gentleman come, whom you bid me not suffer to come up, without giving you notice, with a lady too, and other gentlemen.
| Horner |
Do you all go in there, whilst I send ’em away; and, boy, do you desire ’em to stay below till I come, which shall be immediately. |
|
Exeunt Sir Jasper Fidget, Lady Fidget, Lady Squeamish, Mrs. Squeamish, and Mrs. Dainty Fidget. |
| Boy |
Yes, sir. |
|
Exit. |
|
Exit Horner at the other door, and returns with Mrs. Pinchwife. |
| Horner |
You would not take my advice, to be gone home before your husband came back, he’ll now discover all; yet pray, my dearest, be persuaded to go home, and leave the rest to my management; I’ll let you down the back way. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
I don’t know the way home, so I don’t. |
| Horner |
My man shall wait upon you. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
No, don’t you believe that I’ll go at all; what, are you weary of me already? |
| Horner |
No, my life, ’tis that I may love you long, ’tis to secure my love, and your reputation with your husband; he’ll never receive you again else. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
What care I? d’ye think to frighten me with that? I don’t intend to go to him again; you shall be my husband now. |
| Horner |
I cannot be your husband, dearest, since you are married to him. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
O, would you make me believe that? Don’t I see every day at London here, women leave their first husbands, and go and live with other men as their wives? pish, pshaw! you’d make me angry, but that I love you so mainly. |
| Horner |
So, they are coming up—In again, in, I hear ’em.— |
|
Exit Mrs. Pinchwife. Well, a silly mistress is like a weak place, soon got, soon lost, a man has scarce time for plunder; she betrays her husband first to her gallant, and then her gallant to her husband. |
|
Enter Pinchwife, Alithea, Harcourt, Sparkish, Lucy, and a Parson. |
| Pinchwife |
Come, madam, ’tis not the sudden change of your dress, the confidence of your asseverations, and your false witness there, shall persuade me I did not bring you hither just now; here’s my witness, who cannot deny it, since you must be confronted.— Mr. Horner, did not I bring this lady to you just now? |
| Horner |
Now must I wrong one woman for another’s sake—but that’s no new thing with me, for in these cases I am still on the criminal’s side against the innocent. Aside. |
| Alithea |
Pray speak, sir. |
| Horner |
It must be so. I must be impudent, and try my luck; impudence uses to be too hard for truth. Aside. |
| Pinchwife |
What, you are studying an evasion or excuse for her! Speak, sir. |
| Horner |
No, faith, I am something backward only to speak in women’s affairs or disputes. |
| Pinchwife |
She bids you speak. |
| Alithea |
Ay, pray, sir, do, pray satisfy him. |
| Horner |
Then truly, you did bring that lady to me just now. |
| Pinchwife |
O ho! |
| Alithea |
How, sir? |
| Harcourt |
How, Horner? |
| Alithea |
What mean you, sir? I always took you for a man of honour. |
| Horner |
Ay, so much a man of honour, that I must save my mistress, I thank you, come what will on’t. Aside. |
| Sparkish |
So, if I had had her, she’d have made me believe the moon had been made of a Christmas pie. |
| Lucy |
Now could I speak, if I durst, and solve the riddle, who am the author of it. Aside. |
| Alithea |
O unfortunate woman! A combination against my honour! which most concerns me now, because you share in my disgrace, sir, and it is your censure, which I must now suffer, that troubles me, not theirs. |
| Harcourt |
Madam, then have no trouble, you shall now see ’tis possible for me to love too, without being jealous; I will not only believe your innocence myself, but make all the world believe it.—Aside to Horner. Horner, I must now be concerned for this lady’s honour. |
| Horner |
And I must be concerned for a lady’s honour too. |
| Harcourt |
This lady has her honour, and I will protect it. |
| Horner |
My lady has not her honour, but has given it me to keep, and I will preserve it. |
| Harcourt |
I understand you not. |
| Horner |
I would not have you. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
What’s the matter with ’em all? Peeping in behind. |
| Pinchwife |
Come, come, Mr. Horner, no more disputing; here’s the parson, I brought him not in vain. |
| Harcourt |
No, sir, I’ll employ him, if this lady please. |
| Pinchwife |
How! what d’ye mean? |
| Sparkish |
Ay, what does he mean? |
| Horner |
Why, I have resigned your sister to him, he has my consent. |
| Pinchwife |
But he has not mine, sir; a woman’s injured honour, no more than a man’s, can be repaired or satisfied by any but him that first wronged it; and you shall marry her presently, or—Lays his hand on his sword. |
|
Re-enter Mrs. Pinchwife. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
O Lord, they’ll kill poor Mr. Horner! besides, he shan’t marry her whilst I stand by, and look on; I’ll not lose my second husband so. |
| Pinchwife |
What do I see? |
| Alithea |
My sister in my clothes! |
| Sparkish |
Ha! |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
Nay, pray now don’t quarrel about finding work for the parson, he shall marry me to Mr. Horner; or now, I believe, you have enough of me. To Pinchwife. |
| Horner |
Damned, damned loving changeling! Aside. |
| Mrs. Pinchwife |
Pray, sister, pardon me for telling so many lies of you. |
| Horner |
I suppose the riddle is plain now. |
| Lucy |
No, that must be my work.—Good sir, hear me. Kneels to Pinchwife, who stands doggedly with his hat over his eyes. |
| Pinchwife |
I will never hear woman again, but make ’em all silent thus—Offers to draw upon his Wife. |
| Horner |
No, that must not be. |
| Pinchwife |
You then shall go first, ’tis all one to me. Offers to draw on Horner, but is stopped by Harcourt. |
| Harcourt |
Hold! |
|
Re-enter Sir Jasper Fidget, Lady Fidget, Lady Squeamish, Mrs. Dainty Fidget, and Mrs. Squeamish. |
| Sir Jasper |
What’s the matter? what’s the matter? pray, what’s the matter, sir? I beseech you communicate, sir. |
| Pinchwife |
Why, my wife has communicated, sir, as your wife may have done too, sir, if she knows him, sir. |
| Sir Jasper |
Pshaw, with |