Title: A Trip to Scarborough; and, The Critic
Author: Richard Brinsley Sheridan
Release date: December 1, 2004 [eBook #7108]
Most recently updated: November 14, 2019
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
A Trip to Scarborough |
The Critic |
AS ORIGINALLY ACTED AT DRURY LANE THEATRE IN 1777
LORD FOPPINGTON Mr. Dodd.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY Mr. Moody.
COLONEL TOWNLY Mr. Brereton.
LOVELESS Mr. Smith.
TOM FASHION Mr. J. Palmer.
LA VAROLE Mr. Burton.
LORY Mr. Baddeley.
PROBE Mr. Parsons.
MENDLEGS Mr. Norris.
JEWELLER Mr. Lamash
SHOEMAKER Mr. Carpenter.
TAILOR Mr. Parker.
AMANDA Mrs. Robinson.
BERINTHIA Miss Farren.
MISS HOYDEN Mrs. Abington.
MRS. COUPLER Mrs. Booth.
NURSE Mrs. Bradshaw.
Sempstress, Postilion, Maid, and Servants.
What various transformations we remark,
From east Whitechapel to the west Hyde Park!
Men, women, children, houses, signs, and fashions,
State, stage, trade, taste, the humours and the passions;
The Exchange, ’Change Alley, wheresoe’er you’re ranging,
Court, city, country, all are changed or changing
The streets, some time ago, were paved with stones,
Which, aided by a hackney-coach, half broke your bones.
The purest lovers then indulged in bliss;
They ran great hazard if they stole a kiss.
One chaste salute!—the damsel cried—Oh, fie!
As they approach’d—slap went the coach awry—
Poor Sylvia got a bump, and Damon a black eye.
But now weak nerves in hackney-coaches roam,
And the cramm’d glutton snores, unjolted, home;
Of former times, that polish’d thing a beau,
Is metamorphosed now from top to toe;
Then the full flaxen wig, spread o’er the shoulders,
Conceal’d the shallow head from the beholders.
But now the whole’s reversed—each fop appears,
Cropp’d and trimm’d up, exposing head and ears:
The buckle then its modest limits knew,
Now, like the ocean, dreadful to the view,
Hath broke its bounds, and swallowed up the shoe:
The wearer’s foot like his once fine estate,
Is almost lost, the encumbrance is so great.
Ladies may smile—are they not in the plot?
The bounds of nature have not they forgot?
Were they design’d to be, when put together,
Made up, like shuttlecocks, of cork and feather?
Their pale-faced grandmammas appeared with grace
When dawning blushes rose upon the face;
No blushes now their once-loved station seek;
The foe is in possession of the cheek!
No heads of old, too high in feather’d state,
Hinder’d the fair to pass the lowest gate;
A church to enter now, they must be bent,
If ever they should try the experiment.
As change thus circulates throughout the nation,
Some plays may justly call for alteration;
At least to draw some slender covering o’er,
That graceless wit, which was too bare before
Those writers well and wisely use their pens,
Who turn our wantons into Magdalens;
And howsoever wicked wits revile ’em,
We hope to find in you their stage asylum.
Enter TOM FASHION and LORY, POSTILION following with a portmanteau.
TOM FASHION.
Lory, pay the postboy, and take the portmanteau.
LORY.
[Aside to TOM FASHION.] Faith, sir, we had better let the postboy take
the portmanteau and pay himself.
TOM FASHION.
[Aside to LORY.] Why, sure, there’s something left in it!
LORY.
Not a rag, upon my honour, sir! We ate the last of your wardrobe at New
Malton—and, if we had had twenty miles further to go, our next meal must
have been of the cloak-bag.
TOM FASHION.
Why, ’sdeath, it appears full!
LORY.
Yes, sir—I made bold to stuff it with hay, to save appearances, and look
like baggage.
TOM FASHION.
[Aside.] What the devil shall I do?—[Aloud.] Hark’ee,
boy, what’s the chaise?
POSTILION.
Thirteen shillings, please your honour.
TOM FASHION.
Can you give me change for a guinea?
POSTILION.
Oh, yes, sir.
LORY.
[Aside.] So, what will he do now?—[Aloud.] Lord, sir, you
had better let the boy be paid below.
TOM FASHION.
Why, as you say, Lory, I believe it will be as well.
LORY.
Yes, yes, I’ll tell them to discharge you below, honest friend.
POSTILION.
Please your honour, there are the turnpikes too.
TOM FASHION.
Ay, ay, the turnpikes by all means.
POSTILION.
And I hope your honour will order me something for myself.
TOM FASHION.
To be sure; bid them give you a crown.
LORY.
Yes, yes—my master doesn’t care what you charge them—so get
along, you—
POSTILION.
And there’s the ostler, your honour.
LORY.
Psha! damn the ostler!—would you impose upon the gentleman’s
generosity?—[Pushes him out.] A rascal, to be so cursed ready with
his change!
TOM FASHION.
Why, faith, Lory, he had nearly posed me.
LORY.
Well, sir, we are arrived at Scarborough, not worth a guinea! I hope
you’ll own yourself a happy man—you have outlived all your cares.
TOM FASHION.
How so, sir?
LORY.
Why, you have nothing left to take care of.
TOM FASHION.
Yes, sirrah, I have myself and you to take care of still.
LORY.
Sir, if you could prevail with somebody else to do that for you, I fancy we
might both fare the better for it. But now, sir, for my Lord Foppington, your
elder brother.
TOM FASHION.
Damn my eldest brother.
LORY.
With all my heart; but get him to redeem your annuity, however. Look you, sir;
you must wheedle him, or you must starve.
TOM FASHION.
Look you, sir; I would neither wheedle him, nor starve.
LORY.
Why, what will you do, then?
TOM FASHION.
Cut his throat, or get someone to do it for me.
LORY.
Gad so, sir, I’m glad to find I was not so well acquainted with the
strength of your conscience as with the weakness of your purse.
TOM FASHION.
Why, art thou so impenetrable a blockhead as to believe he’ll help me
with a farthing?
LORY.
Not if you treat him de haut en bas, as you used to do.
TOM FASHION.
Why, how wouldst have me treat him?
LORY.
Like a trout—tickle him.
TOM FASHION.
I can’t flatter.
LORY.
Can you starve?
TOM FASHION.
Yes.
LORY.
I can’t. Good by t’ye, sir.
TOM FASHION.
Stay—thou’lt distract me. But who comes here? My old friend,
Colonel Townly.
Enter COLONEL TOWNLY.
My dear Colonel, I am rejoiced to meet you here.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Dear Tom, this is an unexpected pleasure! What, are you come to Scarborough to
be present at your brother’s wedding?
LORY.
Ah, sir, if it had been his funeral, we should have come with pleasure.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
What, honest Lory, are you with your master still?
LORY.
Yes, sir; I have been starving with him ever since I saw your honour last.
TOM FASHION.
Why, Lory is an attached rogue; there’s no getting rid of him.
LORY.
True, sir, as my master says, there’s no seducing me from his
service.—[Aside.] Till he’s able to pay me my wages.
TOM FASHION.
Go, go, sir, and take care of the baggage.
LORY.
Yes, sir, the baggage!—O Lord! [Takes up the portmanteau.] I
suppose, sir, I must charge the landlord to be very particular where he stows
this?
TOM FASHION.
Get along, you rascal.—[Exit LORY with the portmanteau.]
But, Colonel, are you acquainted with my proposed sister-in-law?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Only by character. Her father, Sir Tunbelly Clumsy, lives within a quarter of a
mile of this place, in a lonely old house, which nobody comes near. She never
goes abroad, nor sees company at home; to prevent all misfortunes, she has her
breeding within doors; the parson of the parish teaches her to play upon the
dulcimer, the clerk to sing, her nurse to dress, and her father to
dance;—in short, nobody has free admission there but our old
acquaintance, Mother Coupler, who has procured your brother this match, and is,
I believe, a distant relation of Sir Tunbelly’s.
TOM FASHION.
But is her fortune so considerable?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Three thousand a year, and a good sum of money, independent of her father,
beside.
TOM FASHION.
’Sdeath! that my old acquaintance, Dame Coupler, could not have thought
of me, as well as my brother, for such a prize.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Egad, I wouldn’t swear that you are too late. His lordship, I know,
hasn’t yet seen the lady—and, I believe, has quarrelled with his
patroness.
TOM FASHION.
My dear Colonel, what an idea have you started!
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Pursue it, if you can, and I promise you shall have my assistance; for, besides
my natural contempt for his lordship, I have at present the enmity of a rival
towards him.
TOM FASHION.
What, has he been addressing your old flame, the widow Berinthia?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Faith, Tom, I am at present most whimsically circumstanced. I came here a month
ago to meet the lady you mention; but she failing in her promise, I, partly
from pique and partly from idleness, have been diverting my chagrin by offering
up incense to the beauties of Amanda, our friend Loveless’s wife.
TOM FASHION.
I never have seen her, but have heard her spoken of as a youthful wonder of
beauty and prudence.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
She is so indeed; and, Loveless being too careless and insensible of the
treasure he possesses, my lodging in the same house has given me a thousand
opportunities of making my assiduities acceptable; so that, in less than a
fortnight, I began to bear my disappointment from the widow with the most
Christian resignation.
TOM FASHION.
And Berinthia has never appeared?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Oh, there’s the perplexity! for, just as I began not to care whether I
ever saw her again or not, last night she arrived.
TOM FASHION.
And instantly resumed her empire.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
No, faith—we met—but, the lady not condescending to give me any
serious reasons for having fooled me for a month, I left her in a huff.
TOM FASHION.
Well, well, I’ll answer for it she’ll soon resume her power,
especially as friendship will prevent your pursuing the other too far. But my
coxcomb of a brother is an admirer of Amanda’s too, is he?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Yes, and I believe is most heartily despised by her. But come with me, and you
shall see her and your old friend Loveless.
TOM FASHION.
I must pay my respects to his lordship—perhaps you can direct me to his
lodgings.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Come with me; I shall pass by it.
TOM FASHION.
I wish you could pay this visit for me, or could tell me what I should say to
him.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Say nothing to him—apply yourself to his bag, his sword, his feather,
his snuff-box; and when you are well with them, desire him to lend you a
thousand pounds, and I’ll engage you prosper.
TOM FASHION.
’Sdeath and furies! why was that coxcomb thrust into the world before me?
O Fortune, Fortune, thou art a jilt, by Gad! [Exeunt.
Enter LORD FOPPINGTON in his dressing-gown, and LA VAROLE.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Aside.] Well, ’tis an unspeakable pleasure to be a man of
quality—strike me dumb! Even the boors of this northern spa have learned
the respect due to a title.—[Aloud.] La Varole!
LA VAROLE.
Milor—
LORD FOPPINGTON.
You ha’n’t yet been at Muddymoat Hall, to announce my arrival,
have you?
LA VAROLE.
Not yet, milor.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Then you need not go till Saturday [Exit LA VAROLE] as I am in no
particular haste to view my intended sposa. I shall sacrifice a day or two more
to the pursuit of my friend Loveless’s wife. Amanda is a charming
creature—strike me ugly! and, if I have any discernment in the world, she
thinks no less of my Lord Foppington.
Re-enter LA VAROLE.
LA VAROLE.
Milor, de shoemaker, de tailor, de hosier, de sempstress, de peru, be all
ready, if your lordship please to dress.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
’Tis well, admit them.
LA VAROLE.
Hey, messieurs, entrez!
Enter TAILOR, SHOEMAKER, SEMPSTRESS, JEWELLER, and MENDLEGS.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
So, gentlemen, I hope you have all taken pains to show yourselves masters in
your professions?
TAILOR.
I think I may presume, sir—
LA VAROLE.
Milor, you clown, you!
TAILOR.
My lord—I ask your lordship’s—pardon, my lord. I hope, my
lord, your lordship will be pleased to own I have brought your lordship as
accomplished a suit of clothes as ever peer of England wore, my lord—will
your lordship please to view ’em now?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Ay; but let my people dispose the glasses so that I may see myself before and
behind; for I love to see myself all round. [Puts on his clothes.]
Enter TOM FASHION and LORY. They remain behind, conversing apart.
TOM FASHION.
Heyday! what the devil have we here? Sure my gentleman’s grown a
favourite at court, he has got so many people at his levee.
LORY.
Sir, these people come in order to make him a favourite at court—they are
to establish him with the ladies.
TOM FASHION.
Good Heaven! to what an ebb of taste are women fallen, that it should be in the
power of a laced coat to recommend a gallant to them?
LORY.
Sir, tailors and hair-dressers debauch all the women.
TOM FASHION.
Thou sayest true. But now for my reception.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[To TAILOR.] Death and eternal tortures! Sir—I say the coat is too
wide here by a foot.
TAILOR.
My lord, if it had been tighter, ’twould neither have hooked nor
buttoned.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Rat the hooks and buttons, sir! Can anything be worse than this? As Gad shall
jedge me, it hangs on my shoulders like a chairman’s surtout.
TAILOR.
’Tis not for me to dispute your lordship’s fancy.
LORY.
There, sir, observe what respect does.
TOM FASHION.
Respect! damn him for a coxcomb!—But let’s accost
him.—[Coming forward.] Brother, I’m your humble servant.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
O Lard, Tam! I did not expect you in England. Brother, I’m glad to see
you. But what has brought you to Scarborough, Tam!—[To the
TAILOR.] Look you, sir, I shall never be reconciled to this nauseous
wrapping-gown, therefore pray get me another suit with all possible expedition;
for this is my eternal aversion.—[Exit TAILOR.] Well but, Tam, you
don’t tell me what has driven you to Scarborough.—Mrs. Calico, are
not you of my mind?
Semp.
Directly, my lord.—I hope your lordship is pleased with your ruffles?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
In love with them, stap my vitals!—Bring my bill, you shall be paid
tomorrow.
Semp.
I humbly thank your worship. [Exit.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Hark thee, shoemaker, these shoes aren’t ugly, but they don’t fit
me.
SHOEMAKER.
My lord, I think they fit you very well.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
They hurt me just below the instep.
SHOEMAKER.
[Feels his foot.] No, my lord, they don’t hurt you there.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I tell thee they pinch me execrably.
SHOEMAKER.
Why then, my lord, if those shoes pinch you, I’ll be damned.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, will thou undertake to persuade me I cannot feel?
SHOEMAKER.
Your lordship may please to feel what you think fit, but that shoe does not
hurt you—I think I understand my trade.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Now, by all that’s good and powerful, thou art an incomprehensive
coxcomb!—but thou makest good shoes, and so I’ll bear with thee.
SHOEMAKER.
My lord, I have worked for half the people of quality in this town these twenty
years, and ’tis very hard I shouldn’t know when a shoe hurts, and
when it don’t.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Well, pr’ythee be gone about thy business.—[Exit SHOEMAKER.]
Mr. Mendlegs, a word with you.—The calves of these stockings are
thickened a little too much; they make my legs look like a porter’s.
MENDLEGS.
My lord, methinks they look mighty well.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Ay, but you are not so good a judge of those things as I am—I have
studied them all my life—therefore pray let the next be the thickness of
a crown-piece less.
MENDLEGS.
Indeed, my lord, they are the same kind I had the honour to furnish your
lordship with in town.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Very possibly, Mr. Mendlegs; but that was in the beginning of the winter, and
you should always remember, Mr. Hosier, that if you make a nobleman’s
spring legs as robust as his autumnal calves, you commit a monstrous
impropriety, and make no allowance for the fatigues of the winter.
[Exit—MENDLEGS.]
JEWELLER.
I hope, my lord, these buckles have had the unspeakable satisfaction of being
honoured with your lordship’s approbation?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, they are of a pretty fancy; but don’t you think them rather of the
smallest?
JEWELLER.
My lord, they could not well be larger, to keep on your lordship’s shoe.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
My good sir, you forget that these matters are not as they used to be;
formerly, indeed, the buckle was a sort of machine, intended to keep on the
shoe; but the case is now quite reversed, and the shoe is of no earthly use,
but to keep on the buckle.—Now give me my watches [SERVANT fetches the
watches,] my chapeau, [SERVANT brings a dress hat,] my handkerchief,
[SERVANT pours some scented liquor on a handkerchief and brings it,] my
snuff-box [SERVANT brings snuff-box.] There, now the business of the
morning is pretty well over. [Exit JEWELLER.]
TOM FASHION.
[Aside to LORY.] Well, Lory, what dost think on’t?—a very
friendly reception from a brother, after three years’ absence!
LORY.
[Aside to TOM FASHION.] Why, sir, ’tis your own fault—here
you have stood ever since you came in, and have not commended any one thing
that belongs to him. [SERVANTS all go off.]
TOM FASHION.
[Aside to LORY.] Nor ever shall, while they belong to a
coxcomb.—[To LORD FOPPINGTON.] Now your people of business are
gone, brother, I hope I may obtain a quarter of an hour’s audience of
you?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Faith, Tam, I must beg you’ll excuse me at this time, for I have an
engagement which I would not break for the salvation of
mankind.—Hey!—there!—is my carriage at the door? You’ll
excuse me, brother. [Going.]
TOM FASHION.
Shall you be back to dinner?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
As Gad shall jedge me, I can’t tell; for it is passible I may dine with
some friends at Donner’s.
TOM FASHION.
Shall I meet you there? For I must needs talk with you.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
That I’m afraid mayn’t be quite so praper; for those I commonly eat
with are people of nice conversation; and you know, Tam, your education has
been a little at large.—But there are other ordinaries in town—very
good beef ordinaries—I suppose, Tam, you can eat beef?—However,
dear Tam, I’m glad to see thee in England, stap my vitals! [Exit,
LA VAROLE following.]
TOM FASHION.
Hell and furies! is this to be borne?
LORY.
Faith, sir, I could almost have given him a knock o’ the pate myself.
TOM FASHION.
’Tis enough; I will now show you the excess of my passion, by being very
calm.—Come, Lory, lay your loggerhead to mine, and, in cold blood, let us
contrive his destruction.
LORY.
Here comes a head, sir, would contrive it better than both our loggerheads, if
she would but join in the confederacy.
TOM FASHION.
By this light, Madam Coupler! she seems dissatisfied at something: let us
observe her.
Enter MRS. COUPLER.
MRS. COUPLER.
So! I am likely to be well rewarded for my services, truly; my suspicions, I
find, were but too just. What! refuse to advance me a petty sum, when I am upon
the point of making him master of a galleon! but let him look to the
consequences; an ungrateful, narrow-minded coxcomb.
TOM FASHION.
So he is, upon my soul, old lady; it must be my brother you speak of.
MRS. COUPLER.
Ha! stripling, how came you here? What, hast spent all, eh? And art thou come
to dun his lordship for assistance?
TOM FASHION.
No, I want somebody’s assistance to cut his lordship’s throat,
without the risk of being hanged for him.
MRS. COUPLER.
Egad, sirrah, I could help thee to do him almost as good a turn, without the
danger of being burned in the hand for’t.
TOM FASHION.
How—how, old mischief?
MRS. COUPLER.
Why, you must know I have done you the kindness to make up a match for your
brother.
TOM FASHION.
I am very much beholden to you, truly!
MRS. COUPLER.
You may be before the wedding-day, yet: the lady is a great heiress, the match
is concluded, the writings are drawn, and his lordship is come hither to put
the finishing hand to the business.
TOM FASHION.
I understand as much.
MRS. COUPLER.
Now, you must know, stripling, your brother’s a knave.
TOM FASHION.
Good.
MRS. COUPLER.
He has given me a bond of a thousand pounds for helping him to this fortune,
and has promised me as much more, in ready money, upon the day of the marriage;
which, I understand by a friend, he never designs to pay me; and his just now
refusing to pay me a part is a proof of it. If, therefore, you will be a
generous young rogue, and secure me five thousand pounds, I’ll help you
to the lady.
TOM FASHION.
And how the devil wilt thou do that?
MRS. COUPLER.
Without the devil’s aid, I warrant thee. Thy brother’s face not one
of the family ever saw; the whole business has been managed by me, and all his
letters go through my hands. Sir Tunbelly Clumsy, my relation—for
that’s the old gentleman’s name—is apprised of his
lordship’s being down here, and expects him tomorrow to receive his
daughter’s hand; but the peer, I find, means to bait here a few days
longer, to recover the fatigue of his journey, I suppose. Now you shall go to
Muddymoat Hall in his place. I’ll give you a letter of introduction: and
if you don’t marry the girl before sunset, you deserve to be hanged
before morning.
TOM FASHION.
Agreed! agreed! and for thy reward—
MRS. COUPLER.
Well, well;—though I warrant thou hast not a farthing of money in thy
pocket now—no—one may see it in thy face.
TOM FASHION.
Not a sous, by Jupiter!
MRS. COUPLER.
Must I advance, then? Well, be at my lodgings, next door, this evening, and
I’ll see what may be done—we’ll sign and seal, and when I
have given thee some further instructions, thou shalt hoist sail and be gone.
[Exit.]
TOM FASHION.
So, Lory, Fortune, thou seest, at last takes care of merit! We are in a fair
way to be great people.
LORY.
Ay, sir, if the devil don’t step between the cup and the lip, as he used
to do.
TOM FASHION.
Why, faith, he has played me many a damned trick to spoil my fortune; and,
egad, I am almost afraid he’s at work about it again now; but if I should
tell thee how, thou’dst wonder at me.
LORY.
Indeed, sir, I should not.
TOM FASHION.
How dost know?
LORY.
Because, sir, I have wondered at you so often, I can wonder at you no more.
TOM FASHION.
No! what wouldst thou say, if a qualm of conscience should spoil my design?
LORY.
I would eat my words, and wonder more than ever.
TOM FASHION.
Why faith, Lory, though I have played many a roguish trick, this is so
full-grown a cheat, I find I must take pains to come up to’t—I have
scruples.
LORY.
They are strong symptoms of death. If you find they increase, sir, pray make
your will.
TOM FASHION.
No, my conscience shan’t starve me neither: but thus far I’ll
listen to it. Before I execute this project, I’ll try my brother to the
bottom. If he has yet so much humanity about him as to assist me—though
with a moderate aid—I’ll drop my project at his feet, and show him
how I can do for him much more than what I’d ask he’d do for me.
This one conclusive trial of him I resolve to make.
Succeed or fail, still victory is my lot;
If I subdue his heart, ’tis well—if not,
I will subdue my conscience to my plot.
[Exeunt.]
Enter LOVELESS and AMANDA.
LOVELESS.
How do you like these lodgings, my dear? For my part, I am so pleased with
them, I shall hardly remove whilst we stay here, if you are satisfied.
AMANDA.
I am satisfied with everything that pleases you, else I had not come to
Scarborough at all.
LOVELESS.
Oh, a little of the noise and folly of this place will sweeten the pleasures of
our retreat; we shall find the charms of our retirement doubled when we return
to it.
AMANDA.
That pleasing prospect will be my chiefest entertainment, whilst, much against
my will, I engage in those empty pleasures which ’tis so much the fashion
to be fond of.
LOVELESS.
I own most of them are, indeed, but empty; yet there are delights of which a
private life is destitute, which may divert an honest man, and be a harmless
entertainment to a virtuous woman: good music is one; and truly (with some
small allowance) the plays, I think, may be esteemed another.
AMANDA.
Plays, I must confess, have some small charms. What do you think of that you
saw last night?
LOVELESS.
To say truth, I did not mind it much—my attention was for some time taken
off to admire the workmanship of Nature in the face of a young lady who sat at
some distance from me, she was so exquisitely handsome.
AMANDA.
So exquisitely handsome!
LOVELESS.
Why do you repeat my words, my dear?
AMANDA.
Because you seemed to speak them with such pleasure, I thought I might oblige
you with their echo.
LOVELESS.
Then you are alarmed, Amanda?
AMANDA.
It is my duty to be so when you are in danger.
LOVELESS.
You are too quick in apprehending for me. I viewed her with a world of
admiration, but not one glance of love.
AMANDA.
Take heed of trusting to such nice distinctions. But were your eyes the only
things that were inquisitive? Had I been in your place, my tongue, I fancy, had
been curious too. I should have asked her where she lived—yet still
without design—who was she, pray?
LOVELESS.
Indeed I cannot tell.
AMANDA.
You will not tell.
LOVELESS.
Upon my honour, then, I did not ask.
AMANDA.
Nor do you know what company was with her?
LOVELESS.
I do not. But why are you so earnest?
AMANDA.
I thought I had cause.
LOVELESS.
But you thought wrong, Amanda; for turn the case, and let it be your story:
should you come home and tell me you had seen a handsome man, should I grow
jealous because you had eyes?
AMANDA.
But should I tell you he was exquisitely so, and that I had gazed on him with
admiration, should you not think ’twere possible I might go one step
further, and inquire his name?
LOVELESS.
[Aside.] She has reason on her side; I have talked too much; but I must
turn off another way.—[Aloud.] Will you then make no difference,
Amanda, between the language of our sex and yours? There is a modesty restrains
your tongues, which makes you speak by halves when you commend; but roving
flattery gives a loose to ours, which makes us still speak double what we
think.
Enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Madam, there is a lady at the door in a chair desires to know whether your
ladyship sees company; her name is Berinthia.
AMANDA.
Oh dear! ’tis a relation I have not seen these five years; pray her to
walk in.—[Exit SERVANT.] Here’s another beauty for you; she
was, when I saw her last, reckoned extremely handsome.
LOVELESS.
Don’t be jealous now; for I shall gaze upon her too.
Enter BERINTHIA. Ha! by heavens, the very woman! [Aside.]
BERINTHIA.
[Salutes AMANDA.] Dear Amanda, I did not expect to meet you in
Scarborough.
AMANDA.
Sweet cousin, I’m overjoyed to see you.—Mr. Loveless, here’s
a relation and a friend of mine, I desire you’ll be better acquainted
with.
LOVELESS.
[Salutes BERINTHIA.] If my wife never desires a harder thing, madam, her
request will be easily granted.
Re-enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Sir, my Lord Foppington presents his humble service to you, and desires to know
how you do. He’s at the next door; and, if it be not inconvenient to you,
he’ll come and wait upon you.
LOVELESS.
Give my compliments to his lordship, and I shall be glad to see
him.—[Exit SERVANT.] If you are not acquainted with his lordship,
madam, you will be entertained with his character.
AMANDA.
Now it moves my pity more than my mirth to see a man whom nature has made no
fool be so very industrious to pass for an ass.
LOVELESS.
No, there you are wrong, Amanda; you should never bestow your pity upon those
who take pains for your contempt: pity those whom nature abuses, never those
who abuse nature.
Enter LORD FOPPINGTON.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Dear Loveless, I am your most humble servant.
LOVELESS.
My lord, I’m yours.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Madam, your ladyship’s very obedient slave.
LOVELESS.
My lord, this lady is a relation of my wife’s.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Salutes BERINTHIA.] The beautifullest race of people upon earth, rat
me! Dear Loveless, I am overjoyed that you think of continuing here: I am, stap
my vitals!—[To AMANDA.] For Gad’s sake, madam, how has your
ladyship been able to subsist thus long, under the fatigue of a country life?
AMANDA.
My life has been very far from that, my lord; it has been a very quiet one.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, that’s the fatigue I speak of, madam; for ’tis impossible to
be quiet without thinking: now thinking is to me the greatest fatigue in the
world.
AMANDA.
Does not your lordship love reading, then?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Oh, passionately, madam; but I never think of what I read. For example, madam,
my life is a perpetual stream of pleasure, that glides through with such a
variety of entertainments, I believe the wisest of our ancestors never had the
least conception of any of ’em. I rise, madam, when in town, about twelve
o’clock. I don’t rise sooner, because it is the worst thing in the
world for the complexion: not that I pretend to be a beau; but a man must
endeavour to look decent, lest he makes so odious a figure in the side-bax, the
ladies should be compelled to turn their eyes upon the play. So at twelve
o’clock, I say, I rise. Naw, if I find it is a good day, I resalve to
take the exercise of riding; so drink my chocolate, and draw on my boots by
two. On my return, I dress; and, after dinner, lounge perhaps to the opera.
BERINTHIA.
Your lordship, I suppose, is fond of music?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Oh, passionately, on Tuesdays and Saturdays; for then there is always the best
company, and one is not expected to undergo the fatigue of listening.
AMANDA.
Does your lordship think that the case at the opera?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Most certainly, madam. There is my Lady Tattle, my Lady Prate, my Lady Titter,
my Lady Sneer, my Lady Giggle, and my Lady Grin—these have boxes in the
front, and while any favourite air is singing, are the prettiest company in the
waurld, stap my vitals!—Mayn’t we hope for the honour to see you
added to our society, madam?
AMANDA.
Alas! my lord, I am the worst company in the world at a concert, I’m so
apt to attend to the music.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, madam, that is very pardonable in the country or at church, but a
monstrous inattention in a polite assembly. But I am afraid I tire the company?
LOVELESS.
Not at all. Pray go on.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why then, ladies, there only remains to add, that I generally conclude the
evening at one or other of the clubs; nat that I ever play deep; indeed I have
been for some time tied up from losing above five thousand paunds at a sitting.
LOVELESS.
But isn’t your lordship sometimes obliged to attend the weighty affairs
of the nation?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Sir, as to weighty affairs, I leave them to weighty heads; I never intend mine
shall be a burden to my body.
BERINTHIA.
Nay, my lord, but you are a pillar of the state.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
An ornamental pillar, madam; for sooner than undergo any part of the fatigue,
rat me, but the whole building should fall plump to the ground!
AMANDA.
But, my lord, a fine gentleman spends a great deal of his time in his
intrigues; you have given us no account of them yet.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Aside.] So! she would inquire into my amours—that’s
jealousy, poor soul!—I see she’s in love with
me.—[Aloud.] O Lord, madam, I had like to have forgot a secret I
must need tell your ladyship.—Ned, you must not be so jealous now as to
listen.
LOVELESS.
[Leading BERINTHIA up the stage.] Not I, my lord; I am too
fashionable a husband to pry into the secrets of my wife.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Aside to AMANDA squeezing her hand.] I am in love with you to
desperation, strike me speechless!
AMANDA.
[Strikes him on the ear.] Then thus I return your passion.—An
impudent fool!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
God’s curse, madam, I am a peer of the realm!
LOVELESS.
[Hastily returning.] Hey! what the devil, do you affront my wife, sir?
Nay, then—[Draws. They fight.]
AMANDA.
What has my folly done?—Help! murder! help! Part them for Heaven’s
sake.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Falls back and leans on his sword.] Ah! quite through the body, stap my
vitals!
Enter SERVANTS.
LOVELESS.
[Runs to LORD FOPPINGTON.] I hope I ha’nt killed the fool,
however. Bear him up.—Call a surgeon there.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Ay, pray make haste. [Exit SERVANT.
LOVELESS.
This mischief you may thank yourself for.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I may say so; love’s the devil indeed, Ned.
Re-enter SERVANT, with PROBE.
SERVANT.
Here’s Mr. Probe, sir, was just going by the door.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
He’s the welcomest man alive.
PROBE.
Stand by, stand by, stand by; pray, gentlemen, stand by. Lord have mercy upon
us, did you never see a man run through the body before?—Pray stand by.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Ah, Mr. Probe, I’m a dead man.
PROBE.
A dead man, and I by! I should laugh to see that, egad.
LOVELESS.
Pr’ythee don’t stand prating, but look upon his wound.
PROBE.
Why, what if I don’t look upon his wound this hour, sir?
LOVELESS.
Why, then he’ll bleed to death, sir.
PROBE.
Why, then I’ll fetch him to life again, sir.
LOVELESS.
’Slife! he’s run through the body, I tell thee.
PROBE.
I wish he was run through the heart, and I should get the more credit by his
cure. Now I hope you are satisfied? Come, now let me come at him—now let
me come at him.—[Viewing his wound.] Oops, what a gash is here!
why, sir, a man may drive a coach and six horses into your body.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Oh!
PROBE.
Why, what the devil have you run the gentleman through with—a
scythe?—[Aside.] A little scratch between the skin and the ribs,
that’s all.
LOVELESS.
Let me see his wound.
PROBE.
Then you shall dress it, sir; for if anybody looks upon it I won’t.
LOVELESS.
Why, thou art the veriest coxcomb I ever saw!
PROBE.
Sir, I am not master of my trade for nothing.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Surgeon!
PROBE.
Sir.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Are there any hopes?
PROBE.
Hopes! I can’t tell. What are you willing to give for a cure?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Five hundred paunds with pleasure.
PROBE.
Why then perhaps there may be hopes; but we must avoid further
delay.—Here, help the gentleman into a chair, and carry him to my house
presently—that’s the properest place—[Aside.] to
bubble him out of his money.—[Aloud.] Come, a chair—a chair
quickly—there, in with him.
[SERVANTS put LORD FOPPINGTON into a chair.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Dear Loveless, adieu; if I die, I forgive thee; and if I live, I hope thou wilt
do as much by me. I am sorry you and I should quarrel, but I hope here’s
an end on’t; for if you are satisfied, I am.
LOVELESS.
I shall hardly think it worth my prosecuting any further, so you may be at
rest, sir.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Thou art a generous fellow, strike me dumb!—[Aside.] But thou hast
an impertinent wife, stap my vitals!
PROBE.
So—carry him off!—carry him off!—We shall have him into a
fever by-and-by.—Carry him off! [Exit with LORD FOPPINGTON.] Enter
COLONEL TOWNLY.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
So, so, I am glad to find you all alive.—I met a wounded peer carrying
off. For heaven’s sake what was the matter?
LOVELESS.
Oh, a trifle! he would have made love to my wife before my face, so she obliged
him with a box o’ the ear, and I ran him through the body, that was all.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Bagatelle on all sides. But pray, madam, how long has this noble lord been an
humble servant of yours?
AMANDA.
This is the first I have heard on’t—so I suppose, ’tis his
quality more than his love has brought him into this adventure. He thinks his
title an authentic passport to every woman’s heart below the degree of a
peeress.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
He’s coxcomb enough to think anything: but I would not have you brought
into trouble for him. I hope there’s no danger of his life?
LOVELESS.
None at all. He’s fallen into the hands of a roguish surgeon, who, I
perceive, designs to frighten a little money out of him: but I saw his
wound—’tis nothing: he may go to the ball tonight if he pleases.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
I am glad you have corrected him without further mischief, or you might have
deprived me of the pleasure of executing a plot against his lordship, which I
have been contriving with an old acquaintance of yours.
LOVELESS.
Explain.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
His brother, Tom Fashion, is come down here, and we have it in contemplation to
save him the trouble of his intended wedding: but we want your assistance. Tom
would have called but he is preparing for his enterprise, so I promised to
bring you to him—so, sir, if these ladies can spare you—
LOVELESS.
I’ll go with you with all my heart.—[Aside.] Though I could
wish, methinks, to stay and gaze a little longer on that creature. Good gods!
how engaging she is!—but what have I to do with beauty? I have already
had my portion, and must not covet more.
AMANDA.
Mr. Loveless, pray one word with you before you go. [Exit COLONEL
TOWNLY.
LOVELESS.
What would my dear?
AMANDA.
Only a woman’s foolish question: how do you like my cousin here?
LOVELESS.
Jealous already, Amanda?
AMANDA.
Not at all: I ask you for another reason.
LOVELESS.
[Aside.] Whate’er her reason be, I must not tell her
true.—[Aloud.] Why, I confess, she’s handsome: but you must
not think I slight your kinswoman, if I own to you, of all the women who may
claim that character, she is the last that would triumph in my heart.
AMANDA.
I’m satisfied.
LOVELESS.
Now tell me why you asked?
AMANDA.
At night I will—adieu!
LOVELESS.
I’m yours. [Kisses her and exit.]
AMANDA.
I’m glad to find he does not like her, for I have a great mind to
persuade her to come and live with me. [Aside.]
BERINTHIA.
So! I find my colonel continues in his airs; there must be something more at
the bottom of this than the provocation he pretends from me. [Aside.]
AMANDA.
For Heaven’s sake, Berinthia, tell me what way I shall take to persuade
you to come and live with me.
BERINTHIA.
Why, one way in the world there is, and but one.
AMANDA.
And pray what is that?
BERINTHIA.
It is to assure me—I shall be very welcome.
AMANDA.
If that be all, you shall e’en sleep here tonight.
BERINTHIA.
Tonight.
AMANDA.
Yes, tonight.
BERINTHIA.
Why, the people where I lodge will think me mad.
AMANDA.
Let ’em think what they please.
BERINTHIA.
Say you so, Amanda? Why, then, they shall think what they please: for I’m
a young widow, and I care not what anybody thinks.—Ah, Amanda, it’s
a delicious thing to be a young widow!
AMANDA.
You’ll hardly make me think so.
BERINTHIA.
Poh! because you are in love with your husband.
AMANDA.
Pray, ’tis with a world of innocence I would inquire whether you think
those we call women of reputation do really escape all other men as they do
those shadows of beaux.
BERINTHIA.
Oh no, Amanda; there are a sort of men make dreadful work amongst ’em,
men that may be called the beau’s antipathy, for they agree in nothing
but walking upon two legs. These have brains, the beau has none. These are in
love with their mistress, the beau with himself. They take care of their
reputation, the beau is industrious to destroy it. They are decent, he’s
a fop; in short, they are men, he’s an ass.
AMANDA.
If this be their character, I fancy we had here, e’en now, a pattern of
’em both.
BERINTHIA.
His lordship and Colonel Townly?
AMANDA.
The same.
BERINTHIA.
As for the lord, he is eminently so; and for the other, I can assure you
there’s not a man in town who has a better interest with the women that
are worth having an interest with.
AMANDA.
He answers the opinion I had ever of him. [Takes her hand.] I must
acquaint you with a secret—’tis not that fool alone has talked to
me of love; Townly has been tampering too.
BERINTHIA.
[Aside.] So, so! here the mystery comes out!—[Aloud.]
Colonel Townly! impossible, my dear!
AMANDA.
’Tis true indeed; though he has done it in vain; nor do I think that all
the merit of mankind combined could shake the tender love I bear my husband;
yet I will own to you, Berinthia, I did not start at his addresses, as when
they came from one whom I contemned.
BERINTHIA.
[Aside.] Oh, this is better and better!—[Aloud.] Well said,
innocence! and you really think, my dear, that nothing could abate your
constancy and attachment to your husband?
AMANDA.
Nothing, I am convinced.
BERINTHIA.
What, if you found he loved another woman better?
AMANDA.
Well!
BERINTHIA.
Well!—why, were I that thing they call a slighted wife, somebody should
run the risk of being that thing they call—a husband. Don’t I talk
madly?
AMANDA.
Madly indeed!
BERINTHIA.
Yet I’m very innocent.
AMANDA.
That I dare swear you are. I know how to make allowances for your humour: but
you resolve then never to marry again?
BERINTHIA.
Oh no! I resolve I will.
AMANDA.
How so?
BERINTHIA.
That I never may.
AMANDA.
You banter me.
BERINTHIA.
Indeed I don’t: but I consider I’m a woman, and form my resolutions
accordingly.
AMANDA.
Well, my opinion is, form what resolutions you will, matrimony will be the end
on’t.
BERINTHIA.
I doubt it. But ah, Heavens! I have business at home, and am half an hour too
late.
AMANDA.
As you are to return with me, I’ll just give some orders, and walk with
you.
BERINTHIA.
Well, make haste, and we’ll finish this subject as we
go—[Exit AMANDA.]. Ah, poor Amanda! you have led a country life.
Well, this discovery is lucky! Base Townly! at once false to me and treacherous
to his friend!—And my innocent and demure cousin too! I have it in my
power to be revenged on her, however. Her husband, if I have any skill in
countenance, would be as happy in my smiles as Townly can hope to be in hers.
I’ll make the experiment, come what will on’t. The woman who can
forgive the being robbed of a favoured lover, must be either an idiot or a
wanton. [Exit.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Hey, fellow, let thy vis-à-vis come to the door.
LA VAROLE.
Will your lordship venture so soon to expose yourself to the weather?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Sir, I will venture as soon as I can expose myself to the ladies.
LA VAROLE.
I wish your lordship would please to keep house a little longer; I’m
afraid your honour does not well consider your wound.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
My wound!—I would not be in eclipse another day, though I had as many
wounds in my body as I have had in my heart. So mind, Varole, let these cards
be left as directed; for this evening I shall wait on my future father-in-law,
Sir Tunbelly, and I mean to commence my devoirs to the lady, by giving an
entertainment at her father’s expense; and hark thee, tell Mr. Loveless I
request he and his company will honour me with their presence, or I shall think
we are not friends.
LA VAROLE.
I will be sure, milor. [Exit.]
Enter TOM FASHION.
TOM FASHION.
Brother, your servant; how do you find yourself today?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
So well that I have ardered my coach to the door—so there’s no
danger of death this baut, Tam.
TOM FASHION.
I’m very glad of it.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Aside.] That I believe a lie.—[Aloud.] Pr’ythee,
Tam, tell me one thing—did not your heart cut a caper up to your mauth,
when you heard I was run through the bady?
TOM FASHION.
Why do you think it should?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Because I remember mine did so when I heard my uncle was shot through the head.
TOM FASHION.
It, then, did very ill.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Pr’ythee, why so?
TOM FASHION.
Because he used you very well.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Well!—Naw, strike me dumb! he starved me; he has let me want a thausand
women for want of a thausand paund.
TOM FASHION.
Then he hindered you from making a great many ill bargains; for I think no
woman worth money that will take money.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
If I was a younger brother I should think so too.
TOM FASHION.
Then you are seldom much in love?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Never, stap my vitals!
TOM FASHION.
Why, then, did you make all this bustle about Amanda?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Because she’s a woman of insolent virtue, and I thought myself piqued in
honour to debauch her.
TOM FASHION.
Very well.—[Aside.] Here’s a rare fellow for you, to have
the spending of ten thousand pounds a year! But now for my business with
him.—[Aloud.] Brother, though I know to talk of any business
(especially of money) is a theme not quite so entertaining to you as that of
the ladies, my necessities are such, I hope you’ll have patience to hear
me.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
The greatness of your necessities, Tam, is the worst argument in the waurld for
your being patiently heard. I do believe you are going to make a very good
speech, but, strike me dumb! it has the worst beginning of any speech I have
heard this twelvemonth.
TOM FASHION.
I’m sorry you think so.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I do believe thou art: but, come, let’s know the affair quickly.
TOM FASHION.
Why, then, my case, in a word, is this: the necessary expenses of my travels
have so much exceeded the wretched income of my annuity, that I have been
forced to mortgage it for five hundred pounds, which is spent. So unless you
are so kind as to assist me in redeeming it, I know no remedy but to take a
purse.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, faith, Tam, to give you my sense of the thing, I do think taking a purse
the best remedy in the waurld; for if you succeed, you are relieved that way,
if you are taken [Drawing his hand round his neck], you are relieved
t’other.
TOM FASHION.
I’m glad to see you are in so pleasant a humour; I hope I shall find the
effects on’t.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, do you then really think it a reasonable thing, that I should give you
five hundred paunds?
TOM FASHION.
I do not ask it as a due, brother; I am willing to receive it as a favour.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Then thou art willing to receive it anyhow, strike me speechless! But these are
damned times to give money in; taxes are so great, repairs so exorbitant,
tenants such rogues, and bouquets so dear, that the devil take me I’m
reduced to that extremity in my cash, I have been forced to retrench in that
one article of sweet pawder, till I have brought it down to five guineas a
maunth—now judge, Tam, whether I can spare you five paunds.
TOM FASHION.
If you can’t I must starve, that’s all.—[Aside.] Damn
him!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
All I can say is, you should have been a better husband.
TOM FASHION.
Ouns! if you can’t live upon ten thousand a year, how do you think I
should do’t upon two hundred?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Don’t be in a passion, Tam, for passion is the most unbecoming thing in
the waurld—to the face. Look you, I don’t love to say anything to
you to make you melancholy, but upon this occasion I must take leave to put you
in mind that a running horse does require more attendance than a coach-horse.
Nature has made some difference twixt you and me.
TOM FASHION.
Yes—she has made you older.—[Aside.] Plague take her.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
That is not all, Tam.
TOM FASHION.
Why, what is there else?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Looks first on himself and then on his brother.] Ask the ladies.
TOM FASHION.
Why, thou essence-bottle, thou musk-cat! dost thou then think thou hast any
advantage over me but what Fortune has given thee?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I do, stap my vitals!
TOM FASHION.
Now, by all that’s great and powerful, thou art the prince of coxcombs!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Sir, I am proud at being at the head of so prevailing a party.
TOM FASHION.
Will nothing provoke thee?—Draw, coward!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Look you, Tam, you know I have always taken you for a mighty dull fellow, and
here is one of the foolishest plats broke out that I have seen a lang time.
Your poverty makes life so burdensome to you, you would provoke me to a
quarrel, in hopes either to slip through my lungs into my estate, or to get
yourself run through the guts, to put an end to your pain. But I will
disappoint you in both your designs; far, with the temper of a philasapher, and
the discretion of a statesman—I shall leave the room with my sword in the
scabbard. [Exit.]
TOM FASHION.
So! farewell, brother; and now, conscience, I defy thee. Lory!
Enter LORY.
LORY.
Sir!
TOM FASHION.
Here’s rare news, Lory; his lordship has given me a pill has purged off
all my scruples.
LORY.
Then my heart’s at ease again: for I have been in a lamentable fright,
sir, ever since your conscience had the impudence to intrude into your company.
TOM FASHION.
Be at peace; it will come there no more: my brother has given it a wring by the
nose, and I have kicked it downstairs. So run away to the inn, get the chaise
ready quickly, and bring it to Dame Coupler’s without a moment’s
delay.
LORY.
Then, sir, you are going straight about the fortune?
TOM FASHION.
I am.—Away—fly, Lory!
LORY.
The happiest day I ever saw. I’m upon the wing already. Now then I shall
get my wages. [Exeunt.]
LOVELESS.
Is my wife within?
SERVANT.
No, sir, she has gone out this half-hour.
LOVELESS.
Well, leave me.—[Exit SERVANT.] How strangely does my mind run on
this widow!—Never was my heart so suddenly seized on before. That my wife
should pick out her, of all womankind, to be her playfellow! But what fate
does, let fate answer for: I sought it not. So! by Heavens! here she comes.
Enter BERINTHIA.
BERINTHIA.
What makes you look so thoughtful, sir? I hope you are not ill.
LOVELESS.
I was debating, madam, whether I was so or not, and that was it which made me
look so thoughtful.
BERINTHIA.
Is it then so hard a matter to decide? I thought all people were acquainted
with their own bodies, though few people know their own minds.
LOVELESS.
What if the distemper I suspect be in the mind?
BERINTHIA.
Why then I’ll undertake to prescribe you a cure.
LOVELESS.
Alas! you undertake you know not what.
BERINTHIA.
So far at least, then, you allow me to be a physician.
LOVELESS.
Nay, I’ll allow you to be so yet further: for I have reason to believe,
should I put myself into your hands, you would increase my distemper.
BERINTHIA.
How?
LOVELESS.
Oh, you might betray me to my wife.
BERINTHIA.
And so lose all my practice.
LOVELESS.
Will you then keep my secret?
BERINTHIA.
I will.
LOVELESS.
Well—but swear it.
BERINTHIA.
I swear by woman.
LOVELESS.
Nay, that’s swearing by my deity; swear by your own, and I shall believe
you.
BERINTHIA.
Well then, I swear by man!
LOVELESS.
I’m satisfied. Now hear my symptoms, and give me your advice. The first
were these; when I saw you at the play, a random glance you threw at first
alarmed me. I could not turn my eyes from whence the danger came—I gazed
upon you till my heart began to pant—nay, even now, on your approaching
me, my illness is so increased that if you do not help me I shall, whilst you
look on, consume to ashes. [Takes her hand.]
BERINTHIA.
O Lord, let me go! ’tis the plague, and we shall be infected.
[Breaking from him.]
LOVELESS.
Then we’ll die together, my charming angel.
BERINTHIA.
O Gad! the devil’s in you! Lord, let me go!—here’s somebody
coming.
Re-enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Sir, my lady’s come home, and desires to speak with you.
LOVELESS.
Tell her I’m coming.—[Exit SERVANT.] But before I go, one
glass of nectar to drink her health. [To BERINTHIA.]
BERINTHIA.
Stand off, or I shall hate you, by Heavens!
LOVELESS.
[Kissing her.] In matters of love, a woman’s oath is no more to be
minded than a man’s. [Exit.]
BERINTHIA.
Um!
Enter COLONEL TOWNLY.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
[Aside.] So? what’s here—Berinthia and Loveless—and in
such close conversation!—I cannot now wonder at her indifference in
excusing herself to me!—O rare woman!—Well then, let Loveless look
to his wife, ’twill be but the retort courteous on both
sides.—[Aloud.] Your servant, madam; I need not ask you how you
do, you have got so good a colour.
BERINTHIA.
No better than I used to have, I suppose.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
A little more blood in your cheeks.
BERINTHIA.
I have been walking!
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Is that all? Pray was it Mr. Loveless went from here just now?
BERINTHIA.
O yes—he has been walking with me.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
He has!
BERINTHIA.
Upon my word I think he is a very agreeable man; and there is certainly
something particularly insinuating in his address.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
[Aside.] So, so! she hasn’t even the modesty to dissemble!
[Aloud.] Pray, madam, may I, without impertinence, trouble you with a
few serious questions?
BERINTHIA.
As many as you please; but pray let them be as little serious as possible.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Is it not near two years since I have presumed to address you?
BERINTHIA.
I don’t know exactly—but it has been a tedious long time.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Have I not, during that period, had every reason to believe that my
assiduities were far from being unacceptable?
BERINTHIA.
Why, to do you justice, you have been extremely troublesome—and I confess
I have been more civil to you than you deserved.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Did I not come to this place at your express desire, and for no purpose but
the honour of meeting you?—and after waiting a month in disappointment,
have you condescended to explain, or in the slightest way apologise for, your
conduct?
BERINTHIA.
O heavens! apologise for my conduct!—apologise to you! O you barbarian!
But pray now, my good serious colonel, have you anything more to add?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Nothing, madam, but that after such behaviour I am less surprised at what I
saw just now; it is not very wonderful that the woman who can trifle with the
delicate addresses of an honourable lover should be found coquetting with the
husband of her friend.
BERINTHIA.
Very true: no more wonderful than it was for this honourable lover to divert
himself in the absence of this coquette, with endeavouring to seduce his
friend’s wife! O colonel, colonel, don’t talk of honour or your
friend, for Heaven’s sake!
COLONEL TOWNLY.
[Aside.] ’Sdeath! how came she to suspect
this!—[Aloud.] Really, madam, I don’t understand you.
BERINTHIA.
Nay, nay, you saw I did not pretend to misunderstand you.—But here comes
the lady; perhaps you would be glad to be left with her for an explanation.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
O madam, this recrimination is a poor resource; and to convince you how much
you are mistaken, I beg leave to decline the happiness you propose
me.—Madam, your servant.
Enter AMANDA. COLONEL TOWNLY whispers AMANDA, and exit.
BERINTHIA.
[Aside.] He carries it off well, however; upon my
word, very well! How tenderly they part!—[Aloud] So, cousin; I
hope you have not been chiding your admirer for being with me? I assure you we
have been talking of you.
AMANDA.
Fy, Berinthia!—my admirer! will you never learn to talk in earnest of
anything?
BERINTHIA.
Why this shall be in earnest, if you please; for my part, I only tell you
matter of fact.
AMANDA.
I’m sure there’s so much jest and earnest in what you say to me on
this subject, I scarce know how to take it. I have just parted with Mr.
Loveless; perhaps it is fancy, but I think there is an alteration in his manner
which alarms me.
BERINTHIA.
And so you are jealous; is that all?
AMANDA.
That all! is jealousy, then, nothing?
BERINTHIA.
It should be nothing, if I were in your case.
AMANDA.
Why, what would you do?
BERINTHIA.
I’d cure myself.
AMANDA.
How?
BERINTHIA.
Care as little for my husband as he did for me. Look you, Amanda, you may build
castles in the air, and fume, and fret, and grow thin, and lean, and pale, and
ugly, if you please; but I tell you, no man worth having is true to his wife,
or ever was, or ever will be so.
AMANDA.
Do you then really think he’s false to me? for I did not suspect him.
BERINTHIA.
Think so? I am sure of it.
AMANDA.
You are sure on’t?
BERINTHIA.
Positively—he fell in love at the play.
AMANDA.
Right—the very same. But who could have told you this?
BERINTHIA.
Um!—Oh, Townly! I suppose your husband has made him his confidant.
AMANDA.
O base Loveless! And what did Townly say on’t?
BERINTHIA.
[Aside.] So, so! why should she ask that?—[Aloud.] Say! why
he abused Loveless extremely, and said all the tender things of you in the
world.
AMANDA.
Did he?—Oh! my heart!—I’m very ill—dear Berinthia,
don’t leave me a moment. [Exeunt.]
Enter TOM FASHION and LORY.
TOM FASHION.
So here’s our inheritance, Lory, if we can but get into possession. But
methinks the seat of our family looks like Noah’s ark, as if the chief
part on’t were designed for the fowls of the air, and the beasts of the
field.
LORY.
Pray, sir, don’t let your head run upon the orders of building here: get
but the heiress, let the devil take the house.
TOM FASHION.
Get but the house, let the devil take the heiress! I say.—But come, we
have no time to squander; knock at the door.—[LORY knocks two or three
times at the gate.] What the devil! have they got no ears in this
house?—Knock harder.
LORY.
Egad, sir, this will prove some enchanted castle; we shall have the giant come
out by-and-by, with his club, and beat our brains out. [Knocks again.]
TOM FASHION.
Hush, they come.
SERVANT.
[Within. ] Who is there?
LORY.
Open the door and see: is that your country breeding?
SERVANT.
Ay, but two words to that bargain.—Tummus, is the blunderbuss primed?
TOM FASHION.
Ouns! give ’em good words, Lory,—or we shall be shot here a fortune
catching.
LORY.
Egad, sir, I think you’re in the right on’t.—Ho! Mr.
What-d’ye-call-’um, will you please to let us in? or are we to be
left to grow like willows by your moat side? SERVANT appears at the window
with a blunderbuss.
SERVANT.
Well naw, what’s ya’re business?
TOM FASHION.
Nothing, sir, but to wait upon Sir Tunbelly, with your leave.
SERVANT.
To weat upon Sir Tunbelly! why, you’ll find that’s just as Sir
Tunbelly pleases.
TOM FASHION.
But will you do me the favour, sir, to know whether Sir Tunbelly pleases or
not?
SERVANT.
Why, look you, d’ye see, with good words much may be done. Ralph, go thy
ways, and ask Sir Tunbelly if he pleases to be waited upon—and dost hear,
call to nurse, that she may lock up Miss Hoyden before the gates open.
TOM FASHION.
D’ye hear, that, Lory?
Enter SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY, with SERVANTS, armed with guns, clubs, pitchforks, &c.
LORY.
Oh! [Runs behind his master.] O Lord! O Lord! Lord! we are both dead
men!
TOM FASHION.
Fool! thy fear will, ruin us. [Aside to LORY.]
LORY.
My fear, sir? ’sdeath, Sir, I fear nothing.—[Aside.] Would I
were well up to the chin in a horse-pond!
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Who is it here hath any business with me?
TOM FASHION.
Sir, ’tis I, if your name be Sir Tunbelly Clumsy.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Sir, my name is Sir Tunbelly Clumsy, whether you have any business with me or
not.—So you see I am not ashamed of my name, nor my face either.
TOM FASHION.
Sir, you have no cause that I know of.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Sir, if you have no cause either, I desire to know who you are; for, till I
know your name, I shan’t ask you to come into my house: and when I do
know your name, ’tis six to four I don’t ask you then.
TOM FASHION.
Sir, I hope you’ll find this letter an authentic passport. [Gives him
a letter.]
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Cod’s my life, from Mrs. Coupler!—I ask your lordship’s
pardon ten thousand times.—[To a SERVANT.] Here, run in a-doors
quickly; get a Scotch coal fire in the parlour, set all the Turkey work chairs
in their places, get the brass candlesticks out, and be sure stick the socket
full of laurel—run!—[Turns to TOM FASHION.]—My lord, I
ask your lordship’s pardon.—[To SERVANT.] And, do you hear,
run away to nurse; bid her let Miss Hoyden loose again.—[Exit
SERVANT.] I hope your honour will excuse the disorder of my family. We are
not used to receive men of your lordship’s great quality every day. Pray,
where are your coaches and servants, my lord?
TOM FASHION.
Sir, that I might give you and your daughter a proof how impatient I am to be
nearer akin to you, I left my equipage to follow me, and came away post with
only one servant.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Your lordship does me too much honour—it was exposing your person to too
much fatigue and danger, I protest it was: but my daughter shall endeavour to
make you what amends she can: and, though I say it that should not say it,
Hoyden has charms.
TOM FASHION.
Sir, I am not a stranger to them, though I am to her; common fame has done her
justice.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
My lord, I am common fame’s very grateful, humble servant. My lord, my
girl’s young—Hoyden is young, my lord: but this I must say for her,
what she wants in art she has in breeding; and what’s wanting in her age,
is made good in her constitution.—So pray, my lord, walk in; pray, my
lord, walk in.
TOM FASHION.
Sir, I wait upon you. [Exeunt.]
MISS HOYDEN.
Sure, nobody was ever used as I am! I know well enough what other girls do, for
all they think to make a fool o’ me. It’s well I have a husband
a-coming, or ecod I’d marry the baker, I would so. Nobody can knock at
the gate, but presently I must be locked up; and here’s the young
greyhound can run loose about the house all the day, so she
can.—’Tis very well!
NURSE.
[Without opening the door.] Miss Hoyden! miss, miss, miss! Miss Hoyden!
Enter NURSE.
MISS HOYDEN.
Well, what do you make such a noise for, eh? What do you din a body’s
ears for? Can’t one be at quiet for you?
NURSE.
What do I din your ears for? Here’s one come will din your ears for you.
MISS HOYDEN.
What care I who’s come? I care not a fig who comes, or who goes, so long
as I must be locked up like the ale-cellar.
NURSE.
That, miss, is for fear you should be drank before you are ripe.
MISS HOYDEN.
Oh, don’t trouble your head about that; I’m as ripe as you, though
not so mellow.
NURSE.
Very well! Now I have a good mind to lock you up again, and not let you see my
lord tonight.
MISS HOYDEN.
My lord: why, is my husband come?
NURSE.
Yes, marry, is he; and a goodly person too.
MISS HOYDEN.
[Hugs NURSE.] Oh, my dear nurse, forgive me this once, and I’ll
never misuse you again; no, if I do, you shall give me three thumps on the
back, and a great pinch by the cheek.
NURSE.
Ah, the poor thing! see now it melts; it’s as full of good-nature as an
egg’s full of meat.
MISS HOYDEN.
But, my dear nurse, don’t lie now—is he come, by your troth?
NURSE.
Yes, by my truly, is he.
MISS HOYDEN.
O Lord! I’ll go and put on my laced tucker, though I’m locked up
for a month for’t. [Exeunt.
MISS HOYDEN goes off capering, and twirling her doll by its leg.]
Enter MISS HOYDEN and NURSE.
NURSE.
Well, miss, how do you like your husband that is to be?
MISS HOYDEN.
O Lord, nurse, I’m so overjoyed I can scarce contain myself!
NURSE.
Oh, but you must have a care of being too fond; for men, nowadays, hate a woman
that loves ’em.
MISS HOYDEN.
Love him! why, do you think I love him, nurse? Ecod I would not care if he was
hanged, so I were but once married to him. No, that which pleases me is to
think what work I’ll make when I get to London; for when I am a wife and
a lady both, ecod, I’ll flaunt it with the best of ’em. Ay, and I
shall have money enough to do so too, nurse.
NURSE.
Ah, there’s no knowing that, miss; for though these lords have a power of
wealth indeed, yet, as I have heard say, they give it all to their sluts and
their trulls, who joggle it about in their coaches, with a murrain to
’em, whilst poor madam sits sighing and wishing, and has not a spare
half-crown to buy her a Practice of Piety.
MISS HOYDEN.
Oh, but for that, don’t deceive yourself, nurse; for this I must say of
my lord, he’s as free as an open house at Christmas; for this very
morning he told me I should have six hundred a year to buy pins. Now if he
gives me six hundred a year to buy pins, what do you think he’ll give me
to buy petticoats?
NURSE.
Ay, my dearest, he deceives thee foully, and he’s no better than a rogue
for his pains! These Londoners have got a gibberish with ’em would
confound a gipsy. That which they call pin-money, is to buy everything in the
versal world, down to their very shoe-knots. Nay, I have heard some folks say
that some ladies, if they’ll have gallants as they call ’em, are
forced to find them out of their pin-money too.—But look, look, if his
honour be not coming to you!—Now, if I were sure you would behave
yourself handsomely, and not disgrace me that have brought you up, I’d
leave you alone together.
MISS HOYDEN.
That’s my best nurse; do as you’d be done by. Trust us together
this once, and if I don’t show my breeding, I wish I may never be
married, but die an old maid.
NURSE.
Well, this once I’ll venture you. But if you disparage me—
MISS HOYDEN.
Never fear. [Exit NURSE.]
Enter TOM FASHION.
TOM FASHION.
Your servant, madam; I’m glad to find you alone, for I have something of
importance to speak to you about.
MISS HOYDEN.
Sir (my lord, I meant), you may speak to me about what you please, I shall give
you a civil answer.
TOM FASHION.
You give so obliging an one, it encourages me to tell you in a few words what I
think, both for your interest and mine. Your father, I suppose you know, has
resolved to make me happy in being your husband; and I hope I may obtain your
consent to perform what he desires.
MISS HOYDEN.
Sir, I never disobey my father in anything but eating green gooseberries.
TOM FASHION.
So good a daughter must needs be an admirable wife. I am therefore impatient
till you are mine, and hope you will so far consider the violence of my love,
that you won’t have the cruelty to defer my happiness so long as your
father designs it.
MISS HOYDEN.
Pray, my lord, how long is that?
TOM FASHION.
Madam, a thousand years—a whole week.
MISS HOYDEN.
Why, I thought it was to be tomorrow morning, as soon as I was up. I’m
sure nurse told me so.
TOM FASHION.
And it shall be tomorrow morning, if you’ll consent.
MISS HOYDEN.
If I’ll consent! Why I thought I was to obey you as my husband.
TOM FASHION.
That’s when we are married. Till then, I’m to obey you.
MISS HOYDEN.
Why then, if we are to take it by turns, it’s the same thing. I’ll
obey you now, and when we are married you shall obey me.
TOM FASHION.
With all my heart. But I doubt we must get nurse on our side, or we shall
hardly prevail with the chaplain.
MISS HOYDEN.
No more we shan’t, indeed; for he loves her better than he loves his
pulpit, and would always be a-preaching to her by his good will.
TOM FASHION.
Why then, my dear, if you’ll call her hither we’ll persuade her
presently.
MISS HOYDEN.
O Lud! I’ll tell you a way how to persuade her to anything.
TOM FASHION.
How’s that?
MISS HOYDEN.
Why tell her she’s a handsome comely woman, and give her half a crown.
TOM FASHION.
Nay, if that will do, she shall have half a score of ’em.
MISS HOYDEN.
O gemini! for half that she’d marry you herself.—I’ll run and
call her. [Exit.]
TOM FASHION.
So! matters go on swimmingly. This is a rare girl, i’faith. I shall have
a fine time on’t with her at London.
Enter LORY. So, Lory, what’s the matter?
LORY.
Here, sir—an intercepted packet from the enemy; your brother’s
postilion brought it. I knew the livery, pretended to be a servant of Sir
Tunbelly’s, and so got possession of the letter.
TOM FASHION.
[Looks at the letter.] Ouns! he tells Sir Tunbelly here that he will be
with him this evening, with a large party to supper.—Egad, I must marry
the girl directly.
LORY.
Oh, zounds, sir, directly to be sure. Here she comes. [Exit.]
TOM FASHION.
And the old Jezebel with her.
Re-enter MISS HOYDEN and NURSE. How do you do, good Mrs. Nurse? I desired your young lady would give me leave to see you, that I might thank you for your extraordinary care and kind conduct in her education: pray accept this small acknowledgment for it at present, and depend upon my further kindness when I shall be that happy thing, her husband. [Gives her money.]
NURSE.
[Aside.] Gold, by the maakins!—[Aloud.] Your honour’s
goodness is too great. Alas! all I can boast of is, I gave her pure and good
milk, and so your honour would have said, an you had seen how the poor thing
thrived, and how it would look up in my face, and crow and laugh, it would.
MISS HOYDEN.
[To NURSE, taking her angrily aside.] Pray, one word with you.
Pr’ythee, nurse, don’t stand ripping up old stories, to make one
ashamed before one’s love. Do you think such a fine proper gentleman as
he is cares for a fiddlecome tale of a child? If you have a mind to make him
have a good opinion of a woman, don’t tell him what one did then, tell
him what one can do now.—[To Tom FASHION.] I hope your honour will
excuse my mis-manners to whisper before you. It was only to give some orders
about the family.
TOM FASHION.
Oh, everything, madam, is to give way to business; besides, good housewifery is
a very commendable quality in a young lady.
MISS HOYDEN.
Pray, sir, are young ladies good housewives at London-town? Do they darn their
own linen?
TOM FASHION.
Oh no, they study how to spend money, not to save.
MISS HOYDEN.
Ecod, I don’t know but that may be better sport, eh, nurse?
TOM FASHION.
Well, you have your choice, when you come there.
MISS HOYDEN.
Shall I? then, by my troth, I’ll get there as fast as I
can.—[To NURSE.] His honour desires you’ll be so kind as to
let us be married tomorrow.
NURSE.
Tomorrow, my dear madam?
TOM FASHION.
Ay, faith, nurse, you may well be surprised at miss’s wanting to put it
off so long. Tomorrow! no, no; ’tis now, this very hour, I would have the
ceremony performed.
MISS HOYDEN.
Ecod, with all my heart.
NURSE.
O mercy! worse and worse!
TOM FASHION.
Yes, sweet nurse, now and privately; for all things being signed and sealed,
why should Sir Tunbelly make us stay a week for a wedding-dinner?
NURSE.
But if you should be married now, what will you do when Sir Tunbelly calls for
you to be married?
MISS HOYDEN.
Why then we will be married again.
NURSE.
What twice, my child?
MISS HOYDEN.
Ecod, I don’t care how often I’m married, not I.
NURSE.
Well, I’m such a tender-hearted fool, I find I can refuse you nothing. So
you shall e’en follow your own inventions.
MISS HOYDEN.
Shall I? O Lord, I could leap over the moon!
TOM FASHION.
Dear nurse, this goodness of yours shall be still more rewarded. But now you
must employ your power with the chaplain, that he may do this friendly office
too, and then we shall be all happy. Do you think you can prevail with him?
NURSE.
Prevail with him! or he shall never prevail with me, I can tell him that.
TOM FASHION.
I’m glad to hear it; however, to strengthen your interest with him, you
may let him know I have several fat livings in my gift, and that the first that
falls shall be in your disposal.
NURSE.
Nay, then, I’ll make him marry more folks than one, I’ll promise
him!
MISS HOYDEN.
Faith, do, nurse, make him marry you too; I’m sure he’ll do’t
for a fat living.
TOM FASHION.
Well, nurse, while you go and settle matters with him, your lady and I will go
and take a walk in the garden.—[Exit NURSE.] Come, madam, dare you
venture yourself alone with me? [Takes MISS HOYDEN by the hand.] Miss
Hoyd. Oh dear, yes, sir; I don’t think you’ll do anythink to
me, I need be afraid on. [Exeunt.]
Enter AMANDA followed by her MAID.
Maid. If you please, madam, only to say whether you’ll have me buy them or not?
AMANDA.
Yes—no—Go, teaser; I care not what you do. Pr’ythee, leave
me. [Exit MAID.]
Enter BERINTHIA.
BERINTHIA.
What, in the name of Jove, is the matter with you?
AMANDA.
The matter, Berinthia! I’m almost mad; I’m plagued to death.
BERINTHIA.
Who is it that plagues you?
AMANDA.
Who do you think should plague a wife but her husband?
BERINTHIA.
O, ho! is it come to that?—We shall have you wish yourself a widow,
by-and-by.
AMANDA.
Would I were anything but what I am! A base, ungrateful man, to use me thus!
BERINTHIA.
What, has he given you fresh reason to suspect his wandering?
AMANDA.
Every hour gives me reason.
BERINTHIA.
And yet, Amanda, you perhaps at this moment cause in another’s breast the
same tormenting doubts and jealousies which you feel so sensibly yourself.
AMANDA.
Heaven knows I would not.
BERINTHIA.
Why, you can’t tell but there may be some one as tenderly attached to
Townly, whom you boast of as your conquest, as you can be to your husband?
AMANDA.
I’m sure, I never encouraged his pretensions.
BERINTHIA.
Psha! psha! no sensible man ever perseveres to love without encouragement. Why
have you not treated him as you have Lord Foppington?
AMANDA.
Because he presumed not so far. But let us drop the subject. Men, not women,
are riddles. Mr. Loveless now follows some flirt for variety, whom I’m
sure he does not like so well as he does me.
BERINTHIA.
That’s more than you know, madam.
AMANDA.
Why, do you know the ugly thing?
BERINTHIA.
I think I can guess at the person; but she’s no such ugly thing neither.
AMANDA.
Is she very handsome?
BERINTHIA.
Truly I think so.
AMANDA.
Whate’er she be, I’m sure he does not like her well enough to
bestow anything more than a little outward gallantry upon her.
BERINTHIA.
[Aside.] Outward gallantry! I can’t bear
this.—[Aloud.] Come, come, don’t you be too secure, Amanda:
while you suffer Townly to imagine that you do not detest him for his designs
on you, you have no right to complain that your husband is engaged elsewhere.
But here comes the person we were speaking of.
Enter COLONEL TOWNLY.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Ladies, as I come uninvited, I beg, if I intrude, you will use the same
freedom in turning me out again.
AMANDA.
I believe it is near the time Loveless said he would be at home. He talked of
accepting Lord Foppington’s invitation to sup at Sir Tunbelly
Clumsy’s.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
His lordship has done me the honour to invite me also. If you’ll let me
escort you, I’ll let you into a mystery as we go, in which you must play
a part when we arrive.
AMANDA.
But we have two hours yet to spare; the carriages are not ordered till eight,
and it is not a five minutes’ drive. So, cousin, let us keep the colonel
to play at piquet with us, till Mr. Loveless comes home.
BERINTHIA.
As you please, madam; but you know I have a letter to write.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Madam, you know you may command me, though I am a very wretched gamester.
AMANDA.
Oh, you play well enough to lose your money, and that’s all the ladies
require; and so, without any more ceremony, let us go into the next room, and
call for cards and candles. [Exeunt.]
Enter LOVELESS.
LOVELESS.
So, thus far all’s well: I have got into her dressing-room, and it being
dusk, I think nobody has perceived me steal into the house. I heard Berinthia
tell my wife she had some particular letters to write this evening, before she
went to Sir Tunbelly’s, and here are the implements of
correspondence.—How shall I muster up assurance to show myself, when she
comes? I think she has given me encouragement; and, to do my impudence justice,
I have made the most of it.—I hear a door open, and some one coming. If
it should be my wife, what the devil should I say? I believe she mistrusts me,
and, by my life, I don’t deserve her tenderness. However, I am determined
to reform, though not yet. Ha! Berinthia!—So, I’ll step in here,
till I see what sort of humour she is in. [Goes into the closet.]
Enter BERINTHIA.
BERINTHIA.
Was ever so provoking a situation! To think I should sit and hear him
compliment Amanda to my face! I have lost all patience with them both! I would
not for something have Loveless know what temper of mind they have piqued me
into; yet I can’t bear to leave them together. No, I’ll put my
papers away, and return, to disappoint them.—[Goes to the
closet.]—O Lord! a ghost! a ghost! a ghost!
Re-enter LOVELESS.
LOVELESS.
Peace, my angel; it’s no ghost, but one worth a hundred spirits.
BERINTHIA.
How, sir, have you had the insolence to presume to—run in again;
here’s somebody coming. [LOVELESS goes into the closet.]
Enter MAID.
MAID.
O Lord, ma’am, what’s the matter?
BERINTHIA.
O Heavens! I’m almost frightened out of my wits! I thought verily I had
seen a ghost, and ’twas nothing but a black hood pinned against the wall.
You may go again; I am the fearfullest fool! [Exit MAID.]
Re-enter LOVELESS.
LOVELESS.
Is the coast clear?
BERINTHIA.
The coast clear! Upon my word, I wonder at your assurance.
LOVELESS.
Why, then, you wonder before I have given you a proof of it. But where’s
my wife?
BERINTHIA.
At cards.
LOVELESS.
With whom?
BERINTHIA.
With Townly.
LOVELESS.
Then we are safe enough.
BERINTHIA.
You are so! Some husbands would be of another mind, were he at cards with their
wives.
LOVELESS.
And they’d be in the right on’t, too; but I dare trust mine.
BERINTHIA.
Indeed! and she, I doubt not, has the same confidence in you. Yet, do you think
she’d be content to come and find you here?
LOVELESS.
Egad, as you say, that’s true!—Then for fear she should come,
hadn’t we better go into the next room, out of her way?
BERINTHIA.
What, in the dark?
LOVELESS.
Ay, or with a light, which you please.
BERINTHIA.
You are certainly very impudent.
LOVELESS.
Nay, then—let me conduct you, my angel!
BERINTHIA.
Hold, hold! you are mistaken in your angel, I assure you.
LOVELESS.
I hope not; for by this hand I swear—
BERINTHIA.
Come, come, let go my hand, or I shall hate you!—I’ll cry out, as I
live!
LOVELESS.
Impossible! you cannot be so cruel.
BERINTHIA.
Ha! here’s some one coming. Begone instantly.
LOVELESS.
Will you promise to return, if I remain here?
BERINTHIA.
Never trust myself in a room again with you while I live.
LOVELESS.
But I have something particular to communicate to you.
BERINTHIA.
Well, well, before we go to Sir Tunbelly’s, I’ll walk upon the
lawn. If you are fond of a moonlight evening, you’ll find me there.
LOVELESS.
I’faith, they’re coming here now! I take you at your word. [Exit
into the closet.]
BERINTHIA.
’Tis Amanda, as I live! I hope she has not heard his voice; though I mean
she should have her share of jealousy in her turn.
Enter AMANDA.
AMANDA.
Berinthia, why did you leave me?
BERINTHIA.
I thought I only spoiled your party.
AMANDA.
Since you have been gone, Townly has attempted to renew his importunities. I
must break with him, for I cannot venture to acquaint Mr. Loveless with his
conduct.
BERINTHIA.
Oh, no! Mr. Loveless mustn’t know of it by any means.
AMANDA.
Oh, not for the world—I wish, Berinthia, you would undertake to speak to
Townly on the subject.
BERINTHIA.
Upon my word, it would be a very pleasant subject for me to talk upon! But,
come, let us go back; and you may depend on’t I’ll not leave you
together again, if I can help it. [Exeunt.]
Re-enter LOVELESS.
LOVELESS.
So—so! a pretty piece of business I have overheard! Townly makes love to
my wife, and I am not to know it for all the world. I must inquire into
this—and, by Heaven, if I find that Amanda has, in the smallest
degree—yet what have I been at here!—Oh, ’sdeath!
that’s no rule.
That wife alone unsullied credit wins,
Whose virtues can atone her husband’s sins,
Thus, while the man has other nymphs in view,
It suits the woman to be doubly true.
[Exit.]
Enter LOVELESS.
LOVELESS.
Now, does she mean to make a fool of me, or not! I shan’t wait much
longer, for my wife will soon be inquiring for me to set out on our supping
party. Suspense is at all times the devil, but of all modes of suspense, the
watching for a loitering mistress is the worst.—But let me accuse her no
longer; she approaches with one smile to o’erpay the anxieties of a year.
Enter BERINTHIA. O Berinthia, what a world of kindness are you in my debt! had you stayed five minutes longer—
BERINTHIA.
You would have gone, I suppose?
LOVELESS.
Egad, she’s right enough. [Aside.]
BERINTHIA.
And I assure you ’twas ten to one that I came at all. In short, I begin
to think you are too dangerous a being to trifle with; and as I shall probably
only make a fool of you at last, I believe we had better let matters rest as
they are.
LOVELESS.
You cannot mean it, sure?
BERINTHIA.
What more would you have me give to a married man?
LOVELESS.
How doubly cruel to remind me of my misfortunes!
BERINTHIA.
A misfortune to be married to so charming a woman as Amanda?
LOVELESS.
I grant her all her merit, but—’sdeath! now see what you have done
by talking of her—she’s here, by all that’s unlucky, and
Townly with her.—I’ll observe them.
BERINTHIA.
O Gad, we had better get out of the way; for I should feel as awkward to meet
her as you.
LOVELESS.
Ay, if I mistake not, I see Townly coming this way also. I must see a little
into this matter. [Steps aside.]
BERINTHIA.
Oh, if that’s your intention, I am no woman if I suffer myself to be
outdone in curiosity. [Goes on the other side.]
Enter AMANDA.
AMANDA.
Mr. Loveless come home, and walking on the lawn! I will not suffer him to walk
so late, though perhaps it is to show his neglect of me.—Mr. Loveless, I
must speak with you.—Ha! Townly again!—How I am persecuted!
Enter COLONEL TOWNLY.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Madam, you seem disturbed.
AMANDA.
Sir, I have reason.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Whatever be the cause, I would to Heaven it were in my power to bear the pain,
or to remove the malady.
AMANDA.
Your interference can only add to my distress.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Ah, madam, if it be the sting of unrequited love you suffer from, seek for your
remedy in revenge: weigh well the strength and beauty of your charms, and rouse
up that spirit a woman ought to bear. Disdain the false embraces of a husband.
See at your feet a real lover; his zeal may give him title to your pity,
although his merit cannot claim your love.
LOVELESS.
So, so, very fine, i’faith! [Aside.]
AMANDA.
Why do you presume to talk to me thus? Is this your friendship to Mr. Loveless?
I perceive you will compel me at last to acquaint him with your treachery.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
He could not upbraid me if you were.—He deserves it from me; for he has
not been more false to you than faithless to me.
AMANDA.
To you?
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Yes, madam; the lady for whom he now deserts those charms which he was never
worthy of, was mine by right; and, I imagine too, by inclination. Yes, madam,
Berinthia, who now—
AMANDA.
Berinthia! Impossible!
COLONEL TOWNLY.
’Tis true, or may I never merit your attention. She is the deceitful
sorceress who now holds your husband’s heart in bondage.
AMANDA.
I will not believe it.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
By the faith of a true lover, I speak from conviction. This very day I saw them
together, and overheard—
AMANDA.
Peace, sir! I will not even listen to such slander—this is a poor device
to work on my resentment, to listen to your insidious addresses. No, sir;
though Mr. Loveless may be capable of error, I am convinced I cannot be
deceived so grossly in him as to believe what you now report; and for
Berinthia, you should have fixed on some more probable person for my rival than
her who is my relation and my friend: for while I am myself free from guilt, I
will never believe that love can beget injury, or confidence create
ingratitude.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
If I do not prove to you—
AMANDA.
You never shall have an opportunity. From the artful manner in which you first
showed yourself to me, I might have been led, as far as virtue permitted, to
have thought you less criminal than unhappy; but this last unmanly artifice
merits at once my resentment and contempt. [Exit.]
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Sure there’s divinity about her; and she has dispensed some portion of
honour’s light to me: yet can I bear to lose Berinthia without revenge or
compensation? Perhaps she is not so culpable as I thought her. I was mistaken
when I began to think lightly of Amanda’s virtue, and may be in my
censure of my Berinthia. Surely I love her still, for I feel I should be happy
to find myself in the wrong. [Exit.]
Re-enter LOVELESS and BERINTHIA.
BERINTHIA.
Your servant, Mr. Loveless.
LOVELESS.
Your servant, madam.
BERINTHIA.
Pray what do you think of this?
LOVELESS.
Truly, I don’t know what to say.
BERINTHIA.
Don’t you think we steal forth two contemptible creatures?
LOVELESS.
Why, tolerably so, I must confess.
BERINTHIA.
And do you conceive it possible for you ever to give Amanda the least
uneasiness again?
LOVELESS.
No, I think we never should indeed.
BERINTHIA.
We! why, monster, you don’t pretend that I ever entertained a thought?
LOVELESS.
Why then, sincerely and honestly, Berinthia, there is something in my
wife’s conduct which strikes me so forcibly, that if it were not for
shame, and the fear of hurting you in her opinion, I swear I would follow her,
confess my error, and trust to her generosity for forgiveness.
BERINTHIA.
Nay, pr’ythee, don’t let your respect for me prevent you; for as my
object in trifling with you was nothing more than to pique Townly, and as I
perceive he has been actuated by a similar motive, you may depend on’t I
shall make no mystery of the matter to him.
LOVELESS.
By no means inform him: for though I may choose to pass by his conduct without
resentment, how will he presume to look me in the face again?
BERINTHIA.
How will you presume to look him in the face again?
LOVELESS.
He, who has dared to attempt the honour of my wife!
BERINTHIA.
You who have dared to attempt the honour of his mistress! Come, come, be ruled
by me, who affect more levity than I have, and don’t think of anger in
this cause. A readiness to resent injuries is a virtue only in those who are
slow to injure.
LOVELESS.
Then I will be ruled by you; and when you think proper to undeceive Townly, may
your good qualities make as sincere a convert of him as Amanda’s have of
me.-When truth’s extorted from us, then we own the robe of virtue is a
sacred habit.
Could women but our secret counsel scan—
Could they but reach the deep reserve of man—
To keep our love they’d rate their virtue high,
They live together, and together die.
[Exeunt.]
TOM FASHION.
This quick despatch of the chaplain’s I take so kindly it shall give him
claim to my favour as long as I live, I assure you.
MISS HOYDEN.
And to mine too, I promise you.
NURSE.
I most humbly thank your honours; and may your children swarm about you like
bees about a honeycomb!
MISS HOYDEN.
Ecod, with all my heart—the more the merrier, I say—ha, nurse?
Enter LORY.
LORY.
One word with you, for Heaven’s sake. [Taking TOM FASHION
hastily aside.]
TOM FASHION.
What the devil’s the matter?
LORY.
Sir, your fortune’s ruined if you are not married. Yonder’s your
brother arrived, with two coaches and six horses, twenty footmen, and a coat
worth fourscore pounds—so judge what will become of your lady’s
heart.
TOM FASHION.
Is he in the house yet?
LORY.
No, they are capitulating with him at the gate. Sir Tunbelly luckily takes him
for an impostor; and I have told him that we have heard of this plot before.
TOM FASHION.
That’s right.—[Turning to MISS HOYDEN.] My dear,
here’s a troublesome business my man tells me of, but don’t be
frightened; we shall be too hard for the rogue. Here’s an impudent fellow
at the gate (not knowing I was come hither incognito) has taken my name upon
him, in hopes to run away with you.
MISS HOYDEN.
Oh, the brazen-faced varlet! it’s well we are married, or maybe we might
never have been so.
TOM FASHION.
[Aside.] Egad, like enough.—[Aloud.] Pr’ythee, nurse,
run to Sir Tunbelly, and stop him from going to the gate before I speak to him.
NURSE.
An’t please your honour, my lady and I had better, lock ourselves up till
the danger be over.
TOM FASHION.
Do so, if you please.
MISS HOYDEN.
Not so fast; I won’t be locked up any more, now I’m married.
TOM FASHION.
Yes, pray, my dear, do, till we have seized this rascal.
MISS HOYDEN.
Nay, if you’ll pray me, I’ll do anything. [Exit with NURSE.]
TOM FASHION.
Hark you, sirrah, things are better than you imagine. The wedding’s over.
LORY.
The devil it is, sir! [Capers about.]
TOM FASHION.
Not a word—all’s safe—but Sir Tunbelly don’t know it,
nor must not yet. So I am resolved to brazen the brunt of the business out, and
have the pleasure of turning the impostor upon his lordship, which I believe
may easily be done.
Enter SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY. Did you ever hear, sir, of so impudent an undertaking?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Never, by the mass; but we’ll tickle him, I’ll warrant you.
TOM FASHION.
They tell me, sir, he has a great many people with him, disguised like
servants.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ay, ay, rogues enow, but we have mastered them. We only fired a few shot over
their heads, and the regiment scoured in an instant.—Here, Tummus, bring
in your prisoner.
TOM FASHION.
If you please, Sir Tunbelly, it will be best for me not to confront this fellow
yet, till you have heard how far his impudence will carry him.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Egad, your lordship is an ingenious person. Your lordship, then, will please to
step aside.
LORY.
[Aside.] ’Fore heavens, I applaud my master’s modesty!
[Exit with TOM FASHION.]
Enter SERVANTS, with LORD FOPPINGTON
disarmed.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Come, bring him along, bring him along.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
What the plague do you mean, gentlemen? is it fair time, that you are all drunk
before supper?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Drunk, sirrah! here’s an impudent rogue for you now. Drunk or sober,
bully, I’m a justice o’ the peace, and know how to deal with
strollers.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Strollers!
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ay, strollers. Come, give an account of yourself. What’s your name? where
do you live? do you pay scot and lot? Come, are you a freeholder or a
copyholder?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
And why dost thou ask me so many impertinent questions?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Because I’ll make you answer ’em, before I have done with you, you
rascal, you!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Before Gad, all the answer I can make to them is, that you are a very
extraordinary old fellow, stap my vitals.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Nay, if thou art joking deputy-lieutenants, we know how to deal with
you.—Here, draw a warrant for him immediately.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
A warrant! What the devil is’t thou wouldst be at, old gentleman?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
I would be at you, sirrah, (if my hands were not tied as a magistrate,) and
with these two double fists beat your teeth down your throat, you dog, you!
[Driving him.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
And why wouldst thou spoil my face at that rate?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
For your design to rob me of my daughter, villain.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Rob thee of thy daughter! Now do I begin to believe I am in bed and asleep, and
that all this is but a dream. Pr’ythee, old father, wilt thou give me
leave to ask thee one question?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
I can’t tell whether I will or not, till I know what it is.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, then, it is, whether thou didst not write to my Lord Foppington, to come
down and marry thy daughter?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Yes, marry, did I, and my Lord Foppington is come down, and shall marry my
daughter before she’s a day older.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Now give me thy hand, old dad; I thought we should understand one another at
last.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
The fellow’s mad!—Here, bind him hand and foot. [They bind
him.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Nay, pr’ythee, knight, leave fooling; thy jest begins to grow dull.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Bind him, I say—he’s mad: bread and water, a dark room, and a whip,
may bring him to his senses again.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Pr’ythee, Sir Tunbelly, why should you take such an aversion to the
freedom of my address as to suffer the rascals thus to skewer down my arms
like a rabbit?—[Aside.] Egad, if I don’t awake, by all that
I can see, this is like to prove one of the most impertinent dreams that ever
I dreamt in my life.
Re-enter MISS HOYDEN and NURSE.
MISS HOYDEN.
[Going up to LORD FOPPINGTON.] Is this he that would have
run—Fough, how he stinks of sweets!—Pray, father, let him be
dragged through the horse-pond.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
This must be my wife, by her natural inclination to her husband.
[Aside.]
MISS HOYDEN.
Pray, father, what do you intend to do with him—hang him?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
That, at least, child.
NURSE.
Ay, and it’s e’en too good for him too.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Madame la gouvernante, I presume: hitherto this appears to me to be one of the
most extraordinary families that ever man of quality matched into.
[Aside.]
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
What’s become of my lord, daughter?
MISS HOYDEN.
He’s just coming, sir.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
My lord! what does he mean by that, now? [Aside.]
Re-enter TOM FASHION and LORY. Stap my vitals, Tam, now the dream’s out! [Runs.]
TOM FASHION.
Is this the fellow, sir, that designed to trick me of your daughter?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
This is he, my lord. How do you like him? Is not he a pretty fellow to get a
fortune?
TOM FASHION.
I find by his dress he thought your daughter might be taken with a beau.
MISS HOYDEN.
Oh, gemini! is this a beau? let me see him again. [Surveys him.] Ha! I
find a beau is no such ugly thing, neither.
TOM FASHION.
[Aside.] Egad, she’ll be in love with him
presently—I’ll e’en have him sent away to
jail.—[To LORD FOPPINGTON.] Sir, though your undertaking shows you
a person of no extraordinary modesty, I suppose you ha’n’t
confidence enough to expect much favour from me?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Strike me dumb, Tam, thou art a very impudent fellow.
NURSE.
Look, if the varlet has not the effrontery to call his lordship plain Thomas!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
My Lord Foppington, shall I beg one word with your lordship?
NURSE.
Ho, ho! it’s my lord with him now! See how afflictions will humble folks.
MISS HOYDEN.
Pray, my lord—[To FASHION]—don’t let him whisper too
close, lest he bite your ear off.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I am not altogether so hungry as your ladyship is pleased to
imagine.—[Aside to TOM FASHION.] Look you, Tam, I am sensible I
have not been so kind to you as I ought, but I hope you’ll forgive
what’s past, and accept of the five thousand pounds I offer—thou
mayst live in extreme splendour with it, stap my vitals!
TOM FASHION.
It’s a much easier matter to prevent a disease than to cure it. A quarter
of that sum would have secured your mistress, twice as much cannot redeem her.
[Aside to LORD FOPPINGTON.]
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Well, what says he?
TOM FASHION.
Only the rascal offered me a bribe to let him go.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ay, he shall go, with a plague to him!—lead on, constable.
Enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Sir, here is Muster Loveless, and Muster Colonel Townly, and some ladies to
wait on you. [To TOM FASHION.]
LORY.
[Aside to TOM FASHION.] So, sir, what will you do now?
TOM FASHION.
[Aside to LORY.] Be quiet; they are in the plot.—[Aloud.]
Only a few friends, Sir Tunbelly, whom I wish to introduce to you.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Thou art the most impudent fellow, Tam, that ever nature yet brought into the
world.—Sir Tunbelly, strike me speechless, but these are my friends and
acquaintance, and my guests, and they will soon inform thee whether I am the
true Lord Foppington or not.
Enter LOVELESS, COLONEL TOWNLY, AMANDA, and
BERINTHIA.—LORD FOPPINGTON accosts them as they pass, but none answer
him. Fash.
So, gentlemen, this is friendly; I rejoice to see you.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
My lord, we are fortunate to be the witnesses of your lordship’s
happiness.
LOVELESS.
But your lordship will do us the honour to introduce us to Sir Tunbelly Clumsy?
AMANDA.
And us to your lady.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Gad take me, but they are all in a story! [Aside.]
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Gentlemen, you do me much honour; my Lord Foppington’s friends will ever
be welcome to me and mine.
TOM FASHION.
My love, let me introduce you to these ladies.
MISS HOYDEN.
By goles, they look so fine and so stiff, I am almost ashamed to come nigh
’em.
AMANDA.
A most engaging lady indeed!
MISS HOYDEN.
Thank ye, ma’am.
BERINTHIA.
And I doubt not will soon distinguish herself in the beau monde.
MISS HOYDEN.
Where is that?
TOM FASHION.
You’ll soon learn, my dear.
LOVELESS.
But Lord Foppington—
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Sir!
LOVELESS.
Sir! I was not addressing myself to you, sir!—Pray who is this gentleman?
He seems rather in a singular predicament—
COLONEL TOWNLY.
For so well-dressed a person, a little oddly circumstanced, indeed.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ha! ha! ha!—So, these are your friends and your guests, ha, my
adventurer?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
I am struck dumb with their impudence, and cannot positively say whether I
shall ever speak again or not.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Why, sir, this modest gentleman wanted to pass himself upon me as Lord
Foppington, and carry off my daughter.
LOVELESS.
A likely plot to succeed, truly, ha! ha!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
As Gad shall judge me, Loveless, I did not expect this from thee. Come,
pr’ythee confess the joke; tell Sir Tunbelly that I am the real Lord
Foppington, who yesterday made love to thy wife; was honoured by her with a
slap on the face, and afterwards pinked through the body by thee.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
A likely story, truly, that a peer would behave thus.
LOVELESS.
A pretty fellow, indeed, that would scandalize the character he wants to
assume; but what will you do with him, Sir Tunbelly?
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Commit him, certainly, unless the bride and bridegroom choose to pardon him.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Bride and bridegroom! For Gad’s sake, Sir Tunbelly, ’tis tarture
to me to hear you call ’em so.
MISS HOYDEN.
Why, you ugly thing, what would you have him call us—dog and cat?
LORD FOPPINGTON.
By no means, miss; for that sounds ten times more like man and wife than
t’other.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
A precious rogue this to come a-wooing!
Re-enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
There are some gentlefolks below to wait upon Lord Foppington. [Exit.]
COLONEL TOWNLY.
’Sdeath, Tom, what will you do now? [Aside to TOM FASHION.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Now, Sir Tunbelly, here are witnesses who I believe are not corrupted.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Peace, fellow!—Would your lordship choose to have your guests shown here,
or shall they wait till we come to ’em?
TOM FASHION.
I believe, Sir Tunbelly, we had better not have these visitors here
yet.—[Aside.] Egad, all must out.
LOVELESS.
Confess, confess; we’ll stand by you. [Aside to TOM FASHION.]
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Nay, Sir Tunbelly, I insist on your calling evidence on both sides—and
if I do not prove that fellow an impostor—
TOM FASHION.
Brother, I will save you the trouble, by now confessing that I am not what I
have passed myself for.—Sir Tunbelly, I am a gentleman, and I flatter
myself a man of character; but’tis with great pride I assure you I am not
Lord Foppington.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ouns!—what’s this?—an impostor?—a cheat?—fire and
faggots, sir, if you are not Lord Foppington, who the devil are you?
TOM FASHION.
Sir, the best of my condition is, I am your son-in-law; and the worst of it is,
I am brother to that noble peer.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Impudent to the last, Gad dem me!
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
My son-in-law! not yet, I hope.
TOM FASHION.
Pardon me, sir; thanks to the goodness of your chaplain, and the kind offices
of this gentlewoman.
LORY.
’Tis true indeed, sir; I gave your daughter away, and Mrs. Nurse, here,
was clerk.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Knock that rascal down!—But speak, Jezebel, how’s this?
NURSE.
Alas! your honour, forgive me; I have been overreached in this business as well
as you. Your worship knows, if the wedding-dinner had been ready, you would
have given her away with your own hands.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
But how durst you do this without acquainting me?
NURSE.
Alas! if your worship had seen how the poor thing begged and prayed, and clung
and twined about me like ivy round an old wall, you would say, I who had nursed
it, and reared it, must have had a heart like stone to refuse it.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ouns! I shall go mad! Unloose my lord there, you scoundrels!
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Why, when these gentlemen are at leisure, I should be glad to congratulate you
on your son-in-law, with a little more freedom of address.
MISS HOYDEN.
Egad, though, I don’t see which is to be my husband after all.
LOVELESS.
Come, come, Sir Tunbelly, a man of your understanding must perceive that an
affair of this kind is not to be mended by anger and reproaches.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
Take my word for it, Sir Tunbelly, you are only tricked into a son-in-law you
may be proud of: my friend Tom Fashion is as honest a fellow as ever breathed.
LOVELESS.
That he is, depend on’t; and will hunt or drink with you most
affectionately: be generous, old boy, and forgive them—
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Never! the hussy!—when I had set my heart on getting her a title.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Now, Sir Tunbelly, that I am untrussed—give me leave to thank thee for
the very extraordinary reception I have met with in thy damned, execrable
mansion; and at the same time to assure you, that of all the bumpkins and
blockheads I have had the misfortune to meek with, thou art the most obstinate
and egregious, strike me ugly!
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
What’s this! I believe you are both rogues alike.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
No, Sir Tunbelly, thou wilt find to thy unspeakable mortification, that I am
the real Lord Foppington, who was to have disgraced myself by an alliance with
a clod; and that thou hast matched thy girl to a beggarly younger brother of
mine, whose title deeds might be contained in thy tobacco-box.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Puppy! puppy!—I might prevent their being beggars, if I chose it; for I
could give ’em as good a rent-roll as your lordship.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Ay, old fellow, but you will not do that—for that would be acting like a
Christian, and thou art a barbarian, stap my vitals.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Udzookers! now six such words more, and I’ll forgive them directly.
LOVELESS.
’Slife, Sir Tunbelly, you should do it, and bless yourself—Ladies,
what say you?
AMANDA.
Good Sir Tunbelly, you must consent.
BERINTHIA.
Come, you have been young yourself, Sir Tunbelly.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Well then, if I must, I must; but turn—turn that sneering lord out,
however, and let me be revenged on somebody. But first look whether I am a
barbarian or not; there, children, I join your hands; and when I’m in a
better humour, I’ll give you my blessing.
LOVELESS.
Nobly done, Sir Tunbelly! and we shall see you dance at a grandson’s
christening yet.
MISS HOYDEN.
By goles, though, I don’t understand this! What! an’t I to be a
lady after all? only plain Mrs.—What’s my husband’s name,
nurse?
NURSE.
Squire Fashion.
MISS HOYDEN.
Squire, is he?—Well, that’s better than nothing.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
[Aside.] Now I will put on a philosophic air, and show these people,
that it is not possible to put a man of my quality out of
countenance.—[Aloud.] Dear Tam, since things are fallen out,
pr’ythee give me leave to wish thee joy; I do it de bon coeur,
strike me dumb! You have married into a family of great politeness and uncommon
elegance of manners, and your bride appears to be a lady beautiful in person,
modest in her deportment, refined in her sentiments, and of nice morality,
split my windpipe!
MISS HOYDEN.
By goles, husband, break his bones if he calls me names!
TOM FASHION.
Your lordship may keep up your spirits with your grimace, if you please; I
shall support mine, by Sir Tunbelly’s favour, with this lady and three
thousand pounds a year.
LORD FOPPINGTON.
Well, adieu, Tam!—Ladies, I kiss your, hands!—Sir Tunbelly, I shall
now quit this thy den; but while I retain the use of my arms, I shall ever
remember thou art a demned horrid savage; Ged demn me! [Exit.]
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
By the mass, ’tis well he’s gone—for I should ha’ been
provoked, by-and-by, to ha’ dun un a mischief. Well, if this is a lord, I
think Hoyden has luck on her side, in troth.
COLONEL TOWNLY.
She has, indeed, Sir Tunbelly.—But I hear the fiddles; his lordship, I
know, has provided ’em.
LOVELESS.
Oh, a dance and a bottle, Sir Tunbelly, by all means!
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
I had forgot the company below; well—what—we must be merry, then,
ha? and dance and drink, ha? Well, ’fore George, you shan’t say I
do these things by halves. Son-in-law there looks like a hearty rogue, so
we’ll have a night on’t: and which of these ladies will be the old
man’s partner, ha?—Ecod, I don’t know how I came to be in so
good a humour.
BERINTHIA.
Well, Sir Tunbelly, my friend and I both will endeavour to keep you so: you
have done a generous action, and are entitled to our attention. If you should
be at a loss to divert your new guests, we will assist you to relate to them
the plot of your daughter’s marriage, and his lordship’s deserved
mortification; a subject which perhaps may afford no bad evening’s
entertainment.
SIR TUNBELLY CLUMSY.
Ecod, with all my heart; though I am a main bungler at a long story.
BERINTHIA.
Never fear; we will assist you, if the tale is judged worth being repeated; but
of this you may be assured, that while the intention is evidently to please,
British auditors will ever be indulgent to the errors of the performance.
[Exeunt omnes.]
OR, A TRAGEDY REHEARSED A DRAMATIC PIECE IN THREE ACTS TO MRS. GREVILLE
MADAM,
In requesting your permission to address the following pages to you, which,
as they aim themselves to be critical, require every protection and allowance
that approving taste or friendly prejudice can give them, I yet ventured to
mention no other motive than the gratification of private friendship and
esteem. Had I suggested a hope that your implied approbation would give a
sanction to their defects, your particular reserve, and dislike to the
reputation of critical taste, as well as of poetical talent, would have made
you refuse the protection of your name to such a purpose. However, I am not so
ungrateful as now to attempt to combat this disposition in you. I shall not
here presume to argue that the present state of poetry claims and expects every
assistance that taste and example can afford it; nor endeavour to prove that a
fastidious concealment of the most elegant productions of judgment and fancy is
an ill return for the possession of those endowments. Continue to deceive
yourself in the idea that you are known only to be eminently admired and
regarded for the valuable qualities that attach private friendships, and the
graceful talents that adorn conversation. Enough of what you have written has
stolen into full public notice to answer my purpose; and you will, perhaps, be
the only person, conversant in elegant literature, who shall read this address
and not perceive that by publishing your particular approbation of the
following drama, I have a more interested object than to boast the true respect
and regard with which
I have the honour to be,
Madam,
your very sincere
and obedient humble servant,
R. B. SHERIDAN.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY. Mr. Parsons.
PUFF. Mr. King.
DANGLE. Mr. Dodd
SNEER. Mr. Palmer.
SIGNOR PASTICCIO RITORNELLO. Mr. Delpini.
INTERPRETER. Mr. Baddeley.
UNDER PROMPTER. Mr. Phillimore.
MR. HOPKINS. Mr. Hopkins.
MRS. DANGLE. Mrs. Hopkins.
SIGNORE PASTICCIO RITORNELLO. Miss Field and the Miss Abrams.
Scenemen, Musicians, and Servants.
CHARACTERS OF THE TRAGEDY
LORD BURLEIGH. Mr. Moody.
GOVERNOR OF TILBURY FORT. Mr. Wrighten.
EARL OF LEICESTER. Mr. Farren.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH. Mr. Burton.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON. Mr. Waldron.
MASTER OF THE HORSE. Mr. Kenny.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS. Mr. Bannister, jun.
BEEFEATER. Mr. Wright.
JUSTICE. Mr. Packer.
SON. Mr. Lamash.
CONSTABLE. Mr. Fawcett.
THAMES. Mr. Gawdry.
TILBURINA. Miss Pope.
CONFIDANT. Mrs. Bradshaw.
JUSTICE’s LADY. Mrs. Johnston.
FIRST NIECE. Miss Collett.
SECOND NIECE. Miss Kirby.
Knights, Guards, Constables, Sentinels, Servants, Chorus, Rivers, Attendants, &c., &c.
The sister Muses, whom these realms obey,
Who o’er the drama hold divided sway,
Sometimes by evil counsellors, ’tis said,
Like earth-born potentates have been misled.
In those gay days of wickedness and wit,
When Villiers criticised what Dryden writ,
The tragic queen, to please a tasteless crowd,
Had learn’d to bellow, rant, and roar so loud,
That frighten’d Nature, her best friend before,
The blustering beldam’s company foreswore;
Her comic sister, who had wit ’tis true,
With all her merits, had her failings too:
And would sometimes in mirthful moments use
A style too flippant for a well-bred muse;
Then female modesty abash’d began
To seek the friendly refuge of the fan,
Awhile behind that slight intrenchment stood,
Till driven from thence, she left the stage for good.
In our more pious, and far chaster times,
These sure no longer are the Muse’s crimes!
But some complain that, former faults to shun,
The reformation to extremes has run.
The frantic hero’s wild delirium past,
Now insipidity succeeds bombast:
So slow Melpomene’s cold numbers creep,
Here dulness seems her drowsy court to keep,
And we are scarce awake, whilst you are fast asleep.
Thalia, once so ill-behaved and rude,
Reform’d, is now become an arrant prude;
Retailing nightly to the yawning pit
The purest morals, undefiled by wit!
Our author offers, in these motley scenes,
A slight remonstrance to the drama’s queens:
Nor let the goddesses be over nice;
Free-spoken subjects give the best advice.
Although not quite a novice in his trade,
His cause tonight requires no common aid.
To this, a friendly, just, and powerful court,
I come ambassador to beg support.
Can he undaunted brave the critic’s rage?
In civil broils with brother bards engage?
Hold forth their errors to the public eye,
Nay more, e’en newspapers themselves defy?
Say, must his single arm encounter all?
By number vanquish’d, e’en the brave may fall;
And though no leader should success distrust,
Whose troops are willing, and whose cause is just;
To bid such hosts of angry foes defiance,
His chief dependence must be, your alliance.
DANGLE.
[Reading.] Brutus to Lord North.—Letter the second on the State of
the Army—Psha! To the first L dash D of the A dash Y.—Genuine
extract of a Letter from St. Kitt’s.—Coxheath
Intelligence.—It is now confidently asserted that Sir Charles
Hardy—Psha! nothing but about the fleet and the nation!—and I
hate all politics but theatrical politics.—Where’s the Morning
Chronicle?
MRS. DANGLE.
Yes, that’s your Gazette.
DANGLE.
So, here we have it.—[Reads.] Theatrical intelligence
extraordinary.—We hear there is a new tragedy in rehearsal at Drury Lane
Theatre, called the Spanish Armada, said to be written by Mr. Puff, a gentleman
well-known in the theatrical world. If we may allow ourselves to give credit to
the report of the performers, who, truth to say, are in general but indifferent
judges, this piece abounds with the most striking and received beauties of
modern composition.—So! I am very glad my friend Puff’s tragedy is
in such forwardness.—Mrs. Dangle, my dear, you will be very glad to hear
that Puff’s tragedy—
MRS. DANGLE.
Lord, Mr. Dangle, why will you plague me about such nonsense?—Now the
plays are begun I shall have no peace.—Isn’t it sufficient to make
yourself ridiculous by your passion for the theatre, without continually
teasing me to join you? Why can’t you ride your hobby-horse without
desiring to place me on a pillion behind you, Mr. Dangle?
DANGLE.
Nay, my dear, I was only going to read—
MRS. DANGLE.
No, no; you will never read anything that’s worth listening to. You hate
to hear about your country; there are letters every day with Roman signatures,
demonstrating the certainty of an invasion, and proving that the nation is
utterly undone. But you never will read anything to entertain one.
DANGLE.
What has a woman to do with politics, Mrs. Dangle?
MRS. DANGLE.
And what have you to do with the theatre, Mr. Dangle? Why should you affect the
character of a critic? I have no patience with you!—haven’t you
made yourself the jest of all your acquaintance by your interference in matters
where you have no business? Are you not called a theatrical Quidnunc, and a
mock Maecenas to second-hand authors?
DANGLE.
True; my power with the managers is pretty notorious. But is it no credit to
have applications from all quarters for my interest—from lords to
recommend fiddlers, from ladies to get boxes, from authors to get answers, and
from actors to get engagements?
MRS. DANGLE.
Yes, truly; you have contrived to get a share in all the plague and trouble of
theatrical property, without the profit, or even the credit of the abuse that
attends it.
DANGLE.
I am sure, Mrs. Dangle, you are no loser by it, however; you have all the
advantages of it. Mightn’t you, last winter, have had the reading of the
new pantomime a fortnight previous to its performance? And doesn’t Mr.
Fosbrook let you take places for a play before it is advertised, and set you
down for a box for every new piece through the season? And didn’t my
friend, Mr. Smatter, dedicate his last farce to you at my particular request,
Mrs. Dangle?
MRS. DANGLE.
Yes; but wasn’t the farce damned, Mr. Dangle? And to be sure it is
extremely pleasant to have one’s house made the motley rendezvous of all
the lackeys of literature; the very high ’Change of trading authors and
jobbing critics!—Yes, my drawing-room is an absolute register-office for
candidate actors, and poets without character.—Then to be continually
alarmed with misses and ma’ams piping hysteric changes on Juliets and
Dorindas, Pollys and Ophelias; and the very furniture trembling at the
probationary starts and unprovoked rants of would-be Richards and
Hamlets!—And what is worse than all, now that the manager has monopolized
the Opera House, haven’t we the signors and signoras calling here,
sliding their smooth semibreves, and gargling glib divisions in their
outlandish throats—with foreign emissaries and French spies, for aught I
know, disguised like fiddlers and figure dancers?
DANGLE.
Mercy! Mrs. Dangle!
MRS. DANGLE.
And to employ yourself so idly at such an alarming crisis as this
too—when, if you had the least spirit, you would have been at the head of
one of the Westminster associations—or trailing a volunteer pike in the
Artillery Ground! But you—o’ my conscience, I believe, if the
French were landed tomorrow, your first inquiry would be, whether they had
brought a theatrical troop with them.
DANGLE.
Mrs. Dangle, it does not signify—I say the stage is ‘the mirror of
nature’, and the actors are ‘the Abstract and brief Chronicles of
the Time’: and pray what can a man of sense study better?—Besides,
you will not easily persuade me that there is no credit or importance in being
at the head of a band of critics, who take upon them to decide for the whole
town, whose opinion and patronage all writers solicit, and whose recommendation
no manager dares refuse.
MRS. DANGLE.
Ridiculous!—Both managers and authors of the least merit laugh at your
pretensions.—The public is their critic—without whose fair
approbation they know no play can rest on the stage, and with whose applause
they welcome such attacks as yours, and laugh at the malice of them, where they
can’t at the wit.
DANGLE.
Very well, madam—very well!
Enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Mr. Sneer, sir, to wait on you.
DANGLE.
Oh, show Mr. Sneer up.—[Exit SERVANT.]—Plague on’t,
now we must appear loving and affectionate, or Sneer will hitch us into a
story.
MRS. DANGLE.
With all my heart; you can’t be more ridiculous than you are.
DANGLE.
You are enough to provoke—
Enter SNEER. Ha! my dear Sneer, I am vastly glad to see you.—My dear, here’s Mr. Sneer.
MRS. DANGLE.
Good-morning to you, sir.
DANGLE.
Mrs. Dangle and I have been diverting ourselves with the papers. Pray, Sneer,
won’t you go to Drury Lane Theatre the first night of Puff’s
tragedy?
SNEER.
Yes; but I suppose one shan’t be able to get in, for on the first night
of a new piece they always fill the house with orders to support it. But here,
Dangle, I have brought you two pieces, one of which you must exert yourself to
make the managers accept, I can tell you that; for’tis written by a
person of consequence.
DANGLE.
So! now my plagues are beginning.
SNEER.
Ay, I am glad of it, for now you’ll be happy. Why, my dear Dangle, it is
a pleasure to see how you enjoy your volunteer fatigue, and your solicited
solicitations.
DANGLE.
It’s a great trouble—yet, egad, it’s pleasant too.—Why,
sometimes of a morning I have a dozen people call on me at breakfast-time,
whose faces I never saw before, nor ever desire to see again.
SNEER.
That must be very pleasant indeed!
DANGLE.
And not a week but I receive fifty letters, and not a line in them about any
business of my own.
SNEER.
An amusing correspondence!
DANGLE.
[Reading.] Bursts into tears and exit.—What, is this a
tragedy?
SNEER.
No, that’s a genteel comedy, not a translation—only taken from the
French: it is written in a style which they have lately tried to run down; the
true sentimental, and nothing ridiculous in it from the beginning to the end.
MRS. DANGLE.
Well, if they had kept to that, I should not have been such an enemy to the
stage; there was some edification to be got from those pieces, Mr. Sneer!
SNEER.
I am quite of your opinion, Mrs. Dangle: the theatre, in proper hands, might
certainly be made the school of morality; but now, I am sorry to say it, people
seem to go there principally for their entertainment!
MRS. DANGLE.
It would have been more to the credit of the managers to have kept it in the
other line.
SNEER.
Undoubtedly, madam; and hereafter perhaps to have had it recorded, that in the
midst of a luxurious and dissipated age, they preserved two houses in the
capital, where the conversation was always moral at least, if not entertaining!
DANGLE.
Now, egad, I think the worst alteration is in the nicety of the
audience!—No double-entendre, no smart innuendo admitted; even
Vanbrugh and Congreve obliged to undergo a bungling reformation!
SNEER.
Yes, and our prudery in this respect is just on a par with the artificial
bashfulness of a courtesan, who increases the blush upon her cheek in an exact
proportion to the diminution of her modesty.
DANGLE.
Sneer can’t even give the public a good word! But what have we
here?—This seems a very odd—
SNEER.
Oh, that’s a comedy on a very new plan; replete with wit and mirth, yet
of a most serious moral! You see it is called The Reformed
House-breaker; where, by the mere force of humour, house-breaking is put in
so ridiculous a light, that if the piece has its proper run, I have no doubt
but that bolts and bars will be entirely useless by the end of the season.
DANGLE.
Egad, this is new indeed!
SNEER.
Yes; it is written by a particular friend of mine, who has discovered that the
follies and foibles of society are subjects unworthy the notice of the comic
muse, who should be taught to stoop only to the greater vices and blacker
crimes of humanity—gibbeting capital offences in five acts, and
pillorying petty larcenies in two.—In short, his idea is to dramatize the
penal laws, and make the stage a court of ease to the Old Bailey.
DANGLE.
It is truly moral.
Re-enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Sir Fretful Plagiary, sir.
DANGLE.
Beg him to walk up.—[Exit SERVANT.] Now, Mrs. Dangle, Sir Fretful
Plagiary is an author to your own taste.
MRS. DANGLE.
I confess he is a favourite of mine, because everybody else abuses him.
SNEER.
Very much to the credit of your charity, madam, if not of your judgment.
DANGLE.
But, egad, he allows no merit to any author but himself, that’s the truth
on’t—though he’s my friend.
SNEER.
Never.—He is as envious as an old maid verging on the desperation of six
and thirty; and then the insidious humility with which he seduces you to give a
free opinion on any of his works, can be exceeded only by the petulant
arrogance with which he is sure to reject your observations.
DANGLE.
Very true, egad—though he’s my friend.
SNEER.
Then his affected contempt of all newspaper strictures; though, at the same
time, he is the sorest man alive, and shrinks like scorched parchment from the
fiery ordeal of true criticism: yet he is so covetous of popularity, that he
had rather be abused than not mentioned at all.
DANGLE.
There’s no denying it—though he is my friend.
SNEER.
You have read the tragedy he has just finished, haven’t you?
DANGLE.
Oh, yes; he sent it to me yesterday.
SNEER.
Well, and you think it execrable, don’t you?
DANGLE.
Why, between ourselves, egad, I must own—though he is my
friend—that it is one of the most—He’s
here—[Aside.]—finished and most admirable perform—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
[Without.] Mr. Sneer with him did you say?
Enter SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
DANGLE.
Ah, my dear friend!—Egad, we were just speaking of your
tragedy.—Admirable, Sir Fretful, admirable!
SNEER.
You never did anything beyond it, Sir Fretful—never in your life.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
You make me extremely happy; for without a compliment, my dear Sneer, there
isn’t a man in the world whose judgment I value as I do yours and Mr.
Dangle’s.
MRS. DANGLE.
They are only laughing at you, Sir Fretful; for it was but just now that—
DANGLE.
Mrs. Dangle!—Ah, Sir Fretful, you know Mrs. Dangle.—My friend Sneer
was rallying just now:—he knows how she admires you, and—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
O Lord, I am sure Mr. Sneer has more taste and sincerity than
to—[Aside.] A damned double-faced fellow!
DANGLE.
Yes, yes—Sneer will jest—but a better humoured—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Oh, I know—
DANGLE.
He has a ready turn for ridicule—his wit costs him nothing.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
No, egad—or I should wonder how he came by it. [Aside.]
MRS. DANGLE.
Because his jest is always at the expense of his friend. [Aside.]
DANGLE.
But, Sir Fretful, have you sent your play to the managers yet?—or can I
be of any service to you?
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
No, no, I thank you: I believe the piece had sufficient recommendation with
it.—I thank you though.—I sent it to the manager of Covent Garden
Theatre this morning.
SNEER.
I should have thought now, that it might have been cast (as the actors call it)
better at Drury Lane.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
O Lud! no—never send a play there while I live—hark’ee!
[Whispers SNEER.]
SNEER.
Writes himself!—I know he does.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
I say nothing—I take away from no man’s merit—am hurt at no
man’s good fortune—I say nothing.—But this I will
say—through all my knowledge of life, I have observed—that there is
not a passion so strongly rooted in the human heart as envy.
SNEER.
I believe you have reason for what you say, indeed.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Besides—I can tell you it is not always so safe to leave a play in the
hands of those who write themselves.
SNEER.
What, they may steal from them, hey, my dear Plagiary?
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Steal!—to be sure they may; and, egad, serve your best thoughts as
gypsies do stolen children, disfigure them to make ’em pass for their
own.
SNEER.
But your present work is a sacrifice to Melpomene, and he, you know,
never—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
That’s no security: a dexterous plagiarist may do anything. Why, sir, for
aught I know, he might take out some of the best things in my tragedy, and put
them into his own comedy.
SNEER.
That might be done, I dare be sworn.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
And then, if such a person gives you the least hint or assistance, he is
devilish apt to take the merit of the whole—
DANGLE.
If it succeeds.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ay, but with regard to this piece, I think I can hit that gentleman, for I can
safely swear he never read it.
SNEER.
I’ll tell you how you may hurt him more.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
How?
SNEER.
Swear he wrote it.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Plague on’t now, Sneer, I shall take it ill!—I believe you want to
take away my character as an author.
SNEER.
Then I am sure you ought to be very much obliged to me.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Hey!—sir!—
DANGLE.
Oh, you know, he never means what he says.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Sincerely then—do you like the piece?
SNEER.
Wonderfully!
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
But come, now, there must be something that you think might be mended,
hey?—Mr. Dangle, has nothing struck you?
DANGLE.
Why, faith, it is but an ungracious thing for the most part, to—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
With most authors it is just so, indeed; they are in general strangely
tenacious! But, for my part, I am never so well pleased as when a judicious
critic points out any defect to me; for what is the purpose of showing a work
to a friend, if you don’t mean to profit by his opinion?
SNEER.
Very true.—Why, then, though I seriously admire the piece upon the whole,
yet there is one small objection; which, if you’ll give me leave,
I’ll mention.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Sir, you can’t oblige me more.
SNEER.
I think it wants incident.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Good God! you surprise me!—wants incident!
SNEER.
Yes; I own I think the incidents are too few.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Good God! Believe me, Mr. Sneer, there is no person for whose judgment I have a
more implicit deference. But I protest to you, Mr. Sneer, I am only
apprehensive that the incidents are too crowded.—My dear Dangle, how does
it strike you?
DANGLE.
Really I can’t agree with my friend Sneer. I think the plot quite
sufficient; and the four first acts by many degrees the best I ever read or saw
in my life. If, I might venture to suggest anything, it is that the interest
rather falls off in the fifth.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Rises, I believe you mean, sir.
DANGLE.
No, I don’t, upon my word.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Yes, yes, you do, upon my soul!—it certainly don’t fall off, I
assure you.—No, no; it don’t fall off.
DANGLE.
Now, Mrs. Dangle, didn’t you say it struck you in the same light?
MRS. DANGLE.
No, indeed, I did not.—I did not see a fault in any part of the play,
from the beginning to the end.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Upon my soul, the women are the best judges after all!
MRS. DANGLE.
Or, if I made any objection, I am sure it was to nothing in the piece; but that
I was afraid it was on the whole, a little too long.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Pray, madam, do you speak as to duration of time; or do you mean that the story
is tediously spun out?
MRS. DANGLE.
O Lud! no.—I speak only with reference to the usual length of acting
plays.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Then I am very happy—very happy indeed—because the play is a short
play, a remarkably short play. I should not venture to differ with a lady on a
point of taste; but on these occasions, the watch, you know, is the critic.
MRS. DANGLE.
Then, I suppose, it must have been Mr. Dangle’s drawling manner of
reading it to me.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Oh, if Mr. Dangle read it, that’s quite another affair!—But I
assure you, Mrs. Dangle, the first evening you can spare me three hours and a
half, I’ll undertake to read you the whole, from beginning to end, with
the prologue and epilogue, and allow time for the music between the acts.
MRS. DANGLE.
I hope to see it on the stage next.
DANGLE.
Well, Sir Fretful, I wish you may be able to get rid as easily of the newspaper
criticisms as you do of ours.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
The newspapers! Sir, they are the most
villainous—licentious—abominable—infernal.—Not that I
ever read them—no—I make it a rule never to look into a newspaper.
DANGLE.
You are quite right; for it certainly must hurt an author of delicate feelings
to see the liberties they take.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
No, quite the contrary! their abuse is, in fact, the best panegyric—I
like it of all things. An author’s reputation is only in danger from
their support.
SNEER.
Why, that’s true—and that attack, now, on you the other day—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
What? where?
DANGLE.
Ay, you mean in a paper of Thursday: it was completely ill-natured, to be sure.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Oh so much the better.—Ha! Ha! Ha! I wouldn’t have it otherwise.
DANGLE.
Certainly it is only to be laughed at; for—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
You don’t happen to recollect what the fellow said, do you?
SNEER.
Pray, Dangle—Sir Fretful seems a little anxious—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
O Lud, no!—anxious!—not I—not the least.—I—but
one may as well hear, you know.
DANGLE.
Sneer, do you recollect?—[Aside to SNEER.] Make out something.
SNEER.
[Aside to DANGLE.] I will.—[Aloud.] Yes, yes, I remember
perfectly.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Well, and pray now—not that it signifies—what might the gentleman
say?
SNEER.
Why, he roundly asserts that you have not the slightest invention or original
genius whatever; though you are the greatest traducer of all other authors
living.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ha! ha! ha!—very good!
SNEER.
That as to comedy, you have not one idea of your own, he believes, even in your
commonplace-book—where stray jokes and pilfered witticisms are kept with
as much method as the ledger of the lost and stolen office.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ha! ha! ha!—very pleasant!
SNEER.
Nay, that you are so unlucky as not to have the skill even to steal with
taste:—but that you glean from the refuse of obscure volumes, where more
judicious plagiarists have been before you; so that the body of your work is a
composition of dregs and sentiments—like a bad tavern’s worst wine.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ha! ha!
SNEER.
In your more serious efforts, he says, your bombast would be less intolerable,
if the thoughts were ever suited to the expression; but the homeliness of the
sentiment stares through the fantastic encumbrance of its fine language, like a
clown in one of the new uniforms!
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ha! ha!
SNEER.
That your occasional tropes and flowers suit the general coarseness of your
style, as tambour sprigs would a ground of linsey-woolsey; while your
imitations of Shakspeare resemble the mimicry of Falstaff’s page, and are
about as near the standard as the original.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Ha!
SNEER.
In short, that even the finest passages you steal are of no service to you; for
the poverty of your own language prevents their assimilating; so that they lie
on the surface like lumps of marl on a barren moor, encumbering what it is not
in their power to fertilize!
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
[After great agitation.] Now, another person would be vexed at this!
SNEER.
Oh! but I wouldn’t have told you—only to divert you.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
I know it—I am diverted.—Ha! ha! ha!—not the least
invention!—Ha! ha! ha!—very good!—very good!
SNEER.
Yes—no genius! ha! ha! ha!
DANGLE.
A severe rogue! ha! ha! ha! But you are quite right, Sir Fretful, never to read
such nonsense.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
To be sure—for if there is anything to one’s praise, it is a
foolish vanity to be gratified at it; and, if it is abuse—why one is
always sure to hear of it from one damned good-natured friend or other!
Enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Sir, there is an Italian gentleman, with a French interpreter, and three young
ladies, and a dozen musicians, who say they are sent by Lady Rondeau and Mrs.
Fugue.
DANGLE.
Gadso! they come by appointment!—Dear Mrs. Dangle, do let them know
I’ll see them directly.
MRS. DANGLE.
You know, Mr. Dangle, I shan’t understand a word they say.
DANGLE.
But you hear there’s an interpreter.
MRS. DANGLE.
Well, I’ll try to endure their complaisance till you come. [Exit.]
SERVANT.
And Mr. Puff, sir, has sent word that the last rehearsal is to be this morning,
and that he’ll call on you presently.
DANGLE.
That’s true—I shall certainly be at home.—[Exit
SERVANT.]—now, Sir Fretful, if you have a mind to have justice done you
in the way of answer, egad, Mr. Puff’s your man.
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Psha! sir, why should I wish to have it answered, when I tell you I am pleased
at it?
DANGLE.
True, I had forgot that. But I hope you are not fretted at what Mr.
Sneer—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Zounds! no, Mr. Dangle; don’t I tell you these things never fret me in
the least?
DANGLE.
Nay, I only thought—
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
And let me tell you, Mr. Dangle, ’tis damned affronting in you to suppose
that I am hurt when I tell you I am not.
SNEER.
But why so warm, Sir Fretful?
SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY.
Gad’s life! Mr. Sneer, you are as absurd as Dangle: how often must I
repeat it to you, that nothing can vex me but your supposing it possible for me
to mind the damned nonsense you have been repeating to me!—let me tell
you, if you continue to believe this, you must mean to insult me,
gentlemen—and, then, your disrespect will affect me no more than the
newspaper criticisms—and I shall treat it with exactly the same calm
indifference and philosophic contempt—and so your servant. [Exit.]
Sneer.
Ha! ha! ha! poor Sir Fretful! Now will he go and vent his philosophy in
anonymous abuse of all modern critics and authors.—But, Dangle, you must
get your friend Puff to take me to the rehearsal of his tragedy.
DANGLE.
I’ll answer for’t, he’ll thank you for desiring it. But come
and help me to judge of this musical family: they are recommended by people of
consequence, I assure you.
SNEER.
I am at your disposal the whole morning!—but I thought you had been a
decided critic in music as well as in literature.
DANGLE.
So I am—but I have a bad ear. I’faith, Sneer, though, I am afraid
we were a little too severe on Sir Fretful—though he is my friend.
SNEER.
Why, ’tis certain, that unnecessarily to mortify the vanity of any writer
is a cruelty which mere dulness never can deserve; but where a base and
personal malignity usurps the place of literary emulation, the aggressor
deserves neither quarter nor pity.
DANGLE.
That’s true, egad!—though he’s my friend!
INTERPRETER.
Je dis, madame, j’ai l’honneur to introduce et de vous demander
votre protection pour le Signor Pasticcio Ritornello et pour sa charmante
famille.
SIGNOR PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Ah! vosignoria, not vi preghiamo di favoritevi colla vostra protezione.
FIRST SIGNORA PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Vosignoria fatevi questi grazie.
SECOND SIGNORA PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Si, signora.
INTERPRETER.
Madame—me interpret.—C’est à dire—in
English—qu’ils vous prient de leur faire l’honneur—
MRS. DANGLE.
I say again, gentlemen, I don’t understand a word you say.
SIGNOR PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Questo signore spiegheró—
INTERPRETER.
Oui—me interpret.—Nous avons les lettres de recommendation pour
Monsieur Dangle de—
MRS. DANGLE.
Upon my word, sir, I don’t understand you.
SIGNOR PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
La Contessa Rondeau è nostra padrona.
THIRD SIGNORA PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Si, padre, et Miladi Fugue.
INTERPRETER.
O!—me interpret.—Madame, ils disent—in
English—Qu’ils ont l’honneur d’être protégés de ces
dames.—You understand?
MRS. DANGLE.
No, sir,—no understand!
Enter DANGLE and SNEER.
INTERPRETER.
Ah, voici, Monsieur Dangle!
ALL ITALIANS.
Ah! Signor Dangle!
MRS. DANGLE.
Mr. Dangle, here are two very civil gentlemen trying to make themselves
understood, and I don’t know which is the interpreter.
DANGLE.
Eh, bien! [The INTERPRETER and SIGNOR PASTICCIO here speak at
the same time.]
INTERPRETER.
Monsieur Dangle, le grand bruit de vos talens pour la critique, et de votre
intérêt avec messieurs les directeurs à tous les théâtres—
SIGNOR PASTICCIO RITORNELLO.
Vosignoria siete si famoso par la vostra conoscenza, e vostra interessa colla
le direttore da—
DANGLE.
Egad, I think the interpreter is the hardest to be understood of the two!
SNEER.
Why, I thought, Dangle, you had been an admirable linguist!
DANGLE.
So I am, if they would not talk so damned fast.
SNEER.
Well, I’ll explain that—the less time we lose in bearing them the
better—for that, I suppose, is what they are brought here for. [Speaks
to SIGNOR PASTICCIO— they sing trios, &c., DANGLE
beating out of time.] Enter SERVANT and whispers DANGLE.
DANGLE.
Show him up.—[Exit SERVANT.] Bravo! admirable! bravissimo!
admirablissimo!—Ah! Sneer! where will you find voices such as these in
England?
SNEER.
Not easily.
DANGLE.
But Puff is coming.—Signor and little signoras obligatissimo!—Sposa
Signora Danglena—Mrs. Dangle, shall I beg you to offer them some
refreshments, and take their address in the next room. [Exit MRS. DANGLE
with SIGNOR PASTICCIO, SIGNORE PASTICCIO, MUSICIANS, and
INTERPRETER, ceremoniously.]
Re-enter SERVANT.
SERVANT.
Mr. Puff, sir. [Exit.]
Enter PUFF.
DANGLE.
My dear Puff!
PUFF.
My dear Dangle, how is it with you?
DANGLE.
Mr. Sneer, give me leave to introduce Mr. Puff to you.
PUFF.
Mr. Sneer is this?—Sir, he is a gentleman whom I have long panted for the
honour of knowing—a gentleman whose critical talents and transcendent
judgment—
SNEER.
Dear Sir—
DANGLE.
Nay, don’t be modest, Sneer; my friend Puff only talks to you in the
style of his profession.
SNEER.
His profession.
PUFF.
Yes, sir; I make no secret of the trade I follow: among friends and brother
authors, Dangle knows I love to be frank on the subject, and to advertise
myself viva voce.—I am, sir, a practitioner in panegyric, or, to
speak more plainly, a professor of the art of puffing, at your service—or
anybody else’s.
SNEER.
Sir, you are very obliging!—I believe, Mr. Puff, I have often admired
your talents in the daily prints.
PUFF.
Yes, sir, I flatter myself I do as much business in that way as any six of the
fraternity in town.—Devilish hard work all the summer, friend
Dangle,—never worked harder! But, hark’ee,—the winter
managers were a little sore, I believe.
DANGLE.
No; I believe they took it all in good part.
PUFF.
Ay! then that must have been affectation in them: for, egad, there were some of
the attacks which there was no laughing at!
SNEER.
Ay, the humorous ones.—But I should think, Mr. Puff, that authors would
in general be able to do this sort of work for themselves.
PUFF.
Why, yes—but in a clumsy way. Besides, we look on that as an
encroachment, and so take the opposite side. I dare say, now, you conceive half
the very civil paragraphs and advertisements you see to be written by the
parties concerned, or their friends? No such thing: nine out of ten
manufactured by me in the way of business.
SNEER.
Indeed!
PUFF.
Even the auctioneers now—the auctioneers, I say—though the rogues
have lately got some credit for their language—not an article of the
merit theirs: take them out of their pulpits, and they are as dull as
catalogues!—No, sir; ’twas I first enriched their
style—’twas I first taught them to crowd their advertisements with
panegyrical superlatives, each epithet rising above the other, like the bidders
in their own auction rooms! From me they learned to inlay their phraseology
with variegated chips of exotic metaphor: by me too their inventive faculties
were called forth:—yes, sir, by me they were instructed to clothe ideal
walls with gratuitous fruits—to insinuate obsequious rivulets into
visionary groves—to teach courteous shrubs to nod their approbation of
the grateful soil; or on emergencies to raise upstart oaks, where there never
had been an acorn; to create a delightful vicinage without the assistance of a
neighbour; or fix the temple of Hygeia in the fens of Lincolnshire!
DANGLE.
I am sure you have done them infinite service; for now, when a gentleman is
ruined, he parts with his house with some credit.
SNEER.
Service! if they had any gratitude, they would erect a statue to him; they
would figure him as a presiding Mercury, the god of traffic and fiction, with a
hammer in his hand instead of a caduceus.—But pray, Mr. Puff, what first
put you on exercising your talents in this way?
PUFF.
Egad, sir, sheer necessity!—the proper parent of an art so nearly allied
to invention. You must know, Mr. Sneer, that from the first time I tried my
hand at an advertisement, my success was such, that for some time after I led a
most extraordinary life indeed!
SNEER.
How, pray?
PUFF.
Sir, I supported myself two years entirely by my misfortunes.
SNEER.
By your misfortunes!
PUFF.
Yes, sir, assisted by long sickness, and other occasional disorders: and a very
comfortable living I had of it.
SNEER.
From sickness and misfortunes! You practised as a doctor and an attorney at
once?
PUFF.
No, egad; both maladies and miseries were my own.
SNEER.
Hey! what the plague!
DANGLE.
’Tis true, i’faith.
PUFF.
Hark’ee!—By advertisements—. Oh, I understand you.
PUFF.
And, in truth, I deserved what I got! for, I suppose never man went through
such a series of calamities in the same space of time. Sir, I was five times
made a bankrupt, and reduced from a state of affluence, by a train of
unavoidable misfortunes: then, sir, though a very industrious tradesman, I was
twice burned out, and lost my little all both times: I lived upon those fires a
month. I soon after was confined by a most excruciating disorder, and lost the
use of my limbs: that told very well; for I had the case strongly attested, and
went about to collect the subscriptions myself.
DANGLE.
Egad, I believe that was when you first called on me.
PUFF.
In November last?—O no; I was at that time a close prisoner in the
Marshalsea, for a debt benevolently contracted to serve a friend. I was
afterwards twice tapped for a dropsy, which declined into a very profitable
consumption. I was then reduced to—O no—then, I became a widow with
six helpless children, after having had eleven husbands pressed, and being left
every time eight months gone with child, and without money to get me into an
hospital!
SNEER.
And you bore all with patience, I make no doubt?
PUFF.
Why yes; though I made some occasional attempts at felo de se, but as I
did not find those rash actions answer, I left off killing myself very soon.
Well, sir, at last, what with bankruptcies, fires, gout, dropsies,
imprisonments, and other valuable calamities, having got together a pretty
handsome sum, I determined to quit a business which had always gone rather
against my conscience, and in a more liberal way still to indulge my talents
for fiction and embellishment, through my favourite channels of diurnal
communication—and so, sir, you have my history.
SNEER.
Most obligingly communicative indeed! and your confession, if published, might
certainly serve the cause of true charity, by rescuing the most useful channels
of appeal to benevolence from the cant of imposition. But, surely, Mr. Puff,
there is no great mystery in your present profession?
PUFF.
Mystery, sir! I will take upon me to say the matter was never scientifically
treated nor reduced to rule before.
SNEER.
Reduced to rule!
PUFF.
O Lud, sir, you are very ignorant, I am afraid!—Yes, sir,. puffing is of
various sorts; the principal are, the puff direct, the puff preliminary, the
puff collateral, the puff collusive, and the puff oblique, or puff by
implication. These all assume, as circumstances require, the various forms of
Letter to the Editor, Occasional Anecdote, Impartial Critique, Observation from
Correspondent, or Advertisement from the Party.
SNEER.
The puff direct, I can conceive—
PUFF.
O yes, that’s simple enough! For instance,—a new comedy or farce is
to be produced at one of the theatres (though by-the-by they don’t bring
out half what they ought to do)—the author, suppose Mr. Smatter, or Mr.
Dapper, or any particular friend of mine—very, well; the day before it is
to be performed, I write an account of the manner in which it was received; I
have the plot from the author, and only add—characters strongly
drawn—highly coloured—hand of a master—fund of genuine
humour—mine of invention—neat dialogue—Attic salt. Then for
the performance—Mr. Dodd was astonishingly great in the character of Sir
Harry. That universal and judicious actor, Mr. Palmer, perhaps never appeared
to more advantage than in the colonel;—but it is not in the power of
language to do justice to Mr. King: indeed he more than merited those repeated
bursts of applause which he drew from a most brilliant and judicious audience.
As to the scenery—the miraculous powers of Mr. De Loutherbourg’s
pencil are universally acknowledged. In short, we are at a loss which to admire
most, the unrivalled genius of the author, the great attention and liberality
of the managers, the wonderful abilities of the painter, or the incredible
exertions of all the performers.
SNEER.
That’s pretty well indeed, sir.
PUFF.
Oh, cool!—quite cool!—to what I sometimes do.
SNEER.
And do you think there are any who are influenced by this?
PUFF.
O Lud, yes, sir! the number of those who undergo the fatigue of judging for
themselves is very small indeed.
SNEER.
Well, sir, the puff preliminary.
PUFF.
O, that, sir, does well in the form of a caution. In a matter of gallantry
now—Sir Flimsy Gossamer wishes to be well with Lady Fanny Fete—he
applies to me—I open trenches for him with a paragraph in the Morning
Post.—It is recommended to the beautiful and accomplished Lady F four
stars F dash E to be on her guard against that dangerous character, Sir F dash
G; who, however pleasing and insinuating his manners may be, is certainly not
remarkable for the constancy of his attachments!—in italics. Here,
you see, Sir Flimsy Gossamer is introduced to the particular notice of Lady
Fanny, who perhaps never thought of him before—she finds herself publicly
cautioned to avoid him, which naturally makes her desirous of seeing him; the
observation of their acquaintance causes a pretty kind of mutual embarrassment;
this produces a sort of sympathy of interest, which if Sir Flimsy is unable to
improve effectually, he at least gains the credit of having their names
mentioned together, by a particular set, and in a particular way—which
nine times out of ten is the full accomplishment of modern gallantry.
DANGLE.
Egad, Sneer, you will be quite an adept in the business.
PUFF.
Now, Sir, the puff collateral is much used as an appendage to advertisements,
and may take the form of anecdote,—Yesterday, as the celebrated George
Bonmot was sauntering down St. James’s Street, he met the lively Lady
Mary Myrtle coming out of the park:—‘Good God, Lady Mary, I’m
surprised to meet you in a white jacket,—for I expected never to have
seen you, but in a full-trimmed uniform and a light horseman’s
cap!’—‘Heavens, George, where could you have learned
that?’—‘Why,’ replied the wit, ‘I just saw a
print of you, in a new publication called the Camp Magazine; which, by-the-by,
is a devilish clever thing, and is sold at No. 3, on the right hand of the way,
two doors from the printing-office, the corner of Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row,
price only one shilling.’
SNEER.
Very ingenious indeed!
PUFF.
But the puff collusive is the newest of any; for it acts in the disguise of
determined hostility. It is much used by bold booksellers and enterprising
poets.—An indignant correspondent observes, that the new poem called
Beelsebub’s Cotillon, or Proserpine’s Fête Champêtre, is one of the
most unjustifiable performances he ever read. The severity with which certain
characters are handled is quite shocking: and as there are many descriptions in
it too warmly coloured for female delicacy, the shameful avidity with which
this piece is bought by all people of fashion is a reproach on the taste of the
times, and a disgrace to the delicacy of the age. Here you see the two
strongest inducements are held forth; first, that nobody ought to read it; and
secondly, that everybody buys it: on the strength of which the publisher boldly
prints the tenth edition, before he had sold ten of the first; and then
establishes it by threatening himself with the pillory, or absolutely indicting
himself for scan. mag.
DANGLE.
Ha! ha! ha!—’gad, I know it is so.
PUFF.
As to the puff oblique, or puff by implication, it is too various and extensive
to be illustrated by an instance: it attracts in titles and resumes in patents;
it lurks in the limitation of a subscription, and invites in the assurance of
crowd and incommodation at public places; it delights to draw forth concealed
merit, with a most disinterested assiduity; and sometimes wears a countenance
of smiling censure and tender reproach. It has a wonderful memory for
parliamentary debates, and will often give the whole speech of a favoured
member with the most flattering accuracy. But, above all, it is a great dealer
in reports and suppositions. It has the earliest intelligence of intended
preferments that will reflect honour on the patrons; and embryo promotions of
modest gentlemen, who know nothing of the matter themselves. It can hint a
ribbon for implied services in the air of a common report; and with the
carelessness of a casual paragraph, suggest officers into commands, to which
they have no pretension but their wishes. This, sir, is the last principal
class of the art of puffing—an art which I hope you will now agree with
me is of the highest dignity, yielding a tablature of benevolence and public
spirit; befriending equally trade, gallantry, criticism, and politics: the
applause of genius—the register of charity—the triumph of
heroism—the self-defence of contractors—the fame of
orators—and the gazette of ministers.
SNEER.
Sir, I am completely a convert both to the importance and ingenuity of your
profession; and now, sir, there is but one thing which can possibly increase my
respect for you, and that is, your permitting me to be present this morning at
the rehearsal of your new trage—
PUFF.
Hush, for heaven’s sake!—My tragedy!—Egad, Dangle, I
take this very ill: you know how apprehensive I am of being known to be the
author.
DANGLE.
I’faith I would not have told—but it’s in the papers, and
your name at length in the Morning Chronicle.
PUFF.
Ah! those damned editors never can keep a secret I—Well, Mr. Sneer, no
doubt you will do me great honour—I shall be infinitely
happy—highly flattered—Dang. I believe it must be near the
time—shall we go together?
PUFF.
No; it will, not be yet this hour, for they are always late at that theatre:
besides, I must meet you there, for I have some little matters here to send to
the papers, and a few paragraphs to scribble before I go.—[Looking at
memorandums.] Here is A conscientious Baker, on the subject of the Army
Bread; and a Detester of visible Brick-work, in favour of the new invented
Stucco; both in the style of Junius, and promised for tomorrow. The Thames
navigation too is at a stand. Misomud or Anti-shoal must go to work again
directly.—Here too are some political memorandums—I see; ay—
To take Paul Jones and get the Indiamen out of the Shannon—reinforce Byron—compel the Dutch to—so!—I must do that in the evening papers, or reserve it for the Morning Herald; for I know that I have undertaken tomorrow, besides, to establish the unanimity of the fleet in the Public Advertiser, and to shoot Charles Fox in the Morning Post.—So, egad, I ha’n’t a moment to lose.
DANGLE.
Well, we’ll meet in the Green Room. [Exeunt severally.
Enter DANGLE, PUFF, and SNEER.
PUFF.
No, no, sir; what Shakspeare says of actors may be better applied to the
purpose of plays; they ought to be the abstract and brief chronicles of the
time. Therefore when history, and particularly the history of our own country,
furnishes anything like a case in point, to the time in which an author writes,
if he knows his own interest, he will take advantage of it; so, sir, I call my
tragedy The Spanish Armada; and have laid the scene before Tilbury Fort.
SNEER.
A most happy thought, certainly I Dang. Egad it was—I told you so. But,
pray now, I don’t understand how you have contrived to introduce any love
into it.
PUFF.
Love! oh, nothing so easy! for it is a received point among poets, that where
history gives you a good heroic outline for a play, you may fill up with a
little love at your own discretion: in doing which, nine times out of ten, you
only make up a deficiency in the private history of the times. Now, I rather
think I have done this with some success.
SNEER.
No scandal about Queen Elizabeth, I hope?
PUFF.
O Lud! no, no;—I only suppose the governor of Tilbury Fort’s
daughter to be in love with the son of the Spanish admiral.
SNEER.
Oh, is that all!
DANGLE.
Excellent, i’faith! I see at once. But won’t this appear rather
improbable?
PUFF.
To be sure it will—but what the plague! a play is not to show occurrences
that happen every day, but things just so strange, that though they never did,
they might happen.
SNEER.
Certainly nothing is unnatural, that is not physically impossible.
PUFF.
Very true—and for that matter Don Ferolo Whiskerandos, for that’s
the lover’s name, might have been over here in the train of the Spanish
ambassador, or Tilburina, for that is the lady’s name, might have been in
love with him, from having heard his character, or seen his picture; or from
knowing that he was the last man in the world she ought to be in love
with—or for any other good female reason.—However; sir, the fact
is, that though she is but a knight’s daughter, egad! she is in love like
any princess!
DANGLE.
Poor young lady! I feel for her already! for I can conceive how great the
conflict must be between her passion and her duty; her love for her country,
and her love for Don Ferolo Whiskerandos!
PUFF.
Oh, amazing!—her poor susceptible heart is swayed to and fro by
contending passions like—
Enter UNDER PROMPTER.
UNDER PROMPTER.
Sir, the scene is set, and everything is ready to begin, if you please.
PUFF.
Egad, then we’ll lose no time.
UNDER PROMPTER.
Though, I believe, sir, you will find it very short, for all the performers
have profited by the kind permission you granted them.
PUFF.
Hey! what?
UNDER PROMPTER.
You know, sir, you gave them leave to cut out or omit whatever they found heavy
or unnecessary to the plot, and I must own they have taken very liberal
advantage of your indulgence.
PUFF.
Well, well.—They are in general very good judges, and I know I am
luxuriant.—Now, Mr. Hopkins, as soon as you please.
UNDER PROMPTER.
[To the Orchestra.] Gentlemen, will you play a few bars of something,
just to—
PUFF.
Ay, that’s right; for as we have the scenes and dresses, egad,
we’ll go to’t, as if it was the first night’s
performance,—but you need not mind stopping between the acts—
[Exit UNDER PROMPTER.—Orchestra play—then the bell
rings.] Soh! stand clear; gentlemen. Now you know there will be a cry of
down! down!—Hats off!—Silence!—Then up curtain, and let us
see what our painters have done for us. [Curtain rises.]
DANGLE.
Tilbury Fort!—very fine indeed!
PUFF.
Now, what do you think I open with?
SNEER.
Faith, I can’t guess—
PUFF.
A clock.—Hark!—[Clock strikes.] I open with a clock
striking, to beget an awful attention in the audience: it also marks the time,
which is four o’clock in the morning, and saves a description of the
rising sun, and a great deal about gilding the eastern hemisphere.
DANGLE.
But pray, are the sentinels to be asleep?
PUFF.
Fast as watchmen.
SNEER.
Isn’t that odd though at such an alarming crisis?
PUFF.
To be sure it is,—but smaller things must give way to a striking scene at
the opening; that’s a rule. And the case is, that two great men are
coming to this very spot to begin the piece; now it is not to be supposed they
would open their lips, if these fellows were watching them; so, egad, I must
either have sent them off their posts, or set them asleep.
SNEER.
Oh, that accounts for it. But tell us, who are these coming?
PUFF.
These are they—Sir Walter Raleigh, and Sir Christopher Hatton.
You’ll know Sir Christopher by his turning out his toes—famous, you
know, for his dancing. I like to preserve all the little traits of
character.—Now attend. Enter SIR WALTER RALEIGH and SIR
CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
True, gallant Raleigh!
DANGLE.
What, they had been talking before?
PUFF.
O yes; all the way as they came along.—[To the actors.] I beg pardon,
gentlemen, but these are particular friends of mine, whose remarks may be of
great service to us.—[To SNEER and DANGLE.] Don’t
mind interrupting them whenever anything strikes you. Sir Christ.
TRUE, GALLANT RALEIGH
But oh, thou champion of thy country’s fame,
There is a question which I yet must ask
A question which I never ask’d before—
What mean these mighty armaments?
This general muster? and this throng of chiefs?
SNEER.
Pray, Mr. Puff, how came Sir Christopher Hatton never to ask that question
before?
PUFF.
What before the play began?-how the plague could he?
DANGLE.
That’s true, i’faith!
PUFF.
But you will hear what he thinks of the matter.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
Alas I my noble friend, when I behold
Yon tented plains in martial symmetry
Array’d; when I count o’er yon glittering lines
Of crested warriors, where the proud steeds’ neigh,
And valour-breathing trumpet’s shrill appeal,
Responsive vibrate on my listening ear;
When virgin majesty herself I view,
Like her protecting Pallas, veil’d in steel,
With graceful confidence exhort to arms!
When, briefly, all I hear or see bears stamp
Of martial vigilance and stern defence,
I cannot but surmise—forgive, my friend,
If the conjecture’s rash—I cannot but
Surmise the state some danger apprehends!
SNEER.
A very cautious conjecture that.
PUFF.
Yes, that’s his character; not to give an opinion but on secure
grounds.—Now then.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
O most accomplish’d Christopher!—
PUFF.
He calls him by his Christian name, to show that they are on the most familiar
terms.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
O most accomplish’d Christopher! I find Thy staunch sagacity still tracks
the future, In the fresh print of the o’ertaken past.
PUFF.
Figurative!
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
Thy fears are just.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
But where? whence? when? and what The danger is,—methinks I fain would
learn.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
You know, my friend, scarce two revolving suns, And three revolving moons, have
closed their course Since haughty Philip, in despite of peace, With hostile
hand hath struck at England’s trade.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
I know it well.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
Philip, you know, is proud Iberia’s king!
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
He is.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
His subjects in base bigotry And Catholic oppression held;-while we, You know,
the Protestant persuasion hold.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
We do.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
You know, beside, his boasted armament, The famed Armada, by the Pope baptized,
With purpose to invade these realms—
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
Is sailed, Our last advices so report.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
While the Iberian admiral’s chief hope, His darling son—
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
Ferolo Whiskerandos hight—
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
The same—by chance a prisoner hath been ta’en, And in this fort of
Tilbury—
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
Is now Confined—’tis true, and oft from yon tall turret’s top
I’ve mark’d the youthful Spaniard’s haughty mien
Unconquer’d, though in chains.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
You also know—Dang. Mr. Puff, as he knows all this, why does Sir Walter
go on telling him?
PUFF.
But the audience are not supposed to know any-thing of the matter, are they?
Sneer. True; but I think you manage ill: for there certainly appears no reason
why Sir Walter should be so communicative.
PUFF.
’Fore Gad, now, that is one of the most ungrateful observations I ever
heard!—for the less inducement he has to tell all this, the more, I
think, you ought to be obliged to him; for I am sure you’d know nothing
of the matter without it.
DANGLE.
That’s very true, upon my word.
PUFF.
But you will find he was not going on. Sir Christ.
Enough, enough—’tis plain—and I no more Am in amazement
lost!—
PUFF.
Here, now you see, Sir Christopher did not in fact ask any one question for his
own information.
SNEER.
No, indeed: his has been a most disinterested curiosity!
DANGLE.
Really, I find that we are very much obliged to them both.
PUFF.
To be sure you are. Now then for the commander-in-chief, the Earl of Leicester,
who, you know, was no favourite but of the queen’s.—We left
off—in amazement lost! Sir Christ.
Am in amazement lost. But, see where noble Leicester comes supreme in honours
and command.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
And yet, methinks, At such a time, so perilous, so fear’d, That staff
might well become an abler grasp.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
And so, by Heaven! think I; but soft, he’s here!
PUFF.
Ay, they envy him!
SNEER.
But who are these with him?
PUFF.
Oh! very valiant knights: one is the governor of the fort, the other the master
of the horse. And now, I think, you shall hear some better language: I was
obliged to be plain and intelligible in the first scene, because there was so
much matter of fact in it; but now, i’faith, you have trope, figure, and
metaphor, as plenty as noun-substantives. Enter EARL OF LEICESTER,
GOVERNOR, MASTER OF THE HORSE, KNIGHTS, &c.
EARL OF LEICESTER.
How’s this, my friends! is’t thus your new-fledged zeal,
And plumed valour moulds in roosted sloth?
Why dimly glimmers that heroic flame,
Whose reddening blaze, by patriot spirit fed,
Should be the beacon of a kindling realm?
Can the quick current of a patriot heart
Thus stagnate in a cold and weedy converse,
Or freeze in tideless inactivity?
No! rather let the fountain of your valour
Spring through each stream of enterprise,
Each petty channel of conducive daring,
Till the full torrent of your foaming wrath
O’erwhelm the flats of sunk hostility!
PUFF.
There it is—followed up! Sir Walt.
No more!—the freshening breath of thy rebuke
Hath fill’d the swelling canvas of our souls!
And thus, though fate should cut the cable of
[All take hands.]
Our topmost hopes, in friendship’s closing line
We’ll grapple with despair, and if we fall,
We’ll fall in glory’s wake!
EARL OF LEICESTER.
There spoke old England’s genius!
Then, are we all resolved?
ALL.
We are—all resolved.
EARL OF LEICESTER.
To conquer—or be free?
ALL.
To conquer, or be free.
EARL OF LEICESTER.
All?
ALL.
All.
DANGLE.
Nem. con. egad!
PUFF.
O yes!—where they do agree on the stage, their unanimity is wonderful!
EARL OF LEICESTER.
Then let’s embrace—and now—[Kneels.
SNEER.
What the plague, is he going to pray?
PUFF.
Yes; hush!—in great emergencies, there Is nothing like a prayer.
EARL OF LEICESTER.
O mighty Mars!
DANGLE.
But why should he pray to Mars?
PUFF.
Hush!
EARL OF LEICESTER.
If in thy homage bred,
Each point of discipline I’ve still observed;
Nor but by due promotion, and the right
Of service, to the rank of major-general
Have risen; assist thy votary now!
GOVERNOR.
Yet do not rise—hear me! [Kneels.]
MASTER OF THE HORSE.
And me! [Kneels.]
KNIGHT.
And me! [Kneels.]
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
And me! [Kneels.]
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
And me! [Kneels.]
PUFF.
Now pray altogether.
ALL.
Behold thy votaries submissive beg,
That thou wilt deign to grant them all they ask;
Assist them to accomplish all their ends,
And sanctify whatever means they use
To gain them!
SNEER.
A very orthodox quintetto!
PUFF.
Vastly well, gentlemen!—Is that well managed or not? Have you such a
prayer as that on the stage?
SNEER.
Not exactly.
EARL OF LEICESTER.
[To PUFF.] But, sir, you haven’t settled how we are to get off
here.
PUFF.
You could not go off kneeling, could you?
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
[To PUFF.] O no, sir; impossible!
PUFF.
It would have a good effect i’faith, if you could exeunt
praying!—Yes, and would vary the established mode of springing off with a
glance at the pit.
SNEER.
Oh, never mind, so as you get them off!—I’ll answer for it, the
audience won’t care how.
PUFF.
Well, then, repeat the last line standing, and go off the old way.
All.
And sanctify whatever means we use To gain them. [Exeunt.]
DANGLE.
Bravo! a fine exit.
SNEER.
Well, really, Mr. Puff—
PUFF.
Stay a moment! The SENTINELS get up.
FIRST SENTINEL.
All this shall to Lord Burleigh’s ear.
SECOND SENTINEL.
’Tis meet it should. [Exeunt.]
DANGLE.
Hey!—why, I thought those fellows had been asleep?
PUFF.
Only a pretence; there’s the art of it: they were spies of Lord
Burleigh’s.
SNEER.
But isn’t it odd they never were taken notice of, not even by the
commander-in-chief?
PUFF.
O Lud, sir! if people who want to listen, or overhear, were not always connived
at in a tragedy, there would be no carrying on any plot in the world.
DANGLE.
That’s certain.
PUFF.
But take care, my dear Dangle! the morning gun is going to fire. [Cannon
fires.]
DANGLE.
Well, that will have a fine effect!
PUFF.
I think so, and helps to realize the scene.—[Cannon twice.] What
the plague! three morning guns! there never is but one!—Ay, this is
always the way at the theatre: give these fellows a good thing, and they never
know when to have done with it.—You have no more cannon to fire?
UNDER PROMPTER.
[Within.] No, sir.
PUFF.
Now, then, for soft music.
SNEER.
Pray, what’s that for?
PUFF.
It shows that Tilburina is coming!—nothing introduces you a heroine like
soft music. Here she comes!
DANGLE.
And her confidant, I suppose?
PUFF.
To be sure! Here they are—inconsolable to the minuet in Ariadne! [Soft
music.] Enter TILNURINA and CONFIDANT.
TILNURINA.
Now has the whispering breath of gentle morn
Bid Nature’s voice and Nature’s beauty rise;
While orient Phoebus, with unborrow’d hues,
Clothes the waked loveliness which all night slept
In heavenly drapery I Darkness is fled.
Now flowers unfold their beauties to the sun,
And, blushing, kiss the beam he sends to wake them—
The striped carnation, and the guarded rose,
The vulgar wallflower, and smart gillyflower,
The polyanthus mean—the dapper daisy,
Sweet-William, and sweet marjoram—and all
The tribe of single and of double pinks!
Now, too, the feather’d warblers tune their notes
Around, and charm the listening grove. The lark!
The linnet! chaffinch! bullfinch! goldfinch! greenfinch!
But O, to me no joy can they afford!
Nor rose, nor wallflower, nor smart gillyflower,
Nor polyanthus mean, nor dapper daisy,
Nor William sweet, nor marjoram—nor lark,
Linnet nor all the finches of the grove!
PUFF.
Your white handkerchief, madam!—
TILNURINA.
I thought, sir, I wasn’t to use that till heart-rending woe.
PUFF.
O yes, madam, at the finches of the grove, if you please.
TILNURINA.
Nor lark,
Linnet, nor all the finches of the grove! [Weeps.]
PUFF.
Vastly well, madam! Dang.
Vastly well, indeed!
TILNURINA.
For, O, too sure, heart-rending woe is now
The lot of wretched Tilburina!
CONFIDANT.
Oh!—it’s too much.
SNEER.
Oh!—it is indeed.
PUFF.
Be comforted, sweet lady; for who knows,
But Heaven has yet some milk-white day in store?
TILNURINA.
Alas! my gentle Nora, Thy tender youth as yet hath never mourn’d
Love’s fatal dart. Else wouldst thou know, that when The soul is sunk in
comfortless despair, It cannot taste of merriment.
DANGLE.
That’s certain. Con.
But see where your stern father comes It is not meet that he should find you
thus.
PUFF.
Hey, what the plague!—what a cut is here! Why, what is become of the
description of her first meeting with Don Whiskerandos—his gallant
behaviour in the sea-fight—and the simile of the canary-bird?
TILNURINA.
Indeed, sir, you’ll find they will not be missed.
PUFF.
Very well, very well!
TILNURINA.
[To CONFIDANT.] The cue, ma’am, if you please.
CONFIDANT.
It is not meet that he should find you thus.
TILNURINA.
Thou counsel’st right; but ’tis no easy task For barefaced grief to
wear a mask of joy.
Enter. GOVERNOR.
GOVERNOR.
How’s this!—in tears?—O Tilburina, shame! Is this a time for
maudling tenderness, And Cupid’s baby woes?—Hast thou not heard
That haughty Spain’s pope-consecrated fleet Advances to our shores, while
England’s fate, Like a clipp’d guinea, trembles in the scale?
TILNURINA.
Then is the crisis of my fate at hand! I see the fleets approach—I
see—
PUFF.
Now, pray, gentlemen, mind. This is one of the most useful figures we tragedy
writers have, by which a hero or heroine, in consideration of their being often
obliged to overlook things that are on the stage, is allowed to hear and see a
number of things that are not.
SNEER.
Yes; a kind of poetical second-sight!
PUFF.
Yes.—Now then, madam. Tilb.
I see their decks Are clear’d!—I see the signal made! The line is
form’d!—a cable’s length asunder! I see the frigates
station’d in the rear; And now, I hear the thunder of the guns! I hear
the victor’s shouts—I also hear The vanquish’d
groan!—and now ’tis smoke-and now I see the loose sails shiver in
the wind! I see—I see—what soon you’ll see—
GOVERNOR.
Hold, daughter! peace! this love hath turn’d thy brain The Spanish fleet
thou canst not see—because—It is not yet in sight!
DANGLE.
Egad, though, the governor seems to make no allowance for this poetical figure
you talk of.
PUFF.
No, a plain matter-of-fact man;—that’s his character.
Tilb.
But will you then refuse his offer?
GOVERNOR.
I must—I will—I can—I ought—I do.
TILNURINA.
Think what a noble price.
GOVERNOR.
No more—you urge in vain.
TILNURINA.
His liberty is all he asks.
SNEER.
All who asks, Mr. Puff? Who is—
PUFF.
Egad, sir, I can’t tell! Here has been such cutting and slashing, I
don’t know where they have got to myself.
TILNURINA.
Indeed, sir, you will find it will connect very well. —And your reward
secure.
PUFF.
Oh, if they hadn’t been so devilish free with their cutting here, you
would have found that Don Whiskerandos has been tampering for his liberty, and
has persuaded Tilburina to make this proposal to her father. And now, pray
observe the conciseness with which the argument is conducted. Egad, the
pro and con goes as smart as hits in a fencing match. It is
indeed a sort of small-sword-logic, which we have borrowed from the French.
TILNURINA.
A retreat in Spain!
GOVERNOR.
Outlawry here!
TILNURINA.
Your daughter’s prayer!
GOVERNOR.
Your father’s oath!
TILNURINA.
My lover!
GOVERNOR.
My country!
TILNURINA.
Tilburina!
GOVERNOR.
England!
TILNURINA.
A title!
GOVERNOR.
Honour!
TILNURINA.
A pension!
GOVERNOR.
Conscience!
TILNURINA.
A thousand pounds!
GOVERNOR.
Ha! thou hast touch’d me nearly!
PUFF.
There you see-she threw in Tilburina.
Quick, parry Carte with England! Ha! thrust in tierce a
title!—parried by honour.
Ha! a pension over the arm!—put by by conscience.
Then flankonade with a thousand pounds—and a palpable hit, egad!
TILNURINA.
Canst thou—Reject the suppliant, and the daughter too?
GOVERNOR.
No more; I would not hear thee plead in vain: The father softens—but the
governor Is fix’d! [Exit.]
DANGLE.
Ay, that antithesis of persons is a most established figure.
TILNURINA.
’Tis well,—hence then, fond hopes,—fond passion hence; Duty,
behold I am all over thine—
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
[Without.] Where is my love—my—
TILNURINA.
Ha!
Enter DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
My beauteous enemy!—
PUFF.
O dear, ma’am, you must start a great deal more than that! Consider, you
had just determined in favour of duty—when, in a moment, the sound of his
voice revives your passion—overthrows your resolution—destroys your
obedience. If you don’t express all that in your start, you do nothing at
all.
TILNURINA.
Well, we’ll try again.
DANGLE.
Speaking from within has always a fine effect.
SNEER.
Very.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
My conquering Tilburina! How! is’t thus We meet? why are thy looks
averse? what means That falling tear—that frown of boding woe? Ha! now
indeed I am a prisoner! Yes, now I feel the galling weight of these Disgraceful
chains—which, cruel Tilburina! Thy doting captive gloried in
before.—But thou art false, and Whiskerandos is undone!
TILNURINA.
O no! how little dost thou know thy Tilburina!
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
Art thou then true?—Begone cares, doubts, and fears, I make you all a
present to the winds; And if the winds reject you—try the waves.
PUFF.
The wind, you know, is the established receiver of all stolen sighs, and
cast-off griefs and apprehensions.
TILNURINA.
Yet must we part!—stern duty seals our doom Though here I call yon
conscious clouds to witness, Could I pursue the bias of my soul, All friends,
all right of parents, I’d disclaim, And thou, my Whiskerandos, shouldst
be father And mother, brother, cousin, uncle, aunt, And friend to me!
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
Oh, matchless excellence! and must we part? Well, if—we must—we
must—and in that case The less is said the better.
PUFF.
Heyday! here’s a cut!—What, are all the mutual protestations out?
TILNURINA.
Now, pray, sir, don’t interrupt us just here: you ruin our feelings.
PUFF.
Your feelings!—but, zounds, my feelings, ma’am!
SNEER.
No, pray don’t interrupt them. Whisk.
One last embrace.
TILNURINA.
Now,—farewell, for ever.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
For ever!
TILNURINA.
Ay, for ever! [Going.]
PUFF.
’Sdeath and fury!—Gad’s life!—sir! madam! if you go out
without the parting look, you might as well dance out. Here, here!
CONFIDANT.
But pray, sir, how am I to get off here?
PUFF.
You! pshaw! what the devil signifies how you get off! edge away at the top, or
where you will—[Pushes the CONFIDANT off.] Now,
ma’am, you see—
TILNURINA.
We understand you, sir. Ay, for ever.
BOTH.
Oh! [Turning back, and exeunt.—Scene closes.]
DANGLE.
Oh, charming!
PUFF.
Hey!—’tis pretty well, I believe: you see I don’t attempt to
strike out anything new—but I take it I improve on the established modes.
SNEER.
You do, indeed! But pray is not Queen Elizabeth to appear?
PUFF.
No, not once—but she is to be talked of for ever; so that, egad,
you’ll think a hundred times that she is on the point of coming in.
SNEER.
Hang it, I think it’s a pity to keep her in the green-room all the night.
PUFF.
O no, that always has a fine effect—it keeps up expectation.
DANGLE.
But are we not to have a battle?
PUFF.
Yes, yes, you will have a battle at last: but, egad, it’s not to be by
land, but by sea—and that is the only quite new thing in the piece.
DANGLE.
What, Drake at the Armada, hey?
PUFF.
Yes, i’faith—fire-ships and all; then we shall end with the
procession. Hey, that will do, I think?,
SNEER.
No doubt on’t.
PUFF.
Come, we must not lose time; so now for the under-plot.
SNEER.
What the plague, have you another plot?
PUFF.
O Lord, yes; ever while you live have two plots to your tragedy. The grand
point in managing them is only to let your under-plot have as little connection
with your main-plot as possible.—I flatter myself nothing can be more
distinct than mine; for as in my chief plot the characters are all great
people, I have laid my under-plot in low life, and as the former is to end in
deep distress, I make the other end as happy as a farce.—Now, Mr.
Hopkins, as soon as you please.
Enter UNDER PROMPTER.
UNDER PROMPTER.
Sir, the carpenter says it is impossible you can go to the park scene yet.
PUFF.
The park scene! no! I mean the description scene here, in the wood.
UNDER PROMPTER.
Sir, the performers have cut it out.
PUFF.
Cut it out!
UNDER PROMPTER.
Yes, sir.
PUFF.
What! the whole account of Queen Elizabeth?
UNDER PROMPTER.
Yes, sir.
PUFF.
And the description of her horse and side-saddle?
UNDER PROMPTER.
Yes, sir.
PUFF.
So, so; this is very fine indeed!—Mr. Hopkins, how the plague could you
suffer this?
Mr. Hop.
[Within.] Sir, indeed the pruning-knife—
PUFF.
The pruning-knife—zounds!—the axe! Why, here has been such lopping
and topping, I shan’t have the bare trunk of my play left
presently!—Very well, sir—the performers must do as they please;
but, upon my soul, I’ll print it every word.
SNEER.
That I would, indeed.
PUFF.
Very well, sir; then we must go on.—Zounds! I would not have parted with
the description of the horse!—Well, sir, go on.—Sir, it was one of
the finest and most laboured things.—Very well, sir; let them go
on.—There you had him and his accoutrements, from the bit to the
crupper.—Very well, sir; we must go to the park scene.
UNDER PROMPTER.
Sir, there is the point: the carpenters say, that unless there is some business
put in here before the drop, they sha’n’t have time to clear away
the fort, or sink Gravesend and the river.
PUFF.
So! this is a pretty dilemma, truly!—Gentlemen, you must excuse
me—these fellows will never be ready, unless I go and look after them
myself.
SNEER.
O dear, sir, these little things will happen.
PUFF.
To cut out this scene!—but I’ll print it—egad, I’ll
print it every word! [Exeunt.]
Enter PUFF, SNEER, and DANGLE.
PUFF.
Well, we are ready; now then for the justices. [Curtain rises.]
JUSTICES, CONSTABLES, &c., discovered.
SNEER.
This, I suppose, is a sort of senate scene.
PUFF.
To be sure; there has not been one yet.
DANGLE.
It is the under-plot, isn’t it?
PUFF.
Yes.—What, gentlemen, do you mean to go at once to the discovery scene?
JUSTICE.
If you please, sir.
PUFF.
Oh, very well!—Hark’ee, I don’t choose to say anything more;
but, i’faith they have mangled my play in a most shocking manner.
DANGLE.
It’s a great pity!
PUFF.
Now, then, Mr. justice, if you please.
JUSTICE.
Are all the volunteers without?
CONSTABLE.
They are. Some ten in fetters, and some twenty drunk.
JUSTICE.
Attends the youth, whose most opprobrious fame And clear convicted crimes have
stamp’d him soldier?
CONSTABLE.
He waits your pleasure; eager to repay The best reprieve that sends him to the
fields Of glory, there to raise his branded hand In honour’s cause.
JUSTICE.
’Tis well—’tis justice arms him! Oh! may he now defend his
country’s laws With half the spirit he has broke them all! If ’tis
your worship’s pleasure, bid him enter.
CONSTABLE.
I fly, the herald of your will. [Exit.]
PUFF.
Quick, sir.
SNEER.
But, Mr. Puff, I think not only the justice, but the clown seems to talk in as
high a style as the first hero among them.
PUFF.
Heaven forbid they should not in a free country!—Sir, I am not for making
slavish distinctions, and giving all the fine language to the upper sort of
people.
DANGLE.
That’s very noble in you, indeed. Enter JUSTICE’S LADY.
PUFF.
Now, pray mark this scene. Lady Forgive this interruption, good my love;
But as I just now pass’d a prisoner youth, Whom rude hands hither lead,
strange bodings seized My fluttering heart, and to myself I said, An’ if
our Tom had lived, he’d surely been This stripling’s height!
JUSTICE.
Ha! sure some powerful sympathy directs Us both—
Enter CONSTABLE with SON. What is thy name?
SON.
My name is Tom Jenkins—alias have I none—Though
orphan’d, and without a friend!
JUSTICE.
Thy parents?
SON.
My father dwelt in Rochester—and was, As I have heard—a
fishmonger—no more.
PUFF.
What, sir, do you leave out the account of your birth, parentage, and
education?
SON.
They have settled it so, sir, here.
PUFF.
Oh! oh! Lady.
How loudly nature whispers to my heart Had he no other name?
SON.
I’ve seen a bill Of his sign’d Tomkins, creditor.
JUSTICE.
This does indeed confirm each circumstance The gipsy told!—Prepare!
SON.
I do.
JUSTICE.
No orphan, nor without a friend art thou—I am thy father; here’s
thy mother; there Thy uncle—this thy first cousin, and those are all your
near relations!
JUSTICE’S LADY.
O ecstasy of bliss!
SON.
O most unlook’d for happiness!
JUSTICE.
O wonderful event! [They faint alternately in each other’s arms.]
PUFF.
There, you see, relationship, like murder, will out.
JUSTICE.
Now let’s revive—else were this joy too much! But come—and
we’ll unfold the rest within; And thou, my boy, must needs want rest and
food. Hence may each orphan hope, as chance directs, To find a
father—where he least expects! [Exeunt.]
PUFF.
What do you think of that?
DANGLE.
One of the finest discovery-scenes I ever saw!—Why, this under-plot would
have made a tragedy itself.
SNEER.
Ay! or a comedy either.
PUFF.
And keeps quite clear you see of the other. Enter SCENEMEN, taking
away the seats.
PUFF.
The scene remains, does it?
SCENEMAN.
Yes, sir.
PUFF.
You are to leave one chair, you know.—But it is always awkward in a
tragedy, to have your fellows coming in in your play-house liveries to remove
things.—I wish that could be managed better.—So now for my
mysterious yeoman. Enter BEEFEATER.
BEEFEATER.
Perdition catch my soul, but I do love thee.
SNEER.
Haven’t I heard that line before?
PUFF.
No, I fancy not.—Where, pray?
DANGLE.
Yes, I think there is something like it in Othello.
PUFF.
Gad! now you put me in mind on’t, I believe there is—but
that’s of no consequence; all that can be said is, that two people
happened to hit upon the same thought—and Shakspeare made use of it
first, that’s all.
SNEER.
Very true.
PUFF.
Now, sir, your soliloquy—but speak more to the pit, if you
please—the soliloquy always to the pit, that’s a rule.
BEEFEATER.
Though hopeless love finds comfort in despair, It never can endure a
rival’s bliss! But soft—I am observed. [Exit.]
DANGLE.
That’s a very short soliloquy.
PUFF.
Yes—but it would have been a great deal longer if he had not been
observed.
SNEER.
A most sentimental Beefeater that, Mr. Puff!
PUFF.
Hark’ee—I would not have you be too sure that he is a Beefeater.
SNEER.
What, a hero in disguise?
PUFF.
No matter—I only give you a hint. But now for my principal character.
Here he comes—Lord Burleigh in person! Pray, gentlemen, step this
way—softly—I only hope the Lord High Treasurer is perfect—if
he is but perfect! Enter LORD BURLEIGH, goes slowly to a chair, and
sits.
SNEER.
Mr. Puff!
PUFF.
Hush!—Vastly well, sir! vastly well! a most interesting gravity.
DANGLE.
What, isn’t he to speak at all?
PUFF.
Egad, I thought you’d ask me that!—Yes, it is a very likely
thing—that a minister in his situation, with the whole affairs of the
nation on his head, should have time to talk!—But hush! or you’ll
put him out.
SNEER.
Put him out; how the plague can that be, if he’s not going to say
anything?
PUFF.
There’s the reason! why, his part is to think; and how the plague do you
imagine he can think if you keep talking?
DANGLE.
That’s very true, upon my word! LORD BURLEIGH comes forward, shakes
his head, and exit.
SNEER.
He is very perfect indeed! Now, pray what did he mean by that?
PUFF.
You don’t take it?
SNEER.
No, I don’t, upon my soul.
PUFF.
Why, by that shake of the head, he gave you to understand that even though they
had more justice in their cause, and wisdom in their measures—yet, if
there was not a greater spirit shown on the part of the people, the country
would at last fall a sacrifice to the hostile ambition of the Spanish monarchy.
SNEER.
The devil! did he mean all that by shaking his head?
PUFF.
Every word of it—if he shook his head as I taught him.
DANGLE.
Ah! there certainly is a vast deal to be done on the stage by dumb show and
expressions of face; and a judicious author knows how much he may trust to it.
SNEER.
Oh, here are some of our old acquaintance. Enter SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON
and SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
My niece and your niece too! By Heaven! there’s witchcraft
in’t.—He could not else Have gain’d their hearts.—But
see where they approach Some horrid purpose lowering on their brows!
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
Let us withdraw and mark them. [They withdraw.]
SNEER.
What is all this?
PUFF.
Ah! here has been more pruning!—but the fact is, these two young ladies
are also in love with Don Whiskerandos.—Now, gentlemen, this scene goes
entirely for what we call situation and stage effect, by which the greatest
applause may be obtained, without the assistance of language, sentiment, or
character: pray mark! Enter the two NIECES.
FIRST NIECE.
Ellena here! She is his scorn as much as I—that is Some comfort still !
PUFF.
O dear, madam, you are not to say that to her face!—Aside, ma’am,
aside.—The whole scene is to be aside. 1st Niece.
She is his scorn as much as I—that is Some comfort still. [Aside.]
SECOND NIECE.
I know he prizes not Pollina’s love; But Tilburina lords it o’er
his heart. [Aside.]
FIRST NIECE.
But see the proud destroyer of my peace. Revenge is all the good I’ve
left. [Aside.]
SECOND NIECE.
He comes, the false disturber of my quiet. Now vengeance do thy worst.
[Aside.]
Enter DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
O hateful liberty—if thus in vain I seek my Tilburina!
BOTH NIECES.
And ever shalt! SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON and SIR WALTER RALEIGH come
forward.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON and SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
Hold! we will avenge you.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
Hold you—or see your nieces bleed! [The two NIECES draw
their two daggers to strike WHISKERANDOS: the two UNCLES at the
instant, with their two swords drawn, catch their two NIECES’
arms, and turn the points of their swords to WHISKERANDOS, who
immediately draws two daggers, and holds them to the two NIECES’
bosoms.]
PUFF.
There’s situation for you! there’s an heroic group!—You see
the ladies can’t stab Whiskerandos—he durst not strike them, for
fear of their uncles—the uncles durst not kill him, because of their
nieces.—I have them all at a dead lock!—for every one of them is
afraid to let go first.
SNEER.
Why, then they must stand there for ever!
PUFF.
So they would, if I hadn’t a very fine contrivance for’t.—Now
mind—Enter BEEFEATER, with his halbert.
BEEFEATER.
In the queen’s name I charge you all to drop Your swords and daggers!
[They drop their swords and daggers.]
SNEER.
That is a contrivance indeed!
PUFF.
Ay—in the queen’s name.
SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON.
Come, niece!
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
Come, niece! [Exeunt with the two NIECES.]
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
What’s he, who bids us thus renounce our guard?
BEEFEATER.
Thou must do more—renounce thy love!
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
Thou liest—base Beefeater!
BEEFEATER.
Ha! hell! the lie! By Heaven thou’st roused the lion in my heart! Off,
yeoman’s habit!—base disguise! off! off! [Discovers himself by
throwing off his upper dress, and appearing in a very fine waistcoat.] Am I
a Beefeater now? Or beams my crest as terrible as when In Biscay’s Bay I
took thy captive sloop?
PUFF.
There, egad! he comes out to be the very captain of the privateer who had taken
Whiskerandos prisoner—and was himself an old lover of Tilburina’s.
DANGLE.
Admirably managed, indeed!
PUFF.
Now, stand out of their way. Whisk. I thank thee, Fortune, that hast
thus bestowed A weapon to chastise this insolent. [Takes up one of the
swords.]
BEEFEATER.
I take thy challenge, Spaniard, and I thank thee, Fortune, too! [Takes up
the other sword.]
DANGLE.
That’s excellently contrived!—It seems as if the two uncles had
left their swords on purpose for them.
PUFF.
No, egad, they could not help leaving them. Whisk.
Vengeance and Tilburina!
BEEFEATER.
Exactly so—[They fight—and after the usual number of wounds
given, WHISKERANDOS falls.]
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
O cursed parry!—that last thrust in tierce Was fatal.—Captain, thou
hast fenced well! And Whiskerandos quits this bustling scene For all
eter—
BEEFEATER.
—nity—he would have added, but stern death Cut short his being, and
the noun at once!
PUFF.
Oh, my dear sir, you are too slow: now mind me.—Sir, shall I trouble you
to die again? Whisk.
And Whiskerandos quits this bustling scene For all eter—
BEEFEATER.
—nity—he would have added,—
PUFF.
No, sir—that’s not it—once more, if you please.
DON FEROLO WHISKERANDOS.
I wish, sir, you would practise this without me—I can’t stay dying
here all night.
PUFF.
Very well; we’ll go over it by-and-by.—[Exit WHISKERANDOS.]
I must humour these gentlemen! Beef.
Farewell, brave Spaniard! and when next—
PUFF.
Dear sir, you needn’t speak that speech, as the body has walked off.
BEEFEATER.
That’s true, sir—then I’ll join the fleet.
PUFF.
If you please.—[Exit BEEFEATER.] Now, who comes on? Enter
GOVERNOR, with his hair properly disordered.
GOVERNOR.
A hemisphere of evil planets reign! And every planet sheds contagious frenzy!
My Spanish prisoner is slain! my daughter, Meeting the dead corse borne along,
has gone Distract! [A loud flourish of trumpets.] But hark! I am
summoned to the fort: Perhaps the fleets have met! amazing crisis! O Tilburina!
from thy aged father’s beard Thou’st pluck’d the few brown
hairs which time had left! [Exit.]
SNEER.
Poor gentleman!
PUFF.
Yes—and no one to blame but his daughter!
DANGLE.
And the planets—
PUFF.
True.—Now enter Tilburina!
SNEER.
Egad, the business comes on quick here.
PUFF.
Yes, sir—now she comes in stark mad in white satin.
SNEER.
Why in white satin?
PUFF.
O Lord, sir—when a heroine goes mad, she always goes into white
satin.—Don’t she, Dangle?
DANGLE.
Always—it’s a rule.
PUFF.
Yes—here it is—[Looking at the book.] Enter Tilburina stark
mad in white satin, and her confidant stark mad in white linen. Enter
TILBURINA and CONFIDANT, mad, according to custom.
SNEER.
But, what the deuce! is the confidant to be mad too?
PUFF.
To be sure she is: the confidant is always to do whatever her mistress does;
weep when she weeps, smile when she smiles, go mad when she goes
mad.—Now, Madam Confidant—but keep your madness in the background,
if you please. Tilb. The wind whistles—the moon rises—see,
They have kill’d my squirrel in his cage: Is this a
grasshopper?—Ha! no; it is my Whiskerandos—you shall not keep
him—I know you have him in your pocket—An oyster may be
cross’d in love!—who says A whale’s a bird?—Ha! did you
call, my love?—He’s here! he’s there!—He’s
everywhere! Ah me! he’s nowhere! [Exit.]
PUFF.
There, do you ever desire to see anybody madder than that?
SNEER.
Never, while I live!
PUFF.
You observed how she mangled the metre?
DANGLE.
Yes,—egad, it was the first thing made me suspect she was out of her
senses!
SNEER.
And pray what becomes of her?
PUFF.
She is gone to throw herself into the sea, to be sure—and that brings us
at once to the scene of action, and so to my catastrophe—my sea-fight, I
mean.
SNEER.
What, you bring that in at last?
PUFF.
Yes, yes—you know my play is called The Spanish Armada; otherwise,
egad, I have no occasion for the battle at all.—Now then for my
magnificence!—my battle!—my noise!—and my
procession!—You are all ready?
UNDER PROMPTER.
[Within.] Yes, sir.
PUFF.
Is the Thames dressed? Enter THAMES with two ATTENDANTS.
Thames.
Here I am, sir.
PUFF.
Very well, indeed!—See, gentlemen, there’s a river for
you!—This is blending a little of the masque with my tragedy—a new
fancy, you know—and very useful in my case; for as there must be a
procession, I suppose Thames, and all his tributary rivers, to compliment
Britannia with a fête in honour of the victory.
SNEER.
But pray, who are these gentlemen in green with him?
PUFF.
Those?—those are his banks.
SNEER.
His banks?
PUFF.
Yes, one crowned with alders, and the other with a villa!—you take the
allusions?—But hey! what the plague!—you have got both your banks
on one side.—Here, sir, come round.—Ever while you live, Thames, go
between your banks.—[Bell rings.] There; so! now
for’t!—Stand aside, my dear friends!—Away, Thames!
[Exit THAMES between his banks.] [Flourish of drums, trumpets,
cannon, &c., &c. Scene changes to the sea—the fleets
engage—the music plays—Britons strike home.—Spanish fleet
destroyed by fire-ships, &c.—English fleet advances—music
plays, Rule Britannia.—The procession of all the English rivers, and
their tributaries, with their emblems, &c., begins with Handel’s
water music, ends with a chorus to the march in Judas’
Maccabaeus.—During this scene, PUFF directs and applauds
everything—then
PUFF.
Well, pretty well—but not quite perfect. So, ladies and gentlemen, if you
please, we’ll rehearse this piece again tomorrow. [Curtain
drops.]