The Blind-Beggar of
Bednall-Green.
ACT I.
Enter Bedford, Sir Robert Westford,
Captain Westford
and Souldiers.
Bed.
YOu Peers of
England that with awfull dread
Drum.
Have pac'd on the green Garments of fair
France,
Here cease a while, and give the
French-men rest,
That they may know whose Soveraignty is best,
Either the Dolphin
[...], or our Royal Lords.
But what avails our Conquests far from home,
When civil Discords stir uncivil arms
In the Kings Chamber,
London, nay, his Court?
See Lords, read what is written there.
By blest St.
Peter, Gloster is to blame,
And
W
[...]nchester hath neither grace nor shame.
Sir Rob.
Yes my Lord, he is Lord Cardinals grace.
Bed.
Lord Cardinal! marry fie, he was proud before,
But now his Hat exalts his proud heart more:
But when I come among them, Ile make them know
The benefit of Peace; fall out for women,
Wrangle at a word? the one's Protector
Of a sacred Prince, the other made a Prince
Drum afar off.
Amongst the Prelates; though
Bewford basely born
Ile write to them: if with regardless eyes our lines they read,
VVe'll over and cut off their factious head
Sir Rob.
About old
Playnseys son what says your Excellency?
Bed.
Sir
Walters son, marry Sir
Rob. Westford;
March a far off.
[Page]This Drum I think marcheth from
Amiens,
Is should be he, I sent him for the Prisoners.
Enter young Plainsey
with Drum and Souldiers, and a Switzar.
Y. Playn.
Health to your Excellence most gracious Regent,
Playnsey long Prisoner in
Amiens,
Releast by
Momfords bounty and your care,
Requests before these Prisoners be dismist
This
Switzar may be searcht, for last night late
I heard a Gentleman tell him in Dutch,
If he would bear a Letter to a Lord,
VVith whom
Veleires had intelligence,
He should receive in hand ten Crowns in gold,
And 30 more when 'twas deliver'd him.
Bed.
Who was it promis'd you so large reward?
Switz.
On frolick yonker,
Dat is de Scryven Ick Doeniit for-stow
De secretarie to
Van Here Velieres
Bed.
He was the Secretary to the Governour?
Swiz.
Yaw, yaw, mine Here.
Bed.
Who were they sent unto?
Swiz.
To van
Heren Montford dat is de grave van
Callis ant van
Guynes,
Dar is deen script deen Letters watt you see then.
Bed.
To
Momford! what should
Veleires write to
Momford.
Read.
Sr. Rob.
Playnsey is this the plot for
Momfords fall?
Y. Playn.
It is, and be assured that down he shall.
Sr. Rob.
Oh let me hugg thee! thou hast won my heart!
Y. Playn.
Forbear, lest the sharp eye of Jealousie,
See by this suddain Joy our Injury.
Sir Rob.
When it breaks forth wee'l seem to weep for grief.
Bed.
Lords take your places, and Mr.
Playnsey take your seat,
For in this business your desert is great.
See here's a Letter sent from
Amiens unto
Momford.
Omnes.
How, unto
Momford!
Bed.
Yes, and if this speak right,
Momford betray'd
Guynes on Friday night,
And means to morrow ere the Sun be set
To yield up
Callis to the enemy.
Cap. West.
High Heaven for-send it, gracious General.
I think there breaths not a more noble Spirit
[Page]In any Souldiers breast, than noble
Momfords.
Y. Playn.
I'le gage my life Lord
Momford will be loyal.
Bed.
We would be loath to find him otherwise:
Enter Momford.
But here he comes himself, his eyes bewray
Sorrow, as clowds fore-shew a stormy day.
Monf.
Better success betide my Noble Lords,
Than hath befaln the miserable
Momford.
Bed.
What hath befaln thee?
Momf.
Guynes, Guynes, is betray'd.
Bed.
And when must
Callis be surrendered?
Momf.
Never while
Momford hath the charge of it.
Bed.
Yes, if thou have the charge of it this night
It must be yielded unto false
Veleires.
Here's a large promise of ten thousand Marks,
Your praise for Fridays work in yielding
Guynes.
Know you this hand? Oh that on silver hairs.
After much honour won in flowring Youth,
Should sit so huge a shame as on thine doth.
Momf.
My Lord! Lords all! this is conspiracy.
Bed.
True, conspiracy in thee, for there he stands
That should have brought that Letter to thy hands.
Momf.
This fellow fled from
Hance Beamart the Traitor,
The
Walloon Captain that betray'd the Lanthorn,
And so by consequence the Fort of
Guynes.
Bed.
Momford no more, his free confession
Hath purchased his pardon, fellow stay
Amongst our
English, and expect good pay.
Swiz.
Thank had mine Here, lets
Iacob gilt habben,
And Ick sall fight wid ten hunderd towsand Divels.
Exit Switz.
Momf.
Shall such a one touch
Momfords reputation?
Bed.
These Letters and the accidents succeeding
Condemn thee, and thou know'st by Law of Arms
Thou merit'st death with more than common torture:
But thy exceeding vallour of
[...]en tride,
Sets open Mercies gate, whose gentle hand
Leads thee from death, but leaves thee banished
From
England, and the Realms and Provinces
Under protection of the
English King,
Only thy Lands and Goods thou shalt enjoy,
And wheresoere from them be still maintain'd.
Momf.
My gracious Lord!
Bed.
[Page]
Thou find'st but too much grace.
Momf.
Here me but speak.
Bed.
No more; we must away,
To win by force the Town thou didst betray.
Exeunt.
Momf.
Oh miserable! miserable man!
Falls.
West.
Why do you faint? why fall you on the ground?
Sir Rob.
Cosen arise.
Manet Momford Sir Rob. Y. Playnsey,
and Cap. Westford.
Y. Playn.
Father, you are my Father!
The Lady
Elizabeth your noble Daughter
Is my affied wife, for her sake rise,
And stop this tide of woe that drowns your eyes.
Momf.
Oh miserable, miserable Man!
Dishonours-abject, base reproaches scorn,
Why was mine age to this disaster born?
Cap. West.
Comfort your self, let not condemn'd despair
Add to your sorrow, more than common care.
If you be just, as I suppose you be,
Know Innocence ends not in misery;
Kings have had falls, great Souldiers overthrown,
No riches in this earth is a mans own,
He strives, he toyls, with many pains he takes it,
In an age gets it, in one hour forsakes it.
Enter Luce
the Landeresse and 3
others.
Vitler.
Hee's yonder yet, hee's digrac'd, and can do us no more good,
Therefore let every man ask his own. Follow me Sirs,
Ile speak to the purpose and stand too't.
Luce.
Nay Sutler by your leave I'll stand to the best man in the Army,
And have my due before the proudest of ye, if I do not,
Say
Luce the Landress is your Shee-asse to bear for others,
I'll venture upon him, let him take it as he will.
Enter Souldier
All.
Do
Luce, wee'l be rul'd by thee.
Luce.
My Lord, my Noble Lord, I am sorry for your weak estate, I hope for all this to see you up again, here's 4 poor Creatures of us; amongst the rest I am
Luce your poor Landress, that have washt you, and trim'd you, and starch't you, and as I have done for you, I have done my part with all your company, heres my Bill, I pray see me crost.
Momf.
VVhat do I owe thee woman?
Luce.
Nine pound, nine shillings, and nine pence my Lord.
Momf.
[Page]
There's 10 pound for thee.
Luce,
Oh good Noble man! that ever, that ever I should see thee thus down, adown!
Vitler.
Your poor Vitler Sir, where your Lordships men went o'th' ticket.
Armor.
Your Armorer an't please your Honor.
Carter.
Your Carter Sir for carriages.
Momf.
VVhat owe I thee?
Vitler.
Some (7 marks) an't like ye.
Monf.
VVhat thee?
Armor.
Twelve pound.
Momf.
VVhat thee?
Carter.
About some 20 Nobles.
Momf.
Ther's 30 pound amongst ye, all Thave,
The Treasurer owes me some two thousand Marks.
All 4.
God blesse ye Sir, and send it ye.
Exeunt Luce
and the rest.
Momf.
VVherefore stayest thou my Friend? Oh I know thee now!
Thou art not impudent, thou canst not begg,
Thou art a Souldier, and thy wound-plow'd face
Hath every furrow fill'd with falling tears,
That arms and honour should be thus disdain'd.
I have no gold to give thee, but this chain,
I pray thee take it friend, thou griev'st at me,
And I am griev'd thy want and wounds to see.
Sould.
My silent prayer my hearts love shall express.
Heaven succour you, as you help my distress.
Momf.
Brother Sir
Robert, if you do not scorn
Momfords disgraced name, and Mr.
Playnsey,
Son I should call ye if all vows be kept,
VVill you vouchsafe to tarry here a while
Till I go down unto the Treasurers tent?
It may be he will pay me all my due.
Y. Playn.
Father I'll wait for you, and weep for woe,
That I have liv'd to see your overthrow.
Sir Rob.
VVell, I'll stay too, or bear ye company,
For your distress doth make my woes abound.
Momf.
Come Cosen Captain
Westford walk with me.
Cap. West.
To do you good I'd go though't be to death.
[Page]
Exeunt. Manet Sir Robert,
and young Playnsey.
Sir Rob.
Ha, ha, ha, gill, gill, gill, I have been teady to burst.
Son pray thee tell me how thou laid'st this plot?
Y. Playn.
Marry Sir
Robert thus, when I perceiv'd
Your great desire for
Momfords overthrow,
I got intelligence at
Amiens,
How one
Beaumart a Captain in
Guynes Fort
Offer'd to sell it to the Governor,
Having this light, about a two months since,
I wilfully was taken Prisoner,
Born into
Amiens, where I was confirm'd
And knew the very time of taking
Guynes,
On Thursday evening I attir'd my self
Like
Veleires Secretary
Lanclot,
Came to the Prison where the
Switzer lay,
For I had liberty to walk the Town,
Had all my Ramsome ready sent by
Momford,
And only tarryed for our
English Drum,
That should exchange
French Prisoners for the
English,
The
Switzar being one that stay'd with us.
Sir Rob.
So, I understand ye; but in the end
How dealt ye with the
Switzar for the Letter?
Y. Playn.
I brought it home in secret, gave him charge
To give it
Momford with all able speed,
Promising 30 Crowns, besides those ten
I gave him first, of noble
Momfords bounty:
He took me for
Veleires Secretarie;
But now you see the end,
Momford's disgrac'd,
And I am unsuspected in this case.
Sir Rob.
Excellent good! I hugg thee gentle
Playnsey.
Y. Playn.
But tell me pray, How goes all in
England?
Sir Rob.
Marry I'll tell thee
Gill, thy Fathers Ward
The Lady
Ellenor, shall be his Wife.
Y. Playn.
The Duke of
Gloster will not suffer that.
Sir Rob.
Tut, tut, it's all but talk, it's all but lyes;
So does the Cardinal make show of Love,
But tittle tittle tattle, all's but talk,
He shall have Lady
Ellenor no
[...],
Say she die childless, there is land for you,
You marry with my daughter, shee's my heir,
[Page]Still Mr.
Playnsey there is land for you;
I'll turn out
Momfords daughter forth of doors,
Seise all her goods and lands by a device;
Still Mr.
Playnsey there is Land for you.
Y. Playn.
But how I pray? What colour have you for it?
Sir Rob.
Marry Son thus, About a twelve month since
Momford in trust made me a Deed of Gift
Of all he had, excepting certain land
Morgag'd unto a
Norfolk man, one
Strowd of
Harling,
Now Sir I am acquainted with an odd Consort,
One
Ca
[...]bee, that doth serve the Cardinal.
Y. Playn.
Oh he can cheat, take purses, forge mens hands.
Sir Rob.
The same, the same, he rac'd out that Exception,
And put in other matter to my liking:
So I'll defeat old
Strowd, turn out
Besse Momford,
All shall be mine, and after mine all thine.
Y. Playn.
No more,
Momford returns.
Enter Momford,
and Captain Westford.
Momf.
Captain, Ye see
That men dejected bust bear injury.
He knowes I am exil'd, and cannot stay,
And yet he drives me to a longer day.
Cap. Westford,
There is a hundred pound, ye shall not chuse.
Sir Rob.
I faith my Noble Cozen, I and
Playnsey
Are without mony, but send into
England,
Ye shall not want for 20 thousand pound.
Momf.
Brother Sir
Robert I put trust in you,
This Ring shall come within a day or two.
Sir Rob.
I cannot speak for grief!
Momf.
No more can I,
This wind ere the Sun set will let you see
London, that nere must be beheld of me.
Commend me to my Daughter, love her
Playnsey;
Part silent, let your sighs serve for reply.
They embrace. Exeunt, manet Momf.
Captain think on
Strowds morgage, and farewell.
They shall see London, they shall see my Child,
But
Momford must not, for he is exil'd.
I am exil'd, Yet I will
England see,
And live in
England 'spight of infamy.
In some disguise I'll live, perhaps I'll turn
A Beggar, for a Beggars life is best,
[Page]His Dyet is in each mans Kitchin drest,
But first I'll like an aged Souldier
Carry mine own Ring to Sir
Robert Westford,
They say 'tis good to try Friends, him I'll try.
Though I believe he love me stedfastly.
Ex. Momf.
Enter old Playnsey,
and Lady Ellenor.
Lady.
Sir Walter Playnsey.
Old. Playn.
Lady
Ellenor,
You are too strong in this opinion,
I yield you are my wardship, and that desire
To your Revenews, more than true hearts love,
Enforc'd me beg your wardship of the King.
Lady.
I do believe you Sir, for did you look
Into my State with an indifferent eye,
Or love me half so well as you make shew,
You would—
Old Playn.
Come, come, I know what you would say,
You think I am your Foe, because I keep you
From private conference with the Duke of
Gloster,
And his proud Uncle the Lord
Cardinal,
That divers times have practis'd sundry plots
To steal you from my house.
Lady.
Your love's but feign'd,
Because you say you love me for my living.
Old Playn.
I say my first love took first life from thence,
But since more dear familiarity
Hath brought forth perfect and true shapen love.
I love you Lady, and you are mine own,
Mine in possession, and I do intend
To make you mine by lawfull marriage,
Then blame me not if being all my joy,
And the high-prized Jewel of my heart,
I over-look you with a wary eye,
Lest
Gloster, or the Bastard
Cardinal
Should with their swelling Protestations,
Knock.
Cheat my fair meaning of thy hopefull love.
Enter a Serv.
Serv.
Sir here's a Servant from the Duke of
Gloster
Hath brought you Letters.
Old Playn.
How! Letters to me!
No thou mistak'st, they come to
Ellenor,
[Page]
Enter Gloster
disguised with a Letter.
Glost.
My Lord and Master greets Sir
Walter Playnsey,
Old Playn.
I do accept his honourable love
With more than mean or ordinary care.
Reads
He doth intreat me to come and speak with him
About some certain Letters come from
France,
Touching the present fortunes of my Son
Lately tane Prisoner by the bloodie
French.
He shall command far more than he intreats.
Knocks.
How now? whose that which knocks?
Enter Serv.
Serv.
One of the Cardinals men.
Old Playn.
Bid him to come in.
Enter the Cardinal disguised with Letters.
Card.
Sir Walter Playnsey,
From my Lord Cardinals grace of
Winchester
I greet thee well, and charge thee without stay
To come, and answer such objections
As may by him be laid unto thy charge
Glost.
Oh you should be his Sumner by your message.
Card.
And if I do not take my marks amiss
Thou shouldest be
Glosters Skullion.
Glost.
How ye Groom?
I am as good a man, and better born
Than up-start
Bewford the base Cardinal.
Card.
Sirrah! wert not thou in presence of this Lady
Whose love my Lord doth prize above his life,
I'd scorn to take these braves at
Glosters hands,
Much less at thine. Madam know I am
Bewford,
And for your love do undergo this scorn.
Lady.
Then for my love let all these quarrels cease,
For fear Sir
Walter do discover you.
Glost.
Hadst thou been Servant to the meanest man
That breaths in
England, being legitimate,
I would have born with thee: but thou to brave me,
Whose Master I esteem as basely on,
As on thy words, I cannot put it up,
For Madam know, that howsoere diguis'd
My name is
Gloster, who holds scorn—
Lady.
No more,
If ever I had interest in your love,
[Page]Shew it in silence, thats the Cardinal
Who comes diguis'd, arm'd with some base resolve
To get me hence by forein violence.
Glost.
Is't possible that this disguise should meer,
So just with mine?
Lady.
'Tis true, he told me all.
Glost.
Wo'd we were well rid of his company.
Lady.
Do you but send away Sir
Walter Playnsey,
Let me alone to pack the Cardinal.
Both.
What do you say Sir
Walter?
Old Playn.
There is some hidden secret in this message
Which
Playnsey sounds not, but I'll go to them both.
Glost.
But Sir I hope you'l go to
Gloster first.
Card.
And why to
Gloster first?
Glost.
'Cause hee's the betcer man.
Card.
He lyes that sayes it.
Glost.
Were the Cardinal
Bewford himself apparell'd in thy cloaths,
Draw.
I'd cross his pare for giving me the lye.
Old Playn.
Keep the Kings peace Sir.
Glost.
Sir
Walter, so I will,
Yet the worst boy that feeds on
Glosters beef,
Holds it high scorn to pocket up the lye
At ere a Sumners hand that follows
Bewford.
Card.
Thou durst not speak this in another place?
Glost.
Yes here, or any where to
Bewfords face,
Even to his teeth, and I would thou wert he.
Card.
Shall I be brav'd! oh I could tear my flesh,
And eat his heart for this disparagement,
I fear he knows me, and to work my shame
He braves me thus before my Mrs. face,
But
Bewford with a shower of patience,
Lay the rough wind of thy distemper'd thoughts
For my vext Soul hath tane a solemn oath
Nere to kiss comfort till I be reveng'd.
Old Playn.
Nay Gentlemen, howsoever private brawls
Have set your Lords and Masters at debate,
Let my intreats so much prevail with you,
As in my house to use no violence,
And so I pray rest pleas'd, for ere I sleep
[Page]I do intend to visit both my Lords.
Will't please you to walk along for company?
Card.
I would, but I must stay an hour or two
About some other business in the Town.
Glost.
About my Love you mean, but Cardinal
Heres one will do that business to your hand.
Old Playn.
Why then farewell to you both.
Exit old Playn.
Both.
A due Sir
Walter Playnsey.
Lady.
A word with you my good Lord Cardinal,
Your Brothers man seems very quarrelsome,
And should you both stay, there might grow some jars,
Which to prevent, I would intreat your grace
To walk before into the
Spittle fields.
Whilst with good words I send away this Fellow,
Which done, I'll chuse my opportunity,
And in the absence of Sir
Walter Playnsey
Get out, and meet you at the Orchard-gate,
And there conclude about some stratage me
To make you Master of your own desires.
Card.
Enough sweet Lady: Sirrah Horse-courser,
I'll course you one day for your Jadish tricks.
Glo.
Jades a fit Title for an Asse like thee,
That canst not kick, but bear all injury.
Manet Glo. & Elle.
Come Madam now let's go, the Cardinals mad
To lose thee thus, then banish hence all fear,
Gloster is on thy side.
Exeunt.
Enter Canbee
and Hadland,
and Cardinal.
Can.
Sirrah
Iack.
Had.
What sayest thou
Franck.
Can.
How you base Rogue, nere an (
M.) under your Gidle, have I preferr'd thee to my good Lord Cardinal here, and am I no better than your homesome
Franck.
Had.
Canbee, let me nere take purse again, and I think not, but thou and this
Tom Tawny coat here gull me, make me your cheat, your gull, your strowd, your
Norfolk Dumpling, whom when you cheated him of his sattin-suite, left naked bed to the mercy of his hostess.
Can.
And I damb thee not for thy unbelief. Call
Canbee Coward think'st thou) I wo'd have lost this evenings work, but for my Noble, my Princely Lord Cardinal? no.
Had.
[Page]
That's some reason indeed, but Prince and Cardinal if thou be,
Iack-Hadland swears by the bawl'd Crown of King
Carnifax the meeting thy greatness this evening has dampnified our receipts at least six purses.
Card.
Be what you will be both, only be resolute
In any quarrel against
Glosters men,
And on mine honour I'll reward ye well.
Can.
My Lord, and ye were able to give him as much Land as would lie between
Winchester and
Walsingham, he wo'd be your prigger, your prancer, your high-lawyer, your—
Had.
Your nipper, your foyst, your rogue, your cheat, your pander, your any vild thing that may be, sblud the worst that any man can say of me is, that I am a tall Theef, and the best that any man can say of thee is, that thou art a base Rogue and a Cheater.
Can.
I'll jerk ye for this ye slave.
Card.
Nay Sirs be Friends, hold ye, here's gold,
Do but assist me against
Glosters life
And I'll reward you better.
Had.
Cardinal, wert thou Cardinal King of the Infernals, were thou Prince of
Grim-tarter-tarmagant and
Erebus, I wo'd not shed one drop of the worst Dogs blood my Duke of
Gloster keeps, for thy miter, thy million, thy metropolis, shall I betray his life that sav'd me from the death of a Dog? no. Yet for my honest friend
Franck Canbees sake, I am content to stand by, and give aym at this time.
Enter Gloster and
Ellenor.
See where he comes two of ye are enough to deal with one, I'll not meddle with him.
Card.
Let's set upon him all, and kill the slave.
Glost.
Hast thou betray'd me Coward?
Bewford know
Though I am over-matcht I am not kill'd.
Enter old Playnsey,
young Playnsey,
Captain West.
and Oficers.
Old Playn.
Keep the Kings peace for shame my Lords.
Card.
Come
Canbee follow me,
Playnsey be sure
I'll sit upon your skirts for parting us.
Glost.
Bewford Thou maist befriend him with thy power,
Had not he been, thou hadst not breath'd this aire.
Card.
Gloster thou wrongst me, with-hold'st St.
Iohnses,
Look too't, for fear when I get enterie
[Page]I pull not down the Castle ore thine ears:
Glost.
Cardinal to spite thee I'll keep
Ellenor,
And wed her in St.
Iohnses make her my Dutches.
Card.
Thou wilt abuse her with lascivious lust,
As once thou didst the Earl of
Flanders wife,
And make her wretched, hoping in thy love.
Glost.
Oh! your holiness would have her turn a Nun,
Your cloyster-lemmon but sh
[...] minds thee not;
Fellow what ere thou art that tak'st my part
There's 20 Crowns, go prove an honest man
Card.
There's 40 for thee,
Canbee, kill that slave
A
[...] ever thou intend'st my Love to have.
Can.
I will take my time my Lord.
Had.
Canbee come not near me, thou knowest my antient order▪ They die that dare me: but if thou dare meet me, heark in thine ear, disturb not these honourable personages.
Can.
Be brief, appoint the place of meeting,
subito, subito.
Had.
At our Old Hostises mad rogue to make merry, lay a fresh plot to meet the
Norfolk gull, and be blithe.
Can.
Agreed, and I meet thee not,
bafle[?] my good name, & chronicle
Canbee for a Coward, my Lord I will have a limbe of that Rogue.
Ca
[...].
I shall be mindfull of thee
Canbee: if thou kill him
Base slave, had not he been
Gloster had dyed?
Glost.
I am sorry Gentlemen for
Momfords fall,
And for our Brother the Lord Regents anger,
Let him pull down the pride of
Winchester,
And
Gloster easily will be appeas'd.
Card.
Humphry nor
Bedford, nor thy self hath power
To make Lord
Bewford stoop; dost thou forget,
I am a Prince, and a Plantaginet?
Glost.
Bastards were never Princes in their state.
Card.
I am a Prince elected by the Pope.
Glost.
I'll make ye gladly flye to your Elector.
Card.
First will I see thy death Witless Protector.
Draw again.
Old Playn.
Keep the Kings peace my Lords.
Card.
Look to't, I'll rowse you and your minions,
Out of St.
Iohnses ere a week be spent.
Can.
Sir we'll rowse ye, we—
Ex. Card. and Canbee.
Glost.
VVould never greater care came near my heart;
Could I have had my will in my Loves sight.
[Page]This evening had been
Bewfords latest night.
But to the purpose, now Sir
Walter Playnsey
Take no exceptions as you love our favour,
That Lady
Ellenor's escap'd away.
Old Playn.
Is she escap'd away my Lord?
Glost.
She is, nay storm not,
For if you do your anger is in vain,
I'll answer any Duty for her wardship.
So rest your self content; if ye rest quiet
And will confirm your ward to be my wife,
I'll send ye within six daies six thousand pound,
Being more than you can get by course of Law.
Old Playn.
I but my Lord her sudden taking hence—
Glost.
Nay, nay, stand not on tearms, take this or chuse▪
Send word ye love us, or our Loves refuse.
Come Captain
Westford bring us to St.
Iohnses.
Ex. Glost. & Cap. West.
Y. Playn.
Here's a good world when ev'ry Duke is King;
Thus I see power can master any thing.
Old Playn.
I son, else durst not you and old Sir
Robert
Being but new come from the dejected Father,
Offer such open wrong to
Momfords Daughter.
Y. Playn.
Father I'll answer that upon the way
Please ye to walk but to Sir
Robert Westfords.
Enter Momford
like a Souldier.
Momf.
Save ye Gentlemen, pray can ye tell me
Whether Sir
Robert Westford ly in
London.
Or at his Summer-house?
Old Playn.
He lyes at
Stepny fellow.
Follow us we'll bring thee thither presently.
Ex. Playnseys.
Momf.
That's
Playnsey and his son, I'll follow hem,
And try my Brother
Westford ere I need,
Already have I took a little Cottage
On
Bednall-Green, pretending my self blind,
Thither perhaps my gentle Child will come,
For she's full of charitable alms.
But howsoere now I shall surely see her
Bringing my own seal as a Messenger,
I'll follow after kind Sir
Walter Playnsey,
And his Heroick son my Daughters Joy.
Ex. Momf.
ACT II.
Enter Sir Robert, Kate
his Daughter, Bess Momford,
and Swash.
Kate.
FAther you wrong me, and my Cosen
Momford,
I marry
Playnsey, troth plight unto her;
Oh it's an impious match! I'll rather have
Than such a mariage-bed, a dismal grave.
Sir Rob.
Use no more words, no title tattle talk,
The Priest is sent for,
Playnsey is a comming,
He shall have you, and you shall have his Land.
Kate.
But for my Cosen
Bess—
Sir Rob.
Your Cosen-Beggar, Child unto a Traytor;
Go to no more, come heark a word with me.
Enter Old Strowd,
and wash.
Old Str.
Ha this is excellent, stript of his cloaths,
His shirt stoln from his back, why this exceeds,
This is a toy to mock an Ape withall.
Swash.
Nay barlady Sir this toy has mock'd as well-favour'd a Youth, as your own Son.
Old Str.
Hold ye, there's ten pound, go fetch him new cloaths.
Swash.
Nay Sir he wants no cloaths, for he hath a Cloak laid on with gold lace, and an imbroidred Ierkin, and thus he is marching hither like the fore-man of a Morris.
Old Stro.
Not for 20 l. gold lace embroiderd,
I'll see how he is suited by and by.
Swash.
I'll tell him so, but pray Mr. let me be at the wedding feast.
Old Stro.
And there you'll be hoyting and kissing the Wenches you.
Swash.
Not I indeed Master, I never use to kiss any, not I.
Old Stro.
You know what complaints was made of you the last wedding you were at.
Swash.
I thank ye Master ye made me stand in a white sheet for ye-
Old Stro.
How for me Knave? go to thou lyest, thou shalt not be there for that lye.
Swash.
Pray let me go, there will be all the Youth of our Parish there, good Master?
Old Stro.
Well Sir, go your way, but let me hear no ill of ye you were best.
Swash.
I warrant ye Master, thank ye Sir, hey for our Town.
Old Stro.
Go, get you gone, I fear we shall fall out,
I wonder what Sir
Robert does intend?
Exit.
Sir Rob.
Look to't, pine, pule, weep, sob, it shall be so,
Thou shalt be
Playnseys wife who ere sayes no.
Old Stro.
Sir
Robert since your Cosen is refus'd
By Mr.
Gilbert Playnsey, if she please, and you agree
Your Cosen
Elizabeth shall have
Tom Strowd;
You know he is my Heir, no Clown, no Swad,
But held in
Norfolk for a Lusty Lad.
Sir Rob.
Let her take whom she will, all's one to me.
Old Stro.
How say you Lady?
Bess.
For
Playnsey's sake
The name of mariage I have sworn to hate.
Enter old Playnsey
and his Son, Momford
follows them.
Sir Rob.
Good morrow good Sir
Walter and Son
Playnsey,
I trust Sir
Walter gill hath let you know
My purpose, for this mariage with my Daughter?
Old Playn.
He tells me he is so resolv'd Sir
Robert,
And in his own power now consists his choyce,
But be assur'd, the searching eye of Heaven
Sees every thought of man, take heed you two
Answer not for each ill deed, and wrong ye do.
Sir Rob.
Tut tut Sir
Walter, God and we for that;
Speak Mr.
Playnsey, let
Bess Momford hear
How you resolve unto my Daughter
Katherine.
Y. Playn.
I come to mary her.
Kate.
Think upon your Vow,
See this sad Lady, when you went to
France,
You swore at your return to mary her.
Y. Playn.
Fair be content, my mind therein is chang'd,
Her Father is disgraced and exil'd
And therefore
Playnseys Son doth scorn his Child,
Bess.
Do scorn me, leave me, every way abuse me,
Death will receive me, though you all refuse me.
Sir Rob.
Nay good Sir
Walter be not discontent,
Son
Playnsey, Daughter
Katherine, let's confer.
Old Stro.
How say you Madam, will Sir
Robert Westford
Defeat me of the Land I have at morgage,
Take away all your Jewels, and your plate?
Bess.
[Page]
He sayes he will.
Old Stro
Well let him and he dare.
And if he wrong you Lady come to me.
Momf. Wondrous amazement! what doth
Momford see?
Where he most trusted, most impiety.
Sir Rob.
The Chaplain stayes in Heavens name let us in,
They shall be maried in
Bess Momfords sight.
Kate
Father your malice to my Cosen
Momford,
This deed of
Playnsey whom you call my Husband,
Whom I shall never love, never abide,
Makes me to Death and Shame become a Bride:
But Shame will quickly from my red cheeks flye,
And Death will paint them with his ashy dye.
Sir Rob.
Come, come, leave pratling,
Playnsey comfort
Kate.
Y. Playn.
Fair Love be frolick talk no more of death and care
We'll sport, for I am young, and thou artfair.
Farewell forsaken Turtle, take thy flight
To some more abject mate whilst Kate and I, joys adore.
Kate.
High Heaven forgive me, Father have remorce,
Let me not thus be hal'd to death perforce.
Ex. both.
Old Playn.
Sir
Robert Westford I mislike this match.
Old Stro.
'Tis more than Injury, but Lady grieve not you.
Be
[...]s.
No Sir I am patient.
Sir Rob.
I pray you go in Sir
Walter.
Old Playn.
Yes I'll go in,
But Heaven can tell, I hate this forc'd sin.
Ex. old Playn.
Sir Rob.
What will you do Mr.
Strowd?
Old S
[...]ro.
I scarcely know
Your moods, and these affairs do
[...]ll out so.
Sir Rob.
Well at your pleasure, go Huswife get you in.
Bess.
I will do what you will, yet ere I go
Somewhat on this old man I will bestow,
Thou seem'st a maymed Souldier, wo is me!
I have a little Gold, good Father take it,
And here's a Diamond do not forsake it;
My Father was a Souldier maym'd like thee,
Thou in thy limbs, he by vil'd infamy.
Old Stro.
Bith mass I like her, shee's a
Momford right
Of noble blood and the true
Norfolk breed;
Hold the good fellow there's one 40 pence
[Page]From a poor Yeomans purse, old
Strowd of
Harling.
Momf.
I thank you Sir, I have more than I deserve.
Sir Rob.
I Sir, and more than you shall bear from hence
Come Minx what Iewell did you give this Rogue.
Momf.
I am a Souldier Sir, the name of Rogue
Ill fits a man of your respect to give
To a poor Gentleman, though in distress.
Sir Rob.
A Gentleman! and why a Gentleman
Because a Souldier? Come you desper-view.
Deliver me the Iewel or I'll hang thee,
To morrow is the Sessions, I'll make short,
And shave your Gentry shorter by the neck,
A Gentleman! come, come, give me the Iewel,
What makes your Gentry sneaking at my Gate?
Momf.
I came from
Momford banish'd in
Britany,
He prays ye by this token you would send
A thousand Marks to help him in his need.
Sir Rob.
Where do you lye Sir?
Momf.
I lay last night with a Blind-Beggar
That hath a little House on
Bednall-Green.
Sir Rob.
He came but yesterday, I heard of him
Beggars keep lodging, well I'll hamper him,
I know this token, and will keep the same:
But have no 1000 Marks to maintain Rebels.
Momf.
Base upstart Knight deliver
Momfords Seal,
Draw.
Or by the honour of a Souldiers name
I'll slice thy heart out.
Sir Rob.
Help me Mr.
Strowd.
Old Stro.
What help ye to do wrong?
Nay by the rood, though
Momford was exil'd,
'Twas told me he should have his Lands and Goods.
Sir Rob.
There, take them, but do you hear me Sirrah
Take heed I catch you not at the Blind-Beggars.
Momf.
If I should lye there, though you be a Iustice,
I trust to find Friends in my just defence.
Old Stro.
Hold thee good fellow, there's the t'other noble,
Bith mass I like thee, th'art a tough old Lad
Momf.
I thank you Sir, Lady I'll take my leave.
Bess.
Commend me to my Father good old man.
Momf.
I will, and tell him of Sir
Roberts wrong.
Sir Rob.
[Page]
Do fellow, say, I scorn his treachery,
And hope his end will be in misery.
Momf.
I'll tell him what you say.
Exit Momf.
Bess.
Father farewell.
Sir Rob.
Nay 'twere best ye packt,
Beggar with Beggar, for ye shall away:
Ha Huswife! are you giving Diamonds,
Do you forget your Jewels are all mine,
Did not old
Westford pay for this attire?
But off with it, go in, or either drudge
Amongst my Servants to maintain your State,
Or pack, stay not an hour.
Bess.
You shall not need
To bid me pack, for I'll begon indeed.
Exit Bess.
Sir Rob.
To steal and hang, or starve and beg, choose which
Old Stro.
Sir
Robert by the — you do her wrong.
Sir Rob.
What's that to you look to your own affairs,
Strowd, Strowd, you think to have the Land at
Farnam,
I and shall, and shall—
Old Stro.
And will, do you your worst.
Sir Rob.
Y'are too sawcy
Strowd.
Old Stro.
Too sawcy moody Knight,
Thou durst not thus in scorn to old
Strowd prate,
But cock on thine own hill, thus near thy Gate.
Sir Rob.
I'll meet thee where thou dar'st, and when thou dar'st▪
Old Stro.
I'll say th'art a tall man and thou dost.
Sir Rob.
Appoint the place.
Old Stro.
Theee is a new mown field
Lying by Eastward of a little shed
That stands on
Bednall-Green.
Sir Rob.
I know it, that's the shed the Souldier lay in,
The Close is compas'd with a quick-set, is't not?
Old Stro.
The same.
Sir Rob.
I like it, what's the hour?
Old Stro.
'Twixt one and two▪
Sir Rob.
Hold the
Strowd, there's my hand
I'll meet thee, and I'll make thee know me too.
Old Stro.
No more, I'll meet thee, else call me Jew.
Exeunt.
Enter Tom Strowd
and Swash
his man, Gallant
Y. Stro.
London lick penny can ye it,—t'as lick'd me with a
[Page] witness, I was set ore for a reckoning of 40 shillings, and as fair a Sattin suite t'other night, as a man shall lightly see in a Summers day; but if ere it be my fortune to meet with that ill fac'd Gypsie that stole it, I'll teach him his teripoop for stealing, whilst he hath a day to live again, so woll I: Nay nothing griev'd me
Swash, but that the slave perswaded me to lye naked for fear of the Fleas; which when I had done he stole me away as fair a shirt of my Mothers own spinning, as a man shall need to pull o're his ears: and Sirrah in the morning when mine Hostis came up to call me, I was as naked as your
Norfolk-Dumplin, as I am a christen man I blush'd out of all—
Swash.
Nay Master I told you at first you should find a sower fellow of that Gypsie, I lik'd him not he had such a crabtree-fac'd countenance of his own: but come my old Master sent me for you, you must along to the wedding to—
Y. Stro.
Why so I say now,—it would make a Horse break his Bridle to see the humours of these fellows, I know no more how to please him than I know how to build up
Pauls-steeple, so do not I, but come
Swash follow me, I'll to him, the—
Enter Canby, Hadland
and Snip.
Can.
Tush man 'tis be, I know him as well as the Beggar knows his dish, 'tis he that I fetch'd over for the sattin suite, and left him in pawn for the reckoning, he has a fair Cloak on's back, and we could get that we were made men.
Had.
Be rul'd by me 'tis our own, do thou take the wall of him, if he take exceptions I'll draw; if he draws his Cloak falls down.
Snip.
And all fallings are mine Sir, let me alone, I know my cue
Strowd, thou hadst as good have met the Hangman; for thy upper Garment's mine.
Canby
takes the Wall, and jussels Strowd.
Y. Stro.
—What is the matter with you? so feather-ey'd ye cannot let us passe in the Kings high way?
Can.
You must learn to know your Duty, and give your betters the wall.
Y. Stro.
My Betters the wall, on what acquaintance? ye shall be set up and ye say the word, I'll wash mine hands and wait on you.
Had.
What do you prate, nay then have at you Sir.
Y. Stro.
—And have at you too then e'faith.
They fight.
Can.
Hold, as you are a Gentleman hold.
Y. Stro.
[Page]
Hold me no holds, I'll have another bout with ye, or I'll make your sconce and the post ring noon together, and sirrah Gypsie you shall fare the worse for one of your Coats sake, that rob'd me of a sattin suite tother night,—and well remembred where's my Cloak
Swash?
Swash.
Your Cloaks a good Cloak, take the wall of my Master ye slave you.
Y. Stro
I think the fellow be mad,—where's my Cloak man.
Swash.
Your Cloak's good Cloak and a fair Cloak, quarrel with my Mr. ye scabs you.
Y. Stro.
I think the fellow's frompall, I ask thee where my Cloak is.
Can.
Let not a man pass unsearch'd, the Gentleman shall not lose the worth of a mite in my company.
Had.
I hope Sir you will not suspect my Boy nor me?
Y. Stro.
Suspect me no suspects, I am sure my Cloak cannot go without hands, and I'll have it again, or I'll bang it out of the coxcombs of some of them.
Can.
—Sir you mishape lyes as near my heart as it had been mine own, and cause I see'you a resolute tall Gentleman, and in respect that I was the occasion of this falling out, my Cloak (simpl though it be) cost me 40 French Crowns, take it, it is at your service.
Y. Stro.
Forty French Crowns, forty French Pins, what dost thou tell me of thy Cloak? I scorn to wear ere a mans Cloak under the Element but mine own: but I'll tell thee what, and it were not for thy sake, whom I think an honest kind fellow and so forth, I'de bang this Bacon fan'd slave orethwart his shaoks, he should remember stealing a Cloak to Dooms day, so should he.
Had.
Why Sir I hope you know no harm by me were it in place, where I'de say, he lyed in his Throat that but touch'd the very hem of my reputation with reproach.
Y. Stro.
Wol't say I lye? thou hadst as good eat a load of logs wert thou, I
[...]ay no harm by thee, and yet I say I have seen an honester face than thine hang'd, what sayest thou to it now? and thou beest agrieved mend thy self how thou canst, or how thou darest, dost't see now. Naye
Swah yonders my father, say nothing of my Cloak
Swash.
Enter old Strowd.
Old Stro.
Well, if I live I'll meet Sir
Robert Westford,
[Page]But first I'll see if I can find my Son,
And here he is, is't possible my Lands
A Ierkin or Iacket for Strowd.
Should maintain this Attire, you Podigal
Where have you got this trash, unto whose Books
Are you indebted for it, pardon me Gentlemen
For being so sawey in your company;
'Tis not for a poor Country Yeomans son
To flant it out thus.
Can.
Sir you may say your pleasure, is your Son, but thus much I'll assure you, though if he be your on the chiefest Gallants in the Land are enamour'd with his good parts and valour.
Old Strow.
Nay Gentlemen thus much I'll say for him,
Hee's a right
Norfolk-man mettle, all steel:
But I'll not have him use his bravery.
The time has been when as a
Norfolk yeoman
That might dispend 500 marks a year
Would▪ wear such cloath as this sheeps russets gray,
And for my Son shall be no President
To break those orders, come off with this trash
Your bought Gentility, that sits on thee
Like Peacock's feathers cock't upon a Raven.
Let true born Gentlemen were Gentries robes,
And Yeoman Country seeming Liveries.
Y. Stro.
—You'd have the Calf with the white face I think, I am sure yonders old
Simsons son of
Showdam Thorp, that wears his great gall gaskins o'the Swash-fashion, with 8 or 10 gold laces of a side, and yet, without boast be it spoken, you are more in the Kings Books than he. and pay more scot and lot a fair deal, so ye do.
Old Stro.
He is a desperate Cast-away like thee,
And wrongs his fathers credit and his own;
The Sons discent's no better than her fathers.
Why should their cloaths be richer? I am as proud,
And think my self as gallant in this gray,
Having my Table furnish't with good Beef.
Norfolk temes-bread, and Country home-bred drink,
As he that goeth in ratling Taffity.
Let Gentlemen go gallant what care I,
I was a Yeoman born, and so I'll dye;
Then if thou beest my Son be of my mind,
Wast lesse in rags and spend more in thine House,
[Page]Or if thou hast no House to spend it in
Swash.
Go to a Bawdy-house Mr.
Old Stro.
How Knave to a Bawdy-house, no sirrah no
give it maim'd Souldiers, and poor helpless Widows.
Off with this trash, on with this seemly weed,
Be not
Strowds shadow but be
Strowd indeed.
Y. Stro.
Come hither
Swash there is no remedy, I must give the old man good words and speak him fair, for and if he should die to morrow next (as God forbid but he should) he might defeat me of all his Land.
Swash.
You say true Master, come on with this Jerkin, so now young Master you look like your self, and like my Masters son.
Old Stro
Son what are these that keep you company?
Y. Stro.
A couple of honest proper Gentlemen they seem to be, but alls one to you, I must keep company with none but a sort of Momes and Hoydons that know not chalk from cheese, and can talk of nothing but how they sell a score of Cow-hides at
Lynmarte, and what price Pease and Barley bears at
Thetford market.
Old Stro.
Then still consort thee with these Gentlemen, I like the carriage of them passing well.
Y.
Stro.
I a murren on em they they have carried away my Cloak amongst 'em.
Old Stro.
But let that pass.
Swash.
I Sir 'tis past and gon too.
Old Stro.
And come along with me to
Mile end to my Lodging.
I must talk a couple of cold words with Sir
Robert Westford.
Go
Swash afore, and saddle my bay Nag,
Perhaps I'll ride a mile or two to night:
Kind Gentlemen, I am somewhat troublesom
To press thus rudely into your company;
Come Gentlemen, I'll gratulate your Loves
And your kind favours used unto my Son.
Ex. Strowds.
Can.
And we live wee'l make him spend your living, come
Iack lets go, where's
Snip.
Had.
Oh Sir at my sweet Boss the Broakers, neer fear it there's a sure Dandeno, she cuts it out in Hose and Jerkins, she is an honest dealer, your privy taker, and your sure concealer.
Can.
Let's to't and turn again to meet this Gull,
Wee'll fleece him and his Bags wee they nere so full.
Exeunt.
Bess.
Oh hapless, hapless, miserable wretch!
To loose my wealth and all my fathers Lands
Did never move me; but to see my Uncle
Cheat me of all my Jewels, and in spight
Even to my face mary my troth-plight Husband
To his own Daughter, and to see young
Playnsey
Embrace another in my promis'd bed,
And I thrust out upon the wedding day;
Oh this is it that drives me full of woe
Into this sad and sollitary Green!
Here to do violence unto my self.
Momf.
My Daughter in dispair, then play thy part,
Prevent her ills that did procure her smart,
Alas where am I? how shall I return
Unto my homely Cabbin? where's my boy?
I prethee do not leave me gentle wag,
Take pity of my miserable state.
Bess.
Who talks of pity? now alas good man,
What are you blind?
Momf.
Yes blind, and like to die,
Not for my own, but for thy misery.
Bess.
Father be comforted, I am but poor,
Momf.
Oh do not sigh Girl,
Grief hath so tyranniz'd upon my heart
That if you mourn my tears will bear a part.
Bess.
You are the man I look for.
Momf.
I am indeed,
And yet thou know'st me not, alas the while
That blind deceit, should clear ey'd love beguile,
Whence spring thy sorrows from some private wrong.
Bess.
Am I asleep, or do I know his tongue,
Art thou blind sayest thou, let me see thy face,
Oh let me kiss it too, and with my tears
Wash off these blemishes which cruel time
Have surrow'd in thy cheeks! Oh could thou see,
I'de show thine eyes whom thou dost represent.
I call'd thee father, I thou shalt be my father,
Nor scorn my proffer, were my father here,
[Page]Hee'd tell thee that his Daughter held him dear:
But in his absence Father, thou art he,
Shed but one tear for him, and I for thee
will weep, till from the moyster of mine eyes
A little font of christall tears, shall rise
To bath thine eye lids in, yet do not weep;
Lay all thy griefs on me, for I am young,
And I have tears enough to weep much wrong.
Momf.
Wilt thou remain with me; I dare not speak
For fear my tongue should my heart's counsel break.
Bess.
I'le dwell, I'le tend thee, I'le do any thing
To do thee good, because within thy looks
I see the presence of my reverend Father.
Momf.
Hast'
[...] lost thy Father then?
Bess.
Father! I have,
List to my words and I will tell thee how.
Momf.
First lead me to my Cottage, there relate
From the beginning all thy down-cast state.
Exeunt:
Enter Sir Robert Westford,
and Captain Westford.
Sir Rob.
I tell thee Captain
Westford I have done
No more than I can answer,
I and will.
Cap. West.
Nay Cosen
Westford mis-conceit me not,
Or if thou do all's one, I say again,
You shew'd a cruell part, and wod the Maid
Be rus'd by me your Betters should decide it.
Sir Rob.
Decide a pins end, do you take her part,
Each one you saw did seek to get their own,
Why should not I then? shall I undergo
Publick displeasure for a pawltry Girl;
Shee comes not in myne ears.
Cap. West.
The more unkind
And cruel you, but wherefore should you mary
Young
Playnsey to your Child, considering
He was the troth-plight Husband to your Kins-woman,
The much wrong'd Daughter of the down-trod
Momford.
Sir Rob.
Alas for her, does she complain to you,
Why and she want a Husband you are a Batcheler,
You may do well to take her.
Cap. West.
You had done better,
Had not your avarice broke the contract,
Sir Rob.
Well Sir, I will answer what I have done,
Cap. West.
Not one word more Sir.
Enter old Strowd,
young Strowd,
and Swash.
Old Stro.
I marry Sir, why this is somewhat like,
Now art thou like thy self, but stand aside,
Whose that, Sir
Robert? hee's as good's his word,
The Captain with him, ah he promis't me
To meet me single
Sir Rob.
Pacifie your self,
What I have done I'le stand to, pray forbear,
I'le talk a word or two with Master
Strowd,
What's here his son, how and his man too? ha
That's more than promise.
Old Stro.
Now Sir
Robert Westford you are an early riser,
Sir Rob.
My last nights promise waken'd me afore my hour,
Send hence your Son.
Old Stro.
'Tis good, I like you well, send hence your Kinsman,
Yet 'tis no matter, I have a devise
Shall rid them all, God save you Captain
Westford,
Thanks for your friendly company last night.
Cap. West.
I take your greetings kindly Mr.
Strowd,
And with the tongue of love return it back
With double intrest, pray is not this your Son.
Old Stro.
I cannot tell, his Mother tells me so.
Cap. West.
I shall desire your more acquaintance Sir.
Y. Stro.
I thank you Sir, I am easier to be acquainted with all, than to borrow mony on, I thank my father, but and it please you to drink a Cup of beer or ale, and you'le but walk 'ore the Green to the red lattice yonder, I'le bestow it on you.
Cap West.
Thanks Mr.
Strowd, pray walk to my Chamber,
I am desirons to impart my love
Unto your kind acceptance.
Old Stro.
Sir I thank you for him.
Please you to walk to
Mile end with my Son
And this good fellow, I'le but talk a word
In secret here with Sir
Robert Westford,
About Lord
Momfords Lands, and follow ye.
Capt. West.
At your good pleasure wilt please you walk Mr.
Strowd?
Y. Stro.
[Page]
Pray lead the way, I'le follow you come hither
Swash▪ and it had pleas'd my Father, I might a had as gallant apparell as he, or another man, but all's one, a dog has his day, and I shall have mine too, one day when the old man's dead;—I'le make all flye then e'faith.
Exeunt.
Old Stro.
So they are gone, and now Sir
Robert Westford.
Think of your last nights quarrel.
Sir Rob.
Tut, tut, nee'r prate,
Old Stro.
Thus I revenge my wrong, Thus I defend
The truth, and reputation of my cause.
Sir Rob.
O I am slain.
They fight, and Sir Rob.
falls.
Old Stro.
Then Heaven receive thy Soul,
And pardon me, thy Conscience can tell
I never wish't unto thy Soul but well.
Ex. Strowd.
Enter Momford.
Momf.
What pitious groan calls
Momford from his Cell,
Whose this my Brother
Westford? what and slain!
Heaven thou art just; he that last day for Gold
Did sell my Daughter, is himself now sold
Into the hands of death.
Momford dissemble,
Daughter come forth, and look about this Close,
I heard one groan.
Enter Bess:
Bess.
And here's a bloody Coarse.
Momf.
Look if thou knowst it.
Bess.
Oh 'tis my Uncle
Westford,
He that last day with his commanding breath
Chid me out of his doors, now breathless lies
Intreating me, to give his mingled body
A homely entertainment in our Cell.
Heaven thou art just, and dreadfull is thy judgement.
Momf.
Glory not in his Fall, but rather grieve
That in his end thou canst him not relieve:
Let's bear him in, and if we can by Art
Upon thy Foe, we'll work a friendly part:
For have he but the smallest sign of breath,
We'll recall life, and rescue him from Death.
But howsoe're the Body stayes with me,
Exeunt with the body.
Till Justice points him out that murder'd thee.
Enter old Strowd,
young Strowd,
and Swash.
Old Stro.
Saddle my horse, there
Swash run
Y. Stro.
At hand quoth Pick-purse,—what's the matter with you trow?
Old Stro
Good Son leave prating,
Swash where's my horse?
I am undone, go post to
Chenford, run to Mr.
Glasscock,
Give him my Seal-ring, desire him send me.
Where's my horse I say, the 100 pound he owes me, where's Captain
Westford, take heed he hear me not, Lord how my heart pants in my bosome, I have slain a man.
Swash.
Slain a man! oh oh oh oh.
Y. Stro.
Peace
Swash do not cry so.
Swash.
No, I do not cry, I do but rore.
Old Stro.
I had not the power to keep it longer,
Nor to take my horse till I confest it.
Enter Captain Westford,
and Officers.
Capt. West.
Lay hold on him, and Mr.
Strowd once more,
Confess thy guilt.
Old Stro.
Why Sir? I not deny
Sir
Robert Westford doing me much wrong,
Is by me slain.
Cap. West.
And you for this offence,
Shall be conducted safely unto Prison,
Till matters may be better thought upon,
Mean time your own confession is my warrant.
Y. Stro.
My Father kill a man,—here's a jest to mock an Ape withall, what shall become of me now:
Swash hie thee to
Chenford for the 100 pound, and soon towards Evening Il'e meet thee at
Ilford for fear of base Knaves;—I know not whom a man may trust when ones own Father does deceive 'em thus.
Ex. Swash.
Old Stro.
Well Gentlemen I do obey the Law,
And yield my body Prisoner to the King,
Soon work what means ye can for my repreeve
Till we may sue for pardon. So adue my Son,
Heaven give thee grace such desperate bralls to shun.
Exeunt.
Y. Stro.
Get a reprieval call you it,—I know no more how to go about it, than I know how to build
Pauls-steeple so I do not: but I'le go seek out a Gentleman, one
Franck Canby that served the Cardinall, and try what he can do in it; it's an old saying in our Country, it's better to have a friend at Court than a peny in the purse, it shall go hard but I'le save my father from hanging thats certain.
Ex. Musick.
ACT III.
Enter Momford,
with Sir Rob.
and Bess.
Sir Rob.
GOod Father! gentle Maiden set me down,
My wound I fear will freshly bleed again,
I prethee let thy Daughter make a bed,
I fear my Death-bed, good now send her in.
Momf.
Daughter I pray go in and make the bed,
If we need help I'le call you, pray you begone.
Bess.
It doth torment him to behold my sight,
Well Heaven forgive him and restore his health,
He did me more than wrong, and if I see
He be at point of death, I'le let him know,
That I am
Momford's Childe he wronged so.
Exit Bess.
Sir Rob.
Father lend me thy hand now in Heaven's eye
Swear to be secret till thou see me dead,
Or of this wound by the recovered;
Know first I am a Knight, my Name is
Westford,
My Wife was Sister to the Baron
Momford,
Ready for a Hangman's will.
That
Momford left his Daughter to my trust,
Which Daughter I have this day turned forth
To seek her living, and from her have kept
Above ten thousand Marks, besides the Lands
Morgag'd unto one
Strowd a
Norfolk Yeoman,
That
Strowd on my abuse done to the Lady
Challeng'd the field, we fought, and here I fell,
He scap't I hope, Heaven grant he may do well.
Momf.
'Tis well Sir that you are so penitent.
Sir Rob.
Oh Father I had need to rend my heart
In sunder, with true sorrows hourly sighes,
For I have done a deed more impious
Than ever entred in the heart of man,
If ever thou didst hear of
Momfords name,
His honor, bounty, and magnificence,
If ever thou didst hear his late defame,
[Page]His accusation, exile, indigence,
Then know that I am he,
Momford lov'd well,
Yet I am he by whom old
Momford fell.
Momf.
Alas Sir! how?
Sir Rob.
I coveted his Land,
And practis'd with Sir
Walter Playnsey's Son,
An irreligious careless Gentleman;
Yet one that will make show, swear and protest,
His course of life is equal with the best.
O there are many such old man there be,
Too many in this Land like him and me;
We laid this plot, he should go into
France,
He did, and serv'd on horse at
Amiens,
Where he was wilfully ta'n Prisoner,
And by his Keepers Daughter understood,
The
French should by a trecherous plot win
Guynes,
Wherein Lord
Momford held a Garrison.
Momf.
Who were consenting with the
French in this?
Sir Rob.
A
Wallown-Captain called
Haute Bewmart.
Momf.
Did
Momford know of it?
Sir Rob.
No (old man) never-
But
Playnsey counterfeited certain Letters.
Subscribing them with Lord
Villiers his name,
In gratulation for betraying
Guynes,
These Letters were delivered to a Post,
The Post surpriz'd, examin'd where he had them,
He answered from
Villiers his Secretary:
For in his habit
Playnsey was disguis'd▪
Momf.
Oh Heaven!
Sir Rob.
Good father wherefore dost thou sigh?
Momf.
For grief mens hearts should harbour such deceits.
Sir Rob.
I faint good father, if thou can relieve me,
Call for thy Daughter, stretch me on a bed:
Bear witness I repent now, help and ease me,
And till I dye conceal my treachery.
Momf.
Be sure I will, and yet I hope you'll live,
And reconcile the banish't Lord your self,
For 'twas an unjust fact, indeed it was.
Come Daughter help to lead in this Gentleman,
Wee'll show him all the favour that we can.
Enter Bess.
Bess.
[Page]
Father he fownes.
Momf.
Come quickly help him in,
I hope he will recover, but if not,
Heaven grant his sins may wholly be forgot.
Exeunt.
Enter Canbee
disguised.
Can.
This damb'd perpetual Rogue
Swash, has kept me here in little ease of the bare ground, hungry, cold, and comfortless, ever since two hours afore day. I am hungry for the hundred pound he brings, cold at my heart for fear he come without it, and comfortless least if he have it, he comes with company, but
lupus in fabula here he comes, what and alone! excellent the 100 l. myne own then.
Enter Swash.
Swa
[...]h.
I discover none, the danger is past, I think I may with safety put up an honest weapon, thou terror to all Theeves, sleep there; my young Master promised to meet me, he stayes somewhat long, but he knows
Swash is able to stand under the strokes of a dozen false slaves, oh that I could meet with a Theef now to try my valour.
Can.
Stand sirrah and deliver.
Swash.
Oh Lord, Theeves, theeves, oh, oh.
Can.
Peace Villain, or I'le cut out thy Tongue, and make a rasher of the coals on't, deliver the mony.
Swash.
Yes good Mr. Theef with all my heart, there 'tis I am glad I had it for you.
Can.
So am I too Sir, come hold up I must now bind you hand and foot for running after me.
Swash.
I pray you do bind me hard, do good Mr. Theef, harder yet Sir.
Can.
So now farewell, your mony goes with me Sir.
Swash.
Farewell kind Mr. Theef. O pox choke him for a slave, Theeves, theeves, theeves, help, help, help.
Enter Hadland
and Snip
with Strowd's
sword.
Had..
Sirrah
Snip be sure you run away with
Strowd's sword
Snip.
I warrant you Sir let me alone for running.
Swash.
Theeves, theeves, help, help.
Snip.
How theeves, I'le go, and raise the town Sir, theeves, theeves.
Ex. Snip.
Enter Tom Strowd.
Y. Stro.
How Theeves,—where's
Snip run with my sword? who's that cries Theeves
Swash, how now man come stand to it.
Swash.
Yes Sir, I am bound to it.
Y.
Stro.
[Page]
Why what's the matter
Swash, how cam'st thou thus, ha.
Swash.
I am rob'd Master.
Y. Stro
How rob'd, I hope not so man!
Swash.
Yes faith there was six Theeves set upon me, I very manfully kill'd seven of the six, and the rest carried away the mony, but I shall have it again that's the best on't.
Y. Stro.
How dost thou know thou shalt ha't again
Swash?
Swash.
Why he has left me his bond here to bring it again.
Y. Stro.
There's a bond with a Halters name,—
Swash is all the mony gone?
Swash.
Every peny Master.
Y. Stro.
What ill fortune is that
Swash, what shall we do now trow.
Enter Snip
and Canby.
Snip.
Theeves, theeves, come good Mr.
Canby make hast, this way, this way.
Can.
Theeves, where Boy? I am almost out of breath with runring, what Mr.
Strowd and
Swash how comes this.
Y. Stro.
Why
Swash is rob'd man!
Can.
How rob'd?
Y.
Stro.
Yes faith, but I may thank
Snip there that run away with my sword.
Snip.
Alas Sir I was so amazed I knew not what I did,
Nor whither I ran, till I met Mr.
Canbee here!
Can.
Rob'd, I wod I had been with thee
Swash.
Swash.
I honest Mr.
Canbee, and you had been with me I had scaped well enough then.
Can.
Well Mr.
Strowd, as I was passing through
Allgate this morning I saw the Shreeves and Constables set towards to
Newgate to fetch your father, the Carpenter in a Cart carried the Jebbet to
Bednall-Green, only love to meet you made me neglect the principal business, here's the Protectors Reprieve, I have done the part of a Gentleman, here's
Humphry Gloster good Noble man, he loved your Father well, let not your delay dash all, I was two hours by the clock of my bare Knees to the Protector, pray'd the equity of the quarrel, and could
Westfords body a been found, the Pardon had been sealed: but haste away with the Repreeve, take horse at
Langton, and make speed, or your father will be hanged.
Y. Stro.
[Page]
How take horse quoth ye, yes, the Cat would lick her ears and she had 'em, why, I was rob'd too last night my self at
Langton.
Can.
Were you rob'd Mr.
Strowd?
Y. Stro.
Yes faith, they make a matter of nothing to rob
Swash and I now adayes, I have not a horse to cast at a dog man not I.
Can.
Apox of all ill fortunes, hold Sir, there's five shillings left take it, and go take my horse at the Bell at
Stratford, and make hast for fear you come too late.
Y. Stro.
Troth Mr.
Canbee, and ye gave me all that ere ye had, I can but thank you, and your horse were a horse of gold, he shall be forth-comming again. Come
Swash let us go.
Exit Tom Stro:
Swash.
Mr.
Canbee no more but so for this kindness, farewell Mr.
Hadland, farewell
Snip, pray let's see ye all at the Gallows, till when I bequeath this halter amongst ye, in token of my love, and so adue.
Snip.
Farewell
Swash and be hang'd.
Had.
—
Canbee, art thou mad to give him thy horse, and five shillings to save his father from hanging.
Can.
No you Friday-fac't-frying pan it was to save us all from whipping, or a worse shame; for let your Rogueship understand, that this reprieve is counterfeit and made by me, your ordinary pasport maker, that should have lost an ear at
Salisbury, and another at
Northampton; the truth is we must leave
London, for if the Protector get us under his protection, we shall all go Westward for this warrant.
Had.
—Let's turn Gypsies again then, and go about a fortune-telling, 'tis in good request again now.
Can.
That's the smooth foot path up
Holborn, no
lack there's an odde fellow snuffels i'the nose, that shows a motion about
Bishopsgate, we'le wheel about by
Ratliff and get to his lodging, see shews for a fortnight, till
Strowd's nine daies wonder of hanging be past, to let us use his motion, which done the boy shall turn girle, thou as I have done already, wash off that Gypsie-colour, and be doorkeeper with the boy, my self with a half vizzard will describe, and thus we'le live like young Emperors.
Had.
[...]anbee I'le chronicle thee for this conceit.
Snip thou shalt have good purchase of the Wenches in the throng.
Snip.
And if I snip not off their Purses then call me crack.
Ex.
[Page]
Enter Gloster,
Sir Walter Playnsey
and his Son, Captain Westford.
Enter Old Strowd
to the Gallows, with the Hangman, and Officers.
Glost.
Strowd I am sorry for this heavy sight.
And by the dread command of my liege Lord,
I come to witness 'twixt the world and you
What state you dye in, how you will dispose
Your lands, your goods and debts now forfeited,
These he restores thee, yet whilst thou has life
To give unto your son, your friends, or wife.
Old Stro.
I humbly thank his royal Majesty,
VVishing long happiness to him and you:
But with your favour my good Lord Protector
I still deny I am a Murtherer,
I kill'd Sir
Robert Westford in fair fight;
Our quarrel rising from open wrong,
He offer'd to his neece the Lady
Momford.
Glost.
All that was certified his Majesty,
But prethee hear me
Strowd, Death's fleshless hand
Clapsing the wretched palms of endless woe,
Hath made a circle, and thy soul's the Center,
From which by neither power, prayers, or tears,
If thou dye desperate she can be freed.
Old Stro.
My Lord I do beseech ye pardon me,
The worl'd believes that I have murder'd
Westford,
Or since abus'd his body being dead,
And shaming at my savage guiltiness,
Have hurl'd it in some well not to be found;
Is this the matter that I should confess?
Glost.
It is good
Strowd in that make clear thy Soul.
Old Stro.
He whose pure blood turns scarlet sins to snow.
Forgive me all my faults and
Westford's death:
But if I ever wrong'd him being dead,
Or mov'd him from the place whereon he fell,
Not far off from this place where I must fall.
I ask Heavens anger on me, for his grace,
And I can say no more concerning that.
Glost.
Enough what sayes thou about
Momford's lands.
Old. Stro.
I say, seeing the King of his good grace
Hath given me all my lands, my debts, and goods,
[Page]I give too marks, and all the deeds,
Unto the Lady
Elizabeth his Daughter,
And Captain
Westford, in whom I put all trust,
Be carefull that the Lady be not wrong'd.
Cap. West.
I warrant you Mr.
Strowd.
Glost.
How mean'st thou to di
[...]pose of all thine own?
Old Stro.
I have a will drawn at my house in
Harling,
And I confirm that for my Testament.
Glost.
Are you pleas'd that will shall be perform'd,
Old Stro.
Heaven's will be done.
But I would fain have seen mine unkind Son.
Glost.
Tarry a little Executioner.
Enter Tom Strowd, and
Swash.
Y. Stro.
Hold, hold, hold, let him alone you cross legg'd-hartichoak, touch him and thou dare.
Swash.
Hold Hangman and thou be'st a man, hold for the Kings advantage.
Glost.
What are these trow?
Y. Stro.
Two sir that come not without their cards I hope, Father you have a simple fellow to your Son you see, come who's the shreeve here haw.
Old Playn.
I do supply his place.
Y. Stro.
Do ye so, then here's a
Mittimus to repreeve my father back again to the Gaol, or a repreeval what do you call it, it's my Lord Cardinal's, and my Lord Protectors own hands, and seals; I assure you Sir.
Glost.
Proud
Winchesters and mine, that's strange, let's see it.
Swash.
It is not so strange as true Sir, there it is.
Glost.
Is this your Son
Strowd?
Old Stro
I my gracious Lord.
Y. Stro.
'Tis the more shame for my Mother else.
Glost.
Where had you this repreeve?
Y. Stro.
Of an honest Gentleman Sir, one that can do any reasonable matter with my Lord Protector.
Swash.
I truly Sir he is one, as honest a Gentleman as
Canbee.
Glost.
It may be so, for I know one
Franck Canbee,
He serv'd sometimes
Bewford the Cardinal,
The commonst cosening Knave in all this Land.
Swash.
I, I that's he Sir, that's he.
Y. Stro.
[Page]
As God mend me 'tis the very same man, but all's one for that, he has plaid the kind Gentleman with me, and as God save me, and
Swash had not been rob'd this morning of 100 pound, I had paid him well for his pains too Sir.
Glost.
Strowd turn your self to Heaven these hopes are vain,
And young
Strowd as you hope to have our favour
After your Father's death, I charge you seek
That
Canbee forth that forg'd you this repreeve.
Y. Stro.
How after my father's death,—I hope it is not come to that now? after all this charge.
Old Stro.
Sirrah you, ever chuse you such sure Mates,
My Lord Protector pray be good to him.
Y.
Stro.
Nay pray you my Lord be good to my father, and turn him 'ore the Ladder.
Swash.
—is this my Lord Erector?
Y. Stro.
How's that my Lord Protector, and you be my Lord Protector, I pray do but set your hand to this Bill, and as God save me, and ere ye come into
Norfolk, I'le do you twenty times as good a turn as the hanging of my father comes to, pray you my Lord.
Swash.
Do my good Lord Erector, and
Swash and his Buckler shall be at your service.
Old Stro.
Peace, peace, your idle prate, Heaven's peace
Must be my comfort in adversity.
Y.
Stro.
Swash what shall become of me now, I nere dare go down into
Norfolk again, every clown will brave me, and bid me go to
London, and be hang'd as my father was.
Swash.
I, and they'll bid
Swash swing in an Halter as his old Master did.
Enter old Momford
lead in by Bess Momford.
Momf.
Some good man bring me to an Officer.
It may be a blind wretch may save a subject.
Swash.
Master, here's a blind man come to see your father hang'd.
Y.
Stro.
How a blind man see him hang'd? that were strange indeed
Swash.
Old Playn.
What would that aged man, and that fair Maid?
Swash.
I hope she comes to beg my old Master from the Gallows.
Y.
Stro.
No
Swash She should have come in her Smock▪ and then
Swash.
[Page]
It may be it is not clean Master.
Momf.
I heard the people murmur near my house,
A little Cottage yonder on the Green,
That there was come an antient man to die,
For killing of a Knight last afternoon,
If it be so, the Knight lives, and no doubt
Will be recovered of his dangerous wounds.
Glost.
Where is he father?
Momf.
Yonder in my Cottage.
Swash.
O brave, Master he sayes the Knight's in his God-piece.
Y. Stro.
No in his Cottage man, thou mistakest.
Momf.
He nam'd himself but now, and sent us forth,
To know the truth, and he comes after us,
As well as his green wounds will give him leave.
Y. Stro.
I marry
Swash, here's a good old man, and a goodly Mother, brings news for the nonce,—I wo'd not for all the Bullocks in
Norfolk, th'ad faln out, that my father had faln off.
Glost.
Let
Strowd come down, I hope Sir
Robert lives,
And if he do, believe me I'le reprove
This over rash proceedings for
Strowd's death.
Old Playn.
May it please your grace, 'twas Sessions the last day,
Strowd granted he had kill'd him, Judgement past,
And my Sons wife the Daughter to Sir
Robert,
Hasten'd (with tears) the execution.
Enter Sir Robert Westford.
Swash.
Yonder he comes Master, come you had like to made a fine piece of work here, are you a Knight and can fight no better.
Sir Rob.
Health to my gracious Lord the Duke of
Gloster.
Glost.
I am glad Sir
Robert Westford of your health,
How do you feel your wounds?
Sir Rob.
May it please your grace, I hope they will do well,
This good old man, and this fair-comming Maid,
Next under Heaven preserv'd me from death.
Glost.
Be thankfull to them then, and hear ye young
Strowd,
Consider this poor man, and that fair Maid.
Y. Stro.
Consider her,—I consider well enough, sirrah
Swash methinks it is the prettiest Mother that ere man's eyes look't on.
Glost.
Sir
Walter Playnsey take
Strowd to your house,
[Page]His pardon shall be sent you ere you dine,
So upon Sureties let him be discharg'd,
But hear you young
Strowd, see you find out
Canbee,
Or at my hands never expect a favour.
Y.
Stro.
Yes my Lord I'le find him or it shall go hard, vesdiness
Swash I am mightily smitten in love with yonder Mother, and I ha not a swelling burning feavour, in every member wo'd I might nere stir, —yonders Mr.
Playnsey has all the talk with her, and yet hee's no Batchelar.
Swash.
Cannot you go and take her away from him, I co'd do it my self Master.
Y.
Stro.
Ile go to 'em, I'le try,
Goddeen to your Sir.
Swash.
Pish you are no body Master, let me alone I have a device to get him away, and then do you sease upon the Wench: follow me Master.
Y. Stro.
Oh brave
Swash e'faith.
Enter a Messenger.
Glost.
Now Sir your news?
Mess.
The haughty Cardinal
Taking advantage of your being from home,
Hath with a crue of his Confederates,
Beset St.
Iohnses, and with all his force
Assayls to wrong the Lady
Ellenor,
And steal her forth the Castle.
Glost.
Is't possible, that this proud Priest dares offer violence
Unto my Troth-plight
Ellenor?
Mess.
'Tis too true my Lord.
Glost.
Where is he now?
Mess.
Rid to the Court my Lord.
Glost.
And thither
Gloster doth intend to fly,
As swift as quickest speed will give him leave.
Ex. Glost.
Old Stro.
Come Sir you'll seek those Cozeners▪
No doubt those copes-mates had my 100 pound,
And do you hear, take your companion with you,
Go and seek them, or for your own part never see my face:
But as for you that trust to every slave,
Wasting my goods, nay jesting out my life.
By false repreeves, and such base practises,
Walk, pack, sink, swim, pine, perish, look not on me,
[Page]Till you have found those that have Cony-catch't you.
Y. Stro.
Heark hither
Swash, and it had not been for a blemish to the name of the
Strowds, wo'd we had made an end of this brawling at the Gallows, and then thou should'st a seen whether I wo'd a kept such a coyl for a little pawltry loss or no, I warrant thee he ha not the honesty, to cast thee a Noble towards the healing of thy crack't Crown, yet every one sayes he gave that ill-fac't knave the Hangman five, or six pound.
Swash.
I that was to buy him a better face Mr. But give him good words, you know the old man is kind enough.
Y. Stro.
I as any Corssen creature, hee's won with a Apple, and lost again with a nut, but come
Swash we'll go seek out those Cony-catchers, and ere I catch them,—I'le make them pay soundly all for their roguery.
Exeunt young Strowd
and Swash.
Old Playn.
Sir
Robert will you shake hands with Mr.
Strowd.
Sir Rob.
Well he may have my hand but not my heart,
Srowd thou didst wound me, yet thou didst it well,
No more, I'le think on't till my dying day,
I'le sit upon your skirts before, I will.
Capt. West.
Oh Uncle have patience.
Sir Rob.
You are an Agent for the Child of
Momford,
I pray you Sir
Walter Playnsey make good Bonds,
That
Strowd abuse me not, look to't I pray.
Old Playn.
I warrant you Sir
Robert I'le be sure
Of such security as you shall like.
Old Stro.
Come Captain
Westford, you shall have the Deeds
Concerning
Momford's lands past unto you.
Cap. West.
I had rather Sir you kept them in your hand.
Old Stro.
Well as you please, yet walk with us I pray,
You brought me to the Gallows, bring me back:
Father farewell, farewell good gentle maid,
I'le rest your Debtor till some other time;
But 'twas Sir
Robert's kindness to reveal his name,
Else Hangman you had had this home-spun suit,
But Heaven be thank't I keep it for my Son,
I hope to driue him from his silken humour.
Cap. West.
Come good Mr.
Strowd will you go?
Old Stro.
Gallows farewell,
Strowd's heart is blithe and bold,
Having escap'd thy danger being thus old.
[Page]
Exeunt old Strowd,
Cap. Westford,
and old Playnsey.
Sir Rob.
A plague of this blind slave, and that base drab,
Else hadst thou hang'd ere I had been discover'd,
And on my tongue a mischief, that reveal'd
Our purpose in the plot of
Momfords fall,
But I ha't now, I am resolv'd, hear you Son
Playnsey,
I pray you give that Maid a mark in gold,
And Father I must crave a word with thee.
Y. Playn.
Fair Maid besides his offer take this Gold,
Bess.
I pray you pardon me, for all the world
I would not do my soul that injury.
Y. Playn.
Divine immortal, all my Souls delight.
Bess.
Salute me not with such vain Epithite.
I am wretched, mortal, miserable, poor,
But howsoever base, I'le be no whore.
Y. Playn.
Wilt thou be then my wife, for she is dead.
Bess.
It's much unlike,
A Gentleman of your worth will vouchsafe,
A B
[...]ggars Daughter to your Bridal bed.
Y. Playn.
By Heaven I will if thou w
[...]lt grant me love.
I'le answer you another time kind Sir.
My father hath no Nurse, no Wife, no childe,
No servant but my self, and he is blind.
Y.
Playn.
Heark in thine ear one word.
Sir Rob.
I, I, I, I do remember such a tale I told thee,
Come hither good son
Playnsey thou shalt hear it.
Last night at my first dressing I was Lunatick,
Mad that I was hurt, more than of the hurt,
And in my ravening fit told this old fool,
That thou and I did practise
Momford's fall,
Now this old Asse-believing I said true,
Comes with my Conscience, bids me advise,
And goes about to make a matter on't,
Ha, ha, old fool go, go, go to thy prayers,
Thou hadst need of eyes to keep thy Daughter honest.
I guess thy cottage be a brothell house,
Talk'st thou of
Momfords fall and of my madness
Momf.
I do beseech ye hear me for Heaven's sake.
Sir Rob.
Tu
[...], tut, do not tell me of Heaven, or Hell,
Prate not, I'le send the now and then a peny,
[Page]But if thou tittle tattle tales of me,
I'le clap thee by the heels, and whip thy Daughter,
Turn thee to the wide world, and let thee starve.
Come come son
Plainsey let the Knave alone,
Keep's tongue, and keep his friend, else he gets none.
Bess.
My Father Sir had pity of your wounds.
Sir Rob.
Peace Huswife. I have paid him for his pains.
Come son away, and old man hold your tongue,
Remember this old saw, As men are friended,
Ex. Sir Rob. and Y. Playn.
So either right or wrong their sutes are ended.
Momf.
Oh miserable age!
Bess.
Oh wretched youth!
Momf.
Oh times corrupt by men for want of truth!
Bess.
What ailes my father?
Momf.
Why exclaims my Daughter?
Bess.
Playnsey the perjur'd, he that did deride me,
He that did marry
Westford's only Daughter,
Courts me again to be his Concubine.
Momf.
Does he then know thee?
Bess.
He makes show he doth not.
Momf.
Oh do not trust him Girl,
Westford and he
Are all compos'd of guile and subtilty.
Alas that this fair world, by sin deform'd,
Should bear upon her bosome such a shape
As
Westford is; last night expecting death,
Terror dwelt on his heart, which forc'd him tell
With tears and lamentations his foul facts,
No sooner had he any hope of health,
But he conspir'd the faultless death of
Strowd,
And would not have come forth, had not we been,
But till the man had dy'd kept close within.
Now he denies a deed as clear as day,
Threatens poor want, and low-trod poverty
Must not resist men in authority;
Come lead me in, I would my daies were done,
Since vice layes baits which vertue cannot shun.
Exeunt.
ACT IV.
Enter Tom Strowd
and Swash.
Y. Stro.
HOw's this, shall I see all
Norwitch in the corner of a little Chamber? I had as lieve thou hadst told me
Charing cross stood in
Cheapside, and all one.
Swash.
And you will not believe me you shall see it your self, 'tis in this house, 'tis called a motion: there's first the Master of the motion, then the Master's Mate, the Mate's Consort, the Consort's Cabin-fellow, the Cabin-fellows Hangby, the Hangby's Man, the Man's Boy, the Boy's Page, the Page's Wench, and all these live upon the motion.
Y. Stro.
This is old excellent y'faith; come, and I had but one cross in the world to bless me with I'de see it; go you afore
Swash and shew me thither.
Enter Snip
like a Wench drest up.
Swash.
Do you see you Wench Master? she is Door-keeper, I have given her earnest to enter her soberly, and pass through her quarters at my pleasure.
Y. Stro.
Is this she? how now pretty Mother? what Gamballs hast ta? canst thou describe them? sen ye?
Snip.
Not I Sir, the Master of the Motion can Sir.
Y. Stro.
Go call him out then,—What's he? is he asham'd to shew his face trow? or is it the fashion trow ye? what Gamballs have ye here now? ha?
Enter Canbee
and Hadland
disguised.
Can.
Why This is
Strowd that I fetc'd over with the counterfeit Repreeve, but 'tis no matter, wee'll out-face him. Gentlemen the first conceit you are to see is Tumbling.
Y. Stro.
Stumbling, What stumbling? I think the fellow be straught.
Had.
Sir he means Tumbling, and feats of Activity.
Y. Stro.
Why man that's as stale as
Bancks curtal, there were a sort of Tumblers at
Windham fair last week, and they have made that so stale
in[?]
Norfolk and
Suffolk, that every wench is turn'd Tumbler, and ye
[Page] ha no better matters ye lose my custome I can tell ye Sirs.
Can.
You shall likewise see the famous City of
Norwitch, and the stabbing of
Iulius Caesar in the
French Capitol by a sort of Dutch
Mesapotamians.
Y.
Stro.
How the
French Capitol! nay I remember
Tully's
Offices sayes the Capitol that
Caesar was stab'd in was at
Rome.
Can.
Impute the gross mistake to the fault of the Author; you shall likewise see the amorous conceits and Love songs betwixt Captain
Pod of
Py-corner, and Mrs.
Rump of
Ram-alley, never described before.
Swash.
Good Master let's see Mrs.
Rump of
Ram-alley.
Y. Stro.
How? Captain
Pod and Mrs.
Rump?—I think this snufling slave flouts us; then y'faith let's see the sawing of the Devil with a wooden saw.
Can.
Or if it please you shall see a stately combate betwixt
Tamberlayn the Great, and the Duke of
Guyso the less, perform'd on the
Olympick Hills in
France.
Y. Stro.
France?—Thou speakest all
French to me; but off with this snuffling
French Mask, and speak in your
English voyce, or as God sa me I'll beat thy nostrils as flat as a pancake, or a barly froyes.
Had.
Alas Sir, the Gentleman has got a mischance lately, and broke his Brow, that makes him wear a Visard.
Y. Stro.
Dost tell me on his Brow? what car'd I and he had broke his Neck, I'll have it off; what are you the Master of the Motion?—I am glad I know it;
Swash look thee here's
Canby that cosen'd me with the false Repreeve.
Swash.
And here's the slave
Snip that ran away with your Sword in a Wenches Petticoat; we'll spoyle your motion now we have ye.
Had.
I beseech you good Master
Swash.
Swash.
What Gypsie? are you turn'd Jugler? I'll tickle you.
Can.
Heark ye Mr.
Strowd.
Had.
Mr.
Swash as you ever came of a woman—
Swash.
Let me never come off a woman while I live again if I do not terrifie you, I'll motion you, I'll murther your
Tamberlayn and his Coatch-horses, I'll stab your
Caesar, I'll ravish your
Rump, I'll peper your
Pod, I'll powder your Motion, your
Norwitch shall down, I am fire, and I'll consume your Motion in a twinkling.
Exit with Snip.
Y. Stro.
Do
Swash, and let me alone with these till thou come again.
Had.
[Page]
Mr.
Stro. For mine own part I protest unto you I love you as dear as the heart in my bosom, and protest unto you it went to the very soul of me to hear how that slave
Canbee, like a Gypsy, cosen'd you of a sattin suit.
Y. Stro.
How? how's this, was he the Gypsie that cosen'd me of my suit?
Can.
Iack y'are a Gypsie; believe him not Mr.
Strowd he has been prov'd perjur'd, the slave will fight with his own Father for a Jack of Beer, and kill a sucking Infant for a pint of Wine, and where he sayes I cosen'd you of your suit, 'twas his damn'd counsell that
Swash was rob'd yesterday of the 100 l.
Had.
Mr.
Strowd, by this hollow tooth that shall tear that slaves Nose like a piece of Swines flesh, 'twas he that rob'd him, and counterfeited the Repreeve; indeed I must confess I had my share; some I have spent, the rest is here, take it Mr.
Strowd, and think of honest
Iack Hadland as he deserves.
Can.
I must give him some to; Mr.
Strowd there's 20
l. towards your losses, because I would not have my reputation come in question afore the Protector, nor seem to stain my Lord Cardinal's cloath; there should be an old
Harry Angel amongst it, lend it me to swear by a little.
Y. Stro.
Not one of them and there were a hundred of 'em.
Can.
Let me be torn into mammocks with wilde Bears if I make not a gallemaufry of thy heart, and keep thy Skull for my quaffing bowl you base cheating Slave.
Y.
Stro.
—Here's the old Proverb right, When false Theeves fall out, true men come to their own; but say I should take this 40 l. in part of payment, what security shall I have to get the rest? for my Father has vow'd nere to take me for his Son, till I get his mony again, or see you at the Gallows.
Can.
Are you faln out with your father? fall in with us helter shelter, you shall fare no worse than we do.
Y. Stro.
—Man, what wouldst thou have me to turn Conycatcher?
Can.
Oh Sir, your only bravest life that can be.
Y. Stro.
—I think it were not amiss, for I ha seen Wheat and Barley grow amongst cockell and darnell, and many an honest man keep Knaves company; How now
Swash, what hast thou done?
Enter Swash
and Snip.
Swash.
I have confounded their Motion, beleaguer'd their
[Page] Castle, batter'd down the Walls, and taken
Tamberlayn the blood▪ Prisoner in a pursute, to the utter undoing of all Motion-Monger and Puppit-players.
Y.
Stro.
'Tis well done
Swash, but wotts thou what man? I am turn'd Cony-catcher since thou wentst.
Swash.
Cony-catcher? the Devill you are?
Y. Stro.
Yes y'faith
Swash, and if thou wou't do one thing for me now, I'll teach thee to conycatch too when I come into
Norfolk.
Swash.
On that condition Master I'll do it what ere it be.
Y.
Stro.
Do but go thy waies to
Mile-end-Green to my fathers lodging at the 3 Colts, & do but tell him I cannot find these fellows yet, but as soon as I do meet with them, tell him he shal hear from me.
Swash.
Yes Sir, I'll go tell him you are with 'em, but you bid me say you could not find 'em.
Y. Stro.
—By no means
Swash, then thou marr'st all, tell him I cannot find 'em, make a lye for me now, I'll make two for thee another time.
Swash.
Well on this condition you'll teach me to cony, I am content to lye for you.
Ex. Swash.
Y. Stro.
Do so; Now Sirs, what course will you take, that I may come by the rest of my mony?
Can.
Tush we have 100 l. tricks when we want cash one amongst us undertakes the name and habit of some swashing
Italian or
French Noble-man at least, the rest in Liveries attending, then we come and sojourn at some honest Gentlemans house, till we have eat him out of house and home in diet, and wore his credit out at elbows with taking up commodities at his Merchants, in hope to have all his mony at a day, before which day we give him the slip, and to escape pursute attire our selves like Gypsies, Pedlars, Tinkers, or such like disguise; how like you this?
Y. Stro.
This is old excellent y'faith; well I see I might a kept company with honest men all the daies a my life ere I should a learn'd half this Knavery: but heark my Masters, yonder's the Blind-Beggar of
Bednall-Green has the prettiest Mother to his Daughter as a man need to lay his leg over, now if all the wit in your heads can but get her to be my wife, I sho'd think my mony every penny better bestowed than other.
Can.
You shall have Sir her.
Y. Stro.
Shall, why well said; come then my mad Viragoes I
[Page] have spent many a gray groat of honest swaggerers, and tear-Plackets in my daies that I never drunk for, and now I'll turn swaggerer my self, I'll keep you company and't be but to keep you honest, true men I cannot, for there's nere a finger on your hands but is as bad as a lime twig, I'll do my good will, and I can bring ye to any goodness, then say God a mercy honest
Tom Strowd of
Harling.
Can.
Thou shalt be our chief Captain amongst us.
Y. Stro.
How your Captain?—I'll make all split then, come my hearts.
Exeunt.
Enter old Momford
and sits down, to him Bess Momford.
Bess.
Father, dear father succour me from shame,
Young Mr.
Playnsey is entered our house,
Hath shut the fore-door up, detains the keys,
And swears to kill me, if I do not yield
To his abhorrid and intemperate lust,
Help me good father o're the Garden pale,
That I may call for succour on the Green.
Momf.
No Daughter, sit thee down, sit down by me,
I call you Daughter, being your own desire,
If you be nobly born as you report,
Why should you to escape your own distress
Leave me poor man alone, and comfortless?
Enter Y. Playn.
Bess.
He comes!
Momf.
Let him, sit down, sit down I say.
Bess.
O how shall I escape reproach this day?
Momf.
Peace, heaven may give my byzon'd eyes their light,
Stretching these crooked limbs strait and upright.
Y. Playn.
Art thou fled hither? thinkest thou his weak strength
Can free thee? come, why should this frosty ice
Clasp his cold arms about thy flowring spring?
Nay strive not
Bayard, if ye do, by Heaven
I'll draw my Rapier, and with one thrust
Send thee to
Charon as a Passenger:
Momf.
Oh, I am feeble, pray ye hurt me nor,
If it be true, as I have heard it told
You maried lately with Sir
Robert's Daughter.
Y. Playn.
Father, I hate her, and she scorneth me,
She pules, she sighs, she pines, she leaves her meat,
She flies by Bridal-bed, she bans, she raves
[Page]That ere her father forc'd her to be mine.
Bess.
Good Sir comfort her.
Y.
Playn.
Comfott thou me, and I will comfort her.
Bess.
I will not yield consent to such a sin,
I scorn to be a Princes Concubine.
Y. Playn.
Wilt thou be then my wife?
Bess.
No, I have sworn
To dye as pure a Maid as I was born.
Momf.
How can she be your Wife?
Y. Stro.
My wife will die.
Momf.
Tarry that time.
Y. Playn.
All lingering I defie.
Old man I'll make thee happy by thy grant;
Fair Maid thou shalt be blest in thy consent;
Deny me and I'll turn a
Tereus,
Murder thy Father, then cut out thy tongue,
Deform thy beauty with the hand of wrath,
Lastly make spoyl of thy Virginity,
Then leave thee wretched; where if now thou yield,
'Gainst all reproach and wrong I'll be thy shield.
Bess.
Help me good Father.
Y. Playn.
Bid a sere dry'd Reed
Oppose his sapless strength 'gainst a green Oak.
See me, I am all youth, all love, all beauty,
Thou beautious, lovely, youthfull, 'tis thy duty
To love thy like, which duty if thou shun,
My hate thy beautious youth shall overturn.
Momf.
Good Sir stand but aside a little while;
I do remember since my self was young
The strong effects of lust; both she and I
Must yield to your desire.
Bess.
I'll rather dye.
Momf.
Nay say not so, listen to me my Child.
Y.
Playn.
I marry father if thou canst perswade her
I'll make thee rich, and one day mary her.
Momf.
Fear nothing Child, but use him gently,
And I will fit his hot lust presently.
Y.
Playn.
Come, what resolve you? either yield or dye.
Momf.
Sir I commit my Daughter to your hands,
But I beseech you woo her with fair words,
[Page]She may without compulsion yield at last;
I'll in and we
[...]p, for what can I do more?
You're rich and strong, and I am week and poor.
Y. Playn.
Hold Father, take that Gold to comfort thee.
Momf.
For mony few men now shun infamy.
Bess.
Oh me, do you forsake me!
Momf.
I a while I do,
But
Playnsey I'll anon be even with you.
Ex. Momf.
Y.
Playn.
Now prettie Virgin how are you resolv'd?
Bess.
I yield, yet though I yield I bend my knees,
And ere my spotless Virgin shape I leese
Kneels.
Let me delate the many miseries—
Y. Playn.
Come do not stain thy lilly cheeks with tears,
Nor fashion to thy self a form of dread,
Thou talk'st of loss of shape, a fair Lass bears
A shape as goodly in lost Maiden-head,
And far more lovely; then with smiling grace,
They boldly look upon a Lovers face,
Try once, then be assur'd thoul't not refuse,
Hadst thou a hundred Maiden-heads to lose.
B
[...]ss.
Impious temptation! I defie thee
Playnsey,
Setting my weak strength to resist thy lust;
Off with thy poysonous hands, help, help me Heaven.
Enter Momford
like a Serving-man.
Momf.
But a poor earthly man guided by Heaven
Will keep thee from this deed, hatefull as Hell;
Playnsey forbear as thou respects-thy life.
Y. Playn.
Thou Autum-shaken leaf, thou bare Anatomie,
Thou wither'd Elder-pith, thou shape of death,
Sent by that blind exorcist to disturb
The pleasures that young
Playnsey's heart affects,
Vanish, I know thou art but lither Ayr,
Thy hand fell lightly on me like thin smoak
That is disperc'st amongst the spreading clowds.
Momf.
What mak'st thou me a Ghost? come take thy weapons,
Thou shalt soon try I am both flesh and bone.
Fight, Playnsey
is down.
Y. Playn:
Hold Villain hold!
Momf.
No Boy, I am a Man,
Uncle to that wrong'd Maid, the Blind-mans brother,
Who quaking sits within mourning his Child;
[Page]Ar't not asham'd? no thou art impudent,
Westford and you are flesh't in villanies;
Think on your plot about the banish'd
Momford,
If you'll repent it I will use you well;
Make means that
Momford may be proved clear,
As you know best his harmless innocence,
And on a Souldiers word I do protest
Momford shall make your peace, and sue your pardon.
Y. Playn.
What dost thou mean? what's this thou talk'st to me?
Momf.
I talk of Treason, rapine, slander, wrong;
Go get thee to Sir
Robert, hee's hard by,
I saw him walking up along the Green;
Stand not to talk, if thou accept my offer
I'll be a faithfull servant in this business,
Preserve your credits, and confer with you;
If not, resolve on this, I'll to the King,
And there accuse you of this haynous wrong.
Y. Playn.
Wilt thou stay here untill I fetch Sir
Robert?
Momf.
I will. Go Maid, h
[...]lp the old man to bed,
Ex. Pl.
Hee's shrowdly frighted by this violence.
Bess.
Wh
[...]t reverend man art thou? or Angel rather,
That speak'st these wonders of my banish'd father?
Momf.
Go honorable M
[...]iden,
Momford's Heir,
A little help the old weak blinded man,
That weeping si
[...]s within, trembling for dread
Lest
Playns
[...]y had thy chast youth injured,
Help him, and then I'll tell thee many wonders.
Bess.
To hear but one word of my fathers weal,
I'll undergo a
[...]l work, all pain, all toyl.
Ex. Bess.
Momf.
Poor Girl, how glad she is to hear the voyce
Of
Momford's honor? with what nimble
[...]peed
She hyes to help a shadow, there
[...]s no beggar,
No poor blind man, that wants her comforting;
I wonder what she'ill think, when she shall find
Only a staff, a scrip, a gown, a bonnet,
And nere a body to make use of them?
Enter Bess.
She comes, and is amazed a
[...] she comes.
Bess.
Where is the blind man I beseech you Sir▪
Alone I find his garments in his Chair,
[Page]Do not amaze me, tell me where he is?
Momf.
He is within fair Maid.
Bess.
Aged man,
I should give credit to your milk-white hairs;
Tell me, O tell me, why within a Chair
The case is left; are you a Conjuror,
Where is the blind man that I call'd my father?
Momf.
I am no Conjuror, stay here but a while,
And I will bring the blind-man to thy fight,
Stay here, look on this clowdy Element,
And I'll produce him to your hearts content,
Ex. Momf.
Bess.
Alas where am I sure this Beggars Cell
Is a base Cottage to betray my honor;
I took him at the first to be a Comforter,
But now I see he is expert in shapes:
But why should I dispraise him? he did free
My body from vild
Playnsey's luxury.
Methinks he has been all my Joy to me,
Why should there now arise this difference?
Enter Momford
like a Beggar.
Momf.
Daughter where are you?
Bess.
Pray where is your brother?
Momf.
I have no Brother, no kin but one Daughter.
Bess.
Hee's an Inchanter sure, his waies I'll shun.
Momf.
Daughter where are you? I conjure you Child
By the true honor of old
Momford's name,
By
Momford's faith, that was by fraud exil'd,
You would not let his honor die in shame▪
Bess.
Help me ye powers, that give all Mortals power,
To scape this heavy and too troublous hour.
Spirit avoid me, or if thou be no spirit
Surely it is a damn'd Magicion.
Fly me, thou alter'st shapes, I do not love thee.
Momf.
Thou dost; see here the Gold thou sent'st thy father,
When I, even I my self brought these fair Arms
To wicked
Westford's Gate; poor Child be not amaz'd,
I am thy Father
Momford, by trayterous practise banished.
Bess.
Ah me, that I have liv'd so long unknown,
I still had such a hope.
Mom.
Fair Child forbear,
[Page]I know Sir
Robert Westford, and this
Playnsey,
Or one of them at least, will come forthwith;
Say you the blind man is in his bed sick,
And call me Uncle; come, be comforted,
Our sum of honor in despight of guile
Shall brightly shine in
England's Hemisphere,
We have been clowded long, but mauger hate,
Truth will advance desert to honor's state.
Exeunt.
Enter Sir Robert Westford, Y. Playnsey, Canbee, Hadland,
and Tom Strowd.
Y.
Playn.
Dare you trust
Strowd in this same stratagem?
Can.
Tush fear him not, since his father hath given him over, he hath given o're all honesty and lives upon the spoyl; come ye mad Rogues here's three of us, and here's 30
l. each man take his share, and with his share his charge; We are all for this mony to cut the throat of the Blind-beggar, his Brother, and his Daughter.
Y.
Stro.
How? cut their Throats?—I'll see ye hang'd first.
Can.
Iack thou and I will keep quarter at this end of the Green, and Waylay the old spruce Serving man, he shall be our share, and
Tom Strowd thou shalt ly at this corner for the wench, for this way she comes unto the Conduit-head for water, she falls to thee.
Had.
And fall thou to her, and ye can but agree of price.
Y. Stro.
Nay let me alone for falling upon the Wench I warrant ye.
Can.
Mr.
Playnsey and Sir
Robert do you keep about the old Mans Cottage, and when you see his Daughter gone knock out his Brains with his Crutches; thus have you heard your several charges; every man to his Court of Guard, and keep fair quarter.
Sir Rob.
Plotted with good discretion; Son
Playnsey
I like it well, that you and I go walk
Near to this Cottage, for it much concerns us
To see this Beggar dead, upon whose breath
Proud slander si
[...]s to blemish our good names,
And blast our honest reputations;
Shake hands and part in hope when next we meet,
Ex. Sir Rob. & Can. & Had.
Their deaths shall lay all danger at our feet.
Y.
Playn.
Pray heaven it may; a word good Mr.
Strowd.
Although you had in charge to kill the Maid,
[Page]I do intreat you use some special care
In your attempt, and in the stead of death
Tell her I love her dearly, and that love
Enforc'd this shift: for though the Wench be poor,
Yet in the glass of my affection
She seems right wealthy, fair and vertuous;
Commend me to her
Strowd, and since my wife
Hath given her latest farewell to the world,
Ready Swash.
Tell her I do intend to mary her;
Mean time convey her to my farm at
Rederiff,
And there's 10 Angels more for thy reward:
But be as trusty to me, as the thought
That sleeps within my bosome, so adue,
I trust the richest of my hopes with you.
Ex. Playn.
Y. Stro.
Do so, and I do not deceive you let me dye like a Dog on a Pitch-fork;—This is excellent, hire me to steal away the Wench I am in love withall my self, this comes just in the nick yfaith, I desire no more, but to meet her. Whose yonder
Swash? how now? whither away so fast
Swash ha?
Enter Swash.
Swash.
What my young Master? why I am going to the three Colts to saddle your Fathers Gelding; we both ride into
Norfolk this afternoon.
Y.
Stro.
—Better and better still, thou com'st as fit for the purpose as a Pudding for a Fryers mouth, so dost thou: I do but stay here to talk 3 or 4 cold words in hugger-mugger with the Blind-beggars Daughter, and I'll ride down into
Norfolk with you; and as God wo'd ha't, yonder comes the Mother.
Enter Bess Momford.
Bess.
Oh what content attends this Country life?
Here proud Ambition's emulating eye
Playes not the find-fault; our thatch'd-shed is built
Without the reach of Treasons bloody Gripe.
Swash.
To her Master; 'tis an old saying in our Country, Long Standers are but short Doers, Wenches cannot away with them.
Y.
Stro.
Mass
Swash I think thou sayst true; I'll to her, How now pretty Mother, whither are you going so fast?
Bess.
Alas good Sir I am a poor man's Child,
My Father is the Beggar of this Green,
That ives upon good peoples charities,
[Page]I am agoing with this earthen Pitcher
To fetch clean water from the Conduit-head;
VVe eat the herbs that grow on the Springs brinck,
And count the Conduit-water wholsom drink.
Y.
Stro.
Nay you drink water you are no hostess for me:
Swash.
You are no hostess for me, fie, fie, I am ashamed of you.
Y.
Stro.
Why? what should I say to her?
Swash.
VVhat? you should have prais'd her little foot,
Her hansome shooe belonging to't:
And then a come to her round knee,
And then Master to her belly.
Y.
Stro.
I marry
Swash, and I were there once I'de do well enough: but pray thee let me alone, I'll talk to her well enough I warrant thee; this is to the purpose, VVench you know young Mr.
Playnsey?
Bess.
I do remember I have seen the man,
He loves my Father well; why names he
Playnsey?
I hope he'ill do me no more injury?
Swash.
Fie, fie, what have you to do with
Playnsey? come to your own business; as thus you must come upon her, Oh Lady bright, pity this Knight, that in this plight is thus tormented, if you be willing, to be billing, I dare hold a shilling you shall be contented.
Y.
Stro.
I marry
Swash, this is excellent yfaith; could'st not thou a taught me this? but all's one
Swash, I'll win her without these Ballads I warrant you; VVell wench, to come to the point, there's young
Playnsey loves you well, and he has hired me to watch for thee here, and carry thee to his Farm house at
Rederiff, where if he find thee, soon at night thou art like to lose thy Maiden-head afore morning.
Bess.
Unhappy wretch, that
Playnsey sure was born
To make our House and Family a scorn.
Swash.
Shee begins to yield Master, give her not o're, to her again Master.
Y.
Stro.
I warrant thee
Swash now I am in let me alone. VVell VVench, this is the plain
English on't, and thou lovest me no worse than I love thee, instead of carrying thee to his Farm-house at
Rederiff, I'll ha thee to the Church and mary thee, and of a poor Beggar, Daughter, I'll make thee a wealthy
Norfolk Yeomans
[Page] wife; what sayest thou to it now sen ye?
Bess.
Alas my Father is a poor Blind-man,
And I am all the comfort that he has,
I am his eyes to see, his feet to go,
And hands to dress him, I being gone hee's left
Eyeless, handless, footless, comfortless,
Yet if you love me as you make a show,
Come to our Cottage: though our State be poor,
We live content and that's a good mans store,
Y.
Stro.
Lay thee
Swash, I must go into her Cot-house she says; Well VVench, and thou wot not go with me, thou art ne're like to see thy Father, nor his Shed more, for Mr.
Playnsey and Sir
Robert Westford has hired a couple of false Knaves to cut thy fathers throat, therefore and thou canst love me, say, and hold, go thou with
Swash and raise the Town, and I'll go back and save thy Father's life I warrant thee.
Bess.
I'll go with ye, love ye, I'll do any thing so thou wilt save my aged Fathers life.
Y.
Stro.
—Let me be hang'd like a Dog and I do not;
Swash go you with her and raise the Town, I'll but cross o're the Summer lay by the Broom field o're goodman
Dawson's Close and be with you presently;—whither art thou going? thou dost not hear me.
Swash.
Yes, yes, I must go by the Broom-field, I hear you Sir, come VVench come.
Y.
Stro.
Nay since you are so forward hold, take you the Pitcher, I'll go with her my self,—I wod not for any thing but I had turn'd Cony-catcher, here had been a black day with some body else; come VVench, dry thine eyes, never cry for the matter, the worst is past, thou shalt see the case altered I warrant thee, I'll save thy Father's life fear not.
Swash.
Oh, oh, oh, I carry the Pitcher I there let it lye, I'll after them.
Exeunt.
Enter Momford
driving in Canbee
and Hadland.
Can.
—I am hurt.
Had.
Hold, and thou com'st of the noble blood of the
Trojans hold.
Momf.
Nay do not think you desperate Cast-aways,
Though time hath hid me with the rynd of Age,
And hung his snowy livery of my face,
[Page]Though I am old, that I want strength to fight;
If you be men whose fortune's has been shak'd
By the rough arm of want, or Servitors
That have consum'd your living in the wars,
I have a poor blind Brother on this Green,
Who by the Alms of charitable men,
And with the wealth I brought him out of
France,
Hath store of Gold, and had you shown your wants
To him or me—
Can.
I scorn to make my state known to e're a prowling Beggar on ye all, we know your Brother has Gold, and 'tis that we come for.
Had
And we'll ha't or dye for't.
Both.
Murther, help, help.
They fight.
Enter Sir Robert Westford,
and young Playnsey.
Sir Rob.
What murder? where's the Murderers?
Y. Playn.
Sir
Robert draw, it is my friend that's wrong'd.
Momf.
Nay I beseech your worship hold your hands,
Though I be old, I am sufficient
To answer two far better men than these.
Can.
Sir
Robert, as you are a Knight lay hold upon one, who was have con
[...]ent to rob us in the Kings high way, but would likewise ho
[...] taken away our lives.
Y. Playn.
Upon my Soul you do the fellow wrong.
Sir Rob.
Nay, nay Son
Playnsey, never take his part;
How should the B
[...]ggar here of
Bednall-Green
Get so much wealth, as the world thinks he hath,
And keep his minion at the Beggars house,
But by such practices? yield up thy weapons,
Or set upon him all, I'll answer it.
Momf.
Well, well, Sir
Robert Westford, time has been
The Blind-man and his Daughter did deserve
More friendship at your hands: and Mr.
Playnsey
I could repeat, but let old matters rest.
They beat Momf.
Sir Rob.
What do ye brave us? set upon the slave.
Y. Playn.
What is he gone? how did he scape our hands?
Can.
—I know not, I had a full blow at his left leg, I had thought I had cut it off.
Enter Tom Strowd.
Tom Stro.
Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho, ho,
Canbee! I Pray Heaven keep the old man from killing ere I come, and I care not.
Can.
[Page]
What
Tom Strowd? well met, where's the Wench? is she safe?
Y. Stro.
Safe
[...] Dost thou make a question on't? I warrant she is safe enough for telling any more tales, I am no Bunglar ab
[...]ut a VVench: but where's the Blind-beggar and his Brother?
Can.
The Beggar is a Devil, and his Brother his familiar; here's old
Madge has bit off 100 and 50 Legs and Arms in her daies, and yet she could not so much as draw blood of him, hee's Musket-proof, or he had dyed for't else.
Y Playn.
She is at
Rederiff then, there I sent
Strowd;
VVe'll end this task, and then I'll visit her:
But here's the Cottage, pull the Villain out,
They knock▪
Hee's both a Fellon, and a Murderer.
Enter Momford
like a Beggar.
Momf.
VVhat means this out-rage at a Blind mans door?
Are
Englishmen become so inhumane
That Beggars cannot scape their violence?
Sir Rob.
Leave this dissembling, and send forth thy Brother,
For he hath rob'd these honest Gentlemen,
VVe follow'd him, and saw him enter here,
Therefore dispatch, and either send him out,
Or else wee'll lock the Doors upon you both,
And fire the rotten Cottage 'ore your ears.
Momf.
Indeed I must confess I have a Brother,
An Antient Serving-man, maym'd in the wars
Under Lord
Momfords colours.
Y. Playn
For naming
Momford run him through the heart.
T. Stro.
—Touch him he that dares; as God sa' me I'll be his Priest that toucheth but a hair of him?
Can.
Strowd, I hope you do but jest with us.
T. Stro.
Jest me no jests shall ne're be said,
Tom Strowd of
Harling stood by and saw a Blind-man murthered, therefore courage old Father, set thy back to mine, and cover thy head with thy Crutches; I'll take up my lodging on Gods dear ground, er'e thou shalt take any harm, for the pretty Mother thy Daughters sake.
Enter old Playnsey,
old Strowd,
and Captain VVestford, Sill,
Clark.
Old Playn.
How now? what quarrels have we here?
Sir
Robert Westford, it ill be
[...]eems a man of your estate
To have a hand in such unlawfull riots;
[Page]Are you there Son? have you so soon forgoe
The timeless death of your deceased wife,
To follow such unseemly practises?
Old. Stro.
Ha, sest me so? dost take the blind mans part?
Th'art a
Strowd right, a
Norfolk Yeoman right,
To take part with the weakest; Well done my Boy,
I do forgive all matters that are past,
For joy to see thy heart so well inclin'd.
T. Stro.
VVhy I thank you Father, and I forgive you too withall my heart.
Sir Rob.
Sir
Walter Playnsey you are mis-inform'd,
We come with no intent of injury,
These Gentlemen were Strangers unto us,
We found sore hurt and rob'd by a false Theef,
And Brother to this Beggar, whom we saw
Enter into his house.
Old Playn.
What say'st thou Father?
Know'st thou of such a practise by thy Brother?
Or to thy knowledge is he in the house?
Momf.
Sir
Walter Playnsey, that I take's your name,
So help me Heaven, as I am ignorant
From any such lewd practise of my Brothers:
But since your worships here, I'll call him forth
In person, to make answer for himself,
Desiring you to pardon me a while,
For what with sorrow and with cares down prest,
My sightless eyes had need to take their rest.
Exit.
Old Payn.
Send us thy Brother and be thou discharg'd:
[...]
But Mr.
Strowd, what can you say to this?
T. Stro.
Faith Sir, 'tis a common saying in our Country, You shall know by the Market-folks how the Market goes; and none knows their Knavery better than I that was one of their company. Father do you see those two fellows there?
Old Stro.
I son, what of them?
T. Stro.
Why these were they that cosen'd me of my sattin sute, and with the false Repreeve that had like to a hang'd you, and rob'd
Swash of the 100
l. too.
Old Stro.
What these Gentlemen?
T. Stro.
Gentlemen! as God mend me, a couple of as arrant Cony-catchers as e're pist▪
Old Stro.
[Page]
Is't possible Son?
T. Stro.
Push, you are a Fool Father, you know nothing, I have paid for my learning; and falling into their company in hope to get some satisfaction for all my losses; it was my chance to be by when Sir
Robert Westford and Mr.
Playnsey there gave them 30
l. to murder the Blind-beggar, his Brother, and his Daughter: but by my means the Beggar and his Daughter are alive, but what's become of his Brother I know not; this, as I am
Tom Strowd of
Harling, and a true-hearted
Norfolk-man, I'll justifie against one, two, three, or the whole pack of 'em, when, where, or how they dare, for the very ears and guts of 'em all.
Can.
Strowd, y'are a Nit, a Slave, and a Pessant.
T. Stro.
How a Fessant?—I scorn to soyl my hands about thee: but and I had thee alone, with a tough Ashen Gibbet in my hand, and I did not dry bang ye all one after another, I'de eat no meat but Mustard; sen ye?
Old Playn.
Strowd have a care you speak nought but truth.
Old Stro.
And speak the truth Boy as thou art my Son.
T. Stro.
And I do not I'll give you leave to call me Cut, sen ye?
Old Playn.
Sir
Robert Westford this concerns you near,
And Son it touches your reputation too?
Y. Playn.
But it shall touch his life that Authors it;
Strowd you are a villain, and for old grudge
Enter Momford
like a Serving man.
Betwixt your Father and Sir
Robert Westford,
Forg'd this surmise, as both these Gentlemen
Are ready on their oaths to justifie.
Can.
No more, here comes the Slave that rob'd us.
T. Stro.
Rob'd ye! of what I trow? of your good conditions?
Had.
This is he that hack't my Thygh like a leg of Beef.
T. Stro.
Thou lyest like a Theef.
Old Playn.
Are you the Blind-mans Brother?
Momf.
Sir, I am.
Old Playn.
You are accus'd here of a Robbery,
What can you answer in your own defence?
Momf
Sir
Walter Playnsey, and good Captain
Westford,
First as I look for comfort from above,
I never nurs'd a thought to that intent:
Indeed these Gentlemen, Strangers to me,
Did draw upon me, and as I suppose,
By the provokement of Sir
Robert Westford
[Page]And Mr.
Playnsey, sought to take my life.
Old Playn.
What reason should they have for that?
Momf.
Your worship shall perceive; Sir
Robert Westford
Wounded by
Strowd, and desperate of life,
Confest unto my Brother the Blind-man,
That by the means of him and Mr.
Playnsey
They counterfeited these Letters that wrought
Momford's banishment; Besides all this,
My Sword shall justifie, that first by bribes,
And then by forcive means he would have forc'd
My Neece unto his lust. All this is true,
And this I
[...]ll justifie upon their bodies in the open lists.
Y. Playn.
Thou dar'st not for thy life?
Momf.
Playnsey I dare,
And wo'd my Soveraign Liege give me but leave,
This Sun should see thy Treasons punished.
Sir Rob.
Wert thou a Gentlemen as thou art a Slave,
I'de make thee eat thy words or dig thy Grave.
T. Stro.
Eat a Pudding's end, the old man shall take no wrong Sir.
Cap. West.
Sir
Robert Westford, your Gentility
Shall not tread down the truth; long has my Soul
Thirsted for this occasion: for when I saw
You falsifie your faith, wedding your Daughter
Unto
Playnsey's Son, that was the Troth-plight Husband to
Bess Momford,
I thought as much as this poor man now speaks,
And will in single combate prove as much;
He of you both that thinks himself most touch'd,
Take up my Gage.
Y. Playn.
Westford I'll answer thee.
Can.
And I'll maintain Sir
Robert Westford's cause.
Momf.
Take up my Glove then.
Sir Rob.
Give me it, I'll maintain it my self.
Had.
This shall justifie that
Strowd
And that base Villain were agreed to murder us.
T. Stro.
I is the wind ei' that door, I'll take up thy Glove: but—and I bang not thy Coxcomb, hang me la.
Old Playn.
I hope this challeng'd combate will decide the truth.
Cap. West.
Which Heaven assisting, and the King well pleas'd,
[Page]Shall be perform'd this present afternoon;
I'll to the King, and never raise my Knee from the cold earth,
Till I obtain, by privilege of f
[...]ight
A black revenge for worthy
Momford's fall.
Ex. Cap. West.
Y. Playn.
And thither
Westford will I follow thee,
Or born upon the wings of my just cause,
Arive before thee.
Exit Y. Playn.
Sir Rob.
Each man take his way,
St.
George and Conquest guide our swords this day.
Exeunt, manent
Old Stro.
Courage my Boy, if thou prevail in fight,
the Strowds.
I'll swear Lord
Momford hath not had his right.
T. Stro.
Courage sa' ye? as God mend me, I respect them no more than I do a flap with a Fox tayl, and I do not beat'em as ye sho'd cuyle a side of dry'd Stock-fish, I'll be bound to go to
Rome with a Morter a my head.
Old Stro.
Why well said my Son, let's away.
T. Stro.
But heark ye Father; you know I am to go amongst the Court-nowles, you must needs let me have good store of mony with me, let not the name of
STROWDS be disgrac'd, I pray Father.
Old Stro.
Tush Boy, fear not, I'll carry 500
l. with me, and that shall fly ere thou want.
T. Stro.
—And I'll bring some of my own too, or it shall go hard.
Exeunt.
Musick.
Cornets.
ACT V.
Sound Trumpets.
Enter King Harry
the 6
th. Gloster, Cardinal,
Lady Ellanor,
and Lords attending.
King.
VNcle of
Gloster, and Lord Cardinal,
Since all our Court has put on smooth-fac'd mirth,
Only to grace your Honor'd Mariage,
Embrace each other in the arms of Love,
And as you joyn your hands, so let your hearts
Knit your affections in a friendly league.
Glost.
[Page]
Gloster speaks first, yet speaks he not in fear,
As begging
Bewford's friendship, but in love
Both to his King, and to fair
Englands good;
Yet ere I set my hand to this new League,
Bewford, if any undisgested wrong
Lyes in thy swelling bosome, freely speak't,
And
Gloster will as freely answer it:
But if thy Conscience be as clear from soyl
Of hatefull treachery, as
Glosters is,
Give me thy hand, and with thy hand thy heart,
Which
Gloster will as charily regard,
As the best blood that's chamber'd in his breast▪
Card.
On that Condition
Bewford gives his hand,
And from his heart wipes off all forepass'd wrongs.
King.
Witness this League Lords, and now Ant
Ellanor
Heaven give you joy, both of our Uncles love,
And of this new born peace. Now Uncle
Gloster I desire to know
The cause of
Momford's treason, and his fall,
Which he hath lately undergone in
France?
Glost.
His fall my Liege was great, but his offence
Little or none; for by
Velleires his means,
Who as a Prisoner now attends your Grace,
I have found out since
Momford's banishment,
That all his accusations were false.
King.
Yet
Guynes in which Lord
Momford had a charge,
Was yeelded up by Treason.
Glost.
True my Liege,
I have known
Momford in my Brothers days,
Put in great trust; yet never heard
That he was found disloyal in his charge.
King.
And Uncle
Gloster, we have always had
His honor'd age in reverent esteem.
We hear he had a Daughter, where lives she?
Glost.
Thrust out of all by one old
Westford's means.
King.
Methinks 'tis hard the Child should not enjoy
The riches that the painfull Father left.
Good Uncle
Gloster let it be your care,
To see old
Momferd's Daughter have her right.
Enter Old Pl.
But what grave man is that?
Glost.
Sir
Walter Playnsey,
[Page]The bosom friend unto exiled
Momford.
King.
Sir
Walter Playnsey, by our Uncles leave
I pray stand up, methinks those reverent hairs
Deserve a softer pillar than the ground;
I pray stand up, and boldly speak your mind.
Old Playn.
My Soveraign Liege, your Subject comes in love
To let you know, that divers Gentlemen,
On what presumption they themselves best know,
Have underta'en to prove in open field,
That the Lord
Momford who late fell in
France,
Was treacherously accus'd.
Glost.
Why? 'twas your Son
That first p
[...]oduc'd his accusation.
Old Playn.
Your Grace will give me leave to clear my self,
For I was neither privy to that fact,
Nor speak in his excuse; he is my Son,
But if in malice he hath wrong'd Lord
Momford,
Let him have Justice, and the Law take place.
King.
Are they resolv'd to try it out in fight?
Old Playn.
They are my Liege, and only wait your pleasure.
King.
Even what our Uncle
Gloster will set down
We do assent to.
Glost.
Herald fetch them in,
See them at all points arm'd.
Enter with Drum Sir Robert West.
young Playn. Canbee
and Hadland.
At the other Door old Momf.
Cap. West. Tom Srrowd,
and old Strowd,
and Bess.
Glost.
Who is the Plaintiff?
Momf.
I my gracious Lord.
Glost.
Reach him the Book, and thereon take thine Oath,
That thou art neither drawn by bribes nor hate
To undertake this Comba
[...].—'Tis enough.
Speak truth, and nought but truth, so help thee Heaven.
Momf.
Pleaseth your Grace, this in a word is all,
Sir
Robert Westford and Mr.
Playnsey there confest
To a Blind-man, in hearing of that Maid,
That
Playnsey and himself did counterfeit
The Letters that wrought
Momfords banishment.
Glost.
Give him the Book, now answer on thine oath
In thy defence.
Sir Rob.
[Page]
Then first my Liege 'tis false,
Next hee's a Felon, and by force of arms
Offer'd to rob these honest Gentlemen
In the high way.
T. Stro.
—Then I can hold my tongue no longer, it's an arrant lye my Lord, that's the plain
English on't: for I was by when Sir
Robert Westford and Mr.
Playnsey gave them 30
l. to murder the Blind-beggar, his Brother, and his Daughter, and if I had not been, they had been all kill'd too, so had they.
King.
Fellows what do you say to this?
[...]an.
My Liege I cannot talk, grant me the Combate, and my Sword shall prove Iam a Souldier, and my tongue nere knew the art of scolding.
Glost.
Give him his will, alarum to the fight.
King.
Stay, for me thinks there is some difference,
Both in their years, and their conditions,
And for we highly prize our Subject lives,
Good Uncle
Gloster let them choose their weapons▪
It may be a means to save their lives.
Glost.
And hearten others in pursute of knowledge.
Herauld bring forth all sorts of weapons,
'Tis the King's pleasure that every man
Make choice of those weapons he hath practis'd most.
Sir
Robert chuse your weapon first.
Sir Rob.
Thanks to my Liege: the common fight of these same serving men is sword and dagger, therefore I'll chuse the sword and target they are unskilfull in; I take the sword and target for my defence.
Momf.
And my Liege, because Sir
Rob. Westford shall not think I'll take any advantage, I'll answer him at his own weapons.
Kings.
'Tis well; on to the next.
Y. Playn.
Come Captain
Westford, you have been in
Spain,
And well are practis'd in the desperate fight of single Rapier?
Cap. West.
Playnsey I am pleas'd.
King.
So are not we, the single Rapier is too desperate,
And therefore choose some other weapon,
Or we will have no Combat fought this day.
Y. Playn.
Backsword then and't please your Grace.
King.
So, we are pleas'd.
Can.
Sirrah
Iack, methinks Sword and Bucklet's a safe fight.
Had.
I'll choose no other, and I had a thousand lives.
Tom. Stro.
[Page]
I do, take your bars of Iron, and your Barn-doors, and I do not bang 'em together like a couple of Cur-dogs, I'll nere be seen again.
King.
Sirrah thou fellow.
T. Stro.
Anon.
King.
What weapons wilt thou use?
T. Stro.
Weapon me no weapons, I can play at wasters as well as another man; but all's one for that, give me but an ashen Gibbet in my hand, and I do not dry-bang them both, I'll be bound to eat hay with a horse, so will I.
King.
An ashen-gibbet? what dost thou mean by that?
T. Stro.
What do I mean by it quoth ye?—I think you be sib to one of the
London-Cockneys, that ask't, whether Hay-cocks were better meat broyl'd or rosted, an ashen Plant, a good Cudgell, what sho'd I ca it?
King.
If there be such a weapon in the Court, let one go fetch it him.
T. Stro.
Nay I'll make a page of my own age, and fet it my self.
Swash bring out my blest Beggar there.
Enter Swash
with an ashen-Gibbet:
Swash.
Yes Sir, here's your blest Beggar Master.
T. Stro.
Look ye Sirs, this is en it, and I do not cudgell'em both with it, I'll give you leave to stick me up at the Court-gate for a Pissing-post, so will I.
King.
But two to one is oddes, rather fight single.
T. Stro.
No, they know me well enough, I have cudgelled them both afore now.
King.
Well, if thou dare oppose them both, have thy desire.
King.
Alarum to the flight.
Alarum.
They fight, and Momford
's side wins.
King.
Fellow, dost hear?
T. Stro.
Anon?
King.
What should I call thy Country, and thy name?
T. Stro.
Sen ye?
Glost.
The King wo'd know thy Country, and thy name?
T. Stro.
My name? I am not asham'd of my name, I am one
Tom Strowd of
Harling, I'll play a gole at Camp-ball, or wrassel a fall a the hip, or the hin turn with ere a Courtnoll of ye all, for 20 quarters of Male, and march me height for height.
King.
A lusty fellow trust—
[Page]We have too few such Subjects in our Land; where's the Blind-beggar and his brother?
T. Stro.
Where the Blind-beggar is I know not, but here's the pretty Mother his Daughter; and thou beest a kind spring all speak a good word for me to my father that I may have her, and as God mend me and ere thou com'st into
Norfolk I'll give thee as good a Dish of Dumplings as e're thou layd'st thy lips too, so will I, sen ye?
Old Stro.
How? mary with a Beggar? mix the blood of
Strowds with a tatter? either cast her off, or I will cast off thee.
T Stro.
Now we shall have a coyl with ye; and ye were not my father I'd knock your pate, so wo'd I.
Old Stro.
How's that? do and thou dare.
Momf.
Strowd, though she be Daughter to a poor Bind-man that long hath liv'd on good mens charity, do not disdain her. Be her birth as it may, the portion I'll give with her, deserves as good a Husband as your Son.
T. Stro.
Bate me an ace of that qd.
Bolton, yet I would I had her as naked as my nayl.
Old Stro.
As good a portion as my Son? proud Beggar,
'Tis not your Clapdish and your patch'd Gown can do't.
Momf.
However poor, good Sir digrace me not.
Old Stro.
'Tis my disgrace to be out-worded by a Beggar?
But and thou be'st such a well-monied man
As thou dost brag, dar'st drop old Angels with me?
And he that out-drops other, take up all?
Momf.
That were ambition in a beggar Sir.
Cap. West.
'Twere credit for thee, and thou couldst out-drop him.
Momf.
So please my Liege to give me leave, I'll venture
That small Estate I have.
King.
We are content,
'Mongst cares 'tis fit to mix some meriment.
Momf.
Come hither Daughter; are you ready Master?
T. Stro.
—To him Father, never lose a hog for a halfp'worth of tar; come old fellow bring thy white Bears to the stake, and thy yellow gingle boys to the Bull-ring;—Father wherefore do you hang an arse so? they are all our own and there were a comb seck full on 'em.
Momf.
I thus begin.
Old Stro.
And thus I answer thee.
Momf.
Thus I reply.
Old Stro.
And thus do I joyn issue.
T. Stro.
[Page]
I had rather joyn issue with the Mother a great deal, had I.
Old Stro.
Some more mony
Swash.
Swash.
Here Master, we'll outdrop the Beggar, we'll make Gill sweat else.
Old Stro.
Hast thou any mony about thee
Tom?
T. Stro.
An hundred angels, and a better peny, Pigs of your own Sow Father.
Momf.
There's 20 more.
Old. Stro.
More yet? the Rascal will disgrace me; more yet?
T. Stro.
And yet too,—you think beggars ha' no lice father.
Glost.
Why how now
Strowd, begins it to be low water with ye?
Old Stro.
I am e'en run a ground, have drop'd till I can drop no more.
T. Stro.
You must e'en burn of the spit, for I have no more oyl of Angels to bast you father.
Old Stro.
Nor thou
Swash?
Swash.
Only a broken three farthings that I kept in a corner to buy my wench pins with.
Momf.
All this is mine then.
Old. Stro.
I not deny't, 'tis true
That was our match, and so good Gold adue.
T. Stro.
—I have brought my hogs to a fair Market, must I lose the Mother and all my Gold too?
Old Stro.
Yes saith, all's gone
Tom.
T. Stro.
This is your foolery Father, and I had don't, we sho'd have had such a scolding with you.
Momf.
Then
Strowd where thou before didst scorn my Daughter,
Now I do scorn thy Son; not mov'd through hate,
For
Strowd I hold thee a most honest man,
For right thou didst unto Lord
Momford's Daughter,
And since thy Son did save my poor Girls life,
And rescued mine with hazard of his own,
This Gold which by our bargain is all mine
I freely give him towards his mariage.
King.
Trust me a gallant Beggar.
T. Stro.
Beggar?—He might be a King for his bounty, for he gives away all.
Swash.
I know the reason of that, he can beg more, and Begging be so good an occupation wo'd I had been bound Apprentice to't seven years ago, there was somewhat to be got by it then, 'tis out of request now.
T. Stro.
[Page]
This is old excellent, here carry't to my Chamber
Swash, and lock the door fast I charge thee.
Swash.
And I meet no false Knaves by the way;
Canbee and
Hadland here had been a simple boon for you now.
Exit.
Momf.
And now my Lord, since
Momford is prov'd clear,
And his Accusers have confest their guilt,
I freely give my Daughter to the man,
Who for the love of
Momford (lov'd of all)
Will take her to his wife.
Cap. West
For
Momford's sake, whose honor'd deeds
Are writ up with the blood of the proud
French,
Were she the meanest and deformed'st Creature
That treads upon the bosome of the earth,
Westford wo'd take, love, live and marry her.
Momf.
Nay then I see that virtue shall find friends;
Take her good Captain, and for
Momford's sake
Use the Maid kindly.
T. Stro.
Why farewell 40 pence, I ha fisht fair and caught a frog; well Mother, though I am no Gentleman, I co'd ha brought you to more Land than a score on 'em, thou should'st have had 40 as fair milch kine to your payl, as a man sho'd need to see in a Summers day, 4 yoak of Oxen, and three team of Cart-horses; besides; thou should'st have had thine ambling nag, and thy side-saddle to ha rid on, a little easier than to be jaunted up and down
London Streets in a lethern wheel-barrow; and then of the other side there's the old woman my Mother, she would have made thee a vild-good Huswife could have taught thee how to a made butter, and flap-jacks, fritters, pancakes, I and the rarest fools, all the Ladies in the Land know not how to turn their hands to 'em: But I'll take my leave on thee with an oh good night Land lady the Moon is up.
Momford
discovers himself.
Cap. W.
Gl. Card. Momford!
King.
Bold
Momford living, and proved Loyal,
Thy Love like a rich Jewel we will wear
Next to our hear
[...]; upon those Gentlemen
That have maintain'd and proved faithfull,
We do confer a 100 Crowns a piece.
Momf.
Your Grace in this does
Momford double right;
And noble Country-men while we do live,
Your Love and Valour must not be forgotten.
Old Playn.
[Page]
How is't you will we deal with your Accusers?
King.
That we refer unto our Uncle
Gloster,
Who better knows those passages than we.
Glost.
Since 'tis your will my Liege, then thus't must be,
For you
Y. Playnsey and Sir
Robert Westford
Receive a legal Tryal;
Canbee and
Hadland,
We for a President will have you sent
Out of the Land to dateless banishment.
Can.
Thanks your good Honor, and we'll do you more good by cheating your enemies abroad, than ever we did hurt by cosening honest subjects at home.
King.
Good Uncle
Gloster, we commend your care
For throwing out such rank weeds forth our Land,
Whose weaken'd body hath been sick too long,
Wanting tho
[...]e helps that should have made it strong.
'Mongst whom Lord
Momford you are not the least,
(Pray Heaven you be the last) whom this wilde beast,
Ambitious treason sought to ruinate:
But in requital of your more than wrong
We make you here our Lord High-Treasurer;
And Captain
Westford, make you General
Of all our forces muster'd up 'gainst
France.
Thus our disjointed Kingdom being made strong,
Each Member seated in his proper seat▪
Let's in to praise his name, whose powerfull hand
Protects the safety of our peacefull Land,
FINIS