P R O L O G U E.

1
[Link] HEre you’re all met, and looke for a ſet ſpeech,
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Put into Rhyme, to court you, and beſeech
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Your Worſhips, but to heare and like the Play,
4
But I, I vow, have no ſuch part to ſay.
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I’m ſent a woing to you, but how to do’t,
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I han’t the ſkill; tis true I’ve a new Suite,
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And Ribbons faſhionable, yclipt Fancies,
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But for the Complements, the Trips, and Dances,
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Our Poet can’t abide um, and he ſweares,
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They’re all but cheats; and ſugred words but jeeres.
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Hee’s hearkning there: and if I go about
12
To make a Speech, he vows, he’le put me out.
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Nor dare I write t’you: therefore in this condition,
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Ile turne my courtſhip into admonition.
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When a good thing is profer’d, don’t be nice,
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Our Poet vows, you ſhan’t be profer’d twice.

The Perſons of the Comedy.

[Link]
Careleſſe, a young wilde Heire.Lady Thrivewell.
Sir Val. Thrivewell, his UnkleMrs. Alicia, Salewares light wife
that adopted him Heire.Mrs. Croſtill, a rich Vintners
Saleware, a Citizen and a Cuck-Widow, and humorous.
hold.Phoebe, Careleſſe his Whore.
Saveall, Sir Valentines demureCloſet, an old Crone, Nurſekeeper
Steward.to L. Thrivewell.
L. Lovely, a Wencher.
Bellamy, a woman diſguiſed, andApprentices.
his Steward.Servingmen.
Wat, a blunt fellow, CareleſſesAnd Attendants.
Servingman.
Old Bellamy.1. Mad couple.
2. Novella.
3. Beggar.

The Scene L O N D O N.


A5v




A
MAD COUPLE
WELL MATCH’D.
ACT. I. SCENE. I.
Carleſſe, Wat.
17
Car.THou haſt delivered my Letter?
18
Wat.Yes Sir, to Mr. Saveall your
19
Unkles friend: But hee has ſtood your
20
friend ſo long, and ſo often, to ſo little
21
purpoſe in moving your Unkle for you, that he holds it
22
utterly in vaine, to urge him any further, he told me.
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Car.Thou ſhould’ſt ha’ told him, I would not be
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ſo anſwer’d.
25
Wat.Yes; and then he would have told me, let your
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Maſter take his courſe.
27
Car.Then you ſhould ha’ told him again, I have taken
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all the courſes I could, or as any Gentleman can to main-
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taine my ſelfe like one; But all my courſes are run out,
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and I have not breath, nor know any ground whereon
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to begin a new one, unleſſe that thing my Unkle ſets me
Bup


A mad Couple Well Match’d.
32
up againe, nor have I any meanes to attaine to that,
33
but by his Mediation.
34
Wat.Then would he ha’ told me againe, what all your
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courſes have been. Namely, running into debt by all the
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wayes can be imagin’d, and cheating by all could be in-
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vented, then that the ſaid thing, (as you call it) your
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Unkle, before he caſt you quite off, had redeem’d you out
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of Priſon, and ſeverall holds, within the ſpace of 15.
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Moneths 14. times.
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Car.That was not once a Moneth then, or if it had,
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what had that been to him? ’twas I that ſuffer’d, thou
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ſhouldſt ha’ told him, not he.
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Wat.Hee would ha’ told me then againe, That ſeve-
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rall Redemptions, coſt your Unkle at leaſt 2000 l. And
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that upon your laſt revolt when he quite gave you over
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for a caſt-away, two yeares ſince, he caſt the third thou-
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ſand with you, upon condition never to afflict him
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more. And then he Married in hope to get an heire.
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Car.I that Marrying ſpoy’ld all.
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Wat.Becauſe you ſhould not after his death caſt away
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all the reſt of the thouſands, and ten thouſands which you
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might have liv’d to inherit, if your Unkles love or Mr.
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Savealls counſell could have prevay’d with you againſt
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the Divill, and Debauchednes.
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Car.Pox on’t, let it all goe, let that wretched Unkle
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goe, and let Saveall goe for a punctuall aſſe as hee is. I
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confeſſe he has by his ſaving helpe peec’d mee with my
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Unkle a ſcore of times at leaſt. What had once more
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been to him?
61
Wat.Sir, it were better for you to thinke upon ſome
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courſe by our ſelfe, and me your Creature (that have
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ſtuck to you, or followed you through all fortunes) to
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maintaine Rich Lace, and Bravery upon you. And thinke
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in time too before this be worne out, upon ſome new
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wayes for your ſupplies—
[B1v]Car.


A mad Couple Well Match’d.
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Car.I cannot, nor will I trouble my braines to thinke
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of any, I will rather die here in Ram alley, or walk down
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to the Temple, and lay my ſelfe down alive, in the old
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Synagogue, croſs-leg’d among the Monumentall Knights
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there, till I turne Marble with’em. Thinke quoth a !
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what ſhould I think on?
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Wat.On your poor Whore Sir (as you have brought
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her) ſhee’s in worſe caſe then your ſelfe; your Cloaths are
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good enough—
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Car.I ther’s the Devill. I would doe ſomething
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for her if I knew how. But what have I not done that
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can be done by a forlorn heire?
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Wat.Why though the Dice, and all other Houſehold
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games, and all the Cheats belonging unto them have
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fayld you by your and their diſcoveries, till none dare
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venture ſo neare you as a Man hurles a Die or Skirrs a
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Card. Though all your hidden wayes in Hide-parke
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races are trod out, and all your bowling booties beaten
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bare off o’ the Grounds and Allies; and the ſweete
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Honey-combes of all your Cockpit coſenages cut off.
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Though all your Arts of borowing are croſt out of all
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Mens Bookes before you offer at ’em, while your old
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Debts ſtand fairely written, and all your Marts miſcarry
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of putting out for credit, Veniſon to Citizens, or early
91
Cherries, Codlings and Apricocks to their Wives availe
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you nothing, cannot ſomething yet be found?
93
Car.Nothing, nothing. All Projects are confounded.
94
Wat.Did your Father leave you nothing but wit to
95
live upon for this? And did hee leave you that but
96
for yeares, and not for Life? and is the terme ex-
97
pir’d?
98
Car.Hold thy peace. I am caſting for ſomething to be
99
done by me, that ſhall be worth, and coſt my life, to ſhame
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my Unkle.
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Wat.There’s a plot! Think of your poore whore Sir,
B2how


A mad Couple well Match’d.
102
how ſhall ſhe live, if you caſt away your ſelfe?
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Car.I muſt leave her once thou knowſt.
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Wat.If you could leave her now, and betake your
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ſelfe handſomely to other Women, I have thought
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on a courſe.
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Car.What, quickly, what iſt?
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Wat.To ſet up a Male bawdy houſe.
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Car.Fy upon’t.
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Wat.You are handſome, lovely, and I thinke able to
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do one Mans worke, two or three ſuch Gentlemen
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more which I know, and can deſcribe to you, with the
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wayes I’le finde to bring in cuſtome ſhall fill your
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purſes—
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Car.And empt our bones. I ever had enough of one
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Miſtris Variety would deſtroy me. No Gentlemen can
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be able to hold it out. They are too weake to make com-
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mon He-whores.
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Wat.For a little while Sir, till we have got a ſtock of rich
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cloathes; And then we will put Drey-men, and Wine-
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porters, Corniſh Wraſtlers & ſuch like into thoſe cloaths;
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and make them Country Cavaliers. Have you not ſeen
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courſe ſnowt-faire drudges, clapt into bravery, that would
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doe more bodily ſervice in a Brothell then twenty Ladies
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Daughters? They are the Game-beares of a Bawdy-houſe,
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can play ten ſingle courſes for a cleane-bred Gentle-wo-
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mans one, wee will hire fellowes for groates a peece a
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day, that ſhall (without the additaments of Clary,
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Cawdle or Cock-broth) get us forty peeces a Man before
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Night, or perhaps a hundred by next Morning, out of
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ſuch ſhee-cuſtomers, as an Aunt of mine ſhall finde out
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for us.
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Car.O baſe Villaine! No I’le never fall ſo deep below
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a Gentleman, as to be Maſter of a Baudy-houſe.
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Wat.Very good decay’d Gentlemen have done as
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much; though I urge this, but for your paſtime ſir.
[B2v]Car.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
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Car.No my firſt plot ſhall ſtand, I will do ſome no-
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torious death-deſerving thing (though theſe cloaths goe
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to th’ Hangman for’t, what care I) in defiance of him that
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was my Unkle, and his Methodicall, Grave, and Ortho-
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graphicall ſpeaking friend, Mr. Saveall that cals People
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Pe-o-ple.
Enter Saveall.
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O Mr. Saveall how have you honord mee, how
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am I bound to you for this viſit! Sir hearing that my
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Unkle was come to Town, and you with him, I did pre-
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ſume to write to you.
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Sav.Send forth your Man.
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Car.Goe forth—Exit Wat.
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Sav.One Servant is not fit for all Offices, although
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you keepe no more; you preſumed indeed, I can no leſſe
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then call it a preſumption, although it were but unto mee
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you write; I ſpeak not this in the behalfe of any dignity
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in me; but that you ſhould overweene that I had ability
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to wraſtle any more with your overgratefull Unkle in
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your behalfe. Therein was your outrecuidance.
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Car.The miſerableſt Man on Earth! in having wee-
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ried out my worthieſt friend, on whom the ſum of all my
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hopes was caſt.
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Sav.No, I am not wearied; But ſtill in the ſame full
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ſtrength: yet my modeſty diſſwadeth mee from uſing
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ſtrength above reaſon, and my reaſon prevaileth with me
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not to ſtrive againſt a Torrent.
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Car.He is then inexorable, and I muſt periſh. But did
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you try him for me this laſt time?
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Sav.I have both tryed, and tempted him to his vexation.
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Car.But did you urge that pious act of mine
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Which he once vow’d ſhould never be forgot,
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Or unrewarded by him?
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Sav.Your ſtanding upon merit in that Act
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Perplexeth nature in him, and confounds
B3Both


A mad Couple well Match’d.
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Both your deſert, and his benevolence,
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And now ſince you have urged it, I’le tell you,
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Your Act was undenyable, moſt noble,
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And glorious in a Nephew, greater piety
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Could not have been expected in a Sonne:
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When from the Swords of Theeves and Murderers,
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Your valor reſcued him—But—
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Car.I and my Man I’me ſure made four of the ſtowteſt
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purſes fly for’t, that ever ſet our Country o’ the ſkore:
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After they had him downe, and their points at his breſt
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and throat, hee crying out for helpe, when I came on by
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chance at a time too when I was in his diſpleaſure, nay
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he hated mee a whole yeare together before that, and yet
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I did it, and more then ſo—
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Sav.Fare you well Sir, I thought to have ſaid all this
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for you, and more then ſo too. But—
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Car.Nay ſweet Mr. Saveall
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Sav.Good Mr. Careleſſe, as I can hear I would be
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heard ſometimes.
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Car.Indeed I cry you mercy, pray ſir ſpeake.
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Sav.I was commending of your act, and do ſo ſtill.
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You did expreſſe your ſelfe in blood and nature
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A perfect Kinſman; and your piety
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Drew bleſſings on you: for whereas before
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Your Unkle left you off to Reprobation,
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He then receives you a Son, (being his Siſters)
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Adopted you, intended you his heire,
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And out of his Eſtate then preſently
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Allowed you two hundred pounds per annum,
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And gave your Man for what he ſuffered
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In the conflict an hundred Marks—
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Car.Poore Rogue ! and he deſerv’d it, I’le beſworne
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for a Theeves marke that he receiv’d; a cut o’ the Cockſ-
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combe that crackt his ſkull, ſo that hee could never bear
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his drinke ſince, as hee could ha’ done before. For ſir, as we
[B3v]came


A mad Couple Well Match’d.
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came in, I having put by the thruſts of three of ’em, the
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fourth man with a full blow—
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Sav.Fare you well Sir the ſecond time—
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Car.Nay curteous Mr. Saveall.
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Sav.I came to ſpeake not with you altogether, but
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unto you for to be heard.
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Car.Sir I will heare you with all due reſpect.
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Sav.Your Unkle having done ſo gratefully, and ſo
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plentifully for you,
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You building ſtill on merit for that ſervice,
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Did hold him ſo faſt bound that you preſumed
217
To run upon more extravagancies
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In all the out-wayes of debauchery,
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Till for the one good deed you did for him
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He did you forty, in reſtoring you
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From Surfets, Wants, Wounds and Impriſonments,
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Till overborne with charge, and more with anguiſh,
223
At your outragious, unexampled Riots,
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Hee gave you an irrevocable farewell, yet then at your
225
departure.—
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Car.Yet then I liv’d and could have done till now,
227
meerly by being his Nephew, and ſuppos’d his heire, had
228
not he married; but his Marriage turnd the hearts of all
229
believing Citizens from me, where before a Taylor could
230
have made mee run through all the credit i’ the Town,
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When in a ſute Chinquant, and Ala-mode
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They could informe themſelves, whoſe heire I was,
233
But to ſay truth I vex’d him into Wed-lock, for before
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he valud not a Wife at a batchelors Button.
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Sav.Farewell to you the third time.
236
Car.Sir, you ſhall ſee mee die firſt, and that inſtantly;
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That you may tell my Uncle I’le be no more his trouble,
238
or charge, unleſſe in charity hee’l ſend to bury me.
239
Sav.You will not deſperately work a violent end up-
240
on your ſelfe ?
B4Car.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
241
Car.No Sir, the Devills not ſo great with mee;
242
but my heart, I feele it ready to breake. My Unkle
243
is no more my Unkle, nor you my friend, all by my own
244
fault, and what ſhould I do here, but in to my Bed, and
245
out o’ the World preſently. Wat. Wat.
Enter Wat.
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[Link] I here Sir!
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Sav.I have dalyed too long, and tempted him too far
248
I feare.
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Car.Lay down my Bed.
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Wat.Your Wench is come indeed, but I hope you will
251
not to bed before he be gone.
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Car.Lay down my bed I ſay. But firſt unbutton me.
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Wat.Lord how his heart beats! pangs of death I fear.
254
Sav.Not ſo I hope. I will now come to the point Sir,
255
Mr. Careleſſe be comforted.
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Car.I am, and well reſolv’d, I thanke my better
257
Angell.
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Sav.Your Unkle’s friends with you.
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Car.Alas, how can that be?
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Sav.I thought your ſpirit had been higher.
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Car.It will be Sir anon, I hope.
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Sav.I have but dallied with you to ſearch your
263
temper.
264
Wat.But you have ſearched too deep I feare ſir.
265
Car.Ah!—
266
Sav.Your Unkle is friends with you, I ſay ſo farre
267
as to make a further tryall of your nature, you may be
268
yet his heire; for your Aunt deſpaireth of any Child by
269
him, having fruitleſly been married now theſe two years.
270
Car.Ah!—But good Sir, can this be?
271
Sav.It is, and I will bring you to him. And ſee that all
272
be well.
273
Car.Your noble friendſhip hath reviv’d me ſir,
274
O run and fetch my cloake.
[B4v]Enter.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
Enter Wat with his Cloake.
275
Tell Phebe I cannot ſtay to give her any ſatiſfaction now,
276
I muſt go ſee my Unkle firſt.Exit Wat.
277
Sav.Poore Gentleman, how weakly he ſtandeth! The
278
ſight of his Unkle will recover him. Come Mr. Careleſs
279
let us goe.
280
Car.Sir what do you thinke if I ſhould firſt according
281
to the reformation of my mind cut off my undecent hair,
282
and change this gariſh apparrell for a civill well worne
283
Students ſute, I can be fitted preſently hard by.
284
Sav.No, the mind reformed is enough, your habit well
285
becometh you.Exit.
286
Wat.Now Wit and’t be thy will go with him. And I
287
hope this will be his laſt hot fit of the Unkle.
Enter Phebe.
288
Phe.Your Maſters gone forth it ſeemes.
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Wat.Cal’d by his fortune, hee is ſo.
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Phe.Shuns he the ſight of me? i’le overtake him.
291
Wat.O your patience ſweete Miſtris Phebe, a little
292
patience.
293
Hee’s gone to be happy, and to make you happy. I dare
294
promiſe you a Sattin Gowen within this ſea’night.
295
Phe.For let me tell thee Miſtris Phebe bright
296
Hee’s reconciled to his Unkle Knight.
297
Away Pimpe, Flamſted, I came to be ſerious with him,
298
to let him know the miſeries I ſuffer, by the wrongs hee
299
has done mee, and that I can nor will no longer
300
beare’em.
301
Wat.Nor him neither will you? Take heede what you
302
ſay Madam Marion.
303
Phe.No nor him neither, you pandarly Paraſite, till
304
he make his vowes good, and me an honeſt Woman.
305
Wat.Birlady, a ſhrewd taſke, and I fear an impoſſible
306
worke.
307
Phe.Sirra, I will claw your ugly Face till thou under-
308
tak’ſt it with him, to make it eaſie.
[B5]Wat.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
309
Wat.Hold, hold, I’le doe you all the good I can,
310
Phe.O will you ſo ?
311
Wat.How deſperatly valiant a Whore growes, when
312
ſhe is ſo poore that her cloathes feare no tearing.
313
But by what meanes can you hope to bring this worke
314
about?
315
Phe.You know I have a wealthy Kinſman in the City.
316
Wat.O Mr. Saleware, and he has a Wife too that bears
317
it up bravely.
318
Phe.Pimpe impudent, ſhall I claw your Face into
319
bluſhes at my injuryes, to be mockt out of my Mayden-
320
head, when I was upon a good Match in the Countrey;
321
Then with a promiſe of Marriage, to be intic’d from my
322
friends into fooles Paradice (that was a new title for the
323
City) and here to be uſed, and abuſed from Lodging to
324
Lodging, by him that now flies me, for the decayes hee
325
hath brought mee to ? But my Kinſman has money
326
though I have none, and for money there is Law to be
327
found, and in a juſt cauſe he will not let me ſink, he ſayes:
328
for I have told him all.
329
Wat.But not the how many times, the whens, the
330
where’s, and the wherewithalls, I hope have you?
331
Phe.Sirrah, I ſhall ſhew you and your Maſter too a
332
way to more civility, ſince I am thus abuſed, and
333
ſlighted.
334
Wat.You have ſchoold mee handſomely, and brought
335
me into ſenſe of your injuries: you have beene over-
336
wrong’d, but not over-wrought, nor over-worne, you
337
doe excell in Beauty, Strength and Spirit, which makes
338
you in your very anger now appeare ſo lovely, that I
339
profeſſe my ſelfe your Creature. What would a kiſſe of
340
this faire Hand now make mee do, and of thoſe Lipps
341
what not?Shee ſtrikes him.
342
Phe.Away you Creature.
343
Wat.Leave theſe temptations; doe not ſtrike me too
344
deeply in love with you.
[B5v]Phe.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
345
Phe.Away you Creature.
346
Wat.’Tis true I am your Creature, as I am my Maſters;
347
And ſometimes the ſerving Creature, breakes his faſt with
348
a bit off the Spit before the ſame meat is ſerv’d up to his
349
Maſters table, but is never denyed to Dine upon his Ma-
350
ſters leavings, you cannot thinke what an appetite that
351
frown gives me.
352
Phe.You are no ſaucy Raſcall.
353
Wat.Good wit too! My appetite needs no Sauce; nor
354
ſhall you need to make uſe of Law, or Friend againſt my
355
Maſter, but my ſelfe.
356
Phe.You!
357
Wat.Be rul’d by me, if I doe not lay you downe, and
358
joyne with you preſently in a courſe that ſhall content
359
you, then—hang me Lady at your doore.– – –
360
Phe.What doe you meane?
361
Wat.In the next roome we ſhall finde Pen, Inke and
362
Paper, you ſhall write him ſuch a Letter (as I will dictate
363
to you) that ſhall ſo nettle him.
364
Phe.Nay I did intend to leave him part of my mind in
365
writting before I went.—
Enter Saleware.
366
Ph.O Coſen, I want you.—
367
Wat.A pox of this interupting Cuckold, hee hinders
368
all Trading, but his Wives, zownds I was going with full
369
ſpeed a Tilt, as the learned ſay, had not this horne-head
370
come, we had writ lines together ſhould have put down
371
Hero and Leander
372
Harke you Miſtris Phebe, is this your Kinſman that you
373
told me, you had told all the buſineſſe to?
374
SaleYes, ſir, I am the Gentleman, and ſhee has told
375
me ſo much, Sir that I muſt tell you, to tell your Maſter
376
from mee, and as I would tell him my ſelfe if hee were
377
here perſonally preſent, hee is a moſt diſhoneſt Gentle-
378
man if he doe her not lawfull right by Marrying her; and
[B6]that


A mad Couple well Match’d.
379
that right I came to demand, and obtaine of him, or to
380
denounce the Law againſt him.
381
Wat.How happy are you, that you came ſhort to tell
382
him ſo, elſe hee would ha’ ſo beaten you, as never was
383
Citizen beaten, ſince the great Battaile of Finſbury-
384
Field.
385
Sal.Your great words cannot make mee feare his
386
blowes (I am not daſht nor baſht) nor croſſe him out of
387
my Booke, for feare of any ſuch payment. I have him
388
there for foure ſcore pound as you know, though you
389
are pleas’d to forget mee, But Sapientia mea mihi ſtultitia
390
tua tibi.
391
Wat.Cry mercy Mr. Saleware, is it you? I hope Mi-
392
ſtris Saleware is well, your moſt exquiſite, and moſt court-
393
ly wife; the Flower-de-luce of the City.
394
Sal.Well wag well, you muſt not now put me off with
395
my wife, ſhee’s well and much reſpected; I come to
396
ſpeake of, and for my diſtreſſed Kinſwoman, her whom
397
your wicked Maſter has moſt wickedly dealt withall.
398
Hee has deflower’d and deluc’d her, and led her from
399
her Friends, and out of her Countrey into Fooles Pa-
400
radice—By making her believe he would Marry her, and
401
here he has put her on, and put her off, with hopes and
402
delayes till ſhee is come to both woe and want; And
403
(which may prove her moſt affliction, if hee be ſuffered
404
to forſake her) ſhee is with child by him.
405
Wat.Say you ſo, Miſtris Phebe ? here’s ſmall ſhew of
406
it yet.
407
Phe.Sirrah, I ſhall ſhew you and your Maſter too a
408
way to more civility, if I be thus abuſed and ſlighted.
409
Wat.By the way Mr. Saleware, how many children
410
have you by your moſt amiable wife?
411
Sal.Sir, that needs not to fall by the way of our diſ-
412
courſe.
413
Wat.But by the way I ſpeake of getting children. Or
[B6v]I


A mad Couple well Match’d.
414
I pray tell me, did not you correct one of her children
415
once, for which your wife reprehended you, and bad
416
you correct your own? And how then ſhall my Maſter
417
be ſure that this (if it be one) is his?
418
Sal.What an Aſinego’s this? I ſhall finde a time ſir,
419
to talke with your Maſter. In the meane time I tell you
420
that my Kinſewoman is a Gentlewoman of as good
421
blood as himſelf, and of the beſt in Herefordſhire.
422
Wat.Yes, Welſh-blood.
423
Sal.And ſhall find friends that ſhall not ſee her abus’d
424
by you nor him. There is Law to be found for money, and
425
money to be found for Friends, and Friends to be found
426
in the Arches, and ſo tell your Maſter, come away
427
Coſen.
428
Wat.But one word before you goe Sir, is this Gentle-
429
woman, (who was but a Countrey Chamber-maide when
430
my Maſter tooke her to his mercy) of ſuch boaſted blood,
431
your Cozen by your owne, or by your Wives ſide I
432
pray?
433
Sal.Sirrah, like a ſaucy companion as you are, though
434
you meddle with me that am a Common-councell-Man;
435
I charge you meddle not with my wife, you have had two
436
or three jerks at her.
437
Wat.I was warn’d before Sir, in my own underſtand-
438
ing: for ſhe is for great perſons.
439
Sal.Then know your diſtance Sir.
440
Wat.Yet give me leave to wait you down Sir, cudſhoe
441
did it tell it Kinſeman that it is got with Champkin.
442
Phe.You are a Pandarly Raſcall, and I’le be a terror
443
both to you, and your Patron.Exit omnes.
Enter Thrivewell, Lady.
444
Thr.How can you thinke ſo?
445
La.Thinke! I ſee’t apparently upon your Face, and
446
heare it in your ſighes, your broken ſleepes to night,
447
when your owne groanes wak’d you, declard no leſſe;
[B7]But


A mad Couple well Match’d.
448
But had I had the power of ſome wifes with their hus-
449
bands I could have fetch’d it out of you waking once (I
450
thanke you) you tooke me in your arme, but when you
451
found ’twas I you turn’d away as in a dreame.
452
Thr.Sure you dreame now, whence can this talke pro-
453
ceed elſe?
454
La.I muſt not give it over till I know the cauſe of
455
your melancholly fit, doe you doubt my duty, or my
456
loyalty? perhaps you do, and ſo make me the cauſe of
457
your affliction.
458
Thr.May ſuch a thought within mee, ſtick mee to the
459
endleſſe torments.
460
La.’Tis lately entertained, what e’re it be; you came
461
heart whole to Town, and Joviall. Ha’ you been drawn
462
for ſecurity into Bonds by any of my friends, for great
463
ſumms, and forc’d to pay ’em?
464
Thr.Fie, fie.
465
La.Are any great friends of yours in queſtion, attaint-
466
ed, impriſoned, or run away ?
467
Thr.Pſewh.
468
La.Or are you further griev’d about your Nephew,
469
Careleſſe? I thought that your friend Saveall, and my
470
ſelfe had made his peace with you; and that you had ſent
471
for him, do you repent that?
472
Thr.No, no, ſweete heart, hee ſhall be welcome. And
473
pray let me intreate you make no further inquiſition; If
474
(as you ſuppoſe) there be a trouble in my thoughts, I ſhall
475
ſoon paſſe it over.
476
La.Tell me, or I ſhall prove the greater trouble. I
477
would thoſe few examples of women, that could not
478
keepe their huſbands counſells had beene burnt, and the
479
woman too rather then I ſhould be diſtruſted thus, and
480
ſlighted by a Huſband—
481
Thr.Nay then you’l grieve me indeed.
482
La.There has beene many examples of diſcreet wo-
[B7v]men


A mad Couple well Match’d.
483
men that have not onely kept their huſbands councells,
484
but adviſe and help ’em in extremities, and deliver’d ’em
485
out of dangers.
486
Thr.I pray content your ſelfe.
487
La.Be you content to tell me then what troubles you.
488
And I pray you tell mee ſpeedily, now preſently; or
489
(excuſe me in my vow,) it is the laſt requeſt that ever
490
I will make to you, and the laſt queſtion I’le ever aſke
491
you, and (the eaſier to get it from you) I promiſe you
492
by the continuance of my faith to you ( which by this
493
kiſſe I ſeale) Be it a deadly injury to my ſelfe, I will for-
494
give it freely; not be troubled at it.
495
Thr.I ſhall do that now, which few wiſe men would.
496
But ſhee’s diſcreet, and has a fortitude
497
Above the boaſt of women; ſhould that faile,
498
And this too weighty knowledge for a wife
499
Should prove a torment to her, I’m excus’d
500
Shee pulls it on her ſelfe, and for Revenge
501
Should ſhe againſt her proteſtation move it,
502
I am enough above her.
503
La.You are reſolv’d it ſeems to keepe your ſecret
504
Unto your ſelfe, much good Sir may it doe you.
505
Thr.No, you ſhall know it, ſir, and (if unſhaken
506
Now, in your love to me) the wonder of all wives
507
Y’are bound by a faire pledge, the kiſſe you gave me,
508
To be unmov’d, and to forgive it though
509
It be a deadly injury to your ſelf;
510
It is, and ’tis a great one; and ſo great
511
But that you have ſeald my pardon, the hid knowledge
512
Of it ſhould feed upon my Heart, and Liver,
513
Till life were baniſh’d thence, rather then pull
514
Your juſt revenge upon me; yet you frown not!
515
But before I declare it to your Juſtice,
516
Let me renew your mercy.Kiſſe.
517
And on this Altar, which I have prophan’d
[B8]While


A mad Couple well Match’d.
518
While it breath’d ſacred incence, now with penitence
519
Offer religious vowes, never to violate
520
My Faith or Love to you againe. One more Kiſſe.
521
Before you heare it: for if then you ſtand not
522
Firme to your Mercy, it muſt be my laſt.
523
La.What do you but violate your Love to mee,
524
Now in your moſt unjuſt ſuſpition?
525
Thr.I’le treſpaſſe ſo no more; yet many huſbands
526
(I wiſh they had my ſorrow, and no leſſe
527
Purpoſer to reformation) wrong their wives.
528
La.Leave theſe perambulations; to the point:
529
You have unlawfully lyen with ſome woman!
530
Thr.’Tis ſaid; and now your doome.
531
La.Ha, ha, ha. Here’s a buſieſſe!
532
Would ſomebody heard you faith: nay of five hundred
533
That now might overheare us (I meane not only
534
Gallants, but grave ſubſtantiall Gentlemen)
535
Could be pick’d out a twelve good men and true,
536
To finde you guilty, I would then condemne you,
537
But ſuch a Jury muſt be pannell’d firſt.
538
Thr.And can you be ſo mild? then farwell thought.
539
La.Thought of your Miſtris Sir, And then farwell
540
My jealouſy, for let me tell you Sir,
541
That I have had an ache upon theſe browes
542
Since your laſt being in Town. And ſince you have dealt
543
So faithfully as to tell me it is one,
544
(There’s no more, is there?)
545
Thr.No upon my vow.
546
La.Name me the woman: if it be the ſame
547
That I ſuſpect, I’le never ſuſpect more.
548
Thr.As faithfully as to my Confeſſor; Light Weight.
549
Saleware my Silke-mans wife.
550
La.The ſame I meant,
551
Y’are a faire dealing huſband. On what condition?
552
Come this is merry talke. Prithee on what condition?
[B8v]Only


A mad Couple well Match’d.
553
Only to bring good cuſtome to her ſhop,
554
And ſend her huſband Veniſon (fleſh for fleſh)
555
I did obſerve you bought all there laſt terme,
556
And wiſh’d me to her Shop, and Mr. Saveall
557
With divers others to beſtow our monies.
558
Troth ſhee’s a handſome one; Prithee on what con-
559
ditions ?
560
Thr.Thou ſhalt know all to purge me of my folly.
561
La.Well ſaid.
562
Thr.After a coſtly, and a tedious Sute
563
With many an anſwer no, and no ſuch Woman,
564
At length ſhee yeilds for a hundred pieces;
565
Had’em, and I enjoy’d her once.
566
La.That was,
567
When you laſt Terme ſat up all Night, and ſaid you ſat
568
up with the three Lady Gameſters.
569
Thr.It is confeſs’d.
570
La.Faire dealing ſtill.
571
Thr.But here was the foule dealing, and for which
572
I hate her now: I having paid ſo great a fine, and
573
Tane poſſeſſion thought after to deale Rent-free.
574
La.A Pepper-corne a quarter, if ſhee be Pepper-
575
proofe.
576
Thr.But ſhee at my very next approach, which was
577
but yeſterday denyes me Egreſſe, except I make it a new
578
purchaſe at the ſame former rate, and ſo for all times
579
after.
580
La.Troth ’tis unreaſonable, a hundred pound a time?
581
How rich would Citizens be, if their wives were all ſo
582
paid, and how poore the Court and Country! But
583
huſht, here comes Mr. Saveall with your Nephew, I
584
take it; A handſome Gentleman, could hee be ſo de-
585
bauch’d?
Enter Saveall, Careleſſe.
586
Sav.Sir, I have brought you home a Reformado:
Cand


A mad Couple well Match’d.
587
and doe intreat (for what I have ſaid unto him, and he
588
hath fairely anſwered unto me) that words may not by
589
you be multiplied.
590
Thr.Not a word of unkindneſſe, Nephew, you are
591
welcome, give me your hand. George, thou art welcome.
592
Car.I ſhall be George o’ horſe-back once more I ſee.
593
In all humility I thanke you Sir.
594
Thr.Nay now thou ſpeakeſt, and look’ſt too tamely
595
George, I would have thee keepe and uſe the lively ſpirit
596
that thou hadſt, but not to let it flie at randome, as it has
597
done George.
598
Car.Sir, I have learnt now by the inconveniences I
599
have met with, in thoſe extravagant out-flights, the better
600
to containe it within the limits of your leave, and faire
601
allowance hereafter.
602
Thr.Well ſaid, and againe welcome George. But (and
603
this you ſhall give me leave to ſay Mr. Saveall ) I remit
604
your thanks for any inclination I had towards this re-
605
concilement till I doe you ſome further kindneſſe; only
606
you had good advocates, who pleaded friendly for you,
607
Mr. Saveall, and your Aunt there before ſhe ever ſaw you
608
whom you may thanke.
609
Car.A man muſt be ſo tied now.
610
Thr.Pray take notice of her.
611
Car.I cannot uſe reſpect enough Sir.
612
Thr.I like that modeſty.
613
Sav.Doubt him in nothing, for he is come home.
614
Car.Madam as you are my gracious Patroneſſe, and
615
my ſelfe ſo all unworthy, my duty checks me in my ap-
616
proach to you.
617
La.You are the more intirely welcome Coſen. Kiſſe.
618
Car.Shee Kiſſes like an old mans wife, That is, as a
619
Child late ſterv’d at Nurſe, ſucks a freſh flowing
620
Breaſt.
621
La.You muſt not Sir be baſhfull.
[C1v]Car.


A mad Couple well Match’d.
622
Car.’Twill leſſe become mee to preſume good Ma-
623
dam.
624
Thr.George, here’s a Lodging for you in this houſe,
625
and my Table has a place for you, ſend for your man to
626
wait upon you.
627
Ha’ you Wat ſtill?
628
Car.Yes Sir, an honeſt true hearted civill fellow he is,
629
as I have manag’d him, he can ſay grace now.
630
Thr.The world’s well mended. To morrow you ſhall
631
give me a note of your debts George, which I’le take or-
632
der for, if I may preſume you have any.
633
Car.Some driblets Sir, My credit has not lately wrong’d
634
me much.
635
Sav.You ſpeake ſententiouſly, for credit ſought
636
With Tradeſ-men, then their wares are dearer bought;
637
So Gentlemen are wronged.
638
Thr.Then not to wrong our ſelves, lets in to Dance.Exeunt omnes.