Jasper
Ay, my wife locked it. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Did she so? let’s break it open then. |
| Sir Jasper |
No, no, he’ll do her no hurt. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Aside. But is there no other way to get in to ’em? whither goes this? I will disturb ’em. |
|
Exit at another door. |
|
Enter Old Lady Squeamish. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Where is this harlotry, this impudent baggage, this rambling tomrigg? 11 O Sir Jasper, I’m glad to see you here; did you not see my vile grandchild come in hither just now? |
| Sir Jasper |
Yes. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Ay, but where is she then? where is she? Lord, Sir Jasper, I have e’en rattled myself to pieces in pursuit of her: but can you tell what she makes here? they say below, no woman lodges here. |
| Sir Jasper |
No. |
| Lady Squeamish |
No! what does she here then? say, if it be not a woman’s lodging, what makes she here? But are you sure no woman lodges here? |
| Sir Jasper |
No, nor no man neither, this is Mr. Horner’s lodging. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Is it so, are you sure? |
| Sir Jasper |
Yes, yes. |
| Lady Squeamish |
So; then there’s no hurt in’t, I hope. But where is he? |
| Sir Jasper |
He’s in the next room with my wife. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Nay, if you trust him with your wife, I may with my Biddy. They say, he’s a merry harmless man now, e’en as harmless a man as ever came out of Italy with a good voice, and as pretty, harmless company for a lady, as a snake without his teeth. |
| Sir Jasper |
Ay, ay, poor man. |
|
Re-enter Mrs. Squeamish. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
I can’t find ’em.—Oh, are you here, grandmother? I followed, you must know, my Lady Fidget hither; ’tis the prettiest lodging, and I have been staring on the prettiest pictures— |
|
Re-enter Lady Fidget with a piece of china in her hand, and Horner following. |
| Lady Fidget |
And I have been toiling and moiling for the prettiest piece of china, my dear. |
| Horner |
Nay, she has been too hard for me, do what I could. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Oh, lord, I’ll have some china too. Good Mr. Horner, don’t think to give other people china, and me none; come in with me too. |
| Horner |
Upon my honour, I have none left now. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Nay, nay, I have known you deny your china before now, but you shan’t put me off so. Come. |
| Horner |
This lady had the last there. |
| Lady Fidget |
Yes indeed, madam, to my certain knowledge, he has no more left. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
O, but it may be he may have some you could not find. |
| Lady Fidget |
What, d’ye think if he had had any left, I would not have had it too? for we women of quality never think we have china enough. |
| Horner |
Do not take it ill, I cannot make china for you all, but I will have a roll-wagon for you too, another time. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Thank you, dear toad. |
| Lady Fidget |
What do you mean by that promise? Aside to Horner. |
| Horner |
Alas, she has an innocent, literal understanding. Aside to Lady Fidget. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Poor Mr. Horner! he has enough to do to please you all, I see. |
| Horner |
Ay, madam, you see how they use me. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Poor gentleman, I pity you. |
| Horner |
I thank you, madam: I could never find pity, but from such reverend ladies as you are; the young ones will never spare a man. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Come, come, beast, and go dine with us; for we shall want a man at ombre after dinner. |
| Horner |
That’s all their use of me, madam, you see. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Come, sloven, I’ll lead you, to be sure of you. Pulls him by the cravat. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Alas, poor man, how she tugs him! Kiss, kiss her; that’s the way to make such nice women quiet. |
| Horner |
No, madam, that remedy is worse than the torment; they know I dare suffer anything rather than do it. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Prithee kiss her, and I’ll give you her picture in little, that you admired so last night; prithee do. |
| Horner |
Well, nothing but that could bribe me: I love a woman only in effigy, and good painting as much as I hate them.—I’ll do’t, for I could adore the devil well painted. Kisses Mrs. Squeamish. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Foh, you filthy toad! nay, now I’ve done jesting. |
| Lady Squeamish |
Ha! ha I ha! I told you so. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Foh! a kiss of his— |
| Sir Jasper |
Has no more hurt in’t than one of my spaniel’s. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Nor no more good neither. |
| Quack |
I will now believe anything he tells me. Aside. |
|
Enter Pinchwife. |
| Lady Fidget |
O lord, here’s a man! Sir Jasper, my mask, my mask! I would not be seen here for the world. |
| Sir Jasper |
What, not when I am with you? |
| Lady Fidget |
No, no, my honour—let’s be gone. |
| Mrs. Squeamish |
Oh grandmother, let’s be gone; make haste, make haste, I know not how he may censure us. |
| Lady Fidget |
Be found in the lodging of anything like a man!—Away. |
|
Exeunt Sir Jasper Fidget, Lady Fidget, Old Lady Squeamish, and Mrs. Squeamish. |
| Quack |
What’s here? another cuckold? he looks like one, and none else sure have any business with him. Aside. |
| Horner |
Well, what brings my dear friend hither? |
| Pinchwife |
Your impertinency. |
| Horner |
My impertinency!—why, you gentlemen that have got handsome wives, think you have a privilege of saying anything to your friends, and are as brutish as if you were our creditors. |
| Pinchwife |
No, sir, I’ll ne’er trust you anyway. |
| Horner |
But why not, dear Jack? why diffide in me thou know’st so well? |
| Pinchwife |
Because I do know you so well. |
| Horner |
Han’t I been always thy friend, honest Jack, always ready to serve thee, in love or battle, before thou wert married, and am so still? |
| Pinchwife |
I believe so, you would be my second now, indeed. |
| Horner |
Well then, dear Jack, why so unkind, so grum, so strange to me? Come, prithee kiss me, dear rogue: gad I was always, I say, and am still as much thy servant as— |
| Pinchwife |
As I am yours, sir. What, you would send a kiss to my wife, is that it? |
| Horner |
So, there ’tis—a man can’t show his friendship to a married man, but presently |