Ben Jonson
VOLPONE
OR
THE FOX
The
Persons of the Play
VOLPONE, a
magnifico
MOSCA, his
parasite
VOLTORE,
an advocate
CORBACCIO,
an old gentleman
CORVINO, a
merchant
BONARIO,
son to Corbaccio
SIR
POLITIC WOULD-BE, a knight
PEREGRINE,
a gentleman traveler
NANO, a
dwarf
CASTRONE,
an eunuch
ANDROGYNO,
an hermaphrodite
GREGE (or
Mob)
COMMENDATORI,
officers of justice
MERCATORI,
three merchants
AVOCATORI,
four magistrates
NOTARIO,
the register
LADY
WOULD-BE, SIR POLITICS Wife
CELIA,
CORVINOS Wife
SERVITORI,
Servants, two WAITING-WOMEN, &c.
THE SCENE,
Venice
The
Argument
Volpone,
childless, rich, feigns sick, despairs,
Offers
his state to hopes of several heirs,
Lies
languishing; his parasite receives
Presents
of all, assures, deludes; then weaves
Other
cross plots, which ope themselves, are told.
New
tricks for safety are sought; they thrive: when bold,
Each
tempts the other again, and all are sold.
Act 1
Scene 1.1
A room in Volpones house.
[Enter
Volpone and Mosca]
Volpone:
Good
morning to the Day; and, next, my Gold:
Open the
shrine, that I may see my Saint.
[MOSCA
withdraws the curtain, and discovers piles of gold, plate, jewels,
&c.]
Hayle the
worlds soule, and mine. More glad then is
The
teeming earth, to see the longd-for Sunne
Peepe
through the hornes of the Cælestiall Ram,
Am I, to
view thy splendor, darkening his:
That lying
here, amongst my other hoordes,
Shew'st
like a flame, by night; or like the Day
Strooke
out of Chaos, when all darkenes fled
Unto the
center. O thou Son of Sol,
(But
brighter then thy father) let me kisse,
With
adoration, thee, and euery relique
Of sacred
treasure, in this blessed roome.
Well did
wise Poets, by thy glorious name,
Title that
age, which they would have the best;
Thou being
the best of things: and far transcending
All stile
of ioy, in children, parents, friends,
Or any
other waking dreame on earth.
Thy lookes
when they to Venus did ascribe,
They
should have given her twenty thousand Cupids;
Such are
thy beauties, and our loves. Deare Saint,
Riches,
the dombe God, that giu'st all men tongues;
That canst
do naught, and yet mak'st men do all things;
The price
of soules; euen hell, with thee to boote,
Is made
worth heauen. Thou art vertue, fame,
Honor, and
all things else. Who can get thee
He shall
be noble, valiant, honest, wise, --
Mosca:
And what
he will Sir. Riches are in fortune
A greater
good, then wisedome is in nature.
Volpone:
True, my
beloved Mosca. Yet, I glory
More in
the cunning purchasse of my wealth,
Then in
the glad possession; since I gaine
No cowmon
way: I vse no trade, no venter;
I wound no
earth with plow-shares; fat no beasts
To feede
the Shambles; have no mills for iron,
Oyle,
corne, or men, to grinde them into poulder;
I blow no
subtill glasse; expose no shipps
To
threatnings of the furrow-faced sea;
I turne no
moneys, in the publike banke;
Nor vsure
priuate.
Mosca:
No Sir,
nor deuoure
Soft
prodigalls. You shall have some will swallow
A melting
heire, as glibly, as your Dutch
Will pills
of butter, and ne're purge for it;
Teare
forth the fathers of poore families
Out of
their beds, and coffin them aliue,
In some
kinde, clasping prison, where their bones
May be
forth-comming, when the flesh is rotten:
But your
sweet nature doth abhorre these courses;
You loath,
the widdowes, or the orphans teares
Should
washe your pauements; or their pityous cries
Ring in
your roofes: and beate the ayre, for vengeance.
Volpone:
Right,
Mosca, I do loath it.
Mosca:
And
besides, Sir,
You are
not like a thresher, that doth stand
With a
huge flaile, watching a heape of corne,
And,
hungry, dares not taste the smallest graine,
But feedes
on mallowes, and such bitter herbes;
Nor like
the merchant, who hath fill'd his vaults
With
Romagnia, and rich Candian wines,
Yet drinks
the lees of Lombards vineger:
You will
not lie in straw, whilst mothes, and wormes
Feed on
your sumptuous hangings, and soft bedds.
You know
the vse of riches, and dare give, now,
From that
bright heape, to me, your poore obseruer,
Or to your
Dwarfe, or your Hermaphrodite,
Your
Eunuch, or what other houshold-trifle
Your
pleasure allowes maint'nance.
Volpone:
Hold thee,
Mosca,
Take of my
hand; thou strik'st on truth, in all:
And they
are enuious, terme thee Parasite.
Call forth
my Dwarfe, my Eunuch, and my Foole,
And let
them make me sport. What should I do,
But cocker
up my Genius, and liue free
To all
delights, my fortune calls me too?
I have no
wife, no parent, childe, allye,
To give my
substance too; but whome I make,
Must be my
heyre: and this makes men obserue me,
This
drawes new clients, dayly, to my house,
Women, and
men, of euery sexe, and age,
That bring
me presents, send me plate, coyne, iewels,
With hope,
that when I die, (which they expect
Each
greedy minute) it shall then returne
Ten-fold
upon them; whilst some, couetous
Aboue the
rest, seeke to engrosse me, whole,
And
counter-worke, the one, unto the other,
Contend in
gifts, as they would seeme, in love:
All which
I suffer, playing with their hopes,
And am
content to coyne them into profit,
To looke
upon their kindnesse, and take more,
And looke
on that; still, bearing them in hand,
Letting
the cherry knock against their lips,
And, drawe
it, by their mouths, and back againe. How now!
Scene 1.2
[Enter
MOSCA with NANO, ANDROGYNO, and CASTRONE]
Nano:
Now
roome, for fresh Gamsters, who do will you to know,
They do
bring you neither Play, nor Vniuersity Show;
And
therefore do intreat you, that whatsoeuer they reherse,
May not
fare a whit the worse, for the false pase of the verse.
If you
wonder at this, you will wonder more, ere we passe,
For
know, here is inclos'd the Soule of Pithagoras,
That
Iugler divine, as hereafter shall follow;
Which
Soule (fast, and loose, sir) came first from Apollo,
And was
breath'd into A Ethalides; Mercurius his son,
Where
it had the gift to remember all that euer was done.
From
thence it fled forth, and made quicke transmigration
To
goldy-lockt Euphorbus, who was kill'd, in good fashion,
At the
seege of old Troy, by the Cuckold of Sparta.
Hermotimus
was next (I finde it, in my Charta')
To whom
it did passe, where no sooner it was missing,
But
with one Pirrhus, of Delos, it learn'd to go a fishing:
And
thence, did it enter the Sophist of Greece.
From
Pithagore, she went into a beautifull peece,
Hight
Aspasia, the Meretrix; and the next tosse of her
Was,
againe, of a Whore, she became a Philosopher,
Crates
the Cynick: (as it selfe doth relate it)
Since,
Kings, Knights, and Beggars, Knaues, Lords and Fooles gat it,
Besides,
Oxe, and Asse, cammel, Mule, Goat, and Brock,
In all
which it hath spoke, as in the Coblers Cock.
But I
come not here, to discourse of that matter,
Or his
One, Two, or Three, or his greath Oath, by Quater,
His
Musicks, his Trigon, his golden Thigh,
Or his
telling how Elements shift: but I
Would
aske, how of late, thou best suffered translation,
And
shifted thy coat, in these dayes of Reformation?
Androgyno:
Like
one of the Reformed, a Foole, as you see,
Counting
all old Doctrine heresie:
Nano:
But not
on thine own forbid meates hast thou venter'd?
Androgyno:
On
fish, when first, a Carthusian I enter'd.
Nano:
Why,
then thy dogmaticall Silence hath left thee?
Androgyno:
Of that
an obstreperous Lawyer bereft me.
Nano:
O
wonderfull change! when Sir Lawyer forsooke thee,
For
Pithagore's sake, what body then tooke thee?
Androgyno:
A good
dull Moyle.
Nano:
And
how?: by that meanes,
Thou
wert brought to allow of the eating of Beanes?
Androgyno:
Yes.
Nano:
But,
from the Moyle, into whome didst thou passe?
Androgyno:
Into a
very strange Beast, by some Writers cal'd an Asse;
By
others, a precise, pure, illuminate Brother,
Of
those deuoure flesh, and sometimes one an other:
And
will drop you forth a libell, or a sanctified lie,
Betwixt
euery spooneful of a Natiuity Pie.
Nano:
Now
quit thee, for Heauen, of that profane nation;
And
gently, report thy next transmigration.
Androgyno:
To the
same that I am.
Nano:
A
Creature of delight?
And
(what is more then a Foole) an Hermaphrodite?
Now
'pray thee, sweete Soule, in all thy variation,
Which
Body wouldst thou choose, to take up thy station?
Androgyno:
Troth,
this I am in, euen here would I tarry.
Nano:
Because
here, the delight of each Sexe thou canst varie?
Androgyno:
Alas,
those pleasures be stale, and forsaken;
No, it
is your Foole, wherewith I am so taken,
The
onely one Creature, that I can call blessed:
For all
other formes I have prou'd most distressed.
Nano:
Spoke
true, as thou wert in Pithagoras still.
This
learned opinion we celebrate will,
Fellow
Eunuch (as behooues us) with all our wit, and arte,
To
dignifie that, whereof our selues are so great, and special a part.
Volpone:
Now very,
very pretty: Mosca, this
Was thy
inuention?
Mosca:
If it
please my Patron,
Not else.
Volpone:
It doth
good Mosca.
Mosca:
Then it
was, Sir.
[NANO
and CASTRONE sing]
Fooles,
they are the onely Nation
Worth
mens enuy, or admiration;
Free
from care, or sorrow-taking,
Themselues,
and others merry making:
All
they speake, or do, is sterling.
Your
Foole, he is your great mans dearling,
And
your Ladies sport, and pleasure;
Tongue,
and Bable are his treasure.
His
very face begetteth laughter,
And he
speakes truth, free from slaughter;
He is
the grace of euery feast,
And,
sometimes, the cheefest guest:
Hath
his trencher, and his stoole,
When
wit shall waite upon the Foole:
O, who
would not be
He, he,
he?
[Knocking without.]
Volpone:
Who is
that? Away!
[Exeunt NANO and CASTRONE]
looke
Mosca.
Mosca:
Foole, be
gon,
It is
Signior Voltore, the Aduocate,
I know
him, by his knock.
Volpone:
Fetch me
my gowne,
My furres,
and night-caps; say, my couch is changing:
And let
him intertaine himselfe, a while,
Within in
the gallery. Now, now, my clients
Beginne
their visitation; Vulture, Kite,
Rauen, and
gor-Crowe, all my birds of prey,
That think
me turning carcasse, now they come:
I am not
for them yet.
[Re-enter
MOSCA, with the gown, &c.]
How now?
the newes?
Mosca:
A peece of
plate, Sir.
Volpone:
Of what
bignesse?
Mosca:
Huge,
Massie,
and antique, with your name inscrib'd,
And armes
ingrauen.
Volpone:
Good, And
not a Foxe
Stretch'd
on the earth, with fine delusiue sleights,
Mocking a
gaping Crow? ha, Mosca?
Mosca:
Sharpe,
Sir.
Volpone:
Give me my
furres.
[Puts
on his sick dress.]
Why dost
thou laugh so, man?
Mosca:
I cannot
choose, Sir, when I apprehend
What
thoughts he has (within) now, as he walks:
That this
might be the last gift, he should give;
That this
would fetch you; if you died to day,
And gaue
him all, what he should be to morrow;
What large
returne would come of all his venters;
How he
should worship'd be, and reuerenc'd;
Ride, with
his furres, and foote-cloths; waited on
By heards
of Fooles, and clients; have cleare way
Made for
his moyle, as letter'd as himselfe;
Be cald
the great, and learned Aduocate:
And then
concludes, there is nought impossible.
Volpone:
Yes, to be
learned, Mosca;
Mosca:
O no: rich
Implies
it. Hood an asse, with reuerend purple,
So you can
hide his two ambitious eares,
And, he
shall passe for a cathedrall Doctor.
Volpone:
My caps,
my caps, good Mosca, fetch him in.
Mosca:
Stay, Sir,
your ointment for your eyes.
Volpone:
That is
true;
Dispatch,
dispatch: I long to have possession
Of my new
present.
Mosca:
That, and
thousands more,
I hope, to
see you lord of.
Volpone:
Thankes,
kind Mosca.
Mosca:
And that,
when I am lost in blended dust,
And
hundred such, as I am, in succession --
Volpone:
Nay, that
were too much, Mosca.
Mosca:
You shall
liue,
Still, to
delude these Harpyeis.
Volpone:
Louing
Mosca,
It is
well, my pillow now, and let him enter.
[Exit
MOSCA]
Now, my
fain'd Cough, my Pthisick, and my Goute,
My
Apoplexie, Palsie, and Catarrhe,
Helpe,
with your forced functions, this my posture,
Wherein,
this three yeare, I have milk'd their hopes.
He comes,
I heare him [coughing] (vh, vh, vh, vh) o.
Scene 1.3
[Enter
MOSCA, introducing VOLTORE with a piece of plate]
Mosca:
You still
are, what you were, Sir. Onely you
(Of all
the rest) are he, commands his love:
And you do
wisely to preserue it, thus,
With early
visitation, and kinde notes
Of your
good meaning to him, which, I know,
Cannot but
come most gratefull. Patron, Sir.
Here is
Signior Voltore is come --
Volpone:
What say
you?
Mosca:
Sir
Signior Voltore is come, this morning,
To visit
you.
Volpone:
I thanke
him.
Mosca:
And hath
brought
A peece of
antique plate, bought of S t Marke,
With which
he here presents you.
Volpone:
He is
welcome.
Pray him,
to come more often.
Mosca:
Yes.
Voltore:
What saies
he?
Mosca:
He thankes
you, and desires you see him often.
Volpone:
Mosca.
Mosca:
My Patron?
Volpone:
Bring him
neare, where is he?
I long to
feele his hand.
Mosca:
The plate
is here Sir.
Voltore:
How fare
you Sir?
Volpone:
I thanke
you, Signior Voltore.
Where is
the plate? mine eyes are bad.
Voltore:
[putting
it into his hands] I am sorry,
To see you
still thus weake.
Mosca:
[aside]
That he is
not weaker.
Volpone:
You are
too munificent.
Voltore:
No Sir.
would to heauen,
I could as
well give health to you, as that plate.
Volpone:
You give
Sir what you can. I thanke you. Your love
Hath tast
in this, and shall not be vnanswer'd.
I pray you
see me often.
Voltore:
Yes, I
shall Sir.
Volpone:
Be not far
from me.
Mosca:
Do you
obserue that Sir?
Volpone:
Hearken
unto me, still. It will concerne you.
Mosca:
You are a
happy man Sir, know your good.
Volpone:
I cannot
now last long.
Mosca:
You are
his heyre Sir.
Voltore:
Am I?
Volpone:
I feele me
going, (vh,vh,vh,vh.)
I am
sayling to my port, (vh,vh,vh,vh?)
And I am
glad, I am so neere my haven.
Mosca:
Alas,
kinde gentleman, well, we must all go.
Voltore:
But,
Mosca.
Mosca:
Age will
conquer.
Voltore:
'Pray thee
heare me.
Am I
inscrib'd his heire, for certain?
Mosca:
Are you?
I do
beseech you Sir you will vouchsafe
To write
me, in your family. All my hopes,
Depend
upon your worship; I am lost,
Except the
rising Sunne do shine on me.
Voltore:
It shall
both shine, and warme thee, Mosca.
Mosca:
Sir.
I am a
man, that have not done your love
All the
worst offices here I weare your keys,
See all
your coffers, and your caskets lockt,
Keepe the
poore inuentorie of your iewels,
Your
plate, and moneyes, am your Steward Sir.
Husband
your goods here.
Voltore:
But am I
sole heyre?
Mosca:
Without a
partner Sir confirmde this morning;
The waxe
is warme yet, and the inke scarse dry
Upon the
parchment:
Voltore:
Happy,
happy me!
By what
good chance, sweete Mosca?
Mosca:
Your
desert Sir;
I know no
second cause.
Voltore:
Thy
modesty
Is loath
to know it; well, we shall requite it.
Mosca:
He euer
lik'd your course Sir. That first tooke him.
I, oft,
have heard him say, how he admir'd
Men of
your large profession, that could speake
To euery
cause, and things mere contraries,
Till they
were hearse againe, yet all be Law;
That, with
most quicke agility, could turne,
And
returne; make knots, and vndoe them;
Give
forked councell; take prouoking gold
On eyther
hand, and put it up: These men,
He knewe,
would thriue, with their humility.
And (for
his part) he thought, he should be blest
To have
his heyre of such a suffering spirit,
So wise,
so graue, of so perplex'd a tongue,
And loud
withall, that would not wag, nor scarce
Lie still,
without a fee; when euery word
Your
worship but lets fall, is a Cecchine.
[Knocking without]
Who is
that? One knockes, I would not have you seen Sir.
And yet --
pretend you came, and went in hast;
I will
fashion an excuse. And, gentle Sir,
When you
do come to swim, in golden lard,
Up to the
armes, in honey, that your chin
Is borne
up stiffe, with fatnesse of the flood,
Think on
your vassall; but remember me:
I have not
beene your worst of clients.
Voltore:
Mosca --
Mosca:
When will
you have your inuentory brought, Sir
Or see a
coppy of the Will? Anone,
I will
bring them to you Sir. Away, be gon,
Put
businesse in your face.
[Exit
VOLTORE.]
Volpone:
Excellent
Mosca!
Come
hither, let me kisse thee.
Mosca:
Keepe you
still Sir.
Here is
Corbaccio.
Volpone:
Set the
plate away,
The
Vulture is gone, and the old Rauen is come.
Scene 1.4
Mosca:
Betake
you, to your silence, and your sleepe:
[Puts
the plate away] Stand there, and multiply. Now, shall we see
A wretch,
who is (indeed) more impotent,
Then this
can fayne to be; yet hopes to hop
Ouer his
graue. [Enter CORBACCIO] Signior Corbaccio,
You are
very welcome, Sir.
Corbaccio:
How does
your Patron?
Mosca:
Troth as
he did, Sir, no amends.
Corbaccio:
What?
mendes he?
Mosca:
No, Sir:
he is rather worse.
Corbaccio:
That is
well. Where is he?
Mosca:
Upon his
couch Sir, newly fall'n a sleepe.
Corbaccio:
Does he
sleepe well?
Mosca:
No winke,
Sir, all this night,
Nor
yesterday, but slumbers.
Corbaccio:
Good. He
should take
Some
counsell of Physitians: I have brought him
An Opiate
here, from mine own Doctor --
Mosca:
He will
not heare of drugs.
Corbaccio:
Why? I my
selfe
Stood by
while it was made; saw all the ingredients:
And know,
it cannot but most gently worke.
My life
for his, it is but to make him sleepe.
Volpone:
Aye, his
last sleepe, if he would take it.
Mosca:
Sir.
He has no
faith in Physick:
Corbaccio:
'Say you?
'say you?
Mosca:
He has no
faith in Physick: He does think
Most of
your Doctors are the greater danger,
And worse
disease, to escape. I often have
Heard him
protest, that your Physitian
Should
neuer be his heyre.
Corbaccio:
Not I his
heyre?
Mosca:
Not your
Physitian, Sir.
Corbaccio:
O, no, no,
no,
I do not
meane it.
Mosca:
No Sir,
nor their fees
He cannot
brooke: He sayes, they flea a man,
Before
they kill him.
Corbaccio:
Right, I
conceiue you.
Mosca:
And then,
they do it by experiment;
For which
the Law not onely doth absolue them,
But giues
them great reward: And, he is loath
To hire
his death, so.
Corbaccio:
It is
true, they kill,
With as
much licence, as a Iudge.
Mosca:
Nay more;
For he but
kills, Sir, where the Law condemnes,
And these
can kill him, too;
Corbaccio:
Aye, or
me:
Or any
man. How does his Apoplexe?
Is that
strong on him, still?
Mosca:
Most
violent.
His speech
is broken, and his eyes are set,
His face
drawne longer, then it was wont --
Corbaccio:
How? how?
Stronger,
then he was wont?
Mosca:
No, Sir:
his face
Drawne
longer, then it was wont.
Corbaccio:
O, good.
Mosca:
His mouth
Is euer
gaping, and his eye-lids hang.
Corbaccio:
Good.
Mosca:
A freezing
numnesse stiffens all his ioynts,
And makes
the colour of his flesh like lead.
Corbaccio:
It is
good.
Mosca:
His pulse
beats slow, and dull.
Corbaccio:
Good
symptomes, still.
Mosca:
And, from
his braine --
Corbaccio:
Ha? how?
not from his braine?
Mosca:
Yes, Sir,
and from his braine --
Corbaccio:
I conceiue
you, good.
Mosca:
Flowes a
cold sweat, with a continuall rhewme,
Forth the
resolued corners of his eyes.
Corbaccio:
Is it
possible? yet I am better, ha!
How does
he, with the swimming of his head?
Mosca:
O, Sir it
is past the Scotomy; he, now,
Hath lost
his feeling, and hath left to snort:
You hardly
can perceiue him, that he breaths.
Corbaccio:
Excellent,
excellent, sure I shall outlast him:
This makes
me yong againe, a score of yeares.
Mosca:
I was a
coming for you, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Has he
made his Will?
What has
he giu'n me?
Mosca:
No, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Nothing?
ha?
Mosca:
He has not
made his Will, Sir.
Corbaccio:
O, o, o.
But what
did Voltore, the Lawyer, here?
Mosca:
He smelt a
carcasse Sir, when he but heard
My maister
was about his Testament;
As I did
vrge him to it, for your good --
Corbaccio:
He came
unto him, did he? I thought so.
Mosca:
Yes, and
presented him this peece of plate.
Corbaccio:
To be his
heire?
Mosca:
I do not
know Sir.
Corbaccio:
True,
I know it
too.
Mosca:
[aside]
By your
own scale, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Well,
I shall
preuent him, yet. See Mosca, looke,
Here, I
have brought a bag of bright Cecchines,
Will quite
weigh downe his plate.
Mosca:
[taking
the bag] Yea marry, Sir.
This is
true Physick, this your sacred Medicine,
No talke
of Opiates, to this great Elixir.
Corbaccio:
It is
Aurum palpabile, if not potabile.
Mosca:
It shall
be minister'd to him, in his boule?
Corbaccio:
Aye, do,
do, do.
Mosca:
Most
blessed Cordiall,
This will
recouer him.
Corbaccio:
Yes, do,
do, do.
Mosca:
I think,
it were not best, Sir.
Corbaccio:
What?
Mosca:
To recouer
him.
Corbaccio:
O, no, no,
no; by no meanes.
Mosca:
Why, Sir.
this
Will work
some strange effect if he but feele it.
Corbaccio:
It is
true, therefore forbeare; I will take my venter:
Give me it
againe.
Mosca:
At no
hand, pardon me;
You shall
not do your selfe that wrong Sir I
Will so
aduise you, you shall have it all.
Corbaccio:
How?
Mosca:
All Sir it
is your right, your own; no man
Can claime
a part: it is yours, without a riuall,
Decre'd by
destiny.
Corbaccio:
How? how,
good Mosca?
Mosca:
I will
tell you Sir. This fit he shall recouer;
Corbaccio:
I do
conceiue you.
Mosca:
And, on
first aduantage
Of his
gain'd sense, will I re-importune him
Unto the
making of his Testament:
And shew
him this.
[Pointing to the money]
Corbaccio:
Good,
good.
Mosca:
It is
better yet,
If you
will heare, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Yes, with
all my heart.
Mosca:
Now, would
I councell you, make home with speed;
There,
frame a Will; whereto you shall inscribe
My maister
your sole heyre.
Corbaccio:
And
disinherit
My son?
Mosca:
O Sir, the
better: for that colour
Shall make
it much more taking.
Corbaccio:
O, but
colour?
Mosca:
This Will
Sir, you shall send it unto me.
Now, when
I come to inforce (as I will do)
Your
cares, your watchings, and your many prayers,
Your more
then many gifts, your this dayes present,
And last,
produce your Will; where (without thought,
Or least
regard, unto your proper issue,
A son so
braue, and highly meriting)
The
streame of your diuerted love hath throwne you
Upon my
maister, and made him your heyre:
He cannot
be so stupide, or stone dead,
But, out
of conscience, and mere gratitude --
Corbaccio:
He must
pronounce me, his?
Mosca:
It is
true.
Corbaccio:
This plot
Did I
think on before.
Mosca:
I do
beleeue it.
Corbaccio:
Do you not
beleeue it?
Mosca:
Yes Sir.
Corbaccio:
Mine own
proiect.
Mosca:
Which when
he hath done, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Publish'd
me his heire?
Mosca:
And you so
certaine, to suruiue him.
Corbaccio:
Aye.
Mosca:
Beeing so
lusty a man.
Corbaccio:
It is
true.
Mosca:
Yes Sir.
Corbaccio:
I thought
on that too. See, how he should be
The very
organ, to expresse my thoughts!
Mosca:
You have
not onely done your selfe a good,
Corbaccio:
But
multiplied it on my son?
Mosca:
It is
right, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Still, my
inuention.
Mosca:
'Lasse
Sir, heauen knowes,
It hath
beene all my study, all my care,
(I even
grow grey withall) how to worke things --
Corbaccio:
I do
conceiue, sweet Mosca.
Mosca:
You are
he,
For whom I
labour, here.
Corbaccio:
Aye, do,
do, do:
I will
straight about
it.
[Going.]
Mosca:
Rooke go
with you, Rauen.
Corbaccio:
I know
thee honest.
Mosca:
[aside]
You do lie, Sir.
Corbaccio:
And --
Mosca:
Your
knowledge is no better then your eares, Sir.
Corbaccio:
I do not
doubt, to be a father to thee.
Mosca:
Nor I, to
gull my brother of his blessing.
Corbaccio:
I may have
my youth restor'd to me, why not?
Mosca:
Your
worship is a precious asse.
Corbaccio:
What
sayest thou?
Mosca:
I do
desire your worship, to make hast, Sir.
Corbaccio:
It is
done, it is done, I go.
[Exit]
Volpone:
[leaping
from his couch]
O, I shall
burst;
Let out my
sides, let out my sides --
Mosca:
Containe
Your fluxe
of laughter, Sir; you know, this hope
Is such a
baite, it couers any hooke.
Volpone:
O, but thy
working, and thy placing it!
I cannot
hold; good rascall, let me kisse thee:
I neuer
knew thee, in so rare a humor.
Mosca:
Alas Sir,
I but do, as I am taught;
Follow
your graue instructions; give them words;
Powre oyle
into their eares: and send them hence.
Volpone:
It is
true, it is true. What a rare punishment
Is
auarice, to it selfe?
Mosca:
Aye, with
our help, Sir.
Volpone:
So many
cares, so many maladies,
So many
feares attending on old age,
Yea, death
so often call'd on, as no wish
Can be
more frequent with them, their limbes faint,
Their
senses dull, their seeing, hearing, going
All dead
before them; yea, their very teeth,
Their
instruments of eating, failing them:
Yet this
is reckon'd life! Nay, here was one;
Is now
gone home, that wishes to liue longer!
Feeles not
his gout, nor palsy, faines himselfe
Yonger, by
scores of yeares, flatters his age,
With
confident bellying it, hopes he may
With
charmes, like A Eson, have his youth restor'd,
And with
these thoughts so battens, as if Fate
Would be
as easily cheated on, as he,
And all
turnes ayre! [Knocking within] Who is that, there, now? a
third?
Mosca:
Close, to
your couch againe: I heare his voice.
It is
Coruino, our spruce merchant.
Volpone:
[lies
down as before] Dead.
Mosca:
Another
bout, Sir, with your eyes. Who is there?
Scene 1.5
[Enter
CORVINO]
Mosca:
Signior
Coruino! come most wisht for! O,
How happy
were you, if you knew it, now!
Corvino:
Why? what?
wherein?
Mosca:
The tardie
houre is come, Sir.
Corvino:
He is not
dead?
Mosca:
Not dead,
Sir, but as good;
He knowes
no man.
Corvino:
How shall
I do then?
Mosca:
Why sir?
Corvino:
I have
brought him, here, a Pearle.
Mosca:
Perhaps,
he has
So much
remembrance left, as to know you, Sir;
He still
calls on you, nothing but your name
Is in his
mouth: Is your Pearle orient, Sir?
Corvino:
Venice was
neuer owner of the like.
Volpone:
[faintly]
Signior
Coruino.
Mosca:
Hearke.
Volpone:
Signior
Coruino.
Mosca:
He calls
you, step and give it him. He is here, Sir,
And he has
brought you a rich Pearle.
Corvino:
How do you
Sir?
Tell him,
it doubles the twelfe Caract.
Mosca:
Sir,
He cannot
vnderstand, his hearing is gone;
And yet it
comforts him, to see you --
Corvino:
Say,
I have a
Diamant for him, too.
Mosca:
Best shew
it Sir,
Put it
into his hand; it is onely there
He
apprehends: He has his feeling, yet.
See, how
he graspes it!
Corvino:
'Lasse,
good gentleman!
How
pittifull the sight is!
Mosca:
Tut,
forget Sir.
The
weeping of an heyre should still be laughter,
Vnder a
visor.
Corvino:
Why? am I
his heyre?
Mosca:
Sir, I am
sworne, I may not shew the Will,
Till he be
dead: But, here has beene Corbaccio,
Here has
beene Voltore, here were others too,
I cannot
nomber them, they were so many,
All gaping
here for legacyes; but I,
Taking the
vantage of his naming you,
(Signior
Coruino, Signior Coruino,) tooke
Paper, and
pen, and ynke, and there I ask'd him,
Whom he
would have his heyre? Coruino: Who
Should be
executor, Coruino: And,
To any
question, he was silent too,
I still
interpreted the noddes, he made,
(Though
weakenesse) for consent: and sent home the others,
Nothing
bequeath'd them, but to crie, and curse.
Corvino:
O, my
deare Mosca. [They embrace] Does he not perceiue us?
Mosca:
No more
then a blinde harper. He knowes no man,
No face of
friend, nor name of any seruant,
Who it was
that fed him last, or gaue him drinke:
Not those,
he hath begotten, or brought up
Can he
remember.
Corvino:
Has he
children?
Mosca:
Bastards,
Some
dozen, or more, that he begot on beggars,
Gipseys,
and Iewes, and Black-moores, when he was drunke.
Knew you
not that Sir? it is the common fable.
The
Dwarfe, the Foole, the Eunuch are all his;
He is the
true father of his familie,
In all,
saue me: but he has giu'n them nothing.
Corvino:
That is
well, that is well. Art sure he does not heare us?
Mosca:
Sure Sir?
why looke you, credit your own sense.
[Shouts
in Volpones ear]
The Poxe
approch, and adde to your diseases,
If it
would send you hence the sooner, Sir.
For, your
incontinence, it hath deseru'd it
Throughly,
and throughly, and the Plague to boot.
(You may
come neere, Sir) Would you would once close
Those
filthy eyes of yours, that flowe with slime,
Like two
frog-pits; and those same hanging cheekes,
Couer'd
with hide, in steede of skinne: (nay helpe, Sir)
That looke
like frozen dish-clouts, set on end.
Corvino:
Or, like
an old smoak'd wall, on which the raine
Ran downe
in streakes.
Mosca:
Excellent,
Sir, speake out;
You may be
lowder yet: A Culuering,
Discharged
in his eare would hardly bore it.
Corvino:
His nose
is like a common sewre, still running;
Mosca:
It is
good: and, what his mouth?
Corvino:
A very
draught.
Mosca:
O stop it
up --
Corvino:
By no
meanes;
Mosca:
'Pray you
let me.
Faith, I
could stifle him, rarely, with a pillow,
As well,
as any woman, that should keepe him.
Corvino:
Do as you
will, but I will be gone.
Mosca:
Be so;
It is your
presence makes him last so long.
Corvino:
I pray
you, vse no violence.
Mosca:
No, Sir?
why?
Why should
you be thus scrupulous? 'pray you, Sir.
Corvino:
Nay, at
your discretion.
Mosca:
Well, good
Sir, be gone.
Corvino:
I will not
trouble him now, to take my Pearle?
Mosca:
Puh, nor
your Diamant. What a needelesse care
Is this
afflicts you? Is not all, here yours?
Am not I
here? whom you have made? your creature?
That owe
my beeing to you?
Corvino:
Gratefull
Mosca:
Thou art
my friend, my fellow, my companion,
My
partner, and shalt share in all my fortunes.
Mosca:
Excepting
one.
Corvino:
What is
that?
Mosca:
Your
gallant wife,
Sir.
[Exit Corvino]
Now, is he
gone; we had no other meanes,
To shoote
him hence, but this.
Volpone:
My diuine
Mosca!
Thou hast
to day out-gone thy selfe.
[Knocking
within] Who is there?
I will be
troubled with no more. Prepare
Me
musicke, dances, banquets, all delights;
The Turke
is not more sensual, in his pleasures,
Then will
Volpone. Let me see, a Pearle?
A Diamant?
Plat? Cecchines? good mornings purchase;
Why this
is better then rob Churches, yet:
Or fat, by
eating (once a mon'th) a man.
[Enter MOSCA]
Who is it?
Mosca:
The
beauteous Lady Would-bee, Sir.
Wife, to
the English Knight, Sir Politique Would-bee,
(This is
the stile, Sir, is directed me)
Hath sent
to know, how you have slept to night,
And if you
would be visited.
Volpone:
Not, now.
Some three
houres, hence --
Mosca:
I told the
Squire, so much.
Volpone:
When I am
high with mirth, and wine; then, then.
'Fore
heauen, I wonder at the desperate valure
Of the
bold English, that they dare let loose
Their
wiues, to all encounters!
Mosca:
Sir, this
Knight
Had not
his name for nothing, he is politique,
And
knowes, how ere his wife affect strange ayres,
She hath
not yet the face, to be dishonest.
But had
she Signior Coruino's wiues face --
Volpone:
Has she so
rare a face?
Mosca:
O Sir, the
wonder,
The
blazing Starre of Italy; a wench
Of the
first yeare, a beauty, ripe, as haruest!
Whose
skinne is whiter then a Swan, all ouer!
Then
siluer, snow, or lillies! a soft lip,
Would
tempt you to eternity of kissing!
And flesh,
that melteth, in the touch, to bloud!
Bright as
your gold, and lovely, as your gold!
Volpone:
Why had
not I knowne this, before?
Mosca:
Alas,
Sir.
My selfe,
but yesterday, discouer'd it.
Volpone:
How might
I see her?
Mosca:
O, not
possible;
She is
kept as warily, as is your gold:
Neuer does
come abroad, neuer takes ayre,
But at a
windore. All her lookes are sweet,
As the
first grapes, or cherries; and are watch'd
As neare,
as they are.
Volpone:
I must see
her --
Mosca:
Sir.
There is a
guard, of ten spies thick, upon her;
All his
whole houshold: each of which is set
Upon his
fellow, and have all their charge,
When he
goes out, when he comes in, examin'd.
Volpone:
I will go
see her, though but at her windore.
Mosca:
In some
disguise, then?
Volpone:
That is
true, I must
Maintaine
mine own shape, still, the same: we will think.
[Exeunt]
Act 2
Scene 2.1
St. Marks Place, before CORVINOS house
Sir
Politic:
Sir, to a
wise man, all the world is his foile.
It is not
Italy, nor France, nor Europe,
That must
bound me, if my Fates call me forth.
Yet, I
protest, it is no salt desire
Of seeing
Countries, shifting a Religion,
Nor any
dis-affection to the State
Where I
was bred, (and, unto which I owe
My dearest
plots) hath brought me out; much lesse,
That idle,
antique, stale, grey-headed proiect
Of knowing
mens mindes, and manners, with Vlisses:
But, a
peculiar humour of my wiues,
Layd for
this height of Venice, to obserue,
To quote,
to learne the language, and so forth --
I hope you
trauell, Sir, with licence?
Peregrine:
Yes.
Sir
Politic:
I dare the
safelier conuerse -- How long, Sir,
Since you
left England?
Peregrine:
Seauen
weekes.
Sir
Politic:
So lately!
You have
not beene with my Lord Ambassador?
Peregrine:
Not yet,
Sir.
Sir
Politic:
'Pray you,
what newes, Sir, vents our climate?
I heard,
last night, a most strange thing reported
By some of
my Lords followers, and I long
To heare,
how it will be seconded!
Peregrine:
What was
it, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
Marry,
Sir, of a Rauen, that should build
In a ship
royall of the Kings.
Peregrine:
[aside]
This
fellow
Does he
gull me, trow? or is gull'd? your name Sir?
Sir
Politic:
My name is
Politique Would-bee.
Peregrine:
O, that
speaks him.
[aside]
A Knight, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
A poore
Knight, Sir.
Peregrine:
Your Lady
Lies here,
in Venice, for intelligence
Of tires,
and fashions, and behauiour,
Among the
Curtizans? the fine Lady Would-be?
Sir
Politic:
Yes; Sir;
the spider, and the bee, oft times,
Suck from
one flower.
Peregrine:
Good Sir
Politique!
I crie you
mercy; I have heard much of you:
It is
true, Sir, of your Rauen.
Sir
Politic:
On your
knowledge?
Peregrine:
Yes, and
your Lions whelping, in the Tower.
Sir
Politic:
Another
whelpe?
Peregrine:
Another,
Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Now
heauen!
What
prodigies be these? The Fires at Berwike!
And the
new Starre! these things concurring, strange!
And full
of omen! Saw you those Meteors?
Peregrine:
I did Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Fearefull!
Pray you Sir, confirme me,
Were there
three Porcpisces seene, aboue the Bridge,
As they
give out?
Peregrine:
Sixe, and
a Sturgeon, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
I am
astonish'd.
Peregrine:
Nay sir,
be not so;
I will
tell you a greater prodigie, then these --
Sir
Politic:
What
should these things portend!
Peregrine:
The very
day
(Let me be
sure) that I put forth from London,
There was
a Whale discouer'd, in the riuer,
As high as
Woollwich, that had waited there
(Few know
how many moneths) for the subuersion
Of the
Stode-Fleete.
Sir
Politic:
Is it
possible? Beleeue it,
It was
either sent from Spaine, or the Arch-duke,
Spinola's
Whale, upon my life, my credit;
Will they
not leaue these proiects? Worthy Sir,
Some other
newes.
Peregrine:
Faith,
Stone, the Foole, is dead;
And they
do lack a tauerne-Foole, extremely.
Sir
Politic:
Is Mass'
Stone dead?
Peregrine:
He is dead
Sir; why? I hope
You
thought him not immortall? [Aside.] O this Knight
(Were he
well knowne) would be a precious thing
To fit our
English Stage: He that should write
But such a
fellow, should be thought to faine
Extremely,
if not maliciously.
Sir
Politic:
Stone
dead?
Peregrine:
Dead.
Lord! how deepely Sir you apprehend it?
He was no
kinsman to you?
Sir
Politic:
That I
know of.
Well! that
same fellow was an vnknowne Foole.
Peregrine:
And yet
you know him, it seemes?
Sir
Politic:
I did so.
Sir,
I knew him
one of the most dangerous heads
Liuing
within the State, and so I held him.
Peregrine:
Indeed
Sir?
Sir
Politic:
While he
liu'd, in action.
He has
receiu'd weekely intelligence,
Upon my
knowledge, out of the Low Countries,
(For all
parts of the world) in cabages;
And those
dispens'd, againe, to Ambassadors,
In
oranges, musk-melons, apricocks,
Limons,
pome-citrons, and such like: sometimes,
In
Colchester-oysters, and your Selsey-cockles.
Peregrine:
You make
me wonder!
Sir
Politic:
Sir. upon
my knowledge.
Nay, I,
have obseru'd him, at your publique Ordinary,
Take his
aduertisement, from a Traueller
(A
conceald States-man) in a trencher of meate;
And,
instantly, before the meale was done,
Conuay an
answer in a tooth-pick.
Peregrine:
Strange!
How could
this be, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
Why, the
meate was cut
So like
his character, and so layd, as he
Must
easily read the cipher.
Peregrine:
I have
heard, he could not read, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
So, it was
giuen out,
(In
pollitie,) by those, that did imploy him:
But he
could read, and had your languages,
And to it,
as sound a noddle --
Peregrine:
I have
heard, Sir,
That your
Babiouns were spies; and that they were
A kinde of
subtle Nation, neare to China:
Sir
Politic:
Aye, aye,
your Mamuluchi. Faith, they had
Their hand
in a French plot, or two; but they
Were so
extremely giuen to women, as
They made
discouery of all: Yet I
Had my
aduises here (on wensday last)
From one
of their own coat, they were return'd,
Made their
relations (as the fashion is)
And now
stand faire, for fresh imployment.
Peregrine:
[aside]
'Hart!
This Sir
Poll: will be ignorant of nothing.
It seemes
Sir, you know all?
Sir
Politic:
Not all
Sir. But,
I have
some generall notions; I do love
To note,
and to obserue: Though I liue out,
Free from
the actiue torrent, yet I would marke
The
currents, and the passages of things,
For mine
own priuate vse; and know the ebbes,
And flowes
of State.
Peregrine:
Beleeueit,
Sir, I hold
My selfe,
in no small tie, unto my fortunes,
For
casting me thus luckely, upon you;
Whose
knowledge (if your bounty equall it)
May do me
great assistance, in instruction
For my
behauiour, and my bearing, which
Is yet so
rude, and raw --
Sir
Politic:
Why? came
you forth
Empty of
rules, for trauayle?
Peregrine:
Faith, I
had
Some
common ones, from out that vulgar Grammar,
Which he,
that cri'd Italian to me, taught me.
Sir
Politic:
Why, this
it is, that spoiles all our braue blouds,
Trusting
our hopefull gentry unto Pedants,
Fellowes
of out-side, and mere barke. You seeme
To be a
gentleman, of ingenuous race --
I not
professe it, but my fate hath beene
To be,
where I have been consulted with,
In this
high kinde, touching some great mens sons,
Persons of
bloud, and honor --
Peregrine:
[seeing
people approach] Who be these, Sir?
Scene 2.2
[Enter
MOSCA and NANO disguised, followed by persons with materials for
erecting a stage]
Mosca:
Vnder that
windore, there it must be. The same.
Sir
Politic:
Fellowes,
to mount a banke! Did your instructer
In the
deare Tongues, neuer discourse to you
Of the
Italian Montebankes?
Peregrine:
Yes, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Why,
Here shall
you see one.
Peregrine:
They are
Quack-saluers,
Fellowes,
that liue by venting oyles, and drugs?
Sir
Politic:
Was that
the character he gaue you of them?
Peregrine:
As I
remember.
Sir
Politic:
Pittie his
ignorance.
They are
the onely-knowing men of Europe,
Great,
generall Schollers, excellent Phisitians,
Most
admir'd States-men, profest Fauorites,
And
cabinet-Councellors, to the greatest Princes:
The onely
Languag'd-men, of all the world.
Peregrine:
And, I
have heard, they are most lewd impostors;
Made all
of termes, and shreds; no lesse beliers
Of
great-mens fauors, then their own vile med'cines;
Which they
will vtter upon monstrous othes:
Selling
that drug, for two pence, ere they part,
Which they
have valew'd at twelue crownes, before.
Sir
Politic:
Sir,
calumnies are answer'd best with silence;
Your selfe
shall iudge. Who is it mounts, my friends?
Mosca:
Scoto of
Mantua, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Is it he?
nay, then
I will
proudly promise, Sir, you shall behold
Another
man, then has beene phant'sied to you.
I wonder,
yet, that he should mount his banke
Here, in
this nooke, that has beene wont to appeare
In face of
the Piazza! Here, he comes.
[Enter
VOLPONE disguised as a mountebank and followed by a crowd of people]
Volpone:
[to
NANO] Mount Zany.
Mob:
Follow,
follow, follow, follow, follow.
Sir
Politic:
See how
the people follow him! he is a man
May write
10000. Crownes, in Banke, here. Note,
[VOLPONE
mounts the stage]
Marke but
his gesture; I do vse to obserue
The state
he keepes, in getting up!
Peregrine:
It is
worth it, Sir.
Volpone:
Most
noble Gent: and my worthy Patrons, it may seeme strange, that I, your
Scoto Mantuano, who was euer wont to fixe my Banke in face of the
publike Piazza, neare the shelter of the portico, to the Procuratia,
should, now (after eight months absence, from this illustrous Citty
of Venice) humbly retire my selfe, into an obscure nooke of the
Piazza.
Sir
Politic:
Did not I,
now, obiect the same?
Peregrine:
Peace,
Sir.
Volpone:
Let me
tel you: I am not (as your Lombard Prouerbe sayth) cold on my feete,
or content to part with my commodities at a cheaper rate, then I
accustomed; looke not for it. Nor, that the calumnious reports of
that impudent detractor, and shame to our profession, (Alessandro
Buttone, I meane) who gaue out, in publike, I was condemn'd
a'Sforzato to the Galleys, for poysoning the Cardinall Bemboos --
Cooke, hath at all attached, much lesse deiected me. No, no, worthie
Gent: (to tell you true) I cannot indure, to see the rable of these
ground Ciarlitani, that spread their clokes on the pauement, as if
they meant to do feates of actiuitie, and then come in, lamely, with
their mouldy tales out of Boccacio, like stale Tabarine, the
Fabulist: some of them discoursing their trauells, and of their
tedious captiuity in the Turkes Galleyes, when indeed (were the truth
knowne) they were the Christians Galleyes, where very temperately,
they eate bread, and drunke water, as a wholesome pennance (enioyn'd
them by their Confessors) for base pilferies.
Sir
Politic:
Note but
his bearing, and contempt of these.
Volpone:
These
turdy-facy-nasty-patie-lousie-farticall rogues, with one poore
groats-worth of vnprepar'd antimony, finely wrapt up in seuerall
'Scartoccios, are able, very well, to kill their twenty a weeke, and
play; yet these meagre steru'd spirits, who have halfe stopt the
organs of their mindes with earthy oppilations, want not their
fauourers among your shriuel'd, sallad-eating Artizans: who are
ouerioy'd, that they may have their halfeperth of Physick, though it
purge them into another world, makes no matter.
Sir
Politic:
Excellent!
have you heard better Language, Sir?
Volpone:
Well,
let them go. And Gentlemen, honourable Gentlemen, know, that for this
time, our Banque, being thus remou'd from the clamours of the
Canaglia, shall be the Scene of pleasure, and delight; For I have
nothing to sell, little or nothing to sell.
Sir
Politic:
I told
you, Sir; his ende.
Peregrine:
You did
so, Sir.
Volpone:
I
protest, I, and my sixe seruants, are not able to make of this
pretious liquor, so fast, as it is fetch'd away from my lodging, by
Gentlemen of your Citty; strangers of the Terra-ferma; worshipful
Merchants; aye, and Senators too: who, euer since my arriuall, have
detained me to their vses, by their splendidous liberalities. And
worthily. For what auayles your rich man to have his magazines stuft
with Moscadelli, or the purest grape, when his Physitians prescribe
him (on paine of death) to drinke nothing but water, cocted with
Anise-seeds? O health! health! the blessing of the rich, the riches
of the poore! who can buy thee at too deare a rate, since there is no
enioying this world, without thee? Be not then so sparing of your
purses, honorable Gentlemen, as to abridge the naturall course of
life --
Peregrine:
You see
his ende?
Sir
Politic:
Aye, is it
good?
Volpone:
For,
when a humide Fluxe, or Catarrhe, by the mutability of ayre, falls
from your head, into an arme or shouilder, or any other part; take
you a Duckat, or your Cecchine of gold, and applie to the place
affected: see, what good effect it can worke. No, no, it is this
blessed Vnguento, this rare Extraction, that hath onely power to
disperse all malignant humors, that proceede, either of hot, cold,
moist or windy causes --
Peregrine:
I would he
had put in dry too.
Sir
Politic:
'pray you,
obserue.
Volpone:
To
fortifie the most indigest, and crude stomacke, aye, were it of one,
that (through extreame weakenesse) vomited bloud, applying onely a
warme napkin to the place, after the vnction, and fricace; For the
Vertigine, in the head, putting but a drop into your nostrills,
likewise, behind the eares; a most soueraigne, and approoued remedy.
The Mall-caduco, Crampes, Convulsions, Paralysies, Epilepsies,
Tremor-cordia, retired-Nerues, ill Vapours of the spleene, Stoppings
of the Liuer, the Stone, the Strangury, Hernia ventosa, Iliaca
passio; stops a Disenteria, immediatly; easeth the torsion of the
small guts: and cures Melancolia hypocondriaca, being taken and
applyed, according to my printed Receipt. For, this is the Physitian,
this the medicine; this councells, this cures; this giues the
direction, this works the effect: and (in summe) both together may be
term'd an abstract of the theorick, and practick in the A Esculapian
Art. It will cost you eight Crownes. And, Zan Fritada, 'pray thee
sing a verse, extempore, in honour of it.
Sir
Politic:
How do you
like him, Sir?
Peregrine:
Most
strangely, I!
Sir
Politic:
Is not his
language rare?
Peregrine:
But
Alchimy,
I neuer
heard the like: or Broughtons bookes.
[NANO
sings]
Had
old Hippocrates, or Galen,
(That
to their bookes put med'cines all in)
But
knowne this secret, they had neuer
(Of
which they will be guilty euer)
Beene
murderers of so much paper,
Or
wasted many a hurtlesse taper:
No
Indian drug had ere beene famed,
Tabacco,
Sassafras not named;
Ne
yet, of Guacum one small stick, Sir,
Nor
Raymund Lullies greate Elixir.
Ne,
had beene knowne the danish Gonswart.
Or
Paracelsus, with his long-sword.
Peregrine:
All this,
yet, will not do, eight Crownes is high.
Volpone:
No
more; Gentlemen, if I had but time to discourse to you the miraculous
effects of this my oyle, surnamed oglio del Scoto, with the
count-lesse catalogue of those I have cured of the aforesayd, and
many more diseases, the Pattents and Priuiledges of all the Princes,
and Common-wealthes of Christendome, or but the depositions of those
that appear'd on my part, before the Signiry of the Sanita', and most
learned Colledge of Physitians; where I was authorized, upon notice
taken of the admirable vertues of my medicaments, and mine own
excellency, in matter of rare, and vnknowne secrets, not onely to
disperse them publiquely in this famous Citty, but in all the
Territories, that happely ioy vnder the gouernment of the most pious
and magnificent States of Italy. But may some other gallant fellow
say, O, there be diuers, that make profession to have as good, and as
experimented receipts, as yours: Indeed, very many have assay'd, like
Apes, in imitation of that, which is really, and essentially in me,
to make of this oyle; bestow'd great cost in furnaces, stilles,
alembekes, continuall fires, and preparation of the ingredients, as
indeede there goes to it sixe hundred seuerall Simples, beside, some
quantity of humane fat, for the conglutination, which we buy of the
Anatomistes; But, when these Practitioners come to the last
decoction, blow, blow, puff, puff, and all flies in fumo: ha, ha, ha.
Poore wretches! I rather pitty their folly, and indiscretion, then
their losse of time, and money; for those may be recouer'd by
industry: but to be a Foole borne is a disease incurable. For my
selfe, I alwaies from my youth have indeauor'd to get the rarest
secrets, and booke them; eyther in exchange, or for money; I spared
nor cost, nor labour, where anything was worthy to be learned. And
Gentlemen, honourable Gentlemen, I will vndertake (by vertue of
Chymicall Art) out of the honourable hat, that couers your head, to
extract the foure Elements; that is to say, the Fire, Ayre, Water,
and Earth, and returne you your felt, without burne, or staine. For,
whilst others have beene at the balloo, I have beene at my booke: and
am now past the craggy pathes of study, and come to the flowrie
plaines of honour, and reputation.
Sir
Politic:
I do
assure you, Sir, that is his ayme.
Volpone:
But, to
our price.
Peregrine:
And that
withall, Sir Poll.
Volpone:
You all
know (honourable Gentlemen) I neuer valew'd this ampulla, or violl,
at lesse then eight Crownes, but for this time, I am content, to be
depriu'd of it for sixe; sixe Crownes is the price; and lesse, in
curtesie, I know you cannot offer me; take it, or leaue it,
howsoeuer, both it, and I am at your seruice. I aske you not, as the
valew of the thing, for then I should demand of you a thousand
Crownes, so the Cardinalls Montalto, Fernese, the great Duke of
Tuscany, my Gossip, with diuers other Princes have giuen me; but I
despise money: only to shew my affection to you, honorable Gentlemen,
and your illustrous State here, I have neglected the messages of
these Princes, mine own offices, fram'd my iourney hither, onely to
present you with the fruicts of my trauells. Tune your voyces once
more, to the touch of your instruments, and give the honorable
assembly some delightfull recreation.
Peregrine:
What
monstrous, and most painefull circumstance
Is here,
to get some three, or foure Gazets?
Some
three-pence, in the whole, for that it will come to
Song
You
that would last long, list to my song,
Make no
more coyle, but buy of this oyle.
Would
you be euer faire? and yong?
Stout
of teeth? and strong of tongue?
Tart of
palat? quick of eare?
Sharpe
of sight? of nostrill cleare?
Moist
of hand? and light of foot?
(Or I
will come neerer to it)
Would
you liue free from all diseases?
Do the
act, your mistres pleases;
Yet
fright all aches from your bones?
Here is
a med'cine, for the nones.
Volpone:
Well, I
am in a humor (at this time) to make a present of the small quantity
my coffer containes: to the rich, in courtesie, and to the poore, for
Gods sake. Wherefore, now marke; I ask'd you sixe Crownes, and sixe
Crownes, at other times, you have payd me; you shall not give me sixe
Crownes, nor fiue, nor foure, nor three, nor two, nor one; nor halfe
a Duckat; no, nor a Muccinigo: six pence it will cost you, or sixe
hundred pound -- expect no lower price, for by the banner of my
front, I will not bate a bagatine, that I will have, onely, a pledge
of your loves, to carry something from amongst you, to shew, I am not
contemn'd by you. Therefore, now, tosse your handkerchiefes,
chearefully, chearefully; and be aduertised, that the first heroique
spirit, that deignes to grace me, with a handkerchiefe, I will give
it a little remembrance of something, beside, shall please it better,
then if I had presented it with a double Pistolet.
Peregrine:
Will you
be that heroique Sparke, Sir Pol?
[CELIA,
at a window above, throws down her handkerchief]
O see! the
windore has preuented you.
Volpone:
Lady, I
kisse your bounty; and, for this timely grace, you have done your
poore Scoto of Mantua, I will returne you, ouer and aboue my oyle, a
secret, of that high, and inestimable nature, shall make you for euer
enamour'd on that minute, wherein your eye first descended on so
meane, yet not altogether to be despis'd an obiect. Here is a
Poulder, conceal'd in this paper, of which, if I should speake to the
worth, nine thousand volumes were but as one page, that page as a
line, that line as a word; so short is this Pilgrimage of man (which
some call Life) to the expressing of it: would I reflect on the
price? why, the whole World were but as an Empire, that Empire as a
Prouince, that Prouince as a Banke, that Banke as a priuate Purse, to
the purchase of it. I will, onely, tell you; it is the Poulder, that
made Venus a Goddesse (giuen her by Apollo) that kept her perpetually
yong, clear'd her wrincles, firm'd her gumnmes, fill'd her skinne,
colour'd her hayre; From her, deriu'd to Helen, and at the sack of
Troy (vnfortunately) lost: Till now, in this our age, it was as
happily recouer'd, by a studious Antiquary, out of some ruines of
Asia, who sent a moyetie of it, to the Court of France (but much
sophistcated) wherewith the Ladyes there, now, colour their hayre.
The rest (at this present) remaines with me; extracted, to a Quint
essence: so that, where euer it but touches, in youth it perpetually
preserues, in age restores the complexion; seats your teeth, did they
dance like Virginall iacks, firme as a wall; makes them white, as
Iuory, that were black, as --
Scene 2.3
[Enter
CORVINO]
Corvino:
Bloud of
the deuill, and my shame! [To VOLPONE] come downe, here;
Come
downe: No house but mine to make your Scene?
Signior
Flaminio, will you downe, Sir? downe?
What is my
wife your Franciscina? Sir?
No
windores on the whole Piazza, here,
To make
your properties, but mine? but mine? [Beats away VOLPONE, NANO,
&C.]
Hart! ere
to morrow, I shall be new christen'd,
And cald
the Pantalone di Besogniosi,
About the
towne.
[Exit
CORVINO; and the crowd disperses]
Peregrine:
What
should this meane, Sir Poll?
Sir
Politic:
Some trick
of State, beleeue it. I will home.
Peregrine:
It may be
some designe on you:
Sir
Politic:
I know
not.
I will
stand upon my gard.
Peregrine:
It is your
best, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
This three
weekes, all my aduises, all my letters
They have
beene intercepted.
Peregrine:
Indeed,
Sir?
Best have
a care.
Sir
Politic:
Nay so I
will.
Peregrine:
This
Knight,
I may not
loose him, for my mirth, till night.
[Exeunt]
Scene 2.4
A room in VOLPONEs house
[Enter
VOLPONE and MOSCA]
Volpone:
O I am
wounded.
Mosca:
Where,
Sir?
Volpone:
Not
without;
Those
blowes were nothing: I could beare them euer.
But angry
Cupid, boulting from her eyes,
Hath shot
himselfe into me, like a flame;
Where,
now, he flings about his burning heat,
As in a
furnace, some ambitious fire,
Whose vent
is stopt. The fight is all within me.
I cannot
liue, except thou helpe me, Mosca;
My liuer
melts, and I, without the hope
Of some
soft ayre, from her refreshing breath,
Am but a
heape of cinders.
Mosca:
'Lasse,
good Sir,
Would you
had neuer seene her.
Volpone:
Nay, would
thou
Hadst
neuer told me of her.
Mosca:
Sir it is
true;
I do
confesse, I was vnfortunate,
And you
vnhappy: but I am bound in conscience.
No lesse
then duety, to effect my best
To your
release of torment, and I will, Sir.
Volpone:
Deare
Mosca, shall I hope?
Mosca:
Sir, more
then deare,
I will not
bidd you to dispaire of ought,
Within a
humane compasse.
Volpone:
O, there
spoke
My better
Angell. Mosca, take my keyes,
Gold,
plate, and iewells, all is at thy deuotion;
Employ
them, how thou wilt; nay, coyne me, too:
So thou,
in this, but crowne my longings. Mosca?
Mosca:
Vse but
your patience.
Volpone:
So I have.
Mosca:
I doubt
not
But bring
successe to your desires.
Volpone:
Nay, then,
I not
repent me of my late disguise.
Mosca:
If you can
horne him, Sir, you neede not.
Volpone:
True:
Besides, I
neuer meant him for my heyre.
Is not the
colour of my beards. and eye-browes,
To make me
knowne?
Mosca:
No iot.
Volpone:
I did it
well.
Mosca:
So well,
would I could follow you in mine,
With halfe
the happinesse; and, yet, I would
Escape
your Epilogue.
Volpone:
But, were
they gull'd
With a
beleefe, that I was Scoto?
Mosca:
Sir,
Scoto
himselfe could hardly have distinguish'd;
I have not
time to flatter you, we will part:
And, as I
prosper, so applaud my art.
[Exeunt]
Scene 2.5
A room in CORVINOs house
[Enter
CORVINO, sword in his hand, dragging in CELIA]
Corvino:
Death of
mine honour, with the citties Foole?
A iugling,
tooth-drawing, prating Montebanke?
And, at a
publique windore? where whilst he,
With his
strain'd action, and his dole of faces,
To his
drug-Lecture drawes your itching eares,
A crewe of
old, vn-mari'd, noted lechers,
Stood
leering up, like Satyres; and you smile,
Most
graciously? and fanne you fauours forth,
To give
your hote Spectators satisfaction?
What; was
your Montebanke their call? their whistle?
Or were
you 'enamour'd on his copper rings?
His
saffron iewell, with the toade-stone in it?
Or his
imbroydred sute, with the cope-stitch,
Made of a
herse-cloath? or his old tilt-feather?
Or his
starch'd beard? well; you shall have him, yes.
He shall
come home, and minister unto you
The
fricace, for the Mother. Or, let me see,
I think,
you had rather mount? would you not mount?
Why, if
you will mount, you may; yes truely, you may:
And so,
you may be seene, downe to the foote.
Get you a
citterne, Lady Vanity,
And be a
Dealer, with the Vertuous Man;
Make on: I
will but protest myselfe a cuckold,
And saue
your dowry. I am a Dutchman, I;
For, if
you thought me an Italian,
You would
be damn'd, ere you did this, you Whore:
Thou
wouldst tremble, to imagine, that the murder
Of father,
mother, brother, all thy race,
Should
follow, as the subiect of my iustice.
Celia:
Good Sir,
have pacience.
Corvino:
What
couldst thou propose
Lesse to
thy selfe, then, in this heate of wrath,
And stung
with my dishonour, I should strike
This
steele unto thee, with as many stabs,
As thou
wert gaz'd upon with goatish eyes?
Celia:
Alas Sir,
be appeas'd; I could not think
My beeing
at the windore should more, now,
Moue your
impatience, then at other times:
Corvino:
No? not to
seeke, and entertaine a parlee;
With a
knowne knaue? before a multitude?
You were
an Actor, with your handkercheife;
Which he,
most sweetly, kist in the receipt,
And might
(no doubt) returne it, with a letter,
And point
the place, where you might meete: your sisters,
Your
mothers, or your aunts might serue the turne.
Celia:
Why, deare
Sir, when do I make these excuses?
Or euer
stirre, abroad, but to the Church?
And that,
so seldome --
Corvino:
Well, it
shall be lesse;
And thy
restraint, before, was liberty,
To what I
now decree: And therefore, marke me.
First, I
will have this baudy light damn'd up;
And, till
it be done, some two, or three yards of,
I will
chalke a line: ore which, if thou but (chance
To) set
thy desp'rate foote; more hell, more horror,
More
wilde, remorcelesse rage shall seize on thee,
Then on a
Coniurer, that had heed-lesse left,
His
Circles saftie, ere his Deuill was layd.
Then, here
is a lock, which I will hang upon thee;
And, now I
think of it, I will keepe thee back-wards;
Thy
lodging shall be back-wards; thy walkes back-wards;
Thy
prospect-all be back-wards; and no pleasure,
That thou
shalt know, but back-wards: Nay, since you force
My honest
nature, know, it is your own
Being too
open, makes me vse you thus.
Since you
will not containe your subtill nostrills
In a
sweete roome, but, they must snuffe the ayre
Of ranke,
and sweaty passengers [Knocking within] One knocks.
Away, and
be not seene, paine of thy life;
Not looke
toward the windore: if thou dost --
(Nay stay,
heare this) let me not prosper, Whore,
But I will
make thee an Anatomy,
Dissect
thee mine own selfe, and read a lecture
Upon thee,
to the citty, and in publique.
Away.
[Exit CELIA] Who is there? [Enter SERVANT]
Servant:
It is
Signior Mosca, Sir.
Scene 2.6
Corvino:
Let him
come in. [Exit SERVANT] His master is dead: There is yet
Some good,
to helpe the bad. My Mosca, welcome;
I gesse
your newes.
Mosca:
I feare,
you cannot, Sir.
Corvino:
Is it not
his death?
Mosca:
Rather,
the contrary.
Corvino:
Not his
recouery?
Mosca:
Yes, Sir,
Corvino:
I am
curst,
I am
bewitch'd, my crosses meete to vexe me.
How? how?
how? how?
Mosca:
Why, Sir,
with Scoto's oyle;
Corbaccio,
and Voltore brought of it,
Whilst I
was busy in an inner roome --
Corvino:
Death!
that damn'd Mountebanke; but, for the Law,
Now, I
could kill the raskall: it cannot be,
His oyle
should have that vertue. Have not I
Knowne him
a common rogue, come fidling in
To the
Osteria, with a tumbling whore,
And, when
he has done all his forc'd tricks, beene glad
Of a poore
spoonefull of ded wine, with flies in it?
It cannot
be. All his ingredients
Are a
sheepes gall, a rosted bitches marrow,
Some fewe
sod earewigs pounded caterpillers,
A little
capons grease, and fasting spitle:
I know
hem, to a dram.
Mosca:
I know
not, Sir,
But some
of it, there they pour'd into his eares,
Some in
his nostrills, and recouer'd him;
Applying
but the fricace.
Corvino:
Pox on
that fricace.
Mosca:
And since
to seeme the more officious,
And
flatt'ring of his health, there, they have had
(At
extreme fees) the Colledge of Physitians
Consulting
on him how they might restore him;
Where, one
would have a cataplasme of spices,
Another a
flead Ape clapt to his brest,
A third
would have it a Dog, a fourth an oyle
With wilde
Cates skinnes: At last, they all resolu'd
That, to
preserue him, was no other meanes,
But some
yong woman must be streight sought out,
Lusty, and
ful if iuice, to sleepe by him;
And, to
this seruice (most vnhappily,
And most
vnwillingly) am I now imploy'd,
Which,
here, I thought to pre-acquaint you with,
For your
aduise, since it concernes you most,
Because, I
would not do that thing might crosse
Your ends,
on whome I have my whole dependance, Sir:
Yet if I
do it not, they may delate
My
slacknesse to my Patron, worke me out
Of his
opinion; and there, all your hopes,
Venters,
or whatsoeuer, are all frustrate.
I do but
tell you, Sir. Besides, they are all
Now
striuing, who shall first present him. Therefore --
I could
intreate you, breefly, conclude some-what:
Preuent
them if you can.
Corvino:
Death to
my hopes!
This is my
villanous fortune! best to hire
Some
common Curtezan?
Mosca:
Aye, I
thought on that, Sir.
But they
are all so subtle, full of art,
And age
againe, doting, and flexible,
So as -- I
cannot tell -- we may perchance
Light on a
queane, may cheate us all.
Corvino:
It is
true.
Mosca:
No, no: it
must be one, that has no tricks, Sir,
Some
simple thing, a creature, made unto it;
Some wench
you may command. Have you no kinswoman?
Gods son
-- Think, think, think, think, think, think, think, Sir.
One of the
Doctors offer'd, there, his daughter.
Corvino:
How!
Mosca:
Yes,
Signior Lupo, the Physitian,
Corvino:
His
daughter?
Mosca:
And a
virgin, Sir. Why? Alasse
He knowes
the state of his body, what it is;
That
naught can warme his bloud Sir, but a feuer;
Nor any
incantation raise his spirit:
A long
forgetfullnesse hath seiz'd that part.
Besides,
Sir, who shall know it? some one, or two.
Corvino:
I pray
thee give me leaue. [Walks aside] If any man
But I had
had this luck -- The thing in it selfe,
I know, is
nothing -- Wherefore should not I
As well
command my bloud, and my affections,
As this
dull Doctor? In the point of honor,
The cases
are all one, of wife, and daughter.
Mosca:
[aside]
I heare him comming.
Corvino:
She shall
do it: it is done.
Slight, if
this Doctor that is not engag'd,
Vnlesse it
be for his councell (which is nothing)
Offer his
daughter, what should I, that am
So deepely
in? I will preuent him, wretch!
Couetous
wretch! Mosca, I have determin'd.
Mosca:
How Sir?
Corvino:
We will
make all sure. The party, you wot of,
Shall be
mine own wife, Mosca.
Mosca:
Sir. The
thing,
(But that
I would not seeme to councell you)
I should
have motion'd to you at the first:
And, make
your count, you have cut all their throtes.
Why! it is
directly taking a possession!
And, in
his next fit, we may let him go.
It is but
to pul the pillow, from his head,
And he is
thratled: it had beene done, before,
But for
your scrupulous doubts.
Corvino:
Aye, a
plague on it,
My
conscience fooles my wit. Well, I will be briefe,
And so be
thou, least they should be before us:
Go home,
prepare him, tell him, with what zeale,
And
willingnesse, I do it: sweare it was,
On the
first hearing, (as thou mayst do, truely)
Mine own
free motion.
Mosca:
Sir, I
warrant you,
I will so
possesse him with it, that the rest
Of his
steru'd clients shall be banisht, all;
And onely
you receiu'd. But come not, Sir,
Vntill I
send, for I have something, else
To ripen,
for your good (you must not know it)
Corvino:
But do not
you forget to send, now.
Mosca:
Feare
not. [Exit MOSCA.]
Scene 2.7
Corvino:
Where are
you, wife? my Celia? Wife!
[Enter
CELIA, weeping]
what,
blubbering?
Come, drye
those teares. I think, thou thought'st me in earnest?
Ha? by
this light, I talk'd so but to trie thee.
Me
thinkes, the lightnesse of the occasion
Should
have confirm'd thee. Come, I am not iealous:
Celia:
No?
Corvino:
Faith, I
am not I, nor neuer was:
It is a
poore, vnprofitable humor.
Do not I
know, if women have a will,
They will
do against all the watches, of the world?
And that
the feircest spies, are tam'd with gold?
Tut, I am
confident in thee thou shalt see it:
And see, I
will give thee cause too, to beleeue it.
Come,
kisse me. Go, and make thee ready straight,
In all thy
best attire, thy choicest iewells,
Put them
all on, and, with them, thy best lookes:
We are
inuited to a solemne feast,
At old
Volpone's, where it shall appeare
How far I
am free, from iealousie, or feare.
[Exeunt]
Act 3
Scene 3.1
A street.
[Enter
MOSCA]
Mosca:
I Feare, I
shall begin to grow in love
With my
deare selfe, and my most prosp'rous parts,
They do so
spring, and burgeon; I can feele
A whimsey
in my bloud: (I know not how)
Successe
hath made me wanton. I could skip
Out of my
skinne, now, like a subtill snake,
I am so
limber. O! Your Parasite
Is a most
pretious thing, dropt from aboue,
Not bred
amongst clods, and clot-poules, here on earth.
I muse,
the Mysterie was not made a Science,
It is so
liberally profest! Almost,
All the
wise world is little else, in nature,
But
Parasites, or Sub-parasites. And, yet,
I meane
not those, that have your bare Towne-art,
To know,
who is fit to feede them; have no house,
No family,
no care, and therefore mould
Tales for
mens eares, to baite that sense; or get
Kitchin-inuention,
and some stale receipts
To please
the belly, and the groine; nor those,
With their
Court-dog-trickes, that can fawne, and fleere,
Make their
revenue out of legges, and faces,
Eccho
my-Lord, and lick away a moath:
But you
fine, elegant rascall, that can rise,
And stoope
(almost together) like an arrow;
Shoote
through the aire, as nimbly as a starre;
Turne
short, as doth a swallow; and be here,
And there,
and here, and yonder, all at once;
Present to
any humour, all occasion;
And change
a visor, swifter, then a thought.
This is
the creature, had the art borne with him;
Toyles not
to learne it, but doth practise it
Out of
most excellent nature: And such sparkes,
Are the
true Parasites, others but their Zani's.
Scene 3.2
[Enter
BONARIO]
Mosca:
[aside]
Who is this? Bonario? old Corbaccio's son?
The person
I was bound to seeke. Fayre Sir,
You are
happ'ly met.
Bonario:
That
cannot be by thee.
Mosca:
Why Sir?
Bonario:
Nay 'pray
thee know thy way, and leaue me;
I would be
loath to inter-change discourse,
With such
a mate, as thou art
Mosca:
Curteous
Sir.
Scorne not
my pouerty.
Bonario:
Not I, by
heauen,
But thou
shalt give me leaue to hate thy basenesse.
Mosca:
Basenesse?
Bonario:
Aye Answer
me, Is not thy sloth
Sufficient
argument? thy flattery?
Thy meanes
of feeding?
Mosca:
Heauen, be
good to me.
These
imputations are too common, Sir,
And eas'ly
stuck on vertue, when she is poore;
You are
vnequall to me, and how ere
Your
sentence may be righteous yet you are not,
That ere
you know me, thus, proceed in censure:
S t Marke
beare witnesse against you, it is inhumane. [Weeps]
Bonario:
[aside]
What? does he weepe? the signe is soft, and good;
I do
repent me, that I was so harsh.
Mosca:
It is
true, that sway'd, by strong necessity,
I am
enforc'd to eate my carefull bread
With too
much obsequy; it is true, beside,
That I am
faine to spin mine own poore rayment,
Out of my
mere obseruance, being not borne,
To a free
fortune: but that I have done
Base
offices, in rending friends asunder,
Diuiding
families, betraying councells,
Whispering
false lies, or mining men with prayses,
Train'd
their credulitie with periuries,
Corrupted
chastity, or am in love
With mine
own tender ease, but would not rather
Proue the
most rugged, and laborious course,
That might
redeeme, my present estimation;
Let me
here perish, in all hope of goodnesse.
Bonario:
[aside]
This cannot be a personated passion.
I was to
blame, so to mistake thy nature;
'Pray thee
forgiue me: and speake out thy bus'nesse.
Mosca:
Sir, it
concernes you; and though I may seeme,
At first,
to make a maine offence, in manners,
And in my
gratitude, unto my maister,
Yet, for
the pure love, which I beare all right,
And hatred
of the wrong, I must reueale it.
This very
houre, your father is in purpose
To
disinherit you --
Bonario:
How?
Mosca:
And thrust
you forth,
As a mere
stranger to his bloud; it is true, Sir:
The worke
no way ingageth me, but, as
I claime
an interest in the generall state
Of
goodnesse, and true vertue, which I heare
To abound
in you: and, for which mere respect,
Without a
second ayme, Sir, I have done it.
Bonario:
This tale
hath lost thee much of the late trust,
Thou hadst
with me; it is impossible:
I know not
how to lend it any thought,
My father
should be so vnnaturall.
Mosca:
It is a
confidence, that well becomes
Your
piety; and form'd (no doubt) it is,
From your
own simple innocence: which makes
Your wrong
more monstrous, and abhor'd. But, Sir,
I now,
will tell you more. This very minute,
It is, or
will be doing: And, if you
Shall be
but pleas'd to goe with me, I will bring you,
(I dare
not say where you shall see, but) where
Your eare
shall be a witnesse of the deed;
Heare your
selfe written Bastard; and profest
The common
issue of the earth.
Bonario:
I am
maz'd.
Mosca:
Sir, if I
do it not, draw your iust sword,
And score
your vengeance, on my front, and face;
Marke me
your villayne: You have too much wrong,
And I do
suffer for you, Sir. My heart
Weepes
bloud, in anguish --
Bonario:
Lead. I
follow thee.
[Exeunt]
Scene 3.3
A room in VOLPONEs house.
[Enter
VOLPONE]
Volpone:
Mosca
stayes long, me thines. Bring forth your sports
And helpe,
to make the wretched time more sweete.
[Enter
NANO, ANDROGYNO, and CASTRONE]
Nano:
Dwarfe,
Foole, and Eunuch, well mett here we be.
A
question it were now, whether of us three,
Being,
all, the knowne delicates, of a rich man,
In
pleasing him, claime the precedency can?
Castrone:
I
claime for my selfe.
Androgyno:
And,
so doth the Foole.
Nano:
It is
foolish indeed: let me set you both to schoole.
First,
for your Dwarfe, he is little, and witty,
And
euery thing, as it is little, is pritty;
Else,
why do men say to a creature (of my shape)
So
soone as they see him, it is a pritty little Ape?
And,
why a pritty Ape? but for pleasing imitation
Of
greater mens action, in a ridiculous fashion.
Beside,
this feat body of mine doth not craue
Halfe
the meat, drinke, and cloth, one of your bulkes will have.
Admit,
your Fooles face be the Mother of Laughter,
Yet,
for his braine, it must alwaies come after:
And,
though that do feede him, it is a pittifull case,
His
body is beholding to such a bad face.
Volpone:
Who is
there? my couch, Away, looke Nano, see:
[Exeunt
ANDROGYNO and CASTRONE]
Give me my
cappes, first -- go, enquire. [Exit NANO.] Now, Cupid
Send it be
Mosca, and with faire returne.
Nano:
[within]
It is the
beauteous Madam --
Volpone:
Would-bee?
is it?
Nano:
The same.
Volpone:
Now,
torment on me; squire her in:
For she
will enter, or dwell here for euer.
Nay,
quickly, [Retires to his couch] that my fit were past. I feare
A second
hell too, that my loathing this
Will quite
expell my appetite to the other:
Would she
were taking, now, her tedious leaue.
Lord, how
it threates me, what I am to suffer!
Scene 3.4
[Enter
NANO with LADY POLITIC WOULD-BE.]
Lady
Politic:
I thanke
you, good Sir. 'Pray you signifie
Unto your
Patron, I am here. This band
Shewes not
my neck inough (I trouble you, Sir,
Let me
request you, bid one of my women
Come
hether to me) In good faith, I, am drest
Most
fauorably, to day, it is no matter,
It is well
inough. [Enter 1st Waiting-Woman]
Looke,
see, these petulant things,
How they
have done this!
Volpone:
[aside]
I do feele
the Feuer
Entring,
in at mine eares; O, for a charme
To fright
it hence.
Lady
Politic:
Come
nearer: Is this curle
In his
right place? or this? why is this highter
Then all
the rest? you have not wash'd your eies, yet?
Or do they
not stand euen in your head?
Where is
your fellow? call her. [Exit 1st Waiting-Woman]
Nano:
[aside]
Now, St
Marke
Deliuer
us: anone, she will beate her women,
Because
her nose is red.
[Re-enter
1st with 2nd WOMAN]
Lady
Politic:
I pray
you, view
This tire,
forsooth; are all things apt, or no
2
Woman:
One haire
a little, here, sticks out, forsooth.
Lady
Politic:
Does it so
forsooth? and where was your deare sight
When it
did so, forsooth? what now? bird-eyd?
And you
too? 'pray you both approach, and mend it.
Now (by
that light) I muse, you are not asham'd,
I, that
have preach'd these things, so oft, unto you,
Read you
the principles, argu'd all the grounds,
Disputed
euery grace, euery fitnesse,
Call'd you
to councell of so frequent dressings --
Nano:
[aside]
(More
carefully, then of your fame, or honor)
Lady
Politic:
Made you
acquainted, what an ample dowry
The
knowledge of these things would be unto you,
Able,
alone, to get you Noble husbands
At your
returne: And you, thus, to neglect it?
Besides,
you seeing what a curious Nation
The
Italians are, what will they say of me?
The
English lady cannot dresse her selfe;
Here is a
fine imputation, to our Country:
Well, goe
your waies, and stay, in the next roome.
This fucus
was too course too, it is no matter.
Good-Sir,
you will give them entertaynement?
[Exeunt
NANO and WAITING-WOMEN.]
Volpone:
The storme
comes toward me.
Lady
Politic:
[goes
to the couch]
How does
my Volp?
Volpone:
Troubled
with noyse, I cannot sleepe; I dreamt'
That a
strange Fury entred, now, my house,
And, with
the dreadfull tempest of her breath,
Did cleaue
my roofe asunder.
Lady
Politic:
Beleeue
me, and I
Had the
most fearefull dreame, could I remember it --
Volpone:
[aside]
Out on my fate; I have giu'n her the occasion
How to
torment me: she will tell me hers.
Lady
Politic:
Me
thought, the golden Mediocrity
Polite,
and delicate --
Volpone:
O, if you
do love me,
No more; I
sweate, and suffer, at the mention
Of any
dreame: feele, how I tremble yet.
Lady
Politic:
Alasse,
good soule! the Passion of the heart.
Seed-pearle
were good now, boild with sirrope of Apples,
Tincture
of Gold, and Currall, Citron-pills,
Your
Elicampane roote, Mirobalanes --
Volpone:
[aside]
Ay me, I have ta'ne a grasse-hopper by the wing.
Lady
Politic:
Burnt
silke, and Amber, you have Muscadell
Good in
the house --
Volpone:
You will
not drinke, and part?
Lady
Politic:
No, feare
not that. I doubt, we shall not get
Some
English saffron (halfe a dram would serue)
Your
sixteene Cloves, a little Muske, dri'd Mintes,
Buglosse,
and barley-meale --
Volpone:
[aside]
She is in againe,
Before I
fayn'd diseases, now I have one.
Lady
Politic:
And these
appli'd, with a right scarlet-cloth --
Volpone:
[aside]
Another floud of words! a very torrent!
Lady
Politic:
Shall I,
Sir, make you a Poultise?
Volpone:
No, no,
no;
I am very
well: you neede prescribe no more.
Lady
Politic:
I have, a
little, studied Physick; but, now,
I am all
for Musique: saue, in the forenoones,
An houre,
or two, for Paynting. I would have
A Lady,
indeed, to have all, Letters, and Artes,
Be able to
discourse, to write, to paynt,
But
principall (as Plato holds) your Musique
(And, so
does wise Pithagoras, I take it)
Is your
true rapture; when there is concent
In face,
in voice, and clothes: and is, indeed,
Our sexes
chiefest ornament.
Volpone:
The Poet;
As old in
time, as Plato, and as knowing,
Says that
your highest female grace is Silence.
Lady
Politic:
Which of
your Poets? Petrarch? or Tasso? or Dante?
Guerrini?
Ariosto? Aretino?
Cieco di
Hadria? I have read them all.
Volpone:
[aside]
Is euery thing a cause, to my distruction?
Lady
Politic:
I think, I
have two or three of them, about me.
Volpone:
[aside]
The sunne, the sea will sooner, both, stand still,
Then her
æternall tongue; nothing can scape it.
Lady
Politic:
Here is
Pastor Fido --
Volpone:
[aside]
Professe obstinate silence,
That is,
now, my safest.
Lady
Politic:
All our
English Writers,
I meane
such, as are happy in the Italian,
Will
deigne to steal out of this Author, mainely;
Almost as
much, as from Montagnie;
He has so
moderne, and facile a veine,
Fitting
the time, and catching the Court-eare.
Your
Petrarch is more passionate, yet he,
In dayes
of Sonetting, trusted them, with much:
Dante is
hard, and fewe can vnderstand him.
But, for a
desperate wit, there is Aretine;
Onely, his
pictures are a little obscene --
You marke
me not?
Volpone:
Alasse, my
mind is perturb'd.
Lady
Politic:
Why in
such cases we must cure our selues,
Make vse
of our Philosophie --
Volpone:
O 'ay me.
Lady
Politic:
And, as we
find our passions do rebell,
Encounter
them with reason; or diuert them,
By giuing
scope unto some other humour
Of lesser
danger: As, in politique bodyes,
There is
nothing, more doth ouerwhelme the iudgment,
And clouds
the vnderstanding, then too much
Setling,
and fixing, and (as it were) subsiding
Upon one
obiect. For the incorporating
Of these
same outward things, into that part,
Which we
call mentall, leaues some certaine fæces,
That stop
the organs, and as Plato sayes,
Assassinates
our Knowledge.
Volpone:
[aside]
Now, the spirit
Of
patience helpe me.
Lady
Politic:
Come, in
faith, I must
Visit you
more, a dayes; and make you well:
Laugh, and
be lusty.
Volpone:
[aside]
My good Angell saue me.
Lady
Politic:
There was
but one sole man, in all the world,
With whom
I ere could sympathize; and he
Would lie
you often three, foure houres together,
To heare
me speake: and be (sometime) so rap't,
As he
would answer me, quite from the purpose,
Like you,
and you are like him, iust. I will discourse
(And it be
but only, Sir, to bring you a sleepe)
How we did
spend our time, and loves, together,
For some
sixe yeares.
Volpone:
O, o, o,
o, o, o.
Lady
Politic:
For we
were Coætanei, and brought up --
Volpone:
Some
power, some fate, some fortune rescue me.
Scene 3.5
[Enter
MOSCA]
Mosca:
God saue
you, Madam.
Lady
Politic:
Good Sir.
Volpone:
Mosca?
welcome,
Welcome to
my redemption.
Mosca:
Why, Sir?
Volpone:
[aside
to MOSCA] O,
Rid me of
this my torture, quickly, there;
My Madam,
with the euerlasting voyce:
The Bells,
in time of pestilence, ne're made
Like
noyse, or were in that perpetuall motion;
The
Cock-pit comes not neare it. All my house,
But now,
steam'd like a bath, with her thicke breath.
A Lawyer
could not have beene heard; nor scarse
Another
Woman such a hayle of words
She has
let fall. For hells sake, ridd her hence.
Mosca:
Has she
presented?
Volpone:
O, I do
not care,
I will
take her absence, upon any price,
With any
losse.
Mosca:
Madam.
Lady
Politic:
I have
brought your Patron
A toy, a
cap here, of mine own worke --
Mosca:
It is
well,
I had
forgot to tell you, I saw your Knight,
Where you
would little think it --
Lady
Politic:
Where?
Mosca:
Many,
Where yet,
if you make hast you may apprehend him,
Rowing
upon the water in a gondole,
With the
most cunning Curtizan, of Venice.
Lady
Politic:
Is it
true?
Mosca:
Pursue
them, and beleeue your eyes;
Leaue me,
to make your gift. [Exit LADY POLITIC hastily] I knew, it
would take:
For
lightly, they, that vse themselues most licence,
Are still
most iealous.
Volpone:
Mosca,
hearty thanks,
For thy
quick fiction, and deliuery of me.
Now, to my
hopes, what saist thou?
[Re-enter
LADY POLITIC]
Lady
Politic:
But do you
heare, Sir?
Volpone:
Againe; I
feare a paroxisme.
Lady
Politic:
Which way
Row'd they
together?
Mosca:
Toward the
Rialto.
Lady
Politic:
I pray
you, lend me your Dwarfe.
Mosca:
I pray
you, take him --
[Exit LADY POLITIC.]
Your
hopes, Sir, are like happy blossomes, fayre,
And
promise timely fruict, if you will stay
But the
maturing; keepe you, at your couch,
Corbaccio
will arriue straight, with the Will:
When he is
gone, I will tell you more.
[Exit.]
Volpone:
My bloud,
My spirits
are return'd; I am aliue:
And like
your wanton gam'ster, at Primero,
Whose
thought had whisper'd to him not go lesse,
Me thinkes
I lie, and drawe -- for an encounter.
[The
bed-curtains close upon VOLPONE]
Scene 3.6
The Passage Leading to VOLPONEs Chamber.
[Enter
MOSCA and BONARIO]
Mosca:
Sir, here
conceald, [Shows him a closet.] you may here all. But 'pray
you
Have
patience, Sir; [Knocking within] the same is your father,
knocks:
I am
compeld, to leaue you.
[Exit]
Bonario:
Do so.
Yet,
Cannot my
thought imagine this a truth.
[Goes
into the closet]
Scene 3.7
Another part of the same.
[Enter
MOSCA and CORVINO, CELIA following.]
Mosca:
Death on
me! you are come too soone, what meant you?
Did not I
say, I would send?
Corvino:
Yes, but I
feard
You might
forget it, and then they preuent us.
Mosca:
Preuent?
did ere man hast so, for his hornes?
A Courtier
would not ply it so, for a place.
Well, now
there is no helping it, stay here;
I will
presently returne.
[Crosses
stage to BONARIO.]
Corvino:
Where are
you, Celia?
You know
not, wherefore I have brought you hether?
Celia:
Not well,
except you told me.
Corvino:
Now, I
will:
Hearke
hether. [He leads her apart, and whispers to her.]
Mosca:
[to
BONARIO]
Sir, your
father hath sent word,
It will be
halfe an houre, ere he come;
And
therefore, if you please to walke, the while,
Into that
gallery -- at the vpper end,
There are
some bookes, to entertaine the time:
And I will
take care, no man shall come unto you, Sir.
Bonario:
Yes, I
will stay there; [aside] I do doubt this fellow.
[Exit
BONARIO]
Mosca:
[looking
after him]
There, he
is farre inough; he can heare nothing:
And, for
his father, I can keepe him of.
[Goes
to VOLPONES couch, opens the curtains, and whispers with him.]
Corvino:
[to
CELIA]
Nay, now,
there is no starting back; and therefore,
Resolue
upon it: I have so decree'd.
It must be
done. Nor, would I moue it, afore,
Because I
would auoyd all shifts and tricks,
That might
deny me.
Celia:
Sir, let
me beseech you,
Affect not
these strange trialls; if you doubt
My
chastity, why lock me up, for euer:
Make me
the heyre of darkenesse. Let me liue,
Where I
may please your feares, if not your trust.
Corvino:
Beleeue
it, I have no such humor, I.
All that I
speake, I meane; yet I am not mad:
Not
horne-mad, see you? Go to, shew your selfe
Obedient,
and a wife.
Celia:
O heauen!
Corvino:
I say it,
Do so.
Celia:
Was this
the traine?
Corvino:
I have
told you reasons;
What the
Phisitians have set downe; how much,
It may
concerne me; what my ingagements are;
My meanes;
and the necessity of those meanes,
For my
recouery: wherefore, if you be
Loyall,
and mine, be wonne, respect my venture.
Celia:
Before
your honour?
Corvino:
Honour?
tut, a breath;
There is
no such thing, in nature: a mere terme
Inuented
to awe fooles. What is my gold
The worse,
for touching? clothes, for being look'd on?
Why, this
is no more. An old, decrepite wretch,
That has
no sense, no sinewe; takes his meate
With
others fingers; onely knowes to gape,
When you
do scald his gummes; a voice; a shadow;
And, what
can this man hurt you?
Celia:
Lord! what
spirit
Is this
hath entred him?
Corvino:
And for
your same,
That is
such a ligg; as if I would go tell it,
Crie it,
on the Piazza! who shall know it?
But he,
that cannot speake it; and this fellow,
Whose
lippes are in my pocket: saue your selfe,
If you
will proclaime it, you may. I know no other,
Should
come to know it.
Celia:
Are
heauen, and Saints then nothing?
Will they
be blind, or stupide?
Corvino:
How?
Celia:
Good Sir,
Be iealous
stil, æmulate them; and think
What hate
they burne with, toward euery sinne.
Corvino:
I graunt
you; if I thought it were a sinne,
I would
not vrge you. Should I offer this
To some
young Frenchman, or hot Tuscane bloud,
That had
read Aretine, conn'd all his printes,
Knew euery
quirke within lusts Laborinth,
And were
profest Cristique, in lechery;
And I
would loope upon him, and applaud him,
This were
a sinne: but here, it is contrary,
A pious
worke, mere charity, for Physick,
And honest
politie, to assure mine own.
Celia:
O heauen,
canst thou suffer such a change?
Volpone:
Thou art
mine honor, Mosca and my pride,
My ioy, my
tickling, my delight: go, bring them.
Mosca:
[advancing]
Please you drawe neare, Sir.
Corvino:
Come on,
what --
You will
not be rebellious? By that light --
Mosca:
Sir,
Signior Coruino, here, is come to see you,
Volpone:
O!
Mosca:
And,
hearing of the consultation had,
So lately,
for your health, is come to offer,
Or rather,
Sir, to prostitute --
Corvino:
Thankes,
sweete Mosca,
Mosca:
Freely,
vna -- sk'd, or vn -- intreated --
Corvino:
Well.
Mosca:
(As the
true, feruent instance of his love)
His own
most faire, and proper wife; the beauty,
Onely of
price, in Venice --
Corvino:
It is well
vrg'd.
Mosca:
To be your
comfortresse, and to preserue you.
Volpone:
Alasse, I
am past already. 'Pray you, thanke him,
For his
good care, and promptnesse. But for that,
It is a
vaine labour, eene to fight, against heauen;
Applying
fire to a stone: (uh, uh, uh, uh,) [coughing]
Making a
dead leafe grow againe. I take
His wishes
gently, though; and, you may tell him,
What I
have done for him: Mary, my state is hopelesse,
Will him,
to pray for me: and to vse his fortune,
With
reuerence, when he comes to it.
Mosca:
Do you
heare, Sir?
Go to him,
with your wife.
Corvino:
[to
CELIA] Heart of my father!
Wilt thou
persist thus? Come. I pray thee, come.
Thou seest
it is nothing: Celia. By this hand,
I shall
grow violent. Come, do it, I say.
Celia:
Sir, kill
me, rather: I will take downe poyson,
Eate
burning coales, do any thing --
Corvino:
Be damn'd.
(Heart I
will drag thee hence, home, by the haire;
Cry thee a
strumpet, through the streetes; rip up
Thy mouth,
unto thine eares; and slit thy nose,
Like a raw
rotchet -- Do not tempt me, come,
Yeld, I am
loth -- (Death) I will buy some slaue,
Whom I
will kill, and binde thee to him, aliue;
And, at my
windore, hang you forth: deuising
Some
monstrous crime, which I, in CAPITAL letters,
Will eate
into thy flesh, with Aqua-fortis,
And
burning cor'siues, on this stubborne brest.
Now, by
the bloud, thou hast incens'd, I will do it.
Celia:
Sir, what
you please, you may, I am your Martyr.
Corvino:
Be not
thus obstinate, I have not deseru'd it:
Think, who
it is, intreats you. 'Pray thee, sweete;
(Good'faith)
thou shalt have iewells, gownes, attires,
What thou
wilt think, and aske -- Do, but, goe kisse him.
Or touch
him, but. For my sake. At my sute.
This once.
No? Not? I shall remember this.
Will you
disgrace me, thus? Do you thirst my vndoing?
Mosca:
Nay,
gentle Lady, be aduis'd.
Corvino:
No, no.
She has watch'd her time. God's precious -- this is skiruy: it is
very skiruie: And you are --
Mosca:
Nay good,
Sir.
Corvino:
An errant
Locust, by heauen, a Locust. Whore,
Crocodile,
that hast thy teares prepar'd,
Expecting,
how thou wilt bid hem flow.
Mosca:
Nay, 'Pray
you, Sir,
She will
consider.
Celia:
Would my
life would serue
To
satisfie --
Corvino:
(S'Death)
if she would but speake to him,
And saue
my reputation, it were somewhat;
But,
spightfully to affect my vtter ruine:
Mosca:
Aye, now
you have put your fortune, in her hands.
Why in
faith, it is her modesty, I must quit her;
If you
were absent, she would be more comming;
I know it:
and dare vndertake for her.
What woman
can, before her husband? 'pray you,
Let us
departe, and leaue her, here.
Corvino:
Sweete
Celia,
Thou mayst
redeeme all, yet; I will say no more:
If not,
esteeme your selfe as lost, -- Nay, stay there.
[Shuts
the door, and exit with MOSCA]
Celia:
O God, and
his good Angells! whether, whether
Is shame
fled humane brests? that, with such ease,
Men dare
put of your honors, and their own?
Is that,
which euer was a cause of life,
Now
place'd beneath the basest circumstance?
And
modesty an exile made, for money?
Volpone:
Aye in
Coruino, and such earth-fed mindes,
[leaping
from his couch]
That neuer
tasted the true heau'n of love.
Assure
thee, Celia, he that would sell thee,
Onely for
hope of gaine, and that vncertaine,
He would
have sold his part of Paradise
For ready
money, had he met a Cope-man.
Why art
thou maz'd, to see me thus reuiu'd?
Rather,
applaud thy beauties miracle;
It is thy
great worke: that hath, not now alone,
But sundry
times, rays'd me, in seuerall shapes,
And, but
this morning, like a Mountebanke;
To see
thee at thy windore. Aye, before
I would
have left my practise, for thy love,
In varying
figures, I would have contended
With the
blew Proteus, or the horned Floud.
Now, art
thou welcome.
Celia:
Sir.
Volpone:
Nay, flie
me not;
Nor, let
thy false imagination
That I was
bedrid, make thee think, I am so:
Thou shalt
not find it. I am, now, as fresh,
As hot, as
high, and, in as Iouiall plight,
As when
(in that so celebrated Scene,
At
recitation of our Como edie,
For
entertayment of the great Valoys)
I acted
yong Antinou+s; and atracted
The eyes,
and eares of all the Ladies, present,
To admire
each gracefull gesture, note, and footing.
Song
Come,
my Celia, let us proue,
While
we can, the sports of love;
Time
will not be ours, for euer,
He, at
length, our good will seuer;
Spend
not then his guiftes, in vaine.
Sunnes,
that set, may rise againe:
But if,
once, we loose this light,
It is
with us perpetuall night.
Why
should we deferre our ioyes?
Fame,
and rumor are but toyes.
Cannot
we delude the eyes
Of a
few poore houshold-spies?
Or his
easier eares beguile,
Thus
remooued, by our wile?
It is
no sinne, loves fruicts to steale;
But the
sweete thefts to reveale:
To be
taken, to be seene,
These
have crimes accounted beene.
Celia:
Some
serene blast me, or dire lightning strike
This my
offending face.
Volpone:
Why
droopes my Celia?
Thou hast,
in place of a base husband, found
A worthy
lover: vse thy fortune well,
With
secrecy, and pleasure. See, behold,
What thou
art Queene of; not in expectation,
As I feede
others: but possess'd, and crown'd.
See, here,
a rope of pearle; and each, more orient
Then that
the braue A Egiptian Queene carrous'd:
Dissolue,
and drinke them. See, a Carbuncle,
May put
out both the eyes of our St Marke;
A Diamant,
would have bought Lollia Paulina,
When she
came in, like star-light, hid with iewells,
That were
the spoyles of Prouinces; take these,
And weare,
and loose them: Yet, remaines an Eare-ring
To
purchase them againe, and this whole State.
A Gem, but
worth a priuate patrimony,
Is
nothing: we will eate such at a meale.
The heads
of parrots, tongues of nightingalles,
The
braynes of peacocks, and of estriches
Shall be
our foode: and, could we get the pho enix,
(Though
Nature lost her kind) she were our dish.
Celia:
Good Sir,
these things might moue a minde affected
With such
delights; but I, whose innocence
Is all I
can think wealthy, or worth the enioying,
And, which
once lost, I have nought to loose beyond it,
Cannot be
taken with these sensuall baytes:
If you
have conscience --
Volpone:
It is the
Beggers vertue,
If thou
hast wisdome, heare me Celia.
Thy bathes
shall be the iuyce of Iuly-flowers,
Spirit of
roses, and of violets,
The milke
of vnicornes, and panthers breath
Gather'd
in bagges, and mixt with Cretan wines.
Our drinke
shall be prepared gold, and amber;
Which we
will take, vntill my roofe whirle round
With the
vertigo: and my Dwarfe shall dance,
My Eunuch
sing, my Foole make up the antique.
Whilst,
we, in changed shapes, act Ouids tales,
Thou, like
Europa now, and I like Ioue,
Then I
like Mars, and thou like Erycine,
So, of the
rest, till we have quite run through
And
weary'd all the fables of the Gods.
Then will
I have thee, in more moderne formes,
Attired
like some sprightly Dame of France,
Braue
Tuscan lady, or proud Spanish Beautie;
Sometimes,
unto the Persian Sophies Wife;
Or the
grand-Signiors Mistresse; and, for change,
To one of
our most arte-full Curtezans,
Or some
quick Negro, or cold Russian;
And I will
meete thee, in as many shapes:
Where we
may, so, trans-fuse our wandring soules,
Out at our
lippes, and score up summes of pleasures, [Sings]
That
the curious shall not know,
How to
tell them, as they flow;
And the
enuious, when they find
What
there number is, be pind.
Celia:
If you
have eares, that will be pierc'd -- or eyes,
That can
be open'd -- a heart, may be touch'd --
Or any
part, that yet sounds man, about you --
If you
have touch of holy Saints -- or Heauen --
Do me the
grace, to let me scape -- if not,
Be
bountifull, and kill me -- you do know,
I am a
creature, hether ill betrayd,
By one,
whose shame I would forget it were --
If you
will daigne me neither of these graces,
Yet feede
your wrath, Sir, rather then your lust --
(It is a
vice, comes nearer manlinesse --)
And punish
that vnhappy crime of nature,
Which you
miscall my beauty -- Flea my face,
Or poison
it, with oyntments, for seducing
Your bloud
to this rebellion -- Rub these hands,
With what
may cause an eating leprosie,
Even to my
bones, and marrow -- Any thing,
That may
dis-fauour me, saue in my honour --
And I will
kneele to you, 'pray for you, pay downe
A thousand
howrely vowes, Sir, for your health --
Report,
and think you vertuous --
Volpone:
Think me
cold,
Frosen,
and impotent, and so report me?
That I had
Nestor's hernia, thou wouldst think.
I do
degenerate, and abuse my Nation,
To play
with oportunity, thus long:
I should
have done the act, and then have parlee'd.
Yeeld, or
I will force thee.
[Seizes
her.]
Celia:
O, iust
God.
Volpone:
In vaine
--
Bonario:
[rushing
in]
Forbeare,
foule rauisher, libidinous swine,
Free the
forc'd lady, or thou dy'st, Impostor.
But that I
am loath to snatch thy punishment
Out of the
hand of Iustice, thou shouldst, yet,
Be made
the timely sacrifice of vengeance,
Before
this Altar, and this drosse, thy Idoll.
Lady, let
us quit the place, it is the den
Of
villany; feare nought you have a guard:
And he,
ere long, shall meete his iust reward.
[Exeunt
BONARIO and CELIA.]
Volpone:
Fall on
me, roofe, and bury me in ruine,
Become my
graue, that wert my shelter. O,
I am
vn-masqu'd, vn-spirited, vn-done,
Betray'd
to beggary, to infamy --
Scene 3.8
[Enter
MOSCA, wounded and bleeding.]
Mosca:
Where
shall I runne, most wretched shame of men,
To beate
out my vn-luckie braines?
Volpone:
Here,
here.
What? dost
thou bleede?
Mosca:
O, that
his well-driu'n sword
Had beene
so curteous, to have cleft me downe,
Unto the
nauill; e're I liu'd to see
My life,
my hopes, my spirits, my Patron, all
Thus
desperately engaged, by my error.
Volpone:
Woe, on
thy fortune.
Mosca:
And my
follies, Sir.
Volpone:
Thou hast
made me miserable.
Mosca:
And my
selfe, Sir.
Who would
have thought, he would have harken'd, so?
Volpone:
What shall
we do?
Mosca:
I know
not, if my heart
Could
expiate the mischance, I would pluck it out.
Will you
be pleas'd to hang me? or cut my throate?
And I will
requite you, Sir. Let us die like Romanes,
Since we
have liu'd, like Grecians. [Knocking within]
Volpone:
Hearke,
who is there?
I heare
some footing, Officers, the Saffi,
Come to
apprehend us! I do feele the brand
Hissing,
already, at my fore-head: now,
Mine eares
are boring.
Mosca:
To your
couch, Sir, you
Make that
place good, how euer. [VOLPONE lies down, as before.]
Guilty men
Suspect,
what they deserue still. Signior Corbaccio!
Scene 3.9
[Enter
CORBACCIO with VOLTORE behind, unseen.]
Corbaccio:
Why! how
now? Mosca!
Mosca:
O, vndone,
amaz'd, Sir.
Your son
(I know not, by what accident)
Acquainted
with your purpose, to my Patron,
Touching
your Will, and making him your heire;
Entred our
house with violence, his sword drawne,
Sought for
you, call'd you wretch, vnnaturall,
Vow'd he
would kill you.
Corbaccio:
Me?
Mosca:
Yes, and
my Patron.
Corbaccio:
This act,
shall disinherit him indeed:
Here is
the Will.
Mosca:
It is
well, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Right, and
well.
Be you as
carefull, now, for me.
Mosca:
My life,
Sir,
Is not
more tenderd, I am onely yours.
Corbaccio:
How does
he? will he die shortly, think'st thou?
Mosca:
I feare
He will
out-last May.
Corbaccio:
To day?
Mosca:
No,
last-out May, Sir,
Corbaccio:
Couldst
thou not give him a dram?
Mosca:
O by no
meanes, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Nay, I
will not bid you.
Voltore:
[coming
forward] This is a knaue, I see.
Mosca:
[seeing
VOLTORE, aside] How, Signior Voltore! did he heare me?
Voltore:
Parasite!
Mosca:
Who is
that? O, Sir, most timely welcome --
Voltore:
Scarce,
To the
discouery of your tricks, I feare.
You are
his, onely? and mine, also? are you not?
Mosca:
Who? I,
Sir?
Voltore:
You, Sir.
What deuise is this
About a
Will?
Mosca:
A plot for
you, Sir.
Voltore:
Come,
Put not
your foysts upon me, I shall sent them.
Mosca:
Did you
not heare it?
Voltore:
Yes, I
heare, Corbaccio
Hath made
your Patron, there, his heire.
Mosca:
It is
true,
By my
deuise, drawne to it by my plot,
With hope
--
Voltore:
Your
Patron should reciprocate?
And, you
have promis'd?
Mosca:
For your
good, I did, Sir.
Nay more,
I told his son, brought, hid him here,
Where he
might heare his father passe the deed:
Being
perswaded to it, by this thought, Sir,
That the
vnnaturallnesse, first, of the act,
And then,
his fathers oft disclayming in him,
Which I
did meane to helpe on, would sure enrage him
To do some
violence upon his parent,
On which
the law should take sufficient hold,
And you be
stated in a double hope:
Truth be
my comfort, and my conscience,
My onely
ayme was, to dig you a fortune
Out of
these two, old, rotten Sepulchers --
Voltore:
I cry thee
mercy Mosca.
Mosca:
Worth your
patience,
And your
great merit, Sir. And, see the change!
Voltore:
Why? what
successe?
Mosca:
Most
happlesse! you must helpe, Sir.
Whilst we
expected the old Rauen, in comes
Coruino's
wife, sent hether, by her husband --
Voltore:
What, with
a present?
Mosca:
No, Sir,
On visitation;
(I will
tell you how, anone) and, staying long,
The youth,
he growes impatient, rushes forth,
Seizeth
the lady, wound's me, makes her sweare
(Or he
would murder her, that was his vow)
To affirme
my patron would have done her rape:
Which how
vnlike it is, you see! and, hence,
With that
pretext, he is gone, to accuse his father;
Defame my
Patron; defeate you --
Voltore:
Where is
her husband?
Let him be
sent for, streight.
Mosca:
Sir, I
will go fetch him.
Voltore:
Bring him,
to the Scrutineo.
Mosca:
Sir, I
Will.
Voltore:
This must
be stopt.
Mosca:
O, you do
nobly, Sir.
Alasse, it
was labor'd all, Sir, for your good;
Nor was
there want of councell, in the plot:
But
fortune can, at any time, ore throw
The
proiects of a hundred learned Clearkes, Sir.
Corbaccio:
[listening]
What is that?
Voltore:
Wilt
please you, Sir, to go along?
[Exit
CORBACCIO followed by VOLTORE]
Mosca:
Patron, go
in, and pray for our successe.
Volpone:
[rising
from his couch]
Need makes
deuotion; Heauen your labor blesse.
[Exeunt]
Act 4
Scene 4.1
A street.
[Enter
SIR POLITIC WOULD-BE and PEREGRINE.]
Sir
Politic:
I told
you, Sir, it was a plot: you see
What
obseruation is. You mention'd me,
For some
instructions: I will tell you, Sir,
(Since we
are met, here, in this height of Venice)
Some few
perticulars, I have set downe,
Onely, for
this meridian, fit to be knowne
Of your
crude Trauailer, and they are these.
I will not
touch, Sir, at your phrase, or clothes,
For they
are old.
Peregrine:
Sir, I
have better.
Sir
Politic:
Pardon
I meant,
as they are Theames.
Peregrine:
O, Sir,
proceed:
I will
slander you no more of wit, good Sir.
Sir
Politic:
First, for
your garbe, it must be graue, and serious,
Very
reseru'd, and lock't; not tell a secret,
On any
termes, not to your father; scarse
A fable,
but with caution; make sure choise
Both of
your company, and discourse; beware,
You neuer
speake a truth --
Peregrine:
How?
Sir
Politic:
Not to
strangers,
For those
be they, you must conuerse with, most;
Others I
would not know, Sir, but, at distance,
So as I
still might be a sauer, in them:
You shall
have tricks, else, past upon you, hourely.
And then,
for your Religion, professe none;
But
wonder, at the diuersity of all;
And, for
your part, protest, were there no other
But simply
the Lawes, of the Land, you could content you:
Nic:
Machiauell, and Monsieur Bodine, both,
Were of
this minde. Then, must you learne the vse,
And
handling of your siluer forke, at meales;
The
mettall of your glasse -- These are maine matters,
With your
Italian, and to know the hower,
When you
must eat your melons, and your figges.
Peregrine:
Is that a
point of State, too?
Sir
Politic:
Here it
is,
For your
Venetian, if he see a man
Preposterous,
in the least, he has him straight;
He has: he
strippes him. I will acquaint you, Sir,
I now have
liu'd here (it is some fourteene monthes)
Within the
first weeke, of my landing here,
All tooke
me for a Citizen of Venice:
I knew the
formes, so well --
Peregrine:
[Aside]
And nothing else.
Sir
Politic:
I had read
Contarene, tooke me a house,
Dealt with
my Iewes, to furnish it with moueables --
Well, if I
could but finde one man -- one man,
To mine
own heart, whome I durst trust -- I would --
Peregrine:
What?
what, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
Make him
rich; make him a fortune:
He should
not think, againe. I would command it.
Peregrine:
As how?
Sir
Politic:
With
certaine proiects, that I have:
Which, I
may not discouer.
Peregrine:
[aside]
If I had
But one to
wager with, I would lay odds, now,
He tells
me, instantly.
Sir
Politic:
One is,
(and that
I care not
greatly, who knowes) to serue the State
Of Venice,
with red herrings, for three yeares,
And at a
certaine rate, from Roterdam,
Where I
have correspendence. There is a letter,
Sent me
from one of the States, and to that purpose;
He cannot
write his name, but that is his marke.
Peregrine:
He is a
Chaundler?
Sir
Politic:
No, a
Cheesemonger.
There are
some other two, with whome I treate
About the
same negotiation;
And -- I
will vndertake it: For, it is thus,
I will do
it with ease, I have cast it all. Your hoigh
Carries
but three men in her, and a boy;
And she
shall make me three returnes, a yeare:
So, if
there come but one of three, I saue,
If two, I
can defalke. But, this is now,
If my
mayne proiect faile.
Peregrine:
Then, you
have otheres?
I should
be loath to draw the subtill ayre
Sir
Politic:
Of such a
place, without my thousand aymes.
I will not
dissemble, Sir, where ere I come,
I love to
be consideratiue; and, it is true,
I have, at
my free houres, thought upon
Some
certaine Goods, unto the State of Venice,
Which I do
call my Cautions: and, Sir, which
I meane
(in hope of pension) to propound
To the
great Councell, then unto the Forty,
So to the
Ten. My meanes are made already --
Peregrine:
By whome?
Sir
Politic:
Sir, one,
that though his place be obscure,
Yet, he
can sway, and they will heare him. He is
A
Commandadore.
Peregrine:
What, a
common sergeant?
Sir
Politic:
Sir, such,
as they are, put it in their mouthes,
What they
should say, sometimes: as well as greater.
I think I
have my notes, to shew you [Searching his pockets.]
Peregrine:
Good, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
But, you
shall sweare unto me, on your gentry,
Not to
anticipate --
Peregrine:
I, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
Nor
reueale
A
circumstance -- My paper is not with me.
Peregrine:
O, but,
you can remember, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
My first
is
Concerning
Tinder-boxes. You must know,
No family
is, here, without its boxe;
Now Sir,
it being so portable a thing,
Put case,
that you, or I were ill affected
Unto the
State: Sir, with it, in our pockets,
Might not
I go into the Arsenale?
Or you?
come out againe? and none the wiser?
Peregrine:
Except
your selfe, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Go to,
then. I, therefore,
Aduertise
to the State, how fit it were,
That none,
but such as were knowne Patriots,
Sound
lovers of their country, should be sufferd
To enioy
them in their houses: And, euen those,
Seald, at
some office, and at such a bignesse,
As might
not lurke in pockets.
Peregrine:
Admirable!
Sir
Politic:
My next
is, how to enquire, and be resolu'd,
By present
demonstration, whether a Ship,
Newly
arriued from Soria, or from
And
suspected part of all the Leuant,
Be guilty
of the Plague: And, where they vse
To lie out
forty, fifty dayes, sometimes,
About the
Lazaretto, for their triall;
I will
saue that charge, and losse unto the merchant,
And, in an
houre, cleare the doubt.
Peregrine:
Indeede,
Sir?
Sir
Politic:
Or -- I
will loose my labour.
Peregrine:
My faith,
that is much.
Sir
Politic:
Nay, Sir,
conceiue me. It will cost me, in onions,
Some
thirty Liu'res --
Peregrine:
Which is
one pound sterling.
Sir
Politic:
Beside my
water-workes: For this I do, Sir.
First, I
bring in your ship, 'twixt two brickwalles;
(But those
the State shall venter) on the one
I straine
me a fayre tarre-paulin; and, in that,
I stick my
onions, cut in halfes: the other
Is full of
loope holes, out at which, I thrust
The noses
of my bellowes; and, those bellowes
I keepe,
with water-workes, in perpetuall motion,
Which is
the easi'st matter of a hundred.)
Now, Sir,
your onion, which doth naturally
Attract
the infection, and your bellowes, blowing
The aire
upon him, will shew (instantly)
By his
chang'd colour, if there be contagion;
Or else,
remaine as faire, as at the first:
Now it is
knowne, it is nothing.
Peregrine:
You are
right, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
I would, I
had my note.
Peregrine:
'Faith, so
would I:
But, you
have done well, for once, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Were I
false,
Or would
be made so, I could shew you reasons,
How I
could sell this State, now, to the Turke;
Spight of
their Galleys, or their [Examining his papers]
Peregrine:
Pray you,
Sir Poll.
Sir
Politic:
I have
them not, about me.
Peregrine:
That I
fear'd.
They are
there, Sir?
Sir
Politic:
No. This
is my Diary,
Wherein I
note my actions of the day.
Peregrine:
'Pray you,
let us see, Sir. What is here? [Reads.] Notandum,
A Rat
had gnawne my spur-lethers; notwithstanding,
I put
on new, and did go forth: but, first,
I threw
three beanes ouer the threshold. Item,
I went,
and bought two tooth-pickes, whereof one
I
burst, immediatly, in a discourse
With a
dutch Merchant, about Ragion del stato.
From
him, I went, and payd a moccinigo,
For
peecing my silke stockings; by the way,
I
cheapend sprats: and at St Markes, I vrin'd.
'Faith,
these are politique notes!
Sir
Politic:
Sir, I do
slippe
No action
of my life, thus, but I quote it.
Peregrine:
Beleeue
me, it is wise!
Sir
Politic:
Nay, Sir,
read forth.
Scene 4.2
[Enter,
at a distance, LADY POLITIC WOULD-BE, NANO, and two WAITING-WOMEN.]
Lady
Politic:
Where
should this loose Knight be, trow? sure he is hous'd.
Nano:
Why, then
he is fast.
Lady
Politic:
Aye, he
plaies both, with me:
I pray
you, stay. This heate will do more harme
To my
complexion, then his heart is worth;
(I do not
care to hinder, but to take him)
How it
comes of! [Rubbing her cheeks.]
Woman:
My maister
is, yonder.
Lady
Politic:
Where?
Woman:
With a
yong Gentleman.
Lady
Politic:
That same
is the party,
In mans
apparell. 'Pray you, Sir, iog my Knight:
I will be
tender to his reputation,
How euer
he demerit.
Sir
Politic:
[seeing
her] My Lady!
Peregrine:
Where?
Sir
Politic:
It is she
indeed Sir, you shall know her. She is,
Were she
not mine, a Lady of that merite,
For
fashion, and behauiour; and, for beauty
I durst
compare --
Peregrine:
It seemes,
you are not iealous,
That dare
commend her.
Sir
Politic:
Nay, and
for discourse --
Peregrine:
Beeing
your wife, she cannot misse that.
Sir
Politic:
[introducing
Peregrine] Madame,
Here is a
Gentleman, 'pray you, vse him, fayrely,
He seemes
a youth, but he is --
Lady
Politic:
None?
Sir
Politic:
Yes, one
Has put
his face, as soone, into the world --
Lady
Politic:
You meane,
as early? but to day?
Sir
Politic:
How is
this?
Lady
Politic:
Why in
this habit, Sir, you apprehend me.
Well M r
Would-bee, this doth not become you;
I had
thought, the odour, Sir, of your good name,
Had beene
more precious to you; that you would not
Have done
this dire massacre, on your honour;
One of
your grauitie, and ranke, besides:
But,
Knights, I see, care little for the oath
They make
to Ladies; chiefely their own Ladies.
Sir
Politic:
Now by my
Spurres (the Symbole of my Knight-hood)
Peregrine:
(Lord! how
his brayne is humbled, for an oath)
Sir
Politic:
I reach
you not.
Lady
Politic:
Right,
Sir, your politie
May beare
it through, thus. [To PEREGRINE.] Sir, a word with you.
I would be
loath, to contest, publikely,
With any
Gentlewoman or to seeme
Froward,
or violent (as the Courtier sayes)
It comes
too neare rusticity, in a Lady,
Which I
would shun, by all meanes: and, how-euer
I may
deserue from Mr Would-bee, yet,
To have
one fayre Gentlewoman, thus, be made
The vnkind
instrument, to wrong another,
And one
she knowes not; aye, and to perseuer:
In my
poore iudgement, is not warranted
From being
a solo ecisme in our sexe,
If not in
manners.
Peregrine:
How is
this!
Sir
Politic:
Sweete
Madame,
Come
nearer to your ayme.
Lady
Politic:
Mary, and
will, Sir.
Since you
prouoke me, with your impudence,
And
laughter of your light land-Syren, here,
Your
Sporus, your Hermaphrodite --
Peregrine:
What is
here:
Poe+tique
fury, and Historique stormes?
Sir
Politic:
The
Gentleman, beleeue it, is of worth,
And of our
Nation.
Lady
Politic:
Aye, your
white-Friars nation?
Come, I
blush for you, M r Would-bee, I;
And am
asham'd, you should have no more forehead,
Then,
thus, to be the Patron, or Saint George
To a lewd
harlot, a base fricatrice,
A female
deuill, in a male out-side.
Sir
Politic:
Nay,
And you be
such a one! I must bid, adieu
To your
delights. The case appeares too liquide. [Exit]
Lady
Politic:
Aye, you
may carry it cleare, with your State-face;
But, for
your Carniuale Concupiscence,
Who here
is fled, for liberty of conscience,
From
furious persecution of the Marshall,
Her will I
disc'ple.
Peregrine:
This is
fine, In faith!
And do you
vse this, often? is this part
Of your
wits exercise, against you have occasion?
Madam --
Lady
Politic:
Go to,
Sir.
Peregrine:
Do you
heare me, Lady?
Why, if
your Knight have set you to begge shirts,
Or to
inuite me home, you might have done it
A nearer
way, by farre:
Lady
Politic:
This
cannot worke you,
Out of my
snare.
Peregrine:
Why? am I
in it, then?
Indeed,
your husband told me, you were fayre,
And so you
are; onely, your nose enclines
(That
side, that is next the Sunne) to the Queene-apple:
Lady
Politic:
This
cannot be indur'd, by any patience.
Scene 4.3
[Enter
MOSCA.]
Mosca:
What is
the matter, Madame?
Lady
Politic:
If the
Senate
Right not
my quest, in this; I will protest them,
To all the
world, no Aristocracye.
Mosca:
What is
the iniurie, Lady?
Lady
Politic:
Why, the
callet,
You told
me of, here I have ta'ne disguis'd.
Mosca:
Who? this?
What meanes your Ladiship? The creature
I
mention'd to you, is apprehended, now,
Before the
Senate, you shall see her --
Lady
Politic:
Where?
Mosca:
I will
bring you to her. This yong Gentleman
I saw him
land, this morning, at the Port.
Lady
Politic:
Is it
possible! how has my iudgement wander'd?
Sir, I
must, blushing, say to you, I have err'd:
And plead
your pardon.
Peregrine:
What! more
changes, yet?
Lady
Politic:
I hope,
you have not the malice to remember
A
Gentlewomans passion. If you stay,
In Venice,
here, please you to vse me, Sir --
Mosca:
Will you
goe, Madam?
Lady
Politic:
'Pray you,
Sir, vse me. In faith,
The more
you vse me the more I shall conceiue,
You have
forgot our quarrell.
[Exeunt
LADY WOULD-BE, MOSCA, NANO, and WAITING-WOMEN.]
Peregrine:
This is
rare!
Sir
Politique Would-bee? No, Sir Politique Baud.
To bring
me, thus, acquainted with his wife!
Well, wise
Sir Pol: since you have practis'd, thus,
Upon my
freshman-ship, I will trie your salt-head,
What
proofe it is against a counter-plot.
[Exit.]
Scene 4.4
The Scrutineo.
[Enter
VOLTORE, CORBACCIO, CORVINO, and MOSCA.]
Voltore:
Well, now
you know the carriage of the businesse,
Your
constancy is all, that is requir'd
Unto the
safety of it.
Mosca:
Is the lie
Safely
conuai'd amongst us? Is that sure?
Knowes
euery man his burden?
Corvino:
Yes.
Mosca:
Then,
shrinke not.
Corvino:
[aside
to MOSCA] But, knowes the Aduocate the truth?
Mosca:
O, Sir,
By no
meanes. I deuis'd a formall tale,
That
salu'd your reputation. But, be valiant, Sir.
Corvino:
I feare no
one, but him; that, this his pleading
Should
make him stand for a co-heire --
Mosca:
Co-halter,
Hang him:
we will but vse his tongue, his noise,
As we do
Croakers, here.
Corvino:
Aye, what
shall he do?
Mosca:
When we
have done, you meane?
Corvino:
Yes.
Mosca:
Why, we
will think,
Sell him
for Mummia, he is halfe dust already.
[to
VOLTORE.] Do not you smile, to see this Buffalo,
How he
does sport it with his head? [Aside.] -- I should
If all
were well, and past. Sir, onely you
Are here,
that shall enioy the crop of all,
And these
not know for whome they toile.
Corbaccio:
Aye,
peace.
Mosca:
[turning
to CORVINO] But you shall eate it. [Aside.]
Much. [to
VOLTORE.] Worshipfull Sir,
Mercury
sit upon your thundring tongue,
Or the
French Hercules, and make your language
As
conquering as his club, to beate along,
(As with a
tempest) flat, our aduersaries;
But, much
more, yours, Sir.
Voltore:
Here they
come, have done.
Mosca:
I have
another witnesse, if you neede, Sir,
I can
produce.
Voltore:
Who is it?
Mosca:
Sir, I
have her.
Scene 4.5
[Enter
AVOCATORI and take their seats; BONARIO, CELIA, NOTARIO,
COMMENDATORI,
SAFFI, and other OFFICERS OF JUSTICE.]
1
Avocatore:
The like
of this the Senate neuer heard of.
2
Avocatore:
It will
come most strange to them, when we report it.
4
Avocatore:
The
Gentlewoman has beene euer held
Of
vn-reproued name.
3
Avocatore:
So has the
youth.
4
Avocatore:
The more
vnnaturall part that of his father.
2
Avocatore:
More, of
the husband.
1
Avocatore:
I not know
to give
His act a
name, it is so monstrous!
4
Avocatore:
But the
Impostor, he is a thing created
To exceed
example!
1
Avocatore:
And all
after times!
2
Avocatore:
I neuer
heard a true voluptuary.
Discrib'd,
but him.
3
Avocatore:
Appeare
yet those were cited?
Notario:
All, but
the old magnifico, Volpone.
1
Avocatore:
Why is not
he here?
Mosca:
Please
your Fatherhoods,
Here is
his Avuocate. Himselfe is, so weake,
So feeble
--
4
Avocatore:
What are
you?
Bonario:
His
Parasite,
His Knaue,
his Pandar -- I beseech the Court,
He may be
forc'd to come, that your graue eies
May beare
strong witnesse of his strange impostures.
Voltore:
Upon my
faith, and credit, with your vertues,
He is not
able to endure the ayre.
2
Avocatore:
Bring him,
howe euer.
3
Avocatore:
We will
see him.
4
Avocatore:
Fetch him.
Voltore:
Your
Father-hoodes fit pleasures be obey'd,
[Exeunt
OFFICERS.]
But sure,
the sight will rather mooue your pittyes,
Then
indignation; may it please the Court,
In the
meane time, he may be heard in me:
I know
this Place most voide of preiudice,
And
therefore craue it, since we have no reason
To feare
our truth should hurt our cause.
3
Avocatore:
Speake
free.
Voltore:
Then know,
most honor'd Fathers, I must now
Discouer,
to your strangely abused eares,
The most
prodigious, and most frontlesse piece
Of solid
impudence, and trechery,
That euer
vicious nature yet brought forth
To shame
the State of Venice. This lewd woman
(That
wants no artificiall lookes, or teares,
To helpe
the visor, she has now put on)
Hath long
beene knowne a close adultresse,
To that
lasciuious youth there, not suspected,
I say, but
knowne; and taken, in the act,
With him;
and by this man, the easie husband,
Pardon'd:
whose timelesse bounty makes him, now,
Stand
here, the most vnhappy, innocent person,
That euer
mans own vertue made accus'd.
For these,
not knowing how to owe a gift
Of that
deare grace, but with their shame; being plac'd
So aboue
all powers of their gratitude,
Began to
hate the benefit; and, in place
Of
thankes, deuise to extirpe the memory
Of such an
act: wherein, I pray your Father-hoods,
To obserue
the malice, yea, the rage of creatures
Discouer'd
in their euils; and what heart
Such take,
euen, from their crimes. But that, anone,
Will more
appeare. This Gentleman, the father,
Hearing of
this foule fact, with many others,
That dayly
strooke at his too-tender eares,
And,
grieu'd in nothing more, then that he could not
Preserue
himselfe a parent (his sons ills
Growing to
that strange floud) at last decreed
To
dis-inherit him.
1
Avocatore:
These be
strange turnes!
2
Avocatore:
The yong
mans fame was euer faire, and honest.
Voltore:
So much
more full of danger is his vice,
That can
beguile so, vnder shade of vertue.
But as I
said (my honour'd Sires) his father
Having
this setled purpose, (by what meanes
To him
betray'd, we know not) and this day
Appointed
for the deed, that Parricide,
(I cannot
stile him better) by confederacy
Preparing
this his Paramour, to be there,
Entred
Volpone's house (who was the man
Your
Father-hoods must vnderstand, design'd
For the
inheritance) there, sought his father;
But, with
what purpose sought he him, my Sires?
(I tremble
to pronounce it, that a son
Unto a
father, and to such a father
Should
have so foule, felonious intent)
It was, to
murder him. When, being preuented
By his
more happy absence, what then did he?
Not check
his wicked thoughts; no, now new deedes:
(Mischiefe
doth euer ende. Where it begins)
An act of
horror, Fathers! he drag'd forth
The aged
Gentleman, that had there lien, bed-rid,
Three
yeares, and more, out off his innocent couch,
Naked upon
the floore, there left him; wounded
His
seruant in the face; and, with this strumpet
The stale
to his for'gd practise, who was glad
To be so
actiue, (I shall here desire
Your
Father-hoods to note but my collections,
As most
remarkable) thought, at once, to stop
His
fathers ends; discredit his free choise,
In the old
Gentleman; redeeme themselues,
By laying
infamy, upon this man
To whome,
with blushing, they should woe their liues.
1
Avocatore:
What
proofes have you of this?
Bonario:
Most
honour'd Fathers,
I humbly
craue, there be no credite giuen
To this
mans mercenary tongue.
2
Avocatore:
Forbeare.
Bonario:
His soule
moues in his face.
3
Avocatore:
O, Sir.
Bonario:
This
fellow,
For six
sols more, would pleade against his Maker.
1
Avocatore:
You do
forget your selfe.
Voltore:
Nay, nay,
graue Fathers,
Let him
have scope; can any man imagine
That he
will spare his accuser, that would not
Have
spar'd his parent?
1
Avocatore:
Well,
produce your proofes.
Celia:
I would, I
could forget, I were a creature.
Voltore:
Signior
Corbaccio. [CORBACCIO comes forward.]
4
Avocatore:
What is
he?
Voltore:
The
father.
2
Avocatore:
Has he had
an oath?
Notario:
Yes.
Corbaccio:
What must
I do now?
Notario:
Your
testimony is crau'd.
Corbaccio:
Speake to
the knaue?
I will
have my mouth, first, stopt with earth; my heart
Abhors his
knowledge: I disclaime in him
1
Avocatore:
But, for
what cause?
Corbaccio:
The mere
portent of nature.
He is an
vtter stranger to my loynes.
Bonario:
Have they
made you to this?
Corbaccio:
I will not
heare thee,
Monster of
men, swine, goate, wolfe, Parricide,
Speake
not, thou viper.
Bonario:
Sir, I
will sit downe,
And rather
wish my innocence should suffer,
Then I
resist the authority of a father.
Voltore:
Signior
Coruino. [CORVINO comes forward.]
2
Avocatore:
This is
strange!
1
Avocatore:
Who is
this?
Notario:
The
husband.
4
Avocatore:
Is he
sworne?
Notario:
He is.
3
Avocatore:
Speake
then.
Corvino:
This woman
(please your Father-hoods) is a whore,
Of most
hot exercise, more then a partrich,
Upon
record --
1
Avocatore:
No more.
Corvino:
Neighes,
like a gennet.
Notario:
Preserue
the honour of the Court.
Corvino:
I shall,
And
modesty of your most reuerend eares.
And, yet,
I hope that I may say, these eyes
Have seene
her glew'd unto that peece of Cedar;
That fine
well-timber'd gallant: and that, here,
The
letters may be read, through the horne,
That make
the story perfect.
Mosca:
Excellent,
Sir.
Corvino:
[aside
to MOSCA] There is no harme in this, now, is there?
Mosca:
None.
Corvino:
Or if I
said, I hop'd that she were onward
To her
damnation, if there be a hell
Greater
then whore, and woman; a good Christian
May make
the doubt.
3
Avocatore:
His griefe
hath made him frantique.
1
Avocatore:
Remoue
him, hence.
[CELIA
swoons.]
2
Avocatore:
Looke to
the woman.
Corvino:
Rare!
Prettily
fain'd! againe!
4
Avocatore:
Stand from
about her.
1
Avocatore:
Give her
the ayre.
3
Avocatore:
[to
MOSCA] What can you say?
Mosca:
My wound
(May it
please your wisdomes) speakes for me, receiu'd
In ayde of
my good Patron, when he mist
His sought
for father, when that well-taught dame
Had her
Qu: giuen her, to crie out a rape.
Bonario:
O, Most
lay'd impudence! Fathers.
3
Avocatore:
Sir, be
silent,
You had
your hearing free, so must they theirs.
2
Avocatore:
I do begin
to doubt the imposture, here.
4
Avocatore:
This
woman, has too many moodes.
Voltore:
Graue
Fathers,
She is a
creature, of a most profest,
And
prostituted lewdnesse.
Corvino:
Most
impetuous,
Vnsatisfied,
graue Fathers.
Voltore:
May her
faynings
Not take
your wisdomes: but, this day, she bayted
A
stranger, a graue Knight, with her loose eeyes,
And more
lasciuious kisses. This man [indicating MOSCA] saw them
Together,
on the water, in a Gondola.
Mosca:
Here is
the Lady herselfe, that saw them too,
Without;
who, then, had in the open streetes
Pursew'd
them, but for sauing her Knights honour.
1
Avocatore:
Produce
that Lady.
2
Avocatore:
Let her
come. [Exit MOSCA.]
4
Avocatore:
These
things
They
strike, with wonder!
3
Avocatore:
I am
turn'd a stone!
Scene 4.6
[Enter
MOSCA with LADY WOULD-BE.]
Mosca:
Be
resolute, Madam.
Lady
Politic:
Aye, this
same is she. [Pointing to CELIA.]
Out, thou
Chameleon harlot; now, thine eyes
Vie teares
with the Hyæna: darst thou looke
Upon my
wronged face? I crie your pardons.
I feare, I
have (forgettingly) transgrest
Against
the dignity of the Court --
2
Avocatore:
No,
Madame.
Lady
Politic:
And beene
exorbitant --
2
Avocatore:
You have
not, Lady.
4
Avocatore:
These
proofes are strong.
Lady
Politic:
Surely, I
had no purpose,
To
scandalize your Honors, or my sexes.
3
Avocatore:
We do
beleeue it.
Lady
Politic:
Surely,
you may beleeue it.
2
Avocatore:
Madame, we
do.
Lady
Politic:
Indeede,
you may; my breeding
Is not so
course --
4
Avocatore:
We know
it.
Lady
Politic:
To offend
With
pertinacy --
3
Avocatore:
Lady.
Lady
Politic:
Such a
presence;
No,
surely.
1
Avocatore:
We well
think it.
Lady
Politic:
You may
think it.
1
Avocatore:
Let her
o'recome. [To BONARIO.] What witnesses have you,
To make
good your report?
Bonario:
Our
consciences:
Celia:
And
heauen, that neuer fayles the innocent.
4
Avocatore:
These are
no testimonies.
Bonario:
Not, in
your Courts,
Where
multitude, and clamour, ouercomes.
1
Avocatore:
Nay, then
you do waxe insolent.
[Re-enter
OFFICERS, bearing VOLPONE on a couch. LADY POLITIC
embraces
him.]
Voltore:
Here,
here,
The
testimony comes, that will conuince,
And put to
vtter dumbnesse, their bold tongues.
See here,
graue Fathers, here is the Rauisher,
The Rider
on mens wiues, the great Impostor,
The grand
Voluptuary: Do you not think,
These
limbes should affect Venery? or these eyes
Couet a
concubine? 'Pray you, marke these hands,
Are they
not fit to stroke a Ladies brests?
Perhaps,
he doth dissemble.
Bonario:
So he
does.
Voltore:
Would you
have him tortur'd?
Bonario:
I would
have him prou'd.
Voltore:
Best trie
him, then, with goades, or burning Irons;
Put him to
the strappado; I have heard,
The Rack
hath cur'd the goute; faith, give it him,
And helpe
him of a malady, be courteous:
I will
vndertake, before these honor'd Fathers,
He shall
have, yet, as many left diseases,
As she has
knowne adulterers, or thou strumpets.
O, my most
equall Hearers, if these deedes,
Acts, of
this bold, and most exorbitant straine,
May passe
with suffrance; what one Cittizen,
But owes
the forfeit of his life, yea fame,
To him
that dares traduce him? Which of you
Are safe,
my honord Fathers? I would aske
(With
leaue of your graue Father-hoods) if their plot
Have any
face, or colour like to truth?
Or if,
unto the dullest nostrill, here,
It smell
not ranke, and most abhorred flaunder?
I craue
your care of this good Gentleman,
Whose life
is much indanger'd, by their fable;
And, as
for them, I will conclude with this,
That
vicious persons when they are hot, and flesh'd
In impious
acts, their constancy abounds:
Damn'd
deedes are done with greatest confidence.
1
Avocatore:
Take them
to custody, and seuer them.
[CELIA and
BONARIO are taken out.]
2
Avocatore:
It is
pitty, two such prodigies should liue.
1
Avocatore:
Let the
old Gentleman be return'd, with care;
[Exeunt
OFFICERS with VOLPONE.]
I am sory,
our credulity wrong'd him.
4
Avocatore:
These are
two creatures!
3
Avocatore:
I have an
earthquake in me!
2
Avocatore:
Their
shame (euen in their cradles) fled their faces.
4
Avocatore:
[To
VOLTORE] You have done a worthy seruice to the State, Sir,
In their
discouery.
1
Avocatore:
You shall
heare, ere night,
What
punishment the Court decrees upon them.
Voltore:
We thanke
your Father-hoods. [Exeunt AVOCATORI, NOTARIO, and OFFICERS.]
[To
MOSCA.] How like you it?
Mosca:
Rare.
I would
have your tongue, Sir, tipt with gold, for this;
I would
have you be the heyre to the whole Citty;
The earth
I would have want men, ere you want liuing:
They are
bount to erect your Statue, in St Markes.
Signior
Coruino, I would have you goe,
And shew
your selfe, that you have conquer'd.
Corvino:
Yes.
Mosca:
[aside
to CORVINO] It was much better, that you should professe
Your selfe
a cuckold, thus; then that the other
Should
have beene prou'd.
Corvino:
Nay I
consider'd that;
Now it is
her fault:
Mosca:
Then, it
had beene yours.
Corvino:
True, I do
doubt this Aduocate, still.
Mosca:
In faith,
You need
not, I dare ease you of that care.
Corvino:
I trust
thee, Mosca.
Mosca:
As your,
own soule, Sir.
[Exit CORVINO.]
Corbaccio:
Mosca!
Mosca:
Now for
your businesse, Sir.
Corbaccio:
How? have
you busines?
Mosca:
Yes,
yours, Sir.
Corbaccio:
O, none
else?
Mosca:
None else,
not I.
Corbaccio:
Be
carefull, then.
Mosca:
Rest you,
with both your eies, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Dispatch
it,
Mosca:
Instantly.
Corbaccio:
And looke,
that all,
What-euer,
be put in, iewells, plate, moneyes,
House-holdstuffe,
bedding, curtines.
Mosca:
Curtine-rings,
Sir.
Onely, the
Aduocates fee must be deducted.
Corbaccio:
I will pay
him, now: you will be too prodigall.
Mosca:
Sir. I
must tender it.
Corbaccio:
Two
Cecchines is well?
Mosca:
No, sixe,
Sir.
Corbaccio:
It is too
much.
Mosca:
He talk'd
a great while,
You must
consider that, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Well,
there is three --
Mosca:
I will
give it him.
Corbaccio:
Do so, and
there is for thee.
[Exit.]
Mosca:
Bountifull
bones! What horride strange offence
Did he
commit against nature, in his youth,
Worthy
this age? [To VOLTORE.] You see, Sir, how I worke
Unto your
ends; take you no notice.
Voltore:
No,
I will
leaue you.
Mosca:
All, is
yours; [exit VOLTORE] the Deuill, and all,
Good
Aduocate! Madame, I will bring you home.
Lady
Politic:
No, I will
go see your Patron.
Mosca:
That you
shall not:
I will
tell you, why. My purpose is, to vrge
My patron
to reforme his Will; and, for
The zeale,
you have shew'n to day, whereas before
You were
but third, or fourth, you shall be now
Put in the
first; which would appeare as beg'd,
If you be
present. Therefore --
Lady
Politic:
You shall
sway me.
[Exeunt.]
Act 5
Scene 5.1
A room in VOLPONEs house.
[Enter
VOLPONE.]
Volpone:
Well, I am
here; and all this brunt is past:
I ne're
was in dislike with my disguise,
Till this
fled moment; here, it was good, in priuate,
But, in
your publike, Caue, whilst I breath.
'Fore God,
my left legge began to have the crampe;
And I
appre'nded, straight, some power had strooke me
With a
dead Palsey: Well, I must be merry,
And shake
it off. A many of these feares
Would put
me into some villanous disease,
Should
they come thick upon me: I will preuent them.
Give me a
boule of lusty wine, to fright
This humor
from my heart; [Drinks.] (Hum, hum, hum)
It is
almost gone, already: I shall conquer.
Any
deuise, now, of rare, ingenious knauery,
That would
possesse me with a violent laughter,
Would make
me up, againe: [Drinks again.] So, so, so, so.
This heate
is life; it is blood, by this time: Mosca!
Scene 5.2
[Enter
MOSCA.]
Mosca:
How now,
Sir? does the day looke cleare againe?
Are we
recouerd? and wrought out of error,
Into our
way? to see our path, before us?
Is our
trade free, once more?
Volpone:
Exquisite
Mosca!
Mosca:
Was it not
carry'd learnedly?
Volpone:
And
stoutly.
Good wits
are greatest in extremities.
Mosca:
It were a
folly, beyond thought, to trust
Any grand
act unto a cowardly spirit:
You are
not taken with it, enough, me thinkes?
Volpone:
O, more,
then if I had enioy'd the wench:
The
pleasure of all woman-kind is not like it.
Mosca:
Why, now
you speake, Sir. We must, here be fixt;
Here, we
must rest; this is our maister-peice;
We cannot
think, to goe beyond this.
Volpone:
True.
Thou hast
playd thy prise, my precious Mosca.
Mosca:
Nay Sir,
To gull
the Court --
Volpone:
And, quite
diuert the torrent,
Upon the
innocent.
Mosca:
Yes, and
to make
So rare a
Musique, out of Discordes --
Volpone:
Right.
That, yet,
to me is the strangest! how thou hast borne it!
That these
(being so diuided amongst them selues)
Should not
sent some-what, or in me, or thee,
Or doubt
their own side.
Mosca:
True. They
will not see it;
Too much
light blinds them, I think: each of them
Is so
possest, and stuft with his own hopes,
That any
thing, unto the contrary,
Neuer so
true, or neuer so apparent,
Neuer so
palpable, they will resist it --
Volpone:
Like a
temptation of the Deuill.
Mosca:
Right Sir.
Merchants
may talke of trade, and your great Signiors
Of land,
that yeelds well; but if Italy
Have any
glebe, more fruictfull, then these fellowes,
I am
deceiu'd. Did not your Aduocate rare?
Volpone:
O, my
most honor'd Fathers, my graue Fathers,
Vnder
correction of your Father-hoods,
What
face of truth is, here? If these strange deedes
May
passe, most honour'd Fathers -- I had much a do
To
forbeare laughing.
Mosca:
It seem'd
to me, you sweate, Sir.
Volpone:
In troth,
I did a little.
Mosca:
But
confesse, Sir,
Were you
not daunted?
Volpone:
In good
faith, I was
A little
in a mist; but not deiected:
Neuer, but
still my selfe.
Mosca:
I think
it, Sir.
Now (so
truth helpe me) I must needes say this, Sir,
And, out
of conscience; for your Aduocate:
He has
taken paynes, in faith, Sir, and deseru'd,
In my
poore iudgement, I speake it, vnder fauour,
Not to
contrary you, Sir, very richly --
Well -- to
be cosend.
Volpone:
Troth, and
I think so too,
By that I
heard him, in the latter ende.
Mosca:
O, but
before, Sir; had you heard him, first,
Draw it to
certaine heads, then aggrauate,
Then vse
his vehement figures -- I look'd stil,
When he
would shift a shirt; and, doing this
Out of
pure love, no hope of gaine --
Volpone:
It is
right.
I cannot
answer him, Mosca, as I would,
Not yet;
but, for thy sake, at thy intreaty,
I will
beginne, euen now, to vexe them all:
This very
instant.
Mosca:
Good, Sir.
Volpone:
Call the
Dwarfe,.
And
Eunuch, forth.
Mosca:
Castrone,
Nano.
[Enter
CASTRONE and NANO.]
Nano:
Here.
Volpone:
Shall we
have a Iig, now?
Mosca:
What you
please, Sir.
Volpone:
Goe,
Streight,
give out, about the streetes, you two,
That I am
dead; do it, with constancy,
Sadly, do
you heare? impute it to the griefe
Of this
late slander.
[Exeunt CASTRONE and NANO.]
Mosca:
What do
you meane Sir?
Volpone:
O,
I shall
have, instantly, my Vulture, Crow,
Rauen,
come flying hither (on the newes)
To peck
for carrion, my shee-Wolfe, and all,
Greedy,
and full of expectation --
Mosca:
And then,
to have it rauish'd from their mouths?
Volpone:
It is
true, I will have thee put on a gowne,
And take
upon thee, as thou wert mine heire;
Shew them
a Will; Open that chest, and reach
Forth one
of those, that has the Blankes. I will straight
Put in thy
name.
Mosca:
It will be
rare, Sir.
[Gives
him a paper.]
Volpone:
Aye
When they
even gape, and finde themselues deluded,
Mosca:
Yes.
Volpone:
And, thou
vse them skiruily. Dispatch,
Get on thy
gowne.
Mosca:
But, what,
Sir, if they aske
After the
body?
Volpone:
Say, it
was corrupted,
Mosca:
I will say
it stunke, Sir; and was faine to have it
Coffin'd
up instantly, and sent away.
Volpone:
Any thing,
what thou wilt. Hold, here is my Will.
Get thee a
cap, a count-booke, pen and inke,
Papers
afore thee; sit, as thou wert taking
An
inuentory of parcells: I will get up,
Behind the
curtine, on a stoole, and hearken;
Sometime,
peepe ouer; see, how they do looke;
With what
degrees, their bloud doth leaue their faces;
O, it will
afford me a rare meale of laughter.
Mosca:
[putting
on a cap, and setting out the table, &c.]
Your
Aduocate will turne starke dull, upon it.
Volpone:
It will
take of his Oratories edge.
Mosca:
But your
Clarissimo, old round-backe, he
Will
crumpe you, like a hog-louse, with the touch.
Volpone:
And what
Coruino?
Mosca:
O, Sir,
looke for him,
To morrow
morning, with a rope, and a dagger,
To visite
all the streetes; he must runne madd.
My Lady
too, that came into the Court,
To beare
false witnesse, for your Worship.
Volpone:
Yes,
And kist
me 'fore the Fathers; when my face
Flow'd all
with oyles.
Mosca:
And sweate
-- Sir. Why, your gold
Is such
another med'cine, it dries up
All those
offensiue sauors! It tranformes
The most
deformed, and restores them lovely,
As it were
the strange poeticall Girdle. IOVE
Could not
inuent, to himselfe, a shroud more subtle,
To passe
Acrisius guardes. It is the thing
Makes all
the world her grace, her youth, her beauty.
Volpone:
I think,
she loves me.
Mosca:
Who? the
Lady, Sir?
She is
iealous of you.
Volpone:
Dost thou
say so?
[Knocking within.]
Mosca:
Hearke,
There is
some, already.
Volpone:
Looke.
Mosca:
It is the
Vulture:
He has the
quickest sent.
Volpone:
I will to
my place,
Thou, to
thy posture,
[Goes behind the curtain.]
Mosca:
I am set.
Volpone:
But,
Mosca,
Play the
Artificer now, torture them, rarely.
Scene 5.3
[Enter
VOLTORE.]
Voltore:
How now,
my Mosca?
Mosca:
[writing]
Turkie Carpets, nine --
Voltore:
Taking an
inuentory? that is well.
Mosca:
Two
Sutes of bedding, Tissew --
Voltore:
Where is
the Will?
Let me
read that, the while.
[Enter
SERVANTS with CORBACCIO in a chair.]
Corbaccio:
So, set me
downe:
And get
you home.
[Exeunt SERVANTS.]
Voltore:
Is he
come, now, to trouble us?
Mosca:
Of
Cloth of gold, two more--
Corbaccio:
Is it
done, Mosca?
Mosca:
Of
seuerall vellets, eight --
Voltore:
I like his
care.
Corbaccio:
Dost thou
not heare?
[Enter
CORVINO.]
Corvino:
Ha? is the
houre come, Mosca?
Volpone:
[peeping
over the curtain] Aye, now, they muster.
Corvino:
What does
the Aduocate, here?
Or this
Corbaccio?
Corbaccio:
What do
these here?
[Enter
LADY POLITIC WOULD-BE.]
Lady
Politic:
Mosca!
Is his
thred spunne?
Mosca:
Eight
Chests of Linnen --
Volpone:
O,
My fine
Dame would-bee, too!
Corvino:
Mosca, the
Will,
That I may
shew it these, and rid hem hence.
Mosca:
Six
Chests of Diaper foure of Damasske -- There.
[Gives
them the will carelessly, over his shoulder.]
Corbaccio:
Is that
the Will?
Mosca:
Downe-Beds,
and Boulsters --
Volpone:
Rare!
Be busie
still. Now, they begin to flutter:
They neuer
think of me. Looke, see, see, see!
How their
swift eies runne ouer the long deed,
Unto the
Name, and to the Legacies,
What is
bequeath'd them, there --
Mosca:
Ten
Sutes of Hangings --
Volpone:
Aye, in
their garters, Mosca. Now, their hopes
Are at the
gaspe.
Voltore:
Mosca the
heire?
Corbaccio:
What is
that?
Volpone:
My
Aduocate is dumbe, Looke to my Merchant,
He has
heard of some strange storme, a ship is lost:
He
faintes. My Lady will swoune. Old Glazen-eies,
He hath
not reach'd his dispaire, yet.
Corbaccio:
All these
Are out of
hope, I am sure the man. [Takes the will.]
Corvino:
But, Mosca
--
Mosca:
Two
Cabinets.
Corvino:
Is this in
earnest?
Mosca:
One
Of
Ebony --
Corvino:
Or, do you
but delude me?
Mosca:
The
other, Mother of Pearle -- I am very busie.
Good
faith, it is a fortune throwne upon me --
Item,
one Salt of Agat -- not my seeking.
Lady
Politic:
Do you
heare, Sir?
Mosca:
A
perfum'd Boxe -- 'pray you forbeare,
You see I
am troubled -- made of an Onyx --
Lady
Politic:
How!
Mosca:
To morrow,
or next day, I shall be at leasure,
To talke
with you all.
Corvino:
Is this my
large hopes issue?
Lady
Politic:
Sir, I
must have a fayrer answere.
Mosca:
Madame?
Mary, and
shall: 'pray you, fairely quit my house.
Nay, raise
no tempest with your lookes; but, hearke you:
Remember,
what your Ladyship offerd me,
To put you
in, an heire; go to, think on it.
And what
you said, eene your best Madames did
For
maintaynance, and why not you? Inough.
Go home,
and vse the poore Sir Poll. Your Knight, well;
For feare
I tell some riddles; Go, be melancholique. [Exit LADY POLITIC.]
Volpone:
O, my fine
Deuill!
Corvino:
Mosca,
'pray you a word.
Mosca:
Lord! will
not you take your dispatch hence, yet?
Me thinkes
(of all) you should have beene the example.
Why should
you stay, here? with what thought? what promise?
Heare you;
do not you know, I know you an asse?
And, that
you would; most faine, have beene a wittoll,
If fortune
would have let you? that you are
A declar'd
cuckold, on good termes? This Pearle,
You will
say, was yours? right. This Diamant?
I will not
deny it, but thanke you. Much here, else?
It may be
so. Why, think that these good workes
May helpe
to hide your bad: I will not betray you,
Although
you be but extraordinary,
And have
it onely in title, it sufficeth.
Go home;
be melancholique, too: or mad. [Exit CORVINO.]
Volpone:
Rare
Mosca! how his villany becomes him.
Voltore:
Certaine,
he doth delude all these, for me.
Corbaccio:
Mosca the
heire?
Volpone:
O, his
fowre eies have found it.
Corbaccio:
I am
cosen'd, cheated, by a Parasite-slaue;
Harlot,
thou hast gul'd me.
Mosca:
Yes, Sir.
Stop your mouth,
Or I shall
draw the only tooth, is left.
Are not
you he, that filthy couetous wretch,
With the
three legges, that, here, in hope of prey,
Have, any
time this three yeare, snuft about,
With your
most grou'ling nose; and would have hir'd
Me, to the
pois'ning of my Patron? Sir?
Are not
you he, that have, to day, in Court,
Profess'd
the dis-inheriting of your son?
Periur'd
your selfe? goe home, and die, and stinke;
If you but
croake a sillable, all comes out:
Away, and
call your porters, go, go stinke. [Exit CORBACCIO.]
Volpone:
Excellent
varlet!
Voltore:
Now, my
faithfull Mosca,
I finde
thy constancie.
Mosca:
Sir?
Voltore:
Sincere.
Mosca:
[writing]
A Table
Of
Porphiry -- I mar'le, you will be thus troublesome.
Volpone:
Nay, leaue
off now, they are gone.
Mosca:
Why? who
are you?
What? who
did send for you? O crie you mercy,
Reuerend
Sir: good faith, I am grieu'd for you,
That any
chance of mine should thus defeate
Your (I
must needs say) most deseruing trauailes:
But, I
protest, Sir, it was cast upon me,
And I
could, almost, wish to be without it,
But, that
the will of the dead must be obseru'd,
Mary, my
ioy is, that you need it not,
You have a
gift, Sir, (thanke your education)
Will neuer
let you want, while there are men,
And malice
to breed causes. Would I had
But halfe
the like, for all my fortune, Sir.
If I have
any sutes (as I do hope,
Things
being so easie, and direct, I shall not)
I will
make bold with your obstreperous aide,
(Conceiue
me) for your fee, Sir. In meane time,
You, that
have so much law, I know have the conscience,
Not to be
couetous of what is mine.
Good Sir,
I thanke you, for my plate; it will helpe
To set up
a yong man. Good faith, you looke
As you
were costiue; best goe home, and purge, Sir. [Exit VOLTORE]
Volpone:
[comes
from behind the curtain] Bid him, eate lettice
well: my
witty mischiefe,
Let me
embrace thee. O, that I could now
Transforme
thee to a Venus -- Mosca, goe,
Streight,
take my habite of Clarissimo,
And walke
the streets; be seene, torment them more:
We must
purseew, as well as plot. Who would
Have lost
this feast?
Mosca:
I doubt,
it will loose them.
Volpone:
O, my
recouery shall recouer all,
That I
could now but think on some disguise,
To meete
them in: and aske them questions.
How I
would vexe them still, at euery turne?
Mosca:
Sir, I can
fit you.
Volpone:
Canst
thou?
Mosca:
Yes. I
know
One of the
Commandadori, Sir, so like you,
Him will I
streight make drunke, and bring you his habite.
Volpone:
A rare
disguise, and answering thy braine!
O, I will
be a sharpe disease unto them.
Mosca:
Sir you
must looke for curses --
Volpone:
Till they
burst;
The FOXE
fares euer best, when he is curst.
[Exeunt.]
Scene 5.4
A hall in SIR POLITICs house.
[Enter
PEREGRINE disguised, and three MERCHANTS.]
Peregrine:
Am I
inough disguis'd?
Servant:
I warrant
you.
Peregrine:
All my
ambition is to fright him, onely.
Servant:
If you
could ship him away, twere excellent,
To Zant,
or to Alepo?
Peregrine:
Yes, and
have his
Aduentures
put in the Booke of voyages.
And his
guld story registred, for truth?
Well,
Gentlemen, when I am in, a while;
And that
you think us warme in our discourse,
Know your
approaches.
Servant:
Trust it,
to our care.
[Exeunt MERCHANTS]
[Enter
WAITING-WOMAN.]
Peregrine:
'Saue you
faire Lady. Is Sir Poll. within?
Woman:
I do not
know, Sir.
Peregrine:
'Pray you,
say unto him,
Here is a
merchant, upon earnest businesse,
Desires to
speake with him.
Woman:
I will
see, Sir. [Exit.]
Peregrine:
'Pray you.
I see, the
Family is all female, here.
[Re-enter
WAITING-WOMAN.]
Woman:
He says,
Sir, he has waighty affaires of State,
That now
require him whole; some other time,
You may
possesse him.
Peregrine:
Pray you,
say againe,
If those
require him whole; these will exact him,
Whereof I
bring him tideings. [Exit WOMAN.] What might be
His graue
affaire of State, now? how, to make
Bolognian
sauseges, here, in Venice, sparing
One of the
Ingredients.
[Re-enter
WAITING-WOMAN.]
Woman:
Sir, he
says, he knowes
By your
word tidings, that you are no States-man,
And
therefore, wills you stay.
Peregrine:
Sweet,
'pray you returne him,
I have not
read so many Proclamations,
And
studied them, for words, as he has done --
But, here
he deignes to come. [Exit WOMAN.]
[Enter
SIR POLITICS.]
Sir
Politic:
Sir!! I
must craue
Your
courteous pardon; There hath chanc'd (to day)
Vnkinde
disaster, 'twixt my Lady, and me:
And I was
penning my Apologie
To give
her satisfaction, as you came, now.
Peregrine:
Sir, I am
greiu'd, I bring you worse disaster;
The
Gentleman, you met at the Port, to day,
That told
you, he was newly arriu'd --
Sir
Politic:
Aye, was
A
fugitiue-Punke?
Peregrine:
No, Sir, a
Spie, set on you,
And he has
made relation to the Senate,
That you
profest to him, to have a plot,
To sell
the State of Venice, to the Turke.
Sir
Politic:
O me.
Peregrine:
For which,
warrants are sign'd by this time,
To
apprehend you, and to search your study,
For papers
--
Sir
Politic:
Alasse,
Sir. I have none, but notes,
Drawne out
of Play-bookes--
Peregrine:
All the
better, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
And some
Essayes. What shall I do?
Peregrine:
Sir, Best
Conuay
your selfe into a Sugar-Chest;
Or, if you
could lie round, a Frayle were rare:
And I
could send you, aboard.
Sir
Politic:
Sir, I but
talk'd so,
For
discourse sake, merely.
[Knocking within.]
Peregrine:
Hearke,
they are there.
Sir
Politic:
I am a
wretch, a wretch.
Peregrine:
What, will
you do Sir?
Have you
nere a Curren-Butt to leape into?
They will
put you to the Rack, you must be sodaine.
Sir
Politic:
Sir, I
have an ingine --
3
Merchant:
Sir
Politique Would-be?
4
Merchant:
[within]
Where is he?
Sir
Politic:
That I
have thought upon, before time.
Peregrine:
What is
it?
Sir
Politic:
I shall
ne're indure the torture.
Mary, it
is, Sir, of a Tortoyse-shell,
Apted, for
these extremities: 'Pray you Sir, helpe me.
Here, I
have a place, Sir, to put back my leggs,
Please you
to lay it on, Sir, [Lies down while PEREGRINE
places
the shell upon him.] with this cap,
And my
black gloves, I will lie, Sir, like a Tortoyse,
Till they
are gone,
Peregrine:
And, call
you this an ingine?
Sir
Politic:
Mine own
deuise -- Good Sir, bid my wiues women
To burne
my papers.
[Exit PEREGRINE.]
[The
Merchants rush in.]
1
Merchant:
Where is
he hid?
We must,
And will,
sure, finde him.
2
Merchant:
Which is
his study?
[Re-enter
PEREGRINE.]
1
Merchant:
What
Are you,
Sir?
Peregrine:
I am a
merchant, that came here
To looke
upon this Tortoyse.
3
Merchant:
How?
1
Merchant:
St Marke!
What Beast
is this?
Peregrine:
It is a
Fish.
2
Merchant:
Come out,
here.
Peregrine:
Nay, you
may strike him, Sir, and tread upon him:
He will
beare a cart.
1
Merchant:
What, to
runne ouer him?
Peregrine:
Yes.
3
Merchant:
Let us
iumpe, upon him;
2
Merchant:
Can he not
goe?
Peregrine:
He creepes
Sir.
1
Merchant:
Let us see
him creepe. [Pokes him.]
Peregrine:
No, good
Sir, you will hurt him.
2
Merchant:
(Heart) I
will see him creepe; or prick his gutts.
3
Merchant:
Come out,
here.
Peregrine:
'Pray you,
Sir, [Aside to SIR POLITIC.] (creepe a little)
1
Merchant:
Forth.
Yet
furder.
Peregrine:
Good Sir.
[Aside to SIR POLITIC.] (creepe)
2
Merchant:
We will
see his leggs. [They pull off the shell and discover him.]
3
Merchant:
Gods 'so
he has garters!
1
Merchant:
Aye, and
gloves!
2
Merchant:
Is this
Your
fearefull Tortoyse?
Peregrine:
[discovering
himself]
Now, Sir
Poll. We are euen;
For your
next proiect, I shall be prepar'd:
I am sory,
for the funerall of your notes, Sir.
1
Merchant:
It were a
rare motion, to be seene in Fleete-street!
2
Merchant:
Aye, in
the Terme.
1
Merchant:
Or
Smithfield, in the Faire.
3Merchant:
Me
thinkes, it is but a melancholique sight!
Peregrine:
Farewell,
most politique Tortoyse. [Exeunt PEREGRINE and MERCHANTS.]
[Re-enter
WAITING-WOMAN]
Sir
Politic:
Where is
my Lady?
Knowes she
of this?
Woman:
I know
not, Sir.
Sir
Politic:
Enquire.
[Exit
WOMAN.]
O, I shall
be the fable of all feasts;
The
freight of the Gazetti; ship-boies tale;
And, which
is worst, euen talke for Ordinaries.
[Re-enter WOMAN]
Woman:
My Lady is
come most melancholique, home,
And says,
Sir, she will straight to sea, for Physick.
Sir
Politic:
And I, to
shunne, this place, and clime for euer;
Creeping,
with house, on back: and think it well,
To shrinke
my poore head, in my politique shell.
[Exeunt.]
Scene 5.5
A room in VOLPONEs house.
[Enter
MOSCA in the habit of a clarissimo, and VOLPONE in that
of a
commendatore.]
Volpone:
Am I then
like him?
Mosca:
O, Sir,
you are he:
No man can
seuer you.
Volpone:
Good.
Mosca:
But, what
am I?
Volpone:
'Fore
heau'n, a braue Clarissimo, thou becom'st it!
Pitty,
thou wert not borne one.
Mosca:
If I hold
My made
one, it will be well.
Volpone:
I will
goe, and see
What
newes, first, at the
Court.
[Exit.]
Mosca:
Do so. My
FOXE
Is out on
his hole, and, ere he shall re-enter,
I will
make him languish, in his borrow'd case,
Except he
come to composition, with me:
Androgyno,
Castrone, Nano.
[Enter
ANDROGYNO, CASTRONE, and NANO.]
Mob:
Here.
Mosca:
Go,
recreate your selues, abroad; go, sport:
[Exeunt.]
So, now I
have the keies, and am possest.
Since he
will, needes, be dead, afore his time,
I will
burie him, or gaine by him; I am his heyre:
And so
will keepe me, till he share at least.
To cosen
him of all, were but a cheat
Well
plac'd; no man would construe it a sinne:
Let his
sport pay for it, this is call'd the FOXE-trap.
[Exit.]
Scene 5.6
A street.
[Enter
CORBACCIO and CORVINO.]
Corbaccio:
They say,
the Court is set.
Corvino:
We must
mainteine
Our first
tale good, for both our reputations.
Corbaccio:
Why? mine
is no tale: my son would, there, have kild me.
Corvino:
That is
true, I had forgot; [Aside.] Mine is, I am sure
But, for
your Will, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Aye, I
will come upon him,
For that,
hereafter; now his Patron is dead.
[Enter
VOLPONE in disguise.]
Volpone:
Signior
Coruino! and Corbaccio! Sir,
Much ioy
unto you.
Corvino:
Of what?
Volpone:
The
sodaine good,
Dropt down
upon you --
Corbaccio:
Where?
Volpone:
(And, none
knowes how)
From old
Volpone, Sir.
Corbaccio:
Out,
errant Knaue.
Volpone:
Let not
your too much wealth, Sir, make you furious.
Corbaccio:
Away, thou
varlet.
Volpone:
Why Sir?
Corbaccio:
Dost thou
mock me?
Volpone:
You mock
the world, Sir, did you not change Wills?
Corbaccio:
Out,
harlot.
Volpone:
O! belike
you are the man,
Signior
Coruino? 'faith, you carry it well;
You grow
not mad withall: I love your spirit.
You are
not ouer-leauend, with your fortune.
You should
have some would swell, now, like a wine-fat,
With such
an Autumne -- Did he give you all, Sir?
Corbaccio:
Auoid, you
Rascall.
Volpone:
'Troth,
your wife has shew'ne
Her selfe
a very woman; but, you are well,
You need
not care, you have a good estate,
To beare
it out Sir: better, by this chance.
Except
Corbaccio have a share?
Corvino:
Hence
varlet.
Volpone:
You will
not be a' knowne, Sir: it is wise,
Thus do
all Gam'sters, at all games, dissemble;
No man
will seeme to winne: [Exeunt CORVINO and CORBACCIO.]
here,
comes my Vulture,
Heauing
his beake up in the ayre, and snuffing.
Scene 5.7
[Enter
VOLTORE.]
Voltore:
Ovt-stript
thus, by a Parasite? a slaue?
Would run
on errands? and make less, for crums?
Well, what
I will do --
Volpone:
The Court
stayes for your worship.
I ee'ne
reioyce, Sir, at your worships happinesse,
And, that
it fell into so learned hands,
That
vnderstand the fingering.
Voltore:
What do
you meane?
Volpone:
I meane to
be a sutor to your worship,
For the
small tenement, out of reparations;
That, at
the end of your long row of houses,
By the
Piscaria: It was, in Volpone's time,
Your
predecessor, e're he grew diseas'd,
A
handsome, pretty, custom'd baudy-house,
As any was
in Venice (none disprais'd)
But fell
with him; His body, and that house
Decay'd,
together.
Voltore:
Come, Sir,
leaue your prating.
Volpone:
Why, if
your worship give me but your hand,
That I may
have the refusall; I have done.
It is a
meere toy, to you, Sir; candle rents:
As your
learn'd worship knowes --
Voltore:
What do I
know?
Volpone:
Mary, no
end of your wealth, Sir, God decrease it.
Voltore:
Mistaking
knaue! what, mockst thou my mis-fortune?
Volpone:
His
blessing on your heart, Sir, would it were
more.
[Exit VOLTORE.]
Now, to my
first, againe; at the next corner.
(MOSCA
passant)
Scene 5.8
Another part of the street.
[Enter
CORBACCIO and CORVINO; - MOSCA passes over the stage,
before
them.]
Corbaccio:
See, in
our habite! see the impudent varlet!
Corvino:
That I
could shoote mine eyes at him, like gunstones.
[Enter
VOLPONE.]
Volpone:
But, is
this true, Sir, of the Parasite?
Corbaccio:
Againe, to
afflict us? Monster!
Volpone:
In good
faith, Sir,
I am
hartily greeu'd, a beard of your graue length
Should be
so ouer-reach'd. I neuer brook'd
That
Parasites hayre, me thought his nose should cosen,
There
still was somewhat, in his looke, did promise
The bane
of a Clarissimo.
Corbaccio:
Knaue --
Volpone:
Me
thinkes,
Yet you,
that are so traded in the world,
A witty
merchant, the fine bird, Coruino,
That have
such morall Emblemes on your name,
Should not
have sung your shame; and dropt your cheese:
To let the
FOXE laugh at your emptinesse.
Corvino:
Sirrah,
you think, the priuiledge of the place,
And your
red saucy cap, that seemes (to me)
Nayl'd to
your iolt-head, with those two Cecchines,
Can
warrant your abuses; come you, hither:
You shall
perceiue, Sir, I dare beate you. Approch.
Volpone:
No hast,
Sir, I do know your valure, well,
Since you
durst publish what you are, Sir.
Corvino:
Tarry,
I would
speake , with you.
Volpone:
Sir,
another time --
Corvino:
Nay, now.
Volpone:
O God,
Sir! I were a wise man
Would
stand the fury of a distracted cuckold. [As he is running off,
re-enter
MOSCA.]
Corbaccio:
What! come
againe?
Volpone:
[aside]
Upon them, Mosca; saue me.
Corbaccio:
The ayre
is infected, where he breathes.
Corvino:
Lets fly
him.
[Exeunt
CORVINO and CORBACCIO.]
Volpone:
Excellent
Basiliske! Turne upon the Vulture.
Scene 5.9
[Enter
VOLTORE.]
Voltore:
Well,
flesh-flie, it is Sommer with you now;
Your
Winter will come on.
Mosca:
Good
Aduocate,
'Pray
thee, not rayle, nor threaten out of place, thus;
Thou wilt
make a solo ecisme (as Madam sayes)
Get you a
biggen, more: your brayne breakes loose. [Exit.]
Voltore:
Well, Sir.
Volpone:
Would you
have me beate the insolent slaue?
Throwe
durt, upon his first good cloathes?
Voltore:
This same
Is,
doubtlesse, some Familiar!
Volpone:
Sir, the
Court,
In troth,
stayes for you. I am madd, a Mule,
That neuer
read Iustinian, should get up,
And ride
an Aduocate. Had you no quirk,
To auoide
gullage, Sir., by such a creature?
I hope you
do but iest; he has not done it:
This is
but confederacy, to blinde the rest.
You are
the heyre?
Voltore:
A strange,
officious,
Trouble-some
knaue! thou dost torment me.
Volpone:
I know --
It cannot
be, sir, that you should be consen'd;
It is not
within the wit of man, to do it:
You are so
wise, so prudent -- And, it is fit,
That
wealth, and wisdome still, should go together --
[Exeunt.]
Scene
5.10 The Scrutineo.
[Enter
AVOCATORI, NOTARIO, BONARIO, CELIA, CORBACCIO,
CORVINO,
COMMENDATORI, SAFFI, &C.]
1Avocatore:
Are all
the parties, here?
Notario:
All but
the Aduocate.
2
Avocatore:
And, here
he comes.
[Enter
VOLTORE and VOLPONE.]
1
Avocatore:
Then bring
them forth to sentence.
Voltore:
O my most
honourd Fathers, let your mercy
Once winne
upon your iustice, to forgiue --
I am
distracted --
Volpone:
[aside]
What will he do, now?
Voltore:
O,
I know not
which to addresse my selfe to, first,
Whether
your Father-hoods, or these innocents --
Corvino:
[aside]
Will he betray himselfe,
Voltore:
Whome,
equally,
I have
abus'd, out of most couetous endes --
Corvino:
The man is
mad!
Corbaccio:
What is
that?
Corvino:
He is
possest.
Voltore:
For which;
now strooke in conscience, here I prostate
My selfe,
at you offended feete, for pardon.
1, 2
Avocatori:
Arise.
Celia:
O heau'n,
how iust thou art!
Volpone:
[aside]
I am caught
In myne
own noose --
Corvino:
[to
CORBACCIO] Be constant. Sir, nought now
Can helpe,
but impudence.
1
Avocatore:
Speake
forward.
Commendatore:
[to the
courtroom] Silence!
Voltore:
It is not
passion in me, reuerend Fathers,
But onely
conscience, conscience, my good Sires,
That makes
me, now, tell trueth. That Parasite,
That Knaue
hath been the instrument of all --
1
Avocatore:
Where is
that Knaue? fetch him.
Volpone:
I go.
[Exit.]
Corvino:
Graue
Fathers,
This man
is distracted, he confest it, now;
For,
hoping to be old Volpone's heyre,
Who now is
dead --
3
Avocatore:
How?
2
Avocatore:
Is Volpone
dead?
Corvino:
Dead
since, graue Fathers --
Bonario:
O, sure
vengeance!
1
Avocatore:
Stay, --
Then, he
was no deceiuer?
Voltore:
O, no,
none:
The
Parasite, graue Fathers --
Corvino:
He does
speake,
Out of
mere enuie, 'cause the seruant is made
The thing,
he gap't for; please your Father-hoods,
This is
the truth: though, I will not iustifie
The other,
but he may be somewhere faulty.
Voltore:
Aye, to
your hopes, as well as mine, Coruino:
But I will
vse modesty. 'Pleaseth your wisdomes
To view
these certaine notes, and but conferre them;
As I hope
fauour, they shall speake cleare truth.
Corvino:
The Deuill
has entred him.
Bonario:
Or bides
in you.
4
Avocatore:
We have
done ill, by a publike Officer,
To send
for him, if he be heire;
2
Avocatore:
For whome?
4
Avocatore:
Him, that
they call the Parasite.
3
Avocatore:
It is
true;
He is a
man, of great estate, now left.
4
Avocatore:
Goe you,
and learne his name; and say, the Court
Intreates
his presence, here: but, to the clearing
Of some
few
doubts.
[Exit NOTARIO.]
2
Avocatore:
This same
is a labyrinth!
1
Avocatore:
[To
CORVINO] Stand you unto your first report?
Corvino:
My state,
My life,
my fame --
Bonario:
Where is
it?
Corvino:
Are at the
stake
1
Avocatore:
[To
CORBACCIO.] Is yours so too?
Corbaccio:
The
Aduocate is a knave:
And has a
forked tongue --
2
Avocatore:
Speake to
the point.
Corbaccio:
So is the
Parasite, too.
1
Avocatore:
This is
confusion.
Voltore:
I do
beseech your Father-hoods, read but those;
[Giving
them papers.]
Corvino:
And credit
nothing, the false spirit hath writ:
It cannot
be (my Sires) but he is possest.
Scene 5.11
A street.
[Enter
VOLPONE.]
Volpone:
To make a
snare, for mine own neck! and run
My head
into it, wilfully! with laughter!
When I had
newly scap't, was free, and cleare!
Out of
mere wantonnesse! o, the dull Deuill
Was in
this braine of mine, when I deuis'd it;
And Mosca
gaue it second: he must now
Helpe to
seare up this veyne, or we bleed dead.
[Enter
NANO, ANDROGYNO, and CASTRONE.]
How now!
who let you loose? whether go you, now?
What? to
bury Ginger bread? or to drowne Kitlings?
Nano:
Sir,
Maister Mosca call'd us out of dores,
And bid us
all go play, and tooke the keyes.
Androgyno:
Yes.
Volpone:
Did
Maister Mosca take the keyes? why, so!
I am
farder, in. These are my fine conceipts!
I must be
merry, with a mischiefe to me!
What a
vile wretch was I, that could not beare
My
fortune, soberly? I must have my Crotchets!
And my
Conundrums! well, go you, and seeke him:
His
meaning may be truer, then my feare.
Bid him
he, streight, come to me, to the Court;
Thether
will I; and, if it be possible,
Vn-screw
my Aduocate, upon new hopes:
When I
prouok'd him, then I lost my selfe.
[Exeunt.]
Scene 5.12
The Scrutineo.
[AVOCATORI,
BONARIO, CELIA, CORBACCIO, CORVINO, VOLTORE,
COMMENDATORI,
SAFFI, &c. as before.]
1
Avocatore:
[showing
the papers] These things can ne're be reconcil'd.
He, here,
Professeth,
that the Gentleman was wrong'd;
And that
the Gentlewoman was brought thether,
Forc'd by
her husband: and there left.
Voltore:
Most true.
Celia:
How ready
is heau'n to those, that pray.
1
Avocatore:
But, that
Volpone
would have rauish'd her, he holds
Vtterly
false; knowing his impotence.
Corvino:
Graue
Fathers, he is possest; againe, I say
Possest:
nay, if there be possession,
And
obsession, he has both.
3
Avocatore:
Here comes
our Officer.
[Enter
VOLPONE, still in disguise.]
Volpone:
The
Parasite will streight be, here, graue Fathers.
4
Avocatore:
You might
inuent some other name, Sir varlet.
3
Avocatore:
Did not
the Notarie meet him?
Volpone:
Not, that
I know.
4
Avocatore:
His
comming will cleare all.
2
Avocatore:
Yet it is
misty.
Voltore:
May it
please your Father-hoods --
Volpone:
[whispers
to VOLTORE] Sir, the Parasite
Will'd me
to tell you, that his Maister liues;
That you
are still the man; your hopes the same;
And this
was, onely a iest --
Voltore:
How?
Volpone:
Sir, to
trie
If you
were firme, and how you stood affected.
Voltore:
Art sure
he liues?
Volpone:
Do I liue,
Sir?
Voltore:
O me!
I was too
violent.
Volpone:
Sir, you
may redeeme it,
They said,
you were possest; fall downe, and seeme so:
I will
helpe to make it good. [VOLTORE falls.] God blesse the man!
Stop your
wind hard, and swell: See, see, see, see!
He vomits
crooked pinnes! his eyes are set,
Like a
dead hares, hung in a poulters shop!
His mouth
is running away! Do you see, Signior?
Now, it is
in his belly!
Corvino:
Aye, the
Deuill!
Volpone:
Now, in
his throate.
Corvino:
Aye, I
perceiue it plaine.
Volpone:
It will
out, it will out; stand cleere. See, where it flyes!
In shape
of a blew toad, with a battes wings!
Do not you
see it, Sir?
Corbaccio:
What? I
think I do.
Corvino:
It is too
manifest.
Volpone:
Looke! he
comes to himselfe!
Voltore:
Where am
I?
Volpone:
Take good
heart, the worst is past, Sir.
You are
dis-possest.
1
Avocatore:
What
accident is this?
2
Avocatore:
Sodaine,
and full of wonder!
3
Avocatore:
If he were
Possest,
as it appeares, all this is nothing. [He waves the notes.]
Corvino:
He has
beene, often, subiect to these fitts.
1
Avocatore:
Shew him
that writing, do you know it, Sir?
Volpone:
[whispers
to VOLTORE] Deny it, Sir, forweare it,
know it
not.
Voltore:
Yes, I do
know it well, it is my hand:
Volpone:
But all,
that it containes, is false.
Bonario:
O
practise!
2
Avocatore:
What maze
is this!
1
Avocatore:
Is he not
guilty, then,
Whome you,
there, name the Parasite?
Voltore:
Graue
Fathers,
No more
then, his good Patron, old Volpone.
4
Avocatore:
Why, he is
dead?
Voltore:
O no, my
honor'd Fathers,
He liues
--
1
Avocatore:
How!
liues?
Voltore:
Liues.
2
Avocatore:
This is
subtler, yet!
3
Avocatore:
You sayd,
he was dead?
Voltore:
Neuer.
3
Avocatore:
[to
CORVINO] You sayd so!
Corvino:
I heard
so.
4
Avocatore:
Here comes
the Gentleman, make him way.
[Enter
MOSCA as a clarissimo.]
3
Avocatore:
A stoole.
4
Avocatore:
[aside]
A proper man! and, were Volpone dead,
A fit
match for my daughter.
3
Avocatore:
Give him
way.
Volpone:
[aside
to MOSCA] Mosca, I was almost lost, the Aduocate
Had
betrayd all; but, now, it is recouer'd:
All is on
the henge againe -- say, I am liuing.
Mosca:
What busie
knaue is this. Most reuerend Fathers,
I sooner
had attended your graue pleasures,
But that
my order, for the funerall
Of my
deare Patron did require me --
Volpone:
(Mosca!)
Mosca:
Whome I
intend to bury, like a Gentleman --
Volpone:
[aside]
Aye, quick, and cosen me of all.
2
Avocatore:
Still
stranger!
More
intricate!
1
Avocatore:
And come
about, againe!
4
Avocatore:
[aside]
It is a match, my daughter is bestow'd.
Mosca:
[aside
to VOLPONE] Will you give me halfe?
Volpone:
First I
will be hang'd.
Mosca:
[aside] I
know,
Your voice
is good, cry not so low'd.
1
Avocatore:
Demand
The
Aduocate. Sir, did not you affirme,
Volpone
was aliue?
Volpone:
Yes, and
he is;
This
Gent'man told me, so. [Aside to MOSCA.] Thou shalt have halfe.
Mosca:
Whose
drunkard is this same? speake some, that know him:
I neuer
saw his face. [Aside to VOLPONE.] I cannot now
Afford it
you so cheape.
Volpone:
[aside]
No?
1
Avocatore:
[To
VOLTORE] What say you?
Voltore:
The
Officer told me.
Volpone:
I did,
graue Fathers,
And will
maintayne, he liues, with mine own life.
And that
this creature [points to MOSCA] told me. [Aside.] I was
borne,
With all
good starres my enemies.
Mosca:
Most graue
Fathers,
If such an
insolence, as this, must passe
Upon me, I
am silent: it was not this,
For which
you sent, I hope.
2
Avocatore:
Take him
away.
Volpone:
[aside]
Mosca.
3
Avocatore:
Let him be
whipt.
Volpone:
[aside]
Wilt thou betray me? Cosen me?
3
Avocatore:
And
taught, to beare himselfe
Toward a
person of his ranke.
4
Avocatore:
Away.
[The OFFICERS seize VOLPONE.]
Mosca:
I humbly
thanke your Father-hoods.
Volpone:
[aside]
Soft, soft: whipt?
And loose
all that I have? If I confesse,
It cannot
be much more.
4
Avocatore:
[to
MOSCA] Sir, are you married?
Volpone:
[aside]
They will be ally'd, anone; I must be resolute:
The FOXE
shall, here, vncase. [Throws off his disguise.]
Mosca:
Patron.
Volpone:
Nay, now,
My ruines
shall not come alone; your match
I will
hinder sure: my substance shall not glew you,
Nor screw
you, into a Family.
Mosca:
Why,
Patron!
Volpone:
I am
Volpone, and this [pointing to MOSCA] is my Knaue;
This,
[to VOLTORE] his own Knaue; This, [to CORBACCIO] auarices
Foole;
This,
[to CORVINO] a Chimoera of Wittall, Foole, and Knaue;
And,
reuerend Fathers, since we all can hope
Nought,
but a sentence, let us not now dispaire it.
You heare
me breife.
Corvino:
May it
please your Father-hoods --
Commendatore:
Silence!
1
Avocatore:
The knot
is now vndone, by miracle!
2
Avocatore:
Nothing
can be more clear.
3
Avocatore:
Or, can
more proue
These
innocent.
1
Avocatore:
Give them
their liberty.
Bonario:
Heauen
could not, long, let such grosse crimes be hid.
2
Avocatore:
If this be
held the high way, to get riches,
May I be
poore.
3
Avocatore:
This is
not the gaine, but torment.
1
Avocatore:
These
possesse wealth, as sick men possesse Feuers,
Which,
trulyer, may be sayd to possesse them.
2
Avocatore:
Disroabe
that Parasite.
Corvino,
Mosca:
Most
honor'd Fathers! --
1
Avocatore:
Can you
plead ought to stay the course of Iustice?
If you
can, speake.
Corvino,
Voltore:
We beg
fauor,
Celia:
And mercy.
1
Avocatore:
You hurt
your innocence, suing for the guilty.
Stand
forth; and, first, the Parasite. You appeare
To have
beene the chiefest minister, if not plotter,
In all
these leud impostures; and now, lastly,
Have, with
your impudence, abus'd the Court,
And habite
of a Gentleman of Venice,
Being a
fellow of no birth or bloud:
For which,
our sentence is, first thou be whipt;
Then liue
perpetuall prisoner in our Gallies.
Voltore:
I thanke
you, for him.
Mosca:
Bane to
thy woluish nature.
1
Avocatore:
Deliuer
him to the Saffi. [MOSCA is led out.]
Thou,
Volpone,
By bloud,
and ranke a Gentleman, canst not fall
Vnder like
censure; But our iudgement on thee
Is, that
thy substance all be straight confiscate
To the
Hospitall, of the Incurabili:
And, since
the most was gotten by imposture,
By fayning
lame, gout, palsey and such diseases,
Thou art
to lie in prison, crampt with irons,
Till thou
bee'st sick, and lame indeed. Remoue him. [He is led aside.]
Volpone:
This is
call'd mortifiyng of a FOXE.
1
Avocatore:
Thou
Voltore, to take away the scandale
Thou hast
giu'n all worthy men, of thy profession,
Art
banish'd from their Fellowship, and our State.
Corbaccio,
bring him neare. We here possesse
Thy son,
of all thy estate; and confine thee
To the
Monastery of San' Spirito:
Where
since thou knewst not how to liue well here,
Thou shalt
be learn'd to die well.
Corbaccio:
Ha! what
said he?
Commendatore:
You shall
know anone, Sir.
1
Avocatore:
Thou
Coruino, shalt
Be
straight imbarqu'd from thine own house, and row'd
Round
about Venice, thorough the grand Canale,
Wearing a
cap, with fayre, long Asses eares,
In steed
of hornes: and so, to mount (a paper
Pin'd on
thy brest) to the Berlino --
Corvino:
Yes,
And, have
mine eyes beat out with stinking fish,
Brus'd
fruit and rotten egges -- it is well. I am glad,
I shall
not see my shame, yet.
1
Avocatore:
And to
expiate
Thy wrongs
done to thy wife, thou art to send her
Home, to
her father, with her dowrie trebled:
And these
are all your Iudgements --
All:
Honour'd
Fathers.
1
Avocatore:
Which may
not be reuok'd. Now, you begin
When
crimes are done, and past, and to be punish'd,
To think
what your crimes are; away, with them.
Let all,
that see these vices thus rewarded,
Take
heart, and love to study them. Mischiefes feed
Like
beasts, till they be fat, and then they
bleed.
[Exeunt.]
[VOLPONE
comes forward.]
Volpone:
The
seasoning of a Play is the applause,
Now,
though the Foxe be punish'd by the lawes,
He,
yet, doth hope there is no suffring due,
For any
fact, which he hath done against you;
If
there be, censure him: here he, doubtfull, stands.
If not,
fare jovially, and clap your
hands.
[Exit.]