FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108  
109   110   111   112   >>  
tudie how to get a wife Sir, Y'are cast far behind, tis good you should be melancholie, It shewes like a Gamester that had lost his money, And t'is the fashon to weare your arme in a skarfe Sir, For you have had a shrewd cut ore the fingers. _Lew._ But are y' in earnest? _Ang._ Yes, beleeve me father, You shall nere choose for me, y'are old and dim Sir, And th' shaddow of the earth ecclips'd your judgement, Y'have had your time without controwle deare father, And you must give me leave to take mine now Sir. _Bri._ This is the last time of asking, Will you set your hand to? _Cha._ This is the last time of answering, I will never. _Bris._ Out of my doores. _Char._ Most willingly. _Miram._ He shall Jew, Thou of the Tribe of _Man-y-asses_ Coxcombe, And never trouble thee more till thy chops be cold foole. _Ang._ Must I be gone too? _Lew._ I will never know thee. _Ang._ Then this man will; what fortune he shall run, father, Bee't good or bad, I must partake it with him. _Enter_ Egremont. When shall the Masque begins? _Eust._ Tis done alreadie, All, all, is broken off, I am undone friend, My brother's wise againe, and has spoil'd all, Will not release the land, has wone the Wench too. _Egre._ Could he not stay till th' Masque was past? W'are ready. What a skirvie trick's this? _Mir._ O you may vanish, Performe it at some Hall, where the Citizens wives May see't for six pence a peece, and a cold supper. Come let's goe _Charles_; And now my noble Daughter, Ile sell the tiles of my house ere thou shall want Wench. Rate up your dinner Sir, and sell it cheape, Some younger brother will take 't up in commodities. Send you joy, Nephew _Eustace_, if you studie the Law, Keep your great pippin-pies, they'l goe far with ye. _Cha._ Ide have your blessing. _Bri._ No, no, meet me no more, Farewell, thou wilt blast mine eyes else. _Cha._ I will not. _Lew._ Nor send not you for Gownes. _Ang._ Ile weare course flannel first. _Bri._ Come let's goe take some counsel. _Lew._ Tis too late. _Bri._ Then stay and dine, It may be we shall vexe 'em. _Exeunt._ _Actus 4. Scaena 1._ _Enter_ Brisac, Eustace, Egremont, Cowsy. Nere talke to me, you are no men but Masquers, Shapes, shadowes, and the signes of men, Court bubbles, That every breath or breakes or blowes away, You have no soules, no metal in your bloods, No heat to stir ye when ye have occasion, Frozen dull things that must b
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108  
109   110   111   112   >>  



Top keywords:

father

 
Egremont
 

Eustace

 

Masque

 

brother

 

Nephew

 
commodities
 
studie
 

blessing

 
younger

pippin

 

supper

 

melancholie

 

Charles

 

Daughter

 

Farewell

 

dinner

 

cheape

 
bubbles
 

breath


breakes

 

signes

 

Masquers

 

Shapes

 
shadowes
 

blowes

 
Frozen
 

occasion

 

things

 
soules

bloods

 

flannel

 

counsel

 

Gownes

 

Citizens

 

Brisac

 
Scaena
 

Exeunt

 

beleeve

 

trouble


Coxcombe

 

fortune

 

earnest

 

fingers

 
shaddow
 
ecclips
 

judgement

 

controwle

 
answering
 

willingly