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so let him follow his own way. Ha! ha! ha! Pardon me, dear creature, I must laugh; ha! ha! ha! Though I grant you ā€™tis a little barbarous; ha! ha! ha! Mrs. Marwood What pity ā€™tis so much fine raillery, and delivered with so significant gesture, should be so unhappily directed to miscarry. Mrs. Millamant Heh? Dear creature, I ask your pardonā ā€”I swear I did not mind you. Mrs. Marwood Mr. Mirabell and you both may think it a thing impossible, when I shall tell him by telling youā ā€” Mrs. Millamant Oh dear, what? For it is the same thing, if I hear itā ā€”ha! ha! ha! Mrs. Marwood That I detest him, hate him, madam. Mrs. Millamant O madam, why, so do Iā ā€”and yet the creature loves me, ha! ha! ha! How can one forbear laughing to think of it.ā ā€”I am a sibyl if I am not amazed to think what he can see in me. Iā€™ll take my death,51 I think you are handsomerā ā€”and within a year or two as young. If you could but stay for me, I should overtake youā ā€”but that cannot be.ā ā€”Well, that thought makes me melancholic.ā ā€”Now Iā€™ll be sad. Mrs. Marwood Your merry note may be changed sooner than you think. Mrs. Millamant Dā€™ye say so? Then Iā€™m resolved Iā€™ll have a song to keep up my spirits. Re-enter Mincing. Mincing The gentlemen stay but to comb, madam, and will wait on you. Mrs. Millamant Desire Mrs.ā ā€”that is in the next room, to sing the song I would have learnt yesterday. You shall hear it, madam. Not that thereā€™s any great matter in itā ā€”but ā€™tis agreeable to my humour.

Song

Loveā€™s but the frailty of the mind
When ā€™tis not with ambition joined;
A sickly flame, which if not fed, expires,
And feeding, wastes in self-consuming fires.

ā€™Tis not to wound a wanton boy
Or amā€™rous youth, that gives the joy;
But ā€™tis the glory to have pierced a swain,
For whom inferior beauties sighed in vain.

Then I alone the conquest prize,
When I insult a rivalā€™s eyes;
If thereā€™s delight in love, ā€™tis when I see
That heart, which others bleed for, bleed for me.

Enter Petulant and Witwoud. Mrs. Millamant Is your animosity composed, gentlemen? Witwoud Raillery, raillery, madam; we have no animosity. We hit off a little wit now and then, but no animosity. The falling out of wits is like the falling out of lovers:ā ā€”we agree in the main,52 like treble and bass.ā ā€”Ha, Petulant? Petulant Aye, in the main. But when I have a humour to contradictā ā€” Witwoud Aye, when he has a humour to contradict, then I contradict too. What, I know my cue. Then we contradict one another like two battledores; for contradictions beget one another like Jews. Petulant If he says blackā€™s blackā ā€”if I have a humour to say ā€™tis blueā ā€”let that passā ā€”allā€™s one for that. If I have a humour to prove it, it must be granted. Witwoud Not positively mustā ā€”but it mayā ā€”it may. Petulant Yes, it positively must, upon proof positive. Witwoud Aye, upon proof positive it must; but upon proof presumptive it only may.ā ā€”Thatā€™s a logical distinction now, madam. Mrs. Marwood I perceive your debates are of importance, and very learnedly handled. Petulant Importance is one thing and learningā€™s another; but a debateā€™s a debate, that I assert. Witwoud Petulantā€™s an enemy to learning; he relies altogether on his parts. Petulant No, Iā€™m no enemy to learning; it hurts not me. Mrs. Marwood Thatā€™s a sign indeed itā€™s no enemy to you. Petulant No, no, itā€™s no enemy to anybody but them that have it. Mrs. Millamant Well, an illiterate manā€™s my aversion: I wonder at the impudence of any illiterate man to offer to make love. Witwoud That I confess I wonder at, too. Mrs. Millamant Ah, to marry an ignorant that can hardly read or write. Petulant Why should a man be any further from being married, though he canā€™t read, than he is from being hanged? The ordinaryā€™s paid for setting the psalm,53 and the parish priest for reading the ceremony. And for the rest which is to follow in both cases, a man may do it without bookā ā€”so allā€™s one for that. Mrs. Millamant Dā€™ye hear the creature?ā ā€”Lord, hereā€™s company; Iā€™ll begone. Exit. Enter Sir Wilfull Witwoud in a riding dress, followed by Footman. Witwoud In the name of Bartlemew and his fair,54 what have we here? Mrs. Marwood ā€™Tis your brother, I fancy. Donā€™t you know him? Witwoud Not I.ā ā€”Yes, I think it is heā ā€”Iā€™ve almost forgot him; I have not seen him since the Revolution. Footman To Sir Wilful. Sir, my ladyā€™s dressing. Hereā€™s company, if you please to walk in, in the meantime. Sir Wilful Dressing! What, itā€™s but morning here, I warrant, with you in London; we should count it towards afternoon in our parts down in Shropshire:ā ā€”why, then, belike my aunt hanā€™t dined yet, ha, friend? Footman Your aunt, sir? Sir Wilful My aunt, sir! Yes my aunt, sir, and your lady, sir; your lady is my aunt, sir.ā ā€”Why, what dost thou not know me, friend? Why, then, send somebody hither that does. How long hast thou lived with thy lady, fellow, ha? Footman A week, sir; longer than anybody in the house, except my ladyā€™s woman. Sir Wilful Why, then, belike thou dost not know thy lady, if thou seest her, ha, friend? Footman Why, truly, sir, I cannot safely swear to her face in a morning, before she is dressed. ā€™Tis like I may give a shrewd guess at her by this time. Sir Wilful Well, prithee try what thou canst do; if thou canst not guess, enquire her out, dost hear, fellow? And tell her her nephew, Sir Wilfull Witwoud, is in the house. Footman I shall, sir. Sir Wilful Hold ye, hear me, friend, a word with you in your ear: prithee who are these gallants? Footman Really, sir, I canā€™t tell; here come so many here, ā€™tis hard to know ā€™em all. Exit. Sir Wilful Oons, this fellow knows less than a starling: I donā€™t think aā€™ knows his own name. Mrs. Marwood Mr. Witwoud, your brother is not behindhand in forgetfulness. I fancy he has forgot you too. Witwoud I hope so. The devil take him that remembers first, I say. Sir Wilful Save
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