Scene
II
Athens. A room in the prison.
Enter Doctor, Gaoler, and Wooer in the habit of Palamon.
Doctor
Has this advice I told you done any good upon her?
Wooer
O, very much; the maids that kept her company
Have half persuaded her that I am Palamon;
Within this half-hour she came smiling to me,
And ask’d me what I’d eat, and when I’d kiss her:
I told her presently, and kiss’d her twice.
Doctor
’Twas well done: twenty times had been far better;
For there the cure lies mainly.
Wooer
Then she told me
She’d watch with me to-night, for well she knew
What hour my fit would take me.
Doctor
Let her do so;
And when your fit comes, fit her home, and presently.
Wooer
She would have me sing.
Doctor
You did so?
Wooer
No.
Doctor
’Twas very ill done, then;
You should observe her every way.
Wooer
Alas,
I have no voice, sir, to confirm her that way!
Doctor
That’s all one, if ye make a noise:
If she entreat again, do anything;
Lie with her, if she ask you.
Gaoler
Hoa, there, doctor!
Doctor
Yes, in the way of cure.
Gaoler
But first, by your leave,
I’ the way of honesty.
Doctor
That’s but a niceness;
Ne’er cast your child away for honesty:
Cure her first this way; then, if she’ll be honest,
She has the path before her.
Gaoler
Thanke ye, doctor.
Doctor
Pray, bring her in,
And let’s see how she is.
Gaoler
I will, and tell her
Her Palamon stays for her: but, doctor,
Methinks you are i’ the wrong still. Exit.
Doctor
Go, go;
You fathers are fine fools: her honesty!
And we should give her physic till we find that—
Wooer
Why, do you think she is not honest, sir?
Doctor
How old is she?
Wooer
She’s eighteen.
Doctor
She may be;
But that’s all one, ’tis nothing to our purpose:
Whate’er her father says, if you perceive
Her mood inclining that way that I spoke of,
Videlicet, the way of flesh—you have me?
Wooer
Yes, very well, sir.
Doctor
Please her appetite,
And do it home; it cures her, ipso facto,
The melancholy humour that infects her.
Wooer
I am of your mind, doctor.
Doctor
You’ll find it so. She comes: pray, humour her.
Reenter Gaoler, with Daughter and Maid.
Gaoler
Come; your love Palamon stays for you, child,
And has done this long hour, to visit you.
Daughter
I thank him for his gentle patience;
He’s a kind gentleman, and I’m much bound to him.
Did you ne’er see the horse he gave me?
Gaoler
Yes.
Daughter
How do you like him?
Gaoler
He’s a very fair one.
Daughter
You never saw him dance?
Gaoler
No.
Daughter
I have often:
He dances very finely, very comely;
And, for a jig, come cut and long tail to him;
He turns ye like a top.
Gaoler
That’s fine indeed.
Daughter
He’ll dance the morris twenty mile an hour,
And that will founder the best hobby-horse,
If I have any skill, in all the parish;
And gallops to the tune of “Light o’ Love:”
What think you of this horse?
Gaoler
Having these virtues,
I think he might be brought to play at tennis.
Daughter
Alas, that’s nothing.
Gaoler
Can he write and read too?
Daughter
A very fair hand; and casts himself th’ accounts
Of all his hay and provender; that hostler
Must rise betime that cozens him. You know
The chestnut mare the duke has?
Gaoler
Very well.
Daughter
She’s horribly in love with him, poor beast;
But he is like his master, coy and scornful.
Gaoler
What dowry has she?
Daughter
Some two hundred bottles,
And twenty strike of oats; but he’ll ne’er have her:
He lisps in’s neighing, able to entice
A miller’s mare; he’ll be the death of her.
Doctor
What stuff she utters!
Gaoler
Make curtsy; here your love comes.
Wooer
Pretty soul,
How do ye? That’s a fine maid; there’s a curtsy!
Daughter
Yours to command, i’ the way of honesty.
How far is’t now to th’ end o’ the world, my masters?
Doctor
Why, a day’s journey, wench.
Daughter
Will you go with me?
Wooer
What shall we do there, wench?
Daughter
Why, play at stool-ball:
What is there else to do?
Wooer
I am content,
If we shall keep our wedding there.
Daughter
’Tis true;
For there, I will assure you, we shall find
Some blind priest for the purpose, that will venture
To marry us, for here they’re nice and foolish;
Besides, my father must be hang’d to-morrow,
And that would be a blot i’ the business.
Are not you Palamon?
Wooer
Do not you know me?
Daughter
Yes; but you care not for me: I have nothing
But this poor petticoat and two coarse smocks.
Wooer
That’s all one; I will have you.
Daughter
Will you surely?
Wooer
Yes, by this fair hand, will I.
Daughter
We’ll to bed, then.
Wooer
Even when you will. Kisses her.
Daughter
O, sir, you’d fain be nibbling.
Wooer
Why do you rub my kiss off?
Daughter
’Tis a sweet one,
And will perfume me finely ’gainst the wedding.
Is not this your cousin Arcite?
Doctor
Yes, sweetheart;
And I am glad my cousin Palamon
Has made so fair a choice.
Daughter
Do you think he’ll have me?
Doctor
Yes, without doubt.
Daughter
Do you think so too?
Gaoler
Yes.
Daughter
We shall have many children.—Lord, how y’are grown!
My Palamon I hope will grow, too, finely,
Now he’s at liberty: alas, poor chicken,
He was kept down with hard meat and ill lodging;
But I’ll kiss him up again.
Enter Messenger.
Messenger
What do you here? you’ll lose the noblest sight
That e’er was seen.
Gaoler
Are they i’ the field?
Messenger
They are:
You bear a charge there too.
Gaoler
I’ll away straight.—
I must even leave you here.
Doctor
Nay, we’ll go with you;
I will not lose the sight.
Gaoler
How did you like her?
Doctor
I’ll warrant you, within these three or four days
I’ll make her right again.—You must not from her,
But still preserve her in this way.
Wooer
I will.
Doctor
Let’s get her in.
Wooer
Come, sweet, we’ll go to dinner;
And then we’ll play at cards.
Daughter
And shall we kiss too?
Wooer
A hundred times.
Daughter
And twenty?
Wooer
Ay, and twenty.
Daughter
And then we’ll sleep together?
Doctor
Take her offer.
Wooer
Yes, marry, will we.
Daughter
But you shall not hurt me.
Wooer
I will not, sweet.
Daughter
If you do, love, I’ll cry. Exeunt.