The Way of the World William Congreve (general ebook reader TXT) š
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man again.
Aye, thereās my grief; thatās the sad change of life:
To lose my title, and yet keep my wife.
A room in Lady Wishfortās house.
Lady Wishfort at her toilet, Peg waiting. Lady Wishfort Merciful! No news of Foible yet? Peg No, madam. Lady Wishfort I have no more patience.ā āIf I have not fretted myself till I am pale again, thereās no veracity in me. Fetch me the redā āthe red, do you hear, sweetheart?ā āAn errant ash colour, as Iām a person. Look you how this wench stirs! Why dost thou not fetch me a little red? Didst thou not hear me, Mopus?33 Peg The red ratafia, does your ladyship mean, or the cherry brandy? Lady Wishfort Ratafia, fool? No, fool. Not the ratafia, foolā āgrant me patience!ā āI mean the Spanish paper,34 idiot; complexion, darling. Paint, paint, paint, dost thou understand that, changeling, dangling thy hands like bobbins before thee? Why dost thou not stir, puppet? Thou wooden thing upon wires! Peg Lord, madam, your ladyship is so impatient!ā āI cannot come at the paint, madam: Mrs. Foible has locked it up, and carried the key with her. Lady Wishfort A pox take you both.ā āFetch me the cherry brandy then.Exit Peg. Iām as pale and as faint, I look like Mrs. Qualmsick, the curateās wife, thatās always breeding. Wench, come, come, wench, what art thou doing? Sipping? Tasting?ā āSave thee, dost thou not know the bottle? Re-enter Peg with a bottle and china cup. Peg Madam, I was looking for a cup. Lady Wishfort A cup, save thee, and what a cup hast thou brought! Dost thou take me for a fairy, to drink out of an acorn? Why didst thou not bring thy thimble? Hast thou neāer a brass thimble clinking in thy pocket with a bit of nutmeg?35ā āI warrant thee. Come, fill, fill!ā āSoā āagain.ā āKnocking at the door. See who that is.ā āSet down the bottle first!ā āhere, here, under the table.ā āWhat, wouldst thou go with the bottle in thy hand like a tapster? As Iām a person, this wench has lived in an inn upon the road, before she came to me, like Maritornes the Asturian in Don Quixote.36ā āNo Foible yet? Peg No, madam; Mrs. Marwood. Lady Wishfort Oh, Marwood: let her come in.ā āCome in, good Marwood. Enter Mrs. Marwood. Mrs. Marwood Iām surprised to find your ladyship in deshabille at this time of day. Lady Wishfort Foibleās a lost thing; has been abroad since morning, and never heard of since. Mrs. Marwood I saw her but now, as I came masked through the park, in conference with Mirabell. Lady Wishfort With Mirabell!ā āYou call my blood into my face with mentioning that traitor. She durst not have the confidence. I sent her to negotiate an affair, in which if Iām detected Iām undone. If that wheedling villain has wrought upon Foible to detect me, Iām ruined. O my dear friend, Iām a wretch of wretches if Iām detected. Mrs. Marwood O madam, you cannot suspect Mrs. Foibleās integrity! Lady Wishfort Oh, he carries poison in his tongue that would corrupt integrity itself! If she has given him an opportunity, she has as good as put her integrity into his hands. Ah, dear Marwood, whatās integrity to an opportunity?ā āHark! I hear her!ā ādear friend, retire into my closet, that I may examine her with more freedomā āyouāll pardon me, dear friend, I can make bold with youā āthere are books over the chimneyā āQuarles and Prynne,37 and the Short View of the Stage,38 with Bunyanās works to entertain you.ā āTo Peg.ā āGo, you thing, and send her in. Exeunt Mrs. Marwood and Peg. Enter Foible. Lady Wishfort O Foible, where hast thou been? What hast thou been doing? Foible Madam, I have seen the party. Lady Wishfort But what hast thou done? Foible Nay, ātis your ladyship has done, and are to do; I have only promised. But a man so enamouredā āso transported! Well, if worshipping of pictures be a sinā āpoor Sir Rowland, I say. Lady Wishfort The miniature has been counted like. But hast thou not betrayed me, Foible? Hast thou not detected me to that faithless Mirabell? What hast thou to do with him in the park? Answer me, has he got nothing out of thee? Foible Aside. So, the devil has been beforehand with me; what shall I say?ā āAloud.ā āAlas, madam, could I help it, if I met that confident thing? Was I in fault? If you had heard how he used me, and all upon your ladyshipās account, Iām sure you would not suspect my fidelity. Nay, if that had been the worst I could have borne: but he had a fling at your ladyship too, and then I could not hold; but, iāfaith I gave him his own. Lady Wishfort Me? What did the filthy fellow say? Foible O madam, ātis a shame to say what he saidā āwith his taunts and his fleers, tossing up his nose. Humph! (says he) what, you are a hatching some plot (says he), you are so early abroad, or catering (says he), ferreting for some disbanded officer, I warrant.ā āHalf pay is but thin subsistence (says he), well, what pension does your lady propose? Let me see, (says he), what, she must come down pretty deep now, sheās superannuated (says he) andā ā Lady Wishfort Ods my life, Iāll have himā āIāll have him murdered. Iāll have him poisoned. Where does he eat?ā āIāll marry a drawer to have him poisoned in his wine. Iāll send for Robin from Locketās39 immediately. Foible Poison him? Poisoningās too good for him. Starve him, madam, starve him; marry Sir Rowland, and get him disinherited. Oh, you would bless yourself to hear what he said! Lady Wishfort A villain! Superannuated! Foible Humph (says he), I hear you are laying designs against me too (says he) and Mrs. Millamant is to marry my uncle (he does not suspect a word of your ladyship); but (says he) Iāll fit youFree ebook Ā«The Way of the World William Congreve (general ebook reader TXT) šĀ» - read online now
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