gh of studying hard, but not to study myself to
Death.
_Pe._ Has this Walk pleas'd you?
_Jo._ It has been a charming pleasant one.
* * * * *
_2. GILES, LEONARD._
_Gi._ Where is our Leonard a going?
_Le._ I was coming to you.
_Gi._ That you do but seldom.
_Le._ Why so?
_Gi._ Because you han't been to see me this twelve Months.
_Le._ I had rather err on that Hand to be wanted, than to be tiresome.
_Gi._ I am never tired with the Company of a good Friend: Nay, the
oftner you come the more welcome you are.
_Le._ But by the Way, how goes Matters at your House.
_Gi._ Why truly not many Things as I would have them.
_Le._ I don't wonder at that, but is your Wife brought to Bed yet?
_Gi._ Ay, a great While ago, and had two at a Birth too.
_Le._ How, two at once!
_Gi._ 'Tis as I tell you, and more than that she's with Child again.
_Le._ That's the Way to increase your Family.
_Gi._ Ay, but I wish Fortune would increase my Money as much as my Wife
does my Family.
_Le._ Have you disposed of your Daughter yet?
_Gi._ No, not yet.
_Le._ I would have you consider if it be not hazardous to keep such a
great Maid as she at Home, you should look out for a Husband for her.
_Gi._ There's no Need of that, for she has Sweet-hearts enough already.
_Le._ But why then don't you single out one for her, him that you like
the best of them?
_Gi._ They are all so good that I can't tell which to chuse: But my
Daughter won't hear of marrying.
_Le._ How say you! If I am not mistaken, she has been marriageable for
some Time. She has been fit for a Husband a great While, ripe for
Wedlock, ready for a Husband this great While.
_Gi._ Why not, she is above seventeen, she's above two and twenty, she's
in her nineteenth Year, she's above eighteen Years old.
_Le._ But why is she averse to Marriage?
_Gi._ She says she has a Mind to be married to Christ.
_Le._ In Truth he has a great many Brides. But is she married to an evil
Genius that lives chastly with a Husband?
_Gi._ I don't think so.
_Le._ How came that Whimsey into her Head?
_Gi._ I can't tell, but there's no persuading her out of it by all that
can be said to her.
_Le._ You should take Care that there be no Tricksters that inveagle or
draw her away.
_Gi._ I know these Kidnappers well enough, and I drive this Kind of
Cattel as far from my House as I can.
_Le._ But what do you intend to
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