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+Project Gutenberg's The Laws of Candy, by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Laws of Candy
+ Beaumont & Fletcher's Works (3 of 10)
+
+Author: Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2005 [EBook #14548]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LAWS OF CANDY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Paul Murray and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+236] The Laws of Candy
+
+
+ A Tragi-Comedy
+
+
+ The works of Beaumont and Fletcher, edited by A.R. Walker
+
+
+
+
+
+Persons Represented in the Play.
+
+
+ Cassilanes, _General of_ Candy.
+ Antinous, _Son to_ Cassilanes, _and his Competitor_.
+ Fernando, _a Venetian Captain, Servant to_ Annophel.
+ Philander, _Prince of_ Cyprus, _passionately in love with_ Erota.
+ Gonzalo, _An ambitious Politick Lord of_ Venice.
+ Gaspero, _Secretary of State_.
+ Melitus, _a Gentleman of_ Candy.
+ Arcanes, _a noble Souldier, Friend to_ Cassilanes.
+ Decius, _Friend to_ Antinous.
+ Porphycio,
+ Possenne, _Senators_.
+ Paolo Michael, _Venetian Ambassadour_.
+ Mochingo, _an ignorant Servant to_ Erota.
+ _Gentlemen._
+ _Souldiers._
+ _Servants._
+
+
+_WOMEN_
+ Erota, _a Princess, imperious, and of an overweaning Beauty_.
+ Annophel, _Daughter to_ Cassilanes.
+ Hyparcha, _Attendant on the Princess_ Erota.
+
+
+
+
+
+ [_The Scene_ Candy]
+
+
+
+
+
+The principal Actors were,
+
+
+ _Joseph Taylor_.
+ _William Eglestone_.
+ _Nicholas Toolie_.
+ _Richard Sharpe_.
+ _John Lowin_.
+ _John Underwood_.
+ _George Birch_.
+ _Thomas Pollard_.
+
+
+
+
+
+237]
+Actus Primus
+
+
+
+
+Scena Prima
+
+ [Enter _Gaspero_, and _Melitus_]
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Sir, you're the very friend I wish'd to meet with,
+ I have a large discourse invites your ear
+ To be an Auditor.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ And what concerns it?
+
+Melitus:
+
+ The sadly thriving progress of the loves
+ Between my Lord, the Prince, and that great Lady,
+ Whose insolence, and never-yet-match'd Pride,
+ Can by no Character be well exprest,
+ But in her only name, the proud _Erota_.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Alas, _Melitus_, I should guess the best
+ Success your Prince could find from her, to be
+ As harsh as the event doth prove: but now
+ 'Tis not a time to pity passionate griefs,
+ When a whole Kingdom in a manner lyes
+ Upon its Death-Bed bleeding.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Who can tell
+ Whether or no these plagues at once
+ Hang over this unhappy Land for her sake
+ That is a Monster in it?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Here's the misery
+ Of having a Child our Prince; else I presume
+ The bold _Venetians_ had not dar'd to attempt
+ So bloody an invasion.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Yet I wonder
+ Why (Master Secretary) still the Senate
+ So almost superstitiously adores
+ _Gonzalo_, the _Venetian_ Lord, considering
+ The outrage of his Countrymen--
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ The Senate
+ Is wise, and therein just, for this _Gonzalo_,
+ Upon a Massacre performed at Sea
+ By the Admiral of _Venice_, on a Merchant
+ Of _Candy_, when the cause was to be heard
+ Before the Senate there, in open Court
+ Professed, that the cruelty the Admiral
+ Had shewed, deserved not only fine, but death;
+238] For _Candy_ then, and _Venice_ were at peace:
+ Since when upon a motion in the Senate,
+ For Conquest of our Land, 'tis known for certain,
+ That only this _Gonzalo_ dar'd to oppose it,
+ His reason was, because it too much savour'd
+ Of lawless and unjust ambition.
+ The Wars were scarce begun, but he (in fear
+ Of quarrels 'gainst his life) fled from his Country,
+ And hither came, where (to confirm his truth)
+ I know, (_Melitus_,) he out of his own store,
+ Hath monied _Cassilanes_ the General.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ What, without other pledges than _Cassilanes_
+ Bare promise of payment?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ No, it may be
+ He has some [pe]tty Lordship to retire to;
+ But thus he hath done; now 'tis fit, _Melitus_,
+ The Senate should be thankful, otherwise
+ They should annihilate one of those Laws
+ For which this Kingdome is throughout the World
+ Unfollowed and admired.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ What Laws are those, Sir?
+ Let me so much importune you.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ You shall,
+ And they be worth your knowledge: briefly thus:
+ Who e'r he be that can detect apparently
+ Another of ingratitude, for any
+ Received Benefit, the Plaintiff may
+ Require the Offenders life; unless he please
+ Freely and willingly to grant remission.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ By which strict Law, the Senate is in danger,
+ Should they neglect _Gonzalo_?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Right, the Law
+ Permits a like equality to Aliens,
+ As to a home-bred Patriot.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Pray Sir, the other?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Know, _Melitus_,
+ The elder _Cretans_ flourished many years,
+ In War, in Peace unparallel'd, and they
+ (To spur heroic Spirits on to Vertue)
+ Enacted that what man so ere he were,
+239] Did noblest in the field against his enemy,
+ So by the general voice approv'd, and known,
+ Might at his home-return, make his demand
+ For satisfaction, and reward.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ They are
+ Both famous Laws indeed.
+
+ [Enter a Messenger]
+
+Messenger:
+
+ Master Secretary,
+ The Senate is about to sit, and crave
+ Your presence.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ What, so suddenly?
+
+Messenger:
+
+ These Letters
+ Will shew the causes why.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Heaven, thou art great,
+ And worthy to be thanked!
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Your countenance, Sir,
+ Doth promise some good tidings.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ O the best
+ And happiest for this land that e'r was told!
+ All the _Venetian_ Forces are defeated.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ How, Sir?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ And what doth add some delight more,
+ There is amongst the Souldiers a contention
+ Who shall be the triumpher, and it stands
+ Doubtful between a Father and his Son,
+ Old _Cassilanes_, and young _Antinous_.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Why may not both demand it?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ The Law denies it,
+ But where the Souldiers do not all consent,
+ The Parties in contention, are refer'd
+ To plead before the Senate; and from them
+ Upon an open audience to be judg'd
+ The Chief, and then to make demands.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ You ravish me
+ With wonder and delight.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Come; as we walk,
+ I shall more fully inform you.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+
+
+
+240]
+SCENE II
+
+
+ [Enter _Cassilanes_, _Arcanes_, _Antinous_, and _Decius_.]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Admit no Souldier near us till the Senate
+ Have took their places.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ You are obey'd, my Lord.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ _Decius_, fall off.
+
+Decius:
+
+ I shall.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Give leave _Arcanes_:
+ Young man, come nearer to me: who am I?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ It were a sin against the piety
+ Of filial duty, if I should forget
+ The debt I owe my Father on my knee:
+ Your pleasure?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ What, so low? canst thou find joints,
+ Yet be an Elephant? _Antinous_, rise;
+ Thou wilt belye opinion, and rebate
+ The ambition of thy gallantry, that they
+ Whose confidence thou hast bewitch'd, should see
+ Their little God of War, kneel to his Father,
+ Though in my hand I did grasp Thunder.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Sir,
+ For proof that I acknowledge you the Author
+ Of giving me my Birth, I have discharg'd
+ A part of my Obedience. But if now
+ You should (as cruel fathers do) proclaim
+ Your right, and Tyrant-like usurp the glory
+ Of my peculiar honours, not deriv'd
+ From successary, but purchas'd with my bloud,
+ Then I must stand first Champion for my self
+ Against all interposers.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Boldly urg'd,
+ And proudly, I could love thee, did not anger
+ Consult with just disdain, in open language
+ To call thee most ungrateful. Say freely,
+ Wilt thou resign the flatteries whereon
+ The reeling pillars of a popular breath
+ Have rais'd thy Giant-like conceit, to add
+ A suffrage to thy Fathers merit? speak.
+241]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Sir, hear me: were there not a Chronicle
+ Well pen'd by all their tongues, who can report
+ What they have seen you do; or had you not
+ Best in your own performance writ your self,
+ And been your own text, I would undertake
+ Alone, without the help of Art, or Character,
+ But only to recount your deeds in Arms,
+ And you should ever then be fam'd a President
+ Of living victory: But as you are
+ Great, and well worthy to be stiled Great,
+ It would betray a poverty of Spirit
+ In me to obstruct my fortunes, or descent,
+ If I should coward-like surrender up
+ The interest which the inheritance of your vertue
+ And mine own thrifty fate can claim in honour:
+ My Lord, of all the mass of Fame, which any
+ That wears a Sword, and hath but seen me fight,
+ Gives me, I will not share, nor yield one jot,
+ One tittle.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Not to me?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ You are my Father,
+ Yet not to you.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Ambitious Boy, how dar'st thou
+ To tell me, that thou wilt contend?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Had I
+ Been slothful, and not follow'd you in all
+ The streights of death, you might have justly then
+ Reputed me a Bastard: 'tis a cruelty
+ More than to murther Innocents, to take
+ The life of my yet infant-honour from me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ _Antinous_, look upon this badge of age,
+ Thy Father's grey-hair'd beard: full fifty years,
+ (And more than half of this, ere thou wert born)
+ I have been known a Souldier, in which time
+ I found no difference 'twixt War and Peace,
+ For War was Peace to me, and Peace was War.
+ _Antinous_, mark me well; there hath not liv'd
+ These fifty years a man whom _Crete_ prefer'd
+ Before thy Father; let me boldly boast,
+ Thy Father, both for Discipline a[n]d Action
+242] Hath so long been the first of all his Nation;
+ Now, canst thou think it honest, charitable,
+ Nay humane, being so young, my Son, my Child,
+ Begot, bred, taught by me, by me thy Father,
+ For one days service, and that on thy first,
+ To rob me of a glory which I fought for
+ A half of hundred years?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ My case observes
+ Both equity and presidents; for Sir,
+ That very day whereon you got your Fame,
+ You took it from some other, who was then
+ Chief in repute, as you are now, and has been
+ Perhaps as many years deserving that
+ Which you gain'd in a day, as I have mine.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ But he was not my Father then, _Antinous_;
+ Thou leav'st out that.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Sir, had he been your Father,
+ He had been then immortal; for a Father
+ Heightens his reputation where his Son
+ Inherits it, as when you give us life,
+ Your life is not diminish'd but renew'd
+ In us when you are dead, and we are still
+ Your living Images.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ So be thou curs'd
+ In thy posterity, as I in thee,
+ Dishonourable Boy; O shall that Sun,
+ Which not a year yet since beheld me mounted
+ Upon a fiery Steed, waving my Sword,
+ And teaching this young Man to manage Arms,
+ That was a raw, fresh Novice in the feats
+ Of Chivalrie, shall that same Sun be witness
+ Against this Brat of his Ingratitude?
+ Who, to eclipse the light of my renown,
+ Can no way hope to get a noble Name,
+ But by the treading on his Father's Greatness;
+ Thou wilt not yield?
+
+ [Enter _Arcanes_]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ My life, but not the prize
+ My Sword hath purchas'd.
+243]
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ The Senate,
+ My Lord, are here at hand, and all the Souldiers
+ Begin to throng about them.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Now, _Arcanes_, the--
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ What, Sir?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Trifles will affront us; that
+ Fine fighting Stripling.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Let him have the shame on't;
+ 'Please you withdraw on this side.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ My great heart
+ Was never quail'd before.
+
+Decius:
+
+ My Lord, be confident,
+ Let not your Father daunt you.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ _Decius_, whither
+ Must I withdraw?
+
+Decius:
+
+ On this side.--See, the Souldiers
+ Attend your pleasure--courage, Sir; the Senate.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Way for the Senate.
+
+ [Enter _Porphycio_, _Possenne_, (three Senators) _Gonzalo_, _Gaspero_,
+ Souldiers]
+
+ My good Lords I know not
+ What tax of arrogance I may incurr,
+ Should I presume, though courted by your Favours,
+ To take a place amongst you; I had rather
+ Give proof of my unfeign'd humility
+ By force, though mean, yet more becoming place,
+ Than run the hazard of a doubtful censure.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ My Lord, your wisdom is both known and try'd;
+ We cannot rank you in a nobler Friendship
+ Than your great service to the State deserves.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Will't please you, Sir?
+
+ [Enter _Fernando_ with Souldiers.]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ What's here, my Lord _Porphycio_?
+ It must not be.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ My Lord, you are too modest.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ It is no season to be troublesome,
+ Else--but I have done: your Lordships are observ'd.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Is the demandant ready?
+244]
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ He is ready.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Produce him then.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Before this sacred presence,
+ I, by a general consent, am made
+ The Souldiers voice, and to your gracious Wisedoms,
+ Present as chief in Arms, his Countries Champion,
+ _Cassilanes._
+
+Decius:
+
+ Most reverend Lords, you hear the lesser number
+ Of those who have been Guardians to this Country,
+ Approve this Champion; I, in all their names,
+ Who fought for _Candy_, here present before you
+ The mightiest man in Arms, _Antinous_.
+ Speak fellow Souldiers.
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ _Antinous, Antinous_.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Stand by all, save the two Competitors.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ My Lords, how much your Countrey owes you both,
+ The due reward of your desertful glories
+ Must to Posterity remain: but yet
+ Since, by our Law, one only can make claim
+ To the proposed honours which you both
+ (It seems) have truly merited, take leave
+ Freely to plead your rights; we shall attend ye.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Wherein priority of voice is granted,
+ Lord _Cassilanes_ to you; for that your rare
+ And long experience in the Course of War,
+ As well doth challenge it as the best priviledge
+ Of Order and Civility, for that
+ You are your brave Opponents worthy Father.
+ Say, Country-men, are you content?
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ I, I.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Right grave, right gracious Fathers; how unfit
+ It is for me, that all my life time have
+ Been practis'd in the School of Bloud, and Slaughter
+ To bandy words now in my lifes last farewel,
+ Your Wisedomes will consider; were there pitcht
+ Another, and another field, like that
+ Which, not yet three days since, this Arm hath scatter'd,
+ Defeated, and made nothing, then the man
+ That had a heart to think he could but follow
+ (For equal me he should not) through the lanes
+245] Of danger and amazement, might in that
+ That only of but following me, be happy,
+ Reputed worthy to be made my Rival;
+ For 'tis not, Lords, unknown to those about me,
+ (My fellow Souldiers) first, with what a confidence
+ I led them on to fight, went on still, and
+ As if I could have been a second Nature,
+ As well in heartening them by my example,
+ As by my exhortation, I gave life
+ To quicken courage, to inflame revenge,
+ To heighten resolution; in a word,
+ To out-doe action: It boots not to discover,
+ How that young man, who was not fledg'd nor skill'd
+ In Martial play, was even as ignorant
+ As childish: But I list not to disparage
+ His non-ability: The signal given
+ Of Battel, when our enemies came on,
+ (Directed more by fury, than by warrant
+ Of Policy and Stratagem) I met them,
+ I in the fore-front of the Armies met them;
+ And as if this old weather-beaten body
+ Had been compos'd of cannon-proof, I stood
+ The volleys of their shot. I, I my self
+ Was he that first dis-rankt their woods of Pikes:
+ But when we came to handy-stroaks, as often
+ As I lent blows, so often I gave wounds,
+ And every wound a death. I may be bold
+ To justifie a truth, this very sword
+ Of mine slew more than any twain besides:
+ And, which is not the least of all my glorie,
+ When he, this young man, hand to hand in fight,
+ Was by the General of the Venetians,
+ And such as were his retinue, unhors'd,
+ I stept between, and rescu'd him my self,
+ Or horses hoofs had trampled him to dirt;
+ And whilst he was re-mounting, I maintain'd
+ The combate with the gallant General,
+ Till having taken breath, he throng'd before me,
+ Renew'd the fight, and with a fatal blow,'
+ Stole both that honour from me, and his life
+246] From him, whom I before my self alone,
+ Had more than full three quarters kill'd: a man
+ Well worthy only by this hand to have dy'd,
+ Not by a Boys weak push: I talk too much,
+ But 'tis a fault of age: If to bring home
+ Long peace, long victorie, even to your Capitol;
+ If to secure your Kingdom, wives, and children,
+ Your lives and liberties; if to renown
+ Your honours through the world, to fix your names,
+ Like Blazing stars admir'd, and fear'd by all
+ That have but heard of _Candy_, or a _Cretan_,
+ Be to deserve the approvement of my man-hood,
+ Then thus much have I done: what more, examine
+ The annals of my life; and then consider
+ What I have been, and am. Lords I have said.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ With reverence to the Senate, is it lawfull,
+ Without your Customes breach, to say a word?
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Say on my Lord _Gonzalo_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I have heard,
+ And with no little wonder, such high deeds
+ Of Chivalrie discours'd, that I confess,
+ I do not think the Worthies while they liv'd
+ All nine, deserv'd as much applause, or memorie,
+ As this one: But who can do ought to gain
+ The crown of honour from him, must be somewhat
+ More than a man; you tread a dangerous path,
+ Yet I shall hear you gladly: for believe me,
+ Thus much let me profess, in honours cause,
+ I would not to my Father, nor my King,
+ (My Countries Father) yield: if you transcend
+ What we have heard, I can but only say,
+ That Miracles are yet in use. I fear
+ I have offended.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ You have spoken nobly.
+ _Antinous_ use your priviledge.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Princely Fathers,
+ E're I begin, one suit I have to make,
+ 'Tis just, and honourable.
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ Speak, and have it.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ That you would please the souldiers might all stand
+247] Together by their General.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ 'Tis granted.
+ All fall to yonder side: Go on, _Antinous_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I shall be brief and plain: all what my Father
+ (This Countries Patron) hath discours'd, is true.
+ Fellows in Arms: speak you, is't true?
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ True, true.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ It follows, that the blaze of my performance
+ Took light from what I saw him do: and thus
+ A City (though the flame be much more dreadfull)
+ May from a little spark be set on fire;
+ Of all what I have done, I shall give instance
+ Only in three main proofs of my desert.
+ First I sought out (but through how many dangers
+ My Lords judge ye) the chief, the great Commander,
+ The head of that huge body, whose proud weight
+ Our Land shrunk under, him I found and fought with,
+ Fought with, and slew. Fellows in Arms, speak you,
+ Is't true or not?
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ True, true.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ When he was faln,
+ The hearts of all our adversaries
+ Began to quail, till young _Fernando_, son
+ To the last Duke of _Venice_ gather'd head,
+ And soon renew'd the field, by whose example
+ The bold Venetians doubling strength and courage
+ Had got the better of the day; our men
+ Supposing that their adversaries grew
+ Like _Hydra's_ head, recoyle, and 'gan to flye:
+ I follow'd them; and what I said, they know;
+ The summe on't is; I call'd them back, new rankt them;
+ Led on, they follow'd, shrunk not t[i]ll the end:
+ Fellows in Arms is't true, or no?
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ True, true.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Lastly, to finish all, there was but one,
+ The only great exploit; which was to take
+ _Fernando_ prisoner, and that hand to hand
+ In single fight I did: my self without
+ The help of any arm, save the arm of Heaven.
+ Speak Souldiers, is it true, or no?
+248]
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ _Antinous, Antinous_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Behold my prisoner, Fathers.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ This one man
+ Ruin'd our Army, and hath glorifi'd
+ _Crete_ in her robes of mightiness and conquest.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ We need not use long circumstance of words,
+ _Antinous_ thou art conquerer: the Senate,
+ The souldiers, and thy valour have pronounc'd it.
+
+All:
+
+ _Antinous, Antinous_.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Make thy demand.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Please ye (my Lords) give leave
+ That I may part.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ No _Cassilane_, the Court
+ Should therein be dishonour'd, do not imagin
+ We prize your presence at so slight a rate.
+ Demand, _Antinous_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Thus (my Lords) to witness
+ How far I am from arrogance, or thinking
+ I am more valiant, though more favour'd
+ Than my most matchless father, my demand is,
+ That for a lasting memorie of his name,
+ His deeds, his real, nay his royal worth,
+ You set up in your Capitol in Brass
+ My Fathers Statue, there to stand for ever
+ A Monument and Trophy of his victories,
+ With this Inscription to succeeding ages,
+ _Great_ Cassilanes, _Patron of Candy's Peace_,
+ _Perpetual Triumpher_.
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ It is granted. What more?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ No more.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ How Boy?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Thou art immortal,
+ Both for thy Son-like pietie, and beauties
+ Of an unconquer'd minde.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ My Prisoner, Lords,
+ To your more sacred wisedoms I surrender:
+ Fit you his ransom; half whereof I give
+ For largess to the Souldiers: the other half
+ To the erection of this monument.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Ambitious villain.
+249]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Thou art all un-imitable.
+ My Lords, to work a certain peace for _Candy_
+ With _Venice_, use _Fernando_ like a Prince;
+ His ransom I'le disburse what e're it be:
+ Yet you may stay him with you, till conditions
+ Of amitie shall be concluded on:
+ Are ye content?
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ We are, and ever rest
+ Both friends and debters to your nobleness.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Souldiers attend me in the Market-place,
+ Fie thither send your largess.
+
+Souldiers:
+
+ _Antinous, Antinous_.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ I have a sute too, Lords.
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ Propose it, 'tis yours, if fit and just.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Let not my services,
+ My being forty years a drudge, a pack-horse
+ To you, and to the State, be branded now
+ With Ignominy ne're to be forgotten:
+ Rear me no Monument, unless you mean
+ To have me fam'd a Coward, and be stamp'd so.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ We understand you not.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Proud boy, thou dost,
+ And Tyrant-like insult'st upon my shame.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Sir, Heaven can tell, and my integrity,
+ What I did, was but only to inforce
+ The Senates gratitude. I now acknowledge it.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Observe it Fathers, how this haughty boy
+ Grows cunning in his envy of mine honours:
+ He knows no mention can of me be made,
+ But that it ever likewise must be told,
+ How I by him was master'd; and for surety
+ That all succeeding times may so report it,
+ He would have my dishonour, and his Triumphs
+ Ingrav'd in Brass: hence, hence proceeds the falshood
+ Of his insinuating piety.
+ Thou art no child of mine: thee and thy bloud,
+ Here in the Capitol, before the Senate,
+ I utterly renounce: So thrift and fate
+ Confirm me; henceforth never see my face,
+ Be, as thou art, a villain to thy Father.
+250] Lords I must crave your leaves: come, come _Arcanes_.
+
+ [Ex.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Here's a strange high-born spirit.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ 'Tis but heat
+ Of suddain present rage; I dare assure _Antinous_ of his favour.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I not doubt it,
+ He is both a good man, and a good Father.
+ I shall attend your Lordships.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Do _Antinous_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Yes: feast thy Triumphs
+ With applause and pleasures.
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ Lead on.
+
+ [Exeunt. Flor. Cornets.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I utterly renounce--'Twas so?
+ Was't not, my _Decius_?
+
+Decius:
+
+ Pish, you know, my Lord,
+ Old men are cholerick.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ And lastly parted
+ With, never henceforth see my face: O me,
+ How have I lost a Father? Such a Father!
+ Such a one _Decius_! I am miserable,
+ Beyond expression.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Fie, how unbecoming
+ This shews upon your day of fame!
+
+Antinous:
+
+ O mischief!
+ I must no more come near him; that I know,
+ And am assur'd on't.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Say you do not?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ True:
+ Put case I do not: what is _Candy_ then
+ To lost _Antinous_? _Malta_, I resolve
+ To end my dayes in thee.
+
+Decius:
+
+ How's that?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I'le trie
+ All humble means of being reconcil'd,
+ Which if deny'd, then I may justly say,
+ This day has prov'd my worst: _Decius_, my worst.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+
+
+
+
+251]
+Actus Secundus
+
+
+
+
+Scena Prima
+
+ [Enter _Gonzalo_, and _Gaspero_]
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Now to what you have heard; as no man can
+ Better than I, give you her Character;
+ For I have been both nurs'd, and train'd up to
+ Her petulant humours, and been glad to bear them,
+ Her Brother, my late Master, did no less:
+ Strong apprehensions of her beauty hath
+ Made her believe that she is more than woman:
+ And as there did not want those flatterers
+ 'Bout the worlds Conquerour, to make him think,
+ And did perswade him that he was a god;
+ So there be those base flies, that will not stick
+ To buzze into her ears she is an Angel,
+ And that the food she feeds on is _Ambrosia_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ She should not touch it then, 'tis Poets fare.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ I may take leave to say, she may as well
+ Determine of her self to be a goddess,
+ With lesser flatterie than he a god:
+ For she does conquer more, although not farther.
+ Every one looks on her, dyes in despair,
+ And would be glad to do it actually,
+ To have the next age tell how worthily,
+ And what good cause he had to perish so:
+ Here beauty is superlative, she knows it,
+ And knowing it, thinks no man can deserve,
+ But ought to perish, and to dye for her:
+ Many great Princes for her love have languish'd,
+ And given themselves a willing sacrifice,
+ Proud to have ended so: And now there is
+ A Prince so madded in his own passions,
+ That he forgets the Royaltie he was born to,
+ And deems it happiness to be her slave.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You talk as if you meant to winde me in,
+ And make me of the number.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Sir, mistake me not, the service that I owe ye
+ Shall plead for me: I tell you what she is,
+ What she expects, and what she will effect,
+252] Unless you be the miracle of men,
+ That come with a purpose to behold,
+ And goe away your self.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I thank you, I will do it: But pray resolve me,
+ How is she stor'd with wit?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ As with beauty,
+ Infinite, and more to be admired at,
+ Than medled with.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And walks her tongue the same gate with her feet?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Much beyond: what e're her heart thinks, she utters:
+ And so boldly, so readily, as you would judge
+ It penn'd and studied.
+
+ [Enter _Erota_, _Philander_, _Annophil_, _Hyparcha_, _Mochingo_
+Attendants]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ She comes.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ I must leave you then,
+ But my best wishes shall remain with you.
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Still I must thank you.
+ This is the most passionate,
+ Most pitifull Prince,
+ Who in the Caldron of affections,
+ Looks as he had been par-boy'ld.
+
+Philander:
+
+ If I offend with too much loving you,
+ It is a fault that I must still commit,
+ To make your mercy shine the more on me.
+
+Erota:
+
+ You are the self-same creature you condemn,
+ Or else you durst not follow me with hope
+ That I can pity you, who am so far
+ From granting any comfort in this kind,
+ That you and all men else shall perish first:
+ I will live free and single, till I find
+ Something above a man to equal me;
+ Put all your brave _Heroes_ into one,
+ Your Kings and Emperours, and let him come
+ In person of a man, and I should scorn him:
+ Must, and will scorn him.
+ The god of love himself hath lost his eyes,
+ His Bow and Torch extinguish'd, and the Poets
+ That made him first a god, have lost their fire
+253] Since I appear'd, and from my eyes must steal it.
+ This I dare speak; and let me see the man,
+ Now I have spoke it, that doth, dare deny;
+ Nay, not believe it.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ He is mad that does not.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Have not all the nations of the Earth heard of me?
+ Most come to see me, and seeing me, return'd
+ Full of my praises? teaching their Chroniclers
+ To make their Stories perfect? for where the name,
+ Merely the word of fair _Erota_ stands,
+ It is a lasting History to time,
+ Begetting admiration in the men,
+ And in my own Sex envie: which glorie's lost,
+ When I shall stick my beautie in a cloud,
+ And clearly shine through it.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ This woman's in the altitudes, and he must be
+ A good Astrologer shall know her Zodiack.
+
+Philander:
+
+ For any man to think
+ Himself an able purchaser of you,
+ But in the bargain there must be declar'd
+ Infinite bounty: otherwise I vow,
+ By all that's excellent and gracious in you,
+ I would untenant every hope lodg'd in me,
+ And yield my self up loves, or your own Martyr.
+
+Erota:
+
+ So you shall please us.
+
+Philander:
+
+ O you cannot be
+ So heavenly, and so absolute in all things,
+ And yet retain such cruel tyranny.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I can, I do, I will.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ She is in her
+ Moods, and her Tenses: I'le Grammer with you,
+ And make a trial how I can decline you:
+ By your leave (great Lady.)
+
+Erota:
+
+ What are you?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ A man, a good man, that's a wealthy;
+ A Proper man, and a proud man too; one
+ That understands himself, and knows, unless
+ It be your self, no woman on the Universe deserves him.
+ Nay, Lady, I must tell you too withal,
+ I may make doubt of that, unless you paint
+254] With better judgement next day than on this;
+ For (plain I must be with you) 'tis a dull Fucus.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Knows any one here what this fellow is?
+
+Attendants:
+
+ He is of _Venice_ (Madam) a great Magnifico,
+ And gracious with the Senate.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Let him keep then among them; what makes he here?
+ Here's state enough where I am: here's a do--
+ You, tell him, if he have ought with us, let him
+ Look lower, and give it in Petition.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Mighty Magnifico, my Mistris bid me tell you,
+ If you have ought with her, you must look lower,
+ And yield it in Petition.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Here is for thee a Ducket.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ You say well Sir, take your own course.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I will not grace you
+ (Lady) so much as take you by the hand;
+ But when I shall vouchsafe to touch your lip,
+ It shall be through your Court a holy-day
+ Proclaimed for so high favour.
+
+Erota:
+
+ This is some
+ Great mans Jester: Sirrah, begon, here is
+ No place to fool in.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Where are the fools you talk of?
+ I do keep two.
+
+Erota:
+
+ No question of it: for
+ In your self you do maintain an hundred.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And besides them I keep a noble train,
+ Statists, and men of aclion: my purse is large and deep,
+ Beyond the reach of riot to draw drie:
+ Fortune did vie with Nature, to bestow
+ (When I was born) her bountie equally:
+ 'Tis not amiss you turn your eyes from me;
+ For should you stand and gaze me in the face,
+ You perish would, like _Semele_ by _Jove_:
+ In _Venice_ at this instant there do lye
+ No less than threescore Ladies in their graves,
+ And in their Beds five hundred for my love.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ You lie more than they; yet it becomes him bravel[y];
+ Would I could walk and talk so! I'le endeavour it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Sir, do you know me?
+255]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Yes, you were sister to the late Prince of _Candy_,
+ Aunt to this young one: and I in _Venice_,
+ Am born a Lord; equall to you in fortunes,
+ In shape; I'le say no more, but view.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ There needs no more be said, were I a woman--
+ O he does rarely: in shape; I'le say no more,
+ But view: who could say more, who better?
+ Man is no man, nor woman woman is,
+ Unless they have a pride like one of these.
+ How poor the Prince of _Cyprus_ shews to him!
+ How poor another Lady unto her!
+ Carriage and State makes us seem demi-gods,
+ Humility, like beasts, worms of the Earth.
+
+ [Enter _Antinous_, and _Decius_.]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Royal Lady, I kiss your hand.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Sir, I know you not.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ O my noble Brother, welcom from the wars.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Dear Sister.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Where is my Father, that you come without him?
+ We have news of your success: he has his health I hope?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Yes Sister, he has his health, but is not well.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ How not well? what Riddles do yo[u] utter?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I'le tell you more in private.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Noble Sir,
+ I cannot be unmindfull of your merit,
+ Since I last heard it: you are a hopefull youth,
+ And (indeed) the Soul of _Candy_.
+ I must speak my thoughts.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ The Prince of _Cyprus_ Brother, good _Decius_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I am his Servant.
+
+Philander:
+
+ You are the Patron of your Countrie, Sir,
+ So your unimitable deeds proclaim you,
+ It is no language of my own, but all mens.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Your Enemies must needs acknowledge it:
+ Then do not think it flatterie in your friends,
+ For if they had a heart, they could not want a tongue.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Is this your Brother _Annophil_?
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Yes Madam.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Your name's _Antinous_?
+256]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I am (Lady) that most unfortunate man.
+
+Erota:
+
+ How unfortunate? are you not the Souldier,
+ The Captain of those Captains, that did bring
+ Conquest and Victory home along with you?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I had some share in't; but was the least
+ Of the least worthy.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ O Sir, in your modesty you'ld make
+ A double Conquest: I was an ear-witness
+ When this young man spoke lesser than he acted,
+ And had the Souldiers voice to help him out:
+ But that the Law compell'd him for his honour,
+ To inforce him make a claim for his reward,
+ I well perceive he would have stood the man
+ That he does now, buried his worth in silence.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Sir, I hearken not to him, but look on you,
+ And find more in you than he can relate:
+ You shall attend on me.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam, your pardon.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Deny it not Sir, for it is more honour
+ Than you have gotten i'th' field: for know you shall,
+ Upon _Erota's_ asking, serve _Erota_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I may want answers, Lady,
+ But never want a will to do you service.
+ I came here to my Sister, to take leave,
+ Having enjoyn'd my self to banishment,
+ For some cause that hereafter you may hear,
+ And wish with me I had not the occasion.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ There shall be no occasion to divide us:
+ Dear Madam for my sake use your power,
+ Even for the service that he ought to owe,
+ Must, and does owe to you, his friends, and country.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Upon your Loyalty to the state and me,
+ I do command you Sir, not depart Candy:
+ Am I not your Princess?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ You are a great Lady.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Then shew your self a Servant and a Subject.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I am your vassal.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ You are a Coward; I that dare not fight,
+ Scorn to be vassail to any Prince in _Europe_:
+ Great is my heart with pride, which I'le encrease
+257] When they are gone, with practise on my Vassals.
+
+Attendants:
+
+ The noble _Cassilane_ is come to see you Madam.
+
+Decius:
+
+ There's comfort in those words, _Antinous_:
+ For here's the place, and persons that have power,
+ To reconcile you to his love again.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ That were a fortunate meeting.
+
+ [Enter _Cassilane_, and _Arcanes_.]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Greatness still wait you Lady.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Good _Cassilane_, we do maintain our greatness,
+ Through your valour.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ My prayers pull daily blessings on thy head,
+ My un-offending child, my _Annophel_.
+ Good Prince, worthy _Gonzalo_! ha? art thou here
+ Before me? in every action art thou ambitious?
+ My duty (Lady) first offered here,
+ And love to thee (my child) though he out-strip me;
+ Thus in the wars he got the start on me,
+ By being forward, but performing less;
+ All the endeavours of my life are lost,
+ And thrown upon that evil of mine own
+ Cursed begetting, whom I shame to father.
+ O that the heat thou rob'dst me of, had burnt
+ Within my Entrails, and begot a feaver,
+ Or some worse sickness, for thou art a disease
+ Sharper than any Physick gives a name to.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Why do you say so?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ O _Annophil_; there is good cause my girle:
+ He has plaid the thief with me, and filch'd away
+ The richest jewel of my life, my honour,
+ Wearing it publickly with that applause,
+ As if he justly did inherit it.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Would I had in my Infancy been laid
+ Within my grave, covered with your blessings rather
+ Than grown up to a man, to meet your curses.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ O that thou hadst.
+ Then I had been the Father of a child,
+ Dearer than thou wert ever unto me,
+ When hope perswaded me I had begot
+ Another self in thee: Out of mine eyes,
+258] As far as I have thrown thee from my heart,
+ That I may live and dye forgetting thee.
+
+Erota:
+
+ How has he deserv'd this untam'd anger,
+ That when he might have ask't for his reward
+ Some honour for himself, or mass of pelf,
+ He only did request to have erected
+ Your Statue in the Capitol, with Titles
+ Ingrav'd upon't, The Patron of his Countrey?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ That, that's the poison in the gilded cup,
+ The Serpent in the flowers, that stings my honour,
+ And leaves me dead in fame: Gods do a justice,
+ And rip his bosom up, that men may see,
+ Seeing, believe the subtle practises
+ Written within his heart: But I am heated,
+ And do forget this presence, and my self.
+ Your pardon, Lady.
+
+Erota:
+
+ You should not ask, 'less you knew how to give.
+ For my sake _Cassilane_, cast out of your thoughts
+ All ill conceptions of your worthy son,
+ That (questionless) has ignorantly offended,
+ Declared in his penitence.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Bid me dye, Lady, for your sake I'le do it;
+ But that you'l say is nothing, for a man
+ That has out-liv'd his honour: But command me
+ In any thing save that, and _Cassilane_
+ Shall ever be your servant. Come _Annophel_,
+ (My joy in this world) thou shalt live with me,
+ (Retired in some solitarie nook,)
+ The comfort of my age; my dayes are short,
+ And ought to be well spent: and I desire
+ No other witness of them but thy self,
+ And good _Arcanes_.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ I shall obey you Sir.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Noble Sir:
+ If you taste any want of worldly means,
+ Let not that discontent you: know me your friend,
+ That hath, and can supply you.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Sir, I am too much bound to you already,
+ And 'tis not of my cares the least, to give you
+ Fair satisfaction.
+259]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You may imagine I do speak to that end,
+ But trust me, 'tis to make you bolder with me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Sir, I thank you, and may make trial of you,
+ Mean time my service.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Brother be comforted; so long as I continue
+ Within my Fathers love, you cannot long
+ Stand out an Exile: I must goe live with him,
+ And I will prove so good an Orator
+ In your behalf, that you again shall gain him,
+ Or I will stir in him another anger,
+ And be lost with you.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Better I were neglected: for he is hasty,
+ And through the Choler that abounds in him,
+ (Which for the time divides from him his judgement)
+ He may cast you off, and with you his life;
+ For grief will straight surprize him, and that way
+ Must be his death: the sword has try'd too often,
+ And all the deadly Instruments of war
+ Have aim'd at his great heart, but ne're could touch it:
+ Yet not a limb about him wants a scar.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Madam my duty--
+
+Erota:
+
+ Will you be gone?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ I must, Lady, but I shall be ready,
+ When you are pleas'd command me, for your service.
+ Excellent Prince--To all my heartie love,
+ And a good Farewel.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Thanks honest _Cassilane_.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Come _Annophel_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Shall I not wait upon you Sir?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ From hence you shall not stir a foot:
+ Loving _Gonzalo_, it must be all my study
+ To requite you.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ If I may be so fortunate to deserve
+ The name of friend from you, I have enough.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ You are so, and you have made your self so.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I will then preserve it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_ you are my servant, are you not?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ It hath pleased you so to grace me.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Why are you then dejected? you will say,
+ You have lost a father; but you have found a Mistris
+260] Doubles that loss: be master of your spirit;
+ You have a cause for it, which is my favour.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And mine.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Will no man ease me of this fool?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Your fellow.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_ wait upon us.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I shall Madam.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Nay but Ladie, Ladie.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Sir, you are rude: and if you be the Master
+ Of such means as you do talk of, you should
+ Learn good manners.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ O Lady, you can find a fault in me,
+ But not perceive it in your self: you must, shall hear me:
+ I love you for your pride, 'tis the best vertue
+ In you.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I could hang this fellow now: by whom
+ Are you supported, that you dare do this?
+ Have you not example here in a Prince
+ Transcending you in all things, yet bears himself
+ As doth become a man had seen my beautie?
+ Back to your Country, and your Curtizans,
+ Where you may be admired for your wealth,
+ Which being consum'd, may be a means to gain you
+ The opinion of some wit. Here's nothing
+ To be got but scorn, and loss of time.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Which are things I delight in.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_ follow me.
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ She is vext to the soul.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Let her be vext, 'tis fit she should be so:
+ Give me thy hand _Gonzalo_, thou art in our favour,
+ For we do love to cherish lofty spirits,
+ Such as percusse the Earth, and bound
+ With an erected countenance to the clouds.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ 'S-foot, what thing is this?
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ I do love fire-works, because they mount:
+ An Exhalation I profess to adore,
+ Beyond a fixed star, 'tis more illustrious,
+ As every thing rais'd out of smoak is so:
+ Their vertue is in action: what do you think of me?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Troth Sir,
+261] You are beyond my ghess, I know you not.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Do you know your self?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Yes Sir.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Why you and I are one: I am proud, and
+ Very proud too, that I must tell you; I saw
+ It did become you, cousin _Gonzalo_, prethee
+ Let it be so.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Let it be so good cousin.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ I am no great ones fool.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I hope so, for alliance sake.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Yet I do serve the Mighty, Monstrous, and Magnanimous
+ Invincible _Erota_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ O good cousin, now I have you: I'le meet you in your Coat.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Coat? I have my horse-mans coat I must confess
+ Lin'd through with Velvet, and a Scarlet out-side;
+ If you'll meet me in't, I'le send for't;
+ And cousin you shall see me with much comfort,
+ For it is both a new one, and a right one,
+ It did not come collateral.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Adieu good cousin; at this present I have some business.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Farewel, excellent cousin.
+
+
+
+
+
+Actus Tertius
+
+
+
+
+Scena Prima
+
+ [Enter _Gonzalo_, and _Fernando_.]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ _Candy_, I say, is lost already.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Yes,
+ If to be conqueror be to be lost.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You have it; one days conquest hath undone them.
+ And sold them to their vassalage; for what
+ Have I else toyl'd my brains, profusely emptied
+ My moneys, but to make them slaves to _Venice_,
+ That so in case the sword did lose his edge,
+ Then art might sharpen hers?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ _Gonzalo_ how?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ _Fernando_ thus: you see how through this Land,
+ Both of the best and basest I am honour'd;
+ I only gave the State of _Venice_ notice,
+ When, where, and how to land, or you had found
+262] A better entertainment: I was he
+ Encourag'd young _Antinous_ to affront
+ The Devil his Father: for the Devil I think
+ Dares not do more in battel.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ But why did ye?
+ I find no such great policie in that.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Indeed _Fernando_, thou canst fight, not plot:
+ Had they continu'd one, they two alone
+ Were of sufficient courage and performance
+ To beat an Armie.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Now by all my hopes,
+ I rather shall admire, than envy vertue.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Why then by all your hopes you'l rather have
+ Your Brains knockt out, than learn how to be wise;
+ You States-man? Well Sir, I did more than this,
+ When _Cassilane_ crav'd from the common treasure
+ Pay for his Souldiers, I strook home, and lent him
+ An hundred thousand Duckets.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Marry Sir,
+ The policy was little, the love l[e]ss,
+ And honesty least of all.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ How say ye by that?
+ Go fight, I say goe fight, I'le talk no more with you,
+ You are insensible.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Well, I shall observe ye.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Why look you Sir, by this means have I got
+ The greatest part of _Cassilanes_ estate
+ Into my hands, which he can ne're redeem,
+ But must of force sink: do you conceive me now?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ So:
+ But why have you importuned the Senate,
+ For me to sojourn with them?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ There's the quintessence,
+ The soul, and grand elixir of my wit:
+ For he (according to his noble nature)
+ Will not be known to want, though he do want,
+ And will be bankrupted so much the sooner,
+ And made the subject of our scorn and laughter.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Here's a perfect plotted stratagem.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Why? could you
+263] Imagine, that I did not hate in heart
+ My Countryes enemies? yes, yes, _Fernando_,
+ And I will be the man that shall undoe them.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Ye are in a ready way.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I was never out on't.
+
+ [Enter _Gaspero_]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Peace,
+ Here comes a wise Coxcombe, a tame Coward.
+ Now worthy _Gaspero_, what,
+ You come (I know) to be my Lord _Fernando_'s
+ Conducter to old _Cassilane_?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ To wait upon him.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And my Lords the Senators sent you?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ My noble Lord they did.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ My Lord _Fernando_,
+ This Gentleman, (as humble as you see him)
+ Is even this Kingdoms treasure; In a word,
+ 'Tis his chief glory that he is not wiser
+ Than honest, nor more honest than approv'd
+ In truth and faith.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ My Lord.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You may be bold
+ To trust him with your bosom, he'l not deceive
+ If you relie upon him once.
+
+[Fernando]:
+
+ Your name is _Gaspero_?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Your servant.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Go commend me
+ (Right honest _Gaspero_) commend me heartily
+ To noble _Cassilane_, tell him my love
+ Is vow'd to him.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ I shall.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I know you will.
+ My Lord I cannot long be absent from you.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Sir, you are now my guide.
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Thus my designs
+ Run uncontroul'd; yet _Venice_ though I be
+ Intelligencer to thee, in my brain
+ Are other large Projects: for if proud _Erota_
+ Bend to my lure, I will be _Candy's_ King,
+264] And Duke of _Venice_ too. Ha? _Venice_ too?
+ O 'twas prettily shov'd in: why not? _Erota_
+ May in her love seal all sure: if she swallow
+ The bait, I am Lord of both; if not, yet _Candy_
+ Despight of all her power shall be ruin'd.
+
+ [Enter _Cassilane_, _Arcanes_, and _Annophel_]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Urge me no farther _Annopbel_.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ My Lord.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Thy fathers poverty has made thee happy;
+ For though 'tis true, this solitary life
+ Sutes not with youth and beautie, O my child,
+ Yet 'tis the sweetest Guardian to protect
+ Chast names from Court aspersions; there a Lady
+ Tender and delicate in years and graces,
+ That doats upon the charms of ease and pleasure,
+ Is ship-wrackt on the shore; for 'tis much safer
+ To trust the Ocean in a leaking ship,
+ Than follow greatness in the wanton rites
+ Of luxurie and sloth.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ My wishes Sir,
+ Have never soar'd a higher flight, than truly
+ To find occasion wherein I might witness
+ My duty and obedience.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ 'Tis well said,
+ Canst thou forbear to laugh _Arcanes_?
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Why Sir?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ To look upon my beggerie, to look upon
+ My patience in my beggerie: Tell me,
+ Does it shew handsom? bravely?
+ Handsom? thou wilt flatter me,
+ And swear that I am miserable.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Nothing
+ More glorifies the noble, and the valiant,
+ Than to despise contempt: if you continue
+ But to enjoy your self, you in your self
+ Enjoy all store besides.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ An excellent change:
+ I that some seven Apprentice-ships commanded
+ A hundred Ministers, that waited on
+265] My nod, and sometimes twenty thousand souldiers,
+ Am now retir'd, attended in my age
+ By one poor maid, follow'd by one old man.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Sir, you are lower in your own repute
+ Than you have reason for.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ The _Roman_ Captains,
+ I mean the best, such as with their blouds
+ Purchas'd their Countreys peace, the Empires glorie,
+ Were glad at last to get them to some Farmes,
+ Off-from the clamours of the ingratefull great ones,
+ And the unsteady multitude, to live
+ As I do now, and 'twas their blessing too,
+ Let it be ours _Arcanes_.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ I cannot but
+ Applaud your scorn of injuries.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Of injuries?
+ _Arcanes_, _Annophel_, lend both your hands.
+ So, what say ye now?
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Why now my Lord--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ I swear
+ By all my past prosperities; thus standing
+ Between you two, I think my self as great,
+ As mighty, as if in the Capitol
+ I stood amidst the Senators, with all
+ The _Cretan_ subjects prostrate at my feet.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Sir, you are here more safe.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ And more beloved:
+ Why look ye Sirs, I can forget the weakness
+ Of the traduced Souldiers, the negleft
+ Of the fair-spoken Senate, the impietie
+ Of him, the villain, whom (to my dishonour)
+ The World miscalls my son.
+ But by the--
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Sir, remember that you promis'd no occasion
+ Should move your patience.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Thou do'st chide me friendly,
+ He shall not have the honour to be thought upon
+ Amongst us.
+
+ [Enter _a Servant_.]
+
+ Now? the news?
+266]
+
+Servant:
+
+ The Secretarie,
+ With the _Venetian_ prisoner, desire
+ Admittance to your Lordship.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ How? to me?
+ What mysterie is this? _Arcanes_ can they,
+ Thinkst thou, mean any good?
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ My Lord, they dare not
+ Intend ought else but good.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ 'Tis true, they dare not;
+ _Arcanes_ welcom them: Come hither _Annophel_,
+ Stand close to me, we'l change our affability
+ Into a form of State: and they shall know
+ Our heart is still our own.
+
+ [Enter _Arcanes_, _Fernando_, and _Gaspero_.]
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ My Lord--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ _Arcanes_,
+ I know them both: _Fernando_, as you are
+ A man of greatness, I should under-value
+ The right my sword hath fought for, to observe
+ Low-fawning complements, but as you are
+ A Captive and a stranger, I can love you,
+ And must be kind. You are welcom.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ 'Tis the all
+ Of my ambition.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ And for proof how much
+ He truly honours your heroick vertues,
+ The Senate on his importunity,
+ Commend him to your Lordships guard.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ For what?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ During the time of his abode in _Candy_,
+ To be your houshold guest.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Wherein my Lord,
+ You shall more make me debtor to your nobleness,
+ Than if you had return'd me without ransom.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Are you in earnest Sir?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ My sute to the Senate
+ Shall best resolve you that.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Come hither Secretarie,
+ Look that this be no trick now put upon me:
+267] For if it be--Sirrah--
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ As I have troth
+ (My Lord) it only is a favour granted
+ Upon _Fernando's_ motion, from himself:
+ Your Lordship must conceive, I'de not partake
+ Ought, but what should concern your honour; Who
+ Has been the prop, our Countries shield, and safety,
+ But the renowned _Cassilane_?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Applause?
+ Is _Gaspero_--puff--nothing--why, young Lord,
+ Would you so much be sequester'd from those
+ That are the blazing Comets of the time,
+ To live a solitary life with me?
+ A man forsaken? all my hospitality
+ Is now contracted to a few; these two,
+ The tempest-wearied Souldier, and this Virgin;
+ We cannot feast your eyes with Masques and Revels,
+ Or Courtly Anticks; the sad Sports we riot in,
+ Are tales of foughten fields, of Martial scars,
+ And things done long ago, when men of courage
+ Were held the best, not those well-spoken Youths,
+ Who only carry Conquest in their tongues:
+ Now stories of this nature are unseasonable
+ To entertain a great Duke's Son with.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Herein
+ Shall my Captivity be made my happiness,
+ Since what I lose in freedom, I regain
+ (With int'rest) by conversing with a Souldier,
+ So matchless for experience, as great _Cassilane_:
+ 'Pray Sir, admit me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ If you, come to mock me,
+ I shall be angry.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ By the love I bear
+ To goodness, my intents are honourable.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Then in a word, my Lord, your visitations
+ Shall find all due respect: but I am now
+ Grown old, and have forgot to be an Host;
+ Come when you please, you are welcome.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Sir, I thank you.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Good Sir, be not too urgent; for my Father
+268] Will soon be mov'd: yet, in a noble way
+ Of courtesie, he is as easily conquer'd.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Lady, your words are like your beauty, powerful;
+ I shall not strive more how to do him service
+ Than how to be your servant.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ She's my Daughter,
+ And does command this House.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ So I conceive her.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Do you hear?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ My honour'd Lord.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Commend me to them:
+ Tell 'em I thank them.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Whom, my Lord?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ The Senate;
+ Why, how come you so dull? O they are gracious,
+ And infinitely grateful--Thou art eloquent,
+ Speak modestly in mentioning my services;
+ And if ought fall out in the By, that must
+ Of meer necessity touch any act
+ Of my deserving praises, blush when you talk on't,
+ Twill make them blush to hear on't.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Why, my Lord--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Nay, nay, you are too wise now; good, observe me.
+ I do not rail against the hopeful Springall,
+ That builds up Monuments in Brass; rears Trophies
+ With Mottoes and Inscriptions, quaint devices
+ Of Poetry and Fiction; let's be quiet.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ You must not cross him.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Not for _Candy_'s Wealth.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ You shall for ever make me yours.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ 'Twere pity to double your Captivity.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Who's here, _Decius_?
+
+ [Enter _Decius_]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Ha! _Decius_? who nam'd _Decius_?
+
+Decius:
+
+ My duty to your Lordship, I am bold,
+ Presuming on your noble, and known goodness
+ To--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ What?
+
+Decius:
+
+ Present you with this--
+269]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Letter?
+
+Decius:
+
+ Yes, my honour'd Lord.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ From whom?
+
+Decius:
+
+ 'Please you peruse
+ The inside, and you shall find a name subscrib'd,
+ In such humility, in such obedience,
+ That you your self will judge it tyranny
+ Not to receive it favourably.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Hey-day!
+ Good words my Masters: this is Court-infection,
+ And none but Cowards ply them: tell me, _Decius_,
+ Without more circumstance, who is the Sender?
+
+Decius:
+
+ Your most griev'd Son, _Antinous_.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ On my life
+ A Challenge; speak, as thou art worthy, speak;
+ I'll answer't.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Honour'd Sir.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ No honour'd Sirs--
+ Fool your young Idol with such pompous Attributes.
+ Say briefly, what contains it?
+
+Decius:
+
+ 'Tis a lowly
+ Petition for your favour.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Rash young man,
+ But that thou art under my own roof, and know'st
+ I dare not any way infringe the Laws
+ Of Hospitality, thou should'st repent
+ Thy bold and rude intrusion. But presume not
+ Again to shew thy Letter, for thy life;
+ _Decius_, not for thy life.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Nay then, (my Lord)
+ I can with-hold no longer; you are too rough,
+ And wrestle against nature with a violence
+ More than becomes a Father; wherein would ye
+ Come nearer to the likeness of God,
+ Than in your being entreated? Let not thirst
+ Of Honour, make you quite forget you are
+ A Man, and what makes perfect manhoods, comforts
+ A Father.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ If a memory remain
+ Of my departed Mother; if the purity
+270] Of her unblemish'd faith deserve to live
+ In your remembrance, let me yet by these
+ Awake your love to my uncomforted Brother.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ I am a Stranger, but so much I tender
+ Your Sons desertful Vertues, that I vow
+ His Sword ne'r conquer'd me so absolutely,
+ As shall your courtesie, if you vouchsafe
+ At all our instances, to new receive him
+ Into your wonted favour.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Sir, you cannot
+ Require more low submission.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Am I not
+ Grown vile yet in your eyes? then by the name
+ Of Father, let me once more sue for him,
+ Who is the only now remaining Branch
+ With me, of that most ancient root, whose Body
+ You are, dear Sir.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ 'Tis well, an host of furies
+ Could not have baited me more torturingly,
+ More rudely, or more most unnaturally.
+ _Decius_, I say, let me no more hear from him;
+ For this time go thou hence, and know from me
+ Thou art beholding to me that I have not
+ Kill'd thee already, look to't next, look to't.
+ _Arcanes_ fie, fie _Annophel_.
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ He's gone;
+ Chaf'd beyond sufferance; we must follow him.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Lady, this Letter is to you.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Come with me,
+ For we must speak in private; 'please you, Sir,
+ To see what entertainment our sad house
+ Can yield?
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ I shall attend you, Lady.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ How do you like
+ To sojourn here, my Lord?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ More than to feast
+ With all the Princes of the Earth besides:
+ _Gonzalo_ told me that thou wert honest.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Yes Sir,
+ And you shall find it.
+271]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Shall I?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ All my follies
+ Be else recorded to my shame.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Enough,
+ My heart is here for ever lodg'd.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ The Lady.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ The place admits no time to utter all,
+ But _Gaspero_ if thou wilt prove my friend,
+ I'll say thou art--
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Your Servant; I conceive ye,
+ We'll chuse some fitter leisure.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Never man
+ Was (in a moment) or more bless'd or wretched.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+ [Enter _Hyparcha_ (placing two Chairs) _Antinous_, and _Erota_.]
+
+Erota:
+
+ Leave us.
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ I shall.
+
+ [Exit.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_, sit down.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I say sit down, I do command you sit;
+ For look what honour thou dost gain by me,
+ I cannot lose it: happy _Antinous_,
+ The graces and the higher Deities
+ Smil'd at thy Birth, and still continue it:
+ Then think that I (who scorn lesser examples)
+ Must do the like: such as do taste my power,
+ And talk of it with fear and reverence,
+ Shall do the same unto the man I favour.
+ I tell thee Youth, thou hast a conquest won,
+ Since thou cam'st home, greater than that last,
+ Which dignified thy Fame, greater than if
+ Thou should'st go out again, and conquer farther;
+ For I am not ashamed to acknowledge
+ My self subdued by thee.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Great Lady--
+
+Erota:
+
+ Sit still, I will not hear thee else; now speak,
+ And speak like my _Antinous_, like my Souldier,
+ Whom _Cupid_, and not _Mars_ hath sent to Battel.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I must (I see) be silent.
+272]
+
+Erota:
+
+ So thou maist;
+ There's greater action in it than in clamour,
+ A look (if it be gracious) will begin the War,
+ A word conclude it; then prove no Coward,
+ Since thou hast such a friendly enemy,
+ That teaches thee to conquer.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ You do amaze me, Madam,
+ I have no skill, no practice in this War,
+ And whether you be serious, or please
+ To make your sport on a dejected man,
+ I cannot rightly guess; but be it as it will,
+ It is a like unhappiness to me:
+ My discontents bear those conditions in them,
+ And lay me out so wretched, no designs
+ (However truly promising a good)
+ Can make me relish ought but a sweet-bitter
+ Voluntary Exile.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Why an Exile?
+ What comfort can there be in those Companions
+ Which sad thoughts bring along with?
+
+ [Enter _Hyparcha_]
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ Madam.
+
+ [Musick.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Whence comes this well tun'd sound?
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ I know not, Madam.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Listen Wench;
+ What ever friendly hands they are that send it,
+
+ [Song.
+
+ Let 'em play on; they are Masters of their faculty:
+ Doth it please you, Sir?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ According to the time.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Go to 'em, Wench,
+ And tell 'em, we shall thank 'em; for they have kept
+ As good time to our disposition, as to their instruments;
+ Unless _Antinous_ shall say he loves,
+ There never can be sweeter accents utter'd.
+
+ [Enter _Philander_.]
+
+Philander:
+
+ Let then the heart that did employ those hands,
+ Receive some small share of your thanks with them,
+ 'Tis happiness enough that you did like it;
+273] A fortune unto me, that I should send it
+ In such a lucky minute; but to obtain
+ So gracious welcome did exceed my hopes.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Good Prince, I thank you for't.
+
+Philander:
+
+ O Madam, pour not (too fast) joys on me,
+ But sprinkle 'em so gently I may stand 'em;
+ It is enough at first, you have laid aside
+ Those cruel angry looks out of your eyes,
+ With which (as with your lovely) you did strike
+ All your Beholders in an Ecstasie.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Philander_, you have long profest to love me.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Have I but profest it, Madam?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Nay, but hear me?
+
+Philander:
+
+ More attentively than to an Oracle.
+
+Erota:
+
+ And I will speak more truly, if more can be;
+ Nor shall my language be wrapt up in Riddles,
+ But plain as truth it self; I love this Gentleman,
+ Whose grief has made him so uncapable
+ Of Love, he will not hear, at least not understand it.
+ I, that have lookt with scornful eyes on thee,
+ And other Princes, mighty in their states,
+ And in their friends as fortunate, have now pray'd,
+ In a petitionary kind almost,
+ This man, this well-deserving man, (that I must say)
+ To look upon this beauty, yet you see
+ He casts his eyes rather upon the ground,
+ Than he will turn 'em this way; _Philander_,
+ You look pale; I'll talk no more.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Pray go forward; I would be your Martyr,
+ To dye thus, were immortally to live.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Will you go to him then, and speak for me?
+ You have loved longer, but not ferventer,
+ Know how to speak, for you have done it like
+ An Orator, even for your self; then how will you for me
+ Whom you profess to love above your self.
+
+Philander:
+
+ The Curses of Dissemblers follow me
+ Unto my Grave, and if I do not so.
+
+Erota:
+
+ You may (as all men do) speak boldlier, better
+ In their friends cause still, than in your own;
+ But speak your utmost, yet you cannot feign,
+274] I will stand by, and blush to witness it.
+ Tell him, since I beheld him, I have lost
+ The happiness of this life, food, and rest;
+ A quiet bosome, and the state I went with.
+ Tell him how he has humbled the proud,
+ And made the living but a dead _Erota_.
+ Tell him withal, that she is better pleas'd
+ With thinking on him, than enjoying these.
+ Tell him--_Philander_, Prince; I talk in vain
+ To you, you do not mark me.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Indeed I do.
+
+Erota:
+
+ But thou dost look so pale,
+ As thou wilt spoil the story in relating.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Not, if I can but live to tell it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ It may be you have not the heart.
+
+Philander:
+
+ I have a will I am sure how e'r my heart
+ May play the Coward, but if you please, I'll try.
+
+Erota:
+
+ If a kiss will strengthen thee, I give you leave
+ To challenge it, nay, I will give it you.
+
+Philander:
+
+ O that a man should taste such heavenly bliss,
+ And be enjoyn'd to beg it for another!
+
+Erota:
+
+ Alas, it is a misery I grieve
+ To put you to, and I will suffer rather
+ In his tyranny, than thou in mine.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Nay Madam, since I cannot have your love,
+ I will endeavour to deserve your pity;
+ For I had rather have within the grave
+ Your love, than you should want it upon earth.
+ But how can I hope, with a feeble tongue
+ To instruct him in the rudiments of love,
+ When your most powerful Beauty cannot work it?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Do what thou wilt (_Philander_) the request
+ Is so unreasonable, that I quit thee of it.
+ I desire now no more but the true patience,
+ And fortitude of Lovers, with those helps
+ Of sighs and tears, which I think is all the Physick--
+
+Philander:
+
+ O if he did but hear you 'twere enough;
+ And I will 'wake him from his Apoplexie.
+ _Antinous._
+
+Antinous:
+
+ My Lord?
+275]
+
+Philander:
+
+ Nay, 'pray,
+ No courtesie to me, you are my Lord,
+ (Indeed you are) for you command her heart
+ That commands mine; nor can you want to know it.
+ For look you, she that told it you in words,
+ Explains it now more passionately in tears;
+ Either thou hast no heart, or a marble one,
+ If those drops cannot melt it; prithee look up
+ And see how sorrow sits within her eyes,
+ And love the grief she goes with (if not her)
+ Of which thou art the Parent; and never yet
+ Was there (by Nature) that thing made so stony
+ But it would love what ever it begot.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ He that begot me did beget these cares
+ Which are good issues, though happily by him
+ Esteemed Monsters: Nay, the ill-judging World
+ Is likely enough to give them those Characters.
+
+Philander:
+
+ What's this to love, and to the Lady? he's old,
+ Wrathful, perverse, self-will'd, and full of anger,
+ Which are his faults; but let them not be thine;
+ He thrusts you from his love, she pulls thee on;
+ He doubts your Vertues, she doth double them;
+ O either use thine own eyes, or take mine,
+ And with them my heart, then thou wilt love her,
+ Nay, dote upon her more than on thy duty,
+ And men will praise thee equally for it,
+ Neglecting her, condemn thee as a man
+ Unworthy such a fortune: O _Antinous_,
+ 'Tis not the friendship that I bear to thee,
+ But her command, that makes me utter this;
+ And when I have prevail'd, let her but say,
+ _Philander_, you must dye or this is nothing,
+ It shall be done together with a breath,
+ With the same willingness I live to serve her.
+
+Erota:
+
+ No more, _Philander_.
+
+Philander:
+
+ All I have done, is little yet to purpose,
+ But ere I leave him I will perceive him blush;
+ And make him feel the passions that I do,
+ And every true Lover will assist me in't,
+ And lend me their sad sighs to blow it home,
+276] For _Cupid_ wants a Dart to wound this bosome.
+
+Erota:
+
+ No more, no more, _Philander_, I can endure no more,
+ Pray let him go; go good _Antinous_, make peace
+ With your own mind, no matter though I perish.
+
+ [Ex.
+
+
+
+
+
+Actus Quartus
+
+
+
+
+Scena Prima
+
+ [Enter _Hyparcha_, and _Mochingo_]
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ I Cannot help it.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Nor do I require it,
+ The malady needs no Physician,
+ Help hospital people.
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ I am glad to hear
+ You are so valiant.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Valiant?
+ Can any man be proud that is not valiant?
+ Foolish Woman, what would'st thou say? thou--
+ know not what to call thee.
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ I can you,
+ For I can call you Coxcomb, Ass, and Puppy.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ You do doe it, I thank you.
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ That you'll lose a Fortune,
+ Which a Cobler better deserves than thou dost.
+
+Mochingo:
+
+ Do not provoke my magnanimity,
+ For when I am incens'd I am insensible,
+ Go tell thy Lady, that hath sent me word
+ She will discard me, that I discard her,
+ And throw a scorn upon her, which I would not,
+ But that she does me wrong.
+
+ [Enter _Erota_, and _Antinous_.]
+
+Erota:
+
+ Do you not glory in your Conquest more,
+ To take some great man Prisoner, than to kill him?
+ And shall a Lady find less mercy from you,
+ That yields her self your Captive, and for her Ransome,
+ Will give the Jewel of her life, her heart,
+ Which she hath lockt from all men but thy self?
+ For shame (_Antinous_) throw this dulness off;
+ Art thou a man no where but in the field?
+277]
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ He must hear Drums, and Trumpets ere he sleeps,
+ And at this instant dreams he's in his Armour;
+ These iron-hearted Souldiers are so cold,
+ Till they be beaten to a Womans Arms,
+ And then they love 'em better than their own;
+ No Fort can hold them out.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ What pity it is (Madam) that your self,
+ Who are all Excellence, should become so wretched,
+ To think on such a Wretch as Grief hath made me!
+ Seldome despairing men look up to Heaven,
+ Although it still speak to 'em in its Glories;
+ For when sad thoughts perplex the mind of man,
+ There is a Plummet in the heart that weighs,
+ And pulls us (living) to the dust we came from;
+ Did you but see the miseries you pursue,
+ (As I the happiness that I avoid
+ That doubles my afflictions) you would flye
+ Unto some Wilderness, or to your Grave,
+ And there find better Comforts than in me,
+ For Love and Cares can never dwell together.
+
+Erota:
+
+ They should,
+ If thou hadst but my Love and I thy Cares.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ What wild Beast in the Desart but would be
+ Taught by this Tongue to leave his Cruelty,
+ Though all the beauties of the face were vail'd!
+ But I am savager than any Beast,
+ And shall be so till _Decius_ does arrive,
+ Whom with so much submission I have sent
+ Under my hand, that if he do not bring
+ His Benediction back, he must to me
+ Be much more cruel than I to you.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Is't but your Fathers pardon you desire?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ With his love, and then nothing next that, like yours.
+
+ [Enter _Decius_]
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Decius_ is come.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ O welcome Friend; if I apprehend not
+ Too much of joy, there's comfort in thy looks.
+
+Erota:
+
+ There is indeed; I prithee _Decius_ speak it.
+
+Decius:
+
+ How! prithee _Decius_! this Woman's strangely alter'd.
+278]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Why dost not speak (good friend) and tell me how
+ The reverend Blessing of my life receiv'd
+ My humble lines; wept he for joy?
+
+Decius:
+
+ No, there's a Letter will inform you more;
+ Yet I can tell you what I think will grieve you,
+ The Old Man is in want and angry still,
+ And poverty is the Bellows to the Coal
+ More than distaste from you as I imagine.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ What's here? how's this? It cannot be! now sure
+ My griefs delude my senses.
+
+Erota:
+
+ In his looks
+ I read a world of Changes; _Decius_, mark
+ With what a sad amazement he surveys
+ The News; canst thou guess what 'tis?
+
+Decius:
+
+ None good, I fear.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I fear so too; and then--
+
+Antinous:
+
+ It is her hand.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Are you not well?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Too well: if I were ought
+ But Rock, this Letter would conclude my miseries,
+ Peruse it (Lady) and resolve me then,
+ In what a case I stand.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Sir, the worst is,
+ Your Fathers lowness and distaste.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ No, _Decius_,
+ My Sister writes _Fernando_ has made suit
+ For love to her; and to express sincerely
+ His constant truth, hath like a noble Gentleman,
+ Discovered plots of treachery; contriv'd
+ By false _Gonzalo_, not intending more
+ The utter ruine of our house, than generally
+ _Candies_ Confusion.
+
+Decius:
+
+ 'Tis a generous part
+ Of young _Fernando_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ 'Tis, and I could wish
+ All thrift to his affections, _Decius_.
+ You find the sum on't, Madam.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Yes, I do.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ And can you now yet think a heart opprest
+ With such a throng of cares, can entertain
+279] An amorous thought? Love frees all toils but one,
+ Calamity and it can ill agree.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Wil't please you speak my doom?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Alas, great Lady,
+ Why will you flatter thus a desperate Man
+ That is quite cast away? O had you not
+ Procur'd the Senates Warrant to enforce
+ My stay, I had not heard of these sad News.
+ What would ye have me do?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Love me, or kill me,
+ One word shall sentence either; for as Truth
+ Is just, if you refuse me, I am resolute
+ Not to out-live my thraldome.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Gentle Lady.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Say, must I live, or dye?
+
+Decius:
+
+ My Lord, how can you
+ Be so inexorable? here's Occasion
+ Of succouring your Father in his wants
+ Securely profer'd, pray Sir, entertain it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ What is my sentence?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ What you please to have it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ As thou art gentle speak those words again.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam, you have prevail'd; yet give me leave
+ Without offence, ere I resign the interest
+ Your heart hath in my heart, to prove your secresie.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_, 'tis the greatest argument
+ Of thy affections to me.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam, thus then,
+ My Father stands for certain sums engag'd
+ To treacherous _Gonzalo_; and has morgag'd
+ The greatest part of his estate to him;
+ If you receive this Morgage, and procure
+ Acquittance from _Gonzalo_ to my Father,
+ I am what you would have me be.
+
+Erota:
+
+ You'll love me then?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Provided (Madam) that my Father know not
+ I am an Agent for him.
+
+Erota:
+
+ If I fail
+ In this, I am unworthy to be lov'd.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Then (with your favour) thus I seal my truth,
+280] To day, and _Decius_ witness how unchangingly
+ I shall still love _Erota_.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Thou hast quickned
+ A dying heart, _Antinous_.
+
+Decius:
+
+ This is well;
+ Much happiness to both.
+
+ [Enter _Hyparcha_]
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ The Lord _Gonzalo_
+ Attends you, Madam.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Comes as we could wish,
+ Withdraw _Antinous_, here's a Closet, where
+ You may partake his errand; let him enter.
+
+ [_Enter_ Gonzalo]
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam you must be wary.
+
+ [Exit
+
+Erota:
+
+ Fear it not,
+ I will be ready for him; to entertain him
+ With smiling Welcome. Noble Sir, you take
+ Advantage of the time; it had been fit
+ Some notice of your presence might have fashion'd
+ A more prepared state.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Do you mock me, Madam?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Trust me, you wrong your judgment, to repute
+ My Gratitude a fault; I have examin'd
+ Your portly carriage, and will now confess
+ It hath not slightly won me.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ The Wind's turn'd;
+ I thought 'twould come to this; it pleas'd us, Madam,
+ At our last interview, to mention Love;
+ Have you consider'd on't?
+
+Erota:
+
+ With more than common
+ Content: but Sir, if what you spoke you meant,
+ (As I have cause to doubt) then--
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ What, (sweet Lady?)
+
+Erota:
+
+ Methinks we should lay by this form of stateliness;
+ Loves Courtship is familiar, and for instance,
+ See what a change it hath begot in me,
+ I could talk humbly now, as Lovers use.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And I, and I, we meet in one self-centre
+281] Of blest Consent.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I hope my weakness, Sir,
+ Shall not deserve neglect; but if it prove so
+ I am not the first Lady has been ruin'd
+ By being too credulous; you will smart for't one day.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Angel-like Lady, let me be held a Villain,
+ If I love not sincerely.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Would I knew it.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Make proof by any fit Command.
+
+Erota:
+
+ What, do you mean to marry me?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ How! mean? nay more, I mean
+ To make you Empress of my Earthly Fortunes,
+ Regent of my desires, for did you covet
+ To be a real Queen, I could advance you.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Now I perceive you slight me, and would make me
+ More simple than my Sexes frailty warrants.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ But say your mind, and you shall be a Queen.
+
+Erota:
+
+ On those Conditions, call me yours.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Enough.
+ But are we safe?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Assuredly.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ In short,
+ Yet, Lady, first be plain; would you not chuse
+ Much rather to prefer your own Sun-rising,
+ Than any's else though ne'r so near entituled
+ By Blood, or right of Birth?
+
+Erota:
+
+ 'Tis a question
+ Needs not a resolution.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Good; what if
+ I set the Crown of _Candy_ on your head?
+
+Erota:
+
+ I were a Queen indeed then.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Madam, know
+ There's but a Boy 'twixt you and it; suppose him
+ Transhap'd into an Angel.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Wise _Gonzalo_,
+ I cannot but admire thee.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ 'Tis worth thinking on;
+ Besides, your Husband shall be Duke of _Venice_.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Gonzalo_, Duke of _Venice_?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You are mine you say?
+282]
+
+Erota:
+
+ Pish: you but dally with me; and would lull me
+ In a rich golden dream.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You are too much distrustfull of my truth.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Then you must give me leave to apprehend
+ The means, and manner how.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Why thus--
+
+Erota:
+
+ You shall not,
+ We may be over-heard; Affairs and counsels
+ Of such high nature, are not to be trusted
+ Not to the Air it self, you shall in writing,
+ Draw out the full design; which if effected,
+ I am as I profess.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ O I applaud
+ Your ready care, and secresie.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Gonzalo_,
+ There is a bar yet, 'twixt our hopes and us,
+ And that must be remov'd.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ What is't?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Old _Cassilane_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Ha? fear not him: I build upon his ruines
+ Already.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I would find a smoother course
+ To shift him off.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ As how?
+
+Erota:
+
+ We'l talk in private,
+ I have a ready plot.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ I shall adore you.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+ [Enter _Fernando_, a[n]d _Annophel_]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Madam, although I hate unnoble practices,
+ And therefore have perform'd no more than what
+ I ought, for honours safety: yet _Annophel_,
+ Thy love hath been the spur, to urge me forward
+ For speedier diligence.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Sir your own fame
+ And memory will best reward themselves.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ All gain is loss (sweet beauty) if I miss
+ My comforts here: The Brother and the Sister
+ Have double conquer'd me, but thou maist triumph.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Good Sir, I have a Father.
+283]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Yes, a brave one;
+ Could'st thou obscure thy beauty, yet the happiness
+ Of being but his Daughter, were a dower
+ Fit for a Prince: what say ye?
+
+Annophel:
+
+ You have deserv'd
+ As much as I should grant.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ By this fair hand
+ I take possession.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ What in words I dare not,
+ Imagine in my silence.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Thou art all vertue.
+
+ [Enter _Cassilanes_, and _Arcanes_]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ I'le tell thee how: _Baldwin_ the Emperour,
+ Pretending title, more through tyranny,
+ Than right of conquest, or descent, usurp'd
+ The stile of Lord o're all the _Grecian_ Islands,
+ And under colour of an amity
+ With _Creet_, prefer'd the Marquess _Mountferato_
+ To be our Governor; the _Cretians_ vex'd
+ By the ambitious _Turks_, in hope of aid
+ From the Emperour, receiv'd for General,
+ This _Mountferato_; he (the wars appeased)
+ Plots with the state of _Venice_ and takes money
+ Of them for _Candy_: they paid well, he steals
+ Away in secret; since which time, that right
+ The state of _Venice_ claims o're _Candy_, is
+ By purchase, not inheritance or Conquest:
+ And hence grows all our quarrel.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ So an Usurer
+ Or Lumbard-Jew, might with some bags of trash,
+ Buy half the Western world.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Mony, _Arcanes_,
+ Is now a God on Earth: it cracks virginities,
+ And turns a Christian, Turk;
+ Bribes justice, cut-throats honour, does what not?
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Not captives _Candy_.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Nor makes thee dishonest,
+ Nor me a Coward---Now Sir, here is homely,
+ But friendly entertainment.
+284]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Sir, I find it.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ And like it, do ye not?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ My repair speaks for me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ _Fernando_ we are speaking off--how this?
+
+ [Enter _Gonzalo_, and _Gaspero_, with a Casket]
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Your friend, and servant.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Creditors, my Lord,
+ Are Masters and no Servants: as the world goes,
+ Debters are very slaves to those to whom
+ They have been beholding to; in which respect,
+ I should fear you _Gonzalo_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Me, my Lord?
+ You owe me nothing.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ What, nor love, nor mony?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Yes, love, I hope, not mony.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ All this braverie
+ Will scarcely make that good.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ 'Tis done already:
+ See Sir, your Mortgage which I only took,
+ In case you and your son had in the wars
+ Miscarried: I yield it up again: 'tis yours.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Are ye so conscionable?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ 'Tis your own.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Pish, pish, I'le not receive what is not mine,
+ That were a dangerous business.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Sir, I am paid for't,
+ The summes you borrowed, are return'd; The bonds
+ Cancel'd, and your acquittance formerly seal'd:
+ Look here Sir, _Gaspero_ is witness to it.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ My honoured Lord, I am.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ My Lord _Fernando_,
+ _Arcanes_ and the rest, you all shall testifie,
+ That I acquit Lord _Cassilane_ for ever,
+ Of any debts to me.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ 'Tis plain and ample:
+ Fortune will once again smile on us fairly.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ But hark ye, hark ye, if you be in earnest,
+ Whence comes this bounty? or whose is't?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ In short,
+285] The great _Erota_ by this Secretary,
+ Return'd me my full due.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ _Erota_? why
+ Should she do this?
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ You must ask her the cause,
+ She knows it best.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ So ho, _Arcanes_, none
+ But women pity us? soft-hearted women?
+ I am become a brave fellow now, _Arcanes_,
+ Am I not?
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Why Sir, if the gracious Princess
+ Have took more special notice of your services,
+ And means to be more thankfull than some others,
+ It were an injury to gratitude,
+ To disesteem her favours.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Sir she ever
+ For your sake most respectively lov'd me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ The Senate, and the body of this Kingdom
+ Are herein (let me speak it without arrogance)
+ Beholding to her: I will thank her for it;
+ And if she have reserv'd a means whereby
+ I may repay this bounty with some service,
+ She shall be then my Patroness: come Sirs,
+ We'I taste a cup of wine together now.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ _Fernando_, I must speak with you in secret.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ You shall--Now _Gaspero_, all's well.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ There's news
+ You must be acquainted with.
+ Come, there is no master-piece in Art, like Policie.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+
+
+
+
+Actus Quintus
+
+
+
+
+Scena Prima.
+
+ [Enter _Fernando_, and _Michael_]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ The Senate is inform'd at full.
+
+Michael:
+
+ _Gonzalo_
+ Dreams not of my arrival yet.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Nor thinks
+ 'Tis possible his plots can be discover'd:
+ He fats himself with hopes of Crowns, and Kingdoms,
+286] And laughs securely, to imagine how
+ He means to gull all but himself: when truly,
+ None is so grosly gull'd as he.
+
+Michael:
+
+ There was never
+ A more arch villain.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Peace, the Senate comes.
+
+ [Enter _Porphicio_, _Pos._ Senators, and _Gaspero_, Attend]
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ How closely Treason cloaks it self in forms
+ Of Civil honesty!
+
+Possenne:
+
+ And yet how palpably
+ Does heaven reveal it!
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Gracious Lords.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ The Embassadour,
+ Lord _Paulo Michael_, Advocate
+ To the great Duke of _Venice_.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ You are most welcome,
+ Your Master is a just and noble Prince.
+
+Michael:
+
+ My Lords, he bad me say, that you may know
+ How much he scorns, and (as good Princes ought)
+ Defies base indirect, and godless treacheries;
+ To your more Sacred wisdomes he refers
+ The punishment due to the false _Gonzalo_,
+ Or else to send him home to _Venice_.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Herein
+ The Duke is royal: _Gaspero_, the Prince
+ Of _Cyprus_ answer'd he would come.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ My Lords,
+ He will not long be absent.
+
+ [Enter _Philander_, and _Melitus_]
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ You _Fernando_,
+ Have made the State your debter: worthy Prince,
+ We shall be sutors to you for your presence,
+ In hearing, and determining of matters
+ Greatly concerning _Candy_.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Fathers, I am
+ A stranger.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Why, the cause, my Lord, concerns
+ A stranger: please you seat your self.
+287]
+
+Philander:
+
+ How e're
+ Unfit, since you will have it so, my Lords,
+ You shall command me.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ You my Lord _Fernando_,
+ With the Ambassador, withdraw a while.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ My Lords, we shall.
+
+ [Ex.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Melitus, and the Secretary,
+ Give notice to _Gonzalo_, that the Senate
+ Requires his presence.
+
+ [Ex. _Gas._ and _Mel._
+
+ [Enter _Cassilane_, and _Arca_]
+
+Philander:
+
+ What concerns the business?
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Thus noble Prince--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Let me alone, thou troublest me,
+ I will be heard.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ You know not what you do.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Forbear: who's he that is so rude? what's he that dares
+ To interrupt our counsels?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ One that has guarded,
+ Those Purple robes from Cankers worse than Moths,
+ One that hath kept your fleeces on your backs,
+ That would have been snatch'd from you: but I see
+ 'Tis better now to be a Dog, a Spaniel
+ In times of Peace, then boast the bruised scars,
+ Purchas'd with loss of bloud in noble wars,
+ My Lords, I speak to you.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Lord _Cassilane_,
+ We know not what you mean.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Yes, you are set
+ Upon a bench of justice; and a day
+ Will come (hear this, and quake ye potent great ones)
+ When you your selves shall stand before a judge,
+ Who in a pair of scales will weigh your actions,
+ Without abatement of one grain: as then
+ You would be found full weight, I charge ye fathers
+ Let me have justice now.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Lord _Cassilane_,
+ What strange distemperature provokes distrust
+ Of our impartiality? be sure
+ We'l flatter no mans injuries.
+288]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ 'Tis well;
+ You have a Law, Lords, that without remorse
+ Dooms such as are belepred with the curse
+ Of foul ingratitude unto death.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ We have.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Then do me justice.
+
+ [Enter _Antinous_, _Decius_, _Erota_, _Hyparcha_.]
+
+Decius:
+
+ Mad-man, whither run'st thou?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Peace _Decius_, I am deaf.
+
+Hyparcha:
+
+ Will you forget
+ Your greatness, and your modesty?
+
+Erota Hyparcha:
+
+ leave, I will not hear.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Lady; great, gentle, Lady.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Prethee young man forbear to interrupt me,
+ Triumph not in thy fortunes; I will speak.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ More uproars yet! who are they that disturb us?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ The viper's come; his fears have drawn him hither,
+ And now, my Lords, be Ch[ro]nicled for ever,
+ And give me justice against this vile Monster,
+ This bastard of my bloud.
+
+Erota:
+
+ 'Tis justice, Fathers,
+ I sue for too: and though I might command it,
+ (If you remember Lords, whose child I was)
+ Yet I will humbly beg it; this old wretch
+ Has forfeited his life to me.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Tricks, tricks;
+ Complots, devices, 'twixt these pair of young-ones,
+ To blunt the edge of your well temper'd Swords,
+ Wherewith you strike offenders, Lords, but I
+ Am not a baby to be fear'd with bug-bears,
+ 'Tis justice I require.
+
+Erota:
+
+ And I.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ You speak too tenderly; and too much like yourself
+ To mean a cruelty; which would make monstrous
+ Your Sex: yet for the loves sake, which you once
+ Pleas'd to pretend, give my griev'd Father leave
+ To urge his own revenge; you have no cause
+ For yours: keep peace about ye.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Will you hear me?
+289]
+
+Philander:
+
+ Here's some strange novelty.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Sure we are mock'd,
+ Speak one at once: say wherein hath your Son
+ Transgress'd the Law?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ O the gross mists of dulness!
+ Are you this Kingdomes Oracles, yet can be
+ So ignorant? first hear, and then consider.
+ That I begot him, gave him birth and life,
+ And education, were, I must confess,
+ But duties of a Father: I did more;
+ I taught him how to manage Arms, to dare
+ An Enemy; to court both death and dangers;
+ Yet these were but additions to compleat
+ A well accomplish'd Souldier: I did more yet.
+ I made him chief Commander in the field
+ Next to my self, and gave him the full prospeft
+ Of honour, and preferment; train'd him up
+ In all perfections of a Martiallist:
+ But he unmindful of his gratitude,
+ You know with what contempt of my deserts,
+ First kick'd against mine honour, scorned all
+ My services; then got the palm of glory
+ Unto himself: yet not content with this,
+ He (lastly) hath conspir'd my death, and sought
+ Means to engage me to this Lady's debt,
+ Whose bounty all my whole estate could never
+ Give satisfaction to: now honoured Fathers,
+ For this cause only, if your Law be law,
+ And you the Ministers of justice; then
+ Think of this strange ingratitude in him.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Can this be so _Antinous_?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ 'Tis all true,
+ Nor hath my much wrong'd father limn'd my faults
+ In colours half so black, as in themselves,
+ My guilt hath dy'd them: were there mercy left,
+ Yet mine own shame would be my Executioner:
+ Lords, I am guilty.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Thou beliest, _Antinous_,
+ Thine innocence: alas, my Lords, he's desperate,
+ And talks he knows not what: you must not credit
+290] His lunacy; I can my self disprove
+ This accusation: _Cassilane_, be yet
+ More mercifull; I beg it.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Time, not fate,
+ The world, or what is in it, shall not alter
+ My resolution: he shall dye.
+
+Erota:
+
+ The Senats
+ Prayers, or weeping Lovers, shall not alter
+ My resolution: thou shalt dye.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Why Madam,
+ Are ye all Marble?
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Leave your shifts _Antinous_,
+ What plead you to your Fathers accusation?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Most fully guilty.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ You have doom'd your self,
+ We cannot quit you now.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ A burthen'd conscience
+ Will never need a hang-man: hadst thou dar'd
+ To have deni'd it, then this Sword of mine
+ Should on thy head have prov'd thy tongue a lyar.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Thy sword? wretched old man, thou hast liv'd too long
+ To carry peace or comfort to thy grave;
+ Thou art a man condemn'd: my Lords, this tyrant
+ Had perish'd but for me, I still suppli'd
+ His miserable wants; I sent his Daughter
+ Mony to buy him food; the bread he eat,
+ Was from my purse: when he (vain-gloriously)
+ To dive into the peoples hearts, had pawn'd
+ His birth-right, I redeem'd it, sent it to him,
+ And for requitall, only made my suite,
+ That he would please to new receive his son
+ Into his favour, for whose love I told him
+ I had been still so friendly: but then he
+ As void of gratitude, as all good nature,
+ Distrafted like a mad man, poasted hither
+ To pull this vengeance on himself, and us;
+ For why, my Lords, since by the Law, all means
+ Is blotted out of your commission,
+ As this hard hearted Father hath accus'd
+ Noble _Antinous_, his unblemished Son,
+291] So I accuse this Father, and crave judgement.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ All this is but deceit, meer trifles forg'd
+ By combination to defeat the process
+ Of Justice, I will have _Antinous_ life.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ Sir, what do ye mean?
+
+Erota:
+
+ I will have _Cassilane's_.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Cunning and cruel Lady, runs the stream
+ Of your affections this way? have you not
+ Conquest enough by treading on my grave?
+ Unless you send me thither in a shrowd
+ Steept in my fathers bloud? as you are woman,
+ As the protests of love you vow'd were honest;
+ Be gentler to my Father.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Cassilane,
+ Thou hast a heart of flint: let my intreaties,
+ My tears, the Sacrifice of griefs unfeigned,
+ Melt it: yet be a Father to thy son,
+ Unmask thy long besotted judgement, see
+ A low obedience kneeling at the feet
+ Of nature, I beseech you.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Pish, you cozen
+ Your hopes: your plots are idle: I am resolute.
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Antinous_, urge no further.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Hence thou Sorcery
+ Of a beguiling softness, I will stand,
+ Like the earths center, unmov'd; Lords your breath
+ Must finish these divisions: I confess
+ Civility doth teach I should not speak
+ Against a Lady of her birth, so high
+ As great _Erota_, but her injuries
+ And thankless wrongs to me, urge me to cry
+ Aloud for justice, Fathers.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Whither run you?
+
+Antinous:
+
+ For (honoured fathers) that you all may know
+ That I alone am not unmatchable
+ In crimes of this condition, lest perhaps
+ You might conceive, as yet the case appears,
+ That this foul stain, and guilt runs in a bloud;
+ Before this presence, I accuse this Lady
+ Of as much vile ingratitude to me.
+292]
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Impudent Traitor!
+
+Philander:
+
+ Her? O spare _Antinous_;
+ The world reputes thee valiant, do not soyle
+ All thy past nobleness with such a cowardize.
+ As murthering innocent Ladies will stamp on thee.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Brave Prince, with what unwillingness I force
+ Her follies, and in those her sin, be witness,
+ All these about me: she is bloudy minded,
+ And turns the justice of the Law to rigor:
+ It is her cruelites, not I accuse her:
+ Shall I have Audience?
+
+Erota:
+
+ Let him speak my Lords.
+
+Decius:
+
+ Your memory will rot.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Cast all your eyes
+ On this, what shall I call her? truthless woman,
+ When often in my discontents, the sway
+ Of her unruly bloud, her untam'd passion,
+ (Or name it as you list) had hour by hour
+ Solicited my love, she vow'd at last
+ She could not, would not live unless I granted
+ What she long sued for: I in tender pity,
+ To save a Lady of her birth from ruine,
+ Gave her her life, and promis'd to be hers:
+ Nor urg'd I ought from her, but secresie,
+ And then enjoyn'd her to supply such wants
+ As I perceiv'd my Fathers late engagements
+ Had made him subject to; what shall I heap up
+ Long repetitions? she to quit my pity,
+ Not only hath discover'd to my Father
+ What she had promis'd to conceal, but also
+ Hath drawn my life into this fatal forfeit;
+ For which since I must dye, I crave a like
+ Equality of justice against her;
+ Not that I covet bloud, but that she may not
+ Practise this art of falsehood on some other,
+ Perhaps more worthy of her love hereafter.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ If this be true--
+
+Erota:
+
+ My Lords, be as the Law is,
+ Indifferent, upright, I do plead guilty:
+ Now Sir, what glory have you got by this?
+293] 'Las man, I meant not to outlive thy doom,
+ Shall we be friends in death?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Hear me, the villain
+ Scandals her, honour'd Lords.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Leave off to doat,
+ And dye a wise man.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ I am over-reach'd,
+ And master'd in my own resolution.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Will ye be wilfull Madam? here's the curse
+ Of loves disdain.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Why sit you like dumb Statues?
+ Demur no longer.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ _Cassilane_, _Erota_,
+ _Antinous_, death ye ask; and 'tis your dooms,
+ You in your follies liv'd, dye in your follies.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ I am reveng'd, and thank you for it.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Yes, and I: _Antlnous_ hath been gracious.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Sir, may I presume to crave a blessing from you
+ Before we part?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Yes, such a one as Parents
+ Bestow on cursed sons, now now, I laugh
+ To see how those poor younglings are both cheated
+ Of life and comfort: look ye, look ye, Lords,
+ I go but some ten minutes (more or less)
+ Before my time, but they have finely cozen'd
+ Themselves of many, many hopefull years
+ Amidst their prime of youth and glory; now
+
+ [Enter _Annophel_]
+
+ My vengeance is made full. Welcom my joy,
+ Thou com'st to take a seasonable blessing
+ From thy half buried Fathers hand; I am dead
+ Already girle, and so is she and he,
+ We all are worms-meat now.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ I have heard all;
+ Nor shall you dye alone: Lords on my knees
+ I beg for justice too.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ 'Gainst whom, for what?
+
+Annophel:
+
+ First let me be resolv'd; does the Law favour
+ None, be they ne're so mighty?
+294]
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Not the greatest.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Then justly I accuse of foul ingratitude
+ My Lords, you of the Senate all, not one
+ Excepted.
+
+Possenne Porphycio:
+
+ Us?
+
+Philander:
+
+ _Annophel_--
+
+Annophel:
+
+ You are the Authors
+ Of this unthrifty bloud-shed; when your enemies
+ Came marching to your gates, your children suck'd not
+ Safe at their Mothers breasts, your very Cloysters
+ Were not secure, your starting-holes of refuge
+ Not free from danger, nor your lives your own:
+ In this most desperate Ecstasie, my Father,
+ This aged man, not only undertook
+ To guard your lives, but did so; and beat off
+ The daring foe; for you he pawn'd his lands,
+ To pay your Souldiers, who without their pay
+ Refus'd to strike a blow: but, Lords, when peace
+ Was purchas'd for you, and victorie brought home,
+ Where was your gratitude, who in your Coffers
+ Hoarded the rustic treasure which was due
+ To my unminded Father? he was glad
+ To live retir'd in want, in penurie,
+ Whilst you made feasts of surfeit, and forgot
+ Your debts to him: The sum of all is this,
+ You have been unthankfull to him; and I crave
+ The rigor of the Law against you all.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ My Royal spirited daughter!
+
+Erota:
+
+ _Annophel_
+ Thou art a worthy wench; let me embrace thee.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Lords, why do ye keep your seats? they are no places
+ For such as are offenders.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Though our ignorance
+ Of _Cassilanes_ engagements might asswage
+ Severity of justice, yet to shew
+ How no excuse should smooth a breach of Law,
+ I yield me to the trial of it.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ So must I:
+ Great Prince of _Cyprus_, you are left
+ The only Moderator in this difference;
+295] And as you are a Prince be a Protector
+ To wofull _Candy_.
+
+Philander:
+
+ What a Scene of miserie
+ Hath thine obdurate frowardness (old man)
+ Drawn on thy Countries bosom? and for that
+ Thy proud ambition could not mount so high
+ As to be stil'd thy Countries only Patron,
+ Thy malice hath descended to the depth
+ Of Hell, to be renowned in the Title
+ Of the destroyer? dost thou yet perceive
+ What curses all posterity will brand
+ Thy grave with? that at once hast rob'd this Kingdom
+ Of honour and of safety.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Children yet unborn
+ Will stop their ears when thou art nam'd.
+
+Arcanes:
+
+ The world will be too little to contain
+ The memorie of this detested deed;
+ The Furies will abhorr it.
+
+Decius:
+
+ What the sword
+ Could not enforce, your peevish thirst of honour
+ (A brave, cold, weak, imaginarie fame)
+ Hath brought on _Candy: Candy_ groans, not these
+ That are to die.
+
+Philander:
+
+ 'Tis happiness enough
+ For them, that they shall not survive to see
+ The wounds wherewith thou stab'st the land that gave
+ Thee life and name.
+
+Decius:
+
+ 'Tis _Candy's_ wrack shall feel--
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ The mischief of your folly.
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ _Annophel_--
+
+Annophel:
+
+ I will not be entreated.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Prethee _Annophel_.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Why would ye urge me to a mercy which
+ You in your self allow not?
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ 'Tis the Law,
+ That if the party who complains, remit
+ The offender, he is freed: is't not so Lords?
+
+Porphycio Possenne:
+
+ 'Tis so.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ _Antinous_, By my shame observe
+ What a close witch-craft popular applause is:
+296] I am awak'd, and with clear eyes behold
+ The Lethargie wherein my reason long
+ Hath been be-charm'd: live, live, my matchless son,
+ Blest in thy Fathers blessing; much more blest
+ In thine own vertues: let me dew thy cheeks
+ With my unmanly tears: Rise, I forgive thee:
+ And good _Antinous_, if I shall be thy Father
+ Forgive me: I can speak no more.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Dear Sir,
+ You new beget me now--Madam your pardon,
+ I heartily remit you.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I as freely
+ Discharge thee _Cassilane_.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ My gracious Lords,
+ Repute me not a blemish to my Sex,
+ In that I strove to cure a desperate evil
+ With a more violent remedy: your lives,
+ Your honours are your own.
+
+Philander:
+
+ Then with consent
+ Be reconcil'd on all sides: Please you Fathers
+ To take your places.
+
+Possenne:
+
+ Let us again ascend,
+ With joy and thankfulness to Heaven: and now
+ To other business Lords.
+
+ [Enter _Gaspero_, and _Melitus_, with _Gonzalo_]
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Two hours and more Sir,
+ The Senate hath been set.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ And I not know it?
+ Who sits with them?
+
+Melitus:
+
+ My Lord, the Prince of _Cyprus_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Gaspero,
+ Why how comes that to pass?
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Some weighty cause
+ I warrant you.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Now Lords the business? ha?
+ Who's here, _Erota_?
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ Secretarie do your charge
+ Upon that Traitor.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Traitor?
+297]
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Yes, _Gonzalo_, Traitor,
+ Of treason to the peace and state of _Candy_,
+ I do arrest thee.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Me? thou Dog?
+
+ [Enter _Fernando_, and _Michael_]
+
+Michael:
+
+ With Licence
+ From this grave Senate, I arrest thee likewise
+ Of treason to the State of _Venice_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Ha?
+ Is _Michael_ here? nay then I see
+ I am undone.
+
+Erota:
+
+ I shall not be your Queen,
+ Your Dutchess, or your Empress.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Dull, dull brain.
+ O I am fool'd!
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Look Sir, do you know this hand?
+
+Michael:
+
+ Do you know this Seal? First, Lords, he writes to _Venice_,
+ To make a perfect league, during which time
+ He would in private keep some Troops in pay,
+ Bribe all the Centinels throughout this Kingdom,
+ Corrupt the Captains; at a Banquet poyson
+ The Prince, and greatest Peers, and in conclusion
+ Yield _Candy_ slave to _Venice_.
+
+Gaspero:
+
+ Next, he contracted
+ With the Illustrious Princess, the Lady _Erota_,
+ In hope of marriage with her, to deliver
+ All the _Venetian_ gallantry, and strength,
+ Upon their first arrival, to the mercy
+ Of her and _Candy_.
+
+Erota:
+
+ This is true, _Gonzalo_.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ Let it be true: what then?
+
+Possenne:
+
+ My Lord Ambassadour,
+ What's your demand?
+
+Michael:
+
+ As likes the State of _Candy_,
+ Either to sentence him as he deserves
+ Here, or to send him like a slave to _Venice_.
+
+Porphycio:
+
+ We shall advise upon it.
+
+Gonzalo:
+
+ O the Devils,
+ That had not thrust this trick into my pate--
+298] A Politician fool? destruction plague
+ _Candy_ and _Venice_ both.
+
+Possenne Porphycio:
+
+ Away with him.
+
+Melitus:
+
+ Come Sir, I'le see you safe.
+
+ [Exeunt _Gonz._ _Mel._
+
+Erota:
+
+ Lords, e're you part
+ Be witness to another change of wonder;
+ _Antinous_, now be bold, before this presence,
+ Freely to speak, whether or no I us'd
+ The humblest means affection could contrive,
+ To gain thy love.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Madam, I must confess it,
+ And ever am your servant.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Yes _Antinous_,
+ My servant, for my Lord thou shalt be never:
+ I here disclaim the interest thou hadst once
+ In my too passionate thoughts. Most noble Prince,
+ If yet a relique of thy wonted flames
+ Live warm within thy bosom, then I blush not
+ To offer up the assurance of my faith,
+ To thee that hast deserv'd it best.
+
+Philander:
+
+ O Madam,
+ You play with my calamity.
+
+Erota:
+
+ Let heaven
+ Record my truth for ever.
+
+Philander:
+
+ With more joy
+ Than I have words to utter, I accept it.
+ I also pawn you mine.
+
+Erota:
+
+ The man that in requital
+ Of noble and un-sought affection
+ Grows cruel, never lov'd, nor did _Antinous_.
+ Yet herein (Prince) ye are beholding to him;
+ For his neglect of me humbled a pride,
+ Which to a vertuous wife had been a Monster.
+
+Philander:
+
+ For which I'le rank him my deserving friend.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ Much comfort dwell with you, as I could wish
+ To him I honour most.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ O my _Antinous_,
+ My own, my own good son.
+
+Fernando:
+
+ One suit I have to make.
+
+Philander:
+
+ To whom _Fernando_?
+299]
+
+Fernando:
+
+ Lord _Cassilane_ to you.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ To me?
+
+Fernando:
+
+ This Lady
+ Hath promised to be mine.
+
+Annophel:
+
+ Your blessing Sir;
+ Brother your love.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ You cannot Sir bestow her
+ On a more noble Gentleman.
+
+Cassilanes:
+
+ Saist thou so?
+ _Antinous_ I confirm it. Here _Fernando_,
+ Live both as one; she is thine.
+
+Antinous:
+
+ And herein Sister,
+ I honour you for your wise setled love.
+ This is a day of Triumph, all Contentions
+ Are happily accorded: _Candy's_ peace
+ Secur'd, and _Venice_ vow'd a worthy friend.
+
+ [Exeunt.
+
+
+
+
+
+460]
+APPENDIX
+
+
+
+
+THE LAWS OF CANDY
+
+
+The following variations are those of the 1st folio unless otherwise stated
+
+
+ p. 236
+ ll. 2--43. Not in 1st folio. _[e-Text transcriber's note: This is the
+ whole of the front matter, including cast and actor lists, with the
+ exception of the title]_
+
+
+ p. 237
+ l. 9. insolencie.
+ l. 19. these many plagues.
+
+
+ p. 238
+ l. 15. 2nd folio] pretty.
+ l. 16. But this.
+ l. 21. are these.
+
+
+ p. 241
+ l. 40. 2nd folio _misprints_] aud.
+
+
+ p. 242
+ l. 12. and had.
+
+
+ p. 243
+ l. 31. you sit? [_omits_ Sir].
+
+
+ p. 245
+ l. 7. And as if.
+ l. 18. fuerie, then warrant,
+
+
+ p. 247
+ l. 32. 2nd folio] tell.
+
+
+ p. 248
+ l. 11. Lord.
+ l. 13. Cassilanes.
+
+
+461]
+
+
+ p. 249
+ l. 9. add debters.
+
+
+ p. 251
+ l. 31. so manded.
+
+
+ p. 252
+ l. 11. so bold.
+
+
+ p. 253
+ l. 8. teaching there.
+
+
+ p. 254
+ l. 34. by Iolus.
+ l. 38. 2nd folio _misprints_] bravel.
+
+
+ p. 255
+ l. 3. I am borne.
+ l. 22. 2nd folio _misprints_] your.
+
+
+ p. 257
+ ll. 33 and 34.
+
+ --with your blessings,
+ Then growne.
+ l. 37. even unto.
+
+
+ p. 259
+ l. 33. _Omits_ If.
+
+
+ p. 260
+ l. 32. percusseere the.
+
+
+ p. 262
+ l. 20. 2nd folio] loss.
+ l. 25. 2nd folio] Erot.
+
+
+ p. 266
+ l. 16. 2nd folio] Casp.
+
+
+ p. 267
+ l. 16. This tempest-wearied.
+ l. 30. Pray.
+
+
+ p. 269
+ l. 4. Please.
+ l. 13. Your much.
+
+
+ p. 270
+ l. 30. please.
+
+
+ p. 271
+ l. 21. thou didst.
+ l. 22. lose by it.
+
+
+ p. 272
+ ll. 13 and 17. _Adds stage directions_] Musick. Musick againe.
+ l. 22. _Omits stage direction_] Musick.
+
+
+ p. 273
+ l. 4. for it.
+ l. 18. griefes.
+ l. 24. _A missing bracket has been added at the end of the line_.
+
+
+ p. 274
+ l. 38. wake.
+
+
+ p. 275
+ l. 1. pray.
+ l. 23. thy owne.
+
+
+ p. 277
+ l. 7. is it.
+ l. 27. do arive.
+ l. 31. crueller.
+
+
+ p. 279
+ l. 3. please ye.
+ l. 9. would you.
+ l. 30. 'has more 'gag'd.
+
+
+ p. 280
+ l. 31. spake.
+
+
+ p. 281
+ l. 10. do ye.
+ l. 40. Ye are.
+
+
+ p. 282
+ l. 20. He? feare.
+ l. 28. 2nd folio _misprints_] aod.
+
+
+ p. 283
+ l. 29. So a.
+
+
+ p. 286
+ l. 7. Porphino.
+ l. 18. 2nd folio _misprints_] Mie.
+
+
+ p. 288
+ l. 18. 2nd folio _misprints_] Chornicled.
+ l. 25. 'Has.
+
+
+ p. 291
+ l. 15. intreates.
+
+
+ p. 299
+ l. 16. _Adds_ Finis.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Laws of Candy
+by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher
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