The Fatal Marriage | ||
Sc. vi
Enter galeas. & Iacomo:.ga
you spake wt h him as I comaunded you
Iaco:
and had his promise to meet you presently
ga:
I haue heard much ffame of him since my arriue
his generous nature, hospitable loue
his good to all men, enemy to none
indeed hee has that perfect Character
before I see him I'm in loue wt h him
Iaco:
hee has the ffame few Cittizens deserue
ga:
why sir few Cittizens
Iaco
his wordes his bond, and does not breake that bond
to banckrupt others, he makes you not
a library of large Monopolie to cosen all men
sub intelligitur he hates to deale
wt h such portentious othes, as furr his mouth
in the deliverance
Enter Iouanny
ga:
hee comes him selfe
Iou:
sir galeas if I mistake not
ga:
I weare my ffathers name sir
Iou:
and tis a dignity to weare that name
whattes yor. affaires in parma
ga:
to vissit you sir
31
gladnes nor sorrow neuer paid mans debtes
yor pleasure sir
ga:
the livery of my griefe my ffathers dead
and mee hath made his poore executor
Iou
what, ought hee ten thousand ducketes
thy ffathers face ffixt in thy ffront
should be the pay master tho from my hand
ga
I doe not come to borrow, please yee read
Iou:
read, and wt h good regard, for sorrow paies
noe debtes
ga
the summes soe great I feare once read by him
my seeming ffrend will proue my enemy
Iaco:
ffaith if hee doe
hee proues like yor ffrench galloshes
that promise faire to the ffeet, yet twice
a day leaue a man in the durt
Iou:
was this yor ffathers pleasure
ga:
it was his hand
32
it was his writing I know it as my owne
wherein hee has wrong'd mee beyond measure
ga:
how my ffather wrong'd, yee I'm his sonn
Iou:
wer't thou his ffather I'm wrong'd
iniu'rd calumniated, baffled to my teeth
and were it not that these gray haires of mine
were priviledg'd and enemy to vallour
I haue a heart could see yor ffathers wrong
ga:
[Iaco:]
what raile you sir
Iaco:
challenge a halfe pint pot
Iou:
there in a sawpitt knaue, to quitt my selfe of
such an iniury, hee writes mee here
that I should pay to you, tenn thousand Crownes
ga:
as being due to him
Iou:
but thattes not my quarrell sir, for I did owe to him
Millions of Crownes, millions of my loue
and but to send a note here for his owne
ist not a quarrell for an honest man
Iaco:
wt h very few I thinke
Iou:
why looke yee sir
when after many a storme and dreadfull blow
strooke from ffire belching cloudes, bankrupt of life
I haue home return'd, when all my ffrendes
denide their thresholdes to mee, and my creditors
desir'd to sinke mee in a prissoners graue
hee gaue mee dying life his helpefull hand
sent mee to sea and kept mee safe on land
33
ga
oh pray sir
Iou
when all the talentes of oppression
of vsurers, lawyers, and my Creditors
had fang'd vpon my wife and ffamily
hee gaue mee dying life his helpfull hand
sent mee to sea, & kept mee safe on land
ist not a quarrell then to seeke but's owne
ga:
good sir
Iou
come in sir, where I will pay all yt you can dem̄au«nd»
noe other quarrell sir shall passe yor hand
ga:
if euery should pay as well as you
the world were good, wee should haue bankruptes few
Iaco:
I'm of yor mind for that
Exeunt
The Fatal Marriage | ||