
- [ENTER, AT A DISTANCE, LADY POLITICK-WOULD BE, NANO,
- AND TWO WAITING-WOMEN.]
- LADY P: Where should this loose knight be, trow?
- sure he's housed.
- NAN: Why, then he's fast.
- LADY P: Ay, he plays both with me.
- I pray you, stay. This heat will do more harm
- To my complexion, than his heart is worth;
- (I do not care to hinder, but to take him.)
- [RUBBING HER CHEEKS.]
- How it comes off!
- 1 WOM: My master's yonder.
- LADY P: Where?
- 1 WOM: With a young gentleman.
- LADY P: That same's the party;
- In man's apparel! 'Pray you, sir, jog my knight:
- I'll be tender to his reputation,
- However he demerit.
- SIR P [SEEING HER]: My lady!
- PER: Where?
- SIR P: 'Tis she indeed, sir; you shall know her. She is,
- Were she not mine, a lady of that merit,
- For fashion and behaviour; and, for beauty
- I durst compare--
- PER: It seems you are not jealous,
- That dare commend her.
- SIR P: Nay, and for discourse--
- PER: Being your wife, she cannot miss that.
- SIR P [INTRODUCING PER.]: Madam,
- Here is a gentleman, pray you, use him fairly;
- He seems a youth, but he is--
- LADY P: None.
- SIR P: Yes, one
- Has put his face as soon into the world--
- LADY P: You mean, as early? but to-day?
- SIR P: How's this?
- LADY P: Why, in this habit, sir; you apprehend me:--
- Well, master Would-be, this doth not become you;
- I had thought the odour, sir, of your good name,
- Had been more precious to you; that you would not
- Have done this dire massacre on your honour;
- One of your gravity and rank besides!
- But knights, I see, care little for the oath
- They make to ladies; chiefly, their own ladies.
- SIR P: Now by my spurs, the symbol of my knighthood,--
- PER [ASIDE.]: Lord, how his brain is humbled for an oath!
- SIR P: I reach you not.
- LADY P: Right, sir, your policy
- May bear it through, thus.
- [TO PER.]
- sir, a word with you.
- I would be loth to contest publicly
- With any gentlewoman, or to seem
- Froward, or violent, as the courtier says;
- It comes too near rusticity in a lady,
- Which I would shun by all means: and however
- I may deserve from master Would-be, yet
- T'have one fair gentlewoman thus be made
- The unkind instrument to wrong another,
- And one she knows not, ay, and to persever;
- In my poor judgment, is not warranted
- From being a solecism in our sex,
- If not in manners.
- PER: How is this!
- SIR P: Sweet madam,
- Come nearer to your aim.
- LADY P: Marry, and will, sir.
- Since you provoke me with your impudence,
- And laughter of your light land-syren here,
- Your Sporus, your hermaphrodite--
- PER: What's here?
- Poetic fury, and historic storms?
- SIR P: The gentleman, believe it, is of worth,
- And of our nation.
- LADY P: Ay, your White-friars nation.
- Come, I blush for you, master Would-be, I;
- And am asham'd you should have no more forehead,
- Than thus to be the patron, or St. George,
- To a lewd harlot, a base fricatrice,
- A female devil, in a male outside.
- SIR P: Nay,
- And you be such a one, I must bid adieu
- To your delights. The case appears too liquid.
- [EXIT.]
- LADY P: Ay, you may carry't clear, with your state-face!--
- But for your carnival concupiscence,
- Who here is fled for liberty of conscience,
- From furious persecution of the marshal,
- Her will I dis'ple.
- PER: This is fine, i'faith!
- And do you use this often? Is this part
- Of your wit's exercise, 'gainst you have occasion?
- Madam--
- LADY P: Go to, sir.
- PER: Do you hear me, lady?
- Why, if your knight have set you to beg shirts,
- Or to invite me home, you might have done it
- A nearer way, by far:
- LADY P: This cannot work you
- Out of my snare.
- PER: Why, am I in it, then?
- Indeed your husband told me you were fair,
- And so you are; only your nose inclines,
- That side that's next the sun, to the queen-apple.
- LADY P: This cannot be endur'd by any patience.
- [ENTER MOSCA.]
- MOS: What is the matter, madam?
- LADY P: If the Senate
- Right not my quest in this; I'll protest them
- To all the world, no aristocracy.
- MOS: What is the injury, lady?
- LADY P: Why, the callet
- You told me of, here I have ta'en disguised.
- MOS: Who? this! what means your ladyship? the creature
- I mention'd to you is apprehended now,
- Before the senate; you shall see her--
- LADY P: Where?
- MOS: I'll bring you to her. This young gentleman,
- I saw him land this morning at the port.
- LADY P: Is't possible! how has my judgment wander'd?
- Sir, I must, blushing, say to you, I have err'd;
- And plead your pardon.
- PER: What, more changes yet!
- LADY P: I hope you have not the malice to remember
- A gentlewoman's passion. If you stay
- In Venice here, please you to use me, sir--
- MOS: Will you go, madam?
- LADY P: 'Pray you, sir, use me. In faith,
- The more you see me, the more I shall conceive
- You have forgot our quarrel.
- [EXEUNT LADY WOULD-BE, MOSCA, NANO, AND WAITING-WOMEN.]
- PER: This is rare!
- Sir Politick Would-be? no; sir Politick Bawd.
- To bring me thus acquainted with his wife!
- Well, wise sir Pol, since you have practised thus
- Upon my freshman-ship, I'll try your salt-head,
- What proof it is against a counter-plot.
- [EXIT.]
- SCENE 4.2.
- THE SCRUTINEO, OR SENATE-HOUSE.
- ENTER VOLTORE, CORBACCIO, CORVINO, AND MOSCA.
- VOLT: Well, now you know the carriage of the business,
- Your constancy is all that is required
- Unto the safety of it.
- MOS: Is the lie
- Safely convey'd amongst us? is that sure?
- Knows every man his burden?
- CORV: Yes.
- MOS: Then shrink not.
- CORV: But knows the advocate the truth?
- MOS: O, sir,
- By no means; I devised a formal tale,
- That salv'd your reputation. But be valiant, sir.
- CORV: I fear no one but him, that this his pleading
- Should make him stand for a co-heir--
- MOS: Co-halter!
- Hang him; we will but use his tongue, his noise,
- As we do croakers here.
- CORV: Ay, what shall he do?
- MOS: When we have done, you mean?
- CORV: Yes.
- MOS: Why, we'll think:
- Sell him for mummia; he's half dust already.
- [TO VOLTORE.]
- Do not you smile, to see this buffalo,
- How he does sport it with his head?
- [ASIDE.]
- --I should,
- If all were well and past.
- [TO CORBACCIO.]
- --Sir, only you
- Are he that shall enjoy the crop of all,
- And these not know for whom they toil.
- CORB: Ay, peace.
- MOS [TURNING TO CORVINO.]: But you shall eat it.
- Much! [ASIDE.]
- [TO VOLTORE.]
- --Worshipful sir,
- Mercury sit upon your thundering tongue,
- Or the French Hercules, and make your language
- As conquering as his club, to beat along,
- As with a tempest, flat, our adversaries;
- But much more yours, sir.
- VOLT: Here they come, have done.
- MOS: I have another witness, if you need, sir,
- I can produce.
- VOLT: Who is it?
- MOS: Sir, I have her.
- [ENTER AVOCATORI AND TAKE THEIR SEATS,
- BONARIO, CELIA, NOTARIO, COMMANDADORI, SAFFI,
- AND OTHER OFFICERS OF JUSTICE.]
- 1 AVOC: The like of this the senate never heard of.
- 2 AVOC: 'Twill come most strange to them when we report it.
- 4 AVOC: The gentlewoman has been ever held
- Of unreproved name.
- 3 AVOC: So has the youth.
- 4 AVOC: The more unnatural part that of his father.
- 2 AVOC: More of the husband.
- 1 AVOC: I not know to give
- His act a name, it is so monstrous!
- 4 AVOC: But the impostor, he's a thing created
- To exceed example!
- 1 AVOC: And all after-times!
- 2 AVOC: I never heard a true voluptuary
- Discribed, but him.
- 3 AVOC: Appear yet those were cited?
- NOT: All, but the old magnifico, Volpone.
- 1 AVOC: Why is not he here?
- MOS: Please your fatherhoods,
- Here is his advocate: himself's so weak,
- So feeble--
- 4 AVOC: What are you?
- BON: His parasite,
- His knave, his pandar--I beseech the court,
- He may be forced to come, that your grave eyes
- May bear strong witness of his strange impostures.
- VOLT: Upon my faith and credit with your virtues,
- He is not able to endure the air.
- 2 AVOC: Bring him, however.
- 3 AVOC: We will see him.
- 4 AVOC: Fetch him.
- VOLT: Your fatherhoods fit pleasures be obey'd;
- [EXEUNT OFFICERS.]
- But sure, the sight will rather move your pities,
- Than indignation. May it please the court,
- In the mean time, he may be heard in me;
- I know this place most void of prejudice,
- And therefore crave it, since we have no reason
- To fear our truth should hurt our cause.
- 3 AVOC: Speak free.
- VOLT: Then know, most honour'd fathers, I must now
- Discover to your strangely abused ears,
- The most prodigious and most frontless piece
- Of solid impudence, and treachery,
- That ever vicious nature yet brought forth
- To shame the state of Venice. This lewd woman,
- That wants no artificial looks or tears
- To help the vizor she has now put on,
- Hath long been known a close adulteress,
- To that lascivious youth there; not suspected,
- I say, but known, and taken in the act
- With him; and by this man, the easy husband,
- Pardon'd: whose timeless bounty makes him now
- Stand here, the most unhappy, innocent person,
- That ever man's own goodness made accused.
- For these not knowing how to owe a gift
- Of that dear grace, but with their shame; being placed
- So above all powers of their gratitude,
- Began to hate the benefit; and, in place
- Of thanks, devise to extirpe the memory
- Of such an act: wherein I pray your fatherhoods
- To observe the malice, yea, the rage of creatures
- Discover'd in their evils; and what heart
- Such take, even from their crimes:--but that anon
- Will more appear.--This gentleman, the father,
- Hearing of this foul fact, with many others,
- Which daily struck at his too tender ears,
- And grieved in nothing more than that he could not
- Preserve himself a parent, (his son's ills
- Growing to that strange flood,) at last decreed
- To disinherit him.
- 1 AVOC: These be strange turns!
- 2 AVOC: The young man's fame was ever fair and honest.
- VOLT: So much more full of danger is his vice,
- That can beguile so under shade of virtue.
- But, as I said, my honour'd sires, his father
- Having this settled purpose, by what means
- To him betray'd, we know not, and this day
- Appointed for the deed; that parricide,
- I cannot style him better, by confederacy
- Preparing this his paramour to be there,
- Enter'd Volpone's house, (who was the man,
- Your fatherhoods must understand, design'd
- For the inheritance,) there sought his father:--
- But with what purpose sought he him, my lords?
- I tremble to pronounce it, that a son
- Unto a father, and to such a father,
- Should have so foul, felonious intent!
- It was to murder him: when being prevented
- By his more happy absence, what then did he?
- Not check his wicked thoughts; no, now new deeds,
- (Mischief doth ever end where it begins)
- An act of horror, fathers! he dragg'd forth
- The aged gentleman that had there lain bed-rid
- Three years and more, out of his innocent couch,
- Naked upon the floor, there left him; wounded
- His servant in the face: and, with this strumpet
- The stale to his forged practice, who was glad
- To be so active,--(I shall here desire
- Your fatherhoods to note but my collections,
- As most remarkable,--) thought at once to stop
- His father's ends; discredit his free choice
- In the old gentleman, redeem themselves,
- By laying infamy upon this man,
- To whom, with blushing, they should owe their lives.
- 1 AVOC: What proofs have you of this?
- BON: Most honoured fathers,
- I humbly crave there be no credit given
- To this man's mercenary tongue.
- 2 AVOC: Forbear.
- BON: His soul moves in his fee.
- 3 AVOC: O, sir.
- BON: This fellow,
- For six sols more, would plead against his Maker.
- 1 AVOC: You do forget yourself.
- VOLT: Nay, nay, grave fathers,
- Let him have scope: can any man imagine
- That he will spare his accuser, that would not
- Have spared his parent?
- 1 AVOC: Well, produce your proofs.
- CEL: I would I could forget I were a creature.
- VOLT: Signior Corbaccio.
- [CORBACCIO COMES FORWARD.]
- 1 AVOC: What is he?
- VOLT: The father.
- 2 AVOC: Has he had an oath?
- NOT: Yes.
- CORB: What must I do now?
- NOT: Your testimony's craved.
- CORB: Speak to the knave?
- I'll have my mouth first stopt with earth; my heart
- Abhors his knowledge: I disclaim in him.
- 1 AVOC: But for what cause?
- CORB: The mere portent of nature!
- He is an utter stranger to my loins.
- BON: Have they made you to this?
- CORB: I will not hear thee,
- Monster of men, swine, goat, wolf, parricide!
- Speak not, thou viper.
- BON: Sir, I will sit down,
- And rather wish my innocence should suffer,
- Then I resist the authority of a father.
- VOLT: Signior Corvino!
- [CORVINO COMES FORWARD.]
- 2 AVOC: This is strange.
- 1 AVOC: Who's this?
- NOT: The husband.
- 4 AVOC: Is he sworn?
- NOT: He is.
- 3 AVOC: Speak, then.
- CORV: This woman, please your fatherhoods, is a whore,
- Of most hot exercise, more than a partrich,
- Upon record--
- 1 AVOC: No more.
- CORV: Neighs like a jennet.
- NOT: Preserve the honour of the court.
- CORV: I shall,
- And modesty of your most reverend ears.
- And yet I hope that I may say, these eyes
- Have seen her glued unto that piece of cedar,
- That fine well-timber'd gallant; and that here
- The letters may be read, through the horn,
- That make the story perfect.
- MOS: Excellent! sir.
- CORV [ASIDE TO MOSCA.]: There's no shame in this now, is there?
- MOS: None.
- CORV: Or if I said, I hoped that she were onward
- To her damnation, if there be a hell
- Greater than whore and woman; a good catholic
- May make the doubt.
- 3 AVOC: His grief hath made him frantic.
- 1 AVOC: Remove him hence.
- 2 AVOC: Look to the woman.
- [CELIA SWOONS.]
- CORV: Rare!
- Prettily feign'd, again!
- 4 AVOC: Stand from about her.
- 1 AVOC: Give her the air.
- 3 AVOC [TO MOSCA.]: What can you say?
- MOS: My wound,
- May it please your wisdoms, speaks for me, received
- In aid of my good patron, when he mist
- His sought-for father, when that well-taught dame
- Had her cue given her, to cry out, A rape!
- BON: O most laid impudence! Fathers--
- 3 AVOC: Sir, be silent;
- You had your hearing free, so must they theirs.
- 2 AVOC: I do begin to doubt the imposture here.
- 4 AVOC: This woman has too many moods.
- VOLT: Grave fathers,
- She is a creature of a most profest
- And prostituted lewdness.
- CORV: Most impetuous,
- Unsatisfied, grave fathers!
- VOLT: May her feignings
- Not take your wisdoms: but this day she baited
- A stranger, a grave knight, with her loose eyes,
- And more lascivious kisses. This man saw them
- Together on the water in a gondola.
- MOS: Here is the lady herself, that saw them too;
- Without; who then had in the open streets
- Pursued them, but for saving her knight's honour.
- 1 AVOC: Produce that lady.
- 2 AVOC: Let her come.
- [EXIT MOSCA.]
- 4 AVOC: These things,
- They strike with wonder!
- 3 AVOC: I am turn'd a stone.
- [RE-ENTER MOSCA WITH LADY WOULD-BE.]
- MOS: Be resolute, madam.
- LADY P: Ay, this same is she.
- [POINTING TO CELIA.]
- Out, thou chameleon harlot! now thine eyes
- Vie tears with the hyaena. Dar'st thou look
- Upon my wronged face?--I cry your pardons,
- I fear I have forgettingly transgrest
- Against the dignity of the court--
- 2 AVOC: No, madam.
- LADY P: And been exorbitant--
- 2 AVOC: You have not, lady.
- 4 AVOC: These proofs are strong.
- LADY P: Surely, I had no purpose
- To scandalise your honours, or my sex's.
- 3 AVOC: We do believe it.
- LADY P: Surely, you may believe it.
- 2 AVOC: Madam, we do.
- LADY P: Indeed, you may; my breeding
- Is not so coarse--
- 1 AVOC: We know it.
- LADY P: To offend
- With pertinacy--
- 3 AVOC: Lady--
- LADY P: Such a presence!
- No surely.
- 1 AVOC: We well think it.
- LADY P: You may think it.
- 1 AVOC: Let her o'ercome. What witnesses have you
- To make good your report?
- BON: Our consciences.
- CEL: And heaven, that never fails the innocent.
- 4 AVOC: These are no testimonies.
- BON: Not in your courts,
- Where multitude, and clamour overcomes.
- 1 AVOC: Nay, then you do wax insolent.
- [RE-ENTER OFFICERS, BEARING VOLPONE ON A COUCH.]
- VOLT: Here, here,
- The testimony comes, that will convince,
- And put to utter dumbness their bold tongues:
- See here, grave fathers, here's the ravisher,
- The rider on men's wives, the great impostor,
- The grand voluptuary! Do you not think
- These limbs should affect venery? or these eyes
- Covet a concubine? pray you mark these hands;
- Are they not fit to stroke a lady's breasts?--
- Perhaps he doth dissemble!
- BON: So he does.
- VOLT: Would you have him tortured?
- BON: I would have him proved.
- VOLT: Best try him then with goads, or burning irons;
- Put him to the strappado: I have heard
- The rack hath cured the gout; 'faith, give it him,
- And help him of a malady; be courteous.
- I'll undertake, before these honour'd fathers,
- He shall have yet as many left diseases,
- As she has known adulterers, or thou strumpets.--
- O, my most equal hearers, if these deeds,
- Acts of this bold and most exorbitant strain,
- May pass with sufferance; what one citizen
- But owes the forfeit of his life, yea, fame,
- To him that dares traduce him? which of you
- Are safe, my honour'd fathers? I would ask,
- With leave of your grave fatherhoods, if their plot
- Have any face or colour like to truth?
- Or if, unto the dullest nostril here,
- It smell not rank, and most abhorred slander?
- I crave your care of this good gentleman,
- Whose life is much endanger'd by their fable;
- And as for them, I will conclude with this,
- That vicious persons, when they're hot and flesh'd
- In impious acts, their constancy abounds:
- Damn'd deeds are done with greatest confidence.
- 1 AVOC: Take them to custody, and sever them.
- 2 AVOC: 'Tis pity two such prodigies should live.
- 1 AVOC: Let the old gentleman be return'd with care;
- [EXEUNT OFFICERS WITH VOLPONE.]
- I'm sorry our credulity hath wrong'd him.
- 4 AVOC: These are two creatures!
- 3 AVOC: I've an earthquake in me.
- 2 AVOC: Their shame, even in their cradles, fled their faces.
- 4 AVOC [TO VOLT.]: You have done a worthy service to the state, sir,
- In their discovery.
- 1 AVOC: You shall hear, ere night,
- What punishment the court decrees upon them.
- [EXEUNT AVOCAT., NOT., AND OFFICERS WITH BONARIO AND CELIA.]
- VOLT: We thank your fatherhoods.--How like you it?
- MOS: Rare.
- I'd have your tongue, sir, tipt with gold for this;
- I'd have you be the heir to the whole city;
- The earth I'd have want men, ere you want living:
- They're bound to erect your statue in St. Mark's.
- Signior Corvino, I would have you go
- And shew yourself, that you have conquer'd.
- CORV: Yes.
- MOS: It was much better that you should profess
- Yourself a cuckold thus, than that the other
- Should have been prov'd.
- CORV: Nay, I consider'd that:
- Now it is her fault:
- MOS: Then it had been yours.
- CORV: True; I do doubt this advocate still.
- MOS: I'faith,
- You need not, I dare ease you of that care.
- CORV: I trust thee, Mosca.
- [EXIT.]
- MOS: As your own soul, sir.
- CORB: Mosca!
- MOS: Now for your business, sir.
- CORB: How! have you business?
- MOS: Yes, your's, sir.
- CORB: O, none else?
- MOS: None else, not I.
- CORB: Be careful, then.
- MOS: Rest you with both your eyes, sir.
- CORB: Dispatch it.
- MOS: Instantly.
- CORB: And look that all,
- Whatever, be put in, jewels, plate, moneys,
- Household stuff, bedding, curtains.
- MOS: Curtain-rings, sir.
- Only the advocate's fee must be deducted.
- CORB: I'll pay him now; you'll be too prodigal.
- MOS: Sir, I must tender it.
- CORB: Two chequines is well?
- MOS: No, six, sir.
- CORB: 'Tis too much.
- MOS: He talk'd a great while;
- You must consider that, sir.
- CORB: Well, there's three--
- MOS: I'll give it him.
- CORB: Do so, and there's for thee.
- [EXIT.]
- MOS [ASIDE.]: Bountiful bones! What horrid strange offence
- Did he commit 'gainst nature, in his youth,
- Worthy this age?
- [TO VOLT.]--You see, sir, how I work
- Unto your ends; take you no notice.
- VOLT: No,
- I'll leave you.
- [EXIT.]
- MOS: All is yours, the devil and all:
- Good advocate!--Madam, I'll bring you home.
- LADY P: No, I'll go see your patron.
- MOS: That you shall not:
- I'll tell you why. My purpose is to urge
- My patron to reform his Will; and for
- The zeal you have shewn to-day, whereas before
- You were but third or fourth, you shall be now
- Put in the first; which would appear as begg'd,
- If you were present. Therefore--
- LADY P: You shall sway me.
- [EXEUNT.]
- ACT 5. SCENE 5.1
- A ROOM IN VOLPONE'S HOUSE.
- ENTER VOLPONE.
- VOLP: Well, I am here, and all this brunt is past.
- I ne'er was in dislike with my disguise
- Till this fled moment; here 'twas good, in private;
- But in your public,--cave whilst I breathe.
- 'Fore God, my left leg began to have the cramp,
- And I apprehended straight some power had struck me
- With a dead palsy: Well! I must be merry,
- And shake it off. A many of these fears
- Would put me into some villanous disease,
- Should they come thick upon me: I'll prevent 'em.
- Give me a bowl of lusty wine, to fright
- This humour from my heart.
- [DRINKS.]
- Hum, hum, hum!
- 'Tis almost gone already; I shall conquer.
- Any device, now, of rare ingenious knavery,
- That would possess me with a violent laughter,
- Would make me up again.
- [DRINKS AGAIN.]
- So, so, so, so!
- This heat is life; 'tis blood by this time:--Mosca!
- [ENTER MOSCA.]
- MOS: How now, sir? does the day look clear again?
- Are we recover'd, and wrought out of error,
- Into our way, to see our path before us?
- Is our trade free once more?
- VOLP: Exquisite Mosca!
- MOS: Was it not carried learnedly?
- VOLP: And stoutly:
- Good wits are greatest in extremities.
- MOS: It were a folly beyond thought, to trust
- Any grand act unto a cowardly spirit:
- You are not taken with it enough, methinks?
- VOLP: O, more than if I had enjoy'd the wench:
- The pleasure of all woman-kind's not like it.
- MOS: Why now you speak, sir. We must here be fix'd;
- Here we must rest; this is our master-piece;
- We cannot think to go beyond this.
- VOLP: True.
- Thou hast play'd thy prize, my precious Mosca.
- MOS: Nay, sir,
- To gull the court--
- VOLP: And quite divert the torrent
- Upon the innocent.
- MOS: Yes, and to make
- So rare a music out of discords--
- VOLP: Right.
- That yet to me's the strangest, how thou hast borne it!
- That these, being so divided 'mongst themselves,
- Should not scent somewhat, or in me or thee,
- Or doubt their own side.
- MOS: True, they will not see't.
- Too much light blinds them, I think. Each of them
- Is so possest and stuft with his own hopes,
- That any thing unto the contrary,
- Never so true, or never so apparent,
- Never so palpable, they will resist it--
- VOLP: Like a temptation of the devil.
- MOS: Right, sir.
- Merchants may talk of trade, and your great signiors
- Of land that yields well; but if Italy
- Have any glebe more fruitful than these fellows,
- I am deceiv'd. Did not your advocate rare?
- VOLP: O--"My most honour'd fathers, my grave fathers,
- Under correction of your fatherhoods,
- What face of truth is here? If these strange deeds
- May pass, most honour'd fathers"--I had much ado
- To forbear laughing.
- MOS: It seem'd to me, you sweat, sir.
- VOLP: In troth, I did a little.
- MOS: But confess, sir,
- Were you not daunted?
- VOLP: In good faith, I was
- A little in a mist, but not dejected;
- Never, but still my self.
- MOS: I think it, sir.
- Now, so truth help me, I must needs say this, sir,
- And out of conscience for your advocate:
- He has taken pains, in faith, sir, and deserv'd,
- In my poor judgment, I speak it under favour,
- Not to contrary you, sir, very richly--
- Well--to be cozen'd.
- VOLP: Troth, and I think so too,
- By that I heard him, in the latter end.
- MOS: O, but before, sir: had you heard him first
- Draw it to certain heads, then aggravate,
- Then use his vehement figures--I look'd still
- When he would shift a shirt: and, doing this
- Out of pure love, no hope of gain--
- VOLP: 'Tis right.
- I cannot answer him, Mosca, as I would,
- Not yet; but for thy sake, at thy entreaty,
- I will begin, even now--to vex them all,
- This very instant.
- MOS: Good sir.
- VOLP: Call the dwarf
- And eunuch forth.
- MOS: Castrone, Nano!
- [ENTER CASTRONE AND NANO.]
- NANO: Here.
- VOLP: Shall we have a jig now?
- MOS: What you please, sir.
- VOLP: Go,
- Straight give out about the streets, you two,
- That I am dead; do it with constancy,
- Sadly, do you hear? impute it to the grief
- Of this late slander.
- [EXEUNT CAST. AND NANO.]
- MOS: What do you mean, sir?
- VOLP: O,
- I shall have instantly my Vulture, Crow,
- Raven, come flying hither, on the news,
- To peck for carrion, my she-wolfe, and all,
- Greedy, and full of expectation--
- MOS: And then to have it ravish'd from their mouths!
- VOLP: 'Tis true. I will have thee put on a gown,
- And take upon thee, as thou wert mine heir:
- Shew them a will; Open that chest, and reach
- Forth one of those that has the blanks; I'll straight
- Put in thy name.
- MOS [GIVES HIM A PAPER.]: It will be rare, sir.
- VOLP: Ay,
- When they ev'n gape, and find themselves deluded--
- MOS: Yes.
- VOLP: And thou use them scurvily!
- Dispatch, get on thy gown.
- MOS [PUTTING ON A GOWN.]: But, what, sir, if they ask
- After the body?
- VOLP: Say, it was corrupted.
- MOS: I'll say it stunk, sir; and was fain to have it
- Coffin'd up instantly, and sent away.
- VOLP: Any thing; what thou wilt. Hold, here's my will.
- Get thee a cap, a count-book, pen and ink,
- Papers afore thee; sit as thou wert taking
- An inventory of parcels: I'll get up
- Behind the curtain, on a stool, and hearken;
- Sometime peep over, see how they do look,
- With what degrees their blood doth leave their faces,
- O, 'twill afford me a rare meal of laughter!
- MOS [PUTTING ON A CAP, AND SETTING OUT THE TABLE, ETC.]:
- Your advocate will turn stark dull upon it.
- VOLP: It will take off his oratory's edge.
- MOS: But your clarissimo, old round-back, he
- Will crump you like a hog-louse, with the touch.
- VOLP: And what Corvino?
- MOS: O, sir, look for him,
- To-morrow morning, with a rope and dagger,
- To visit all the streets; he must run mad.
- My lady too, that came into the court,
- To bear false witness for your worship--
- VOLP: Yes,
- And kist me 'fore the fathers; when my face
- Flow'd all with oils.
- MOS: And sweat, sir. Why, your gold
- Is such another med'cine, it dries up
- All those offensive savours: it transforms
- The most deformed, and restores them lovely,
- As 'twere the strange poetical girdle. Jove
- Could not invent t' himself a shroud more subtle
- To pass Acrisius' guards. It is the thing
- Makes all the world her grace, her youth, her beauty.
- VOLP: I think she loves me.
- MOS: Who? the lady, sir?
- She's jealous of you.
- VOLP: Dost thou say so?
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- MOS: Hark,
- There's some already.
- VOLP: Look.
- MOS: It is the Vulture:
- He has the quickest scent.
- VOLP: I'll to my place,
- Thou to thy posture.
- [GOES BEHIND THE CURTAIN.]
- MOS: I am set.
- VOLP: But, Mosca,
- Play the artificer now, torture them rarely.
- [ENTER VOLTORE.]
- VOLT: How now, my Mosca?
- MOS [WRITING.]: "Turkey carpets, nine"--
- VOLT: Taking an inventory! that is well.
- MOS: "Two suits of bedding, tissue"--
- VOLT: Where's the Will?
- Let me read that the while.
- [ENTER SERVANTS, WITH CORBACCIO IN A CHAIR.]
- CORB: So, set me down:
- And get you home.
- [EXEUNT SERVANTS.]
- VOLT: Is he come now, to trouble us!
- MOS: "Of cloth of gold, two more"--
- CORB: Is it done, Mosca?
- MOS: "Of several velvets, eight"--
- VOLT: I like his care.
- CORB: Dost thou not hear?
- [ENTER CORVINO.]
- CORB: Ha! is the hour come, Mosca?
- VOLP [PEEPING OVER THE CURTAIN.]: Ay, now, they muster.
- CORV: What does the advocate here,
- Or this Corbaccio?
- CORB: What do these here?
- [ENTER LADY POL. WOULD-BE.]
- LADY P: Mosca!
- Is his thread spun?
- MOS: "Eight chests of linen"--
- VOLP: O,
- My fine dame Would-be, too!
- CORV: Mosca, the Will,
- That I may shew it these, and rid them hence.
- MOS: "Six chests of diaper, four of damask."--There.
- [GIVES THEM THE WILL CARELESSLY, OVER HIS SHOULDER.]
- CORB: Is that the will?
- MOS: "Down-beds, and bolsters"--
- VOLP: Rare!
- Be busy still. Now they begin to flutter:
- They never think of me. Look, see, see, see!
- How their swift eyes run over the long deed,
- Unto the name, and to the legacies,
- What is bequeath'd them there--
- MOS: "Ten suits of hangings"--
- VOLP: Ay, in their garters, Mosca. Now their hopes
- Are at the gasp.
- VOLT: Mosca the heir?
- CORB: What's that?
- VOLP: My advocate is dumb; look to my merchant,
- He has heard of some strange storm, a ship is lost,
- He faints; my lady will swoon. Old glazen eyes,
- He hath not reach'd his despair yet.
- CORB [TAKES THE WILL.]: All these
- Are out of hope: I am sure, the man.
- CORV: But, Mosca--
- MOS: "Two cabinets."
- CORV: Is this in earnest?
- MOS: "One
- Of ebony"--
- CORV: Or do you but delude me?
- MOS: The other, mother of pearl--I am very busy.
- Good faith, it is a fortune thrown upon me--
- "Item, one salt of agate"--not my seeking.
- LADY P: Do you hear, sir?
- MOS: "A perfum'd box"--'Pray you forbear,
- You see I'm troubled--"made of an onyx"--
- LADY P: How!
- MOS: To-morrow or next day, I shall be at leisure
- To talk with you all.
- CORV: Is this my large hope's issue?
- LADY P: Sir, I must have a fairer answer.
- MOS: Madam!
- Marry, and shall: 'pray you, fairly quit my house.
- Nay, raise no tempest with your looks; but hark you,
- Remember what your ladyship offer'd me,
- To put you in an heir; go to, think on it:
- And what you said e'en your best madams did
- For maintenance, and why not you? Enough.
- Go home, and use the poor sir Pol, your knight, well,
- For fear I tell some riddles; go, be melancholy.
- [EXIT LADY WOULD-BE.]
- VOLP: O, my fine devil!
- CORV: Mosca, 'pray you a word.
- MOS: Lord! will you not take your dispatch hence yet?
- Methinks, of all, you should have been the example.
- Why should you stay here? with what thought? what promise?
- Hear you; do not you know, I know you an ass,
- And that you would most fain have been a wittol,
- If fortune would have let you? that you are
- A declared cuckold, on good terms? This pearl,
- You'll say, was yours? right: this diamond?
- I'll not deny't, but thank you. Much here else?
- It may be so. Why, think that these good works
- May help to hide your bad. I'll not betray you;
- Although you be but extraordinary,
- And have it only in title, it sufficeth:
- Go home, be melancholy too, or mad.
- [EXIT CORVINO.]
- VOLP: Rare Mosca! how his villany becomes him!
- VOLT: Certain he doth delude all these for me.
- CORB: Mosca the heir!
- VOLP: O, his four eyes have found it.
- CORB: I am cozen'd, cheated, by a parasite slave;
- Harlot, thou hast gull'd me.
- MOS: Yes, sir. Stop your mouth,
- Or I shall draw the only tooth is left.
- Are not you he, that filthy covetous wretch,
- With the three legs, that, here, in hope of prey,
- Have, any time this three years, snuff'd about,
- With your most grovelling nose; and would have hired
- Me to the poisoning of my patron, sir?
- Are not you he that have to-day in court
- Profess'd the disinheriting of your son?
- Perjured yourself? Go home, and die, and stink.
- If you but croak a syllable, all comes out:
- Away, and call your porters!
- [exit corbaccio.]
- Go, go, stink.
- VOLP: Excellent varlet!
- VOLT: Now, my faithful Mosca,
- I find thy constancy.
- MOS: Sir!
- VOLT: Sincere.
- MOS [WRITING.]: "A table
- Of porphyry"--I marle, you'll be thus troublesome.
- VOLP: Nay, leave off now, they are gone.
- MOS: Why? who are you?
- What! who did send for you? O, cry you mercy,
- Reverend sir! Good faith, I am grieved for you,
- That any chance of mine should thus defeat
- Your (I must needs say) most deserving travails:
- But I protest, sir, it was cast upon me,
- And I could almost wish to be without it,
- But that the will o' the dead must be observ'd,
- Marry, my joy is that you need it not,
- You have a gift, sir, (thank your education,)
- Will never let you want, while there are men,
- And malice, to breed causes. Would I had
- But half the like, for all my fortune, sir!
- If I have any suits, as I do hope,
- Things being so easy and direct, I shall not,
- I will make bold with your obstreperous aid,
- Conceive me,--for your fee, sir. In mean time,
- You that have so much law, I know have the conscience,
- Not to be covetous of what is mine.
- Good sir, I thank you for my plate; 'twill help
- To set up a young man. Good faith, you look
- As you were costive; best go home and purge, sir.
- [EXIT VOLTORE.]
- VOLP [COMES FROM BEHIND THE CURTAIN.]:
- Bid him eat lettuce well.
- My witty mischief,
- Let me embrace thee. O that I could now
- Transform thee to a Venus!--Mosca, go,
- Straight take my habit of clarissimo,
- And walk the streets; be seen, torment them more:
- We must pursue, as well as plot. Who would
- Have lost this feast?
- MOS: I doubt it will lose them.
- VOLP: O, my recovery shall recover all.
- That I could now but think on some disguise
- To meet them in, and ask them questions:
- How I would vex them still at every turn!
- MOS: Sir, I can fit you.
- VOLP: Canst thou?
- MOS: Yes, I know
- One o' the commandadori, sir, so like you;
- Him will I straight make drunk, and bring you his habit.
- VOLP: A rare disguise, and answering thy brain!
- O, I will be a sharp disease unto them.
- MOS: Sir, you must look for curses--
- VOLP: Till they burst;
- The Fox fares ever best when he is curst.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 5.2.
- A HALL IN SIR POLITICK'S HOUSE.
- ENTER PEREGRINE DISGUISED, AND THREE MERCHANTS.
- PER: Am I enough disguised?
- 1 MER: I warrant you.
- PER: All my ambition is to fright him only.
- 2 MER: If you could ship him away, 'twere excellent.
- 3 MER: To Zant, or to Aleppo?
- PER: Yes, and have his
- Adventures put i' the Book of Voyages.
- And his gull'd story register'd for truth.
- Well, gentlemen, when I am in a while,
- And that you think us warm in our discourse,
- Know your approaches.
- 1 MER: Trust it to our care.
- [EXEUNT MERCHANTS.]
- [ENTER WAITING-WOMAN.]
- PER: Save you, fair lady! Is sir Pol within?
- WOM: I do not know, sir.
- PER: Pray you say unto him,
- Here is a merchant, upon earnest business,
- Desires to speak with him.
- WOM: I will see, sir.
- [EXIT.]
- PER: Pray you.--
- I see the family is all female here.
- [RE-ENTER WAITING-WOMAN.]
- WOM: He says, sir, he has weighty affairs of state,
- That now require him whole; some other time
- You may possess him.
- PER: Pray you say again,
- If those require him whole, these will exact him,
- Whereof I bring him tidings.
- [EXIT WOMAN.]
- --What might be
- His grave affair of state now! how to make
- Bolognian sausages here in Venice, sparing
- One o' the ingredients?
- [RE-ENTER WAITING-WOMAN.]
- WOM: Sir, he says, he knows
- By your word "tidings," that you are no statesman,
- And therefore wills you stay.
- PER: Sweet, pray you return him;
- I have not read so many proclamations,
- And studied them for words, as he has done--
- But--here he deigns to come.
- [EXIT WOMAN.]
- [ENTER SIR POLITICK.]
- SIR P: Sir, I must crave
- Your courteous pardon. There hath chanced to-day,
- Unkind disaster 'twixt my lady and me;
- And I was penning my apology,
- To give her satisfaction, as you came now.
- PER: Sir, I am grieved I bring you worse disaster:
- The gentleman you met at the port to-day,
- That told you, he was newly arrived--
- SIR P: Ay, was
- A fugitive punk?
- PER: No, sir, a spy set on you;
- And he has made relation to the senate,
- That you profest to him to have a plot
- To sell the State of Venice to the Turk.
- SIR P: O me!
- PER: For which, warrants are sign'd by this time,
- To apprehend you, and to search your study
- For papers--
- SIR P: Alas, sir, I have none, but notes
- Drawn out of play-books--
- PER: All the better, sir.
- SIR P: And some essays. What shall I do?
- PER: Sir, best
- Convey yourself into a sugar-chest;
- Or, if you could lie round, a frail were rare:
- And I could send you aboard.
- SIR P: Sir, I but talk'd so,
- For discourse sake merely.
- [KNOCKING WITHIN.]
- PER: Hark! they are there.
- SIR P: I am a wretch, a wretch!
- PER: What will you do, sir?
- Have you ne'er a currant-butt to leap into?
- They'll put you to the rack, you must be sudden.
- SIR P: Sir, I have an ingine--
- 3 MER [WITHIN.]: Sir Politick Would-be?
- 2 MER [WITHIN.]: Where is he?
- SIR P: That I have thought upon before time.
- PER: What is it?
- SIR P: I shall ne'er endure the torture.
- Marry, it is, sir, of a tortoise-shell,
- Fitted for these extremities: pray you, sir, help me.
- Here I've a place, sir, to put back my legs,
- Please you to lay it on, sir,
- [LIES DOWN WHILE PEREGRINE PLACES THE SHELL UPON HIM.]
- --with this cap,
- And my black gloves. I'll lie, sir, like a tortoise,
- 'Till they are gone.
- PER: And call you this an ingine?
- SIR P: Mine own device--Good sir, bid my wife's women
- To burn my papers.
- [EXIT PEREGRINE.]
- [THE THREE MERCHANTS RUSH IN.]
- 1 MER: Where is he hid?
- 3 MER: We must,
- And will sure find him.
- 2 MER: Which is his study?
- [RE-ENTER PEREGRINE.]
- 1 MER: What
- Are you, sir?
- PER: I am a merchant, that came here
- To look upon this tortoise.
- 3 MER: How!
- 1 MER: St. Mark!
- What beast is this!
- PER: It is a fish.
- 2 MER: Come out here!
- PER: Nay, you may strike him, sir, and tread upon him;
- He'll bear a cart.
- 1 MER: What, to run over him?
- PER: Yes, sir.
- 3 MER: Let's jump upon him.
- 2 MER: Can he not go?
- PER: He creeps, sir.
- 1 MER: Let's see him creep.
- PER: No, good sir, you will hurt him.
- 2 MER: Heart, I will see him creep, or prick his guts.
- 3 MER: Come out here!
- PER: Pray you, sir!
- [ASIDE TO SIR POLITICK.]
- --Creep a little.
- 1 MER: Forth.
- 2 MER: Yet farther.
- PER: Good sir!--Creep.
- 2 MER: We'll see his legs.
- [THEY PULL OFF THE SHELL AND DISCOVER HIM.]
- 3 MER: Ods so, he has garters!
- 1 MER: Ay, and gloves!
- 2 MER: Is this
- Your fearful tortoise?
- PER [DISCOVERING HIMSELF.]: Now, sir Pol, we are even;
- For your next project I shall be prepared:
- I am sorry for the funeral of your notes, sir.
- 1 MER: 'Twere a rare motion to be seen in Fleet-street.
- 2 MER: Ay, in the Term.
- 1 MER: Or Smithfield, in the fair.
- 3 MER: Methinks 'tis but a melancholy sight.
- PER: Farewell, most politic tortoise!
- [EXEUNT PER. AND MERCHANTS.]
- [RE-ENTER WAITING-WOMAN.]
- SIR P: Where's my lady?
- Knows she of this?
- WOM: I know not, sir.
- SIR P: Enquire.--
- O, I shall be the fable of all feasts,
- The freight of the gazetti; ship-boy's tale;
- And, which is worst, even talk for ordinaries.
- WOM: My lady's come most melancholy home,
- And says, sir, she will straight to sea, for physic.
- SIR P: And I to shun this place and clime for ever;
- Creeping with house on back: and think it well,
- To shrink my poor head in my politic shell.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 5.3.
- A ROOM IN VOLPONE'S HOUSE.
- ENTER MOSCA IN THE HABIT OF A CLARISSIMO;
- AND VOLPONE IN THAT OF A COMMANDADORE.
- VOLP: Am I then like him?
- MOS: O, sir, you are he;
- No man can sever you.
- VOLP: Good.
- MOS: But what am I?
- VOLP: 'Fore heaven, a brave clarissimo, thou becom'st it!
- Pity thou wert not born one.
- MOS [ASIDE.]: If I hold
- My made one, 'twill be well.
- VOLP: I'll go and see
- What news first at the court.
- [EXIT.]
- MOS: Do so. My Fox
- Is out of his hole, and ere he shall re-enter,
- I'll make him languish in his borrow'd case,
- Except he come to composition with me.--
- Androgyno, Castrone, Nano!
- [ENTER ANDROGYNO, CASTRONE AND NANO.]
- ALL: Here.
- MOS: Go, recreate yourselves abroad; go sport.--
- [EXEUNT.]
- So, now I have the keys, and am possest.
- Since he will needs be dead afore his time,
- I'll bury him, or gain by him: I am his heir,
- And so will keep me, till he share at least.
- To cozen him of all, were but a cheat
- Well placed; no man would construe it a sin:
- Let his sport pay for it, this is call'd the Fox-trap.
- [EXIT.]
- SCENE 5.4
- A STREET.
- ENTER CORBACCIO AND CORVINO.
- CORB: They say, the court is set.
- CORV: We must maintain
- Our first tale good, for both our reputations.
- CORB: Why, mine's no tale: my son would there have kill'd me.
- CORV: That's true, I had forgot:--
- [ASIDE.]--mine is, I am sure.
- But for your Will, sir.
- CORB: Ay, I'll come upon him
- For that hereafter; now his patron's dead.
- [ENTER VOLPONE.]
- VOLP: Signior Corvino! and Corbaccio! sir,
- Much joy unto you.
- CORV: Of what?
- VOLP: The sudden good,
- Dropt down upon you--
- CORB: Where?
- VOLP: And, none knows how,
- From old Volpone, sir.
- CORB: Out, arrant knave!
- VOLP: Let not your too much wealth, sir, make you furious.
- CORB: Away, thou varlet!
- VOLP: Why, sir?
- CORB: Dost thou mock me?
- VOLP: You mock the world, sir; did you not change Wills?
- CORB: Out, harlot!
- VOLP: O! belike you are the man,
- Signior Corvino? 'faith, you carry it well;
- You grow not mad withal: I love your spirit:
- You are not over-leaven'd with your fortune.
- You should have some would swell now, like a wine-fat,
- With such an autumn--Did he give you all, sir?
- CORB: Avoid, you rascal!
- VOLP: Troth, your wife has shewn
- Herself a very woman; but you are well,
- You need not care, you have a good estate,
- To bear it out sir, better by this chance:
- Except Corbaccio have a share.
- CORV: Hence, varlet.
- VOLP: You will not be acknown, sir; why, 'tis wise.
- Thus do all gamesters, at all games, dissemble:
- No man will seem to win.
- [exeunt corvino and corbaccio.]
- --Here comes my vulture,
- Heaving his beak up in the air, and snuffing.
- [ENTER VOLTORE.]
- VOLT: Outstript thus, by a parasite! a slave,
- Would run on errands, and make legs for crumbs?
- Well, what I'll do--
- VOLP: The court stays for your worship.
- I e'en rejoice, sir, at your worship's happiness,
- And that it fell into so learned hands,
- That understand the fingering--
- VOLT: What do you mean?
- VOLP: I mean to be a suitor to your worship,
- For the small tenement, out of reparations,
- That, to the end of your long row of houses,
- By the Piscaria: it was, in Volpone's time,
- Your predecessor, ere he grew diseased,
- A handsome, pretty, custom'd bawdy-house,
- As any was in Venice, none dispraised;
- But fell with him; his body and that house
- Decay'd, together.
- VOLT: Come sir, leave your prating.
- VOLP: Why, if your worship give me but your hand,
- That I may have the refusal, I have done.
- 'Tis a mere toy to you, sir; candle-rents;
- As your learn'd worship knows--
- VOLT: What do I know?
- VOLP: Marry, no end of your wealth, sir, God decrease it!
- VOLT: Mistaking knave! what, mockst thou my misfortune?
- [EXIT.]
- VOLP: His blessing on your heart, sir; would 'twere more!--
- Now to my first again, at the next corner.
- [EXIT.]
- SCENE 5.5.
- ANOTHER PART OF THE STREET.
- ENTER CORBACCIO AND CORVINO;--
- MOSCA PASSES OVER THE STAGE, BEFORE THEM.
- CORB: See, in our habit! see the impudent varlet!
- CORV: That I could shoot mine eyes at him like gun-stones.
- [ENTER VOLPONE.]
- VOLP: But is this true, sir, of the parasite?
- CORB: Again, to afflict us! monster!
- VOLP: In good faith, sir,
- I'm heartily grieved, a beard of your grave length
- Should be so over-reach'd. I never brook'd
- That parasite's hair; methought his nose should cozen:
- There still was somewhat in his look, did promise
- The bane of a clarissimo.
- CORB: Knave--
- VOLP: Methinks
- Yet you, that are so traded in the world,
- A witty merchant, the fine bird, Corvino,
- That have such moral emblems on your name,
- Should not have sung your shame; and dropt your cheese,
- To let the Fox laugh at your emptiness.
- CORV: Sirrah, you think the privilege of the place,
- And your red saucy cap, that seems to me
- Nail'd to your jolt-head with those two chequines,
- Can warrant your abuses; come you hither:
- You shall perceive, sir, I dare beat you; approach.
- VOLP: No haste, sir, I do know your valour well,
- Since you durst publish what you are, sir.
- CORV: Tarry,
- I'd speak with you.
- VOLP: Sir, sir, another time--
- CORV: Nay, now.
- VOLP: O lord, sir! I were a wise man,
- Would stand the fury of a distracted cuckold.
- [AS HE IS RUNNING OFF, RE-ENTER MOSCA.]
- CORB: What, come again!
- VOLP: Upon 'em, Mosca; save me.
- CORB: The air's infected where he breathes.
- CORV: Let's fly him.
- [EXEUNT CORV. AND CORB.]
- VOLP: Excellent basilisk! turn upon the vulture.
- [ENTER VOLTORE.]
- VOLT: Well, flesh-fly, it is summer with you now;
- Your winter will come on.
- MOS: Good advocate,
- Prithee not rail, nor threaten out of place thus;
- Thou'lt make a solecism, as madam says.
- Get you a biggin more, your brain breaks loose.
- [EXIT.]
- VOLT: Well, sir.
- VOLP: Would you have me beat the insolent slave,
- Throw dirt upon his first good clothes?
- VOLT: This same
- Is doubtless some familiar.
- VOLP: Sir, the court,
- In troth, stays for you. I am mad, a mule
- That never read Justinian, should get up,
- And ride an advocate. Had you no quirk
- To avoid gullage, sir, by such a creature?
- I hope you do but jest; he has not done it:
- 'Tis but confederacy, to blind the rest.
- You are the heir.
- VOLT: A strange, officious,
- Troublesome knave! thou dost torment me.
- VOLP: I know--
- It cannot be, sir, that you should be cozen'd;
- 'Tis not within the wit of man to do it;
- You are so wise, so prudent; and 'tis fit
- That wealth and wisdom still should go together.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 5.6.
- THE SCRUTINEO OR SENATE-HOUSE.
- ENTER AVOCATORI, NOTARIO, BONARIO, CELIA,
- CORBACCIO, CORVINO, COMMANDADORI, SAFFI, ETC.
- 1 AVOC: Are all the parties here?
- NOT: All but the advocate.
- 2 AVOC: And here he comes.
- [ENTER VOLTORE AND VOLPONE.]
- 1 AVOC: Then bring them forth to sentence.
- VOLT: O, my most honour'd fathers, let your mercy
- Once win upon your justice, to forgive--
- I am distracted--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: What will he do now?
- VOLT: O,
- I know not which to address myself to first;
- Whether your fatherhoods, or these innocents--
- CORV [ASIDE.]: Will he betray himself?
- VOLT: Whom equally
- I have abused, out of most covetous ends--
- CORV: The man is mad!
- CORB: What's that?
- CORV: He is possest.
- VOLT: For which, now struck in conscience, here, I prostate
- Myself at your offended feet, for pardon.
- 1, 2 AVOC: Arise.
- CEL: O heaven, how just thou art!
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: I am caught
- In mine own noose--
- CORV [TO CORBACCIO.]: Be constant, sir: nought now
- Can help, but impudence.
- 1 AVOC: Speak forward.
- COM: Silence!
- VOLT: It is not passion in me, reverend fathers,
- But only conscience, conscience, my good sires,
- That makes me now tell trueth. That parasite,
- That knave, hath been the instrument of all.
- 1 AVOC: Where is that knave? fetch him.
- VOLP: I go.
- [EXIT.]
- CORV: Grave fathers,
- This man's distracted; he confest it now:
- For, hoping to be old Volpone's heir,
- Who now is dead--
- 3 AVOC: How?
- 2 AVOC: Is Volpone dead?
- CORV: Dead since, grave fathers--
- BON: O sure vengeance!
- 1 AVOC: Stay,
- Then he was no deceiver?
- VOLT: O no, none:
- The parasite, grave fathers.
- CORV: He does speak
- Out of mere envy, 'cause the servant's made
- The thing he gaped for: please your fatherhoods,
- This is the truth, though I'll not justify
- The other, but he may be some-deal faulty.
- VOLT: Ay, to your hopes, as well as mine, Corvino:
- But I'll use modesty. Pleaseth your wisdoms,
- To view these certain notes, and but confer them;
- As I hope favour, they shall speak clear truth.
- CORV: The devil has enter'd him!
- BON: Or bides in you.
- 4 AVOC: We have done ill, by a public officer,
- To send for him, if he be heir.
- 2 AVOC: For whom?
- 4 AVOC: Him that they call the parasite.
- 3 AVOC: 'Tis true,
- He is a man of great estate, now left.
- 4 AVOC: Go you, and learn his name, and say, the court
- Entreats his presence here, but to the clearing
- Of some few doubts.
- [EXIT NOTARY.]
- 2 AVOC: This same's a labyrinth!
- 1 AVOC: Stand you unto your first report?
- CORV: My state,
- My life, my fame--
- BON: Where is it?
- CORV: Are at the stake
- 1 AVOC: Is yours so too?
- CORB: The advocate's a knave,
- And has a forked tongue--
- 2 AVOC: Speak to the point.
- CORB: So is the parasite too.
- 1 AVOC: This is confusion.
- VOLT: I do beseech your fatherhoods, read but those--
- [GIVING THEM THE PAPERS.]
- CORV: And credit nothing the false spirit hath writ:
- It cannot be, but he's possest grave fathers.
- [THE SCENE CLOSES.]
- SCENE 5.7.
- A STREET.
- ENTER VOLPONE.
- VOLP: To make a snare for mine own neck! and run
- My head into it, wilfully! with laughter!
- When I had newly 'scaped, was free, and clear,
- Out of mere wantonness! O, the dull devil
- Was in this brain of mine, when I devised it,
- And Mosca gave it second; he must now
- Help to sear up this vein, or we bleed dead.--
- [ENTER NANO, ANDROGYNO, AND CASTRONE.]
- How now! who let you loose? whither go you now?
- What, to buy gingerbread? or to drown kitlings?
- NAN: Sir, master Mosca call'd us out of doors,
- And bid us all go play, and took the keys.
- AND: Yes.
- VOLP: Did master Mosca take the keys? why so!
- I'm farther in. These are my fine conceits!
- I must be merry, with a mischief to me!
- What a vile wretch was I, that could not bear
- My fortune soberly? I must have my crotchets,
- And my conundrums! Well, go you, and seek him:
- His meaning may be truer than my fear.
- Bid him, he straight come to me to the court;
- Thither will I, and, if't be possible,
- Unscrew my advocate, upon new hopes:
- When I provoked him, then I lost myself.
- [EXEUNT.]
- SCENE 5.8.
- THE SCRUTINEO, OR SENATE-HOUSE.
- AVOCATORI, BONARIO, CELIA, CORBACCIO, CORVINO,
- COMMANDADORI, SAFFI, ETC., AS BEFORE.
- 1 AVOC: These things can ne'er be reconciled. He, here,
- [SHEWING THE PAPERS.]
- Professeth, that the gentleman was wrong'd,
- And that the gentlewoman was brought thither,
- Forced by her husband, and there left.
- VOLT: Most true.
- CEL: How ready is heaven to those that pray!
- 1 AVOC: But that
- Volpone would have ravish'd her, he holds
- Utterly false; knowing his impotence.
- CORV: Grave fathers, he's possest; again, I say,
- Possest: nay, if there be possession, and
- Obsession, he has both.
- 3 AVOC: Here comes our officer.
- [ENTER VOLPONE.]
- VOLP: The parasite will straight be here, grave fathers.
- 4 AVOC: You might invent some other name, sir varlet.
- 3 AVOC: Did not the notary meet him?
- VOLP: Not that I know.
- 4 AVOC: His coming will clear all.
- 2 AVOC: Yet, it is misty.
- VOLT: May't please your fatherhoods--
- VOLP [whispers volt.]: Sir, the parasite
- Will'd me to tell you, that his master lives;
- That you are still the man; your hopes the same;
- And this was only a jest--
- VOLT: How?
- VOLP: Sir, to try
- If you were firm, and how you stood affected.
- VOLT: Art sure he lives?
- VOLP: Do I live, sir?
- VOLT: O me!
- I was too violent.
- VOLP: Sir, you may redeem it,
- They said, you were possest; fall down, and seem so:
- I'll help to make it good.
- [voltore falls.]
- --God bless the man!--
- Stop your wind hard, and swell: See, see, see, see!
- He vomits crooked pins! his eyes are set,
- Like a dead hare's hung in a poulter's shop!
- His mouth's running away! Do you see, signior?
- Now it is in his belly!
- CORV: Ay, the devil!
- VOLP: Now in his throat.
- CORV: Ay, I perceive it plain.
- VOLP: 'Twill out, 'twill out! stand clear.
- See, where it flies,
- In shape of a blue toad, with a bat's wings!
- Do you not see it, sir?
- CORB: What? I think I do.
- CORV: 'Tis too manifest.
- VOLP: Look! he comes to himself!
- VOLT: Where am I?
- VOLP: Take good heart, the worst is past, sir.
- You are dispossest.
- 1 AVOC: What accident is this!
- 2 AVOC: Sudden, and full of wonder!
- 3 AVOC: If he were
- Possest, as it appears, all this is nothing.
- CORV: He has been often subject to these fits.
- 1 AVOC: Shew him that writing:--do you know it, sir?
- VOLP [WHISPERS VOLT.]: Deny it, sir, forswear it; know it not.
- VOLT: Yes, I do know it well, it is my hand;
- But all that it contains is false.
- BON: O practice!
- 2 AVOC: What maze is this!
- 1 AVOC: Is he not guilty then,
- Whom you there name the parasite?
- VOLT: Grave fathers,
- No more than his good patron, old Volpone.
- 4 AVOC: Why, he is dead.
- VOLT: O no, my honour'd fathers,
- He lives--
- 1 AVOC: How! lives?
- VOLT: Lives.
- 2 AVOC: This is subtler yet!
- 3 AVOC: You said he was dead.
- VOLT: Never.
- 3 AVOC: You said so.
- CORV: I heard so.
- 4 AVOC: Here comes the gentleman; make him way.
- [ENTER MOSCA.]
- 3 AVOC: A stool.
- 4 AVOC [ASIDE.]: A proper man; and, were Volpone dead,
- A fit match for my daughter.
- 3 AVOC: Give him way.
- VOLP [ASIDE TO MOSCA.]: Mosca, I was almost lost, the advocate
- Had betrayed all; but now it is recovered;
- All's on the hinge again--Say, I am living.
- MOS: What busy knave is this!--Most reverend fathers,
- I sooner had attended your grave pleasures,
- But that my order for the funeral
- Of my dear patron, did require me--
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Mosca!
- MOS: Whom I intend to bury like a gentleman.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Ay, quick, and cozen me of all.
- 2 AVOC: Still stranger!
- More intricate!
- 1 AVOC: And come about again!
- 4 AVOC [ASIDE.]: It is a match, my daughter is bestow'd.
- MOS [ASIDE TO VOLP.]: Will you give me half?
- VOLP: First, I'll be hang'd.
- MOS: I know,
- Your voice is good, cry not so loud.
- 1 AVOC: Demand
- The advocate.--Sir, did not you affirm,
- Volpone was alive?
- VOLP: Yes, and he is;
- This gentleman told me so.
- [ASIDE TO VOLP.]
- --Thou shalt have half.--
- MOS: Whose drunkard is this same? speak, some that know him:
- I never saw his face.
- [ASIDE TO VOLP.]
- --I cannot now
- Afford it you so cheap.
- VOLP: No!
- 1 AVOC: What say you?
- VOLT: The officer told me.
- VOLP: I did, grave fathers,
- And will maintain he lives, with mine own life.
- And that this creature [POINTS TO MOSCA.] told me.
- [ASIDE.]
- --I was born,
- With all good stars my enemies.
- MOS: Most grave fathers,
- If such an insolence as this must pass
- Upon me, I am silent: 'twas not this
- For which you sent, I hope.
- 2 AVOC: Take him away.
- VOLP: Mosca!
- 3 AVOC: Let him be whipt.
- VOLP: Wilt thou betray me?
- Cozen me?
- 3 AVOC: And taught to bear himself
- Toward a person of his rank.
- 4 AVOC: Away.
- [THE OFFICERS SEIZE VOLPONE.]
- MOS: I humbly thank your fatherhoods.
- VOLP [ASIDE.]: Soft, soft: Whipt!
- And lose all that I have! If I confess,
- It cannot be much more.
- 4 AVOC: Sir, are you married?
- VOLP: They will be allied anon; I must be resolute:
- The Fox shall here uncase.
- [THROWS OFF HIS DISGUISE.]
- MOS: Patron!
- VOLP: Nay, now,
- My ruins shall not come alone; your match
- I'll hinder sure: my substance shall not glue you,
- Nor screw you into a family.
- MOS: Why, patron!
- VOLP: I am Volpone, and this is my knave;
- [POINTING TO MOSCA.]
- This [TO VOLT.], his own knave; This [TO CORB.], avarice's fool;
- This [TO CORV.], a chimera of wittol, fool, and knave:
- And, reverend fathers, since we all can hope
- Nought but a sentence, let's not now dispair it.
- You hear me brief.
- CORV: May it please your fatherhoods--
- COM: Silence.
- 1 AVOC: The knot is now undone by miracle.
- 2 AVOC: Nothing can be more clear.
- 3 AVOC: Or can more prove
- These innocent.
- 1 AVOC: Give them their liberty.
- BON: Heaven could not long let such gross crimes be hid.
- 2 AVOC: If this be held the high-way to get riches,
- May I be poor!
- 3 AVOC: This is not the gain, but torment.
- 1 AVOC: These possess wealth, as sick men possess fevers,
- Which trulier may be said to possess them.
- 2 AVOC: Disrobe that parasite.
- CORV, MOS: Most honour'd fathers!--
- 1 AVOC: Can you plead aught to stay the course of justice?
- If you can, speak.
- CORV, VOLT: We beg favour,
- CEL: And mercy.
- 1 AVOC: You hurt your innocence, suing for the guilty.
- Stand forth; and first the parasite: You appear
- T'have been the chiefest minister, if not plotter,
- In all these lewd impostures; and now, lastly,
- Have with your impudence abused the court,
- And habit of a gentleman of Venice,
- Being a fellow of no birth or blood:
- For which our sentence is, first, thou be whipt;
- Then live perpetual prisoner in our gallies.
- VOLT: I thank you for him.
- MOS: Bane to thy wolvish nature!
- 1 AVOC: Deliver him to the saffi.
- [MOSCA IS CARRIED OUT.]
- --Thou, Volpone,
- By blood and rank a gentleman, canst not fall
- Under like censure; but our judgment on thee
- Is, that thy substance all be straight confiscate
- To the hospital of the Incurabili:
- And, since the most was gotten by imposture,
- By feigning lame, gout, palsy, and such diseases,
- Thou art to lie in prison, cramp'd with irons,
- Till thou be'st sick, and lame indeed.--Remove him.
- [HE IS TAKEN FROM THE BAR.]
- VOLP: This is call'd mortifying of a Fox.
- 1 AVOC: Thou, Voltore, to take away the scandal
- Thou hast given all worthy men of thy profession,
- Art banish'd from their fellowship, and our state.
- Corbaccio!--bring him near--We here possess
- Thy son of all thy state, and confine thee
- To the monastery of San Spirito;
- Where, since thou knewest not how to live well here,
- Thou shalt be learn'd to die well.
- CORB: Ah! what said he?
- AND: You shall know anon, sir.
- 1 AVOC: Thou, Corvino, shalt
- Be straight embark'd from thine own house, and row'd
- Round about Venice, through the grand canale,
- Wearing a cap, with fair long asses' ears,
- Instead of horns; and so to mount, a paper
- Pinn'd on thy breast, to the Berlina--
- CORV: Yes,
- And have mine eyes beat out with stinking fish,
- Bruised fruit and rotten eggs--'Tis well. I am glad
- I shall not see my shame yet.
- 1 AVOC: And to expiate
- Thy wrongs done to thy wife, thou art to send her
- Home to her father, with her dowry trebled:
- And these are all your judgments.
- ALL: Honour'd fathers.--
- 1 AVOC: Which may not be revoked. Now you begin,
- When crimes are done, and past, and to be punish'd,
- To think what your crimes are: away with them.
- Let all that see these vices thus rewarded,
- Take heart and love to study 'em! Mischiefs feed
- Like beasts, till they be fat, and then they bleed.
- [EXEUNT.]
- [VOLPONE COMES FORWARD.]
- VOLPONE: The seasoning of a play, is the applause.
- Now, though the Fox be punish'd by the laws,
- He yet doth hope, there is no suffering due,
- For any fact which he hath done 'gainst you;
- If there be, censure him; here he doubtful stands:
- If not, fare jovially, and clap your hands.
- [EXIT.]
- GLOSSARY
- ABATE, cast down, subdue.
- ABHORRING, repugnant (to), at variance.
- ABJECT, base, degraded thing, outcast.
- ABRASE, smooth, blank.
- ABSOLUTE(LY), faultless(ly).
- ABSTRACTED, abstract, abstruse.
- ABUSE, deceive, insult, dishonour, make ill use of.
- ACATER, caterer.
- ACATES, cates.
- ACCEPTIVE, willing, ready to accept, receive.
- ACCOMMODATE, fit, befitting. (The word was a fashionable one and used on
- all occasions. See "Henry IV.," pt. 2, iii. 4).
- ACCOST, draw near, approach.
- ACKNOWN, confessedly acquainted with.
- ACME, full maturity.
- ADALANTADO, lord deputy or governor of a Spanish province.
- ADJECTION, addition.
- ADMIRATION, astonishment.
- ADMIRE, wonder, wonder at.
- ADROP, philosopher's stone, or substance from which obtained.
- ADSCRIVE, subscribe.
- ADULTERATE, spurious, counterfeit.
- ADVANCE, lift.
- ADVERTISE, inform, give intelligence.
- ADVERTISED, "be--," be it known to you.
- ADVERTISEMENT, intelligence.
- ADVISE, consider, bethink oneself, deliberate.
- ADVISED, informed, aware; "are you--?" have you found that out?
- AFFECT, love, like; aim at; move.
- AFFECTED, disposed; beloved.
- AFFECTIONATE, obstinate; prejudiced.
- AFFECTS, affections.
- AFFRONT, "give the--," face.
- AFFY, have confidence in; betroth.
- AFTER, after the manner of.
- AGAIN, AGAINST, in anticipation of.
- AGGRAVATE, increase, magnify, enlarge upon.
- AGNOMINATION. See Paranomasie.
- AIERY, nest, brood.
- AIM, guess.
- ALL HID, children's cry at hide-and-seek.
- ALL-TO, completely, entirely ("all-to-be-laden").
- ALLOWANCE, approbation, recognition.
- ALMA-CANTARAS (astronomy), parallels of altitude.
- ALMAIN, name of a dance.
- ALMUTEN, planet of chief influence in the horoscope.
- ALONE, unequalled, without peer.
- ALUDELS, subliming pots.
- AMAZED, confused, perplexed.
- AMBER, AMBRE, ambergris.
- AMBREE, MARY, a woman noted for her valour at the siege of Ghent, 1458.
- AMES-ACE, lowest throw at dice.
- AMPHIBOLIES, ambiguities.
- AMUSED, bewildered, amazed.
- AN, if.
- ANATOMY, skeleton, or dissected body.
- ANDIRONS, fire-dogs.
- ANGEL, gold coin worth 10 shillings, stamped with the figure of the
- archangel Michael.
- ANNESH CLEARE, spring known as Agnes le Clare.
- ANSWER, return hit in fencing.
- ANTIC, ANTIQUE, clown, buffoon.
- ANTIC, like a buffoon.
- ANTIPERISTASIS, an opposition which enhances the quality it opposes.
- APOZEM, decoction.
- APPERIL, peril.
- APPLE-JOHN, APPLE-SQUIRE, pimp, pander.
- APPLY, attach.
- APPREHEND, take into custody.
- APPREHENSIVE, quick of perception; able to perceive and appreciate.
- APPROVE, prove, confirm.
- APT, suit, adapt; train, prepare; dispose, incline.
- APT(LY), suitable(y), opportune(ly).
- APTITUDE, suitableness.
- ARBOR, "make the--," cut up the game (Gifford).
- ARCHES, Court of Arches.
- ARCHIE, Archibald Armstrong, jester to James I. and Charles I.
- ARGAILE, argol, crust or sediment in wine casks.
- ARGENT-VIVE, quicksilver.
- ARGUMENT, plot of a drama; theme, subject; matter in question; token,
- proof.
- ARRIDE, please.
- ARSEDINE, mixture of copper and zinc, used as an imitation of gold-leaf.
- ARTHUR, PRINCE, reference to an archery show by a society who assumed
- arms, etc., of Arthur's knights.
- ARTICLE, item.
- ARTIFICIALLY, artfully.
- ASCENSION, evaporation, distillation.
- ASPIRE, try to reach, obtain, long for.
- ASSALTO (Italian), assault.
- ASSAY, draw a knife along the belly of the deer, a ceremony of the
- hunting-field.
- ASSOIL, solve.
- ASSURE, secure possession or reversion of.
- ATHANOR, a digesting furnace, calculated to keep up a constant heat.
- ATONE, reconcile.
- ATTACH, attack, seize.
- AUDACIOUS, having spirit and confidence.
- AUTHENTIC(AL), of authority, authorised, trustworthy, genuine.
- AVISEMENT, reflection, consideration.
- AVOID, begone! get rid of.
- AWAY WITH, endure.
- AZOCH, Mercurius Philosophorum.
- BABION, baboon.
- BABY, doll.
- BACK-SIDE, back premises.
- BAFFLE, treat with contempt.
- BAGATINE, Italian coin, worth about the third of a farthing.
- BAIARD, horse of magic powers known to old romance.
- BALDRICK, belt worn across the breast to support bugle, etc.
- BALE (of dice), pair.
- BALK, overlook, pass by, avoid.
- BALLACE, ballast.
- BALLOO, game at ball.
- BALNEUM (BAIN MARIE), a vessel for holding hot water in which other
- vessels are stood for heating.
- BANBURY, "brother of--," Puritan.
- BANDOG, dog tied or chained up.
- BANE, woe, ruin.
- BANQUET, a light repast; dessert.
- BARB, to clip gold.
- BARBEL, fresh-water fish.
- BARE, meer; bareheaded; it was "a particular mark of state and grandeur
- for the coachman to be uncovered" (Gifford).
- BARLEY-BREAK, game somewhat similar to base.
- BASE, game of prisoner's base.
- BASES, richly embroidered skirt reaching to the knees, or lower.
- BASILISK, fabulous reptile, believed to slay with its eye.
- BASKET, used for the broken provision collected for prisoners.
- BASON, basons, etc., were beaten by the attendant mob when bad
- characters were "carted."
- BATE, be reduced; abate, reduce.
- BATOON, baton, stick.
- BATTEN, feed, grow fat.
- BAWSON, badger.
- BEADSMAN, prayer-man, one engaged to pray for another.
- BEAGLE, small hound; fig. spy.
- BEAR IN HAND, keep in suspense, deceive with false hopes.
- BEARWARD, bear leader.
- BEDPHERE. See Phere.
- BEDSTAFF, (?) wooden pin in the side of the bedstead for supporting
- the bedclothes (Johnson); one of the sticks or "laths"; a stick used in
- making a bed.
- BEETLE, heavy mallet.
- BEG, "I'd--him," the custody of minors and idiots was begged for;
- likewise property fallen forfeit to the Crown ("your house had been
- begged").
- BELL-MAN, night watchman.
- BENJAMIN, an aromatic gum.
- BERLINA, pillory.
- BESCUMBER, defile.
- BESLAVE, beslabber.
- BESOGNO, beggar.
- BESPAWLE, bespatter.
- BETHLEHEM GABOR, Transylvanian hero, proclaimed King of Hungary.
- BEVER, drinking.
- BEVIS, SIR, knight of romance whose horse was equally celebrated.
- BEWRAY, reveal, make known.
- BEZANT, heraldic term: small gold circle.
- BEZOAR'S STONE, a remedy known by this name was a supposed antidote to
- poison.
- BID-STAND, highwayman.
- BIGGIN, cap, similar to that worn by the Beguines; nightcap.
- BILIVE (belive), with haste.
- BILK, nothing, empty talk.
- BILL, kind of pike.
- BILLET, wood cut for fuel, stick.
- BIRDING, thieving.
- BLACK SANCTUS, burlesque hymn, any unholy riot.
- BLANK, originally a small French coin.
- BLANK, white.
- BLANKET, toss in a blanket.
- BLAZE, outburst of violence.
- BLAZE, (her.) blazon; publish abroad.
- BLAZON, armorial bearings; fig. all that pertains to good birth and
- breeding.
- BLIN, "withouten--," without ceasing.
- BLOW, puff up.
- BLUE, colour of servants' livery, hence "--order," "--waiters."
- BLUSHET, blushing one.
- BOB, jest, taunt.
- BOB, beat, thump.
- BODGE, measure.
- BODKIN, dagger, or other short, pointed weapon; long pin with which the
- women fastened up their hair.
- BOLT, roll (of material).
- BOLT, dislodge, rout out; sift (boulting-tub).
- BOLT'S-HEAD, long, straight-necked vessel for distillation.
- BOMBARD SLOPS, padded, puffed-out breeches.
- BONA ROBA, "good, wholesome, plum-cheeked wench" (Johnson) --not always
- used in compliment.
- BONNY-CLABBER, sour butter-milk.
- BOOKHOLDER, prompter.
- BOOT, "to--," into the bargain; "no--," of no avail.
- BORACHIO, bottle made of skin.
- BORDELLO, brothel.
- BORNE IT, conducted, carried it through.
- BOTTLE (of hay), bundle, truss.
- BOTTOM, skein or ball of thread; vessel.
- BOURD, jest.
- BOVOLI, snails or cockles dressed in the Italian manner (Gifford).
- BOW-POT, flower vase or pot.
- BOYS, "terrible--," "angry--," roystering young bucks. (See Nares).
- BRABBLES (BRABBLESH), brawls.
- BRACH, bitch.
- BRADAMANTE, a heroine in "Orlando Furioso."
- BRADLEY, ARTHUR OF, a lively character commemorated in ballads.
- BRAKE, frame for confining a horse's feet while being shod, or strong
- curb or bridle; trap.
- BRANCHED, with "detached sleeve ornaments, projecting from the shoulders
- of the gown" (Gifford).
- BRANDISH, flourish of weapon.
- BRASH, brace.
- BRAVE, bravado, braggart speech.
- BRAVE (adv.), gaily, finely (apparelled).
- BRAVERIES, gallants.
- BRAVERY, extravagant gaiety of apparel.
- BRAVO, bravado, swaggerer.
- BRAZEN-HEAD, speaking head made by Roger Bacon.
- BREATHE, pause for relaxation; exercise.
- BREATH UPON, speak dispraisingly of.
- BREND, burn.
- BRIDE-ALE, wedding feast.
- BRIEF, abstract; (mus.) breve.
- BRISK, smartly dressed.
- BRIZE, breese, gadfly.
- BROAD-SEAL, state seal.
- BROCK, badger (term of contempt).
- BROKE, transact business as a broker.
- BROOK, endure, put up with.
- BROUGHTON, HUGH, an English divine and Hebrew scholar.
- BRUIT, rumour.
- BUCK, wash.
- BUCKLE, bend.
- BUFF, leather made of buffalo skin, used for military and serjeants'
- coats, etc.
- BUFO, black tincture.
- BUGLE, long-shaped bead.
- BULLED, (?) bolled, swelled.
- BULLIONS, trunk hose.
- BULLY, term of familiar endearment.
- BUNGY, Friar Bungay, who had a familiar in the shape of a dog.
- BURDEN, refrain, chorus.
- BURGONET, closely-fitting helmet with visor.
- BURGULLION, braggadocio.
- BURN, mark wooden measures ("--ing of cans").
- BURROUGH, pledge, security.
- BUSKIN, half-boot, foot gear reaching high up the leg.
- BUTT-SHAFT, barbless arrow for shooting at butts.
- BUTTER, NATHANIEL ("Staple of News"), a compiler of general news. (See
- Cunningham).
- BUTTERY-HATCH, half-door shutting off the buttery, where provisions and
- liquors were stored.
- BUY, "he bought me," formerly the guardianship of wards could be bought.
- BUZ, exclamation to enjoin silence.
- BUZZARD, simpleton.
- BY AND BY, at once.
- BY(E), "on the __," incidentally, as of minor or secondary importance;
- at the side.
- BY-CHOP, by-blow, bastard.
- CADUCEUS, Mercury's wand.
- CALIVER, light kind of musket.
- CALLET, woman of ill repute.
- CALLOT, coif worn on the wigs of our judges or serjeants-at-law
- (Gifford).
- CALVERED, crimped, or sliced and pickled. (See Nares).
- CAMOUCCIO, wretch, knave.
- CAMUSED, flat.
- CAN, knows.
- CANDLE-RENT, rent from house property.
- CANDLE-WASTER, one who studies late.
- CANTER, sturdy beggar.
- CAP OF MAINTENCE, an insignia of dignity, a cap of state borne before
- kings at their coronation; also an heraldic term.
- CAPABLE, able to comprehend, fit to receive instruction, impression.
- CAPANEUS, one of the "Seven against Thebes."
- CARACT, carat, unit of weight for precious stones, etc.; value, worth.
- CARANZA, Spanish author of a book on duelling.
- CARCANET, jewelled ornament for the neck.
- CARE, take care; object.
- CAROSH, coach, carriage.
- CARPET, table-cover.
- CARRIAGE, bearing, behaviour.
- CARWHITCHET, quip, pun.
- CASAMATE, casemate, fortress.
- CASE, a pair.
- CASE, "in--," in condition.
- CASSOCK, soldier's loose overcoat.
- CAST, flight of hawks, couple.
- CAST, throw dice; vomit; forecast, calculate.
- CAST, cashiered.
- CASTING-GLASS, bottle for sprinkling perfume.
- CASTRIL, kestrel, falcon.
- CAT, structure used in sieges.
- CATAMITE, old form of "ganymede."
- CATASTROPHE, conclusion.
- CATCHPOLE, sheriff's officer.
- CATES, dainties, provisions.
- CATSO, rogue, cheat.
- CAUTELOUS, crafty, artful.
- CENSURE, criticism; sentence.
- CENSURE, criticise; pass sentence, doom.
- CERUSE, cosmetic containing white lead.
- CESS, assess.
- CHANGE, "hunt--," follow a fresh scent.
- CHAPMAN, retail dealer.
- CHARACTER, handwriting.
- CHARGE, expense.
- CHARM, subdue with magic, lay a spell on, silence.
- CHARMING, exercising magic power.
- CHARTEL, challenge.
- CHEAP, bargain, market.
- CHEAR, CHEER, comfort, encouragement; food, entertainment.
- CHECK AT, aim reproof at.
- CHEQUIN, gold Italian coin.
- CHEVRIL, from kidskin, which is elastic and pliable.
- CHIAUS, Turkish envoy; used for a cheat, swindler.
- CHILDERMASS DAY, Innocents' Day.
- CHOKE-BAIL, action which does not allow of bail.
- CHRYSOPOEIA, alchemy.
- CHRYSOSPERM, ways of producing gold.
- CIBATION, adding fresh substances to supply the waste of evaporation.
- CIMICI, bugs.
- CINOPER, cinnabar.
- CIOPPINI, chopine, lady's high shoe.
- CIRCLING BOY, "a species of roarer; one who in some way drew a man into
- a snare, to cheat or rob him" (Nares).
- CIRCUMSTANCE, circumlocution, beating about the bush; ceremony,
- everything pertaining to a certain condition; detail, particular.
- CITRONISE, turn citron colour.
- CITTERN, kind of guitar.
- CITY-WIRES, woman of fashion, who made use of wires for hair and dress.
- CIVIL, legal.
- CLAP, clack, chatter.
- CLAPPER-DUDGEON, downright beggar.
- CLAPS HIS DISH, a clap, or clack, dish (dish with a movable lid) was
- carried by beggars and lepers to show that the vessel was empty, and to
- give sound of their approach.
- CLARIDIANA, heroine of an old romance.
- CLARISSIMO, Venetian noble.
- CLEM, starve.
- CLICKET, latch.
- CLIM O' THE CLOUGHS, etc., wordy heroes of romance.
- CLIMATE, country.
- CLOSE, secret, private; secretive.
- CLOSENESS, secrecy.
- CLOTH, arras, hangings.
- CLOUT, mark shot at, bull's eye.
- CLOWN, countryman, clodhopper.
- COACH-LEAVES, folding blinds.
- COALS, "bear no--," submit to no affront.
- COAT-ARMOUR, coat of arms.
- COAT-CARD, court-card.
- COB-HERRING, HERRING-COB, a young herring.
- COB-SWAN, male swan.
- COCK-A-HOOP, denoting unstinted jollity; thought to be derived from
- turning on the tap that all might drink to the full of the flowing
- liquor.
- COCKATRICE, reptile supposed to be produced from a cock's egg and to
- kill by its eye--used as a term of reproach for a woman.
- COCK-BRAINED, giddy, wild.
- COCKER, pamper.
- COCKSCOMB, fool's cap.
- COCKSTONE, stone said to be found in a cock's gizzard, and to possess
- particular virtues.
- CODLING, softening by boiling.
- COFFIN, raised crust of a pie.
- COG, cheat, wheedle.
- COIL, turmoil, confusion, ado.
- COKELY, master of a puppet-show (Whalley).
- COKES, fool, gull.
- COLD-CONCEITED, having cold opinion of, coldly affected towards.
- COLE-HARBOUR, a retreat for people of all sorts.
- COLLECTION, composure; deduction.
- COLLOP, small slice, piece of flesh.
- COLLY, blacken.
- COLOUR, pretext.
- COLOURS, "fear no--," no enemy (quibble).
- COLSTAFF, cowlstaff, pole for carrying a cowl=tub.
- COME ABOUT, charge, turn round.
- COMFORTABLE BREAD, spiced gingerbread.
- COMING, forward, ready to respond, complaisant.
- COMMENT, commentary; "sometime it is taken for a lie or fayned tale"
- (Bullokar, 1616).
- COMMODITY, "current for--," allusion to practice of money-lenders, who
- forced the borrower to take part of the loan in the shape of worthless
- goods on which the latter had to make money if he could.
- COMMUNICATE, share.
- COMPASS, "in--," within the range, sphere.
- COMPLEMENT, completion, completement; anything required for the
- perfecting or carrying out of a person or affair; accomplishment.
- COMPLEXION, natural disposition, constitution.
- COMPLIMENT, See Complement.
- COMPLIMENTARIES, masters of accomplishments.
- COMPOSITION, constitution; agreement, contract.
- COMPOSURE, composition.
- COMPTER, COUNTER, debtors' prison.
- CONCEALMENT, a certain amount of church property had been retained at
- the dissolution of the monasteries; Elizabeth sent commissioners to
- search it out, and the courtiers begged for it.
- CONCEIT, idea, fancy, witty invention, conception, opinion.
- CONCEIT, apprehend.
- CONCEITED, fancifully, ingeniously devised or conceived; possessed of
- intelligence, witty, ingenious (hence well conceited, etc.); disposed to
- joke; of opinion, possessed of an idea.
- CONCEIVE, understand.
- CONCENT, harmony, agreement.
- CONCLUDE, infer, prove.
- CONCOCT, assimilate, digest.
- CONDEN'T, probably conducted.
- CONDUCT, escort, conductor.
- CONEY-CATCH, cheat.
- CONFECT, sweetmeat.
- CONFER, compare.
- CONGIES, bows.
- CONNIVE, give a look, wink, of secret intelligence.
- CONSORT, company, concert.
- CONSTANCY, fidelity, ardour, persistence.
- CONSTANT, confirmed, persistent, faithful.
- CONSTANTLY, firmly, persistently.
- CONTEND, strive.
- CONTINENT, holding together.
- CONTROL (the point), bear or beat down.
- CONVENT, assembly, meeting.
- CONVERT, turn (oneself).
- CONVEY, transmit from one to another.
- CONVINCE, evince, prove; overcome, overpower; convict.
- COP, head, top; tuft on head of birds; "a cop" may have reference to one
- or other meaning; Gifford and others interpret as "conical, terminating
- in a point."
- COPE-MAN, chapman.
- COPESMATE, companion.
- COPY (Lat. copia), abundance, copiousness.
- CORN ("powder--"), grain.
- COROLLARY, finishing part or touch.
- CORSIVE, corrosive.
- CORTINE, curtain, (arch.) wall between two towers, etc.
- CORYAT, famous for his travels, published as "Coryat's Crudities."
- COSSET, pet lamb, pet.
- COSTARD, head.
- COSTARD-MONGER, apple-seller, coster-monger.
- COSTS, ribs.
- COTE, hut.
- COTHURNAL, from "cothurnus," a particular boot worn by actors in Greek
- tragedy.
- COTQUEAN, hussy.
- COUNSEL, secret.
- COUNTENANCE, means necessary for support; credit, standing.
- COUNTER. See Compter.
- COUNTER, pieces of metal or ivory for calculating at play.
- COUNTER, "hunt--," follow scent in reverse direction.
- COUNTERFEIT, false coin.
- COUNTERPANE, one part or counterpart of a deed or indenture.
- COUNTERPOINT, opposite, contrary point.
- COURT-DISH, a kind of drinking-cup (Halliwell); N.E.D. quotes from Bp.
- Goodman's "Court of James I.": "The king... caused his carver to cut him
- out a court-dish, that is, something of every dish, which he sent him as
- part of his reversion," but this does not sound like short allowance or
- small receptacle.
- COURT-DOR, fool.
- COURTEAU, curtal, small horse with docked tail.
- COURTSHIP, courtliness.
- COVETISE, avarice.
- COWSHARD, cow dung.
- COXCOMB, fool's cap, fool.
- COY, shrink; disdain.
- COYSTREL, low varlet.
- COZEN, cheat.
- CRACK, lively young rogue, wag.
- CRACK, crack up, boast; come to grief.
- CRAMBE, game of crambo, in which the players find rhymes for a given
- word.
- CRANCH, craunch.
- CRANION, spider-like; also fairy appellation for a fly (Gifford, who
- refers to lines in Drayton's "Nimphidia").
- CRIMP, game at cards.
- CRINCLE, draw back, turn aside.
- CRISPED, with curled or waved hair.
- CROP, gather, reap.
- CROPSHIRE, a kind of herring. (See N.E.D.)
- CROSS, any piece of money, many coins being stamped with a cross.
- CROSS AND PILE, heads and tails.
- CROSSLET, crucible.
- CROWD, fiddle.
- CRUDITIES, undigested matter.
- CRUMP, curl up.
- CRUSADO, Portuguese gold coin, marked with a cross.
- CRY ("he that cried Italian"), "speak in a musical cadence," intone, or
- declaim (?); cry up.
- CUCKING-STOOL, used for the ducking of scolds, etc.
- CUCURBITE, a gourd-shaped vessel used for distillation.
- CUERPO, "in--," in undress.
- CULLICE, broth.
- CULLION, base fellow, coward.
- CULLISEN, badge worn on their arm by servants.
- CULVERIN, kind of cannon.
- CUNNING, skill.
- CUNNING, skilful.
- CUNNING-MAN, fortune-teller.
- CURE, care for.
- CURIOUS(LY), scrupulous, particular; elaborate, elegant(ly), dainty(ly)
- (hence "in curious").
- CURST, shrewish, mischievous.
- CURTAL, dog with docked tail, of inferior sort.
- CUSTARD, "quaking--," "--politic," reference to a large custard which
- formed part of a city feast and afforded huge entertainment, for the
- fool jumped into it, and other like tricks were played. (See "All's
- Well, etc." ii. 5, 40.)
- CUTWORK, embroidery, open-work.
- CYPRES (CYPRUS) (quibble), cypress (or cyprus) being a transparent
- material, and when black used for mourning.
- DAGGER ("--frumety"), name of tavern.
- DARGISON, apparently some person known in ballad or tale.
- DAUPHIN MY BOY, refrain of old comic song.
- DAW, daunt.
- DEAD LIFT, desperate emergency.
- DEAR, applied to that which in any way touches us nearly.
- DECLINE, turn off from; turn away, aside.
- DEFALK, deduct, abate.
- DEFEND, forbid.
- DEGENEROUS, degenerate.
- DEGREES, steps.
- DELATE, accuse.
- DEMI-CULVERIN, cannon carrying a ball of about ten pounds.
- DENIER, the smallest possible coin, being the twelfth part of a sou.
- DEPART, part with.
- DEPENDANCE, ground of quarrel in duello language.
- DESERT, reward.
- DESIGNMENT, design.
- DESPERATE, rash, reckless.
- DETECT, allow to be detected, betray, inform against.
- DETERMINE, terminate.
- DETRACT, draw back, refuse.
- DEVICE, masque, show; a thing moved by wires, etc., puppet.
- DEVISE, exact in every particular.
- DEVISED, invented.
- DIAPASM, powdered aromatic herbs, made into balls of perfumed paste.
- (See Pomander.)
- DIBBLE, (?) moustache (N.E.D.); (?) dagger (Cunningham).
- DIFFUSED, disordered, scattered, irregular.
- DIGHT, dressed.
- DILDO, refrain of popular songs; vague term of low meaning.
- DIMBLE, dingle, ravine.
- DIMENSUM, stated allowance.
- DISBASE, debase.
- DISCERN, distinguish, show a difference between.
- DISCHARGE, settle for.
- DISCIPLINE, reformation; ecclesiastical system.
- DISCLAIM, renounce all part in.
- DISCOURSE, process of reasoning, reasoning faculty.
- DISCOURTSHIP, discourtesy.
- DISCOVER, betray, reveal; display.
- DISFAVOUR, disfigure.
- DISPARAGEMENT, legal term applied to the unfitness in any way of a
- marriage arranged for in the case of wards.
- DISPENSE WITH, grant dispensation for.
- DISPLAY, extend.
- DIS'PLE, discipline, teach by the whip.
- DISPOSED, inclined to merriment.
- DISPOSURE, disposal.
- DISPRISE, depreciate.
- DISPUNCT, not punctilious.
- DISQUISITION, search.
- DISSOLVED, enervated by grief.
- DISTANCE, (?) proper measure.
- DISTASTE, offence, cause of offence.
- DISTASTE, render distasteful.
- DISTEMPERED, upset, out of humour.
- DIVISION (mus.), variation, modulation.
- DOG-BOLT, term of contempt.
- DOLE, given in dole, charity.
- DOLE OF FACES, distribution of grimaces.
- DOOM, verdict, sentence.
- DOP, dip, low bow.
- DOR, beetle, buzzing insect, drone, idler.
- DOR, (?) buzz; "give the--," make a fool of.
- DOSSER, pannier, basket.
- DOTES, endowments, qualities.
- DOTTEREL, plover; gull, fool.
- DOUBLE, behave deceitfully.
- DOXY, wench, mistress.
- DRACHM, Greek silver coin.
- DRESS, groom, curry.
- DRESSING, coiffure.
- DRIFT, intention.
- DRYFOOT, track by mere scent of foot.
- DUCKING, punishment for minor offences.
- DUILL, grieve.
- DUMPS, melancholy, originally a mournful melody.
- DURINDANA, Orlando's sword.
- DWINDLE, shrink away, be overawed.
- EAN, yean, bring forth young.
- EASINESS, readiness.
- EBOLITION, ebullition.
- EDGE, sword.
- EECH, eke.
- EGREGIOUS, eminently excellent.
- EKE, also, moreover.
- E-LA, highest note in the scale.
- EGGS ON THE SPIT, important business on hand.
- ELF-LOCK, tangled hair, supposed to be the work of elves.
- EMMET, ant.
- ENGAGE, involve.
- ENGHLE. See Ingle.
- ENGHLE, cajole; fondle.
- ENGIN(E), device, contrivance; agent; ingenuity, wit.
- ENGINER, engineer, deviser, plotter.
- ENGINOUS, crafty, full of devices; witty, ingenious.
- ENGROSS, monopolise.
- ENS, an existing thing, a substance.
- ENSIGNS, tokens, wounds.
- ENSURE, assure.
- ENTERTAIN, take into service.
- ENTREAT, plead.
- ENTREATY, entertainment.
- ENTRY, place where a deer has lately passed.
- ENVOY, denouement, conclusion.
- ENVY, spite, calumny, dislike, odium.
- EPHEMERIDES, calendars.
- EQUAL, just, impartial.
- ERECTION, elevation in esteem.
- ERINGO, candied root of the sea-holly, formerly used as a sweetmeat and
- aphrodisiac.
- ERRANT, arrant.
- ESSENTIATE, become assimilated.
- ESTIMATION, esteem.
- ESTRICH, ostrich.
- ETHNIC, heathen.
- EURIPUS, flux and reflux.
- EVEN, just equable.
- EVENT, fate, issue.
- EVENT(ED), issue(d).
- EVERT, overturn.
- EXACUATE, sharpen.
- EXAMPLESS, without example or parallel.
- EXCALIBUR, King Arthur's sword.
- EXEMPLIFY, make an example of.
- EXEMPT, separate, exclude.
- EXEQUIES, obsequies.
- EXHALE, drag out.
- EXHIBITION, allowance for keep, pocket-money.
- EXORBITANT, exceeding limits of propriety or law, inordinate.
- EXORNATION, ornament.
- EXPECT, wait.
- EXPIATE, terminate.
- EXPLICATE, explain, unfold.
- EXTEMPORAL, extempore, unpremeditated.
- EXTRACTION, essence.
- EXTRAORDINARY, employed for a special or temporary purpose.
- EXTRUDE, expel.
- EYE, "in--," in view.
- EYEBRIGHT, (?) a malt liquor in which the herb of this name was infused,
- or a person who sold the same (Gifford).
- EYE-TINGE, least shade or gleam.
- FACE, appearance.
- FACES ABOUT, military word of command.
- FACINOROUS, extremely wicked.
- FACKINGS, faith.
- FACT, deed, act, crime.
- FACTIOUS, seditious, belonging to a party, given to party feeling.
- FAECES, dregs.
- FAGIOLI, French beans.
- FAIN, forced, necessitated.
- FAITHFUL, believing.
- FALL, ruff or band turned back on the shoulders; or, veil.
- FALSIFY, feign (fencing term).
- FAME, report.
- FAMILIAR, attendant spirit.
- FANTASTICAL, capricious, whimsical.
- FARCE, stuff.
- FAR-FET. See Fet.
- FARTHINGAL, hooped petticoat.
- FAUCET, tapster.
- FAULT, lack; loss, break in line of scent; "for--," in default of.
- FAUTOR, partisan.
- FAYLES, old table game similar to backgammon.
- FEAR(ED), affright(ed).
- FEAT, activity, operation; deed, action.
- FEAT, elegant, trim.
- FEE, "in--" by feudal obligation.
- FEIZE, beat, belabour.
- FELLOW, term of contempt.
- FENNEL, emblem of flattery.
- FERE, companion, fellow.
- FERN-SEED, supposed to have power of rendering invisible.
- FET, fetched.
- FETCH, trick.
- FEUTERER (Fr. vautrier), dog-keeper.
- FEWMETS, dung.
- FICO, fig.
- FIGGUM, (?) jugglery.
- FIGMENT, fiction, invention.
- FIRK, frisk, move suddenly, or in jerks; "--up," stir up, rouse; "firks
- mad," suddenly behaves like a madman.
- FIT, pay one out, punish.
- FITNESS, readiness.
- FITTON (FITTEN), lie, invention.
- FIVE-AND-FIFTY, "highest number to stand on at primero" (Gifford).
- FLAG, to fly low and waveringly.
- FLAGON CHAIN, for hanging a smelling-bottle (Fr. flacon) round the neck
- (?). (See N.E.D.).
- FLAP-DRAGON, game similar to snap-dragon.
- FLASKET, some kind of basket.
- FLAW, sudden gust or squall of wind.
- FLAWN, custard.
- FLEA, catch fleas.
- FLEER, sneer, laugh derisively.
- FLESH, feed a hawk or dog with flesh to incite it to the chase; initiate
- in blood-shed; satiate.
- FLICKER-MOUSE, bat.
- FLIGHT, light arrow.
- FLITTER-MOUSE, bat.
- FLOUT, mock, speak and act contemptuously.
- FLOWERS, pulverised substance.
- FLY, familiar spirit.
- FOIL, weapon used in fencing; that which sets anything off to advantage.
- FOIST, cut-purse, sharper.
- FOND(LY), foolish(ly).
- FOOT-CLOTH, housings of ornamental cloth which hung down on either side
- a horse to the ground.
- FOOTING, foothold; footstep; dancing.
- FOPPERY, foolery.
- FOR, "--failing," for fear of failing.
- FORBEAR, bear with; abstain from.
- FORCE, "hunt at--," run the game down with dogs.
- FOREHEAD, modesty; face, assurance, effrontery.
- FORESLOW, delay.
- FORESPEAK, bewitch; foretell.
- FORETOP, front lock of hair which fashion required to be worn upright.
- FORGED, fabricated.
- FORM, state formally.
- FORMAL, shapely; normal; conventional.
- FORTHCOMING, produced when required.
- FOUNDER, disable with over-riding.
- FOURM, form, lair.
- FOX, sword.
- FRAIL, rush basket in which figs or raisins were packed.
- FRAMPULL, peevish, sour-tempered.
- FRAPLER, blusterer, wrangler.
- FRAYING, "a stag is said to fray his head when he rubs it against a tree
- to... cause the outward coat of the new horns to fall off" (Gifford).
- FREIGHT (of the gazetti), burden (of the newspapers).
- FREQUENT, full.
- FRICACE, rubbing.
- FRICATRICE, woman of low character.
- FRIPPERY, old clothes shop.
- FROCK, smock-frock.
- FROLICS, (?) humorous verses circulated at a feast (N.E.D.); couplets
- wrapped round sweetmeats (Cunningham).
- FRONTLESS, shameless.
- FROTED, rubbed.
- FRUMETY, hulled wheat boiled in milk and spiced.
- FRUMP, flout, sneer.
- FUCUS, dye.
- FUGEAND, (?) figent: fidgety, restless (N.E.D.).
- FULLAM, false dice.
- FULMART, polecat.
- FULSOME, foul, offensive.
- FURIBUND, raging, furious.
- GALLEY-FOIST, city-barge, used on Lord Mayor's Day, when he was sworn
- into his office at Westminster (Whalley).
- GALLIARD, lively dance in triple time.
- GAPE, be eager after.
- GARAGANTUA, Rabelais' giant.
- GARB, sheaf (Fr. gerbe); manner, fashion, behaviour.
- GARD, guard, trimming, gold or silver lace, or other ornament.
- GARDED, faced or trimmed.
- GARNISH, fee.
- GAVEL-KIND, name of a land-tenure existing chiefly in Kent; from
- 16th century often used to denote custom of dividing a deceased man's
- property equally among his sons (N.E.D.).
- GAZETTE, small Venetian coin worth about three-farthings.
- GEANCE, jaunt, errand.
- GEAR (GEER), stuff, matter, affair.
- GELID, frozen.
- GEMONIES, steps from which the bodies of criminals were thrown into the
- river.
- GENERAL, free, affable.
- GENIUS, attendant spirit.
- GENTRY, gentlemen; manners characteristic of gentry, good breeding.
- GIB-CAT, tom-cat.
- GIGANTOMACHIZE, start a giants' war.
- GIGLOT, wanton.
- GIMBLET, gimlet.
- GING, gang.
- GLASS ("taking in of shadows, etc."), crystal or beryl.
- GLEEK, card game played by three; party of three, trio; side glance.
- GLICK (GLEEK), jest, gibe.
- GLIDDER, glaze.
- GLORIOUSLY, of vain glory.
- GODWIT, bird of the snipe family.
- GOLD-END-MAN, a buyer of broken gold and silver.
- GOLL, hand.
- GONFALIONIER, standard-bearer, chief magistrate, etc.
- GOOD, sound in credit.
- GOOD-YEAR, good luck.
- GOOSE-TURD, colour of. (See Turd).
- GORCROW, carrion crow.
- GORGET, neck armour.
- GOSSIP, godfather.
- GOWKED, from "gowk," to stand staring and gaping like a fool.
- GRANNAM, grandam.
- GRASS, (?) grease, fat.
- GRATEFUL, agreeable, welcome.
- GRATIFY, give thanks to.
- GRATITUDE, gratuity.
- GRATULATE, welcome, congratulate.
- GRAVITY, dignity.
- GRAY, badger.
- GRICE, cub.
- GRIEF, grievance.
- GRIPE, vulture, griffin.
- GRIPE'S EGG, vessel in shape of.
- GROAT, fourpence.
- GROGRAN, coarse stuff made of silk and mohair, or of coarse silk.
- GROOM-PORTER, officer in the royal household.
- GROPE, handle, probe.
- GROUND, pit (hence "grounded judgments").
- GUARD, caution, heed.
- GUARDANT, heraldic term: turning the head only.
- GUILDER, Dutch coin worth about 4d.
- GULES, gullet, throat; heraldic term for red.
- GULL, simpleton, dupe.
- GUST, taste.
- HAB NAB, by, on, chance.
- HABERGEON, coat of mail.
- HAGGARD, wild female hawk; hence coy, wild.
- HALBERD, combination of lance and battle-axe.
- HALL, "a--!" a cry to clear the room for the dancers.
- HANDSEL, first money taken.
- HANGER, loop or strap on a sword-belt from which the sword was
- suspended.
- HAP, fortune, luck.
- HAPPILY, haply.
- HAPPINESS, appropriateness, fitness.
- HAPPY, rich.
- HARBOUR, track, trace (an animal) to its shelter.
- HARD-FAVOURED, harsh-featured.
- HARPOCRATES, Horus the child, son of Osiris, figured with a finger
- pointing to his mouth, indicative of silence.
- HARRINGTON, a patent was granted to Lord H. for the coinage of tokens
- (q.v.).
- HARROT, herald.
- HARRY NICHOLAS, founder of a community called the "Family of Love."
- HAY, net for catching rabbits, etc.
- HAY! (Ital. hai!), you have it (a fencing term).
- HAY IN HIS HORN, ill-tempered person.
- HAZARD, game at dice; that which is staked.
- HEAD, "first--," young deer with antlers first sprouting; fig. a
- newly-ennobled man.
- HEADBOROUGH, constable.
- HEARKEN AFTER, inquire; "hearken out," find, search out.
- HEARTEN, encourage.
- HEAVEN AND HELL ("Alchemist"), names of taverns.
- HECTIC, fever.
- HEDGE IN, include.
- HELM, upper part of a retort.
- HER'NSEW, hernshaw, heron.
- HIERONIMO (JERONIMO), hero of Kyd's "Spanish Tragedy."
- HOBBY, nag.
- HOBBY-HORSE, imitation horse of some light material, fastened round the
- waist of the morrice-dancer, who imitated the movements of a skittish
- horse.
- HODDY-DODDY, fool.
- HOIDEN, hoyden, formerly applied to both sexes (ancient term for
- leveret? Gifford).
- HOLLAND, name of two famous chemists.
- HONE AND HONERO, wailing expressions of lament or discontent.
- HOOD-WINK'D, blindfolded.
- HORARY, hourly.
- HORN-MAD, stark mad (quibble).
- HORN-THUMB, cut-purses were in the habit of wearing a horn shield on the
- thumb.
- HORSE-BREAD-EATING, horses were often fed on coarse bread.
- HORSE-COURSER, horse-dealer.
- HOSPITAL, Christ's Hospital.
- HOWLEGLAS, Eulenspiegel, the hero of a popular German tale which relates
- his buffooneries and knavish tricks.
- HUFF, hectoring, arrogance.
- HUFF IT, swagger.
- HUISHER (Fr. huissier), usher.
- HUM, beer and spirits mixed together.
- HUMANITIAN, humanist, scholar.
- HUMOROUS, capricious, moody, out of humour; moist.
- HUMOUR, a word used in and out of season in the time of Shakespeare and
- Ben Jonson, and ridiculed by both.
- HUMOURS, manners.
- HUMPHREY, DUKE, those who were dinnerless spent the dinner-hour in a
- part of St. Paul's where stood a monument said to be that of the duke's;
- hence "dine with Duke Humphrey," to go hungry.
- HURTLESS, harmless.
- IDLE, useless, unprofitable.
- ILL-AFFECTED, ill-disposed.
- ILL-HABITED, unhealthy.
- ILLUSTRATE, illuminate.
- IMBIBITION, saturation, steeping.
- IMBROCATA, fencing term: a thrust in tierce.
- IMPAIR, impairment.
- IMPART, give money.
- IMPARTER, any one ready to be cheated and to part with his money.
- IMPEACH, damage.
- IMPERTINENCIES, irrelevancies.
- IMPERTINENT(LY), irrelevant(ly), without reason or purpose.
- IMPOSITION, duty imposed by.
- IMPOTENTLY, beyond power of control.
- IMPRESS, money in advance.
- IMPULSION, incitement.
- IN AND IN, a game played by two or three persons with four dice.
- INCENSE, incite, stir up.
- INCERATION, act of covering with wax; or reducing a substance to
- softness of wax.
- INCH, "to their--es," according to their stature, capabilities.
- INCH-PIN, sweet-bread.
- INCONVENIENCE, inconsistency, absurdity.
- INCONY, delicate, rare (used as a term of affection).
- INCUBEE, incubus.
- INCUBUS, evil spirit that oppresses us in sleep, nightmare.
- INCURIOUS, unfastidious, uncritical.
- INDENT, enter into engagement.
- INDIFFERENT, tolerable, passable.
- INDIGESTED, shapeless, chaotic.
- INDUCE, introduce.
- INDUE, supply.
- INEXORABLE, relentless.
- INFANTED, born, produced.
- INFLAME, augment charge.
- INGENIOUS, used indiscriminantly for ingenuous; intelligent, talented.
- INGENUITY, ingenuousness.
- INGENUOUS, generous.
- INGINE. See Engin.
- INGINER, engineer. (See Enginer).
- INGLE, OR ENGHLE, bosom friend, intimate, minion.
- INHABITABLE, uninhabitable.
- INJURY, insult, affront.
- IN-MATE, resident, indwelling.
- INNATE, natural.
- INNOCENT, simpleton.
- INQUEST, jury, or other official body of inquiry.
- INQUISITION, inquiry.
- INSTANT, immediate.
- INSTRUMENT, legal document.
- INSURE, assure.
- INTEGRATE, complete, perfect.
- INTELLIGENCE, secret information, news.
- INTEND, note carefully, attend, give ear to, be occupied with.
- INTENDMENT, intention.
- INTENT, intention, wish.
- INTENTION, concentration of attention or gaze.
- INTENTIVE, attentive.
- INTERESSED, implicated.
- INTRUDE, bring in forcibly or without leave.
- INVINCIBLY, invisibly.
- INWARD, intimate.
- IRPE (uncertain), "a fantastic grimace, or contortion of the body:
- (Gifford)."
- JACK, Jack o' the clock, automaton figure that strikes the hour;
- Jack-a-lent, puppet thrown at in Lent.
- JACK, key of a virginal.
- JACOB'S STAFF, an instrument for taking altitudes and distances.
- JADE, befool.
- JEALOUSY, JEALOUS, suspicion, suspicious.
- JERKING, lashing.
- JEW'S TRUMP, Jew's harp.
- JIG, merry ballad or tune; a fanciful dialogue or light comic act
- introduced at the end or during an interlude of a play.
- JOINED (JOINT)-STOOL, folding stool.
- JOLL, jowl.
- JOLTHEAD, blockhead.
- JUMP, agree, tally.
- JUST YEAR, no one was capable of the consulship until he was
- forty-three.
- KELL, cocoon.
- KELLY, an alchemist.
- KEMB, comb.
- KEMIA, vessel for distillation.
- KIBE, chap, sore.
- KILDERKIN, small barrel.
- KILL, kiln.
- KIND, nature; species; "do one's--," act according to one's nature.
- KIRTLE, woman's gown of jacket and petticoat.
- KISS OR DRINK AFORE ME, "this is a familiar expression, employed
- when what the speaker is just about to say is anticipated by another"
- (Gifford).
- KIT, fiddle.
- KNACK, snap, click.
- KNIPPER-DOLING, a well-known Anabaptist.
- KNITTING CUP, marriage cup.
- KNOCKING, striking, weighty.
- KNOT, company, band; a sandpiper or robin snipe (Tringa canutus);
- flower-bed laid out in fanciful design.
- KURSINED, KYRSIN, christened.
- LABOURED, wrought with labour and care.
- LADE, load(ed).
- LADING, load.
- LAID, plotted.
- LANCE-KNIGHT (Lanzknecht), a German mercenary foot-soldier.
- LAP, fold.
- LAR, household god.
- LARD, garnish.
- LARGE, abundant.
- LARUM, alarum, call to arms.
- LATTICE, tavern windows were furnished with lattices of various colours.
- LAUNDER, to wash gold in aqua regia, so as imperceptibly to extract some
- of it.
- LAVE, ladle, bale.
- LAW, "give--," give a start (term of chase).
- LAXATIVE, loose.
- LAY ABOARD, run alongside generally with intent to board.
- LEAGUER, siege, or camp of besieging army.
- LEASING, lying.
- LEAVE, leave off, desist.
- LEER, leering or "empty, hence, perhaps, leer horse, a horse without
- a rider; leer is an adjective meaning uncontrolled, hence 'leer
- drunkards'" (Halliwell); according to Nares, a leer (empty) horse meant
- also a led horse; leeward, left.
- LEESE, lose.
- LEGS, "make--," do obeisance.
- LEIGER, resident representative.
- LEIGERITY, legerdemain.
- LEMMA, subject proposed, or title of the epigram.
- LENTER, slower.
- LET, hinder.
- LET, hindrance.
- LEVEL COIL, a rough game... in which one hunted another from his seat.
- Hence used for any noisy riot (Halliwell).
- LEWD, ignorant.
- LEYSTALLS, receptacles of filth.
- LIBERAL, ample.
- LIEGER, ledger, register.
- LIFT(ING), steal(ing); theft.
- LIGHT, alight.
- LIGHTLY, commonly, usually, often.
- LIKE, please.
- LIKELY, agreeable, pleasing.
- LIME-HOUND, leash-, blood-hound.
- LIMMER, vile, worthless.
- LIN, leave off.
- Line, "by--," by rule.
- LINSTOCK, staff to stick in the ground, with forked head to hold a
- lighted match for firing cannon.
- LIQUID, clear.
- LIST, listen, hark; like, please.
- LIVERY, legal term, delivery of the possession, etc.
- LOGGET, small log, stick.
- LOOSE, solution; upshot, issue; release of an arrow.
- LOSE, give over, desist from; waste.
- LOUTING, bowing, cringing.
- LUCULENT, bright of beauty.
- LUDGATHIANS, dealers on Ludgate Hill.
- LURCH, rob, cheat.
- LUTE, to close a vessel with some kind of cement.
- MACK, unmeaning expletive.
- MADGE-HOWLET or OWL, barn-owl.
- MAIM, hurt, injury.
- MAIN, chief concern (used as a quibble on heraldic term for "hand").
- MAINPRISE, becoming surety for a prisoner so as to procure his release.
- MAINTENANCE, giving aid, or abetting.
- MAKE, mate.
- MAKE, MADE, acquaint with business, prepare(d), instruct(ed).
- MALLANDERS, disease of horses.
- MALT HORSE, dray horse.
- MAMMET, puppet.
- MAMMOTHREPT, spoiled child.
- MANAGE, control (term used for breaking-in horses); handling,
- administration.
- MANGO, slave-dealer.
- MANGONISE, polish up for sale.
- MANIPLES, bundles, handfuls.
- MANKIND, masculine, like a virago.
- MANKIND, humanity.
- MAPLE FACE, spotted face (N.E.D.).
- MARCHPANE, a confection of almonds, sugar, etc.
- MARK, "fly to the--," "generally said of a goshawk when, having 'put
- in' a covey of partridges, she takes stand, marking the spot where they
- disappeared from view until the falconer arrives to put them out to her"
- (Harting, Bibl. Accip. Gloss. 226).
- MARLE, marvel.
- MARROW-BONE MAN, one often on his knees for prayer.
- MARRY! exclamation derived from the Virgin's name.
- MARRY GIP, "probably originated from By Mary Gipcy" = St. Mary of Egypt,
- (N.E.D.).
- MARTAGAN, Turk's cap lily.
- MARYHINCHCO, stringhalt.
- MASORETH, Masora, correct form of the scriptural text according to
- Hebrew tradition.
- MASS, abb. for master.
- MAUND, beg.
- MAUTHER, girl, maid.
- MEAN, moderation.
- MEASURE, dance, more especially a stately one.
- MEAT, "carry--in one's mouth," be a source of money or entertainment.
- MEATH, metheglin.
- MECHANICAL, belonging to mechanics, mean, vulgar.
- MEDITERRANEO, middle aisle of St. Paul's, a general resort for business
- and amusement.
- MEET WITH, even with.
- MELICOTTON, a late kind of peach.
- MENSTRUE, solvent.
- MERCAT, market.
- MERD, excrement.
- MERE, undiluted; absolute, unmitigated.
- MESS, party of four.
- METHEGLIN, fermented liquor, of which one ingredient was honey.
- METOPOSCOPY, study of physiognomy.
- MIDDLING GOSSIP, go-between.
- MIGNIARD, dainty, delicate.
- MILE-END, training-ground of the city.
- MINE-MEN, sappers.
- MINION, form of cannon.
- MINSITIVE, (?) mincing, affected (N.E.D.).
- MISCELLANY MADAM, "a female trader in miscellaneous articles; a dealer
- in trinkets or ornaments of various kinds, such as kept shops in the New
- Exchange" (Nares).
- MISCELLINE, mixed grain; medley.
- MISCONCEIT, misconception.
- MISPRISE, MISPRISION, mistake, misunderstanding.
- MISTAKE AWAY, carry away as if by mistake.
- MITHRIDATE, an antidote against poison.
- MOCCINIGO, small Venetian coin, worth about ninepence.
- MODERN, in the mode; ordinary, commonplace.
- MOMENT, force or influence of value.
- MONTANTO, upward stroke.
- MONTH'S MIND, violent desire.
- MOORISH, like a moor or waste.
- MORGLAY, sword of Bevis of Southampton.
- MORRICE-DANCE, dance on May Day, etc., in which certain personages were
- represented.
- MORTALITY, death.
- MORT-MAL, old sore, gangrene.
- MOSCADINO, confection flavoured with musk.
- MOTHER, Hysterica passio.
- MOTION, proposal, request; puppet, puppet-show; "one of the small
- figures on the face of a large clock which was moved by the vibration of
- the pendulum" (Whalley).
- MOTION, suggest, propose.
- MOTLEY, parti-coloured dress of a fool; hence used to signify pertaining
- to, or like, a fool.
- MOTTE, motto.
- MOURNIVAL, set of four aces or court cards in a hand; a quartette.
- MOW, setord hay or sheaves of grain.
- MUCH! expressive of irony and incredulity.
- MUCKINDER, handkerchief.
- MULE, "born to ride on--," judges or serjeants-at-law formerly rode on
- mules when going in state to Westminster (Whally).
- MULLETS, small pincers.
- MUM-CHANCE, game of chance, played in silence.
- MUN, must.
- MUREY, dark crimson red.
- MUSCOVY-GLASS, mica.
- MUSE, wonder.
- MUSICAL, in harmony.
- MUSS, mouse; scramble.
- MYROBOLANE, foreign conserve, "a dried plum, brought from the Indies."
- MYSTERY, art, trade, profession.
- NAIL, "to the--" (ad unguem), to perfection, to the very utmost.
- NATIVE, natural.
- NEAT, cattle.
- NEAT, smartly apparelled; unmixed; dainty.
- NEATLY, neatly finished.
- NEATNESS, elegance.
- NEIS, nose, scent.
- NEUF (NEAF, NEIF), fist.
- NEUFT, newt.
- NIAISE, foolish, inexperienced person.
- NICE, fastidious, trivial, finical, scrupulous.
- NICENESS, fastidiousness.
- NICK, exact amount; right moment; "set in the--," meaning uncertain.
- NICE, suit, fit; hit, seize the right moment, etc., exactly hit on, hit
- off.
- NOBLE, gold coin worth 6s. 8d.
- NOCENT, harmful.
- NIL, not will.
- NOISE, company of musicians.
- NOMENTACK, an Indian chief from Virginia.
- NONES, nonce.
- NOTABLE, egregious.
- NOTE, sign, token.
- NOUGHT, "be--," go to the devil, be hanged, etc.
- NOWT-HEAD, blockhead.
- NUMBER, rhythm.
- NUPSON, oaf, simpleton.
- OADE, woad.
- OBARNI, preparation of mead.
- OBJECT, oppose; expose; interpose.
- OBLATRANT, barking, railing.
- OBNOXIOUS, liable, exposed; offensive.
- OBSERVANCE, homage, devoted service.
- OBSERVANT, attentive, obsequious.
- OBSERVE, show deference, respect.
- OBSERVER, one who shows deference, or waits upon another.
- OBSTANCY, legal phrase, "juridical opposition."
- OBSTREPEROUS, clamorous, vociferous.
- OBSTUPEFACT, stupefied.
- ODLING, (?) "must have some relation to tricking and cheating" (Nares).
- OMINOUS, deadly, fatal.
- ONCE, at once; for good and all; used also for additional emphasis.
- ONLY, pre-eminent, special.
- OPEN, make public; expound.
- OPPILATION, obstruction.
- OPPONE, oppose.
- OPPOSITE, antagonist.
- OPPRESS, suppress.
- ORIGINOUS, native.
- ORT, remnant, scrap.
- OUT, "to be--," to have forgotten one's part; not at one with each
- other.
- OUTCRY, sale by auction.
- OUTRECUIDANCE, arrogance, presumption.
- OUTSPEAK, speak more than.
- OVERPARTED, given too difficult a part to play.
- OWLSPIEGEL. See Howleglass.
- OYEZ! (O YES!), hear ye! call of the public crier when about to make a
- proclamation.
- PACKING PENNY, "give a--," dismiss, send packing.
- PAD, highway.
- PAD-HORSE, road-horse.
- PAINED (PANED) SLOPS, full breeches made of strips of different colour
- and material.
- PAINFUL, diligent, painstaking.
- PAINT, blush.
- PALINODE, ode of recantation.
- PALL, weaken, dim, make stale.
- PALM, triumph.
- PAN, skirt of dress or coat.
- PANNEL, pad, or rough kind of saddle.
- PANNIER-ALLY, inhabited by tripe-sellers.
- PANNIER-MAN, hawker; a man employed about the inns of court to bring in
- provisions, set the table, etc.
- PANTOFLE, indoor shoe, slipper.
- PARAMENTOS, fine trappings.
- PARANOMASIE, a play upon words.
- PARANTORY, (?) peremptory.
- PARCEL, particle, fragment (used contemptuously); article.
- PARCEL, part, partly.
- PARCEL-POET, poetaster.
- PARERGA, subordinate matters.
- PARGET, to paint or plaster the face.
- PARLE, parley.
- PARLOUS, clever, shrewd.
- PART, apportion.
- PARTAKE, participate in.
- PARTED, endowed, talented.
- PARTICULAR, individual person.
- PARTIZAN, kind of halberd.
- PARTRICH, partridge.
- PARTS, qualities, endowments.
- PASH, dash, smash.
- PASS, care, trouble oneself.
- PASSADO, fencing term: a thrust.
- PASSAGE, game at dice.
- PASSINGLY, exceedingly.
- PASSION, effect caused by external agency.
- PASSION, "in--," in so melancholy a tone, so pathetically.
- PATOUN, (?) Fr. Paton, pellet of dough; perhaps the "moulding of the
- tobacco... for the pipe" (Gifford); (?) variant of Petun, South American
- name of tobacco.
- PATRICO, the recorder, priest, orator of strolling beggars or gipsies.
- PATTEN, shoe with wooden sole; "go--," keep step with, accompany.
- PAUCA VERBA, few words.
- PAVIN, a stately dance.
- PEACE, "with my master's--," by leave, favour.
- PECULIAR, individual, single.
- PEDANT, teacher of the languages.
- PEEL, baker's shovel.
- PEEP, speak in a small or shrill voice.
- PEEVISH(LY), foolish(ly), capricious(ly); childish(ly).
- PELICAN, a retort fitted with tube or tubes, for continuous
- distillation.
- PENCIL, small tuft of hair.
- PERDUE, soldier accustomed to hazardous service.
- PEREMPTORY, resolute, bold; imperious; thorough, utter, absolute(ly).
- PERIMETER, circumference of a figure.
- PERIOD, limit, end.
- PERK, perk up.
- PERPETUANA, "this seems to be that glossy kind of stuff now called
- everlasting, and anciently worn by serjeants and other city officers"
- (Gifford).
- PERSPECTIVE, a view, scene or scenery; an optical device which gave a
- distortion to the picture unless seen from a particular point; a relief,
- modelled to produce an optical illusion.
- PERSPICIL, optic glass.
- PERSTRINGE, criticise, censure.
- PERSUADE, inculcate, commend.
- PERSWAY, mitigate.
- PERTINACY, pertinacity.
- PESTLING, pounding, pulverising, like a pestle.
- PETASUS, broad-brimmed hat or winged cap worn by Mercury.
- PETITIONARY, supplicatory.
- PETRONEL, a kind of carbine or light gun carried by horsemen.
- PETULANT, pert, insolent.
- PHERE. See Fere.
- PHLEGMA, watery distilled liquor (old chem. "water").
- PHRENETIC, madman.
- PICARDIL, stiff upright collar fastened on to the coat (Whalley).
- PICT-HATCH, disreputable quarter of London.
- PIECE, person, used for woman or girl; a gold coin worth in Jonson's
- time 20s. or 22s.
- PIECES OF EIGHT, Spanish coin: piastre equal to eight reals.
- PIED, variegated.
- PIE-POUDRES (Fr. pied-poudreux, dusty-foot), court held at fairs to
- administer justice to itinerant vendors and buyers.
- PILCHER, term of contempt; one who wore a buff or leather jerkin, as did
- the serjeants of the counter; a pilferer.
- PILED, pilled, peeled, bald.
- PILL'D, polled, fleeced.
- PIMLICO, "sometimes spoken of as a person--perhaps master of a house
- famous for a particular ale" (Gifford).
- PINE, afflict, distress.
- PINK, stab with a weapon; pierce or cut in scallops for ornament.
- PINNACE, a go-between in infamous sense.
- PISMIRE, ant.
- PISTOLET, gold coin, worth about 6s.
- PITCH, height of a bird of prey's flight.
- PLAGUE, punishment, torment.
- PLAIN, lament.
- PLAIN SONG, simple melody.
- PLAISE, plaice.
- PLANET, "struck with a--," planets were supposed to have powers of
- blasting or exercising secret influences.
- PLAUSIBLE, pleasing.
- PLAUSIBLY, approvingly.
- PLOT, plan.
- PLY, apply oneself to.
- POESIE, posy, motto inside a ring.
- POINT IN HIS DEVICE, exact in every particular.
- POINTS, tagged laces or cords for fastening the breeches to the doublet.
- POINT-TRUSSER, one who trussed (tied) his master's points (q.v.).
- POISE, weigh, balance.
- POKING-STICK, stick used for setting the plaits of ruffs.
- POLITIC, politician.
- POLITIC, judicious, prudent, political.
- POLITICIAN, plotter, intriguer.
- POLL, strip, plunder, gain by extortion.
- POMANDER, ball of perfume, worn or hung about the person to prevent
- infection, or for foppery.
- POMMADO, vaulting on a horse without the aid of stirrups.
- PONTIC, sour.
- POPULAR, vulgar, of the populace.
- POPULOUS, numerous.
- PORT, gate; print of a deer's foot.
- PORT, transport.
- PORTAGUE, Portuguese gold coin, worth over 3 or 4 pounds.
- PORTCULLIS, "--of coin," some old coins have a portcullis stamped on
- their reverse (Whalley).
- PORTENT, marvel, prodigy; sinister omen.
- PORTENTOUS, prophesying evil, threatening.
- PORTER, references appear "to allude to Parsons, the king's porter, who
- was... near seven feet high" (Whalley).
- POSSESS, inform, acquaint.
- POST AND PAIR, a game at cards.
- POSY, motto. (See Poesie).
- POTCH, poach.
- POULT-FOOT, club-foot.
- POUNCE, claw, talon.
- PRACTICE, intrigue, concerted plot.
- PRACTISE, plot, conspire.
- PRAGMATIC, an expert, agent.
- PRAGMATIC, officious, conceited, meddling.
- PRECEDENT, record of proceedings.
- PRECEPT, warrant, summons.
- PRECISIAN(ISM), Puritan(ism), preciseness.
- PREFER, recommend.
- PRESENCE, presence chamber.
- PRESENT(LY), immediate(ly), without delay; at the present time;
- actually.
- PRESS, force into service.
- PREST, ready.
- PRETEND, assert, allege.
- PREVENT, anticipate.
- PRICE, worth, excellence.
- PRICK, point, dot used in the writing of Hebrew and other languages.
- PRICK, prick out, mark off, select; trace, track; "--away," make off
- with speed.
- PRIMERO, game of cards.
- PRINCOX, pert boy.
- PRINT, "in--," to the letter, exactly.
- PRISTINATE, former.
- PRIVATE, private interests.
- PRIVATE, privy, intimate.
- PROCLIVE, prone to.
- PRODIGIOUS, monstrous, unnatural.
- PRODIGY, monster.
- PRODUCED, prolonged.
- PROFESS, pretend.
- PROJECTION, the throwing of the "powder of projection" into the crucible
- to turn the melted metal into gold or silver.
- PROLATE, pronounce drawlingly.
- PROPER, of good appearance, handsome; own, particular.
- PROPERTIES, stage necessaries.
- PROPERTY, duty; tool.
- PRORUMPED, burst out.
- PROTEST, vow, proclaim (an affected word of that time); formally declare
- non-payment, etc., of bill of exchange; fig. failure of personal credit,
- etc.
- PROVANT, soldier's allowance--hence, of common make.
- PROVIDE, foresee.
- PROVIDENCE, foresight, prudence.
- PUBLICATION, making a thing public of common property (N.E.D.).
- PUCKFIST, puff-ball; insipid, insignificant, boasting fellow.
- PUFF-WING, shoulder puff.
- PUISNE, judge of inferior rank, a junior.
- PULCHRITUDE, beauty.
- PUMP, shoe.
- PUNGENT, piercing.
- PUNTO, point, hit.
- PURCEPT, precept, warrant.
- PURE, fine, capital, excellent.
- PURELY, perfectly, utterly.
- PURL, pleat or fold of a ruff.
- PURSE-NET, net of which the mouth is drawn together with a string.
- PURSUIVANT, state messenger who summoned the persecuted seminaries;
- warrant officer.
- PURSY, PURSINESS, shortwinded(ness).
- PUT, make a push, exert yourself (N.E.D.).
- PUT OFF, excuse, shift.
- PUT ON, incite, encourage; proceed with, take in hand, try.
- QUACKSALVER, quack.
- QUAINT, elegant, elaborated, ingenious, clever.
- QUAR, quarry.
- QUARRIED, seized, or fed upon, as prey.
- QUEAN, hussy, jade.
- QUEASY, hazardous, delicate.
- QUELL, kill, destroy.
- QUEST, request; inquiry.
- QUESTION, decision by force of arms.
- QUESTMAN, one appointed to make official inquiry.
- QUIB, QUIBLIN, quibble, quip.
- QUICK, the living.
- QUIDDIT, quiddity, legal subtlety.
- QUIRK, clever turn or trick.
- QUIT, requite, repay; acquit, absolve; rid; forsake, leave.
- QUITTER-BONE, disease of horses.
- QUODLING, codling.
- QUOIT, throw like a quoit, chuck.
- QUOTE, take note, observe, write down.
- RACK, neck of mutton or pork (Halliwell).
- RAKE UP, cover over.
- RAMP, rear, as a lion, etc.
- RAPT, carry away.
- RAPT, enraptured.
- RASCAL, young or inferior deer.
- RASH, strike with a glancing oblique blow, as a boar with its tusk.
- RATSEY, GOMALIEL, a famous highwayman.
- RAVEN, devour.
- REACH, understand.
- REAL, regal.
- REBATU, ruff, turned-down collar.
- RECTOR, RECTRESS, director, governor.
- REDARGUE, confute.
- REDUCE, bring back.
- REED, rede, counsel, advice.
- REEL, run riot.
- REFEL, refute.
- REFORMADOES, disgraced or disbanded soldiers.
- REGIMENT, government.
- REGRESSION, return.
- REGULAR ("Tale of a Tub"), regular noun (quibble) (N.E.D.).
- RELIGION, "make--of," make a point of, scruple of.
- RELISH, savour.
- REMNANT, scrap of quotation.
- REMORA, species of fish.
- RENDER, depict, exhibit, show.
- REPAIR, reinstate.
- REPETITION, recital, narration.
- REREMOUSE, bat.
- RESIANT, resident.
- RESIDENCE, sediment.
- RESOLUTION, judgment, decision.
- RESOLVE, inform; assure; prepare, make up one's mind; dissolve; come to
- a decision, be convinced; relax, set at ease.
- RESPECTIVE, worthy of respect; regardful, discriminative.
- RESPECTIVELY, with reverence.
- RESPECTLESS, regardless.
- RESPIRE, exhale; inhale.
- RESPONSIBLE, correspondent.
- REST, musket-rest.
- REST, "set up one's--," venture one's all, one's last stake (from game
- of primero).
- REST, arrest.
- RESTIVE, RESTY, dull, inactive.
- RETCHLESS(NESS), reckless(ness).
- RETIRE, cause to retire.
- RETRICATO, fencing term.
- RETRIEVE, rediscovery of game once sprung.
- RETURNS, ventures sent abroad, for the safe return of which so much
- money is received.
- REVERBERATE, dissolve or blend by reflected heat.
- REVERSE, REVERSO, back-handed thrust, etc., in fencing.
- REVISE, reconsider a sentence.
- RHEUM, spleen, caprice.
- RIBIBE, abusive term for an old woman.
- RID, destroy, do away with.
- RIFLING, raffling, dicing.
- RING, "cracked within the--," coins so cracked were unfit for currency.
- RISSE, risen, rose.
- RIVELLED, wrinkled.
- ROARER, swaggerer.
- ROCHET, fish of the gurnet kind.
- ROCK, distaff.
- RODOMONTADO, braggadocio.
- ROGUE, vagrant, vagabond.
- RONDEL, "a round mark in the score of a public-house" (Nares); roundel.
- ROOK, sharper; fool, dupe.
- ROSAKER, similar to ratsbane.
- ROSA-SOLIS, a spiced spirituous liquor.
- ROSES, rosettes.
- ROUND, "gentlemen of the--," officers of inferior rank.
- ROUND TRUNKS, trunk hose, short loose breeches reaching almost or quite
- to the knees.
- ROUSE, carouse, bumper.
- ROVER, arrow used for shooting at a random mark at uncertain distance.
- ROWLY-POWLY, roly-poly.
- RUDE, RUDENESS, unpolished, rough(ness), coarse(ness).
- RUFFLE, flaunt, swagger.
- RUG, coarse frieze.
- RUG-GOWNS, gown made of rug.
- RUSH, reference to rushes with which the floors were then strewn.
- RUSHER, one who strewed the floor with rushes.
- RUSSET, homespun cloth of neutral or reddish-brown colour.
- SACK, loose, flowing gown.
- SADLY, seriously, with gravity.
- SAD(NESS), sober, serious(ness).
- SAFFI, bailiffs.
- ST. THOMAS A WATERINGS, place in Surrey where criminals were executed.
- SAKER, small piece of ordnance.
- SALT, leap.
- SALT, lascivious.
- SAMPSUCHINE, sweet marjoram.
- SARABAND, a slow dance.
- SATURNALS, began December 17.
- SAUCINESS, presumption, insolence.
- SAUCY, bold, impudent, wanton.
- SAUNA (Lat.), a gesture of contempt.
- SAVOUR, perceive; gratify, please; to partake of the nature.
- SAY, sample.
- SAY, assay, try.
- SCALD, word of contempt, implying dirt and disease.
- SCALLION, shalot, small onion.
- SCANDERBAG, "name which the Turks (in allusion to Alexander the Great)
- gave to the brave Castriot, chief of Albania, with whom they had
- continual wars. His romantic life had just been translated" (Gifford).
- SCAPE, escape.
- SCARAB, beetle.
- SCARTOCCIO, fold of paper, cover, cartouch, cartridge.
- SCONCE, head.
- SCOPE, aim.
- SCOT AND LOT, tax, contribution (formerly a parish assessment).
- SCOTOMY, dizziness in the head.
- SCOUR, purge.
- SCOURSE, deal, swap.
- SCRATCHES, disease of horses.
- SCROYLE, mean, rascally fellow.
- SCRUPLE, doubt.
- SEAL, put hand to the giving up of property or rights.
- SEALED, stamped as genuine.
- SEAM-RENT, ragged.
- SEAMING LACES, insertion or edging.
- SEAR UP, close by searing, burning.
- SEARCED, sifted.
- SECRETARY, able to keep a secret.
- SECULAR, worldly, ordinary, commonplace.
- SECURE, confident.
- SEELIE, happy, blest.
- SEISIN, legal term: possession.
- SELLARY, lewd person.
- SEMBLABLY, similarly.
- SEMINARY, a Romish priest educated in a foreign seminary.
- SENSELESS, insensible, without sense or feeling.
- SENSIBLY, perceptibly.
- SENSIVE, sensitive.
- SENSUAL, pertaining to the physical or material.
- SERENE, harmful dew of evening.
- SERICON, red tincture.
- SERVANT, lover.
- SERVICES, doughty deeds of arms.
- SESTERCE, Roman copper coin.
- SET, stake, wager.
- SET UP, drill.
- SETS, deep plaits of the ruff.
- SEWER, officer who served up the feast, and brought water for the hands
- of the guests.
- SHAPE, a suit by way of disguise.
- SHIFT, fraud, dodge.
- SHIFTER, cheat.
- SHITTLE, shuttle; "shittle-cock," shuttlecock.
- SHOT, tavern reckoning.
- SHOT-CLOG, one only tolerated because he paid the shot (reckoning) for
- the rest.
- SHOT-FREE, scot-free, not having to pay.
- SHOVE-GROAT, low kind of gambling amusement, perhaps somewhat of the
- nature of pitch and toss.
- SHOT-SHARKS, drawers.
- SHREWD, mischievous, malicious, curst.
- SHREWDLY, keenly, in a high degree.
- SHRIVE, sheriff; posts were set up before his door for proclamations, or
- to indicate his residence.
- SHROVING, Shrovetide, season of merriment.
- SIGILLA, seal, mark.
- SILENCED BRETHERN, MINISTERS, those of the Church or Nonconformists who
- had been silenced, deprived, etc.
- SILLY, simple, harmless.
- SIMPLE, silly, witless; plain, true.
- SIMPLES, herbs.
- SINGLE, term of chase, signifying when the hunted stag is separated from
- the herd, or forced to break covert.
- SINGLE, weak, silly.
- SINGLE-MONEY, small change.
- SINGULAR, unique, supreme.
- SI-QUIS, bill, advertisement.
- SKELDRING, getting money under false pretences; swindling.
- SKILL, "it--s not," matters not.
- SKINK(ER), pour, draw(er), tapster.
- SKIRT, tail.
- SLEEK, smooth.
- SLICE, fire shovel or pan (dial.).
- SLICK, sleek, smooth.
- 'SLID, 'SLIGHT, 'SPRECIOUS, irreverent oaths.
- SLIGHT, sleight, cunning, cleverness; trick.
- SLIP, counterfeit coin, bastard.
- SLIPPERY, polished and shining.
- SLOPS, large loose breeches.
- SLOT, print of a stag's foot.
- SLUR, put a slur on; cheat (by sliding a die in some way).
- SMELT, gull, simpleton.
- SNORLE, "perhaps snarl, as Puppy is addressed" (Cunningham).
- SNOTTERIE, filth.
- SNUFF, anger, resentment; "take in--," take offence at.
- SNUFFERS, small open silver dishes for holding snuff, or receptacle for
- placing snuffers in (Halliwell).
- SOCK, shoe worn by comic actors.
- SOD, seethe.
- SOGGY, soaked, sodden.
- SOIL, "take--," said of a hunted stag when he takes to the water for
- safety.
- SOL, sou.
- SOLDADOES, soldiers.
- SOLICIT, rouse, excite to action.
- SOOTH, flattery, cajolery.
- SOOTHE, flatter, humour.
- SOPHISTICATE, adulterate.
- SORT, company, party; rank, degree.
- SORT, suit, fit; select.
- SOUSE, ear.
- SOUSED ("Devil is an Ass"), fol. read "sou't," which Dyce interprets
- as "a variety of the spelling of "shu'd": to "shu" is to scare a bird
- away." (See his "Webster," page 350).
- SOWTER, cobbler.
- SPAGYRICA, chemistry according to the teachings of Paracelsus.
- SPAR, bar.
- SPEAK, make known, proclaim.
- SPECULATION, power of sight.
- SPED, to have fared well, prospered.
- SPEECE, species.
- SPIGHT, anger, rancour.
- SPINNER, spider.
- SPINSTRY, lewd person.
- SPITTLE, hospital, lazar-house.
- SPLEEN, considered the seat of the emotions.
- SPLEEN, caprice, humour, mood.
- SPRUNT, spruce.
- SPURGE, foam.
- SPUR-RYAL, gold coin worth 15s.
- SQUIRE, square, measure; "by the--," exactly.
- STAGGERING, wavering, hesitating.
- STAIN, disparagement, disgrace.
- STALE, decoy, or cover, stalking-horse.
- STALE, make cheap, common.
- STALK, approach stealthily or under cover.
- STALL, forestall.
- STANDARD, suit.
- STAPLE, market, emporium.
- STARK, downright.
- STARTING-HOLES, loopholes of escape.
- STATE, dignity; canopied chair of state; estate.
- STATUMINATE, support vines by poles or stakes; used by Pliny (Gifford).
- STAY, gag.
- STAY, await; detain.
- STICKLER, second or umpire.
- STIGMATISE, mark, brand.
- STILL, continual(ly), constant(ly).
- STINKARD, stinking fellow.
- STINT, stop.
- STIPTIC, astringent.
- STOCCATA, thrust in fencing.
- STOCK-FISH, salted and dried fish.
- STOMACH, pride, valour.
- STOMACH, resent.
- STOOP, swoop down as a hawk.
- STOP, fill, stuff.
- STOPPLE, stopper.
- STOTE, stoat, weasel.
- STOUP, stoop, swoop=bow.
- STRAIGHT, straightway.
- STRAMAZOUN (Ital. stramazzone), a down blow, as opposed to the thrust.
- STRANGE, like a stranger, unfamiliar.
- STRANGENESS, distance of behaviour.
- STREIGHTS, OR BERMUDAS, labyrinth of alleys and courts in the Strand.
- STRIGONIUM, Grau in Hungary, taken from the Turks in 1597.
- STRIKE, balance (accounts).
- STRINGHALT, disease of horses.
- STROKER, smoother, flatterer.
- STROOK, p.p. of "strike."
- STRUMMEL-PATCHED, strummel is glossed in dialect dicts. as "a long,
- loose and dishevelled head of hair."
- STUDIES, studious efforts.
- STYLE, title; pointed instrument used for writing on wax tablets.
- SUBTLE, fine, delicate, thin; smooth, soft.
- SUBTLETY (SUBTILITY), subtle device.
- SUBURB, connected with loose living.
- SUCCUBAE, demons in form of women.
- SUCK, extract money from.
- SUFFERANCE, suffering.
- SUMMED, term of falconry: with full-grown plumage.
- SUPER-NEGULUM, topers turned the cup bottom up when it was empty.
- SUPERSTITIOUS, over-scrupulous.
- SUPPLE, to make pliant.
- SURBATE, make sore with walking.
- SURCEASE, cease.
- SUR-REVERENCE, save your reverence.
- SURVISE, peruse.
- SUSCITABILITY, excitability.
- SUSPECT, suspicion.
- SUSPEND, suspect.
- SUSPENDED, held over for the present.
- SUTLER, victualler.
- SWAD, clown, boor.
- SWATH BANDS, swaddling clothes.
- SWINGE, beat.
- TABERD, emblazoned mantle or tunic worn by knights and heralds.
- TABLE(S), "pair of--," tablets, note-book.
- TABOR, small drum.
- TABRET, tabor.
- TAFFETA, silk; "tuft-taffeta," a more costly silken fabric.
- TAINT, "--a staff," break a lance at tilting in an unscientific or
- dishonourable manner.
- TAKE IN, capture, subdue.
- TAKE ME WITH YOU, let me understand you.
- TAKE UP, obtain on credit, borrow.
- TALENT, sum or weight of Greek currency.
- TALL, stout, brave.
- TANKARD-BEARERS, men employed to fetch water from the conduits.
- TARLETON, celebrated comedian and jester.
- TARTAROUS, like a Tartar.
- TAVERN-TOKEN, "to swallow a--," get drunk.
- TELL, count.
- TELL-TROTH, truth-teller.
- TEMPER, modify, soften.
- TENDER, show regard, care for, cherish; manifest.
- TENT, "take--," take heed.
- TERSE, swept and polished.
- TERTIA, "that portion of an army levied out of one particular district
- or division of a country" (Gifford).
- TESTON, tester, coin worth 6d.
- THIRDBOROUGH, constable.
- THREAD, quality.
- THREAVES, droves.
- THREE-FARTHINGS, piece of silver current under Elizabeth.
- THREE-PILED, of finest quality, exaggerated.
- THRIFTILY, carefully.
- THRUMS, ends of the weaver's warp; coarse yarn made from.
- THUMB-RING, familiar spirits were supposed capable of being carried
- about in various ornaments or parts of dress.
- TIBICINE, player on the tibia, or pipe.
- TICK-TACK, game similar to backgammon.
- TIGHTLY, promptly.
- TIM, (?) expressive of a climax of nonentity.
- TIMELESS, untimely, unseasonable.
- TINCTURE, an essential or spiritual principle supposed by alchemists
- to be transfusible into material things; an imparted characteristic or
- tendency.
- TINK, tinkle.
- TIPPET, "turn--," change behaviour or way of life.
- TIPSTAFF, staff tipped with metal.
- TIRE, head-dress.
- TIRE, feed ravenously, like a bird of prey.
- TITILLATION, that which tickles the senses, as a perfume.
- TOD, fox.
- TOILED, worn out, harassed.
- TOKEN, piece of base metal used in place of very small coin, when this
- was scarce.
- TONNELS, nostrils.
- TOP, "parish--," large top kept in villages for amusement and exercise
- in frosty weather when people were out of work.
- TOTER, tooter, player on a wind instrument.
- TOUSE, pull, rend.
- TOWARD, docile, apt; on the way to; as regards; present, at hand.
- TOY, whim; trick; term of contempt.
- TRACT, attraction.
- TRAIN, allure, entice.
- TRANSITORY, transmittable.
- TRANSLATE, transform.
- TRAY-TRIP, game at dice (success depended on throwing a three) (Nares).
- TREACHOUR (TRECHER), traitor.
- TREEN, wooden.
- TRENCHER, serving-man who carved or served food.
- TRENDLE-TAIL, trundle-tail, curly-tailed.
- TRICK (TRICKING), term of heraldry: to draw outline of coat of arms,
- etc., without blazoning.
- TRIG, a spruce, dandified man.
- TRILL, trickle.
- TRILLIBUB, tripe, any worthless, trifling thing.
- TRIPOLY, "come from--," able to perform feats of agility, a "jest
- nominal," depending on the first part of the word (Gifford).
- TRITE, worn, shabby.
- TRIVIA, three-faced goddess (Hecate).
- TROJAN, familiar term for an equal or inferior; thief.
- TROLL, sing loudly.
- TROMP, trump, deceive.
- TROPE, figure of speech.
- TROW, think, believe, wonder.
- TROWLE, troll.
- TROWSES, breeches, drawers.
- TRUCHMAN, interpreter.
- TRUNDLE, JOHN, well-known printer.
- TRUNDLE, roll, go rolling along.
- TRUNDLING CHEATS, term among gipsies and beggars for carts or coaches
- (Gifford).
- TRUNK, speaking-tube.
- TRUSS, tie the tagged laces that fastened the breeches to the doublet.
- TUBICINE, trumpeter.
- TUCKET (Ital. toccato), introductory flourish on the trumpet.
- TUITION, guardianship.
- TUMBLER, a particular kind of dog so called from the mode of his
- hunting.
- TUMBREL-SLOP, loose, baggy breeches.
- TURD, excrement.
- TUSK, gnash the teeth (Century Dict.).
- TWIRE, peep, twinkle.
- TWOPENNY ROOM, gallery.
- TYRING-HOUSE, attiring-room.
- ULENSPIEGEL. See Howleglass.
- UMBRATILE, like or pertaining to a shadow.
- UMBRE, brown dye.
- UNBATED, unabated.
- UNBORED, (?) excessively bored.
- UNCARNATE, not fleshly, or of flesh.
- UNCOUTH, strange, unusual.
- UNDERTAKER, "one who undertook by his influence in the House of Commons
- to carry things agreeably to his Majesty's wishes" (Whalley); one who
- becomes surety for.
- UNEQUAL, unjust.
- UNEXCEPTED, no objection taken at.
- UNFEARED, unaffrighted.
- UNHAPPILY, unfortunately.
- UNICORN'S HORN, supposed antidote to poison.
- UNKIND(LY), unnatural(ly).
- UNMANNED, untamed (term in falconry).
- UNQUIT, undischarged.
- UNREADY, undressed.
- UNRUDE, rude to an extreme.
- UNSEASONED, unseasonable, unripe.
- UNSEELED, a hawk's eyes were "seeled" by sewing the eyelids together
- with fine thread.
- UNTIMELY, unseasonably.
- UNVALUABLE, invaluable.
- UPBRAID, make a matter of reproach.
- UPSEE, heavy kind of Dutch beer (Halliwell); "--Dutch," in the Dutch
- fashion.
- UPTAILS ALL, refrain of a popular song.
- URGE, allege as accomplice, instigator.
- URSHIN, URCHIN, hedgehog.
- USE, interest on money; part of sermon dealing with the practical
- application of doctrine.
- USE, be in the habit of, accustomed to; put out to interest.
- USQUEBAUGH, whisky.
- USURE, usury.
- UTTER, put in circulation, make to pass current; put forth for sale.
- VAIL, bow, do homage.
- VAILS, tips, gratuities.
- VALL. See Vail.
- VALLIES (Fr. valise), portmanteau, bag.
- VAPOUR(S) (n. and v.), used affectedly, like "humour," in many senses,
- often very vaguely and freely ridiculed by Jonson; humour, disposition,
- whims, brag(ging), hector(ing), etc.
- VARLET, bailiff, or serjeant-at-mace.
- VAUT, vault.
- VEER (naut.), pay out.
- VEGETAL, vegetable; person full of life and vigour.
- VELLUTE, velvet.
- VELVET CUSTARD. Cf. "Taming of the Shrew," iv. 3, 82, "custard coffin,"
- coffin being the raised crust over a pie.
- VENT, vend, sell; give outlet to; scent, snuff up.
- VENUE, bout (fencing term).
- VERDUGO (Span.), hangman, executioner.
- VERGE, "in the--," within a certain distance of the court.
- VEX, agitate, torment.
- VICE, the buffoon of old moralities; some kind of machinery for moving a
- puppet (Gifford).
- VIE AND REVIE, to hazard a certain sum, and to cover it with a larger
- one.
- VINCENT AGAINST YORK, two heralds-at-arms.
- VINDICATE, avenge.
- VIRGE, wand, rod.
- VIRGINAL, old form of piano.
- VIRTUE, valour.
- VIVELY, in lifelike manner, livelily.
- VIZARD, mask.
- VOGUE, rumour, gossip.
- VOICE, vote.
- VOID, leave, quit.
- VOLARY, cage, aviary.
- VOLLEY, "at--," "o' the volee," at random (from a term of tennis).
- VORLOFFE, furlough.
- WADLOE, keeper of the Devil Tavern, where Jonson and his friends met in
- the 'Apollo' room (Whalley).
- WAIGHTS, waits, night musicians, "band of musical watchmen" (Webster),
- or old form of "hautboys."
- WANNION, "vengeance," "plague" (Nares).
- WARD, a famous pirate.
- WARD, guard in fencing.
- WATCHET, pale, sky blue.
- WEAL, welfare.
- WEED, garment.
- WEFT, waif.
- WEIGHTS, "to the gold--," to every minute particular.
- WELKIN, sky.
- WELL-SPOKEN, of fair speech.
- WELL-TORNED, turned and polished, as on a wheel.
- WELT, hem, border of fur.
- WHER, whether.
- WHETSTONE, GEORGE, an author who lived 1544(?) to 1587(?).
- WHIFF, a smoke, or drink; "taking the--," inhaling the tobacco smoke or
- some such accomplishment.
- WHIGH-HIES, neighings, whinnyings.
- WHIMSY, whim, "humour."
- WHINILING, (?) whining, weakly.
- WHIT, (?) a mere jot.
- WHITEMEAT, food made of milk or eggs.
- WICKED, bad, clumsy.
- WICKER, pliant, agile.
- WILDING, esp. fruit of wild apple or crab tree (Webster).
- WINE, "I have the--for you," Prov.: I have the perquisites (of the
- office) which you are to share (Cunningham).
- WINNY, "same as old word "wonne," to stay, etc." (Whalley).
- WISE-WOMAN, fortune-teller.
- WISH, recommend.
- WISS (WUSSE), "I--," certainly, of a truth.
- WITHOUT, beyond.
- WITTY, cunning, ingenious, clever.
- WOOD, collection, lot.
- WOODCOCK, term of contempt.
- WOOLSACK ("--pies"), name of tavern.
- WORT, unfermented beer.
- WOUNDY, great, extreme.
- WREAK, revenge.
- WROUGHT, wrought upon.
- WUSSE, interjection. (See Wiss).
- YEANLING, lamb, kid.
- ZANY, an inferior clown, who attended upon the chief fool and mimicked
- his tricks.
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