FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34  
35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   >>   >|  
my best devotions offer to it. _Enter_ Clodio, _and_ Guard. _Clod_. Now is this tye dispatch'd? _Char_. I think it be Sir. _Clod_. And my bed ready? _Char_. There you may quickly find Sir, Such a loath'd preparation. _Clod_. Never grumble, Nor fling a discontent upon my pleasure, It must and shall be done: give me some wine, And fill it till it leap upon my lips: [_wine_ Here's to the foolish maidenhead you wot of, The toy I must take pains for. _Char_. I beseech your Lordship Load not a Fathers love. _Clod_. Pledge it _Charino_, Or by my life I'le make thee pledge thy last, And be sure she be a maid, a perfect Virgin, (I will not have my expectation dull'd) Or your old pate goes off. I am hot and fiery, And my bloud beats alarms through my body, And fancie high. You of my guard retire, And let me hear no noise about the lodging But musick and sweet ayres, now fetch your Daughter, And bid the coy wench put on all her beauties, All her enticements, out-blush damask Roses, And dim the breaking East with her bright Crystals. I am all on fire, away. _Char_. And I am frozen. [_Exit_. _Enter_ Zenocia _with Bow and Quiver, an Arrow bent_, Arnoldo _and_ Rutilio _after her, arm'd_. _Zen_. Come fearless on. _Rut_. Nay an I budge from thee Beat me with durty sticks. _Clod_. What Masque is this? What pretty fancy to provoke me high? The beauteous Huntress, fairer far, and sweeter; Diana shewes an Ethiop to this beauty Protected by two Virgin Knights. _Rut_. That's a lye, A loud one, if you knew as much as I do, The Guard's dispers'd. _Arn_. Fortune I hope invites us. _Clod_. I can no longer hold, she pulls my heart from me. _Zen_. Stand, and stand fixt, move not a foot, nor speak not, For if thou doest, upon this point thy death sits. Thou miserable, base, and sordid lecher, Thou scum of noble blood, repent and speedily, Repent thy thousand thefts, from helpless Virgins, Their innocence betrayed to thy embraces. _Arn_. The base dishonour, that thou doest to strangers, In glorying to abuse the Laws of Marriage, Thy Infamy thou hast flung upon thy Country, In nourishing this black and barbarous Custom. _Clod_. My Guard. _Arn_. One word more, and thou diest. _Rut_. One syllable That tends to any thing, but I beseech you, And as y'are Gentlemen tender my case, And I'le thrust my Javeling down thy throat. Thou Dog-whelp, thou, pox upon thee, what Should I call thee, P
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34  
35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

beseech

 

Virgin

 

invites

 
longer
 

Huntress

 

beauteous

 

fairer

 
sweeter
 

provoke

 

sticks


Masque

 

pretty

 
shewes
 

Ethiop

 

dispers

 
Protected
 

beauty

 

Knights

 

Fortune

 

Custom


barbarous
 

Country

 
nourishing
 

syllable

 

tender

 

thrust

 

Javeling

 

throat

 
Gentlemen
 

Infamy


speedily
 

repent

 

Repent

 

thousand

 
Should
 

thefts

 

miserable

 

sordid

 
lecher
 

helpless


Virgins

 

glorying

 

Marriage

 

strangers

 
innocence
 

betrayed

 

embraces

 

dishonour

 
Lordship
 

maidenhead