Welcome to PhiloLogic  
   home |  the ARTFL project |  download |  documentation |  sample databases |   

notenote

-- 254 --

notenote
note



-- 255 --

note

notenotenote

-- 256 --

-- 257 --

A Pleasant Conceited Comedie, of Syr Iohn Falstaffe, and the merry Wiues of VVindsor.

Main text Scene 1 [Sc. I.] Enter Iustice Shallow, Syr Hugh, Maister Page, and Slender.

Shal.
Nere talke to me, Ile make a star-chamber matter of it.
The Councell shall know it.

Page.
Nay good maister Shallow be perswaded by mee.

Slen.
Nay surely my vncle shall not put it vp so.

Sir Hu.
Wil you not heare reasons M. Slenders?
You should heare reasons.

Shal.
Tho he be a knight, he shall not thinke to carrie it so away.
M. Page I will not be wronged. For you
Syr, I loue you, and for my cousen,
He comes to looke vpon your daughter.

Pa.
And heres my hand, and if my daughter
Like him so well as I, wee'l quickly haue it a match:
In the meane time let me entreate you to soiourne
Here a while. And on my life Ile vndertake
To make you friends.

Sir Hu.
I pray you M. Shallowes let it be so.
The matter is pud to arbitarments.
The first man is M. Page, videlicet M. Page.
The second is my selfe, videlicet my selfe.
The third and last man, is mine host of the gartyr. Enter Syr Iohn Falstaffe, Pistoll, Bardolfe, and Nim.
Heere is sir Iohn himselfe now, looke you.

Fal.

Now M. Shallow, youle complaine of me to the Councell, I heare?

Shal.
Sir Iohn, sir Iohn, you haue hurt my keeper,

-- 258 --


Kild my dogs, stolne my deere.

Fal.
But not kissed your keepers daughter.

Shal.
Well this shall be answered.

Fal.
Ile answere it strait note. I haue done all this.
This is now answred.

Shal.
Well, the Councell shall know it.

Fal.
Twere better for you twere knowne in counsell,
Youle be laught at.

Sir Hugh.
Good vrdes sir Iohn, good vrdes.

Fal.
Good vrdes, good Cabidge.
Slender I brake your head,
What matter haue you against mee?

Slen.

I haue matter in my head against you and your cogging companions, Pistoll and Nym. They carried mee to the Tauerne, and made mee drunke, and afterward picked my pocket.

Fal.

What say you to this Pistoll, did you picke Maister Slenders purse Pistoll?

Slen.

I by this handkercher did he. Two faire shouell boord shillings, besides seuen groats in mill sixpences.

Fal.

What say you to this Pistoll?

Pist.
Sir Iohn, and Maister mine, I combat craue
Of this same laten bilbo. I do retort the lie
Euen in thy gorge, thy gorge, thy gorge.

Slen.
By this light it was he then.

Nym.
Syr my honor is not for many words,
But if you run bace humors of me,
I will say mary trap. And there's the humor of it.

Fal.
You heare these matters denide gentlemen,
You heare it. Enter Mistresse Foord, Mistresse Page, and her daughter Anne.

Pa.
No more now,
I thinke it be almost dinner time,
For my wife is come to meete vs.

Fal.
Mistresse Foord, I think your name is,
If I mistake not.
Syr Iohn kisses her.

Mis. Ford.
Your mistake sir is nothing but in the Mistresse.
But my husbands name is Foord sir.

Fal.
I shall desire your more acquaintance.
The like of you good misteris Page.

Mis. Pa.
With all my hart sir Iohn.
Come husband will you goe?
Dinner staies for vs.

Pa.
With all my hart, come along Gentlemen. Exit all, but Slender and Mistresse Anne.

-- 259 --

Anne.
Now forsooth why do you stay me?
What would you with me?

Slen.

Nay for my owne part, I would litle or nothing with you. I loue you well, and my vncle can tell you how my liuing stands. And if you can loue me why so. If not, why then happie man be his dole.

An.
You say well M. Slender.
But first you must giue me leaue to
Be acquainted with your humor,
And afterward to loue you if I can.

Slen.

Why by God, there's neuer a man in christendome can desire more. What haue you beares in your Towne mistresse Anne, your dogs barke so?

An.

I cannot tell M. Slender, I think there be.

Slen.

Ha how say you? I warrant your afeard of a Beare let loose, are you not?

An.

Yes trust me.

Slen.
Now that's meate and drinke to me,
Ile run yon note to a beare, and take her by the mussell,
You neuer saw the like.
But indeed I cannot blame you,
For they are maruellous rough things.

Anne.
Will yo go into dinner M. Slendor?
The meate staies for you.

Slen.
No faith not I. I thanke you,
I cannot abide the smell of hot meate
Nere since I broke my shin. Ile tel you how it came
By my troth. A Fencer and I plaid three venies
For a dish of stewd prunes, and I with my ward
Defending my head, he hot my shin. Yes faith. Enter Maister Page.

Pa.
Come, come Maister Slender, dinner staies for you.

Slen.
I can eate no meate, I thanke you.

Pa.
You shall not choose I say.

Slen.
Ile follow you sir, pray leade the way.
Nay be God misteris Anne, you shall goe first,
I haue more manners then so, I hope.

An.
Well sir, I will not be troublesome. Exit omnes. Scene 2 [Sc. II.] Enter Sir Hugh and Simple, from dinner.

Sir Hu.

Hark you Simple, pray you beare this letter to doctor Cayus house, the French Doctor. He is twell vp along the street, and enquire of his house for one mistris Quickly, his woman, or his try

-- 260 --

nurse, and deliuer this Letter to her, it tis about Maister Slender. Looke you, will you do it now?

Sim.

I warrant you sir.

Sir Hu.
Pray you do, I must not be absent at the grace.
I will goe make an end of my dinner,
There is pepions and cheese behinde. Exit omnes. Scene 3 [Sc. III.] Enter Sir Iohn Falstaffes Host of the Garter, Nym, Bardolfe, Pistoll, and the Boy.

Fal.
Mine Host of the Garter.

Host.
What ses my bully Rooke?
Speake schollerly and wisely.

Fal.
Mine Host, I must turne away some of my followers.

Host.
Discard bully, Hercules cassire.
Let them wag, trot, trot.

Fal.
I sit at ten pound a weeke.

Host.
Thou art an Emperor Cæsar, Phesser and Kesar bully.
Ile entertaine Bardolfe. He shall tap, he shall draw.
Said I well, bully Hector?

Fal.
Do good mine Host.

Host.
I haue spoke. Let him follow. Bardolfe
Let me see thee froth, and lyme. I am at
A word. Follow, follow. Exit Host.

Fal.
Do Bardolfe, a Tapster is a good trade,
An old cloake will make a new Ierkin,
A withered seruingman, a fresh Tapster:
Follow him Bardolfe.

Bar.
I will sir, Ile warrant you Ile make a good shift to liue. Exit Bardolfe.

Pis.
O bace gongarian wight, wilt thou the spicket willd?

Nym.
His minde is not heroick. And theres the humor of it.

Fal.
Well my Laddes, I am almost out at the heeles.

Pis.
Why then let cybes insue.

Nym.
I thanke thee for that humor.

Fal.
Well I am glad I am so rid of this tinder Boy.
His stealth was too open, his filching was like
An vnskilfull singer, he kept not time.

Nym.
The good humour is to steale at a minutes rest.

Pis.
Tis so indeed Nym, thou hast hit it right.

Fal.
Wel, afore God, I must cheat, I must conycatch.
Which of you knowes Foord of this Towne?

Pis.
I ken the wight, he is of substance good.

Fal.
Well my honest Lads, Ile tell you what
I am about.

-- 261 --

Pis.
Two yards and more.

Fal.
No gibes now Pistoll: indeed I am two yards
In the wast, but now I am about no wast:
Briefly, I am about thrift you rogues you,
I do intend to make loue to Foords wife,
I espie entertainment in her. She carues, she
Discourses. She giues the lyre of inuitation,
And euery part to be constured rightly is, I am
Syr Iohn Falstaffes.

Pis.
Hee hath studied her well, out of honestie
Into English.

Fal.
Now the report goes, she hath all the rule
Of her husbands purse. She hath legians of angels.

Pis.
As many diuels attend her.
And to her boy say I.

Fal.

Heree's a Letter to her. Heeres another to misteris Page. Who euen now gaue me good eies too, examined my exteriors with such a greedy intention, with the beames of her beautie, that it seemed as she would a scorged me vp like a burning glasse. Here is another Letter to her, shee beares the purse too. They shall be Excheckers to me, and Ile be cheaters to them both. They shall be my East and West Indies, and Ile trade to them both. Heere beare thou this Letter to mistresse Foord. And thou this to mistresse Page. Weele thriue Lads, we will thriue.

Pist.
Shall I sir Panderowes of Troy become?
And by my sword were note steele.
Then Lucifer take all.

Nym.
Here, take your humor Letter againe,
For my part, I will keepe the hauior
Of reputation. And theres the humor of it.

Fal.
Here sirrha beare me these Letters titely,
Saile like my pinnice to the golden shores:
Hence slaues, avant. Vanish like hailstones, goe.
Falstaffe will learne the humor of this age,
French thrift you rogue, my selfe and scirted Page. Exit Falstaffe, and the Boy.

Pis.
And art thou gone? Teaster Ile haue in pouch
When thou shalt want, bace Phrygian Turke,

Nym.

I haue operations in my head, which are humors of reuenge.

Pis.

Wilt thou reuenge?

Nym.

By Welkin and her Fairies.

Pis.

By wit, or sword?

Nym.

With both the humors I will disclose this loue to Page. Ile poses him with Iallowes,

-- 262 --


And theres the humor of it.

Pis.
And I to Foord will likewise tell
How Falstaffe varlot vilde,
Would haue her loue, his doue would proue,
And eke his bed defile.

Nym.
Let vs about it then.

Pis.
Ile second thee: sir Corporall Nym troope on. Exit omnes. Scene 4 [Sc. IV.] Enter Mistresse Quickly, and Simple.

Quic.
M. Slender is your masters name say you?

Sim.
I indeed that is his name.

Quic.
How say you? I take it hee is somewhat a weakly man:
And he has as it were a whay coloured beard.

Sim.
Indeed my maisters beard is kane colored.

Quic.
Kane colour, you say well.
And is this Letter from sir Yon, about misteris An,
Is it not?

Sim.

I indeed is it.

Quic.

So: and your Maister would haue me as it twere to speak to misteris Anne concerning him: I promise you my M. hath a great affectioned mind to mistresse Anne himselfe. And if he should know that I should as they say, giue my verdit for any one but himselfe, I should heare of it throughly: For I tell you friend, he puts all his priuities in me.

Sim.
I by my faith you are a good staie to him.

Quic.
Am I? I and you knew all yowd say so:
Washing, brewing, baking, al goes through my hands,
Or else it would be but a woe house.

Sim.
I beshrow me, one woman to do all this,
Is very painfull.

Quic.
Are you auised of that? I, I warrant you,
Take all, and paie all, all goe through my hands,
And he is such a honest man, and note he should chance
To come home and finde a man here, we should
Haue no who note with him. He is a parlowes man.

Sim.
Is he indeed?

Quic.
Is he, quoth you? God keepe him abroad:
Lord blesse me, who knocks there?
For Gods sake step into the Counting-house,
While I go see whose at doore note. He steps into the Counting-house.
What Iohn Rugby, Iohn,
Are you come home sir alreadie? And she opens the doore.

-- 263 --

Doct.
I begar I be forget mine oyntment,
Where be Iohn Rugby? Enter Iohn.

Rug.
Here sir, do you call?

Doct.
I you be Iohn Rugbie, and you be Iack Rugby
Goe run vp met your heeles, and bring away
De oyntment in the vindoe present:
Make haste Iohn Rugbie. O I am almost forget
My simples in a boxe in de Counting-house:
O Ieshu vat be here, a deuella, a deuella?
My Rapier Iohn Rugby, Vat be you, vat make
You in my Counting-house?
I tinck you be a teefe.

Quic.
Ieshu blesse me, we are all vndone.

Sim.
O Lord sir no: I am no theefe,
I am a Seruingman:
My name is Iohn Simple, I brought a Letter sir
From my M. Slender, about misteris Anne Page
Sir: Indeed that is my comming.

Doct.
I begar is dat all? Iohn Rugby giue a ma pen
An Inck: tarche vn pettit tarche a little. The Doctor writes.

Sim.
O God what a furious man is this?

Quic.
Nay it is well he is no worse:
I am glad he is so quiet.

Doc.
Here giue that same to sir Hu, it ber ve chalenge
Begar tell him I will cut his nase, will you?

Sim.
I sir, Ile tell him so.

Doc.
Dat be vell, my rapier Iohn Rugby, follow may. Exit Doctor.

Quic.
Well my friend, I cannot tarry, tell your
Maister Ile doo what I can for him,
And so farewell.

Sim.
Marry will, I, I am glad I am got hence. Exit omnes. Scene 5 [Sc. V.] Enter Mistresse Page, reading of a Letter.

Mis. Pa.
Mistresse Page I loue you. Ask me no reason,
Because theyr impossible to alledge. Your faire,
And I am fat. You loue sack, so do I:
As I am sure I haue no mind but to loue,
So I know you haue no hart but to grant note
A souldier doth not vse many words where a knowes
A letter may serue for a sentence. I loue you,

-- 264 --


And so I leaue you.

Yours Syr Iohn Falstaffe.


Now Ieshu blesse me, am I methomorphised?

I think I knowe not my selfe. Why what a Gods name doth this man see in me, that thus he shootes at my honestie? Well but that I knowe my owne heart, I should scarcely perswade my selfe I were hand. Why what an vnreasonable woolsack is this. He was neuer twice note in my companie, and if then I thought I gaue such assurance with my eies, Ide pull them out, they should neuer see more holie daies. Well, I shall trust fat men the worse while I liue for his sake. O God, that I knew how to be reuenged of him. But in good time, heeres mistresse Foord.

Enter Mistresse Foord.

Mis. For.

How now mistris Page, are you are reading Loue letters? How do you woman?

Mis. Pa.
O woman I am I know not what:
In loue vp to the hard eares. I was neuer in such a case in my life.

Mis. Ford.
In loue, now in the name of God with whom?

Mis. Pa.
With one that sweares he loues me,
And I must not choose but do the like againe:
I prethie looke on that Letter.

Mis. For.
Ile match your letter iust with the like,
Line for line, word for word. Onely the name
Of misteris Page, and misteris Foord disagrees:
Do me the kindnes note to looke vpon this.

Mis. Pa.
Why this is right my letter.
O most notorious villaine!
Why what a bladder of iniquity is this?
Lets be reuenged what so ere we do.

Mis. For.
Reuenged, if we liue weel be reuenged.
O Lord if my husband should see this Letter,
Ifaith this would euen giue edge to his Iealousie. Enter Ford, Page, Pistoll, and Nym.

Mis. Pa.
See where our husbands are,
Mine's as far from Iealousie,
As I am from wronging him.

Pis.
Ford the words I speake are forst:
Beware, take heed, for Falstaffe loues thy wife:
When Pistoll lies do this.

Ford.
Why sir my wife is not young.

Pis.
He wooes both yong and old, both rich and poore,
None comes amis. I say he loues thy wife:

-- 265 --


Faire warning did I giue, take heed,
For sommer comes, and cuckoo birds appeare;
Page belieue him what he ses. Away sir Corporal Nym. Exit Pistoll:

Nym.
Syr the humor of it is, he loues your wife,
I should ha borne the humor Letter to her:
I speake and I auouch tis true: My name is Nym.
Farwell, I loue not the humor of bread and cheese:
And theres the humor of it. Exit Nym.

Pa.
The humor of it, quoth you:
Heres a fellow frites humor out of his wits.

Mis. Pa.
How now sweet hart, how dost thou? Enter Mistresse Quickly.

Pa.
How now man? how do you mistris Ford?

Mis. For.
Well I thanke you good M. Page.
How now husband, how chaunce thou art so melancholy? note

Ford.
Melancholy, I am not melancholy.
Goe get you in, goe.

Mis. For.
God saue me, see who yonder is:
Weele set her a worke in this businesse.

Mis. Pa.
O sheele serue excellent.
Now you come to see my daughter An I am sure.

Quic.
I forsooth that is my comming.

Mis. Pa.
Come go in with me. Come Mis. Ford.

Mis. For.
I follow you Mistresse Page. Exit Mistresse Ford, Mis. Page, and Quickly.

For.
M. Page did you heare what these fellows said?

Pa.
Yes M. Ford, what of that sir?

For.
Do you thinke it is true that they told vs?

Pa.
No by my troth do I not,
I rather take them to be paltry lying knaues,
Such as rather speakes of enuie,
Then of any certaine they haue
Of any thing. And for the knight, perhaps
He hath spoke merrily, as the fashion of fat men
Are: But should he loue my wife,
Ifaith Ide turne her loose to him:
And what he got more of her,
Then ill lookes, and shrowd words,
Why let me beare the penaltie of it.

For.
Nay I do not mistrust my wife,
Yet Ide be loth to turne them together,
A man may be too confident.

-- 266 --

Enter Host and Shallow.

Pa.
Here comes my ramping host of the garter,
Ther's either licker in his hed, or mony in his purse,
That he lookes so merily. Now mine Host?

Host.
God blesse you my bully rookes, God blesse you.
Caualera Iustice I say.

Shal.
At hand mine host, at hand. M. Ford. god den to you note
God den and twentie good M. Page.
I tell you sir we haue sport in hand.

Host.
Tell him cauelira Iustice: tell him bully rooke.

Ford.
Mine Host a the garter:

Host.
What ses my bully rooke?

Ford.
A word with you sir. Ford and the Host talkes.

Shal.
Harke you sir, Ile tell you what the sport shall be
Doctor Cayus and sir Hu are to fight,
My merrie Host hath had the measuring
Of their weapons, and hath
Appointed them contrary places. Harke in your eare:

Host:
Hast thou no shute against my knight,
My guest, my cauellira.

For.
None I protest: But tell him my name
Is Rrooke note, onlie for a Iest.

Host:
Thy hand bully: thou shalt
Haue egres and regres, and thy
Name shall be Brooke: Sed I well bully Hector?

Shal.
I tell you what M. Page, I beleeue
The Doctor is no Iester, heele laie it on:
For tho we be Iustices and Doctors,
And Church men, yet we are
The sonnes of women M. Page:

Pa:
True maister Shallow:

Shal:
It will be found so maister Page:

Pa.
Maister Shallow, you your selfe
Haue bene a great fighter,
Though now a man of peace:

Shal:
M. Page, I haue seene the day that yong
Tall fellowes with their stroke and their passado,
I haue made them trudge Maister Page,
A tis the hart, the hart doth all: I
Haue seene the day, with my two hand sword
I would a made you foure tall Fencers
Scipped like Rattes.

Host.
Here boyes, shall we wag, shall we wag?

-- 267 --

Shal.
Ha with you mine host. Exit Host and Shallow.

Pa.
Come M. Ford, shall we to dinner?
I know these fellowes sticks in your minde.

For.
No in good sadnesse, not in mine:
Yet for all this Ile try it further,
I will not leaue it so:
Come M. Page, shall we to dinner?

Page.
With all my hart sir, Ile follow you. Exit omnes. Scene 6 [Sc. VI.] Enter Syr Iohn, and Pistoll.

Fal.

Ile not lend thee a peny.

Pis.

I will retort the sum in equipage.

Fal.

Not a pennie: I haue beene content you shuld lay my countenance to pawne: I haue grated vpon my good friends for 3 repriues, for you and your Coach-fellow Nym, else you might a looked thorow a grate like a geminy of babones. I am damned in hell for swearing to Gentlemen your good souldiers and tall fellowes: and when mistrisse note Briget lost the handle of her Fan, I tooked on my ho- note thou hadst it not.

Pis.

Didst thou not share? hadst thou not fifteene pence?

Fal.
Reason you rogue, reason.
Does thou thinke Ile indanger my soule gratis?

In briefe, hang no more about mee, I am no gybit for you. A note short knife and a throng to your manner of pickt hatch, goe. Youle not beare a Letter for me you rogue you: you stand vpon your honor. Why thou vnconfinable basenesse thou, tis as much as I can do to keepe the termes of my honor precise. I, I my selfe sometimes, leauing the feare of God on the left hand, am faine to shuffel, to filch and to lurch. And yet you stand vpon your honor, you rogue. You, you.

Pis.

I do recant: what woulst thou more of man?

Fal.

Well, gotoo, away, no more.

Enter Mistresse Quickly.

Quic.

Good you god den sir.

Fal.

Good den faire wife.

Quic.

Not so ant like your worship.

Fal.

Faire mayd then.

Quic.
That I am Ile be sworne, as my mother was
The first houre I was borne.
Sir I would speake with you in priuate.

Fal.
Say on I prethy, heeres none but my owne houshold.

-- 268 --

Quic.

Are they so? Now God blesse them, and make them his seruants.


Syr I come from Mistresse Foord.

Fal.
So from Mistresse Foord. Goe on.

Quic.
I sir, she hath sent me to you to let you
Vnderstand she hath receiued your Letter,
And let me note tell you, she is one stands vpon note her credit.

Fal.
Well, come Misteris Ford, Misteris Ford.

Quic.
I sir, and as they say, she is not the first
Hath bene led in a fooles paradice.

Fal.
Nay prethy be briefe my good she Mercury.

Quic.

Mary sir, sheed haue you meet her betweene eight and nine.

Fal.
So betweene eight and nine:

Qu.
I forsooth, for then her husband goes a birding,

Fal.
Well commend me to thy mistris, tel her
I will not faile her: Boy giue her my purse.

Quic.
Nay sir I haue another arant to do to you
From misteris Page:

Fal.
From misteris Page? I prethy what of her?

Qu.
By my troth I think you work by Inchantments,
Els they could note neuer loue you as they doo:

Fal.
Not I, I assure thee; setting the attraction of my
Good parts aside, I vse no other inchantments:

Quic.
Well sir, she loues you extreemly:
And let me tell you, shees one that feares God,
And her husband giues her leaue to do all:
For he is not halfe so iealousie note as M. Ford is.

Fal.
But harke thee, hath misteris Page and mistris Ford,
Acquainted each other how dearly they loue me?

Quic.
O God no sir: there were a iest indeed.

Fal.
Well farwel, commend me to misteris Ford,
I will not faile her say.

Quic.
God be with your worship. Exit Mistresse Quickly. Enter Bardolfe.

Bar.
Sir, heer's a Gentleman,
One M. Brooke, would speak with you,
He hath sent you a cup of sacke.

Fal.
M. Brooke, hees welcome: bid him come vp,
Such Brookes are alwaies welcome to me:
A Iack, will thy old bodie yet hold out?
Wilt thou after the expence of so much mony

-- 269 --


Be now a gainer? Good bodie note I thanke thee,
And Ile make more of thee then I ha done:
Ha, ha, misteris Ford, and misteris Page, haue
I caught you a the note hip? go too. Enter Foord disguised like Brooke.

For.
God saue you sir.

Fal.
And you too, would you speak with me?

For.
Mary would I sir, I am somewhat bolde to trouble you,
My name is Brooke.

Fal.
Good M. Brooke your verie welcome.

For.
Ifaith sir I am a gentleman and a traueller,
That haue seen somewhat. And I haue often heard
That if mony goes before, all waies lie open.

Fal.
Mony is a good souldier sir, and will on.

For.
Ifaith sir, and I haue a bag here,
Would you wood helpe me to beare it.

Fal.
O Lord, would I could tell how to deserue
To be your porter.

For.
That may you easily sir Iohn: I haue an earnest
Sute to you. But good sir Iohn when I haue
Told you my griefe, cast one eie of your owne
Estate, since your selfe knew what tis to be
Such an offender.

Fal.
Verie well sir, proceed.

For.
Sir I am deeply in loue with one Fords wife
Of this Towne. Now sir Iohn you are a gentleman
Of good discoursing, well beloued among Ladies,
A man of such parts that might win 20. such as she.

Fal.
O good sir.

For.
Nay beleeue it sir Iohn, for tis time. Now my loue
Is so grounded vpon her, that without her loue
I shall hardly liue.

Fal.
Haue you importuned her by any means?

Ford.
No neuer sir.

Fal.
Of what qualitie is your loue then?

Ford.
Ifaith sir, like a faire house set vpon
Another mans foundation.

Fal.
And to what end haue you vnfolded this to me?

For.
O sir, when I haue told you that, I told you all:
For she sir stands so pure in the firme state
Of her honestie, that she is too bright to be looked
Against: Now could I come against her
With some detection, I should sooner perswade her

-- 270 --


From her marriage vow, and a hundred such nice
Tearmes that sheele stand vpon.

Fal.
Why would it apply well to the veruensie of your affection,
That another should possesse what you would enjoy?
Meethinks you prescribe verie proposterously
To your selfe.

For.
No sir, for by that meanes should I be certaine of that which
I now misdoubt.

Fal.
Wel M. Brooke, Ile first make bold with your mony,
Next, giue me your hand. Lastly, you shall
And note you will, enioy Fords wife.

Foord.
O good sir.

Fal.
M. Brooke, I say you shall.

For.
Want no mony syr Iohn, you shall want none.

Fal.
Want no misteris Ford M. Brooke,
You shall want none. Euen as you came to me,
Her spokes mate, her go between parted from me:
I may tell you M. Brooke, I am to meet her
Betweene 8 and 9, for at that time the Iealous
Cuckally knaue her husband wil be from home,
Come to me soone at night, you shall know how
I speed M. Brooke.

Ford.
Sir do you know Ford?

Fal.
Hang him poore cuckally knaue, I know him not,
And yet I wrong him to call him poore. For they
Say the cuckally knaue hath legions of angels,
For the which his wife seemes to me well fauored,
And Ile vse her as the key of the cuckally knaues
Coffer, and there's my randeuowes.

Foord.
Meethinkes sir it were good that you knew
Ford, that you might shun him.

Fal.
Hang him cuckally knaue, Ile stare him
Out of his wits, Ile keepe him in awe
With this my cudgell: It shall hang like a meator
Ore the wittolly knaues head, M. Brooke thou shalt
See I will predominate ore the peasant,
And thou shalt lie with his wife. M. Brooke
Thou shalt know him for knaue and cuckold,
Come to me soone at night. Exit Falstaffe.

Ford.
What a damned epicurian is this?
My wife hath sent for him, the plot is laid:
Page is an Asse, a foole. A secure Asse,
Ile sooner trust an Irishman with my
Aquauita bottle, Sir Hu our parson with my cheese,

-- 271 --


A theefe to walke my ambling gelding, then my wife
With her selfe: then she plots, then she ruminates,
And what she thinkes in her hart she may effect,
Sheele breake her hart but she will effect it.
God be praised, God be praised for my iealousie:
Well Ile go preuent him, the time drawes on,
Better an houre too soone, then a minit too late,
Gods my life cuckold, cuckold. Exit Ford. Scene 7 [Sc. VII.] Enter the Doctor and his man.

Doc.
Iohn Rugbie goe looke met your eies ore de stall,
And spie and you can see de parson.

Rug.
Sir I cannot tell whether he be there or no,
But I see a great many comming.

Doc.
Bully moy, mon rapier Iohn Rugabie, begar de
Hearing be not so dead as I shall make him. Enter Shallow, Page, my Host, and Slender.

Pa.

God saue you M. Doctor Cayus.

Shal.

How do you M. Doctor?

Ho.
God blesse thee my bully doctor, God blesse thee,

Doct.
Vat be all you, Van to tree come for, a?

Host.

Bully to see thee fight, to see thee foine, to see thee trauerse, to see thee here, to see thee there, to see thee passe the punto. The stock, the reuerse, the distance: the montnce is a dead my francoyes? Is a dead my Ethiopian? Ha, what ses my gallon? my escuolapis? Is a dead bullies taile, is a dead?

Doct.
Begar de preest be a coward Iack knaue,
He dare not shew his face.

Host.
Thou art a castallian king vrinall.
Hector of Greece my boy.

Sha.
He hath showne himselfe the wiser man, M. Doctor:
Sir Hugh is a parson, and you a Phisition. You must
Goe with me, M. Doctor.

Host.

Pardon bully Iustice. A word monsire mockwater.

Doct.

Mockwater, vat me note dat?

Host.

That is in our English tongue, Vallor bully, vallor.

Doct.

Begar den I haue as mockuater as de Inglish Iack dog, knaue.

Host.

He will claperclaw thee titely bully.

Doct.

Claperclawe, vat be dat?

Host.

That is, he will make thee amends.

Doct.
Begar I do looke he shal claperclaw me den,
And Ile prouoke him to do it, or let him wag:

-- 272 --


And moreouer bully, but M. Page and M. Shallow,
And eke cauellira Slender, go you all ouer the fields to Frogmore?

Pa.
Sir Hugh is there, is hee?

Host.
He is there: go see what humor hee is in,
Ile bring the Doctor about by the fields:
Will it do well?

Shal.
We wil do it my host. Farewel M. Doctor. Exit all but the Host and Doctor.

Doc.
Begar I will kill de cowardly Iack preest,
He is make a foole of moy.

Host.
Let him die, but first sheth your impatience,
Throw cold water on your collor, com go with me
Through the fields to Frogmore, and Ile bring thee
Where mistris An Page is a feasting note at a farm house,
And thou shalt wear hir cried game: sed I wel bully note

Doct.

Begar excellent vel: and if you speake pour moy, I shall procure you de gesse note of all de gentlemen mon patinces note. I begar I sall.

Host.
For the which Ile be thy aduersary
To misteris An Page: sed I well?

Doct.
I begar excellent.

Host.
Let vs wag then.

Doct.
Alon, alon, alon. Exit omnes. Scene 8 [Sc. VIII.] Enter syr Hugh and Simple.

Sir Hu.
I pray you do so much as see if you can espie
Doctor Cayus comming, and giue me intelligence,
Or bring me vrde if you please now.

Sim.
I will sir.

Sir Hu.
Ieshu ples mee, how my hart trobes, and trobes,
And then she made him bedes of Roses,
And a thousand fragrant poses,
To shallow riueres. Now so kad vdge me, my hart
Swelles more and more. Mee thinks I can cry
Verie well. There dwelt a man in Babylon,
To shallow riuers and to falles,
Melodious birds sing Madrigalles.

Sim.
Sir here is M. Page, and M. Shallow,
Comming hither as fast as they can.

Sir Hu.
Then it is verie necessary I put vp my sword,
Pray give me my cowne too, marke you. Enter Page, shallow, and Slender.

Pa.
God saue you sir Hugh.

-- 273 --

Shal.
God saue you M. parson.

Sir Hu.
God plesse you all from his mercies sake now.

Pa.
What the word and the sword, doth that agree well?

Sir Hu.
There is reasons and causes in all things,
I warrant you now.

Pa.
Well sir Hugh, we are come to craue
Your helpe and furtherance in a matter.

Sir Hu.

What is I pray you?

Pa.

Ifaith tis this sir Hugh. There is an auncient friend of ours, a man of verie good sort, so at oddes with one patience, that I am sure you would hartily grieue to see him. Now sir Hugh, you are a scholler well red, and verie perswasiue, we would intreate you to see if you could intreat him to patience.

Sir Hu.
I pray you who is it? Let vs know that.

Pa.
I am shure you know him, tis Doctor Cayus.

Sir Hu.
I had as leeue you should tel me of a messe of poredge,
He is an arant lowsie beggerly knaue:
And he is a coward beside.

Pa.
Why Ile laie my life tis the man
That he should fight withall. Enter Doctor and the Host, they offer to fight.

Shal.
Keep them asunder, take away their weapons.

Host.
Disarme, let them question.

Shal.
Let them keepe their limbs hole, and hack our English.

Doct.
Harke van vrd in your eare. You be vn daga
And de Iack, coward preest.

Sir Hu.

Harke you, let vs not be laughing stockes to other mens humors. By Ieshu I will knock your vrinalls about your knaues cockcomes, for missing your meetings and appointments.

Doct.
O Ieshu mine host of de garter, Iohn Rogoby,
Haue I not met him at de place he make apoint,
Haue I not?

Sir Hu.
So kad vdge me, this is the pointment place,
Witnes by my Host of the garter.

Host.
Peace I say gawle and gawlia, Freneh and Wealch,
Soule curer and bodie curer.

Doc.
This be verie braue, excellent.

Host.
Peace I say, heare mine host of the garter,
Am I wise? am I polliticke? am I Matchauil?
Shal I lose my doctor? No, he giues me the motions
And the potions. Shal I lose my parson, my sir Hu?
No, he giues me the prouerbes, and the nouerbes:
Giue me thy hand terestiall,
So giue me thy hand celestiall:

-- 274 --


So boyes of art I haue deceiued you both,
I haue directed you to wrong places,
Your hearts are mightie, you skins are whole,
Bardolfe laie their swords to pawne. Follow me lads
Of peace, follow me. Ha, ra, la. Follow. Exit Host.

Shal.
Afore God a mad host, come let vs goe.

Doc.
I begar haue you mocka may thus?
I will be euen met you my Iack Host.

Sir Hugh.
Giue me your hand doctor Cayus,
We be all friends:
But for mine hosts foolish knauery, let me alone.

Doc.
I dat be vell begar I be friends. (Exit omnes Scene 9 [Sc. IX.] Enter M. Foord.

For.
The time drawes on he shuld come to my house,
Well wife, you had best worke closely,
Or I am like to goe beyond your cunning:
I now wil seeke my guesse that comes to dinner,
And in good time see where they all are come. Enter Shallow, Page, host, Slender, Doctor, and sir Hugh.
By my faith a knot well met: your welcome all.

Pa.
I thanke you good M. Ford.

For.
Welcome good M. Page,
I would your daughter were here.

Pa.
I thank you sir, she is very well at home.

Slen.
Father Page I hope I haue your consent
For Misteris Anne?

Pa.
You haue sonne Slender, but my wife here,
Is altogether for maister Doctor.

Doc.
Begar I tanck her hartily.

Host.
But what say you to yong Maister Fenton?
He capers, he daunces, he writes verses, he smelles
All April and May: he wil cary it, he wil carit,
Tis in his betmes he wil carite.

Pa.
My host not with my consent: the gentleman is
Wilde, he knowes too much: If he take her,
Let him take her simply: for my goods goes
With my liking, and my liking goes not that way.

For.
Well, I pray go home with me to dinner:
Besides your cheare Ile shew you wonders: Ile
Shew you a monster. You shall go with me
M. Page, and so shall you sir Hugh, and you Maister Doctor.

S. Hu.
If there be one in the company, I shal make two:

Doc.
And dere be ven to, I sall make de tird:

-- 275 --

Sir Hu,
In your teeth for shame,

Shal:
wel, wel, God be with you, we shall haue the fairer
Wooing at Maister Pages: Exit Shallow and Slender.

Host.
Ile to my honest knight sir Iohn Falstaffe,
And drinke Canary with him. Exit host.

For.
I may chance to make him drinke in pipe wine,
First come gentlemen. Exit omnes. Scene 10 [Sc. X.] Enter Mistresse Ford, with two of her men, and a great buck busket.

Mis. For.
Sirrha, if your M. aske you whither
You carry this basket, say to the Launderers,
I hope you know how to bestow it?

Ser.
I warrant you misteris. Exit seruant.

Mis. For.
Go get you in. Well sir Iohn,
I beleeue I shall serue you such a trick,
You shall haue little mind to come againe. Enter Sir Iohn.

Fal.
Haue I caught my heauenlie Iewel?
Why now let me die. I haue liued long inough,
This is the happie houre I haue desired to see,
Now shall I sin in my wish,
I would thy husband were dead.

Mis. For.
Why how then sir Iohn?

Fal.
By the Lord, Ide make thee my Ladie.

Mis. For.
Alas sir Iohn, I should be a verie simple Ladie.

Fal.
Goe too, I see how thy eie doth emulate the Diamond.
And how the arched bent of thy brow
Would become the ship tire, the tire vellet,
Or anie Venetian attire, I see it.

Mis. For.
A plaine kercher sir Iohn, would fit me better.

Fal.
By the Lord thou art a traitor to saie so:
What made me loue thee? Let that perswade thee
Ther's somewhat extraordinarie in thee: Goe too I loue thee:
Mistris Ford, I cannot cog, I cannot prate, like one
Of these fellowes that smels like Bucklers-berie,
In simple time, but I loue thee,
And none but thee.

Mis. For.
Sir Iohn, I am afraid you loue misteris Page.

Fal.
I thou mightest as well saie
I loue to walke by the Counter gate,
Which is as hatefull to me
As the reake of a lime kill.

-- 276 --

Enter Mistresse Page.

Mis. Pa.
Mistresse Ford, Mis. Ford, where are you?

Mis. For.
O Lord step aside good sir Iohn. Falstaffe stands behind the aras.
How now Misteris Page, what's the matter?

Mis. Pa.
Why your husband woman is comming,
With halfe Windsor at his heeles,
To looke for a gentleman, that he ses
Is hid in his house: his wifes sweet hart.

Mis. For.
Speak louder. But I hope tis not true Misteris Page.

Mis. Pa.
Tis too true woman. Therefore if you
Haue any here, away with him, or your vndone for euer.

Mis. For.
Alas mistresse Page, what shall I do?
Here is a gentleman my friend, how shall I do?

Mis. Pa.

Gode body woman, do not stand what shal I do, and what shall I do. Better any shift, rather then you shamed. Looke heere, here's a buck-basket, if hee be a man of any reasonable sise, heele in here.

Mis. For.

Alas I feare he is too big.

Fal.
Let me see, let me see, Ile in, Ile in,
Follow your friends counsell.

Mis. Pa.
Fie sir Iohn, is this your loue? Go too. (Aside.

Fal.
I loue thee, and none but thee:
Helpe me to conuey me hence,
Ile neuer come here more. Sir Iohn goes into the basket, they put cloathes ouer him, the two men carries it away: Foord meetes it, and all the rest, Page, Doctor, Priest, Slender, Shallow.

Ford.
Come pray along, you shall see all.
How now who goes heare? whither goes this?
Whither goes it? set it downe.

Mis. For.

Now let it go, you had best meddle with buck-washing.

Ford.
Buck, good buck, pray come along,
Master Page take my keyes: helpe to search. Good
Sir Hugh pray come along, helpe a little, a little,
Ile shew you all.

Sir Hu.
By Ieshu these are iealosies and distemperes. Exit omnes.

Mis. Pa.
He is in a pittiful taking.

Mis.
I wonder what he thought
When my husband bad them set downe the basket.

Mis. Pa.
Hang him dishonest slaue, we cannot vse
Him bad inough. This is excellent for your

-- 277 --


Husbands iealousie.

Mi. For.
Alas poore soule it grieues me at the hart,
But this will be a meanes to make him cease
His iealous fits, if Falstaffes love increase.

Mis. Pa.
Nay we wil send to Falstaffe once again,
Tis great pittie we should leaue him:
What wiues may be merry, and yet honest too.

Mi. For.
Shall we be condemnd because we laugh?
Tis old, but true: still sowes eate all the draffe. Enter all.

Mis. Pa.
Here comes your husband, stand aside.

For.
I can find no body within, it may be he lied.

Mis. Pa.
Did you heare that?

Mis. For.
I, I, peace.

For.
Well, Ile not let it go so, yet Ile trie further.

S. Hu.
By Ieshu if there be any body in the kitchin
Or the cuberts, or the presse, or the buttery,
I am an arrant Iew: now God plesse me:
You serue me well, do you not?

Pa.
Fie M. Ford you are too blame:

Mis. Pa.
Ifaith tis not well M. Ford to suspect
Her thus without cause.

Doc.
No by my trot it be no vell:

For.
Wel, I pray bear with me, M. Page pardon me.
I suffer for it, I suffer for it:

Sir Hu:
You suffer for a bad conscience looke you now:

Ford:
Well I pray no more, another time Ile tell you all;
The mean time go dine with me, pardon me wife,
I am sorie; M. Page, pray goe in to dinner,
Another time Ile tell you all.

Pa:
Wel let it be so, and to morrow I inuite you all
To my house to dinner: and in the morning weele
A birding, I haue an excellent Hauke for the bush.

Ford:
Let it be so: Come M. Page, come wife;
I pray you come in all, y'are welcome, pray come in.

Sir Hu:
By so kad vdgme, M. Fordes is
Not in his right wittes: Exit omnes: Scene 11 [Sc. XI. note] Enter sir Iohn Falstaffe.

Fal:
Bardolfe brew me a pottle sack presently:

Bar:
With Egges sir?

Fal:
Simply of it selfe, Ile none of these pullets sperme

-- 278 --


In my drink: goe make haste.
Haue I liued to be carried in a basket

And throwne into the Thames like a barow of Butchers offoll. Well, and note I be serued such another tricke, Ile giue them leaue to take out my braines and butter them, and giue them to a dog for a new-yeares gift. Sblood, the rogues slided me in with as little remorse as if they had gone to drowne a blinde bitches puppies in the litter: and they might know by my sise I haue a kind of alacritie in sinking: and note the bottom had bin as deep as hell I should downe. I had bene drowned, but that the shore was sheluie and somewhat shallowe: a death that I abhorre. For you know the water swelles a man: and what a thing should I haue bene when I had bene swelled? By the Lord a mountaine of money. Now is the Sacke brewed?

Bar.

I sir, there's a woman below would speake with you.

Fal.

Bid her come vp. Let me put some Sacke among this cold water, for my belly is as cold as if I had swallowed snow-balles for pilles.

Enter Mistresse Quickly.

Now whats the newes with you?

Quic.
I come from misteris Ford forsooth.

Fal.
Misteris Ford, I haue had Ford inough,
I haue bene throwne into the Ford, my belly is full
Of Ford: she hath tickled mee.

Quic.

O Lord sir, she is the sorrowfullest woman that her seruants mistooke, that euer liued. And sir, she would desire you of all loues you will meet her once againe, to morrow sir, betweene ten and eleuen, and she hopes to make amends for all.

Fal.

Ten, and eleuen, saiest thou?

Quic.

I forsooth.

Fal.
Well, tell her Ile meet her. Let her but think
Of mans frailtie: Let her iudge what man is,
And then thinke of me. And so farwell.

Quic.
Youle not faile sir? Exit mistresse Quickly.

Fal.
I will not faile. Commend me to her.
I wonder I heare not of M. Brooke, I like his
Mony well. By the masse here he is. Enter Brooke.

For.

God saue you sir.

Fal.

Welcome good M. Brooke. You come to know how matters goes.

Ford.

Thats my comming indeed sir Iohn.

Fal.
M. Brooke I will not lye to you sir,

-- 279 --


I was there at my appointed time.

For.

And how sped you sir?

Fal.

Verie ilfauouredly sir.

For.
Why sir, did she change her determination?

Fal.

No M. Brooke, but you shall heare. After we had kissed and imbraced, and as it were euen note amid the prologue of our incounter, who should come, but the iealous knaue her husband, and a rabble of his companions at his heeles, thither prouoked and instigated by his distemper. And what to do thinke you? to search for his wiues loue. Euen so, plainly so.

For.

While ye were there?

Fal.

Whilst I was there?

For.
And did he search and could not finde you?

Fal.
You shall heare sir, as God would haue it,
A little before comes me one Pages wife,
Giues her intelligence of her husbands
Approach: and by her inuention, and Fords wiues
Distraction, conueyd me into a buck-basket.

Ford.
A buck basket!

Fal.
By the Lord a buck-basket, rammed me in
With soule shirts, stokins, greasie napkins,
That M. Brooke, there was a compound of the most
Villanous smel, that euer offended nostrill.
Ile tell you M. Brooke, by the Lord for your sake
I suffered three egregious deaths: First to be
Crammed like a good bilbo, in the circomference
Of a pack, Hilt to point, heele to head: and then to
Be stewed in my owne grease like a Dutch dish:
A man of my kidney; by the Lord it was maruell I
Escaped suffication; and in the heat of all this,
To be throwne into Thames like a horshoo hot:
Maister Brooke, thinke of that hissing heate, Maister Brooke.

Ford.
Well sir then my shute is void?
Youle vndertake it no more?

Fal.
M. Brooke, Ile be throwne into Etna
As I haue bene in the Thames,
Ere I thus note leaue her: I haue receiued
Another appointment of meeting,
Betweene ten and eleuen is the houre.

Ford:
Why sir, tis almost ten alreadie:

Fal:
Is it? why then will I addresse my selfe
For my appointment: M. Brooke, come to me soone
At night, and you shall know how I speed,
And the end shall be, you shall enjoy her loue:

-- 280 --


You shall cuckold Foord: come to mee soone at at note night. Exit Falstaffe.

For.
Is this a dreame? Is it a vision?
Maister Ford, maister Ford, awake maister Ford,
There is a hole made in your best coat M. Ford,
And a man shall not onely endure this wrong,
But shall stand vnder the taunt of names,
Lucifer is a good name, Barbason good: good
Diuels names: but cuckold, wittold, godeso
The diuel himselfe hath not such a name:
And they may hang hats here, and napkins here
Vpon my hornes: well Ile home, I ferit him,
And vnlesse the diuel himselfe should aide him.
Ile search vnpossible places: Ile about it,
Least I repent too late: Exit omnes. Scene 12 [Sc. XII.] Enter M. Fenton, Page note, and mistresse Quickly.

Fen:
Tell me sweet Nan, how doest thou yet resolue,
Shall foolish Slender haue thee to his wife?
Or one as wise as he, the learned Doctor?
Shall such as they enjoy thy maiden hart?
Thou knowst that I haue alwaies loued thee deare,
And thou hast oft times swore the like to me.

An:
Good M. Fenton, you may assure your selfe
My hart is setled vpon none but you,
Tis as my father and mother please:
Get their consent, you quickly shall haue mine.

Fen:
Thy father thinks I loue thee for his wealth,
Tho I must needs confesse at first that drew me,
But since thy vertues wiped that trash away,
I loue thee Nan, and so deare is it set,
That whilst I liue, I nere shall thee forget.

[Quic: note]
Godes pitie here comes here father. Enter M. Page his wife, M. Shallow, and Slender.

Pa.
M. Fenton I pray what make you here?
You know my answere sir, shees not for you:
Knowing my vow, to blame to vse me thus.

Fen.
But heare me speake sir.

Pa.
Pray sir get you gon: Come hither daughter,
Sonne Slender let me speak with you. (they whisper.

Quic.
Speake to misteris Page.

Fen.
Pray misteris Page let me haue your consent.

-- 281 --

Mis. Pa.
Ifaith M. Fenton tis as my husband please.
For my part, Ile neither hinder you, nor further you.

Quic.
How say you this was my doings?
I bid you speake to misteris Page.

Fen.
Here nurse, theres a brace of angels to drink,
Worke what thou canst for me, farwell. (Exit Fen.

Quic.
By my troth so I will, good hart.

Pa.
Come wife, you an I will in, weele leaue M. Slender
And my daughter to talke together. M. Shallow,
You may stay sir if you please. Exit Page and his wife.

Shal.
Mary I thanke you for that:
To her cousin, to her.

Slen.

Ifaith I know not what to say.

An.

Now M. Slender, what's your will?

Slen.

Godeso, theres a Iest indeed: why misteris An, I neuer made will yet: I thank God I am wise inough for that.

Shal.
Fie cusse fie, thou art not right,
O thou hadst a father.

Slen.
I had a father misteris Anne, good vncle
Tell the Iest how my father stole the goose out of
The henloft. All this is nought, harke you mistresse Anne.

Shal.

He will make you ioynter of three hundred pound a yeare, he shall make you a Gentlewoman.

Slend.

I be God that I vill, come cut and long taile, as good as any is in Glostershire, vnder the degree of a Squire.

An.
O God how many grosse faults are hid
And couered in three hundred pound a yeare?
Well M. Slender, within a day or two Ile tell you more.

Slend.

I thanke you good misteris Anne, vncle I shall haue her.

Quic.

M. Shallow, M. Page would pray you to come you, and you M. Slender, and you mistris An.

Slend.
Well Nurse, if youle speake for me,
Ile giue you more than Ile talke of. Exit omnes but Quickly.

Quic.
Indeed I will, Ile speake what I can for you,
But specially for M. Fenton:
But specially of all for my Maister.
And indeed I will do what I can for them all three. Exit. Enter misteris Ford and her two men.

Mis. For.

Do you heare? when your M. comes take vp this basket as you did before, and if your M. bid you set it downe, obey him.

Ser.

I will forsooth.

Enter Syr Iohn.

Mis. For.

Syr Iohn welcome.

-- 282 --

Fal.

What are you sure of your husband now?

Mis. For.

He is gone a birding sir Iohn, and I hope will not come home note yet.

Enter mistresse Page.
Gods body here is misteris Page,
Step behind the arras good sir Iohn. He steps behind the arras.

Mis. Pa.

Misteris Ford, why woman your husband is in his old vaine againe, hees comming to search for your sweet heart, but I am glad he is not here.

Mis. For.
O God misteris Page the knight is here,
What shall I do?

Mis. Pa.

Why then you'r vndone woman, vnles you make some meanes to shift him away.

Mis. For.
Alas I know no meanes, unlesse
we put him in the basket againe.

Fal.
No Ile come no more in the basket,
Ile creep vp into the chimney.

Mis. For.
There they use to discharge their Fowling peeces.

Fal.
Why then Ile goe out of doores.

Mi. Pa.
Then your vndone, your but a dead man.

Fal.
For Gods sake deuise any extremitie,
Rather then a mischiefe.

Mis. Pa.
Alas I know not what meanes to make,
If there were any womans apparell would fit him,
He might put on a gowne and a mufler,
And so escape.

Mi. For.
Thats wel remembred, my maids Aunt
Gillian of Brainford, hath a gowne aboue.

Mis. Pa.
And she is altogether as fat as he.

Mis. For.
I that will serue him of my word.

Mis. Pa.
Come goe with me sir Iohn, Ile helpe to dresse you.

Fal.
Come for God sake, any thing. Exit Mis. Page and Sir Iohn. Enter M. Ford, Page, Priest note, Shallow, the two men carries the basket, and Ford meets it.

For.
Come along I pray, you shal know the cause,
How now whither goe you? Ha whither go you?
Set downe the basket you ssaue,
You panderly rogue, set it downe.

Mis. For.
What is the reason that you vse me thus?

For.
Come hither set downe the basket,

-- 283 --


Misteris Ford the modest woman,
Misteris Ford the vertuous woman,
She that hath the iealous foole to her husband,
I mistrust you without cause do I not?

Mis. For.
I Gods my record do you. And if
you mistrust me in any ill sort.

Ford.
Well sed brazen face, hold it out,
You youth in a basket, come out here,
Pull out the cloathes, search.

Hu.
Ieshu plesse me, will you pull vp your wiues cloathes.

Pa.
Fie M. Ford, you are not to go abroad if you be in these fits.

Sir Hugh.
By so note kad vdge me, tis verie necessarie
He were put in pethlem.

For.
M. Page, as I am an honest man M. Page,

There was one conueyd out of my house here yesterday out of this basket, why may he not be here now?

Mi. For.
Come note mistris Page, bring the old woman downe.

For.
Old woman, what old woman?

Mi. For.
Why my maidens Ant, Gillian of Brainford.
A witch, note haue I not forewarned her my house,
Alas we are simple we, we know not what

Is brought to passe vnder the colour of fortune-Telling. Come downe you witch, come downe.

Enter Falstaffe disguised like an old woman, and misteris Page with him, Ford beates him, and hee runnes away.
Away you witch get you gone.

Sir Hu.
By Ieshu I verily thinke she is a witch indeed,
I espied vnder her mufler a great beard.

Ford.
Pray come helpe me to search, pray now.

Pa.
Come weele go for his minds sake. Exit omnes.

Mi. For.
By my troth he beat him most extreamly.

Mi. Pa.
I am glad of it, what shall we proceed any further?

Mi. For.
No faith, now if you will let vs tell our husbands of it.
For mine I am sure hath almost fretted himselfe to death.

Mi. Pa.
Content, come weele go tell them all,
And as they agree, so will we proceed. Exit both. Scene 13 [Sc. XIII.] Enter Host and Bardolfe.

Bar.

Syr heere be three Gentlemen come from the Duke the Stanger sir, would haue your horse.

Host.

The Duke, what Duke? let me speake with the Gentlemen, do they speake English?

Bar.

Ile call them to you sir.

-- 284 --

Host.
No Bardolfe, let them alone, Ile sauce them:
They haue had my house a weeke at command,
I haue turned away my other guesse,
They shall haue my horses Bardolfe,
They must come off, Ile sawce them. Exit omnes. Scene 14 [Sc. XIV.] Enter Ford, Page, their wives, Shallow and Slender note, Syr Hu.

Ford.

Well wife, heere take my hand, vpon my soule I loue thee dearer then I do my life, and ioy I hnue so true and constant wife, my iealousie shall neuer more offend thee.

Mi. For.
Sir I am glad, and that which I haue done,
Was nothing else but mirth and modestie.

Pa.
I misteris Ford, Falstaffe hath all the griefe,
And in this knauerie my wife was the chiefe.

Mi. Pa.
No knauery husband, it was honest mirth.

Hu.
Indeed it was good pastimes & merriments.

Mis. For.
But sweete heart shall wee leaue olde Falstaffe so?

Mis. Pa.
O by no meanes, send to him againe.

Pa.
I do not thinke heele come being so much deceiued.

For.

Let me alone, Ile to him once again like Brooke, and know his mind whether heele come or not.

Pa.
There must be some plot laide, or heele not come.

Mis. Pa.
Let vs alone for that. Heare my deuice.
Oft haue you heard since Horne the hunter dyed,
That women to affright their litle children,
Ses that he walkes in shape of a great stagge.
Now for that Falstaffe hath bene so deceiued,
As that he dares not venture to the house,
Weele send him word to meet vs in the field,
Disguised like Horne, with huge horns on his head,
The houre shalbe iust betweene twelue and one,
And at that time we will meet him both:
Then would I haue you present there at hand,
With litle boyes disguised and dressed like Fayries,
For to affright fat Falstaffe in the woods.
And then to make a period to the Iest,
Tell Falstaffe all, I thinke this will do best.

Pa.
Tis excellent, and my daughter Anne,
Shall like a litle Fayrie be disguised.

Mis. Pa.

And in that Maske Ile make the Doctor steale my daughter An, and ere my husband knowes it, to carrie her to Church, and marrie her.

Mis. For.
But who will buy the silkes to tyre the boyes?

Pa.
That will I do, and in a robe of white

-- 285 --


Ile cloath my daughter, and aduertise Slender
To know her by that signe, and steale her thence,
And vnknowne to my wife, shall marrie her.

Hu.
So kad vdge me the deuises is excellent.
I will also be there, and will be like a Iackanapes,
And pinch him most cruelly for his lecheries.

Mis. Pa.
Why then we are reuenged sufficiently.
First he was carried and throwne in the Thames,
Next beaten well, I am sure youle witnes that.

Mi. For.
Ile lay my life this makes him nothing fat.

Pa.
Well lets about this stratagem, I long
To see deceit deceiued, and wrong haue wrong.

For.
Well send to Falstaffe, and if he come thither,
Twill make vs smile and laugh one moneth togither. Exit omnes. Scene 15 [Sc. XV.] Enter Host and Simple.

Host.
What would thou haue boore, what thick-skin?
Speake, breath, discus, short, quick, briefe, snap.

Sim.

Sir, I am sent from my M. to sir Iohn Falstaffe.

Host.

Sir Iohn, theres his Castle, his standing bed, his trundle bed, his chamber is painted about with the story of the prodigall, fresh and new, goe knock, heele speak like an Antripophiginian to thee:

Knock I say.

Sim.

Sir I should speak with an old woman that went vp into his chamber.

Host.

An old woman, the knight may be robbed, Ile call bully knight, bully sir Iohn. Speake from thy Lungs military: it is thine host, thy Ephesian calls.

note

Fal.

Now mine host,

Host:

Here is a Bohemian tarter bully, tarries the comming downe of the fat woman: Let her descend bully, let her descend, my chambers are honorable, pah priuasie, fie.

Fal.
Indeed mine host there was a fat woman with me,
But she is gone. Enter sir Iohn.

Sim.
Pray sir, was it not the wise woman of Brainford?

Fal.
Marry was it Musselshell, what would you?

Sim.
Marry sir my maister Slender sent me to her,
To know whether one Nim that hath his chaine,
Cousoned him of it, or no.

Fal.
I talked with the woman about it.

Sim.
And I pray you sir what ses she?

Fal.
Marry she ses the very same man that

-- 286 --


Beguiled maister Slender of his chaine,
Cousoned him of it.

Sim.
May I be bolde to tell my maister so sir?

Fal.

I tike, who more bolde.

Sim.

I thanke you sir, I shall make my maister a glad man at these tydings, God be with you sir.

Exit.

Host.
Thou art clarkly sir Iohn, thou art clarkly,
Was there a wise woman with thee?

Fal.
Marry was there mine host, one that taught
Me more wit then I learned this 7. yeare,
And I paid nothing for it,
But was paid for my learning. Enter Bardolfe.

Bar.
O lord sir cousonage, plaine cousonage.

Host.
Why man, where be my horses? where be the Germanes?

Bar.
Rid away with your horses:
After I came beyond Maidenhead,
They flung me in a slow of myre, & away they ran. Enter Doctor.

Doc.
Where be my Host de gartyre?

Host.
O here sir in perplexitie.

Doc.
I cannot tell vad be dad,
But begar I will tell you van ting,
Dear be a Garmaine Duke come to de Court,
Has cosened all the host of Branford,
And Redding: begar I tell you for good will,
Ha, ha, mine Host, am I euen met you? Exit. Enter Sir Hugh.

Sir Hu.
Where is mine host of the gartyr?
Now my Host, I would desire you looke you now,
To haue a care of your entertainments,
For there is three sorts of cosen garmombles,
Is cosen all the Host of Maidenhead and Readings,
Now you are an honest man, and a scuruy beggerly lowsie knaue beside:
And can point wrong places,
I tell you for good will, grate why mine Host. Exit.

Host.
I am cosened Hugh, and coy Bardolfe,
Sweet knight assist me, I am cosened. Exit.

Fal.
Would all the worell were cosened for me,
For I am cousoned and beaten too.
Well, I neuer prospered since I forswore
Myselfe at Primero: and my winde

-- 287 --


Were but long inough to say my prayers,
Ide repent, now from whence come you? Enter Mistresse Quickly.

Quic.
From the two parties forsooth.

Fal.
The diuell take the one partie,
And his dam the other,
And theyle be both bestowed.
I haue endured more for their sakes,
Then man is able to endure.

Quic.
O Lord sir, they are the sorowfulst creatures
That euer liued: specially mistresse Ford,
Her husband hath beaten her that she is all
Blacke and blew poore soule.

Fal.
What tellest me of blacke and blew,
I haue bene note beaten all the colours in the Rainbow,
And in my escape like to a bene apprehended
For a witch of Brainford, and set in the stockes.

Quic.
Well sir, she is a sorrowfull woman,
And I hope when you heare my errant,
Youle be perswaded to the contrarie.

Fal.
Come goe with me into my chamber, Ile heare thee. Exit omnes. Scene 16 [Sc. XVI.] Enter Host and Fenton.

Host.
Speake not to me sir, my mind is heauie,
I haue had a great losse.

Fen.
Yet heare me, and as I am a gentleman,
Ile giue you a hundred pound toward your losse.

Host.
Well sir Ile heare you, and at least keep your counsell.

Fen.
Then thus my host. Tis not vnknown to you,
The feruent loue I beare to young Anne Page,
And mutally her loue againe to mee:
But her father still against her choise,
Doth seeke to marrie her to foolish Slender,
And in a robe of white this night disguised,
Wherein fat Falstaffe had a mightie scare,
Must Slender take her and carrie her to Catlen,
And there vnknowne to any, marrie her.
Now her mother still against that match,
And firme for Doctor Cayus, in a robe of red
By her deuice, the Doctor must steale her thence,

-- 288 --


And she hath giuen consent to goe with him.

Host.
Now which meanes she to deceiue, father or mother?

Fen.
Both my good Host, to go along with me.
Now here it rests, that you would procure a priest,
And tarry readie at the appointment place,
To giue our harts vnited matrimonie.

Host.
But how will you come to steale her from among them?

Fen.
That hath sweet Nan and I agreed vpon,
And by a robe of white, the which she weares,
With ribones pendant flaring bout her head,
I shalbe sure to know her, and conuey her thence,
And bring her where the priest abides our comming,
And by thy furtherance there be married.

Host.
Well, husband your deuice, Ile to the Vicar,
Bring you the maide, you shall not lacke a Priest.

Fen.
So shall I euermore be bound vnto thee,
Besides Ile always be thy faithful friend. Exit omnes. Scene 17 [Sc. XVII.] Enter sir Iohn with a Bucks head vpon him.

Fal.
This is the third time, well Ile venter,
They say there is good luck in old numbers,
[Ioue transform'd himselfe into a Bull,]
And I am here a Stag, and I thinke the fattest
In all Windsor forrest: well I stand here
For Horne the hunter, waiting my Does comming. Enter mistris Page and mistris Ford.

Mis. Pa.
Sir Iohn, where are you?

Fal.
Art thou come my doe? What and thou too?
Welcome Ladies.

Mi. For.
II sir Iohn, I see you will not faile,
Therefore you deserue far better then our loues,
But it grieues me for your late crosses.

Fal.
This makes amends for all.
Come diuide me betweene you, each a hanch,
For my horns Ile bequeath them to your husbands,
Do I speake like Horne the hunter, ha?

Mis. Pa.
God forgiue me, what noise is this? There is a noise of hornes, the two women run away. Enter sir Hugh like a Satyre, and boyes drest like Fayries, mistresse Quickly, like the Queene of Fayries: they sing a song about him, and afterward speake.

Quic:
You Fayries that do haunt these shady groues,
Looke round about the wood if you can espie

-- 289 --


A mortall that doth haunt our sacred round:
If such a one you can espy, giue him his due,
And leaue not till you pinch him blacke and blew:
Giue them their charge Puck ere they part away.

Sir Hu.
Come hither Peane, goe to the countrie houses,
And when you finde a slut that lies a sleepe,
And all her dishes foule, and roome vnswept,
With youre long nailes pinch her till she crie,
And sweare to mend her sluttish huswiferie.

Fai.
I warrant you I will perform your will.

Hu.
Where is Pead? Go and see where Brokers sleep,
And Foxe-eyed Seriants with their mase,
Goe laie the proctors in the street,
And pinch the lowsie Seriants face:
Spare none of these when they are a bed,
But such whose nose lookes plew and red.

Quic.
Away begon, his mind fulfill,
And looke that none of you stand still.
Some do that thing, some do this,
All do something, none amis.

Hir Hu.
I smell a man of middle earth.

Fal.
God blesse me from that wealch Fairie.

Quic.
Looke euery one about this round,
And if that any here be found,
For his presumption in this place,
Spare neither legge, arme, head, nor face.

Sir Hu.
See I haue spied one by good luck,
His bodie man, his head a buck.

Fal.
God send me good fortune now, and I care not.

Quick.
Go strait, and do as I commaund,
And take a Taper in your hand,
And set it to his fingers endes,
And if you see it him offends,
And that he starteth at the flame,
Then is he mortall, know his name:
If with an F. it doth begin,
Why then be shure he is full of sin.
About it then, and know the truth,
Of this same metamorphised youth.

Sir Hugh.
Giue me the Tapers note, I will try
And if that he loue venery. They put the Tapers to his fingers, and he starts.

Sir Hu.
It is right indeed, he is full of lecheries and iniquitie.

-- 290 --

Quic.
A little distant from him stand,
And euery one take hand in hand,
And compasse him within a ring,
First pinch him well, and after sing. Here they pinch him, and sing about him, and the Doctor comes one way and steales away a boy in red. And Slender another way he takes a boy in greene: And Fenton steales misteris Anne, being in white. And a noyse of hunting is made within; and all the Fairies runne away. Falstaffe pulles off his bucks head, and rises vp. And enters M. Page, M. Ford, and their wiues, M. Shallow, sir Hugh.

Fal.
Horne the hunter quoth you: am I ghost?
Sblood the Fairies hath made a ghost of me:
What hunting at this time at night?
Ile lay my life the mad prince of Wales

Is stealing his fathers Deare. How now who haue we here, what is all Windsor stirring? Are you there?

Shal.

God saue you sir Iohn Falstaffe.

Sir Hu.

God plesse you sir Iohn, God plesse you.

Pa.

Why how now sir Iohn, what a pair of horns in your hand?

For.
Those hornes he ment to place vpon my head,
And M. Brooke and he should be the men:
Why how now sir Iohn, why are you thus amazed?
We know the Fairies man that pinched you so note,
Your throwing in the Thames, your beating well,
And what's to come sir Iohn, that can we tell.

Mi. Pa.
Sir Iohn tis thus, your dishonest meanes
To call our credits into question,
Did make vs vndertake to our best,
To turn your leaud lust to a merry Iest.

Fal.
Iest, tis well, haue I liued to these yeares
To be gulled now, now to be ridden?
Why then these were not Fairies?

Mis. Pa.
No sir Iohn but boyes.

Fal.
By the Lord I was twice or thrise in the mind
They were not, and yet the grosnesse
Of the fopperie perswaded me they were.
Well, and note the fine wits of the Court heare this,
Thayle so whip me with their keene Iests,
That thayle melt me out like tallow,
Drop by drop out of my grease. Boyes!

Sir Hu.
I trust me boyes Sir Iohn: and I was

-- 291 --


Also a Fairie that did helpe to pinch you.

Fal.
I, tis well I am your May-pole,
You haue the start of mee,
Am I ridden note too with a wealch goate?
With a peece of toasted cheese?

Sir Hu.
Butter is better then cheese sir Iohn,
You are all butter, butter.

For.
There is a further matter yet sir Iohn,
There's 20. pound you borrowed of M. Brooke sir Iohn,
And it must be paid to M. Ford sir Iohn.

Mi. For.
Nay husband let that go to make amends,
Forgiue that sum, and so weele all be friends.

For.
Well here is my hand, all's forgiuen at last.

Fal.
It hath cost me well,
I haue beene well pinched and washed. Enter the Doctor.

Mi. Pa.
Now M. Doctor, sonne I hope you are.

Doct.
Sonne begar you be de ville voman,
Begar I tinck to marry metres An, and begar
Tis a whorson garson Iack boy.

Mis. Pa.
How a boy?

Doct.
I begar a boy.

Pa.
Nay be not angry wife, Ile, tell thee true,
It was my plot to deceiue thee so:
And by this time your daughter's married
To M. Slender, and see where he comes. Enter Slender.
Now sonne Slender,
Where's your bride?

Slen.

Bride, by Gods lyd I thinke theres neuer a man in the worell hath that crosse fortune that I haue: begod I could cry for verie anger.

Page.

Why whats the matter sonne Slender?

Slen.

Sonne, nay by God I am none of your son.

Pa.

No, why so?

Slen.

Why so God saue me, tis a boy that note I haue married.

Page.

How, a boy? why did you mistake the word?

Slen.

No neither, for I came to her in red as you bad me, and I cried mum, and hee cried budget, so well as euer you heard, and I haue married him.

-- 292 --

Sir Hugh.

Ieshu M. Slender, cannot you see but marrie boyes?

Pa.
O I am vext at hart, what shal I do? Enter Fenton and Anne.

Mis. Pa.
Here comes the man note that hath deceiued vs all:
How now daughter, where haue you bin?

An.
At Curch note forsooth.

Pa.
At Church, what haue you done there?

Fen.
Married to me, nay sir neuer storme,
Tis done sir now, and cannot be vndone.

Ford:
Ifaith M. Page neuer chafe your selfe,
She hath made her choise wheras her hart was fixt,
Then tis in vaine for you to storme or fret.

Fal.
I am glad yet that note your arrow hath glanced

Mi. For.
Come mistris Page, Ile be bold with you,
Tis pitie to part loue that is so true.

Mis. Pa.
Altho that I haue missed in my intent,
Yet I am glad my husbands match was crossed,
Here M. Fenton, take her, and God giue thee ioy.

Sir Hu:
Come M. Page, you must needs agree.

Fo.
I yfaith note sir come, you see your wife is wel pleased:

Pa.
I cannot tel, and yet my hart's well eased,
And yet it doth me good the Doctor missed.
Come hither Fenton, and come hither daughter,
Go too you might haue stai'd for my good will,
But since your choise is made of one you loue,
Here take her Fenton, & both happie proue.

Sir. Hu.
I wil also note dance & eate plums at your weddings.

For.
All parties pleased, now let vs in to feast,
And laugh at Slender and the Doctors ieast.
He hath got the maiden, each of you a boy
To waite vpon you, so God giue you ioy,
And sir Iohn Falstaffe now shal you keep your word,
For Brooke this night shall lye with mistris Ford. Exit omnes. FINIS.

-- 293 --

William Aldis Wright [1863–1866], The works of William Shakespeare edited by William George Clark... and John Glover [and William Aldis Wright] (Macmillan and Co., London) [word count] [S10701].
To look up a word in a dictionary, select the word with your mouse and press 'd' on your keyboard.

Previous section

ACT V. note Scene I. [Footnote: A room in the Garter Inn. Enter Falstaff and Mistress Quickly.

Fal.

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!

-- 241 --

Quick.

I'll provide you a chain; and I'll do what I can to get you a pair of horns.

Fal.

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 to-night, 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?

Fal.

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. note Scene II. [Footnote: Windsor Park note. 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 note.

Slen.

Ay, forsooth; I have spoke with her, and we have a nay-word how to know one another: I come to her

-- 242 --

in white, and cry, ‘mum;’ she cries ‘budget;’ and by that we know one another.

Shal.

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. note Scene III. [Footnote: A street leading to the Park. note 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 note?

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 note be mocked.

Mrs Ford.

We'll betray him finely.

-- 243 --

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. note Scene IV. [Footnote: 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 note you: come, come; trib, trib.

[Exeunt. note Scene V. [Footnote: Another part of the Park. Enter Falstaff note disguised as Herne.

Fal.

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?

-- 244 --

Fal.

My doe with the black scut! Let the sky rain potatoes; let it thunder to the tune of Green Sleeves, hail kissing-comfits, and snow eringoes; let there come a tempest of provocation, I will shelter me here.

Mrs Ford.

Mistress Page is come with me, sweetheart.

Fal.

Divide me like a bribe note 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!

Fal.

What should this be?

Mrs Ford. Mrs Page.

Away, away!

[They run off.

Fal.

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. note

Enter Sir Hugh Evans, disguised as before; Pistol, as Hobgoblin; Mistress Quickly, Anne Page, and others, as Fairies, with tapers note.

Quick. note
Fairies, black, grey, green, and white,
You moonshine revellers, and shades of night,
You orphan note heirs of fixed destiny,
Attend your office and your quality.
Crier Hobgoblin, make the fairy oyes.

Pist.
Elves, list your names; silence, you airy toys.
Cricket, to Windsor chimneys shalt thou leap note:
Where fires thou find'st unraked and hearths unswept note,
There pinch the maids as blue as bilberry:
Our radiant queen hates sluts and sluttery.

-- 245 --

Fal.
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 note.

Evans.
Where's Bede note? Go you, and where you find a maid
That, ere she sleep, has thrice her prayers said,
Raise up the organs of her fantasy;
Sleep she as sound as careless infancy:
But those as note sleep and think not on their sins,
Pinch them, arms, legs, backs, shoulders, sides, and shins.

Quick. note
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 note wholesome as in state 'tis fit,
Worthy the owner, and note 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, note look you sing,
Like to the Garter's compass, in a ring:
Th' expressure that it bears, green let it be,
More note fertile-fresh than all the field to see;
And Honi soit qui mal y pense write
In emerald tufts note, flowers purple note, blue, and white;
Like sapphire, pearl note, and note 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

-- 246 --


Of Herne the hunter, let us not forget.

Evans.
Pray you note, 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.

Fal.

Heavens defend me from that Welsh fairy, lest he transform me to a piece of cheese!

Pist.
Vile worm, thou wast o'erlook'd even in thy birth.

Quick.
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.

Pist.
A trial, come.

Evans.
Come, will this wood take fire?
[They burn him with their tapers. note

Fal.
Oh, Oh, Oh!

Quick.
Corrupt, corrupt, and tainted in desire!
About him, fairies; sing a scornful rhyme;
And, as you trip, still pinch him to your time note.


Song.
  Fie on sinful note fantasy!
  Fie on lust and luxury!
  Lust is but a bloody fire note,
  Kindled with unchaste desire,
  Fed in heart note, whose flames aspire,
  As thoughts do blow them, higher and higher.
  Pinch him, fairies, mutually note;
  Pinch him for his villany;
Pinch him, and burn him, and turn him about, note
Till candles and starlight and moonshine be out.
During this song they pinch Falstaff. Doctor Caius comes one way, and steals away a boy in green; Slender another way, and takes off a boy in white; and Fenton comes, and

-- 247 --

steals away Mrs Anne Page. A noise of hunting is heard within. All the Fairies run away. Falstaff pulls off his buck's head, and rises. Enter note Page, Ford, Mistress Page and Mistress Ford. note

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 note? do not these fair yokes note note
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 note; 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.

Fal.

I do begin to perceive that I am made an ass.

Ford.

Ay, and an ox too: both the proofs are extant.

Fal.

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 note 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.

-- 248 --

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.

Fal.

Have I laid my brain in the sun, and dried it, that it wants matter to prevent so gross o'erreaching as this? Am I ridden with a Welsh goat too? shall I have a coxcomb of frize? 'Tis time I were choked with a piece of toasted cheese.

Evans.

Seese is not good to give putter; your pelly note is all putter.

Fal.

‘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 note 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 note, and metheglins, and to drinkings, and swearings, and starings note, pribbles and prabbles?

Fal.

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 note: 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

-- 249 --

have suffered, I think to repay that money will be a biting noteaffliction.

Page.

Yet be cheerful, knight: thou shalt eat a posset to-night 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.

note

Mrs Page. [Aside]

Doctors doubt that: if Anne Page be my daughter, she is, by this, Doctor Caius' wife.

noteEnter Slender.

Slen.

Whoa note, ho! ho, father Page!

Page.

Son, how now! how now, son! have you dispatched?

Slen.

Dispatched!—I'll make the best in Gloucestershire know on't; would I were hanged, la, else!

Page.

Of what, son?

Slen.

I came yonder at Eton to marry Mistress Anne Page, and she's a great lubberly boy. If it had not been i' the note 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.

Slen.

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?

Slen.

I went to her in white note, and cried ‘mum,’ and she cried ‘budget,’ as Anne and I had appointed; and yet it was not Anne, but a postmaster's boy.

Mrs Page.

Good George, be not angry: I knew of

-- 250 --

your purpose; turned my daughter into note green note; and, indeed, she is now with the doctor at the deanery, and there married.

noteEnter Caius.

Caius.

Vere is Mistress Page? By gar, I am cozened: I ha' married un garçon note, a boy; un paysan note, by gar, a boy note; it is not Anne Page: by gar, I am cozened.

Mrs Page.

Why, did you note take her in green note?

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?

Fent.
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 note;
Since therein she doth evitate and shun
A thousand irreligious cursed hours,
Which forced marriage would have brought upon her.

Ford.
Stand not amazed; here is no remedy:

-- 251 --


In love the heavens themselves do guide the state;
Money buys lands, and wives are sold by fate.

Fal.

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! note
What cannot be eschew'd must be embraced.

Fal.
When night-dogs run, all sorts of deer are chased.

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, note
To Master Brook you yet shall hold your word;
For he to-night shall lie with Mistress Ford.
[Exeunt.

-- 253 --

NOTES. note

Previous section


William Aldis Wright [1863–1866], The works of William Shakespeare edited by William George Clark... and John Glover [and William Aldis Wright] (Macmillan and Co., London) [word count] [S10701].
Powered by PhiloLogic