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land_n enter_v issue_n tail_n 1,471 5 9.9848 5 false
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A77567 Five nevv playes, viz. The English moor, or the mock-marriage. The love-sick court, or the ambitious politique: Covent Garden weeded. The nevv academy, or the nevv exchange. The queen and concubine. / By Richard Brome. Brome, Richard, d. 1652?; Brome, Richard, d. 1652? English Moor.; Brome, Richard, d. 1652? Love-sick court.; Brome, Richard, d. 1652? Covent Garden weeded.; Brome, Ricahrd, d. 1652?. New academy.; Brome, Richard, d. 1652? Queen and concubine. 1659 (1659) Wing B4872; Thomason E1782_1; Thomason E1782_2; Thomason E1782_3; Thomason E1782_4; Thomason E1782_5; ESTC R209758 271,627 554

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kinde of a Gentleman you know I 'll not stirre till I have my money I am not an Asse Sir Mi. No body sayes thou art Shoe I have had too many such tricks put upon me i' my dayes Mi. A trick as I hope for money it is no trick Shoe Well Sir trick or no trick I must have my money or my boots and that 's plain dealing Mi. A pox o' th' boots so my legs were out of 'hem Would they were i' thy throat spurres and all you will not out Shoe No marry will we not Tay. Well-said Shoomaker I commend thee thou hast a better heart then I though my stomack 's good Enter Laundresse Mi. O well said my good Laundresse How am I bound to thee yet all this wo'not do 't Laundresse Thou must bestir thy stumps a little further and borrow me a couple of Gownes more for these Rascals here that will not away Laun. How wo'not away And they were well serv'd they would be thrust out of doors for saucie companions Your Masters would not put a Gentleman to his trumps thus M Nay svveet Laundresse restrain thy tongue and stretch thy feet A couple of Govvns good Laundresse and forget not caps Ex. If I do novv furnish you like Civil Lavvyers and you do not keep your countenances if ever you do but peep in at the Hall-door at Christmas to see the revels I 'le have you set i' th' stocks for this beleeve it Sho. If you do Sir I may hap be even vvith you before the year comes about and set you in our stocks for 't Tay. But will you make Lawyers of us Mi. Have you a minde to have your money you unbelieving Rascals Shoc. I see your drift and hope you 'll prove an honest Gentleman Mi. Thou hast some hope though no faith nor trust in any man Shoe Alas Sir our Masters sit at great rents and keep great families Mi. I cry you mercy they are remov'd into the nevv plantation here where they say are a tribe of Infidel-tradesmen that have made a Law vvithin your selves to put no trust in Gentlemen But beare your selves handsomely here you vvere best I am acquainted vvith a crevv that haunts about your habitations vvith whom I will joyne and so batter your windows one of these nights else O welcom Laundresse how doest thou toile for me Laun. Your fathers talking as I am a woman below As thou art a woman below well-said Come on with these Gownes and le ts see how yow 'll look If we had time the Shoomaker should wash his face but seeing there is no remedy pull the cap in your eyes and good enongh Now Laundresse set us stooles and leave us Laun. I hear him coming up Ex. Mi. Now let him come we are ready for him Shoomaker keep your hand underneath the book that the pitch do not discover you Sho. I warrant you Sir Mi. And Taylor be sure you have no Needle on your sleeve nor thread about your neck Tay. I warrant you too for me Sir Mi: He 's enrred Enter Croswill Belt and stand aside Mi. Remitter I say is where a man hath two titles that is to say one of an elder the other of a later And he cometh to the land by the later title yet the Law adjudgeth him to be in by the force of the elder title If the tenant in the taile discontinue the taile and after he diseaseth his discontinue and so dieth seised whereby the tenants descend to their issue as to his Cousin inheritable by force of the taile In this case the tenants descend who have right by force of the taile a Remitter in the taile taken for that in the Law shall put and adjudge him to be in by force of descent Pox on ye speak something good or bad somewhat Sho. The Remitter you say is seised i' th' tail Mi. Excellent Shoomaker I say so and again I say that if the tenant in the taile in feoffe his son or his Cousin inheritable by force of the taile the which sonne or cousin at the time of the feoffment is within age and after the tenant in the taile dierh this is a Remitter to the heire in the taile to whom the feoffment is made now Taylor Tay. Think you so Sir Mi. Look either Fitzherbert Perkins or Dier and you shall finde it in the second part of Richard Cordelyon So much for Remitter Novv I 'll put a plain home-spun case as a man may say vvhich vve call a moot-case Sho. I pray do Sir Cross. Some father might take joy of such a sonne novv This takes not me No this is not my vvay Mi. The case is this aside pull up your grounds closer and be hang'd you are a Tailor and you a Shoomaker Sho. And you owe us money Mi. I put the case I do to you for a suit of clothes Tay. Well Mi. And to you for a paire of boots Sho. True Mi. I have broke my day with you both Suppose so Both Very well we do Mi. You clap a Sergeant o' my back I put in bail remove it and carry it up into the upper Court with habeas-Corpus bring it down again into the lower Court with procedendo then take it from thence and bring it into the Chancery with a Certiorari I and if you look not to it bring it out of the Chancery again and thus will I keep you from your money till your suite and your boots be worne out before you recover penny of me Sho. S'ly'd but you shall not your father shall know all first Mi. S'foot Shoomaker wilt thou be an Asse I do but put a case Have you not seen it tried Tay. Yes very often Cross. Away with books Away with Law Away with madnesse I God blesse thee and make thee his servant and defend thee from Law I say Take up these books sarrah and carry them presently into Pauls Church-yard d ee see and change them all for Histories as pleasant as profitable Arthur of Britain Primalion of Greece Amadis of Gaul and such like de see Mi. I hope he do's but jest Cross. And do you heare Sirrah Belt I Sir Cross. Get Bells work and you can into the bargain Belt Which Bell Sir Adam Bell with Clim o' th' Clough and William of Cloudesley Cros. Adam Bell you Asse Valiant Bell that kill'd the Dragon Belt You mean St. George Cros. Sir Jolthead do I not I 'le teach you to chop logick vvith me Mi. Sfoot how shall I answer my borrow'd books Stay Belt Pray Sir do not change my books Cros. Sir Sir I will change them and you too Did I leave thee here to learn fashions and manners that thou mightst carry thy self like a Gentleman and dost thou wast thy brains in learning a language that I understand not a word of ha I had been as good have brought thee up among the wild Irish Mi. Why alass Sir Had I not better keep my self within my Chamber at my Studie then be
is too much abuse made of such good creatures Wine in it self is good you will grant though the excesse be nought and Tavernes are not contemptible so the company be good Gab. It is most true we finde that holy men have gone to Tavernes and made good use of 'em upon their Peregrinations Mi. And cannot men be content to take now and then a cup and discourse of good things by the way As thus Brother here 's a remembrance if she be living and have not lost her honour to our Cousin Dore as Gab. O that kinswoman of ours She was the dearest losse that e're fell from our house Mi. Pledge her good brother Gab. I do Mi. I hope 't will maudlenize him Gab. But have you never seen that miscreant that wrong'd her since he did that same they say you knew him Mi. Alas suppose I had what could be done she 's lost we see What good could she receive by any course against him Gab. It had been good to have humbled him though into the knowledge of his Transgression And of himself for his soules good either by course of Law or else in case of necessity where the Law promiseth no releefe by your own right hand you might have smote him smote him with great force yea smote him unto the earth until he had prayed that the evil might be taken from him Mih. This is their way of loving enemies to bear 'em into goodnesse Well brother I may meet with him again and then I know what to do If he knew him as I do now what a religious combate were here like to be at Nicks coming Enter Boy Sir here 's a Gentlewoman asks for Mr. Rooksbill Mih. The travell'd Gallant is 't not Boy Yes sir and the old black party her Land lady with her But they ask for no body but him sir Mih. Say he is here by all meanes and bring 'em up Ex. Boy Gab. Women pray brother le ts avoid the place let us flie it What should we do with women in a Tavern Mih. No harme assure your selfe cannot we govern ourselves Enter Dorcas and Madge and start back Nay Lady stay he will be here presently that you look for Gab. I will not glance an eye toward temptation Mih. I am amaz'd sure I have seen this face howe're your habit and the course of time may give 't another seeming Dorc. Good Angels help my thoughts and memory It is my Kinsman Mihil What 's the other that hides his face so Mih. Do you turn away Dorc. It is my Cousin Gabriel strangely altered Mih. Come hither you I 'le make a little bold with you Thou that hast been a concealer of more sins in womens actions then thou hast grizled hairs Dorc. Sure I will speak to him he alwayes lov'd me Mih. Reveale a truth to me on my demand now instanrly without premeditation I 'le cut thy tongue out else Mad. What 's here to do do you think I am a devil that you make such conjurations over me Mih. I think thou art as true a servant of his as any Bawd can be But he now if thou darest How long have you known that Gentlewoman and what do you know by her Dorc. Sir Mad. Here 's a stirre about nothing I know nothing by her not I Nor whether she has any thing or nothing that a woman should have by the report of knowledge of man woman or beast not I She came to me but this morning with a purpose to set me up in my new house as I hoped But she has taken a course to make it honestly spoken of already to my utter undoing but she never comes within my doors again as I hope to thrive by my Trade hereafter Dorc. Pray look upon me sir Mih. Was she so resolutely bent and so soon altered Mad. Upon the very first fight of the very first man that came into my house the very first houre of my setting up in it Mih. What man was that Mad. A shame take him your roaring friend Nick I think she is enamoured of him or of something she guesses he has and would faine play the honest woman with him that never played honest man with woman in his life Mih. 'T is she and 't is most wonderful Dorc. If you knew who I were you would not be so strange to me Mad. And here she comes me a hunting after him like a fondling whilest halfe a dozen peeces might ha' been gotten at home by this time aud she have had the halfes of it in her purse by this time if she would have done as I thought she would have done by this time Mih. Alas poor Howlet Mad. I sent whooping after the best guest that haunt my house to have taken the first fruits of her conversation and she would not see a man of 'em to my undoing Mih. Well leave thy hooting Madge and hold thy peace thou shalt get by it Mad. Yes I shall get a good name shortly and this geare hold and turn begger I shall Dor. Pray sir but one word Mih. Speak to her brother 't is our Cousin Dorcas Gab. Will you abuse me too is she not lost Mih. And will not you give her leave to be found again his wine and her sudden apprehension works on him at once Cousin I 'le speak to you though I confesse the miracle of our meeting thus amazes me Dorc. O Cousins both As ye are Gentlemen and of that noble stock whose meer remembrance when he was given up and at the brink of desperate folly stroke that reverend fear into my soul that hath preserv'd my honour from further falling Lend me now your aide to vindicate that honour by that man that threw me in the way of losse and ruine Mih. All shall be well good Cousin you shall have both hands and hearts to re-estate you in him So that in fact you have not wrong'd that honour since he forsook you Dorc. On my soule I have not Mih. Infants then shall be pardoned Brother speak Dorc. You were wont still to be my loving'st Cousin Gab. What a strange dream has wine wrought in my head Mih. I hope it will work out his superfluous zeale And render him civil Christian again Dor. It is no dream good Cousin you are awake And I that Dorcas for whom you have wish't Affinity of blood might be dispens'd with And you to be my choice So well you lov'd me Gab. And will above my life affect you still But you must leave these gauds and prophane dressings Mad. Bawds did he say how comes he to know me troe Dorc. How came my Cousin Gabriel thus translated Out of gay cloathes long haire and lofty spirit Stout and brave action manly carriage Into so strict a Reformation Where is the martial humour he was wont so to affect Mih. His purity and your disgrace fell on you both about a time I faith Gab. Do you swear by your FAITH Mi. He 's falling back again Boy Some more
I vow and brought Fidlers along but they must play i' th' next room for here 's one breaks all the Fiddles that come in his reach Come fir will you drink dance and do as we do Gab. I 'le drink I 'le dance I 'le kisse or do any thing any living thing with any of you that is Brother or Sister Sweet-heart let me feel thy Coney Mih. I now he 's in Play Fidlers Dance All bravely performed admirably well done c. Nick I vow thou art a brother after my own heart To Gabriel Women We cannot commend you enough sir Gab. This done in civil fort among our selves I hope will prove no scandal to a brother Nick 'T will prove an honour to our faction Gab. I thirst to do it honour Clot. Give him some wine he thirsts Mih. Thou little dapper thing thou hold thy peace Ant. Thou seest he can scarce stand Gab. No my religious brethren no more wine Enough 's a feast and little doth suffice I thirst to do some honour to our cause To lead forth legions to fight a battel 'gainst our malignant adversaries Nick Brave Gab. Such an employment now would make me famous for my sufficiency of Att in Armes Nick I vow this man has hidden things in him Mih. He has as brave a warlike spirit man before his precise humour tainted it as ever breath'd in Hector Nick I vow then a good orderly diet of nothing but sack for a week together would revive it in him and bring it to good again Mih. I hope 't is done already Ant. How do you sit Gab. I feare some Jesuitical fumes have invaded my Brain pan All me thinks goes whirley whirley whirley Ant. Best lie down upon a bed Drawer Gab. Souldiers must not be curious A Bench or any thing Draw The Gentleman may have a bed here an 't please you But sir there 's an old angry Gentleman below that asks for you and by all description for that mortified Gentleman And will by all meanes presse into your room here Mih. It is my father Dorc. O me What shall I do Mad. Bet. Fran. We shall be all clap't up Mi. Fear nothing veile your face a little Who is with him Draw No body but his old Servingman that it seems discover'd you You may put this Gentleman into this inner room and keep the Key your selfe I know not what charge he has about him Mih. Admirable honest fellow Draw And you may tell your father he is gone for he is gone you see Nick I vow a wit Draw Now if you 'll be civil I may bring him up to you if not because he is your father we 'll thrust him out of doors an 't please you Mi. Notable rascal well sir let him up I know how to fit him Dorc. But this delays my businesse Cousin and will I fear frustrate my hopes Mi. Nor hinder any thing I 'le warrant thee he 's thine Play Fidlers t'other dance Nick I vow Clot. Will you protest Ant. You are not wilde Mad. Come Wenches if he venture in his fathers sight shame take us and we blush Dance Enter Croswill Belt Cross. Belt And I had not sold all my land to live upon my money in Town here out of danger or the Statute I would give thee a Copihold for this discovery Belt I thank your worship and truly 't is a goodly sight me thinks an 't please your worship Cross. I 'm glad it likes you Heigh excellent good again Heigh Heigh what an happinesse may fathers boast that can bring their children up to this Dance ended I cry ye mercy Gentlemen all Ha! I am sory I interrupted your serious private occasions Nick Would you speak with any here sir Mi. It is my father Gentlemen Cross. Thy father hold thy peace dar'st thou use thy father thus to spend thy time thus ha Is this place fit for the son of a Gentleman of quality ha why doest not answer me does this company sort with thy reputation ha Mih. Sir the company Cross. Hold thy peace I say or are these exercises allowable for a Gentleman that ever said or heard Grace at his fathers Table answer me that Mih. An 't please you Sir Cross. Hold thy peace when I bid thee Nick The company sir offends not you I hope you see the worst of us Cross. In good time sir you are the distracted Gentlemen I take it that ask't him if he would moot to night Is this your mooting do you put cases to your VVenches or they to you Nick I vow thy father talkes too much Cross. Which are the better Lawyers ha Mad. But that you are his father sit and an old man and he an honest young Gentleman and our friend we would tell you Cross. I thank you for him yes truly heartily and for your good opinion of him heartily Pray keep him amongst you while ye have him for I 'le ha' no more to say to him I Is your Invectives against drinking wenching and the abomination of the times come to this is this your spending of time more pretious then money is it you that knows not what to do with money but to buy books and were drawn with such unwillingnesse to a Tavern ha you shall graze upon Littletons Commons or eat nothing but books an 't please you for any exhibition thou ever get'st from me And in that faith thou hast lost a father Come sir you have brought me to a goodly sight here would any Villain but thy selfe have shewed his Master light to see so much woe Thy Coxscombe shall yet pay for 't Belt O sir O. Cross. This was your trim sight was it Belt O. Cross. But well remembred Pray where 's your brother my son I would say for I know no brother or father thou hast Where is Gabriel Mih. He is not here sir Cross. Did you not tell me Sirrah he was here Belt I told you then too much I feel it here Cross. He was here sir but he is gone sir Cross. So so he 's lost He must be cried or we shall never finde him Mih. I 'le warrant you I 'le find him yet to night sir Pray Gentlemen pay you the Reckoning I 'le wait upon my father home Cross. Was that spoke like a son of mine must others pay your reckoning and I in place take that and do not make me mad And why should you home with me I pray sir Mih. Because sir it grows dark and 't is the worst way as it is about the town so many odde holes a man may slip into pray take me with you sir Cross. Pray take no care for me sir and let the way be as it is Do not think me worse at it in the dark then your self I beseech you But you talk't of the Reckoning pray let not the want of money for that hinder the search of your brother There 's towards your paines for that and so for a farewel to you and your friends here till I hear thou keepest