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Coro. Well, it shall be less;

And thy restraint before was liberty,

To what I now decree: and therefore mark me.
First, I will have this bawdy light damm'd up;
And till't be done, some two or three yards off,
I'll chalk a line: o'er which if thou but chance
To set thy desperate foot, more hell, more horror,
More wild remorseless rage shall seize on thee,
Than on a conjuror, that had heedless left
His circle's safety ere his devil was laid.
Then here's a lock which I will hang upon thee,
And, now I think on't, I will keep thee backwards;
Thy lodging shall be backwards; thy walks
backwards;

Thy prospect, all be backwards; and no pleasure, That thou shalt know but backwards: nay, since you force

My honest nature, know, it is your own,
Being too open, makes me use you thus:
Since you will not contain your subtle nostrils"
In a sweet room, but they must snuff the air
Of rank and sweaty passengers. [Knocking within.]
-One knocks.

Away, and be not seen, pain of thy life;
Nor look toward the window: if thou dost-
Nay, stay, hear this-let me not prosper, whore,
But I will make thee an anatomy,

Dissect thee mine own self, and read a lecture
Upon thee to the city, and in public.

Away!

Enter Servant.

[Exit Celia.

Who's there?

Ser. 'Tis signior Mosca, sir.

Coro. Let him come in. [Exit Sero.] His master's

dead: there's yet

Some good to help the bad.

Enter MosCA.

I guess your news.

My Mosca, welcome!

Mos. I fear you cannot, sir.

Coro. Is't not his death?
Mos. Rather the contrary.
Coro. Not his recovery?

Mos. Yes, sir.

Coro. I am curs'd,

I am bewitch'd, my crosses meet to vex me.
How? how? how? how?

Mos. Why, sir, with Scoto's oil;
Corbaccio and Voltore brought of it,
Whilst I was busy in an inner room-

Coro. Death! that damn'd mountebank! but for the law

Now, I could kill the rascal: it cannot be,
His oil should have that virtue. Have not I
Known him a common rogue, come fidling in
To the osteria,' with a tumbling whore,
And, when he has done all his forced tricks, been
glad

Of a poor spoonful of dead wine, with flies in't?
It cannot be. All his ingredients

Are a sheep's gall, a roasted bitch's marrow,
Some few sod earwigs, pounded caterpillars,
A little capon's grease, and fasting spittle:
I know them to a dram.

Mos. I know not, sir;

But some on't, there, they pour'd into his ears,

3 To the osteria,] The inn or hotel. So Fletcher,

"Host. Thy master

That lodges here in my osteria." Fair Maid of the Inn.

W HAL.

Some in his nostrils, and recover'd him;
Applying but the fricace.

Coro. Pox o' that fricace!

Mos. And since, to seem the more officious And flatt'ring of his health, there, they have had, At extreme fees, the college of physicians Consulting on him, how they might restore him; Where one would have a cataplasm of spices, Another a flay'd ape clapp'd to his breast, A third would have it a dog, a fourth an oil, With wild cats' skins: at last, they all resolved That, to preserve him, was no other means, But some young woman must be straight sought

out,

Lusty, and full of juice, to sleep by him;
And to this service, most unhappily,
And most unwillingly, am I now employ'd,
Which here I thought to pre-acquaint you with,
For your advice, since it concerns you most;
Because, I would not do that thing might cross
Your ends, on whom I have my whole dependance,
sir:

Yet, if I do it not, they may delate*
My slackness to my patron, work me out
Of his opinion; and there all your hopes,
Ventures, or whatsoever, are all frustrate!
I do but tell you, sir. Besides, they are all
Now striving, who shall first present him; there-
fore-

I could entreat you, briefly conclude somewhat;
Prevent them if you can.

Corv. Death to my hopes,

This is my villainous fortune! Best to hire
Some common courtezan.

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My slackness to my patron,] i. e. accuse, or complain of: a vile latinism." Prevent them," just below, is anticipate them.

Mos. Ay, I thought on that, sir;
But they are all so subtle, full of art—
And age again doting and flexible,

-

So as I cannot tell-we may, perchance,
Light on a quean may cheat us all.

Corv. 'Tis true.

Mos. No, no: it must be one that has no tricks, sir,

Some simple thing, a creature made unto it ;* Some wench you may command. Have you no kinswoman?

Odso-Think, think, think, think, think, think, think, sir.

One o' the doctors offer'd there his daughter.
Coro. How!

Mos. Yes, signior Lupo, the physician.
Coro. His daughter!

Mos. And a virgin, sir. Why, alas,

He knows the state of's body, what it is;
That nought can warm his blood, sir, but a fever;'
Nor any incantation raise his spirit:

A long forgetfulness hath seized that part.
Besides, sir, who shall know it? some one or

two

Coro. I pray thee give me leave. [walks aside.]
If any man

But I had had this luck-- The thing in't self,
I know, is nothing-Wherefore should not I
As well command my blood and my affections,
As this dull doctor? In the point of honour,
The cases are all one of wife and daughter.

* A creature made unto it.] See p. 45.

5 That nought can warm his blood, sir, but a fever;]

Præterea minimus gelido jam corpore sanguis

Febre calet sola.

Juv. Sat.

What follows is from the same satire.

Mos. I hear him coming.

Coro. She shall do't: 'tis done.

[Aside.

Slight! if this doctor, who is not engaged,
Unless 't be for his counsel, which is nothing,
Offer his daughter, what should I, that am
So deeply in I will prevent him: Wretch!
Covetous wretch!'-Mosca, I have determined.
Mos. How, sir?

Coro. We'll make all sure. The party you wot of

Shall be mine own wife, Mosca.

Mos. Sir, the thing,

But that I would not seem to counsel you,
I should have motion'd to you, at the first:
And make your count, you have cut all their
throats.

Why, 'tis directly taking a possession!
And in his next fit, we may let him go.

'Tis but to pull the pillow from his head,

And he is throttled: it had been done before, But for your scrupulous doubts.

Corv. Ay, a plague on't,

My conscience fools my wit! Well, I'll be brief,

And so be thou, lest they should be before us:

• I hear him coming.] Mosca, who overhears Corvino's last words, speaks this aside; and he means, that he is yielding, or coming into the plot he had laid, to procure his wife for Volpone. So in Eastward Hoe! A. V. "No more; I am coming already: if I should give any further ear, I were taken." WHAL.

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Covetous wretch!] "How finely," says Upton, "is it imagined by our poet, to make Corvino see the basely covetous character of the physician, and yet be so strangely ignorant of his own! This is an instance of our comedian's great insight into the characters of mankind.”

This is one of ten thousand: but, indeed, no language can do full justice to the various excellencies of this truly attic drama.

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