The Merry Wives of Windsor
From Wikisource
| THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR by |
DRAMATIS PERSONAE (Persons Represented):
- SIR JOHN FALSTAFF
- FENTON, a young gentleman
- SHALLOW, a country justice
- SLENDER, cousin to Shallow
- FORD, Gentleman dwelling at Windsor
- PAGE, Gentleman dwelling at Windsor
- WILLIAM PAGE, a boy, son to Page
- SIR HUGH EVANS, a Welsh parson
- DOCTOR CAIUS, a French physician
- HOST of the Garter Inn
- BARDOLPH, PISTOL, NYM, Followers of Falstaff
- ROBIN, page to Falstaff
- SIMPLE, servant to Slender
- RUGBY, servant to Doctor Caius
- MISTRESS FORD
- MISTRESS PAGE
- MISTRESS ANNE PAGE, her daughter, in love with Fenton
- MISTRESS QUICKLY, servant to Doctor Caius
- SERVANTS to Page, Ford, &c.
SCENE: Windsor; and the neighbourhood
The Merry Wives of Windsor
Contents |
[edit] ACT I.
[edit] SCENE 1. Windsor. Before PAGE'S house.
[Enter JUSTICE SHALLOW, SLENDER, and SIR HUGH EVANS.]
SHALLOW.
- Sir Hugh, persuade me not; I will make a Star Chamber matter
- of it; if he were twenty Sir John Falstaffs, he shall not
- abuse Robert Shallow, esquire.
SLENDER.
- In the county of Gloucester, Justice of Peace, and 'coram.'
SHALLOW.
- Ay, cousin Slender, and 'cust-alorum.'
SLENDER.
- Ay, and 'rato-lorum' too; and a gentleman born, Master Parson,
- who writes himself 'armigero' in any bill, warrant, quittance,
- or obligation—'armigero.'
SHALLOW.
- Ay, that I do; and have done any time these three hundred years.
SLENDER.
- All his successors, gone before him, hath done't; and all his
- ancestors, that come after him, may: they may give the dozen
- white luces in their coat.
SHALLOW.
- It is an old coat.
EVANS.
- The dozen white louses do become an old coat well; it agrees well,
- passant; it is a familiar beast to man, and signifies love.
SHALLOW.
- The luce is the fresh fish; the salt fish is an old
- coat.
SLENDER.
- I may quarter, coz?
SHALLOW.
- You may, by marrying.
EVANS.
- It is marring indeed, if he quarter it.
SHALLOW.
- Not a whit.
EVANS.
- Yes, py'r lady! If he has a quarter of your coat, there is but three
- skirts for yourself, in my simple conjectures; but that is all one.
- If Sir John Falstaff have committed disparagements unto you, I am of
- the church, and will be glad to do my benevolence to make atonements
- and compremises between you.
SHALLOW.
- The Council shall hear it; it is a riot.
EVANS.
- It is not meet the Council hear a riot; there is no fear of Got in
- a riot; the Council, look you, shall desire to hear the fear of Got,
- and not to hear a riot; take your vizaments in that.
SHALLOW.
- Ha! o' my life, if I were young again, the sword should end it.
EVANS.
- It is petter that friends is the sword and end it; and there is
- also another device in my prain, which peradventure prings goot
- discretions with it. There is Anne Page, which is daughter to
- Master George Page, which is pretty virginity.
SLENDER.
- Mistress Anne Page? She has brown hair, and speaks small like a woman.
EVANS.
- It is that fery person for all the orld, as just as you will desire;
- and seven hundred pounds of moneys, and gold, and silver, is
- her grandsire upon his death's-bed—Got deliver to a joyful
- resurrections!—give, when she is able to overtake seventeen years
- old. It were a goot motion if we leave our pribbles and prabbles,
- and desire a marriage between Master Abraham and Mistress Anne Page.
SHALLOW.
- Did her grandsire leave her seven hundred pound?
EVANS.
- Ay, and her father is make her a petter penny.
SHALLOW.
- I know the young gentlewoman; she has good gifts.
EVANS.
- Seven hundred pounds, and possibilities, is goot gifts.
SHALLOW.
- Well, let us see honest Master Page. Is Falstaff there?
EVANS.
- Shall I tell you a lie? I do despise a liar as I do despise one that
- is false; or as I despise one that is not true. The knight Sir John
- is there; and, I beseech you, be ruled by your well-willers. I will
- peat the door for Master Page.
- [Knocks.] What, hoa! Got pless your house here!
PAGE.
- [Within.] Who's there?
EVANS.
- Here is Got's plessing, and your friend, and Justice Shallow; and
- here young Master Slender, that peradventures shall tell you another
- tale, if matters grow to your likings.
[Enter PAGE.]
PAGE.
- I am glad to see your worships well. I thank you for my venison,
- Master Shallow.
SHALLOW.
- Master Page, I am glad to see you; much good do it your good heart!
- I wished your venison better; it was ill killed. How doth good
- Mistress Page?—and I thank you always with my heart, la! with my
- heart.
PAGE.
- Sir, I thank you.
SHALLOW.
- Sir, I thank you; by yea and no, I do.
PAGE.
- I am glad to see you, good Master Slender.
SLENDER.
- How does your fallow greyhound, sir? I heard say he was outrun on
- Cotsall.
PAGE.
- It could not be judged, sir.
SLENDER.
- You'll not confess, you'll not confess.
SHALLOW.
- That he will not: 'tis your fault; 'tis your fault. 'Tis a good dog.
PAGE.
- A cur, sir.
SHALLOW.
- Sir, he's a good dog, and a fair dog; can there be more said? he is
- good, and fair. Is Sir John Falstaff here?
PAGE.
- Sir, he is within; and I would I could do a good office
- between you.
EVANS.
- It is spoke as a Christians ought to speak.
SHALLOW.
- He hath wronged me, Master Page.
PAGE.
- Sir, he doth in some sort confess it.
SHALLOW.
- If it be confessed, it is not redressed: is not that so, Master
- Page? He hath wronged me; indeed he hath;—at a word, he hath,
- —believe me; Robert Shallow, esquire, saith he is wronged.
PAGE.
- Here comes Sir John.
[Enter SIR JOHN FALSTAFF, BARDOLPH, NYM, and PISTOL.]
FALSTAFF.
- Now, Master Shallow, you'll complain of me to the King?
SHALLOW.
- Knight, you have beaten my men, killed my deer, and broke open my
- lodge.
FALSTAFF.
- But not kiss'd your keeper's daughter?
SHALLOW.
- Tut, a pin! this shall be answered.
FALSTAFF.
- I will answer it straight: I have done all this. That is now answered.
SHALLOW.
- The Council shall know this.
FALSTAFF.
- 'Twere better for you if it were known in counsel: you'll be laughed
- at.
EVANS.
- Pauca verba, Sir John; goot worts.
FALSTAFF.
- Good worts! good cabbage! Slender, I broke your head; what matter
- have you against me?
SLENDER.
- Marry, sir, I have matter in my head against you; and against your
- cony-catching rascals, Bardolph, Nym, and Pistol. They carried me
- to the tavern, and made me drunk, and afterwards picked my pocket.
BARDOLPH.
- You Banbury cheese!
SLENDER.
- Ay, it is no matter.
PISTOL.
- How now, Mephostophilus!
SLENDER.
- Ay, it is no matter.
NYM.
- Slice, I say! pauca, pauca; slice! That's my humour.
SLENDER.
- Where's Simple, my man? Can you tell, cousin?
EVANS.
- Peace, I pray you. Now let us understand. There is three umpires in
- this matter, as I understand: that is—Master Page, fidelicet Master
- Page; and there is myself, fidelicet myself; and the three party is,
- lastly and finally, mine host of the Garter.
PAGE.
- We three to hear it and end it between them.
EVANS.
- Fery goot: I will make a prief of it in my note-book; and we will
- afterwards ork upon the cause with as great discreetly as we can.
FALSTAFF.
- Pistol!
PISTOL.
- He hears with ears.
EVANS.
- The tevil and his tam! what phrase is this, 'He hears with ear'?
- Why, it is affectations.
FALSTAFF.
- Pistol, did you pick Master Slender's purse?
SLENDER.
- Ay, by these gloves, did he—or I would I might never come in mine
- own great chamber again else!—of seven groats in mill-sixpences,
- and two Edward shovel-boards that cost me two shilling and two pence
- a-piece of Yead Miller, by these gloves.
FALSTAFF.
- Is this true, Pistol?
EVANS.
- No, it is false, if it is a pick-purse.
PISTOL.
- Ha, thou mountain-foreigner!—Sir John and master mine,
- I combat challenge of this latten bilbo.
- Word of denial in thy labras here!
- Word of denial! Froth and scum, thou liest.
SLENDER.
- By these gloves, then, 'twas he.
NYM.
- Be avised, sir, and pass good humours; I will say 'marry trap' with
- you, if you run the nuthook's humour on me; that is the very note
- of it.
SLENDER.
- By this hat, then, he in the red face had it; for though I cannot
- remember what I did when you made me drunk, yet I am not altogether
- an ass.
FALSTAFF.
- What say you, Scarlet and John?
BARDOLPH.
- Why, sir, for my part, I say the gentleman had drunk himself out of
- his five sentences.
EVANS.
- It is his 'five senses'; fie, what the ignorance is!
BARDOLPH.
- And being fap, sir, was, as they say, cashier'd; and so conclusions
- passed the careires.
SLENDER.
- Ay, you spake in Latin then too; but 'tis no matter; I'll ne'er be
- drunk whilst I live again, but in honest, civil, godly company, for
- this trick; if I be drunk, I'll be drunk with those that have the
- fear of God, and not with drunken knaves.
EVANS.
- So Got udge me, that is a virtuous mind.
FALSTAFF.
- You hear all these matters denied, gentlemen; you hear it.
[Enter ANNE PAGE with wine; MISTRESS FORD and MISTRESS PAGE.]
PAGE.
- Nay, daughter, carry the wine in; we'll drink within.
[Exit ANNE PAGE.]
SLENDER.
- O heaven! this is Mistress Anne Page.
PAGE.
- How now, Mistress Ford!
FALSTAFF.
- Mistress Ford, by my troth, you are very well met; by your leave,
- good mistress. [Kissing her.]
PAGE.
- Wife, bid these gentlemen welcome. Come, we have a hot venison pasty
- to dinner; come, gentlemen, I hope we shall drink down all unkindness.
[Exeunt all but SHALLOW, SLENDER, and EVANS.]
SLENDER.
- I had rather than forty shillings I had my Book of Songs and Sonnets
- here.
[Enter SIMPLE.]
How, Simple! Where have you been? I must wait on myself, must I? You
- have not the Book of Riddles about you, have you?
SIMPLE.
- Book of Riddles! why, did you not lend it to Alice Shortcake upon
- Allhallowmas last, a fortnight afore Michaelmas?
SHALLOW.
- Come, coz; come, coz; we stay for you. A word with you, coz; marry,
- this, coz: there is, as 'twere, a tender, a kind of tender, made
- afar off by Sir Hugh here: do you understand me?
SLENDER.
- Ay, sir, you shall find me reasonable; if it be so, I shall do that
- that is reason.
SHALLOW.
- Nay, but understand me.
SLENDER.
- So I do, sir.
EVANS.
- Give ear to his motions, Master Slender: I will description the
- matter to you, if you pe capacity of it.
SLENDER.
- Nay, I will do as my cousin Shallow says; I pray you pardon me; he's
- a justice of peace in his country, simple though I stand here.
EVANS.
- But that is not the question; the question is concerning your marriage.
SHALLOW.
- Ay, there's the point, sir.
EVANS.
- Marry is it; the very point of it; to Mistress Anne Page.
SLENDER.
- Why, if it be so, I will marry her upon any reasonable demands.
EVANS.
- But can you affection the 'oman? Let us command to know that of your
- mouth or of your lips; for divers philosophers hold that the lips is
- parcel of the mouth: therefore, precisely, can you carry your good
- will to the maid?
SHALLOW.
- Cousin Abraham Slender, can you love her?
SLENDER.
- I hope, sir, I will do as it shall become one that would do reason.
EVANS.
- Nay, Got's lords and his ladies! you must speak possitable, if you can
- carry her your desires towards her.
SHALLOW.
- That you must. Will you, upon good dowry, marry her?
SLENDER.
- I will do a greater thing than that upon your request, cousin, in any
- reason.
SHALLOW.
- Nay, conceive me, conceive me, sweet coz; what I do is to pleasure
- you, coz. Can you love the maid?
SLENDER.
- I will marry her, sir, at your request; but if there be no great love
- in the beginning, yet heaven may decrease it upon better acquaintance,
- when we are married and have more occasion to know one another; I hope
- upon familiarity will grow more contempt. But if you say 'Marry her,'
- I will marry her; that I am freely dissolved, and dissolutely.
EVANS.
- It is a fery discretion answer; save, the fall is in the ort
- 'dissolutely:' the ort is, according to our meaning, 'resolutely.'
- His meaning is good.
SHALLOW.
- Ay, I think my cousin meant well.
SLENDER.
- Ay, or else I would I might be hanged, la!
SHALLOW.
- Here comes fair Mistress Anne.
[Re-enter ANNE PAGE.]
Would I were young for your sake, Mistress Anne!
ANNE.
- The dinner is on the table; my father desires your worships' company.
SHALLOW.
- I will wait on him, fair Mistress Anne!
EVANS.
- Od's plessed will! I will not be absence at the grace.
[Exeunt SHALLOW and EVANS.]
ANNE.
- Will't please your worship to come in, sir?
SLENDER.
- No, I thank you, forsooth, heartily; I am very well.
ANNE.
- The dinner attends you, sir.
SLENDER.
- I am not a-hungry, I thank you, forsooth. Go, sirrah, for all you are
- my man, go wait upon my cousin Shallow.
[Exit SIMPLE.]
A justice of peace sometime may be beholding to his friend for a man.
- I keep but three men and a boy yet, till my mother be dead. But what
- though? Yet I live like a poor gentleman born.
ANNE.
- I may not go in without your worship: they will not sit till you come.
SLENDER.
- I' faith, I'll eat nothing; I thank you as much as though I did.
ANNE.
- I pray you, sir, walk in.
SLENDER.
- I had rather walk here, I thank you. I bruised my shin th' other day
- with playing at sword and dagger with a master of fence; three veneys
- for a dish of stewed prunes—and, by my troth, I cannot abide the
- smell of hot meat since. Why do your dogs bark so? Be there bears i'
- the town?
ANNE.
- I think there are, sir; I heard them talked of.
SLENDER.
- I love the sport well; but I shall as soon quarrel at it as any man
- in England. You are afraid, if you see the bear loose, are you not?
ANNE.
- Ay, indeed, sir.
SLENDER.
- That's meat and drink to me now. I have seen Sackerson loose twenty
- times, and have taken him by the chain; but I warrant you, the women
- have so cried and shrieked at it that it passed; but women, indeed,
- cannot abide 'em; they are very ill-favoured rough things.
[Re-enter PAGE.]
PAGE.
- Come, gentle Master Slender, come; we stay for you.
SLENDER.
- I'll eat nothing, I thank you, sir.
PAGE.
- By cock and pie, you shall not choose, sir! come, come.
SLENDER.
- Nay, pray you lead the way.
PAGE.
- Come on, sir.
SLENDER.
- Mistress Anne, yourself shall go first.
ANNE.
- Not I, sir; pray you keep on.
SLENDER.
- Truly, I will not go first; truly, la! I will not do you that wrong.
ANNE.
- I pray you, sir.
SLENDER.
- I'll rather be unmannerly than troublesome. You do yourself wrong
- indeed, la!
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 2. The same.
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS and SIMPLE.]
EVANS.
- Go your ways, and ask of Doctor Caius' house which is the way; and
- there dwells one Mistress Quickly, which is in the manner of his
- nurse, or his dry nurse, or his cook, or his laundry, his washer,
- and his wringer.
SIMPLE.
- Well, sir.
EVANS.
- Nay, it is petter yet. Give her this letter; for it is a 'oman that
- altogether's acquaintance with Mistress Anne Page; and the letter
- is to desire and require her to solicit your master's desires to
- Mistress Anne Page. I pray you be gone: I will make an end of my
- dinner; there's pippins and cheese to come.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 3. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter FALSTAFF, HOST, BARDOLPH, NYM, PISTOL, and ROBIN.]
FALSTAFF.
- Mine host of the Garter!
HOST.
- What says my bully rook? Speak scholarly and wisely.
FALSTAFF.
- Truly, mine host, I must turn away some of my followers.
HOST.
- Discard, bully Hercules; cashier; let them wag; trot, trot.
FALSTAFF.
- I sit at ten pounds a week.
HOST.
- Thou'rt an emperor, Caesar, Keiser, and Pheazar. I will entertain
- Bardolph; he shall draw, he shall tap; said I well, bully Hector?
FALSTAFF.
- Do so, good mine host.
HOST.
- I have spoke; let him follow. [To BARDOLPH] Let me see thee froth and
- lime. I am at a word; follow.
[Exit.]
FALSTAFF.
- Bardolph, follow him. A tapster is a good trade; an old cloak makes
- a new jerkin; a withered serving-man a fresh tapster. Go; adieu.
BARDOLPH.
- It is a life that I have desired; I will thrive.
PISTOL.
- O base Hungarian wight! Wilt thou the spigot wield?
[Exit BARDOLPH.]
NYM.
- He was gotten in drink. Is not the humour conceited?
FALSTAFF.
- I am glad I am so acquit of this tinder-box: his thefts were too open;
- his filching was like an unskilful singer—he kept not time.
NYM.
- The good humour is to steal at a minim's rest.
PISTOL.
- 'Convey' the wise it call. 'Steal!' foh! A fico for the phrase!
FALSTAFF.
- Well, sirs, I am almost out at heels.
PISTOL.
- Why, then, let kibes ensue.
FALSTAFF.
- There is no remedy; I must cony-catch; I must shift.
PISTOL.
- Young ravens must have food.
FALSTAFF.
- Which of you know Ford of this town?
PISTOL.
- I ken the wight; he is of substance good.
FALSTAFF.
- My honest lads, I will tell you what I am about.
PISTOL.
- Two yards, and more.
FALSTAFF.
- No quips now, Pistol. Indeed, I am in the waist two yards about; but
- I am now about no waste; I am about thrift. Briefly, I do mean to
- make love to Ford's wife; I spy entertainment in her; she discourses,
- she carves, she gives the leer of invitation; I can construe the
- action of her familiar style; and the hardest voice of her behaviour,
- to be Englished rightly, is 'I am Sir John Falstaff's.'
PISTOL.
- He hath studied her will, and translated her will out of honesty into
- English.
NYM.
- The anchor is deep; will that humour pass?
FALSTAFF.
- Now, the report goes she has all the rule of her husband's purse; he
- hath a legion of angels.
PISTOL.
- As many devils entertain; and 'To her, boy,' say I.
NYM.
- The humour rises; it is good; humour me the angels.
FALSTAFF.
- I have writ me here a letter to her; and here another to Page's wife,
- who even now gave me good eyes too, examined my parts with most
- judicious oeillades; sometimes the beam of her view gilded my foot,
- sometimes my portly belly.
PISTOL.
- Then did the sun on dunghill shine.
NYM.
- I thank thee for that humour.
FALSTAFF.
- O! she did so course o'er my exteriors with such a greedy intention
- that the appetite of her eye did seem to scorch me up like a
- burning-glass. Here's another letter to her: she bears the purse
- too; she is a region in Guiana, all gold and bounty. I will be
- cheator to them both, and they shall be exchequers to me; they shall
- be my East and West Indies, and I will trade to them both. Go, bear
- thou this letter to Mistress Page; and thou this to Mistress Ford.
- We will thrive, lads, we will thrive.
PISTOL.
- Shall I Sir Pandarus of Troy become,
- And by my side wear steel? then Lucifer take all!
NYM.
- I will run no base humour. Here, take the humour-letter; I will keep
- the haviour of reputation.
FALSTAFF.
- [To ROBIN] Hold, sirrah; bear you these letters tightly;
- Sail like my pinnace to these golden shores.
- Rogues, hence, avaunt! vanish like hailstones, go;
- Trudge, plod away o' hoof; seek shelter, pack!
- Falstaff will learn the humour of this age;
- French thrift, you rogues; myself, and skirted page.
[Exeunt FALSTAFF and ROBIN.]
PISTOL.
- Let vultures gripe thy guts! for gourd and fullam holds,
- And high and low beguile the rich and poor;
- Tester I'll have in pouch when thou shalt lack,
- Base Phrygian Turk!
NYM.
- I have operations in my head which be humours of revenge.
PISTOL.
- Wilt thou revenge?
NYM.
- By welkin and her star!
PISTOL.
- With wit or steel?
NYM.
- With both the humours, I:
- I will discuss the humour of this love to Page.
PISTOL.
-
- And I to Ford shall eke unfold
- How Falstaff, varlet vile,
- His dove will prove, his gold will hold,
- And his soft couch defile.
NYM.
- My humour shall not cool: I will incense Page to deal with poison;
- I will possess him with yellowness, for the revolt of mine is
- dangerous: that is my true humour.
PISTOL.
- Thou art the Mars of malcontents; I second thee; troop on.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 4. A room in DOCTOR CAIUS'S house.
[Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY, and SIMPLE.]
QUICKLY.
- What, John Rugby!
[Enter RUGBY.]
I pray thee go to the casement, and see if you can see my master,
- Master Doctor Caius, coming: if he do, i' faith, and find anybody
- in the house, here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the
- King's English.
RUGBY.
- I'll go watch.
QUICKLY.
- Go; and we'll have a posset for't soon at night, in faith, at the
- latter end of a sea-coal fire.
[Exit RUGBY.]
An honest, willing, kind fellow, as ever servant shall come in house
- withal; and, I warrant you, no tell-tale nor no breed-bate; his worst
- fault is that he is given to prayer; he is something peevish that
- way; but nobody but has his fault; but let that pass. Peter Simple
- you say your name is?
SIMPLE.
- Ay, for fault of a better.
QUICKLY.
- And Master Slender's your master?
SIMPLE.
- Ay, forsooth.
QUICKLY.
- Does he not wear a great round beard, like a glover's paring-knife?
SIMPLE.
- No, forsooth; he hath but a little whey face, with a little yellow
- beard—a cane-coloured beard.
QUICKLY.
- A softly-sprighted man, is he not?
SIMPLE.
- Ay, forsooth; but he is as tall a man of his hands as any is between
- this and his head; he hath fought with a warrener.
QUICKLY.
- How say you?—O! I should remember him. Does he not hold up his head,
- as it were, and strut in his gait?
SIMPLE.
- Yes, indeed, does he.
QUICKLY.
- Well, heaven send Anne Page no worse fortune! Tell Master Parson
- Evans I will do what I can for your master: Anne is a good girl,
- and I wish—
[Re-enter RUGBY.]
RUGBY.
- Out, alas! here comes my master.
QUICKLY.
- We shall all be shent. Run in here, good young man; go into this
- closet. [Shuts SIMPLE in the closet.] He will not stay long. What,
- John Rugby! John! what, John, I say! Go, John, go inquire for my
- master; I doubt he be not well that he comes not home.
[Exit Rugby.]
[Sings.] And down, down, adown-a, &c.
[Enter DOCTOR CAIUS.]
CAIUS.
- Vat is you sing? I do not like des toys. Pray you, go and vetch me
- in my closet une boitine verde—a box, a green-a box: do intend vat
- I speak? a green-a box.
QUICKLY.
- Ay, forsooth, I'll fetch it you. [Aside] I am glad he went not in
- himself: if he had found the young man, he would have been horn-mad.
CAIUS.
- Fe, fe, fe fe! ma foi, il fait fort chaud. Je m'en vais a la cour—
- la grande affaire.
QUICKLY.
- Is it this, sir?
CAIUS.
- Oui; mettez le au mon pocket: depechez, quickly—Vere is dat knave,
- Rugby?
QUICKLY.
- What, John Rugby? John!
[Re-enter Rugby.]
RUGBY.
- Here, sir.
CAIUS.
- You are John Rugby, and you are Jack Rugby: come, take-a your rapier,
- and come after my heel to de court.
RUGBY.
- 'Tis ready, sir, here in the porch.
CAIUS.
- By my trot, I tarry too long—Od's me! Qu'ay j'oublie? Dere is some
- simples in my closet dat I vill not for the varld I shall leave behind.
QUICKLY.
- [Aside.] Ay me, he'll find the young man there, and be mad!
CAIUS.
- O diable, diable! vat is in my closet?—Villainy! larron!
- [Pulling SIMPLE out.] Rugby, my rapier!
QUICKLY.
- Good master, be content.
CAIUS.
- Verefore shall I be content-a?
QUICKLY.
- The young man is an honest man.
CAIUS.
- What shall de honest man do in my closet? dere is no honest man dat
- shall come in my closet.
QUICKLY.
- I beseech you, be not so phlegmatic. Hear the truth of it: he came of
- an errand to me from Parson Hugh.
CAIUS.
- Vell.
SIMPLE.
- Ay, forsooth, to desire her to—
QUICKLY.
- Peace, I pray you.
CAIUS.
- Peace-a your tongue!—Speak-a your tale.
SIMPLE.
- To desire this honest gentlewoman, your maid, to speak a good word to
- Mistress Anne Page for my master, in the way of marriage.
QUICKLY.
- This is all, indeed, la! but I'll ne'er put my finger in the fire,
- and need not.
CAIUS.
- Sir Hugh send-a you?—Rugby, baillez me some paper: tarry you a
- little-a while. [Writes.]
QUICKLY.
- I am glad he is so quiet: if he had been throughly moved, you should
- have heard him so loud and so melancholy. But notwithstanding, man,
- I'll do you your master what good I can; and the very yea and the no
- is, the French doctor, my master—I may call him my master, look you,
- for I keep his house; and I wash, wring, brew, bake, scour, dress
- meat and drink, make the beds, and do all myself—
SIMPLE.
- 'Tis a great charge to come under one body's hand.
QUICKLY.
- Are you avis'd o' that? You shall find it a great charge; and to be
- up early and down late; but notwithstanding,—to tell you in your
- ear,—I would have no words of it—my master himself is in love with
- Mistress Anne Page; but notwithstanding that, I know Anne's mind,
- that's neither here nor there.
CAIUS.
- You jack'nape; give-a dis letter to Sir Hugh; by gar, it is a
- shallenge: I will cut his troat in de Park; and I will teach a scurvy
- jack-a-nape priest to meddle or make. You may be gone; it is not good
- you tarry here: by gar, I will cut all his two stones; by gar, he
- shall not have a stone to throw at his dog.
[Exit SIMPLE.]
QUICKLY.
- Alas, he speaks but for his friend.
CAIUS.
- It is no matter-a ver dat:—do not you tell-a me dat I shall have
- Anne Page for myself? By gar, I vill kill de Jack priest; and I have
- appointed mine host of de Jartiere to measure our weapon. By gar, I
- vill myself have Anne Page.
QUICKLY.
- Sir, the maid loves you, and all shall be well. We must give folks
- leave to prate: what, the good-jer!
CAIUS.
- Rugby, come to the court vit me. By gar, if I have not Anne Page,
- I shall turn your head out of my door. Follow my heels, Rugby.
[Exeunt CAIUS and RUGBY.]
QUICKLY.
- You shall have An fool's-head of your own. No, I know Anne's mind for
- that: never a woman in Windsor knows more of Anne's mind than I do;
- nor can do more than I do with her, I thank heaven.
FENTON.
- [Within.] Who's within there? ho!
QUICKLY.
- Who's there, I trow? Come near the house, I pray you.
[Enter FENTON.]
FENTON.
- How now, good woman! how dost thou?
QUICKLY.
- The better, that it pleases your good worship to ask.
FENTON.
- What news? how does pretty Mistress Anne?
QUICKLY.
- In truth, sir, and she is pretty, and honest, and gentle; and one that
- is your friend, I can tell you that by the way; I praise heaven for it.
FENTON.
- Shall I do any good, thinkest thou? Shall I not lose my suit?
QUICKLY.
- Troth, sir, all is in His hands above; but notwithstanding, Master
- Fenton, I'll be sworn on a book she loves you. Have not your worship
- a wart above your eye?
FENTON.
- Yes, marry, have I; what of that?
QUICKLY.
- Well, thereby hangs a tale; good faith, it is such another Nan; but,
- I detest, an honest maid as ever broke bread. We had an hour's talk
- of that wart; I shall never laugh but in that maid's company;—but,
- indeed, she is given too much to allicholy and musing. But for you
- —well, go to.
FENTON.
- Well, I shall see her to-day. Hold, there's money for thee; let me
- have thy voice in my behalf: if thou seest her before me, commend me.
QUICKLY.
- Will I? i' faith, that we will; and I will tell your worship more of
- the wart the next time we have confidence; and of other wooers.
FENTON.
- Well, farewell; I am in great haste now.
QUICKLY.
- Farewell to your worship.—[Exit FENTON.] Truly, an honest gentleman;
- but Anne loves him not; for I know Anne's mind as well as another
- does. Out upon 't, what have I forgot?
[Exit.]
[edit] ACT II.
[edit] SCENE 1. Before PAGE'S house
[Enter MISTRESS PAGE, with a letter.]
MRS. PAGE.
- What! have I scaped love-letters in the holiday-time of my beauty,
- and am I now a subject for them? Let me see.
-
- 'Ask me no reason why I love you; for though Love use Reason
- for his precisian, he admits him not for his counsellor. You
- are not young, no more am I; go to, then, there's sympathy:
- you are merry, so am I; ha! ha! then there's more sympathy;
- you love sack, and so do I; would you desire better sympathy?
- Let it suffice thee, Mistress Page, at the least, if the love
- of soldier can suffice, that I love thee. I will not say,
- pity me: 'tis not a soldier-like phrase; but I say, Love me.
- By me,
- Thine own true knight,
- By day or night,
- Or any kind of light,
- With all his might,
- For thee to fight,
- JOHN FALSTAFF.'
What a Herod of Jewry is this! O wicked, wicked world! One that is
- well-nigh worn to pieces with age to show himself a young gallant.
- What an unweighed behaviour hath this Flemish drunkard picked, with
- the devil's name! out of my conversation, that he dares in this manner
- assay me? Why, he hath not been thrice in my company! What should I
- say to him? I was then frugal of my mirth:—Heaven forgive me! Why,
- I'll exhibit a bill in the parliament for the putting down of men.
- How shall I be revenged on him? for revenged I will be, as sure as
- his guts are made of puddings.
[Enter MISTRESS FORD.]
MRS. FORD.
- Mistress Page! trust me, I was going to your house.
MRS. PAGE.
- And, trust me, I was coming to you. You look very ill.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, I'll ne'er believe that; I have to show to the contrary.
MRS. PAGE.
- Faith, but you do, in my mind.
MRS. FORD.
- Well, I do, then; yet, I say, I could show you to the contrary.
- O, Mistress Page! give me some counsel.
MRS. PAGE.
- What's the matter, woman?
MRS. FORD.
- O woman, if it were not for one trifling respect, I could come to
- such honour!
MRS. PAGE.
- Hang the trifle, woman; take the honour. What is it?—Dispense with
- trifles;—what is it?
MRS. FORD.
- If I would but go to hell for an eternal moment or so, I could be
- knighted.
MRS. PAGE.
- What? thou liest. Sir Alice Ford! These knights will hack; and so
- thou shouldst not alter the article of thy gentry.
MRS. FORD.
- We burn daylight: here, read, read; perceive how I might be knighted.
- I shall think the worse of fat men as long as I have an eye to make
- difference of men's liking: and yet he would not swear; praised
- women's modesty; and gave such orderly and well-behaved reproof to
- all uncomeliness that I would have sworn his disposition would have
- gone to the truth of his words; but they do no more adhere and keep
- place together than the Hundredth Psalm to the tune of 'Greensleeves.'
- What tempest, I trow, threw this whale, with so many tuns of oil in
- his belly, ashore at Windsor? How shall I be revenged on him? I think
- the best way were to entertain him with hope, till the wicked fire of
- lust have melted him in his own grease. Did you ever hear the like?
MRS. PAGE.
- Letter for letter, but that the name of Page and Ford differs. To thy
- great comfort in this mystery of ill opinions, here's the twin-brother
- of thy letter; but let thine inherit first, for, I protest, mine never
- shall. I warrant he hath a thousand of these letters, writ with blank
- space for different names, sure, more, and these are of the second
- edition. He will print them, out of doubt; for he cares not what he
- puts into the press, when he would put us two: I had rather be a
- giantess and lie under Mount Pelion. Well, I will find you twenty
- lascivious turtles ere one chaste man.
MRS. FORD.
- Why, this is the very same; the very hand, the very words. What doth
- he think of us?
MRS. PAGE.
- Nay, I know not; it makes me almost ready to wrangle with mine own
- honesty. I'll entertain myself like one that I am not acquainted
- withal; for, sure, unless he know some strain in me that I know not
- myself, he would never have boarded me in this fury.
MRS. FORD.
- 'Boarding' call you it? I'll be sure to keep him above deck.
MRS. PAGE.
- So will I; if he come under my hatches, I'll never to sea again.
- Let's be revenged on him; let's appoint him a meeting, give him a
- show of comfort in his suit, and lead him on with a fine-baited
- delay, till he hath pawned his horses to mine host of the Garter.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, I will consent to act any villainy against him that may not
- sully the chariness of our honesty. O, that my husband saw this
- letter! It would give eternal food to his jealousy.
MRS. PAGE.
- Why, look where he comes; and my good man too: he's as far from
- jealousy as I am from giving him cause; and that, I hope, is an
- unmeasurable distance.
MRS. FORD.
- You are the happier woman.
MRS. PAGE.
- Let's consult together against this greasy knight. Come hither.
[They retire.]
[Enter FORD, PISTOL, and PAGE and NYM.]
FORD.
- Well, I hope it be not so.
PISTOL.
- Hope is a curtal dog in some affairs:
- Sir John affects thy wife.
FORD.
- Why, sir, my wife is not young.
PISTOL.
- He woos both high and low, both rich and poor,
- Both young and old, one with another, Ford;
- He loves the gallimaufry. Ford, perpend.
FORD.
- Love my wife!
PISTOL.
- With liver burning hot: prevent, or go thou,
- Like Sir Actaeon he, with Ringwood at thy heels.—
- O! odious is the name!
FORD.
- What name, sir?
PISTOL.
- The horn, I say. Farewell:
- Take heed; have open eye, for thieves do foot by night;
- Take heed, ere summer comes, or cuckoo birds do sing.
- Away, Sir Corporal Nym.
- Believe it, Page; he speaks sense.
[Exit PISTOL.]
FORD.
- [Aside] I will be patient: I will find out this.
NYM.
- [To PAGE] And this is true; I like not the humour of lying. He hath
- wronged me in some humours: I should have borne the humoured letter
- to her; but I have a sword, and it shall bite upon my necessity. He
- loves your wife; there's the short and the long. My name is Corporal
- Nym; I speak, and I avouch 'tis true. My name is Nym, and Falstaff
- loves your wife. Adieu. I love not the humour of bread and cheese;
- and there's the humour of it. Adieu.
[Exit NYM.]
PAGE.
- [Aside.] 'The humour of it,' quoth 'a! Here's a fellow frights
- English out of his wits.
FORD.
- I will seek out Falstaff.
PAGE.
- I never heard such a drawling, affecting rogue.
FORD.
- If I do find it: well.
PAGE.
- I will not believe such a Cataian, though the priest o' the town
- commended him for a true man.
FORD.
- 'Twas a good sensible fellow: well.
PAGE.
- How now, Meg!
MRS. PAGE.
- Whither go you, George?—Hark you.
MRS. FORD.
- How now, sweet Frank! why art thou melancholy?
FORD.
- I melancholy! I am not melancholy. Get you home, go.
MRS. FORD.
- Faith, thou hast some crotchets in thy head now. Will you go,
- Mistress Page?
MRS. PAGE.
- Have with you. You'll come to dinner, George?
- [Aside to MRS. FORD] Look who comes yonder: she shall be our
- messenger to this paltry knight.
MRS. FORD.
- [Aside to MRS. PAGE] Trust me, I thought on her: she'll fit it.
[Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
MRS. PAGE.
- You are come to see my daughter Anne?
QUICKLY.
- Ay, forsooth; and, I pray, how does good Mistress Anne?
MRS. PAGE.
- Go in with us and see; we'd have an hour's talk with you.
[Exeunt MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS FORD, and MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
PAGE.
- How now, Master Ford!
FORD.
- You heard what this knave told me, did you not?
PAGE.
- Yes; and you heard what the other told me?
FORD.
- Do you think there is truth in them?
PAGE.
- Hang 'em, slaves! I do not think the knight would offer it; but these
- that accuse him in his intent towards our wives are a yoke of his
- discarded men; very rogues, now they be out of service.
FORD.
- Were they his men?
PAGE.
- Marry, were they.
FORD.
- I like it never the better for that. Does he lie at the Garter?
PAGE.
- Ay, marry, does he. If he should intend this voyage toward my wife,
- I would turn her loose to him; and what he gets more of her than
- sharp words, let it lie on my head.
FORD.
- I do not misdoubt my wife; but I would be loath to turn them together.
- A man may be too confident. I would have nothing 'lie on my head': I
- cannot be thus satisfied.
PAGE.
- Look where my ranting host of the Garter comes. There is either
- liquor in his pate or money in his purse when he looks so merrily.
[Enter HOST and SHALLOW.]
How now, mine host!
HOST.
- How now, bully-rook! Thou'rt a gentleman. Cavaliero-justice, I say!
SHALLOW.
- I follow, mine host, I follow. Good even and twenty, good Master
- Page! Master Page, will you go with us? We have sport in hand.
HOST.
- Tell him, cavaliero-justice; tell him, bully-rook.
SHALLOW.
- Sir, there is a fray to be fought between Sir Hugh the Welsh priest
- and Caius the French doctor.
FORD.
- Good mine host o' the Garter, a word with you.
HOST.
- What say'st thou, my bully-rook?
[They go aside.]
SHALLOW.
- [To PAGE.] Will you go with us to behold it? My merry host hath had
- the measuring of their weapons; and, I think, hath appointed them
- contrary places; for, believe me, I hear the parson is no jester.
- Hark, I will tell you what our sport shall be. [They converse apart.]
HOST.
- Hast thou no suit against my knight, my guest-cavaliero?
FORD.
- None, I protest: but I'll give you a pottle of burnt sack to give me
- recourse to him, and tell him my name is Brook, only for a jest.
HOST.
- My hand, bully; thou shalt have egress and regress; said I well? and
- thy name shall be Brook. It is a merry knight. Will you go, mynheers?
SHALLOW.
- Have with you, mine host.
PAGE.
- I have heard the Frenchman hath good skill in his rapier.
SHALLOW.
- Tut, sir! I could have told you more. In these times you stand on
- distance, your passes, stoccadoes, and I know not what: 'tis the
- heart, Master Page; 'tis here, 'tis here. I have seen the time with
- my long sword I would have made you four tall fellows skip like rats.
HOST.
- Here, boys, here, here! Shall we wag?
PAGE.
- Have with you. I had rather hear them scold than fight.
[Exeunt HOST, SHALLOW, and PAGE.]
FORD.
- Though Page be a secure fool, and stands so firmly on his wife's
- frailty, yet I cannot put off my opinion so easily. She was in his
- company at Page's house, and what they made there I know not. Well,
- I will look further into 't; and I have a disguise to sound Falstaff.
- If I find her honest, I lose not my labour; if she be otherwise,
- 'tis labour well bestowed.
[Exit.]
[edit] SCENE 2. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter FALSTAFF and PISTOL.]
FALSTAFF.
- I will not lend thee a penny.
PISTOL.
- Why then, the world's mine oyster,
- Which I with sword will open.
- I will retort the sum in equipage.
FALSTAFF.
- Not a penny. I have been content, sir, you should lay my countenance
- to pawn; I have grated upon my good friends for three reprieves for
- you and your coach-fellow, Nym; or else you had looked through the
- grate, like a geminy of baboons. I am damned in hell for swearing
- to gentlemen my friends you were good soldiers and tall fellows; and
- when Mistress Bridget lost the handle of her fan, I took 't upon
- mine honour thou hadst it not.
PISTOL.
- Didst not thou share? Hadst thou not fifteen pence?
FALSTAFF.
- Reason, you rogue, reason. Thinkest thou I'll endanger my soul
- gratis? At a word, hang no more about me, I am no gibbet for you:
- go: a short knife and a throng!—to your manor of Picht-hatch! go.
- You'll not bear a letter for me, you rogue!—you stand upon your
- honour!—Why, thou unconfinable baseness, it is as much as I can do
- to keep the terms of my honour precise. I, I, I myself sometimes,
- leaving the fear of God on the left hand, and hiding mine honour in
- my necessity, am fain to shuffle, to hedge, and to lurch; and yet
- you, rogue, will ensconce your rags, your cat-a-mountain looks,
- your red-lattice phrases, and your bold-beating oaths, under the
- shelter of your honour! You will not do it, you!
PISTOL.
- I do relent; what wouldst thou more of man?
[Enter ROBIN.]
ROBIN.
- Sir, here's a woman would speak with you.
FALSTAFF.
- Let her approach.
[Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
QUICKLY.
- Give your worship good morrow.
FALSTAFF.
- Good morrow, good wife.
QUICKLY.
- Not so, an't please your worship.
FALSTAFF.
- Good maid, then.
QUICKLY.
- I'll be sworn; As my mother was, the first hour I was born.
FALSTAFF.
- I do believe the swearer. What with me?
QUICKLY.
- Shall I vouchsafe your worship a word or two?
FALSTAFF.
- Two thousand, fair woman; and I'll vouchsafe thee the hearing.
QUICKLY.
- There is one Mistress Ford, sir,—I pray, come a little nearer this
- ways:—I myself dwell with Master Doctor Caius.
FALSTAFF.
- Well, on: Mistress Ford, you say,—
QUICKLY.
- Your worship says very true;—I pray your worship come a little
- nearer this ways.
FALSTAFF.
- I warrant thee nobody hears—mine own people, mine own people.
QUICKLY.
- Are they so? God bless them, and make them His servants!
FALSTAFF.
- Well: Mistress Ford, what of her?
QUICKLY.
- Why, sir, she's a good creature. Lord, Lord! your worship's a wanton!
- Well, heaven forgive you, and all of us, I pray.
FALSTAFF.
- Mistress Ford; come, Mistress Ford—
QUICKLY.
- Marry, this is the short and the long of it. You have brought her
- into such a canaries as 'tis wonderful: the best courtier of them
- all, when the court lay at Windsor, could never have brought her to
- such a canary; yet there has been knights, and lords, and gentlemen,
- with their coaches; I warrant you, coach after coach, letter after
- letter, gift after gift; smelling so sweetly,—all musk, and so
- rushling, I warrant you, in silk and gold; and in such alligant
- terms; and in such wine and sugar of the best and the fairest, that
- would have won any woman's heart; and I warrant you, they could
- never get an eye-wink of her. I had myself twenty angels given me
- this morning; but I defy all angels, in any such sort, as they say,
- but in the way of honesty: and, I warrant you, they could never get
- her so much as sip on a cup with the proudest of them all; and yet
- there has been earls, nay, which is more, pensioners; but, I warrant
- you, all is one with her.
FALSTAFF.
- But what says she to me? be brief, my good she-Mercury.
QUICKLY.
- Marry, she hath received your letter; for the which she thanks you
- a thousand times; and she gives you to notify that her husband will
- be absence from his house between ten and eleven.
FALSTAFF.
- Ten and eleven?
QUICKLY.
- Ay, forsooth; and then you may come and see the picture, she says,
- that you wot of: Master Ford, her husband, will be from home. Alas!
- the sweet woman leads an ill life with him; he's a very jealousy
- man; she leads a very frampold life with him, good heart.
FALSTAFF.
- Ten and eleven. Woman, commend me to her; I will not fail her.
QUICKLY.
- Why, you say well. But I have another messenger to your worship:
- Mistress Page hath her hearty commendations to you too; and let me
- tell you in your ear, she's as fartuous a civil modest wife, and
- one, I tell you, that will not miss you morning nor evening prayer,
- as any is in Windsor, whoe'er be the other; and she bade me tell
- your worship that her husband is seldom from home, but she hopes
- there will come a time. I never knew a woman so dote upon a man:
- surely I think you have charms, la! yes, in truth.
FALSTAFF.
- Not I, I assure thee; setting the attraction of my good parts aside,
- I have no other charms.
QUICKLY.
- Blessing on your heart for 't!
FALSTAFF.
- But, I pray thee, tell me this: has Ford's wife and Page's wife
- acquainted each other how they love me?
QUICKLY.
- That were a jest indeed! They have not so little grace, I hope: that
- were a trick indeed! But Mistress Page would desire you to send
- her your little page, of all loves: her husband has a marvellous
- infection to the little page; and, truly, Master Page is an honest
- man. Never a wife in Windsor leads a better life than she does; do
- what she will, say what she will, take all, pay all, go to bed when
- she list, rise when she list, all is as she will; and truly she
- deserves it; for if there be a kind woman in Windsor, she is one.
- You must send her your page; no remedy.
FALSTAFF.
- Why, I will.
QUICKLY.
- Nay, but do so then; and, look you, he may come and go between
- you both; and in any case have a nay-word, that you may know one
- another's mind, and the boy never need to understand any thing; for
- 'tis not good that children should know any wickedness: old folks,
- you know, have discretion, as they say, and know the world.
FALSTAFF.
- Fare thee well; commend me to them both. There's my purse; I am yet
- thy debtor. Boy, go along with this woman.—
[Exeunt MISTRESS QUICKLY and ROBIN.]
This news distracts me.
PISTOL.
- This punk is one of Cupid's carriers;
- Clap on more sails; pursue; up with your fights;
- Give fire; she is my prize, or ocean whelm them all!
[Exit.]
FALSTAFF.
- Say'st thou so, old Jack? go thy ways; I'll make more of thy old
- body than I have done. Will they yet look after thee? Wilt thou,
- after the expense of so much money, be now a gainer? Good body,
- I thank thee. Let them say 'tis grossly done; so it be fairly done,
- no matter.
[Enter BARDOLPH, with a cup of sack.]
BARDOLPH.
- Sir John, there's one Master Brook below would fain speak with you
- and be acquainted with you: and hath sent your worship a morning's
- draught of sack.
FALSTAFF.
- Brook is his name?
BARDOLPH.
- Ay, sir.
FALSTAFF.
- Call him in. [Exit BARDOLPH.] Such Brooks are welcome to me, that
- o'erflow such liquor. Ah, ha! Mistress Ford and Mistress Page, have
- I encompassed you? Go to; via!
[Re-enter BARDOLPH, with FORD disguised.]
FORD.
- Bless you, sir!
FALSTAFF.
- And you, sir; would you speak with me?
FORD.
- I make bold to press with so little preparation upon
- you.
FALSTAFF.
- You're welcome. What's your will?—Give us leave, drawer.
[Exit BARDOLPH.]
FORD.
- Sir, I am a gentleman that have spent much: my name is Brook.
FALSTAFF.
- Good Master Brook, I desire more acquaintance of you.
FORD.
- Good Sir John, I sue for yours: not to charge you; for I must let
- you understand I think myself in better plight for a lender than
- you are: the which hath something embold'ned me to this unseasoned
- intrusion; for they say, if money go before, all ways do lie open.
FALSTAFF.
- Money is a good soldier, sir, and will on.
FORD.
- Troth, and I have a bag of money here troubles me; if you will
- help to bear it, Sir John, take all, or half, for easing me of
- the carriage.
FALSTAFF.
- Sir, I know not how I may deserve to be your porter.
FORD.
- I will tell you, sir, if you will give me the hearing.
FALSTAFF.
- Speak, good Master Brook; I shall be glad to be your servant.
FORD.
- Sir, I hear you are a scholar,—I will be brief with you, and
- you have been a man long known to me, though I had never so good
- means, as desire, to make myself acquainted with you. I shall
- discover a thing to you, wherein I must very much lay open mine
- own imperfection; but, good Sir John, as you have one eye upon my
- follies, as you hear them unfolded, turn another into the register
- of your own, that I may pass with a reproof the easier, sith you
- yourself know how easy is it to be such an offender.
FALSTAFF.
- Very well, sir; proceed.
FORD.
- There is a gentlewoman in this town, her husband's name is Ford.
FALSTAFF.
- Well, sir.
FORD.
- I have long loved her, and, I protest to you, bestowed much on her;
- followed her with a doting observance; engrossed opportunities to
- meet her; fee'd every slight occasion that could but niggardly
- give me sight of her; not only bought many presents to give her,
- but have given largely to many to know what she would have given;
- briefly, I have pursued her as love hath pursued me; which hath
- been on the wing of all occasions. But whatsoever I have merited,
- either in my mind or in my means, meed, I am sure, I have received
- none, unless experience be a jewel that I have purchased at an
- infinite rate, and that hath taught me to say this,
Love like a shadow flies when substance love pursues;
- Pursuing that that flies, and flying what pursues.
FALSTAFF.
- Have you received no promise of satisfaction at her hands?
FORD.
- Never.
FALSTAFF.
- Have you importuned her to such a purpose?
FORD.
- Never.
FALSTAFF.
- Of what quality was your love, then?
FORD.
- Like a fair house built on another man's ground; so that I have
- lost my edifice by mistaking the place where I erected it.
FALSTAFF.
- To what purpose have you unfolded this to me?
FORD.
- When I have told you that, I have told you all. Some say that though
- she appear honest to me, yet in other places she enlargeth her mirth
- so far that there is shrewd construction made of her. Now, Sir John,
- here is the heart of my purpose: you are a gentleman of excellent
- breeding, admirable discourse, of great admittance, authentic in
- your place and person, generally allowed for your many war-like,
- court-like, and learned preparations.
FALSTAFF.
- O, sir!
FORD.
- Believe it, for you know it. There is money; spend it, spend it;
- spend more; spend all I have; only give me so much of your time in
- exchange of it as to lay an amiable siege to the honesty of this
- Ford's wife: use your art of wooing, win her to consent to you;
- if any man may, you may as soon as any.
FALSTAFF.
- Would it apply well to the vehemency of your affection, that I
- should win what you would enjoy? Methinks you prescribe to yourself
- very preposterously.
FORD.
- O, understand my drift. She dwells so securely on the excellency
- of her honour that the folly of my soul dares not present itself;
- she is too bright to be looked against. Now, could I come to her
- with any detection in my hand, my desires had instance and argument
- to commend themselves; I could drive her then from the ward of her
- purity, her reputation, her marriage-vow, and a thousand other her
- defences, which now are too too strongly embattled against me.
- What say you to't, Sir John?
FALSTAFF.
- Master Brook, I will first make bold with your money; next, give me
- your hand; and last, as I am a gentleman, you shall, if you will,
- enjoy Ford's wife.
FORD.
- O good sir!
FALSTAFF.
- I say you shall.
FORD.
- Want no money, Sir John; you shall want none.
FALSTAFF.
- Want no Mistress Ford, Master Brook; you shall want none. I shall
- be with her, I may tell you, by her own appointment; even as you
- came in to me her assistant or go-between parted from me: I say
- I shall be with her between ten and eleven; for at that time the
- jealous rascally knave, her husband, will be forth. Come you to
- me at night; you shall know how I speed.
FORD.
- I am blest in your acquaintance. Do you know Ford, sir?
FALSTAFF.
- Hang him, poor cuckoldly knave! I know him not; yet I wrong him to
- call him poor; they say the jealous wittolly knave hath masses of
- money; for the which his wife seems to me well-favoured. I will
- use her as the key of the cuckoldly rogue's coffer; and there's my
- harvest-home.
FORD.
- I would you knew Ford, sir, that you might avoid him if you saw him.
FALSTAFF.
- Hang him, mechanical salt-butter rogue! I will stare him out of his
- wits; I will awe him with my cudgel; it shall hang like a meteor
- o'er the cuckold's horns. Master Brook, thou shalt know I will
- predominate over the peasant, and thou shalt lie with his wife.
- Come to me soon at night. Ford's a knave, and I will aggravate his
- style; thou, Master Brook, shalt know him for knave and cuckold.
- Come to me soon at night.
[Exit.]
FORD.
- What a damned Epicurean rascal is this! My heart is ready to crack
- with impatience. Who says this is improvident jealousy? My wife hath
- sent to him; the hour is fixed; the match is made. Would any man
- have thought this? See the hell of having a false woman! My bed
- shall be abused, my coffers ransacked, my reputation gnawn at; and
- I shall not only receive this villanous wrong, but stand under the
- adoption of abominable terms, and by him that does me this wrong.
- Terms! names! Amaimon sounds well; Lucifer, well; Barbason, well;
- yet they are devils' additions, the names of fiends. But Cuckold!
- Wittol!—Cuckold! the devil himself hath not such a name. Page is
- an ass, a secure ass; he will trust his wife; he will not be
- jealous; I will rather trust a Fleming with my butter, Parson Hugh
- the Welshman with my cheese, an Irishman with my aqua-vitae bottle,
- or a thief to walk my ambling gelding, than my wife with herself;
- then she plots, then she ruminates, then she devises; and what
- they think in their hearts they may effect, they will break their
- hearts but they will effect. God be praised for my jealousy!
- Eleven o'clock the hour. I will prevent this, detect my wife, be
- revenged on Falstaff, and laugh at Page. I will about it; better
- three hours too soon than a minute too late. Fie, fie, fie!
- cuckold! cuckold! cuckold!
[Exit.]
[edit] SCENE 3. A field near Windsor.
[Enter CAIUS and RUGBY.]
CAIUS.
- Jack Rugby!
RUGBY.
- Sir?
CAIUS.
- Vat is de clock, Jack?
RUGBY.
- 'Tis past the hour, sir, that Sir Hugh promised to meet.
CAIUS.
- By gar, he has save his soul, dat he is no come; he has pray his
- Pible vell dat he is no come: by gar, Jack Rugby, he is dead
- already, if he be come.
RUGBY.
- He is wise, sir; he knew your worship would kill him if he came.
CAIUS.
- By gar, de herring is no dead so as I vill kill him. Take your
- rapier, Jack; I vill tell you how I vill kill him.
RUGBY.
- Alas, sir, I cannot fence!
CAIUS.
- Villany, take your rapier.
RUGBY.
- Forbear; here's company.
[Enter HOST, SHALLOW, SLENDER, and PAGE.]
HOST.
- Bless thee, bully doctor!
SHALLOW.
- Save you, Master Doctor Caius!
PAGE.
- Now, good Master Doctor!
SLENDER.
- Give you good morrow, sir.
CAIUS.
- Vat be all you, one, two, tree, four, come for?
HOST.
- To see thee fight, to see thee foin, to see thee traverse; to see
- thee here, to see thee there; to see thee pass thy punto, thy stock,
- thy reverse, thy distance, thy montant. Is he dead, my Ethiopian?
- Is he dead, my Francisco? Ha, bully! What says my Aesculapius?
- my Galen? my heart of elder? Ha! is he dead, bully stale? Is he
- dead?
CAIUS.
- By gar, he is de coward Jack priest of de world; he is not show
- his face.
HOST.
- Thou art a Castalion King Urinal! Hector of Greece, my boy!
CAIUS.
- I pray you, bear witness that me have stay six or seven, two, tree
- hours for him, and he is no come.
SHALLOW.
- He is the wiser man, Master doctor: he is a curer of souls, and you
- a curer of bodies; if you should fight, you go against the hair of
- your professions. Is it not true, Master Page?
PAGE.
- Master Shallow, you have yourself been a great fighter, though now
- a man of peace.
SHALLOW.
- Bodykins, Master Page, though I now be old, and of the peace, if
- I see a sword out, my finger itches to make one. Though we are
- justices, and doctors, and churchmen, Master Page, we have some
- salt of our youth in us; we are the sons of women, Master Page.
PAGE.
- 'Tis true, Master Shallow.
SHALLOW.
- It will be found so, Master Page. Master Doctor Caius, I come to
- fetch you home. I am sworn of the peace; you have showed yourself
- a wise physician, and Sir Hugh hath shown himself a wise and
- patient churchman. You must go with me, Master Doctor.
HOST.
- Pardon, guest-justice.—A word, Monsieur Mockwater.
CAIUS.
- Mock-vater! Vat is dat?
HOST.
- Mockwater, in our English tongue, is valour, bully.
CAIUS.
- By gar, then I have as much mockvater as de Englishman.—Scurvy
- jack-dog priest! By gar, me vill cut his ears.
HOST.
- He will clapper-claw thee tightly, bully.
CAIUS.
- Clapper-de-claw! Vat is dat?
HOST.
- That is, he will make thee amends.
CAIUS.
- By gar, me do look he shall clapper-de-claw me; for, by gar, me
- vill have it.
HOST.
- And I will provoke him to't, or let him wag.
CAIUS.
- Me tank you for dat.
HOST.
- And, moreover, bully—but first: Master guest, and Master Page,
- and eke Cavaliero Slender, go you through the town to Frogmore.
[Aside to them.]
PAGE.
- Sir Hugh is there, is he?
HOST.
- He is there: see what humour he is in; and I will bring the
- doctor about by the fields. Will it do well?
SHALLOW.
- We will do it.
PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER.
- Adieu, good Master Doctor.
[Exeunt PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER.]
CAIUS.
- By gar, me vill kill de priest; for he speak for a jack-an-ape
- to Anne Page.
HOST.
- Let him die. Sheathe thy impatience; throw cold water on thy choler;
- go about the fields with me through Frogmore; I will bring thee
- where Mistress Anne Page is, at a farm-house a-feasting; and thou
- shalt woo her. Cried I aim? Said I well?
CAIUS.
- By gar, me tank you for dat: by gar, I love you; and I shall
- procure-a you de good guest, de earl, de knight, de lords, de
- gentlemen, my patients.
HOST.
- For the which I will be thy adversary toward Anne Page: said I well?
CAIUS.
- By gar, 'tis good; vell said.
HOST.
- Let us wag, then.
CAIUS.
- Come at my heels, Jack Rugby.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] ACT III
[edit] SCENE 1. A field near Frogmore.
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS and SIMPLE.]
EVANS.
- I pray you now, good Master Slender's serving-man, and friend
- Simple by your name, which way have you looked for Master Caius,
- that calls himself doctor of physic?
SIMPLE.
- Marry, sir, the pittie-ward, the park-ward, every way; old Windsor
- way, and every way but the town way.
EVANS.
- I most fehemently desire you you will also look that
- way.
SIMPLE.
- I will, Sir.
[Exit.]
EVANS.
- Pless my soul, how full of chollors I am, and trempling of mind!
- I shall be glad if he have deceived me. How melancholies I am!
- I will knog his urinals about his knave's costard when I have goot
- opportunities for the 'ork: pless my soul!
[Sings]
-
- To shallow rivers, to whose falls
- Melodious birds sings madrigals;
- There will we make our peds of roses,
- And a thousand fragrant posies.
- To shallow—
Mercy on me! I have a great dispositions to cry.
[Sings.]
-
- Melodious birds sing madrigals,—
- Whenas I sat in Pabylon,—
- And a thousand vagram posies.
- To shallow,—
[Re-enter SIMPLE.]
SIMPLE.
- Yonder he is, coming this way, Sir Hugh.
EVANS.
- He's welcome.
[Sings]
-
- To shallow rivers, to whose falls—
Heaven prosper the right!—What weapons is he?
SIMPLE.
- No weapons, sir. There comes my master, Master Shallow, and another
- gentleman, from Frogmore, over the stile, this way.
EVANS.
- Pray you give me my gown; or else keep it in your arms.
- [Reads in a book.]
[Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER.]
SHALLOW.
- How now, Master Parson! Good morrow, good Sir Hugh. Keep a gamester
- from the dice, and a good student from his book, and it is wonderful.
SLENDER.
- [Aside] Ah, sweet Anne Page!
PAGE.
- 'Save you, good Sir Hugh!
EVANS.
- Pless you from his mercy sake, all of you!
SHALLOW.
- What, the sword and the word! Do you study them both, Master Parson?
PAGE.
- And youthful still, in your doublet and hose, this raw rheumatic day!
EVANS.
- There is reasons and causes for it.
PAGE.
- We are come to you to do a good office, Master Parson.
EVANS.
- Fery well; what is it?
PAGE.
- Yonder is a most reverend gentleman, who, belike having received
- wrong by some person, is at most odds with his own gravity and
- patience that ever you saw.
SHALLOW.
- I have lived fourscore years and upward; I never heard a man of
- his place, gravity, and learning, so wide of his own respect.
EVANS.
- What is he?
PAGE.
- I think you know him: Master Doctor Caius, the renowned French
- physician.
EVANS.
- Got's will and His passion of my heart! I had as lief you would
- tell me of a mess of porridge.
PAGE.
- Why?
EVANS.
- He has no more knowledge in Hibbocrates and Galen,—and he is a
- knave besides; a cowardly knave as you would desires to be
- acquainted withal.
PAGE.
- I warrant you, he's the man should fight with him.
SLENDER.
- [Aside] O, sweet Anne Page!
SHALLOW.
- It appears so, by his weapons. Keep them asunder; here comes
- Doctor Caius.
[Enter HOST, CAIUS, and RUGBY.]
PAGE.
- Nay, good Master Parson, keep in your weapon.
SHALLOW.
- So do you, good Master Doctor.
HOST.
- Disarm them, and let them question; let them keep their limbs whole
- and hack our English.
CAIUS.
- I pray you, let-a me speak a word with your ear: verefore will you
- not meet-a me?
EVANS.
- [Aside to CAIUS.] Pray you use your patience; in good time.
CAIUS.
- By gar, you are de coward, de Jack dog, John ape.
EVANS.
- [Aside to CAIUS.] Pray you, let us not be laughing-stogs to other
- men's humours; I desire you in friendship, and I will one way or
- other make you amends.
- [Aloud.] I will knog your urinals about your knave's cogscomb
- for missing your meetings and appointments.
CAIUS.
- Diable!—Jack Rugby,—mine Host de Jarretiere,—have I not stay for
- him to kill him? Have I not, at de place I did appoint?
EVANS.
- As I am a Christians soul, now, look you, this is the place
- appointed. I'll be judgment by mine host of the Garter.
HOST.
- Peace, I say, Gallia and Gaullia; French and Welsh, soul-curer
- and body-curer!
CAIUS.
- Ay, dat is very good; excellent!
HOST.
- Peace, I say! Hear mine host of the Garter. Am I politic? am I
- subtle? am I a Machiavel? Shall I lose my doctor? No; he gives me
- the potions and the motions. Shall I lose my parson, my priest,
- my Sir Hugh? No; he gives me the proverbs and the no-verbs.
- Give me thy hand, terrestrial; so;—give me thy hand, celestial;
- so. Boys of art, I have deceived you both; I have directed you
- to wrong places; your hearts are mighty, your skins are whole,
- and let burnt sack be the issue. Come, lay their swords to pawn.
- Follow me, lads of peace; follow, follow, follow.
SHALLOW.
- Trust me, a mad host!—Follow, gentlemen, follow.
SLENDER.
- [Aside] O, sweet Anne Page!
[Exeunt SHALLOW, SLENDER, PAGE, and HOST.]
CAIUS.
- Ha, do I perceive dat? Have you make-a de sot of us, ha, ha?
EVANS.
- This is well; he has made us his vlouting-stog. I desire you that
- we may be friends; and let us knog our prains together to be
- revenge on this same scall, scurvy, cogging companion, the host
- of the Garter.
CAIUS.
- By gar, with all my heart. He promise to bring me where is Anne
- Page; by gar, he deceive me too.
EVANS.
- Well, I will smite his noddles. Pray you follow.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 2. A street in Windsor.
[Enter MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Nay, keep your way, little gallant: you were wont to be a follower,
- but now you are a leader. Whether had you rather lead mine eyes,
- or eye your master's heels?
ROBIN.
- I had rather, forsooth, go before you like a man than follow him
- like a dwarf.
MRS. PAGE.
- O! you are a flattering boy: now I see you'll be a courtier.
[Enter FORD.]
FORD.
- Well met, Mistress Page. Whither go you?
MRS. PAGE.
- Truly, sir, to see your wife. Is she at home?
FORD.
- Ay; and as idle as she may hang together, for want of company.
- I think, if your husbands were dead, you two would marry.
MRS. PAGE.
- Be sure of that—two other husbands.
FORD.
- Where had you this pretty weathercock?
MRS. PAGE.
- I cannot tell what the dickens his name is my husband had him of.
- What do you call your knight's name, sirrah?
ROBIN.
- Sir John Falstaff.
FORD.
- Sir John Falstaff!
MRS. PAGE.
- He, he; I can never hit on's name. There is such a league between
- my good man and he! Is your wife at home indeed?
FORD.
- Indeed she is.
MRS. PAGE.
- By your leave, sir: I am sick till I see her.
[Exeunt MRS. PAGE and ROBIN.]
FORD.
- Has Page any brains? Hath he any eyes? Hath he any thinking? Sure,
- they sleep; he hath no use of them. Why, this boy will carry a
- letter twenty mile as easy as a cannon will shoot point-blank
- twelve score. He pieces out his wife's inclination; he gives
- her folly motion and advantage; and now she's going to my wife,
- and Falstaff's boy with her. A man may hear this shower sing in
- the wind: and Falstaff's boy with her! Good plots! They are laid;
- and our revolted wives share damnation together. Well; I will take
- him, then torture my wife, pluck the borrowed veil of modesty from
- the so seeming Mistress Page, divulge Page himself for a secure
- and wilful Actaeon; and to these violent proceedings all my
- neighbours shall cry aim. [Clock strikes] The clock gives me my
- cue, and my assurance bids me search; there I shall find Falstaff.
- I shall be rather praised for this than mocked; for it is as
- positive as the earth is firm that Falstaff is there. I will go.
[Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, SLENDER, HOST, SIR HUGH EVANS,
- CAIUS, and RUGBY.]
SHALLOW, PAGE, &c.
- Well met, Master Ford.
FORD.
- Trust me, a good knot; I have good cheer at home, and I pray you
- all go with me.
SHALLOW.
- I must excuse myself, Master Ford.
SLENDER.
- And so must I, sir; we have appointed to dine with Mistress Anne,
- and I would not break with her for more money than I'll speak of.
SHALLOW.
- We have lingered about a match between Anne Page and my cousin
- Slender, and this day we shall have our answer.
SLENDER.
- I hope I have your good will, father Page.
PAGE.
- You have, Master Slender; I stand wholly for you. But my wife,
- Master doctor, is for you altogether.
CAIUS.
- Ay, be-gar; and de maid is love-a me: my nursh-a Quickly tell me
- so mush.
HOST.
- What say you to young Master Fenton? He capers, he dances, he has
- eyes of youth, he writes verses, he speaks holiday, he smells April
- and May; he will carry 't, he will carry 't; 'tis in his buttons;
- he will carry 't.
PAGE.
- Not by my consent, I promise you. The gentleman is of no having:
- he kept company with the wild Prince and Pointz; he is of too high
- a region, he knows too much. No, he shall not knit a knot in his
- fortunes with the finger of my substance; if he take her, let him
- take her simply; the wealth I have waits on my consent, and my
- consent goes not that way.
FORD.
- I beseech you, heartily, some of you go home with me to dinner:
- besides your cheer, you shall have sport; I will show you a monster.
- Master Doctor, you shall go; so shall you, Master Page; and you,
- Sir Hugh.
SHALLOW.
- Well, fare you well; we shall have the freer wooing at Master Page's.
[Exeunt SHALLOW and SLENDER.]
CAIUS.
- Go home, John Rugby; I come anon.
[Exit RUGBY.]
HOST.
- Farewell, my hearts; I will to my honest knight Falstaff, and drink
- canary with him.
[Exit HOST.]
FORD.
- [Aside] I think I shall drink in pipe-wine first with him. I'll
- make him dance. Will you go, gentles?
ALL.
- Have with you to see this monster.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 3. A room in FORD'S house.
[Enter MISTRESS FORD and MISTRESS PAGE.]
MRS. FORD.
- What, John! what, Robert!
MRS. PAGE.
- Quickly, quickly:—Is the buck-basket—
MRS. FORD.
- I warrant. What, Robin, I say!
[Enter SERVANTS with a basket.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Come, come, come.
MRS. FORD.
- Here, set it down.
MRS. PAGE.
- Give your men the charge; we must be brief.
MRS. FORD.
- Marry, as I told you before, John and Robert, be ready here hard by
- in the brew-house; and when I suddenly call you, come forth, and,
- without any pause or staggering, take this basket on your shoulders:
- that done, trudge with it in all haste, and carry it among the
- whitsters in Datchet-Mead, and there empty it in the muddy ditch
- close by the Thames side.
MRS. PAGE.
- You will do it?
MRS. FORD.
- I have told them over and over; they lack no direction. Be gone, and
- come when you are called.
[Exeunt SERVANTS.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Here comes little Robin.
[Enter ROBIN.]
MRS. FORD.
- How now, my eyas-musket! what news with you?
ROBIN.
- My Master Sir John is come in at your back-door, Mistress Ford,
- and requests your company.
MRS. PAGE.
- You little Jack-a-Lent, have you been true to us?
ROBIN.
- Ay, I'll be sworn. My master knows not of your being here, and hath
- threatened to put me into everlasting liberty, if I tell you of it;
- for he swears he'll turn me away.
MRS. PAGE.
- Thou 'rt a good boy; this secrecy of thine shall be a tailor to
- thee, and shall make thee a new doublet and hose. I'll go hide me.
MRS. FORD.
- Do so. Go tell thy master I am alone.
[Exit ROBIN.]
Mistress Page, remember you your cue.
MRS. PAGE.
- I warrant thee; if I do not act it, hiss me.
[Exit.]
MRS. FORD.
- Go to, then; we'll use this unwholesome humidity, this gross watery
- pumpion; we'll teach him to know turtles from jays.
[Enter FALSTAFF.]
FALSTAFF.
- 'Have I caught thee, my heavenly jewel?' Why, now let me die, for
- I have lived long enough: this is the period of my ambition:
- O this blessed hour!
MRS. FORD.
- O, sweet Sir John!
FALSTAFF.
- Mistress Ford, I cannot cog, I cannot prate, Mistress Ford. Now
- shall I sin in my wish; I would thy husband were dead. I'll speak
- it before the best lord, I would make thee my lady.
MRS. FORD.
- I your lady, Sir John! Alas, I should be a pitiful
- lady.
FALSTAFF.
- Let the court of France show me such another. I see how thine eye
- would emulate the diamond; thou hast the right arched beauty of
- the brow that becomes the ship-tire, the tire-valiant, or any tire
- of Venetian admittance.
MRS. FORD.
- A plain kerchief, Sir John; my brows become nothing else; nor that
- well neither.
FALSTAFF.
- By the Lord, thou art a traitor to say so: thou wouldst make an
- absolute courtier; and the firm fixture of thy foot would give an
- excellent motion to thy gait in a semi-circled farthingale. I see
- what thou wert, if Fortune thy foe were not, Nature thy friend.
- Come, thou canst not hide it.
MRS. FORD.
- Believe me, there's no such thing in me.
FALSTAFF.
- What made me love thee? Let that persuade thee there's something
- extraordinary in thee. Come, I cannot cog and say thou art this
- and that, like a many of these lisping hawthorn-buds that come
- like women in men's apparel, and smell like Bucklersbury in
- simple-time; I cannot; but I love thee, none but thee; and thou
- deservest it.
MRS. FORD.
- Do not betray me, sir; I fear you love Mistress Page.
FALSTAFF.
- Thou mightst as well say I love to walk by the Counter-gate, which
- is as hateful to me as the reek of a lime-kiln.
MRS. FORD.
- Well, heaven knows how I love you; and you shall one day find it.
FALSTAFF.
- Keep in that mind; I'll deserve it.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, I must tell you, so you do; or else I could not be in that mind.
ROBIN.
- [Within] Mistress Ford! Mistress Ford! here's Mistress Page at the
- door, sweating and blowing and looking wildly, and would needs speak
- with you presently.
FALSTAFF.
- She shall not see me; I will ensconce me behind the arras.
MRS. FORD.
- Pray you, do so; she's a very tattling woman.
[FALSTAFF hides himself.]
[Re-enter MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN.]
What's the matter? How now!
MRS. PAGE.
- O Mistress Ford, what have you done? You're shamed, you are
- overthrown, you are undone for ever!
MRS. FORD.
- What's the matter, good Mistress Page?
MRS. PAGE.
- O well-a-day, Mistress Ford! having an honest man to your husband,
- to give him such cause of suspicion!
MRS. FORD.
- What cause of suspicion?
MRS. PAGE.
- What cause of suspicion? Out upon you! how am I mistook in you!
MRS. FORD.
- Why, alas, what's the matter?
MRS. PAGE.
- Your husband's coming hither, woman, with all the officers in
- Windsor, to search for a gentleman that he says is here now in
- the house, by your consent, to take an ill advantage of his absence:
- you are undone.
MRS. FORD.
- [Aside.] Speak louder.—
- 'Tis not so, I hope.
MRS. PAGE.
- Pray heaven it be not so that you have such a man here! but 'tis
- most certain your husband's coming, with half Windsor at his heels,
- to search for such a one. I come before to tell you. If you know
- yourself clear, why, I am glad of it; but if you have a friend here,
- convey, convey him out. Be not amazed; call all your senses to you;
- defend your reputation, or bid farewell to your good life for ever.
MRS. FORD.
- What shall I do?—There is a gentleman, my dear friend; and I fear
- not mine own shame as much as his peril: I had rather than a
- thousand pound he were out of the house.
MRS. PAGE.
- For shame! never stand 'you had rather' and 'you had rather': your
- husband's here at hand; bethink you of some conveyance; in the
- house you cannot hide him. O, how have you deceived me! Look, here
- is a basket; if he be of any reasonable stature, he may creep in
- here; and throw foul linen upon him, as if it were going to
- bucking: or—it is whiting-time—send him by your two men to
- Datchet-Mead.
MRS. FORD.
- He's too big to go in there. What shall I do?
FALSTAFF.
- [Coming forward] Let me see 't, let me see 't. O, let me see 't!
- I'll in, I'll in; follow your friend's counsel; I'll in.
MRS. PAGE.
- What, Sir John Falstaff! Are these your letters, knight?
FALSTAFF.
- I love thee and none but thee; help me away: let me creep in here.
- I'll never—
[He gets into the basket; they cover him with foul linen.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Help to cover your master, boy. Call your men, Mistress Ford. You
- dissembling knight!
MRS. FORD.
- What, John! Robert! John!
[Exit ROBIN.]
[Re-enter SERVANTS.]
Go, take up these clothes here, quickly; where's the cowl-staff?
- Look how you drumble! Carry them to the laundress in Datchet-Mead;
- quickly, come.
[Enter FORD, PAGE, CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS.]
FORD.
- Pray you come near. If I suspect without cause, why then make sport
- at me, then let me be your jest; I deserve it. How now, whither
- bear you this?
SERVANT.
- To the laundress, forsooth.
MRS. FORD.
- Why, what have you to do whither they bear it? You were best meddle
- with buck-washing.
FORD.
- Buck! I would I could wash myself of the buck! Buck, buck, buck!
- ay, buck; I warrant you, buck; and of the season too, it shall appear.
[Exeunt SERVANTS with the basket.]
Gentlemen, I have dreamed to-night; I'll tell you my dream. Here,
- here, here be my keys: ascend my chambers; search, seek, find out.
- I'll warrant we'll unkennel the fox. Let me stop this way first.
- [Locking the door.] So, now uncape.
PAGE.
- Good Master Ford, be contented: you wrong yourself
- too much.
FORD.
- True, Master Page. Up, gentlemen, you shall see sport anon; follow
- me, gentlemen.
[Exit.]
EVANS.
- This is fery fantastical humours and jealousies.
CAIUS.
- By gar, 'tis no the fashion of France; it is not jealous in France.
PAGE.
- Nay, follow him, gentlemen; see the issue of his search.
[Exeunt EVANS, PAGE, and CAIUS.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Is there not a double excellency in this?
MRS. FORD.
- I know not which pleases me better, that my husband is deceived, or
- Sir John.
MRS. PAGE.
- What a taking was he in when your husband asked who was in the basket!
MRS. FORD.
- I am half afraid he will have need of washing; so throwing him into
- the water will do him a benefit.
MRS. PAGE.
- Hang him, dishonest rascal! I would all of the same strain were in
- the same distress.
MRS. FORD.
- I think my husband hath some special suspicion of Falstaff's being
- here, for I never saw him so gross in his jealousy till now.
MRS. PAGE.
- I will lay a plot to try that, and we will yet have more tricks
- with Falstaff: his dissolute disease will scarce obey this medicine.
MRS. FORD.
- Shall we send that foolish carrion, Mistress Quickly, to him, and
- excuse his throwing into the water, and give him another hope, to
- betray him to another punishment?
MRS. PAGE.
- We will do it; let him be sent for to-morrow eight o'clock, to
- have amends.
[Re-enter FORD, PAGE, CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS.]
FORD.
- I cannot find him: may be the knave bragged of that he could not
- compass.
MRS. PAGE.
- [Aside to MRS. FORD.] Heard you that?
MRS. FORD.
- [Aside to MRS. PAGE.] Ay, ay, peace.—
- You use me well, Master Ford, do you?
FORD.
- Ay, I do so.
MRS. FORD.
- Heaven make you better than your thoughts!
FORD.
- Amen!
MRS. PAGE.
- You do yourself mighty wrong, Master Ford.
FORD.
- Ay, ay; I must bear it.
EVANS.
- If there be any pody in the house, and in the chambers, and in the
- coffers, and in the presses, heaven forgive my sins at the day of
- judgment!
CAIUS.
- Be gar, nor I too; there is no bodies.
PAGE.
- Fie, fie, Master Ford, are you not ashamed? What spirit, what devil
- suggests this imagination? I would not ha' your distemper in this
- kind for the wealth of Windsor Castle.
FORD.
- 'Tis my fault, Master Page: I suffer for it.
EVANS.
- You suffer for a pad conscience. Your wife is as honest a 'omans as
- I will desires among five thousand, and five hundred too.
CAIUS.
- By gar, I see 'tis an honest woman.
FORD.
- Well, I promised you a dinner. Come, come, walk in the Park: I pray
- you pardon me; I will hereafter make known to you why I have done
- this. Come, wife, come, Mistress Page; I pray you pardon me; pray
- heartily, pardon me.
PAGE.
- Let's go in, gentlemen; but, trust me, we'll mock him. I do invite
- you to-morrow morning to my house to breakfast; after, we'll
- a-birding together; I have a fine hawk for the bush. Shall it be so?
FORD.
- Any thing.
EVANS.
- If there is one, I shall make two in the company.
CAIUS.
- If there be one or two, I shall make-a the turd.
FORD.
- Pray you go, Master Page.
EVANS.
- I pray you now, remembrance to-morrow on the lousy knave, mine host.
CAIUS.
- Dat is good; by gar, with all my heart.
EVANS.
- A lousy knave! to have his gibes and his mockeries!
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 4. A room in PAGE'S house.
[Enter FENTON, ANNE PAGE, and MISTRESS QUICKLY. MISTRESS QUICKLY stands apart.]
FENTON.
- I see I cannot get thy father's love;
- Therefore no more turn me to him, sweet Nan.
ANNE.
- Alas! how then?
FENTON.
- Why, thou must be thyself.
- He doth object, I am too great of birth;
- And that my state being gall'd with my expense,
- I seek to heal it only by his wealth.
- Besides these, other bars he lays before me,
- My riots past, my wild societies;
- And tells me 'tis a thing impossible
- I should love thee but as a property.
ANNE.
- May be he tells you true.
FENTON.
- No, heaven so speed me in my time to come!
- Albeit I will confess thy father's wealth
- Was the first motive that I wooed thee, Anne:
- Yet, wooing thee, I found thee of more value
- Than stamps in gold, or sums in sealed bags;
- And 'tis the very riches of thyself
- That now I aim at.
ANNE.
- Gentle Master Fenton,
- Yet seek my father's love; still seek it, sir.
- If opportunity and humblest suit
- Cannot attain it, why then,—hark you hither.
[They converse apart.]
[Enter SHALLOW, SLENDER, and MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
SHALLOW.
- Break their talk, Mistress Quickly: my kinsman shall speak for himself.
SLENDER.
- I'll make a shaft or a bolt on 't. 'Slid, 'tis but venturing.
SHALLOW.
- Be not dismayed.
SLENDER.
- No, she shall not dismay me. I care not for that, but that I am afeard.
QUICKLY.
- Hark ye; Master Slender would speak a word with you.
ANNE.
- I come to him. [Aside.] This is my father's choice.
- O, what a world of vile ill-favour'd faults
- Looks handsome in three hundred pounds a year!
QUICKLY.
- And how does good Master Fenton? Pray you, a
- word with you.
SHALLOW.
- She's coming; to her, coz. O boy, thou hadst a father!
SLENDER.
- I had a father, Mistress Anne; my uncle can tell you good jests
- of him. Pray you, uncle, tell Mistress Anne the jest how my father
- stole two geese out of a pen, good uncle.
SHALLOW.
- Mistress Anne, my cousin loves you.
SLENDER.
- Ay, that I do; as well as I love any woman in Gloucestershire.
SHALLOW.
- He will maintain you like a gentlewoman.
SLENDER.
- Ay, that I will come cut and long-tail, under the degree of a squire.
SHALLOW.
- He will make you a hundred and fifty pounds jointure.
ANNE.
- Good Master Shallow, let him woo for himself.
SHALLOW.
- Marry, I thank you for it; I thank you for that good comfort. She
- calls you, coz; I'll leave you.
ANNE.
- Now, Master Slender.
SLENDER.
- Now, good Mistress Anne.—
ANNE.
- What is your will?
SLENDER.
- My will! 'od's heartlings, that's a pretty jest indeed! I ne'er
- made my will yet, I thank heaven; I am not such a sickly creature,
- I give heaven praise.
ANNE.
- I mean, Master Slender, what would you with me?
SLENDER.
- Truly, for mine own part I would little or nothing with you. Your
- father and my uncle hath made motions; if it be my luck, so; if not,
- happy man be his dole! They can tell you how things go better than
- I can. You may ask your father; here he comes.
[Enter PAGE and MISTRESS PAGE.]
PAGE.
- Now, Master Slender: love him, daughter Anne.
- Why, how now! what does Master Fenton here?
- You wrong me, sir, thus still to haunt my house:
- I told you, sir, my daughter is dispos'd of.
FENTON.
- Nay, Master Page, be not impatient.
MRS. PAGE.
- Good Master Fenton, come not to my child.
PAGE.
- She is no match for you.
FENTON.
- Sir, will you hear me?
PAGE.
- No, good Master Fenton.
- Come, Master Shallow; come, son Slender, in.
- Knowing my mind, you wrong me, Master Fenton.
[Exeunt PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER.]
QUICKLY.
- Speak to Mistress Page.
FENTON.
- Good Mistress Page, for that I love your daughter
- In such a righteous fashion as I do,
- Perforce, against all checks, rebukes, and manners,
- I must advance the colours of my love
- And not retire: let me have your good will.
ANNE.
- Good mother, do not marry me to yond fool.
MRS. PAGE.
- I mean it not; I seek you a better husband.
QUICKLY.
- That's my master, Master doctor.
ANNE.
- Alas! I had rather be set quick i' the earth.
- And bowl'd to death with turnips.
MRS. PAGE.
- Come, trouble not yourself. Good Master Fenton,
- I will not be your friend, nor enemy;
- My daughter will I question how she loves you,
- And as I find her, so am I affected.
- Till then, farewell, sir: she must needs go in;
- Her father will be angry.
FENTON.
- Farewell, gentle mistress. Farewell, Nan.
[Exeunt MRS. PAGE and ANNE.}
QUICKLY.
- This is my doing now: 'Nay,' said I, 'will you cast away your child
- on a fool, and a physician? Look on Master Fenton.' This is my doing.
FENTON.
- I thank thee; and I pray thee, once to-night
- Give my sweet Nan this ring. There's for thy pains.
QUICKLY.
- Now Heaven send thee good fortune!
[Exit FENTON.]
A kind heart he hath; a woman would run through fire and water for
- such a kind heart. But yet I would my master had Mistress Anne; or
- I would Master Slender had her; or, in sooth, I would Master Fenton
- had her; I will do what I can for them all three, for so I have
- promised, and I'll be as good as my word; but speciously for Master
- Fenton. Well, I must of another errand to Sir John Falstaff from my
- two mistresses: what a beast am I to slack it!
[Exit.]
[edit] SCENE 5. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter FALSTAFF and BARDOLPH.]
FALSTAFF.
- Bardolph, I say,—
BARDOLPH.
- Here, sir.
FALSTAFF.
- Go fetch me a quart of sack; put a toast in 't.
[Exit BARDOLPH.]
Have I lived to be carried in a basket, and to be thrown in the
- Thames like a barrow of butcher's offal? Well, if I be served such
- another trick, I'll have my brains ta'en out and buttered, and give
- them to a dog for a new year's gift. The rogues slighted me into
- the river with as little remorse as they would have drowned a blind
- bitch's puppies, fifteen i' the litter; and you may know by my size
- that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking; if the bottom were as
- deep as hell I should down. I had been drowned but that the shore
- was shelvy and shallow; a death that I abhor, for the water swells
- a man; and what a thing should I have been when had been swelled!
- I should have been a mountain of mummy.
[Re-enter BARDOLPH, with the sack.]
BARDOLPH.
- Here's Mistress Quickly, sir, to speak with you.
FALSTAFF.
- Come, let me pour in some sack to the Thames water; for my belly's
- as cold as if I had swallowed snowballs for pills to cool the reins.
- Call her in.
BARDOLPH.
- Come in, woman.
[Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
QUICKLY.
- By your leave. I cry you mercy. Give your worship good morrow.
FALSTAFF.
- Take away these chalices. Go, brew me a pottle of sack finely.
BARDOLPH.
- With eggs, sir?
FALSTAFF.
- Simple of itself; I'll no pullet-sperm in my brewage.
[Exit BARDOLPH.]
How now!
QUICKLY.
- Marry, sir, I come to your worship from Mistress Ford.
FALSTAFF.
- Mistress Ford! I have had ford enough; I was thrown into the ford;
- I have my belly full of ford.
QUICKLY.
- Alas the day! good heart, that was not her fault: she does so take
- on with her men; they mistook their erection.
FALSTAFF.
- So did I mine, to build upon a foolish woman's promise.
QUICKLY.
- Well, she laments, sir, for it, that it would yearn your heart to
- see it. Her husband goes this morning a-birding; she desires you
- once more to come to her between eight and nine; I must carry her
- word quickly. She'll make you amends, I warrant you.
FALSTAFF.
- Well, I will visit her. Tell her so; and bid her think what a man
- is; let her consider his frailty, and then judge of my merit.
QUICKLY.
- I will tell her.
FALSTAFF.
- Do so. Between nine and ten, sayest thou?
QUICKLY.
- Eight and nine, sir.
FALSTAFF.
- Well, be gone; I will not miss her.
QUICKLY.
- Peace be with you, sir.
[Exit.]
FALSTAFF.
- I marvel I hear not of Master Brook; he sent me word to stay within.
- I like his money well. O! here he comes.
[Enter FORD disguised.]
FORD.
- Bless you, sir!
FALSTAFF.
- Now, Master Brook, you come to know what hath passed between me
- and Ford's wife?
FORD.
- That, indeed, Sir John, is my business.
FALSTAFF.
- Master Brook, I will not lie to you: I was at her house the hour
- she appointed me.
FORD.
- And how sped you, sir?
FALSTAFF.
- Very ill-favouredly, Master Brook.
FORD.
- How so, sir? did she change her determination?
FALSTAFF.
- No. Master Brook; but the peaking cornuto her husband, Master Brook,
- dwelling in a continual 'larum of jealousy, comes me in the instant
- of our encounter, after we had embraced, kissed, protested, and, as
- it were, spoke the prologue of our comedy; and at his heels a
- rabble of his companions, thither provoked and instigated by his
- distemper, and, forsooth, to search his house for his wife's love.
FORD.
- What! while you were there?
FALSTAFF.
- While I was there.
FORD.
- And did he search for you, and could not find you?
FALSTAFF.
- You shall hear. As good luck would have it, comes in one Mistress
- Page; gives intelligence of Ford's approach; and, in her invention
- and Ford's wife's distraction, they conveyed me into a buck-basket.
FORD.
- A buck-basket!
FALSTAFF.
- By the Lord, a buck-basket! rammed me in with foul shirts and
- smocks, socks, foul stockings, greasy napkins, that, Master Brook,
- there was the rankest compound of villainous smell that ever
- offended nostril.
FORD.
- And how long lay you there?
FALSTAFF.
- Nay, you shall hear, Master Brook, what I have suffered to bring
- this woman to evil for your good. Being thus crammed in the basket,
- a couple of Ford's knaves, his hinds, were called forth by their
- mistress to carry me in the name of foul clothes to Datchet-lane;
- they took me on their shoulders; met the jealous knave their
- master in the door; who asked them once or twice what they had in
- their basket. I quaked for fear lest the lunatic knave would have
- searched it; but Fate, ordaining he should be a cuckold, held his
- hand. Well, on went he for a search, and away went I for foul
- clothes. But mark the sequel, Master Brook: I suffered the pangs
- of three several deaths: first, an intolerable fright to be
- detected with a jealous rotten bell-wether; next, to be compassed
- like a good bilbo in the circumference of a peck, hilt to
- point, heel to head; and then, to be stopped in, like a strong
- distillation, with stinking clothes that fretted in their own
- grease: think of that; a man of my kidney, think of that, that am
- as subject to heat as butter; a man of continual dissolution and
- thaw: it was a miracle to 'scape suffocation. And in the height
- of this bath, when I was more than half stewed in grease, like
- a Dutch dish, to be thrown into the Thames, and cooled, glowing
- hot, in that surge, like a horse-shoe; think of that, hissing hot,
- think of that, Master Brook!
FORD.
- In good sadness, sir, I am sorry that for my sake you have suffered
- all this. My suit, then, is desperate; you'll undertake her no more.
FALSTAFF.
- Master Brook, I will be thrown into Etna, as I have been into
- Thames, ere I will leave her thus. Her husband is this morning
- gone a-birding; I have received from her another embassy of
- meeting; 'twixt eight and nine is the hour, Master Brook.
FORD.
- 'Tis past eight already, sir.
FALSTAFF.
- Is it? I will then address me to my appointment. Come to me at
- your convenient leisure, and you shall know how I speed, and the
- conclusion shall be crowned with your enjoying her: adieu. You
- shall have her, Master Brook; Master Brook, you shall cuckold Ford.
[Exit.]
FORD.
- Hum! ha! Is this a vision? Is this a dream? Do I sleep? Master Ford,
- awake; awake, Master Ford. There's a hole made in your best coat,
- Master Ford. This 'tis to be married; this 'tis to have linen and
- buck-baskets! Well, I will proclaim myself what I am; I will now
- take the lecher; he is at my house. He cannot scape me; 'tis
- impossible he should; he cannot creep into a half-penny purse, nor
- into a pepper box; but, lest the devil that guides him should aid
- him, I will search impossible places. Though what I am I cannot
- avoid, yet to be what I would not, shall not make me tame; if I
- have horns to make one mad, let the proverb go with me; I'll be
- horn-mad.
[Exit.]
[edit] ACT IV.
[edit] SCENE I. The street.
[Enter MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS QUICKLY, and WILLIAM.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Is he at Master Ford's already, think'st thou?
QUICKLY.
- Sure he is by this; or will be presently; but truly he is very
- courageous mad about his throwing into the water. Mistress Ford
- desires you to come suddenly.
MRS. PAGE.
- I'll be with her by and by; I'll but bring my young man here to
- school. Look where his master comes; 'tis a playing day, I see.
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS.]
How now, Sir Hugh, no school to-day?
EVANS.
- No; Master Slender is let the boys leave to play.
QUICKLY.
- Blessing of his heart!
MRS. PAGE.
- Sir Hugh, my husband says my son profits nothing in the world at
- his book; I pray you ask him some questions in his accidence.
EVANS.
- Come hither, William; hold up your head; come.
MRS. PAGE.
- Come on, sirrah; hold up your head; answer your master; be not afraid.
EVANS.
- William, how many numbers is in nouns?
WILLIAM.
- Two.
QUICKLY.
- Truly, I thought there had been one number more, because they say
- 'Od's nouns.'
EVANS.
- Peace your tattlings! What is 'fair,' William?
WILLIAM.
- Pulcher.
QUICKLY.
- Polecats! There are fairer things than polecats, sure.
EVANS.
- You are a very simplicity 'oman; I pray you, peace. What is
- 'lapis,' William?
WILLIAM.
- A stone.
EVANS.
- And what is 'a stone,' William?
WILLIAM.
- A pebble.
EVANS.
- No, it is 'lapis'; I pray you remember in your prain.
WILLIAM.
- Lapis.
EVANS.
- That is a good William. What is he, William, that does lend articles?
WILLIAM.
- Articles are borrowed of the pronoun, and be thus declined:
- Singulariter, nominativo; hic, haec, hoc.
EVANS.
- Nominativo, hig, hag, hog; pray you, mark: genitivo, hujus. Well,
- what is your accusative case?
WILLIAM.
- Accusativo, hinc.
EVANS.
- I pray you, have your remembrance, child. Accusativo, hung, hang, hog.
QUICKLY.
- 'Hang-hog' is Latin for bacon, I warrant you.
EVANS.
- Leave your prabbles, 'oman. What is the focative case, William?
WILLIAM.
- O vocativo, O.
EVANS.
- Remember, William: focative is caret.
QUICKLY.
- And that's a good root.
EVANS.
- 'Oman, forbear.
MRS. PAGE.
- Peace.
EVANS.
- What is your genitive case plural, William?
WILLIAM.
- Genitive case?
EVANS.
- Ay.
WILLIAM.
- Genitive: horum, harum, horum.
QUICKLY.
- Vengeance of Jenny's case; fie on her! Never name her, child, if
- she be a whore.
EVANS.
- For shame, 'oman.
QUICKLY.
- You do ill to teach the child such words. He teaches him to hick
- and to hack, which they'll do fast enough of themselves; and to
- call 'horum;' fie upon you!
EVANS.
- 'Oman, art thou lunatics? Hast thou no understandings for thy cases,
- and the numbers of the genders? Thou art as foolish Christian
- creatures as I would desires.
MRS. PAGE.
- Prithee, hold thy peace.
EVANS.
- Show me now, William, some declensions of your pronouns.
WILLIAM.
- Forsooth, I have forgot.
EVANS.
- It is qui, quae, quod; if you forget your 'quis', your 'quaes',
- and your 'quods', you must be preeches. Go your ways and play; go.
MRS. PAGE.
- He is a better scholar than I thought he was.
EVANS.
- He is a good sprag memory. Farewell, Mistress Page.
MRS. PAGE.
- Adieu, good Sir Hugh.
[Exit SIR HUGH.]
Get you home, boy. Come, we stay too long.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 2. A room in FORD'S house.
[Enter FALSTAFF and MISTRESS FORD.]
FALSTAFF.
- Mistress Ford, your sorrow hath eaten up my sufferance. I see you
- are obsequious in your love, and I profess requital to a hair's
- breadth; not only, Mistress Ford, in the simple office of love,
- but in all the accoutrement, complement, and ceremony of it. But
- are you sure of your husband now?
MRS. FORD.
- He's a-birding, sweet Sir John.
MRS. PAGE.
- [Within.] What ho! gossip Ford, what ho!
MRS. FORD.
- Step into the chamber, Sir John.
[Exit FALSTAFF.]
[Enter MISTRESS PAGE.]
MRS. PAGE.
- How now, sweetheart! who's at home besides yourself?
MRS. FORD.
- Why, none but mine own people.
MRS. PAGE.
- Indeed!
MRS. FORD.
- No, certainly.—[Aside to her.] Speak louder.
MRS. PAGE.
- Truly, I am so glad you have nobody here.
MRS. FORD.
- Why?
MRS. PAGE.
- Why, woman, your husband is in his old lunes again. He so takes
- on yonder with my husband; so rails against all married mankind;
- so curses all Eve's daughters, of what complexion soever; and so
- buffets himself on the forehead, crying 'Peer out, peer out!'
- that any madness I ever yet beheld seemed but tameness, civility,
- and patience, to this his distemper he is in now. I am glad the
- fat knight is not here.
MRS. FORD.
- Why, does he talk of him?
MRS. PAGE.
- Of none but him; and swears he was carried out, the last time he
- searched for him, in a basket; protests to my husband he is now
- here; and hath drawn him and the rest of their company from their
- sport, to make another experiment of his suspicion. But I am glad
- the knight is not here; now he shall see his own foolery.
MRS. FORD.
- How near is he, Mistress Page?
MRS. PAGE.
- Hard by, at street end; he will be here anon.
MRS. FORD.
- I am undone! the knight is here.
MRS. PAGE.
- Why, then, you are utterly shamed, and he's but a dead man. What
- a woman are you! Away with him, away with him! better shame than
- murder.
MRS. FORD.
- Which way should he go? How should I bestow him? Shall I put him
- into the basket again?
[Re-enter FALSTAFF.}
FALSTAFF.
- No, I'll come no more i' the basket. May I not go out ere he come?
MRS. PAGE.
- Alas! three of Master Ford's brothers watch the door with pistols,
- that none shall issue out; otherwise you might slip away ere he
- came. But what make you here?
FALSTAFF.
- What shall I do? I'll creep up into the chimney.
MRS. FORD.
- There they always use to discharge their birding-pieces.
MRS. PAGE.
- Creep into the kiln-hole.
FALSTAFF.
- Where is it?
MRS. FORD.
- He will seek there, on my word. Neither press, coffer, chest, trunk,
- well, vault, but he hath an abstract for the remembrance of such
- places, and goes to them by his note: there is no hiding you in
- the house.
FALSTAFF.
- I'll go out then.
MRS. PAGE.
- If you go out in your own semblance, you die, Sir John. Unless
- you go out disguised,—
MRS. FORD.
- How might we disguise him?
MRS. PAGE.
- Alas the day! I know not! There is no woman's gown big enough for
- him; otherwise he might put on a hat, a muffler, and a kerchief,
- and so escape.
FALSTAFF.
- Good hearts, devise something: any extremity rather than a mischief.
MRS. FORD.
- My maid's aunt, the fat woman of Brainford, has a gown above.
MRS. PAGE.
- On my word, it will serve him; she's as big as he is; and there's
- her thrummed hat, and her muffler too. Run up, Sir John.
MRS. FORD.
- Go, go, sweet Sir John. Mistress Page and I will look some linen
- for your head.
MRS. PAGE.
- Quick, quick! we'll come dress you straight; put on the gown the while.
[Exit FALSTAFF.]
MRS. FORD.
- I would my husband would meet him in this shape; he cannot abide
- the old woman of Brainford; he swears she's a witch, forbade her
- my house, and hath threatened to beat her.
MRS. PAGE.
- Heaven guide him to thy husband's cudgel; and the devil guide his
- cudgel afterwards!
MRS. FORD.
- But is my husband coming?
MRS. PAGE.
- Ay, in good sadness is he; and talks of the basket too, howsoever
- he hath had intelligence.
MRS. FORD.
- We'll try that; for I'll appoint my men to carry the basket again,
- to meet him at the door with it as they did last time.
MRS. PAGE.
- Nay, but he'll be here presently; let's go dress him like the
- witch of Brainford.
MRS. FORD.
- I'll first direct my men what they shall do with the basket. Go up;
- I'll bring linen for him straight.
[Exit.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Hang him, dishonest varlet! we cannot misuse him enough.
- We'll leave a proof, by that which we will do,
- Wives may be merry and yet honest too.
- We do not act that often jest and laugh;
- 'Tis old but true: 'Still swine eats all the draff.'
[Exit.]
[Re-enter MISTRESS FORD, with two SERVANTS.]
MRS. FORD.
- Go, sirs, take the basket again on your shoulders; your master is
- hard at door; if he bid you set it down, obey him. Quickly, dispatch.
[Exit.]
FIRST SERVANT.
- Come, come, take it up.
SECOND SERVANT.
- Pray heaven, it be not full of knight again.
FIRST SERVANT.
- I hope not; I had lief as bear so much lead.
[Enter FORD, PAGE, SHALLOW, CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS.]
FORD.
- Ay, but if it prove true, Master Page, have you any way then to
- unfool me again? Set down the basket, villain! Somebody call my
- wife. Youth in a basket! O you panderly rascals! there's a knot,
- a ging, a pack, a conspiracy against me. Now shall the devil be
- shamed. What, wife, I say! Come, come forth! behold what honest
- clothes you send forth to bleaching!
PAGE.
- Why, this passes, Master Ford! you are not to go loose any longer;
- you must be pinioned.
EVANS.
- Why, this is lunatics! this is mad as a mad dog.
SHALLOW.
- Indeed, Master Ford, this is not well, indeed.
FORD.
- So say I too, sir.—
[Re-enter MISTRESS FORD.]
Come hither, Mistress Ford, the honest woman, the modest wife,
- the virtuous creature, that hath the jealous fool to her husband!
- I suspect without cause, Mistress, do I?
MRS. FORD.
- Heaven be my witness, you do, if you suspect me in any dishonesty.
FORD.
- Well said, brazen-face! hold it out. Come forth, sirrah.
[Pulling clothes out of the basket.]
PAGE.
- This passes!
MRS. FORD.
- Are you not ashamed? Let the clothes alone.
FORD.
- I shall find you anon.
EVANS.
- 'Tis unreasonable. Will you take up your wife's clothes? Come away.
FORD.
- Empty the basket, I say!
MRS. FORD.
- Why, man, why?
FORD.
- Master Page, as I am a man, there was one conveyed out of my house
- yesterday in this basket: why may not he be there again? In my
- house I am sure he is; my intelligence is true; my jealousy is
- reasonable. Pluck me out all the linen.
MRS. FORD.
- If you find a man there, he shall die a flea's death.
PAGE.
- Here's no man.
SHALLOW.
- By my fidelity, this is not well, Master Ford; this wrongs you.
EVANS.
- Master Ford, you must pray, and not follow the imaginations of
- your own heart; this is jealousies.
FORD.
- Well, he's not here I seek for.
PAGE.
- No, nor nowhere else but in your brain.
[Servants carry away the basket.]
FORD.
- Help to search my house this one time. If I find not what I
- seek, show no colour for my extremity; let me for ever be your
- table-sport; let them say of me 'As jealous as Ford, that searched
- a hollow walnut for his wife's leman.' Satisfy me once more; once
- more search with me.
MRS. FORD.
- What, hoa, Mistress Page! Come you and the old woman down; my
- husband will come into the chamber.
FORD.
- Old woman? what old woman's that?
MRS. FORD.
- Why, it is my maid's aunt of Brainford.
FORD.
- A witch, a quean, an old cozening quean! Have I not forbid her
- my house? She comes of errands, does she? We are simple men;
- we do not know what's brought to pass under the profession of
- fortune-telling. She works by charms, by spells, by the figure,
- and such daubery as this is, beyond our element. We know nothing.
- Come down, you witch, you hag you; come down, I say!
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, good sweet husband! Good gentlemen, let him not strike the
- old woman.
[Re-enter FALSTAFF in woman's clothes, led by MISTRESS PAGE.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Come, Mother Prat; come, give me your hand.
FORD.
- I'll prat her.—[Beats him.] Out of my door, you witch, you rag,
- you baggage, you polecat, you ronyon! Out, out! I'll conjure you,
- I'll fortune-tell you.
[Exit FALSTAFF.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Are you not ashamed? I think you have killed the poor woman.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, he will do it. 'Tis a goodly credit for you.
FORD.
- Hang her, witch!
EVANS.
- By yea and no, I think the 'oman is a witch indeed; I like not when
- a 'oman has a great peard; I spy a great peard under her muffler.
FORD.
- Will you follow, gentlemen? I beseech you follow; see but the issue
- of my jealousy; if I cry out thus upon no trail, never trust me
- when I open again.
PAGE.
- Let's obey his humour a little further. Come, gentlemen.
[Exeunt FORD, PAGE, SHALLOW, CAIUS, and EVANS.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Trust me, he beat him most pitifully.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, by the mass, that he did not; he beat him most unpitifully
- methought.
MRS. PAGE.
- I'll have the cudgel hallowed and hung o'er the altar; it hath
- done meritorious service.
MRS. FORD.
- What think you? May we, with the warrant of womanhood and the
- witness of a good conscience, pursue him with any further revenge?
MRS. PAGE.
- The spirit of wantonness is sure scared out of him; if the devil
- have him not in fee-simple, with fine and recovery, he will never,
- I think, in the way of waste, attempt us again.
MRS. FORD.
- Shall we tell our husbands how we have served him?
MRS. PAGE.
- Yes, by all means; if it be but to scrape the figures out of
- your husband's brains. If they can find in their hearts the poor
- unvirtuous fat knight shall be any further afflicted, we two will
- still be the ministers.
MRS. FORD.
- I'll warrant they'll have him publicly shamed; and methinks there
- would be no period to the jest, should he not be publicly shamed.
MRS. PAGE.
- Come, to the forge with it then; shape it. I would not have things
- cool.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 3. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter HOST and BARDOLPH.]
BARDOLPH.
- Sir, the Germans desire to have three of your horses; the Duke
- himself will be to-morrow at court, and they are going to meet him.
HOST.
- What duke should that be comes so secretly? I hear not of him in
- the court. Let me speak with the gentlemen; they speak English?
BARDOLPH.
- Ay, sir; I'll call them to you.
HOST.
- They shall have my horses, but I'll make them pay; I'll sauce them;
- they have had my house a week at command; I have turned away my
- other guests. They must come off; I'll sauce them. Come.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 4. A room in FORD'S house.
[Enter PAGE, FORD, MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS FORD, and SIR HUGH
- EVANS.]
EVANS.
- 'Tis one of the best discretions of a 'oman as ever I did look upon.
PAGE.
- And did he send you both these letters at an instant?
MRS. PAGE.
- Within a quarter of an hour.
FORD.
- Pardon me, wife. Henceforth, do what thou wilt;
- I rather will suspect the sun with cold
- Than thee with wantonness: now doth thy honour stand,
- In him that was of late an heretic,
- As firm as faith.
PAGE.
- 'Tis well, 'tis well; no more.
- Be not as extreme in submission
- As in offence;
- But let our plot go forward: let our wives
- Yet once again, to make us public sport,
- Appoint a meeting with this old fat fellow,
- Where we may take him and disgrace him for it.
FORD.
- There is no better way than that they spoke of.
PAGE.
- How? To send him word they'll meet him in the park at midnight?
- Fie, fie! he'll never come!
EVANS.
- You say he has been thrown in the rivers; and has been grievously
- peaten as an old 'oman; methinks there should be terrors in him,
- that he should not come; methinks his flesh is punished; he shall
- have no desires.
PAGE.
- So think I too.
MRS. FORD.
- Devise but how you'll use him when he comes,
- And let us two devise to bring him thither.
MRS. PAGE.
- There is an old tale goes that Herne the hunter,
- Sometime a keeper here in Windsor Forest,
- Doth all the winter-time, at still midnight,
- Walk round about an oak, with great ragg'd horns;
- And there he blasts the tree, and takes the cattle,
- And makes milch-kine yield blood, and shakes a chain
- In a most hideous and dreadful manner:
- You have heard of such a spirit, and well you know
- The superstitious idle-headed eld
- Received, and did deliver to our age,
- This tale of Herne the hunter for a truth.
PAGE.
- Why, yet there want not many that do fear
- In deep of night to walk by this Herne's oak.
- But what of this?
MRS. FORD.
- Marry, this is our device;
- That Falstaff at that oak shall meet with us,
- Disguis'd, like Herne, with huge horns on his head.
PAGE.
- Well, let it not be doubted but he'll come,
- And in this shape. When you have brought him thither,
- What shall be done with him? What is your plot?
MRS. PAGE.
- That likewise have we thought upon, and thus:
- Nan Page my daughter, and my little son,
- And three or four more of their growth, we'll dress
- Like urchins, ouphs, and fairies, green and white,
- With rounds of waxen tapers on their heads,
- And rattles in their hands. Upon a sudden,
- As Falstaff, she, and I, are newly met,
- Let them from forth a sawpit rush at once
- With some diffused song; upon their sight
- We two in great amazedness will fly:
- Then let them all encircle him about,
- And fairy-like, to pinch the unclean knight;
- And ask him why, that hour of fairy revel,
- In their so sacred paths he dares to tread
- In shape profane.
MRS. FORD.
- And till he tell the truth,
- Let the supposed fairies pinch him sound,
- And burn him with their tapers.
MRS. PAGE.
- The truth being known,
- We'll all present ourselves; dis-horn the spirit,
- And mock him home to Windsor.
FORD.
- The children must
- Be practis'd well to this or they'll ne'er do 't.
EVANS.
- I will teach the children their behaviours; and I will
- be like a jack-an-apes also, to burn the knight with my
- taber.
FORD.
- That will be excellent. I'll go buy them vizards.
MRS. PAGE.
- My Nan shall be the Queen of all the Fairies,
- Finely attired in a robe of white.
PAGE.
- That silk will I go buy. [Aside.] And in that time
- Shall Master Slender steal my Nan away,
- And marry her at Eton. Go, send to Falstaff straight.
FORD.
- Nay, I'll to him again, in name of Brook;
- He'll tell me all his purpose. Sure, he'll come.
MRS. PAGE.
- Fear not you that. Go, get us properties
- And tricking for our fairies.
EVANS.
- Let us about it. It is admirable pleasures, and fery
- honest knaveries.
[Exeunt PAGE, FORD, and EVANS.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Go, Mistress Ford.
- Send Quickly to Sir John to know his mind.
[Exit MRS. FORD.]
I'll to the Doctor; he hath my good will,
- And none but he, to marry with Nan Page.
- That Slender, though well landed, is an idiot;
- And he my husband best of all affects:
- The Doctor is well money'd, and his friends
- Potent at court: he, none but he, shall have her,
- Though twenty thousand worthier come to crave her.
[Exit.]
[edit] SCENE 5. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter HOST and SIMPLE.]
HOST.
- What wouldst thou have, boor? What, thick-skin? Speak, breathe,
- discuss; brief, short, quick, snap.
SIMPLE.
- Marry, sir, I come to speak with Sir John Falstaff from Master Slender.
HOST.
- There's his chamber, his house, his castle, his standing-bed and
- truckle-bed; 'tis painted about with the story of the Prodigal,
- fresh and new. Go knock and call; he'll speak like an
- Anthropophaginian unto thee; knock, I say.
SIMPLE.
- There's an old woman, a fat woman, gone up into his chamber; I'll
- be so bold as stay, sir, till she come down; I come to speak with
- her, indeed.
HOST.
- Ha! a fat woman? The knight may be robbed. I'll call. Bully knight!
- Bully Sir John! Speak from thy lungs military. Art thou there? It
- is thine host, thine Ephesian, calls.
FALSTAFF.
- [Above] How now, mine host?
HOST.
- Here's a Bohemian-Tartar tarries the coming down of thy fat woman.
- Let her descend, bully, let her descend; my chambers are honourible.
- Fie! privacy? fie!
[Enter FALSTAFF.]
FALSTAFF.
- There was, mine host, an old fat woman even now with, me; but
- she's gone.
SIMPLE.
- Pray you, sir, was't not the wise woman of Brainford?
FALSTAFF.
- Ay, marry was it, mussel-shell: what would you with her?
SIMPLE.
- My master, sir, my Master Slender, sent to her, seeing her go
- thorough the streets, to know, sir, whether one Nym, sir, that
- beguiled him of a chain, had the chain or no.
FALSTAFF.
- I spake with the old woman about it.
SIMPLE.
- And what says she, I pray, sir?
FALSTAFF.
- Marry, she says that the very same man that beguiled Master Slender
- of his chain cozened him of it.
SIMPLE.
- I would I could have spoken with the woman herself; I had other
- things to have spoken with her too, from him.
FALSTAFF.
- What are they? Let us know.
HOST.
- Ay, come; quick.
SIMPLE.
- I may not conceal them, sir.
FALSTAFF.
- Conceal them, or thou diest.
SIMPLE.
- Why, sir, they were nothing but about Mistress Anne Page: to know
- if it were my master's fortune to have her or no.
FALSTAFF.
- 'Tis, 'tis his fortune.
SIMPLE.
- What sir?
FALSTAFF.
- To have her, or no. Go; say the woman told me so.
SIMPLE.
- May I be bold to say so, sir?
FALSTAFF.
- Ay, Sir Tike; like who more bold?
SIMPLE.
- I thank your worship; I shall make my master glad with these tidings.
[Exit.]
HOST.
- Thou art clerkly, thou art clerkly, Sir John. Was there a wise
- woman with thee?
FALSTAFF.
- Ay, that there was, mine host; one that hath taught me more wit
- than ever I learned before in my life; and I paid nothing for it
- neither, but was paid for my learning.
[Enter BARDOLPH.]
BARDOLPH.
- Out, alas, sir! cozenage, mere cozenage!
HOST.
- Where be my horses? Speak well of them, varletto.
BARDOLPH.
- Run away, with the cozeners; for so soon as I came beyond Eton,
- they threw me off, from behind one of them, in a slough of mire;
- and set spurs and away, like three German devils, three Doctor
- Faustuses.
HOST.
- They are gone but to meet the Duke, villain; do not say they be
- fled; Germans are honest men.
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS.]
EVANS.
- Where is mine host?
HOST.
- What is the matter, sir?
EVANS.
- Have a care of your entertainments: there is a friend of mine come
- to town tells me there is three cozen-germans that has cozened all
- the hosts of Readins, of Maidenhead, of Colebrook, of horses and
- money. I tell you for good will, look you; you are wise, and full
- of gibes and vlouting-stogs, and 'tis not convenient you should be
- cozened. Fare you well.
[Exit.]
[Enter DOCTOR CAIUS.]
CAIUS.
- Vere is mine host de Jarteer?
HOST.
- Here, Master Doctor, in perplexity and doubtful dilemma.
CAIUS.
- I cannot tell vat is dat; but it is tell-a me dat you make grand
- preparation for a Duke de Jamany. By my trot, dere is no duke that
- the court is know to come; I tell you for good will: Adieu.
[Exit.]
HOST.
- Hue and cry, villain, go! Assist me, knight; I am undone. Fly,
- run, hue and cry, villain; I am undone!
[Exeunt HOST and BARDOLPH.]
FALSTAFF.
- I would all the world might be cozened, for I have been cozened and
- beaten too. If it should come to the ear of the court how I have
- been transformed, and how my transformation hath been washed and
- cudgelled, they would melt me out of my fat, drop by drop, and
- liquor fishermen's boots with me; I warrant they would whip me
- with their fine wits till I were as crest-fallen as a dried pear.
- I never prospered since I forswore myself at primero. Well, if my
- wind were but long enough to say my prayers, I would repent.
[Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
Now! whence come you?
QUICKLY.
- From the two parties, forsooth.
FALSTAFF.
- The devil take one party and his dam the other! And so they shall
- be both bestowed. I have suffered more for their sakes, more than
- the villainous inconstancy of man's disposition is able to bear.
QUICKLY.
- And have not they suffered? Yes, I warrant; speciously one of them;
- Mistress Ford, good heart, is beaten black and blue, that you
- cannot see a white spot about her.
FALSTAFF.
- What tellest thou me of black and blue? I was beaten myself into
- all the colours of the rainbow; and was like to be apprehended for
- the witch of Brainford. But that my admirable dexterity of wit,
- my counterfeiting the action of an old woman, delivered me, the
- knave constable had set me i' the stocks, i' the common stocks,
- for a witch.
QUICKLY.
- Sir, let me speak with you in your chamber; you shall hear how
- things go, and, I warrant, to your content. Here is a letter will
- say somewhat. Good hearts, what ado here is to bring you together!
- Sure, one of you does not serve heaven well, that you are so crossed.
FALSTAFF.
- Come up into my chamber.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 6. Another room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter FENTON and HOST.]
HOST.
- Master Fenton, talk not to me; my mind is heavy; I will give over all.
FENTON.
- Yet hear me speak. Assist me in my purpose,
- And, as I am a gentleman, I'll give thee
- A hundred pound in gold more than your loss.
HOST.
- I will hear you, Master Fenton; and I will, at the least, keep your
- counsel.
FENTON.
- From time to time I have acquainted you
- With the dear love I bear to fair Anne Page,
- Who, mutually, hath answered my affection,
- So far forth as herself might be her chooser,
- Even to my wish. I have a letter from her
- Of such contents as you will wonder at;
- The mirth whereof so larded with my matter
- That neither, singly, can be manifested
- Without the show of both; wherein fat Falstaff
- Hath a great scare: the image of the jest
- I'll show you here at large. Hark, good mine host:
- To-night at Herne's oak, just 'twixt twelve and one,
- Must my sweet Nan present the Fairy Queen;
- The purpose why is here: in which disguise,
- While other jests are something rank on foot,
- Her father hath commanded her to slip
- Away with Slender, and with him at Eton
- Immediately to marry; she hath consented:
- Now, sir,
- Her mother, even strong against that match
- And firm for Doctor Caius, hath appointed
- That he shall likewise shuffle her away,
- While other sports are tasking of their minds;
- And at the deanery, where a priest attends,
- Straight marry her: to this her mother's plot
- She seemingly obedient likewise hath
- Made promise to the doctor. Now thus it rests:
- Her father means she shall be all in white;
- And in that habit, when Slender sees his time
- To take her by the hand and bid her go,
- She shall go with him: her mother hath intended
- The better to denote her to the doctor,—
- For they must all be mask'd and vizarded—
- That quaint in green she shall be loose enrob'd,
- With ribands pendent, flaring 'bout her head;
- And when the doctor spies his vantage ripe,
- To pinch her by the hand: and, on that token,
- The maid hath given consent to go with him.
HOST.
- Which means she to deceive, father or mother?
FENTON.
- Both, my good host, to go along with me:
- And here it rests, that you'll procure the vicar
- To stay for me at church, 'twixt twelve and one,
- And in the lawful name of marrying,
- To give our hearts united ceremony.
HOST.
- Well, husband your device; I'll to the vicar.
- Bring you the maid, you shall not lack a priest.
FENTON.
- So shall I evermore be bound to thee;
- Besides, I'll make a present recompense.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] ACT V.
[edit] SCENE 1. A room in the Garter Inn.
[Enter FALSTAFF and MISTRESS QUICKLY.]
FALSTAFF.
- Prithee, no more prattling; go: I'll hold. This is the third time;
- I hope good luck lies in odd numbers. Away! go. They say there is
- divinity in odd numbers, either in nativity, chance, or death. Away!
QUICKLY.
- I'll provide you a chain, and I'll do what I can to get you a pair
- of horns.
FALSTAFF.
- Away, I say; time wears; hold up your head, and mince.
[Exit MRS. QUICKLY.]
[Enter FORD.]
How now, Master Brook! Master Brook, the matter will be known
- tonight, or never. Be you in the Park about midnight, at Herne's
- oak, and you shall see wonders.
FORD.
- Went you not to her yesterday, sir, as you told me you had appointed?
FALSTAFF.
- I went to her, Master Brook, as you see, like a poor old man; but
- I came from her, Master Brook, like a poor old woman. That same
- knave Ford, her husband, hath the finest mad devil of jealousy
- in him, Master Brook, that ever governed frenzy. I will tell you:
- he beat me grievously in the shape of a woman; for in the shape
- of man, Master Brook, I fear not Goliath with a weaver's beam,
- because I know also life is a shuttle. I am in haste; go along
- with me; I'll tell you all, Master Brook. Since I plucked geese,
- played truant, and whipped top, I knew not what 'twas to be beaten
- till lately. Follow me: I'll tell you strange things of this knave
- Ford, on whom to-night I will be revenged, and I will deliver his
- wife into your hand. Follow. Strange things in hand, Master Brook!
- Follow.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 2. Windsor Park.
[Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER.]
PAGE.
- Come, come; we'll couch i' the castle-ditch till we see the light
- of our fairies. Remember, son Slender, my daughter.
SLENDER.
- Ay, forsooth; I have spoke with her, and we have a nay-word how
- to know one another. I come to her in white and cry 'mum'; she
- cries 'budget,' and by that we know one another.
SHALLOW.
- That's good too; but what needs either your 'mum' or her 'budget'?
- The white will decipher her well enough. It hath struck ten o'clock.
PAGE.
- The night is dark; light and spirits will become it well. Heaven
- prosper our sport! No man means evil but the devil, and we shall
- know him by his horns. Let's away; follow me.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 3. The street in Windsor.
[Enter MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS FORD, and DOCTOR CAIUS.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Master Doctor, my daughter is in green; when you see your time,
- take her by the hand, away with her to the deanery, and dispatch
- it quickly. Go before into the Park; we two must go together.
CAIUS.
- I know vat I have to do; adieu.
MRS. PAGE.
- Fare you well, sir. [Exit CAIUS.] My husband will not rejoice so
- much at the abuse of Falstaff as he will chafe at the doctor's
- marrying my daughter; but 'tis no matter; better a little chiding
- than a great deal of heart break.
MRS. FORD.
- Where is Nan now, and her troop of fairies, and the Welsh devil,
- Hugh?
MRS. PAGE.
- They are all couched in a pit hard by Herne's oak, with obscured
- lights; which, at the very instant of Falstaff's and our meeting,
- they will at once display to the night.
MRS. FORD.
- That cannot choose but amaze him.
MRS. PAGE.
- If he be not amazed, he will be mocked; if he be amazed, he will
- every way be mocked.
MRS. FORD.
- We'll betray him finely.
MRS. PAGE.
- Against such lewdsters and their lechery,
- Those that betray them do no treachery.
MRS. FORD.
- The hour draws on: to the oak, to the oak!
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 4. Windsor Park
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS, disguised, with others as Fairies.]
EVANS.
- Trib, trib, fairies; come; and remember your parts. Be pold,
- I pray you; follow me into the pit; and when I give the watch-ords,
- do as I pid you. Come, come; trib, trib.
[Exeunt.]
[edit] SCENE 5. Another part of the Park.
[Enter FALSTAFF disguised as HERNE with a buck's head on.]
FALSTAFF.
- The Windsor bell hath struck twelve; the minute draws on. Now the
- hot-blooded gods assist me! Remember, Jove, thou wast a bull for
- thy Europa; love set on thy horns. O powerful love! that in some
- respects, makes a beast a man; in some other a man a beast. You
- were also, Jupiter, a swan, for the love of Leda. O omnipotent love!
- how near the god drew to the complexion of a goose! A fault done
- first in the form of a beast; O Jove, a beastly fault! and then
- another fault in the semblance of a fowl: think on't, Jove, a foul
- fault! When gods have hot backs what shall poor men do? For me,
- I am here a Windsor stag; and the fattest, I think, i' the forest.
- Send me a cool rut-time, Jove, or who can blame me to piss my tallow?
- Who comes here? my doe?
[Enter MISTRESS FORD and MISTRESS PAGE.]
MRS. FORD.
- Sir John! Art thou there, my deer? my male deer?
FALSTAFF.
- My doe with the black scut! Let the sky rain potatoes; let it
- thunder to the tune of 'Greensleeves'; hail kissing-comfits and
- snow eringoes; let there come a tempest of provocation, I will
- shelter me here.
[Embracing her.]
MRS. FORD.
- Mistress Page is come with me, sweetheart.
FALSTAFF.
- Divide me like a brib'd buck, each a haunch; I will keep my sides
- to myself, my shoulders for the fellow of this walk, and my horns
- I bequeath your husbands. Am I a woodman, ha? Speak I like Herne
- the hunter? Why, now is Cupid a child of conscience; he makes
- restitution. As I am a true spirit, welcome!
[Noise within.]
MRS. PAGE.
- Alas! what noise?
MRS. FORD.
- Heaven forgive our sins!
FALSTAFF.
- What should this be?
MRS. FORD.
- Away, away!
MRS. PAGE.
- Away, away!
[They run off.]
FALSTAFF.
- I think the devil will not have me damned, lest the oil that's
- in me should set hell on fire; he would never else cross me thus.
[Enter SIR HUGH EVANS like a Satyr, PISTOL as a Hobgoblin, ANNE
- PAGE as the the Fairy Queen, attended by her Brothers and Others,
- as fairies, with waxen tapers on their heads.]
ANNE.
- Fairies, black, grey, green, and white,
- You moonshine revellers, and shades of night,
- You orphan heirs of fixed destiny,
- Attend your office and your quality.
- Crier Hobgoblin, make the fairy oyes.
PISTOL.
- Elves, list your names: silence, you airy toys!
- Cricket, to Windsor chimneys shalt thou leap:
- Where fires thou find'st unrak'd, and hearths unswept,
- There pinch the maids as blue as bilberry:
- Our radiant Queen hates sluts and sluttery.
FALSTAFF.
- They are fairies; he that speaks to them shall die:
- I'll wink and couch: no man their works must eye.
[Lies down upon his face.]
EVANS.
- Where's Bede? Go you, and where you find a maid
- That, ere she sleep, has thrice her prayers said,
- Rein up the organs of her fantasy,
- Sleep she as sound as careless infancy;
- But those as sleep and think not on their sins,
- Pinch them, arms, legs, backs, shoulders, sides, and shins.
ANNE.
- About, about!
- Search Windsor castle, elves, within and out:
- Strew good luck, ouphes, on every sacred room,
- That it may stand till the perpetual doom,
- In state as wholesome as in state 'tis fit,
- Worthy the owner and the owner it.
- The several chairs of order look you scour
- With juice of balm and every precious flower:
- Each fair instalment, coat, and several crest,
- With loyal blazon, evermore be blest!
- And nightly, meadow-fairies, look you sing,
- Like to the Garter's compass, in a ring:
- The expressure that it bears, green let it be,
- More fertile-fresh than all the field to see;
- And 'Honi soit qui mal y pense' write
- In emerald tufts, flowers purple, blue and white;
- Like sapphire, pearl, and rich embroidery,
- Buckled below fair knighthood's bending knee.
- Fairies use flowers for their charactery.
- Away! disperse! But, till 'tis one o'clock,
- Our dance of custom round about the oak
- Of Herne the hunter let us not forget.
EVANS.
- Pray you, lock hand in hand; yourselves in order set;
- And twenty glow-worms shall our lanterns be,
- To guide our measure round about the tree.
- But, stay; I smell a man of middle-earth.
FALSTAFF.
- Heavens defend me from that Welsh fairy, lest he transform me
- to a piece of cheese!
PISTOL.
- Vile worm, thou wast o'erlook'd even in thy birth.
ANNE.
- With trial-fire touch me his finger-end:
- If he be chaste, the flame will back descend
- And turn him to no pain; but if he start,
- It is the flesh of a corrupted heart.
PISTOL.
- A trial! come.
EVANS.
- Come, will this wood take fire?
[They burn him with their tapers.]
FALSTAFF.
- Oh, oh, oh!
ANNE.
- Corrupt, corrupt, and tainted in desire!
- About him, fairies; sing a scornful rhyme;
- And, as you trip, still pinch him to your time.
SONG.
-
- Fie on sinful fantasy!
- Fie on lust and luxury!
- Lust is but a bloody fire,
- Kindled with unchaste desire,
- Fed in heart, whose flames aspire,
- As thoughts do blow them, higher and higher.
- Pinch him, fairies, mutually;
- Pinch him for his villany;
- Pinch him and burn him and turn him about,
- Till candles and star-light and moonshine be out.
[During this song the Fairies pinch FALSTAFF. DOCTOR CAIUS comes one way, and steals away a fairy in green; SLENDER another way, and takes off a fairy in white; and FENTON comes, and steals away ANNE PAGE. A noise of hunting is heard within. All the fairies run away. FALSTAFF pulls off his buck's head, and rises.]
[Enter PAGE, FORD, MISTRESS PAGE, MISTRESS FORD. They lay hold on FALSTAFF.]
PAGE.
- Nay, do not fly; I think we have watch'd you now:
- Will none but Herne the hunter serve your turn?
MRS. PAGE.
- I pray you, come, hold up the jest no higher.
- Now, good Sir John, how like you Windsor wives?
- See you these, husband? do not these fair yokes
- Become the forest better than the town?
FORD.
- Now, sir, who's a cuckold now? Master Brook, Falstaff's a knave,
- a cuckoldly knave; here are his horns, Master Brook; and, Master
- Brook, he hath enjoyed nothing of Ford's but his buck-basket,
- his cudgel, and twenty pounds of money, which must be paid to
- Master Brook; his horses are arrested for it, Master Brook.
MRS. FORD.
- Sir John, we have had ill luck; we could never meet. I will never
- take you for my love again; but I will always count you my deer.
FALSTAFF.
- I do begin to perceive that I am made an ass.
FORD.
- Ay, and an ox too; both the proofs are extant.
FALSTAFF.
- And these are not fairies? I was three or four times in the thought
- they were not fairies; and yet the guiltiness of my mind, the
- sudden surprise of my powers, drove the grossness of the foppery
- into a received belief, in despite of the teeth of all rhyme and
- reason, that they were fairies. See now how wit may be made a
- Jack-a-Lent when 'tis upon ill employment!
EVANS.
- Sir John Falstaff, serve Got, and leave your desires, and fairies
- will not pinse you.
FORD.
- Well said, fairy Hugh.
EVANS.
- And leave you your jealousies too, I pray you.
FORD.
- I will never mistrust my wife again, till thou art able to woo her
- in good English.
FALSTAFF.
- Have I laid my brain in the sun, and dried it, that it wants matter
- to prevent so gross o'er-reaching as this? Am I ridden with a Welsh
- goat too? Shall I have a cox-comb of frieze? 'Tis time I were
- choked with a piece of toasted cheese.
EVANS.
- Seese is not good to give putter: your belly is all putter.
FALSTAFF.
- 'Seese' and 'putter'! Have I lived to stand at the taunt of one
- that makes fritters of English? This is enough to be the decay
- of lust and late-walking through the realm.
MRS. PAGE.
- Why, Sir John, do you think, though we would have thrust virtue
- out of our hearts by the head and shoulders, and have given
- ourselves without scruple to hell, that ever the devil could
- have made you our delight?
FORD.
- What, a hodge-pudding? a bag of flax?
MRS. PAGE.
- A puffed man?
PAGE.
- Old, cold, withered, and of intolerable entrails?
FORD.
- And one that is as slanderous as Satan?
PAGE.
- And as poor as Job?
FORD.
- And as wicked as his wife?
EVANS.
- And given to fornications, and to taverns, and sack and wine, and
- metheglins, and to drinkings and swearings and starings, pribbles
- and prabbles?
FALSTAFF.
- Well, I am your theme; you have the start of me; I am dejected;
- I am not able to answer the Welsh flannel. Ignorance itself is
- a plummet o'er me; use me as you will.
FORD.
- Marry, sir, we'll bring you to Windsor, to one Master Brook, that
- you have cozened of money, to whom you should have been a pander:
- over and above that you have suffered, I think to repay that money
- will be a biting affliction.
MRS. FORD.
- Nay, husband, let that go to make amends;
- Forget that sum, so we'll all be friends.
FORD.
- Well, here's my hand: all is forgiven at last.
PAGE.
- Yet be cheerful, knight; thou shalt eat a posset tonight at my
- house; where I will desire thee to laugh at my wife, that now
- laughs at thee. Tell her, Master Slender hath married her daughter.
MRS. PAGE.
- [Aside] Doctors doubt that; if Anne Page be my daughter, she is,
- by this, Doctor Caius' wife.
[Enter SLENDER.]
SLENDER.
- Whoa, ho! ho! father Page!
PAGE.
- Son, how now! how now, son! have you dispatched?
SLENDER.
- Dispatched! I'll make the best in Gloucestershire know on't;
- would I were hanged, la, else!
PAGE.
- Of what, son?
SLENDER.
- I came yonder at Eton to marry Mistress Anne Page, and she's a
- great lubberly boy: if it had not been i' the church, I would
- have swinged him, or he should have swinged me. If I did not
- think it had been Anne Page, would I might never stir! and 'tis
- a postmaster's boy.
PAGE.
- Upon my life, then, you took the wrong.
SLENDER.
- What need you tell me that? I think so, when I took a boy for a
- girl. If I had been married to him, for all he was in woman's
- apparel, I would not have had him.
PAGE.
- Why, this is your own folly. Did not I tell you how you should
- know my daughter by her garments?
SLENDER.
- I went to her in white and cried 'mum' and she cried 'budget'
- as Anne and I had appointed; and yet it was not Anne, but a
- postmaster's boy.
EVANS.
- Jeshu! Master Slender, cannot you see put marry poys?
PAGE.
- O I am vexed at heart: what shall I do?
MRS. PAGE.
- Good George, be not angry: I knew of your purpose; turned my
- daughter into green; and, indeed, she is now with the doctor at
- the deanery, and there married.
[Enter DOCTOR CAIUS.]
CAIUS.
- Vere is Mistress Page? By gar, I am cozened; I ha' married un
- garcon, a boy; un paysan, by gar, a boy; it is not Anne Page;
- by gar, I am cozened.
MRS. PAGE.
- Why, did you take her in green?
CAIUS.
- Ay, by gar, and 'tis a boy: by gar, I'll raise all Windsor.
[Exit.]
FORD.
- This is strange. Who hath got the right Anne?
PAGE.
- My heart misgives me; here comes Master Fenton.
[Enter FENTON and ANNE PAGE.]
How now, Master Fenton!
ANNE.
- Pardon, good father! good my mother, pardon!
PAGE.
- Now, Mistress, how chance you went not with Master Slender?
MRS. PAGE.
- Why went you not with Master Doctor, maid?
FENTON.
- You do amaze her: hear the truth of it.
- You would have married her most shamefully,
- Where there was no proportion held in love.
- The truth is, she and I, long since contracted,
- Are now so sure that nothing can dissolve us.
- The offence is holy that she hath committed,
- And this deceit loses the name of craft,
- Of disobedience, or unduteous title,
- Since therein she doth evitate and shun
- A thousand irreligious cursed hours,
- Which forced marriage would have brought upon her.
FORD.
- Stand not amaz'd: here is no remedy:
- In love, the heavens themselves do guide the state:
- Money buys lands, and wives are sold by fate.
FALSTAFF.
- I am glad, though you have ta'en a special stand
- to strike at me, that your arrow hath glanced.
PAGE.
- Well, what remedy?—Fenton, heaven give thee joy!
- What cannot be eschew'd must be embrac'd.
FALSTAFF.
- When night-dogs run, all sorts of deer are chas'd.
MRS. PAGE.
- Well, I will muse no further. Master Fenton,
- Heaven give you many, many merry days!
- Good husband, let us every one go home,
- And laugh this sport o'er by a country fire;
- Sir John and all.
FORD.
- Let it be so. Sir John,
- To Master Brook you yet shall hold your word;
- For he, to-night, shall lie with Mistress Ford.
[Exeunt.]
| This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. |