The Way of the World William Congreve (general ebook reader TXT) đ
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- Author: William Congreve
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you, gentlemen and lady.
Mrs. Marwood
For shame, Mr. Witwoud; why wonât you speak to him?â âAnd you, sir.
Witwoud
Petulant, speak.
Petulant
And you, sir.
Sir Wilful
No offence, I hope? Salutes Mrs. Marwood.
Mrs. Marwood
No, sure, sir.
Witwoud
This is a vile dog, I see that already. No offence! Ha! ha! ha! To him, to him, Petulant, smoke him.55
Petulant
It seems as if you had come a journey, sir; hem, hem. Surveying him round.
Sir Wilful
Very likely, sir, that it may seem so.
Petulant
No offence, I hope, sir?
Witwoud
Smoke the boots, the boots, Petulant, the boots: ha! ha! ha!
Sir Wilful
Maybe not, sir; thereafter as âtis meant,56 sir.
Petulant
Sir, I presume upon the information of your boots.
Sir Wilful
Why, âtis like you may, sir: if you are not satisfied with the information of my boots, sir, if you will step to the stable, you may enquire further of my horse, sir.
Petulant
Your horse, sir! Your horse is an ass, sir!
Sir Wilful
Do you speak by way of offence, sir?
Mrs. Marwood
The gentlemanâs merry, thatâs all, sir. Aside. âSlife, we shall have a quarrel betwixt an horse and an ass, before they find one another out.â âAloud. You must not take anything amiss from your friends, sir. You are among your friends here, though itâ âmay be you donât know it. If I am not mistaken, you are Sir Wilfull Witwoud?
Sir Wilful
Right, lady; I am Sir Wilfull Witwoud, so I write myself; no offence to anybody, I hope; and nephew to the Lady Wishfort of this mansion.
Mrs. Marwood
Donât you know this gentleman, sir?
Sir Wilful
Hum! What, sure âtis notâ âyea byâr lady but âtisâ âsâheart, I know not whether âtis or noâ âyea, but âtis, by the Wrekin. Brother Anthony! What, Tony, iâfaith! What, dost thou not know me? Byâr lady, nor I thee, thou art so becravated and so beperiwigged.â âSâheart, why dost not speak? Art thou oâerjoyed?
Witwoud
Odso, brother, is it you? Your servant, brother.
Sir Wilful
Your servant! Why, yours, sir. Your servant againâ âsâheart, and your friend and servant to thatâ âand aâ âpuff and a flap-dragon for your service, sir, and a hareâs foot and a hareâs scut57 for your service, sir, an you be so cold and so courtly!
Witwoud
No offence, I hope, brother.
Sir Wilful
Sâheart, sir, but there is, and much offence!â âA pox, is this your inns oâ court breeding, not to know your friends and your relations, your elders, and your betters?
Witwoud
Why, brother Wilfull of Salop,58 you may be as short as a Shrewsbury cake, if you please. But I tell you âtis not modish to know relations in town.:you think youâre in the country, where great lubberly brothers slabber and kiss one another when they meet, like a call of sergeants.59â ââtis not the fashion here; âtis not, indeed, dear brother.
Sir Wilful
The fashionâs a fool and youâre a fop, dear brother. Sâheart, Iâve suspected thisâ âbyâr lady I conjectured you were a fop, since you began to change the style of your letters, and write in a scrap of paper gilt round the edges, no bigger than a subpoena. I might expect this when you left off âHonoured brother,â and âHoping you are in good health,â and so forth, to begin with a âRat me, knight, Iâm so sick of a last nightâs debauch.â Ods heart, and then tell a familiar tale of a cock and a bull, and a whore and a bottle, and so conclude. You could write news before you were out of your time,60 when you lived with honest Pimple Nose, the attorney of Furnivalâs Inn.61â âyou could intreat to be remembered then to your friends round the reckan.62 We could have gazettes then, and Dawksâs Letter,63 and the Weekly Bill,64 till of late days.
Petulant
âSlife, Witwoud, were you ever an attorneyâs clerk? Of the family of the Furnivals? Ha! ha! ha!
Witwoud
Aye, aye, but that was but for a while. Not long, not long; pshaw, I was not in my own power then. An orphan, and this fellow was my guardian; aye, aye, I was glad to consent to that man to come to London. He had the disposal of me then. If I had not agreed to that, I might have been bound âprentice to a feltmaker in Shrewsbury: this fellow would have bound me to a maker of felts.
Sir Wilful
Sâheart, and better than to be bound to a maker of fops, where, I suppose, you have served your time, and now you may set up for yourself.
Mrs. Marwood
You intend to travel, sir, as Iâm informed?
Sir Wilful
Belike I may, madam. I may chance to sail upon the salt seas, if my mind hold.
Petulant
And the wind serve.
Sir Wilful
Serve or not serve, I shanât ask license of you, sir, nor the weathercock your companion. I direct my discourse to the lady, sir.â ââTis like my aunt may have told you, madam? Yes, I have settled my concerns, I may say now, and am minded to see foreign parts. If an how that the peace holds, whereby, that is, taxes abate.65
Mrs. Marwood
I thought you had designed for France at all adventures.
Sir Wilful
I canât tell that; âtis like I may, and âtis like I may not. I am somewhat dainty in making a resolution, because when I make it I keep it. I donât stand shill I, shall I, then; if I sayât, Iâll doât. But I have thoughts to tarry a small matter in town, to learn somewhat of your lingo first, before I cross the seas. Iâd gladly have a spice of your French as they say, whereby to hold discourse in foreign countries.
Mrs. Marwood
Hereâs an academy in town for that use.
Sir Wilful
There is? âTis like there may.66
Mrs. Marwood
No doubt you will return very much improved.
Witwoud
Yes, refined like a Dutch skipper from a whale-fishing.
Enter
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