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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made
+into a Farce, by William Mountfort
+
+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 Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made into a Farce
+
+Author: William Mountfort
+
+Editor: Anthony Kaufman
+
+Release Date: September 14, 2011 [EBook #37422]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND DEATH OF DOCTOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Katie Hernandez, Joseph Cooper
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+To H. T. Swedenberg,
+Junior _founder_, _protector_, _friend_
+
+[Illustration: _He that delights to_ Plant _and_ Set, _Makes_ After-Ages
+_in his_ Debt.]
+
+ Where could they find another formed so fit,
+ To poise, with solid sense, a sprightly wit?
+ Were these both wanting, as they both abound,
+ Where could so firm integrity be found?
+
+
+The verse and emblem are from George Wither, _A Collection of Emblems,
+Ancient and Modern_ (London, 1635), illustration xxxv, page 35.
+
+The lines of poetry (123-126) are from "To My Honoured Kinsman John
+Driden," in John Dryden, _The Works of John Dryden_, ed. Sir Walter
+Scott, rev. and corr. George Saintsbury (Edinburgh: William Patterson,
+1885), xi, 78.
+
+
+THE AUGUSTAN REPRINT SOCIETY
+
+WILLIAM MOUNTFORT
+
+The LIFE and DEATH of _Doctor Faustus_ Made into a FARCE
+
+(1697)
+
+_Introduction by_ ANTHONY KAUFMAN
+
+PUBLICATION NUMBER 157
+
+WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY
+
+UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
+
+1973
+
+
+
+
+GENERAL EDITORS
+
+ William E. Conway, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ George Robert Guffey, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Maximillian E. Novak, University of California, Los Angeles
+ David S. Rodes, University of California, Los Angeles
+
+
+ADVISORY EDITORS
+
+ Richard C. Boys, University of Michigan
+ James L. Clifford, Columbia University
+ Ralph Cohen, University of Virginia
+ Vinton A. Dearing, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Arthur Friedman, University of Chicago
+ Louis A. Landa, Princeton University
+ Earl Miner, Princeton University
+ Samuel H. Monk, University of Minnesota
+ Everett T. Moore, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Lawrence Clark Powell, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ James Sutherland, University College, London
+ H. T. Swedenberg, Jr., University of California, Los Angeles
+ Robert Vosper, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ Carl A. Zimansky, State University of Iowa
+
+
+CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
+
+Edna C. Davis, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+
+
+EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
+
+Jean T. Shebanek, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+
+Typography by Wm. M. Cheney
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+According to "Some Account of the Life of Mr. W. Mountfort" prefixed to
+the collected plays of 1720, William Mountfort, successful playwright
+and actor, was born "the Son of Captain _Mountfort_, a Gentleman of a
+good Family in _Staffordshire_; and he spent the greatest Part of his
+Younger Years in that County, without being bred up to any Employment."
+Since "his Gaiety of Temper and Airy Disposition ... could not be easily
+restrain'd to the solitary Amusements of a Rural Life,"[1] he set out to
+make his fortune in London, and was employed by the Duke's Company at
+the Dorset Garden Theater. First notice of him appears in the part of
+the "boy" in _The Counterfeits_, attributed to John Leanerd, and
+produced in May, 1678.[2]
+
+Mountfort was to win notice as an actor in the part of Talboy in Brome's
+_The Jovial Crew_, where as a rejected lover he was called upon for
+storms of comic tears. In his _Apology_, Cibber praises Mountfort in
+this part: "in his Youth, he had acted Low Humour, with great Success,
+even down to _Tallboy_ in the _Jovial Crew_"[3] and Mountfort himself
+alluded to his early success in the prologue to his first play, _The
+Injured Lovers_, where he defies the critics: "True Talboy to the last
+I'll Cry and Write."
+
+Mountfort scored his first major success as an actor when he played the
+title role in Crowne's _Sir Courtly Nice_. The play's popularity owed
+much to Mountfort's acting of a part which recalls Etherege's Sir
+Fopling Flutter. The "Account" of 1720 says that Mountfort "gain'd a
+great and deserved Reputation, as a Player; particularly in Acting the
+part of Sir _Courtly Nice_," and Cibber, who was later to create the
+great Sir Novelty Fashion, says of Mountfort's Sir Courtly:
+
+ There his whole Man, Voice, Mien, and Gesture, was no longer
+ _Monfort_, but another Person. There, the insipid, soft
+ Civility, the elegant, and formal Mien; the drawling delicacy
+ of Voice, the stately Flatness of his Address, and the empty
+ Eminence of his Attitudes were ... nicely observ'd.... If, some
+ Years after the Death of _Monfort_, I my self had any Success,
+ in either of these Characters, I must pay the Debt I owe to his
+ Memory, in confessing the Advantages I receiv'd from the just
+ Idea, and strong Impression he had given me, from his action
+ them (_Apology_, p. 76).
+
+In 1686, Mountfort married one of the attractive young actresses then
+appearing in London, Susanna Percival, and the Mountforts appeared
+together in a number of plays until his untimely death.
+
+Mountfort brought his first play, _The Injured Lovers_: or, _The
+Ambitious Father_, a tragedy, to be acted at Drury Lane early in
+February, 1688. The play was not a great success. Gildon mentions that
+it "did not succeed as the Author wish'd,"[4] although the play was
+brilliantly cast, with Betterton, Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Mrs. Barry in
+chief parts. Mountfort himself played second lead to Betterton, and the
+comedians Leigh, Jevon, and Underhill appeared in boisterous roles. But
+this rather extravagant account of passion and thwarted love did not
+take. Such lines as the heroine's "Thy _Antelina_, she shall be the Pile
+On which I'll burn, and as I burn I'll smile," reveals an uncertain
+poetic talent. In the prologue Mountfort manages more wit:
+
+ JO. _Hayne's Fate is now become my Share,
+ For I'm a Poet, Marry'd, and a Player:
+ The greatest of these Curses is the First;
+ As for the latter Two, I know the worst ..._
+
+And of the play's fate:
+
+ _Damn it who will, Damn me, I'll write again;
+ Clap down each Thought, nay, more than I can think,
+ Ruin my Family in Pen and Ink.
+ And tho' my Heart should burst to see your Spite,
+ True Talboy to the last, I'll Cry and Write...._
+
+Unsuccessful at tragedy, Mountfort moved to surer ground, and if tragedy
+did not sell on the market of the 1680's, farce was surefire.
+Mountfort's _The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, Made into a Farce ...
+with the Humours of Harlequin and Scaramouche_, is a most interesting
+example of Restoration farce. The Queen's Theater in Dorset Garden was
+well-fitted for stage spectacle and effect, and Mountfort took advantage
+of his knowledge of the stage and the contemporary audience to produce
+an amusing and popular hit. The play was revived in 1697, five years
+after Mountfort's death, and again in 1724, at a time when, as Borgman
+tells us (p. 39), _The Injured Lovers_ had been long forgotten.
+
+Mountfort continued his acting career with great success; he was one of
+twenty-two men and six women who, on 12 January 1688, were given the
+position of "Comoedians in Ordinary" to King James, and he acted in a
+variety of plays, including Shadwell's _The Squire of Alsatia_, in May,
+1688, and _Bury Fair_, in April, 1689. In Dryden's _Don Sebastian_,
+produced in December, 1689, he played the young and noble Don Antonio,
+described as "the wittiest Woman's toy in Portugal." Although Mountfort
+was best known for comic roles, he scored a success as Alexander in
+Nathaniel Lee's _The Rival Queens_, January, 1690. Cibber says of his
+Alexander:
+
+ In Tragedy he was the most affecting Lover within my Memory.
+ His Addresses had a resistless Recommendation from the very
+ Tone of his Voice ... All this he particularly verify'd in that
+ Scene of _Alexander_, where the Heroe throws himself at the
+ Feet of _Statira_ for Pardon of his past Infidelities. There we
+ saw the Great, the Tender, the Penitent, the Despairing, the
+ Transported, and the Amiable, in the highest Perfection
+ (_Apology_, pp. 74-75).
+
+Mountfort's third play was acted in January, 1690, although it may have
+been produced as early as December of the previous year. _The Successful
+Strangers_, a tragi-comedy, was based on a novel by Scarron, _The Rival
+Brothers_. In his Preface, Mountfort confesses, "_I am no Scholar, which
+renders me incapable of stealing from Greek and Latin Authors, as the
+better Learned have done_". The play was a success; its combination of
+comedy and tragedy appealed to the town, and it was revived several
+times in the early eighteenth century.
+
+As Borgman notes (p. 80), Mountfort's acting career peaked in the season
+of 1690-1691, when he acted nine new roles, eight of which were leads.
+He also prepared a comedy of his own, _Greenwich Park_, and assisted in
+the writing or preparation of three other plays. He assisted Settle with
+_Distress'd Innocence_, and his name is linked with two plays by John
+Bancroft, _Edward III_ and _Henry the Second_, although his contribution
+here, if any, is uncertain. The publishers of the collected plays of
+1720 note that "we have annex'd, _King Edward the Third_, and _Henry the
+Second_; which tho' not wholly composed by him, it is presum'd he had,
+at least, a Share in fitting them for the Stage, otherwise it cannot be
+supposed he would have taken the Liberty of Writing Dedications to
+them." Borgman says of these plays that Mountfort "doubtless scanned the
+script with a critical eye and made such changes as would seem necessary
+to an experienced man of the theater" (p. 90).
+
+In _Greenwich Park_, Mountfort scored his greatest success. The comedy
+is a hilarious mixture of the comedy of manners, humours, and farce. The
+prologue sounds the dominant motif of the play, that of satiric and
+energetic sex-intrigue: "At Greenwich lies the Scene, where many a Lass
+Has bin Green-gown'd upon the tender Grass." The play hits wittily at
+fortune-hunters, cits, and old fellows who attempt to ignore their age.
+There is heavy reference to the contemporary London scene. The comedy
+was produced in April, 1691, with great success; Gildon says of it: "a
+very pretty Comedy, and has been always received with general Applause"
+(_Lives and Characters_, p. 102). The gay and witty Florella was played
+by Mrs. Mountfort--who played a part very much like that in which she
+was so successful previously, Sir Anthony Love. Mrs. Barry played the
+passionate Dorinda, a promiscuous and mercenary woman who, at one point
+in the play, cries out in the best tradition of sentimental comedy: "Oh
+what a Curse 'tis, when for filthy Gain We affect a Pleasure in a real
+Pain." Sir Thomas Reveller, the heavy but comic father, was played by
+Leigh; Nokes and Underhill played comic cits, and Mountfort himself
+played opposite his wife as Young Reveller. The play was revived
+repeatedly, and remains a delightful work.
+
+Mountfort's best part of his last year came in December, 1691, when he
+played the hilarious lout, Mr. Friendall, of Southerne's _The Wives'
+Excuse_. The play is good comedy, but quite serious, as Southerne
+focuses on the distress of an intelligent, sensitive woman, saddled with
+a foolish husband who is the perfect representative of a frivolous and
+malicious society. On Friday, 2 December 1692, Mountford acted what must
+have been his final role, Alexander in _The Rival Queens_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mountfort's life ended at the height of his fame, in the most
+spectacular and dramatic murder of its time. The notorious Lord Mohun,
+then age fifteen, frequented the playhouse in 1692, often in the company
+of Captain Richard Hill, age twenty. Hill hoped to win the affections of
+Anne Bracegirdle, known not only for her beauty and acting ability, but
+also for her chastity--supposedly a scarce virtue among the actresses of
+the time. In _A Comparison between the Two Stages_, the following
+dialogue takes place:
+
+ _Sullen_: But does that _Romantick Virgin_ [Bracegirdle] still
+ keep up her great Reputation?
+
+ _Critick_: D'ye mean her Reputation for Acting?
+
+ _Sullen_: I mean her Reputation for not acting; you understand
+ me--....[5]
+
+Hill, making no headway with Mrs. Bracegirdle, concluded that she was in
+fact interested in Mountfort; they had often appeared on the stage
+together. More than once Hill was heard to utter threats against the
+actor, although Mohun was apparently on friendly terms with Mountfort
+Hill, determined to abduct the actress, persuaded Mohun to be his
+accomplice. They set Friday, 9 December 1692, as the date, and about ten
+o'clock in the evening, accompanied by some soldiers under Hill's
+command, they ambushed Mrs. Bracegirdle, her mother and her brother,
+Hamlet Bracegirdle, along with a man named Page, in Drury Lane. The
+actress's mother and Mr. Page fended the villains off for a time, in a
+moment a crowd gathered, and the would-be kidnappers saw that their plan
+was useless. Hill escorted the actress home and after having muttered a
+threat at Mr. Page proceeded to pace up and down outside their door.
+Approximately an hour and a half later, Mountfort appeared in Howard
+Street--apparently intent on confronting Hill and Mohun. Mohun greeted
+the actor courteously and asked if he had been sent for. Mountfort
+professed that he did not know anything of the business at hand, that he
+had come there by chance, adding that Mrs. Bracegirdle was no concern of
+his. What happened then happened fast and the witnesses disagree (see
+Borgman, pp. 135ff). It would seem, however, that Hill first struck the
+actor, then quickly drew and ran him through before Mountfort could
+draw. On his deathbed, traditionally the locale for truth-telling,
+Mountfort reported that "_My Lord Mohun offered me no Violence, but
+whilst I was talking with my Lord Mohun, Hill struck me with his Left
+Hand, and with his Right Hand run me through, before I could put my Hand
+to my Sword_" (Borgman, p. 140). It would seem clear that Hill gave the
+actor his deathblow and then, while the cry of murder was raised,
+escaped into the night. Mountfort, fatally wounded, staggered toward his
+own home in the next street. As Mrs. Mountfort opened the door, her
+husband fell bleeding into her arms; at one o'clock in the afternoon of
+the next day, he died. According to the "Account," he was to have played
+Bussy D'Ambois that night--Marlowe's tragedy of a young man who meets
+his death through assassination.
+
+Although Hill made good his escape, Lord Mohun stood trial in
+Westminster before his peers. Mohun's defense was simply that he was not
+privy to Hill's design and did not assist and encourage him in it. The
+lords, having heard the evidence, retired, and the next day, Saturday, 5
+February, acquitted Mohun of wrongdoing by a vote of 69-14. The prisoner
+was discharged.
+
+The United Company found themselves seriously hampered by the death of
+Mountfort, and even more so when fifteen days later the great comedian
+Anthony Leigh died. The "Account" says that Mountfort's death "had so
+great an Affect on his Dear Companion, Mr. LEE the Comedian, that he did
+not survive him above the space of a Week." The Company delayed the
+opening of a new play by one William Congreve, _The Old Bachelor_. But
+when that smash hit finally came on the boards in March 1693, Susanna
+Mountfort played the gay évaporée, Belinda, to great applause. And on 31
+January 1694, she married the actor John Verbruggen. The rather
+mysterious Anne Bracegirdle, for whom Mountfort had been killed, played
+female leads in all of Congreve's plays, and just as the public had once
+speculated on her relationship to Mountfort, they now speculated on her
+relationship to Congreve.
+
+Although farce was popular with London audiences during the Restoration,
+there was considerable controversy as to what it was and what it was
+worth. In a period in which the canon of English literary criticism was
+being formed, farce illustrates the disparity between received classical
+principles and the playwright's actual craft. Dryden, who himself
+"stooped" to writing farce, nonetheless sneers in his preface to _An
+Evening's Love, or The Mock-Astrologer_ [1671]:
+
+ Farce ... consists principally of grimaces ... Comedy consists,
+ though of low persons, yet of natural actions and characters; I
+ mean such humours, adventures, and designs, as are to be found
+ and met with in the world. Farce, on the other side, consists
+ of forced humours, and unnatural events. Comedy presents us
+ with the imperfections of human nature: Farce entertains us
+ with what is monstrous and chimerical.[6]
+
+Farce was theoretically unpopular because it relied on the extravagant
+and unnatural, as opposed to the play of real character found in comedy.
+And whereas in seventeenth-century comedy the avowed intention is
+usually to expose and thus to reform the vices and follies of the age,
+farce uses the grossly physical to draw a laugh; there is nothing to be
+learned from the slapstick and pigsbladder.
+
+Though sneered at by theorists and subject to endless abuse in the
+prologues and epilogues of the day, farce continued as pleasing to
+Restoration audiences as it is today. James Sutherland notes that shrewd
+actor-playwrights such as Mountfort, Betterton, Underhill, Jevon,
+Dogget, Powell--men who knew intimately the tastes of the town, chose to
+write farce.[7] Tate's _A Duke and No Duke_, Aphra Behn's _The Emperor
+of the Moon_, and Jevon's _The Devil of a Wife_, were among the most
+popular offerings, and although the Restoration wit may have gone to
+"Dr. Faustus" with a certain sense of intellectual slumming, he did
+continue to support quite generously the _farceurs_ of that time.
+Moreover, farcical elements appear regularly in the supposedly elegant
+and artificial Restoration comedy of manners.
+
+"Dr. Faustus" is a highly competent putting-together of those components
+which the experienced actor-playwright knew to be surefire. The date of
+its premier production is not known and has been assigned to a date as
+early as 1684 and as late as 1688. The farce was not published until the
+quarto of 1697, which appeared without cast-list, prologue, or
+epilogue.[8] The title page, however, states that the farce was acted at
+Dorset Garden "several times," by "Lee" (Anthony Leigh) and Jevon, and,
+as the editor of _The London Stage_ points out, since Jevon died in
+December of 1688, the premiere was probably no later than the season of
+1687-1688.[9] Borgman maintains that "Dr. Faustus" is Mountfort's second
+work, after _The Injured Lovers_ of February, 1688, noting that the
+epilogue to that play, spoken by Jevon, suggests that Mountfort was
+planning, or had written, a farce:
+
+ _Pardon but this, and I will pawn my life,
+ His next shall match my Devil of a Wife,
+ We'll grace it with the Imbellishment of Song and Dance;
+ We'll have the Monsieur once again from _France_,
+ With's Hoop and Glasses, and when that is done,
+ He shall divert you with his Riggadoon._
+
+We might guess, then, that if the epilogue does refer to "Dr. Faustus,"
+the date of that play is as late as the Spring of 1688.
+
+Mountfort took as his raw material Marlowe's great tragedy and for that
+reason "Dr. Faustus" may be to some extent thought of as a burlesque.
+The Restoration audience delighted in Marlowe's Faustus; the Elizabethan
+tragedy had been played in 1662, and there was a performance at the
+Duke's Theater in September, 1675. Edward Phillips wrote in his
+_Theatrum Poetarum_, that "of all that [Marlowe] hath written to the
+Stage his Dr. _Faustus_ hath made the greatest noise with its Devils and
+such like Tragical sport."[10] Here lies the suggestion that Mountfort
+was to take up, for as Borgman notes, Marlowe's tragedy has two distinct
+lines: the mighty verse which makes up the tragedy of an heroic
+overreacher, and a comic line of farcical _lazzi_. Mountfort has trimmed
+away the poetry of Marlowe and, for the most part, retained the farcical
+elements of the earlier play.[11]
+
+Mountfort keeps the compact with Mephostopholis, the appearance of good
+and bad angels, the visit of Lucifer and Beelzebub, the pageant of the
+seven deadly sins, the cheating of the horse-courser, the admonitions of
+the Old Man, the summoning of the spirits of Alexander and Darius, the
+tricking of Benvolio, the final moments of remorse before Faustus is
+dragged down to hell, and finally, the discovery of Faustus's limbs in
+his study. Mountfort's purpose, as Borgman notes, was not to convert an
+Elizabethan tragedy into a Restoration one, but to affix additional
+farcical materials to a work that already contained scenes of slapstick.
+
+Mountfort's unique contribution to his source was the introduction of
+the _commedia dell'arte_ figures which had become well-known to London
+theatergoers because of several visits to London by Italian actors since
+the Restoration. Probably, as Borgman notes (p. 36), the first
+Englishmen to play Scaramouche and Harlequin were Griffin and Haynes who
+had in 1677 appeared with the King's Company in Ravenscroft's
+_Scaramouch a Philosopher, Harlequin a School-Boy, Bravo, Merchant, and
+Magician_. When Aphra Behn's _The Emperor of the Moon_ appeared in
+March, 1687, Leigh played Scaramouche and Harlequin was taken by Jevon.
+It seems probable that in order that these two actors might have a
+further opportunity to appear as these popular characters, a place was
+found for Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's farce.
+
+The text of Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" reveals that his farce, like any,
+must depend to a great extent on its _farceurs_. In Jevon and Leigh he
+had talented players and much of the script can be regarded merely as an
+improvisational chart allowing the two famed comics to maneuver. Jevon,
+as Leo Hughes points out, built up a considerable reputation, chiefly in
+low comedy roles since his first notice as Osric in a revival of Hamlet
+in 1673.[12] Having a slight, thin figure, he was noted for his grace of
+movement and agility on the stage; he played Harlequin. Although Jevon
+could play such straight roles as Young Bellair in _The Man of Mode_,
+he, along with Nokes, Underhill, and Leigh, made his reputation in the
+boisterous farce of which "Dr. Faustus" is an excellent example.
+
+Anthony Leigh played Scaramouche. Of his acting Cibber says:
+
+ In Humour, he lov'd to take a full Career, but was careful
+ enough to stop short, when just upon the Precipice: He had
+ great Variety, in his manner, and was famous in very different
+ Characters.... But no wonder _Leigh_ arriv'd to such Fame, in
+ what was so completely written for him; when Characters that
+ would make the Reader yawn, in the Closet, have by the Strength
+ of his Action, been lifted into the lowdest Laughter, on the
+ Stage (_Apology_, p. 85-86).
+
+That Jevon and Leigh played well together is evident, and one can see
+great possibilities in their improvisation of such _lazzi_ as the
+episode of the "dead body," Act I, Scene i, or in the elaborate show of
+compliment which ends the first act.
+
+The presence of Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's adaptation
+suggests the influence of the Italian and French _commedia_ on the
+Restoration stage, although, as Leo Hughes points out, the native
+tradition of farce is paramount (pp. 134-141). Hughes notes that
+although the _commedia_ influence is obvious, Italian farce is different
+in style from the English, and that although there were four or five
+tours by _commedia_ troops between 1660 and 1700, these visits were not
+enough to influence significantly English farce writing. Furthermore,
+the Italian's art was improvisational--they used no printed texts, and
+the English would therefore have even less chance to copy from the
+_commedia_. Readers of "Dr. Faustus" will find little trace of
+_commedia_ influence apart from the conventional names. Hughes
+acknowledges (p. 141) the greater influence of the French stage in the
+Restoration, owing chiefly to the great popularity of Molière, whose
+influence on farce, especially on the afterpiece which became a staple
+on the English stage after 1695, was long-lived. His prestige was great;
+he appealed to English taste, and such characters as M. Jourdain, M.
+Pourceaugnac, and Sganarelle appear repeatedly in English adaptations.
+
+The action of farce is typically a string of blow-ups, stage business
+highly dependent on fast pacing. Characteristically on the English stage
+there is a great deal of stage-effect; "Dr. Faustus," produced at the
+Dorset Garden Theater where farce was often produced in order to take
+advantage of the elaborate stage machinery available there, makes use
+of rising tables, a giant which divides in two, good and bad angels
+which rise and descend, fireworks, a vanishing feast, a view of hell,
+and even more. Indeed, the often hilarious stage directions give us good
+insight into the capabilities of the Restoration stage. The finale is
+typical: "_Scene discovers Faustus's Limbs_." After the Old Man piously
+hopes that this "May ... a fair Example be to all, To avoid such Ways
+which brought poor Faustus's Fall," the "_Scene changes to Hell. Faustus
+Limbs come together. A Dance, and Song._"
+
+Farce often verges on satire, and, as he was to demonstrate in
+_Greenwich Park_, Mountfort had an eye for contemporary foibles. At the
+end of Act I, Harlequin and Scaramouche engage in dialogue which
+suggests similar passages of rough satire in Wycherley. Asked what
+practice his master, a doctor, has, Harlequin replies:
+
+ Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against the Term
+ for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks; and against
+ _Christmas_, _Easter_ and _Whitsun_ Holidays, for City
+ Apprentices; and if his Pills [to cure clap] be destroy'd,
+ 'twill ruin him in one Term.
+
+Mountford altered the pageant of the seven sins that he found in
+Marlowe, changing it in at least one case to bring it up to date. He
+begins by paraphrasing Marlowe:
+
+ _Faustus_: What art thou the Third?
+
+ _Envy_: I am _Envy_; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an
+ Oyster-wench. I cannot read, and wish all Books burnt.
+
+But then Mountford departs from his source, adding the following lines:
+
+ I always curst the Governement, that I was not prefer'd; and
+ was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns (II, i).
+
+The three kings are, I suppose, Charles I, Charles II, and James II, and
+the satiric jab is against those who perennially oppose the
+Establishment. Furthermore, it is easy to imagine that the role of
+Faustus, whoever played it, could well have been acted as a parody of
+the "tragical" acting style of the day, with its curious sing-song tone
+and stylized gestures.
+
+Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" gives us an often amusing insight into that
+much despised, ever-popular bastard-child of the Restoration stage:
+farce. If the direct influence of the _commedia_ is slight, the spirit
+of improvisational comedy is embodied in the inspired buffoonery of
+Leigh and Jevon, reinforced by stage-effect and spots of contemporary
+satire. The play proved a hit and that undoubtedly was the playwright's
+sole intention. The farce is workmanlike, and as the "Account" prefixed
+to the 1720 collected plays observes, "THE Life and Death of Doctor
+_FAUSTUS_ has a great deal of low, but Entertaining Humour; it
+sufficiently shews his Talents that way."
+
+
+ University of Illinois
+ Urbana
+
+
+
+
+NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION
+
+ 1. _Six Plays, written by Mr. Mountfort_ (London, 1720), 2 volumes.
+ All references to plays other than "Dr. Faustus" are taken from
+ this collection.
+
+ 2. The substance of my account of Mountfort's life and work is based
+ on Albert S. Borgman, _The Life and Death of William Mountfort_
+ (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1935).
+
+ 3. _An Apology for the Life of Colley Cibber_, ed. B. R. S. Fone
+ (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1968), p. 117.
+
+ 4. Charles Gildon, _The Lives and Characters of the English
+ Dramatick Poets_ (London, [1698?]), p. 102.
+
+ 5. (London, 1702), p. 17.
+
+ 6. _Essays of John Dryden_, ed. W. P. Ker (New York: Russell &
+ Russell, 1900; rpt. 1961), I, 135-136.
+
+ 7. _English Literature of the Late Seventeenth Century_ (Oxford:
+ Clarendon Press, 1969), p. 132.
+
+ 8. The first edition, page 5, omits the period at the end of 1. 23
+ and the speech prefix "Meph." for 1. 24. These are correctly added
+ in the second edition (1720).
+
+ 9. _The London Stage 1660-1800, Part I: 1660-1700_, ed. W. Van
+ Lennep (Carbondale, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press,
+ 1965), 342.
+
+ 10. (London, 1675), p. 25.
+
+ 11. Borgman outlines the changes Mountfort made in his source; see
+ pp. 35ff and Appendix A.
+
+ 12. _A Century of English Farce_ (Princeton: Princeton University
+ Press, 1956), pp. 165-166.
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+The facsimile of Mountfort's _The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus_
+(1697) is reproduced by permission from a copy of the first edition
+(Shelf Mark: 131909) in _The Huntington Library, San Marino,
+California_. The total type-page (p. 17) measures 195 X 112 mm.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ LIFE and DEATH
+
+ OF
+
+ Doctor Faustus,
+
+ Made into a
+
+ FARCE.
+
+ By Mr. _MOUNTFORD_.
+
+ _First Edition_
+
+ WITH THE
+
+ Humours of _Harlequin_ and _Scaramouche_:
+
+ As they were several times Acted
+
+ By Mr. _LEE_ and Mr. _JEVON_,
+
+ AT THE
+
+ Queens Theatre in _Dorset_ Garden.
+
+ Newly Revived,
+
+ At the Theatre in _Lincolns Inn Fields_,
+
+ With _Songs_ and _Dances_ between the ACTS.
+
+ _LONDON_,
+
+ Printed and sold by _E. Whitlock_ near _Stationers_ Hall, (1697)
+
+
+
+
+
+The Life and Death of
+
+Dr. FAUSTUS.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I. SCENE I.
+
+_Dr._ Faustus _seated in his Chair, and reading in his Study_.
+
+_Good and bad Angel ready._
+
+
+ _Faust._ Settle thy Study, _Faustus_, and begin
+ To sound the Depth of that thou wilt profess;
+ These Metaphysicks of Magicians,
+ And Negromantick Books, are heav'nly
+ Lines, Circles, Letters, Characters,
+ Ay, these are those that _Faustus_ most desires;
+ A sound Magician is a Demi-God:
+ Here tire my Brains to get a Deity.
+
+Mephostopholis _under the Stage_. _A good and bad Angel fly down._
+
+ _Good Ang._ O _Faustus_! lay that damn'd Book aside;
+ And gaze not on it, lest it tempt thy heart to blasphemy.
+
+ _Bad Ang._ Go forward, _Faustus_, in that famous Art
+ Wherein all Natures Treasure is contain'd:
+ Be thou on Earth as _Jove_ is in the Sky,
+ Lord and Commander of these Elements.
+
+_Spirits ascend._
+
+ _Faust._ How am I glutted with conceit of this?
+ Shall I make Spirits fetch me what I please?
+ I'll have 'em fly to _India_ for Gold,
+ Ransack the Ocean for Orient Pearl.
+ I'll have 'em Wall all _Germany_ with Brass:
+ I'll levy Soldiers with the Coin they bring,
+ And chase the Prince of _Parma_ from our Land. [_Rises._
+ 'Tis now the Dead nigh Noon of Night,
+ And _Lucifer_ his Spirits freedom gives;
+ I'll try if in this Circle I can Raise
+ A _Dæmon_ to inform me what I long for.
+
+_Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii, Orientis Princeps, Beelzebub,
+German. Demogorgon._ [Thunders. _Mephostopholis, Mephostopholis, surgat
+Spiritus._
+
+Mephostopholis _speaks under Ground_. [Thunders.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, I attend thy Will.
+
+_Faust._ Where art thou?
+
+_Meph._ Here. [_a Flash of Light._
+
+_Scar. within._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Faust._ What Noise is that? Hast thou any Companions with thee?
+
+_Meph._ No.
+
+_Faust._ It comes this way?
+
+_Scar._ Oh, oh, O----. [_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Faust._ What ail'st thou?
+
+_Scar._ O' o' o'
+
+_Faust._ Speak, Fellow, what's the Matter?
+
+_Scar._ O poor _Scaramouche_!
+
+_Faust._ Speak, I conjure thee; or _Acherontis Dii Demogorgon_.----
+
+_Scar._ O I beseech you Conjure no more, for I am frighted into a
+_Diabetes_ already.
+
+_Faust._ Frighted at what?
+
+_Scar._ I have seen, Oh, oh----
+
+_Faust._ What?
+
+_Scar._ The Devil.
+
+_Faust._ Art sure it was the Devil?
+
+_Scar._ The Devil, or the Devil's Companion: He had a Head like a Bulls,
+with Horns on; and two Eyes that glow'd like the Balls of a dark
+Lantern: His Hair stood a Tiptoe, like your new-fashion'd Top-knots;
+with a Mouth as large as a King's Beef Eater: His Nails was as sharp as
+a Welshman's in Passion; and he look'd as frightful as a Sergeant to an
+_Alsatian_.
+
+_Faust._ But why art thou afraid of the Devil?
+
+_Scar._ Why I never said my Prayers in all my Life, but once; and that
+was when my damn'd Wife was sick, that she might dye: My Ears are as
+deaf to good Council, as _French_ Dragoons are to Mercy. And my
+Conscience wants as much sweeping as a Cook's Chimny. And I have as many
+Sins to answer for as a Church-warden, or an Overseer of the Poor.
+
+_Faust._ Why, the Devil loves Sinners at his Heart.
+
+_Scar._ Does he so?
+
+_Faust._ He hates none, but the Vertuous, and the Godly. Such as Fast,
+and go to Church, and give Alms-deeds.
+
+_Scar._ I never saw a Church in my Life, thank God, (I mean the Devil;)
+and for Fasting, it was always my Abomination; and for Alms, I never
+gave any Thing in my Life, but the Itch once to a Pawn-broker. Therefore
+I hope he may Love me.
+
+_Faust._ And he shall Love thee; I'll bring thee acquainted with him.
+
+_Scar._ Acquainted with the Devil?
+
+_Faust._ Ay; _Tanto metropontis Acherontis_.
+
+_Scar._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Faust._ Fear nothing _Mephostopholis_, be visible.
+
+[Scaramouche _sinks behind the Doctor, and peeps his Head out behind the
+Slip of his Gown._ _A Devil rises in Thunder and Lightning._
+
+I charge thee to be gon, and change thy Shape; thou art too ugly to
+attend on me. I find there's Virtue in my Charm; Come, rise up, Fool,
+the Devil's gon.
+
+[_The Devil sinks._
+
+_Scar._ The Devil go with him.
+
+_Faust._ Fear nothing, I command the Devil. If thou wilt leave thy
+Chimny-sweeping Trade, and live with me, thou shalt have Meat and Drink
+in Plenty; and 40 Crowns a Year shall be thy Wages; I'll make thee
+Learned in the black Art.
+
+_Scar._ I am a Student in that already: But let me consider, Good Meat
+and Drink, and 40 Crowns a Year. Then I'll change my black Art for
+yours.
+
+_Faust._ There's Earnest, thou art now my Servant; dispose of thy Brooms
+and Poles, they'll be useless to thee here; take this Key, go into my
+Study, and clean; take all the Books you find scatter'd about, and range
+'em orderly upon the Shelves.
+
+_Scar._ Happy _Scaramouche_, now may'st thou Swear, Lye, Steal, Drink
+and Whore; for thy Master is the Devil's Master, and thou in time may'st
+master 'em both.
+
+[_Exit_ Scaram.
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Meph._ Now, _Faustus_, what wouldst thou have with me?
+
+ _Faust._ I charge thee wait upon me whilst I live,
+ And do what-ever _Faustus_ shall command.
+
+_Meph._ Ay _Faustus_, so I will, if thou wilt purchase me of _Lucifer_.
+
+_Faust._ What says _Lucifer_, thy Lord?
+
+ _Meph._ That I shall Wait on _Faustus_ whilst he Lives,
+ So thou wilt buy my Service with thy Blood.
+
+_Faust._ Already _Faustus_ has hazarded that for thee.
+
+ _Meph._ Ay, but thou must bequeath it solemnly,
+ And write a Deed of Gift with it;
+ For that Security craves _Lucifer_.
+ If thou deny it, I must back to Hell.
+
+ _Bad Ang._ But _Faustus_, if I shall have thy Soul,
+ I'll be thy Slave, and worship thy Commands,
+ And give thee more than thou hast Will of.
+
+ _Faust._ If he wilt spare me Four and twenty Years,
+ Letting me Live in all Voluptuousness,
+ To have thee ever to attend on me,
+ To give me whatsoever I shall ask,
+ And tell me whatsoever I demand;
+ On these Conditions I resign it to him.
+
+ _Meph._ Then, _Faustus_ stab thy Arm couragiously,
+ And bind thy Soul, that at some certain Day
+ Great _Lucifer_ may claim it as his own;
+ And then be thou as Great as _Lucifer_.
+
+ _Faust._ Lo, _Mephostopholis_, for Love of thee, _Faustus_ has cut
+ His Arm, and with his proper Blood
+ Assures his Soul to be great _Lucifers_.
+
+_Meph._ But, _Faustus_, write it in manner of a Deed, and Gift.
+
+_Faust._ Ay, so I do; but, _Mephostopholis_, my Blood congeals, and I
+can write no more.
+
+_Meph._ I'll fetch thee Fire to dissolve it streight. [_Exit._
+
+ _Faust._ What might the staying of my Blood portend,
+ It is unwilling I should write this Bill.
+
+_Good and Bad Angel descend._
+
+_Good An._ Yet, _Faustus_, think upon thy precious Soul.
+
+_Bad An._ No, _Faustus_, think of Honour, and of Wealth.
+
+_Faust._ Of Wealth. Why all the _Indies_, _Ganges_, shall be mine.
+
+_Good An._ No, _Faustus_, everlasting Tortures shall be thine.
+
+ _Bad An._ No, _Faustus_, everlasting Glory shall be thine.
+ The World shall raise a Statue of thy Name,
+ And on it write, This, this is he that could command the
+ World. [_Good Angel ascends, bad Angel descends._
+
+ _Faust._ Command the World; Ay, _Faustus_, think on that,
+ Why streams not then my Blood that I may write?
+ _Faustus_ gives to thee his Soul; Oh! there it stops. Why
+ shouldst thou not? Is not thy Soul thy own?
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis _with a Chafer of Fire_.
+
+_Meph._ See, _Faustus_, here is Fire, set it on.
+
+_Faust._ So now the Blood begins to clear again.
+
+_Meph._ What is't I would not do to obtain his Soul?
+
+ _Faust._ _Consummatum est_; the Bill is ended.
+ But what is this Inscription on my Arm?
+ _Homo fuge_: Whether shall I fly?
+ My Senses are deceiv'd, here's nothing writ;
+ O yes, I see it plain, even here is writ
+ _Homo fuge_; yet shall not _Faustus_ fly,
+ I'll call up something to delight his Mind.
+
+[_Song._ Mephostopholis _waves his Wand_. _Enter several Devils, who
+present Crowns to_ Faustus, _and after a Dance vanish_.
+
+_Faust._ What means this then?
+
+ _Meph._ 'Tis to delight thy Mind, and let thee see
+ What Magick can perform.
+
+_Faust._ And may I raise such Spirits when I please.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, and do greater Things than these.
+
+ _Faust._ Then, _Mephostopholis_ receive this Deed of Gift;
+ But set Conditionally, that thou perform all
+ Covenants and Articles herein subscribed.
+
+ _Meph._ I swear by Hell, and _Lucifer_, to effect all
+ Promises between us both.
+
+_Faust._ Then take it.
+
+_Meph._ Do you deliver it as your Deed, and Gift?
+
+_Faust._ Ay, and the Devil do you good on't.
+
+_Meph._ So, now, _Faustus_, ask what thou wilt.
+
+_Faust._ Then let me have a Wife.
+
+Faustus _waves his Wand, and a Woman Devil rises: Fire-works about
+whirles round, and sinks_.
+
+_Faust._ What sight is this?
+
+_Meph._ Now, _Faustus_ wilt thou have a Wife?
+
+_Faust._ Here's a hot Whore indeed, I'll have no Wife.
+
+ _Meph._ Marriage is but a Ceremonial Toy;
+ I'll cull thee out the fairest Curtezans,
+ And bring 'em every Morning to thy Bed:
+ She whom thy Eye shall like, thy Heart shall have.
+
+_Faust._ Then, _Mephostopholis_, let me behold the Famous _Hellen_, who
+was the Occasion of great _Troys'_ Destruction.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, thou shalt. [_Waves his Wand, enters._
+
+_Faust._ O _Mephostopholis_! what would I give to gain a Kiss from off
+those lovely Lips.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, thou may'st. [_He kisses her._
+
+_Faust._ My Soul is fled; come _Hellen_, come, give me my Soul again;
+she's gon. [_He goes to kiss her again, and she sinks._
+
+_Meph._ Women are shy you know at the first Sight; but come, _Faustus_,
+command me somewhat else.
+
+_Faust._ Then tell me, is Hell so terrible as Church-men write it.
+
+_Meph._ No, _Faustus_ 'tis Glorious as the upper World; but that we have
+Night and Day, as you have here: Above there's no Night.
+
+_Faust._ Why sighs my _Mephostopholis_, I think Hell's a meer Fable.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, think so still.
+
+_Faust._ Tell me who made the World?
+
+_Meph._ I will not.
+
+_Faust._ Sweet _Mephos._
+
+_Meph._ Move me no further.
+
+_Faust._ Villain, have I not bound thee to tell me any Thing.
+
+ _Meph._ That's not against our Kingdom, this is: Thou art
+ Lost; think thou of Hell.
+
+_Faust._ Think, _Faustus_, upon him that made the World.
+
+_Meph._ Remember this. [_Sinks._
+
+ _Faust._ Ay, go accursed Spirit to ugly Hell,
+ 'Tis thou hast damn'd distressed _Faustus_ Soul:
+ I will Repent: Ha! [_Goes to his Books._
+ This Bible's fast, but here's another:
+
+[_They both fly out of's Hand, and a flaming Thing appears written_, &c.
+
+ Is't not too late? [_Ring. Good and bad descend._
+
+_Bad An._ Too late.
+
+_Good An._ Never too late, if _Faustus_ will repent.
+
+ _Bad An._ _Faustus_, behold, behold thy Deed; if thou repent
+ Devils will tear thee in Pieces.
+
+_Good An._ Repent, and they shall never raze thy Skin.
+
+[_Scene shuts, Ang. ascends._
+
+_Scene changes to the Street._ _Enter_ Harlequin.
+
+_Harl._ This must be Mr. Doctor's House; I'll make bold to knock: My
+Heart fails me already.
+
+[Harlequin _opens the Door, peeps about, and shuts it_.
+
+I begin to tremble at the Thoughts of seeing the Devil.
+
+[_Knocks again._
+
+ Here's a great Resort of Devils, the very Doors smell of
+ Brimstone: I'll e'en back----No: I'll be a Man of Resolution:
+ But if Mr. Doctor should send a Familiar to open the
+ Door, in what language should I speak to the Devil? [_Knocks._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar. peeping._ This is some malicious Spirit, that will not let me
+alone at my Study; but I'll go in, and conn my Book. [_Exit._
+
+_Harl._ I believe Mr. Doctor is very Busy; but I'll rap this time with
+Authority.
+
+[Harlequin _raps at the Door_, Scaramouche _peeps out_. Harlequin
+_strikes him, and jumps back, runs frighted off_.
+
+_Scene changes to a Room in the Doctor's House._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche, _with a Book in the Doctor's Gown_.
+
+_Scar._ I have left the Door open to save the Devil the labour of
+Knocking, if he has a mind to come in: For I am resolved not to stir
+from my Book; I found it in the Doctor's Closet, and know it must
+contain Something of the Black Art.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin.
+
+_Harl._ Oh here's Mr. Doctor himself; he's reading some conjuring Book.
+_Ide fain jecit._
+
+_Scar._ This must be a conjuring Book by the hard Words. AB, EB, IB, OB,
+UB, BA, BO, BU, BI.
+
+_Harl._ Its a Child's Primer. [Harlequin _looks over him_.
+
+_Scar._ The Devil, the Devil; be gon, avoid Satan. [_Runs off._
+
+_Harl._ O the Devil! Now will I lye as if I were Dead, and let the Devil
+go hunt for my Soul. [_Lyes down._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ I have learn'd to raise the Devil, but how the Devil shall I do
+to lay him. Ha! what's here, a dead Body? The Devil assum'd this Body,
+and when I began to mutter my Prayers, he was in such haste he left his
+Carcass behind him. Ha! it stirs; no, 'twas but my Fancy.
+
+[Scaram. _lifts up all his Limbs, and lets 'em fall, whil'st_ Harl.
+_hits him on the Breech, lifts his Head, which falls gently_.
+
+ All's dead but's Head. [_Sets him upright._
+ The Devil, the Devil! Be gon; what art thou?
+
+_Harl._ A poor unfortunate Devil.
+
+_Scar._ The Devil; _Avant_ then _Hagon mogon strogon_.
+
+_Harl._ O good Mr. Doctor, conjure up no more Devils and I'll be gon, or
+any thing.--I came only to ask your Black Artship a Question.
+
+_Scar._ No, this is not the Devil. Who art thou? Whence comest thou?
+What's thy Business, Quick, or _Hogon strogon_?
+
+_Harl._ Hold, hold, hold, I am poor _Harlequin_: By the Learned I am
+called _Zane_, by the Vulgar _Jack Pudding_. I was late Fool to a
+Mountebank; and last Night, in the mistaking the Pipkin, I eat up a Pot
+of _Bolus_ instead of Hasty Pudding; and devour'd Three Yards of
+_Diaculum_ Plaister instead of Pancake, for which my Master has turn'd
+me out of Doors instead of Wages: Therefore, to be reveng'd, I come to
+hire a Devil or two of you, Mr. Doctor, of a strong Constitution, that
+may swallow up his Turpentine Pills as fast as he makes 'em, that he may
+never cure poor Whore more of a Clap; and then he'll be undone, for they
+are his chief Patients.
+
+_Scar._ What Practice has he?
+
+_Harl._ Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against the Term
+for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks; and against _Christmas_,
+_Easter_ and _Whitsun_ Holidays, for City Apprentices; and if his Pills
+be destroy'd, 'twill ruin him in one Term.
+
+_Scar._ Come in; and for a Crown a Week I'll lett thee out a Devil, as
+they do Horses at Livery, shall swallow him a Peck of Pills a day,
+though every one were as big as a Pumpkin; and make nothing of a _Bolus_
+for a Breakfast.
+
+_Harl._ O brave Mr. Doctor! O dainty Mr. Devil!
+
+_Scar._ Seigniora. [_Here they Complement who shall go first._
+
+
+_The End of the First Act._
+
+
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+Faustus _in his Study_.
+
+_Good and Bad Angel descend._
+
+
+_Good An._ _Faustus_, Repent; yet Heav'n will pity thee.
+
+_Bad An._ Thou art a Spirit, Heav'n cannot pity thee.
+
+_Fau._ Who buzzes in my Ear, I am a Spirit; be I a Devil yet Heaven can
+pity me: Yea, Heaven will pity me, if I repent.
+
+_Bad An._ Ay, but _Faustus_ never shall repent.
+
+_Good An._ Sweet _Faustus_ think of Heav'n, and heavenly Things.
+[_Ascends._
+
+ _Fau._ My Heart is hardened, I cannot repent.
+ Scarce can I name Salvation, Faith, or Heav'n,
+ But I am pinch'd, and prick'd, in thousand Places.
+ O help distressed _Faustus_!
+
+Lucifer, Beelzebub. _and_ Mephostopholis _rises_.
+
+_Luc._ None can afford thee help; for only I have Interest in thee,
+_Faustus_.
+
+_Fau._ Oh! What art thou, that looks so terrible?
+
+_Luc._ I am _Lucifer_, and this is my Companion Prince in Hell.
+
+_Beel._ We are come to tell thee thou dost injure us.
+
+_Luc._ Thou call'st on Heav'n contrary to thy Promise.
+
+_Beel._ Thou should'st not think on Heav'n.
+
+ _Fau._ Nor will I henceforth pardon him for this,
+ And _Faustus_ Vows never to look to Heav'n.
+
+ _Beel._ So shalt thou shew thy self a faithful Servant,
+ And we will highly gratify thee for it.
+
+_Fau._ Those Words delight my Soul.
+
+_Luc._ _Faustus_, we are come in Person to shew thee Passtime; sit down,
+and thou shalt behold the Seven Deadly Sins in their own proper Shapes
+and Likeness.
+
+_Fau._ That Sight will be as pleasant to my Eye, as Paradise to _Adam_
+the first Day of his Creation.
+
+_Beel._ Talk not of Paradise, but mind the Show. Go, _Mephostopholis_,
+and fetch 'em in; and, _Faustus_, question 'em their Names. _Enter
+Pride._
+
+_Fau._ What art thou?
+
+_Prid._ I am _Pride_; I was begot by Disdain and Affectation. I always
+took the Wall of my Betters; had ever the first Cut, or else would not
+eat: I scorn'd all Advice, never thought any one handsom but my self;
+had the best Pue in the Church, though a Tradesman's Wife; and at last
+dyed of the Spleen, for want of a Coach and Six Horses. Why is not thy
+Room perfum'd, and spread with Cloth of _Tissue_? What must you sit, and
+I stand? Rise up Brute.
+
+_Fau._ Go, thou art a proud Slut indeed. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Covetousness.
+
+Now what art thou the Second.
+
+_Cov._ I am _Covetousness_; I was begot by a close Fist, and a griping
+Heart, in a Usurer's Chest. I never eat, to save Charges: This Coat has
+cover'd me for Fourscore Winters: This Beard has seen as many more. I
+never slept in my Life, but always watch'd my Gold.
+
+_Fau._ What wert thou on Earth?
+
+_Cov._ I was first an Exciseman, and cheated the King and Country; then
+I was a Baker, and from every Neighbor's Loaf I stole Two Pound, and
+swore 'twas shrunk in the Oven. I was a Vintner, and by bribing of
+Quest-men had leave to sell in Pint Bottles for Quarts: At last I was a
+Horse-courser, made _Smithfield_ too hot to hold me, and rid Post to the
+Devil? Give me some Gold, Father? [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Envy.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Third?
+
+_Env._ I am _Envy_; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an Oyster-wench. I
+cannot read, and wish all Books burnt. I always curst the Government
+that I was not prefer'd; and was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns. I
+am Lean with seeing others Eat; and I wish the Devil would make a Sponge
+of thy Heart, to wipe out the Score of my Sins.
+
+_Enter_ Wrath.
+
+_Fau._ Out, Envious Wretch. What art thou the Fourth?
+
+_Wra._ I am _Wrath_; I had neither Father nor Mother, but leap'd out of
+a Lion's Mouth when I was scarce an Hour old. I always abhor'd the Art
+of Patience, and curst all Fisher-men. I beat my Wife for my Pleasure;
+curst Heav'n in my Passion, 'cause it gave me no Fortune, and was hang'd
+for a Rape on a _Scotch_ Pedlar. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Gluttony.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Fifth?
+
+_Glut._ I am _Gluttony_; begot by a Plow-man on a Washer-woman, who
+devour'd a _Chedder_ Cheese in two Hours. I am of a Royal Pedigree: My
+Grand-father was a Sur-loin of Beef, and my Mother a Gammon of Bacon: My
+Sisters were Sows, which supply'd me with Pork: My Brothers were Calves,
+which afforded me Veal: My God-fathers were _Peter_ Pickled-Herring, and
+_Michael_ Milk-Porredg: My God-mothers were _Susan_ Salt-butter, and
+_Margery_ Sous'd-Hog's-Face. Now, _Faustus_, thou hast heard my
+Pedigree, wilt thou invite me to Supper?
+
+_Fau._ Not I.
+
+_Glut._ Then the Devil choak thee.
+
+_Enter_ Sloth.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Sixth?
+
+_Slo._ Hey ho! I am _Sloth_; I was begotten at Church by a sleepy Judg
+on a Costermonger's Wife, in the middle of a long Sermon. I am as Lazy
+as a Fishmonger in the Dog-days, or a Parson in _Lent_: I would not
+speak another Word for a King's Ransom.
+
+_Enter_ Leachery.
+
+_Fau._ And what are you, Mr. _Minks_, the Seventh and last?
+
+_Leach._ I am one that love an Inch of Raw Mutton better than an Ell of
+Fry'd Stock-fish, and the first Letter of my Name begins with
+_Leachery_. [_Exit._
+
+_Fau._ This Sight delights my Soul.
+
+_Luc._ _Faustus_ in Hell are all manner of Delights.
+
+_Fau._ O might I see Hell once, and return safe.
+
+_Luc.__ Faustus_, thou shalt; give me thy hand. Hence let's descend, and
+we will _Faustus_ show The mighty Pleasures in the World below.
+[_Vanishes._
+
+
+SCENE _Changes_.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin, _and_ Scaramouche _in the Doctor's Gown; a Wand, and
+a Circle_.
+
+_Scar._ So, now am I in my _Pontificalibus_: Now can I shew my Black
+Art; for I have found that heavenly Book which _Faustus_ used to raise
+the Dead in: Come, stand within this Circle.
+
+_Har._ 'Tis time to Conjure, for I am almost famish'd. We have fasted
+like Priests for a Miracle.
+
+_Scar._ I'll make thee amends presently; I'll conjure up a Spirit, ask
+what thou wilt thou shalt have it.
+
+_Har._ Let me alone for asking.
+
+_Scar._ Be very earnest with him, and intreat mightily.
+
+_Har._ I'll intreat Earnestly.
+
+_Scar._ Silence. _Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii Nobis Diccatus
+Mephostopholis, &c._
+
+Mephostopholis _rises_.
+
+ _Meph._ How am I tortur'd by these Villains Charms?
+ From _Constantinople_ have they brought me now,
+ Only for Measure of these idle Slaves? What
+ Would you with _Mephostopholis_?
+
+_Scar._ Wee'd know how Dr. _Faustus_ does.
+
+_Meph._ Well.
+
+_Scar._ When comes he home?
+
+_Meph._ Within Two Days.
+
+_Scar._ What was he doing when you left him?
+
+_Meph._ He was at Supper, eating good Chear.
+
+_Har._ Good Mr. Devil, tell him we are almost starv'd; and desire him to
+send us some of his good Chear.
+
+_Meph._ Is that all?
+
+_Har._ Some Wine too?
+
+_Meph._ What else.
+
+_Har._ What else: Why if Fornication been't against your Commandments,
+we would have some live Flesh; a handsom Wench.
+
+_Scar._ Only for a third Person, and please your Damnation.
+
+_Meph._ You shall have your Desires.
+
+_Har._ We desire your Mephostopholiship too, not to let us stay the
+Roasting and Boiling of any thing: For we are as Eager as the Wine in
+_Smithfield_, and want no whetting.
+
+_Meph._ You shall.
+
+Scaramouche _and_ Harlequin _pull off their Caps_.
+
+Now if your mighty Darkness would please to Retire.
+
+_Meph._ Farewell. [_Vanish._
+
+Scaramouche _steps out of the Circle, and struts about_.
+
+_Scar._ Now how do you like my Art?
+
+_Har._ O rare Art! O divine Mr. Doctor _Scaramouche_! If the Devil be as
+good as his Word, I'll owe him a good Turn as long as I live: But I wish
+our third Person would come.
+
+_A Giant rises._
+
+Ha! What's here?
+
+_Gi._ I am sent by _Pluto_ to bear you Company.
+
+_Har._ Is this his third Person? Or is it Three Generations in One? Come
+you from _Guild-hall_, Sir?
+
+_Gi._ No, Mortal, from the _Stygian_ Lake. I am the Giant which St.
+_George_ destroy'd; and in the Earth have been decaying ever since, but
+now am come to Eat with you.
+
+_Scar._ To pick up your Crums, Sir: You'r heartily Welcome.
+
+Scaramouche _gets upon_ Harlequin, _and salutes him_.
+
+_Gi._ I have lain now within the _Stygian_ Lake 2000 Years.
+
+_Scar._ Your Honour is not much shrunk in the Wetting.
+
+_Gi._ But we loose Time, and Dinner cools.
+
+_Har._ Where is it?
+
+_Gi._ In the next Room.
+
+_Scar._ Will it please your Lustiness to lead the Way?
+
+_Har._ Will it please you then to make way for him?
+
+_Gi._ I can divide my self to serve my Friends?
+
+[_Giant leaps in two._
+
+Breeches be you my Page, and follow me.
+
+Harleq. _and_ Scaram. _complement the Breeches_. [_Exeunt._
+
+
+SCENE _draws, and discovers a Table furnished with Bottles of Wine, and
+a Venison Pasty, a Pot of wild Fowl_, &c.
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche, Giant, _and_ Harlequin.
+
+_Har._ O heavenly Apparition!
+
+_Scar._ Come, let's sit down.
+
+_The upper part of the Giant flies up, and the under sinks, and
+discovers a Woman in the Room._
+
+Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche _start_.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! What's here, a Woman?
+
+_Har._ O happy Change! Madam, with your good Leave.
+
+[_Kisses._
+
+_Scar._ Never too late in good Breeding. [_Kisses._] Rare Wench! And as
+Luscious as Pig-sauce.
+
+_Har._ Heav'n be prais'd for all.
+
+[_Woman sinks, a Flash of Lightning._
+
+_Scar._ Your unseasonable Thankfulness has rob'd us of our Strumpet.
+
+_Har._ No matter, no matter; we shall meet her in the Cloisters after
+the Fair. Come let's fall too.
+
+[_They put their Caps before their Faces._
+
+Ha!
+
+_Scar._ The Table runs away from us.
+
+_Har._ We'll bestow the Pains to follow it again; this I see is a
+running Banquet.
+
+[_They put their Caps on again, the Table removes._
+
+_Scar._ I have found the Secret: We must not say Grace at the Devil's
+Feast.
+
+_Har._ Come then let's fall too, _San's_ Ceremony; Will you be Carver?
+
+_Scar._ Every one for himself, I say.
+
+_Har._ Ay, every one for himself, and God for us all.
+
+[_Table flies up into the Air._
+
+_Scar._ A Plague o'your Proverb; it has a Word in't must not be named.
+
+_Har._ Ah, Mr. Doctor, do but intreat Mr. _Mephostopholis_ to let the
+Table down to us, or send us to that, and I'll be his Servant as long as
+I live. [_They are hoisted up to the Table._
+
+_Scar. and Har._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Scar._ Now have a care of another Proverb: We go without our Supper.
+
+_Har._ Nay, now I know the Devil's Humour, I'll hit him to a Hair: Pray,
+Mr. Doctor, cut up that Pasty.
+
+_Scar._ I can't get my Knife into it, 'tis over-bak'd.
+
+_Har._ Ay, 'tis often so: God sends Meat, and the Devil sends Cooks.
+[_Table flies down._
+
+_Scar._ Thou Varlet, dost thou see what thy Proverb has done?
+
+_Har._ Now could I curse my Grand-mother, for she taught 'em me: Well,
+if sweet _Mephostopholis_ will be so kind as but to let us and the Table
+come together again, I'll promise never to say Grace, or speak Proverb
+more, as long as I live.
+
+[_They are let down to the Table._
+
+_Scar._ Your Prayers are heard, now be careful; for if I lose my Supper
+by thy Negligence I'll cut thy Throat.
+
+_Har._ Do, and eat me when you have done. I am damnably hungry; I'll cut
+open this Pasty, while you open that Pot of wild Fowl.
+
+[Harlequin _takes off the Lid of the Pasty, and a Stag's Head peeps out;
+and out of the Pot of Fowl flies Birds_. Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche
+_start back, fall over their Chairs, and get up_.
+
+_Har._ Here's the Nest but the Birds are flown: Here's Wine though, and
+now I'll conjure for a Supper. I have a Sallad within of my own
+Gathering in the Fields to Day.
+
+_Scar._ Fetch it in; Bread, Wine, and a Salad may serve for a
+Collation.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _with a Tray of Sallad_.
+
+_Har._ Come, no Ceremony among Friends. _Bon. fro._
+
+_Scar._ _Sallad mal adjuste_; here's neither Fat nor Lean.
+
+_Har._ O Mr. Doctor, neither Fat nor Lean in a Sallad.
+
+_Scar._ Neither Oyl, nor Vinegar.
+
+_Har._ Oh! I'll fetch you that presently.
+
+[Harlequin _fetches a Chamber-pot of Piss, and a Lamp of Oyl, and pours
+on the Sallad_.
+
+_Scar._ O thy Sallad is nothing but Thistles and Netles; and thy Oyl
+stinks worse than _Arsefetito_.
+
+_Har._ Bread and Wine be our Fare. Ha! the Bread's alive. [_Bread
+stirs._
+
+_Scar._ Or the Devil's in't. Hey! again. [_Bread sinks._
+
+_Har._ My Belly's as empty as a Beggar's Purse.
+
+_Scar._ And mine as full of Wind as a Trumpeter's Cheeks.
+
+[_Table sinks, and Flash of Lightning._
+
+But since we can't Eat, let's Drink: Come, here's Dr. _Faustus_'s
+Health.
+
+_Har._ Ay, come; God bless Dr. _Faustus_.
+
+[_Bottles fly up, and the Table sinks._
+
+_Scar._ What all gone: Here's a Banquet stole away like a City Feast.
+[_Musick._
+
+_Har._ Ha! here's Musick to delight us.
+
+[_Two Chairs rises._ Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche _sits down, and are
+caught fast_.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! the Devil. We are lock'd in.
+
+_Har._ As fast as a Counter Rat.
+
+_Enter several Devils, who black_ Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche's _Faces,
+and then squirt Milk upon them_. _After the Dance they both sink._
+
+_Scar. and Har._ O' o, o'----
+
+
+_The End of the Second Act._
+
+
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+
+SCENE _a Wood_.
+
+Mephostopholis _and Dr._ Faustus.
+
+_Faust._ How have I been delighted by thy Art; and in Twelve Years have
+seen the utmost Limits of the spacious World; feasted my self with all
+Varieties; pleasur'd my Fancy with my Magick Art, and liv'd sole Lord
+o'er every Thing I wish'd for.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, is it not a splendid Life?
+
+_Faust._ It is my Spirit; but prithee now retire, while I repose my
+self within this Shade, and when I wake attend on me again.
+
+_Meph._ _Faust_, I will. [_Exit._
+
+_Faust._ What art thou, _Faustus_, but a Man condemn'd. Thy Lease of
+Years expire apace; and, _Faustus_, then thou must be _Lucifers_: Here
+rest my Soul, and in my Sleep my future State be buried.
+
+_Good and bad Angel descends._
+
+_Good An._ _Faustus_, sweet _Faustus_, yet remember Heav'n. Oh! think
+upon the everlasting Pain thou must endure, For all thy short Space of
+Pleasure.
+
+_Bad An._ Illusions, Fancies, _Faustus_; think of Earth. The Kings thou
+shalt command: The Pleasures Rule. Be, _Faustus_, not a whining, pious
+Fool. [_Ascend._
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser.
+
+_Hors._ Oh! what a couz'ning Doctor was this: I riding my Horse into the
+Water, thinking some hidden Mystery had been in 'em, found my self on a
+Bundle of Straw, and was drag'd by Something in the Water, like a
+Bailiff through a Horse-pond. Ha! he's a Sleep: So ho, Mr. Doctor, so
+ho. Why Doctor, you couz'ning, wheedling, hypocritical, cheating,
+chousing, Son of a Whore; awake, rise, and give me my Mony again, for
+your Horse is turn'd into a Bottle of Hay. Why Sirrah, Doctor; 'sfoot I
+think he's dead. Way Doctor Scab; you mangy Dog. [_pulls him by the
+Leg._ 'Zounds I'm undone, I have pull'd his Leg off.
+
+_Faust._ O help! the Villain has undone me; Murder.
+
+_Hors._ Murder, or not Murder, now he has but one Leg I'll out-run him.
+[_Exit._
+
+_Faust._ Stop, stop him; ha, ha, ha, _Faustus_ has his Leg again, and
+the Horse-courser a Bundle of Hay for his Forty Dollars. Come,
+_Mephostopholis_, let's now attend the Emperor. [_Exit_ Faust. _and_
+Meph.
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser, _and_ Carter, _with Pots of Ale_.
+
+_Cart._ Here's to thee; and now I'll tell thee what I came hither for:
+You have heard of a Conjurer they call Doctor _Faustus_.
+
+_Hors._ Heard of him, a Plague take him, I have Cause to know him; has
+he play'd any Pranks with you?
+
+_Cart._ I'll tell thee, as I was going to the Market a while ago, with
+a Load of Hay, he met me, and askt me, What he should give me for as
+much Hay as his Horse would Eat: Now, Sir, I thinking that a little
+would serve his Turn, bad him take as much as he would for Three
+Farthings.
+
+_Hors._ So.
+
+_Cart._ So he presently gave me Mony, and fell to Eating: And as I'm a
+cursen Man, he never left Yeating and Yeating, 'till he had eaten up my
+whole Load of Hay.
+
+_Hors._ Now you shall hear how he serv'd me: I went to him Yesterday to
+buy a Horse of him, which I did; and he had me be sure not to ride him
+into the Water.
+
+_Cart._ Good.
+
+_Hors._ Ad's Wounds 'twas Bad, as you shall hear: For I thinking the
+Horse had some rare Quality, that he would not have me know, what do me
+I but rides him in the Water; and when I came just in the midst of the
+River, I found my self a Straddle on a Bottle of Hay.
+
+_Cart._ O rare Doctor!
+
+_Hors._ But you shall hear how I serv'd him bravely for it; for finding
+him a Sleep just now in a By-Field, I whoop'd and hollow'd in his Ears,
+but could not wake him; so I took hold of his Leg, and never left
+pulling till I had pull'd it quite off.
+
+_Cart._ And has the Doctor but one Leg then? That's Rare. But come, this
+is his House, let's in and see for our Mony; look you, we'll pay as we
+come back.
+
+_Hors._ Done, done; and when we have got our Mony let's laugh at his one
+Leg: Ha, ha, ha. [_Exeunt Laughing._
+
+_Enter_ Hostess.
+
+_Host._ What have the Rogues left my Pots, and run away, without paying
+their Reck'ning? I'll after 'em, cheating Villains, Rogues, Cut-purses;
+rob a poor Woman, cheat the Spittle, and rob the King of his Excise; a
+parcel of Rustick, Clownish, Pedantical, High-shoo'd, Plow-jobbing,
+Cart-driving, Pinch-back'd, Paralytick, Fumbling, Grumbling, Bellowing,
+Yellowing, Peas-picking, Stinking, Mangy, Runagate, Ill-begotten,
+Ill-contriv'd, Wry-mouth'd, Spatrifying, Dunghill-raking, Costive,
+Snorting, Sweaty, Farting, Whaw-drover Dogs. [_Exit_
+
+_Enter_ Faustus.
+
+_Faust._ My Time draws near, and 20 Years are past: I have but Four poor
+Twelve Months for my Life, and then I am damn'd for ever.
+
+_Enter an_ Old Man.
+
+_Old M._ O gentle _Faustus_, leave this damn'd Art; this Magick, that
+will charm thy Soul to Hell, and quite bereave thee of Salvation: Though
+thou hast now offended like a Man, do not, oh! do not persist in't like
+a Devil. It may be this my Exhortation seems harsh, and all unpleasant;
+let it not, for, gentle Son, I speak in tender Love and Pity of thy
+future Misery; and so have hope that this my kind Rebuke, checking thy
+Body, may preserve thy Soul.
+
+_Faust._ Where art thou, _Faustus_? Wretch, what hast thou done? O
+Friend, I feel thy Words to comfort my distressed Soul; retire, and let
+me ponder on my Sins.
+
+_Old M._ _Faustus_, I leave thee, but with grief of Heart, Fearing thy
+Enemy will near depart. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Meph._ Thou Traytor, I arrest thee for Disobedience to thy Sovereign
+Lord; revolt, or I'll in piece-meal tear thy Flesh.
+
+_Faust._ I do repent I e'er offended him; torment, sweet Friend, that
+old Man that durst disswade me from thy _Lucifer_.
+
+_Meph._ His Faith is great, I cannot touch his Soul; but what I can
+afflict his Body with I will.
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser _and_ Carter.
+
+_Hors._ We are come to drink a Health to your wooden Leg.
+
+_Faust._ My wooden Leg; what dost thou mean, Friend?
+
+_Hors._ Ha, ha! he has forgot his Leg.
+
+_Cart._ Psha, 'tis not a Leg he stands upon. Pray, let me ask you one
+Question; Are both your Legs Bed-fellows?
+
+_Faust._ Why dost thou ask?
+
+_Cart._ Because I believe you have a good Companion of one.
+
+_Hors._ Why, don't you remember I pull'd off one o' your Legs when you
+were a Sleep?
+
+_Faust._ But I have it again now I am awake.
+
+_Cart._ Ad's Wounds, had the Doctor three Legs!----You, Sir, don't you
+remember you gave a Peny for as much Hay as your Horse would eat, and
+then eat up my whole Load.
+
+_Hors._ Look you, Mr. Doctor, you must not carry it off so; I come to
+have the Mony again I gave for the Ho-o-o-
+
+[Faustus _waves his Wand_.
+
+_Cart._ And I come to be paid far my Load of Ha-a-a.
+
+_Enter_ Hostess.
+
+_Host._ O Mr. Doctor! do you harbour Rogues that bilk poor Folks, and
+wont pay their Reck'nings? Who must pay me for my A-a-a-a [_Waves
+again._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ Mr. Doctor, I can't be quiet for your Devil Mr. _Me-o-o--_
+[_Waves again._
+
+[_Exeunt_ Faustus _and_ Mephostopholis. _They all stare at one another,
+and so go off, crying O, o, o, o- to the Emperor's Pallace._
+
+_Enter Emperor_, Faustus, _Gent. Guards._ Benoolio _above_.
+
+_Emp._ Wonder of Men, thrice Learned _Faustus_, Renowned Magician,
+welcome to our Court; and as thou late didst promise us, I would behold
+the Famous _Alexander_ fighting with his great Rival _Darius_, in their
+true Shapes, and State Majestical.
+
+_Faust._ Your Majesty shall see 'em presently.
+
+_Ben._ If thou bring'st _Alexander_, or _Darius_ here, I'll be content
+to be _Actæon_, and turn my self to a Stag.
+
+_Faust._ And I'll play _Diana_, and send you the Horns presently.
+
+_Enter_ Darius _and_ Alexander; _they Fight_: Darius _falls_. Alexander
+_takes his Crown, and puts it on his Head_.
+
+[_Exit._ Darius _sinks_.
+
+_Faust._ Away, be gon; see, my Gracious Lord, what Beast is that that
+thrusts his Head out of yon' Window.
+
+_Emp._ O wondrous Sight! see two Horns on young _Benoolio_'s Head; call
+him, Lords.
+
+_Lord._ What, ho! _Benoolio_.
+
+_Ben._ A Plague upon you, let me Sleep.
+
+_Lord._ Look up, _Benoolio_, 'tis the Emperor calls.
+
+_Ben._ The Emperor; O my Head.
+
+_Faust._ And thy Horns hold, 'tis no matter for thy Head.
+
+_Ben._ Doctor, this is your Villany.
+
+_Faust._ O say not so, Sir; the Doctor has no Skill, if he bring
+_Alexander_ or _Darius_ here you'll be _Actæon_, and turn to a Stag:
+Therefore, if it please your Majesty, I'll bring a Kennel of Hounds to
+hunt him. Ho! _Helmot_, _Argiron_, _Asterot_.
+
+_Ben._ Hold, he'll raise a Kennel of Devils. Good, my Lord, intreat.
+
+_Emp._ Prithee remove his Horns, he has done Penance enough.
+
+_Faust._ Away; and remember hereafter you speak well of Scholars.
+
+_Ben._ If Scholars be such Cuckolds to put Horns upon honest Mens Heads,
+I'll ne'er trust Smooth-face and Small-band more: But if I been't
+reveng'd, may I be turn'd to a Gaping Oyster, and drink nothing but
+Salt-water.
+
+_Emp._ Come, _Faustus_, in recompence of this high Desert, Thou shalt
+command the State of _Germany_, and live belov'd of mighty _Carolus_.
+[_Exeunt omnes._
+
+
+SCENE _a Garden_.
+
+_Lord._ Nay, sweet _Benoolio_, let us sway thy Thoughts from this
+Attempt against the Conjurer.
+
+ _Ben._ My Head is lighter than it was by the Horns:
+ And yet my Heart's more pond'rous than my Head,
+ And pants, until I see the Conjurer dead.
+
+_2 Lord._ Consider.
+
+_Ben._ Away; disswade me not, he comes. [_Draws._
+
+_Enter_ Faustus _with a false Head_.
+
+ Now Sword strike home:
+ For Horns he gave, I'll have his Head anon.
+
+_Runs_ Faustus _through, he falls_.
+
+_Faust._ Oh, oh.
+
+_Ben._ Groan you, Mr. Doctor, now for his Head.
+
+[_Cuts his Head off._
+
+_Lord._ Struck with a willing Hand.
+
+_Ben._ First, on this Scull, in quittance of my Wrongs, I'll nail huge
+forked Horns within the Window where he yoak'd me first, that all the
+World may see my just Revenge; and thus having settled his Head----
+
+_Faust._ What shall the Body do, Gentlemen.
+
+_Ben._ The Devil's alive again?
+
+_Lord._ Give the Devil his Head again.
+
+ _Faust._ Nay, keep it; _Faustus_ will have Heads and Hands;
+ I call your Hearts to recompence this Deed.
+ Ho; _Asteroth_, _Belincoth_, _Mephostopholis_.
+
+_Enter Devils, and Horse 'em upon others._
+
+ Go Horse these Traytors on your fiery Backs.
+ Drag 'em through Dirt and Mud, through Thorns and Briers.
+
+_Lord._ Pity us, gentle _Faustus_, save our Lives.
+
+_Faust._ Away.
+
+_Ben._ He must needs go whom the Devil drives.
+
+[_Spirits fly away._ _Exit_ Faustus.
+
+
+SCENE _a Hall_.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _in a Beggar's Habit_.
+
+_Harl._ I find this _Scaramouche_ is a Villain; he has left the Doctor,
+and is come to be Steward to a rich Widdow, whose Husband dyed
+Yesterday, and here he is coming to give the Poor their Doles, of which
+I'll ha' my Share.
+
+Scaramouche, _and poor People, with a Basket of Bread and Money_.
+
+_Scar._ Come hither, poor Devils; stand in Order, and be Damn'd. I came
+to distribute what your deceased good Master hath bequeath'd. [_They all
+stare at_ Scar.
+
+_Harl._ God bless you, Mr. Steward.
+
+_Scar._ Let me tell you, Gentlemen, he was as good a Man as ever piss'd,
+or cry'd Stand on the High-way.
+
+[Scaramouche _takes out a Leaf and a Shilling, holds it out, and_
+Harlequin _takes it_.
+
+He spent a good Estate, 'tis true; but he was no Body's Foe but his own.
+I never left him while he was worth a Groat. [_Again._] He would now and
+then Curse in his Passion, and give a Soul to the Devil, or so; yet,
+what of that? He always paid his Club, and no Man can say he owes this.
+[_Again._] He had a Colt's Tooth, and over-laid one of his Maids; yet,
+what of that? All Flesh is frail. [_Again._] 'Tis thought that her Body
+workt him off on his Legs; why, what of that? his Legs were his own, and
+his Arse never hung in your Light. [_Again._] Sometimes, you'll say, he
+wou'd rap out an Oath; what then, Words are but Wind, and he meant no
+more harm than a sucking Pig does by squeaking. [_Again._] Now let's
+consider his good Deeds; he brew'd a Firkin of strong Drink for the poor
+every Year, and kill'd an old Ram every _Easter_: The Meat that was
+stale, and his Drink that was sowre, was always yours. [_Again._] He
+allow'd you in Harvest to Glean after his Rake. [_Again._] And now, at
+his Death, has given you all this. [_Again._
+
+_Scar._ So, setting the Hare's Head against the Goose Giblets, he was a
+good Hospitable Man; and much good may do you with what you had.
+
+_Poor._ I have had nothing.
+
+_2 Poor._ Nor I.
+
+_3 Po._ Nor I.
+
+_4 Po._ Nor. I.
+
+_Scar._ Nothing.
+
+_All._ Nothing, nothing.
+
+_Scar._ Nothing, nothing; you lying Rogues, then there's something for
+you. [_Beats 'em all off._
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _in a Cloak, laughing_.
+
+_Har._ So now I am Victual'd, I may hold out Siege against Hunger. [_A
+Noise within; this way, this way._
+
+Ha! they are hunting after me, and will kill me. Let me see, I will take
+this Gibbet for my Preserver, and with this long Cloak make as if I were
+hang'd. Now when they find a Man hang'd, not knowing me in this
+Disguise, they'll look no farther after me, but think the Thief's
+hang'd.----I hear 'em coming. [_Throws himself off the Ladder._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! what's here, a Man hang'd? But what Paper is this in his
+Hand?
+
+[_Whil'st_ Scaramouche _reads_, Harlequin _puts the Rope over him_.
+
+I have cheated the Poor of their Mony, and took the Bread out of their
+Mouths, for which I was much troubled in Conscience, fell into Dispair,
+and, as you see, hang'd my self.
+
+[_Pulls him up, and runs out_
+
+O the Devil! Murder, murder!
+
+_Enter_ Poor.
+
+_Poor._ O Neighbours, here hangs the Rogue.
+
+_Scar._ Help me down?
+
+_Poor._ No, you are very well as you are.
+
+_Scar._ Don't you know me?
+
+_Poor._ Ay, for a Rogue; e'en finish your Work, and save the Hang-man a
+Labour. Yet, now I think on't, self-murder is a crying Sin, and may damn
+his Soul. Come, Neighbours, we'll take him down, and have him hang'd
+according to Law. [_When he's down he trips up their Heels, and runs
+out, they after him._
+
+_All._ Stop Thief, stop Thief.
+
+_Thunder and Lightning_; Lucifer, Beelzebub, _and_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Luc._ Thus from the infernal _Dis_ do we ascend, bringing with us the
+Deed; the Time is come which makes it forfeit.
+
+_Enter_ Faustus, _an old Man, and a Scholar_.
+
+_Old M._ Yet, _Faustus_, call on Heav'n.
+
+_Faust._ Oh! 'tis too late; behold, they lock my Hands.
+
+_Old M._ Who, _Faustus_?
+
+_Faust._ _Lucifer_ and _Mephostopholis_; I gave 'em my Soul for Four and
+twenty Years.
+
+_Old M._ Heav'n forbid.
+
+_Fau._ Ay, Heav'n forbad it indeed, but _Faustus_ has done it; for the
+vain Pleasure of Four and twenty Years, _Faustus_ has lost eternal Joy
+and Felicity: I writ 'em a Bill with my own Blood, the Date is expired;
+this is the Time, and they are come to fetch me.
+
+_Old M._ Why would not _Faustus_ tell me of that before?
+
+_Faust._ I oft intended it, but the Devil threat'ned to tear me in
+Pieces. O Friend, retire, and save your self.
+
+_Old M._ I'll into the next Room, and there pray for thee.
+
+_Faust._ Ay, pray for me; and what Noise soever you hear stir not, for
+nothing can rescue me.
+
+_Old M._ Pray thou, and I'll pray. Adieu.
+
+_Faust._ If I live till Morning I'll visit you; if not, _Faustus_ is gon
+to Hell. [_Exeunt old Man and Scholar._
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, now thou hast no hopes on Heav'n.
+
+ _Faust._ O thou bewitching Fiend; 'twas thou, and thy
+ Temptations, hath rob'd me of eternal Happiness.
+
+ _Meph._ I do confess it, _Faustus_, and rejoyce.
+ What weep'st thou, 'tis too late; hark to thy Knell:
+ Fools that will Laugh on Earth, must Weep in Hell.
+
+_Ext._
+
+_Good and bad Angel descend._
+
+ _Good An._ O _Faustus_, if thou hadst given Ear to me,
+ Innumerable Joys had followed thee:
+ But thou didst love the World.
+
+_Bad An._ Gave Ear to me, and now must taste Hell's Pains perpetual.
+
+_Throne of Heaven appears._
+
+ _Good An._ Had'st thou affected sweet Divinity,
+ Hell, nor the Devil, had no Power on thee.
+ Had'st thou kept on that way, _Faustus_, behold in what resplendid
+ Glory thou had'st sat; that hast thou Lost.
+ And now, poor Soul, must thy good Angel leave:
+ The Jaws of Hell are ready to receive thee. [_Ascends._
+
+_Hell is discovered._
+
+ _Bad An._ Now, _Faustus_, let thy Eyes with Horror stare
+ Into that Vast perpetual torturing House.
+
+_Faust._ O I have seen enough to torture me.
+
+ _Bad An._ Nay thou must feel 'em, 'taste the Smart of all.
+ He that loves Pleasure must for Pleasure fall:
+ And so I leave thee, _Faustus_, till anon.
+ Thou'lt tumble into Confusion. [_Descends._
+
+_The Clock strikes Eleven._
+
+ _Faust._ Now, _Faustus_, hast thou but one bear Hour to Live,
+ And then thou must be Damn'd perpetually:
+ Stand still you ever-moving Spheres of Heav'n,
+ That Time may cease, and Mid-night never come.
+
+Or let this Hour be but a Year, a Month, a Week, a natural Day; that
+_Faustus_ may repent, and save his Soul. Mountains and Hills come, come,
+and fall on me, and hide me from the heavy Wrath of Heav'n. Gape Earth;
+Oh no, it will not harbour me. [_The Clock strikes._ Oh! half the Hour
+is past; 'twill all be past anon. Oh! if my Soul must suffer for my Sin,
+impose some end to my incessant Pain. Let _Faustus_ live in Hell a
+Thousand Years, an Hundred thousand, and at last be sav'd. [_Strikes
+Twelve._ No End is limitted to damn'd Souls: It strikes, it strikes.
+Now, Body, turn to Air, to Earth, or Water. Oh! avoid the Fire: They
+come. Oh! mercy, Heaven; ugly Hell gape not. Come not _Lucifer_; O
+_Mephostopholis_.
+
+[_Sink with Devils. Thunder._
+
+_Enter old Man and Scholar._
+
+_Old M._ Come, Friend, let's visit _Faustus_: For such a dreadful Night
+was never seen.
+
+_Scene discovers_ Faustus's _Limbs_.
+
+ _Schol._ O help us, Heav'n; see here are _Faustus_'s Limbs,
+ All torn asunder by the Hand of Hell.
+
+ _Old M._ May this a fair Example be to all,
+ To avoid such Ways which brought poor _Faustus_'s Fall.
+ And whatsoever Pleasure does invite,
+ Sell not your Souls to purchase vain Delight.
+
+[_Exeunt._
+
+_Scene changes to Hell._
+
+Faustus _Limbs come together_. _A Dance, and Song._
+
+
+_FINIS._
+
+
+
+
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK
+ MEMORIAL LIBRARY
+
+ UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
+
+ The Augustan Reprint Society
+
+ PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT
+
+
+The Augustan Reprint Society
+
+PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT
+
+=1948-1949=
+
+16. Henry Nevil Payne, _The Fatal Jealousie_ (1673).
+
+17. Nicholas Rowe, _Some Account of the Life of Mr. William Shakespear_
+ (1709).
+
+18. Anonymous, "Of Genius," in _The Occasional Paper_, Vol. III, No. 10
+ (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface to _The Creation_ (1720).
+
+=1949-1950=
+
+19. Susanna Centlivre, _The Busie Body_ (1709).
+
+20. Lewis Theobald, _Preface to the Works of Shakespeare_ (1734).
+
+22. Samuel Johnson, _The Vanity of Human Wishes_ (1749), and two
+ _Rambler_ papers (1750).
+
+23. John Dryden, _His Majesties Declaration Defended_ (1681).
+
+=1951-1952=
+
+26. Charles Macklin, _The Man of the World_ (1792).
+
+31. Thomas Gray, _An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard_ (1751), and
+ _The Eton College Manuscript_.
+
+=1952-1953=
+
+41. Bernard Mandeville, _A Letter to Dion_ (1732).
+
+=1962-1963=
+
+98. Selected Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert's _Temple_ ... (1697).
+
+=1964-1965=
+
+109. Sir William Temple, _An Essay Upon the Original and Nature of
+ Government_ (1680).
+
+110. John Tutchin, _Selected Poems_ (1685-1700).
+
+111. Anonymous, _Political Justice_ (1736).
+
+112. Robert Dodsley, _An Essay on Fable_ (1764).
+
+113. T. R., _An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning_ (1698).
+
+114. Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted, _One Epistle to Mr. A.
+ Pope_ (1730), and Anonymous, _The Blatant Beast_ (1742).
+
+=1965-1966=
+
+115. Daniel Defoe and others, _Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal_.
+
+116. Charles Macklin, _The Covent Garden Theatre_ (1752).
+
+117. Sir Roger L'Estrange, _Citt and Bumpkin_ (1680).
+
+118. Henry More, _Enthusiasmus Triumphatus_ (1662).
+
+119. Thomas Traherne, _Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation_
+ (1717).
+
+120. Bernard Mandeville, _Aesop Dress'd or a Collection of Fables_
+ (1740).
+
+=1966-1967=
+
+123. Edmond Malone, _Cursory Observations on the Poems Attributed to Mr.
+ Thomas Rowley_ (1782).
+
+124. Anonymous, _The Female Wits_ (1704).
+
+125. Anonymous, _The Scribleriad_ (1742). Lord Hervey, _The Difference
+ Between Verbal and Practical Virtue_ (1742).
+
+=1967-1968=
+
+129. Lawrence Echard, Prefaces to _Terence's Comedies_ (1694) and
+ _Plautus's Comedies_ (1694).
+
+=1968-1969=
+
+133. John Courtenay, _A Poetical Review of the Literary and Moral
+ Character of the Late Samuel Johnson_ (1786).
+
+134. John Downes, _Roscius Anglicanus_ (1708).
+
+135. Sir John Hill, _Hypochondriasis, a Practical Treatise_ (1766).
+
+136. Thomas Sheridan, _Discourse ... Being Introductory to His Course of
+ Lectures on Elocution and the English Language_ (1759).
+
+137. Arthur Murphy, _The Englishman From Paris_ (1736).
+
+=1969-1970=
+
+138. [Catherine Trotter], _Olinda's Adventures_ (1718).
+
+139. John Ogilvie, _An Essay on the Lyric Poetry of the Ancients_
+ (1762).
+
+140. _A Learned Dissertation on Dumpling_ (1726) and _Pudding Burnt to
+ Pot or a Compleat Key to the Dissertation on Dumpling_ (1727).
+
+141. Selections from Sir Roger L'Estrange's _Observator_ (1681-1687).
+
+142. Anthony Collins, _A Discourse Concerning Ridicule and Irony in
+ Writing_ (1729).
+
+143. _A Letter From A Clergyman to His Friend, With An Account of the
+ Travels of Captain Lemuel Gulliver_ (1726).
+
+144. _The Art of Architecture, A Poem. In Imitation of Horace's Art of
+ Poetry_ (1742).
+
+=1970-1971=
+
+145-146. Thomas Shelton, _A Tutor to Tachygraphy, or Short-writing_
+ (1642) and _Tachygraphy_ (1647).
+
+147-148. _Deformities of Dr. Samuel Johnson_ (1782).
+
+149. _Poeta de Tristibus: or the Poet's Complaint_ (1682).
+
+150. Gerard Langbaine, _Momus Triumphans: or the Plagiaries of the
+ English Stage_ (1687).
+
+=1971-1972=
+
+151-152. Evan Lloyd, _The Methodist_. A Poem (1766).
+
+153. _Are these Things So?_ (1740), and _The Great Man's Answer to Are
+ these Things So?_ (1740).
+
+154. Arbuthnotiana: _The Story of the St. Alb-ns Ghost_ (1712), and _A
+ Catalogue of Dr. Arbuthnot's Library_ (1779).
+
+155-156. A Selection of Emblems from Herman Hugo's _Pia Desideria_
+ (1624), with English Adaptations by Francis Quarles and Edmund
+ Arwaker.
+
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Life And Death of Doctor Faustus Made Into a Farce, by William Mountfort.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made
+into a Farce, by William Mountfort
+
+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 Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made into a Farce
+
+Author: William Mountfort
+
+Editor: Anthony Kaufman
+
+Release Date: September 14, 2011 [EBook #37422]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND DEATH OF DOCTOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Katie Hernandez, Joseph Cooper
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/i_cover.png" width="600" height="983" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<h4>To</h4>
+<h3>H. T. Swedenberg, Junior</h3>
+<h5><i>founder</i>, <i>protector</i>, <i>friend</i></h5>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/i_001.png" width="600" height="649" alt="He that delights to Plant and Set,
+Makes After-Ages in his Debt." title="" />
+<span class="caption">He that delights to Plant and Set,
+Makes After-Ages in his Debt.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">
+Where could they find another formed so fit,<br />
+
+To poise, with solid sense, a sprightly wit?<br />
+Were these both wanting, as they both abound,<br />
+Where could so firm integrity be found?<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The verse and emblem are from George Wither, <i>A Collection
+of Emblems, Ancient and Modern</i> (London, 1635), illustration
+xxxv, page 35.</p>
+
+<p>The lines of poetry (123-126) are from "To My Honoured
+Kinsman John Driden," in John Dryden, <i>The Works of John
+Dryden</i>, ed. Sir Walter Scott, rev. and corr. George Saintsbury
+(Edinburgh: William Patterson, 1885), xi, 78.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Augustan Reprint Society</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">WILLIAM MOUNTFORT</p>
+
+<h3>The
+LIFE and DEATH
+of
+<i>Doctor Faustus</i>
+Made into a
+FARCE</h3>
+
+<h4>(1697)</h4>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Introduction by</i>
+<span class="smcap">Anthony Kaufman</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">PUBLICATION NUMBER 157</p>
+
+<p class="center">WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">University of California, Los Angeles</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">1973</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>GENERAL EDITORS</h3>
+
+<blockquote>
+William E. Conway, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library<br />
+George Robert Guffey, University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+Maximillian E. Novak, University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+David S. Rodes, University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>ADVISORY EDITORS</h3>
+
+<blockquote>
+Richard C. Boys, University of Michigan<br />
+James L. Clifford, Columbia University<br />
+Ralph Cohen, University of Virginia<br />
+Vinton A. Dearing, University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+Arthur Friedman, University of Chicago<br />
+Louis A. Landa, Princeton University<br />
+
+Earl Miner, Princeton University<br />
+Samuel H. Monk, University of Minnesota<br />
+Everett T. Moore, University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+Lawrence Clark Powell, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library<br />
+James Sutherland, University College, London<br />
+H. T. Swedenberg, Jr., University of California, Los Angeles<br />
+Robert Vosper, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library<br />
+Carl A. Zimansky, State University of Iowa<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CORRESPONDING SECRETARY</h3>
+
+<blockquote>Edna C. Davis, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library</blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>EDITORIAL ASSISTANT</h3>
+
+<blockquote>Jean T. Shebanek, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+Typography by Wm. M. Cheney</blockquote>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+<p>According to "Some Account of the Life of Mr. W. Mountfort"
+prefixed to the collected plays of 1720, William Mountfort,
+successful playwright and actor, was born "the Son of
+Captain <i>Mountfort</i>, a Gentleman of a good Family in <i>Staffordshire</i>;
+and he spent the greatest Part of his Younger Years in
+that County, without being bred up to any Employment." Since
+"his Gaiety of Temper and Airy Disposition ... could not be
+easily restrain'd to the solitary Amusements of a Rural Life,"<a name="FNanchor_1_1"id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1"class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+he set out to make his fortune in London, and was employed by
+the Duke's Company at the Dorset Garden Theater. First notice
+of him appears in the part of the "boy" in <i>The Counterfeits</i>, attributed
+to John Leanerd, and produced in May, 1678.<a name="FNanchor_2_2"id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2"class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>Mountfort was to win notice as an actor in the part of
+Talboy in Brome's <i>The Jovial Crew</i>, where as a rejected lover
+he was called upon for storms of comic tears. In his <i>Apology</i>,
+Cibber praises Mountfort in this part: "in his Youth, he had
+acted Low Humour, with great Success, even down to <i>Tallboy</i>
+
+in the <i>Jovial Crew</i>"<a name="FNanchor_3_3"id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3"class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and Mountfort himself alluded to his early
+success in the prologue to his first play, <i>The Injured Lovers</i>,
+where he defies the critics: "True Talboy to the last I'll Cry and
+Write."</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort scored his first major success as an actor when
+he played the title role in Crowne's <i>Sir Courtly Nice</i>. The
+play's popularity owed much to Mountfort's acting of a part
+which recalls Etherege's Sir Fopling Flutter. The "Account" of
+1720 says that Mountfort "gain'd a great and deserved
+Reputation, as a Player; particularly in Acting the part of Sir
+<i>Courtly Nice</i>," and Cibber, who was later to create the great Sir
+Novelty Fashion, says of Mountfort's Sir Courtly:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>There his whole Man, Voice, Mien, and Gesture, was
+no longer <i>Monfort</i>, but another Person. There, the insipid,
+soft Civility, the elegant, and formal Mien; the
+drawling delicacy of Voice, the stately Flatness of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span>
+
+Address, and the empty Eminence of his Attitudes
+were ... nicely observ'd.... If, some Years after the
+Death of <i>Monfort</i>, I my self had any Success, in either
+of these Characters, I must pay the Debt I owe to his
+Memory, in confessing the Advantages I receiv'd from
+the just Idea, and strong Impression he had given me,
+from his action them (<i>Apology</i>, p. 76).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>In 1686, Mountfort married one of the attractive young actresses
+then appearing in London, Susanna Percival, and the
+Mountforts appeared together in a number of plays until his
+untimely death.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort brought his first play, <i>The Injured Lovers</i>: or,
+<i>The Ambitious Father</i>, a tragedy, to be acted at Drury Lane
+early in February, 1688. The play was not a great success.
+Gildon mentions that it "did not succeed as the Author
+wish'd,"<a name="FNanchor_4_4"id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4"class="fnanchor">[4]</a> although the play was brilliantly cast, with Betterton,
+Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Mrs. Barry in chief parts. Mountfort himself
+played second lead to Betterton, and the comedians
+Leigh, Jevon, and Underhill appeared in boisterous roles. But
+this rather extravagant account of passion and thwarted love
+did not take. Such lines as the heroine's "Thy <i>Antelina</i>, she
+shall be the Pile / On which I'll burn, and as I burn I'll smile,"
+reveals an uncertain poetic talent. In the prologue Mountfort
+manages more wit:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+JO. <i>Hayne's Fate is now become my Share,<br />
+For I'm a Poet, Marry'd, and a Player:<br />
+The greatest of these Curses is the First;<br />
+
+As for the latter Two, I know the worst ...</i><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And of the play's fate:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<i>Damn it who will, Damn me, I'll write again;<br />
+Clap down each Thought, nay, more than I can think,<br />
+
+Ruin my Family in Pen and Ink.<br />
+And tho' my Heart should burst to see your Spite,<br />
+True Talboy to the last, I'll Cry and Write....</i><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Unsuccessful at tragedy, Mountfort moved to surer ground, and
+if tragedy did not sell on the market of the 1680's, farce was
+surefire. Mountfort's <i>The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus,
+Made into a Farce ... with the Humours of Harlequin and
+Scaramouche</i>, is a most interesting example of Restoration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span>
+
+farce. The Queen's Theater in Dorset Garden was well-fitted
+for stage spectacle and effect, and Mountfort took advantage of
+his knowledge of the stage and the contemporary audience to
+produce an amusing and popular hit. The play was revived in
+1697, five years after Mountfort's death, and again in 1724, at a
+time when, as Borgman tells us (p. 39), <i>The Injured Lovers</i> had
+been long forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort continued his acting career with great success;
+he was one of twenty-two men and six women who, on 12
+January 1688, were given the position of "Comoedians in Ordinary"
+to King James, and he acted in a variety of plays, including
+Shadwell's <i>The Squire of Alsatia</i>, in May, 1688, and
+<i>Bury Fair</i>, in April, 1689. In Dryden's <i>Don Sebastian</i>, produced
+in December, 1689, he played the young and noble Don Antonio,
+described as "the wittiest Woman's toy in Portugal."
+Although Mountfort was best known for comic roles, he
+scored a success as Alexander in Nathaniel Lee's <i>The Rival
+Queens</i>, January, 1690. Cibber says of his Alexander:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In Tragedy he was the most affecting Lover within my
+Memory. His Addresses had a resistless Recommendation
+from the very Tone of his Voice ... All this he
+particularly verify'd in that Scene of <i>Alexander</i>,
+where the Heroe throws himself at the Feet of <i>Statira</i>
+for Pardon of his past Infidelities. There we saw the
+Great, the Tender, the Penitent, the Despairing, the
+Transported, and the Amiable, in the highest Perfection
+(<i>Apology</i>, pp. 74-75).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mountfort's third play was acted in January, 1690, although
+it may have been produced as early as December of the
+previous year. <i>The Successful Strangers</i>, a tragi-comedy, was
+based on a novel by Scarron, <i>The Rival Brothers</i>. In his
+Preface, Mountfort confesses, "<i>I am no Scholar, which renders
+me incapable of stealing from Greek and Latin Authors, as the
+better Learned have done</i>". The play was a success; its combination
+of comedy and tragedy appealed to the town, and it
+was revived several times in the early eighteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>As Borgman notes (p. 80), Mountfort's acting career
+peaked in the season of 1690-1691, when he acted nine new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span>
+roles, eight of which were leads. He also prepared a comedy of
+his own, <i>Greenwich Park</i>, and assisted in the writing or
+preparation of three other plays. He assisted Settle with
+<i>Distress'd Innocence</i>, and his name is linked with two plays by
+John Bancroft, <i>Edward III</i> and <i>Henry the Second</i>, although his
+contribution here, if any, is uncertain. The publishers of the
+collected plays of 1720 note that "we have annex'd, <i>King Edward
+the Third</i>, and <i>Henry the Second</i>; which tho' not wholly
+composed by him, it is presum'd he had, at least, a Share in fitting
+them for the Stage, otherwise it cannot be supposed he
+would have taken the Liberty of Writing Dedications to them."
+Borgman says of these plays that Mountfort "doubtless scanned
+the script with a critical eye and made such changes as would
+seem necessary to an experienced man of the theater" (p. 90).</p>
+
+<p>In <i>Greenwich Park</i>, Mountfort scored his greatest success.
+The comedy is a hilarious mixture of the comedy of manners,
+humours, and farce. The prologue sounds the dominant motif
+of the play, that of satiric and energetic sex-intrigue: "At
+Greenwich lies the Scene, where many a Lass / Has bin Green-gown'd
+upon the tender Grass." The play hits wittily at fortune-hunters,
+cits, and old fellows who attempt to ignore their age.
+There is heavy reference to the contemporary London scene.
+The comedy was produced in April, 1691, with great success;
+Gildon says of it: "a very pretty Comedy, and has been always
+received with general Applause" (<i>Lives and Characters</i>, p.
+102). The gay and witty Florella was played by Mrs. Mountfort&mdash;who
+played a part very much like that in which she was
+so successful previously, Sir Anthony Love. Mrs. Barry played
+the passionate Dorinda, a promiscuous and mercenary woman
+who, at one point in the play, cries out in the best tradition of
+sentimental comedy: "Oh what a Curse 'tis, when for filthy
+Gain / We affect a Pleasure in a real Pain." Sir Thomas
+Reveller, the heavy but comic father, was played by Leigh;
+Nokes and Underhill played comic cits, and Mountfort himself
+played opposite his wife as Young Reveller. The play was
+revived repeatedly, and remains a delightful work.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort's best part of his last year came in December,
+1691, when he played the hilarious lout, Mr. Friendall, of
+Southerne's <i>The Wives' Excuse</i>. The play is good comedy, but
+quite serious, as Southerne focuses on the distress of an intelligent,
+sensitive woman, saddled with a foolish husband who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span>
+is the perfect representative of a frivolous and malicious
+society. On Friday, 2 December 1692, Mountford acted what
+must have been his final role, Alexander in <i>The Rival Queens</i>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Mountfort's life ended at the height of his fame, in the
+most spectacular and dramatic murder of its time. The
+notorious Lord Mohun, then age fifteen, frequented the
+playhouse in 1692, often in the company of Captain Richard
+Hill, age twenty. Hill hoped to win the affections of Anne
+Bracegirdle, known not only for her beauty and acting ability,
+but also for her chastity&mdash;supposedly a scarce virtue among the
+actresses of the time. In <i>A Comparison between the Two
+Stages</i>, the following dialogue takes place:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>Sullen</i>: But does that <i>Romantick Virgin</i> [Bracegirdle] still
+keep up her great Reputation?</p>
+
+<p><i>Critick</i>: D'ye mean her Reputation for Acting?</p>
+
+<p><i>Sullen</i>: I mean her Reputation for not acting; you understand
+me&mdash;....<a name="FNanchor_5_5"id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5"class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Hill, making no headway with Mrs. Bracegirdle, concluded
+that she was in fact interested in Mountfort; they had often appeared
+on the stage together. More than once Hill was heard to
+utter threats against the actor, although Mohun was apparently
+on friendly terms with Mountfort Hill, determined to abduct
+the actress, persuaded Mohun to be his accomplice. They set
+Friday, 9 December 1692, as the date, and about ten o'clock in
+the evening, accompanied by some soldiers under Hill's command,
+they ambushed Mrs. Bracegirdle, her mother and her
+brother, Hamlet Bracegirdle, along with a man named Page, in
+Drury Lane. The actress's mother and Mr. Page fended the
+villains off for a time, in a moment a crowd gathered, and the
+would-be kidnappers saw that their plan was useless. Hill
+escorted the actress home and after having muttered a threat at
+Mr. Page proceeded to pace up and down outside their door.
+Approximately an hour and a half later, Mountfort appeared in
+Howard Street&mdash;apparently intent on confronting Hill and
+Mohun. Mohun greeted the actor courteously and asked if he
+had been sent for. Mountfort professed that he did not know
+anything of the business at hand, that he had come there by
+chance, adding that Mrs. Bracegirdle was no concern of his.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>
+What happened then happened fast and the witnesses disagree
+(see Borgman, pp. 135ff). It would seem, however, that Hill
+first struck the actor, then quickly drew and ran him through
+before Mountfort could draw. On his deathbed, traditionally
+the locale for truth-telling, Mountfort reported that "<i>My Lord
+Mohun offered me no Violence, but whilst I was talking with
+my Lord Mohun, Hill struck me with his Left Hand, and with
+his Right Hand run me through, before I could put my Hand to
+my Sword</i>" (Borgman, p. 140). It would seem clear that Hill
+gave the actor his deathblow and then, while the cry of murder
+was raised, escaped into the night. Mountfort, fatally wounded,
+staggered toward his own home in the next street. As Mrs.
+Mountfort opened the door, her husband fell bleeding into her
+arms; at one o'clock in the afternoon of the next day, he died.
+According to the "Account," he was to have played Bussy
+D'Ambois that night&mdash;Marlowe's tragedy of a young man who
+meets his death through assassination.</p>
+
+<p>Although Hill made good his escape, Lord Mohun stood
+trial in Westminster before his peers. Mohun's defense was
+simply that he was not privy to Hill's design and did not assist
+and encourage him in it. The lords, having heard the evidence,
+retired, and the next day, Saturday, 5 February, acquitted
+Mohun of wrongdoing by a vote of 69-14. The prisoner was
+discharged.</p>
+
+<p>The United Company found themselves seriously hampered
+by the death of Mountfort, and even more so when fifteen
+days later the great comedian Anthony Leigh died. The
+"Account" says that Mountfort's death "had so great an Affect
+on his Dear Companion, Mr. LEE the Comedian, that he did not
+survive him above the space of a Week." The Company delayed
+the opening of a new play by one William Congreve, <i>The Old
+Bachelor</i>. But when that smash hit finally came on the boards
+in March 1693, Susanna Mountfort played the gay évaporée,
+Belinda, to great applause. And on 31 January 1694, she
+married the actor John Verbruggen. The rather mysterious
+Anne Bracegirdle, for whom Mountfort had been killed, played
+female leads in all of Congreve's plays, and just as the public
+had once speculated on her relationship to Mountfort, they now
+speculated on her relationship to Congreve.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Although farce was popular with London audiences during
+the Restoration, there was considerable controversy as to what
+it was and what it was worth. In a period in which the canon of
+English literary criticism was being formed, farce illustrates
+the disparity between received classical principles and the
+playwright's actual craft. Dryden, who himself "stooped" to
+writing farce, nonetheless sneers in his preface to <i>An
+Evening's Love, or The Mock-Astrologer</i> [1671]:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Farce ... consists principally of grimaces ... Comedy
+consists, though of low persons, yet of natural actions
+and characters; I mean such humours, adventures, and
+designs, as are to be found and met with in the world.
+Farce, on the other side, consists of forced humours,
+and unnatural events. Comedy presents us with the
+imperfections of human nature: Farce entertains us
+with what is monstrous and chimerical.<a name="FNanchor_6_6"id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6"class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Farce was theoretically unpopular because it relied on the extravagant
+and unnatural, as opposed to the play of real character
+found in comedy. And whereas in seventeenth-century
+comedy the avowed intention is usually to expose and thus to
+reform the vices and follies of the age, farce uses the grossly
+physical to draw a laugh; there is nothing to be learned from
+the slapstick and pigsbladder.</p>
+
+<p>Though sneered at by theorists and subject to endless
+abuse in the prologues and epilogues of the day, farce continued
+as pleasing to Restoration audiences as it is today. James
+Sutherland notes that shrewd actor-playwrights such as Mountfort,
+Betterton, Underhill, Jevon, Dogget, Powell&mdash;men who
+knew intimately the tastes of the town, chose to write farce.<a name="FNanchor_7_7"id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7"class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
+Tate's <i>A Duke and No Duke</i>, Aphra Behn's <i>The Emperor of the
+Moon</i>, and Jevon's <i>The Devil of a Wife</i>, were among the most
+popular offerings, and although the Restoration wit may have
+gone to "Dr. Faustus" with a certain sense of intellectual slumming,
+he did continue to support quite generously the <i>farceurs</i>
+of that time. Moreover, farcical elements appear regularly in
+the supposedly elegant and artificial Restoration comedy of
+manners.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Faustus" is a highly competent putting-together of
+those components which the experienced actor-playwright
+knew to be surefire. The date of its premier production is not
+known and has been assigned to a date as early as 1684 and as
+late as 1688. The farce was not published until the quarto of
+1697, which appeared without cast-list, prologue, or epilogue.<a name="FNanchor_8_8"id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8"class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+The title page, however, states that the farce was acted at Dorset
+Garden "several times," by "Lee" (Anthony Leigh) and
+Jevon, and, as the editor of <i>The London Stage</i> points out, since
+Jevon died in December of 1688, the premiere was probably no
+later than the season of 1687-1688.<a name="FNanchor_9_9"id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9"class="fnanchor">[9]</a> Borgman maintains that
+"Dr. Faustus" is Mountfort's second work, after <i>The Injured
+Lovers</i> of February, 1688, noting that the epilogue to that play,
+spoken by Jevon, suggests that Mountfort was planning, or had
+written, a farce:</p>
+
+<blockquote><i>
+Pardon but this, and I will pawn my life,<br />
+His next shall match my Devil of a Wife,<br />
+We'll grace it with the Imbellishment of Song and Dance;<br />
+We'll have the Monsieur once again from <i>France</i>,<br />
+With's Hoop and Glasses, and when that is done,<br />
+He shall divert you with his Riggadoon.<br />
+</i></blockquote>
+
+<p>We might guess, then, that if the epilogue does refer to "Dr.
+Faustus," the date of that play is as late as the Spring of 1688.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort took as his raw material Marlowe's great
+tragedy and for that reason "Dr. Faustus" may be to some extent
+thought of as a burlesque. The Restoration audience
+delighted in Marlowe's Faustus; the Elizabethan tragedy had
+been played in 1662, and there was a performance at the Duke's
+Theater in September, 1675. Edward Phillips wrote in his
+<i>Theatrum Poetarum</i>, that "of all that [Marlowe] hath written to
+the Stage his Dr. <i>Faustus</i> hath made the greatest noise with its
+Devils and such like Tragical sport."<a name="FNanchor_10_10"id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10"class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Here lies the suggestion
+that Mountfort was to take up, for as Borgman notes, Marlowe's
+tragedy has two distinct lines: the mighty verse which makes
+up the tragedy of an heroic overreacher, and a comic line of farcical
+<i>lazzi</i>. Mountfort has trimmed away the poetry of Marlowe
+and, for the most part, retained the farcical elements of the
+earlier play.<a name="FNanchor_11_11"id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11"class="fnanchor">[11]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mountfort keeps the compact with Mephostopholis, the appearance
+of good and bad angels, the visit of Lucifer and
+Beelzebub, the pageant of the seven deadly sins, the cheating of
+the horse-courser, the admonitions of the Old Man, the summoning
+of the spirits of Alexander and Darius, the tricking of
+Benvolio, the final moments of remorse before Faustus is
+dragged down to hell, and finally, the discovery of Faustus's
+limbs in his study. Mountfort's purpose, as Borgman notes, was
+not to convert an Elizabethan tragedy into a Restoration one,
+but to affix additional farcical materials to a work that already
+contained scenes of slapstick.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort's unique contribution to his source was the introduction
+of the <i>commedia dell'arte</i> figures which had
+become well-known to London theatergoers because of several
+visits to London by Italian actors since the Restoration.
+Probably, as Borgman notes (p. 36), the first Englishmen to play
+Scaramouche and Harlequin were Griffin and Haynes who had
+in 1677 appeared with the King's Company in Ravenscroft's
+<i>Scaramouch a Philosopher, Harlequin a School-Boy, Bravo,
+Merchant, and Magician</i>. When Aphra Behn's <i>The Emperor of
+the Moon</i> appeared in March, 1687, Leigh played Scaramouche
+and Harlequin was taken by Jevon. It seems probable that in order
+that these two actors might have a further opportunity to
+appear as these popular characters, a place was found for
+Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's farce.</p>
+
+<p>The text of Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" reveals that his
+farce, like any, must depend to a great extent on its <i>farceurs</i>. In
+Jevon and Leigh he had talented players and much of the script
+can be regarded merely as an improvisational chart allowing
+the two famed comics to maneuver. Jevon, as Leo Hughes
+points out, built up a considerable reputation, chiefly in low
+comedy roles since his first notice as Osric in a revival of
+Hamlet in 1673.<a name="FNanchor_12_12"id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12"class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Having a slight, thin figure, he was noted for
+his grace of movement and agility on the stage; he played
+Harlequin. Although Jevon could play such straight roles as
+Young Bellair in <i>The Man of Mode</i>, he, along with Nokes, Underhill,
+and Leigh, made his reputation in the boisterous farce
+of which "Dr. Faustus" is an excellent example.</p>
+
+<p>Anthony Leigh played Scaramouche. Of his acting Cibber
+says:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In Humour, he lov'd to take a full Career, but was
+careful enough to stop short, when just upon the
+Precipice: He had great Variety, in his manner, and
+was famous in very different Characters.... But no
+wonder <i>Leigh</i> arriv'd to such Fame, in what was so
+completely written for him; when Characters that
+would make the Reader yawn, in the Closet, have by
+the Strength of his Action, been lifted into the lowdest
+Laughter, on the Stage (<i>Apology</i>, p. 85-86).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>That Jevon and Leigh played well together is evident, and one
+can see great possibilities in their improvisation of such <i>lazzi</i>
+as the episode of the "dead body," Act I, Scene i, or in the
+elaborate show of compliment which ends the first act.</p>
+
+<p>The presence of Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's
+adaptation suggests the influence of the Italian and
+French <i>commedia</i> on the Restoration stage, although, as Leo
+Hughes points out, the native tradition of farce is paramount
+(pp. 134-141). Hughes notes that although the <i>commedia</i> influence
+is obvious, Italian farce is different in style from the
+English, and that although there were four or five tours by
+<i>commedia</i> troops between 1660 and 1700, these visits were not
+enough to influence significantly English farce writing. Furthermore,
+the Italian's art was improvisational&mdash;they used no
+printed texts, and the English would therefore have even less
+chance to copy from the <i>commedia</i>. Readers of "Dr. Faustus"
+will find little trace of <i>commedia</i> influence apart from the conventional
+names. Hughes acknowledges (p. 141) the greater influence
+of the French stage in the Restoration, owing chiefly to
+the great popularity of Molière, whose influence on farce,
+especially on the afterpiece which became a staple on the
+English stage after 1695, was long-lived. His prestige was great;
+he appealed to English taste, and such characters as M. Jourdain,
+M. Pourceaugnac, and Sganarelle appear repeatedly in
+English adaptations.</p>
+
+<p>The action of farce is typically a string of blow-ups, stage
+business highly dependent on fast pacing. Characteristically on
+the English stage there is a great deal of stage-effect; "Dr.
+Faustus," produced at the Dorset Garden Theater where farce
+was often produced in order to take advantage of the elaborate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
+stage machinery available there, makes use of rising tables, a
+giant which divides in two, good and bad angels which rise and
+descend, fireworks, a vanishing feast, a view of hell, and even
+more. Indeed, the often hilarious stage directions give us good
+insight into the capabilities of the Restoration stage. The finale
+is typical: "<i>Scene discovers Faustus's Limbs</i>." After the Old
+Man piously hopes that this "May ... a fair Example be to all, /
+To avoid such Ways which brought poor Faustus's Fall," the
+"<i>Scene changes to Hell. Faustus Limbs come together. A
+Dance, and Song.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Farce often verges on satire, and, as he was to demonstrate
+in <i>Greenwich Park</i>, Mountfort had an eye for contemporary
+foibles. At the end of Act I, Harlequin and Scaramouche engage
+in dialogue which suggests similar passages of rough satire in
+Wycherley. Asked what practice his master, a doctor, has,
+Harlequin replies:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against
+the Term for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks;
+and against <i>Christmas</i>, <i>Easter</i> and <i>Whitsun</i> Holidays,
+for City Apprentices; and if his Pills [to cure clap] be
+destroy'd, 'twill ruin him in one Term.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mountford altered the pageant of the seven sins that he found
+in Marlowe, changing it in at least one case to bring it up to
+date. He begins by paraphrasing Marlowe:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>Faustus</i>: What art thou the Third?</p>
+
+<p><i>Envy</i>: I am <i>Envy</i>; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an
+Oyster-wench. I cannot read, and wish all Books burnt.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But then Mountford departs from his source, adding the
+following lines:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I always curst the Governement, that I was not prefer'd;
+and was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns (II, i).</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The three kings are, I suppose, Charles I, Charles II, and James
+II, and the satiric jab is against those who perennially oppose
+the Establishment. Furthermore, it is easy to imagine that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span>
+role of Faustus, whoever played it, could well have been acted
+as a parody of the "tragical" acting style of the day, with its
+curious sing-song tone and stylized gestures.</p>
+
+<p>Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" gives us an often amusing insight
+into that much despised, ever-popular bastard-child of the
+Restoration stage: farce. If the direct influence of the <i>commedia</i>
+is slight, the spirit of improvisational comedy is embodied
+in the inspired buffoonery of Leigh and Jevon, reinforced
+by stage-effect and spots of contemporary satire. The
+play proved a hit and that undoubtedly was the playwright's
+sole intention. The farce is workmanlike, and as the "Account"
+prefixed to the 1720 collected plays observes, "THE Life and
+Death of Doctor <i>FAUSTUS</i> has a great deal of low, but Entertaining
+Humour; it sufficiently shews his Talents that way."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">
+University of Illinois<br />
+Urbana<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="NOTES_TO_THE_INTRODUCTION" id="NOTES_TO_THE_INTRODUCTION"></a>NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a><i>Six Plays, written by Mr. Mountfort</i> (London, 1720), 2 volumes. All
+references to plays other than "Dr. Faustus" are taken from this collection.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The substance of my account of Mountfort's life and work is based on
+Albert S. Borgman, <i>The Life and Death of William Mountfort</i> (Cambridge:
+Harvard University Press, 1935).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>An Apology for the Life of Colley Cibber</i>, ed. B. R. S. Fone (Ann Arbor:
+University of Michigan Press, 1968), p. 117.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Charles Gildon, <i>The Lives and Characters of the English Dramatick Poets</i>
+(London, [1698?]), p. 102.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> (London, 1702), p. 17.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> <i>Essays of John Dryden</i>, ed. W. P. Ker (New York: Russell &amp; Russell, 1900;
+rpt. 1961), I, 135-136.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> <i>English Literature of the Late Seventeenth Century</i> (Oxford: Clarendon
+Press, 1969), p. 132.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The first edition, page 5, omits the period at the end of 1. 23 and the speech
+prefix "Meph." for 1. 24. These are correctly added in the second edition
+(1720).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>The London Stage 1660-1800, Part I: 1660-1700</i>, ed. W. Van Lennep (Carbondale,
+Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, 1965), 342.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> (London, 1675), p. 25.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Borgman outlines the changes Mountfort made in his source; see pp. 35ff
+and Appendix A.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>A Century of English Farce</i> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1956),
+pp. 165-166.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="BIBLIOGRAPHICAL_NOTE" id="BIBLIOGRAPHICAL_NOTE"></a>BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE</h2>
+
+
+<p>The facsimile of Mountfort's <i>The Life and
+Death of Doctor Faustus</i> (1697) is reproduced
+by permission from a copy of the first edition
+(Shelf Mark: 131909) in <i>The Huntington
+Library, San Marino, California</i>. The total
+type-page (p. 17) measures 195 X 112 mm.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+THE<br />
+LIFE and DEATH<br />
+OF<br />
+Doctor Faustus,<br />
+Made into a<br />
+FARCE.<br />
+<br />
+By Mr. <i>MOUNTFORD</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<i>First Edition</i><br />
+<br />
+WITH THE<br />
+Humours of <i>Harlequin</i> and <i>Scaramouche</i>:<br />
+<br />
+As they were several times Acted
+By Mr. <i>LEE</i> and Mr. <i>JEVON</i>,
+AT THE
+Queens Theatre in <i>Dorset</i> Garden.<br />
+<br />
+Newly Revived,<br />
+At the Theatre in <i>Lincolns Inn Fields</i>,<br />
+With <i>Songs</i> and <i>Dances</i> between the ACTS.<br />
+<br />
+<i>LONDON</i>,<br />
+<br />
+Printed and sold by <i>E. Whitlock</i> near <i>Stationers</i> Hall, (1697)<br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>The Life and Death of Dr. FAUSTUS</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ACT I. SCENE I.</h2>
+
+<p><i>Dr.</i> Faustus <i>seated in his Chair, and reading
+in his Study</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good and bad Angel ready.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> Settle thy Study, <i>Faustus</i>, and begin<br />
+To sound the Depth of that thou wilt profess;<br />
+These Metaphysicks of Magicians,<br />
+And Negromantick Books, are heav'nly<br />
+Lines, Circles, Letters, Characters,<br />
+Ay, these are those that <i>Faustus</i> most desires;<br />
+A sound Magician is a Demi-God:<br />
+Here tire my Brains to get a Deity.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Mephostopholis <i>under the Stage</i>. <i>A good and bad
+Angel fly down.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Good Ang.</i> O <i>Faustus</i>! lay that damn'd Book aside;<br />
+And gaze not on it, lest it tempt thy heart to blasphemy.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Bad Ang.</i> Go forward, <i>Faustus</i>, in that famous Art<br />
+Wherein all Natures Treasure is contain'd:<br />
+Be thou on Earth as <i>Jove</i> is in the Sky,<br />
+Lord and Commander of these Elements.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Spirits ascend.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> How am I glutted with conceit of this?<br />
+Shall I make Spirits fetch me what I please?<br />
+I'll have 'em fly to <i>India</i> for Gold,<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>Ransack the Ocean for Orient Pearl.<br />
+I'll have 'em Wall all <i>Germany</i> with Brass:<br />
+I'll levy Soldiers with the Coin they bring,<br />
+And chase the Prince of <i>Parma</i> from our Land. [<i>Rises.</i><br />
+'Tis now the Dead nigh Noon of Night,<br />
+And <i>Lucifer</i> his Spirits freedom gives;<br />
+I'll try if in this Circle I can Raise<br />
+A <i>Dæmon</i> to inform me what I long for.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii, Orientis
+Princeps, Beelzebub, German. Demogorgon.</i> [Thunders.
+<i>Mephostopholis, Mephostopholis, surgat Spiritus.</i></p>
+
+<p>Mephostopholis <i>speaks under Ground</i>. [Thunders.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, I attend thy Will.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Where art thou?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Here. [<i>a Flash of Light.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar. within.</i> Oh, oh, oh.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What Noise is that? Hast thou any Companions
+with thee?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> No.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> It comes this way?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Oh, oh, O&mdash;&mdash;. [<i>Enter</i> Scaramouche.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What ail'st thou?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> O' o' o'</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Speak, Fellow, what's the Matter?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> O poor <i>Scaramouche</i>!</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Speak, I conjure thee; or <i>Acherontis Dii Demogorgon</i>.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> O I beseech you Conjure no more, for I am frighted
+into a <i>Diabetes</i> already.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Frighted at what?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I have seen, Oh, oh&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Devil.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Art sure it was the Devil?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Devil, or the Devil's Companion: He had a
+Head like a Bulls, with Horns on; and two Eyes that glow'd
+like the Balls of a dark Lantern: His Hair stood a Tiptoe,
+like your new-fashion'd Top-knots; with a Mouth as large
+as a King's Beef Eater: His Nails was as sharp as a Welshman's
+in Passion; and he look'd as frightful as a Sergeant to
+an <i>Alsatian</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> But why art thou afraid of the Devil?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Why I never said my Prayers in all my Life, but
+once; and that was when my damn'd Wife was sick, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+she might dye: My Ears are as deaf to good Council, as
+<i>French</i> Dragoons are to Mercy. And my Conscience wants
+as much sweeping as a Cook's Chimny. And I have as
+many Sins to answer for as a Church-warden, or an Overseer
+of the Poor.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Why, the Devil loves Sinners at his Heart.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Does he so?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> He hates none, but the Vertuous, and the Godly.
+Such as Fast, and go to Church, and give Alms-deeds.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I never saw a Church in my Life, thank God, (I
+mean the Devil;) and for Fasting, it was always my Abomination;
+and for Alms, I never gave any Thing in my
+Life, but the Itch once to a Pawn-broker. Therefore I hope
+he may Love me.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> And he shall Love thee; I'll bring thee acquainted
+with him.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Acquainted with the Devil?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Ay; <i>Tanto metropontis Acherontis</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Oh, oh, oh.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Fear nothing <i>Mephostopholis</i>, be visible.</p>
+
+<p>[Scaramouche <i>sinks behind the Doctor, and peeps his Head
+out behind the Slip of his Gown.</i> <i>A Devil rises in Thunder
+and Lightning.</i></p>
+
+<p>I charge thee to be gon, and change thy Shape; thou art
+too ugly to attend on me. I find there's Virtue in my Charm;
+Come, rise up, Fool, the Devil's gon.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>The Devil sinks.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Devil go with him.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Fear nothing, I command the Devil. If thou wilt
+leave thy Chimny-sweeping Trade, and live with me, thou
+shalt have Meat and Drink in Plenty; and 40 Crowns a Year
+shall be thy Wages; I'll make thee Learned in the black Art.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I am a Student in that already: But let me consider,
+Good Meat and Drink, and 40 Crowns a Year. Then I'll
+change my black Art for yours.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> There's Earnest, thou art now my Servant; dispose
+of thy Brooms and Poles, they'll be useless to thee here;
+take this Key, go into my Study, and clean; take all the
+Books you find scatter'd about, and range 'em orderly upon
+the Shelves.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Happy <i>Scaramouche</i>, now may'st thou Swear, Lye,
+Steal, Drink and Whore; for thy Master is the Devil's Master,
+and thou in time may'st master 'em both.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Exit</i> Scaram.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Mephostopholis.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Now, <i>Faustus</i>, what wouldst thou have with me?</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> I charge thee wait upon me whilst I live,<br />
+And do what-ever <i>Faustus</i> shall command.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Ay <i>Faustus</i>, so I will, if thou wilt purchase me of
+<i>Lucifer</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What says <i>Lucifer</i>, thy Lord?</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> That I shall Wait on <i>Faustus</i> whilst he Lives,<br />
+So thou wilt buy my Service with thy Blood.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Already <i>Faustus</i> has hazarded that for thee.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> Ay, but thou must bequeath it solemnly,<br />
+And write a Deed of Gift with it;<br />
+For that Security craves <i>Lucifer</i>.<br />
+If thou deny it, I must back to Hell.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Bad Ang.</i> But <i>Faustus</i>, if I shall have thy Soul,<br />
+I'll be thy Slave, and worship thy Commands,<br />
+And give thee more than thou hast Will of.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Faust.</i> If he wilt spare me Four and twenty Years,<br />
+Letting me Live in all Voluptuousness,<br />
+To have thee ever to attend on me,<br />
+To give me whatsoever I shall ask,<br />
+And tell me whatsoever I demand;<br />
+On these Conditions I resign it to him.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Meph.</i> Then, <i>Faustus</i> stab thy Arm couragiously,<br />
+And bind thy Soul, that at some certain Day<br />
+Great <i>Lucifer</i> may claim it as his own;<br />
+And then be thou as Great as <i>Lucifer</i>.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Faust.</i> Lo, <i>Mephostopholis</i>, for Love of thee, <i>Faustus</i> has cut<br />
+His Arm, and with his proper Blood<br />
+Assures his Soul to be great <i>Lucifers</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> But, <i>Faustus</i>, write it in manner of a Deed, and Gift.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Ay, so I do; but, <i>Mephostopholis</i>, my Blood congeals,
+and I can write no more.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> I'll fetch thee Fire to dissolve it streight. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> What might the staying of my Blood portend,<br />
+It is unwilling I should write this Bill.<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Good and Bad Angel descend.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> Yet, <i>Faustus</i>, think upon thy precious Soul.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> No, <i>Faustus</i>, think of Honour, and of Wealth.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Of Wealth. Why all the <i>Indies</i>, <i>Ganges</i>, shall be
+mine.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> No, <i>Faustus</i>, everlasting Tortures shall be thine.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bad An.</i> No, <i>Faustus</i>, everlasting Glory shall be thine.<br />
+The World shall raise a Statue of thy Name,<br />
+And on it write, This, this is he that could command the<br />
+World. [<i>Good Angel ascends, bad Angel descends.</i><br />
+<br />
+<i>Faust.</i> Command the World; Ay, <i>Faustus</i>, think on that,<br />
+Why streams not then my Blood that I may write?<br />
+<i>Faustus</i> gives to thee his Soul; Oh! there it stops. Why<br />
+shouldst thou not? Is not thy Soul thy own?<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Mephostopholis <i>with a Chafer of Fire</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> See, <i>Faustus</i>, here is Fire, set it on.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> So now the Blood begins to clear again.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> What is't I would not do to obtain his Soul?</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> <i>Consummatum est</i>; the Bill is ended.<br />
+But what is this Inscription on my Arm?<br />
+<i>Homo fuge</i>: Whether shall I fly?<br />
+My Senses are deceiv'd, here's nothing writ;<br />
+O yes, I see it plain, even here is writ<br />
+<i>Homo fuge</i>; yet shall not <i>Faustus</i> fly,<br />
+I'll call up something to delight his Mind.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Song.</i> Mephostopholis <i>waves his Wand</i>. <i>Enter several
+Devils, who present Crowns to</i> Faustus, <i>and after
+a Dance vanish</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What means this then?</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> 'Tis to delight thy Mind, and let thee see<br />
+What Magick can perform.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> And may I raise such Spirits when I please.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Ay, <i>Faustus</i>, and do greater Things than these.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> Then, <i>Mephostopholis</i> receive this Deed of Gift;<br />
+But set Conditionally, that thou perform all<br />
+Covenants and Articles herein subscribed.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Meph.</i> I swear by Hell, and <i>Lucifer</i>, to effect all<br />
+Promises between us both.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Then take it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Do you deliver it as your Deed, and Gift?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Ay, and the Devil do you good on't.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> So, now, <i>Faustus</i>, ask what thou wilt.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Then let me have a Wife.</p>
+
+<p>Faustus <i>waves his Wand, and a Woman Devil rises:
+Fire-works about whirles round, and sinks</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What sight is this?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Now, <i>Faustus</i> wilt thou have a Wife?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Here's a hot Whore indeed, I'll have no Wife.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> Marriage is but a Ceremonial Toy;<br />
+I'll cull thee out the fairest Curtezans,<br />
+And bring 'em every Morning to thy Bed:<br />
+She whom thy Eye shall like, thy Heart shall have.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Then, <i>Mephostopholis</i>, let me behold the Famous
+<i>Hellen</i>, who was the Occasion of great <i>Troys'</i> Destruction.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, thou shalt. [<i>Waves his Wand, enters.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> O <i>Mephostopholis</i>! what would I give to gain a Kiss
+from off those lovely Lips.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, thou may'st. [<i>He kisses her.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> My Soul is fled; come <i>Hellen</i>, come, give me my Soul
+again; she's gon. [<i>He goes to kiss her again, and she sinks.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Women are shy you know at the first Sight; but
+come, <i>Faustus</i>, command me somewhat else.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Then tell me, is Hell so terrible as Church-men
+write it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> No, <i>Faustus</i> 'tis Glorious as the upper World; but
+that we have Night and Day, as you have here: Above
+there's no Night.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Why sighs my <i>Mephostopholis</i>, I think Hell's a meer
+Fable.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Ay, think so still.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Tell me who made the World?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> I will not.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Sweet <i>Mephos.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Move me no further.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Villain, have I not bound thee to tell me any Thing.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> That's not against our Kingdom, this is: Thou art<br />
+Lost; think thou of Hell.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Think, <i>Faustus</i>, upon him that made the World.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Remember this. [<i>Sinks.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> Ay, go accursed Spirit to ugly Hell,<br />
+'Tis thou hast damn'd distressed <i>Faustus</i> Soul:<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+'Tis thou hast damn'd distressed <i>Faustus</i> Soul:<br />
+I will Repent: Ha! [<i>Goes to his Books.</i><br />
+This Bible's fast, but here's another:<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>[<i>They both fly out of's Hand, and a flaming Thing
+appears written</i>, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>
+Is't not too late? [<i>Ring. Good and bad descend.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> Too late.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> Never too late, if <i>Faustus</i> will repent.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bad An.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, behold, behold thy Deed; if thou repent<br />
+Devils will tear thee in Pieces.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> Repent, and they shall never raze thy Skin.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Scene shuts, Ang. ascends.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scene changes to the Street.</i> <i>Enter</i> Harlequin.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> This must be Mr. Doctor's House; I'll make bold
+to knock: My Heart fails me already.</p>
+
+<p>[Harlequin <i>opens the Door, peeps about, and shuts it</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I begin to tremble at the Thoughts of seeing the Devil.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Knocks again.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+Here's a great Resort of Devils, the very Doors smell of<br />
+Brimstone: I'll e'en back&mdash;&mdash;No: I'll be a Man of Resolution:<br />
+But if Mr. Doctor should send a Familiar to open the<br />
+Door, in what language should I speak to the Devil? [<i>Knocks.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar. peeping.</i> This is some malicious Spirit, that will not
+let me alone at my Study; but I'll go in, and conn my
+Book. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> I believe Mr. Doctor is very Busy; but I'll rap this
+time with Authority.</p>
+
+<p>[Harlequin <i>raps at the Door</i>, Scaramouche <i>peeps out</i>. Harlequin
+<i>strikes him, and jumps back, runs frighted off</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scene changes to a Room in the Doctor's House.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche, <i>with a Book in the Doctor's Gown</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I have left the Door open to save the Devil the labour
+of Knocking, if he has a mind to come in: For I
+am resolved not to stir from my Book; I found it in the
+Doctor's Closet, and know it must contain Something of the
+Black Art.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Harlequin.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> Oh here's Mr. Doctor himself; he's reading some
+conjuring Book. <i>Ide fain jecit.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> This must be a conjuring Book by the hard Words.
+AB, EB, IB, OB, UB, BA, BO, BU, BI.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> Its a Child's Primer. [Harlequin <i>looks over him</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Devil, the Devil; be gon, avoid Satan. [<i>Runs off.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> O the Devil! Now will I lye as if I were Dead,
+and let the Devil go hunt for my Soul. [<i>Lyes down.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I have learn'd to raise the Devil, but how the Devil
+shall I do to lay him. Ha! what's here, a dead Body?
+The Devil assum'd this Body, and when I began to mutter
+my Prayers, he was in such haste he left his Carcass behind
+him. Ha! it stirs; no, 'twas but my Fancy.</p>
+
+<p>[Scaram. <i>lifts up all his Limbs, and lets 'em fall, whil'st</i> Harl.
+<i>hits him on the Breech, lifts his Head, which falls gently</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+All's dead but's Head. [<i>Sets him upright.</i><br />
+The Devil, the Devil! Be gon; what art thou?<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> A poor unfortunate Devil.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Devil; <i>Avant</i> then <i>Hagon mogon strogon</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> O good Mr. Doctor, conjure up no more Devils and
+I'll be gon, or any thing.&mdash;I came only to ask your Black
+Artship a Question.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> No, this is not the Devil. Who art thou? Whence
+comest thou? What's thy Business, Quick, or <i>Hogon strogon</i>?</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> Hold, hold, hold, I am poor <i>Harlequin</i>: By the
+Learned I am called <i>Zane</i>, by the Vulgar <i>Jack Pudding</i>. I
+was late Fool to a Mountebank; and last Night, in the mistaking
+the Pipkin, I eat up a Pot of <i>Bolus</i> instead of Hasty
+Pudding; and devour'd Three Yards of <i>Diaculum</i> Plaister
+instead of Pancake, for which my Master has turn'd me out
+of Doors instead of Wages: Therefore, to be reveng'd, I
+come to hire a Devil or two of you, Mr. Doctor, of a strong
+Constitution, that may swallow up his Turpentine Pills as fast
+as he makes 'em, that he may never cure poor Whore more
+of a Clap; and then he'll be undone, for they are his chief
+Patients.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> What Practice has he?</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against
+the Term for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks;
+and against <i>Christmas</i>, <i>Easter</i> and <i>Whitsun</i> Holidays, for City<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+Apprentices; and if his Pills be destroy'd, 'twill ruin him
+in one Term.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Come in; and for a Crown a Week I'll lett thee
+out a Devil, as they do Horses at Livery, shall swallow him
+a Peck of Pills a day, though every one were as big as a Pumpkin;
+and make nothing of a <i>Bolus</i> for a Breakfast.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> O brave Mr. Doctor! O dainty Mr. Devil!</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Seigniora. [<i>Here they Complement who shall go first.</i></p>
+
+
+<p><i>The End of the First Act.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ACT II.</h2>
+
+<p>Faustus <i>in his Study</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good and Bad Angel descend.</i></p>
+
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, Repent; yet Heav'n will pity thee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> Thou art a Spirit, Heav'n cannot
+pity thee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Who buzzes in my Ear, I am a Spirit; be I a Devil
+yet Heaven can pity me: Yea, Heaven will pity me, if I
+repent.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> Ay, but <i>Faustus</i> never shall repent.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> Sweet <i>Faustus</i> think of Heav'n, and heavenly
+Things. [<i>Ascends.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Fau.</i> My Heart is hardened, I cannot repent.<br />
+Scarce can I name Salvation, Faith, or Heav'n,<br />
+But I am pinch'd, and prick'd, in thousand Places.<br />
+O help distressed <i>Faustus</i>!<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Lucifer, Beelzebub. <i>and</i> Mephostopholis <i>rises</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> None can afford thee help; for only I have Interest
+in thee, <i>Faustus</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Oh! What art thou, that looks so terrible?</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> I am <i>Lucifer</i>, and this is my Companion Prince in
+Hell.</p>
+
+<p><i>Beel.</i> We are come to tell thee thou dost injure us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> Thou call'st on Heav'n contrary to thy Promise.</p>
+
+<p><i>Beel.</i> Thou should'st not think on Heav'n.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Fau.</i> Nor will I henceforth pardon him for this,<br />
+And <i>Faustus</i> Vows never to look to Heav'n.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Beel.</i> So shalt thou shew thy self a faithful Servant,<br />
+And we will highly gratify thee for it.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Those Words delight my Soul.</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, we are come in Person to shew thee Passtime;
+sit down, and thou shalt behold the Seven Deadly
+Sins in their own proper Shapes and Likeness.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> That Sight will be as pleasant to my Eye, as Paradise
+to <i>Adam</i> the first Day of his Creation.</p>
+
+<p><i>Beel.</i> Talk not of Paradise, but mind the Show. Go, <i>Mephostopholis</i>,
+and fetch 'em in; and, <i>Faustus</i>, question 'em their
+Names. <i>Enter Pride.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> What art thou?</p>
+
+<p><i>Prid.</i> I am <i>Pride</i>; I was begot by Disdain and Affectation.
+I always took the Wall of my Betters; had ever the first Cut,
+or else would not eat: I scorn'd all Advice, never thought
+any one handsom but my self; had the best Pue in the Church,
+though a Tradesman's Wife; and at last dyed of the Spleen,
+for want of a Coach and Six Horses. Why is not thy Room
+perfum'd, and spread with Cloth of <i>Tissue</i>? What must you
+sit, and I stand? Rise up Brute.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Go, thou art a proud Slut indeed. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Covetousness.</p>
+
+<p>Now what art thou the Second.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cov.</i> I am <i>Covetousness</i>; I was begot by a close Fist, and
+a griping Heart, in a Usurer's Chest. I never eat, to save
+Charges: This Coat has cover'd me for Fourscore Winters:
+This Beard has seen as many more. I never slept in my Life,
+but always watch'd my Gold.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> What wert thou on Earth?</p>
+
+<p><i>Cov.</i> I was first an Exciseman, and cheated the King and
+Country; then I was a Baker, and from every Neighbor's
+Loaf I stole Two Pound, and swore 'twas shrunk in the
+Oven. I was a Vintner, and by bribing of Quest-men had
+leave to sell in Pint Bottles for Quarts: At last I was a Horse-courser,
+made <i>Smithfield</i> too hot to hold me, and rid Post to
+the Devil? Give me some Gold, Father? [<i>Exit.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Envy.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> What art thou the Third?</p>
+
+<p><i>Env.</i> I am <i>Envy</i>; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an
+Oyster-wench. I cannot read, and wish all Books burnt. I
+always curst the Government that I was not prefer'd; and
+was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns. I am Lean with
+seeing others Eat; and I wish the Devil would make a
+Sponge of thy Heart, to wipe out the Score of my Sins.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Wrath.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Out, Envious Wretch. What art thou the Fourth?</p>
+
+<p><i>Wra.</i> I am <i>Wrath</i>; I had neither Father nor Mother, but
+leap'd out of a Lion's Mouth when I was scarce an Hour
+old. I always abhor'd the Art of Patience, and curst all
+Fisher-men. I beat my Wife for my Pleasure; curst Heav'n
+in my Passion, 'cause it gave me no Fortune, and was hang'd
+for a Rape on a <i>Scotch</i> Pedlar. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Gluttony.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> What art thou the Fifth?</p>
+
+<p><i>Glut.</i> I am <i>Gluttony</i>; begot by a Plow-man on a Washer-woman,
+who devour'd a <i>Chedder</i> Cheese in two Hours. I
+am of a Royal Pedigree: My Grand-father was a Sur-loin of
+Beef, and my Mother a Gammon of Bacon: My Sisters were
+Sows, which supply'd me with Pork: My Brothers were
+Calves, which afforded me Veal: My God-fathers were
+<i>Peter</i> Pickled-Herring, and <i>Michael</i> Milk-Porredg: My God-mothers
+were <i>Susan</i> Salt-butter, and <i>Margery</i> Sous'd-Hog's-Face.
+Now, <i>Faustus</i>, thou hast heard my Pedigree, wilt
+thou invite me to Supper?</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Not I.</p>
+
+<p><i>Glut.</i> Then the Devil choak thee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Sloth.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> What art thou the Sixth?</p>
+
+<p><i>Slo.</i> Hey ho! I am <i>Sloth</i>; I was begotten at Church by
+a sleepy Judg on a Costermonger's Wife, in the middle of a
+long Sermon. I am as Lazy as a Fishmonger in the Dog-days,
+or a Parson in <i>Lent</i>: I would not speak another Word
+for a King's Ransom.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Leachery.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> And what are you, Mr. <i>Minks</i>, the Seventh and last?</p>
+
+<p><i>Leach.</i> I am one that love an Inch of Raw Mutton better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+than an Ell of Fry'd Stock-fish, and the first Letter of my
+Name begins with <i>Leachery</i>. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> This Sight delights my Soul.</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> <i>Faustus</i> in Hell are all manner of Delights.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> O might I see Hell once, and return safe.</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i><i> Faustus</i>, thou shalt; give me thy hand.
+Hence let's descend, and we will <i>Faustus</i> show
+The mighty Pleasures in the World below. [<i>Vanishes.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>SCENE <i>Changes</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Harlequin, <i>and</i> Scaramouche <i>in the Doctor's Gown;
+a Wand, and a Circle</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> So, now am I in my <i>Pontificalibus</i>: Now can I shew
+my Black Art; for I have found that heavenly Book which
+<i>Faustus</i> used to raise the Dead in: Come, stand within this
+Circle.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> 'Tis time to Conjure, for I am almost famish'd. We
+have fasted like Priests for a Miracle.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I'll make thee amends presently; I'll conjure up a
+Spirit, ask what thou wilt thou shalt have it.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Let me alone for asking.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Be very earnest with him, and intreat mightily.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> I'll intreat Earnestly.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Silence. <i>Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii Nobis
+Diccatus Mephostopholis, &amp;c.</i></p>
+
+<p>Mephostopholis <i>rises</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Meph.</i> How am I tortur'd by these Villains Charms?<br />
+From <i>Constantinople</i> have they brought me now,<br />
+Only for Measure of these idle Slaves? What<br />
+Would you with <i>Mephostopholis</i>?<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Wee'd know how Dr. <i>Faustus</i> does.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Well.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> When comes he home?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Within Two Days.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> What was he doing when you left him?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> He was at Supper, eating good Chear.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Good Mr. Devil, tell him we are almost starv'd;
+and desire him to send us some of his good Chear.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Is that all?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Some Wine too?</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> What else.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> What else: Why if Fornication been't against your
+Commandments, we would have some live Flesh; a handsom
+Wench.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Only for a third Person, and please your Damnation.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> You shall have your Desires.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> We desire your Mephostopholiship too, not to let us
+stay the Roasting and Boiling of any thing: For we are as
+Eager as the Wine in <i>Smithfield</i>, and want no whetting.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> You shall.</p>
+
+<p>Scaramouche <i>and</i> Harlequin <i>pull off their Caps</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Now if your mighty Darkness would please to Retire.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Farewell. [<i>Vanish.</i></p>
+
+<p>Scaramouche <i>steps out of the Circle, and struts about</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Now how do you like my Art?</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> O rare Art! O divine Mr. Doctor <i>Scaramouche</i>! If
+the Devil be as good as his Word, I'll owe him a good Turn
+as long as I live: But I wish our third Person would come.</p>
+
+<p><i>A Giant rises.</i></p>
+
+<p>Ha! What's here?</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> I am sent by <i>Pluto</i> to bear you Company.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Is this his third Person? Or is it Three Generations
+in One? Come you from <i>Guild-hall</i>, Sir?</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> No, Mortal, from the <i>Stygian</i> Lake. I am the Giant
+which St. <i>George</i> destroy'd; and in the Earth have been decaying
+ever since, but now am come to Eat with you.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> To pick up your Crums, Sir: You'r heartily Welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Scaramouche <i>gets upon</i> Harlequin, <i>and salutes him</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> I have lain now within the <i>Stygian</i> Lake 2000 Years.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Your Honour is not much shrunk in the Wetting.</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> But we loose Time, and Dinner cools.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Where is it?</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> In the next Room.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Will it please your Lustiness to lead the Way?</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Will it please you then to make way for him?</p>
+
+<p><i>Gi.</i> I can divide my self to serve my Friends?</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Giant leaps in two.</i></p>
+
+<p>Breeches be you my Page, and follow me.</p>
+
+<p>Harleq. <i>and</i> Scaram. <i>complement the Breeches</i>. [<i>Exeunt.</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>SCENE <i>draws, and discovers a Table furnished with
+Bottles of Wine, and a Venison Pasty, a Pot of wild
+Fowl</i>, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche, Giant, <i>and</i> Harlequin.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> O heavenly Apparition!</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Come, let's sit down.</p>
+
+<p><i>The upper part of the Giant flies up, and the under sinks,
+and discovers a Woman in the Room.</i></p>
+
+<p>Harlequin <i>and</i> Scaramouche <i>start</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Ha! What's here, a Woman?</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> O happy Change! Madam, with your good Leave.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Kisses.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Never too late in good Breeding. [<i>Kisses.</i>] Rare
+Wench! And as Luscious as Pig-sauce.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Heav'n be prais'd for all.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Woman sinks, a Flash of Lightning.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Your unseasonable Thankfulness has rob'd us of our
+Strumpet.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> No matter, no matter; we shall meet her in the
+Cloisters after the Fair. Come let's fall too.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>They put their Caps before their Faces.</i></p>
+
+<p>Ha!</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> The Table runs away from us.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> We'll bestow the Pains to follow it again; this I see
+is a running Banquet.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>They put their Caps on again, the Table removes.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I have found the Secret: We must not say Grace at
+the Devil's Feast.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Come then let's fall too, <i>San's</i> Ceremony; Will you
+be Carver?</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Every one for himself, I say.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Ay, every one for himself, and God for us all.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Table flies up into the Air.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> A Plague o'your Proverb; it has a Word in't must
+not be named.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Ah, Mr. Doctor, do but intreat Mr. <i>Mephostopholis</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+to let the Table down to us, or send us to that, and I'll be his
+Servant as long as I live. [<i>They are hoisted up to the Table.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar. and Har.</i> Oh, oh, oh.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Now have a care of another Proverb:
+We go without our Supper.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Nay, now I know the Devil's Humour, I'll hit him
+to a Hair: Pray, Mr. Doctor, cut up that Pasty.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> I can't get my Knife into it, 'tis over-bak'd.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Ay, 'tis often so: God sends Meat, and the Devil
+sends Cooks. [<i>Table flies down.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Thou Varlet, dost thou see what thy Proverb has done?</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Now could I curse my Grand-mother, for she taught
+'em me: Well, if sweet <i>Mephostopholis</i> will be so kind as but
+to let us and the Table come together again, I'll promise never
+to say Grace, or speak Proverb more, as long as I live.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>They are let down to the Table.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Your Prayers are heard, now be careful; for if I
+lose my Supper by thy Negligence I'll cut thy Throat.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Do, and eat me when you have done. I am damnably
+hungry; I'll cut open this Pasty, while you open that
+Pot of wild Fowl.</p>
+
+<p>[Harlequin <i>takes off the Lid of the Pasty, and a Stag's Head
+peeps out; and out of the Pot of Fowl flies Birds</i>. Harlequin
+<i>and</i> Scaramouche <i>start back, fall over their
+Chairs, and get up</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Here's the Nest but the Birds are flown: Here's Wine
+though, and now I'll conjure for a Supper. I have a Sallad
+within of my own Gathering in the Fields to Day.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Fetch it in; Bread, Wine, and a Salad may serve
+for a Collation.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Harlequin <i>with a Tray of Sallad</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Come, no Ceremony among Friends. <i>Bon. fro.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> <i>Sallad mal adjuste</i>; here's neither Fat nor Lean.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> O Mr. Doctor, neither Fat nor Lean in a Sallad.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Neither Oyl, nor Vinegar.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Oh! I'll fetch you that presently.</p>
+
+<p>[Harlequin <i>fetches a Chamber-pot of Piss, and a Lamp
+of Oyl, and pours on the Sallad</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> O thy Sallad is nothing but Thistles and Netles; and
+thy Oyl stinks worse than <i>Arsefetito</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Bread and Wine be our Fare. Ha! the Bread's
+alive. [<i>Bread stirs.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Or the Devil's in't. Hey! again. [<i>Bread sinks.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> My Belly's as empty as a Beggar's Purse.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> And mine as full of Wind as a Trumpeter's Cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Table sinks, and Flash of Lightning.</i></p>
+
+<p>But since we can't Eat, let's Drink: Come, here's Dr. <i>Faustus</i>'s
+Health.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Ay, come; God bless Dr. <i>Faustus</i>.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Bottles fly up, and the Table sinks.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> What all gone: Here's a Banquet stole away like
+a City Feast. [<i>Musick.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> Ha! here's Musick to delight us.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Two Chairs rises.</i> Harlequin <i>and</i> Scaramouche <i>sits
+down, and are caught fast</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Ha! the Devil. We are lock'd in.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> As fast as a Counter Rat.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter several Devils, who black</i> Harlequin <i>and</i> Scaramouche's
+<i>Faces, and then squirt Milk upon them</i>. <i>After the Dance
+they both sink.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar. and Har.</i> O' o, o'&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p><i>The End of the Second Act.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ACT III.</h2>
+
+
+<p>SCENE <i>a Wood</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Mephostopholis <i>and Dr.</i> Faustus.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> How have I been delighted by thy Art; and in
+Twelve Years have seen the utmost Limits of
+the spacious World; feasted my self with all Varieties; pleasur'd
+my Fancy with my Magick Art, and liv'd sole Lord
+o'er every Thing I wish'd for.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Ay, <i>Faustus</i>, is it not a splendid Life?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> It is my Spirit; but prithee now retire, while I re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>pose
+my self within this Shade, and when I wake attend on
+me again.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> <i>Faust</i>, I will. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What art thou, <i>Faustus</i>, but a Man condemn'd.
+Thy Lease of Years expire apace; and, <i>Faustus</i>, then thou
+must be <i>Lucifers</i>: Here rest my Soul, and in my Sleep my
+future State be buried.</p>
+
+<p><i>Good and bad Angel descends.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Good An.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, sweet <i>Faustus</i>, yet remember Heav'n.
+Oh! think upon the everlasting Pain thou must endure,
+For all thy short Space of Pleasure.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> Illusions, Fancies, <i>Faustus</i>; think of Earth.
+The Kings thou shalt command: The Pleasures Rule.
+Be, <i>Faustus</i>, not a whining, pious Fool. [<i>Ascend.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Horse-courser.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Oh! what a couz'ning Doctor was this: I riding
+my Horse into the Water, thinking some hidden Mystery
+had been in 'em, found my self on a Bundle of Straw, and
+was drag'd by Something in the Water, like a Bailiff through
+a Horse-pond. Ha! he's a Sleep: So ho, Mr. Doctor, so ho.
+Why Doctor, you couz'ning, wheedling, hypocritical, cheating,
+chousing, Son of a Whore; awake, rise, and give me
+my Mony again, for your Horse is turn'd into a Bottle of
+Hay. Why Sirrah, Doctor; 'sfoot I think he's dead. Way
+Doctor Scab; you mangy Dog. [<i>pulls him by the Leg.</i>
+'Zounds I'm undone, I have pull'd his Leg off.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> O help! the Villain has undone me; Murder.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Murder, or not Murder, now he has but one Leg
+I'll out-run him. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Stop, stop him; ha, ha, ha, <i>Faustus</i> has his Leg
+again, and the Horse-courser a Bundle of Hay for his Forty
+Dollars. Come, <i>Mephostopholis</i>, let's now attend the Emperor. [<i>Exit</i> Faust. <i>and</i> Meph.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Horse-courser, <i>and</i> Carter, <i>with Pots of Ale</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> Here's to thee; and now I'll tell thee what I came
+hither for: You have heard of a Conjurer they call Doctor
+<i>Faustus</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Heard of him, a Plague take him, I have Cause to
+know him; has he play'd any Pranks with you?</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> I'll tell thee, as I was going to the Market a while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+ago, with a Load of Hay, he met me, and askt me, What
+he should give me for as much Hay as his Horse would Eat:
+Now, Sir, I thinking that a little would serve his Turn, bad
+him take as much as he would for Three Farthings.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> So.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> So he presently gave me Mony, and fell to Eating:
+And as I'm a cursen Man, he never left Yeating and Yeating,
+'till he had eaten up my whole Load of Hay.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Now you shall hear how he serv'd me: I went to
+him Yesterday to buy a Horse of him, which I did; and he
+bad me be sure not to ride him into the Water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> Good.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Ad's Wounds 'twas Bad, as you shall hear: For I
+thinking the Horse had some rare Quality, that he would not
+have me know, what do me I but rides him in the Water;
+and when I came just in the midst of the River, I found my
+self a Straddle on a Bottle of Hay.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> O rare Doctor!</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> But you shall hear how I serv'd him bravely for
+it; for finding him a Sleep just now in a By-Field, I whoop'd
+and hollow'd in his Ears, but could not wake him; so I took
+hold of his Leg, and never left pulling till I had pull'd it
+quite off.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> And has the Doctor but one Leg then? That's Rare.
+But come, this is his House, let's in and see for our Mony;
+look you, we'll pay as we come back.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Done, done; and when we have got our Mony
+let's laugh at his one Leg: Ha, ha, ha. [<i>Exeunt Laughing.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Hostess.</p>
+
+<p><i>Host.</i> What have the Rogues left my Pots, and run away,
+without paying their Reck'ning? I'll after 'em, cheating
+Villains, Rogues, Cut-purses; rob a poor Woman, cheat the
+Spittle, and rob the King of his Excise; a parcel of Rustick,
+Clownish, Pedantical, High-shoo'd, Plow-jobbing, Cart-driving,
+Pinch-back'd, Paralytick, Fumbling, Grumbling, Bellowing,
+Yellowing, Peas-picking, Stinking, Mangy, Runagate,
+Ill-begotten, Ill-contriv'd, Wry-mouth'd, Spatrifying,
+Dunghill-raking, Costive, Snorting, Sweaty, Farting, Whaw-drover
+Dogs. [<i>Exit</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Faustus.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> My Time draws near, and 20 Years are past: I
+have but Four poor Twelve Months for my Life, and then I
+am damn'd for ever.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter an</i> Old Man.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> O gentle <i>Faustus</i>, leave this damn'd Art; this Magick,
+that will charm thy Soul to Hell, and quite bereave
+thee of Salvation: Though thou hast now offended like a
+Man, do not, oh! do not persist in't like a Devil. It may
+be this my Exhortation seems harsh, and all unpleasant; let
+it not, for, gentle Son, I speak in tender Love and Pity of
+thy future Misery; and so have hope that this my kind Rebuke,
+checking thy Body, may preserve thy Soul.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Where art thou, <i>Faustus</i>? Wretch, what hast thou
+done? O Friend, I feel thy Words to comfort my distressed
+Soul; retire, and let me ponder on my Sins.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> <i>Faustus</i>, I leave thee, but with grief of Heart,
+Fearing thy Enemy will near depart. [<i>Exit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Mephostopholis.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Thou Traytor, I arrest thee for Disobedience to
+thy Sovereign Lord; revolt, or I'll in piece-meal tear thy
+Flesh.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> I do repent I e'er offended him; torment, sweet
+Friend, that old Man that durst disswade me from thy <i>Lucifer</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> His Faith is great, I cannot touch his Soul; but
+what I can afflict his Body with I will.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Horse-courser <i>and</i> Carter.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> We are come to drink a Health to your wooden
+Leg.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> My wooden Leg; what dost thou mean, Friend?</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Ha, ha! he has forgot his Leg.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> Psha, 'tis not a Leg he stands upon. Pray, let me
+ask you one Question; Are both your Legs Bed-fellows?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Why dost thou ask?</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> Because I believe you have a good Companion of
+one.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Why, don't you remember I pull'd off one o' your
+Legs when you were a Sleep?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> But I have it again now I am awake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> Ad's Wounds, had the Doctor three Legs!&mdash;--You,
+Sir, don't you remember you gave a Peny for as much
+Hay as your Horse would eat, and then eat up my whole
+Load.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hors.</i> Look you, Mr. Doctor, you must not carry it off
+so; I come to have the Mony again I gave for the Ho-o-o-</p>
+
+<p>[Faustus <i>waves his Wand</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Cart.</i> And I come to be paid far my Load of Ha-a-a.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Hostess.</p>
+
+<p><i>Host.</i> O Mr. Doctor! do you harbour Rogues that bilk
+poor Folks, and wont pay their Reck'nings? Who must pay
+me for my A-a-a-a [<i>Waves again.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Mr. Doctor, I can't be quiet for your Devil
+Mr. <i>Me-o-o&mdash;</i> [<i>Waves again.</i></p>
+
+<p>[<i>Exeunt</i> Faustus <i>and</i> Mephostopholis. <i>They all stare at
+one another, and so go off, crying O, o, o, o- to the
+Emperor's Pallace.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter Emperor</i>, Faustus, <i>Gent. Guards.</i> Benoolio <i>above</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Emp.</i> Wonder of Men, thrice Learned <i>Faustus</i>, Renowned
+Magician, welcome to our Court; and as thou late didst
+promise us, I would behold the Famous <i>Alexander</i> fighting
+with his great Rival <i>Darius</i>, in their true Shapes, and State
+Majestical.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Your Majesty shall see 'em presently.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> If thou bring'st <i>Alexander</i>, or <i>Darius</i> here, I'll be
+content to be <i>Actæon</i>, and turn my self to a Stag.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> And I'll play <i>Diana</i>, and send you the Horns presently.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Darius <i>and</i> Alexander; <i>they Fight</i>: Darius <i>falls</i>.
+Alexander <i>takes his Crown, and puts it on his Head</i>.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Exit.</i> Darius <i>sinks</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Away, be gon; see, my Gracious Lord, what Beast
+is that that thrusts his Head out of yon' Window.</p>
+
+<p><i>Emp.</i> O wondrous Sight! see two Horns on young <i>Benoolio</i>'s
+Head; call him, Lords.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> What, ho! <i>Benoolio</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> A Plague upon you, let me Sleep.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> Look up, <i>Benoolio</i>, 'tis the Emperor calls.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> The Emperor; O my Head.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> And thy Horns hold, 'tis no matter for thy Head.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> Doctor, this is your Villany.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> O say not so, Sir; the Doctor has no Skill, if he
+bring <i>Alexander</i> or <i>Darius</i> here you'll be <i>Actæon</i>, and turn to
+a Stag: Therefore, if it please your Majesty, I'll bring a
+Kennel of Hounds to hunt him. Ho! <i>Helmot</i>, <i>Argiron</i>,
+<i>Asterot</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> Hold, he'll raise a Kennel of Devils. Good, my Lord,
+intreat.</p>
+
+<p><i>Emp.</i> Prithee remove his Horns, he has done Penance
+enough.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Away; and remember hereafter you speak well of
+Scholars.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> If Scholars be such Cuckolds to put Horns upon honest
+Mens Heads, I'll ne'er trust Smooth-face and Small-band
+more: But if I been't reveng'd, may I be turn'd to a Gaping
+Oyster, and drink nothing but Salt-water.</p>
+
+<p><i>Emp.</i> Come, <i>Faustus</i>, in recompence of this high Desert,
+Thou shalt command the State of <i>Germany</i>, and live belov'd
+of mighty <i>Carolus</i>. [<i>Exeunt omnes.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>SCENE <i>a Garden</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> Nay, sweet <i>Benoolio</i>, let us sway thy Thoughts from
+this Attempt against the Conjurer.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Ben.</i> My Head is lighter than it was by the Horns:<br />
+And yet my Heart's more pond'rous than my Head,<br />
+And pants, until I see the Conjurer dead.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>2 Lord.</i> Consider.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> Away; disswade me not, he comes. [<i>Draws.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Faustus <i>with a false Head</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+Now Sword strike home:<br />
+For Horns he gave, I'll have his Head anon.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Runs</i> Faustus <i>through, he falls</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Oh, oh.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> Groan you, Mr. Doctor, now for his Head.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Cuts his Head off.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> Struck with a willing Hand.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> First, on this Scull, in quittance of my Wrongs, I'll
+nail huge forked Horns within the Window where he yoak'd
+me first, that all the World may see my just Revenge; and
+thus having settled his Head&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> What shall the Body do, Gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> The Devil's alive again?</p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> Give the Devil his Head again.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> Nay, keep it; <i>Faustus</i> will have Heads and Hands;<br />
+I call your Hearts to recompence this Deed.<br />
+Ho; <i>Asteroth</i>, <i>Belincoth</i>, <i>Mephostopholis</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter Devils, and Horse 'em upon others.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+Go Horse these Traytors on your fiery Backs.<br />
+Drag 'em through Dirt and Mud, through Thorns and Briers.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Lord.</i> Pity us, gentle <i>Faustus</i>, save our Lives.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Away.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ben.</i> He must needs go whom the Devil drives.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Spirits fly away.</i> <i>Exit</i> Faustus.</p>
+
+
+<p>SCENE <i>a Hall</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Harlequin <i>in a Beggar's Habit</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> I find this <i>Scaramouche</i> is a Villain; he has left the
+Doctor, and is come to be Steward to a rich Widdow,
+whose Husband dyed Yesterday, and here he is coming to
+give the Poor their Doles, of which I'll ha' my Share.</p>
+
+<p>Scaramouche, <i>and poor People, with a Basket of
+Bread and Money</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Come hither, poor Devils; stand in Order, and be
+Damn'd. I came to distribute what your deceased good
+Master hath bequeath'd. [<i>They all stare at</i> Scar.</p>
+
+<p><i>Harl.</i> God bless you, Mr. Steward.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Let me tell you, Gentlemen, he was as good a Man
+as ever piss'd, or cry'd Stand on the High-way.</p>
+
+<p>[Scaramouche <i>takes out a Leaf and a Shilling, holds
+it out, and</i> Harlequin <i>takes it</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He spent a good Estate, 'tis true; but he was no Body's
+Foe but his own. I never left him while he was worth a
+Groat. [<i>Again.</i>] He would now and then Curse in his Passion,
+and give a Soul to the Devil, or so; yet, what of that?
+He always paid his Club, and no Man can say he owes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+this. [<i>Again.</i>] He had a Colt's Tooth, and over-laid one of
+his Maids; yet, what of that? All Flesh is frail. [<i>Again.</i>]
+'Tis thought that her Body workt him off on his Legs; why,
+what of that? his Legs were his own, and his Arse never
+hung in your Light. [<i>Again.</i>] Sometimes, you'll say, he wou'd
+rap out an Oath; what then, Words are but Wind, and he
+meant no more harm than a sucking Pig does by squeaking.
+[<i>Again.</i>] Now let's consider his good Deeds; he brew'd
+a Firkin of strong Drink for the poor every Year, and kill'd
+an old Ram every <i>Easter</i>: The Meat that was stale, and his
+Drink that was sowre, was always yours. [<i>Again.</i>] He allow'd
+you in Harvest to Glean after his Rake. [<i>Again.</i>] And
+now, at his Death, has given you all this. [<i>Again.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> So, setting the Hare's Head against the Goose Giblets,
+he was a good Hospitable Man; and much good may do you
+with what you had.</p>
+
+<p><i>Poor.</i> I have had nothing.</p>
+
+<p><i>2 Poor.</i> Nor I.</p>
+
+<p><i>3 Po.</i> Nor I.</p>
+
+<p><i>4 Po.</i> Nor. I.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Nothing.</p>
+
+<p><i>All.</i> Nothing, nothing.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Nothing, nothing; you lying Rogues, then there's
+something for you. [<i>Beats 'em all off.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Harlequin <i>in a Cloak, laughing</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Har.</i> So now I am Victual'd, I may hold out Siege against
+Hunger. [<i>A Noise within; this way, this way.</i></p>
+
+<p>Ha! they are hunting after me, and will kill me. Let me see,
+I will take this Gibbet for my Preserver, and with this long
+Cloak make as if I were hang'd. Now when they find a
+Man hang'd, not knowing me in this Disguise, they'll look
+no farther after me, but think the Thief's hang'd.&mdash;&mdash;I
+hear 'em coming. [<i>Throws himself off the Ladder.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Scaramouche.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Ha! what's here, a Man hang'd? But what Paper
+is this in his Hand?</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Whil'st</i> Scaramouche <i>reads</i>, Harlequin <i>puts
+the Rope over him</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I have cheated the Poor of their Mony, and took the Bread
+out of their Mouths, for which I was much troubled in Conscience,
+fell into Dispair, and, as you see, hang'd my self.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Pulls him up, and runs out</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>O the Devil! Murder, murder!</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Poor.</p>
+
+<p><i>Poor.</i> O Neighbours, here hangs the Rogue.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Help me down?</p>
+
+<p><i>Poor.</i> No, you are very well as you are.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scar.</i> Don't you know me?</p>
+
+<p><i>Poor.</i> Ay, for a Rogue; e'en finish your Work, and save
+the Hang-man a Labour. Yet, now I think on't, self-murder
+is a crying Sin, and may damn his Soul. Come, Neighbours,
+we'll take him down, and have him hang'd according
+to Law. [<i>When he's down he trips up their Heels, and
+runs out, they after him.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>All.</i> Stop Thief, stop Thief.</p>
+
+<p><i>Thunder and Lightning</i>; Lucifer, Beelzebub,
+<i>and</i> Mephostopholis.</p>
+
+<p><i>Luc.</i> Thus from the infernal <i>Dis</i> do we ascend, bringing
+with us the Deed; the Time is come which makes it forfeit.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> Faustus, <i>an old Man, and a Scholar</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Yet, <i>Faustus</i>, call on Heav'n.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Oh! 'tis too late; behold, they lock my Hands.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Who, <i>Faustus</i>?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> <i>Lucifer</i> and <i>Mephostopholis</i>; I gave 'em my Soul for
+Four and twenty Years.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Heav'n forbid.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fau.</i> Ay, Heav'n forbad it indeed, but <i>Faustus</i> has done it;
+for the vain Pleasure of Four and twenty Years, <i>Faustus</i> has
+lost eternal Joy and Felicity: I writ 'em a Bill with my own
+Blood, the Date is expired; this is the Time, and they are
+come to fetch me.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Why would not <i>Faustus</i> tell me of that before?</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> I oft intended it, but the Devil threat'ned to tear
+me in Pieces. O Friend, retire, and save your self.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> I'll into the next Room, and there pray for thee.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> Ay, pray for me; and what Noise soever you hear
+stir not, for nothing can rescue me.</p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Pray thou, and I'll pray. Adieu.</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> If I live till Morning I'll visit you; if not, <i>Faustus</i>
+is gon to Hell. [<i>Exeunt old Man and Scholar.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Meph.</i> Ay, <i>Faustus</i>, now thou hast no hopes on Heav'n.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> O thou bewitching Fiend; 'twas thou, and thy<br />
+Temptations, hath rob'd me of eternal Happiness.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Meph.</i> I do confess it, <i>Faustus</i>, and rejoyce.<br />
+What weep'st thou, 'tis too late; hark to thy Knell:<br />
+Fools that will Laugh on Earth, must Weep in Hell.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Ext.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Good and bad Angel descend.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Good An.</i> O <i>Faustus</i>, if thou hadst given Ear to me,<br />
+Innumerable Joys had followed thee:<br />
+But thou didst love the World.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Bad An.</i> Gave Ear to me, and now must taste Hell's Pains
+perpetual.</p>
+
+<p><i>Throne of Heaven appears.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Good An.</i> Had'st thou affected sweet Divinity,<br />
+Hell, nor the Devil, had no Power on thee.<br />
+Had'st thou kept on that way, <i>Faustus</i>, behold in what resplendid<br />
+Glory thou had'st sat; that hast thou Lost.<br />
+And now, poor Soul, must thy good Angel leave:<br />
+The Jaws of Hell are ready to receive thee. [<i>Ascends.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Hell is discovered.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bad An.</i> Now, <i>Faustus</i>, let thy Eyes with Horror stare<br />
+Into that Vast perpetual torturing House.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>Faust.</i> O I have seen enough to torture me.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Bad An.</i> Nay thou must feel 'em, 'taste the Smart of all.<br />
+He that loves Pleasure must for Pleasure fall:<br />
+And so I leave thee, <i>Faustus</i>, till anon.<br />
+Thou'lt tumble into Confusion. [<i>Descends.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><i>The Clock strikes Eleven.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Faust.</i> Now, <i>Faustus</i>, hast thou but one bear Hour to Live,<br />
+And then thou must be Damn'd perpetually:<br />
+Stand still you ever-moving Spheres of Heav'n,<br />
+That Time may cease, and Mid-night never come.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Or let this Hour be but a Year, a Month, a Week, a natural
+Day; that <i>Faustus</i> may repent, and save his Soul. Mountains
+and Hills come, come, and fall on me, and hide me from the
+heavy Wrath of Heav'n. Gape Earth; Oh no, it will not
+harbour me. [<i>The Clock strikes.</i>
+Oh! half the Hour is past; 'twill all be past anon. Oh! if
+my Soul must suffer for my Sin, impose some end to my in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>cessant
+Pain. Let <i>Faustus</i> live in Hell a Thousand Years, an
+Hundred thousand, and at last be sav'd. [<i>Strikes Twelve.</i>
+No End is limitted to damn'd Souls: It strikes, it strikes.
+Now, Body, turn to Air, to Earth, or Water. Oh! avoid the
+Fire: They come. Oh! mercy, Heaven; ugly Hell gape
+not. Come not <i>Lucifer</i>; O <i>Mephostopholis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Sink with Devils. Thunder.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter old Man and Scholar.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Old M.</i> Come, Friend, let's visit <i>Faustus</i>: For such a
+dreadful Night was never seen.</p>
+
+<p><i>Scene discovers</i> Faustus's <i>Limbs</i>.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Schol.</i> O help us, Heav'n; see here are <i>Faustus</i>'s Limbs,<br />
+All torn asunder by the Hand of Hell.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Old M.</i> May this a fair Example be to all,<br />
+To avoid such Ways which brought poor <i>Faustus</i>'s Fall.<br />
+And whatsoever Pleasure does invite,<br />
+Sell not your Souls to purchase vain Delight.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>[<i>Exeunt.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Scene changes to Hell.</i></p>
+
+<p>Faustus <i>Limbs come together</i>. <i>A Dance, and Song.</i></p>
+
+
+<p><i>FINIS.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center">
+WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK<br />
+MEMORIAL LIBRARY<br />
+UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES<br />
+The Augustan Reprint Society<br />
+PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p>The Augustan Reprint Society</p>
+
+<p>PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT</p>
+
+<p><b>1948-1949</b></p>
+
+<p>16. Henry Nevil Payne, <i>The Fatal Jealousie</i> (1673).</p>
+
+<p>17. Nicholas Rowe, <i>Some Account of the Life of Mr. William
+Shakespear</i> (1709).</p>
+
+<p>18. Anonymous, "Of Genius," in <i>The Occasional Paper</i>, Vol. III,
+No. 10 (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface to <i>The Creation</i> (1720).</p>
+
+<p><b>1949-1950</b></p>
+
+<p>19. Susanna Centlivre, <i>The Busie Body</i> (1709).</p>
+
+<p>20. Lewis Theobald, <i>Preface to the Works of Shakespeare</i> (1734).</p>
+
+<p>22. Samuel Johnson, <i>The Vanity of Human Wishes</i> (1749), and two
+<i>Rambler</i> papers (1750).</p>
+
+<p>23. John Dryden, <i>His Majesties Declaration Defended</i> (1681).</p>
+
+<p><b>1951-1952</b></p>
+
+<p>26. Charles Macklin, <i>The Man of the World</i> (1792).</p>
+
+<p>31. Thomas Gray, <i>An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard</i> (1751),
+and <i>The Eton College Manuscript</i>.</p>
+
+<p><b>1952-1953</b></p>
+
+<p>41. Bernard Mandeville, <i>A Letter to Dion</i> (1732).</p>
+
+<p><b>1962-1963</b></p>
+
+<p>98. Selected Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert's <i>Temple</i> ... (1697).</p>
+
+<p><b>1964-1965</b></p>
+
+<p>109. Sir William Temple, <i>An Essay Upon the Original and Nature
+of Government</i> (1680).</p>
+
+<p>110. John Tutchin, <i>Selected Poems</i> (1685-1700).</p>
+
+<p>111. Anonymous, <i>Political Justice</i> (1736).</p>
+
+<p>112. Robert Dodsley, <i>An Essay on Fable</i> (1764).</p>
+
+<p>113. T. R., <i>An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning</i> (1698).</p>
+
+<p>114. Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted, <i>One Epistle to Mr.
+A. Pope</i> (1730), and Anonymous, <i>The Blatant Beast</i> (1742).</p>
+
+<p><b>1965-1966</b></p>
+
+<p>115. Daniel Defoe and others, <i>Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs.
+Veal</i>.</p>
+
+<p>116. Charles Macklin, <i>The Covent Garden Theatre</i> (1752).</p>
+
+<p>117. Sir Roger L'Estrange, <i>Citt and Bumpkin</i> (1680).</p>
+
+<p>118. Henry More, <i>Enthusiasmus Triumphatus</i> (1662).</p>
+
+<p>119. Thomas Traherne, <i>Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation</i>
+(1717).</p>
+
+<p>120. Bernard Mandeville, <i>Aesop Dress'd or a Collection of Fables</i>
+(1740).</p>
+
+<p><b>1966-1967</b></p>
+
+<p>123. Edmond Malone, <i>Cursory Observations on the Poems
+Attributed to Mr. Thomas Rowley</i> (1782).</p>
+
+<p>124. Anonymous, <i>The Female Wits</i> (1704).</p>
+
+<p>125. Anonymous, <i>The Scribleriad</i> (1742). Lord Hervey, <i>The Difference
+Between Verbal and Practical Virtue</i> (1742).</p>
+
+<p><b>1967-1968</b></p>
+
+<p>129. Lawrence Echard, Prefaces to <i>Terence's Comedies</i> (1694)
+and <i>Plautus's Comedies</i> (1694).</p>
+
+<p><b>1968-1969</b></p>
+
+<p>133. John Courtenay, <i>A Poetical Review of the Literary and Moral
+Character of the Late Samuel Johnson</i> (1786).</p>
+
+<p>134. John Downes, <i>Roscius Anglicanus</i> (1708).</p>
+
+<p>135. Sir John Hill, <i>Hypochondriasis, a Practical Treatise</i> (1766).</p>
+
+<p>136. Thomas Sheridan, <i>Discourse ... Being Introductory to His Course
+of Lectures on Elocution and the English Language</i> (1759).</p>
+
+<p>137. Arthur Murphy, <i>The Englishman From Paris</i> (1736).</p>
+
+<p><b>1969-1970</b></p>
+
+<p>138. [Catherine Trotter], <i>Olinda's Adventures</i> (1718).</p>
+
+<p>139. John Ogilvie, <i>An Essay on the Lyric Poetry of the Ancients</i> (1762).</p>
+
+<p>140. <i>A Learned Dissertation on Dumpling</i> (1726) and <i>Pudding Burnt to
+Pot or a Compleat Key to the Dissertation on Dumpling</i> (1727).</p>
+
+<p>141. Selections from Sir Roger L'Estrange's <i>Observator</i> (1681-1687).</p>
+
+<p>142. Anthony Collins, <i>A Discourse Concerning Ridicule and Irony
+in Writing</i> (1729).</p>
+
+<p>143. <i>A Letter From A Clergyman to His Friend, With An Account of
+the Travels of Captain Lemuel Gulliver</i> (1726).</p>
+
+<p>144. <i>The Art of Architecture, A Poem. In Imitation of Horace's
+Art of Poetry</i> (1742).</p>
+
+<p><b>1970-1971</b></p>
+
+<p>145-146. Thomas Shelton, <i>A Tutor to Tachygraphy, or Short-writing</i>
+(1642) and <i>Tachygraphy</i> (1647).</p>
+
+<p>147-148. <i>Deformities of Dr. Samuel Johnson</i> (1782).</p>
+
+<p>149. <i>Poeta de Tristibus: or the Poet's Complaint</i> (1682).</p>
+
+<p>150. Gerard Langbaine, <i>Momus Triumphans: or the Plagiaries
+of the English Stage</i> (1687).</p>
+
+<p><b>1971-1972</b></p>
+
+<p>151-152. Evan Lloyd, <i>The Methodist</i>. A Poem (1766).</p>
+
+<p>153. <i>Are these Things So?</i> (1740), and <i>The Great Man's Answer
+to Are these Things So?</i> (1740).</p>
+
+<p>154. Arbuthnotiana: <i>The Story of the St. Alb-ns Ghost</i> (1712), and
+<i>A Catalogue of Dr. Arbuthnot's Library</i> (1779).</p>
+
+<p>155-156. A Selection of Emblems from Herman Hugo's <i>Pia Desideria</i>
+(1624), with English Adaptations by Francis Quarles and
+Edmund Arwaker.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE AUGUSTAN REPRINT SOCIETY</h2>
+
+<p class="center">William Andrews Clark Memorial Library</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">University of California, Los Angeles</span></p>
+<p class="center">2520 Cimarron Street (at West Adams), Los Angeles, California 90018</p>
+
+
+<p>Publications of the first fifteen years of the Society (numbers
+1-90) are available in paperbound units of six issues at $16.00
+per unit, from the Kraus Reprint Company, 16 East 46th
+Street, New York, N.Y. 10017.</p>
+
+<p>Publications in print are available at the regular membership
+rate of $5.00 for individuals and $8.00 for institutions per year.
+Prices of single issues may be obtained upon request. Subsequent
+publications may be checked in the annual prospectus.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Make check or money order payable to</i></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">The Regents of the University of California</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus
+Made into a Farce, by William Mountfort
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made
+into a Farce, by William Mountfort
+
+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 Life and Death of Doctor Faustus Made into a Farce
+
+Author: William Mountfort
+
+Editor: Anthony Kaufman
+
+Release Date: September 14, 2011 [EBook #37422]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND DEATH OF DOCTOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Katie Hernandez, Joseph Cooper
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+To H. T. Swedenberg,
+Junior _founder_, _protector_, _friend_
+
+[Illustration: _He that delights to_ Plant _and_ Set, _Makes_ After-Ages
+_in his_ Debt.]
+
+ Where could they find another formed so fit,
+ To poise, with solid sense, a sprightly wit?
+ Were these both wanting, as they both abound,
+ Where could so firm integrity be found?
+
+
+The verse and emblem are from George Wither, _A Collection of Emblems,
+Ancient and Modern_ (London, 1635), illustration xxxv, page 35.
+
+The lines of poetry (123-126) are from "To My Honoured Kinsman John
+Driden," in John Dryden, _The Works of John Dryden_, ed. Sir Walter
+Scott, rev. and corr. George Saintsbury (Edinburgh: William Patterson,
+1885), xi, 78.
+
+
+THE AUGUSTAN REPRINT SOCIETY
+
+WILLIAM MOUNTFORT
+
+The LIFE and DEATH of _Doctor Faustus_ Made into a FARCE
+
+(1697)
+
+_Introduction by_ ANTHONY KAUFMAN
+
+PUBLICATION NUMBER 157
+
+WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY
+
+UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
+
+1973
+
+
+
+
+GENERAL EDITORS
+
+ William E. Conway, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ George Robert Guffey, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Maximillian E. Novak, University of California, Los Angeles
+ David S. Rodes, University of California, Los Angeles
+
+
+ADVISORY EDITORS
+
+ Richard C. Boys, University of Michigan
+ James L. Clifford, Columbia University
+ Ralph Cohen, University of Virginia
+ Vinton A. Dearing, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Arthur Friedman, University of Chicago
+ Louis A. Landa, Princeton University
+ Earl Miner, Princeton University
+ Samuel H. Monk, University of Minnesota
+ Everett T. Moore, University of California, Los Angeles
+ Lawrence Clark Powell, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ James Sutherland, University College, London
+ H. T. Swedenberg, Jr., University of California, Los Angeles
+ Robert Vosper, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+ Carl A. Zimansky, State University of Iowa
+
+
+CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
+
+Edna C. Davis, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+
+
+EDITORIAL ASSISTANT
+
+Jean T. Shebanek, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
+
+Typography by Wm. M. Cheney
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+According to "Some Account of the Life of Mr. W. Mountfort" prefixed to
+the collected plays of 1720, William Mountfort, successful playwright
+and actor, was born "the Son of Captain _Mountfort_, a Gentleman of a
+good Family in _Staffordshire_; and he spent the greatest Part of his
+Younger Years in that County, without being bred up to any Employment."
+Since "his Gaiety of Temper and Airy Disposition ... could not be easily
+restrain'd to the solitary Amusements of a Rural Life,"[1] he set out to
+make his fortune in London, and was employed by the Duke's Company at
+the Dorset Garden Theater. First notice of him appears in the part of
+the "boy" in _The Counterfeits_, attributed to John Leanerd, and
+produced in May, 1678.[2]
+
+Mountfort was to win notice as an actor in the part of Talboy in Brome's
+_The Jovial Crew_, where as a rejected lover he was called upon for
+storms of comic tears. In his _Apology_, Cibber praises Mountfort in
+this part: "in his Youth, he had acted Low Humour, with great Success,
+even down to _Tallboy_ in the _Jovial Crew_"[3] and Mountfort himself
+alluded to his early success in the prologue to his first play, _The
+Injured Lovers_, where he defies the critics: "True Talboy to the last
+I'll Cry and Write."
+
+Mountfort scored his first major success as an actor when he played the
+title role in Crowne's _Sir Courtly Nice_. The play's popularity owed
+much to Mountfort's acting of a part which recalls Etherege's Sir
+Fopling Flutter. The "Account" of 1720 says that Mountfort "gain'd a
+great and deserved Reputation, as a Player; particularly in Acting the
+part of Sir _Courtly Nice_," and Cibber, who was later to create the
+great Sir Novelty Fashion, says of Mountfort's Sir Courtly:
+
+ There his whole Man, Voice, Mien, and Gesture, was no longer
+ _Monfort_, but another Person. There, the insipid, soft
+ Civility, the elegant, and formal Mien; the drawling delicacy
+ of Voice, the stately Flatness of his Address, and the empty
+ Eminence of his Attitudes were ... nicely observ'd.... If, some
+ Years after the Death of _Monfort_, I my self had any Success,
+ in either of these Characters, I must pay the Debt I owe to his
+ Memory, in confessing the Advantages I receiv'd from the just
+ Idea, and strong Impression he had given me, from his action
+ them (_Apology_, p. 76).
+
+In 1686, Mountfort married one of the attractive young actresses then
+appearing in London, Susanna Percival, and the Mountforts appeared
+together in a number of plays until his untimely death.
+
+Mountfort brought his first play, _The Injured Lovers_: or, _The
+Ambitious Father_, a tragedy, to be acted at Drury Lane early in
+February, 1688. The play was not a great success. Gildon mentions that
+it "did not succeed as the Author wish'd,"[4] although the play was
+brilliantly cast, with Betterton, Mrs. Bracegirdle, and Mrs. Barry in
+chief parts. Mountfort himself played second lead to Betterton, and the
+comedians Leigh, Jevon, and Underhill appeared in boisterous roles. But
+this rather extravagant account of passion and thwarted love did not
+take. Such lines as the heroine's "Thy _Antelina_, she shall be the Pile
+On which I'll burn, and as I burn I'll smile," reveals an uncertain
+poetic talent. In the prologue Mountfort manages more wit:
+
+ JO. _Hayne's Fate is now become my Share,
+ For I'm a Poet, Marry'd, and a Player:
+ The greatest of these Curses is the First;
+ As for the latter Two, I know the worst ..._
+
+And of the play's fate:
+
+ _Damn it who will, Damn me, I'll write again;
+ Clap down each Thought, nay, more than I can think,
+ Ruin my Family in Pen and Ink.
+ And tho' my Heart should burst to see your Spite,
+ True Talboy to the last, I'll Cry and Write...._
+
+Unsuccessful at tragedy, Mountfort moved to surer ground, and if tragedy
+did not sell on the market of the 1680's, farce was surefire.
+Mountfort's _The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus, Made into a Farce ...
+with the Humours of Harlequin and Scaramouche_, is a most interesting
+example of Restoration farce. The Queen's Theater in Dorset Garden was
+well-fitted for stage spectacle and effect, and Mountfort took advantage
+of his knowledge of the stage and the contemporary audience to produce
+an amusing and popular hit. The play was revived in 1697, five years
+after Mountfort's death, and again in 1724, at a time when, as Borgman
+tells us (p. 39), _The Injured Lovers_ had been long forgotten.
+
+Mountfort continued his acting career with great success; he was one of
+twenty-two men and six women who, on 12 January 1688, were given the
+position of "Comoedians in Ordinary" to King James, and he acted in a
+variety of plays, including Shadwell's _The Squire of Alsatia_, in May,
+1688, and _Bury Fair_, in April, 1689. In Dryden's _Don Sebastian_,
+produced in December, 1689, he played the young and noble Don Antonio,
+described as "the wittiest Woman's toy in Portugal." Although Mountfort
+was best known for comic roles, he scored a success as Alexander in
+Nathaniel Lee's _The Rival Queens_, January, 1690. Cibber says of his
+Alexander:
+
+ In Tragedy he was the most affecting Lover within my Memory.
+ His Addresses had a resistless Recommendation from the very
+ Tone of his Voice ... All this he particularly verify'd in that
+ Scene of _Alexander_, where the Heroe throws himself at the
+ Feet of _Statira_ for Pardon of his past Infidelities. There we
+ saw the Great, the Tender, the Penitent, the Despairing, the
+ Transported, and the Amiable, in the highest Perfection
+ (_Apology_, pp. 74-75).
+
+Mountfort's third play was acted in January, 1690, although it may have
+been produced as early as December of the previous year. _The Successful
+Strangers_, a tragi-comedy, was based on a novel by Scarron, _The Rival
+Brothers_. In his Preface, Mountfort confesses, "_I am no Scholar, which
+renders me incapable of stealing from Greek and Latin Authors, as the
+better Learned have done_". The play was a success; its combination of
+comedy and tragedy appealed to the town, and it was revived several
+times in the early eighteenth century.
+
+As Borgman notes (p. 80), Mountfort's acting career peaked in the season
+of 1690-1691, when he acted nine new roles, eight of which were leads.
+He also prepared a comedy of his own, _Greenwich Park_, and assisted in
+the writing or preparation of three other plays. He assisted Settle with
+_Distress'd Innocence_, and his name is linked with two plays by John
+Bancroft, _Edward III_ and _Henry the Second_, although his contribution
+here, if any, is uncertain. The publishers of the collected plays of
+1720 note that "we have annex'd, _King Edward the Third_, and _Henry the
+Second_; which tho' not wholly composed by him, it is presum'd he had,
+at least, a Share in fitting them for the Stage, otherwise it cannot be
+supposed he would have taken the Liberty of Writing Dedications to
+them." Borgman says of these plays that Mountfort "doubtless scanned the
+script with a critical eye and made such changes as would seem necessary
+to an experienced man of the theater" (p. 90).
+
+In _Greenwich Park_, Mountfort scored his greatest success. The comedy
+is a hilarious mixture of the comedy of manners, humours, and farce. The
+prologue sounds the dominant motif of the play, that of satiric and
+energetic sex-intrigue: "At Greenwich lies the Scene, where many a Lass
+Has bin Green-gown'd upon the tender Grass." The play hits wittily at
+fortune-hunters, cits, and old fellows who attempt to ignore their age.
+There is heavy reference to the contemporary London scene. The comedy
+was produced in April, 1691, with great success; Gildon says of it: "a
+very pretty Comedy, and has been always received with general Applause"
+(_Lives and Characters_, p. 102). The gay and witty Florella was played
+by Mrs. Mountfort--who played a part very much like that in which she
+was so successful previously, Sir Anthony Love. Mrs. Barry played the
+passionate Dorinda, a promiscuous and mercenary woman who, at one point
+in the play, cries out in the best tradition of sentimental comedy: "Oh
+what a Curse 'tis, when for filthy Gain We affect a Pleasure in a real
+Pain." Sir Thomas Reveller, the heavy but comic father, was played by
+Leigh; Nokes and Underhill played comic cits, and Mountfort himself
+played opposite his wife as Young Reveller. The play was revived
+repeatedly, and remains a delightful work.
+
+Mountfort's best part of his last year came in December, 1691, when he
+played the hilarious lout, Mr. Friendall, of Southerne's _The Wives'
+Excuse_. The play is good comedy, but quite serious, as Southerne
+focuses on the distress of an intelligent, sensitive woman, saddled with
+a foolish husband who is the perfect representative of a frivolous and
+malicious society. On Friday, 2 December 1692, Mountford acted what must
+have been his final role, Alexander in _The Rival Queens_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mountfort's life ended at the height of his fame, in the most
+spectacular and dramatic murder of its time. The notorious Lord Mohun,
+then age fifteen, frequented the playhouse in 1692, often in the company
+of Captain Richard Hill, age twenty. Hill hoped to win the affections of
+Anne Bracegirdle, known not only for her beauty and acting ability, but
+also for her chastity--supposedly a scarce virtue among the actresses of
+the time. In _A Comparison between the Two Stages_, the following
+dialogue takes place:
+
+ _Sullen_: But does that _Romantick Virgin_ [Bracegirdle] still
+ keep up her great Reputation?
+
+ _Critick_: D'ye mean her Reputation for Acting?
+
+ _Sullen_: I mean her Reputation for not acting; you understand
+ me--....[5]
+
+Hill, making no headway with Mrs. Bracegirdle, concluded that she was in
+fact interested in Mountfort; they had often appeared on the stage
+together. More than once Hill was heard to utter threats against the
+actor, although Mohun was apparently on friendly terms with Mountfort
+Hill, determined to abduct the actress, persuaded Mohun to be his
+accomplice. They set Friday, 9 December 1692, as the date, and about ten
+o'clock in the evening, accompanied by some soldiers under Hill's
+command, they ambushed Mrs. Bracegirdle, her mother and her brother,
+Hamlet Bracegirdle, along with a man named Page, in Drury Lane. The
+actress's mother and Mr. Page fended the villains off for a time, in a
+moment a crowd gathered, and the would-be kidnappers saw that their plan
+was useless. Hill escorted the actress home and after having muttered a
+threat at Mr. Page proceeded to pace up and down outside their door.
+Approximately an hour and a half later, Mountfort appeared in Howard
+Street--apparently intent on confronting Hill and Mohun. Mohun greeted
+the actor courteously and asked if he had been sent for. Mountfort
+professed that he did not know anything of the business at hand, that he
+had come there by chance, adding that Mrs. Bracegirdle was no concern of
+his. What happened then happened fast and the witnesses disagree (see
+Borgman, pp. 135ff). It would seem, however, that Hill first struck the
+actor, then quickly drew and ran him through before Mountfort could
+draw. On his deathbed, traditionally the locale for truth-telling,
+Mountfort reported that "_My Lord Mohun offered me no Violence, but
+whilst I was talking with my Lord Mohun, Hill struck me with his Left
+Hand, and with his Right Hand run me through, before I could put my Hand
+to my Sword_" (Borgman, p. 140). It would seem clear that Hill gave the
+actor his deathblow and then, while the cry of murder was raised,
+escaped into the night. Mountfort, fatally wounded, staggered toward his
+own home in the next street. As Mrs. Mountfort opened the door, her
+husband fell bleeding into her arms; at one o'clock in the afternoon of
+the next day, he died. According to the "Account," he was to have played
+Bussy D'Ambois that night--Marlowe's tragedy of a young man who meets
+his death through assassination.
+
+Although Hill made good his escape, Lord Mohun stood trial in
+Westminster before his peers. Mohun's defense was simply that he was not
+privy to Hill's design and did not assist and encourage him in it. The
+lords, having heard the evidence, retired, and the next day, Saturday, 5
+February, acquitted Mohun of wrongdoing by a vote of 69-14. The prisoner
+was discharged.
+
+The United Company found themselves seriously hampered by the death of
+Mountfort, and even more so when fifteen days later the great comedian
+Anthony Leigh died. The "Account" says that Mountfort's death "had so
+great an Affect on his Dear Companion, Mr. LEE the Comedian, that he did
+not survive him above the space of a Week." The Company delayed the
+opening of a new play by one William Congreve, _The Old Bachelor_. But
+when that smash hit finally came on the boards in March 1693, Susanna
+Mountfort played the gay evaporee, Belinda, to great applause. And on 31
+January 1694, she married the actor John Verbruggen. The rather
+mysterious Anne Bracegirdle, for whom Mountfort had been killed, played
+female leads in all of Congreve's plays, and just as the public had once
+speculated on her relationship to Mountfort, they now speculated on her
+relationship to Congreve.
+
+Although farce was popular with London audiences during the Restoration,
+there was considerable controversy as to what it was and what it was
+worth. In a period in which the canon of English literary criticism was
+being formed, farce illustrates the disparity between received classical
+principles and the playwright's actual craft. Dryden, who himself
+"stooped" to writing farce, nonetheless sneers in his preface to _An
+Evening's Love, or The Mock-Astrologer_ [1671]:
+
+ Farce ... consists principally of grimaces ... Comedy consists,
+ though of low persons, yet of natural actions and characters; I
+ mean such humours, adventures, and designs, as are to be found
+ and met with in the world. Farce, on the other side, consists
+ of forced humours, and unnatural events. Comedy presents us
+ with the imperfections of human nature: Farce entertains us
+ with what is monstrous and chimerical.[6]
+
+Farce was theoretically unpopular because it relied on the extravagant
+and unnatural, as opposed to the play of real character found in comedy.
+And whereas in seventeenth-century comedy the avowed intention is
+usually to expose and thus to reform the vices and follies of the age,
+farce uses the grossly physical to draw a laugh; there is nothing to be
+learned from the slapstick and pigsbladder.
+
+Though sneered at by theorists and subject to endless abuse in the
+prologues and epilogues of the day, farce continued as pleasing to
+Restoration audiences as it is today. James Sutherland notes that shrewd
+actor-playwrights such as Mountfort, Betterton, Underhill, Jevon,
+Dogget, Powell--men who knew intimately the tastes of the town, chose to
+write farce.[7] Tate's _A Duke and No Duke_, Aphra Behn's _The Emperor
+of the Moon_, and Jevon's _The Devil of a Wife_, were among the most
+popular offerings, and although the Restoration wit may have gone to
+"Dr. Faustus" with a certain sense of intellectual slumming, he did
+continue to support quite generously the _farceurs_ of that time.
+Moreover, farcical elements appear regularly in the supposedly elegant
+and artificial Restoration comedy of manners.
+
+"Dr. Faustus" is a highly competent putting-together of those components
+which the experienced actor-playwright knew to be surefire. The date of
+its premier production is not known and has been assigned to a date as
+early as 1684 and as late as 1688. The farce was not published until the
+quarto of 1697, which appeared without cast-list, prologue, or
+epilogue.[8] The title page, however, states that the farce was acted at
+Dorset Garden "several times," by "Lee" (Anthony Leigh) and Jevon, and,
+as the editor of _The London Stage_ points out, since Jevon died in
+December of 1688, the premiere was probably no later than the season of
+1687-1688.[9] Borgman maintains that "Dr. Faustus" is Mountfort's second
+work, after _The Injured Lovers_ of February, 1688, noting that the
+epilogue to that play, spoken by Jevon, suggests that Mountfort was
+planning, or had written, a farce:
+
+ _Pardon but this, and I will pawn my life,
+ His next shall match my Devil of a Wife,
+ We'll grace it with the Imbellishment of Song and Dance;
+ We'll have the Monsieur once again from _France_,
+ With's Hoop and Glasses, and when that is done,
+ He shall divert you with his Riggadoon._
+
+We might guess, then, that if the epilogue does refer to "Dr. Faustus,"
+the date of that play is as late as the Spring of 1688.
+
+Mountfort took as his raw material Marlowe's great tragedy and for that
+reason "Dr. Faustus" may be to some extent thought of as a burlesque.
+The Restoration audience delighted in Marlowe's Faustus; the Elizabethan
+tragedy had been played in 1662, and there was a performance at the
+Duke's Theater in September, 1675. Edward Phillips wrote in his
+_Theatrum Poetarum_, that "of all that [Marlowe] hath written to the
+Stage his Dr. _Faustus_ hath made the greatest noise with its Devils and
+such like Tragical sport."[10] Here lies the suggestion that Mountfort
+was to take up, for as Borgman notes, Marlowe's tragedy has two distinct
+lines: the mighty verse which makes up the tragedy of an heroic
+overreacher, and a comic line of farcical _lazzi_. Mountfort has trimmed
+away the poetry of Marlowe and, for the most part, retained the farcical
+elements of the earlier play.[11]
+
+Mountfort keeps the compact with Mephostopholis, the appearance of good
+and bad angels, the visit of Lucifer and Beelzebub, the pageant of the
+seven deadly sins, the cheating of the horse-courser, the admonitions of
+the Old Man, the summoning of the spirits of Alexander and Darius, the
+tricking of Benvolio, the final moments of remorse before Faustus is
+dragged down to hell, and finally, the discovery of Faustus's limbs in
+his study. Mountfort's purpose, as Borgman notes, was not to convert an
+Elizabethan tragedy into a Restoration one, but to affix additional
+farcical materials to a work that already contained scenes of slapstick.
+
+Mountfort's unique contribution to his source was the introduction of
+the _commedia dell'arte_ figures which had become well-known to London
+theatergoers because of several visits to London by Italian actors since
+the Restoration. Probably, as Borgman notes (p. 36), the first
+Englishmen to play Scaramouche and Harlequin were Griffin and Haynes who
+had in 1677 appeared with the King's Company in Ravenscroft's
+_Scaramouch a Philosopher, Harlequin a School-Boy, Bravo, Merchant, and
+Magician_. When Aphra Behn's _The Emperor of the Moon_ appeared in
+March, 1687, Leigh played Scaramouche and Harlequin was taken by Jevon.
+It seems probable that in order that these two actors might have a
+further opportunity to appear as these popular characters, a place was
+found for Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's farce.
+
+The text of Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" reveals that his farce, like any,
+must depend to a great extent on its _farceurs_. In Jevon and Leigh he
+had talented players and much of the script can be regarded merely as an
+improvisational chart allowing the two famed comics to maneuver. Jevon,
+as Leo Hughes points out, built up a considerable reputation, chiefly in
+low comedy roles since his first notice as Osric in a revival of Hamlet
+in 1673.[12] Having a slight, thin figure, he was noted for his grace of
+movement and agility on the stage; he played Harlequin. Although Jevon
+could play such straight roles as Young Bellair in _The Man of Mode_,
+he, along with Nokes, Underhill, and Leigh, made his reputation in the
+boisterous farce of which "Dr. Faustus" is an excellent example.
+
+Anthony Leigh played Scaramouche. Of his acting Cibber says:
+
+ In Humour, he lov'd to take a full Career, but was careful
+ enough to stop short, when just upon the Precipice: He had
+ great Variety, in his manner, and was famous in very different
+ Characters.... But no wonder _Leigh_ arriv'd to such Fame, in
+ what was so completely written for him; when Characters that
+ would make the Reader yawn, in the Closet, have by the Strength
+ of his Action, been lifted into the lowdest Laughter, on the
+ Stage (_Apology_, p. 85-86).
+
+That Jevon and Leigh played well together is evident, and one can see
+great possibilities in their improvisation of such _lazzi_ as the
+episode of the "dead body," Act I, Scene i, or in the elaborate show of
+compliment which ends the first act.
+
+The presence of Scaramouche and Harlequin in Mountfort's adaptation
+suggests the influence of the Italian and French _commedia_ on the
+Restoration stage, although, as Leo Hughes points out, the native
+tradition of farce is paramount (pp. 134-141). Hughes notes that
+although the _commedia_ influence is obvious, Italian farce is different
+in style from the English, and that although there were four or five
+tours by _commedia_ troops between 1660 and 1700, these visits were not
+enough to influence significantly English farce writing. Furthermore,
+the Italian's art was improvisational--they used no printed texts, and
+the English would therefore have even less chance to copy from the
+_commedia_. Readers of "Dr. Faustus" will find little trace of
+_commedia_ influence apart from the conventional names. Hughes
+acknowledges (p. 141) the greater influence of the French stage in the
+Restoration, owing chiefly to the great popularity of Moliere, whose
+influence on farce, especially on the afterpiece which became a staple
+on the English stage after 1695, was long-lived. His prestige was great;
+he appealed to English taste, and such characters as M. Jourdain, M.
+Pourceaugnac, and Sganarelle appear repeatedly in English adaptations.
+
+The action of farce is typically a string of blow-ups, stage business
+highly dependent on fast pacing. Characteristically on the English stage
+there is a great deal of stage-effect; "Dr. Faustus," produced at the
+Dorset Garden Theater where farce was often produced in order to take
+advantage of the elaborate stage machinery available there, makes use
+of rising tables, a giant which divides in two, good and bad angels
+which rise and descend, fireworks, a vanishing feast, a view of hell,
+and even more. Indeed, the often hilarious stage directions give us good
+insight into the capabilities of the Restoration stage. The finale is
+typical: "_Scene discovers Faustus's Limbs_." After the Old Man piously
+hopes that this "May ... a fair Example be to all, To avoid such Ways
+which brought poor Faustus's Fall," the "_Scene changes to Hell. Faustus
+Limbs come together. A Dance, and Song._"
+
+Farce often verges on satire, and, as he was to demonstrate in
+_Greenwich Park_, Mountfort had an eye for contemporary foibles. At the
+end of Act I, Harlequin and Scaramouche engage in dialogue which
+suggests similar passages of rough satire in Wycherley. Asked what
+practice his master, a doctor, has, Harlequin replies:
+
+ Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against the Term
+ for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks; and against
+ _Christmas_, _Easter_ and _Whitsun_ Holidays, for City
+ Apprentices; and if his Pills [to cure clap] be destroy'd,
+ 'twill ruin him in one Term.
+
+Mountford altered the pageant of the seven sins that he found in
+Marlowe, changing it in at least one case to bring it up to date. He
+begins by paraphrasing Marlowe:
+
+ _Faustus_: What art thou the Third?
+
+ _Envy_: I am _Envy_; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an
+ Oyster-wench. I cannot read, and wish all Books burnt.
+
+But then Mountford departs from his source, adding the following lines:
+
+ I always curst the Governement, that I was not prefer'd; and
+ was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns (II, i).
+
+The three kings are, I suppose, Charles I, Charles II, and James II, and
+the satiric jab is against those who perennially oppose the
+Establishment. Furthermore, it is easy to imagine that the role of
+Faustus, whoever played it, could well have been acted as a parody of
+the "tragical" acting style of the day, with its curious sing-song tone
+and stylized gestures.
+
+Mountfort's "Dr. Faustus" gives us an often amusing insight into that
+much despised, ever-popular bastard-child of the Restoration stage:
+farce. If the direct influence of the _commedia_ is slight, the spirit
+of improvisational comedy is embodied in the inspired buffoonery of
+Leigh and Jevon, reinforced by stage-effect and spots of contemporary
+satire. The play proved a hit and that undoubtedly was the playwright's
+sole intention. The farce is workmanlike, and as the "Account" prefixed
+to the 1720 collected plays observes, "THE Life and Death of Doctor
+_FAUSTUS_ has a great deal of low, but Entertaining Humour; it
+sufficiently shews his Talents that way."
+
+
+ University of Illinois
+ Urbana
+
+
+
+
+NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION
+
+ 1. _Six Plays, written by Mr. Mountfort_ (London, 1720), 2 volumes.
+ All references to plays other than "Dr. Faustus" are taken from
+ this collection.
+
+ 2. The substance of my account of Mountfort's life and work is based
+ on Albert S. Borgman, _The Life and Death of William Mountfort_
+ (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1935).
+
+ 3. _An Apology for the Life of Colley Cibber_, ed. B. R. S. Fone
+ (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1968), p. 117.
+
+ 4. Charles Gildon, _The Lives and Characters of the English
+ Dramatick Poets_ (London, [1698?]), p. 102.
+
+ 5. (London, 1702), p. 17.
+
+ 6. _Essays of John Dryden_, ed. W. P. Ker (New York: Russell &
+ Russell, 1900; rpt. 1961), I, 135-136.
+
+ 7. _English Literature of the Late Seventeenth Century_ (Oxford:
+ Clarendon Press, 1969), p. 132.
+
+ 8. The first edition, page 5, omits the period at the end of 1. 23
+ and the speech prefix "Meph." for 1. 24. These are correctly added
+ in the second edition (1720).
+
+ 9. _The London Stage 1660-1800, Part I: 1660-1700_, ed. W. Van
+ Lennep (Carbondale, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press,
+ 1965), 342.
+
+ 10. (London, 1675), p. 25.
+
+ 11. Borgman outlines the changes Mountfort made in his source; see
+ pp. 35ff and Appendix A.
+
+ 12. _A Century of English Farce_ (Princeton: Princeton University
+ Press, 1956), pp. 165-166.
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+The facsimile of Mountfort's _The Life and Death of Doctor Faustus_
+(1697) is reproduced by permission from a copy of the first edition
+(Shelf Mark: 131909) in _The Huntington Library, San Marino,
+California_. The total type-page (p. 17) measures 195 X 112 mm.
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ LIFE and DEATH
+
+ OF
+
+ Doctor Faustus,
+
+ Made into a
+
+ FARCE.
+
+ By Mr. _MOUNTFORD_.
+
+ _First Edition_
+
+ WITH THE
+
+ Humours of _Harlequin_ and _Scaramouche_:
+
+ As they were several times Acted
+
+ By Mr. _LEE_ and Mr. _JEVON_,
+
+ AT THE
+
+ Queens Theatre in _Dorset_ Garden.
+
+ Newly Revived,
+
+ At the Theatre in _Lincolns Inn Fields_,
+
+ With _Songs_ and _Dances_ between the ACTS.
+
+ _LONDON_,
+
+ Printed and sold by _E. Whitlock_ near _Stationers_ Hall, (1697)
+
+
+
+
+
+The Life and Death of
+
+Dr. FAUSTUS.
+
+
+
+
+ACT I. SCENE I.
+
+_Dr._ Faustus _seated in his Chair, and reading in his Study_.
+
+_Good and bad Angel ready._
+
+
+ _Faust._ Settle thy Study, _Faustus_, and begin
+ To sound the Depth of that thou wilt profess;
+ These Metaphysicks of Magicians,
+ And Negromantick Books, are heav'nly
+ Lines, Circles, Letters, Characters,
+ Ay, these are those that _Faustus_ most desires;
+ A sound Magician is a Demi-God:
+ Here tire my Brains to get a Deity.
+
+Mephostopholis _under the Stage_. _A good and bad Angel fly down._
+
+ _Good Ang._ O _Faustus_! lay that damn'd Book aside;
+ And gaze not on it, lest it tempt thy heart to blasphemy.
+
+ _Bad Ang._ Go forward, _Faustus_, in that famous Art
+ Wherein all Natures Treasure is contain'd:
+ Be thou on Earth as _Jove_ is in the Sky,
+ Lord and Commander of these Elements.
+
+_Spirits ascend._
+
+ _Faust._ How am I glutted with conceit of this?
+ Shall I make Spirits fetch me what I please?
+ I'll have 'em fly to _India_ for Gold,
+ Ransack the Ocean for Orient Pearl.
+ I'll have 'em Wall all _Germany_ with Brass:
+ I'll levy Soldiers with the Coin they bring,
+ And chase the Prince of _Parma_ from our Land. [_Rises._
+ 'Tis now the Dead nigh Noon of Night,
+ And _Lucifer_ his Spirits freedom gives;
+ I'll try if in this Circle I can Raise
+ A _Daemon_ to inform me what I long for.
+
+_Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii, Orientis Princeps, Beelzebub,
+German. Demogorgon._ [Thunders. _Mephostopholis, Mephostopholis, surgat
+Spiritus._
+
+Mephostopholis _speaks under Ground_. [Thunders.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, I attend thy Will.
+
+_Faust._ Where art thou?
+
+_Meph._ Here. [_a Flash of Light._
+
+_Scar. within._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Faust._ What Noise is that? Hast thou any Companions with thee?
+
+_Meph._ No.
+
+_Faust._ It comes this way?
+
+_Scar._ Oh, oh, O----. [_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Faust._ What ail'st thou?
+
+_Scar._ O' o' o'
+
+_Faust._ Speak, Fellow, what's the Matter?
+
+_Scar._ O poor _Scaramouche_!
+
+_Faust._ Speak, I conjure thee; or _Acherontis Dii Demogorgon_.----
+
+_Scar._ O I beseech you Conjure no more, for I am frighted into a
+_Diabetes_ already.
+
+_Faust._ Frighted at what?
+
+_Scar._ I have seen, Oh, oh----
+
+_Faust._ What?
+
+_Scar._ The Devil.
+
+_Faust._ Art sure it was the Devil?
+
+_Scar._ The Devil, or the Devil's Companion: He had a Head like a Bulls,
+with Horns on; and two Eyes that glow'd like the Balls of a dark
+Lantern: His Hair stood a Tiptoe, like your new-fashion'd Top-knots;
+with a Mouth as large as a King's Beef Eater: His Nails was as sharp as
+a Welshman's in Passion; and he look'd as frightful as a Sergeant to an
+_Alsatian_.
+
+_Faust._ But why art thou afraid of the Devil?
+
+_Scar._ Why I never said my Prayers in all my Life, but once; and that
+was when my damn'd Wife was sick, that she might dye: My Ears are as
+deaf to good Council, as _French_ Dragoons are to Mercy. And my
+Conscience wants as much sweeping as a Cook's Chimny. And I have as many
+Sins to answer for as a Church-warden, or an Overseer of the Poor.
+
+_Faust._ Why, the Devil loves Sinners at his Heart.
+
+_Scar._ Does he so?
+
+_Faust._ He hates none, but the Vertuous, and the Godly. Such as Fast,
+and go to Church, and give Alms-deeds.
+
+_Scar._ I never saw a Church in my Life, thank God, (I mean the Devil;)
+and for Fasting, it was always my Abomination; and for Alms, I never
+gave any Thing in my Life, but the Itch once to a Pawn-broker. Therefore
+I hope he may Love me.
+
+_Faust._ And he shall Love thee; I'll bring thee acquainted with him.
+
+_Scar._ Acquainted with the Devil?
+
+_Faust._ Ay; _Tanto metropontis Acherontis_.
+
+_Scar._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Faust._ Fear nothing _Mephostopholis_, be visible.
+
+[Scaramouche _sinks behind the Doctor, and peeps his Head out behind the
+Slip of his Gown._ _A Devil rises in Thunder and Lightning._
+
+I charge thee to be gon, and change thy Shape; thou art too ugly to
+attend on me. I find there's Virtue in my Charm; Come, rise up, Fool,
+the Devil's gon.
+
+[_The Devil sinks._
+
+_Scar._ The Devil go with him.
+
+_Faust._ Fear nothing, I command the Devil. If thou wilt leave thy
+Chimny-sweeping Trade, and live with me, thou shalt have Meat and Drink
+in Plenty; and 40 Crowns a Year shall be thy Wages; I'll make thee
+Learned in the black Art.
+
+_Scar._ I am a Student in that already: But let me consider, Good Meat
+and Drink, and 40 Crowns a Year. Then I'll change my black Art for
+yours.
+
+_Faust._ There's Earnest, thou art now my Servant; dispose of thy Brooms
+and Poles, they'll be useless to thee here; take this Key, go into my
+Study, and clean; take all the Books you find scatter'd about, and range
+'em orderly upon the Shelves.
+
+_Scar._ Happy _Scaramouche_, now may'st thou Swear, Lye, Steal, Drink
+and Whore; for thy Master is the Devil's Master, and thou in time may'st
+master 'em both.
+
+[_Exit_ Scaram.
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Meph._ Now, _Faustus_, what wouldst thou have with me?
+
+ _Faust._ I charge thee wait upon me whilst I live,
+ And do what-ever _Faustus_ shall command.
+
+_Meph._ Ay _Faustus_, so I will, if thou wilt purchase me of _Lucifer_.
+
+_Faust._ What says _Lucifer_, thy Lord?
+
+ _Meph._ That I shall Wait on _Faustus_ whilst he Lives,
+ So thou wilt buy my Service with thy Blood.
+
+_Faust._ Already _Faustus_ has hazarded that for thee.
+
+ _Meph._ Ay, but thou must bequeath it solemnly,
+ And write a Deed of Gift with it;
+ For that Security craves _Lucifer_.
+ If thou deny it, I must back to Hell.
+
+ _Bad Ang._ But _Faustus_, if I shall have thy Soul,
+ I'll be thy Slave, and worship thy Commands,
+ And give thee more than thou hast Will of.
+
+ _Faust._ If he wilt spare me Four and twenty Years,
+ Letting me Live in all Voluptuousness,
+ To have thee ever to attend on me,
+ To give me whatsoever I shall ask,
+ And tell me whatsoever I demand;
+ On these Conditions I resign it to him.
+
+ _Meph._ Then, _Faustus_ stab thy Arm couragiously,
+ And bind thy Soul, that at some certain Day
+ Great _Lucifer_ may claim it as his own;
+ And then be thou as Great as _Lucifer_.
+
+ _Faust._ Lo, _Mephostopholis_, for Love of thee, _Faustus_ has cut
+ His Arm, and with his proper Blood
+ Assures his Soul to be great _Lucifers_.
+
+_Meph._ But, _Faustus_, write it in manner of a Deed, and Gift.
+
+_Faust._ Ay, so I do; but, _Mephostopholis_, my Blood congeals, and I
+can write no more.
+
+_Meph._ I'll fetch thee Fire to dissolve it streight. [_Exit._
+
+ _Faust._ What might the staying of my Blood portend,
+ It is unwilling I should write this Bill.
+
+_Good and Bad Angel descend._
+
+_Good An._ Yet, _Faustus_, think upon thy precious Soul.
+
+_Bad An._ No, _Faustus_, think of Honour, and of Wealth.
+
+_Faust._ Of Wealth. Why all the _Indies_, _Ganges_, shall be mine.
+
+_Good An._ No, _Faustus_, everlasting Tortures shall be thine.
+
+ _Bad An._ No, _Faustus_, everlasting Glory shall be thine.
+ The World shall raise a Statue of thy Name,
+ And on it write, This, this is he that could command the
+ World. [_Good Angel ascends, bad Angel descends._
+
+ _Faust._ Command the World; Ay, _Faustus_, think on that,
+ Why streams not then my Blood that I may write?
+ _Faustus_ gives to thee his Soul; Oh! there it stops. Why
+ shouldst thou not? Is not thy Soul thy own?
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis _with a Chafer of Fire_.
+
+_Meph._ See, _Faustus_, here is Fire, set it on.
+
+_Faust._ So now the Blood begins to clear again.
+
+_Meph._ What is't I would not do to obtain his Soul?
+
+ _Faust._ _Consummatum est_; the Bill is ended.
+ But what is this Inscription on my Arm?
+ _Homo fuge_: Whether shall I fly?
+ My Senses are deceiv'd, here's nothing writ;
+ O yes, I see it plain, even here is writ
+ _Homo fuge_; yet shall not _Faustus_ fly,
+ I'll call up something to delight his Mind.
+
+[_Song._ Mephostopholis _waves his Wand_. _Enter several Devils, who
+present Crowns to_ Faustus, _and after a Dance vanish_.
+
+_Faust._ What means this then?
+
+ _Meph._ 'Tis to delight thy Mind, and let thee see
+ What Magick can perform.
+
+_Faust._ And may I raise such Spirits when I please.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, and do greater Things than these.
+
+ _Faust._ Then, _Mephostopholis_ receive this Deed of Gift;
+ But set Conditionally, that thou perform all
+ Covenants and Articles herein subscribed.
+
+ _Meph._ I swear by Hell, and _Lucifer_, to effect all
+ Promises between us both.
+
+_Faust._ Then take it.
+
+_Meph._ Do you deliver it as your Deed, and Gift?
+
+_Faust._ Ay, and the Devil do you good on't.
+
+_Meph._ So, now, _Faustus_, ask what thou wilt.
+
+_Faust._ Then let me have a Wife.
+
+Faustus _waves his Wand, and a Woman Devil rises: Fire-works about
+whirles round, and sinks_.
+
+_Faust._ What sight is this?
+
+_Meph._ Now, _Faustus_ wilt thou have a Wife?
+
+_Faust._ Here's a hot Whore indeed, I'll have no Wife.
+
+ _Meph._ Marriage is but a Ceremonial Toy;
+ I'll cull thee out the fairest Curtezans,
+ And bring 'em every Morning to thy Bed:
+ She whom thy Eye shall like, thy Heart shall have.
+
+_Faust._ Then, _Mephostopholis_, let me behold the Famous _Hellen_, who
+was the Occasion of great _Troys'_ Destruction.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, thou shalt. [_Waves his Wand, enters._
+
+_Faust._ O _Mephostopholis_! what would I give to gain a Kiss from off
+those lovely Lips.
+
+_Meph._ _Faustus_, thou may'st. [_He kisses her._
+
+_Faust._ My Soul is fled; come _Hellen_, come, give me my Soul again;
+she's gon. [_He goes to kiss her again, and she sinks._
+
+_Meph._ Women are shy you know at the first Sight; but come, _Faustus_,
+command me somewhat else.
+
+_Faust._ Then tell me, is Hell so terrible as Church-men write it.
+
+_Meph._ No, _Faustus_ 'tis Glorious as the upper World; but that we have
+Night and Day, as you have here: Above there's no Night.
+
+_Faust._ Why sighs my _Mephostopholis_, I think Hell's a meer Fable.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, think so still.
+
+_Faust._ Tell me who made the World?
+
+_Meph._ I will not.
+
+_Faust._ Sweet _Mephos._
+
+_Meph._ Move me no further.
+
+_Faust._ Villain, have I not bound thee to tell me any Thing.
+
+ _Meph._ That's not against our Kingdom, this is: Thou art
+ Lost; think thou of Hell.
+
+_Faust._ Think, _Faustus_, upon him that made the World.
+
+_Meph._ Remember this. [_Sinks._
+
+ _Faust._ Ay, go accursed Spirit to ugly Hell,
+ 'Tis thou hast damn'd distressed _Faustus_ Soul:
+ I will Repent: Ha! [_Goes to his Books._
+ This Bible's fast, but here's another:
+
+[_They both fly out of's Hand, and a flaming Thing appears written_, &c.
+
+ Is't not too late? [_Ring. Good and bad descend._
+
+_Bad An._ Too late.
+
+_Good An._ Never too late, if _Faustus_ will repent.
+
+ _Bad An._ _Faustus_, behold, behold thy Deed; if thou repent
+ Devils will tear thee in Pieces.
+
+_Good An._ Repent, and they shall never raze thy Skin.
+
+[_Scene shuts, Ang. ascends._
+
+_Scene changes to the Street._ _Enter_ Harlequin.
+
+_Harl._ This must be Mr. Doctor's House; I'll make bold to knock: My
+Heart fails me already.
+
+[Harlequin _opens the Door, peeps about, and shuts it_.
+
+I begin to tremble at the Thoughts of seeing the Devil.
+
+[_Knocks again._
+
+ Here's a great Resort of Devils, the very Doors smell of
+ Brimstone: I'll e'en back----No: I'll be a Man of Resolution:
+ But if Mr. Doctor should send a Familiar to open the
+ Door, in what language should I speak to the Devil? [_Knocks._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar. peeping._ This is some malicious Spirit, that will not let me
+alone at my Study; but I'll go in, and conn my Book. [_Exit._
+
+_Harl._ I believe Mr. Doctor is very Busy; but I'll rap this time with
+Authority.
+
+[Harlequin _raps at the Door_, Scaramouche _peeps out_. Harlequin
+_strikes him, and jumps back, runs frighted off_.
+
+_Scene changes to a Room in the Doctor's House._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche, _with a Book in the Doctor's Gown_.
+
+_Scar._ I have left the Door open to save the Devil the labour of
+Knocking, if he has a mind to come in: For I am resolved not to stir
+from my Book; I found it in the Doctor's Closet, and know it must
+contain Something of the Black Art.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin.
+
+_Harl._ Oh here's Mr. Doctor himself; he's reading some conjuring Book.
+_Ide fain jecit._
+
+_Scar._ This must be a conjuring Book by the hard Words. AB, EB, IB, OB,
+UB, BA, BO, BU, BI.
+
+_Harl._ Its a Child's Primer. [Harlequin _looks over him_.
+
+_Scar._ The Devil, the Devil; be gon, avoid Satan. [_Runs off._
+
+_Harl._ O the Devil! Now will I lye as if I were Dead, and let the Devil
+go hunt for my Soul. [_Lyes down._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ I have learn'd to raise the Devil, but how the Devil shall I do
+to lay him. Ha! what's here, a dead Body? The Devil assum'd this Body,
+and when I began to mutter my Prayers, he was in such haste he left his
+Carcass behind him. Ha! it stirs; no, 'twas but my Fancy.
+
+[Scaram. _lifts up all his Limbs, and lets 'em fall, whil'st_ Harl.
+_hits him on the Breech, lifts his Head, which falls gently_.
+
+ All's dead but's Head. [_Sets him upright._
+ The Devil, the Devil! Be gon; what art thou?
+
+_Harl._ A poor unfortunate Devil.
+
+_Scar._ The Devil; _Avant_ then _Hagon mogon strogon_.
+
+_Harl._ O good Mr. Doctor, conjure up no more Devils and I'll be gon, or
+any thing.--I came only to ask your Black Artship a Question.
+
+_Scar._ No, this is not the Devil. Who art thou? Whence comest thou?
+What's thy Business, Quick, or _Hogon strogon_?
+
+_Harl._ Hold, hold, hold, I am poor _Harlequin_: By the Learned I am
+called _Zane_, by the Vulgar _Jack Pudding_. I was late Fool to a
+Mountebank; and last Night, in the mistaking the Pipkin, I eat up a Pot
+of _Bolus_ instead of Hasty Pudding; and devour'd Three Yards of
+_Diaculum_ Plaister instead of Pancake, for which my Master has turn'd
+me out of Doors instead of Wages: Therefore, to be reveng'd, I come to
+hire a Devil or two of you, Mr. Doctor, of a strong Constitution, that
+may swallow up his Turpentine Pills as fast as he makes 'em, that he may
+never cure poor Whore more of a Clap; and then he'll be undone, for they
+are his chief Patients.
+
+_Scar._ What Practice has he?
+
+_Harl._ Why his Business is to patch up rotten Whores against the Term
+for Country Lawyers, and Attorneys Clerks; and against _Christmas_,
+_Easter_ and _Whitsun_ Holidays, for City Apprentices; and if his Pills
+be destroy'd, 'twill ruin him in one Term.
+
+_Scar._ Come in; and for a Crown a Week I'll lett thee out a Devil, as
+they do Horses at Livery, shall swallow him a Peck of Pills a day,
+though every one were as big as a Pumpkin; and make nothing of a _Bolus_
+for a Breakfast.
+
+_Harl._ O brave Mr. Doctor! O dainty Mr. Devil!
+
+_Scar._ Seigniora. [_Here they Complement who shall go first._
+
+
+_The End of the First Act._
+
+
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+Faustus _in his Study_.
+
+_Good and Bad Angel descend._
+
+
+_Good An._ _Faustus_, Repent; yet Heav'n will pity thee.
+
+_Bad An._ Thou art a Spirit, Heav'n cannot pity thee.
+
+_Fau._ Who buzzes in my Ear, I am a Spirit; be I a Devil yet Heaven can
+pity me: Yea, Heaven will pity me, if I repent.
+
+_Bad An._ Ay, but _Faustus_ never shall repent.
+
+_Good An._ Sweet _Faustus_ think of Heav'n, and heavenly Things.
+[_Ascends._
+
+ _Fau._ My Heart is hardened, I cannot repent.
+ Scarce can I name Salvation, Faith, or Heav'n,
+ But I am pinch'd, and prick'd, in thousand Places.
+ O help distressed _Faustus_!
+
+Lucifer, Beelzebub. _and_ Mephostopholis _rises_.
+
+_Luc._ None can afford thee help; for only I have Interest in thee,
+_Faustus_.
+
+_Fau._ Oh! What art thou, that looks so terrible?
+
+_Luc._ I am _Lucifer_, and this is my Companion Prince in Hell.
+
+_Beel._ We are come to tell thee thou dost injure us.
+
+_Luc._ Thou call'st on Heav'n contrary to thy Promise.
+
+_Beel._ Thou should'st not think on Heav'n.
+
+ _Fau._ Nor will I henceforth pardon him for this,
+ And _Faustus_ Vows never to look to Heav'n.
+
+ _Beel._ So shalt thou shew thy self a faithful Servant,
+ And we will highly gratify thee for it.
+
+_Fau._ Those Words delight my Soul.
+
+_Luc._ _Faustus_, we are come in Person to shew thee Passtime; sit down,
+and thou shalt behold the Seven Deadly Sins in their own proper Shapes
+and Likeness.
+
+_Fau._ That Sight will be as pleasant to my Eye, as Paradise to _Adam_
+the first Day of his Creation.
+
+_Beel._ Talk not of Paradise, but mind the Show. Go, _Mephostopholis_,
+and fetch 'em in; and, _Faustus_, question 'em their Names. _Enter
+Pride._
+
+_Fau._ What art thou?
+
+_Prid._ I am _Pride_; I was begot by Disdain and Affectation. I always
+took the Wall of my Betters; had ever the first Cut, or else would not
+eat: I scorn'd all Advice, never thought any one handsom but my self;
+had the best Pue in the Church, though a Tradesman's Wife; and at last
+dyed of the Spleen, for want of a Coach and Six Horses. Why is not thy
+Room perfum'd, and spread with Cloth of _Tissue_? What must you sit, and
+I stand? Rise up Brute.
+
+_Fau._ Go, thou art a proud Slut indeed. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Covetousness.
+
+Now what art thou the Second.
+
+_Cov._ I am _Covetousness_; I was begot by a close Fist, and a griping
+Heart, in a Usurer's Chest. I never eat, to save Charges: This Coat has
+cover'd me for Fourscore Winters: This Beard has seen as many more. I
+never slept in my Life, but always watch'd my Gold.
+
+_Fau._ What wert thou on Earth?
+
+_Cov._ I was first an Exciseman, and cheated the King and Country; then
+I was a Baker, and from every Neighbor's Loaf I stole Two Pound, and
+swore 'twas shrunk in the Oven. I was a Vintner, and by bribing of
+Quest-men had leave to sell in Pint Bottles for Quarts: At last I was a
+Horse-courser, made _Smithfield_ too hot to hold me, and rid Post to the
+Devil? Give me some Gold, Father? [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Envy.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Third?
+
+_Env._ I am _Envy_; begot by a Chimny-sweeper upon an Oyster-wench. I
+cannot read, and wish all Books burnt. I always curst the Government
+that I was not prefer'd; and was a Male-content in Three Kings Reigns. I
+am Lean with seeing others Eat; and I wish the Devil would make a Sponge
+of thy Heart, to wipe out the Score of my Sins.
+
+_Enter_ Wrath.
+
+_Fau._ Out, Envious Wretch. What art thou the Fourth?
+
+_Wra._ I am _Wrath_; I had neither Father nor Mother, but leap'd out of
+a Lion's Mouth when I was scarce an Hour old. I always abhor'd the Art
+of Patience, and curst all Fisher-men. I beat my Wife for my Pleasure;
+curst Heav'n in my Passion, 'cause it gave me no Fortune, and was hang'd
+for a Rape on a _Scotch_ Pedlar. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Gluttony.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Fifth?
+
+_Glut._ I am _Gluttony_; begot by a Plow-man on a Washer-woman, who
+devour'd a _Chedder_ Cheese in two Hours. I am of a Royal Pedigree: My
+Grand-father was a Sur-loin of Beef, and my Mother a Gammon of Bacon: My
+Sisters were Sows, which supply'd me with Pork: My Brothers were Calves,
+which afforded me Veal: My God-fathers were _Peter_ Pickled-Herring, and
+_Michael_ Milk-Porredg: My God-mothers were _Susan_ Salt-butter, and
+_Margery_ Sous'd-Hog's-Face. Now, _Faustus_, thou hast heard my
+Pedigree, wilt thou invite me to Supper?
+
+_Fau._ Not I.
+
+_Glut._ Then the Devil choak thee.
+
+_Enter_ Sloth.
+
+_Fau._ What art thou the Sixth?
+
+_Slo._ Hey ho! I am _Sloth_; I was begotten at Church by a sleepy Judg
+on a Costermonger's Wife, in the middle of a long Sermon. I am as Lazy
+as a Fishmonger in the Dog-days, or a Parson in _Lent_: I would not
+speak another Word for a King's Ransom.
+
+_Enter_ Leachery.
+
+_Fau._ And what are you, Mr. _Minks_, the Seventh and last?
+
+_Leach._ I am one that love an Inch of Raw Mutton better than an Ell of
+Fry'd Stock-fish, and the first Letter of my Name begins with
+_Leachery_. [_Exit._
+
+_Fau._ This Sight delights my Soul.
+
+_Luc._ _Faustus_ in Hell are all manner of Delights.
+
+_Fau._ O might I see Hell once, and return safe.
+
+_Luc.__ Faustus_, thou shalt; give me thy hand. Hence let's descend, and
+we will _Faustus_ show The mighty Pleasures in the World below.
+[_Vanishes._
+
+
+SCENE _Changes_.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin, _and_ Scaramouche _in the Doctor's Gown; a Wand, and
+a Circle_.
+
+_Scar._ So, now am I in my _Pontificalibus_: Now can I shew my Black
+Art; for I have found that heavenly Book which _Faustus_ used to raise
+the Dead in: Come, stand within this Circle.
+
+_Har._ 'Tis time to Conjure, for I am almost famish'd. We have fasted
+like Priests for a Miracle.
+
+_Scar._ I'll make thee amends presently; I'll conjure up a Spirit, ask
+what thou wilt thou shalt have it.
+
+_Har._ Let me alone for asking.
+
+_Scar._ Be very earnest with him, and intreat mightily.
+
+_Har._ I'll intreat Earnestly.
+
+_Scar._ Silence. _Sint mihi Dii Acherontis propitii Nobis Diccatus
+Mephostopholis, &c._
+
+Mephostopholis _rises_.
+
+ _Meph._ How am I tortur'd by these Villains Charms?
+ From _Constantinople_ have they brought me now,
+ Only for Measure of these idle Slaves? What
+ Would you with _Mephostopholis_?
+
+_Scar._ Wee'd know how Dr. _Faustus_ does.
+
+_Meph._ Well.
+
+_Scar._ When comes he home?
+
+_Meph._ Within Two Days.
+
+_Scar._ What was he doing when you left him?
+
+_Meph._ He was at Supper, eating good Chear.
+
+_Har._ Good Mr. Devil, tell him we are almost starv'd; and desire him to
+send us some of his good Chear.
+
+_Meph._ Is that all?
+
+_Har._ Some Wine too?
+
+_Meph._ What else.
+
+_Har._ What else: Why if Fornication been't against your Commandments,
+we would have some live Flesh; a handsom Wench.
+
+_Scar._ Only for a third Person, and please your Damnation.
+
+_Meph._ You shall have your Desires.
+
+_Har._ We desire your Mephostopholiship too, not to let us stay the
+Roasting and Boiling of any thing: For we are as Eager as the Wine in
+_Smithfield_, and want no whetting.
+
+_Meph._ You shall.
+
+Scaramouche _and_ Harlequin _pull off their Caps_.
+
+Now if your mighty Darkness would please to Retire.
+
+_Meph._ Farewell. [_Vanish._
+
+Scaramouche _steps out of the Circle, and struts about_.
+
+_Scar._ Now how do you like my Art?
+
+_Har._ O rare Art! O divine Mr. Doctor _Scaramouche_! If the Devil be as
+good as his Word, I'll owe him a good Turn as long as I live: But I wish
+our third Person would come.
+
+_A Giant rises._
+
+Ha! What's here?
+
+_Gi._ I am sent by _Pluto_ to bear you Company.
+
+_Har._ Is this his third Person? Or is it Three Generations in One? Come
+you from _Guild-hall_, Sir?
+
+_Gi._ No, Mortal, from the _Stygian_ Lake. I am the Giant which St.
+_George_ destroy'd; and in the Earth have been decaying ever since, but
+now am come to Eat with you.
+
+_Scar._ To pick up your Crums, Sir: You'r heartily Welcome.
+
+Scaramouche _gets upon_ Harlequin, _and salutes him_.
+
+_Gi._ I have lain now within the _Stygian_ Lake 2000 Years.
+
+_Scar._ Your Honour is not much shrunk in the Wetting.
+
+_Gi._ But we loose Time, and Dinner cools.
+
+_Har._ Where is it?
+
+_Gi._ In the next Room.
+
+_Scar._ Will it please your Lustiness to lead the Way?
+
+_Har._ Will it please you then to make way for him?
+
+_Gi._ I can divide my self to serve my Friends?
+
+[_Giant leaps in two._
+
+Breeches be you my Page, and follow me.
+
+Harleq. _and_ Scaram. _complement the Breeches_. [_Exeunt._
+
+
+SCENE _draws, and discovers a Table furnished with Bottles of Wine, and
+a Venison Pasty, a Pot of wild Fowl_, &c.
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche, Giant, _and_ Harlequin.
+
+_Har._ O heavenly Apparition!
+
+_Scar._ Come, let's sit down.
+
+_The upper part of the Giant flies up, and the under sinks, and
+discovers a Woman in the Room._
+
+Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche _start_.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! What's here, a Woman?
+
+_Har._ O happy Change! Madam, with your good Leave.
+
+[_Kisses._
+
+_Scar._ Never too late in good Breeding. [_Kisses._] Rare Wench! And as
+Luscious as Pig-sauce.
+
+_Har._ Heav'n be prais'd for all.
+
+[_Woman sinks, a Flash of Lightning._
+
+_Scar._ Your unseasonable Thankfulness has rob'd us of our Strumpet.
+
+_Har._ No matter, no matter; we shall meet her in the Cloisters after
+the Fair. Come let's fall too.
+
+[_They put their Caps before their Faces._
+
+Ha!
+
+_Scar._ The Table runs away from us.
+
+_Har._ We'll bestow the Pains to follow it again; this I see is a
+running Banquet.
+
+[_They put their Caps on again, the Table removes._
+
+_Scar._ I have found the Secret: We must not say Grace at the Devil's
+Feast.
+
+_Har._ Come then let's fall too, _San's_ Ceremony; Will you be Carver?
+
+_Scar._ Every one for himself, I say.
+
+_Har._ Ay, every one for himself, and God for us all.
+
+[_Table flies up into the Air._
+
+_Scar._ A Plague o'your Proverb; it has a Word in't must not be named.
+
+_Har._ Ah, Mr. Doctor, do but intreat Mr. _Mephostopholis_ to let the
+Table down to us, or send us to that, and I'll be his Servant as long as
+I live. [_They are hoisted up to the Table._
+
+_Scar. and Har._ Oh, oh, oh.
+
+_Scar._ Now have a care of another Proverb: We go without our Supper.
+
+_Har._ Nay, now I know the Devil's Humour, I'll hit him to a Hair: Pray,
+Mr. Doctor, cut up that Pasty.
+
+_Scar._ I can't get my Knife into it, 'tis over-bak'd.
+
+_Har._ Ay, 'tis often so: God sends Meat, and the Devil sends Cooks.
+[_Table flies down._
+
+_Scar._ Thou Varlet, dost thou see what thy Proverb has done?
+
+_Har._ Now could I curse my Grand-mother, for she taught 'em me: Well,
+if sweet _Mephostopholis_ will be so kind as but to let us and the Table
+come together again, I'll promise never to say Grace, or speak Proverb
+more, as long as I live.
+
+[_They are let down to the Table._
+
+_Scar._ Your Prayers are heard, now be careful; for if I lose my Supper
+by thy Negligence I'll cut thy Throat.
+
+_Har._ Do, and eat me when you have done. I am damnably hungry; I'll cut
+open this Pasty, while you open that Pot of wild Fowl.
+
+[Harlequin _takes off the Lid of the Pasty, and a Stag's Head peeps out;
+and out of the Pot of Fowl flies Birds_. Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche
+_start back, fall over their Chairs, and get up_.
+
+_Har._ Here's the Nest but the Birds are flown: Here's Wine though, and
+now I'll conjure for a Supper. I have a Sallad within of my own
+Gathering in the Fields to Day.
+
+_Scar._ Fetch it in; Bread, Wine, and a Salad may serve for a
+Collation.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _with a Tray of Sallad_.
+
+_Har._ Come, no Ceremony among Friends. _Bon. fro._
+
+_Scar._ _Sallad mal adjuste_; here's neither Fat nor Lean.
+
+_Har._ O Mr. Doctor, neither Fat nor Lean in a Sallad.
+
+_Scar._ Neither Oyl, nor Vinegar.
+
+_Har._ Oh! I'll fetch you that presently.
+
+[Harlequin _fetches a Chamber-pot of Piss, and a Lamp of Oyl, and pours
+on the Sallad_.
+
+_Scar._ O thy Sallad is nothing but Thistles and Netles; and thy Oyl
+stinks worse than _Arsefetito_.
+
+_Har._ Bread and Wine be our Fare. Ha! the Bread's alive. [_Bread
+stirs._
+
+_Scar._ Or the Devil's in't. Hey! again. [_Bread sinks._
+
+_Har._ My Belly's as empty as a Beggar's Purse.
+
+_Scar._ And mine as full of Wind as a Trumpeter's Cheeks.
+
+[_Table sinks, and Flash of Lightning._
+
+But since we can't Eat, let's Drink: Come, here's Dr. _Faustus_'s
+Health.
+
+_Har._ Ay, come; God bless Dr. _Faustus_.
+
+[_Bottles fly up, and the Table sinks._
+
+_Scar._ What all gone: Here's a Banquet stole away like a City Feast.
+[_Musick._
+
+_Har._ Ha! here's Musick to delight us.
+
+[_Two Chairs rises._ Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche _sits down, and are
+caught fast_.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! the Devil. We are lock'd in.
+
+_Har._ As fast as a Counter Rat.
+
+_Enter several Devils, who black_ Harlequin _and_ Scaramouche's _Faces,
+and then squirt Milk upon them_. _After the Dance they both sink._
+
+_Scar. and Har._ O' o, o'----
+
+
+_The End of the Second Act._
+
+
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+
+SCENE _a Wood_.
+
+Mephostopholis _and Dr._ Faustus.
+
+_Faust._ How have I been delighted by thy Art; and in Twelve Years have
+seen the utmost Limits of the spacious World; feasted my self with all
+Varieties; pleasur'd my Fancy with my Magick Art, and liv'd sole Lord
+o'er every Thing I wish'd for.
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, is it not a splendid Life?
+
+_Faust._ It is my Spirit; but prithee now retire, while I repose my
+self within this Shade, and when I wake attend on me again.
+
+_Meph._ _Faust_, I will. [_Exit._
+
+_Faust._ What art thou, _Faustus_, but a Man condemn'd. Thy Lease of
+Years expire apace; and, _Faustus_, then thou must be _Lucifers_: Here
+rest my Soul, and in my Sleep my future State be buried.
+
+_Good and bad Angel descends._
+
+_Good An._ _Faustus_, sweet _Faustus_, yet remember Heav'n. Oh! think
+upon the everlasting Pain thou must endure, For all thy short Space of
+Pleasure.
+
+_Bad An._ Illusions, Fancies, _Faustus_; think of Earth. The Kings thou
+shalt command: The Pleasures Rule. Be, _Faustus_, not a whining, pious
+Fool. [_Ascend._
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser.
+
+_Hors._ Oh! what a couz'ning Doctor was this: I riding my Horse into the
+Water, thinking some hidden Mystery had been in 'em, found my self on a
+Bundle of Straw, and was drag'd by Something in the Water, like a
+Bailiff through a Horse-pond. Ha! he's a Sleep: So ho, Mr. Doctor, so
+ho. Why Doctor, you couz'ning, wheedling, hypocritical, cheating,
+chousing, Son of a Whore; awake, rise, and give me my Mony again, for
+your Horse is turn'd into a Bottle of Hay. Why Sirrah, Doctor; 'sfoot I
+think he's dead. Way Doctor Scab; you mangy Dog. [_pulls him by the
+Leg._ 'Zounds I'm undone, I have pull'd his Leg off.
+
+_Faust._ O help! the Villain has undone me; Murder.
+
+_Hors._ Murder, or not Murder, now he has but one Leg I'll out-run him.
+[_Exit._
+
+_Faust._ Stop, stop him; ha, ha, ha, _Faustus_ has his Leg again, and
+the Horse-courser a Bundle of Hay for his Forty Dollars. Come,
+_Mephostopholis_, let's now attend the Emperor. [_Exit_ Faust. _and_
+Meph.
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser, _and_ Carter, _with Pots of Ale_.
+
+_Cart._ Here's to thee; and now I'll tell thee what I came hither for:
+You have heard of a Conjurer they call Doctor _Faustus_.
+
+_Hors._ Heard of him, a Plague take him, I have Cause to know him; has
+he play'd any Pranks with you?
+
+_Cart._ I'll tell thee, as I was going to the Market a while ago, with
+a Load of Hay, he met me, and askt me, What he should give me for as
+much Hay as his Horse would Eat: Now, Sir, I thinking that a little
+would serve his Turn, bad him take as much as he would for Three
+Farthings.
+
+_Hors._ So.
+
+_Cart._ So he presently gave me Mony, and fell to Eating: And as I'm a
+cursen Man, he never left Yeating and Yeating, 'till he had eaten up my
+whole Load of Hay.
+
+_Hors._ Now you shall hear how he serv'd me: I went to him Yesterday to
+buy a Horse of him, which I did; and he had me be sure not to ride him
+into the Water.
+
+_Cart._ Good.
+
+_Hors._ Ad's Wounds 'twas Bad, as you shall hear: For I thinking the
+Horse had some rare Quality, that he would not have me know, what do me
+I but rides him in the Water; and when I came just in the midst of the
+River, I found my self a Straddle on a Bottle of Hay.
+
+_Cart._ O rare Doctor!
+
+_Hors._ But you shall hear how I serv'd him bravely for it; for finding
+him a Sleep just now in a By-Field, I whoop'd and hollow'd in his Ears,
+but could not wake him; so I took hold of his Leg, and never left
+pulling till I had pull'd it quite off.
+
+_Cart._ And has the Doctor but one Leg then? That's Rare. But come, this
+is his House, let's in and see for our Mony; look you, we'll pay as we
+come back.
+
+_Hors._ Done, done; and when we have got our Mony let's laugh at his one
+Leg: Ha, ha, ha. [_Exeunt Laughing._
+
+_Enter_ Hostess.
+
+_Host._ What have the Rogues left my Pots, and run away, without paying
+their Reck'ning? I'll after 'em, cheating Villains, Rogues, Cut-purses;
+rob a poor Woman, cheat the Spittle, and rob the King of his Excise; a
+parcel of Rustick, Clownish, Pedantical, High-shoo'd, Plow-jobbing,
+Cart-driving, Pinch-back'd, Paralytick, Fumbling, Grumbling, Bellowing,
+Yellowing, Peas-picking, Stinking, Mangy, Runagate, Ill-begotten,
+Ill-contriv'd, Wry-mouth'd, Spatrifying, Dunghill-raking, Costive,
+Snorting, Sweaty, Farting, Whaw-drover Dogs. [_Exit_
+
+_Enter_ Faustus.
+
+_Faust._ My Time draws near, and 20 Years are past: I have but Four poor
+Twelve Months for my Life, and then I am damn'd for ever.
+
+_Enter an_ Old Man.
+
+_Old M._ O gentle _Faustus_, leave this damn'd Art; this Magick, that
+will charm thy Soul to Hell, and quite bereave thee of Salvation: Though
+thou hast now offended like a Man, do not, oh! do not persist in't like
+a Devil. It may be this my Exhortation seems harsh, and all unpleasant;
+let it not, for, gentle Son, I speak in tender Love and Pity of thy
+future Misery; and so have hope that this my kind Rebuke, checking thy
+Body, may preserve thy Soul.
+
+_Faust._ Where art thou, _Faustus_? Wretch, what hast thou done? O
+Friend, I feel thy Words to comfort my distressed Soul; retire, and let
+me ponder on my Sins.
+
+_Old M._ _Faustus_, I leave thee, but with grief of Heart, Fearing thy
+Enemy will near depart. [_Exit._
+
+_Enter_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Meph._ Thou Traytor, I arrest thee for Disobedience to thy Sovereign
+Lord; revolt, or I'll in piece-meal tear thy Flesh.
+
+_Faust._ I do repent I e'er offended him; torment, sweet Friend, that
+old Man that durst disswade me from thy _Lucifer_.
+
+_Meph._ His Faith is great, I cannot touch his Soul; but what I can
+afflict his Body with I will.
+
+_Enter_ Horse-courser _and_ Carter.
+
+_Hors._ We are come to drink a Health to your wooden Leg.
+
+_Faust._ My wooden Leg; what dost thou mean, Friend?
+
+_Hors._ Ha, ha! he has forgot his Leg.
+
+_Cart._ Psha, 'tis not a Leg he stands upon. Pray, let me ask you one
+Question; Are both your Legs Bed-fellows?
+
+_Faust._ Why dost thou ask?
+
+_Cart._ Because I believe you have a good Companion of one.
+
+_Hors._ Why, don't you remember I pull'd off one o' your Legs when you
+were a Sleep?
+
+_Faust._ But I have it again now I am awake.
+
+_Cart._ Ad's Wounds, had the Doctor three Legs!----You, Sir, don't you
+remember you gave a Peny for as much Hay as your Horse would eat, and
+then eat up my whole Load.
+
+_Hors._ Look you, Mr. Doctor, you must not carry it off so; I come to
+have the Mony again I gave for the Ho-o-o-
+
+[Faustus _waves his Wand_.
+
+_Cart._ And I come to be paid far my Load of Ha-a-a.
+
+_Enter_ Hostess.
+
+_Host._ O Mr. Doctor! do you harbour Rogues that bilk poor Folks, and
+wont pay their Reck'nings? Who must pay me for my A-a-a-a [_Waves
+again._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ Mr. Doctor, I can't be quiet for your Devil Mr. _Me-o-o--_
+[_Waves again._
+
+[_Exeunt_ Faustus _and_ Mephostopholis. _They all stare at one another,
+and so go off, crying O, o, o, o- to the Emperor's Pallace._
+
+_Enter Emperor_, Faustus, _Gent. Guards._ Benoolio _above_.
+
+_Emp._ Wonder of Men, thrice Learned _Faustus_, Renowned Magician,
+welcome to our Court; and as thou late didst promise us, I would behold
+the Famous _Alexander_ fighting with his great Rival _Darius_, in their
+true Shapes, and State Majestical.
+
+_Faust._ Your Majesty shall see 'em presently.
+
+_Ben._ If thou bring'st _Alexander_, or _Darius_ here, I'll be content
+to be _Actaeon_, and turn my self to a Stag.
+
+_Faust._ And I'll play _Diana_, and send you the Horns presently.
+
+_Enter_ Darius _and_ Alexander; _they Fight_: Darius _falls_. Alexander
+_takes his Crown, and puts it on his Head_.
+
+[_Exit._ Darius _sinks_.
+
+_Faust._ Away, be gon; see, my Gracious Lord, what Beast is that that
+thrusts his Head out of yon' Window.
+
+_Emp._ O wondrous Sight! see two Horns on young _Benoolio_'s Head; call
+him, Lords.
+
+_Lord._ What, ho! _Benoolio_.
+
+_Ben._ A Plague upon you, let me Sleep.
+
+_Lord._ Look up, _Benoolio_, 'tis the Emperor calls.
+
+_Ben._ The Emperor; O my Head.
+
+_Faust._ And thy Horns hold, 'tis no matter for thy Head.
+
+_Ben._ Doctor, this is your Villany.
+
+_Faust._ O say not so, Sir; the Doctor has no Skill, if he bring
+_Alexander_ or _Darius_ here you'll be _Actaeon_, and turn to a Stag:
+Therefore, if it please your Majesty, I'll bring a Kennel of Hounds to
+hunt him. Ho! _Helmot_, _Argiron_, _Asterot_.
+
+_Ben._ Hold, he'll raise a Kennel of Devils. Good, my Lord, intreat.
+
+_Emp._ Prithee remove his Horns, he has done Penance enough.
+
+_Faust._ Away; and remember hereafter you speak well of Scholars.
+
+_Ben._ If Scholars be such Cuckolds to put Horns upon honest Mens Heads,
+I'll ne'er trust Smooth-face and Small-band more: But if I been't
+reveng'd, may I be turn'd to a Gaping Oyster, and drink nothing but
+Salt-water.
+
+_Emp._ Come, _Faustus_, in recompence of this high Desert, Thou shalt
+command the State of _Germany_, and live belov'd of mighty _Carolus_.
+[_Exeunt omnes._
+
+
+SCENE _a Garden_.
+
+_Lord._ Nay, sweet _Benoolio_, let us sway thy Thoughts from this
+Attempt against the Conjurer.
+
+ _Ben._ My Head is lighter than it was by the Horns:
+ And yet my Heart's more pond'rous than my Head,
+ And pants, until I see the Conjurer dead.
+
+_2 Lord._ Consider.
+
+_Ben._ Away; disswade me not, he comes. [_Draws._
+
+_Enter_ Faustus _with a false Head_.
+
+ Now Sword strike home:
+ For Horns he gave, I'll have his Head anon.
+
+_Runs_ Faustus _through, he falls_.
+
+_Faust._ Oh, oh.
+
+_Ben._ Groan you, Mr. Doctor, now for his Head.
+
+[_Cuts his Head off._
+
+_Lord._ Struck with a willing Hand.
+
+_Ben._ First, on this Scull, in quittance of my Wrongs, I'll nail huge
+forked Horns within the Window where he yoak'd me first, that all the
+World may see my just Revenge; and thus having settled his Head----
+
+_Faust._ What shall the Body do, Gentlemen.
+
+_Ben._ The Devil's alive again?
+
+_Lord._ Give the Devil his Head again.
+
+ _Faust._ Nay, keep it; _Faustus_ will have Heads and Hands;
+ I call your Hearts to recompence this Deed.
+ Ho; _Asteroth_, _Belincoth_, _Mephostopholis_.
+
+_Enter Devils, and Horse 'em upon others._
+
+ Go Horse these Traytors on your fiery Backs.
+ Drag 'em through Dirt and Mud, through Thorns and Briers.
+
+_Lord._ Pity us, gentle _Faustus_, save our Lives.
+
+_Faust._ Away.
+
+_Ben._ He must needs go whom the Devil drives.
+
+[_Spirits fly away._ _Exit_ Faustus.
+
+
+SCENE _a Hall_.
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _in a Beggar's Habit_.
+
+_Harl._ I find this _Scaramouche_ is a Villain; he has left the Doctor,
+and is come to be Steward to a rich Widdow, whose Husband dyed
+Yesterday, and here he is coming to give the Poor their Doles, of which
+I'll ha' my Share.
+
+Scaramouche, _and poor People, with a Basket of Bread and Money_.
+
+_Scar._ Come hither, poor Devils; stand in Order, and be Damn'd. I came
+to distribute what your deceased good Master hath bequeath'd. [_They all
+stare at_ Scar.
+
+_Harl._ God bless you, Mr. Steward.
+
+_Scar._ Let me tell you, Gentlemen, he was as good a Man as ever piss'd,
+or cry'd Stand on the High-way.
+
+[Scaramouche _takes out a Leaf and a Shilling, holds it out, and_
+Harlequin _takes it_.
+
+He spent a good Estate, 'tis true; but he was no Body's Foe but his own.
+I never left him while he was worth a Groat. [_Again._] He would now and
+then Curse in his Passion, and give a Soul to the Devil, or so; yet,
+what of that? He always paid his Club, and no Man can say he owes this.
+[_Again._] He had a Colt's Tooth, and over-laid one of his Maids; yet,
+what of that? All Flesh is frail. [_Again._] 'Tis thought that her Body
+workt him off on his Legs; why, what of that? his Legs were his own, and
+his Arse never hung in your Light. [_Again._] Sometimes, you'll say, he
+wou'd rap out an Oath; what then, Words are but Wind, and he meant no
+more harm than a sucking Pig does by squeaking. [_Again._] Now let's
+consider his good Deeds; he brew'd a Firkin of strong Drink for the poor
+every Year, and kill'd an old Ram every _Easter_: The Meat that was
+stale, and his Drink that was sowre, was always yours. [_Again._] He
+allow'd you in Harvest to Glean after his Rake. [_Again._] And now, at
+his Death, has given you all this. [_Again._
+
+_Scar._ So, setting the Hare's Head against the Goose Giblets, he was a
+good Hospitable Man; and much good may do you with what you had.
+
+_Poor._ I have had nothing.
+
+_2 Poor._ Nor I.
+
+_3 Po._ Nor I.
+
+_4 Po._ Nor. I.
+
+_Scar._ Nothing.
+
+_All._ Nothing, nothing.
+
+_Scar._ Nothing, nothing; you lying Rogues, then there's something for
+you. [_Beats 'em all off._
+
+_Enter_ Harlequin _in a Cloak, laughing_.
+
+_Har._ So now I am Victual'd, I may hold out Siege against Hunger. [_A
+Noise within; this way, this way._
+
+Ha! they are hunting after me, and will kill me. Let me see, I will take
+this Gibbet for my Preserver, and with this long Cloak make as if I were
+hang'd. Now when they find a Man hang'd, not knowing me in this
+Disguise, they'll look no farther after me, but think the Thief's
+hang'd.----I hear 'em coming. [_Throws himself off the Ladder._
+
+_Enter_ Scaramouche.
+
+_Scar._ Ha! what's here, a Man hang'd? But what Paper is this in his
+Hand?
+
+[_Whil'st_ Scaramouche _reads_, Harlequin _puts the Rope over him_.
+
+I have cheated the Poor of their Mony, and took the Bread out of their
+Mouths, for which I was much troubled in Conscience, fell into Dispair,
+and, as you see, hang'd my self.
+
+[_Pulls him up, and runs out_
+
+O the Devil! Murder, murder!
+
+_Enter_ Poor.
+
+_Poor._ O Neighbours, here hangs the Rogue.
+
+_Scar._ Help me down?
+
+_Poor._ No, you are very well as you are.
+
+_Scar._ Don't you know me?
+
+_Poor._ Ay, for a Rogue; e'en finish your Work, and save the Hang-man a
+Labour. Yet, now I think on't, self-murder is a crying Sin, and may damn
+his Soul. Come, Neighbours, we'll take him down, and have him hang'd
+according to Law. [_When he's down he trips up their Heels, and runs
+out, they after him._
+
+_All._ Stop Thief, stop Thief.
+
+_Thunder and Lightning_; Lucifer, Beelzebub, _and_ Mephostopholis.
+
+_Luc._ Thus from the infernal _Dis_ do we ascend, bringing with us the
+Deed; the Time is come which makes it forfeit.
+
+_Enter_ Faustus, _an old Man, and a Scholar_.
+
+_Old M._ Yet, _Faustus_, call on Heav'n.
+
+_Faust._ Oh! 'tis too late; behold, they lock my Hands.
+
+_Old M._ Who, _Faustus_?
+
+_Faust._ _Lucifer_ and _Mephostopholis_; I gave 'em my Soul for Four and
+twenty Years.
+
+_Old M._ Heav'n forbid.
+
+_Fau._ Ay, Heav'n forbad it indeed, but _Faustus_ has done it; for the
+vain Pleasure of Four and twenty Years, _Faustus_ has lost eternal Joy
+and Felicity: I writ 'em a Bill with my own Blood, the Date is expired;
+this is the Time, and they are come to fetch me.
+
+_Old M._ Why would not _Faustus_ tell me of that before?
+
+_Faust._ I oft intended it, but the Devil threat'ned to tear me in
+Pieces. O Friend, retire, and save your self.
+
+_Old M._ I'll into the next Room, and there pray for thee.
+
+_Faust._ Ay, pray for me; and what Noise soever you hear stir not, for
+nothing can rescue me.
+
+_Old M._ Pray thou, and I'll pray. Adieu.
+
+_Faust._ If I live till Morning I'll visit you; if not, _Faustus_ is gon
+to Hell. [_Exeunt old Man and Scholar._
+
+_Meph._ Ay, _Faustus_, now thou hast no hopes on Heav'n.
+
+ _Faust._ O thou bewitching Fiend; 'twas thou, and thy
+ Temptations, hath rob'd me of eternal Happiness.
+
+ _Meph._ I do confess it, _Faustus_, and rejoyce.
+ What weep'st thou, 'tis too late; hark to thy Knell:
+ Fools that will Laugh on Earth, must Weep in Hell.
+
+_Ext._
+
+_Good and bad Angel descend._
+
+ _Good An._ O _Faustus_, if thou hadst given Ear to me,
+ Innumerable Joys had followed thee:
+ But thou didst love the World.
+
+_Bad An._ Gave Ear to me, and now must taste Hell's Pains perpetual.
+
+_Throne of Heaven appears._
+
+ _Good An._ Had'st thou affected sweet Divinity,
+ Hell, nor the Devil, had no Power on thee.
+ Had'st thou kept on that way, _Faustus_, behold in what resplendid
+ Glory thou had'st sat; that hast thou Lost.
+ And now, poor Soul, must thy good Angel leave:
+ The Jaws of Hell are ready to receive thee. [_Ascends._
+
+_Hell is discovered._
+
+ _Bad An._ Now, _Faustus_, let thy Eyes with Horror stare
+ Into that Vast perpetual torturing House.
+
+_Faust._ O I have seen enough to torture me.
+
+ _Bad An._ Nay thou must feel 'em, 'taste the Smart of all.
+ He that loves Pleasure must for Pleasure fall:
+ And so I leave thee, _Faustus_, till anon.
+ Thou'lt tumble into Confusion. [_Descends._
+
+_The Clock strikes Eleven._
+
+ _Faust._ Now, _Faustus_, hast thou but one bear Hour to Live,
+ And then thou must be Damn'd perpetually:
+ Stand still you ever-moving Spheres of Heav'n,
+ That Time may cease, and Mid-night never come.
+
+Or let this Hour be but a Year, a Month, a Week, a natural Day; that
+_Faustus_ may repent, and save his Soul. Mountains and Hills come, come,
+and fall on me, and hide me from the heavy Wrath of Heav'n. Gape Earth;
+Oh no, it will not harbour me. [_The Clock strikes._ Oh! half the Hour
+is past; 'twill all be past anon. Oh! if my Soul must suffer for my Sin,
+impose some end to my incessant Pain. Let _Faustus_ live in Hell a
+Thousand Years, an Hundred thousand, and at last be sav'd. [_Strikes
+Twelve._ No End is limitted to damn'd Souls: It strikes, it strikes.
+Now, Body, turn to Air, to Earth, or Water. Oh! avoid the Fire: They
+come. Oh! mercy, Heaven; ugly Hell gape not. Come not _Lucifer_; O
+_Mephostopholis_.
+
+[_Sink with Devils. Thunder._
+
+_Enter old Man and Scholar._
+
+_Old M._ Come, Friend, let's visit _Faustus_: For such a dreadful Night
+was never seen.
+
+_Scene discovers_ Faustus's _Limbs_.
+
+ _Schol._ O help us, Heav'n; see here are _Faustus_'s Limbs,
+ All torn asunder by the Hand of Hell.
+
+ _Old M._ May this a fair Example be to all,
+ To avoid such Ways which brought poor _Faustus_'s Fall.
+ And whatsoever Pleasure does invite,
+ Sell not your Souls to purchase vain Delight.
+
+[_Exeunt._
+
+_Scene changes to Hell._
+
+Faustus _Limbs come together_. _A Dance, and Song._
+
+
+_FINIS._
+
+
+
+
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK
+ MEMORIAL LIBRARY
+
+ UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES
+
+ The Augustan Reprint Society
+
+ PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT
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+
+The Augustan Reprint Society
+
+PUBLICATIONS IN PRINT
+
+=1948-1949=
+
+16. Henry Nevil Payne, _The Fatal Jealousie_ (1673).
+
+17. Nicholas Rowe, _Some Account of the Life of Mr. William Shakespear_
+ (1709).
+
+18. Anonymous, "Of Genius," in _The Occasional Paper_, Vol. III, No. 10
+ (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface to _The Creation_ (1720).
+
+=1949-1950=
+
+19. Susanna Centlivre, _The Busie Body_ (1709).
+
+20. Lewis Theobald, _Preface to the Works of Shakespeare_ (1734).
+
+22. Samuel Johnson, _The Vanity of Human Wishes_ (1749), and two
+ _Rambler_ papers (1750).
+
+23. John Dryden, _His Majesties Declaration Defended_ (1681).
+
+=1951-1952=
+
+26. Charles Macklin, _The Man of the World_ (1792).
+
+31. Thomas Gray, _An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard_ (1751), and
+ _The Eton College Manuscript_.
+
+=1952-1953=
+
+41. Bernard Mandeville, _A Letter to Dion_ (1732).
+
+=1962-1963=
+
+98. Selected Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert's _Temple_ ... (1697).
+
+=1964-1965=
+
+109. Sir William Temple, _An Essay Upon the Original and Nature of
+ Government_ (1680).
+
+110. John Tutchin, _Selected Poems_ (1685-1700).
+
+111. Anonymous, _Political Justice_ (1736).
+
+112. Robert Dodsley, _An Essay on Fable_ (1764).
+
+113. T. R., _An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning_ (1698).
+
+114. Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted, _One Epistle to Mr. A.
+ Pope_ (1730), and Anonymous, _The Blatant Beast_ (1742).
+
+=1965-1966=
+
+115. Daniel Defoe and others, _Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal_.
+
+116. Charles Macklin, _The Covent Garden Theatre_ (1752).
+
+117. Sir Roger L'Estrange, _Citt and Bumpkin_ (1680).
+
+118. Henry More, _Enthusiasmus Triumphatus_ (1662).
+
+119. Thomas Traherne, _Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation_
+ (1717).
+
+120. Bernard Mandeville, _Aesop Dress'd or a Collection of Fables_
+ (1740).
+
+=1966-1967=
+
+123. Edmond Malone, _Cursory Observations on the Poems Attributed to Mr.
+ Thomas Rowley_ (1782).
+
+124. Anonymous, _The Female Wits_ (1704).
+
+125. Anonymous, _The Scribleriad_ (1742). Lord Hervey, _The Difference
+ Between Verbal and Practical Virtue_ (1742).
+
+=1967-1968=
+
+129. Lawrence Echard, Prefaces to _Terence's Comedies_ (1694) and
+ _Plautus's Comedies_ (1694).
+
+=1968-1969=
+
+133. John Courtenay, _A Poetical Review of the Literary and Moral
+ Character of the Late Samuel Johnson_ (1786).
+
+134. John Downes, _Roscius Anglicanus_ (1708).
+
+135. Sir John Hill, _Hypochondriasis, a Practical Treatise_ (1766).
+
+136. Thomas Sheridan, _Discourse ... Being Introductory to His Course of
+ Lectures on Elocution and the English Language_ (1759).
+
+137. Arthur Murphy, _The Englishman From Paris_ (1736).
+
+=1969-1970=
+
+138. [Catherine Trotter], _Olinda's Adventures_ (1718).
+
+139. John Ogilvie, _An Essay on the Lyric Poetry of the Ancients_
+ (1762).
+
+140. _A Learned Dissertation on Dumpling_ (1726) and _Pudding Burnt to
+ Pot or a Compleat Key to the Dissertation on Dumpling_ (1727).
+
+141. Selections from Sir Roger L'Estrange's _Observator_ (1681-1687).
+
+142. Anthony Collins, _A Discourse Concerning Ridicule and Irony in
+ Writing_ (1729).
+
+143. _A Letter From A Clergyman to His Friend, With An Account of the
+ Travels of Captain Lemuel Gulliver_ (1726).
+
+144. _The Art of Architecture, A Poem. In Imitation of Horace's Art of
+ Poetry_ (1742).
+
+=1970-1971=
+
+145-146. Thomas Shelton, _A Tutor to Tachygraphy, or Short-writing_
+ (1642) and _Tachygraphy_ (1647).
+
+147-148. _Deformities of Dr. Samuel Johnson_ (1782).
+
+149. _Poeta de Tristibus: or the Poet's Complaint_ (1682).
+
+150. Gerard Langbaine, _Momus Triumphans: or the Plagiaries of the
+ English Stage_ (1687).
+
+=1971-1972=
+
+151-152. Evan Lloyd, _The Methodist_. A Poem (1766).
+
+153. _Are these Things So?_ (1740), and _The Great Man's Answer to Are
+ these Things So?_ (1740).
+
+154. Arbuthnotiana: _The Story of the St. Alb-ns Ghost_ (1712), and _A
+ Catalogue of Dr. Arbuthnot's Library_ (1779).
+
+155-156. A Selection of Emblems from Herman Hugo's _Pia Desideria_
+ (1624), with English Adaptations by Francis Quarles and Edmund
+ Arwaker.
+
+
+
+
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