reconciles the differences of the marriage bed; you know man and wife do not always agree; I design him for that use, therefore would have him well with my wife.
| Pinchwife |
A menial friend!—you will get a great many menial friends, by showing your wife as you do. |
| Sparkish |
What then? It may be I have a pleasure in’t, as I have to show fine clothes at a playhouse, the first day, and count money before poor rogues. |
| Pinchwife |
He that shows his wife or money, will be in danger of having them borrowed sometimes. |
| Sparkish |
I love to be envied, and would not marry a wife that I alone could love; loving alone is as dull as eating alone. Is it not a frank age? and I am a frank person; and to tell you the truth, it may be, I love to have rivals in a wife, they make her seem to a man still but as a kept mistress; and so good night, for I must to Whitehall.—Madam, I hope you are now reconciled to my friend; and so I wish you a good night, madam, and sleep if you can: for tomorrow you know I must visit you early with a canonical gentleman. Good night, dear Harcourt. |
|
Exit. |
| Harcourt |
Madam, I hope you will not refuse my visit tomorrow, if it should be earlier with a canonical gentleman than Mr. Sparkish’s. |
| Pinchwife |
This gentlewoman is yet under my care, therefore you must yet forbear your freedom with her, sir. Coming between Alithea and Harcourt. |
| Harcourt |
Must, sir? |
| Pinchwife |
Yes, sir, she is my sister. |
| Harcourt |
’Tis well she is, sir—for I must be her servant, sir.—Madam— |
| Pinchwife |
Come away, sister, we had been gone, if it had not been for you, and so avoided these lewd rake-hells, who seem to haunt us. |
|
Re-enter Horner and Dorilant. |
| Horner |
How now, Pinchwife! |
| Pinchwife |
Your servant. |
| Horner |
What! I see a little time in the country makes a man turn wild and unsociable, and only fit to converse with his horses, dogs, and his herds. |
| Pinchwife |
I have business, sir, and must mind it; your business is pleasure, therefore you and I must go different ways. |
| Horner |
Well, you may go on, but this pretty young gentleman—Takes hold of Mrs. Pinchwife. |
| Harcourt |
The lady— |
| Dorilant |
And the maid— |
| Horner |
Shall stay with us; for I suppose their business is the same with ours, pleasure. |
| Pinchwife |
’Sdeath, he knows her, she carries it so sillily! yet if he does not, I should be more silly to discover it first. Aside. |
| Alithea |
Pray, let us go, sir. |
| Pinchwife |
Come, come— |
| Horner |
To Mrs. Pinchwife. Had you not rather stay with us?—Prithee, Pinchwife, who is this pretty young gentleman? |
| Pinchwife |
One to whom I’m a guardian.—Aside. I wish I could keep her out of your hands. |
| Horner |
Who is he? I never saw anything so pretty in all my life. |
| Pinchwife |
Pshaw! do not look upon him so much, he’s a poor bashful youth, you’ll put him out of countenance.—Come away, brother. Offers to take her away. |
| Horner |
O, your brother! |
| Pinchwife |
Yes, my wife’s brother.—Come, come, she’ll stay supper for us. |
| Horner |
I thought so, for he is very like her I saw you at the play with, whom I told you I was in love with. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
Aside. O jeminy! is that he that was in love with me? I am glad on’t, I vow, for he’s a curious fine gentleman, and I love him already, too.—To Pinchwife. Is this he, bud? |
| Pinchwife |
Come away, come away. To his Wife. |
| Horner |
Why, what haste are you in? why won’t you let me talk with him? |
| Pinchwife |
Because you’ll debauch him; he’s yet young and innocent, and I would not have him debauched for anything in the world.—Aside. How she gazes on him! the devil! |
| Horner |
Harcourt, Dorilant, look you here, this is the likeness of that dowdy he told us of, his wife; did you ever see a lovelier creature? The rogue has reason to be jealous of his wife, since she is like him, for she would make all that see her in love with her. |
| Harcourt |
And, as I remember now, she is as like him here as can be. |
| Dorilant |
She is indeed very pretty, if she be like him. |
| Horner |
Very pretty? a very pretty commendation!—she is a glorious creature, beautiful beyond all things I ever beheld. |
| Pinchwife |
So, so. |
| Harcourt |
More beautiful than a poet’s first mistress of imagination. |
| Horner |
Or another man’s last mistress of flesh and blood. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
Nay, now you jeer, sir; pray don’t jeer me. |
| Pinchwife |
Come, come.—Aside. By Heavens, she’ll discover herself! |
| Horner |
I speak of your sister, sir. |
| Pinchwife |
Ay, but saying she was handsome, if like him, made him blush.—Aside. I am upon a rack! |
| Horner |
Methinks he is so handsome he should not be a man. |
| Pinchwife |
Aside. O, there ’tis out! he has discovered her! I am not able to suffer any longer.—To his Wife. Come, come away, I say. |
| Horner |
Nay, by your leave, sir, he shall not go yet.—Aside to them. Harcourt, Dorilant, let us torment this jealous rogue a little. |
| Harcourt and Dorilant |
How? |
| Horner |
I’ll show you. |
| Pinchwife |
Come, pray let him go, I cannot stay fooling any longer; I tell you his sister stays supper for us. |
| Horner |
Does she? Come then, we’ll all go to sup with he and thee. |
| Pinchwife |
No, now I think on’t, having stayed so long for us, I warrant she’s gone to bed.—Aside. I wish she and I were well out of their hands.—To his Wife. Come, I must rise early tomorrow, come. |
| Horner |
Well then, if she be gone to bed, I wish her and you a good night. But pray, young gentleman, present my humble service to her. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
Thank you heartily, sir. |
| Pinchwife |
Aside. ’Sdeath, she will discover herself yet in spite of me—Aloud. He is something more civil to you, for your kindness to his sister, than I am, it seems. |
| Horner |
Tell her, dear sweet little gentleman, for all your brother there, that you have revived the love I |