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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Polite Conversation, by Jonathan Swift
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: Polite Conversation
- In Three Dialogues by Jonathan Swift with Introduction and
- Notes by George Saintsbury
-
-Author: Jonathan Swift
-
-Editor: George Saintsbury
-
-Release Date: August 26, 2019 [EBook #60186]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POLITE CONVERSATION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by The Internet
-Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Chiswick Press Editions
-
-POLITE CONVERSATION
-
- ⁂ _This Edition is limited to Five Hundred copies, viz.:_
-
- _50 on Japanese Vellum, numbered 1 to 50._
- _450 on Handmade paper, numbered 51 to 500._
-
- _This is No. 438._
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: IONATHAN SWIFT S. T. D.
-
-_Decanus Ecclesia Cathedralis Sancti Patricy DUBLIN._
-
-_Carolus Jervacius Pictor Reg. Pinxit._ _Geo. Vertue Londini Sculpsit_]
-
-
-
-
- POLITE CONVERSATION
- IN THREE DIALOGUES BY
- JONATHAN SWIFT WITH INTRODUCTION
- AND NOTES
- BY GEORGE SAINTSBURY
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON PRINTED AND ISSUED BY
- CHARLES WHITTINGHAM & CO AT
- THE CHISWICK PRESS MDCCCXCII
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION vii
-
- INTRODUCTION TO THE DIALOGUES 3
-
- DIALOGUE I. 53
-
- DIALOGUE II. 127
-
- DIALOGUE III. 173
-
- ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES 191
-
-
-
-
-EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-In some ways nothing could be a better introduction to the “Polite
-Conversation” than the account of it which Mr. Thackeray has given in
-his “English Humourists” (though under the head of Steele, not Swift),
-as illustrating the society of the period. That account is in its way
-not much less of a classic than the immortal original itself, and it is
-purely delightful. But it neither deals nor pretends to deal with the
-whole of the subject. Indeed, the idea of Swift’s character which the
-“Conversation” gives does not square altogether well with the view—true,
-but one-sided—which it suited Mr. Thackeray to take of Swift.
-
-The “Conversation” appeared very late in Swift’s life, and he himself
-derived no pecuniary benefit from it. He had, with that almost careless
-generosity which distinguished him side by side with an odd kind
-of parsimony, given the manuscript to a not particularly reputable
-_protégée_ of his, Mrs. Barber, about 1736, and its first edition—a copy
-of which, presented to me by my friend Mr. Austin Dobson no small number
-of years ago, is here reproduced—bears date 1738, and was published
-in London by Motte and Bathurst. The composition, however, dates, as
-is known to a practical certainty, many years earlier. It is beyond
-any reasonable doubt identical with the “Essay on Conversation” which
-Swift noted as written or planned in 1708-10. The _nom de guerre_ on
-the title-page and to the introduction is Simon Wagstaff, one of the
-literary family of Staffs fathered by Swift and Steele in “Tatler” times.
-The manners are evidently those of Queen Anne’s day, and the whole
-chronology of the introduction (which, it will be seen, has all Swift’s
-mock carefulness and exactitude) is adjusted to the first decade of the
-eighteenth century. A hundred years later Scott (whose own evident relish
-for the “Conversation” struggled somewhat with a desire to apologise
-for its coarseness to the decencies even of his own day), hazarded the
-opinion that the abundance of proverbial expressions must be set down to
-the Dean’s own fancy, not to actual truth of reporting. It is always with
-great diffidence that I venture to differ with Sir Walter; but I think
-he was wrong here. One piece of indirect evidence—the extreme energy
-with which Chesterfield, at no very distant date from the publication,
-but after a lapse of fully a generation from the probable composition
-of the dialogues, inveighs against this very practice—would seem to be
-sufficient to establish its authenticity. For polite society, where its
-principles are not, as they generally are, pretty constant, is never
-so bitter as against those practices which were the mode and are now
-_démodés_.
-
-But if anyone thinks this argument paradoxical, there are plenty more.
-The conversation of the immortal eight corresponds exactly to that of the
-comedies of the time, and the times just earlier, which were written by
-the finest gentlemen. It meets us, of course less brilliantly put, in the
-“Wentworth Papers” and other documents of the time; and its very faults
-are exactly those which Steele and Addison, like their predecessors of
-the other sex in the Hotel Rambouillet sixty or seventy years earlier,
-were, just when these dialogues were written, setting themselves to
-correct. We know, of course, that Swift moved in a world of middle and
-even not always upper middle class society, as well as in the great
-world; and that, perhaps, at the date of the actual composition of this
-piece, he had not reached his fullest familiarity with the latter. But
-I have myself very little doubt that the dialogues express and were
-fully justified by the conversation he had actually heard among the less
-decorous visitors at Temple’s solemn board, in the livelier household
-of Lord Berkeley, in the circles of Ormond and Pembroke, and during his
-first initiation after 1707 in London society proper. How far he may have
-subsequently polished and altered the thing it is impossible to say; that
-he had done so to some extent is obvious from such simple matters as the
-use of the word “king” instead of “queen,” from the allusions to the
-“Craftsman,” and others. I doubt whether the picture became substantially
-false till far into the reign of George II., if it even became so then.
-
-There are those, of whom, as Mr. Wagstaff would himself say, “I have the
-honour to be one,” who put the “Polite Conversation” in the very front
-rank of Swift’s works. It is of course on a far less ambitious scale
-than “Gulliver;” it has not the youthful audacity and towering aim of
-the “Tale of a Tub;” it lacks the practical and businesslike cogency
-of the “Drapier;” the absolute perfection and unrivalled irony of the
-“Modest Proposal” and the “Argument against abolishing Christianity.”
-But what it wants in relation to each of these masterpieces in some
-respects it makes up in others; and it is distinctly the superior of its
-own nearest analogue, the “Directions to Servants.” It is never unequal;
-it never flags; it never forces the note. Nobody, if he likes it at all,
-can think it too long; nobody, however much he may like it, can fail to
-see that Swift was wise not to make it longer. One of its charms is the
-complete variation between the introduction and the dialogues themselves.
-The former follows throughout, even to the rather unnecessary striking
-in with literary quarrels, the true vein of Swiftian irony, where
-almost every sentence expresses the exact contrary of the author’s real
-sentiments, and where the putative writer is made to exhibit himself
-as ridiculous while discoursing to his own complete satisfaction. It
-exhibits also, although in a minor key, the peculiar pessimism which
-excites the shudders of some and the admiration of others in the great
-satires on humanity enumerated above.
-
-But the dialogues themselves are quite different. They are, with
-the exception of the lighter passages in the “Journal to Stella,”
-infinitely the most good-natured things in Swift. The characters are
-scarcely satirized; they are hardly caricatured. Not one of them is made
-disagreeable, not one of them offensively ridiculous. Even poor Sir John
-Linger, despite the scarce concealed scorn and pity of his companions
-and the solemn compassion of good Mr. Wagstaff, is let off very easily.
-The very “scandal-mongering” has nothing of the ferocity of the “Plain
-Dealer” long before, and the “School for Scandal” long after it; the
-excellent Ladies Smart and Answerall tear their neighbours’ characters
-to pieces with much relish but with no malignity. The former, for all
-her cut-and-dried phrases, is an excellently hospitable hostess, and
-“her own lord” is as different as possible from the brutal heroes of
-Restoration comedy, and from the yawning sour-blooded rakes of quality
-whom a later generation of painters in words and colours were to portray.
-There is, of course, not a little which would now be horribly coarse,
-but one knows that it was not in the least so then. And in it, as in
-the scandal-mongering, there is no bad blood. Tom and the Colonel and
-Lord Sparkish are fine gentlemen with very loose-hung tongues, and not
-very strait-laced consciences. But there is nothing about them of the
-inhumanity which to some tastes spoils the heroes of Congreve and of
-Vanbrugh.
-
-As for “Miss,” no doubt she says some things which it would be unpleasant
-to hear one’s sister or one’s beloved say now. But I fell in love with
-her when I was about seventeen, I think; and from that day to this I
-have never wavered for one minute in my affection for her. If she is of
-coarser mould than Millamant, how infinitely does she excel her in flesh
-and blood—excellent things in woman! She is only here—“this ‘Miss’ of our
-heart, this ‘Miss’ of our soul,”—here and in a letter or two of the time.
-The dramatists and the essayists and the poets made her a baggage or a
-Lydia Languish, a Miss Hoyden or a minx, when they tried her. Hogarth
-was not enough of a gentleman and Kneller not enough of a genius to put
-her on canvas. When the regular novelists began, sensibility had set its
-clutch on heroines. But here she is as Swift saw her—Swift whom every
-woman whom he knew either loved or hated, and who must, therefore, have
-known something about women, for all his persistent maltreatment of them.
-And here, as I have said, the maltreatment ceases. If the handling is
-not very delicate, it is utterly true, and by no means degrading. There
-is even dignity in Miss. For all her romps, and her broad speeches,
-and her more than risky repartees, she knows perfectly well how to pull
-up her somewhat unpolished admirers when they go too far. And when at
-three o’clock in the morning, with most of the winnings in her pocket,
-she demurely refuses the Colonel’s escort (indeed it might have had its
-dangers), observing, “No, Colonel, thank you; my mamma has sent her chair
-and footmen,” and leaves the room with the curtsey we can imagine, the
-picture is so delightful that unholy dreams come upon one. How agreeable
-it would have been to hire the always available villains, overcome those
-footmen, put Miss in a coach and six, and secure the services of the also
-always available parson, regardless of the feelings of my mamma and of
-the swords of Tom and the Colonel, though not of Miss’s own goodwill!
-For I should not envy anyone who had tried to play otherwise than on the
-square with Miss Notable.
-
-For Mr. Wagstaff’s hero I have, as no doubt is natural, by no means as
-much admiration as for his “heroin.” Mr. Thomas Neverout is a lively
-youth enough, but considerably farther from the idea—and that not merely
-the modern idea—of a gentleman, than Miss with all her astounding licence
-of speech is from the idea—and that not merely the modern idea—of a lady.
-It is observable that he seldom or never gets the better of her except by
-mere coarseness, and that he has too frequent recourse to the expedient
-which even Mr. Wagstaff had the sense to see was not a great evidence of
-wit, the use of some innuendo or other, at which she is obliged to blush
-or to pretend want of understanding. At fair weapons she almost always
-puts him down. In fact, the Colonel, though not precisely a genius, is
-the better fellow of the two. I do not know whether it was intentional
-or not, but it is to be observed that my Lord Sparkish, though quite
-as “smart” in the new-old sense of which this very work is the _locus
-classicus_, as the two commoners, is cleaner by a good deal in his
-language. It is unlike Mr. Wagstaff’s usual precision of information that
-he gives us no details about Lady Answerall. If there is any indication
-to show whether she was wife or widow, I have missed it in many readings;
-but I think she, though still young, was the eldest of the three ladies,
-and she certainly was handsome. Lady Smart I take to have been plain,
-from her disparaging reference to Miss: “The girl’s well enough if she
-had but another nose.” I resent this reference to a feature which I am
-sure was charming (it was probably _retroussé_; it was certainly not
-aquiline); and as Lady Smart was clearly not ill-natured, it follows that
-she must have been herself either a recognized beauty or not beautiful.
-We should have had some intimation of the former had it been the case, so
-I incline to the latter. She had children, and was evidently on the best
-of terms with her husband, which is very satisfactory.
-
-If it were not for Miss and the dinner—two objects of perennial interest
-to all men of spirit and taste—I am not sure that I should not prefer the
-introduction to the conversations themselves. It is indispensable to the
-due understanding of the latter, and I cannot but think that Thackeray
-unjustifiably overlooked the excuse it contains for the somewhat
-miscellaneous and Gargantuan character of the feast which excited his
-astonishment and horror. But it would be delightful in itself if we were
-so unfortunate as to have lost the conversations, and, as I have already
-said, its delight is of a strangely different kind from theirs. Although
-there are more magnificent and more terrible, more poignant and more
-whimsical examples of the marvellous Swiftian irony, I do not know that
-there is any more justly proportioned, more exquisitely modulated, more
-illustrative of that wonderful keeping which is the very essence and
-quiddity of the Dean’s humour.
-
-Some things have been lately said, as they are always said from time
-to time, about the contrast between the Old humour and the New. The
-contrast, I venture to think, is wrongly stated. It is not a contrast
-between the old and the new, but, in the first place, between the
-perennial and the temporary, and in the second between two kinds of
-humour which, to do them justice, are both perennial enough—the humour
-which is quiet, subtle, abstracted, independent of catchwords and cant
-phrases, and the humour which is broad, loud, gesticulative, and prone to
-rely upon cant phrases and catchwords. Swift has illustrated the two in
-the two parts of this astonishing book, and whoso looks into the matter
-a little narrowly will have no difficulty in finding this out. Far be it
-from me to depreciate the “newer” kind, but I may be permitted to think
-it the lower. It is certainly the easier. The perpetual stream of irony
-which Swift pours out here in so quiet yet so steady a flow, is the most
-difficult of all things to maintain in its perfection. Not more, perhaps,
-than half-a-dozen writers in all literature, of whom the three chiefs are
-Lucian, Pascal, and Swift himself, have been quite masters of it, and of
-these three Swift is the mightiest. Sink below the requisite proportion
-of bitterness and the thing becomes flat; exceed that proportion and it
-is nauseous. Perhaps, as one is always fain to persuade oneself in such
-cases, a distinct quality of palate is required to taste, as well as a
-distinct power of genius to brew it. It is certain that though there
-are some in all times who relish this kind of humour (and this is what
-gives it its supremacy, for examples of the other kind are, at other
-than their own times, frequently not relished by anybody), they are not
-often found in large numbers. The liquor is too dry for many tastes; it
-has too little froth, if not too little sparkle for others. The order of
-architecture is too unadorned, depends too much upon the bare attraction
-of symmetry and form, to charm some eyes. But those who have the taste
-never lose it, never change it, never are weary of gratifying it. Of
-irony, as of hardly any other thing under the sun, cometh no satiety to
-the born ironist.
-
-It may be well to end this brief preface by a few words on the principles
-of editing which I have adopted. There is no omission whatever, except
-of a very few words—not, I think, half a score in all—which were barely
-permissible to mouths polite even then, and which now are almost banished
-from even free conversation. Nor have even these omissions been allowed
-to mutilate the passages in which they occur; for on Mr. Wagstaff’s own
-excellent principle, the harmless necessary “blank, which the sagacious
-reader may fill up in his own mind,” has replaced them.
-
-In respect of annotation the methods of the collection in which this book
-appears did not permit of any very extensive commentary; and I could
-not be sorry for this. Anything like full _scholia_ on the proverbs,
-catchwords, and so forth used, would be enormously voluminous, and a very
-dull overlaying of matter ill-sortable with dulness. Besides, much of
-the phraseology is intelligible to anybody intelligent, and not a very
-little is not yet obsolete in the mouths of persons of no particular
-originality. You may still hear men and women, not necessarily destitute
-either of birth, breeding, or sense, say of such a thing that “they like
-it, but it does not like them,” that such another thing “comes from a hot
-place,” with other innocent _clichés_ of the kind. But in some places
-where assistance seemed really required I have endeavoured to give it.
-Among such cases I have not included the attempt to identify “the D. of
-R.,” “the E. of E.,” “Lord and Lady H.,” etc. I am afraid it would be
-falling too much into the humour of good Mr. Wagstaff himself to examine
-with the help of much Collins the various persons whose initials and
-titles might possibly correspond with these during the nearly sixty years
-between Mr. Wagstaff’s coming of age and the appearance of his work at
-the Middle Temple Gate in Fleet Street. The persons named at full length
-are generally, if not universally real, and more or less well known.
-Enough to inform or remind the reader of these has, I hope, been inserted
-in the Notes. But the fact is, that, like most great writers, though not
-all, Swift is really not in need of much annotation. It is not that he
-is not allusive—I hardly know any great writer who is not—but that his
-allusions explain themselves to a reader of average intelligence quite
-sufficiently for the understanding of the context, though not, it may be,
-sufficiently to enable him to “satisfy the examiners.” It does not, for
-instance, matter in the least whether the “infamous Court chaplain,” who
-taught the maids of honour not to believe in Hell was Hoadley, or who he
-was. His cap may even have fitted several persons at different times. In
-such a display of literary skill at arms as this the glitter of the blade
-and the swashing blow of its wielder are the points of interest, not the
-worthless carrion into which it was originally thrust. But “worthless
-carrion” is not Polite Conversation: so let me leave the reader to what
-is.[1]
-
- GEORGE SAINTSBURY.
-
-[1] The piece is on the whole fairly well printed; but the speeches are
-sometimes wrongly assigned. Attention is called to this in the notes; but
-the real speaker is generally evident.
-
-
-
-
- A COMPLETE
-
- COLLECTION
-
- Of GENTEEL and INGENIOUS
-
- CONVERSATION,
-
- According to the Most
-
- Polite Mode and Method
-
- Now USED
-
- At COURT, and in the BEST
-
- COMPANIES of ENGLAND.
-
- In THREE DIALOGUES.
-
- By _SIMON WAGSTAFF_, Esq.;
-
- _LONDON_:
- Printed for B. MOTTE, and C. BATHURST, at
- the _Middle Temple-Gate_ in _Fleet-Street_.
- M.DCC.XXXVIII.
-
-
-
-
-AN INTRODUCTION TO THE FOLLOWING TREATISE.
-
-
-As my Life hath been chiefly spent in consulting the Honour and Welfare
-of my Country for more than Forty Years past, not without answerable
-Success, if the World and my Friends have not flattered me; so, there
-is no Point wherein I have so much labour’d, as that of improving and
-polishing all Parts of Conversation between Persons of Quality, whether
-they meet by Accident or Invitation, at Meals, Tea, or Visits, Mornings,
-Noons, or Evenings.
-
-I have passed perhaps more time than any other Man of my Age and
-Country in Visits and Assemblees, where the polite Persons of both
-Sexes distinguish themselves; and could not without much Grief observe
-how frequently both Gentlemen and Ladies are at a Loss for Questions,
-Answers, Replies and Rejoinders: However, my Concern was much abated,
-when I found that these Defects were not occasion’d by any Want of
-Materials, but because those Materials were not in every Hand: For
-Instance, One Lady can give an Answer better than ask a Question: One
-Gentleman is happy at a Reply; another excels in a Rejoinder: One can
-revive a languishing Conversation by a sudden surprizing Sentence;
-another is more dextrous in seconding; a Third can fill the Gap with
-laughing, or commending what hath been said: Thus fresh Hints may be
-started, and the Ball of Discourse kept up.
-
-But, alas! this is too seldom the Case, even in the most select
-Companies: How often do we see at Court, at public Visiting-Days, at
-great Men’s Levees, and other Places of general Meeting, that the
-Conversation falls and drops to nothing, like a Fire without Supply of
-Fuel; this is what we ought to lament; and against this dangerous Evil I
-take upon me to affirm, that I have in the following Papers provided an
-infallible Remedy.
-
-It was in the Year 1695, and the Sixth of his late Majesty King
-_William_, the Third, of ever glorious and immortal Memory, who rescued
-Three Kingdoms from Popery and Slavery; when, being about the Age of
-Six-and-thirty, my Judgment mature, of good Reputation in the World,
-and well acquainted with the best Families in Town, I determined to
-spend Five Mornings, to dine Four times, pass Three Afternoons, and Six
-Evenings every Week, in the Houses of the most polite Families, of which
-I would confine myself to Fifty; only changing as the Masters or Ladies
-died, or left the Town, or grew out of Vogue, or sunk in their Fortunes,
-(which to me was of the highest moment) or because disaffected to the
-Government; which Practice I have followed ever since to this very Day;
-except when I happened to be sick, or in the Spleen upon cloudy Weather;
-and except when I entertained Four of each Sex at my own Lodgings once a
-Month, by way of Retaliation.
-
-I always kept a large Table-Book in my Pocket; and as soon as I left
-the Company, I immediately entered the choicest Expressions that passed
-during the Visit; which, returning Home, I transcribed in a fair Hand,
-but somewhat enlarged; and had made the greatest Part of my Collection
-in Twelve Years, but not digested into any Method; for this I found was
-a Work of infinite Labour, and what required the nicest Judgment, and
-consequently could not be brought to any Degree of Perfection in less
-than Sixteen Years more.
-
-Herein I resolved to exceed the Advice of _Horace_, a _Roman_ Poet,
-(which I have read in Mr. _Creech_’s admirable Translation) That an
-Author should keep his Works Nine Years in his Closet, before he ventured
-to publish them; and finding that I still received some additional
-Flowers of Wit and Language, although in a very small Number, I
-determined to defer the Publication, to pursue my Design, and exhaust,
-if possible, the whole Subject, that I might present a complete System
-to the World: For, I am convinced by long Experience, that the Critics
-will be as severe as their old Envy against me can make them: I foretel,
-they will object, that I have inserted many Answers and Replies which are
-neither witty, humorous, polite, or authentic; and have omitted others,
-that would have been highly useful, as well as entertaining: But let them
-come to Particulars, and I will boldly engage to confute their Malice.
-
-For these last Six or Seven Years I have not been able to add above Nine
-valuable Sentences to inrich my Collection; from whence I conclude,
-that what remains will amount only to a Trifle: However, if, after the
-Publication of this Work, any Lady or Gentleman, when they have read it,
-shall find the least thing of Importance omitted, I desire they will
-please to supply my Defects, by communicating to me their Discoveries;
-and their Letters may be directed to SIMON WAGSTAFF, Esq; at his Lodgings
-next Door to the _Gloucester-Head_ in _St. James’s-street_, (they paying
-the Postage). In Return of which Favour, I shall make honourable Mention
-of their Names in a short Preface to the Second Edition.
-
-In the mean time, I cannot but with some Pride, and much Pleasure,
-congratulate with my dear Country, which hath outdone all the Nations
-of _Europe_ in advancing the whole Art of Conversation to the greatest
-Height it is capable of reaching; and therefore being intirely convinced
-that the Collection I now offer to the Public is full and complete, I may
-at the same time boldly affirm, that the whole Genius, Humour, Politeness
-and Eloquence of _England_ are summed up in it: Nor is the Treasure
-small, wherein are to be found at least a Thousand shining Questions,
-Answers, Repartees, Replies and Rejoinders, fitted to adorn every kind
-of Discourse that an Assemblee of _English_ Ladies and Gentlemen, met
-together for their mutual Entertainment, can possibly want, especially
-when the several Flowers shall be set off and improved by the Speakers,
-with every Circumstance of Preface and Circumlocution, in proper Terms;
-and attended with Praise, Laughter, or Admiration.
-
-There is a natural, involuntary Distortion of the Muscles, which is the
-anatomical Cause of Laughter: But there is another Cause of Laughter
-which Decency requires, and is the undoubted Mark of a good Taste, as
-well as of a polite obliging Behaviour; neither is this to be acquired
-without much Observation, long Practice, and a sound Judgment: I
-did therefore once intend, for the Ease of the Learner, to set down
-in all Parts of the following Dialogues certain Marks, Asterisks, or
-_Nota-bene’s_ (in _English_, _Markwell’s_) after most Questions, and
-every Reply or Answer; directing exactly the Moment when One, Two, or All
-the Company are to laugh: But having duly considered, that the Expedient
-would too much enlarge the Bulk of the Volume, and consequently the
-Price; and likewise that something ought to be left for ingenious Readers
-to find out, I have determined to leave that whole Affair, although of
-great Importance, to their own Discretion.
-
-The Readers must learn by all means to distinguish between Proverbs
-and those polite Speeches which beautify Conversation: For, as to
-the former, I utterly reject them out of all ingenious Discourse. I
-acknowledge indeed, that there may possibly be found in this Treatise a
-few Sayings, among so great a Number of smart Turns of Wit and Humour,
-as I have produced, which have a proverbial Air: However, I hope, it
-will be considered, that even these were not originally Proverbs, but
-the genuine Productions of superior Wits, to embellish and support
-Conversation; from whence, with great Impropriety, as well as Plagiarism
-(if you will forgive a hard Word) they have most injuriously been
-transferred into proverbial Maxims; and therefore in Justice ought to be
-resumed out of vulgar Hands, to adorn the Drawing-Rooms of Princes, both
-Male and Female, the Levees of great Ministers, as well as the Toilet and
-Tea-table of the Ladies.
-
-I can faithfully assure the Reader, that there is not one single witty
-Phrase in this whole Collection, which hath not received the Stamp and
-Approbation of at least one hundred Years, and how much longer, it is
-hard to determine; he may therefore be secure to find them all genuine,
-sterling, and authentic.
-
-But before this elaborate Treatise can become of universal Use and
-Ornament to my native Country, Two Points, that will require Time and
-much Application, are absolutely necessary.
-
-For, _First_, whatever Person would aspire to be completely witty, smart,
-humourous, and polite, must by hard Labour be able to retain in his
-Memory every single Sentence contained in this Work, so as never to be
-once at a Loss in applying the right Answers, Questions, Repartees, and
-the like, immediately, and without Study or Hesitation.
-
-And, _Secondly_, after a Lady or Gentleman hath so well overcome this
-Difficulty, as to be never at a Loss upon any Emergency, the true
-Management of every Feature, and almost of every Limb, is equally
-necessary; without which an infinite Number of Absurdities will
-inevitably ensue: For Instance, there is hardly a polite Sentence in
-the following Dialogues which doth not absolutely require some peculiar
-graceful Motion in the Eyes, or Nose, or Mouth, or Forehead, or Chin,
-or suitable Toss of the Head, with certain Offices assigned to each
-Hand; and in Ladies, the whole Exercise of the Fan, fitted to the Energy
-of every Word they deliver; by no means omitting the various Turns
-and Cadence of the Voice, the Twistings, and Movements, and different
-Postures of the Body, the several Kinds and Gradations of Laughter, which
-the Ladies must daily practise by the Looking-Glass, and consult upon
-them with their Waiting-Maids.
-
-My Readers will soon observe what a great Compass of real and useful
-Knowledge this Science includes; wherein, although Nature, assisted by
-a Genius, may be very instrumental, yet a strong Memory and constant
-Application, together with Example and Precept, will be highly necessary:
-For these Reasons I have often wished, that certain Male and Female
-Instructors, perfectly versed in this science, would set up Schools for
-the Instruction of young Ladies and Gentlemen therein.
-
-I remember about thirty Years ago, there was a _Bohemian_ Woman, of that
-Species commonly known by the name of _Gypsies_, who came over hither
-from _France_, and generally attended ISAAC the Dancing-Master when he
-was teaching his Art to Misses of Quality; and while the young Ladies
-were thus employed, the _Bohemian_, standing at some distance, but full
-in their Sight, acted before them all proper Airs, and turnings of the
-Head, and motions of the Hands, and twistings of the Body; whereof you
-may still observe the good Effects in several of our elder Ladies.
-
-After the same manner, it were much to be desired, that some expert
-Gentlewomen gone to decay would set up publick Schools, wherein young
-Girls of Quality, or great Fortunes, might first be taught to repeat this
-following System of Conversation, which I have been at so much pains to
-compile; and then to adapt every Feature of their Countenances, every
-Turn of their Hands, every Screwing of their Bodies, every Exercise
-of their Fans, to the Humour of the Sentences they hear or deliver in
-Conversation. But above all to instruct them in every Species and Degree
-of Laughing in the proper seasons at their own Wit, or that of the
-Company. And, if the Sons of the Nobility and Gentry, instead of being
-sent to common Schools, or put into the Hands of Tutors at Home, to learn
-nothing but Words, were consigned to able Instructors in the same Art,
-I cannot find what Use there could be of Books, except in the hands of
-those who are to make Learning their Trade, which is below the Dignity of
-Persons born to Titles or Estates.
-
-It would be another infinite Advantage, that, by cultivating this
-Science, we should wholly avoid the Vexations and Impertinence of
-Pedants, who affect to talk in a Language not to be understood; and
-whenever a polite Person offers accidentally to use any of their
-Jargon-Terms, have the Presumption to laugh at Us for pronouncing those
-Words in a genteeler Manner. Whereas, I do here affirm, that, whenever
-any fine Gentleman or Lady condescends to let a hard Word pass out of
-their Mouths, every syllable is smoothed and polished in the Passage; and
-it is a true Mark of Politeness, both in Writing and Reading, to vary the
-Orthography as well as the Sound; because We are infinitely better Judges
-of what will please a distinguishing ear than those, who call themselves
-_Scholars_, can possibly be; who, consequently, ought to correct their
-Books, and Manner of pronouncing, by the Authority of Our Example, from
-whose lips they proceed with infinitely more Beauty and Significancy.
-
-But, in the mean time, until so great, so useful, and so necessary a
-Design can be put in execution, (which, considering the good Disposition
-of our Country at present, I shall not despair of living to see)
-let me recommend the following Treatise to be carried about as a
-Pocket-Companion, by all Gentlemen and Ladies, when they are going to
-visit, or dine, or drink Tea; or where they happen to pass the Evening
-without Cards, (as I have sometimes known it to be the Case upon
-Disappointments or Accidents unforeseen) desiring they would read their
-several Parts in their Chairs or Coaches, to prepare themselves for every
-kind of Conversation that can possibly happen.
-
-Although I have in Justice to my Country, allowed the Genius of our
-People to excel that of any other Nation upon Earth, and have confirmed
-this Truth by an Argument not to be controlled, I mean, by producing
-so great a Number of witty Sentences in the ensuing Dialogues, all of
-undoubted Authority, as well as of our own Production; yet, I must
-confess at the same time, that we are wholly indebted for them to
-our Ancestors; at least, for as long as my memory reacheth, I do not
-recollect one new Phrase of Importance to have been added; which Defect
-in Us Moderns I take to have been occasioned by the Introduction of
-Cant-Words in the Reign of King _Charles_ the Second. And those have so
-often varied, that hardly one of them, of above a Year’s standing, is now
-intelligible; nor any where to be found, excepting a small Number strewed
-here and there in the Comedies and other fantastick Writings of that Age.
-
-The Honourable Colonel JAMES GRAHAM, my old Friend and Companion, did
-likewise, towards the End of the same Reign, invent a Set of Words and
-Phrases, which continued almost to the Time of his Death. But, as those
-Terms of Art were adapted only to Courts and Politicians, and extended
-little further than among his particular Acquaintance (of whom I had the
-Honour to be one) they are now almost forgotten.
-
-Nor did the late D. of _R——_ and E. of _E——_ succeed much better,
-although they proceeded no further than single Words; whereof, except
-_Bite_, _Bamboozle_, and one or two more, the whole Vocabulary is
-antiquated.
-
-The same Fate hath already attended those other Town-Wits, who furnish us
-with a great Variety of new Terms, which are annually changed, and those
-of the last Season sunk in Oblivion. Of these I was once favoured with a
-compleat List by the Right Honourable the Lord and Lady _H——_, with which
-I made a considerable Figure one Summer in the Country; but returning
-up to Town in Winter, and venturing to produce them again, I was partly
-hooted, and partly not understood.
-
-The only Invention of late Years, which hath any way contributed towards
-Politeness in Discourse, is that of abbreviating or reducing Words of
-many Syllables into one, by lopping off the rest. This Refinement, having
-begun about the Time of the _Revolution_, I had some Share in the Honour
-of promoting it, and I observe, to my great Satisfaction, that it makes
-daily Advancements, and I hope in Time will raise our Language to the
-utmost Perfection; although, I must confess, to avoid Obscurity, I have
-been very sparing of this Ornament in the following Dialogues.
-
-But, as for Phrases, invented to cultivate Conversation, I defy all the
-Clubs of Coffee-houses in this town to invent a new one equal in Wit,
-Humour, Smartness, or Politeness, to the very worst of my Set; which
-clearly shews, either that we are much degenerated, or that the whole
-Stock of Materials hath been already employed. I would willingly hope,
-as I do confidently believe, the latter; because, having my self, for
-several Months, racked my Invention (if possible) to enrich this Treasury
-with some Additions of my own (which, however, should have been printed
-in a different Character, that I might not be charged with imposing
-upon the Publick) and having shewn them to some judicious Friends, they
-dealt very sincerely with me; all unanimously agreeing, that mine were
-infinitely below the true old Helps to Discourse, drawn up in my present
-Collection, and confirmed their Opinion with Reasons, by which I was
-perfectly convinced, as well as ashamed, of my great Presumption.
-
-But, I lately met a much stronger Argument to confirm me in the same
-Sentiments: For, as the great Bishop BURNET, of _Salisbury_, informs
-us in the Preface to his admirable _History of his own Times_, that
-he intended to employ himself in polishing it every Day of his Life,
-(and indeed in its Kind it is almost equally polished with this Work of
-mine:) So, it hath been my constant Business, for some Years past, to
-examine, with the utmost Strictness, whether I could possibly find the
-smallest Lapse in Style or Propriety through my whole Collection, that,
-in Emulation with the Bishop, I might send it abroad as the most finished
-Piece of the Age.
-
-It happened one Day as I was dining in good Company of both Sexes, and
-watching, according to my Custom, for new Materials wherewith to fill my
-Pocket-Book, I succeeded well enough till after Dinner, when the Ladies
-retired to their Tea, and left us over a Bottle of Wine. But I found we
-were not able to furnish any more Materials, that were worth the Pains of
-transcribing: For, the Discourse of the Company was all degenerated into
-smart Sayings of their own Invention, and not of the true old Standard;
-so that, in absolute Despair, I withdrew, and went to attend the Ladies
-at their Tea. From whence I did then conclude, and still continue to
-believe, either that Wine doth not inspire Politeness, or that our Sex is
-not able to support it without the Company of Women, who never fail to
-lead us into the right Way, and there to keep us.
-
-It much encreaseth the Value of these Apophthegms, that unto them we
-owe the Continuance of our Language, for at least an hundred Years;
-neither is this to be wondered at; because indeed, besides the Smartness
-of the Wit, and Fineness of the Raillery, such is the Propriety and
-Energy of Expression in them all, that they never can be changed, but to
-Disadvantage, except in the Circumstance of using Abbreviations; which,
-however, I do not despair, in due Time, to see introduced, having already
-met them at some of the Choice Companies in town.
-
-Although this Work be calculated for all Persons of Quality and Fortune
-of both Sexes; yet the Reader may perceive, that my particular View was
-to the OFFICERS of the ARMY, the GENTLEMEN of the INNS of COURTS, and of
-BOTH the UNIVERSITIES; to all COURTIERS, Male and Female, but principally
-to the MAIDS of HONOUR, of whom I have been personally acquainted with
-two-and-twenty Sets, all excelling in this noble Endowment; till for
-some Years past, I know not how, they came to degenerate into Selling
-of BARGAINS, and FREE-THINKING; not that I am against either of these
-Entertainments at proper Seasons, in compliance with Company, who
-may want a Taste for more exalted Discourse, whose Memories may be
-short, who are too young to be perfect in their Lessons. Or (although
-it be hard to conceive) who have no Inclination to read and learn my
-Instructions. And besides, there is a strong Temptation for Court-Ladies
-to fall into the two Amusements above-mentioned, that they may avoid
-the Censure of affecting Singularity, against the general Current and
-Fashion of all about them: But, however, no Man will pretend to affirm,
-that either BARGAINS or BLASPHEMY, which are the principal Ornaments
-of FREE-THINKING, are so good a Fund of polite Discourse, as what is
-to be met with in my Collection. For, as to BARGAINS, few of them seem
-to be excellent in their kind, and have not much Variety, because they
-all terminate in one single Point; and, to multiply them, would require
-more Invention than People have to spare. And, as to BLASPHEMY or
-FREE-THINKING, I have known some scrupulous Persons, of both Sexes, who,
-by a prejudiced Education, are afraid of Sprights. I must, however,
-except the MAIDS of HONOUR, who have been fully convinced, by an infamous
-Court-Chaplain, that there is no such Place as Hell.
-
-I cannot, indeed, controvert the Lawfulness of FREE-THINKING, because
-it hath been universally allowed, that Thought is free. But, however,
-although it may afford a large Field of Matter; yet in my poor Opinion,
-it seems to contain very little of Wit or Humour; because it hath
-not been antient enough among us to furnish established authentick
-Expressions, I mean, such as must receive a Sanction from the polite
-World, before their Authority can be allowed; neither was the Art of
-BLASPHEMY or FREE-THINKING invented by the Court, or by Persons of great
-Quality, who, properly speaking, were Patrons, rather than Inventors of
-it; but first brought in by the Fanatick Faction, towards the end of
-their Power, and, after the Restoration, carried to _Whitehall_ by the
-converted _Rumpers_, with very good Reasons; because they knew, that
-K. _Charles_ the Second, who, from a wrong Education, occasioned by
-the Troubles of his Father, had Time enough to observe, that Fanatick
-Enthusiasm directly led to Atheism, which agreed with the dissolute
-Inclinations of his Youth; and, perhaps, these Principles were farther
-cultivated in him by the _French_ Huguenots, who have been often charged
-with spreading them among us: However, I cannot see where the Necessity
-lies, of introducing new and foreign Topicks for Conversation, while we
-have so plentiful a Stock of our own Growth.
-
-I have likewise, for some Reasons of equal Weight, been very sparing
-in DOUBLE ENTENDRES; because they often put Ladies upon affected
-Constraints, and affected Ignorance. In short, they break, or very much
-entangle, the Thread of Discourse; neither am I Master of any Rules, to
-settle the disconcerted Countenances of the Females in such a Juncture;
-I can, therefore, only allow _Inuendoes_ of this Kind to be delivered in
-Whispers, and only to young Ladies under Twenty, who, being in Honour
-obliged to blush, it may produce a new Subject for Discourse.
-
-Perhaps the Criticks may accuse me of a Defect in my following System
-of POLITE CONVERSATION; that there is one great Ornament of Discourse,
-whereof I have not produced a single Example; which, indeed, I purposely
-omitted for some Reasons that I shall immediately offer; and, if those
-Reasons will not satisfy the Male Part of my gentle Readers, the Defect
-may be supplied in some manner by an _Appendix_ to the _Second Edition_;
-which _Appendix_ shall be printed by it self, and sold for _Sixpence_,
-stitched, and with a Marble Cover, that my Readers may have no Occasion
-to complain of being defrauded.
-
-The Defect I mean is, my not having inserted, into the Body of my Book,
-all the OATHS now most in Fashion for embellishing Discourse; especially
-since it could give no Offence to the _Clergy_, who are seldom or never
-admitted to these polite Assemblies. And it must be allowed, that Oaths,
-well chosen, are not only very useful Expletives to Matter, but great
-Ornaments of Style.
-
-What I shall here offer in my own Defence upon this important Article,
-will, I hope, be some Extenuation of my Fault.
-
-First, I reasoned with my self, that a just Collection of Oaths, repeated
-as often as the Fashion requires, must have enlarged this Volume, at
-least, to Double the Bulk; whereby it would not only double the Charge,
-but likewise make the Volume less commodious for Pocket-Carriage.
-
-Secondly, I have been assured by some judicious Friends, that themselves
-have known certain Ladies to take Offence (whether seriously or no) at
-too great a Profusion of Cursing and Swearing, even when that Kind of
-Ornament was not improperly introduced; which, I confess, did startle me
-not a little; having never observed the like in the Compass of my own
-several Acquaintance, at least for twenty Years past. However, I was
-forced to submit to wiser Judgments than my own.
-
-Thirdly, as this most useful Treatise is calculated for all future Times,
-I considered, in this Maturity of my Age, how great a Variety of Oaths I
-have heard since I began to study the World, and to know Men and Manners.
-And here I found it to be true what I have read in an antient Poet.
-
- “For, now-a-days, Men change their Oaths,
- As often as they change their Cloaths.”
-
-In short, Oaths are the Children of Fashion, they are in some sense
-almost Annuals, like what I observed before of Cant-Words; and I my
-self can remember about forty different Sets. The old Stock-Oaths I am
-confident, do not mount to above forty five, or fifty at most; but the
-Way of mingling and compounding them is almost as various as that of the
-Alphabet.
-
-Sir JOHN PERROT was the first Man of Quality whom I find upon Record to
-have sworn by _G—’s W—s_. He lived in the Reign of Q. _Elizabeth_, and
-was supposed to have been a natural Son of _Henry_ the Eighth, who might
-also have probably been his Instructor. This Oath indeed still continues,
-and is a Stock-Oath to this Day; so do several others that have kept
-their natural Simplicity: But, infinitely the greater Number hath been so
-frequently changed and dislocated, that if the Inventors were now alive,
-they could hardly understand them.
-
-Upon these Considerations I began to apprehend, that if I should insert
-all the Oaths as are now current, my Book would be out of Vogue with the
-first Change of Fashion, and grow useless as an old Dictionary: Whereas,
-the Case is quite otherways with my Collection of polite Discourse;
-which, as I before observed, hath descended by Tradition for at least
-an hundred Years, without any Change in the Phraseology. I, therefore,
-determined with my self to leave out the whole System of Swearing;
-because, both the male and female Oaths are all perfectly well known and
-distinguished; new ones are easily learnt, and with a moderate Share of
-Discretion may be properly applied on every fit Occasion. However, I must
-here, upon this Article of Swearing, most earnestly recommend to my male
-Readers, that they would please a little to study Variety. For, it is
-the Opinion of our most refined Swearers, that the same Oath or Curse,
-cannot, consistent with true Politeness, be repeated above nine Times in
-the same Company, by the same Person, and at one Sitting.
-
-I am far from desiring, or expecting, that all the polite and ingenious
-Speeches, contained in this Work, should, in the general Conversation
-between Ladies and Gentlemen, come in so quick and so close as I have
-here delivered them. By no means: On the contrary, they ought to be
-husbanded better, and spread much thinner. Nor, do I make the least
-Question, but that, by a discreet thrifty Management, they may serve
-for the Entertainment of a whole Year, to any Person, who does not make
-too long or too frequent Visits in the same Family. The Flowers of Wit,
-Fancy, Wisdom, Humour, and Politeness, scattered in this Volume, amount
-to one thousand, seventy and four. Allowing then to every Gentleman and
-Lady thirty visiting Families, (not insisting upon Fractions) there
-will want but little of an hundred polite Questions, Answers, Replies,
-Rejoinders, Repartees, and Remarks, to be daily delivered fresh, in every
-Company, for twelve solar Months; and even this is a higher Pitch of
-Delicacy than the World insists on, or hath Reason to expect. But, I am
-altogether for exalting this Science to its utmost Perfection.
-
-It may be objected, that the Publication of my Book may, in a long
-Course of Time, prostitute this noble Art to mean and vulgar People:
-But, I answer; That it is not so easy an Acquirement as a few ignorant
-Pretenders may imagine. A Footman can swear; but he cannot swear like
-a Lord. He can swear as often: But, can he swear with equal Delicacy,
-Propriety, and Judgment? No, certainly; unless he be a Lad of superior
-Parts, of good Memory, a diligent Observer; one who hath a skilful Ear,
-some Knowledge in Musick, and an exact Taste, which hardly fall to the
-Share of one in a thousand among that Fraternity, in as high Favour as
-they now stand with their Ladies; neither hath one Footman in six so
-fine a Genius as to relish and apply those exalted Sentences comprised
-in this Volume, which I offer to the World: It is true, I cannot see
-that the same ill Consequences would follow from the Waiting-Woman, who,
-if she hath been bred to read Romances, may have some small subaltern,
-or second-hand Politeness; and if she constantly attends the Tea, and
-be a good Listner, may, in some Years, make a tolerable Figure, which
-will serve, perhaps, to draw in the young Chaplain or the old Steward.
-But, alas! after all, how can she acquire those hundreds of Graces
-and Motions, and Airs, the whole military Management of the Fan, the
-Contortions of every muscular Motion in the Face, the Risings and
-Fallings, the Quickness and Slowness of the Voice, with the several Turns
-and Cadences; the proper Junctures of Smiling and Frowning, how often and
-how loud to laugh, when to jibe and when to flout, with all the other
-Branches of Doctrine and Discipline above-recited?
-
-I am, therefore, not under the least Apprehension that this Art will
-be ever in Danger of falling into common Hands, which requires so much
-Time, Study, Practice, and Genius, before it arrives to Perfection;
-and, therefore, I must repeat my Proposal for erecting Publick Schools,
-provided with the best and ablest Masters and Mistresses, at the Charge
-of the Nation.
-
-I have drawn this Work into the Form of a Dialogue, after the Patterns of
-other famous Writers in History, Law, Politicks, and most other Arts and
-Sciences, and I hope it will have the same Success: For, who can contest
-it to be of greater Consequence to the Happiness of these Kingdoms, than
-all human Knowledge put together. Dialogue is held the best Method of
-inculcating any Part of Knowledge; and, as I am confident, that Publick
-Schools will soon be founded for teaching Wit and Politeness, after my
-Scheme, to young People of Quality and Fortune, I have determined next
-Sessions to deliver a Petition to the _House of Lords_ for an Act of
-Parliament, to establish my Book, as the Standard _Grammar_ in all the
-principal Cities of the Kingdom where this Art is to be taught, by able
-Masters, who are to be approved and recommended by me; which is no more
-than LILLY obtained only for teaching Words in a Language wholly useless:
-Neither shall I be so far wanting to my self, as not to desire a Patent
-granted of course to all useful Projectors; I mean, that I may have the
-sole Profit of giving a Licence to every School to read my _Grammar_ for
-fourteen Years.
-
-The Reader cannot but observe what Pains I have been at in polishing
-the Style of my Book to the greatest Exactness: Nor, have I been less
-diligent in refining the Orthography, by spelling the Words in the
-very same Manner that they are pronounced by the Chief Patterns of
-Politeness, at Court, at Levees, at Assemblees, at Play-houses, at the
-prime Visiting-Places, by young Templers, and by Gentlemen-Commoners of
-both Universities, who have lived at least a Twelvemonth in Town, and
-kept the best Company. Of these Spellings the Publick will meet with many
-Examples in the following Book. For instance, _can’t_, _han’t_, _sha’nt_,
-_didn’t_, _coodn’t_, _woodn’t_, _isn’t_, _e’n’t_, with many more; besides
-several Words which Scholars pretend are derived from _Greek_ and
-_Latin_, but not pared into a polite Sound by Ladies, Officers of the
-Army, Courtiers and Templers, such as _Jommetry_ for _Geometry_, _Verdi_
-for _Verdict_, _Lierd_ for _Lord_, _Larnen_ for _Learning_; together
-with some Abbreviations exquisitely refined; as, _Pozz_ for _Positive_;
-_Mobb_ for _Mobile_; _Phizz_ for _Physiognomy_; _Rep_ for _Reputation_;
-_Plenipo_ for _Plenipotentiary_; _Incog_ for _Incognito_; _Hypps_, or
-_Hippo_, for _Hypocondriacks_; _Bam_ for _Bamboozle_; and _Bamboozle_
-for _God knows what_; whereby much Time is saved, and the high Road to
-Conversation cut short by many a Mile.
-
-I have, as it will be apparent, laboured very much, and, I hope, with
-Felicity enough, to make every Character in the Dialogue agreeable with
-it self, to a degree, that, whenever any judicious Person shall read my
-Book aloud, for the Entertainment and Instruction of a select Company,
-he need not so much as name the particular Speakers; because all the
-Persons, throughout the several Subjects of Conversation, strictly
-observe a different Manner, peculiar to their Characters, which are of
-different kinds: But this I leave entirely to the prudent and impartial
-Reader’s Discernment.
-
-Perhaps the very Manner of introducing the several Points of Wit and
-Humour may not be less entertaining and instructing than the Matter it
-self. In the latter I can pretend to little Merit; because it entirely
-depends upon Memory and the Happiness of having kept polite Company.
-But, the Art of contriving, that those Speeches should be introduced
-naturally, as the most proper Sentiments to be delivered upon so great
-Variety of Subjects, I take to be a Talent somewhat uncommon, and a
-Labour that few People could hope to succeed in unless they had a
-Genius, particularly turned that way, added to a sincere disinterested
-Love of the Publick.
-
-Although every curious Question, smart Answer, and witty Reply be little
-known to many People; yet, there is not one single Sentence in the whole
-Collection, for which I cannot bring most authentick Vouchers, whenever I
-shall be called; and, even for some Expressions, which to a few nice Ears
-may perhaps appear somewhat gross, I can produce the Stamp of Authority
-from Courts, Chocolate-houses, Theatres, Assemblees, Drawing-rooms,
-Levees, Card-meetings, Balls, and Masquerades, from Persons of both
-Sexes, and of the highest Titles next to Royal. However, to say the
-truth, I have been very sparing in my Quotations of such Sentiments that
-seem to be over free; because, when I began my Collection, such kind of
-Converse was almost in its Infancy, till it was taken into the Protection
-of my honoured Patronesses at Court, by whose Countenance and Sanction it
-hath become a choice Flower in the Nosegay of Wit and Politeness.
-
-Some will perhaps object, that when I bring my Company to Dinner, I
-mention too great a Variety of Dishes, not always consistent with the
-Art of Cookery, or proper for the Season of the Year, and Part of the
-first Course mingled with the second, besides a Failure in Politeness, by
-introducing Black Pudden to a Lord’s Table, and at a great Entertainment:
-But, if I had omitted the Black Pudden, I desire to know what would have
-become of that exquisite Reason given by Miss NOTABLE for not eating it;
-the World perhaps might have lost it for ever, and I should have been
-justly answerable for having left it out of my Collection. I therefore
-cannot but hope, that such Hypercritical Readers will please to consider,
-my Business was to make so full and compleat a Body of refined Sayings,
-as compact as I could; only taking care to produce them in the most
-natural and probable Manner, in order to allure my Readers into the very
-Substance and Marrow of this most admirable and necessary Art.
-
-I am heartily sorry, and was much disappointed to find, that so universal
-and polite an Entertainment as CARDS, hath hitherto contributed very
-little to the Enlargement of my Work; I have sate by many hundred Times
-with the utmost Vigilance, and my Table-Book ready, without being able in
-eight Hours to gather Matter for one single Phrase in my Book. But this,
-I think, may be easily accounted for by the Turbulence and Justling of
-Passions upon the various and surprising Turns, Incidents, Revolutions,
-and Events of good and evil Fortune, that arrive in the course of a long
-Evening at Play; the Mind being wholly taken up, and the Consequence of
-Non-attention so fatal.
-
-Play is supported upon the two great Pillars of Deliberation and Action.
-The Terms of Art are few, prescribed by Law and Custom; no Time allowed
-for Digressions or Tryals of Wit. QUADRILLE in particular bears some
-Resemblance to a State of Nature, which, we are told, is a State of War,
-wherein every Woman is against every Woman: The Unions short, inconstant,
-and soon broke; the League made this Minute without knowing the Ally; and
-dissolved in the next. Thus, at the Game of QUADRILLE, female Brains are
-always employed in Stratagem, or their Hands in Action. Neither can I
-find, that our Art hath gained much by the happy Revival of MASQUERADING
-among us; the whole Dialogue in those Meetings being summed up in one
-sprightly (I confess, but) single Question, and as sprightly an Answer.
-DO YOU KNOW ME? YES, I DO. And, DO YOU KNOW ME? YES, I DO. For this
-Reason I did not think it proper to give my Readers the Trouble of
-introducing a Masquerade, meerly for the sake of a single Question, and
-a single Answer. Especially, when to perform this in a proper manner, I
-must have brought in a hundred Persons together, of both Sexes, dressed
-in fantastick Habits for one Minute, and dismiss them the next.
-
-Neither is it reasonable to conceive, that our Science can be much
-improved by Masquerades; where the Wit of both Sexes is altogether taken
-up in continuing singular and humoursome Disguises; and their Thoughts
-entirely employed in bringing Intrigues and Assignations of Gallantry to
-an happy Conclusion.
-
-The judicious Reader will readily discover, that I make Miss NOTABLE my
-Heroin, and Mr. THOMAS NEVER-OUT my Hero. I have laboured both their
-Characters with my utmost Ability. It is into their Mouths that I have
-put the liveliest Questions, Answers, Repartees, and Rejoynders; because
-my Design was to propose them both as Patterns for all young Batchelors
-and single Ladies to copy after. By which I hope very soon to see polite
-Conversation flourish between both Sexes in a more consummate Degree of
-Perfection, than these Kingdoms have yet ever known.
-
-I have drawn some Lines of Sir JOHN LINGER’S Character, the _Derbyshire_
-Knight, on purpose to place it in Counter-view or Contrast with that of
-the other Company; wherein I can assure the Reader, that I intended not
-the least Reflexion upon _Derbyshire_, the Place of my Nativity. But,
-my Intention was only to shew the Misfortune of those Persons, who have
-the Disadvantage to be bred out of the Circle of Politeness; whereof
-I take the present Limits to extend no further than _London_, and ten
-Miles round; although others are please to compute it within the Bills of
-Mortality. If you compare the Discourses of my Gentlemen and Ladies with
-those of Sir JOHN, you will hardly conceive him to have been bred in the
-same Climate, or under the same Laws, Language, Religion, or Government:
-And, accordingly, I have introduced him speaking in his own rude Dialect,
-for no other Reason than to teach my Scholars how to avoid it.
-
-The curious Reader will observe, that when Conversation appears in
-danger to flag, which, in some Places, I have artfully contrived, I
-took care to invent some sudden Question, or Turn of Wit, to revive it;
-such as these that follow. _What? I think here’s a silent Meeting!_
-_Come, Madam, A Penny for your Thought_; with several other of the like
-sort. I have rejected all provincial or country Turns of Wit and Fancy,
-because I am acquainted with a very few; but, indeed, chiefly because I
-found them so very much inferior to those at Court, especially among the
-Gentlemen-Ushers, the Ladies of the Bed-Chamber, and the Maids of Honour;
-I must also add, the hither End of our noble Metropolis.
-
-When this happy Art of polite Conversing shall be thoroughly improved,
-good Company will be no longer pestered with dull, dry, tedious
-Story-tellers, nor brangling Disputers: For, a right Scholar, of
-either Sex, in our Science, will perpetually interrupt them with some
-sudden surprising Piece of Wit, that shall engage all the Company in
-a loud Laugh; and, if after a Pause, the grave Companion resumes his
-Thread in the following Manner; _Well, but to go on with my Story_; new
-Interruptions come from the Left to the Right, till he is forced to give
-over.
-
-I have made some few Essays toward _Selling of_ BARGAINS, as well for
-instructing those, who delight in that Accomplishment, as in compliance
-with my Female Friends at Court. However, I have transgressed a little
-in this Point, by doing it in a manner somewhat more reserved than as it
-is now practiced at St. _James_’s. At the same time, I can hardly allow
-this Accomplishment to pass properly for a Branch of that perfect polite
-Conversation, which makes the constituent Subject of my Treatise; and,
-for which I have already given my Reasons. I have likewise, for further
-Caution, left a Blank in the critical Point of each _Bargain_, which the
-sagacious Reader may fill up in his own Mind.
-
-As to my self, I am proud to own, that except some Smattering in
-the _French_, I am what the Pedants and Scholars call, a Man wholly
-illiterate, that is to say, unlearned. But, as to my own Language, I
-shall not readily yield to many Persons: I have read most of the Plays,
-and all the miscellany Poems that have been published for twenty Years
-past. I have read Mr. _Thomas Brown_’s Works entire, and had the Honour
-to be his intimate Friend, who was universally allowed to be the greatest
-Genius of his Age.
-
-Upon what Foot I stand with the present chief reigning Wits, their
-Verses recommendatory, which they have commended me to prefix before
-my Book, will be more than a thousand Witnesses: I am, and have been,
-likewise, particularly acquainted with Mr. CHARLES GILDON, Mr. WARD,
-Mr. DENNIS, that admirable Critick and Poet, and several others. Each
-of these eminent Persons (I mean, those who are still alive) have
-done me the Honour to read this Production five Times over with the
-strictest Eye of friendly Severity, and proposed some, although very few,
-Amendments, which I gratefully accepted, and do here publickly return my
-Acknowledgment for so singular a Favour.
-
-And here, I cannot conceal, without Ingratitude, the great Assistance I
-have received from those two illustrious Writers, Mr. OZEL, and Captain
-STEVENS. These, and some others, of distinguished Eminence, in whose
-Company I have passed so many agreeable Hours, as they have been the
-great Refiners of our Language; so, it hath been my chief Ambition to
-imitate them. Let the POPES, the GAYS, the ARBUTHNOTS, the YOUNGS, and
-the rest of that snarling Brood burst with Envy at the Praises we receive
-from the Court and Kingdom.
-
-But to return from this Digression.
-
-The Reader will find that the following Collection of polite Expressions
-will easily incorporate with all Subjects of genteel and fashionable
-Life. Those, which are proper for Morning-Tea, will be equally useful
-at the same Entertainment in the Afternoon, even in the same Company,
-only by shifting the several Questions, Answers, and Replies, into
-different Hands; and such as are adapted to Meals will indifferently
-serve for Dinners or Suppers, only distinguishing between Day-light and
-Candle-light. By this Method no diligent Person, of a tolerable Memory,
-can ever be at a loss.
-
-It hath been my constant Opinion, that every Man, who is intrusted by
-Nature with any useful Talent of the Mind, is bound by all the Ties
-of Honour, and that Justice which we all owe our Country, to propose
-to himself some one illustrious Action, to be performed in his Life
-for the publick Emolument. And, I freely confess, that so grand, so
-important an Enterprize as I have undertaken, and executed to the best
-of my Power, well deserved a much abler Hand, as well as a liberal
-Encouragement from the Crown. However, I am bound so far to acquit my
-self, as to declare, that I have often and most earnestly intreated
-several of my above-named Friends, universally allowed to be of the
-first Rank in Wit and Politeness, that they would undertake a Work, so
-honourable to themselves, and so beneficial to the Kingdom; but so great
-was their Modesty, that they all thought fit to excuse themselves, and
-impose the Task on me; yet in so obliging a Manner, and attended with
-such Compliments on my poor Qualifications, that I dare not repeat.
-And, at last, their Intreaties, or rather their Commands, added to that
-inviolable Love I bear to the Land of my Nativity, prevailed upon me to
-engage in so bold an Attempt.
-
-I may venture to affirm, without the least Violation of Modesty,
-that there is no Man, now alive, who hath, by many Degrees, so just
-Pretensions as my self, to the highest Encouragement from the CROWN,
-the PARLIAMENT, and the MINISTRY, towards bringing this Work to its due
-Perfection. I have been assured, that several great Heroes of antiquity
-were worshipped as Gods, upon the Merit of having civilized a fierce and
-barbarous People. It is manifest, I could have no other Intentions; and,
-I dare appeal to my very Enemies, if such a Treatise as mine had been
-published some Years ago, and with as much Success as I am confident
-this will meet, I mean, by turning the Thoughts of the whole Nobility
-and Gentry to the Study and Practice of polite Conversation; whether
-such mean stupid Writers, as the CRAFTSMAN and his Abettors, could
-have been able to corrupt the Principles of so many hundred thousand
-Subjects, as, to the Shame and Grief of every whiggish, loyal, and true
-Protestant Heart, it is too manifest, they have done. For, I desire the
-honest judicious Reader to make one Remark, that after having exhausted
-the Whole[2] _In sickly payday_ (if I may so call it) of Politeness and
-Refinement, and faithfully digested it in the following Dialogues, there
-cannot be found one Expression relating to Politicks; that the MINISTRY
-is never mentioned, nor the Word KING, above twice or thrice, and then
-only to the Honour of Majesty; so very cautious were our wiser Ancestors
-in forming Rules for Conversation, as never to give Offence to Crowned
-Heads, nor interfere with Party Disputes in the State. And indeed,
-although there seem to be a close Resemblance between the two Words
-_Politeness_ and _Politicks_, yet no Ideas are more inconsistent in their
-Natures. However, to avoid all Appearance of Disaffection, I have taken
-care to enforce Loyalty by an invincible Argument, drawn from the very
-Fountain of this noble Science, in the following short Terms, that ought
-to be writ in Gold, MUST IS FOR THE KING; which uncontroulable Maxim I
-took particular Care of introducing in the first Page of my Book; thereby
-to instil early the best Protestant Loyal Notions into the Minds of my
-Readers. Neither is it meerly my own private Opinion, that Politeness is
-the firmest Foundation upon which Loyalty can be supported: For, thus
-happily sings the Divine Mr. _Tibbalds_, or _Theobalds_, in one of his
-Birth-Day Poems.
-
- “I am no Schollard; but I am polite:
- Therefore be sure I am no _Jacobite_.”
-
-Hear likewise, to the same purpose, that great Master of the whole
-Poetick Choir, our most illustrious Laureat Mr. COLLY CIBBER.
-
- “Who in his Talk can’t speak a polite Thing,
- Will never loyal be to GEORGE _our King_.”
-
-I could produce many more shining Passages out of our principal Poets, of
-both Sexes, to confirm this momentous Truth. From whence, I think, it may
-be fairly concluded, that whoever can most contribute towards propagating
-the Science contained in the following Sheets, through the Kingdoms of
-_Great-Britain_ and _Ireland_, may justly demand all the Favour, that the
-wisest Court, and most judicious Senate, are able to confer on the most
-deserving Subject. I leave the Application to my Readers.
-
-This is the Work, which I have been so hardy to attempt, and without the
-least mercenary View. Neither do I doubt of succeeding to my full Wish,
-except among the TORIES and their Abettors; who being all _Jacobites_,
-and, consequently _Papists_ in their Hearts, from a Want of true Taste,
-or by strong Affectation, may perhaps resolve not to read my Book;
-chusing rather to deny themselves the Pleasure and Honour of shining in
-polite Company among the principal Genius’s of both Sexes throughout
-the Kingdom, than adorn their Minds with this noble Art; and probably
-apprehending (as, I confess nothing is more likely to happen) that a true
-Spirit of Loyalty to the Protestant Succession should steal in along with
-it.
-
-If my favourable and gentle Readers could possibly conceive the perpetual
-Watchings, the numberless Toils, the frequent Risings in the Night, to
-set down several ingenious Sentences, that I suddenly or accidentally
-recollected; and which, without my utmost Vigilance, had been
-irrecoverably lost for ever: If they would consider with what incredible
-Diligence I daily and nightly attended at those Houses, where Persons of
-both Sexes, and of the most distinguished Merit, used to meet and display
-their Talents; with what Attention I listened to all their Discourses,
-the better to retain them in my Memory; and then, at proper Seasons,
-withdrew unobserved, to enter them in my Table-Book, while the Company
-little suspected what a noble Work I had then in Embryo: I say, if all
-these were known to the World, I think, it would be no great Presumption
-in me to expect, at a proper Juncture, the publick Thanks of both Houses
-of Parliament, for the Service and Honour I have done to the whole Nation
-by my single Pen.
-
-Although I have never been once charged with the least Tincture of
-Vanity, the Reader will, I hope, give me leave to put an easy Question:
-What is become of all the King of _Sweden_’s Victories? Where are
-the Fruits of them at this Day? or, of what Benefit will they be to
-Posterity? were not many of his greatest Actions owing, at least in part,
-to Fortune? were not all of them owing to the Valour of his Troops, as
-much as to his own Conduct? could he have conquered the _Polish_ King,
-or the _Czar_ of _Muscovy_, with his single Arm? Far be it from me to
-envy or lessen the Fame he hath acquired; but, at the same time, I will
-venture to say, without Breach of Modesty, that I, who have alone with
-this Right-hand subdued Barbarism, Rudeness, and Rusticity, who have
-established and fixed for ever the whole System of all true Politeness
-and Refinement in Conversation, should think my self most inhumanely
-treated by my Country-men, and would accordingly resent it as the highest
-Indignity, to be put upon the level, in point of Fame, in After-ages,
-with CHARLES the Twelfth, late King of _Sweden_.
-
-And yet, so incurable is the Love of Detraction, perhaps beyond what
-the charitable Reader will easily believe, that I have been assured by
-more than one credible Person, how some of my Enemies have industriously
-whispered about, that one ISAAC NEWTON, an Instrument-maker, formerly
-living near _Leicester-Fields_, and afterwards a Workman at the Mint in
-the _Tower_, might possibly pretend to vye with me for Fame in future
-times. The Man it seems was knighted for making Sun-Dials better than
-others of his Trade, and was thought to be a Conjurer, because he
-knew how to draw Lines and Circles upon a Slate, which no body could
-understand. But, adieu to all noble Attempts for endless Renown, if
-the Ghost of an obscure Mechanick shall be raised up to enter into
-competition with me, only for his Skill in making Pot-hooks and Hangers
-with a Pencil, which many thousand accomplished Gentlemen and Ladies
-can perform as well with a Pen and Ink upon a Piece of Paper, and, in a
-manner, as little intelligible as those of Sir ISAAC.
-
-My most ingenious Friend already mentioned, Mr. COLLY CIBBER, who does
-too much Honour to the Laurel Crown he deservedly wears (as he hath often
-done to many Imperial Diadems placed on his Head) was pleased to tell
-me, that, if my Treatise were formed into a Comedy, the Representation,
-performed to Advantage on our Theatre might very much contribute to the
-Spreading of polite Conversation among all Persons of Distinction through
-the whole Kingdom.
-
-I own, the Thought was ingenious, and my Friend’s Intention good. But, I
-cannot agree to his Proposal: For, Mr. CIBBER himself allowed, that the
-Subjects handled in my Work, being so numerous and extensive, it would be
-absolutely impossible for one, two, or even six Comedies to contain them.
-From whence it will follow, that many admirable and essential Rules for
-polite Conversation must be omitted.
-
-And here let me do justice to my Friend Mr. TIBALDS, who plainly
-confessed before Mr. CIBBER himself, that such a Project, as it would
-be a great Diminution to my Honour, so it would intolerably mangle my
-Scheme, and thereby destroy the principal End at which I aimed, to form
-a compleat Body or System of this most useful Science in all its Parts.
-And therefore Mr. TIBBALDS, whose Judgment was never disputed, chose
-rather to fall in with my Proposal mentioned before, of erecting publick
-Schools and Seminaries all over the Kingdom, to instruct the young People
-of both Sexes in this Art, according to my Rules, and in the Method that
-I have laid down.
-
-I shall conclude this long, but necessary Introduction, with a Request,
-or indeed rather, a just and reasonable Demand from all Lords, Ladies,
-and Gentlemen, that while they are entertaining and improving each
-other with those polite Questions, Answers, Repartees, Replies, and
-Rejoinders, which I have with infinite Labour, and close Application,
-during the Space of thirty-six Years, been collecting for their Service
-and Improvement, they shall, as an Instance of Gratitude, on every proper
-Occasion, quote my Name, after this or the like manner. _Madam, as our
-Master_ WAGSTAFF _says_. _My Lord, as our Friend_ WAGSTAFF _has it_. I
-do likewise expect, that all my Pupils shall drink my Health every Day
-at Dinner and Supper during my Life; and that they, or their Posterity,
-shall continue the same Ceremony to my _not inglorious Memory_, after my
-Decease, for ever.
-
-[2] This Word is spelt by _Latinists_, _Encyclopædia_; but the judicious
-Author wisely prefers the Polite Reading before the Pedantick.
-
-
-
-
-POLITE CONVERSATION.
-
-IN THREE DIALOGUES.
-
-
-
-
-DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
-
-
-The MEN.
-
- _Lord_ SPARKISH,
- _Lord_ SMART,
- _Sir_ JOHN LINGER,
- _Mr._ NEVEROUT,
- _Colonel_ ATWIT.
-
-
-The LADIES.
-
- _Lady_ SMART,
- _Miss_ NOTABLE,
- _Lady_ ANSWERALL.
-
-
-
-
-POLITE CONVERSATION, ETC.
-
-ST. JAMES’S PARK.
-
-_Lord_ Sparkish _meeting Col._ Atwit.
-
-
-_Col._ Well met, my Lord.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Thank ye, Colonel. A Parson would have said, I hope we
-shall meet in Heaven. When did you see _Tom Neverout_?
-
-_Col._ He’s just coming towards us. Talk of the Devil——
-
- [Neverout _comes up_.
-
-_Col._ How do you do, _Tom_?
-
-_Neverout._ Never the better for you.
-
-_Col._ I hope, you’re never the worse. But where’s your Manners? Don’t
-you see my Lord _Sparkish_?
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, I beg your Lordship’s Pardon.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ _Tom_, how is it, that you can’t see the Wood for Trees?
-What Wind blew you hither?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, my Lord, it is an ill Wind blows nobody good; for it
-gives me the Honour of seeing your Lordship.
-
-_Col._ _Tom_, you must go with us to Lady _Smart_’s to Breakfast.
-
-_Neverout._ Must? Why, Colonel, Must’s for the King.
-
- [_Col. offering in Jest to draw his Sword._
-
-_Col._ Have you spoke with all your Friends?
-
-_Neverout._ Colonel, as you’re stout, be merciful.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Come, agree, agree; the Law’s costly.
-
- [_Col. taking his Hand from the Hilt._
-
-_Col._ Well, _Tom_, you are never the worse Man to be afraid of me. Come
-along.
-
-_Neverout._ What, do you think, I was born in a Wood, to be afraid of an
-Owl?
-
-I’ll wait on you. I hope Miss _Notable_ will be there; egad she’s very
-handsome, and has Wit at Will.
-
-_Col._ Why every one as they like; as the good Woman said, when she
-kiss’d her Cow.
-
- [_Lord_ Smart’_s House; they knock at the Door; the_ Porter
- _comes out_.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, are you the Porter?
-
-_Porter._ Yes, for Want of a better.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Is your Lady at Home?
-
-_Porter._ She was at Home just now; but she’s not gone out yet.
-
-_Neverout._ I warrant, this Rogue’s Tongue is well hung.
-
- [_Lady_ Smart’_s Antichamber_.
-
- _Lady_ Smart _and Lady_ Answerall _at the Tea-table_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, your Lordship’s most humble Servant.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Madam, you spoke too late; I was your Ladyship’s before.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Oh! Colonel, are you here!
-
-_Col._ As sure as you’re there, Madam.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Oh, Mr. _Neverout_! what, such a Man alive!
-
-_Neverout._ Ay, Madam; alive, and alive like to be, at your Ladyship’s
-Service.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well: I’ll get a Knife, and nick it down, that Mr.
-_Neverout_ came to our House. And pray, What News Mr. _Neverout_?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Madam, Queen _Elizabeth_’s dead.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, I see you are no Changeling.
-
- [_Miss_ Notable _comes in_.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, your Slave: I hope your early Rising will do you no
-Harm. I hear you are but just come out of the Cloth-Market.
-
-_Miss._ I always rise at Eleven, whether it be Day or no.
-
-_Col._ Miss, I hope you are up for all Day?
-
-_Miss._ Yes, if I don’t get a Fall before Night.
-
-_Col._ Miss, I heard you were out of Order; pray, how are you now?
-
-_Miss._ Pretty well, Colonel, I thank you.
-
-_Col._ Pretty and well, Miss! that’s Two very good things.
-
-_Miss._ I mean, I am better than I was.
-
-_Neverout._ Why then, ’tis well you were sick.
-
-_Miss._ What, Mr. _Neverout_; you take me up, before I’m down.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Come, let us leave off Children’s Play, and come to
-Push-pin.
-
-_Miss_ [_to Lady Smart._] Pray, Madam, give me some more Sugar to my Tea.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Miss, you must needs be very good-humour’d, you love sweet
-things so much.
-
-_Neverout._ Stir it up with the Spoon, Miss; for the deeper the sweeter.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I assure you, Miss, the Colonel has made you a great
-Compliment.
-
-_Miss._ I am sorry for it; for I have heard say, that complimenting is
-lying.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_to Ld. Sparkish._] My Lord, methinks the Sight of you is
-good for sore Eyes; if we had known of your Coming, we would have strown
-Rushes for you: How has your Lordship done this long time?
-
-_Col._ Faith, Madam, he’s better in Health, than in good Conditions.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well; I see there’s no worse Friend than one brings from
-Home with one; and I am not the first Man has carry’d a Rod to whip
-himself.
-
-_Neverout._ Here’s Miss, has not a Word to throw at a Dog. Come; a Penny
-for your Thoughts.
-
-_Miss._ It is not worth a Farthing; for I was thinking of you.
-
- [_Col._——_rising up._——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Colonel, Where are you going so soon? I hope you did not
-come to fetch Fire.
-
-_Col._ Madam, I must needs go Home for half an Hour.
-
-_Miss._ Why, Colonel, they say, the Devil’s at Home.
-
-_Lady Answerall._ Well, but sit while you stay; ’tis as cheap sitting as
-standing.
-
-_Col._ No, Madam; while I’m standing I’m going.
-
-_Miss._ Nay, let him go; I promise him, we won’t tear his Cloaths to hold
-him.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I suppose, Colonel, we keep you from better Company; I mean
-only as to myself.
-
-_Col._ Madam, I am all Obedience.
-
- [_Col. sits down._
-
-_Lady Smart._ Lord, Miss, how can you drink your Tea so hot? Sure your
-Mouth’s pav’d.
-
-How do you like this Tea, Colonel?
-
-_Col._ Well enough, Madam; but methinks it is a little more-ish.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Oh, Colonel! I understand you. _Betty_, bring the
-Canister: I have but very little of this Tea left; but I don’t love to
-make two Wants of one; want when I have it, and want when I have it not.
-He, he, he, he.
-
- [_Laughs._
-
-_Lady Answ._ [_to the Maid._] Why, sure, _Betty_, you are bewitch’d; the
-Cream is burnt to.
-
-_Betty._ Why, Madam, the Bishop has set his Foot in it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Go, you Girl, and warm some fresh Cream.
-
-_Betty._ Indeed, Madam, there’s none left; for the Cat has eaten it all.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I doubt, it was a Cat with Two Legs.
-
-_Miss._ Colonel, Don’t you love Bread and Butter with your Tea?
-
-_Col._ Yes, in a Morning, Miss: For they say, Butter is Gold in a
-Morning, Silver at Noon, but it is Lead at Night.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, the Weather is so hot, that my Butter melts on my Bread.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Butter, I’ve heard ’em say, is mad twice a Year.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_to the Maid._] Mrs. _Betty_, how does your Body
-Politick?
-
-_Col._ Fie, my Lord; you’ll make Mrs. _Betty_ blush.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Blush! ay, blush like a blue Dog.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Mrs. _Betty_, Are not you _Tom Johnson_’s Daughter?
-
-_Betty._ So my Mother tells me, Sir.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ But, Mrs. _Betty_, I hear you are in Love.
-
-_Betty._ My Lord, I thank God, I hate nobody; I am in Charity with all
-the World.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, Wench, I think, thy Tongue runs upon Wheels this
-Morning: How came you by that Scratch on your Nose? Have you been
-fighting with the Cats?
-
-_Col._ [_to Miss._] Miss, When will you be married?
-
-_Miss._ One of these Odd-come-shortly’s, Colonel.
-
-_Neverout._ Yes; they say, the Match is half made, the Spark is willing,
-but Miss is not.
-
-_Miss._ I suppose, the Gentleman has got his own Consent for it.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, My Lord, did you walk through the Park in this Rain?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Yes, Madam; we were neither Sugar nor Salt; we were not
-afraid the Rain would melt us. He, he, he. [_Laugh._
-
-_Col._ It rain’d, and the Sun shone at the same time.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then the Devil was beating his Wife behind the Door,
-with a Shoulder of Mutton. [——_Laugh._——
-
-_Col._ A blind Man would be glad to see that.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, methinks you stand in your own Light.
-
-_Neverout._ Ah! Madam, I have done so all my Life.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I’m sure he sits in mine: Prythee, _Tom_, sit a little
-farther: I believe your Father was no Glasier.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, dear Girl, fill me out a Dish of Tea, for I’m very
-lazy.
-
- [_Miss fills a Dish of Tea, sweetens it, and then tastes it._
-
-_Lady Smart._ What, Miss, Will you be my Taster?
-
-_Miss._ No, Madam; but, they say, ’tis an ill Cook, that can’t lick her
-own Fingers.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, fill me another.
-
-_Miss._ Will you have it now, or stay till you get it?
-
-_Lady Answ._ But, Colonel, they say, you went to Court last Night very
-drunk: Nay, I’m told for certain, you had been among _Philistines_: No
-Wonder the Cat wink’d, when both her Eyes were out.
-
-_Col._ Indeed, Madam, that’s a Lye.
-
-_Lady Answ._ ’Tis better I should lye, than you should lose your good
-Manners: Besides, I don’t lie; I sit.
-
-_Neverout._ O faith, Colonel, you must own you had a Drop in your Eye:
-When I left you, you were half Seas over.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, I fear, Lady _Answerall_ can’t live long, she has
-so much Wit.
-
-_Neverout._ No; she can’t live, that’s certain; but she may linger Thirty
-or Forty Years.
-
-_Miss._ Live long; ay, longer than a Cat, or a Dog, or a better thing.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Oh! Miss, you must give your Vardi too!
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Miss, Shall I fill you another Dish of Tea?
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, my Lord, I have drank enough.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Come, it will do you more good than a Month’s Fasting;
-here, take it.
-
-_Miss._ No, I thank your Lordship; enough’s as good as a Feast.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well; but if you always say No, you’ll never be married.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Do, my Lord, give her a Dish; for, they say, Maids will say
-No, and take it.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well; and I dare say, Miss is a Maid in Thought, Word,
-and Deed.
-
-_Neverout._ I would not take my Oath of that.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Sir, speak for yourself.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Fie, Miss; they say, Maids should be seen, and not heard.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Good Miss, stir the Fire, that the Tea-Kettle may boil.—You
-have done it very well; now it burns purely. Well, Miss, you’ll have a
-chearful Husband.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, your Ladyship could have stirr’d it much better.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I know that very well, Hussy; but I won’t keep a Dog, and
-bark myself.
-
-_Neverout._ What! you are sick, Miss.
-
-_Miss._ Not at all; for her Ladyship meant you.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! faith, Miss, you are in Lob’s-pound; get out as you can.
-
-_Miss._ I won’t quarrel with my Bread and Butter for all that: I know
-when I’m well.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well; but Miss——
-
-_Neverout._ Ah! dear Madam, let the Matter fall; take Pity on poor Miss;
-don’t throw Water on a drownded Rat.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, Mr. _Neverout_, you should be cut for the Simples this
-Morning: Say a Word more, and you had as good eat your Nails.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Miss, will you be so good as to favour us with a
-Song?
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, my Lord, I can’t; for I have a great Cold.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Miss, they say, all good Singers have Colds.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Madam, does not Miss sing very well?
-
-_Lady Answ._ She sings, as one may _say_, my Lord.
-
-_Miss._ I hear, Mr. _Neverout_ has a very good Voice.
-
-_Col._ Yes; _Tom_ sings well; but his Luck’s naught.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Colonel, you hit yourself a devilish Box on the Ear.
-
-_Col._ Miss, Will you take a Pinch of Snuff?
-
-_Miss._ No, Colonel; you must know, I never take Snuff, but when I’m
-angry.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Yes, yes, she can take Snuff; but she has never a Box to put
-it in.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Colonel, let me see that Box.
-
-_Col._ Madam, there’s never a C upon it.
-
-_Miss._ May be there is, Colonel.
-
-_Col._ Ay; but May-bees don’t fly now, Miss.
-
-_Neverout._ Colonel, why so hard upon poor Miss? Don’t set your Wit
-against a Child: Miss, give me a Blow, and I’ll beat him.
-
-_Miss._ So she pray’d me to tell you.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, my Lady _Smart_, What Kin are you to Lord _Pozz_?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, his Grandmother and mine had Four Elbows.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, methinks here is a silent Meeting. Come, Miss, hold up
-your Head, Girl; there’s Money bid for you.
-
- [—_Miss starts_—
-
-_Miss._ Lord, Madam, you frighten me out of my Seven Senses!
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, I must be going.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I have seen hastier People than you stay all Night.
-
-_Col._ [_to Lady Smart._] _Tom Neverout_ and I are to leap To-morrow for
-a Guinea.
-
-_Miss._ I believe, Colonel, Mr. _Neverout_ can leap at a Crust better
-than you.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, your Tongue runs before your Wit; nothing can tame you
-but a Husband.
-
-_Miss._ Peace! I think I hear the Church Clock.
-
-_Neverout._ Why you know, as the Fool thinks——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, your Handkerchief’s fallen.
-
-_Miss._ Let him set his Foot on it, that it mayn’t fly in his Face.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss——
-
-_Miss._ Ay, ay; many a one says well, that thinks ill.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss; I’ll think of this.
-
-_Miss._ That’s Rhime, if you take it in Time.
-
-_Neverout._ What! I see you are a Poet.
-
-_Miss._ Yes; if I had but the Wit to show it.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, Will you be so kind as to fill me a Dish of Tea?
-
-_Miss._ Pray, let your Betters be serv’d before you; I am just going to
-fill one for myself; and, you know, the Parson always christens his own
-Child first.
-
-_Neverout._ But I saw you fill one just now for the Colonel: Well, I find
-kissing goes by Favour.
-
-_Miss._ But pray, Mr. _Neverout_, What Lady was that you were talking
-with in the Side-Box last _Tuesday_?
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, can you keep a Secret?
-
-_Miss._ Yes, I can.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss; and so can I.
-
-_Col._ Odds-so! I have cut my Thumb with this cursed Knife!
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; that was your Mother’s Fault, because she only warn’d
-you not to cut your Fingers.
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, no;’tis only Fools cut their Fingers; but wise Folks
-cut their Thumbs.——
-
-_Miss._ I’m sorry for it, but I can’t cry.
-
-_Col._ Don’t you think Miss is grown?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; ill Weeds grow apace.
-
- [——_A Puff of Smoke comes down the Chimney._——
-
-_Lady Answ._ Lord, Madam, Does your Ladyship’s Chimney smoke?
-
-_Col._ No, Madam; but they say, Smoke always pursues the Fair, and your
-Ladyship sat nearest.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Madam, Do you love Bohea Tea?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Madam, I must confess I do love it; but it does not
-love me.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Lady Smart._] Indeed, Madam, your Ladyship is very sparing
-of your Tea: I protest, the last I took, was no more than Water bewitch’d.
-
-_Col._ Pray, Miss, if I may be so bold, What Lover gave you that fine
-Etuy?
-
-_Miss._ Don’t you know? then keep Counsel.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I’ll tell you, Colonel, who gave it her; it was the best
-Lover she will ever have while she lives; her own dear Papa.
-
-_Neverout._ Methinks, Miss, I don’t much like the Colour of that Ribbon.
-
-_Miss._ Why then, Mr. _Neverout_, do you see, if you don’t much like it,
-you may look off of it.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I don’t doubt, Madam, but your Ladyship has heard, that
-Sir _John Brisk_ has got an Employment at Court.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Yes, yes; and I warrant, he thinks himself no small Fool
-now.
-
-_Neverout._ Yet, Madam, I have heard some People take him for a wise Man.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, ay; some are wise, and some are other-wise.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Do you know him, Mr. _Neverout_?
-
-_Neverout._ Know him! ay, as well as the Beggar knows his Dish.
-
-_Col._ Well; I can only say, that he has better Luck than honester Folks:
-But pray, How came he to get this Employment?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, by Chance, as the Man kill’d the Devil.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, you are in a brown Study; What’s the Matter?
-Methinks you look like Mum-Chance, that was hang’d for saying nothing.
-
-_Miss._ I’d have you to know, I scorn your Words.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; but scornful Dogs will eat dirty Puddings.
-
-_Miss._ Well; my Comfort is, your Tongue is no Slander. What! you would
-not have one be always on the high Grin.
-
-_Neverout._ Cry, Map-sticks, Madam; no Offence, I hope.
-
- [——_Lady_ Smart _breaks a Tea-cup_.——
-
-_Lady Answ._ Lord, Madam, How came you to break your Cup?
-
-_Lady Smart._ I can’t help it, if I would cry my Eyes out.
-
-_Miss._ Why, sell it, Madam, and buy a new one with some of the Money.
-
-_Col._ ’Tis a Folly to cry for spilt Milk.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, if Things did not break or wear out, how would
-Tradesmen live?
-
-_Miss._ Well; I am very sick, if any body car’d for it.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, then, Miss, e’en make a Die of it, and then we shall
-have a Burying of our own.
-
-_Miss._ The Devil take you, _Neverout_, besides all small Curses.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Marry, come up, What, plain _Neverout_! methinks you might
-have an M under your Girdle, Miss.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, well, naught’s never in Danger; I warrant, Miss will
-spit in her Hand, and hold fast. Colonel, do you like this Bisket?
-
-_Col._ I’m like all Fools; I love every Thing that’s good.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, and isn’t it pure good?
-
-_Col._ ’Tis better than a worse.
-
- [——_Footman brings the Colonel a Letter._——
-
-_Lady Answ._ I suppose, Colonel, that’s a Billet-doux from your Mistress.
-
-_Col._ Egad, I don’t know whence it comes; but whoe’er writ it, writes a
-Hand like a Foot.
-
-_Miss._ Well, you may make a Secret of it, but we can spell, and put
-together.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, What spells B double Uzzard?
-
-_Miss._ Buzzard in your Teeth, Mr. _Neverout_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Now you are up, Mr. _Neverout_, Will you do me the Favour,
-to do me the Kindness, to take off the Tea-kettle?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I wonder what makes these Bells ring.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, my Lord, I suppose, because they pull the Ropes.
-
- [_Here all laugh._
-
- [——Neverout _plays with a Tea-cup_.——
-
-_Miss._ Now a Child would have cry’d half an Hour before it would have
-found out such a pretty Plaything.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well said, Miss: I vow, Mr. _Neverout_, the Girl is too
-hard for you.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay, Miss will say any Thing but her Prayers, and those she
-whistles.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Colonel, make me a Present of that pretty Penknife?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay, Miss, catch him at that, and hang him.
-
-_Col._ Not for the World, dear Miss; it will cut Love.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Colonel, you shall be married first, I was just going to
-say that.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, but for all that, I can tell who is a great Admirer
-of Miss: Pray, Miss, how do you like Mr. _Spruce_? I swear I have often
-seen him cast a Sheep’s Eye out of a Calf’s Head at you: Deny it if you
-can.
-
-_Miss._ Oh! Madam; all the World knows, that Mr. _Spruce_ is a general
-Lover.
-
-_Col._ Come, Miss, ’tis too true to make a Jest on.
-
- [——_Miss blushes._——
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, however, Blushing is some Sign of Grace.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss says nothing; but I warrant she pays it off with
-Thinking.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Ladies and Gentlemen, you are pleas’d to divert yourselves;
-but, as I hope to be sav’d, there’s nothing in it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Touch a gall’d Horse, and he’ll wince: Love will creep
-where it dare not go: I’d hold a hundred Pound Mr. _Neverout_ was the
-Inventor of that Story; and, Colonel, I doubt you had a Finger in the Pye.
-
-_Lady Answ._ But, Colonel, you forgot to salute Miss when you came in;
-she said you had not been here a long time.
-
-_Miss._ Fie, Madam! I vow, Colonel, I said no such thing; I wonder at
-your Ladyship!
-
-_Col._ Miss, I beg your Pardon——
-
- [_Goes to salute her, she struggles a little._——
-
-_Miss._ Well, I had rather give a Knave a Kiss, for once, than be
-troubled with him; but, upon my Word, you are more bold than welcome.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Fie, fie, Miss! for Shame of the World, and Speech of good
-People.
-
- [Neverout _to_ Miss, _who is cooking her Tea and Bread and
- Butter_.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, come, Miss, make much of naught; good Folks are scarce.
-
-_Miss._ What! and You must come in with your Two Eggs a Penny, and Three
-of them rotten.
-
-_Col._ [_to Ld. Sparkish._] But, my Lord, I forgot to ask you, How you
-like my new Cloaths?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, very well, Colonel; only, to deal plainly with you,
-methinks the worst Piece is in the Middle.
-
- [——_Here a loud Laugh, often repeated._——
-
-_Col._ My Lord, you are too severe on your Friends.
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_, I’m hot; are you a Sot?
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I’m cold; are you a Scold? Take you that.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I confess, that was home. I find, Mr. _Neverout_, you won’t
-give your Head for the washing, as they say.
-
-_Miss._ Oh! he’s a sore Man, where the Skin’s off. I see, Mr. _Neverout_
-has a Mind to sharpen the Edge of his Wit, on the Whetstone of my
-Ignorance.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Faith, _Tom_, you are struck! I never heard a better
-Thing.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, give me Leave to scratch you for that fine Speech.
-
-_Miss._ Pox on your Picture; it cost me a Groat the drawing.
-
-_Neverout._ [_to Lady Smart._] ’Sbuds, Madam, I have burnt my Hand with
-your plaguy Tea-kettle.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, then, Mr. _Neverout_, you must say, God save the King.
-
-_Neverout._ Did you ever see the like?
-
-_Miss._ Never, but once, at a Wedding.
-
-_Col._ Pray, Miss, how old are you?
-
-_Miss._ Why, I’m as old as my Tongue, and a little older than my Teeth.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_to Lady Ans._] Pray, Madam, is Miss _Buxom_ married? I
-hear, ’tis all over the Town.
-
-_Lady Answ._ My Lord, she’s either married, or worse.
-
-_Col._ If she ben’t marry’d, at least she’s lustily promis’d. But, is it
-certain, that Sir _John Blunderbuss_ is dead at last?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Yes; or else he’s sadly wrong’d, for they have bury’d
-him.
-
-_Miss._ Why, if he be dead, he’ll eat no more Bread.
-
-_Col._ But, is he really dead?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Yes, Colonel; as sure as you’re alive——
-
-_Col._ They say, he was an honest Man.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Yes, with good looking to.
-
- [——Miss _feels a Pimple on her Face_.——
-
-_Miss._ Lord! I think my Goodness is coming out. Madam, will your
-Ladyship please to send me a Patch?
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, if you are a Maid, put your Hand upon your Spot.
-
-_Miss._ ——There——
-
- [_Covering her Face with both her Hands._——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, thou art a mad Girl.
-
- [_Gives her a Tap._
-
-_Miss._ Lord, Madam; is that a Blow to give a Child?
-
- [——_Lady_ Smart _lets fall her Handkerchief, and the Colonel
- stoops for it_.——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Colonel, you shall have a better Office.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Madam, I can’t have a better, than to serve your Ladyship.
-
-_Col._ [_to Lady Sparkish._] Madam, has your Ladyship read the new Play,
-written by a Lord? it is call’d, _Love in a Hollow Tree_.
-
-_Lady Sparkish._ No, Colonel.
-
-_Col._ Why, then your Ladyship has one Pleasure to come.
-
- [——Miss _sighs_.——
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, why do you sigh?
-
-_Miss._ To make a Fool ask, and you are the first.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, I find there is nothing but a Bit and a Blow with
-you.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, you must know, Miss is in Love.
-
-_Miss._ I wish, my Head may never ake till that Day.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Come, Miss, never sigh, but send for him.
-
-——_Lady Smart and Lady Answerall speaking together._] If he be hang’d,
-he’ll come hopping; and if he be drown’d, he’ll come dropping.
-
-_Miss._ Well, I swear, you’d make one die with laughing.
-
- [——Miss _plays with a Tea-cup, and_ Neverout _plays with
- another_.——
-
-_Neverout._ Well; I see, one Fool makes many.
-
-_Miss._ And you’re the greatest Fool of any.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, will you be so kind to tie this String for me
-with your fair Hands? it will go all in your Day’s Work.
-
-_Miss._ Marry, come up, indeed; tie it yourself, you have as many Hands
-as I; your Man’s Man will have a fine Office truly: Come, pray, stand out
-of my spitting Place.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; but, Miss, don’t be angry.
-
-_Miss._ No; I was never angry in my Life but once, and then nobody car’d
-for it; so I resolv’d never to be angry again.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; but if you’ll tie it, you shall never know what I’ll do
-for you.
-
-_Miss._ So I suppose, truly.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; but I’ll make you a fine Present one of these Days.
-
-_Miss._ Ay; when the Devil’s blind; and his Eyes are not sore yet.
-
-_Neverout._ No, Miss; I’ll send it you To-morrow.
-
-_Miss._ Well, well: To-morrow’s a new Day; but I suppose, you mean,
-Tomorrow-come-never.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! ’tis the prettiest Thing: I assure you, there came but
-Two of them over in Three Ships.
-
-_Miss._ Would I could see it, quoth blind _Hugh_. But why did you not
-bring me a Present of Snuff this Morning?
-
-_Neverout._ Because, Miss, you never ask’d me; and ’tis an ill Dog that’s
-not worth whistling for.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_to Lady Answ._] Pray, Madam, how came your Ladyship
-last _Thursday_ to go to that odious Puppet-show?
-
-_Col._ Why, to be sure, her Ladyship went to see, and to be seen.
-
-_Lady Answ._ You have made a fine Speech, Colonel: Pray, what will you
-take for your Mouth-piece?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Take that, Colonel: But, pray, Madam, was my Lady _Snuff_
-there? They say, she is extremely handsome.
-
-_Lady Smart._ They must not see with my Eyes, that think so.
-
-_Neverout._ She may pass Muster well enough.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, how old do you take her to be?
-
-_Col._ Why, about Five or Six and Twenty.
-
-_Miss._ I swear, she’s no Chicken; she’s on the wrong Side of Thirty, if
-she be a Day.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Depend upon it, she’ll never see Five and Thirty, and a Bit
-to spare.
-
-_Col._ Why, they say, she’s one of the chief Toasts in Town.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, when all the rest are out of it.
-
-_Miss._ Well; I wou’dn’t be as sick as she’s proud, for all the World.
-
-_Lady Answ._ She looks, as if Butter wou’dn’t melt in her Mouth; but I
-warrant, Cheese won’t choak her. I hear, my Lord What-d’ye-call-him is
-courting her.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ What Lord d’ye mean, _Tom_?
-
-_Miss._ Why, my Lord, I suppose, Mr. _Neverout_ means the Lord of the
-Lord knows what.
-
-_Col._ They say, she dances very fine.
-
-_Lady Answ._ She did; but, I doubt, her Dancing Days are over.
-
-_Col._ I can’t pardon her, for her Rudeness to me.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well; but you must forget and forgive.
-
- [——Footman _comes in_.——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Did you call _Betty_?
-
-_Footman._ She’s coming, Madam.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Coming! ay, so is _Christmas_.
-
- [——Betty _comes in_.——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Come, get ready my Things. Where has the Wench been these
-Three Hours?
-
-_Betty._ Madam, I can’t go faster than my Legs will carry me.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, thou hast a Head, and so has a Pin. But, my Lord,
-all the Town has it, that Miss _Caper_ is to be married to Sir _Peter
-Giball_; one thing is certain, that she hath promis’d to have him.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Madam, you know Promises are either broken or kept.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I beg your Pardon, my Lord; Promises and Pye-crust are made
-to be broken.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Nay, I had it from my Lady _Carry-lye_’s own Mouth. I tell
-you my Tale, and my Tale’s Author; if it be a Lye, you had it as cheap as
-I.
-
-_Lady Answ._ She and I had some Words last _Sunday_ at Church; but, I
-think, I gave her her own.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Her Tongue runs like the Clapper of a Mill; she talks
-enough for herself and all the Company.
-
-_Neverout._ And yet she simpers like a Firmity-Kettle.
-
- [——Miss _looking in a Glass_.——
-
-_Miss._ Lord, how my Head is drest To-day!
-
-_Col._ Oh, Madam! a good Face needs no Band.
-
-_Miss._ No; and a bad one deserves none.
-
-_Col._ Pray, Miss, where is your old Acquaintance, Mrs. _Wayward_?
-
-_Miss._ Why, where should she be? You must needs know; she’s in her Skin.
-
-_Col._ I can answer that: What if you were as far out as she’s in?——
-
-_Miss._ Well, I promis’d to go this Evening to _Hyde-Park_ on the Water;
-but, I protest, I’m half afraid.
-
-_Neverout._ Never fear, Miss; you have the old Proverb on your Side,
-Naught’s ne’er in Danger.
-
-_Col._ Why, Miss, let _Tom Neverout_ wait on you; and then, I warrant,
-you’ll be as safe as a Thief in a Mill; for you know, he that’s born to
-be hang’d, will never be drowned.
-
-_Neverout._ Thank you, Colonel, for your good Word; but, faith, if ever I
-hang, it shall be about a fair Lady’s Neck.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Who’s there? Bid the Children be quiet, and not laugh so
-loud.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Oh, Madam! let’ em laugh; they’ll ne’er laugh younger.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I’ll tell you a Secret, if you’ll promise never to tell
-it again.
-
-_Miss._ No, to be sure; I’ll tell it to nobody but Friends and Strangers.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then, there’s some Dirt in my Tea-cup.
-
-_Miss._ Come, come; the more there’s in’t, the more there’s on’t.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Poh! you must eat a Peck of Dirt before you die.
-
-_Col._ Ay, ay; it goes all one way.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, What’s a Clock?
-
-_Miss._ Why, you must know, ’tis a Thing like a Bell; and you are a Fool
-that can’t tell.
-
-_Neverout._ [_to Lady Answ._] Pray, Madam, do you tell me; for I have
-let my Watch run down.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, ’tis half an Hour past Hanging-time.
-
-_Col._ Well; I am like the Butcher, that was looking for his Knife, and
-had it in his Mouth: I have been searching my Pockets for my Snuff-box,
-and, egad, here ’tis in my Hand.
-
-_Miss._ If it had been a Bear, it would have bit you, Colonel: Well, I
-wish, I had such a Snuff-box.
-
-_Neverout._ You’ll be long enough before you wish your Skin full of
-Eyelet-Holes.
-
-_Col._ Wish in one Hand,——
-
-_Miss._ Out upon you: Lord, what can the Man mean?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ This Tea’s very hot.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, it came from a hot Place, my Lord.
-
- [——Colonel _spills his Tea_.——
-
-_Lady Smart._ That’s as well done as if I had done it myself.
-
-_Col._ Madam, I find, you live by ill Neighbours; when you are forc’d to
-praise yourself.
-
-_Lady Smart._ So they pray’d me to tell you.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, I won’t drink a Drop more; if I do, ’twill go down like
-chopt Hay.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, don’t say No, till you are ask’d.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, what you please, and the rest again.
-
- [——Miss _stooping for a Pin_.——
-
-_Miss._ I have heard ’em say, that a Pin a Day is a Groat a Year. Well,
-as I hope to be married, forgive me for swearing; I vow, ’tis a Needle.
-
-_Col._ Oh! the wonderful Works of Nature: That a black Hen should have a
-white Egg!
-
-_Neverout._ What! you have found a Mare’s Nest; and laugh at the Eggs.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, keep your Breath to cool your Porridge.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, there was a very pleasant Accident last Night in St.
-_James_’s Park.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Lady Smart._] What was it your Ladyship was going to say
-just now?
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss; tell a Mare a Tale——
-
-_Miss._ I find, you love to hear yourself talk.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, if you won’t hear my Tale, kiss my, _&c._
-
-_Miss._ Out upon you, for a filthy Creeter!
-
-_Neverout._ What, Miss! must I tell you a Story, and find you Ears?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_to Lady Smart._] Pray, Madam, don’t you think Mrs.
-_Spendal_ very genteel?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, my Lord, I think she was cut out for a Gentlewoman,
-but she was spoil’d in the Making: She wears her Cloaths, as if they were
-thrown on her with a Pitch-Fork; and, for the Fashion, I believe they
-were made in the Reign of Queen _Bess_.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, that’s neither here nor there; for you know, the more
-careless, the more modish.
-
-_Col._ Well, I’d hold a Wager, there will be a Match between her and
-_Dick Dolt_; and I believe, I can see as far into a Millstone as another
-Man.
-
-_Miss._ Colonel, I must beg your Pardon a Thousand Times; but they say,
-An old Ape has an old Eye.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, what do you mean! you’ll spoil the Colonel’s Marriage,
-if you call him old.
-
-_Col._ Not so old, nor yet so cold. You know the rest, Miss.
-
-_Miss._ Manners is a fine Thing, truly.
-
-_Col._ Faith, Miss, depend upon it, I’ll give you as good as you bring:
-What! if you give a Jest, you must take a Jest.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, you’ll ne’er have done till you break
-that Knife; and then the Man won’t take it again.
-
-_Miss._ Why, Madam, Fools will be medling; I wish, he may cut his
-Fingers; I hope, you can see your own Blood without fainting.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, you shine this Morning like a —— Barn-door; you’ll
-never hold out at this Rate; pray, save a little Wit for To-morrow.
-
-_Miss._ Well, you have said your Say; if People will be rude, I have
-done; my Comfort is, ’twill be all one a thousand Year hence.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, you have shot your Bolt: I find, you must have the last
-Word.—Well, I’ll go to the Opera To-night.—No, I can’t neither, for I
-have some Business—and yet I think I must, for I promis’d to squire the
-Countess to her Box.
-
-_Miss._ The Countess of _Puddledock_, I suppose.
-
-_Neverout._ Peace, or War, Miss?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, you’ll never be mad, you are of so
-many Minds.
-
- [——_As_ Miss _rises, the Chair falls behind her_.——
-
-_Miss._ Well; I shan’t be Lady-Mayoress this Year.
-
-_Neverout._ No, Miss; ’tis worse than that; you won’t be marry’d this
-Year.
-
-_Miss._ Lord! you make me laugh, tho’ I a’n’t well.
-
- [——Neverout, _as_ Miss _is standing, pulls her suddenly on his
- Lap_.——
-
-_Neverout._ Now, Colonel, come, sit down on my Lap; more Sacks upon the
-Mill.
-
-_Miss._ Let me go; ar’n’t you sorry for my Heaviness?
-
-_Neverout._ No, Miss; you are very light; but I don’t say, you are a
-light Hussy. Pray, take up the Chair for your Pains.
-
-_Miss._ ’Tis but one body’s Labour, you may do it yourself: I wish, you
-would be quiet, you have more Tricks than a Dancing Bear.
-
- [——Neverout _rises to take up the Chair, and_ Miss _sits in
- his_.——
-
-_Neverout._ You wou’dn’t be so soon in my Grave, Madam.
-
-_Miss._ Lord! I have torn my Petticoat with your odious Romping; my Rents
-are coming in; I’m afraid, I shall fall into the Ragman’s Hands.
-
-_Neverout._ I’ll mend it, Miss.
-
-_Miss._ You mend it! go, teach your Grannam to suck Eggs.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, you are so cross, I could find in my Heart to hate
-you.
-
-_Miss._ With all my Heart; there will be no Love lost between us.
-
-_Neverout._ But, pray, my Lady _Smart_, does not Miss look as if she
-could eat me without Salt?
-
-_Miss._ I’ll make you one Day sup Sorrow for this.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, follow your own Way, you’ll live the longer.
-
-_Miss._ See, Madam, how well I have mended it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ ’Tis indifferent, as _Doll_ danc’d.
-
-_Neverout._ ’Twill last as many Nights as Days.
-
-_Miss._ Well, I knew, I should never have your good Word.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, my Lady _Answerall_ and I was walking in the Park
-last Night till near Eleven; ’twas a very fine Night.
-
-_Neverout._ Egad so was I; and I’ll tell you a comical Accident; egad, I
-lost my Under-standing.
-
-_Miss._ I’m glad you had any to lose.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, but what do you mean?
-
-_Neverout._ Egad, I kick’d my Foot against a Stone, and tore off the Heel
-of my Shoe, and was forc’d to limp to a Cobler in the _Pall Mall_, to
-have it put on. He, he, he.
-
- [_All laugh._
-
-_Col._ Oh! ’twas a delicate Night to run away with another Man’s Wife.
-
- [——Neverout _sneezes_.——
-
-_Miss._ God bless you, if you ha’n’t taken Snuff.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, what if I have, Miss?
-
-_Miss._ Why, then, the Duce take you.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I want that Diamond-Ring of yours.
-
-_Miss._ Why, then, Want’s like to be your Master.
-
- [——Neverout _looking at the Ring_.——
-
-_Neverout._ Ay, marry, this is not only but also; where did you get it?
-
-_Miss._ Why, where ’twas to be had; where the Devil got the Friar.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; if I had such a fine Diamond-Ring, I woudn’t stay a
-Day in _England_: But you know, far-fetch’d and dear-bought is fit for
-Ladies. I warrant, this cost your Father Twopence half-penny.
-
- [——Miss _sitting between_ Neverout _and the_ Colonel.——
-
-_Miss._ Well; here’s a Rose between Two Nettles.
-
-_Neverout._ No, Madam; with Submission, here’s a Nettle between Two Roses.
-
- [——Colonel _stretching himself_.——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, Colonel, you break the King’s Laws; you stretch
-without a Halter.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Colonel, some Ladies of your Acquaintance have promis’d to
-breakfast with you, and I am to wait on them; what will you give us?
-
-_Col._ Why, faith, Madam, Batchelors Fare; Bread and Cheese, and Kisses.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Poh! what have you Batchelors to do with your Money, but to
-treat the Ladies? you have nothing to keep but your own Four Quarters.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, has Captain _Brag_ the Honour to be related to
-your Lordship?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Very nearly, Madam; he’s my Cousin-German quite remov’d.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, is he not rich?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay, a rich Rogue, Two Shirts and a Rag.
-
-_Col._ Well, however, they say, he has a great Estate, but only the Right
-Owner keeps him out of it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ What Religion is he of?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, he is an _Anythingarian_.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I believe, he has his Religion to chuse, my Lord.
-
- [——Neverout _scratches his Neck_.——
-
-_Miss._ Fie, Mr. _Neverout_, ar’n’t you asham’d! I beg Pardon for
-the Expression, but I’m afraid, your Bosom-friends are become your
-Back-biters.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss, I saw a Flea once on your Pinner, and a L—— is a
-Man’s Companion, but a Flea is a Dog’s Companion: However, I wish, you
-would scratch my Neck with your pretty white Hand.
-
-_Miss._ And who would be Fool then? I wou’dn’t touch a Man’s Flesh for
-the Universe: You have the wrong Sow by the Ear, I assure you! that’s
-Meat for your Master.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss _Notable_, all Quarrels laid aside, pray, step hither
-for a Moment.
-
-_Miss._ I’ll wash my Hands, and wait on you, Sir; but, pray, come hither,
-and try to open this Lock.
-
-_Neverout._ We’ll try what we can do.
-
-_Miss._ We:——What, have you Pigs in your Belly?
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I assure you, I am very handy at all Things.
-
-_Miss._ Marry, hang them that can’t give themselves a good Word: I
-believe, you may have an even Hand to throw a L—— in the Fire.
-
-_Col._ Well, I must be plain; here’s a very bad Smell.
-
-_Miss._ Perhaps, Colonel, the Fox is the Finder.
-
-_Neverout._ No, Colonel; ’tis only your Teeth against Rain: But——
-
-_Miss._ Colonel, I find, you would make a very bad poor Man’s Sow.
-
- [——Colonel _coughing_.——
-
-_Col._ I have got a sad Cold.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; ’tis well if one can get any thing these hard Times.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Col._] Choak, Chicken; there’s more a hatching.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Pray, Colonel, how did you get that Cold?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Madam, I suppose, the Colonel got it, by lying a Bed
-barefoot.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, then, Colonel, you must take it for better for worse,
-as a Man takes his Wife.
-
-_Col._ Well, Ladies, I apprehend you without a Constable.
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_! Mr. _Neverout_! come hither this Moment!
-
-_Lady Smart._ [_imitating her._] Mr. _Neverout_, Mr. _Neverout_! I wish,
-he were tied to your Girdle.
-
-_Neverout._ What’s the Matter! whose Mare’s dead now?
-
-_Miss._ Take your Labour for your Pains; you may go back again, like a
-Fool, as you came.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss; if you deceive me a second time, ’tis my Fault.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Colonel, methinks your Coat is too short.
-
-_Col._ It will be long enough before I get another, Madam.
-
-_Miss._ Come, come; the Coat’s a good Coat, and come of good Friends.
-
-_Neverout._ Ladies, you are mistaken in the Stuff; ’tis half Silk.
-
-_Col._ _Tom Neverout_, you are a Fool, and that’s your Fault.
-
- [——_A great Noise below._——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Hey! what a Clattering is here; one would think, Hell was
-broke loose.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, Madam, I must take my Leave, for I a’n’t well.
-
-_Lady Smart._ What! you are sick of the Mulligrubs, with eating chopt Hay.
-
-_Miss._ No, indeed, Madam; I’m sick and hungry, more need of a Cook than
-a Doctor.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Poor Miss, she’s sick as a Cushion, she wants nothing but
-stuffing.
-
-_Col._ If you are sick, you shall have a Caudle of Calf’s Eggs.
-
-_Neverout._ I can’t find my Gloves.
-
-_Miss._ I saw the Dog running away with some dirty thing awhile ago.
-
-_Col._ Miss, you have got my Handkerchief; pray, let me have it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, keep it, Miss; for they say, Possession is Eleven
-Points of the Law.
-
-_Miss._ Madam, he shall ne’er have it again; ’tis in Hucksters Hands.
-
-_Lady Answ._ What! I see ’tis Raining again.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, then, Madam, we must do, as they do in _Spain_.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, my Lord, how is that?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Madam, we must let it rain.
-
- [——Miss _whispers Lady_ Smart.——
-
-_Neverout._ There’s no Whispering, but there’s Lying.
-
-_Miss._ Lord! Mr. _Neverout_, you are as pert as a Pearmonger this
-Morning.
-
-_Neverout._ Indeed, Miss, you are very handsome.
-
-_Miss._ Poh! I know that already; tell me News.
-
- [——_Somebody knocks at the Door._—— Footman _comes in_.
-
-_Footman._ [_to Col._] An please your Honour, there’s a Man below wants
-to speak to you.
-
-_Col._ Ladies, your Pardon for a Minute.
-
- [Col. _goes out_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, I sent yesterday to know how you did, but you were
-gone abroad early.
-
-_Miss._ Why, indeed, Madam, I was hunch’d up in a Hackney-Coach with
-Three Country Acquaintance, who call’d upon me to take the Air as far as
-_Highgate_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ And had you a pleasant Airing?
-
-_Miss._ No, Madam; it rain’d all the Time; I was jolted to Death, and
-the Road was so bad, that I scream’d every Moment, and call’d to the
-Coachman, Pray, Friend, don’t spill us.
-
-_Neverout._ So, Miss, you were afraid, that Pride wou’d have a Fall.
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_, when I want a Fool, I’ll send for you.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Miss, didn’t your Left Ear burn last Night?
-
-_Miss._ Pray, why, my Lord?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Because I was then in some Company where you were
-extoll’d to the Skies, I assure you.
-
-_Miss._ My Lord, that was more their Goodness, than my Desert.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ They said, that you were a complete Beauty.
-
-_Miss._ My Lord, I am as God made me.
-
-_Lady Smart._ The Girl’s well enough, if she had but another Nose.
-
-_Miss._ Oh! Madam, I know I shall always have your good Word; you love to
-help a lame Dog over the Style.
-
- [——_One knocks._——
-
-_Lady Smart._ Who’s there? you’re on the wrong Side of the Door; come in,
-if you be fat.
-
- [——Colonel _comes in again_.——
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Colonel, you are a Man of great Business.
-
-_Col._ Ay, ay, my Lord, I’m like my Lord Mayor’s Fool; full of Business,
-and nothing to do.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, don’t you think the Colonel mightily fall’n away
-of late?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay; fall’n from a Horse-load to a Cart-load.
-
-_Col._ Why, my Lord, egad I am like a Rabbit, fat and lean in
-Four-and-twenty Hours.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I assure you, the Colonel walks as strait as a Pin.
-
-_Miss._ Yes; he’s a handsome-body’d Man in the Face.
-
-_Neverout._ A handsome Foot and Leg: God-a-mercy Shoe and Stocking!
-
-_Col._ What! Three upon One! that’s foul Play: This wou’d make a Parson
-swear.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, what’s the Matter? You look as if you had neither
-won nor lost.
-
-_Col._ Why, you must know, Miss lives upon Love.
-
-_Miss._ Yes; upon Love and Lumps of the Cupboard.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; they say, Love and Peas-porridge are two dangerous
-Things; one breaks the Heart, and the other the Belly.
-
-_Miss._ [_imitating Lady_ Answerall’_s Tone._] Very pretty! One breaks
-the Heart, and the other the Belly.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Have a Care; they say, mocking is catching.
-
-_Miss._ I never heard that.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then, Miss, you have a Wrinkle——more than ever you had
-before.
-
-_Miss._ Well; live and learn.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay; and be hang’d, and forget all.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, take it as you please; but I swear, you are
-a saucy Jack, to use such Expressions.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then, Miss, if you go to that, I must tell you, there’s
-ne’er a Jack but there’s a Jill.
-
-_Miss._ Oh! Mr. _Neverout_; every body knows that you are the Pink of
-Courtesy.
-
-_Neverout._ And, Miss, all the World allows, that you are the Flower of
-Civility.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, I hear there was a great deal of Company where you
-visited last Night: Pray, who were they?
-
-_Miss._ Why, there was old Lady _Forward_, Miss _To-and-again_, Sir _John
-Ogle_, my Lady _Clapper_, and I, quoth the Dog.
-
-_Col._ Was your Visit long, Miss?
-
-_Miss._ Why, truly, they went all to the Opera; and so poor Pilgarlick
-came Home alone.
-
-_Neverout._ Alack a day, poor Miss! methinks it grieves me to pity you.
-
-_Miss._ What, you think, you said a fine Thing now; well, if I had a Dog
-with no more Wit, I would hang him.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Miss, if it be Manners, may I ask, which is oldest, you or
-Lady _Scuttle_?
-
-_Miss._ Why, my Lord, when I die for Age, she may quake for Fear.
-
-_Lady Smart._ She’s a very great Gadder abroad.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Lord! she made me follow her last Week through all the Shops
-like a Tantiny Pig.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I remember, you told me, you had been with her from _Dan_
-to _Beersheba_.
-
- [——Colonel _spits_.——
-
-_Col._ Lord! I shall die; I cannot spit from me.
-
-_Miss._ Oh! Mr. _Neverout_, my little Countess has just litter’d; speak
-me fair, and I’ll set you down for a Puppy.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, if I speak you fair, perhaps I mayn’t tell Truth.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay, but _Tom_, smoke that, she calls you Puppy by Craft.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss, you ride the Fore-horse To-day.
-
-_Miss._ Ay, many a one says well, that thinks ill.
-
-_Neverout._ Fie, Miss! you said that once before; and, you know, Too much
-of one Thing is good for nothing.
-
-_Miss._ Why, sure, we can’t say a good Thing too often.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, so much for that, and Butter for Fish; let us call
-another Cause: Pray, Madam, does your Ladyship know Mrs. _Nice_?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Perfectly well, my Lord; she’s nice by Name, and nice by
-Nature.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Is it possible, she could take that Booby _Tom Blunder_
-for Love?
-
-_Miss._ She had good Skill in Horse-flesh, that could chuse a Goose to
-ride on.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, my Lord, ’twas her Fate; they say, Marriage and Hanging
-go by Destiny.
-
-_Col._ I believe she’ll never be burnt for a Witch.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ They say, Marriages are made in Heaven; but I doubt, when
-she was married, she had no Friend there.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, she’s got out of God’s Blessing into the warm Sun.
-
-_Col._ The Fellow’s well enough, if he had any Guts in his Brains.
-
-_Lady Smart._ They say, thereby hangs a Tale.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, he’s a mere Hobbledehoy, neither a Man nor a Boy.
-
-_Miss._ Well, if I were to chuse a Husband, I would never be married to a
-little Man.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, why so, Miss? for they say, of all Evils we ought to
-chuse the least.
-
-_Miss._ Because Folks would say, when they saw us together, There goes
-the Woman and her Husband.
-
-_Col._ [_to Lady Smart._] Will your Ladyship be on the _Mall_ To-morrow
-Night?
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, that won’t be proper; you know, To-morrow’s _Sunday_?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ What then, Madam! they say, the better Day, the better
-Deed.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, how do you like Lady _Fruzz_?
-
-_Neverout._ Pox on her! she’s as old as _Poles_.
-
-_Miss._ So will you be, if you ben’t hang’d when you’re young.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, Miss, let us be Friends: Will you go to the Park this
-Evening?
-
-_Miss._ With all my Heart, and a Piece of my Liver; but not with you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I’ll tell you one thing, and that’s not two; I’m afraid I
-shall get a Fit of the Headach To-day.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Madam, don’t be afraid, it comes with a Fright.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam; one of your Ladyship’s Lappets is longer
-than t’other.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, no Matter; they that ride on a trotting Horse will
-ne’er perceive it.
-
-_Neverout._ Indeed, Miss, your Lappets hang worse.
-
-_Miss._ Well, I love a Lyar in my Heart, and you fit me to a Hair.
-
- [——Miss _rises up_.——
-
-_Neverout._ Duce take you, Miss! you trod on my Foot: I hope you don’t
-intend to come to my Bedside.
-
-_Miss._ In Troth, you are afraid of your Friends, and none of them near
-you.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well said, Girl! [_giving her a Chuck._] Take that; they
-say, a Chuck under the Chin is worth Two Kisses.
-
-_Lady Answ._ But, Mr. _Neverout_, I wonder why such a handsome, strait,
-young Gentleman as you, do not get some rich Widow.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Strait! Ay, strait as my Leg, and that’s crooked at Knee.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Madam, if it rain’d rich Widows, none of them would
-fall upon me. Egad, I was born under a Threepenny Planet, never to be
-worth a Groat.
-
-_Lady Answ._ No, Mr. _Neverout_; I believe you were born with a Cawl on
-your Head; you are such a Favourite among the Ladies: But what think you
-of Widow _Prim_? she’s immensely rich.
-
-_Neverout._ Hang her! they say, her Father was a Baker.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay; but it is not what is she? but what has she? now-a-days.
-
-_Col._ _Tom_, faith, put on a bold Face for once, and have at the Widow.
-I’ll speak a good Word for you to her.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; I warrant, you’ll speak one Word for him, and two for
-yourself.
-
-_Miss._ Well; I had that at my Tongue’s End.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Miss, they say, good Wits jump.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Madam, I had rather marry a Woman I lov’d, in her
-Smock, than Widow _Prim_, if she had her Weight in Gold.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Come, come, Mr. _Neverout_; Marriage is honourable, but
-Housekeeping is a Shrew.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Consider, Mr. _Neverout_, Four bare Legs in a Bed; and you
-are a younger Brother.
-
-_Col._ Well, Madam; the younger Brother is the better Gentleman: However,
-_Tom_, I would advise you to look before you leap.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ The Colonel says true: Besides, you can’t expect to wive
-and thrive in the same Year.
-
-_Miss._ [_shuddering._] Lord! there’s somebody walking over my Grave.
-
-_Col._ Pray, Lady _Answerall_, where was you last _Wednesday_, when I did
-myself the Honour to wait on you? I think, your Ladyship is one of the
-Tribe of _Gad_.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Colonel, I was at Church.
-
-_Col._ Nay, then will I be hang’d, and my Horse too.
-
-_Neverout._ I believe her Ladyship was at a Church with a Chimney in it.
-
-_Miss._ Lord, my Petticoat! how it hangs by Jommetry.
-
-_Neverout._ Perhaps the Fault may be in your Shape.
-
-_Miss._ [_looking gravely._] Come, Mr. _Neverout_, there’s no Jest like
-the true Jest; but, I suppose, you think my Back’s broad enough to bear
-every Thing.
-
-_Neverout._ Madam, I humbly beg your Pardon.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Sir, your Pardon’s granted.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, all Things have an End, and a Pudden has two, up-up-on
-my-my-my Word. [_stutters._]
-
-_Miss._ What! Mr. _Neverout_, can’t you speak without a Spoon?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_to Lady Smart._] Has your Ladyship seen the Duchess
-since your falling out?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Never, my Lord, but once at a Visit; and she look’d at me,
-as the Devil look’d over _Lincoln_.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, take a Pinch of my Snuff.
-
-_Miss._ What! you break my Head, and give me a Plaister; well, with all
-my Heart; once, and not use it.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss; if you wanted me and your Victuals, you’d want
-your Two best Friends.
-
-_Col._ [_to Neverout._] _Tom_, Miss and you must kiss, and be Friends.
-
- [Neverout _salutes_ Miss.
-
-_Miss._ Any thing for a quiet Life: my Nose itch’d, and I knew I should
-drink Wine, or kiss a Fool.
-
-_Col._ Well, _Tom_, if that ben’t fair, hang fair.
-
-_Neverout._ I never said a rude Thing to a Lady in my Life.
-
-_Miss._ Here’s a Pin for that Lye; I’m sure Lyars had need of good
-Memories. Pray, Colonel, was not he very uncivil to me but just now?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Mr. _Neverout_, if Miss will be angry for nothing, take my
-Council, and bid her turn the Buckle of her Girdle behind her.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, Lady _Answerall_, I know better Things; Miss and I are
-good Friends; don’t put Tricks upon Travellers.
-
-_Col._ _Tom_, not a Word of the Pudden, I beg you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ah, Colonel! you’ll never be good, nor then neither.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Which of the Goods d’ye mean? good for something, or good
-for nothing?
-
-_Miss._ I have a Blister on my Tongue; yet, I don’t remember, I told a
-Lye.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I thought you did just now.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Madam, what did Thought do?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, for my Life, I cannot conceive what your Lordship
-means.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Indeed, Madam, I meant no Harm.
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, to be sure, my Lord! you are as innocent as a Devil of
-Two Years old.
-
-_Neverout._ Madam, they say, ill Doers are ill Deemers: but I don’t apply
-it to your Ladyship.
-
- [Miss _mending a Hole in her Lace_.
-
-_Miss._ Well, you see, I’m mending; I hope I shall be good in time; look,
-Lady _Answerall_, is not it well mended?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay, this is something like a Tansy.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Miss, you have mended it, as a Tinker mends a Kettle;
-stop one Hole, and make two.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Pray, Colonel, are not you very much tann’d?
-
-_Col._ Yes, Madam; but a Cup of _Christmas_ Ale will soon wash it off.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Lady _Smart_, does not your Ladyship think, Mrs. _Fade_
-is mightily alter’d since her Marriage?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, my Lord, she was handsome in her Time; but she cannot
-eat her Cake, and have her Cake: I hear she’s grown a mere Otomy.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Poor Creature! the Black has set his Foot upon her already.
-
-_Miss._ Ay! she has quite lost the Blue on the Plumb.
-
-_Lady Smart._ And yet, they say, her Husband is very fond of her still.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Oh! Madam; if she would eat Gold, he would give it her.
-
-_Neverout._ [_to Lady Smart._] Madam, have you heard, that Lady _Queasy_
-was lately at the Playhouse _incog._?
-
-_Lady Smart._ What! Lady _Queasy_ of all Women in the World! Do you say
-it upon Rep?
-
-_Neverout._ Poz, I saw her with my own Eyes; she sat among the Mob in the
-Gallery; her own ugly Fiz: And she saw me look at her.
-
-_Col._ Her Ladyship was plaguily bamb’d; I warrant, it put her into the
-Hipps.
-
-_Neverout._ I smoked her huge Nose, and egad she put me in mind of the
-Woodcock, that strives to hide his long Bill, and then thinks nobody sees
-him.
-
-_Col._ _Tom_, I advise you hold your Tongue; for you’ll never say so good
-a Thing again.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, what are you looking for?
-
-_Miss._ Oh! Madam; I have lost the finest Needle——
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, seek till you find it, and then you won’t lose your
-Labour.
-
-_Neverout._ The Loop of my Hat is broke; how shall I mend it? [_he
-fastens it with a Pin._] Well, hang them, say I, that has no Shift.
-
-_Miss._ Ay, and hang him, that has one too many.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! Miss; I have heard a sad Story of you.
-
-_Miss._ I defy you, Mr. _Neverout_; nobody can say, Black’s my Eye.
-
-_Neverout._ I believe, you wish they could.
-
-_Miss._ Well; but who was your Author? Come, tell Truth, and shame the
-Devil.
-
-_Neverout._ Come then, Miss; guess who it was that told me; come, put on
-your Considering-cap.
-
-_Miss._ Well, who was it?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, one that lives within a Mile of an Oak.
-
-_Miss._ Well, go hang yourself in your own Garters; for I’m sure, the
-Gallows groans for you.
-
-_Neverout._ Pretty Miss! I was but in Jest.
-
-_Miss._ Well, but don’t let that stick in your Gizzard.
-
-_Col._ My Lord, does your Lordship know Mrs. _Talkall_?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Only by Sight; but I hear she has a great deal of Wit; and
-egad, as the Saying is, Mettle to the Back.
-
-_Lady Smart._ So I hear.
-
-_Col._ Why _Dick Lubber_ said to her t’other Day, Madam, you can’t cry
-Bo to a Goose: Yes, but I can, said she; and, egad, cry’d Bo full in his
-Face: We all thought we should break our Hearts with laughing.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ That was cutting with a Vengeance: and pr’ythee how did
-the Fool look?
-
-_Col._ Look? Egad he look’d for all the World like an Owl in an Ivy Bush.
-
- [_A Child comes in screaming._
-
-_Miss._ Well, if that Child was mine, I’d whip it till the Blood came;
-Peace, you little Vixen! if I were near you, I would not be far from you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, ay; Batchelors Wives and Maids Children are finely
-tutor’d.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Come to me, Master; and I’ll give you a Sugar-Plumb. Why,
-Miss, you forgot that ever you was a Child yourself. [_She gives the
-Child a Lump of Sugar._] I have heard ’em say, Boys will long.
-
-_Col._ My Lord, I suppose you know, that Mr. _Buzzard_ has married again?
-
-_Lady Smart._ This is his Fourth Wife; then he has been shod round.
-
-_Col._ Why, you must know, she had a Month’s Mind to _Dick Frontless_,
-and thought to run away with him; but her Parents forc’d her to take the
-old Fellow for a good Settlement.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ So the Man got his Mare again.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ I’m told he said a very good thing to _Dick_; said he, You
-think us old Fellows are Fools; but we old Fellows know young Fellows are
-Fools.
-
-_Col._ I know nothing of that; but I know, he’s devilish old, and she’s
-very young.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, they call that a Match of the World’s making.
-
-_Miss._ What if he had been young, and she old?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, that would have been a Match of the Devil’s
-making; but when both are young, that’s a Match of God’s making.
-
- [Miss _searching her Pockets for her Thimble, brings out a
- Nutmeg_.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! Miss, have a Care; for if you carry a Nutmeg in your
-Pocket, you’ll certainly be marry’d to an old Man.
-
-_Miss._ Well, and if ever I be marry’d, it shall be to an old Man; they
-always make the best Husbands; and it is better to be an old Man’s
-Darling than a young Man’s Warling.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Miss, if you speak as you think, I’ll give you my
-Mother for a Maid.
-
- [_Lady_ Smart _rings the Bell_. Footman _comes in_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Harkee, you Fellow; run to my Lady _Match_, and desire she
-will remember to be here at Six, to play at Quadrille: D’ye hear, if you
-fall by the Way, don’t stay to get up again.
-
-_Footman._ Madam, I don’t know the House.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, that’s not for Want of Ignorance; follow your Nose;
-go, enquire among the Servants.
-
- [Footman _goes out, and leaves the Door open_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Here, come back, you Fellow; why did you leave the Door
-open? Remember, that a good Servant must always come when he’s call’d, do
-what he’s bid, and shut the Door after him.
-
- [_The_ Footman _goes out again, and falls down Stairs_.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Neck or nothing; come down, or I’ll fetch you down: Well,
-but I hope, the poor Fellow has not sav’d the Hangman a Labour.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Madam, smoke Miss yonder biting her Lips, and playing
-with her Fan.
-
-_Miss._ Who’s that takes my Name in vain?
-
- [_She runs up to them, and falls down._
-
-_Lady Smart._ What, more falling! do you intend the Frolick should go
-round?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Miss, I wish you may not have broke her Ladyship’s
-Floor.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, come to me, and I’ll take you up.
-
-_Lady Sparkish._ Well, but without a Jest, I hope, Miss, you are not hurt.
-
-_Col._ Nay, she must be hurt for certain; for you see, her Head is all of
-a Lump.
-
-_Miss._ Well, remember this, Colonel, when I have Money, and you have
-none.
-
-_Lady Smart._ But, Colonel, when do you design to get a House, and a
-Wife, and a Fire to put her in?
-
-_Miss._ Lord! who would be marry’d to a Soldier, and carry his Knapsack?
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! Madam: _Mars_ and _Venus_, you know.
-
-_Col._ Egad, Madam, I’d marry To-morrow, if I thought I could bury my
-Wife just when the Honey-Moon is over; but they say, A Woman has as many
-Lives as a Cat.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I find, the Colonel thinks, a dead Wife under the Table is
-the best Goods in a Man’s House.
-
-_Lady Smart._ O but, Colonel, if you had a good Wife, it would break your
-Heart to part with her.
-
-_Col._ Yes, Madam; for they say, he that has lost his Wife and Sixpence,
-has lost a Tester.
-
-_Lady Smart._ But, Colonel, they say, that every marry’d Man should
-believe there’s but one good Wife in the World, and that’s his own.
-
-_Col._ For all that, I doubt, a good Wife must be bespoke, for there is
-none ready made.
-
-_Miss._ I suppose, the Gentleman’s a Woman-Hater; but, Sir, I think, you
-ought to remember, that you had a Mother: And pray, if it had not been
-for a Woman, where would you have been, Colonel?
-
-_Col._ Nay, Miss, you cry’d W——e first, when you talk’d of the Knapsack.
-
-_Lady Answ._ But I hope you won’t blame the whole Sex, because some are
-bad.
-
-_Neverout._ And they say, he that hates Woman, suck’d a Sow.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Madam; there’s no general Rule without an Exception.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Then, why don’t you marry, and settle?
-
-_Col._ Egad, Madam, there’s nothing will settle me but a Bullet.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, Colonel, there’s one Comfort, that you need not
-fear a Cannon-Bullet.
-
-_Col._ Why so, my Lord?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Because they say, he was curs’d in his Mother’s Belly,
-that was kill’d by a Cannon-Bullet.
-
-_Miss._ I suppose, the Colonel was cross’d in his first Love, which makes
-him so severe on all the Sex.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Yes; and I’ll hold a hundred to one, that the Colonel has
-been over Head and Ears in Love with some Lady, that has made his Heart
-ake.
-
-_Col._ Oh! Madam, We Soldiers are Admirers of all the fair Sex.
-
-_Miss._ I wish, I could see the Colonel in Love, till he was ready to
-die.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay; but I doubt, few People die for Love in these days.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, I confess, I differ from the Colonel; for I hope to
-have a rich and a handsome Wife yet before I die.
-
-_Col._ Ay, _Tom_; live Horse, and thou shalt have Grass.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Colonel; but whatever you say against Women, they are
-better Creatures than Men; for Men were made of Clay, but Woman was made
-of Man.
-
-_Col._ Miss, you may say what you please; but, faith, you’ll never lead
-Apes in Hell.
-
-_Neverout._ No, no; I’ll be sworn Miss has not an Inch of Nun’s Flesh
-about her.
-
-_Miss._ I understumble you, Gentlemen.
-
-_Neverout._ Madam, your humble-cum-dumble.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Miss, when did you see your old Acquaintance Mrs.
-_Cloudy_? You and She are Two, I hear.
-
-_Miss._ See her! marry, I don’t care whether I ever see her again, God
-bless my Eye-sight.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Lord! why she and you were as great as two Inkle-weavers.
-I’ve seen her hug you, as the Devil hug’d the Witch.
-
-_Miss._ That’s true; but I’m told for certain, she’s no better than she
-should be.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, God mend us all; but you must allow, the World is
-very censorious: I never heard that she was a naughty Pack.
-
-_Col._ [_to Neverout._] Come, Sir _Thomas_, when the King pleases; when
-do you intend to march?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Have Patience. _Tom_, is your Friend _Ned Rattle_ marry’d?
-
-_Neverout._ Yes, faith, my Lord; he has tied a Knot with his Tongue, that
-he can never untie with his Teeth.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay; marry in Haste, and repent at Leisure.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Has he got a good Fortune with his Lady? for they say,
-Something has some Savour, but Nothing has no Flavour.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Madam, all he gets by her, he may put into his Eye,
-and see never the worse.
-
-_Miss._ Then, I believe, he heartily wishes her in _Abraham_’s Bosom.
-
-_Col._ Pray, my Lord, how does _Charles Limber_ and his fine Wife agree?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, they say, he’s the greatest Cuckold in Town.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! but my Lord, you should always except my Lord-Mayor.
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_!
-
-_Neverout._ Hay, Madam, did you call me?
-
-_Miss._ Hay; why, Hay is for Horses.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, then you may kiss——
-
-_Col._ Pray, my Lord, what’s a Clock by your Oracle?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Faith, I can’t tell, I think my Watch runs upon Wheels.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, pray be so kind to call a Servant to bring me a Glass
-of Small Beer: I know you are at Home here.
-
-_Miss._ Every Fool can do as they’re bid: Make a Page of your own Age,
-and do it yourself.
-
-_Neverout._ Chuse, proud Fool; I did but ask you.
-
- [Miss _puts her Hand to her Knee_.
-
-_Neverout._ What! Miss, are you thinking of your Sweet-Heart? is your
-Garter slipping down?
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, keep your Breath to cool your Porridge;
-you measure my Corn by your Bushel.
-
-_Neverout._ Indeed, Miss, you lye.——
-
-_Miss._ Did you ever hear any thing so rude?
-
-_Neverout._ I mean, you lye——under a Mistake.
-
-_Miss._ If a thousand Lyes could choak you, you would have been choaked
-many a Day ago.
-
- [Miss _tries to snatch_ Neverout’_s Snuff-box_.
-
-_Neverout._ Madam, you miss’d that, as you miss’d your Mother’s Blessing.
-
- [_She tries again, and misses._
-
-_Neverout._ Snap short makes you look so lean, Miss.
-
-_Miss._ Poh! you are so robustious, you had like to put out my Eye: I
-assure you, if you blind me, you must lead me.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Dear Miss, be quiet; and bring me a Pin-cushion out of that
-Closet.
-
- [Miss _opens the Closet Door, and squalls_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Lord bless the Girl! what’s the Matter now?
-
-_Miss._ I vow, Madam, I saw something in black, I thought it was a Spirit.
-
-_Col._ Why, Miss, did you ever see a Spirit?
-
-_Miss._ No, Sir; I thank God, I never saw any thing worse than myself.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, I did a very foolish thing yesterday, and was a great
-Puppy for my Pains.
-
-_Miss._ Very likely; for, they say, many a true Word’s spoke in Jest.
-
- [Footman _returns_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, did you deliver your Message? You are fit to be sent
-for Sorrow, you stay so long by the Way.
-
-_Footman._ Madam, my Lady was not at Home, so I did not leave the Message.
-
-_Lady Smart._ This is it to send a Fool of an Errand.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ [_looking at his Watch._] ’Tis past Twelve a Clock.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, what is that among all us?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Madam, I must take my Leave: Come, Gentlemen, are you for
-a March?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, but your Lordship and the Colonel will dine with us
-To-day; and, Mr. _Neverout_, I hope, we shall have your good Company:
-There will be no Soul else, besides my own Lord and these Ladies; for
-every body knows, I hate a Croud; I would rather want Vittles than
-Elbow-Room: We dine punctually at Three.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Madam, we’ll be sure to attend your Ladyship.
-
-_Col._ Madam, my Stomach serves me instead of a Clock.
-
- [_Another_ Footman _comes back_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Oh! you are the t’other Fellow I sent: Well, have you been
-with my Lady _Club_? You are good to send of a dead Man’s Errand.
-
-_Footman._ Madam, my Lady _Club_ begs your Ladyship’s Pardon; but she is
-engaged To-night.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, here’s the Back of my Hand to you.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I find, you will have the last Word. Ladies, I am more
-yours than my own.
-
-
-
-
-POLITE CONVERSATION, ETC.
-
-DIALOGUE II.
-
-_Lord_ Smart _and the former Company at Three a Clock coming to dine_.
-
-
- [_After Salutations._
-
-_Lord Smart._ I’m sorry I was not at Home this Morning when you all did
-us the Honour to call here: But I went to the Levee To-day.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Oh! my Lord; I’m sure the Loss was ours.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Gentlemen and Ladies, you are come to a sad dirty House; I
-am sorry for it, but we have had our Hands in Mortar.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Oh! Madam; your Ladyship is pleas’d to say so, but I
-never saw any thing so clean and so fine; I profess, it is a perfect
-Paradise.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, your Lordship is always very obliging.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Madam, whose Picture is that?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, my Lord, it was drawn for me.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I’ll swear, the Painter did not flatter your Ladyship.
-
-_Col._ My Lord, the Day is finely clear’d up.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Ay, Colonel; ’tis a pity that fair Weather should ever do
-any Harm. [_To Neverout._] Why, _Tom_, you are high in the Mode.
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, it is better be out of the World, than out of the
-Fashion.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ But, _Tom_, I hear, You and Miss are always quarrelling; I
-fear, it is your Fault; for I can assure you, she is very good-humour’d.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay, my Lord; so is the Devil when he’s pleas’d.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Miss, what do you think of my Friend _Tom_?
-
-_Miss._ My Lord, I think, he’s not the wisest Man in the World; and
-truly, he’s sometimes very rude.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ That may be true; but, yet, he that hangs _Tom_ for a
-Fool, may find a Knave in the Halter.
-
-_Miss._ Well, however, I wish he were hang’d, if it were only to try.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss, if I must be hang’d, I won’t go far to chuse my
-Gallows; it shall be about your fair Neck.
-
-_Miss._ I’ll see your Nose Cheese first, and the Dogs eating it: But, my
-Lord, Mr. _Neverout_’s Wit begins to run low, for I vow, he said this
-before: Pray, Colonel, give him a Pinch, and I’ll do as much for you.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ My Lady _Smart_, your Ladyship has a very fine Scarf.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Yes, my Lord; it will make a flaming Figure in a Country
-Church.
-
- [Footman _comes in_.
-
-_Footman._ Madam, Dinner’s upon the Table.
-
-_Col._ Faith, I’m glad of it; my Belly began to cry Cupboard.
-
-_Neverout._ I wish I may never hear worse News.
-
-_Miss._ What! Mr. _Neverout_, you are in great Haste; I believe, your
-Belly thinks your Throat’s cut.
-
-_Neverout._ No, faith, Miss; Three Meals a Day, and a good Supper at
-Night, will serve my Turn.
-
-_Miss._ To say the Truth, I’m hungry.
-
-_Neverout._ And I’m angry, so let us both go fight.
-
- [_They go in to Dinner, and after the usual Compliments, take
- their Seats._
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ladies and Gentlemen, will you eat any Oysters before
-Dinner?
-
-_Col._ With all my Heart. [_Takes an Oyster._] He was a bold Man, that
-first eat an Oyster.
-
-_Lady Smart._ They say, Oysters are a cruel Meat, because we eat them
-alive: Then they are an uncharitable Meat, for we leave nothing to the
-Poor; and they are an ungodly Meat, because we never say Grace.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, that’s as well said, as if I had said it myself.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, we are well set, if we be but as well serv’d: Come,
-Colonel, handle your Arms; shall I help you to some Beef?
-
-_Col._ If your Ladyship please; and, pray, don’t cut like a
-Mother-in-Law, but send me a large Slice; for I love to lay a good
-Foundation. I vow, ’tis a noble Sirloyn.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay; here’s cut, and come again.
-
-_Miss._ But, pray, why is it call’d a Sirloyn?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, you must know, that our King _James_ the First, who
-lov’d good Eating, being invited to Dinner by one of his Nobles, and
-seeing a large Loyn of Beef at his Table, he drew out his Sword, and in a
-Frolic knighted it. Few People know the Secret of this.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Beef is Man’s Meat, my Lord.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ But, my Lord, I say, Beef is the King of Meat.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, what have I done, that I must not have a Plate?
-
-_Lady Smart._ [_to Lady Answ._] What will your Ladyship please to eat?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, Madam, help yourself.
-
-_Col._ They say, Eating and Scratching wants but a Beginning: If you will
-give me Leave, I’ll help myself to a Slice of this Shoulder of Veal.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Colonel, you can’t do a kinder thing: Well, you are all
-heartily welcome, as I may say.
-
-_Col._ They say, there are Thirty-and-two good Bits in a Shoulder of Veal.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, Colonel; Thirty bad Bits, and Two good ones: you see, I
-understand you; but I hope, you have got one of the two good ones.
-
-_Neverout._ Colonel, I’ll be of your Mess.
-
-_Col._ Then, pray, _Tom_, carve for yourself: They say, Two Hands in a
-Dish, and One in a Purse: Hah, said I well, _Tom_?
-
-_Neverout._ Colonel, you spoke like an Oracle.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, will your Ladyship help me to some Fish?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ [_to Neverout._] _Tom_, they say, Fish should swim thrice.
-
-_Neverout._ How is that, my Lord?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, _Tom_, first it should swim in the Sea, (do you mind
-me?) then it should swim in Butter; and at last, Sirrah, it should swim
-in good Claret. I think, I have made it out.
-
-_Footman._ [_to Ld. Smart._] My Lord, Sir _John Linger_ is coming up.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ God so! I invited him to dine with me To-day, and forgot
-it: Well, desire him to walk in.
-
- [_Sir_ John Linger _comes in_.
-
-_Sir John._ What! are you at it? Why, then, I’ll be gone.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Sir _John_, I beg you will sit down: Come, the more the
-merrier.
-
-_Sir John._ Ay; but the fewer the better Cheer.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, I am the worst in the World at making Apologies; it
-was my Lord’s Fault: I doubt you must kiss the Hare’s Foot.
-
-_Sir John._ I see you are fast by the Teeth.
-
-_Col._ Faith, Sir _John_, we are killing that, that would kill us.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ You see, Sir _John_, we are upon a Business of Life and
-Death: Come, will you do as we do? You are come in Pudden-Time.
-
-_Sir John._ Ay; this would you be doing if I were dead. What! you keep
-Court-Hours I see: I’ll be going, and get a Bit of Meat at my Inn.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, we won’t eat you, Sir _John_.
-
-_Sir John._ It is my own Fault; but I was kept by a Fellow who bought
-some _Derbyshire_ Oxen from me.
-
-_Neverout._ You see, Sir _John_, we stay’d for you, as one Horse does for
-another.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord, will you help Sir _John_ to some Beef? Lady
-_Answerall_, pray, eat, you see your Dinner: I am sure, if we had known
-we should have such good Company, we should have been better provided;
-but you must take the Will for the Deed. I’m afraid you are invited to
-your Loss.
-
-_Col._ And, pray, Sir _John_, how do you like the Town? You have been
-absent a long Time.
-
-_Sir John._ Why, I find, little _London_ stands just where it did when I
-left it last.
-
-_Neverout._ What do you think of _Hannover-Square_? Why, Sir _John_,
-_London_ is gone out of Town since you saw it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Sir _John_, I can only say, you are heartily welcome; and I
-wish I had something better for you.
-
-_Col._ Here’s no Salt; Cuckolds will run away with the Meat.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Pray, edge a little, to make more Room for Sir _John_: Sir
-_John_, fall to, you know Half an Hour is soon lost at Dinner.
-
-_Sir John._ I protest I can’t eat a Bit, for I took Share of a Beef-stake
-and Two Muggs of Ale with my Chapman, besides a Tankard of _March_ Beer,
-as soon as I got out of Bed.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Not fresh and fasting, I hope?
-
-_Sir John._ Yes, faith, Madam; I always wash my Kettle before I put the
-Meat in it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Poh! Sir _John_; you have seen Nine Houses since you
-eat last: Come, you have kept a Corner of your Stomach for a Piece of
-Venison-Pasty.
-
-_Sir John._ Well, I’ll try what I can do, when it comes up.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Come, Sir _John_, you may go further, and fare worse.
-
-_Miss._ [_to Neverout._] Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, will you please to send me
-a Piece of Tongue?
-
-_Neverout._ By no means, Madam; one Tongue’s enough for a Woman.
-
-_Col._ Miss, here’s a Tongue that never told a Lye.
-
-_Miss._ That was, because it could not speak. Why, Colonel, I never told
-a Lye in my Life.
-
-_Neverout._ I appeal to all the Company, whether that be not the greatest
-Lye that ever was told.
-
-_Col._ [_to Neverout._] Pr’ythee, _Tom_, send me the Two Legs and Rump
-and Liver of that Pigeon; for, you must know, I love what nobody else
-loves.
-
-_Neverout._ But what if any of the Ladies should long? Well, here take
-it, and the D—l do you good with it.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well; this Eating and Drinking takes away a body’s Stomach.
-
-_Neverout._ I am sure I have lost mine.
-
-_Miss._ What! the Bottom of it, I suppose.
-
-_Neverout._ No, really, Miss; I have quite lost it.
-
-_Miss._ I should be very sorry a poor body had found it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ But, Sir _John_, we hear you are marry’d since we saw you
-last: What! you have stolen a Wedding it seems.
-
-_Sir John._ Well; one can’t do a foolish thing once in one’s Life, but
-one must hear of it a hundred times.
-
-_Col._ And pray, Sir _John_, how does your Lady unknown?
-
-_Sir John._ My Wife’s well, Colonel; and at your Service in a civil way.
-Ha, ha. [_he laughs._
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Sir _John_, is your Lady tall or short?
-
-_Sir John._ Why, Miss, I thank God, she is a Little Evil.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Come, give me a Glass of Claret.
-
- [Footman _fills him a Bumper_.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why do you fill so much?
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, he fills as he loves you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, shall I send you some Cowcomber?
-
-_Miss._ Madam, I dare not touch it; for they say, Cowcombers are cold in
-the third Degree.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, do you love Pudden?
-
-_Neverout._ Madam, I’m like all Fools, I love every thing that is good;
-but the Proof of the Pudden is in the Eating.
-
-_Col._ Sir _John_, I hear you are a great Walker when you are at Home.
-
-_Sir John._ No, faith, Colonel; I always love to walk with a Horse in my
-Hand: But I have had devilish bad Luck in Horse-flesh of late.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why then, Sir _John_, you must kiss a Parson’s Wife.
-
-_Lady Smart._ They say, Sir _John_, that your Lady has a great deal of
-Wit.
-
-_Sir John._ Madam, she can make a Pudden; and has just Wit enough to know
-her Husband’s Breeches from another Man’s.
-
-_Lady Smart._ My Lord _Sparkish_, I have some excellent Cyder, will you
-please to taste it?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ My Lord, I should like it well enough, if it were not so
-treacherous.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Pray, my Lord, how is it treacherous?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Because it smiles in my Face, and cuts my Throat. [_Here
-a loud laugh._]
-
-_Miss._ Odd-so! Madam; your Knives are very sharp, for I have cut my
-Finger.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I am sorry for it; pray, which Finger? (God bless the Mark.)
-
-_Miss._ Why, this Finger: No, ’tis this: I vow I can’t find which it is.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay; the Fox had a Wound, and he could not tell where, _&c._
-Bring some Water to throw in her Face.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, did you ever draw a Sword in Anger? I
-warrant you would faint at the Sight of your own Blood.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, shall I send you some Veal?
-
-_Neverout._ No, Madam; I don’t love it.
-
-_Miss._ Then pray for them that do. I desire your Ladyship will send me a
-Bit.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ _Tom_, my Service to you.
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, this Moment I did myself the Honour to drink to your
-Lordship.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why then that’s _Hartfordshire_ Kindness.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, my Lord, I pledged myself, for I drank twice together
-without thinking.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why then, Colonel, my humble Service to You.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, my Lord, don’t make a Bridge of my Nose.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, a Glass of this Wine is as comfortable as Matrimony
-to an old Woman.
-
-_Col._ Sir _John_, I design one of these Days to come and beat up your
-Quarters in _Derbyshire_.
-
-_Sir John._ Faith, Colonel, come and welcome; and stay away, and
-heartily welcome: But you were born within the Sound of _Bow_ Bell, and
-don’t care to stir so far from _London_.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Colonel, send me some Fritters.
-
- [_Colonel takes them out with his Hand._
-
-_Col._ Here, Miss; they say, Fingers were made before Forks, and Hands
-before Knives.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Methinks this Pudden is too much boil’d.
-
-_Ld. Answ._ Oh! Madam, they say, a Pudden is Poison when it’s too much
-boil’d.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, shall I help you to a Pigeon? Here’s a Pigeon so finely
-roasted, it cries, Come eat me.
-
-_Miss._ No, Sir; I thank you.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then you may chuse.
-
-_Miss._ I have chosen already.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, you may be worse offer’d, before you are twice marry’d.
-
- [_The Colonel fills a large Plate of Soupe._
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, Colonel, you don’t mean to eat all that Soupe?
-
-_Col._ O my Lord, this is my sick Dish; when I am well, I’ll have a
-bigger.
-
-_Miss_ [_to Col._] Sup, _Simon_; very good Broth.
-
-_Neverout._ This seems to be a good Pullet.
-
-_Miss._ I warrant, Mr. _Neverout_ knows what’s good for himself.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ _Tom_, I shan’t take your Word for it; help me to a Wing.
-
- [Neverout _tryes to cut off a Wing_.
-
-_Neverout._ Egad I can’t hit the Joint.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, then, think of a Cuckold.
-
-_Neverout._ Oh! now I have nick’d it.
-
- [_Gives it Ld._ Sparkish.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, a Man may eat this, tho’ his Wife lay a dying.
-
-_Col._ Pray, Friend, give me a Glass of Small Beer, if it be good.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, Colonel, they say, there is no such thing as good Small
-Beer, good Brown Bread, or a good Old Woman.
-
-_Lady Smart._ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, I beg your Ladyship’s Pardon; I
-did not see you when I was cutting that Bit.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Oh! Madam; after you is good Manners.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Lord! here’s a Hair in the Sauce.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Then set the Hounds after it.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Colonel, help me however to some of that same Sauce.
-
-_Col._ Come; I think you are more Sauce than Pig.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Sir _John_, chear up: My Service to you: Well, what do you
-think of the World to come?
-
-_Sir John._ Truly, my Lord, I think of it as little as I can.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_putting a Scewer on a Plate._] Here, take this Scewer, and
-carry it down to the Cook, to dress it for her own Dinner.
-
-_Neverout._ I beg your Ladyship’s Pardon; but this Small Beer is dead.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, then, let it be bury’d.
-
-_Col._ This is admirable Black Pudden: Miss, shall I carve you some?
-I can just carve Pudden, and that’s all; I am the worst Carver in the
-World; I should never make a good Chaplain.
-
-_Miss._ No, thank ye, Colonel; for they say, those that eat Black Pudden
-will dream of the Devil.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ O, here comes the Venison-Pasty: Here, take the Soupe away.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ [_He cuts it up, and tastes the Venison._] ’Sbuds! this
-Venison is musty.
-
- [Neverout _eats a Piece, and it burns his Mouth_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ What’s the Matter, _Tom_? You have Tears in your Eyes, I
-think: What dost cry for, Man?
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, I was just thinking of my poor Grandmother; She died
-just this very Day Seven Years.
-
- [Miss _takes a Bit, and burns her Mouth_.
-
-_Neverout._ And, pray, Miss, why do you cry too?
-
-_Miss._ Because you were not hang’d the Day your Grandmother died.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ I’d have given Forty Pounds, Miss, to have said that.
-
-_Col._ Egad, I think, the more I eat, the hungrier I am.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Colonel, they say, one Shoulder of Mutton drives
-down another.
-
-_Neverout._ Egad, if I were to fast for my Life, I would take a good
-Breakfast in the Morning, a good Dinner at Noon, and a good Supper at
-Night.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ My Lord, this Venison is plaguily pepper’d; your Cook has
-a heavy Hand.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ My Lord, I hope, you are Pepper-proof: Come, here’s a Health
-to the Founders.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay; and to the Confounders too.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Lady _Answerall_, does not your Ladyship love Venison?
-
-_Lady Answ._ No, my Lord, I can’t endure it in my Sight, therefore please
-to send me a good Piece of Meat and Crust.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish_ [_drinks to Neverout._] Come, _Tom_; not always to my
-Friends, but once to you.
-
-_Neverout_ [_drinks to Lady Smart._] Come, Madam; here’s a Health to our
-Friends, and hang the rest of our Kin.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, will your Ladyship have any of this
-Hare?
-
-_Lady Answ._ No, Madam; they say, ’tis melancholy Meat.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Then, Madam, shall I send you the Brains? I beg your
-Ladyship’s Pardon; for they say, ’tis not good Manners to offer Brains.
-
-_Lady Answ._ No, Madam; for perhaps it will make me hare-brain’d.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I must tell you one thing.
-
-_Miss_ [_with a Glass in her Hand._] Hold your Tongue, Mr. _Neverout_;
-don’t speak in my Tip.
-
-_Col._ Well, he was an ingenious Man, that first found out Eating and
-Drinking.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Of all Vittles Drink digests the quickest: Give me a
-Glass of Wine.
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, your Wine is too strong.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Ay, _Tom_; as much as you are too good.
-
-_Miss._ This Almond Pudden was pure good; but it is grown quite cold.
-
-_Neverout._ So much the better, Miss; cold Pudden will settle your Love.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, are you going to take a Voyage?
-
-_Neverout._ Why do you ask, Miss?
-
-_Miss._ Because you have laid in so much Beef.
-
-_Sir John._ You Two have eat up the whole Pudden betwixt you.
-
-_Miss._ Sir _John_, here’s a little Bit left; will you please to have it?
-
-_Sir John._ No, thankee; I don’t love to make a Fool of my Mouth.
-
-_Col._ [_calling to the Butler._] _John_, is your Small Beer good?
-
-_Butler._ An please your Honour, my Lord and Lady like it; I think it is
-good.
-
-_Col._ Why then, _John_, d’yesee? if you are sure your Small Beer is
-good, d’yemark? Then, give me a Glass of Wine.
-
- [_All laugh._
-
- [_Colonel tasting the Wine._
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Sir _John_, how does your Neighbour _Gatherall_ of the
-_Peak_? I hear, he has lately made a Purchase.
-
-_Sir John._ Oh, _Dick Gatherall_ knows how to butter his Bread, as well
-as any Man in _Darbyshire_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, he us’d to go very fine, when he was here in Town.
-
-_Sir John._ Ay; and it became him, as a Saddle becomes a Sow.
-
-_Col._ I know his Lady, and I think she is a very good Woman.
-
-_Sir John._ Faith, she has more Goodness in her little Finger, than he
-has in his whole Body.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, Colonel, how do you like that Wine?
-
-_Col._ This Wine should be eaten; it is too good to be drunk.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ I’m very glad you like it; and pray don’t spare it.
-
-_Col._ No, my Lord; I’ll never starve in a Cook’s Shop.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ And pray, Sir _John_, what do You say to my Wine?
-
-_Sir John._ I’ll take another Glass first; second Thoughts are best.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Pray, Lady _Smart_, you sit near that Ham; will you
-please to send me a Bit?
-
-_Lady Smart._ With all my Heart. [_She sends him a Piece._] Pray, my
-Lord, how do you like it?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I think it is a Limb of _Lot_’s Wife. [_He eats it with
-Mustard._] Egad, my Lord, your Mustard is very uncivil.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why uncivil, my Lord?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Because it takes me by the Nose, egad.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, I find you are a very good Carver.
-
-_Col._ O Madam, that is no Wonder; for you must know, _Tom Neverout_
-carves a _Sundays_.
-
- [Neverout _overturns the Salt-celler_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, you have overturn’d the Salt, and that’s a
-Sign of Anger: I’m afraid, Miss and You will fall out.
-
-_Lady Answ._ No, no; throw a little of it into the Fire, and all will be
-well.
-
-_Neverout._ O Madam, the falling out of Lovers, you know.
-
-_Miss._ Lovers! very fine! fall out with Him! I wonder when we were in!
-
-_Sir John._ For my Part, I believe, the young Gentlewoman is his
-Sweetheart; there’s so much Fooling and Fidling betwixt them: I’m sure,
-they say in our Country, that — — — is the Beginning of Love.
-
-_Miss._ I own, I love Mr. _Neverout_, as the Devil loves Holy Water; I
-love him like Pye, I’d rather the Devil had him than I.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I’ll tell you one thing.
-
-_Miss._ Come, here’s t’ ye, to stop your Mouth.
-
-_Neverout._ I’d rather you would stop it with a Kiss.
-
-_Miss._ A Kiss! marry come up, my dirty Cousin; are you no sicker? Lord,
-I wonder what Fool it was that first invented Kissing!
-
-_Neverout._ Well, I’m very dry.
-
-_Miss._ Then you’re the better to burn, and the worse to fry.
-
-_Lady Answ._ God bless you, Colonel; you have a good Stroke with you.
-
-_Col._ O Madam; formerly I could eat all, but now I leave nothing; I eat
-but one Meal a Day.
-
-_Miss._ What! I suppose, Colonel, that’s from Morning till Night.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, Miss; and well was his Wont.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Pray, Lady _Answerall_, taste this Bit of Venison.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I hope, your Lordship will set me a good Example.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Here’s a Glass of Cyder fill’d: Miss, you must drink it.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, my Lord, I can’t.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, Miss; better Belly burst, than good Liquor be lost.
-
-_Miss._ Pish! well in Life there was never any thing so teizing; I had
-rather shed it in my Shoes: I wish it were in your Guts, for my Share.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, you han’t tasted my Cyder yet.
-
-_Neverout._ No, my Lord: I have been just eating Soupe; and they say, if
-one drinks in one’s Porridge, one will cough in one’s Grave.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come, take Miss’s Glass, she wish’d it was in your Guts; let
-her have her Wish for once: Ladies can’t abide to have their Inclinations
-cross’d.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_to Sir John._] I think, Sir _John_, you have not tasted
-the Venison yet.
-
-_Sir John._ I seldom eat it, Madam: However, please to send me a little
-of the Crust.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, Sir _John_, you had as good eat the Devil as the
-Broth he’s boil’d in.
-
-_Col._ Well, this Eating and Drinking takes away a body’s Stomach, as
-Lady _Answerall_ says.
-
-_Neverout._ I have dined as well as my Lord Mayor.
-
-_Miss._ I thought I could have eaten this Wing of a Chicken; but my Eye’s
-bigger than my Belly.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Indeed, Lady _Answerall_, you have eaten nothing.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Pray, my Lord, see all the Bones on my Plate: They say, a
-Carpenter’s known by his Chips.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, will you reach me that Glass of Jelly?
-
-_Miss_ [_giving it to him._] You see, ’tis but ask and have.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I would have a bigger Glass.
-
-_Miss._ What! you don’t know your own Mind; you are neither well, full
-nor fasting; I think that is enough.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay, one of the Enough’s; I am sure it is little enough.
-
-_Miss._ Yes; but you know, sweet Things are bad for the Teeth.
-
-_Neverout_ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, I don’t like that Part of the Veal
-you sent me.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, Mr. _Neverout_, I find you are a true _Englishman_;
-you never know when you are well.
-
-_Col._ Well, I have made my whole Dinner of Beef.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why, Colonel, a Belly-full’s a Belly-full, if it be but of
-Wheat-straw.
-
-_Col._ Well, after all, Kitchen-Physic is the best Physic.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ And the best Doctors in the World are Doctor _Dyet_, Doctor
-_Quiet_, and Doctor _Merryman_.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ What do you think of a little House well fill’d?
-
-_Sir John._ And a little Land well till’d?
-
-_Col._ Ay; and a little Wife well will’d?
-
-_Neverout._ My Lady _Smart_, pray help me to some of the Breast of that
-Goose.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ _Tom_, I have heard, that Goose upon Goose is false Heraldry.
-
-_Miss._ What! will you never have done stuffing?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ This Goose is quite raw: Well, God sends Meat, but the Devil
-sends Cooks.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, can you tell which is the white Goose, or the gray
-Goose the Gander?
-
-_Miss._ They say, a Fool will ask more Questions than the wisest body can
-answer.
-
-_Col._ Indeed, Miss, _Tom Neverout_ has posed you.
-
-_Miss._ Why, Colonel, every Dog has his Day; but, I believe, I shall
-never see a Goose again without thinking on Mr. _Neverout_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well said, Miss; faith. Girl, thou hast brought thyself off
-cleverly. _Tom_, what say you to that?
-
-_Col._ Faith, _Tom_ is nonplust; he looks plaguily down in the Mouth.
-
-_Miss._ Why, my Lord, you see he is the provokingest Creature in Life; I
-believe there is not such another in the varsal World.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Oh, Miss! the World’s a wide Place.
-
-_Neverout._ Well, Miss, I’ll give you Leave to call me any thing, if you
-don’t call me Spade.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, but, after all, _Tom_, can you tell me what’s _Latin_
-for a Goose.
-
-_Neverout._ O my Lord, I know that; why _Brandy_ is _Latin_ for a Goose,
-and _Tace_ is _Latin_ for a Candle.
-
-_Miss._ Is that Manners, to shew your Learning before Ladies? Methinks
-you are grown very brisk of a sudden; I think the Man’s glad he’s alive.
-
-_Sir John._ The Devil take your Wit, if this be Wit; for it spoils
-Company: Pray, Mr. _Butler_, bring me a Dram after my Goose; ’tis very
-good for the Wholsoms.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come, bring me the Loaf; I sometimes love to cut my own
-Bread.
-
-_Miss._ I suppose, my Lord, you lay longest a Bed To-day.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Miss, if I had said so, I should have told a Fib; I warrant
-you lay a Bed till the Cows came Home: But, Miss, shall I cut you a
-little Crust now my Hand is in?
-
-_Miss._ If you please, my Lord, a Bit of Under-crust.
-
-_Neverout._ [_whispering Miss._] I find, you love to lie under.
-
-_Miss._ _aloud_ [_pushing him from her._] What does the Man mean! Sir, I
-don’t understand you at all.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, all Quarrels laid aside: Here, Miss, may you live a
-thousand Years.
-
- [_He drinks to her._
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Sir, don’t stint me.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Sir _John_, will you taste my _October_? I think it is very
-good; but I believe not equal to yours in _Darbyshire_.
-
-_Sir John._ My Lord, I beg your Pardon; but they say, the Devil made
-Askers.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ [_to the Butler._] Here, bring up the great Tankard full of
-_October_ for Sir _John_.
-
-_Col._ [_drinking to Miss._] Miss, your Health; may you live all the Days
-of your Life.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, Miss, you’ll certainly be soon marry’d; here’s Two
-Batchelors drinking to you at once.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Indeed, Miss, I believe you were wrapt in your Mother’s
-Smock, you are so well belov’d.
-
-_Miss._ Where’s my Knife? Sure I han’t eaten it. Oh! here it is.
-
-_Sir John._ No, Miss; but your Maidenhead hangs in your Light.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Sir _John_, is that a _Darbyshire_ Compliment? Here, Mr.
-_Neverout_, will you take this Piece of Rabbit that you bid me carve for
-you?
-
-_Neverout._ I don’t know.
-
-_Miss._ Why, take it, or let it alone.
-
-_Neverout._ I will.
-
-_Miss._ What will you?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, I’ll take it, or let it alone.
-
-_Miss._ You are a provoking Creature.
-
-_Sir John_ [_talking with a Glass of Wine in his Hand._] I remember a
-Farmer in our Country——
-
-_Ld. Smart_ [_interrupting him._] Pray, Sir _John_, did you ever hear of
-Parson _Palmer_?
-
-_Sir John._ No, my Lord; what of him?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, he used to preach over his Liquor.
-
-_Sir John._ I beg your Pardon; here’s your Lordship’s Health: I’d drink
-it up, if it were a Mile to the Bottom.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, have you been at the new Play?
-
-_Neverout._ Yes, Madam; I went the first Night.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well; and how did it take?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Madam, the Poet is damn’d.
-
-_Sir John._ God forgive you! that’s very uncharitable: you ought not to
-judge so rashly of any Christian.
-
-_Neverout_ [_whispers Lady Smart._] Was ever such a Dunce? How well he
-knows the Town! see, how he stares like a Stuck-Pig! Well, but, Sir
-_John_, are you acquainted with any of our fine Ladies yet? any of our
-famous Toasts?
-
-_Sir John._ No; damn your Fireships, I have a Wife of my own.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Pray, my Lady _Answerall_, how do you like these preserv’d
-Oranges?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Indeed, Madam, the only Fault I find is, that they are too
-good.
-
-_Lady Smart._ O Madam; I have heard ’em say, that too good is stark
-naught.
-
- [Miss _drinking Part of a Glass of Wine_.
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, let me drink your Snuff.
-
-_Miss._ No, indeed; you shan’t drink after me, for you’ll know my
-Thoughts.
-
-_Neverout._ I know them already; you are thinking of a good Husband:
-Besides, I can tell your Meaning by your Mumping.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Pray, my Lord, did not you order the Butler to bring up a
-Tankard of our _October_ to Sir _John_? I believe, they stay to brew it.
-
- [_The_ Butler _brings up the Tankard to_ Sir John.
-
-_Sir John._ Won’t your Ladyship please to drink first?
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, Sir _John_; ’tis in a very good Hand; I’ll pledge you.
-
-_Col._ [_to Ld. Smart._] My Lord, I love _October_ as well as Sir _John_;
-and I hope, you won’t make Fish of one, and Flesh of another.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Colonel, you’re heartily welcome. Come, Sir _John_, take it
-by Word of Mouth, and then give it the Colonel.
-
- [Sir John _drinks_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, Sir _John_, how do you like it?
-
-_Sir John._ Not as well as my own in _Darbyshire_; ’tis plaguy small.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I never taste Malt Liquor; but they say, ’tis well hopt.
-
-_Sir John._ Hopt! why, if it had hopp’d a little further, it would have
-hopp’d into the River. O my Lord, my Ale is Meat, Drink and Cloth; it
-will make a Cat speak, and a wise Man dumb.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I was told, ours was very strong.
-
-_Sir John._ Ay, Madam, strong of the Water; I believe the Brewer
-forgot the Malt, or the River was too near him: Faith, it is mere
-Whip-Belly-Vengeance; he that drinks most has the worst Share.
-
-_Col._ I believe, Sir _John_, Ale is as Plenty as Water at your House.
-
-_Sir John._ Why, faith, at _Christmas_ we have many Comers and Goers; and
-they must not be sent away without a Cup of _Christmas_ Ale, for fear
-they should —— behind the Door.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I hear, Sir _John_ has the nicest Garden in _England_; they
-say, ’tis kept so clean, that you can’t find a Place where to spit.
-
-_Sir John._ O Madam; you are pleased to say so.
-
-_Lady Smart._ But, Sir _John_, your Ale is terrible strong and heady in
-_Derbyshire_, and will soon make one drunk and sick; what do you then?
-
-_Sir John._ Why, indeed, it is apt to fox one; but our Way is, to take a
-Hair of the same Dog next Morning.——I take a new-laid Egg for Breakfast;
-and, faith, one should drink as much after an Egg as after an Ox.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ _Tom Neverout_, will you taste a Glass of the _October_?
-
-_Neverout._ No, faith, my Lord; I like your Wine, and I won’t put a
-Churle upon a Gentleman; your Honour’s Claret is good enough for me.
-
-_Lady Smart._ What! is this Pigeon left for Manners? Colonel, shall I
-send you the Legs and Rump?
-
-_Col._ Madam, I could not eat a Bit more, if the House was full.
-
-_Ld. Smart_ [_carving a Partridge._] Well; one may ride to _Rumford_ upon
-this Knife, it is so blunt.
-
-_Lady Answ._ My Lord, I beg your Pardon; but they say, an ill Workman
-never had good Tools.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Will your Lordship have a Wing of it?
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ No, my Lord; I love the Wing of an Ox a great deal better.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ I’m always cold after Eating.
-
-_Col._ My Lord, they say, that’s a Sign of long Life.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Ay; I believe I shall live till all my Friends are weary of
-me.
-
-_Col._ Pray, does any body here hate Cheese? I would be glad of a Bit.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ An odd kind of Fellow dined with me t’other Day; and when
-the Cheese came upon the Table, he pretended to faint; so somebody said,
-Pray, take away the Cheese; No, said I; pray, take away the Fool: Said I
-well?
-
- [_Here a large and loud Laugh._
-
-_Col._ Faith, my Lord, you serv’d the Coxcomb right enough; and therefore
-I wish we had a Bit of your Lordship’s _Oxfordshire_ Cheese.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come, hang Saving; bring us a Halfporth of Cheese.
-
-_Lady Answ._ They say, Cheese digests every thing but itself.
-
- [_A Footman brings a great whole Cheese._
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay; this would look handsome, if any body should come in.
-
-_Sir John._ Well; I’m weily rosten, as they sayn in _Lancashire_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Oh! Sir _John_; I wou’d I had something to brost you withal.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come; they say, ’tis merry in Hall, when Beards wag all.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, shall I help you to some Cheese? or will you carve
-for yourself?
-
-_Neverout._ I’ll hold Fifty Pounds, Miss won’t cut the Cheese.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, why so, Mr. _Neverout_?
-
-_Neverout._ Oh there is a Reason, and you know it well enough.
-
-_Miss._ I can’t for my Life understand what the Gentleman means.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Pray, _Tom_, change the Discourse; in Troth you are too bad.
-
-_Col._ [_whispers Neverout._] Smoke Miss; faith, you have made her fret
-like Gum Taffety.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, but Miss; (hold your Tongue, Mr. _Neverout_) shall I
-cut you a Piece of Cheese?
-
-_Miss._ No, really, Madam; I have dined this half Hour.
-
-_Lady Smart._ What! quick at Meat, quick at Work, they say.
-
- [Sir John _nods_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ What! are you sleepy, Sir _John_? do you sleep after Dinner?
-
-_Sir John._ Yes, faith; I sometimes take a Nap after my Pipe; for when
-the Belly is full, the Bones will be at Rest.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come, Colonel; help yourself, and your Friends will love you
-the better. [_To Lady Answ._] Madam, your Ladyship eats nothing.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Lord, Madam, I have fed like a Farmer; I shall grow as fat
-as a Porpoise; I swear my Jaws are weary of chawing.
-
-_Col._ I have a Mind to eat a Piece of that Sturgeon; but fear it will
-make me sick.
-
-_Neverout._ A rare Soldier indeed! Let it alone, and I warrant it won’t
-hurt you.
-
-_Col._ Well; but it would vex a Dog to see a Pudden creep.
-
- [Sir John _rises_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Sir _John_, what are you doing?
-
-_Sir John._ Swolks, I must be going, by’r Lady; I have earnest Business;
-I must do as the Beggars do, go away when I have got enough.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, but stay till this Bottle’s out; you know, the Man was
-hang’d that left his Liquor behind him: And besides, a Cup in the Pate is
-a Mile in the Gate; and a Spur in the Head is worth two in the Heel.
-
-_Sir John._ Come then; one Brimmer to all your Healths. [_The Footman
-gives him a Glass half full._] Pray, Friend, what was the rest of this
-Glass made for? An Inch at the Top, Friend, is worth two at the Bottom.
-[_He gets a Brimmer, and drinks it off._] Well, there’s no Deceit in a
-Brimmer, and there’s no false _Latin_ in this; your Wine is excellent
-good, so I thank you for the next, for I am sure of this: Madam, has your
-Ladyship any Commands in _Darbyshire_? I must go Fifteen Miles To-night.
-
-_Lady Smart._ None, Sir _John_, but to take Care of Yourself; and my most
-humble Service to your Lady unknown.
-
-_Sir John._ Well, Madam, I can but love and thank you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Here, bring Water to wash; tho’, really, you have all eaten
-so little, that you have no need to wash your Mouths.——
-
-_Ld. Smart._ But, pr’ythee, Sir _John_, stay awhile longer.
-
-_Sir John._ No, my Lord; I am to smoke a Pipe with a Friend before I
-leave the Town.
-
-_Col._ Why, Sir _John_, had not you better set out To-morrow?
-
-_Sir John._ Colonel, you forget To-morrow is _Sunday_.
-
-_Col._ Now I always love to begin a Journey on _Sundays_, because I shall
-have the Prayers of the Church, to preserve all that travel by Land, or
-by Water.
-
-_Sir John._ Well, Colonel; thou art a mad Fellow to make a Priest of.
-
-_Neverout._ Fie, Sir _John_, do you take Tobacco? How can you make a
-Chimney of your Mouth?
-
-_Sir John_ [_to Neverout._] What! you don’t smoke, I warrant you, but you
-smock. (Ladies, I beg your Pardon.) Colonel, do you never smoke?
-
-_Col._ No, Sir _John_; but I take a Pipe sometimes.
-
-_Sir John._ I’faith, one of your finical _London_ Blades dined with
-me last Year in _Darbyshire_; so, after Dinner, I took a Pipe; so my
-Gentleman turn’d away his Head: So, said I, What, Sir, do you never
-smoke? So, he answered as you do, Colonel; No, but I sometimes take a
-Pipe: So, he took a Pipe in his Hand, and fiddled with it till he broke
-it: So, said I, Pray, Sir, can you make a Pipe? So, he said No; so, said
-I, Why, then, Sir, if you can’t make a Pipe, you should not break a Pipe;
-so, we all laugh’d.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well; but, Sir _John_, they say, that the Corruption of
-Pipes is the Generation of Stoppers.
-
-_Sir John._ Colonel, I hear, you go sometimes to _Darbyshire_; I wish you
-would come and foul a Plate with me.
-
-_Col._ I hope, you’ll give me a Soldier’s Bottle.
-
-_Sir John._ Come, and try. Mr. _Neverout_, you are a Town-Wit, can you
-tell me what kind of Herb is Tobacco?
-
-_Neverout._ Why, an _Indian_ Herb, Sir _John_.
-
-_Sir John._ No,’tis a Pot Herb; and so here’s t’ye in a Pot of my Lord’s
-_October_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I hear, Sir _John_, since you are married, you have
-forsworn the Town.
-
-_Sir John._ No, Madam; I never forswore any thing but building of
-Churches.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well; but, Sir _John_, when may we hope to see you again in
-_London_?
-
-_Sir John._ Why, Madam, not till the Ducks have eat up the Dirt; as the
-Children say.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, Sir _John_; I foresee it will rain terribly.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Come, Sir _John_, do nothing rashly; let us drink first.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ I know Sir _John_ will go, tho’ he was sure it would rain
-Cats and Dogs: But pray, stay, Sir _John_; you’ll be time enough to go to
-Bed by Candle-light.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Why, Sir _John_, if you must needs go; while you stay, make
-good Use of your Time: Here’s my Service to you, a Health to our Friends
-in _Darbyshire_: Come, sit down; let us put off the evil Hour as long as
-we can.
-
-_Sir John._ Faith, I could not drink a Drop more, if the House was full.
-
-_Col._ Why, Sir _John_, you used to love a Glass of good Wine in former
-Times.
-
-_Sir John._ Why, so I do still, Colonel; but a Man may love his House
-very well, without riding on the Ridge: Besides, I must be with my Wife
-on _Tuesday_, or there will be the Devil and all to pay.
-
-_Col._ Well, if you go To-day, I wish you may be wet to the Skin.
-
-_Sir John._ Ay; but they say, the Prayers of the Wicked won’t prevail.
-
- [Sir John _takes Leave, and goes away_.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, Miss, how do you like Sir _John_?
-
-_Miss._ Why, I think, he’s a little upon the silly, or so: I believe, he
-has not all the Wit in the World; but I don’t pretend to be a Judge.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, I believe, he was bred at _Hogs-Norton_, where the
-Pigs play upon the Organs.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Why, _Tom_, I thought You and He were Hand and Glove.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, he shall have a clean Threshold for me; I never
-darkned his Door in my Life, neither in Town nor Country; but he’s a
-quere old Duke by my Conscience; and yet, after all, I take him to be
-more Knave than Fool.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, come; a Man’s a Man, if he has but a Nose on his
-Head.
-
-_Col._ I was once with Him and some other Company over a Bottle; and,
-egad, he fell asleep, and snor’d so hard, that we thought he was driving
-his Hogs to Market.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, what! you can have no more of a Cat than her Skin; you
-can’t make a Silk Purse out of a Sow’s Ear.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Well, since he’s gone, the Devil go with him and
-Sixpence; and there’s Money and Company too.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, he’s a true Country Put. Pray, Miss, let me ask you a
-Question?
-
-_Miss._ Well; but don’t ask Questions with a dirty Face: I warrant, what
-you have to say will keep cold.
-
-_Col._ Come, my Lord, against you are disposed; Here’s to all that love
-and honour you.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Ay, that was always _Dick Nimble_’s Health. I’m sure you
-know he’s dead.
-
-_Col._ Dead! Well, my Lord, you love to be a Messenger of ill News: I’m
-heartily sorry; but, my Lord, we must all die.
-
-_Neverout._ I knew him very well: But, pray, how came he to die?
-
-_Miss._ There’s a Question! you talk like a Poticary: Why, because he
-could live no longer.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; rest his Soul: We must live by the Living, and not by
-the Dead.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ You know, his House was burnt down to the Ground.
-
-_Col._ Yes; it was in the News: Why Fire and Water are good Servants, but
-they are very bad Masters.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Here, take away, and set down a Bottle of _Burgundy_:
-Ladies, you’ll stay, and drink a Glass of Wine before you go to your Tea.
-
- [_All taken away, and the Wine set down_, &c.
-
- [Miss _gives_ Neverout _a smart Pinch_.
-
-_Neverout._ Lord, Miss, what d’ye mean! D’ye think I have no Feeling?
-
-_Miss._ I’m forc’d to pinch, for the Times are hard.
-
-_Neverout_ [_giving Miss a Pinch._] Take that, Miss; what’s Sauce for a
-Goose is for a Gander.
-
-_Miss_ [_screaming._] Well, Mr. _Neverout_, if I live, that shall neither
-go to Heaven nor Hell with you.
-
-_Neverout_ [_takes Miss’s Hand._] Come, Miss; let us lay all Quarrels
-aside, and be Friends.
-
-_Miss._ Don’t be so teizing! You plague a body so!——Can’t you keep your
-filthy Hands to yourself?
-
-_Neverout._ Pray, Miss, where did you get that Pick-Tooth Case?
-
-_Miss._ I came honestly by it.
-
-_Neverout._ I’m sure it was mine, for I lost just such a one; nay, I
-don’t tell you a Lye.
-
-_Miss._ No; if You lye, it is much.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; I’m sure ’tis mine.
-
-_Miss._ What! you think every Thing is yours, but a little the King has.
-
-_Neverout._ Colonel, you have seen my fine Pick-Tooth Case; don’t you
-think this is the very same?
-
-_Col._ Indeed, Miss, it is very like it.
-
-_Miss._ Ay; what he says, you’ll swear.
-
-_Neverout._ Well; but I’ll prove it to be mine.
-
-_Miss._ Ay; do if you can.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, what’s yours is mine, and what’s mine is my own.
-
-_Miss._ Well, run on till you’re weary, nobody holds you.
-
- [Neverout _gapes_.
-
-_Col._ What, Mr. _Neverout_, do you gape for Preferment?
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, I may gape long enough, before it falls into my Mouth.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Mr. _Neverout_, my Lord and I intend to beat up your
-Quarters one of these Days: I hear, you live high.
-
-_Neverout._ Yes, faith, Madam; live high, and lodge in a Garret.
-
-_Col._ But, Miss, I forgot to tell you, that Mr. _Neverout_ got the
-devilishest Fall in the Park To-day.
-
-_Miss._ I hope he did not hurt the Ground: But how was it, Mr.
-_Neverout_? I wish I had been there, to laugh.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Madam, it was a Place where a Cuckold has been bury’d,
-and one of his Horns sticking out, I happened to stumble against it; that
-was all.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ladies, let us leave the Gentlemen to themselves; I think
-it is Time to go to our Tea.
-
-_Lady Answ._ & _Miss._ My Lords and Gentlemen, your most humble Servant.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, Ladies, we’ll wait on you an Hour hence.
-
- [_The Gentlemen alone._
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Come, _John_, bring us a fresh Bottle.
-
-_Col._ Ay, my Lord; and, pray, let him carry off the dead Men (as we say
-in the Army.)
-
- [_Meaning the empty Bottles._
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Mr. _Neverout_, pray, is not that Bottle full?
-
-_Neverout._ Yes, my Lord; full of Emptiness.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ And, d’ye hear, _John_? bring clean Glasses.
-
-_Col._ I’ll keep mine; for I think, the Wine is the best Liquor to wash
-Glasses in.
-
-
-
-
-POLITE CONVERSATION, ETC.
-
-DIALOGUE III.
-
-_The Ladies at their Tea._
-
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, Ladies; now let us have a Cup of Discourse to
-ourselves.
-
-_Lady Answ._ What do you think of your Friend, Sir _John Spendall_?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, Madam,’tis happy for him, that his Father was born
-before him.
-
-_Miss._ They say, he makes a very ill Husband to my Lady.
-
-_Lady Answ._ But he must be allow’d to be the fondest Father in the World.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Ay, Madam, that’s true; for they say, the Devil is kind to
-his own.
-
-_Miss._ I am told, my Lady manages him to Admiration.
-
-_Lady Smart._ That I believe; for she’s as cunning as a dead Pig; but not
-half so honest.
-
-_Lady Answ._ They say, she’s quite a Stranger to all his Gallantries.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Not at all; but, you know, there’s none so blind as they
-that won’t see.
-
-_Miss._ O Madam, I am told, she watches him, as a Cat would watch a Mouse.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, if she ben’t foully belied, she pays him in his own
-Coin.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Madam, I fancy I know your Thoughts, as well as if I were
-within you.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Madam, I was t’other Day in Company with Mrs. _Clatter_; I
-find she gives herself Airs of being acquainted with your Ladyship.
-
-_Miss._ Oh, the hideous Creature! did you observe her Nails? they were
-long enough to scratch her Granum out of her Grave.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, She and _Tom Gosling_ were banging Compliments
-backwards and forwards; it look’d like Two Asses scrubbing one another.
-
-_Miss._ Ay, claw me, and I’ll claw thou: But, pray, Madam; who were the
-Company?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, there was all the World, and his Wife; there was Mrs.
-_Clatter_, Lady _Singular_, the Countess of _Talkham_, (I should have
-named her first;) _Tom Goslin_, and some others, whom I have forgot.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I think the Countess is very sickly.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Yes, Madam; she’ll never scratch a grey Head, I promise her.
-
-_Miss._ And, pray, what was your Conversation?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, Mrs. _Clatter_ had all the Talk to herself, and was
-perpetually complaining of her Misfortunes.
-
-_Lady Answ._ She brought her Husband Ten Thousand Pounds; she has a
-Town-House and Country-house: Would the Woman have her —— hung with
-Points?
-
-_Lady Smart._ She would fain be at the Top of the House before the Stairs
-are built.
-
-_Miss._ Well, Comparisons are odious; but she’s as like her Husband, as
-if she were spit out of his Mouth; as like as one Egg is to another:
-Pray, how was she drest?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, she was as fine as Fi’pence; but, truly, I thought,
-there was more Cost than Worship.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I don’t know her Husband: Pray, what is he?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, he’s a Concealer of the Law; you must know, he came to
-us as drunk as _David_’s Sow.
-
-_Miss._ What kind of Creature is he?
-
-_Lady Smart._ You must know, the Man and his Wife are coupled like
-Rabbets, a fat and a lean; he’s as fat as a Porpus, and she’s one of
-_Pharaoh_’s lean Kine: The Ladies and _Tom Gosling_ were proposing a
-Party at Quadrille, but he refus’d to make one: Damn your Cards, said he,
-they are the Devil’s Books.
-
-_Lady Answ._ A dull unmannerly Brute! Well, God send him more Wit, and me
-more Money.
-
-_Miss._ Lord! Madam, I would not keep such Company for the World.
-
-_Lady Smart._ O Miss, ’tis nothing when you are used to it: Besides, you
-know, for Want of Company, welcome Trumpery.
-
-_Miss._ Did your Ladyship play?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Yes, and won; so I came off with Fidlers Fare, Meat, Drink,
-and Money.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay; what says _Pluck_?
-
-_Miss._ Well, my Elbow itches; I shall change Bed-fellows.
-
-_Lady Smart._ And my Right Hand itches; I shall receive Money.
-
-_Lady Answ._ And my Right Eye itches; I shall cry.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, I hear your Friend Mistress _Giddy_ has discarded
-_Dick Shuttle_: Pray, has she got another Lover?
-
-_Miss._ I hear of none.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, the Fellow’s rich; and I think she was a Fool to throw
-out her dirty Water before she got clean.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Miss, that’s a very handsome Gown of yours, and finely made;
-very genteel.
-
-_Miss._ I’m glad your Ladyship likes it.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Your Lover will be in Raptures; it becomes you admirably.
-
-_Miss._ Ay; I assure you I won’t take it as I have done; if this won’t
-fetch him, the Devil fetch him, say I.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_to Lady Answ._] Pray, Madam, when did you see Sir _Peter
-Muckworm_?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Not this Fortnight; I hear, he’s laid up with the Gout.
-
-_Lady Smart._ What does he do for it?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Why I hear he’s weary of doctoring it, and now makes Use of
-nothing but Patience and Flannel.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, how does He and my Lady agree?
-
-_Lady Answ._ You know, he loves her as the Devil loves Holy Water.
-
-_Miss._ They say, she plays deep with Sharpers, that cheat her of her
-Money.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Upon my Word, they must rise early that would cheat her of
-her Money; Sharp’s the Word with her; Diamonds cut Diamonds.
-
-_Miss._ Well, but I was assur’d from a good Hand that she lost at one
-Sitting to the Tune of a hundred Guineas; make Money of that.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, but do you hear, that Mrs. _Plump_ is brought to Bed
-at last?
-
-_Miss._ And, pray, what has God sent her?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, guess, if you can.
-
-_Miss._ A Boy, I suppose.
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, you are out; guess again.
-
-_Miss._ A Girl then.
-
-_Lady Smart._ You have hit it; I believe you are a Witch.
-
-_Miss._ O Madam; the Gentlemen say, all fine Ladies are Witches; but I
-pretend to no such thing.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, she had good Luck to draw _Tom Plump_ into Wedlock;
-she ris’ with her —— upwards.
-
-_Miss._ Fie, Madam! what do you mean?
-
-_Lady Smart._ O Miss; ’tis nothing what we say among ourselves.
-
-_Miss._ Ay, Madam; but they say, Hedges have Eyes, and Walls have Ears.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, Miss, I can’t help it; you know, I am old Tell-Truth;
-I love to call a Spade a Spade.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_mistakes the Tea-tongs for the Spoon._] What! I think my
-Wits are a Wool-gathering To-day.
-
-_Miss._ Why, Madam, there was but a Right and a Wrong.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Miss, I hear, that You and Lady _Coupler_ are as great as
-Cup and Can.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay, Miss; as great as the Devil and the Earl of _Kent_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Nay, I am told, you meet together with as much Love, as
-there is between the old Cow and the Hay-stack.
-
-_Miss._ I own, I love her very well; but there’s Difference betwixt
-staring and stark mad.
-
-_Lady Smart._ They say, she begins to grow fat.
-
-_Miss._ Fat! ay, fat as a Hen in the Forehead.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Indeed, Lady _Answerall_, (pray, forgive me) I think, your
-Ladyship looks thinner than when I saw you last.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed, Madam, I think not; but your Ladyship is one of _Job_’s
-Comforters.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Well, no matter how I look; I am bought and sold: but
-really, Miss, you are so very obliging, that I wish I were a handsome
-young Lord for your Sake.
-
-_Miss._ O Madam, your Love’s a Million.
-
-_Lady Smart_ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, will your Ladyship let me wait on
-you to the Play To-morrow?
-
-_Lady Answ._ Madam, it becomes me to wait on your Ladyship.
-
-_Miss._ What, then, I’m turn’d out for a Wrangler.
-
- [_The Gentlemen come in to the Ladies to drink Tea._
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_, we wanted you sadly; you are always out of the
-Way when you should be hang’d.
-
-_Neverout._ You wanted me! Pray, Miss, how do you look when you lye?
-
-_Miss._ Better than you when you cry. Manners indeed! I find, you mend
-like sour Ale in Summer.
-
-_Neverout._ I beg your Pardon, Miss; I only meant, when you lie alone.
-
-_Miss._ That’s well turn’d; one Turn more would have turn’d you down
-Stairs.
-
-_Neverout._ Come, Miss; be kind for once, and order me a Dish of Coffee.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, go yourself; let us wear out the oldest first: Besides, I
-can’t go, for I have a Bone in my Leg.
-
-_Col._ They say, a Woman need but look on her Apron-string to find an
-Excuse.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, you are grown so peevish, a Dog would not live
-with you.
-
-_Miss._ Mr. _Neverout_, I beg your Diversion; no Offence, I hope: but
-truly in a little time you intend to make the Colonel as bad as yourself;
-and that’s as bad as bad can.
-
-_Neverout._ My Lord, don’t you think Miss improves wonderfully of late?
-Why, Miss, if I spoil the Colonel, I hope you will use him as you do me;
-for, you know, love me, love my Dog.
-
-_Col._ How’s that, _Tom_? Say that again: Why, if I am a Dog, shake
-Hands, Brother.
-
- [_Here a great, loud, long Laugh._
-
-_Ld. Smart._ But, pray, Gentlemen, why always so severe upon poor Miss?
-On my Conscience, Colonel and _Tom Neverout_, one of you two are both
-Knaves.
-
-_Col._ My Lady _Answerall_, I intend to do myself the Honour of dining
-with your Ladyship To-morrow.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Ay, Colonel; do if you can.
-
-_Miss._ I’m sure you’ll be glad to be welcome.
-
-_Col._ Miss, I thank you; and, to reward You, I’ll come and drink Tea
-with you in the Morning.
-
-_Miss._ Colonel, there’s Two Words to that Bargain.
-
-_Col._ [_to Lady Smart._] Your Ladyship has a very fine Watch; well may
-you wear it.
-
-_Lady Smart._ It is none of mine, Colonel.
-
-_Col._ Pray, whose is it then?
-
-_Lady Smart._ Why, ’tis my Lord’s; for they say, a marry’d Woman has
-nothing of her own, but her Wedding-Ring and her Hair-Lace: But if Women
-had been the Law-Makers, it would have been better.
-
-_Col._ This Watch seems to be quite new.
-
-_Lady Smart._ No, Sir; it has been Twenty Years in my Lord’s Family; but
-_Quare_ put a new Case and Dial-Plate to it.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, that’s for all the World like the Man who swore he kept
-the same Knife forty Years, only he sometimes changed the Haft, and
-sometimes the Blade.
-
-_Ld. Smart._ Well, _Tom_, to give the Devil his Due, thou art a right
-Woman’s Man.
-
-_Col._ Odd-so! I have broke the Hinge of my Snuff-box; I’m undone beside
-the Loss.
-
-_Miss._ Alack-a-day, Colonel! I vow I had rather have found Forty
-Shillings.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Colonel; all that I can say to comfort you, is, that you
-must mend it with a new one.
-
- [Miss _laughs_.
-
-_Col._ What, Miss! you can’t laugh, but you must shew your Teeth.
-
-_Miss._ I’m sure you shew your Teeth when you can’t bite: Well, thus it
-must be, if we sell Ale.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, you smell very sweet; I hope you don’t carry Perfumes.
-
-_Miss._ Perfumes! No, Sir; I’d have you to know, it is nothing but the
-Grain of my Skin.
-
-_Col._ _Tom_, you have a good Nose to make a poor Man’s Sow.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ So, Ladies and Gentlemen, methinks you are very witty
-upon one another: Come, box it about; ’twill come to my Father at last.
-
-_Col._ Why, my Lord, you see Miss has no Mercy; I wish she were marry’d;
-but I doubt, the grey Mare would prove the better Horse.
-
-_Miss._ Well, God forgive you for that Wish.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Never fear him, Miss.
-
-_Miss._ What, my Lord, do you think I was born in a Wood, to be afraid of
-an Owl?
-
-_Ld. Smart._ What have you to say to that, Colonel?
-
-_Neverout._ O my Lord, my Friend the Colonel scorns to set his Wit
-against a Child.
-
-_Miss._ Scornful Dogs will eat dirty Puddens.
-
-_Col._ Well, Miss; they say, a Woman’s Tongue is the last thing about her
-that dies; therefore let’s kiss and Friends.
-
-_Miss._ Hands off! that’s Meat for your Master.
-
-_Ld. Sparkish._ Faith, Colonel, you are for Ale and Cakes: But after all,
-Miss, you are too severe; you would not meddle with your Match.
-
-_Miss._ All they can say goes in at one Ear, and out at t’other for me, I
-can assure you: Only I wish they would be quiet, and let me drink my Tea.
-
-_Neverout._ What! I warrant you think all is lost, that goes beside your
-own Mouth.
-
-_Miss._ Pray, Mr. _Neverout_, hold your Tongue for once, if it be
-possible; one would think, you were a Woman in Man’s Cloaths, by your
-prating.
-
-_Neverout._ No, Miss; it is not handsome to see one hold one’s Tongue:
-Besides, I should slobber my Fingers.
-
-_Col._ Miss, did you never hear, that Three Women and a Goose are enough
-to make a Market?
-
-_Miss._ I’m sure, if Mr. _Neverout_ or You were among them, it would make
-a Fair.
-
- [Footman _comes in_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Here, take away the Tea-table, and bring up Candles.
-
-_Lady Answ._ O Madam, no Candles yet, I beseech you; don’t let us burn
-Day-Light.
-
-_Neverout._ I dare swear, Miss, for her Part, will never burn Day-Light,
-if she can help it.
-
-_Miss._ Lord, Mr. _Neverout_, one can’t hear one’s own Ears for you.
-
-_Lady Smart._ Indeed, Madam, it is Blind-Man’s Holiday; we shall soon be
-all of a Colour.
-
-_Neverout._ Why, then, Miss, we may kiss where we like best.
-
-_Miss._ Fogh! these Men talk of nothing but kissing.
-
- [_She spits._
-
-_Neverout._ What, Miss, does it make your Mouth water?
-
-_Lady Smart._ It is as good be in the Dark as without Light; therefore
-pray bring in Candles: They say, Women and Linen shew best by
-Candle-Light: Come, Gentlemen, are you for a Party at Quadrille?
-
-_Col._ I’ll make one with you three Ladies.
-
-_Lady Answ._ I’ll sit down, and be a Stander-by.
-
-_Lady Smart._ [_to Lady Answ._] Madam, does your Ladyship never play?
-
-_Col._ Yes; I suppose her Ladyship plays sometimes for an Egg at _Easter_.
-
-_Neverout._ Ay; and a Kiss at _Christmas_.
-
-_Lady Answ._ Come, Mr. _Neverout_; hold your Tongue, and mind your
-Knitting.
-
-_Neverout._ With all my Heart; kiss my Wife, and welcome.
-
- [_The_ Colonel, _Mr._ Neverout, _Lady_ Smart _and_ Miss _go to
- Quadrille, and sit till Three in the Morning_.
-
- [_They rise from Cards._]
-
-_Lady Smart._ Well, Miss, you’ll have a sad Husband, you have such good
-Luck at Cards.
-
-_Neverout._ Indeed, Miss, you dealt me sad Cards; if you deal so ill by
-your Friends, what will you do with your Enemies?
-
-_Lady Answ._ I’m sure ’tis time for honest Folks to be a-bed.
-
-_Miss._ Indeed my Eyes draws Straw.
-
- [_She’s almost asleep._
-
-_Neverout._ Why, Miss, if you fall asleep, somebody may get a Pair of
-Gloves.
-
-_Col._ I’m going to the Land of _Nod_.
-
-_Neverout._ Faith, I’m for _Bedfordshire_.
-
-_Lady Smart._ I’m sure I shall sleep without rocking.
-
-_Neverout._ Miss, I hope you’ll dream of your Sweetheart.
-
-_Miss._ Oh, no doubt of it: I believe I shan’t be able to sleep for
-dreaming of him.
-
-_Col._ [_to Miss._] Madam, shall I have the Honour to escort you?
-
-_Miss._ No, Colonel, I thank you; my Mamma has sent her Chair and
-Footmen. Well, my Lady _Smart_, I’ll give you Revenge whenever you please.
-
- [Footman _comes in_.
-
-_Footman._ Madam, the Chairs are waiting.
-
- [_They all take their Chairs, and go off._
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES.
-
-
-PAGE 5, l. 1. 1695.—This date, and the previous “more than forty years
-past,” are of course adjusted to the date of the book’s appearance. See
-Introduction for its probable chronology.
-
-PAGE 5, l. 18. For “because” I am half inclined to read “became”—a very
-likely misprint.
-
-PAGE 6, ll. 4-10. “_Twelve ... Sixteen._”—This would bring us to 1723,
-which may or may not mark the date of a version of the “Conversation.”
-The first “Twelve” would almost exactly coincide with the “Essay on
-Conversation” referred to above.
-
-PAGE 12, l. 18. “_Isaac the Dancing-Master._”—Called by Steele in
-“Tatler,” No. 34, “my namesake Isaac.” He is best known by Soame Jenyns’
-couplet:—
-
- “And Isaac’s rigadoon shall live as long
- As Raphael’s painting or as Virgil’s song.”
-
-He was, as became his profession, a Frenchman. Southey refers to him in
-“The Doctor.”
-
-PAGE 16, l. 6. “_Comedies and other fantastick Writings._”—Where they
-will be found, as the ingenious Mr. Wagstaff says, “strewed here and
-there.”
-
-PAGES 16, 17.—“_Graham. D. of R. E. of E. Lord and Lady H._”—I do not
-know that attempts at identifying these shadowy personages would be very
-wise. But the date assigned to the Colonel is one of the marks of long
-incubation. “Towards the end” of Charles II.’s reign would be about 1684.
-A fine gentleman of that day might very well have been Mr. Wagstaff’s
-“companion” had the latter written in 1710—less well had he written a
-quarter of a century later.
-
-PAGE 18, l. 24.—Swift, like a good Tory and Churchman, never forgave
-Burnet.
-
-PAGE 21, l. 2. “_Selling of Bargains_” is the returning of a coarse
-answer to a question or other remark. So in Dorset’s charming poem about
-“This Bess of my heart, this Bess of my soul.”
-
-PAGE 24, l. 26. “_Great Ornaments of Style_,” or, as it hath been put
-otherwise, “_a grand set-off to conversation_.”—Observe that in these
-passages as to Free-Thinking and Oaths, Swift maintains his invariable
-attitude as to profanity.
-
-PAGE 25, last line. “_Poet._”—I know him not, if he ever existed save as
-a maggot of Swift’s brain.
-
-PAGE 26, l. 13. “_Sir John Perrot._”—Deputy of Ireland and a stout
-soldier, but an unlucky politician. He died in the Tower, where he is not
-unlikely to have had leisure and reason to perfect himself in commination.
-
-PAGE 31, l. 16. “_Lilly._”—The Latin grammarian, of course, not the
-astrologer.
-
-PAGE 32, l. 12. “_e’n’t_” I presume to be identical with _ain’t_.
-
-PAGE 36, l. 21. It may seem strange that Mr. Wagstaff, who loves not
-books and scholars, should refer to a grave philosopher. But fine
-gentlemen in his youth had to know or seem to know their Hobbes.
-
-PAGE 38, l. 26. “_Please._”—_sic_ in orig.
-
-PAGE 41.—In this page Swift strikes in with his friends against the
-“dunces.” One may suspect that Tom Brown was in the first draught, and
-perhaps Dennis, Ward and Gildon being added later.
-
-PAGE 42, l. 6.—Ozell, the translator of Rabelais. Stevens I do not know
-or have forgotten, and the “Dunciad” knows him not.
-
-PAGE 44, l. 26. “_The Craftsman._”—This must be one of the latest
-additions, the “Craftsman” being the organ of Pulteney and the Opposition
-in the great Walpolian battle.
-
-PAGE 46, ll. 11, 17. “_Another for Alexander!_”
-
-PAGE 50, l. 21. “_Those of Sir Isaac._”—Mr. Craik and others have
-noticed that Swift’s grammar, especially in unrevised pieces, is not
-always impeccable. But this, like other things in this Introduction, is
-clearly writ in character, the character of the more polite than pedantic
-Wagstaff.
-
-PAGE 56, l. 26. “_Wit at Will._”—Readers of the minor and even of the
-greater writers of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
-will remember the interminable jingles and plays on these two words
-wherever they could be introduced. The phrase “Wit at will” survived most
-of its companions as a catchword.
-
-PAGE 58, l. 3. “_Queen Elizabeth’s dead._”—A minute philosopher might
-be pleased with the inquiry when Queen Anne superseded her gracious
-predecessor in this phrase. Naturally that time had not come when the
-“Conversation” was first planned.
-
-PAGE 59, l. 2. “_Push-pin._”—Allusions to this old children’s game are
-very common in the seventeenth century; rare, I think, in the eighteenth.
-
-PAGE 64, l. 20. “_Vardi._”—See Introduction, p. 32, where the form is
-“Verdi.”
-
-PAGE 65, l. 28. “_Lob’s pound_” means an inextricable difficulty. In
-Dekker’s paraphrase of the “Quinze Joyes du Mariage,” it is used to
-render the French _dans la nasse_.
-
-PAGE 72, l. 1. I do not understand “_Map-sticks_.”
-
-PAGE 76, ll. 3, 4. “_Cooking._”—_I.e._ (as I suppose), putting the
-bread-and-butter in the tea. I believe this atrocious practice is not
-absolutely obsolete yet.
-
-PAGE 76, last line but one. “_Head for the washing._”—I think this is
-quite dead in English; _laver la tête_ is of course still excellent
-French for to scold or rate.
-
-PAGE 79, l. 3. “_A Lord._”—Lord Grimstone, whose production made the
-wits merry for a long time. He is Pope’s “booby Lord,” and this absurd
-play (which, however, he is said to have written at the age of 13), was
-reprinted in his despite by the Duchess of Marlborough, with whom he had
-an election quarrel. _Lady Sparkish_ is in orig., but is probably a slip
-for Lady Answerall.
-
-PAGE 82, l. 23. “_The Lord of the Lord knows what._”—A peerage revived
-with slightly altered title by Peter Simple’s shipmates in favour of “the
-Lord Nozoo.”
-
-PAGE 103, l. 4. “_Ld. Smart._”—Erratum for “Ld. Sparkish.”
-
-PAGE 103, l. 13. “_Tantiny Pig._”—The pig usually assigned as companion
-to St. Anthony.
-
-PAGE 105, l. 26. “_Poles._”—St. Paul’s.
-
-PAGE 109, l. 4. “_Jommetry._”—See Introduction.
-
-PAGE 110, l. 7.—I do not know the origin of Miss’s catchword. Julia, the
-heroine of Dryden’s “Amboyna,” had used it beforehand.
-
-PAGE 111, l. 25. “_Tansy_” has two senses, a plant and a sort of custard.
-The reader may choose which suits the circumstances best for metaphorical
-explanation.
-
-PAGE 112, l. 11. “_Otomy_,” for “anatomy,” “skeleton.”
-
-PAGE 114, l. 17. “_Ld. Smart_” again for “Ld. Sparkish;” at the foot of
-the next page for “_Lady_ Smart.”
-
-PAGE 117, last line. “_Smoke_,” “look at;” later, “twig.”
-
-PAGE 118, l. 13. “_Lady Sparkish_,” probably for “Lady Smart,” as being
-hostess.
-
-PAGE 121, last line. “_Inkle._”—Ribbon or tape.
-
-PAGE 129, l. 8. Scott has borrowed this vigorous protest of Miss in one
-of his private letters.
-
-PAGE 131, l. 7. “_Ld. Sparkish_” should evidently be “Ld. Smart.”
-
-PAGE 135, l. 14. “_Kept a Corner for a Venison Pasty._”—Which Dr.
-Goldsmith remembered in immortal verse.
-
-PAGE 140, l. 12. I do not know whether this speech was meant for Lord
-Sparkish or Lady Answerall.
-
-PAGE 143, ll. 1, 3. An unnecessary double entry, but right in the
-attribution.
-
-PAGE 145, l. 9. “_In my Tip_,” “as I am drinking.”
-
-PAGE 161, l. 4. “_Weily rosten_,” should probably be “_b_rosten,” _i.e._,
-“well-nigh burst.”
-
-PAGE 162, l. 9. Lord Smart might make this speech; but from the answer it
-would seem to be his Lady’s.
-
-PAGE 165, l. 13.—I don’t know whether Swift, who never forgot his feud
-with “Cousin Dryden,” was indulging in a half-gird at “The corruption of
-a poet is the generation of a critic.”
-
-PAGE 176, l. 8. “_Concealer._”—A brilliant pun on “Counsellor.”
-
-PAGE 181, l. 24. “_A Bone in my Leg._”—This odd phrase for a peculiar
-cramp in the leg is not dead yet.
-
-PAGE 183, l. 21. “_Quare._”—David Q., died in 1724. He had invented
-repeaters, and throughout the eighteenth century was what Tompion was
-later among watchmakers, what Joe Manton was long among gunmakers, a name
-to conjure with and to quote.
-
-PAGE 184, l. 24. “_Box it about; ’twill come to my Father._”—The famous
-Jacobite cant-phrase for breeding disturbance in hopes of a fresh
-Revolution.
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS:—CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.,
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Polite Conversation, by Jonathan Swift
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