A Pleasant Comedy, Called :The Case is Altered | ||
Scæne. 2.
Enter the sewer, passe by with seruice againe, the seruingmen take knowledge of Valentine as they goe. Iuniper salutes him.Iuni.
What Valentine? fellow Onion, take my dish I prithee
you rogue sirrah, tell me, how thou dost, sweet Ingle.
Valen.
Faith, Iuniper, the better to see thee thus frolicke.
Iuni.
Nay, slid I am no changling, I am Iuniper still.
Exit Oni.
I keepe the pristmate ha, you mad Hierogliphick, when shal we
swagger.
Valen.
Hierogliphick, what meanest thou by that.
Iuni.
Meane? Gods so, ist not a good word man? what?
stand vpon meaning with your friends. Puh, Absconde.
Valen.
Why, but stay, stay, how long has this sprightly
humor haunted thee?
Iuni.
Foe humour, a foolish naturall gift we haue in the Æquinoctiall.
Valen.
Naturall, slid it may be supernaturall, this?
Iuni.
Valentine, I prithee ruminate thy selfe welcome. What
fortuna de la Guerra.
Valen.
O how pittifully are these words forc't.
As though they were pumpt out on's belly.
Iuni.
Sirrah Ingle, I thinke thou hast seene all the strange
countries in Christendome since thou wentst?
Valen.
I haue seene some Iuniper.
Iuni.
You haue seene Constantinople?
Valen.
I, that I haue.
And Ierusalem, and the Indies, and Goodwine sands, and
the tower of Babylon, and Venice and all.
Valen.
I all; no marle and he haue a nimble tong, if he practise
to vault thus from one side of the world to another.
Iuni.
O it's a most heauenly thing to trauel, & see countries,
especially at sea, and a man had a pattent not to be sicke.
Valen.
O sea sicke Iest, and full of the scuruie.
A Pleasant Comedy, Called :The Case is Altered | ||