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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Fair Em, by William Shakespeare (Apocrypha)
-(#54 in our series by Shakespeare Apocrypha)
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-*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
-
-Title: Fair Em
-
-Author: William Shakespeare (Apocrypha)
-
-Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5137]
-[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
-[This file was first posted on May 12, 2002]
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-Edition: 10
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-Language: English
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-Character set encoding: ASCII
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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FAIR EM ***
-
-
-This eBook was produced by Tony Adam.
-
-
-
-Shakespeare, William. Faire Em.
-
-
-A PLEASANT COMMODIE OF
-FAIRE EM
-THE MILLERS DAUGHTER OF MANCHESTER
-WITH THE LOVE OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROUR
-
-
-Dramatis Personae.
-
-
-WILLIAM the Conqueror.
-ZWENO, King of Denmark.
-Duke DIROT.
-Marquis of Lubeck.
-MOUNTNEY.
-MANVILLE.
-ROZILIO.
-DIMARCH.
-Danish Embassador.
-The Miller of Manchester.
-TROTTER, his Man.
-Citizen of Chester.
-
-BLANCH, Princess of Denmark.
-MARIANA, Princess of Suethia.
-Fair EM, the Miller's Daughter.
-ELINER, the Citizen's Daughter.
-English and Danish Nobles.
-Soldiers, Countrymen, and Attendants.
-
-
-Actus Primus. Scaena Prima.
-
-Windsor. A State Apartment.
-
-[Enter William the Conqueror; Marques Lubeck, with a picture;
-Mountney; Manville; Valingford; and Duke Dirot.]
-
-
-MARQUES.
-What means fair Britain's mighty Conqueror
-So suddenly to cast away his staff,
-And all in passion to forsake the tylt?
-
-D. DIROT.
-My Lord, this triumph we solemnise here
-Is of mere love to your increasing joys,
-Only expecting cheerful looks for all;
-What sudden pangs than moves your majesty
-To dim the brightness of the day with frowns?
-
-WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
-Ah, good my Lords, misconster not the cause;
-At least, suspect not my displeased brows:
-I amorously do bear to your intent,
-For thanks and all that you can wish I yield.
-But that which makes me blush and shame to tell
-Is cause why thus I turn my conquering eyes
-To cowards looks and beaten fantasies.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Since we are guiltless, we the less dismay
-To see this sudden change possess your cheer,
-For if it issue from your own conceits
-Bred by suggestion of some envious thoughts,
-Your highness wisdom may suppress it straight.
-Yet tell us, good my Lord, what thought it is
-That thus bereaves you of your late content,
-That in advise we may assist your grace,
-Or bend our forces to revive your spirits.
-
-WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
-Ah, Marques Lubeck, in thy power it lies
-To rid my bosom of these thralled dumps:
-And therefore, good my Lords, forbear a while
-That we may parley of these private cares,
-Whose strength subdues me more than all the world.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-We go and wish thee private conference
-Publicke afffects in this accustomed peace.
-
-[Exit all but William and the Marques.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-Now, Marques, must a Conquerer at arms
-Disclose himself thrald to unarmed thoughts,
-And, threatnd of a shadow, yield to lust.
-No sooner had my sparkling eyes beheld
-The flames of beauty blazing on this piece,
-But suddenly a sense of miracle,
-Imagined on thy lovely Maistre's face,
-Made me abandon bodily regard,
-And cast all pleasures on my wounded soul:
-Then, gentle Marques, tell me what she is,
-That thus thou honourest on thy warlike shield;
-And if thy love and interest be such
-As justly may give place to mine,
-That if it be, my soul with honors wing
-May fly into the bosom of my dear;
-If not, close them, and stoop into my grave!
-
-MARQUES.
-If this be all, renowned Conquerer,
-Advance your drooping spirits, and revive
-The wonted courage of your Conquering mind;
-For this fair picture painted on my shield
-Is the true counterfeit of lovely Blaunch,
-Princess and daughter to the King of Danes,
-Whose beauty and excess of ornaments
-Deserves another manner of defence,
-Pomp and high person to attend her state
-Then Marques Lubeck any way presents.
-Therefore her vertues I resign to thee,
-Already shrined in thy religious breast,
-To be advanced and honoured to the full;
-Nor bear I this an argument of love,
-But to renown fair Blaunch, my Sovereigns child
-In every place where I by arms may do it.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Ah, Marques, thy words bring heaven unto my soul,
-And had I heaven to give for thy reward,
-Thou shouldst be throned in no unworthy place.
-But let my uttermost wealth suffice thy worth,
-Which here I vow; and to aspire the bliss
-That hangs on quick achievement of my love,
-Thy self and I will travel in disguise,
-To bring this Lady to our Brittain Court.
-
-MARQUES.
-Let William but bethink what may avail,
-And let me die if I deny my aide.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Then thus: The Duke Dirot, and Therle Dimarch,
-Will I leave substitutes to rule my Realm,
-While mighty love forbids my being here;
-And in the name of Sir Robert of Windsor
-Will go with thee unto the Danish Court.
-Keep Williams secrets, Marques, if thou love him.
-Bright Blaunch, I come! Sweet fortune, favour me,
-And I will laud thy name eternally.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-
-SCENE II.
-
-Manchester. The Interior of a Mill.
-
-[Enter the Miller and Em, his daughter.]
-
-
-MILLER.
-Come, daughter, we must learn to shake of pomp,
-To leave the state that earst beseemd a Knight
-And gentleman of no mean discent,
-To undertake this homelie millers trade:
-Thus must we mask to save our wretched lives,
-Threatned by Conquest of this hapless Yle,
-Whose sad invasions by the Conqueror
-Have made a number such as we subject
-Their gentle necks unto their stubborn yoke
-Of drudging labour and base peasantry.
-Sir Thomas Godard now old Goddard is,
-Goddard the miller of fair Manchester.
-Why should not I content me with this state,
-As good Sir Edmund Trofferd did the flaile?
-And thou, sweet Em, must stoop to high estate
-To join with mine that thus we may protect
-Our harmless lives, which, led in greater port,
-Would be an envious object to our foes,
-That seek to root all Britains Gentry
-From bearing countenance against their tyranny.
-
-EM.
-Good Father, let my full resolved thoughts
-With settled patiens to support this chance
-Be some poor comfort to your aged soul;
-For therein rests the height of my estate,
-That you are pleased with this dejection,
-And that all toils my hands may undertake
-May serve to work your worthiness content.
-
-MILLER.
-Thanks, my dear Daughter.
-These thy pleasant words
-Transfer my soul into a second heaven:
-And in thy settled mind my joys consist,
-My state revived, and I in former plight.
-Although our outward pomp be thus abased,
-And thralde to drudging, stayless of the world,
-Let us retain those honorable minds
-That lately governed our superior state,
-Wherein true gentry is the only mean
-That makes us differ from base millers borne.
-Though we expect no knightly delicates,
-Nor thirst in soul for former soverainty,
-Yet may our minds as highly scorn to stoop
-To base desires of vulgars worldliness,
-As if we were in our precedent way.
-And, lovely daughter, since thy youthful years
-Must needs admit as young affections,
-And that sweet love unpartial perceives
-Her dainty subjects through every part,
-In chief receive these lessons from my lips,
-The true discovers of a Virgins due,
-Now requisite, now that I know thy mind
-Something enclined to favour Manvils suit,
-A gentleman, thy Lover in protest;
-And that thou maist not be by love deceived,
-But try his meaning fit for thy desert,
-In pursuit of all amorous desires,
-Regard thine honour. Let not vehement sighs,
-Nor earnest vows importing fervent love,
-Render thee subject to the wrath of lust:
-For that, transformed to form of sweet delight,
-Will bring thy body and thy soul to shame.
-Chaste thoughts and modest conversations,
-Of proof to keep out all inchaunting vows,
-Vain sighs, forst tears, and pitiful aspects,
-Are they that make deformed Ladies fair,
-Poor rich: and such intycing men,
-That seek of all but only present grace,
-Shall in perseverance of a Virgins due
-Prefer the most refusers to the choice
-Of such a soul as yielded what they thought.
-But ho: where is Trotter?
-
-[Here enters Trotter, the Millers man, to them: And they
-within call to him for their gryste.]
-
-TROTTER.
-Wheres Trotter? why, Trotter is here. Yfaith, you and your
-daughter go up and down weeping and wamenting, and keeping of
-a wamentation, as who should say, the Mill would go with your
-wamenting.
-
-MILLER.
-How now, Trotter? why complainest thou so?
-
-TROTTER.
-Why, yonder is a company of young men and maids, keep such a
-stir for their grist, that they would have it before my stones
-be ready to grind it. But, yfaith, I would I could break wind
-enough backward: you should not tarry for your gryst, I
-warrant you.
-
-MILLER.
-Content thee, Trotter, I will go pacify them.
-
-TROTTER.
-Iwis you will when I cannot. Why, look, you have a Mill--
-Why, whats your Mill without me? Or rather, Mistress, what
-were I without you?
-
-[Here he taketh Em about the neck.]
-
-EM.
-Nay, Trotter, if you fall achyding, I will give you over.
-
-TROTTER.
-I chide you, dame, to amend you. You are too fine to be a
-Millers daughter; for if you should but stoop to take up the
-tole dish, you will have the cramp in your finger at least
-ten weeks after.
-
-MILLER.
-Ah, well said, Trotter; teach her to play the good huswife,
-and thou shalt have her to thy wife, if thou canst get her
-good will.
-
-TROTTER.
-Ah, words wherein I see Matrimony come loaden with kisses to
-salute me! Now let me alone to pick the Mill, to fill the
-hopper, to take the tole, to mend the sails, yea, and to make
-the mill to go with the very force of my love.
-
-[Here they must call for their gryst within.]
-
-TROTTER.
-I come, I come; yfaith, now you shall have your gryst, or else
-Trotter will trot and amble himself to death.
-
-[They call him again. Exit.]
-
-
-SCENE III.
-
-The Danish Court.
-
-[Enter king of Denmark, with some attendants, Blanch his
-daughter, Mariana, Marques Lubeck, William disguised.]
-
-
-KING OF DENMARK.
-Lord Marques Lubecke, welcome home.
-Welcome, brave Knight, unto the Denmark King,
-For Williams sake, the noble Norman Duke,
-So famous for his fortunes and success,
-That graceth him with name of Conqueror:
-Right double welcome must thou be to us.
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-And to my Lord the king shall I recount
-Your graces courteous entertainment,
-That for his sake vouchsafe to honor me,
-A simple Knight attendant on his grace.
-
-KING OF DENMARK.
-But say, Sir Knight, what may I call your name?
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-Robert Windsor, and like your Majesty.
-
-KING OF DENMARK.
-I tell thee, Robert, I so admire the man
-As that I count it heinous guilt in him
-That honors not Duke William with his heart.
-Blanch, bid this stranger welcome, good my girl.
-
-BLANCH.
-Sir,
-Shouyld I neglect your highness charge herein,
-It might be thought of base discourtesy.
-Welcome, Sir Knight, to Denmark, heartily.
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-Thanks gentle Lady. Lord Marques, who is she?
-
-LUBECK.
-That same is Blanch, daughter to the King.
-The substance of the shadow that you saw.
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-May this be she, for whom I crost the Seas?
-I am ashamed to think I was so fond.
-In whom there's nothing that contents my mind:
-Ill head, worse featured, uncomely, nothing courtly;
-Swart and ill favoured, a Colliers sanguine skin.
-I never saw a harder favoured slut.
-Love her? for what? I can no whit abide her.
-
-KIND OF DENMARK.
-Mariana, I have this day received letters
-From Swethia, that lets me understand
-Your ransom is collecting there with speed,
-And shortly shalbe hither sent to us.
-
-MARIANA.
-Not that I find occasion of mislike
-My entertainment in your graces court,
-But that I long to see my native home--
-
-KING OF DENMARK.
-And reason have you, Madam, for the same.
-Lord Marques, I commit unto your charge
-The entertainment of Sir Robert here;
-Let him remain with you within the Court,
-In solace and disport to spend the time.
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-I thank your highness, whose bounden I remain.
-
-[Exit King of Denmark. Blanch speaketh this secretly at one
-end of the stage.]
-
-Unhappy Blanch, what strange effects are these
-That works within my thoughts confusedly?
-That still, me thinks, affection draws me on,
-To take, to like, nay more, to love this Knight?
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-A modest countenance; no heavy sullen look;
-Not very fair, but richly deckt with favour;
-A sweet face, an exceeding dainty hand;
-A body were it framed of wax
-By all the cunning artists of the world,
-It could not better be proportioned.
-
-LUBECK.
-How now, Sir Robert? in a study, man?
-Here is no time for contemplation.
-
-ROBERT WINDSOR.
-My Lord, there is a certain odd conceit,
-Which on the sudden greatly troubles me.
-
-LUBECK.
-How like you Blanch? I partly do perceive
-The little boy hath played the wag with you.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-The more I look the more I love to look.
-Who says that Mariana is not fair?
-I'll gage my gauntlet gainst the envious man
-That dares avow there liveth her compare.
-
-LUBECK.
-Sir Robert, you mistake your counterfeit.
-This is the Lady which you came to see.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-Yes, my Lord: She is counterfeit in deed,
-For there is the substance that best contents me.
-
-LUBECK.
-That is my love. Sir Robert, you do wrong me.
-
-ROBERT.
-The better for you, sir, she is your Love--
-As for the wrong, I see not how it grows.
-
-LUBECK.
-In seeking that which is anothers right.
-
-ROBERT.
-As who should say your love were privileged,
-That none might look upon her but your self.
-
-LUBECK.
-These jars becomes not our familiarity,
-Nor will I stand on terms to move your patience.
-
-ROBERT.
-Why, my Lord, am
-Not I of flesh and blood as well as you?
-Then give me leave to love as well as you.
-
-LUBECK.
-To Love, Sir Robert? but whom? not she I Love?
-Nor stands it with the honor my state
-To brook corrivals with me in my love.
-
-ROBERT.
-So, Sir, we are thorough for that Lady.
-Ladies, farewell. Lord Marques, will you go?
-I will find a time to speak with her, I trowe.
-
-LUBECK.
-With all my heart. Come, Ladies, will you walk?
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-SCENE IV.
-
-The English Court.
-
-[Enter Manvile alone, disguised.]
-
-
-MANVILE.
-Ah, Em! the subject of my restless thoughts,
-The Anvil whereupon my heart doth be
-Framing thy state to thy desert--
-Full ill this life becomes thy heavenly look,
-Wherein sweet love and vertue sits enthroned.
-Bad world, where riches is esteemd above them both,
-In whose base eyes nought else is bountifull!
-A Millers daughter, says the multitude,
-Should not be loved of a Gentleman.
-But let them breath their souls into the air,
-Yet will I still affect thee as my self,
-So thou be constant in thy plighted vow.
-But here comes one--I will listen to his talk.
-
-[Manvile stays, hiding himself.]
-
-[Enter Valingford at another door, disguised.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Go, William Conqueror, and seek thy love
-Seek thou a minion in a foreign land,
-Whilest I draw back and court my love at home.
-The millers daughter of fair Manchester
-Hath bound my feet to this delightsome soil,
-And from her eyes do dart such golden beams
-That holds my heart in her subjection.
-
-MANVILE.
-He ruminates on my beloved choice:
-God grant he come not to prevent my hope.
-But here's another, him I'll listen to.
-
-[Enter Mountney, disguised, at another door.]
-
-LORD MOUNTNEY.
-Nature unjust, in utterance of thy art,
-To grace a peasant with a Princes fame!
-Peasant am I, so to misterm my love:
-Although a millers daughter by her birth,
-Yet may her beauty and her vertues well suffice
-To hide the blemish of her birth in hell,
-Where neither envious eyes nor thought can pierce,
-But endless darkness ever smother it.
-Go, William Conqueror, and seek thy love,
-Whilest I draw back and court mine own the while,
-Decking her body with such costly robes
-As may become her beauties worthiness;
-That so thy labors may be laughed to scorn,
-And she thou seekest in foreign regions
-Be darkened and eclipst when she arrives
-By one that I have chosen nearer home.
-
-MANVILE.
-What! comes he too, to intercept my love?
-Then hie thee Manvile to forestall such foes.
-
-[Exit Manvile.]
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-What now, Lord Valingford, are you behind?
-The king had chosen you to go with him.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-So chose he you, therefore I marvel much
-That both of us should linger in this sort.
-What may the king imagine of our stay?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-The king may justly think we are to blame:
-But I imagined I might well be spared,
-And that no other man had borne my mind.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-The like did I: in friendship then resolve
-What is the cause of your unlookt for stay?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Lord Valingford, I tell thee as a friend,
-Love is the cause why I have stayed behind.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Love, my Lord? of whom?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Em, the millers daughter of Manchester.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-But may this be?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Why not, my Lord? I hope full well you know
-That love respects no difference of state,
-So beauty serve to stir affection.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-But this it is that makes me wonder most:
-That you and I should be of one conceit
-I such a strange unlikely passion.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-But is that true? My Lord, I hope you do but jest.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-I would I did; then were my grief the less.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Nay, never grieve; for if the cause be such
-To join our thoughts in such a Simpathy,
-All envy set aside, let us agree
-To yield to eithers fortune in this choice.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Content, say I: and what so ere befall,
-Shake hands, my Lord, and fortune thrive at all.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-
-ACT II.
-
-SCENE I. Manchester. The Mill.
-
-[Enter Em and Trotter, the Millers man, with a kerchife on his
-head, and an Urinall in his hand.]
-
-
-EM.
-Trotter, where have you been?
-
-TROTTER.
-Where have I been? why, what signifies this?
-
-EM.
-A kerchiefe, doth it not?
-
-TROTTER.
-What call you this, I pray?
-
-EM.
-I say it is an Urinall.
-
-TROTTER.
-Then this is mystically to give you to understand, I have
-been at the Phismicaries house.
-
-EM.
-How long hast thou been sick?
-
-TROTTER.
-Yfaith, even as long as I have not been half well, and that
-hath been a long time.
-
-EM.
-A loitering time, I rather imagine.
-
-TROTTER.
-It may be so: but the Phismicary tells me that you can help
-Me.
-
-EM.
-Why, any thing I can do for recovery of thy health be right
-well assured of.
-
-TROTTER.
-Then give me your hand.
-
-EM.
-To what end?
-
-TROTTER.
-That the ending of an old indenture is the beginning of a
-new bargain.
-
-EM.
-What bargain?
-
-TROTTER.
-That you promised to do any thing to recover my health.
-
-EM.
-On that condition I give thee my hand.
-
-TROTTER.
-Ah, sweet Em!
-
-[Here he offers to kiss her.]
-
-EM.
-How now, Trotter! your masters daughter?
-
-TROTTER.
-Yfaith, I aim at the fairest.
- Ah, Em, sweet Em!
- Fresh as the flower,
- That hath pour
- To wound my heart,
- And ease my smart,
- Of me, poor thief,
- In prison bound--
-
-EM.
- So all your rhyme
- Lies on the ground.
-But what means this?
-
-TROTTER.
-Ah, mark the device--
- For thee, my love,
- Full sick I was,
- In hazard of my life.
- Thy promise was
- To make me whole,
- And for to be my wife.
- Let me enjoy
- My love, my dear,
- And thou possess
- Thy Trotter here.
-
-EM.
-But I meant no such matter.
-
-TROTTER.
-Yes, woos, but you did. I'll go to our Parson, Sir John, and
-he shall mumble up the marriage out of hand.
-
-EM.
-But here comes one that will forbid the Banes.
-
-[Here enters Manvile to them.]
-
-TROTTER.
-Ah, Sir, you come too late.
-
-MANVILE.
-What remedy, Trotter?
-
-EM.
-Go, Trotter, my father calls.
-
-TROTTER.
-Would you have me go in, and leave you two here?
-
-EM.
-Why, darest thou not trust me?
-
-TROTTER.
-Yes, faith, even as long as I see you.
-
-EM.
-Go thy ways, I pray thee heartily.
-
-TROTTER.
-That same word (heartily) is of great force. I will go. But
-I pray, sir, beware you come not too near the wench.
-
-[Exit Trotter.]
-
-MANVILE.
-I am greatly beholding to you.
-Ah, Maistres, sometime I might have said, my love,
-But time and fortune hath bereaved me of that,
-And I, an object in those gratious eyes,
-That with remorse earst saw into my grief,
-May sit and sigh the sorrows of my heart.
-
-EM.
-In deed my Manvile hath some cause to doubt,
-When such a Swain is rival in his love!
-
-MANVILE.
-Ah, Em, were he the man that causeth this mistrust,
-I should esteem of thee as at the first.
-
-EM.
-But is my love in earnest all this while?
-
-MANVILE.
-Believe me, Em, it is not time to jest,
-When others joys, what lately I possest.
-
-EM.
-If touching love my Manvile charge me thus,
-Unkindly must I take it at his hands,
-For that my conscience clears me of offence.
-
-MANVILE.
-Ah, impudent and shameless in thy ill,
-That with thy cunning and defraudful tongue
-Seeks to delude the honest meaning mind!
-Was never heard in Manchester before
-Of truer love then hath been betwixt twain:
-And for my part how I have hazarded
-Displeasure of my father and my friends,
-Thy self can witness. Yet notwithstanding this,
-Two gentlemen attending on Duke William,
-Mountney and Valingford, as I heard them named,
-Oft times resort to see and to be seen
-Walking the street fast by thy fathers door,
-Whose glauncing eyes up to the windows cast
-Gives testies of their Maisters amorous heart.
-This, Em, is noted and too much talked on,
-Some see it without mistrust of ill--
-Others there are that, scorning, grin thereat,
-And saith, 'There goes the millers daughters wooers'.
-Ah me, whom chiefly and most of all it doth concern,
-To spend my time in grief and vex my soul,
-To think my love should be rewarded thus,
-And for thy sake abhor all womenkind!
-
-EM.
-May not a maid look upon a man
-Without suspitious judgement of the world?
-
-MANVILE.
-If sight do move offence, it is the better not to see.
-But thou didst more, unconstant as thou art,
-For with them thou hadst talk and conference.
-
-EM.
-May not a maid talk with a man without mistrust?
-
-MANVILE.
-Not with such men suspected amorous.
-
-EM.
-I grieve to see my Manviles jealousy.
-
-MANVILE.
-Ah, Em, faithful love is full of jealousy.
-So did I love thee true and faithfully,
-For which I am rewarded most unthankfully.
-
-[Exit in a rage. Manet Em.]
-
-EM.
-And so away? What, in displeasure gone,
-And left me such a bittersweet to gnaw upon?
-Ah, Manvile, little wottest thou
-How near this parting goeth to my heart.
-Uncourteous love, whose followers reaps reward
-Of hate, disdain, reproach and infamy,
-The fruit of frantike, bedlome jealousy!
-
-[Here enter Mountney to Em.]
-
-But here comes one of these suspitious men:
-Witness, my God, without desert of me,
-For only Manvile, honor I in heart,
-Nor shall unkindness cause me from him to start.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-For this good fortune, Venus, be thou blest,
-To meet my love, the mistress of my heart,
-Where time and place gives opportunity
-At full to let her understand my love.
-
-[He turns to Em and offers to take her by the hand, and she
-goes from him.]
-
-Fair mistress, since my fortune sorts so well,
-Hear you a word. What meaneth this?
-Nay, stay, fair Em.
-
-EM.
-I am going homewards, sir.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Yet stay, sweet love, to whom I must disclose
-The hidden secrets of a lovers thoughts,
-Not doubting but to find such kind remorse
-As naturally you are enclined to.
-
-EM.
-The Gentle-man, your friend, Sir,
-I have not seen him this four days at the least.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Whats that to me?
-I speak not, sweet, in person of my friend,
-But for my self, whom, if that love deserve
-To have regard, being honourable love,
-Not base affects of loose lascivious love,
-Whom youthful wantons play and dally with,
-But that unites in honourable bands of holy rites,
-And knits the sacred knot that Gods--
-
-[Here Em cuts him off.]
-
-EM.
-What mean you, sir, to keep me here so long?
-I cannot understand you by your signs;
-You keep a pratling with your lips,
-But never a word you speak that I can hear.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-What, is she deaf? a great impediment.
-Yet remedies there are for such defects.
-Sweet Em, it is no little grief to me,
-To see, where nature in her pride of art
-Hath wrought perfections rich and admirable--
-
-EM.
-Speak you to me, Sir?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-To thee, my only joy.
-
-EM.
-I cannot hear you.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Oh, plague of Fortune! Oh hell without compare!
-What boots it us to gaze and not enjoy?
-
-EM.
-Fare you well, Sir.
-
-[Exit Em. Manet Mountney.]
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Fare well, my love. Nay, farewell life and all!
-Could I procure redress for this infirmity,
-It might be means she would regard my suit.
-I am acquainted with the Kings Physicians,
-Amongst the which theres one mine honest friend,
-Seignior Alberto, a very learned man.
-His judgement will I have to help this ill.
-Ah, Em, fair Em, if Art can make thee whole,
-I'll buy that sence for thee, although it cost me dear.
-But, Mountney, stay: this may be but deceit,
-A matter fained only to delude thee,
-And, not unlike, perhaps by Valingford.
-He loves fair Em as well as I--
-As well as I? ah, no, not half so well.
-Put case: yet may he be thine enemy,
-And give her counsell to dissemble thus.
-I'll try the event and if it fall out so,
-Friendship, farewell: Love makes me now a foe.
-
-[Exit Mountney.]
-
-
-SCENE II.
-
-An Ante-Chamber at the Danish Court.
-
-[Enter Marques Lubeck and Mariana.]
-
-
-MARIANA.
-Trust me, my Lord, I am sorry for your hurt.
-
-LUBECK.
-Gramercie, Madam; but it is not great:
-Only a thrust, prickt with a Rapiers point.
-
-MARIANA.
-How grew the quarrel, my Lord?
-
-LUBECK.
-Sweet Lady, for thy sake. There was this last night two
-masks in one company, my self the formost. The other strangers
-were: amongst the which, when the Musick began to sound the
-Measures, each Masker made choice of his Lady; and one, more
-forward than the rest, stept towards thee, which I perceiving,
-thrust him aside, and took thee my self. But this was taken in
-so ill part that at my coming out of the court gate, with
-justling together, it was my chance to be thrust into the arm.
-The doer thereof, because he was the original cause of the
-disorder at that inconvenient time, was presently committed,
-and is this morning sent for to answer the matter. And I
-think here he comes.
-
-[Here enters Sir Robert of Windsor with a Gaylor.]
-
-What, Sir Robert of Windsor, how now?
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-Yfaith, my Lord, a prisoner: but what ails your arm?
-
-LUBECK.
-Hurt the last night by mischance.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-What, not in the mask at the Court gate?
-
-LUBECK.
-Yes, trust me, there.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-Why then, my Lord, I thank you for my nights lodging.
-
-LUBECK.
-And I you for my hurt, if it were so. Keeper, away, I
-discharge you of your prisoner.
-
-[Exit the Keeper.]
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-Lord Marques, you offered me disgrace to shoulder me.
-
-LUBECK.
-Sir, I knew you not, and therefore you must pardon me, and
-the rather it might be alleged to me of mere simplicity to
-see another dance with my Maistris, disguised, and I my self
-in presence. But seeing it was our happs to damnify each
-other unwillingly, let us be content with our harms, and lay
-the fault where it was, and so become friends.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-Yfaith, I am content with my nights lodging, if you be content
-with your hurt.
-
-LUBECK.
-Not content that I have it, but content to forget how I came
-by it.
-
-SIR ROBERT.
-My Lord, here comes Lady Blaunch, lets away.
-
-[Enter Blaunch.]
-
-LUBECK.
-With good will. Lady, you will stay?
-
-[Exit Lubeck and Sir Robert.]
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam--
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Mariana, as I am grieved with thy presence: so am I not
-offended for thy absence; and were it not a breach to modesty,
-thou shouldest know before I left thee.
-
-MARIANA.
-How near is this humor to madness! If you hold on as you
-begin, you are in a pretty way to scolding.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-To scolding, huswife?
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam, here comes one.
-
-[Here enters one with a letter.]
-
-BLAUNCH.
-There doth in deed. Fellow, wouldest thou have any thing with
-any body here?
-
-MESSENGER.
-I have a letter to deliver to the Lady Mariana.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Give it me.
-
-MESSENGER.
-There must none but she have it.
-
-[Blaunch snatcheth the letter from him. Et exit messenger.]
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Go to, foolish fellow. And therefore, to ease the anger I
-sustain, I'll be so bold to open it. Whats here? Sir
-Robert greets you well? You, Mastries, his love, his life?
-Oh amorous man, how he entertains his new Maistres; and
-bestows on Lubeck, his od friend, a horn night cap to keep
-in his witt.
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam, though you have discourteously read my letter, yet I
-pray you give it me.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Then take it: there, and there, and there!
-
-[She tears it. Et exit Blaunch.]
-
-MARIANA.
-How far doth this differ from modesty! Yet will I gather
-up the pieces, which happily may shew to me the intent
-thereof, though not the meaning.
-
-[She gathers up the pieces and joins them.]
-
-'Your servant and love, sir Robert of Windsor, Alias William
-the Conqueror, wisheth long health and happiness'. Is this
-William the Conqueror, shrouded under the name of sir Robert
-of Windsor? Were he the Monarch of the world he should not
-disposess Lubeck of his Love. Therefore I will to the
-Court, and there, if I can, close to be friends with Lady
-Blaunch; and thereby keep Lubeck, my Love, for my self, and
-further the Lady Blaunch in her suit, as much as I may.
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-SCENE III.
-
-Manchester. The Mill.
-
-[Enter Em sola.]
-
-
-EM.
-Jealousy, that sharps the lovers sight,
-And makes him conceive and conster his intent,
-Hath so bewitched my lovely Manvils senses
-That he misdoubts his Em, that loves his soul;
-He doth suspect corrivals in his love,
-Which, how untrue it is, be judge, my God!
-But now no more--Here commeth Valingford;
-Shift him off now, as thou hast done the other.
-
-[Enter Valingford.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-See how Fortune presents me with the hope I lookt for.
-Fair Em!
-
-EM.
-Who is that?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-I am Valingford, thy love and friend.
-
-EM.
-I cry you mercy, Sir; I thought so by your speech.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-What aileth thy eyes?
-
-EM.
-Oh blind, Sir, blind, stricken blind, by mishap, on a sudden.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-But is it possible you should be taken on such a sudden?
-Infortunate Valingford, to be thus crost in thy love! Fair
-Em, I am not a little sorry to see this thy hard hap. Yet
-nevertheless, I am acquainted with a learned Phisitian that
-will do any thing for thee at my request. To him will I
-resort, and enquire his judgement, as concerning the recovery
-of so excellent a sense.
-
-EM.
-Oh Lord Sir: and of all things I cannot abide Phisicke, the
-very name thereof to me is odious.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-No? not the thing will do thee so much good? Sweet Em, hether
-I cam to parley of love, hoping to have found thee in thy
-woonted prosperity; and have the gods so unmercifully thwarted
-my expectation, by dealing so sinisterly with thee, sweet Em?
-
-EM.
-Good sir, no more, it fits not me
-To have respect to such vain fantasies
-As idle love presents my ears withall.
-More reason I should ghostly give my self
-To sacred prayers for this my former sin,
-For which this plague is justly fallen upon me,
-Then to harken to the vanities of love.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Yet, sweet Em,
-Accept this jewell at my hand, which I
-Bestowe on thee in token of my love.
-
-EM.
-A jewell, sir! what pleasure can I have
-In jewels, treasure, or any worldly thing
-That want my sight that should deserne thereof?
-Ah, sir, I must leave you:
-The pain of mine eyes is so extreme,
-I cannot long stay in a place. I take my leave.
-
-[Exit Em.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Zounds, what a cross is this to my conceit! But, Valingford,
-search the depth of this devise. Why may not this be fained
-subteltie, by Mountneys invention, to the intent that I
-seeing such occasion should leave off my suit and not any
-more persist to solicit her of love? I'll try the event; if
-I can by any means perceive the effect of this deceit to be
-procured by his means, friend Mountney, the one of us is like
-to repent our bargain.
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-ACT III.
-
-SCENE I. The Danish Court.
-
-[Enter Mariana and Marques Lubeck.]
-
-
-LUBECK.
-Lady,
-Since that occasion, forward in our good,
-Presenteth place and opportunity,
-Let me intreat your woonted kind consent
-And friendly furtherance in a suit I have.
-
-MARIANA.
-My Lord, you know you need not to intreat,
-But may command Mariana to her power,
-Be it no impeachment to my honest fame.
-
-LUBECK.
-Free are my thoughts from such base villainy
-As may in question, Lady, call your name:
-Yet is the matter of such consequence,
-Standing upon my honorable credit,
-To be effected with such zeal and secrecy
-As, should I speak and fail my expectation,
-It would redound greatly to my prejudice.
-
-MARIANA.
-My Lord, wherein hath Mariana given you
-Occasion that you should mistrust, or else
-Be jealous of my secrecy?
-
-LUBECK.
-Mariana, do not misconster of me:
-I not mistrust thee, nor thy secrecy;
-Nor let my love misconster my intent,
-Nor think thereof but well and honorable.
-Thus stands the case:
-Thou knowest from England hether came with me
-Robert of Windsor, a noble man at Arms,
-Lusty and valiant, in spring time of his years:
-No marvell then though he prove amorous.
-
-MARIANA.
-True, my Lord, he came to see fair Blanch.
-
-LUBECK.
-No, Mariana, that is not it. His love to Blanch
-Was then extinct, when first he saw thy face.
-'Tis thee he loves; yea, thou art only she
-That is maistres and commander of his thoughts.
-
-MARIANA.
-Well, well, my Lord, I like you, for such drifts
-Put silly Ladies often to their shifts.
-Oft have I heard you say you loved me well,
-Yea, sworn the same, and I believed you too.
-Can this be found an action of good faith
-Thus to dissemble where you found true love?
-
-LUBECK.
-Mariana, I not dissemble, on mine honour,
-Nor fails my faith to thee. But for my friend,
-For princely William, by whom thou shalt possess
-The title of estate and Majesty,
-Fitting thy love, and vertues of thy mind--
-For him I speak, for him do I intreat,
-And with thy favour fully do resign
-To him the claim and interest of my love.
-Sweet Mariana, then, deny me not:
-Love William, love my friend, and honour me,
-Who else is clean dishonored by thy means.
-
-MARIANA.
-Borne to mishap, my self am only she
-On whom the Sun of Fortune never shined:
-But Planets ruled by retrogard aspect
-Foretold mine ill in my nativity.
-
-LUBECK.
-Sweet Lady, cease, let my intreaty serve
-To pacify the passion of thy grief,
-Which, well I know, proceeds of ardent love.
-
-MARIANA.
-But Lubeck now regards not Mariana.
-
-LUBECK.
-Even as my life, so love I Mariana.
-
-MARIANA.
-Why do you post me to another then?
-
-LUBECK.
-He is my friend, and I do love the man.
-
-MARIANA.
-Then will Duke William rob me of my Love?
-
-LUBECK.
-No, as his life Mariana he doth love.
-
-MARIANA.
-Speak for your self, my Lord, let him alone.
-
-LUBECK.
-So do I, Madam, for he and I am one.
-
-MARIANA.
-Then loving you I do content you both.
-
-LUBECK.
-In loveing him, you shall content us both:
-Me, for I crave that favour at your hands,
-He, for he hopes that comfort at your hands.
-
-MARIANA.
-Leave off, my Lord, here comes the Lady Blaunch.
-
-[Enter Blaunch to them.]
-
-LUBECK.
-Hard hap to break us of our talk so soon!
-Sweet Mariana, do remember me.
-
-[Exit Lubeck.]
-
-MARIANA.
-Thy Mariana cannot chose but remember thee.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Mariana, well met. You are very forward in your Love?
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam, be it in secret spoken to your self, if you will but
-follow the complot I have invented, you will not think me
-so forward as your self shall prove fortunate.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-As how?
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam, as thus: It is not unknowen to you that Sir Robert
-of Windsor, a man that you do not little esteem, hath long
-importuned me of Love; but rather then I will be found
-false or unjust to the Marques Lubeck, I will, as did the
-constant lady Penelope, undertake to effect some great
-task.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-What of all this?
-
-MARIANA.
-The next time that Sir Robert shall come in his woonted
-sort to solicit me with Love, I will seem to agree and like
-of any thing that the Knight shall demaund, so far foorth
-as it be no impeachment to my chastity: And, to conclude,
-point some place for to meet the man, for my conveyance
-from the Denmark Court: which determined upon, he will
-appoint some certain time for our departure: whereof you
-having intelligence, you may soon set down a plot to wear
-the English Crown, and than--
-
-BLANCH.
-What then?
-
-MARIANA.
-If Sir Robert prove a King and you his Queen, how than?
-
-BLANCH.
-Were I assured of the one, as I am persuaded of the other,
-there were some possibility in it. But here comes the man.
-
-MARIANA.
-Madam, begone, and you shall see I will work to your desire
-and my content.
-
-[Exit Blanch.]
-
-WILLIAM CON.
-Lady, this is well and happily met.
-Fortune hetherto hath beene my foe,
-And though I have oft sought to speak with you,
-Yet still I have been crot with sinister happs.
-I cannot, Madam, tell a loving tale
-Or court my Maistres with fabulous discourses,
-That am a souldier sworn to follow arms:
-But this I bluntly let you understand,
-I honor you with such religious Zeal
-As may become an honorable mind.
-Nor may I make my love the siege of Troy,
-That am a stranger in this Country.
-First, what I am I know you are resolved,
-For that my friend hath let you that to understand,
-The Marques Lubeck, to whom I am so bound
-That whilest I live I count me only his.
-
-MARIANA.
-Surely you are beholding to the Marques,
-For he hath been an earnest spokes-man in your cause.
-
-WILLIAM.
-And yields my Lady, then, at his request,
-To grace Duke William with her gratious love?
-
-MARIANA.
-My Lord, I am a prisoner,
-And hard it were to get me from the Court.
-
-WILLIAM.
-An easy matter to get you from the Court,
-If case that you will thereto give consent.
-
-MARIANA.
-Put case I should, how would you use me than?
-
-WILLIAM.
-Not otherwise but well and honorably.
-I have at Sea a ship that doth attend,
-Which shall forthwith conduct us into England,
-Where when we are, I straight will marry thee.
-We may not stay deliberating long,
-Least that suspicion, envious of our weal,
-Set in a foot to hinder our pretence.
-
-MARIANA.
-But this I think were most convenient,
-To mask my face, the better to scape unknowen.
-
-WILLIAM.
-A good devise: till then, Farwell, fair love.
-
-MARIANA.
-But this I must intreat your grace,
-You would not seek by lust unlawfully
-To wrong my chaste determinations.
-
-WILLIAM.
-I hold that man most shameless in his sin
-That seeks to wrong an honest Ladies name
-Whom he thinks worthy of his marriage bed.
-
-MARIANA.
-In hope your oath is true,
-I leave your grace till the appointed time.
-
-[Exit Mariana.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-O happy William, blessed in th love,
-Most fortunate in Mariana's love!
-Well, Lubeck, well, this courtesy of thine
-I will requite, if God permit me life.
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-SCENE II.
-
-Manchester. Near the Mill.
-
-[Enter Valingford and Mountney at two sundry doors, looking
-angrily each on other with Rapiers drawn.]
-
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Valingford, so hardly I disgest
-An injury thou hast profered me,
-As, were it not that I detest to do
-What stands not with the honor of my name,
-Thy death should pay thy ransom of thy fault.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-And, Mountney, had not my revenging wrath,
-Incenst with more than ordinary love,
-Been loth for to deprive thee of thy life,
-Thou hadst not lived to brave me as thou doest.
-Wretch as thou art,
-Wherein hath Valingford offended thee?
-That honourable bond which late we did
-Confirm in presence of the Gods,
-When with the Conqueror we arrived here,
-For my part hath been kept inviolably,
-Till now too much abused by thy villainy,
-I am inforced to cancel all those bands,
-By hating him which I so well did love.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Subtle thou art, and cunning in thy fraud,
-That, giving me occasion of offence,
-Thou pickst a quarrell to excuse thy shame.
-Why, Valingford, was it not enough for thee
-To be a rival twixt me and my love,
-But counsell her, to my no small disgrace,
-That, when I came to talk with her of love,
-She should seem deaf, as faining not to hear?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-But hath she, Mountney, used thee as thou sayest?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Thou knowest too well she hath:
-Wherein thou couldest not do me greater injury.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Then I perceive we are deluded both.
-For when I offered many gifts of Gold,
-And Jewels to entreat for love,
-She hath refused them with a coy disdain,
-Alledging that she could not see the Sun.
-The same conjectured I to be thy drift,
-That faining so she might be rid of me.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-The like did I by thee. But are not these
-Naturall impediments?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-In my conjecture merely counterfeit:
-Therefore lets join hands in friendship once again,
-Since that the jar grew only by conjecture.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-With all my heart: Yet lets try the truth hereof.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-With right good will. We will straight unto her father,
-And there to learn whither it be so or no.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-
-SCENE III.
-
-Outside the Danish Palace.
-
-[Enter William and Blanch disguised, with a mask over her
-face.]
-
-
-WILLIAM.
-Come on, my love, the comfort of my life.
-Disguised thus we may remain unknowen,
-And get we once to Seas, I force no then,
-We quickly shall attain the English shore.
-
-BLAUNCH.
-But this I urge you with your former oath:
-You shall not seek to violate mine honour,
-Until our marriage rights be all performed.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Mariana, here I swear to thee by heaven,
-And by the honour that I bear to Arms,
-Never to seek or crave at hands of thee
-The spoil of honourable chastity,
-Until we do attain the English coast,
-Where thou shalt be my right espoused Queen.
-
-BLANCH.
-In hope your oath proceedeth from your heart,
-Let's leave the Court, and betake us to his power
-That governs all things to his mighty will,
-And will reward the just with endless joy,
-And plague the bad with most extreme annoy.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Lady, as little tarriance as we may,
-Lest some misfortune happen by the way.
-
-[Exit Blanch and William.]
-
-
-SCENE IV.
-
-Manchester. The Mill.
-
-[Enter the Miller, his man Trotter, and Manville.]
-
-
-MILLER.
-I tell you, sir, it is no little grief to me, you should
-so hardly conseit of my daughter, whose honest report,
-though I say it, was never blotted with any title of
-defamation.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Father Miller, the repair of those gentlemen to your house
-hath given me great occasion to mislike.
-
-MILLER.
-As for those gentlemen, I never saw in them any evil intreaty.
-But should they have profered it, her chaste mind hath proof
-enough to prevent it.
-
-TROTTER.
-Those gentlemen are so honest as ever I saw: For yfaith one
-of them gave me six pence to fetch a quart of Seck.--See,
-maister, here they come.
-
-[Enter Mountney and Valingford.]
-
-MILLER.
-Trotter, call Em. Now they are here together, I'll have this
-matter throughly debated.
-
-[Exit Trotter.]
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Father, well met. We are come to confer with you.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Nay, with his daughter rather.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Thus it is, father, we are come to crave your friendship in
-a matter.
-
-MILLER.
-Gentlemen, as you are strangers to me, yet by the way of
-courtesy you shall demand any reasonable thing at my hands.
-
-MANVILLE.
-What, is the matter so forward they came to crave his good
-will?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-It is given us to understand that your daughter is sodenly
-become both blind and deaf.
-
-MILLER.
-Marie, God forbid! I have sent for her. In deed, she
-hath kept her chamber this three days. It were no little
-grief to me if it should be so.
-
-MANVILLE.
-This is God's judgement for her treachery.
-
-[Enter Trotter, leading Em.]
-
-MILLER.
-Gentlemen, I fear your words are too true. See where
-Trotter comes leading of her.--What ails my Em? Not blind,
-I hope?
-
-EM.
-[Aside.] Mountney and Valingford both together! And
-Manville, to whom I have faithfully vowed my love! Now, Em,
-suddenly help thy self.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-This is no desembling, Valingford.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-If it be, it is cunningly contrived of all sides.
-
-EM.
-[Aside to Trotter.] Trotter, lend me thy hand, and as thou
-lovest me, keep my counsell, and justify what so ever I say
-and I'll largely requite thee.
-
-TROTTER.
-Ah, thats as much as to say you would tell a monstrous,
-terrible, horrible, outragious lie, and I shall sooth it--
-no, berlady!
-
-EM.
-My present extremity will me,--if thou love me, Trotter.
-
-TROTTER.
-That same word love makes me to do any thing.
-
-EM.
-Trotter, wheres my father?
-
-TROTTER.
-Why, what a blind dunce are you, can you not see? He
-standeth right before you.
-
-[He thrusts Em upon her father.]
-
-EM.
-Is this my father?--Good father, give me leave to sit where
-I may not be disturbed, sith God hath visited me both of my
-sight and hearing.
-
-MILLER.
-Tell me, sweet Em, how came this blindness? Thy eyes are
-lovely to look on, and yet have they lost the benefit of
-their sight. What a grief is this to thy poor father!
-
-EM.
-Good father, let me not stand as an open gazing stock to
-every one, but in a place alone, as fits a creature so
-miserable.
-
-MILLER.
-Trotter, lead her in, the utter overthrow of poor Goddards
-joy and only solace.
-
-[Exit the Miller, Trotter and Em.]
-
-MANVILLE.
-Both blind and deaf! Then is she no wife for me; and glad
-am I so good occasion is hapned: Now will I away to Chester,
-and leave these gentlemen to their blind fortune.
-
-[Exit Manville.]
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Since fortune hath thus spitefully crost our hope, let us
-leave this quest and harken after our King, who is at this
-day landed at Lirpoole.
-
-[Exit Mountney.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Go, my Lord, I'll follow you.--Well, now Mountney is gone,
-I'll stay behind to solicit my love; for I imagine that I
-shall find this but a fained invention, thereby to have us
-leave off our suits.
-
-[Exit Valingford.]
-
-
-SCENE V.
-
-The Danish Court.
-
-[Enter Marques Lubeck and the King of Denmark, angerly with
-some attendants.]
-
-
-ZWENO K.
-Well, Lubeck, well, it is not possible
-But you must be consenting to this act?
-Is this the man so highly you extold?
-And play a part so hateful with his friend?
-Since first he came with thee into the court,
-What entertainment and what coutenance
-He hath received, none better knows than thou.
-In recompence whereof, he quites me well
-To steal away fair Mariana my prisoner,
-Whose ransom being lately greed upon,
-I am deluded of by this escape.
-Besides, I know not how to answer it,
-When she shall be demanded home to Swethia.
-
-LUBECK.
-My gracious Lord, conjecture not, I pray,
-Worser of Lubeck than he doth deserve:
-Your highness knows Mariana was my love,
-Sole paragon and mistress of my thoughts.
-Is it likely I should know of her departure,
-Wherein there is no man injured more than I?
-
-ZWENO.
-That carries reason, Marques, I confess.
-Call forth my daughter. Yet I am pesuaded
-That she, poor soul, suspected not her going:
-For as I hear, she likewise loved the man,
-Which he, to blame, did not at all regard.
-
-[Enter Rocillio and Mariana.]
-
-ROCILLIO.
-My Lord, here is the Princess Mariana;
-It is your daughter is conveyed away.
-
-ZWENO.
-What, my daughter gone?
-Now, Marques, your villainy breaks forth.
-This match is of your making, gentle sir,
-And you shall dearly know the price thereof.
-
-LUBECK.
-Knew I thereof, or that there was intent
-In Robert thus to steal your highness daughter,
-Let leavens in Justice presently confound me.
-
-ZWENO.
-Not all the protestations thou canst use
-Shall save thy life. Away with him to prison!
-And, minion, otherwise it cannot be
-But you are an agent in this treachery.
-I will revenge it throughly on you both.
-Away with her to prison! Heres stuff in deed!
-My daughter stolen away!--
-It booteth not thus to disturb my self,
-But presently to send to English William,
-To send me that proud knight of Windsor hither,
-Here in my Court to suffer for his shame,
-Or at my pleasure to be punished there,
-Withall that Blanch be sent me home again,
-Or I shall fetch her unto Windsors cost,
-Yea, and Williams too, if he deny her me.
-
-[Exit Zweno and the rest.]
-
-
-SCENE VI.
-
-England. Camp of the Earl Demarch.
-
-[Enter William, taken with soldiers.]
-
-
-WILLIAM.
-Could any cross, could any plague be worse?
-Could heaven or hell, did both conspire in one
-To afflict my soul, invent a greater scourge
-Then presently I am tormented with?
-Ah, Mariana, cause of my lament,
-Joy of my heart, and comfort of my life!
-For tho I breath my sorrows in the air
-And tire my self, or silently I sigh,
-My sorrows afficts my soul with equal passion.
-
-SOLDIER.
-Go to, sirha, put up, it is to small purpose.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Hency, villains, hence! dare you lay your hands
-Upon your Soveraigne?
-
-SOLDIER.
-Well, sir, we will deal for that.
-But here comes one will remedy all this.
-
-[Enter Demarch.]
-
-My Lord, watching this night in the camp,
-We took this man, and know not what he is:
-And in his company was a gallant dame,
-A woman fair in outward shew she seemed,
-But that her face was masked, we could not see
-The grace and favour of her countenance.
-
-DEMARCH.
-Tell me, good fellow, of whence and what thou art.
-
-SOLDIER.
-Why do you not answer my Lord?
-He takes scorn to answer.
-
-DEMARCH.
-And takest thou scorn to answer my demand?
-Thy proud behaviour very well deserves
-This misdemeanour at the worst be construed.
-Why doest thou neither know, nor hast thou heard,
-That in the absence of the Saxon Duke
-Demarch is his especial Substitute
-To punish those that shall offend the laws?
-
-WILLIAM.
-In knowing this, I know thou art a traitor;
-A rebel, and mutinous conspirator.
-Why, Demarch, knowest thou who I am?
-
-DEMARCH.
-Pardon, my dread Lord, the error of my sense,
-And misdemeaner to your princely excellencie.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Why, Demarch,
-What is the cause my subjects are in arms?
-
-DEMARCH.
-Free are my thoughts, my dread and gratious Lord,
-From treason to your state and common weal;
-Only revengement of a private grudge
-By Lord Dirot lately profered me,
-That stands not with the honor of my name,
-Is cause I have assembled for my guard
-Some men in arms that may withstand his force,
-Whose settled malice aimeth at my life.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Where is Lord Dirot?
-
-DEMARCH.
-In arms, my gratious Lord,
-Not past two miles from hence, as credibly
-I am assertained.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Well; come, let us go.
-I fear I shall find traitors of you both.
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-ACT IV.
-
-SCENE I.
-
-Chester. Before the Citizen's House.
-
-[Enter the Citizen of Chester, and his daughter Elner, and
-Manville.]
-
-
-CITIZEN.
-In deed, sir, it would do very well if you could intreat your
-father to come hither: but if you think it be too far, I care
-not much to take horse and ride to Manchester. I am sure my
-daughter is content with either. How sayest thou, Elner, art
-thou not?
-
-ELNER.
-As you shall think best I must be contented.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Well, Elner, farewell. Only thus much, I pray: make all
-things in a readiness, either to serve here, or to carry
-thither with us.
-
-CITIZEN.
-As for that, sir, take you no care; and so I betake you to
-your journey.
-
-[Exit Manville.]
-
-[Enter Valingford.]
-
-But soft, what gentleman is this?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-God speed, sir. Might a man crave a word or two with you?
-
-CITIZEN.
-God forbid else, sir; I pray you speak your pleasure.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-The gentleman that parted from you, was he not of Manchester,
-his father living there of good account?
-
-CITIZEN.
-Yes, marry is he, sir. Why do you ask? Belike you have had
-some acquaintance with him.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-I have been acquainted in times past, but, through his double
-dealing, I am growen weary of his company. For, be it spoken
-to you, he hath been acquainted with a poor millers daughter,
-and diverse times hath promist her marriage. But what with
-his delays and flouts he hath brought her into such a taking
-that I fear me it will cost her her life.
-
-CITIZEN.
-To be plain with you, sir, his father and I have been of old
-acquaintance, and a motion was made between my daughter and
-his son, which is now throughly agreed upon, save only the
-place appointed for the marriage, whether it shall be kept
-here or at Manchester; and for no other occasion he is now
-ridden.
-
-ELNER.
-What hath he done to you, that you should speak so ill of
-the man?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Oh, gentlewoman, I cry you mercy: he is your husband that
-shall be.
-
-ELNER.
-If I knew this to be true, he should not be my husband were
-he never so good: And therefore, good father, I would
-desire you to take the pains to bear this gentleman company
-to Manchester, to know whether this be true or no.
-
-CITIZEN.
-Now trust me, gentleman, he deals with me very hardly,
-knowing how well I meant to him; but I care not much to
-ride to Manchester, to know whether his fathers will be he
-should deal with me so badly. Will it please you, sir, to
-go in? We will presently take horse and away.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-If it please you to go in, I'll follow you presently.
-
-[Exit Elner and her father.]
-
-Now shall I be revenged on Manville, and by this means get
-Em to my wife; and therefore I will straight to her fathers
-and inform them both of all that is happened.
-
-[Exit.]
-
-
-SCENE II.
-
-The English Court.
-
-[Enter William, the Ambassador of Denmark, Demarch, and
-other attendants.]
-
-
-WILLIAM.
-What news with the Denmark Embassador?
-
-EMBASSADOR.
-Marry, thus:
-The King of Denmark and my Sovereign
-Doth send to know of thee what is the cause
-That injuriously, against the law of arms,
-Thou hast stolen away his only daughter Blaunch,
-The only stay and comfort of his life.
-Therefore by me
-He willeth thee to send his daughter Blaunch,
-Or else foorthwith he will levy such an host,
-As soon shall fetch her in dispite of thee.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Embassador, this answer I return thy King.
-He willeth me to send his daughter Blaunch,
-Saying, I conveyed her from the Danish court,
-That never yet did once as think thereof.
-As for his menacing and daunting threats,
-I nill regard him nor his Danish power;
-For if he come to fetch her foorth my Realm
-I will provide him such a banquet here,
-That he shall have small cause to give me thanks.
-
-EMBASSADOR.
-Is this your answer, then?
-
-WILLIAM.
-It is; and so begone.
-
-EMBASSADOR.
-I go; but to your cost.
-
-[Exit Embassador.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-Demarch, our subjects, earst levied in civil broils,
-Muster foorthwith, for to defend the Realm.
-In hope whereof, that we shall find you true,
-We freely pardon this thy late offence.
-
-DEMARCH.
-Most humble thanks I render to your grace.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-
-SCENE III.
-
-Manchester. The Mill.
-
-[Enter the Miller and Valingford.]
-
-
-MILLER.
-Alas, gentleman, why should you trouble your self so much,
-considering the imperfections of my daughter, which is able
-to with-draw the love of any man from her, as already it
-hath done in her first choice. Maister Manville hath
-forsaken her, and at Chester shall be married to a mans
-daughter of no little wealth. But if my daughter knew so
-much, it would go very near her heart, I fear me.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Father miller, such is the entire affection to your daughter,
-as no misfortune whatsoever can alter. My fellow Mountney,
-thou seest, gave quickly over; but I, by reason of my good
-meaning, am not so soon to be changed, although I am borne
-off with scorns and denial.
-
-[Enter Em to them.]
-
-MILLER.
-Trust me, sir, I know not what to say. My daughter is not
-to be compelled by me; but here she comes her self: speak
-to her and spare not, for I never was troubled with love
-matters so much before.
-
-EM.
-[Aside.] Good Lord! shall I never be rid of this importunate
-man? Now must I dissemble blindness again. Once more for
-thy sake, Manville, thus am I inforced, because I shall
-complete my full resolved mind to thee. Father, where are
-you?
-
-MILLER.
-Here, sweet Em. Answer this gentleman, that would so fayne
-enjoy thy love.
-
-EM.
-Where are you, sir? will you never leave this idle and vain
-pursuit of love? Is not England stord enough to content you,
-but you must still trouble the poor contemptible maid of
-Manchester?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-None can content me but the fair maid of Manchester.
-
-EM.
-I perceive love is vainly described, that, being blind
-himself, would have you likewise troubled with a blind wife,
-having the benefit of your eyes. But neither follow him so
-much in folly, but love one in whom you may better delight.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Father Miller, thy daughter shall have honor by graunting me
-her love. I am a Gentleman of king Williams Court, and no
-mean man in king Williams favour.
-
-EM.
-If you be a Lord, sir, as you say, you offer both your self
-and me great wrong: yours, as apparent, in limiting your
-love so unorderly, for which you rashly endure reprochement;
-mine, as open and evident, when, being shut from the vanities
-of this world, you would have me as an open gazing stock to
-all the world; for lust, not love, leads you into this error.
-But from the one I will keep me as well as I can, and yield
-the other to none but to my father, as I am bound by duty.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Why, fair Em, Manville hath forsaken thee, and must at
-Chester be married: which if I speak otherwise than true,
-let thy father speak what credibly he hath heard.
-
-EM.
-But can it be Manville will deal so unkindly to reward my
-justice with such monstrous ungentleness? Have I dissembled
-for thy sake, and doest thou now thus requite it? In deed
-these many days I have not seen him, which hath made me
-marvel at his long absence. But, father, are you assured
-of the words he spake were concerning Manville?
-
-MILLER.
-In sooth, daughter, now it is foorth I must needs confirm
-it: Maister Manville hath forsaken thee, and at Chester
-must be married to a mans daughter of no little wealth.
-His own father procures it, and therefore I dare credit
-it; and do thou believe it, for trust me, daughter, it is so.
-
-EM.
-Then, good father, pardon the injury that I have done to
-you, only causing your grief, by over-fond affecting a man
-so trothless. And you likewise, sir, I pray hold me
-excused, a I hope this cause will allow sufficiently for
-me: My love to Manville, thinking he would requite it,
-hath made me double with my father and you, and many more
-besides, which I will no longer hide from you. That
-inticing speeches should not beguile me, I have made my
-self deaf to any but to him; and lest any mans person
-should please me more than his, I have dissembled the want
-of sight: Both which shadows of my irrevocable affections
-I have not spared to confirm before him, my father, and all
-other amorous soliciters--wherewith not made acquainted, I
-perceive my true intent hath wrought mine own sorrow, and
-seeking by love to be regarded, am cut of with contempt, and
-dispised.
-
-MILLER.
-Tell me, sweet Em, hast thou but fained all this while for
-his love, that hath so descourteously forsaken thee?
-
-EM.
-Credit me, father, I have told you the troth; wherewith I
-desire you and Lord Valingford not to be displeased. For
-ought else I shall say, let my present grief hold me excused.
-But, may I live to see that ungrateful man justly rewarded
-for his treachery, poor Em would think her self not a little
-happy. Favour my departing at this instant; for my troubled
-thought desires to meditate alone in silence.
-
-[Exit Em.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Will not Em shew one cheerful look on Valingford?
-
-MILLER.
-Alas, sir, blame her not; you see she hath good cause, being
-so handled by this gentleman: And so I'll leave you, and go
-comfort my poor wench as well as I may.
-
-[Exit the Miller.]
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Farewell, good father.
-
-[Exit Valingford.]
-
-
-ACT V.
-
-SCENE I.
-
-Open country in England.
-
-[Enter Zweno, king of Denmark, with Rosilio and other
-attendants.]
-
-
-ZWENO.
-Rosilio, is this the place whereas the Duke William should
-meet me?
-
-ROSILIO.
-It is, and like your grace.
-
-ZWENO.
-Go, captain! Away, regard the charge I gave:
-See all our men be martialed for the fight.
-Dispose the Wards as lately was devised;
-And let the prisoners under several guards
-Be kept apart, until you hear from us.
-Let this suffise, you know my resolution.
-If William, Duke of Saxons, be the man,
-That by his answer sent us, he would seem,
-Not words, but wounds: not parlays, but alarms,
-Must be decider of this controversy.
-Rosilio, stay with me; the rest begone.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-[Enter William, and Demarch with other attendants.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-All but Demarch go shroud you out of sight;
-For I will go parlay with the Prince my self.
-
-DEMARCH.
-Should Zweno by this parlay call you foorth,
-Upon intent injuriously to deal,
-This offereth too much opportunity.
-
-WILLIAM.
-No, no, Demarch,
-That were a breach against the law of Arms:
-Therefore begone, and leave us here alone.
-
-[Exeunt.]
-
-I see that Zweno is maister of his word.
-Zweno, William of Saxony greeteth thee,
-Either well or ill, according to thy intent.
-If well thou wish to him and Saxony,
-He bids thee friendly welcome as he can.
-If ill thou wish to him and Saxony,
-He must withstand thy malice as he may.
-
-ZWENO.
-William,
-For other name and title give I none
-To him, who, were he worthy of those honours
-That Fortune and his predecessors left,
-I ought, by right and humaine courtesy,
-To grace his style with Duke of Saxony;
-But, for I find a base, degenerate mind,
-I frame my speech according to the man,
-And not the state that he unworthy holds.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Herein, Zweno, dost thou abase thy state,
-To break the peace which by our ancestors
-Hath heretofore been honourably kept.
-
-ZWENO.
-And should that peace for ever have been kept,
-Had not thy self been author of the breach:
-Nor stands it with the honor of my state,
-Or nature of a father to his child,
-That I should so be robbed of my daughter,
-And not unto the utmost of my power
-Revenge so intolerable an injury.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Is this the colour of your quarrel, Zweno?
-I well perceive the wisest men may err.
-And think you I conveyed away your daughter Blanch?
-
-ZWENO.
-Art thou so impudent to deny thou didst,
-When that the proof thereof is manifest?
-
-WILLIAM.
-What proof is there?
-
-ZWENO.
-Thine own confession is sufficient proof.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Did I confess I stole your daughter Blanch?
-
-ZWENO.
-Thou didst confess thou hadst a Lady hence.
-
-WILLIAM.
-I have, and do.
-
-ZWENO.
-Why, that was Blanch, my daughter.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Nay, that was Mariana,
-Who wrongfully thou detainest prisoner.
-
-ZWENO.
-Shameless persisting in thy ill!
-Thou doest maintain a manifest untroth,
-As she shall justify unto thy teeth.
-Rosilio, fetch her and the Marques hether.
-
-[Exit Rosilio for Mariana.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-It cannot be I should be so deceived.
-
-DEMARCH.
-I heard this night among the souldiers
-That in their watch they took a pensive Lady,
-Who, at the appointment of the Lord Dirot,
-Is yet in keeping. What she is I know not:
-Only thus much I over-heard by chance.
-
-WILLIAM.
-And what of this?
-
-DEMARCH.
-I may be Blaunch, the Kind of Denmarks daughter.
-
-WILLIAM.
-It may be so: but on my life it is not;
-Yet, Demarch, go, and fetch her straight.
-
-[Exit Demarch.]
-
-[Enter Rosilio with the Marques.]
-
-ROSILIO.
-Pleaseth your highness, here is the Marques and Mariana.
-
-ZWENO.
-See here, Duke William, your competitors,
-That were consenting to my daughters scape.
-Let them resolve you of the truth herein.
-And here I vow and solemnly protest,
-That in thy presence they shall lose their heads,
-Unless I hear where as my daughter is.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Oh, Marques Lubeck, how it grieveth me,
-That for my sake thou shouldest indure these bonds,
-Be judge my soul that feels the marytrdom!
-
-MARQUES.
-Duke William, you know it is for your cause,
-It pleaseth thus the King to misconceive of me,
-And for his pleasure doth me injury.
-
-[Enter Demarch with the Lady Blaunch.]
-
-DEMARCH.
-May it please your highness,
-Here is the Lady whom you sent me for.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Away, Demarch! what tellest thou me of Ladies?
-I so detest the dealing of their sex,
-As that I count a lovers state to be
-The base and vildest slavery in the world.
-
-DEMARCH.
-What humors are these? Here's a strange alteration!
-
-ZWENO.
-See, Duke William, is this Blaunch or no?
-You know her if you see her, I am sure.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Zweno, I was deceived, yea utterly deceived;
-Yet this is she: this same is Lady Blaunch.
-And for mine error, here I am content
-To do whatsoever Zweno shall set down.
-Ah, cruel Mariana, thus to use
-The man which loved and honored thee with his heart!
-
-MARIANA.
-When first I came into your highness court,
-And William often importing me of love,
-I did devise, to ease the grief your daughter did sustain,
-She should meet Sir William masked, as I it were.
-This put in proof did take so good effect,
-As yet it seems his grace is not resolved,
-But is was I which he conveyed away.
-
-WILLIAM.
-May this be true? It cannot be but true.
-Was it Lady Blaunch which I conveyed away?
-Unconstant Mariana, thus to deal
-With him which meant to thee nought but faith!
-
-BLAUNCH.
-Pardon, dear father, my follies that are past,
-Wherein I have neglected my duty,
-Which I in reverence ought to shew your grace;
-For, led by love, I thus have gone astray,
-And now repent the errors I was in.
-
-ZWENO.
-Stand up, dear daughter: though thy fault deserves
-For to be punisht in the extremest sort,
-Yet love, that covers multitude of sins,
-Makes love in parents wink at childrens faults.
-Sufficeth, Blaunch, thy father loves thee so,
-Thy follies past he knows but will not know.
-And here, Duke William, take my daughter to thy wife,
-For well I am assured she loves thee well.
-
-WILLIAM.
-A proper conjunction! as who should say,
-Lately come out of the fire,
-I would go thrust my self into the flame.
-Let Maistres nice go Saint it where she list,
-And coyly quaint it with dissembling face.
-I hold in scorn the fooleries that they use:
-I being free, will never subject my self
-To any such as she is underneath the Sun.
-
-ZWENO.
-Refusest thou to take my daughter to thy wife?
-I tell thee, Duke, this rash denial may bring
-More mischief on thee then thou canst avoid.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Conseit hath wrought such general dislike,
-Through the false dealing of Mariana,
-That utterly I do abhore their sex.
-They are all disloyal, unconstant, all unjust:
-Who tries as I have tried, and finds as I have found,
-Will say theres so such creatures on the ground.
-
-BLANCH.
-Unconstant Knight, though some deserve no trust,
-Theres others faithful, loving, loyal, and just.
-
-[Enter to them Valingford with Em and the Miller, and
-Mountney, and Manville, and Elner.]
-
-WILLIAM.
-How now, Lord Valingford, what makes these women here?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Here be two women, may it please your grace,
-That are contracted to one man, and are
-In strife whether shall have him to their husband.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Stand foorth, women, and say,
-To whether of you did he first give his faith.
-
-EM.
-To me, forsooth.
-
-ELNER.
-To me, my gratious Lord.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Speak, Manville: to whether didst thou give thy faith?
-
-MANVILLE.
-To say the troth, this maid had first my love.
-
-ELNER.
-Yes, Manville, but there was no witness by.
-
-EM.
-Thy conscience, Manville, is a hundred witnesses.
-
-ELNER.
-She hath stolen a conscience to serve her own turn; but you
-are deceived, yfaith, he will none of you.
-
-MANVILLE.
-In deed, dread Lord, so dear I held her love
-As in the same I put my whole delight;
-But some impediments, which at that instant hapned,
-Made me forsake her quite;
-For which I had her fathers frank consent.
-
-WILLIAM.
-What were the impediments?
-
-MANVILLE.
-Why, she could neither hear nor see.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Now she doth both. Maiden, how were you cured?
-
-EM.
-Pardon, my Lord, I'll tell your grace the troth,
-Be it not imputed to me as discredit.
-I loved this Manville so much, that still my thought,
-When he was absent, did present to me
-The form and feature of that countenance
-Which I did shrine an idol in mine heart.
-And never could I see a man, methought,
-That equaled Manville in my partial eye.
-Nor was there any love between us lost,
-But that I held the same in high regard,
-Until repair of some unto our house,
-Of whom my Manville grew thus jealous
-As if he took exception I vouchsafed
-To hear them speak, or saw them when they came:
-On which I straight took order with my self,
-To void the scrupule of his conscience,
-By counterfaiting that I neither saw nor heard,
-Any ways to rid my hands of them.
-All this I did to keep my Manvilles love,
-Which he unkindly seeks for to reward.
-
-MANVILLE.
-And did my Em, to keep her faith with me,
-Dissemble that she neither heard nor saw?
-Pardon me, sweet Em, for I am only thine.
-
-EM.
-Lay off thy hands, disloyal as thou art!
-Nor shalt thou have possession of my love,
-That canst so finely shift thy matters off.
-Put case I had been blind, and could not see--
-As often times such visitations falls
-That pleaseth God, which all things doth dispose--
-Shouldest thou forsake me in regard of that?
-I tell thee Manville, hadst thou been blind,
-Or deaf, or dumb, or else what impediments might
-Befall to man, Em would have loved and kept,
-And honoured thee: yea begged, if wealth had failed,
-For thy relief.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Forgive me, sweet Em.
-
-EM.
-I do forgive thee, with my heart,
-And will forget thee too, if case I can:
-But never speak to me, nor seem to know me.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Then farewell, frost! Well fare a wench that will!
-Now, Elner, I am thine own, my girl.
-
-ELNER.
-Mine, Manville? thou never shalt be mine.
-I so detest thy villainy,
-That whilest I live I will abhor thy company.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Is it come to this? Of late I had choice of twain,
-On either side, to have me to her husband,
-And now am utterly rejected of them both.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-My Lord, this gentleman, when time was,
-Stood some-thing in our light,
-And now I think it not amiss
-To laugh at him that sometime scorned at us.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-Content my Lord, invent the form.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Then thus.--
-
-WILLIAM.
-I see that women are not general evils,
-Blanch is fair: Methinks I see in her
-A modest countenance, a heavenly blush.
-Zweno, receive a reconciled for,
-Not as thy friend, but as thy son in law,
-If so that thou be thus content.
-
-ZWENO.
-I joy to see your grace so tractable.
-Here, take my daughter Blanch;
-And after my decease the Denmark crown.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Now, sir, how stands the case with you?
-
-MANVILLE.
-I partly am persuaded as your grace is,
-My lord, he is best at ease that medleth least.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Sir, may a man
-Be so bold as to crave a word with you?
-
-MANVILLE.
-Yea, two or three: what are they?
-
-VALINGFORD.
-I say, this maid will have thee to her husband.
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-And I say this: and thereof will I lay
-An hundred pound.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-And I say this: whereon I will lay as much.
-
-MANVILLE.
-And I say neither: what say you to that?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-If that be true, then are we both deceived.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Why, it is true, and you are both deceived.
-
-MARQUES.
-In mine eyes this is the proprest wench;
-Might I advise thee, take her unto thy wife.
-
-ZWENO.
-It seems to me, she hath refused him.
-
-MARQUES.
-Why, theres the spite.
-
-ZWENO.
-If one refuse him, yet may he have the other.
-
-MARQUES.
-He will ask but her good will, and all her friends.
-
-ZWENO.
-Might I advise thee, let them both alone.
-
-MANVILLE.
-Yea, thats the course, and thereon will I stand.
-Such idle love hencefoorth I will detest.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-The Fox will eat no grapes, and why?
-
-MOUNTNEY.
-I know full well, because they hand too high.
-
-WILLIAM.
-And may it be a Millers daughter by her birth?
-I cannot think but she is better borne.
-
-VALINGFORD.
-Sir Thomas Goddard hight this reverent man
-Famed for his vertues, and his good success:
-Whose fame hath been renowmed through the world.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Sir Thomas Goddard, welcome to thy Prince;
-And, fair Em, frolic with thy good father;
-As glad am I to find Sir Thomas Goddard,
-As good Sir Edmund Treford, on the plains:
-He like a sheepheard, and thou our country Miller.
-
-MILLER.
-And longer let not Goddard live a day
-Then he in honour loves his soveraigne.
-
-WILLIAM.
-But say, Sir Thomas, shall I give thy daughter?
-
-MILLER.
-Goddard, and all that he hath,
-Doth rest at the pleasure of your Majesty.
-
-WILLIAM.
-And what says Em to lovely Valingford?
-It seemed he loved you well, that for your sake
-Durst leave his King.
-
-EM.
-Em rests at the pleasure of your highness:
-And would I were a wife for his desert.
-
-WILLIAM.
-Then here, Lord Valingford, receive fair Em.
-Here take her, make her thy espoused wife.
-Then go we in, that preparation may be made,
-To see these nuptials solemnly performed.
-
-[Exeunt all. Sound drums and Trumpets.]
-
-
-FINIS
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, FAIR EM ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Fair Em, by William Shakespeare (Apocrypha)
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Fair Em
- A Pleasant Commodie Of Faire Em The Millers Daughter Of
- Manchester With The Love Of William The Conquerour
-
-Author: William Shakespeare (Apocrypha)
-
-Posting Date: March 18, 2009 [EBook #5137]
-Release Date: February, 2004
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FAIR EM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Tony Adam
-
-
-
-
-
-FAIRE EM
-
-
-By William Shakespeare
-
-(Apocryphal)
-
-
-A PLEASANT COMMODIE OF
-FAIRE EM
-THE MILLERS DAUGHTER OF MANCHESTER
-WITH THE LOVE OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROUR
-
-
-
-
-DRAMATIS PERSONAE.
-
-
- WILLIAM the Conqueror.
- ZWENO, King of Denmark.
- Duke DIROT.
- Marquis of Lubeck.
- MOUNTNEY.
- MANVILLE.
- ROZILIO.
- DIMARCH.
- Danish Embassador.
- The Miller of Manchester.
- TROTTER, his Man.
- Citizen of Chester.
-
- BLANCH, Princess of Denmark.
- MARIANA, Princess of Suethia.
- Fair EM, the Miller's Daughter.
- ELINER, the Citizen's Daughter.
- English and Danish Nobles.
- Soldiers, Countrymen, and Attendants.
-
-
- Actus Primus. Scaena Prima.
-
- Windsor. A State Apartment.
-
-
-
-
-ACT I.
-
-
- [Enter William the Conqueror; Marques Lubeck, with a picture;
- Mountney; Manville; Valingford; and Duke Dirot.]
-
-
- MARQUES.
- What means fair Britain's mighty Conqueror
- So suddenly to cast away his staff,
- And all in passion to forsake the tylt?
-
- D. DIROT.
- My Lord, this triumph we solemnise here
- Is of mere love to your increasing joys,
- Only expecting cheerful looks for all;
- What sudden pangs than moves your majesty
- To dim the brightness of the day with frowns?
-
- WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
- Ah, good my Lords, misconster not the cause;
- At least, suspect not my displeased brows:
- I amorously do bear to your intent,
- For thanks and all that you can wish I yield.
- But that which makes me blush and shame to tell
- Is cause why thus I turn my conquering eyes
- To cowards looks and beaten fantasies.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Since we are guiltless, we the less dismay
- To see this sudden change possess your cheer,
- For if it issue from your own conceits
- Bred by suggestion of some envious thoughts,
- Your highness wisdom may suppress it straight.
- Yet tell us, good my Lord, what thought it is
- That thus bereaves you of your late content,
- That in advise we may assist your grace,
- Or bend our forces to revive your spirits.
-
- WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR.
- Ah, Marques Lubeck, in thy power it lies
- To rid my bosom of these thralled dumps:
- And therefore, good my Lords, forbear a while
- That we may parley of these private cares,
- Whose strength subdues me more than all the world.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- We go and wish thee private conference
- Publicke afffects in this accustomed peace.
-
- [Exit all but William and the Marques.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- Now, Marques, must a Conquerer at arms
- Disclose himself thrald to unarmed thoughts,
- And, threatnd of a shadow, yield to lust.
- No sooner had my sparkling eyes beheld
- The flames of beauty blazing on this piece,
- But suddenly a sense of miracle,
- Imagined on thy lovely Maistre's face,
- Made me abandon bodily regard,
- And cast all pleasures on my wounded soul:
- Then, gentle Marques, tell me what she is,
- That thus thou honourest on thy warlike shield;
- And if thy love and interest be such
- As justly may give place to mine,
- That if it be, my soul with honors wing
- May fly into the bosom of my dear;
- If not, close them, and stoop into my grave!
-
- MARQUES.
- If this be all, renowned Conquerer,
- Advance your drooping spirits, and revive
- The wonted courage of your Conquering mind;
- For this fair picture painted on my shield
- Is the true counterfeit of lovely Blaunch,
- Princess and daughter to the King of Danes,
- Whose beauty and excess of ornaments
- Deserves another manner of defence,
- Pomp and high person to attend her state
- Then Marques Lubeck any way presents.
- Therefore her vertues I resign to thee,
- Already shrined in thy religious breast,
- To be advanced and honoured to the full;
- Nor bear I this an argument of love,
- But to renown fair Blaunch, my Sovereigns child
- In every place where I by arms may do it.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Ah, Marques, thy words bring heaven unto my soul,
- And had I heaven to give for thy reward,
- Thou shouldst be throned in no unworthy place.
- But let my uttermost wealth suffice thy worth,
- Which here I vow; and to aspire the bliss
- That hangs on quick achievement of my love,
- Thy self and I will travel in disguise,
- To bring this Lady to our Brittain Court.
-
- MARQUES.
- Let William but bethink what may avail,
- And let me die if I deny my aide.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Then thus: The Duke Dirot, and Therle Dimarch,
- Will I leave substitutes to rule my Realm,
- While mighty love forbids my being here;
- And in the name of Sir Robert of Windsor
- Will go with thee unto the Danish Court.
- Keep Williams secrets, Marques, if thou love him.
- Bright Blaunch, I come! Sweet fortune, favour me,
- And I will laud thy name eternally.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
-
- SCENE II.
-
- Manchester. The Interior of a Mill.
-
- [Enter the Miller and Em, his daughter.]
-
-
- MILLER.
- Come, daughter, we must learn to shake of pomp,
- To leave the state that earst beseemd a Knight
- And gentleman of no mean discent,
- To undertake this homelie millers trade:
- Thus must we mask to save our wretched lives,
- Threatned by Conquest of this hapless Yle,
- Whose sad invasions by the Conqueror
- Have made a number such as we subject
- Their gentle necks unto their stubborn yoke
- Of drudging labour and base peasantry.
- Sir Thomas Godard now old Goddard is,
- Goddard the miller of fair Manchester.
- Why should not I content me with this state,
- As good Sir Edmund Trofferd did the flaile?
- And thou, sweet Em, must stoop to high estate
- To join with mine that thus we may protect
- Our harmless lives, which, led in greater port,
- Would be an envious object to our foes,
- That seek to root all Britains Gentry
- From bearing countenance against their tyranny.
-
- EM.
- Good Father, let my full resolved thoughts
- With settled patiens to support this chance
- Be some poor comfort to your aged soul;
- For therein rests the height of my estate,
- That you are pleased with this dejection,
- And that all toils my hands may undertake
- May serve to work your worthiness content.
-
- MILLER.
- Thanks, my dear Daughter.
- These thy pleasant words
- Transfer my soul into a second heaven:
- And in thy settled mind my joys consist,
- My state revived, and I in former plight.
- Although our outward pomp be thus abased,
- And thralde to drudging, stayless of the world,
- Let us retain those honorable minds
- That lately governed our superior state,
- Wherein true gentry is the only mean
- That makes us differ from base millers borne.
- Though we expect no knightly delicates,
- Nor thirst in soul for former soverainty,
- Yet may our minds as highly scorn to stoop
- To base desires of vulgars worldliness,
- As if we were in our precedent way.
- And, lovely daughter, since thy youthful years
- Must needs admit as young affections,
- And that sweet love unpartial perceives
- Her dainty subjects through every part,
- In chief receive these lessons from my lips,
- The true discovers of a Virgins due,
- Now requisite, now that I know thy mind
- Something enclined to favour Manvils suit,
- A gentleman, thy Lover in protest;
- And that thou maist not be by love deceived,
- But try his meaning fit for thy desert,
- In pursuit of all amorous desires,
- Regard thine honour. Let not vehement sighs,
- Nor earnest vows importing fervent love,
- Render thee subject to the wrath of lust:
- For that, transformed to form of sweet delight,
- Will bring thy body and thy soul to shame.
- Chaste thoughts and modest conversations,
- Of proof to keep out all inchaunting vows,
- Vain sighs, forst tears, and pitiful aspects,
- Are they that make deformed Ladies fair,
- Poor rich: and such intycing men,
- That seek of all but only present grace,
- Shall in perseverance of a Virgins due
- Prefer the most refusers to the choice
- Of such a soul as yielded what they thought.
- But ho: where is Trotter?
-
- [Here enters Trotter, the Millers man, to them: And they
- within call to him for their gryste.]
-
- TROTTER.
- Wheres Trotter? why, Trotter is here. Yfaith, you and your
- daughter go up and down weeping and wamenting, and keeping of
- a wamentation, as who should say, the Mill would go with your
- wamenting.
-
- MILLER.
- How now, Trotter? why complainest thou so?
-
- TROTTER.
- Why, yonder is a company of young men and maids, keep such a
- stir for their grist, that they would have it before my stones
- be ready to grind it. But, yfaith, I would I could break wind
- enough backward: you should not tarry for your gryst, I
- warrant you.
-
- MILLER.
- Content thee, Trotter, I will go pacify them.
-
- TROTTER.
- Iwis you will when I cannot. Why, look, you have a Mill--
- Why, whats your Mill without me? Or rather, Mistress, what
- were I without you?
-
- [Here he taketh Em about the neck.]
-
- EM.
- Nay, Trotter, if you fall achyding, I will give you over.
-
- TROTTER.
- I chide you, dame, to amend you. You are too fine to be a
- Millers daughter; for if you should but stoop to take up the
- tole dish, you will have the cramp in your finger at least
- ten weeks after.
-
- MILLER.
- Ah, well said, Trotter; teach her to play the good huswife,
- and thou shalt have her to thy wife, if thou canst get her
- good will.
-
- TROTTER.
- Ah, words wherein I see Matrimony come loaden with kisses to
- salute me! Now let me alone to pick the Mill, to fill the
- hopper, to take the tole, to mend the sails, yea, and to make
- the mill to go with the very force of my love.
-
- [Here they must call for their gryst within.]
-
- TROTTER.
- I come, I come; yfaith, now you shall have your gryst, or else
- Trotter will trot and amble himself to death.
-
- [They call him again. Exit.]
-
-
- SCENE III.
-
- The Danish Court.
-
- [Enter king of Denmark, with some attendants, Blanch his
- daughter, Mariana, Marques Lubeck, William disguised.]
-
-
- KING OF DENMARK.
- Lord Marques Lubecke, welcome home.
- Welcome, brave Knight, unto the Denmark King,
- For Williams sake, the noble Norman Duke,
- So famous for his fortunes and success,
- That graceth him with name of Conqueror:
- Right double welcome must thou be to us.
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- And to my Lord the king shall I recount
- Your graces courteous entertainment,
- That for his sake vouchsafe to honor me,
- A simple Knight attendant on his grace.
-
- KING OF DENMARK.
- But say, Sir Knight, what may I call your name?
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- Robert Windsor, and like your Majesty.
-
- KING OF DENMARK.
- I tell thee, Robert, I so admire the man
- As that I count it heinous guilt in him
- That honors not Duke William with his heart.
- Blanch, bid this stranger welcome, good my girl.
-
- BLANCH.
- Sir,
- Shouyld I neglect your highness charge herein,
- It might be thought of base discourtesy.
- Welcome, Sir Knight, to Denmark, heartily.
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- Thanks gentle Lady. Lord Marques, who is she?
-
- LUBECK.
- That same is Blanch, daughter to the King.
- The substance of the shadow that you saw.
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- May this be she, for whom I crost the Seas?
- I am ashamed to think I was so fond.
- In whom there's nothing that contents my mind:
- Ill head, worse featured, uncomely, nothing courtly;
- Swart and ill favoured, a Colliers sanguine skin.
- I never saw a harder favoured slut.
- Love her? for what? I can no whit abide her.
-
- KIND OF DENMARK.
- Mariana, I have this day received letters
- From Swethia, that lets me understand
- Your ransom is collecting there with speed,
- And shortly shalbe hither sent to us.
-
- MARIANA.
- Not that I find occasion of mislike
- My entertainment in your graces court,
- But that I long to see my native home--
-
- KING OF DENMARK.
- And reason have you, Madam, for the same.
- Lord Marques, I commit unto your charge
- The entertainment of Sir Robert here;
- Let him remain with you within the Court,
- In solace and disport to spend the time.
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- I thank your highness, whose bounden I remain.
-
- [Exit King of Denmark. Blanch speaketh this secretly at one
- end of the stage.]
-
- Unhappy Blanch, what strange effects are these
- That works within my thoughts confusedly?
- That still, me thinks, affection draws me on,
- To take, to like, nay more, to love this Knight?
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- A modest countenance; no heavy sullen look;
- Not very fair, but richly deckt with favour;
- A sweet face, an exceeding dainty hand;
- A body were it framed of wax
- By all the cunning artists of the world,
- It could not better be proportioned.
-
- LUBECK.
- How now, Sir Robert? in a study, man?
- Here is no time for contemplation.
-
- ROBERT WINDSOR.
- My Lord, there is a certain odd conceit,
- Which on the sudden greatly troubles me.
-
- LUBECK.
- How like you Blanch? I partly do perceive
- The little boy hath played the wag with you.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- The more I look the more I love to look.
- Who says that Mariana is not fair?
- I'll gage my gauntlet gainst the envious man
- That dares avow there liveth her compare.
-
- LUBECK.
- Sir Robert, you mistake your counterfeit.
- This is the Lady which you came to see.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- Yes, my Lord: She is counterfeit in deed,
- For there is the substance that best contents me.
-
- LUBECK.
- That is my love. Sir Robert, you do wrong me.
-
- ROBERT.
- The better for you, sir, she is your Love--
- As for the wrong, I see not how it grows.
-
- LUBECK.
- In seeking that which is anothers right.
-
- ROBERT.
- As who should say your love were privileged,
- That none might look upon her but your self.
-
- LUBECK.
- These jars becomes not our familiarity,
- Nor will I stand on terms to move your patience.
-
- ROBERT.
- Why, my Lord, am
- Not I of flesh and blood as well as you?
- Then give me leave to love as well as you.
-
- LUBECK.
- To Love, Sir Robert? but whom? not she I Love?
- Nor stands it with the honor my state
- To brook corrivals with me in my love.
-
- ROBERT.
- So, Sir, we are thorough for that Lady.
- Ladies, farewell. Lord Marques, will you go?
- I will find a time to speak with her, I trowe.
-
- LUBECK.
- With all my heart. Come, Ladies, will you walk?
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
- SCENE IV.
-
- The English Court.
-
- [Enter Manvile alone, disguised.]
-
-
- MANVILE.
- Ah, Em! the subject of my restless thoughts,
- The Anvil whereupon my heart doth be
- Framing thy state to thy desert--
- Full ill this life becomes thy heavenly look,
- Wherein sweet love and vertue sits enthroned.
- Bad world, where riches is esteemd above them both,
- In whose base eyes nought else is bountifull!
- A Millers daughter, says the multitude,
- Should not be loved of a Gentleman.
- But let them breath their souls into the air,
- Yet will I still affect thee as my self,
- So thou be constant in thy plighted vow.
- But here comes one--I will listen to his talk.
-
- [Manvile stays, hiding himself.]
-
- [Enter Valingford at another door, disguised.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Go, William Conqueror, and seek thy love
- Seek thou a minion in a foreign land,
- Whilest I draw back and court my love at home.
- The millers daughter of fair Manchester
- Hath bound my feet to this delightsome soil,
- And from her eyes do dart such golden beams
- That holds my heart in her subjection.
-
- MANVILE.
- He ruminates on my beloved choice:
- God grant he come not to prevent my hope.
- But here's another, him I'll listen to.
-
- [Enter Mountney, disguised, at another door.]
-
- LORD MOUNTNEY.
- Nature unjust, in utterance of thy art,
- To grace a peasant with a Princes fame!
- Peasant am I, so to misterm my love:
- Although a millers daughter by her birth,
- Yet may her beauty and her vertues well suffice
- To hide the blemish of her birth in hell,
- Where neither envious eyes nor thought can pierce,
- But endless darkness ever smother it.
- Go, William Conqueror, and seek thy love,
- Whilest I draw back and court mine own the while,
- Decking her body with such costly robes
- As may become her beauties worthiness;
- That so thy labors may be laughed to scorn,
- And she thou seekest in foreign regions
- Be darkened and eclipst when she arrives
- By one that I have chosen nearer home.
-
- MANVILE.
- What! comes he too, to intercept my love?
- Then hie thee Manvile to forestall such foes.
-
- [Exit Manvile.]
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- What now, Lord Valingford, are you behind?
- The king had chosen you to go with him.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- So chose he you, therefore I marvel much
- That both of us should linger in this sort.
- What may the king imagine of our stay?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- The king may justly think we are to blame:
- But I imagined I might well be spared,
- And that no other man had borne my mind.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- The like did I: in friendship then resolve
- What is the cause of your unlookt for stay?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Lord Valingford, I tell thee as a friend,
- Love is the cause why I have stayed behind.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Love, my Lord? of whom?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Em, the millers daughter of Manchester.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- But may this be?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Why not, my Lord? I hope full well you know
- That love respects no difference of state,
- So beauty serve to stir affection.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- But this it is that makes me wonder most:
- That you and I should be of one conceit
- I such a strange unlikely passion.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- But is that true? My Lord, I hope you do but jest.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- I would I did; then were my grief the less.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Nay, never grieve; for if the cause be such
- To join our thoughts in such a Simpathy,
- All envy set aside, let us agree
- To yield to eithers fortune in this choice.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Content, say I: and what so ere befall,
- Shake hands, my Lord, and fortune thrive at all.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
-
-
-
-ACT II.
-
- SCENE I. Manchester. The Mill.
-
- [Enter Em and Trotter, the Millers man, with a kerchife on his
- head, and an Urinall in his hand.]
-
-
- EM.
- Trotter, where have you been?
-
- TROTTER.
- Where have I been? why, what signifies this?
-
- EM.
- A kerchiefe, doth it not?
-
- TROTTER.
- What call you this, I pray?
-
- EM.
- I say it is an Urinall.
-
- TROTTER.
- Then this is mystically to give you to understand, I have
- been at the Phismicaries house.
-
- EM.
- How long hast thou been sick?
-
- TROTTER.
- Yfaith, even as long as I have not been half well, and that
- hath been a long time.
-
- EM.
- A loitering time, I rather imagine.
-
- TROTTER.
- It may be so: but the Phismicary tells me that you can help
- Me.
-
- EM.
- Why, any thing I can do for recovery of thy health be right
- well assured of.
-
- TROTTER.
- Then give me your hand.
-
- EM.
- To what end?
-
- TROTTER.
- That the ending of an old indenture is the beginning of a
- new bargain.
-
- EM.
- What bargain?
-
- TROTTER.
- That you promised to do any thing to recover my health.
-
- EM.
- On that condition I give thee my hand.
-
- TROTTER.
- Ah, sweet Em!
-
- [Here he offers to kiss her.]
-
- EM.
- How now, Trotter! your masters daughter?
-
- TROTTER.
- Yfaith, I aim at the fairest.
- Ah, Em, sweet Em!
- Fresh as the flower,
- That hath pour
- To wound my heart,
- And ease my smart,
- Of me, poor thief,
- In prison bound--
-
- EM.
- So all your rhyme
- Lies on the ground.
- But what means this?
-
- TROTTER.
- Ah, mark the device--
- For thee, my love,
- Full sick I was,
- In hazard of my life.
- Thy promise was
- To make me whole,
- And for to be my wife.
- Let me enjoy
- My love, my dear,
- And thou possess
- Thy Trotter here.
-
- EM.
- But I meant no such matter.
-
- TROTTER.
- Yes, woos, but you did. I'll go to our Parson, Sir John, and
- he shall mumble up the marriage out of hand.
-
- EM.
- But here comes one that will forbid the Banes.
-
- [Here enters Manvile to them.]
-
- TROTTER.
- Ah, Sir, you come too late.
-
- MANVILE.
- What remedy, Trotter?
-
- EM.
- Go, Trotter, my father calls.
-
- TROTTER.
- Would you have me go in, and leave you two here?
-
- EM.
- Why, darest thou not trust me?
-
- TROTTER.
- Yes, faith, even as long as I see you.
-
- EM.
- Go thy ways, I pray thee heartily.
-
- TROTTER.
- That same word (heartily) is of great force. I will go. But
- I pray, sir, beware you come not too near the wench.
-
- [Exit Trotter.]
-
- MANVILE.
- I am greatly beholding to you.
- Ah, Maistres, sometime I might have said, my love,
- But time and fortune hath bereaved me of that,
- And I, an object in those gratious eyes,
- That with remorse earst saw into my grief,
- May sit and sigh the sorrows of my heart.
-
- EM.
- In deed my Manvile hath some cause to doubt,
- When such a Swain is rival in his love!
-
- MANVILE.
- Ah, Em, were he the man that causeth this mistrust,
- I should esteem of thee as at the first.
-
- EM.
- But is my love in earnest all this while?
-
- MANVILE.
- Believe me, Em, it is not time to jest,
- When others joys, what lately I possest.
-
- EM.
- If touching love my Manvile charge me thus,
- Unkindly must I take it at his hands,
- For that my conscience clears me of offence.
-
- MANVILE.
- Ah, impudent and shameless in thy ill,
- That with thy cunning and defraudful tongue
- Seeks to delude the honest meaning mind!
- Was never heard in Manchester before
- Of truer love then hath been betwixt twain:
- And for my part how I have hazarded
- Displeasure of my father and my friends,
- Thy self can witness. Yet notwithstanding this,
- Two gentlemen attending on Duke William,
- Mountney and Valingford, as I heard them named,
- Oft times resort to see and to be seen
- Walking the street fast by thy fathers door,
- Whose glauncing eyes up to the windows cast
- Gives testies of their Maisters amorous heart.
- This, Em, is noted and too much talked on,
- Some see it without mistrust of ill--
- Others there are that, scorning, grin thereat,
- And saith, 'There goes the millers daughters wooers'.
- Ah me, whom chiefly and most of all it doth concern,
- To spend my time in grief and vex my soul,
- To think my love should be rewarded thus,
- And for thy sake abhor all womenkind!
-
- EM.
- May not a maid look upon a man
- Without suspitious judgement of the world?
-
- MANVILE.
- If sight do move offence, it is the better not to see.
- But thou didst more, unconstant as thou art,
- For with them thou hadst talk and conference.
-
- EM.
- May not a maid talk with a man without mistrust?
-
- MANVILE.
- Not with such men suspected amorous.
-
- EM.
- I grieve to see my Manviles jealousy.
-
- MANVILE.
- Ah, Em, faithful love is full of jealousy.
- So did I love thee true and faithfully,
- For which I am rewarded most unthankfully.
-
- [Exit in a rage. Manet Em.]
-
- EM.
- And so away? What, in displeasure gone,
- And left me such a bittersweet to gnaw upon?
- Ah, Manvile, little wottest thou
- How near this parting goeth to my heart.
- Uncourteous love, whose followers reaps reward
- Of hate, disdain, reproach and infamy,
- The fruit of frantike, bedlome jealousy!
-
- [Here enter Mountney to Em.]
-
- But here comes one of these suspitious men:
- Witness, my God, without desert of me,
- For only Manvile, honor I in heart,
- Nor shall unkindness cause me from him to start.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- For this good fortune, Venus, be thou blest,
- To meet my love, the mistress of my heart,
- Where time and place gives opportunity
- At full to let her understand my love.
-
- [He turns to Em and offers to take her by the hand, and she
- goes from him.]
-
- Fair mistress, since my fortune sorts so well,
- Hear you a word. What meaneth this?
- Nay, stay, fair Em.
-
- EM.
- I am going homewards, sir.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Yet stay, sweet love, to whom I must disclose
- The hidden secrets of a lovers thoughts,
- Not doubting but to find such kind remorse
- As naturally you are enclined to.
-
- EM.
- The Gentle-man, your friend, Sir,
- I have not seen him this four days at the least.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Whats that to me?
- I speak not, sweet, in person of my friend,
- But for my self, whom, if that love deserve
- To have regard, being honourable love,
- Not base affects of loose lascivious love,
- Whom youthful wantons play and dally with,
- But that unites in honourable bands of holy rites,
- And knits the sacred knot that Gods--
-
- [Here Em cuts him off.]
-
- EM.
- What mean you, sir, to keep me here so long?
- I cannot understand you by your signs;
- You keep a pratling with your lips,
- But never a word you speak that I can hear.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- What, is she deaf? a great impediment.
- Yet remedies there are for such defects.
- Sweet Em, it is no little grief to me,
- To see, where nature in her pride of art
- Hath wrought perfections rich and admirable--
-
- EM.
- Speak you to me, Sir?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- To thee, my only joy.
-
- EM.
- I cannot hear you.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Oh, plague of Fortune! Oh hell without compare!
- What boots it us to gaze and not enjoy?
-
- EM.
- Fare you well, Sir.
-
- [Exit Em. Manet Mountney.]
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Fare well, my love. Nay, farewell life and all!
- Could I procure redress for this infirmity,
- It might be means she would regard my suit.
- I am acquainted with the Kings Physicians,
- Amongst the which theres one mine honest friend,
- Seignior Alberto, a very learned man.
- His judgement will I have to help this ill.
- Ah, Em, fair Em, if Art can make thee whole,
- I'll buy that sence for thee, although it cost me dear.
- But, Mountney, stay: this may be but deceit,
- A matter fained only to delude thee,
- And, not unlike, perhaps by Valingford.
- He loves fair Em as well as I--
- As well as I? ah, no, not half so well.
- Put case: yet may he be thine enemy,
- And give her counsell to dissemble thus.
- I'll try the event and if it fall out so,
- Friendship, farewell: Love makes me now a foe.
-
- [Exit Mountney.]
-
-
- SCENE II.
-
- An Ante-Chamber at the Danish Court.
-
- [Enter Marques Lubeck and Mariana.]
-
-
- MARIANA.
- Trust me, my Lord, I am sorry for your hurt.
-
- LUBECK.
- Gramercie, Madam; but it is not great:
- Only a thrust, prickt with a Rapiers point.
-
- MARIANA.
- How grew the quarrel, my Lord?
-
- LUBECK.
- Sweet Lady, for thy sake. There was this last night two
- masks in one company, my self the formost. The other strangers
- were: amongst the which, when the Musick began to sound the
- Measures, each Masker made choice of his Lady; and one, more
- forward than the rest, stept towards thee, which I perceiving,
- thrust him aside, and took thee my self. But this was taken in
- so ill part that at my coming out of the court gate, with
- justling together, it was my chance to be thrust into the arm.
- The doer thereof, because he was the original cause of the
- disorder at that inconvenient time, was presently committed,
- and is this morning sent for to answer the matter. And I
- think here he comes.
-
- [Here enters Sir Robert of Windsor with a Gaylor.]
-
- What, Sir Robert of Windsor, how now?
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- Yfaith, my Lord, a prisoner: but what ails your arm?
-
- LUBECK.
- Hurt the last night by mischance.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- What, not in the mask at the Court gate?
-
- LUBECK.
- Yes, trust me, there.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- Why then, my Lord, I thank you for my nights lodging.
-
- LUBECK.
- And I you for my hurt, if it were so. Keeper, away, I
- discharge you of your prisoner.
-
- [Exit the Keeper.]
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- Lord Marques, you offered me disgrace to shoulder me.
-
- LUBECK.
- Sir, I knew you not, and therefore you must pardon me, and
- the rather it might be alleged to me of mere simplicity to
- see another dance with my Maistris, disguised, and I my self
- in presence. But seeing it was our happs to damnify each
- other unwillingly, let us be content with our harms, and lay
- the fault where it was, and so become friends.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- Yfaith, I am content with my nights lodging, if you be content
- with your hurt.
-
- LUBECK.
- Not content that I have it, but content to forget how I came
- by it.
-
- SIR ROBERT.
- My Lord, here comes Lady Blaunch, lets away.
-
- [Enter Blaunch.]
-
- LUBECK.
- With good will. Lady, you will stay?
-
- [Exit Lubeck and Sir Robert.]
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam--
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Mariana, as I am grieved with thy presence: so am I not
- offended for thy absence; and were it not a breach to modesty,
- thou shouldest know before I left thee.
-
- MARIANA.
- How near is this humor to madness! If you hold on as you
- begin, you are in a pretty way to scolding.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- To scolding, huswife?
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam, here comes one.
-
- [Here enters one with a letter.]
-
- BLAUNCH.
- There doth in deed. Fellow, wouldest thou have any thing with
- any body here?
-
- MESSENGER.
- I have a letter to deliver to the Lady Mariana.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Give it me.
-
- MESSENGER.
- There must none but she have it.
-
- [Blaunch snatcheth the letter from him. Et exit messenger.]
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Go to, foolish fellow. And therefore, to ease the anger I
- sustain, I'll be so bold to open it. Whats here? Sir
- Robert greets you well? You, Mastries, his love, his life?
- Oh amorous man, how he entertains his new Maistres; and
- bestows on Lubeck, his od friend, a horn night cap to keep
- in his witt.
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam, though you have discourteously read my letter, yet I
- pray you give it me.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Then take it: there, and there, and there!
-
- [She tears it. Et exit Blaunch.]
-
- MARIANA.
- How far doth this differ from modesty! Yet will I gather
- up the pieces, which happily may shew to me the intent
- thereof, though not the meaning.
-
- [She gathers up the pieces and joins them.]
-
- 'Your servant and love, sir Robert of Windsor, Alias William
- the Conqueror, wisheth long health and happiness'. Is this
- William the Conqueror, shrouded under the name of sir Robert
- of Windsor? Were he the Monarch of the world he should not
- disposess Lubeck of his Love. Therefore I will to the
- Court, and there, if I can, close to be friends with Lady
- Blaunch; and thereby keep Lubeck, my Love, for my self, and
- further the Lady Blaunch in her suit, as much as I may.
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
- SCENE III.
-
- Manchester. The Mill.
-
- [Enter Em sola.]
-
-
- EM.
- Jealousy, that sharps the lovers sight,
- And makes him conceive and conster his intent,
- Hath so bewitched my lovely Manvils senses
- That he misdoubts his Em, that loves his soul;
- He doth suspect corrivals in his love,
- Which, how untrue it is, be judge, my God!
- But now no more--Here commeth Valingford;
- Shift him off now, as thou hast done the other.
-
- [Enter Valingford.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- See how Fortune presents me with the hope I lookt for.
- Fair Em!
-
- EM.
- Who is that?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- I am Valingford, thy love and friend.
-
- EM.
- I cry you mercy, Sir; I thought so by your speech.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- What aileth thy eyes?
-
- EM.
- Oh blind, Sir, blind, stricken blind, by mishap, on a sudden.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- But is it possible you should be taken on such a sudden?
- Infortunate Valingford, to be thus crost in thy love! Fair
- Em, I am not a little sorry to see this thy hard hap. Yet
- nevertheless, I am acquainted with a learned Phisitian that
- will do any thing for thee at my request. To him will I
- resort, and enquire his judgement, as concerning the recovery
- of so excellent a sense.
-
- EM.
- Oh Lord Sir: and of all things I cannot abide Phisicke, the
- very name thereof to me is odious.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- No? not the thing will do thee so much good? Sweet Em, hether
- I cam to parley of love, hoping to have found thee in thy
- woonted prosperity; and have the gods so unmercifully thwarted
- my expectation, by dealing so sinisterly with thee, sweet Em?
-
- EM.
- Good sir, no more, it fits not me
- To have respect to such vain fantasies
- As idle love presents my ears withall.
- More reason I should ghostly give my self
- To sacred prayers for this my former sin,
- For which this plague is justly fallen upon me,
- Then to harken to the vanities of love.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Yet, sweet Em,
- Accept this jewell at my hand, which I
- Bestowe on thee in token of my love.
-
- EM.
- A jewell, sir! what pleasure can I have
- In jewels, treasure, or any worldly thing
- That want my sight that should deserne thereof?
- Ah, sir, I must leave you:
- The pain of mine eyes is so extreme,
- I cannot long stay in a place. I take my leave.
-
- [Exit Em.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Zounds, what a cross is this to my conceit! But, Valingford,
- search the depth of this devise. Why may not this be fained
- subteltie, by Mountneys invention, to the intent that I
- seeing such occasion should leave off my suit and not any
- more persist to solicit her of love? I'll try the event; if
- I can by any means perceive the effect of this deceit to be
- procured by his means, friend Mountney, the one of us is like
- to repent our bargain.
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
-
-
-ACT III.
-
- SCENE I. The Danish Court.
-
- [Enter Mariana and Marques Lubeck.]
-
-
- LUBECK.
- Lady,
- Since that occasion, forward in our good,
- Presenteth place and opportunity,
- Let me intreat your woonted kind consent
- And friendly furtherance in a suit I have.
-
- MARIANA.
- My Lord, you know you need not to intreat,
- But may command Mariana to her power,
- Be it no impeachment to my honest fame.
-
- LUBECK.
- Free are my thoughts from such base villainy
- As may in question, Lady, call your name:
- Yet is the matter of such consequence,
- Standing upon my honorable credit,
- To be effected with such zeal and secrecy
- As, should I speak and fail my expectation,
- It would redound greatly to my prejudice.
-
- MARIANA.
- My Lord, wherein hath Mariana given you
- Occasion that you should mistrust, or else
- Be jealous of my secrecy?
-
- LUBECK.
- Mariana, do not misconster of me:
- I not mistrust thee, nor thy secrecy;
- Nor let my love misconster my intent,
- Nor think thereof but well and honorable.
- Thus stands the case:
- Thou knowest from England hether came with me
- Robert of Windsor, a noble man at Arms,
- Lusty and valiant, in spring time of his years:
- No marvell then though he prove amorous.
-
- MARIANA.
- True, my Lord, he came to see fair Blanch.
-
- LUBECK.
- No, Mariana, that is not it. His love to Blanch
- Was then extinct, when first he saw thy face.
- 'Tis thee he loves; yea, thou art only she
- That is maistres and commander of his thoughts.
-
- MARIANA.
- Well, well, my Lord, I like you, for such drifts
- Put silly Ladies often to their shifts.
- Oft have I heard you say you loved me well,
- Yea, sworn the same, and I believed you too.
- Can this be found an action of good faith
- Thus to dissemble where you found true love?
-
- LUBECK.
- Mariana, I not dissemble, on mine honour,
- Nor fails my faith to thee. But for my friend,
- For princely William, by whom thou shalt possess
- The title of estate and Majesty,
- Fitting thy love, and vertues of thy mind--
- For him I speak, for him do I intreat,
- And with thy favour fully do resign
- To him the claim and interest of my love.
- Sweet Mariana, then, deny me not:
- Love William, love my friend, and honour me,
- Who else is clean dishonored by thy means.
-
- MARIANA.
- Borne to mishap, my self am only she
- On whom the Sun of Fortune never shined:
- But Planets ruled by retrogard aspect
- Foretold mine ill in my nativity.
-
- LUBECK.
- Sweet Lady, cease, let my intreaty serve
- To pacify the passion of thy grief,
- Which, well I know, proceeds of ardent love.
-
- MARIANA.
- But Lubeck now regards not Mariana.
-
- LUBECK.
- Even as my life, so love I Mariana.
-
- MARIANA.
- Why do you post me to another then?
-
- LUBECK.
- He is my friend, and I do love the man.
-
- MARIANA.
- Then will Duke William rob me of my Love?
-
- LUBECK.
- No, as his life Mariana he doth love.
-
- MARIANA.
- Speak for your self, my Lord, let him alone.
-
- LUBECK.
- So do I, Madam, for he and I am one.
-
- MARIANA.
- Then loving you I do content you both.
-
- LUBECK.
- In loveing him, you shall content us both:
- Me, for I crave that favour at your hands,
- He, for he hopes that comfort at your hands.
-
- MARIANA.
- Leave off, my Lord, here comes the Lady Blaunch.
-
- [Enter Blaunch to them.]
-
- LUBECK.
- Hard hap to break us of our talk so soon!
- Sweet Mariana, do remember me.
-
- [Exit Lubeck.]
-
- MARIANA.
- Thy Mariana cannot chose but remember thee.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Mariana, well met. You are very forward in your Love?
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam, be it in secret spoken to your self, if you will but
- follow the complot I have invented, you will not think me
- so forward as your self shall prove fortunate.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- As how?
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam, as thus: It is not unknowen to you that Sir Robert
- of Windsor, a man that you do not little esteem, hath long
- importuned me of Love; but rather then I will be found
- false or unjust to the Marques Lubeck, I will, as did the
- constant lady Penelope, undertake to effect some great
- task.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- What of all this?
-
- MARIANA.
- The next time that Sir Robert shall come in his woonted
- sort to solicit me with Love, I will seem to agree and like
- of any thing that the Knight shall demaund, so far foorth
- as it be no impeachment to my chastity: And, to conclude,
- point some place for to meet the man, for my conveyance
- from the Denmark Court: which determined upon, he will
- appoint some certain time for our departure: whereof you
- having intelligence, you may soon set down a plot to wear
- the English Crown, and than--
-
- BLANCH.
- What then?
-
- MARIANA.
- If Sir Robert prove a King and you his Queen, how than?
-
- BLANCH.
- Were I assured of the one, as I am persuaded of the other,
- there were some possibility in it. But here comes the man.
-
- MARIANA.
- Madam, begone, and you shall see I will work to your desire
- and my content.
-
- [Exit Blanch.]
-
- WILLIAM CON.
- Lady, this is well and happily met.
- Fortune hetherto hath beene my foe,
- And though I have oft sought to speak with you,
- Yet still I have been crot with sinister happs.
- I cannot, Madam, tell a loving tale
- Or court my Maistres with fabulous discourses,
- That am a souldier sworn to follow arms:
- But this I bluntly let you understand,
- I honor you with such religious Zeal
- As may become an honorable mind.
- Nor may I make my love the siege of Troy,
- That am a stranger in this Country.
- First, what I am I know you are resolved,
- For that my friend hath let you that to understand,
- The Marques Lubeck, to whom I am so bound
- That whilest I live I count me only his.
-
- MARIANA.
- Surely you are beholding to the Marques,
- For he hath been an earnest spokes-man in your cause.
-
- WILLIAM.
- And yields my Lady, then, at his request,
- To grace Duke William with her gratious love?
-
- MARIANA.
- My Lord, I am a prisoner,
- And hard it were to get me from the Court.
-
- WILLIAM.
- An easy matter to get you from the Court,
- If case that you will thereto give consent.
-
- MARIANA.
- Put case I should, how would you use me than?
-
- WILLIAM.
- Not otherwise but well and honorably.
- I have at Sea a ship that doth attend,
- Which shall forthwith conduct us into England,
- Where when we are, I straight will marry thee.
- We may not stay deliberating long,
- Least that suspicion, envious of our weal,
- Set in a foot to hinder our pretence.
-
- MARIANA.
- But this I think were most convenient,
- To mask my face, the better to scape unknowen.
-
- WILLIAM.
- A good devise: till then, Farwell, fair love.
-
- MARIANA.
- But this I must intreat your grace,
- You would not seek by lust unlawfully
- To wrong my chaste determinations.
-
- WILLIAM.
- I hold that man most shameless in his sin
- That seeks to wrong an honest Ladies name
- Whom he thinks worthy of his marriage bed.
-
- MARIANA.
- In hope your oath is true,
- I leave your grace till the appointed time.
-
- [Exit Mariana.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- O happy William, blessed in th love,
- Most fortunate in Mariana's love!
- Well, Lubeck, well, this courtesy of thine
- I will requite, if God permit me life.
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
- SCENE II.
-
- Manchester. Near the Mill.
-
- [Enter Valingford and Mountney at two sundry doors, looking
- angrily each on other with Rapiers drawn.]
-
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Valingford, so hardly I disgest
- An injury thou hast profered me,
- As, were it not that I detest to do
- What stands not with the honor of my name,
- Thy death should pay thy ransom of thy fault.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- And, Mountney, had not my revenging wrath,
- Incenst with more than ordinary love,
- Been loth for to deprive thee of thy life,
- Thou hadst not lived to brave me as thou doest.
- Wretch as thou art,
- Wherein hath Valingford offended thee?
- That honourable bond which late we did
- Confirm in presence of the Gods,
- When with the Conqueror we arrived here,
- For my part hath been kept inviolably,
- Till now too much abused by thy villainy,
- I am inforced to cancel all those bands,
- By hating him which I so well did love.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Subtle thou art, and cunning in thy fraud,
- That, giving me occasion of offence,
- Thou pickst a quarrell to excuse thy shame.
- Why, Valingford, was it not enough for thee
- To be a rival twixt me and my love,
- But counsell her, to my no small disgrace,
- That, when I came to talk with her of love,
- She should seem deaf, as faining not to hear?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- But hath she, Mountney, used thee as thou sayest?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Thou knowest too well she hath:
- Wherein thou couldest not do me greater injury.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Then I perceive we are deluded both.
- For when I offered many gifts of Gold,
- And Jewels to entreat for love,
- She hath refused them with a coy disdain,
- Alledging that she could not see the Sun.
- The same conjectured I to be thy drift,
- That faining so she might be rid of me.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- The like did I by thee. But are not these
- Naturall impediments?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- In my conjecture merely counterfeit:
- Therefore lets join hands in friendship once again,
- Since that the jar grew only by conjecture.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- With all my heart: Yet lets try the truth hereof.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- With right good will. We will straight unto her father,
- And there to learn whither it be so or no.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
-
- SCENE III.
-
- Outside the Danish Palace.
-
- [Enter William and Blanch disguised, with a mask over her
- face.]
-
-
- WILLIAM.
- Come on, my love, the comfort of my life.
- Disguised thus we may remain unknowen,
- And get we once to Seas, I force no then,
- We quickly shall attain the English shore.
-
- BLAUNCH.
- But this I urge you with your former oath:
- You shall not seek to violate mine honour,
- Until our marriage rights be all performed.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Mariana, here I swear to thee by heaven,
- And by the honour that I bear to Arms,
- Never to seek or crave at hands of thee
- The spoil of honourable chastity,
- Until we do attain the English coast,
- Where thou shalt be my right espoused Queen.
-
- BLANCH.
- In hope your oath proceedeth from your heart,
- Let's leave the Court, and betake us to his power
- That governs all things to his mighty will,
- And will reward the just with endless joy,
- And plague the bad with most extreme annoy.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Lady, as little tarriance as we may,
- Lest some misfortune happen by the way.
-
- [Exit Blanch and William.]
-
-
- SCENE IV.
-
- Manchester. The Mill.
-
- [Enter the Miller, his man Trotter, and Manville.]
-
-
- MILLER.
- I tell you, sir, it is no little grief to me, you should
- so hardly conseit of my daughter, whose honest report,
- though I say it, was never blotted with any title of
- defamation.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Father Miller, the repair of those gentlemen to your house
- hath given me great occasion to mislike.
-
- MILLER.
- As for those gentlemen, I never saw in them any evil intreaty.
- But should they have profered it, her chaste mind hath proof
- enough to prevent it.
-
- TROTTER.
- Those gentlemen are so honest as ever I saw: For yfaith one
- of them gave me six pence to fetch a quart of Seck.--See,
- maister, here they come.
-
- [Enter Mountney and Valingford.]
-
- MILLER.
- Trotter, call Em. Now they are here together, I'll have this
- matter throughly debated.
-
- [Exit Trotter.]
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Father, well met. We are come to confer with you.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Nay, with his daughter rather.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Thus it is, father, we are come to crave your friendship in
- a matter.
-
- MILLER.
- Gentlemen, as you are strangers to me, yet by the way of
- courtesy you shall demand any reasonable thing at my hands.
-
- MANVILLE.
- What, is the matter so forward they came to crave his good
- will?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- It is given us to understand that your daughter is sodenly
- become both blind and deaf.
-
- MILLER.
- Marie, God forbid! I have sent for her. In deed, she
- hath kept her chamber this three days. It were no little
- grief to me if it should be so.
-
- MANVILLE.
- This is God's judgement for her treachery.
-
- [Enter Trotter, leading Em.]
-
- MILLER.
- Gentlemen, I fear your words are too true. See where
- Trotter comes leading of her.--What ails my Em? Not blind,
- I hope?
-
- EM.
- [Aside.] Mountney and Valingford both together! And
- Manville, to whom I have faithfully vowed my love! Now, Em,
- suddenly help thy self.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- This is no desembling, Valingford.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- If it be, it is cunningly contrived of all sides.
-
- EM.
- [Aside to Trotter.] Trotter, lend me thy hand, and as thou
- lovest me, keep my counsell, and justify what so ever I say
- and I'll largely requite thee.
-
- TROTTER.
- Ah, thats as much as to say you would tell a monstrous,
- terrible, horrible, outragious lie, and I shall sooth it--
- no, berlady!
-
- EM.
- My present extremity will me,--if thou love me, Trotter.
-
- TROTTER.
- That same word love makes me to do any thing.
-
- EM.
- Trotter, wheres my father?
-
- TROTTER.
- Why, what a blind dunce are you, can you not see? He
- standeth right before you.
-
- [He thrusts Em upon her father.]
-
- EM.
- Is this my father?--Good father, give me leave to sit where
- I may not be disturbed, sith God hath visited me both of my
- sight and hearing.
-
- MILLER.
- Tell me, sweet Em, how came this blindness? Thy eyes are
- lovely to look on, and yet have they lost the benefit of
- their sight. What a grief is this to thy poor father!
-
- EM.
- Good father, let me not stand as an open gazing stock to
- every one, but in a place alone, as fits a creature so
- miserable.
-
- MILLER.
- Trotter, lead her in, the utter overthrow of poor Goddards
- joy and only solace.
-
- [Exit the Miller, Trotter and Em.]
-
- MANVILLE.
- Both blind and deaf! Then is she no wife for me; and glad
- am I so good occasion is hapned: Now will I away to Chester,
- and leave these gentlemen to their blind fortune.
-
- [Exit Manville.]
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Since fortune hath thus spitefully crost our hope, let us
- leave this quest and harken after our King, who is at this
- day landed at Lirpoole.
-
- [Exit Mountney.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Go, my Lord, I'll follow you.--Well, now Mountney is gone,
- I'll stay behind to solicit my love; for I imagine that I
- shall find this but a fained invention, thereby to have us
- leave off our suits.
-
- [Exit Valingford.]
-
-
- SCENE V.
-
- The Danish Court.
-
- [Enter Marques Lubeck and the King of Denmark, angerly with
- some attendants.]
-
-
- ZWENO K.
- Well, Lubeck, well, it is not possible
- But you must be consenting to this act?
- Is this the man so highly you extold?
- And play a part so hateful with his friend?
- Since first he came with thee into the court,
- What entertainment and what coutenance
- He hath received, none better knows than thou.
- In recompence whereof, he quites me well
- To steal away fair Mariana my prisoner,
- Whose ransom being lately greed upon,
- I am deluded of by this escape.
- Besides, I know not how to answer it,
- When she shall be demanded home to Swethia.
-
- LUBECK.
- My gracious Lord, conjecture not, I pray,
- Worser of Lubeck than he doth deserve:
- Your highness knows Mariana was my love,
- Sole paragon and mistress of my thoughts.
- Is it likely I should know of her departure,
- Wherein there is no man injured more than I?
-
- ZWENO.
- That carries reason, Marques, I confess.
- Call forth my daughter. Yet I am pesuaded
- That she, poor soul, suspected not her going:
- For as I hear, she likewise loved the man,
- Which he, to blame, did not at all regard.
-
- [Enter Rocillio and Mariana.]
-
- ROCILLIO.
- My Lord, here is the Princess Mariana;
- It is your daughter is conveyed away.
-
- ZWENO.
- What, my daughter gone?
- Now, Marques, your villainy breaks forth.
- This match is of your making, gentle sir,
- And you shall dearly know the price thereof.
-
- LUBECK.
- Knew I thereof, or that there was intent
- In Robert thus to steal your highness daughter,
- Let leavens in Justice presently confound me.
-
- ZWENO.
- Not all the protestations thou canst use
- Shall save thy life. Away with him to prison!
- And, minion, otherwise it cannot be
- But you are an agent in this treachery.
- I will revenge it throughly on you both.
- Away with her to prison! Heres stuff in deed!
- My daughter stolen away!--
- It booteth not thus to disturb my self,
- But presently to send to English William,
- To send me that proud knight of Windsor hither,
- Here in my Court to suffer for his shame,
- Or at my pleasure to be punished there,
- Withall that Blanch be sent me home again,
- Or I shall fetch her unto Windsors cost,
- Yea, and Williams too, if he deny her me.
-
- [Exit Zweno and the rest.]
-
-
- SCENE VI.
-
- England. Camp of the Earl Demarch.
-
- [Enter William, taken with soldiers.]
-
-
- WILLIAM.
- Could any cross, could any plague be worse?
- Could heaven or hell, did both conspire in one
- To afflict my soul, invent a greater scourge
- Then presently I am tormented with?
- Ah, Mariana, cause of my lament,
- Joy of my heart, and comfort of my life!
- For tho I breath my sorrows in the air
- And tire my self, or silently I sigh,
- My sorrows afficts my soul with equal passion.
-
- SOLDIER.
- Go to, sirha, put up, it is to small purpose.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Hency, villains, hence! dare you lay your hands
- Upon your Soveraigne?
-
- SOLDIER.
- Well, sir, we will deal for that.
- But here comes one will remedy all this.
-
- [Enter Demarch.]
-
- My Lord, watching this night in the camp,
- We took this man, and know not what he is:
- And in his company was a gallant dame,
- A woman fair in outward shew she seemed,
- But that her face was masked, we could not see
- The grace and favour of her countenance.
-
- DEMARCH.
- Tell me, good fellow, of whence and what thou art.
-
- SOLDIER.
- Why do you not answer my Lord?
- He takes scorn to answer.
-
- DEMARCH.
- And takest thou scorn to answer my demand?
- Thy proud behaviour very well deserves
- This misdemeanour at the worst be construed.
- Why doest thou neither know, nor hast thou heard,
- That in the absence of the Saxon Duke
- Demarch is his especial Substitute
- To punish those that shall offend the laws?
-
- WILLIAM.
- In knowing this, I know thou art a traitor;
- A rebel, and mutinous conspirator.
- Why, Demarch, knowest thou who I am?
-
- DEMARCH.
- Pardon, my dread Lord, the error of my sense,
- And misdemeaner to your princely excellencie.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Why, Demarch,
- What is the cause my subjects are in arms?
-
- DEMARCH.
- Free are my thoughts, my dread and gratious Lord,
- From treason to your state and common weal;
- Only revengement of a private grudge
- By Lord Dirot lately profered me,
- That stands not with the honor of my name,
- Is cause I have assembled for my guard
- Some men in arms that may withstand his force,
- Whose settled malice aimeth at my life.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Where is Lord Dirot?
-
- DEMARCH.
- In arms, my gratious Lord,
- Not past two miles from hence, as credibly
- I am assertained.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Well; come, let us go.
- I fear I shall find traitors of you both.
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
-
-
-ACT IV.
-
- SCENE I.
-
- Chester. Before the Citizen's House.
-
- [Enter the Citizen of Chester, and his daughter Elner, and
- Manville.]
-
-
- CITIZEN.
- In deed, sir, it would do very well if you could intreat your
- father to come hither: but if you think it be too far, I care
- not much to take horse and ride to Manchester. I am sure my
- daughter is content with either. How sayest thou, Elner, art
- thou not?
-
- ELNER.
- As you shall think best I must be contented.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Well, Elner, farewell. Only thus much, I pray: make all
- things in a readiness, either to serve here, or to carry
- thither with us.
-
- CITIZEN.
- As for that, sir, take you no care; and so I betake you to
- your journey.
-
- [Exit Manville.]
-
- [Enter Valingford.]
-
- But soft, what gentleman is this?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- God speed, sir. Might a man crave a word or two with you?
-
- CITIZEN.
- God forbid else, sir; I pray you speak your pleasure.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- The gentleman that parted from you, was he not of Manchester,
- his father living there of good account?
-
- CITIZEN.
- Yes, marry is he, sir. Why do you ask? Belike you have had
- some acquaintance with him.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- I have been acquainted in times past, but, through his double
- dealing, I am growen weary of his company. For, be it spoken
- to you, he hath been acquainted with a poor millers daughter,
- and diverse times hath promist her marriage. But what with
- his delays and flouts he hath brought her into such a taking
- that I fear me it will cost her her life.
-
- CITIZEN.
- To be plain with you, sir, his father and I have been of old
- acquaintance, and a motion was made between my daughter and
- his son, which is now throughly agreed upon, save only the
- place appointed for the marriage, whether it shall be kept
- here or at Manchester; and for no other occasion he is now
- ridden.
-
- ELNER.
- What hath he done to you, that you should speak so ill of
- the man?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Oh, gentlewoman, I cry you mercy: he is your husband that
- shall be.
-
- ELNER.
- If I knew this to be true, he should not be my husband were
- he never so good: And therefore, good father, I would
- desire you to take the pains to bear this gentleman company
- to Manchester, to know whether this be true or no.
-
- CITIZEN.
- Now trust me, gentleman, he deals with me very hardly,
- knowing how well I meant to him; but I care not much to
- ride to Manchester, to know whether his fathers will be he
- should deal with me so badly. Will it please you, sir, to
- go in? We will presently take horse and away.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- If it please you to go in, I'll follow you presently.
-
- [Exit Elner and her father.]
-
- Now shall I be revenged on Manville, and by this means get
- Em to my wife; and therefore I will straight to her fathers
- and inform them both of all that is happened.
-
- [Exit.]
-
-
- SCENE II.
-
- The English Court.
-
- [Enter William, the Ambassador of Denmark, Demarch, and
- other attendants.]
-
-
- WILLIAM.
- What news with the Denmark Embassador?
-
- EMBASSADOR.
- Marry, thus:
- The King of Denmark and my Sovereign
- Doth send to know of thee what is the cause
- That injuriously, against the law of arms,
- Thou hast stolen away his only daughter Blaunch,
- The only stay and comfort of his life.
- Therefore by me
- He willeth thee to send his daughter Blaunch,
- Or else foorthwith he will levy such an host,
- As soon shall fetch her in dispite of thee.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Embassador, this answer I return thy King.
- He willeth me to send his daughter Blaunch,
- Saying, I conveyed her from the Danish court,
- That never yet did once as think thereof.
- As for his menacing and daunting threats,
- I nill regard him nor his Danish power;
- For if he come to fetch her foorth my Realm
- I will provide him such a banquet here,
- That he shall have small cause to give me thanks.
-
- EMBASSADOR.
- Is this your answer, then?
-
- WILLIAM.
- It is; and so begone.
-
- EMBASSADOR.
- I go; but to your cost.
-
- [Exit Embassador.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- Demarch, our subjects, earst levied in civil broils,
- Muster foorthwith, for to defend the Realm.
- In hope whereof, that we shall find you true,
- We freely pardon this thy late offence.
-
- DEMARCH.
- Most humble thanks I render to your grace.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
-
- SCENE III.
-
- Manchester. The Mill.
-
- [Enter the Miller and Valingford.]
-
-
- MILLER.
- Alas, gentleman, why should you trouble your self so much,
- considering the imperfections of my daughter, which is able
- to with-draw the love of any man from her, as already it
- hath done in her first choice. Maister Manville hath
- forsaken her, and at Chester shall be married to a mans
- daughter of no little wealth. But if my daughter knew so
- much, it would go very near her heart, I fear me.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Father miller, such is the entire affection to your daughter,
- as no misfortune whatsoever can alter. My fellow Mountney,
- thou seest, gave quickly over; but I, by reason of my good
- meaning, am not so soon to be changed, although I am borne
- off with scorns and denial.
-
- [Enter Em to them.]
-
- MILLER.
- Trust me, sir, I know not what to say. My daughter is not
- to be compelled by me; but here she comes her self: speak
- to her and spare not, for I never was troubled with love
- matters so much before.
-
- EM.
- [Aside.] Good Lord! shall I never be rid of this importunate
- man? Now must I dissemble blindness again. Once more for
- thy sake, Manville, thus am I inforced, because I shall
- complete my full resolved mind to thee. Father, where are
- you?
-
- MILLER.
- Here, sweet Em. Answer this gentleman, that would so fayne
- enjoy thy love.
-
- EM.
- Where are you, sir? will you never leave this idle and vain
- pursuit of love? Is not England stord enough to content you,
- but you must still trouble the poor contemptible maid of
- Manchester?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- None can content me but the fair maid of Manchester.
-
- EM.
- I perceive love is vainly described, that, being blind
- himself, would have you likewise troubled with a blind wife,
- having the benefit of your eyes. But neither follow him so
- much in folly, but love one in whom you may better delight.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Father Miller, thy daughter shall have honor by graunting me
- her love. I am a Gentleman of king Williams Court, and no
- mean man in king Williams favour.
-
- EM.
- If you be a Lord, sir, as you say, you offer both your self
- and me great wrong: yours, as apparent, in limiting your
- love so unorderly, for which you rashly endure reprochement;
- mine, as open and evident, when, being shut from the vanities
- of this world, you would have me as an open gazing stock to
- all the world; for lust, not love, leads you into this error.
- But from the one I will keep me as well as I can, and yield
- the other to none but to my father, as I am bound by duty.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Why, fair Em, Manville hath forsaken thee, and must at
- Chester be married: which if I speak otherwise than true,
- let thy father speak what credibly he hath heard.
-
- EM.
- But can it be Manville will deal so unkindly to reward my
- justice with such monstrous ungentleness? Have I dissembled
- for thy sake, and doest thou now thus requite it? In deed
- these many days I have not seen him, which hath made me
- marvel at his long absence. But, father, are you assured
- of the words he spake were concerning Manville?
-
- MILLER.
- In sooth, daughter, now it is foorth I must needs confirm
- it: Maister Manville hath forsaken thee, and at Chester
- must be married to a mans daughter of no little wealth.
- His own father procures it, and therefore I dare credit
- it; and do thou believe it, for trust me, daughter, it is so.
-
- EM.
- Then, good father, pardon the injury that I have done to
- you, only causing your grief, by over-fond affecting a man
- so trothless. And you likewise, sir, I pray hold me
- excused, a I hope this cause will allow sufficiently for
- me: My love to Manville, thinking he would requite it,
- hath made me double with my father and you, and many more
- besides, which I will no longer hide from you. That
- inticing speeches should not beguile me, I have made my
- self deaf to any but to him; and lest any mans person
- should please me more than his, I have dissembled the want
- of sight: Both which shadows of my irrevocable affections
- I have not spared to confirm before him, my father, and all
- other amorous soliciters--wherewith not made acquainted, I
- perceive my true intent hath wrought mine own sorrow, and
- seeking by love to be regarded, am cut of with contempt, and
- dispised.
-
- MILLER.
- Tell me, sweet Em, hast thou but fained all this while for
- his love, that hath so descourteously forsaken thee?
-
- EM.
- Credit me, father, I have told you the troth; wherewith I
- desire you and Lord Valingford not to be displeased. For
- ought else I shall say, let my present grief hold me excused.
- But, may I live to see that ungrateful man justly rewarded
- for his treachery, poor Em would think her self not a little
- happy. Favour my departing at this instant; for my troubled
- thought desires to meditate alone in silence.
-
- [Exit Em.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Will not Em shew one cheerful look on Valingford?
-
- MILLER.
- Alas, sir, blame her not; you see she hath good cause, being
- so handled by this gentleman: And so I'll leave you, and go
- comfort my poor wench as well as I may.
-
- [Exit the Miller.]
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Farewell, good father.
-
- [Exit Valingford.]
-
-
-
-
-ACT V.
-
- SCENE I.
-
- Open country in England.
-
- [Enter Zweno, king of Denmark, with Rosilio and other
- attendants.]
-
-
- ZWENO.
- Rosilio, is this the place whereas the Duke William should
- meet me?
-
- ROSILIO.
- It is, and like your grace.
-
- ZWENO.
- Go, captain! Away, regard the charge I gave:
- See all our men be martialed for the fight.
- Dispose the Wards as lately was devised;
- And let the prisoners under several guards
- Be kept apart, until you hear from us.
- Let this suffise, you know my resolution.
- If William, Duke of Saxons, be the man,
- That by his answer sent us, he would seem,
- Not words, but wounds: not parlays, but alarms,
- Must be decider of this controversy.
- Rosilio, stay with me; the rest begone.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
- [Enter William, and Demarch with other attendants.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- All but Demarch go shroud you out of sight;
- For I will go parlay with the Prince my self.
-
- DEMARCH.
- Should Zweno by this parlay call you foorth,
- Upon intent injuriously to deal,
- This offereth too much opportunity.
-
- WILLIAM.
- No, no, Demarch,
- That were a breach against the law of Arms:
- Therefore begone, and leave us here alone.
-
- [Exeunt.]
-
- I see that Zweno is maister of his word.
- Zweno, William of Saxony greeteth thee,
- Either well or ill, according to thy intent.
- If well thou wish to him and Saxony,
- He bids thee friendly welcome as he can.
- If ill thou wish to him and Saxony,
- He must withstand thy malice as he may.
-
- ZWENO.
- William,
- For other name and title give I none
- To him, who, were he worthy of those honours
- That Fortune and his predecessors left,
- I ought, by right and humaine courtesy,
- To grace his style with Duke of Saxony;
- But, for I find a base, degenerate mind,
- I frame my speech according to the man,
- And not the state that he unworthy holds.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Herein, Zweno, dost thou abase thy state,
- To break the peace which by our ancestors
- Hath heretofore been honourably kept.
-
- ZWENO.
- And should that peace for ever have been kept,
- Had not thy self been author of the breach:
- Nor stands it with the honor of my state,
- Or nature of a father to his child,
- That I should so be robbed of my daughter,
- And not unto the utmost of my power
- Revenge so intolerable an injury.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Is this the colour of your quarrel, Zweno?
- I well perceive the wisest men may err.
- And think you I conveyed away your daughter Blanch?
-
- ZWENO.
- Art thou so impudent to deny thou didst,
- When that the proof thereof is manifest?
-
- WILLIAM.
- What proof is there?
-
- ZWENO.
- Thine own confession is sufficient proof.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Did I confess I stole your daughter Blanch?
-
- ZWENO.
- Thou didst confess thou hadst a Lady hence.
-
- WILLIAM.
- I have, and do.
-
- ZWENO.
- Why, that was Blanch, my daughter.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Nay, that was Mariana,
- Who wrongfully thou detainest prisoner.
-
- ZWENO.
- Shameless persisting in thy ill!
- Thou doest maintain a manifest untroth,
- As she shall justify unto thy teeth.
- Rosilio, fetch her and the Marques hether.
-
- [Exit Rosilio for Mariana.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- It cannot be I should be so deceived.
-
- DEMARCH.
- I heard this night among the souldiers
- That in their watch they took a pensive Lady,
- Who, at the appointment of the Lord Dirot,
- Is yet in keeping. What she is I know not:
- Only thus much I over-heard by chance.
-
- WILLIAM.
- And what of this?
-
- DEMARCH.
- I may be Blaunch, the Kind of Denmarks daughter.
-
- WILLIAM.
- It may be so: but on my life it is not;
- Yet, Demarch, go, and fetch her straight.
-
- [Exit Demarch.]
-
- [Enter Rosilio with the Marques.]
-
- ROSILIO.
- Pleaseth your highness, here is the Marques and Mariana.
-
- ZWENO.
- See here, Duke William, your competitors,
- That were consenting to my daughters scape.
- Let them resolve you of the truth herein.
- And here I vow and solemnly protest,
- That in thy presence they shall lose their heads,
- Unless I hear where as my daughter is.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Oh, Marques Lubeck, how it grieveth me,
- That for my sake thou shouldest indure these bonds,
- Be judge my soul that feels the marytrdom!
-
- MARQUES.
- Duke William, you know it is for your cause,
- It pleaseth thus the King to misconceive of me,
- And for his pleasure doth me injury.
-
- [Enter Demarch with the Lady Blaunch.]
-
- DEMARCH.
- May it please your highness,
- Here is the Lady whom you sent me for.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Away, Demarch! what tellest thou me of Ladies?
- I so detest the dealing of their sex,
- As that I count a lovers state to be
- The base and vildest slavery in the world.
-
- DEMARCH.
- What humors are these? Here's a strange alteration!
-
- ZWENO.
- See, Duke William, is this Blaunch or no?
- You know her if you see her, I am sure.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Zweno, I was deceived, yea utterly deceived;
- Yet this is she: this same is Lady Blaunch.
- And for mine error, here I am content
- To do whatsoever Zweno shall set down.
- Ah, cruel Mariana, thus to use
- The man which loved and honored thee with his heart!
-
- MARIANA.
- When first I came into your highness court,
- And William often importing me of love,
- I did devise, to ease the grief your daughter did sustain,
- She should meet Sir William masked, as I it were.
- This put in proof did take so good effect,
- As yet it seems his grace is not resolved,
- But is was I which he conveyed away.
-
- WILLIAM.
- May this be true? It cannot be but true.
- Was it Lady Blaunch which I conveyed away?
- Unconstant Mariana, thus to deal
- With him which meant to thee nought but faith!
-
- BLAUNCH.
- Pardon, dear father, my follies that are past,
- Wherein I have neglected my duty,
- Which I in reverence ought to shew your grace;
- For, led by love, I thus have gone astray,
- And now repent the errors I was in.
-
- ZWENO.
- Stand up, dear daughter: though thy fault deserves
- For to be punisht in the extremest sort,
- Yet love, that covers multitude of sins,
- Makes love in parents wink at childrens faults.
- Sufficeth, Blaunch, thy father loves thee so,
- Thy follies past he knows but will not know.
- And here, Duke William, take my daughter to thy wife,
- For well I am assured she loves thee well.
-
- WILLIAM.
- A proper conjunction! as who should say,
- Lately come out of the fire,
- I would go thrust my self into the flame.
- Let Maistres nice go Saint it where she list,
- And coyly quaint it with dissembling face.
- I hold in scorn the fooleries that they use:
- I being free, will never subject my self
- To any such as she is underneath the Sun.
-
- ZWENO.
- Refusest thou to take my daughter to thy wife?
- I tell thee, Duke, this rash denial may bring
- More mischief on thee then thou canst avoid.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Conseit hath wrought such general dislike,
- Through the false dealing of Mariana,
- That utterly I do abhore their sex.
- They are all disloyal, unconstant, all unjust:
- Who tries as I have tried, and finds as I have found,
- Will say theres so such creatures on the ground.
-
- BLANCH.
- Unconstant Knight, though some deserve no trust,
- Theres others faithful, loving, loyal, and just.
-
- [Enter to them Valingford with Em and the Miller, and
- Mountney, and Manville, and Elner.]
-
- WILLIAM.
- How now, Lord Valingford, what makes these women here?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Here be two women, may it please your grace,
- That are contracted to one man, and are
- In strife whether shall have him to their husband.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Stand foorth, women, and say,
- To whether of you did he first give his faith.
-
- EM.
- To me, forsooth.
-
- ELNER.
- To me, my gratious Lord.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Speak, Manville: to whether didst thou give thy faith?
-
- MANVILLE.
- To say the troth, this maid had first my love.
-
- ELNER.
- Yes, Manville, but there was no witness by.
-
- EM.
- Thy conscience, Manville, is a hundred witnesses.
-
- ELNER.
- She hath stolen a conscience to serve her own turn; but you
- are deceived, yfaith, he will none of you.
-
- MANVILLE.
- In deed, dread Lord, so dear I held her love
- As in the same I put my whole delight;
- But some impediments, which at that instant hapned,
- Made me forsake her quite;
- For which I had her fathers frank consent.
-
- WILLIAM.
- What were the impediments?
-
- MANVILLE.
- Why, she could neither hear nor see.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Now she doth both. Maiden, how were you cured?
-
- EM.
- Pardon, my Lord, I'll tell your grace the troth,
- Be it not imputed to me as discredit.
- I loved this Manville so much, that still my thought,
- When he was absent, did present to me
- The form and feature of that countenance
- Which I did shrine an idol in mine heart.
- And never could I see a man, methought,
- That equaled Manville in my partial eye.
- Nor was there any love between us lost,
- But that I held the same in high regard,
- Until repair of some unto our house,
- Of whom my Manville grew thus jealous
- As if he took exception I vouchsafed
- To hear them speak, or saw them when they came:
- On which I straight took order with my self,
- To void the scrupule of his conscience,
- By counterfaiting that I neither saw nor heard,
- Any ways to rid my hands of them.
- All this I did to keep my Manvilles love,
- Which he unkindly seeks for to reward.
-
- MANVILLE.
- And did my Em, to keep her faith with me,
- Dissemble that she neither heard nor saw?
- Pardon me, sweet Em, for I am only thine.
-
- EM.
- Lay off thy hands, disloyal as thou art!
- Nor shalt thou have possession of my love,
- That canst so finely shift thy matters off.
- Put case I had been blind, and could not see--
- As often times such visitations falls
- That pleaseth God, which all things doth dispose--
- Shouldest thou forsake me in regard of that?
- I tell thee Manville, hadst thou been blind,
- Or deaf, or dumb, or else what impediments might
- Befall to man, Em would have loved and kept,
- And honoured thee: yea begged, if wealth had failed,
- For thy relief.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Forgive me, sweet Em.
-
- EM.
- I do forgive thee, with my heart,
- And will forget thee too, if case I can:
- But never speak to me, nor seem to know me.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Then farewell, frost! Well fare a wench that will!
- Now, Elner, I am thine own, my girl.
-
- ELNER.
- Mine, Manville? thou never shalt be mine.
- I so detest thy villainy,
- That whilest I live I will abhor thy company.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Is it come to this? Of late I had choice of twain,
- On either side, to have me to her husband,
- And now am utterly rejected of them both.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- My Lord, this gentleman, when time was,
- Stood some-thing in our light,
- And now I think it not amiss
- To laugh at him that sometime scorned at us.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- Content my Lord, invent the form.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Then thus.--
-
- WILLIAM.
- I see that women are not general evils,
- Blanch is fair: Methinks I see in her
- A modest countenance, a heavenly blush.
- Zweno, receive a reconciled for,
- Not as thy friend, but as thy son in law,
- If so that thou be thus content.
-
- ZWENO.
- I joy to see your grace so tractable.
- Here, take my daughter Blanch;
- And after my decease the Denmark crown.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Now, sir, how stands the case with you?
-
- MANVILLE.
- I partly am persuaded as your grace is,
- My lord, he is best at ease that medleth least.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Sir, may a man
- Be so bold as to crave a word with you?
-
- MANVILLE.
- Yea, two or three: what are they?
-
- VALINGFORD.
- I say, this maid will have thee to her husband.
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- And I say this: and thereof will I lay
- An hundred pound.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- And I say this: whereon I will lay as much.
-
- MANVILLE.
- And I say neither: what say you to that?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- If that be true, then are we both deceived.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Why, it is true, and you are both deceived.
-
- MARQUES.
- In mine eyes this is the proprest wench;
- Might I advise thee, take her unto thy wife.
-
- ZWENO.
- It seems to me, she hath refused him.
-
- MARQUES.
- Why, theres the spite.
-
- ZWENO.
- If one refuse him, yet may he have the other.
-
- MARQUES.
- He will ask but her good will, and all her friends.
-
- ZWENO.
- Might I advise thee, let them both alone.
-
- MANVILLE.
- Yea, thats the course, and thereon will I stand.
- Such idle love hencefoorth I will detest.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- The Fox will eat no grapes, and why?
-
- MOUNTNEY.
- I know full well, because they hand too high.
-
- WILLIAM.
- And may it be a Millers daughter by her birth?
- I cannot think but she is better borne.
-
- VALINGFORD.
- Sir Thomas Goddard hight this reverent man
- Famed for his vertues, and his good success:
- Whose fame hath been renowmed through the world.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Sir Thomas Goddard, welcome to thy Prince;
- And, fair Em, frolic with thy good father;
- As glad am I to find Sir Thomas Goddard,
- As good Sir Edmund Treford, on the plains:
- He like a sheepheard, and thou our country Miller.
-
- MILLER.
- And longer let not Goddard live a day
- Then he in honour loves his soveraigne.
-
- WILLIAM.
- But say, Sir Thomas, shall I give thy daughter?
-
- MILLER.
- Goddard, and all that he hath,
- Doth rest at the pleasure of your Majesty.
-
- WILLIAM.
- And what says Em to lovely Valingford?
- It seemed he loved you well, that for your sake
- Durst leave his King.
-
- EM.
- Em rests at the pleasure of your highness:
- And would I were a wife for his desert.
-
- WILLIAM.
- Then here, Lord Valingford, receive fair Em.
- Here take her, make her thy espoused wife.
- Then go we in, that preparation may be made,
- To see these nuptials solemnly performed.
-
- [Exeunt all. Sound drums and Trumpets.]
-
-
- FINIS
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Fair Em, by William Shakespeare (Apocrypha)
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