a want of appetite then, but from a surfeit. Else you could never be so cool to fall from a principal to be an assistant, to procure for him! A pattern of generosity, that I confess. Well, Mr. Fainall, you have met with your match.—O man, man! Woman, woman! The devil’s an ass: if I were a painter, I would draw him like an idiot, a driveller with a bib and bells. Man should have his head and horns, and woman the rest of him. Poor, simple fiend!—“Madam Marwood has a month’s mind, but he can’t abide her.”—’Twere better for him you had not been his confessor in that affair, without you could have kept his counsel closer. I shall not prove another pattern of generosity; he has not obliged me to that with those excesses of himself, and now I’ll have none of him. Here comes the good lady, panting ripe, with a heart full of hope, and a head full of care, like any chemist upon the day of projection. 46
Scene III
A room in Lady Wishfort’s house.
| Mrs. Marwood, Mrs. Millamant, and Mincing. | |
| Mrs. Millamant | Sure, never anything was so unbred as that odious man.—Marwood, your servant. |
| Mrs. Marwood | You have a colour; what’s the matter? |
| Mrs. Millamant | That horrid fellow Petulant has provoked me into a flame: I have broke my fan—Mincing, lend me yours; is not all the powder out of my hair? |
| Mrs. Marwood | No. What has he done? |
| Mrs. Millamant | Nay, he has done nothing; he has only talked. Nay, he has said nothing neither; but he has contradicted everything that has been said. For my part, I thought Witwoud and he would have quarrelled. |
| Mincing | I vow, mem, I thought once they would have fit. |
| Mrs. Millamant | Well, ’tis a lamentable thing, I swear, that one has not the liberty of choosing one’s acquaintance as one does one’s clothes. |
| Mrs. Marwood | If we had that liberty, we should be as weary of one set of acquaintance, though never so good, as we are of one suit, though never so fine. A fool and a doily stuff would now and then find days of grace, and be worn for variety. |
| Mrs. Millamant | I could consent to wear ’em, if they would wear alike; but fools never wear out. They are such drap de Berri 47 things! Without one could give ’em to one’s chambermaid after a day or two! |
| Mrs. Marwood | ’Twere better so indeed. Or what think you of the playhouse? A fine gay glossy fool should be given there, like a new masking habit, after the masquerade is over, and we have done with the disguise. For a fool’s visit is always a disguise, and never admitted by a woman of wit, but to blind her affair with a lover of sense. If you would but appear barefaced now, and own Mirabell, you might as easily put off Petulant and Witwoud as your hood and scarf. And indeed ’tis time, for the town has found it, the secret is grown too big for the pretence. ’Tis like Mrs. Primly’s great belly: she may lace it down before, but it burnishes on her hips. 48 Indeed, Millamant, you can no more conceal it than my Lady Strammel can her face, that goodly face, which in defiance of her Rhenish-wine tea 49 will not be comprehended in a mask. |
| Mrs. Millamant | I’ll take my death, Marwood, you are more censorious than a decayed beauty, or a discarded toast. 50 Mincing, tell the men they may come up. My aunt is not dressing here; their folly is less provoking than your malice. Exit Mincing. The town has found it! what has it found? That Mirabell loves me is no more a secret than it is a secret that you discovered it to my aunt, or than the reason why you discovered it is a secret. |
| Mrs. Marwood | You are nettled. |
| Mrs. Millamant | You’re mistaken. Ridiculous! |
| Mrs. Marwood | Indeed, my dear, you’ll tear another fan, if you don’t mitigate those violent airs. |
| Mrs. Millamant | O silly! ha! ha! ha! I could laugh immoderately. Poor Mirabell! His constancy to me has quite destroyed his complaisance for all the world beside. I swear I never enjoined it him to be so coy—If I had the vanity to think he would obey me, I would command him to show more gallantry—’tis hardly well-bred to be so particular on one hand and so insensible on the other. But I despair to prevail, and |