Volpone Or the Fox - BestLightNovel.com
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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 fas.h.i.+on 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 ma.s.sacre 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 s.e.x, 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 s.h.i.+rts, 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 ladys.h.i.+p? 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.