Scene I-
Scene: The Street.
BELLMOUR and VAINLOVE meeting.
BELL. Vainlove, and abroad so
early! Good-morrow; I thought a contemplative
lover could no more have parted with his bed in a morning
than he could have slept in’t.
VAIN. Bellmour, good-morrow.
Why, truth on’t is, these early sallies are
not usual to me; but business, as you see, sir [Showing
Letters.] And business must be followed, or be
lost.
BELL. Business! And so
must time, my friend, be close pursued, or lost.
Business is the rub of life, perverts our aim, casts
off the bias, and leaves us wide and short of the
intended mark.
VAIN. Pleasure, I guess you mean.
BELL. Ay; what else has meaning?
VAIN. Oh, the wise will tell you
BELL. More than they believe or understand.
VAIN. How, how, Ned! A wise man say more
than he understands?
BELL. Ay, ay! Wisdom’s
nothing but a pretending to know and believe more
than we really do. You read of but one wise man,
and all that he knew was, that he knew nothing.
Come, come, leave business to idlers and wisdom to
fools; they have need of ’em. Wit be my
faculty, and pleasure my occupation; and let Father
Time shake his glass. Let low and earthly souls
grovel till they have worked themselves six foot deep
into a grave. Business is not my element I
roll in a higher orb, and dwell
VAIN. In castles i’ th’
air of thy own building. That’s thy element,
Ned. Well, as high a flier as you are, I have
a lure may make you stoop. [Flings a Letter.]
BELL. I, marry, sir, I have
a hawk’s eye at a woman’s hand. There’s
more elegancy in the false spelling of this superscription
[takes up the Letter] than in all Cicero.
Let me see. How now! Dear perfidious
Vainlove. [Reads.]
VAIN. Hold, hold, ’slife, that’s
the wrong.
BELL. Nay, let’s see the
name Sylvia! how canst thou be
ungrateful to that creature? She’s extremely
pretty, and loves thee entirely I have
heard her breathe such raptures about thee
VAIN. Ay, or anybody that she’s about
BELL. No, faith, Frank, you wrong her; she has
been just to you.
VAIN. That’s pleasant, by my troth, from
thee, who hast had her.
BELL. Never her affections.
’Tis true, by heaven: she owned it to my
face; and, blushing like the virgin morn when it disclosed
the cheat which that trusty bawd of nature, night,
had hid, confessed her soul was true to you; though
I by treachery had stolen the bliss.
VAIN. So was true as turtle in
imagination Ned, ha? Preach this
doctrine to husbands, and the married women will adore
thee.
BELL. Why, faith, I think it
will do well enough, if the husband be out of the
way, for the wife to show her fondness and impatience
of his absence by choosing a lover as like him as
she can; and what is unlike, she may help out with
her own fancy.
VAIN. But is it not an abuse
to the lover to be made a blind of?
BELL. As you say, the abuse
is to the lover, not the husband. For ’tis
an argument of her great zeal towards him, that she
will enjoy him in effigy.
VAIN. It must be a very superstitious
country where such zeal passes for true devotion.
I doubt it will be damned by all our Protestant husbands
for flat idolatry. But, if you can make Alderman
Fondlewife of your persuasion, this letter will be
needless.
BELL. What! The old banker with the handsome
wife?
VAIN. Ay.
BELL. Let me see Laetitia!
Oh, ’tis a delicious morsel. Dear Frank,
thou art the truest friend in the world.
VAIN. Ay, am I not? To
be continually starting of hares for you to course.
We were certainly cut out for one another; for my
temper quits an amour just where thine takes it up.
But read that; it is an appointment for me, this
evening when Fondlewife will be gone out
of town, to meet the master of a ship, about the return
of a venture which he’s in danger of losing.
Read, read.
BELL. [reads.] Hum, Hum Out
of town this evening, and talks of sending for Mr.
Spintext to keep me company; but I’ll take care
he shall not be at home. Good! Spintext!
Oh, the fanatic one-eyed parson!
VAIN. Ay.
BELL. [reads.] Hum, Hum That
your conversation will be much more agreeable, if
you can counterfeit his habit to blind the servants.
Very good! Then I must be disguised? With
all my heart! It adds a gusto to an amour;
gives it the greater resemblance of theft; and, among
us lewd mortals, the deeper the sin the sweeter.
Frank, I’m amazed at thy good nature
VAIN. Faith, I hate love when
’tis forced upon a man, as I do wine. And
this business is none of my seeking; I only happened
to be, once or twice, where Laetitia was the
handsomest woman in company; so, consequently, applied
myself to her and it seems she has taken
me at my word. Had you been there, or anybody,
’t had been the same.
BELL. I wish I may succeed as the same.
VAIN. Never doubt it; for if
the spirit of cuckoldom be once raised up in a woman,
the devil can’t lay it, until she has done’t.
BELL. Prithee, what sort of fellow is Fondlewife?
VAIN. A kind of mongrel zealot,
sometimes very precise and peevish. But I have
seen him pleasant enough in his way; much addicted
to jealousy, but more to fondness; so that as he is
often jealous without a cause, he’s as often
satisfied without reason.
BELL. A very even temper, and
fit for my purpose. I must get your man Setter
to provide my disguise.
VAIN. Ay; you may take him for
good and all, if you will, for you have made him fit
for nobody else. Well
BELL. You’re going to
visit in return of Sylvia’s letter. Poor
rogue! Any hour of the day or night will serve
her. But do you know nothing of a new rival
there?
VAIN. Yes; Heartwell that
surly, old, pretended woman-hater thinks
her virtuous; that’s one reason why I fail her.
I would have her fret herself out of conceit with
me, that she may entertain some thoughts of him.
I know he visits her every day.
BELL. Yet rails on still, and
thinks his love unknown to us. A little time
will swell him so, he must be forced to give it birth;
and the discovery must needs be very pleasant from
himself, to see what pains he will take, and how he
will strain to be delivered of a secret, when he has
miscarried of it already.
VAIN. Well, good-morrow.
Let’s dine together; I’ll meet at the
old place.
BELL. With all my heart.
It lies convenient for us to pay our afternoon services
to our mistresses. I find I am damnably in love,
I’m so uneasy for not having seen Belinda yesterday.
VAIN. But I saw my Araminta, yet am as impatient.
SCENE II-
BELLMOUR alone.
BELL. Why, what a cormorant
in love am I! Who, not contented with the slavery
of honourable love in one place, and the pleasure of
enjoying some half a score mistresses of my own acquiring,
must yet take Vainlove’s business upon my hands,
because it lay too heavy upon his; so am not only
forced to lie with other men’s wives for ’em,
but must also undertake the harder task of obliging
their mistresses. I must take up, or I shall
never hold out. Flesh and blood cannot bear it
always.
SCENE III-
[To him] SHARPER.
SHARP. I’m sorry to see this, Ned.
Once a man comes to his soliloquies,
I give him for gone.
BELL. Sharper, I’m glad to see thee.
SHARP. What! is Belinda cruel, that you are
so thoughtful?
BELL. No, faith, not for that.
But there’s a business of consequence fallen
out to-day that requires some consideration.
SHARP. Prithee, what mighty business of consequence
canst thou have?
BELL. Why, you must know, ’tis
a piece of work toward the finishing of an alderman.
It seems I must put the last hand to it, and dub him
cuckold, that he may be of equal dignity with the rest
of his brethren: so I must beg Belinda’s
pardon.
SHARP. Faith, e’en give
her over for good and all; you can have no hopes of
getting her for a mistress; and she is too proud, too
inconstant, too affected and too witty, and too handsome
for a wife.
BELL. But she can’t have
too much money. There’s twelve thousand
pound, Tom. ’Tis true she is excessively
foppish and affected; but in my conscience I believe
the baggage loves me: for she never speaks well
of me herself, nor suffers anybody else to rail at
me. Then, as I told you, there’s twelve
thousand pound. Hum! Why, faith, upon second
thoughts, she does not appear to be so very affected
neither. Give her her due, I think the
woman’s a woman, and that’s all.
As such, I’m sure I shall like her; for the
devil take me if I don’t love all the sex.
SHARP. And here comes one who
swears as heartily he hates all the sex.
SCENE IV-
[To them] HEARTWELL.
BELL. Who? Heartwell?
Ay, but he knows better things. How now, George,
where hast thou been snarling odious truths, and entertaining
company, like a physician, with discourse of their
diseases and infirmities? What fine lady hast
thou been putting out of conceit with herself, and
persuading that the face she had been making all the
morning was none of her own? For I know thou
art as unmannerly and as unwelcome to a woman as a
looking-glass after the smallpox.
HEART. I confess I have not
been sneering fulsome lies and nauseous flattery;
fawning upon a little tawdry whore, that will fawn
upon me again, and entertain any puppy that comes,
like a tumbler, with the same tricks over and over.
For such, I guess, may have been your late employment.
BELL. Would thou hadst come
a little sooner. Vainlove would have wrought
thy conversion, and been a champion for the cause.
HEART. What! has he been here?
That’s one of love’s April fools; is
always upon some errand that’s to no purpose;
ever embarking in adventures, yet never comes to harbour.
SHARP. That’s because
he always sets out in foul weather, loves to buffet
with the winds, meet the tide, and sail in the teeth
of opposition.
HEART. What! Has he not dropt anchor at
Araminta?
BELL. Truth on’t is she
fits his temper best, is a kind of floating island;
sometimes seems in reach, then vanishes and keeps him
busied in the search.
SHARP. She had need have a good
share of sense to manage so capricious a lover.
BELL. Faith I don’t know,
he’s of a temper the most easy to himself in
the world; he takes as much always of an amour as he
cares for, and quits it when it grows stale or unpleasant.
SHARP. An argument of very little
passion, very good understanding, and very ill nature.
HEART. And proves that Vainlove
plays the fool with discretion.
SHARP. You, Bellmour, are bound
in gratitude to stickle for him; you with pleasure
reap that fruit, which he takes pains to sow:
he does the drudgery in the mine, and you stamp your
image on the gold.
BELL. He’s of another
opinion, and says I do the drudgery in the mine.
Well, we have each our share of sport, and each that
which he likes best; ’tis his diversion to set,
’tis mine to cover the partridge.
HEART. And it should be mine to let ’em
go again.
SHARP. Not till you had mouthed
a little, George. I think that’s all thou
art fit for now.
HEART. Good Mr. Young-Fellow,
you’re mistaken; as able as yourself, and as
nimble, too, though I mayn’t have so much mercury
in my limbs; ’tis true, indeed, I don’t
force appetite, but wait the natural call of my lust,
and think it time enough to be lewd after I have had
the temptation.
BELL. Time enough, ay, too soon,
I should rather have expected, from a person of your
gravity.
HEART. Yet it is oftentimes
too late with some of you young, termagant, flashy
sinners you have all the guilt of the intention,
and none of the pleasure of the practice ’tis
true you are so eager in pursuit of the temptation,
that you save the devil the trouble of leading you
into it. Nor is it out of discretion that you
don’t swallow that very hook yourselves have
baited, but you are cloyed with the preparative, and
what you mean for a whet, turns the edge of your puny
stomachs. Your love is like your courage, which
you show for the first year or two upon all occasions;
till in a little time, being disabled or disarmed,
you abate of your vigour; and that daring blade which
was so often drawn, is bound to the peace for ever
after.
BELL. Thou art an old fornicator
of a singular good principle indeed, and art for encouraging
youth, that they may be as wicked as thou art at thy
years.
HEART. I am for having everybody
be what they pretend to be: a whoremaster be
a whoremaster, and not like Vainlove, kiss a lap-dog
with passion, when it would disgust him from the lady’s
own lips.
BELL. That only happens sometimes,
where the dog has the sweeter breath, for the more
cleanly conveyance. But, George, you must not
quarrel with little gallantries of this nature:
women are often won by ’em. Who would
refuse to kiss a lap-dog, if it were preliminary to
the lips of his lady?
SHARP. Or omit playing with
her fan, and cooling her if she were hot, when it
might entitle him to the office of warming her when
she should be cold?
BELL. What is it to read a play
in a rainy day? Though you should be now and
then interrupted in a witty scene, and she perhaps
preserve her laughter, till the jest were over; even
that may be borne with, considering the reward in
prospect.
HEART. I confess you that are
women’s asses bear greater burdens: are
forced to undergo dressing, dancing, singing, sighing,
whining, rhyming, flattering, lying, grinning, cringing,
and the drudgery of loving to boot.
BELL. O brute, the drudgery of loving!
HEART. Ay! Why, to come
to love through all these incumbrances is like coming
to an estate overcharged with debts, which, by the
time you have paid, yields no further profit than
what the bare tillage and manuring of the land will
produce at the expense of your own sweat.
BELL. Prithee, how dost thou love?
SHARP. He! He hates the sex.
HEART. So I hate physic too yet I
may love to take it for my health.
BELL. Well come off, George,
if at any time you should be taken straying.
SHARP. He has need of such an
excuse, considering the present state of his body.
HEART. How d’ye mean?
SHARP. Why, if whoring be purging,
as you call it, then, I may say, marriage is entering
into a course of physic.
BELL. How, George! Does the wind blow
there?
HEART. It will as soon blow
north and by south marry, quotha!
I hope in heaven I have a greater portion of grace,
and I think I have baited too many of those traps
to be caught in one myself.
BELL. Who the devil would have
thee? unless ’twere an oysterwoman to propagate
young fry for Billingsgate thy talent will
never recommend thee to anything of better quality.
HEART. My talent is chiefly
that of speaking truth, which I don’t expect
should ever recommend me to people of quality.
I thank heaven I have very honestly purchased the
hatred of all the great families in town.
SHARP. And you in return of
spleen hate them. But could you hope to be received
into the alliance of a noble family
HEART. No; I hope I shall never
merit that affliction, to be punished with a wife
of birth, be a stag of the first head and bear my horns
aloft, like one of the supporters of my wife’s
coat. S’death I would not be a Cuckold
to e’er an illustrious whore in England.
BELL. What, not to make your
family, man and provide for your children?
SHARP. For her children, you mean.
HEART. Ay, there you’ve
nicked it. There’s the devil upon devil.
Oh, the pride and joy of heart ’twould be to
me to have my son and heir resemble such a duke; to
have a fleering coxcomb scoff and cry, ’Mr. your
son’s mighty like his Grace, has just his smile
and air of’s face.’ Then replies
another, ’Methinks he has more of the Marquess
of such a place about his nose and eyes, though he
has my Lord what-d’ye-call’s mouth to
a tittle.’ Then I, to put it off as unconcerned,
come chuck the infant under the chin, force a smile,
and cry, ’Ay, the boy takes after his mother’s
relations,’ when the devil and she knows ’tis
a little compound of the whole body of nobility.
BELL+SHARP. Ha, ha, ha!
BELL. Well, but, George, I have one question
to ask you
HEART. Pshaw, I have prattled
away my time. I hope you are in no haste for
an answer, for I shan’t stay now. [Looking
on his watch.]
BELL. Nay, prithee, George
HEART. No; besides my business, I see a fool
coming this way. Adieu.
SCENE V-
SHARPER, BELLMOUR.
BELL. What does he mean?
Oh, ’tis Sir Joseph Wittoll with his friend;
but I see he has turned the corner and goes another
way.
SHARP. What in the name of wonder is it?
BELL. Why, a fool.
SHARP. ’Tis a tawdry outside.
BELL. And a very beggarly lining yet
he may be worth your acquaintance; a little of thy
chymistry, Tom, may extract gold from that dirt.
SHARP. Say you so? ’Faith
I am as poor as a chymist, and would be as industrious.
But what was he that followed him? Is not he
a dragon that watches those golden pippins?
BELL. Hang him, no, he a dragon!
If he be, ’tis a very peaceful one. I
can ensure his anger dormant; or should he seem to
rouse, ’tis but well lashing him, and he will
sleep like a top.
SHARP. Ay, is he of that kidney?
BELL. Yet is adored by that
bigot, Sir Joseph Wittoll, as the image of valour.
He calls him his back, and indeed they are never asunder yet,
last night, I know not by what mischance, the knight
was alone, and had fallen into the hands of some night-walkers,
who, I suppose, would have pillaged him. But
I chanced to come by and rescued him, though I believe
he was heartily frightened; for as soon as ever he
was loose, he ran away without staying to see who
had helped him.
SHARP. Is that bully of his in the army?
BELL. No; but is a pretender,
and wears the habit of a soldier, which nowadays as
often cloaks cowardice, as a black gown does atheism.
You must know he has been abroad went
purely to run away from a campaign; enriched himself
with the plunder of a few oaths, and here vents them
against the general, who, slighting men of merit, and
preferring only those of interest, has made him quit
the service.
SHARP. Wherein no doubt he magnifies
his own performance.
BELL. Speaks miracles, is the
drum to his own praise the only implement
of a soldier he resembles, like that, being full of
blustering noise and emptiness
SHARP. And like that, of no use but to be beaten.
BELL. Right; but then the comparison
breaks, for he will take a drubbing with as little
noise as a pulpit cushion.
SHARP. His name, and I have done?
BELL. Why, that, to pass it
current too, he has gilded with a title: he is
called Capt. Bluffe.
SHARP. Well, I’ll endeavour
his acquaintance you steer another course,
are bound
For love’s island: I,
for the golden coast.
May each succeed in what he wishes
most.