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K002009.000.txt
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Love in a Village; A COMIC OPERA. As it is performed at the
THEATRE ROYAL IN COVENT-GARDEN.LONDON: Printed by W. GRIFFIN; For J. NEWBERY, and W. NICOLL, in
St. Paul's Church-Yard; G. KEARSLY, in Ludgate-Street; T. DAVIES, in
Russel-Street, Covent-Garden; and J. WALTER, at Charing-Cross.
MDCCLXIII.TO MR. BEARD.SIR.IT is with great pleasure I embrace this opportunity to
acknowledge the favours I have received from you. Among others I would mention
in particular the warmth with which you espoused this piece in its
passage to the stage; but that I am afraid it would be thought a
compliment to your good na∣ture, too much at the expence of your
judge∣ment.If this Opera is considered merely as a piece of Dramatic
writing, it will certainly be found to have very little merit: in that light no
one can think more indifferently of it than I do myself; but I believe I may
venture to assert, on your opinion, that some of the songs are
tollerable; that the music is more pleasing than has hitherto appeared in
any composition of this kind; and the words better adapted, considering the
na∣ture of the airs, which are not common bal∣lads, than could be expected,
supposing any degree of poetry to be preserved in the ver∣sification.
More than this few people expect, in an Opera, and if some of the severer
cri∣tics should be inclined to blame your indul∣gence to one of the first
attempts of a young writer, I am persuaded the Public in ge∣neral will applaud your endeavour to pro∣vide them with something new, in
a species of entertainment, in which the performers at your Theatre so
eminently excel.You may perceive Sir, that I yield a punc∣tual observance to the
injunctions you laid upon me, when I threatened you with this address, and
make it rather a preface than a dedication: And yet I must confess I can
hardly reconcile those formalities which ren∣der it indelicate to pay
praises where all the world allows them to be due; nor can I easily
conceive why a man should be so studious to deserve, what he does not
desire: But since you will not allow me to offer any panegy∣ric to you, I
must hasten to bestow one upon myself, and let the public know (which
was my chief design in this intro∣duction) that I have the honor to be,SIR,Your most obliged, And most obedient servant, The
AUTHOR.Of the Publishers of this OPERA may be had, Price One Shilling,
THOMAS and SALLY, OR THE SAILOR'S RETURN. A MUSICAL FARCE. Written by the
same AUTHOR.Dramatis Personae.MEN.Sir William Meadows,Mr. Collins.Young Meadows,Mr. Mattocks.Justice Woodcock,Mr. Shuter.Hawthorn,Mr. Beard.Eustace,Mr. Dyer.Hodge,Mr. Dunstall.WOMEN.Rossetta,Miss Brent.Lucinda,Miss Hallam.Mrs. Deborah Woodcock,Mrs. Walker.Margery,Miss Davies.Country Men and Women, Servants, &c.Scene a Village,Love in a Village.ACT I. SCENE I.A garden, with statues, fountains, and flower-pots. Se∣veral
arbours appear in the side scenes: ROSSETTA and LUCINDA are discovered at
work, seated upon two garden chairs.AIR I.Rossetta.HOPE! thou nurse of young desire,Fairy promiser of joy;Painted vapour, glow-worm fire,Temp'rate sweet, that ne'er can cloy.Lucinda.Hope! thou earnest of delight,Softest soother of the mind;Balmy cordial, prospect bright,Surest friend the wretched find.Both.Kind deceiver, flatter still,Deal out pleasures unpossest;With thy dreams my fancy fill,And in wishes make me blest.Lucin.Heigho—Rossetta!Ross.Well, child, what do you say?Lucin.'Tis a devilish thing to live in a village an hundred miles
from the capital, with a preposterous gouty father, and a superannuated
maiden aunt.—I am heartily sick of my situation.Ross.And with reason.—But 'tis in a great mea∣sure your own
fault: Here is this Mr. Eustace, a man of character and family; he likes you,
you like him; you know one another's minds, and yet you will not resolve to
make yourself happy with him.AIR II.Whence can you inheritSo slavish a spirit?Confin'd thus, and chain'd to a log!Now fondl'd, now chid,Permitted, forbid,'Tis leading the life of a dog.For shame, you a lover!More firmness discover;Take courage, nor here longer moap;Resist and be free,Run riot like me,And to perfect the picture elope.Lucin.And this is your advice?Ross.Positively.Lucin.Here's my hand, positively I'll follow it.—I have
already sent to my gentleman, who is now in the country, to let him know he
may come hither this day; we will make use of the
opportunity to settle all preliminaries—And then—But take notice,
when∣ever we decamp, you march off along with us.Ross.Oh! madam, your servant; I have no incli∣nation to be left
behind, I assure you—But you say you got acquainted with this
spark, while you were with your mother during her last illness at Bath,
so that your father has never seen him.Lucin.Never in his life, my dear; and I am confi∣dent he entertains
not the least suspicion of my having any such connection; my aunt,
indeed, has her doubts and surmises; but, besides that my father will not
allow any one to be wiser than himself, it is an established maxim
between these affectionate relations, never to agree in any thing.Ross.Except being absurd; you must allow they sympathize,
perfectly, in that—But now we are on the subject, I desire to know
what I am to do with this wicked old justice of peace? this libidinous father
of yours, he follows me about the house like a tame goat.Lucin.Nay, I'll assure you he has been a wag in his time—you
must have a care of yourself.Ross.Wretched me! to fall into such hands, who have been just
forced to run away from my parents to avoid an odious marriage—you
smile at that now, and I know you think me whimsical, as you have often
told me; but you must excuse my being a little over-delicate in this
particular.AIR III.My heart's my own, my will is free,And so shall be my voice;No mortal man shall wed with me,'Till first he's made my choice.Let parents rule cry nature's laws,And children still obey;And is there then no saving clause,Against tyrannic sway?Lucin.Well, but my dear mad girl—Ross.Lucinda, don't talk to me—Was your father to go to London,
meet there by accident with an old fellow as wrong headed as himself; and in
a fit of absurd friendship, agree to marry you to that old fel∣low's son,
whom you had never seen, without consult∣ing your inclinations, or allowing
you a negative, in case he should not prove agreeable—Lucin.Why, I should think it a little hard, I con∣fess—yet
when I see you in the character of a cham∣bermaid—Ross.It is the only character, my dear, in which I could hope to lie
concealed; and I can tell you, I was reduced to the last extremity, when, in
consequence of our old boarding-school friendship, I applied to you to
receive me in this capacity: for we expected the par∣ties the very next
week—Lucin.But had not you a message from your in∣tended spouse, to
let you know he was as little inclined to such ill-concerted nuptials as you
were?Ross.More than so; he wrote to advise me by all means, to
contrive some method of breaking them off, for he had rather return to his
dear studies at Oxford; and after that, what hopes could I have of being
hap∣py with him?Lucin.Then you are not at all uneasy at the strange rout you
must have occasioned at home? I warrant, during this month that you have
been absent—Ross.Oh! don't mention, it, my dear; I have had so many admirers
since I commenced abigail, that I am quite charmed with my situation—But hold, who stalks yonder into the yard, that the dogs are so glad
to see?Lucin.Daddy Hawthorn as I live! He is come to pay my father a visit;
and never more luckily, for he always forces him abroad. By the way, what will
you do with yourself while I step into the house to see after my
trusty messenger Hodge?Ross.No matter, I'll sit down in that arbour and lis∣ten to the
singing of the birds: you know I am fond of melancholy amusements.Lucin.So it seems indeed: sure Rossetta none of your admirers
have made a hole in your heart; you are not in love, I hope?Ross.In love! that's pleasant: who do you suppose I should be
in love with pray?Lucin.Why let me see—What do you think of Thomas, our
gardiner? there he is at the other end of the walk—He's a very pretty
young man, and the servants say he's always writing verses on you.Ross.Indeed Lucinda you are very silly.Lucin.Indeed Rossetta that blush makes you look very
handsome.Ross.Blush! I am sure I don't blush.Lucin.Ha, ha, ha!Ross.Pshaw, Lucinda how can you be so ridiculous?Lucin.Well don't be angry and I have done—but suppose you
did like him, how could you help yourselfAIR IV.When once love's subtle poison gains,A passage to the female breast;Like lightning rushing through the veins,Each wish, and ev'ry thought's possest.To heal the pangs our minds endure,Reason in vain its skill applies;Nought can afford the heart a cure,But what is pleasing to the eyes.SCENE II.Enter YOUNG MEADOWS.Y. Meadows.Let me see—on the fifteenth of June, at half an hour
past five in the morning
(having taken out a pocket-book) I left my
father's house unknown to any one, having made free with a coat and jacket of
our gar∣dener's, which fitted me, by way of a disguise:—so says
my pocket-book; and chance directing me to this village, on the 20th of the
same month I pro∣cured a recommendation to the worshipful justice
Woodcock, to be the superintendant of his pumpkins and cabbages,
because I would let my father see I chose to run any lengths rather than
submit to what his obsti∣nacy would have forced me, a marriage against my
in∣clination, with a woman I never saw.
(puts up the book, and takes a watering-pot) Here
I have been three weeks, and in that time I am as much altered as if I had
changed my nature with my habit. 'Sdeath, to fall in love with a chambermaid!
And yet, if I could forget that I am the son and heir of sir William
Meadows—But that's impossible.AIR V.Oh! had I been by fate decreedSome humble cottage swain;In fair Rossetta's sight to feed,My sheep upon the plain.What bliss had I been born to taste,Which now I ne'er must know:Ye envious pow'rs! why have ye plac'dMy fair one's lot so low?Hah! who was it I had a glimpse of as I past by that arbour?
was it not she sat reading there? the trembling of my heart tells me my
eyes were not mistaken—Here she comes.SCENE III.YOUNG MEADOWS, ROSSETTA.Ross.Lucinda was certainly in the right of it, and yet I blush to
own my weakness even to myself—Marry, hang the fellow for not being a
gentleman.Y. Meadows.I am determined I won't speak to her,
(turning to a rose tree, and plucking the
flowers.) Now or never is the time to conquer myself: Besides, I
have some reason to believe the girl has no aversion to me,
and as I wish not to do her an injury, it would be cruel
to fill her head with notions of what can never happen
(hums a tune.) Psha; rot these roses, how
they prick one's fingers.Ross.He takes no notice of me, but so much the better, I'll be as
indifferent as he is. I am sure the poor lad likes me; and if I was to give
him any en∣couragement; I suppose the next thing he talked of would be
buying a ring; and being asked in church—Oh, dear pride, I thank you
for that thought!Y. Meadows.Hah, going without a word! a look!—I can't bear
that—Mrs Rossetta, I am ga∣thering a few roses here, if you'll
please to take them in with you.Ross.Thank you, Mr. Thomas, but all my lady's flowerpots are
full.Y. Meadows.Will you accept of them for yourself, then,
(catching hold of her.) What's the matter? you
look as if you were angry with me.Ross.Pray, let go my hand.Young Mead.Nay, pr'ythee, why is this? you shan't go, I have something
to say to you.Ross.Well, but I must go, I will go; I desire Mr Thomas!AIR VI.Gentle youth, ah, tell me whyStill you force me thus to fly;Cease, oh! cease, to persevere,Speak not what I must not hear,To my heart it's ease restore,Go, and never see me more.SCENE IV.YOUNG MEADOWS.This girl is a riddle—That she loves me I think there is
no room to doubt; she takes a thousand opportunities to let me see it,
and yet when I speak to her, she will hardly give me an answer, and if I
attempt the smallest familiarity is gone in an instant—I feel my
passion for her grow every day more and more violent—Well, would I
marry her? would I make a mistress of her if I could? Two things, called
prudence and honour, forbid either. What am I pursuing, then? a shadow.
Sure my evil genius laid this snare in my way. However, there is one comfort,
it is in my power to fly from it! if so, why do I hesitate? I am
dis∣tracted, unable to determine any thing.AIR VII.Still in hopes to get the better,Of my stubborn flame I try;Swear this moment to forget her,And the next my oath deny.Now prepar'd with scorn to treat her,Ev'ry charm in thought I brave;Boast my freedom, fly to meet her,And confess myself a slave.SCENE. V.A hall in Justice WOODCOCK's house. Enter HAW∣THORN with a
fowling piece in his hand, and a net with birds at his girdle: and afterwards
Justice WOODCOCK.AIR. VIII.There was a jolly miller once,Lived on the river Dee;He work'd, and sung, from morn 'till night,No lark more blyth than he.And this the burthen of his song,For ever used to be.I eare for nobody, not I,If no one cares for me.House here, house; what all gadding, all abroad! house I
say, hilli ho ho!J. Woodcock.Here's a noise, here's a racket! Wil∣liam, Robert,
Hodge! why does not somebody answer? Odds my life I believe the
fellows have lost their hearing:
(Entering) Oh master Hawthorn! I
guessed it was some mad cap—Are you there?Hawth.Am I here, yes: and if you had been where I was three hours ago,
you would find the good effects of it by this time: but you have got the lazy,
unwhol∣some London fashion, of lying a bed in a morning, and there's gout
for you—Why Sir I have not been in bed five minutes after sun-rise
these thirty years, am generally up before it; and I never took a dose of
phy∣sic but once in my life, and that was in compliment to
a cousin of mine an apothecary, that had just set up
business.J. Woodcock.Well but master Hawthorn, let me tell you, you know
nothing of the matter, for I say sleep is necessary for a man, ay and
I'll maintain it.Hawth.What when I maintain the contrary!—Look you neighbour
Woodcock, you are a rich man, a man of worship, a justice of
peace, and all that; but learn to know the respect that is due to the sound
from the infirm; and allow me the superiority a good constitution gives me
over you—Health is the great∣est of all possessions, and 'tis a
maxim with me, that an hail cobler, is a better man than a sick king.J. Woodcock.Well, well, you are a sportsman.Hawth.And so would you too, if you would take my advice. A
Sportsman quotha! why there is nothing like it: I would not exchange the
satisfaction I feel while I am beating the lawns and thickets about my little
farm, for all the entertainments and pageantry in Chris∣tendom.AIR. IX.Let gay ones and great,Make the most of their fate,From pleasure to pleasure they run:Well, who cares a jot,I envy them not,While I have my dog and my gun.For exercise, air,To the fields I repair,With spirits unclouded and light.The blisses I find,No stings leave behind,But health and diversion unite.SCENE. VI.Justice WOODCOCK, HAWTHORN, HODGE.Hodge.Did your worship call Sir?J. Woodcock.Call Sir! where have you and the rest of those rascals
been? but I suppose I need not ask—You must know there is a
statute, a fair for hiring ser∣vants, held upon my green to day, we have it
usually at this season of the year, and it never fails to put all the
folks here-about out of their senses.Hodge.Lord your honour look out, and see what a nice shew they
make yonder, they had got pipers, and fidlers, and were dancing as I com'd
along for dear life—I never saw such a mortal throng in our village
in all my born days again.Hawth.Why I like this now, this is as it should be.J. WOODCOCK.No no, 'tis a very foolish piece of bu∣siness; good for
nothing but to promote idleness and the getting of bastards: but I shall
take measures for preventing it another year, and I doubt whether I am not
sufficiently authorized already: For by an act pas∣sed Anno,
undecimo, Caroli primo, which impowers a justice of peace, who is lord
of the manor.—Hawth.Come come, never mind the act, let me tell you this is a very
proper, a very useful meeting; I want a servant or two myself, I must
go see what your market affords;—and you shall go, and the girls, my
little Lucy and the other young rogue, and we'll make a day on't as well as the
rest.J. Woodcock.I wish master Hawthorn, I cou'd teach you to be a
little more sedate: why wont you take pat∣tern by me, and consider your
dignity—Odds heart I don't wonder you are not a rich man, you laugh too
much ever to be rich.Hawth.Right neighbour Woodcock! health, good humour, and
competence is my motto: and if my exe∣cutors have a mind, they are welcome to
make it my epitaph.AIR. X.The honest heart whose thoughts are clear,From fraud, disguise, and guile;Need neither fortune's frowning fear,Nor court the harlot's smile.The greatness that would make us grave,Is but an empty thing;What more than mirth wou'd mortals have?The chearful man's a king!SCENE. VII.LUCINDA, HODGE.Lucin.Hist, hist, Hodge!Hodge.Who calls? here am I.Lucin.Well, have you been?Hodge.Been, ay I ha been far enough, an that be all? you never knew
any thing fall out so crossly in your born days.Lucin.Why, what's the matter?Hodge.Why you know, I dare not take a horse out of his worship's
stables this morning, for fear it should be missed, and breed
questions; and our old nag at home was so cruelly beat i'th hoofs, that
poor beast, it had not a foot to set to ground; so I was fain to go to
farmer Ploughshares, at the Grainge, to borrow the loan of his bald filly:
and wou'd you think it? after walking all that way,—de'el from me, if the
cross-grain'd tead, did not deny me the favour.Lucin.Unlucky!Hodge.Well, then I went my ways to the King's head in the village, but
all their cattle were at plough: and I was as far to seek below at the
turnpike: so at last, for want of a better; I were forced to take up with
dame Quicksets blind mare.Lucin.Oh, then you have been?Hodge.Yes, yes, I ha' been.Lucin.Psha! why did not you say so at once?Hodge.Ay, but I have had a main tiresome jaunt on't for she is but
a sorry jade at best—Lucin.Well, well did you see Mr. Eustace, and what did he say to
you—come quick—have you e'er a letter!Hodge.Yes, he gave me a letter, if I ha' na' lost it.Lucin.Lost it man!Hidge.Nay, nay, have a bit of patience, adwawns, you are always in
such a hurry
(rummaging his pockets) I put it somewhere in
this waistcoat pocket. Oh here it is.Lucin.So, give it me.
(reads the letter to herself)Hodge.Lord a mercy! how my arm achs with beating that plaguy beast,
I'll be hang'd if I won'na' rather ha'thrash'd half a day, than ha' ridden
her.Lucin.Well Hodge, you have done your business very
well.Hodge.Well, have not I now?Lucin.Yes, Mr. Eustace tells me in this letter, that he will be in
the green lane at the other end of the vil∣lage, by twelve o'clock—You
know where he came before.Hodge.Ay ay.Lucin.Well, you must go there; and wait 'till he arrives; and watch
your opportunity to introduce him across the fields, into the little
summer-house, on the left side of the garden.Hodge.That's enough.Lucin.But take particular care that nobody sees you.Hodge.I warrant you.Lucin.Nor for your life drop a word of it to any mortal.Hodge.Never fear me.Lucin.And Hodge—AIR. XI.Hodge.Well, well, say no more,Sure you told me before;I know the full length of my tether;Do you think I'm a fool,That I need go to school?I can spell you and put you together.A word to the wise,Will always suffice,Addsnigers go talk to your parrot;I'm not such an elf,Though I say it myself,But I know a sheep's head from a carrot.SCENE. VIII.LUCINDA.How severe is my case? here am I obliged to carry on a
clandestine correspondence with a man in all res∣pects my equal,
because the oddity of my father's tem∣per is such, that I dare not tell
him, I have ever yet seen the person I should like to marry—But
hold—is not the blame his then—when princes are oppressive in
their government, subjects have a right to assert their
liberty—perhaps my father has quality in his eye, and hopes one day or
other, as I am his only child, to match me with an earl or a duke—vain
imagination!AIR. XII.Cupid god of soft persuasion,Take the helpless lover's part;Seize, oh seize, some kind occasion,To reward a faithful heart.Justly those we tyrants call,Who the body would enthral;Tyrants of more cruel kind,Those who would enslave the mind.What is grandeur? foe to rest;Childish mummery at best;Happy I in humble state,Catch ye fools, the glitt'ring bait.SCENE. IX.A field with a stile. Enter HODGE, followed by MAR∣GERY, and
in some time after, enter young MEADOWS.Hodge.What does the wench follow me for? Odds flesh, folk may well
talk, to see you dangling after me every where, like a tantony pig; find
some other road, can't you, and don't keep wherreting me with your
non∣sense.Marg.Nay pray you Hodge stay, and let me speak to you a
bit.Hodge.Well; what fayn you?Marg.Dear heart, how can you be so barbarous? and is this the way
you serve me after all? and wont you keep your word Hodge?Hodge.Why no I wont, I tell you; I have chang'd my mind.Marg.Nay but surely, surely—Consider Hodge, you
are obligated in conscience, to make me an honest woman.Hodge.Obligated in conscience, how am I obligated?Marg.Because you are: and none but the basest of rogues wou'd
bring a poor girl to shame, and after∣wards leave her to the wide world.Hodge.Bring you to shame, don't make me speak Madge,
don't make me speak.Marg.Yes do, speak your worst.Hodge.Why then if you go to that, you were fain to leave your own
village down in the West, for a bas∣tard you had by the clerk of the
parish, and I'll bring the man shall say it to your face.Marg.No no Hodge, 'tis no such a thing, 'tis a base lie
of farmer Ploughshare's—But I know what makes you false
hearted to me, that you may keep company with young madam's waiting woman, and
I am sure she's no fit body for a poor man's wife.Hodge.How shou'd you know what she's fit for, she's fit for as
much as you mayhap, don't find fault, with your betters Madge.(seeing young Meadows) Oh! master
Thomas, I have a word or two to say to you; pray did not you go down
the village one day last week with a basket of somewhat upon your
shoulder?Y. Meadows.Well and what then?Hodge.Nay not much, only the Ostler at the Green∣man was saying as
how there was a passenger at their house as see'd you go by: and said
he know'd you; and a mort of
questions—So I thought I'd tell you—Y. Meadaws.The devil! ask questions about me, I know nobody in this
part of the country, there must be some mistake in it—Come hither
Hodge.(They walk off discoursing)Marg.A nasty ungrateful fellow, to use me at this rate, after
being to him as I have—Well well, I wish all poor girls, wou'd take
warning by my mishap, and never have nothing to say to none of them.AIR. XIII.How happy were my days till now,I ne'er did sorrow feel;I rose with joy to milk my cow,Or take my spinning wheel.My heart was lighter than a fly,Like any bird I sung,Till he pretended love, and I,Believed his flatt'ring tongue.Oh the fool, the silly, silly fool,Who trusts what man may be;I wish I was a maid again,And in my own country.SCENE X.A green with the prospect of a village, and the
representa∣tion of a statute or fair. Enter Justice WOODCOCK, HAWTHORN,
Mrs. DEBORAH WOODCOCK, LU∣CINDA, ROSSETTA, Young MEADOWS, HODGE, and several
Country People.Hodge.This way, your worship, this way! Why don't you stand
aside there? here's his worship a coming.Countryman.His worship!J. Woodcock.Fye, fye; what a crowd's this; odd, I'll put some of them in
the stocks
(striking a fellow) stand out of the way,
sirrah.Hawth.For shame, neighbour. Well, my lad, are you willing to serve
the king?Countryman.Why can you list ma? Serve the king, master! no, no, I pay
the king, that's enough for me. Ho, ho, ho!Hawth.Well said, sturdy-boots.J. Woodcock.Nay, if you talk to them, they'll answer you.Hawth.I would have them do so, I like they should.—Well,
madam, is not this a fine sight? I did not know my neighbour's estate had
been so well peopled.—Are all these his own tenants?Mrs. Deb.More than are good of them, Mr. Haw∣thorn. I don't like
to see such a parcel of young husseys fleering with the fellows.Hawth.There's a lass
(beckoning a country girl) come hither my pretty
maid. What brings you here? (chucking her under the chin) Do you come to look
for a service.C. Girl.Yes, an't please you.Hawth.Well, and what place are you for?C. Girl.All work, an't please you.J. Woodcock.Ay, ay, I don't doubt it; any work you'll put her to.Mrs. Deb.She looks like a brazen one.—Go hussey.Hawth.Here's another
(catching a girl that goes by) What health, what
bloom!—This is nature's work; no art, no daubing. Don't be ashamed,
child; those cheeks of thine are enough to put a whole drawing-room out of
countenance.AIR XIV.The court, and the city, fine folk may extol,Where beauties, all shining, a paradise make;But shew me the belles, at a play or a ball,To equal the lass at a fair, or a wake.Behold, in a garden, the roses new blown,Such freshness smiles here upon every face;While flow'rs in a chimney, your fair ones in town,Look wither'd, and bear the dark hue of the place.SCENE XI.Justice WOODCOCK, HAWTHORN, LUCINDA, ROS∣SETTA, Young
MEADOWS, HODGE, and men and women servants.Hodge.Now your honour, now the sport will come. The gut scrapers
are here, and some among them are going to sing and dance. Why there's not
the likes of our statute, mun, in five counties; others are but fools to
it.Servant man.Come good people, make a ring, and stand out,
fellow-servants, as many of you as are wil∣ling, and able to bear a bob:
we'll let my masters and mistresses see we can do something, at
least; if they won't hire us it shan't be our fault. Strike up the
Ser∣vants Medley.AIR XV.GARDENER.Those who in gardens take delight,Attend to what I say,To pleasure you, with main and might,I'll labour every day.All sort of gardener-craft I know,Though it be ne'er so nice;With me your fruits and flowers shall grow,As 'twere in Paradise.HOUSE-MAID.I pray ye, gentles, list to me,I'm young, and strong, and clean to see;I'll not turn tail to any sheFor work, that's in the county;Of all your house the charge I take,I wash, I scrub, I brew, I bake,And more can do, than here I'll speak,Depending on your bounty.HUNTSMAN.A Huntsman I am, with a merry ton'd horn,Come here in the search of a place;Hark away, jolly sportsmen, I'll rouse you each
mornTo enjoy the delights of the chase—my brave
boys.LANDRY-MAID.If for your Landry you desireA sober, careful girl to hire,I dare be bound, your linen allTo get up neat, both great and small;I would not brag but where I might;No driven snow shall be more white.FOOTMAN.Behold a blade, who knows his tradeIn chamber, hall, and entry;And what tho' here, I now appear,I've serv'd the best of gentry.A footman would you have,I can dress, and comb, and shaveFor I a handy lad am,On a message I can go,And slip a billet-deux,With your humble servant, madam.COOKMAID.Who wants a good cook, my hand they must cross,For plain wholesome dishes I'm ne'er at a loss;And what are your soups, your ragouts, and your
sauce,Compar'd to the fare of old England, &c.GROOM.Clear the course, my boys, clear the course, and make
room,Ye gents of the turf, have you need of a groom?Let me ride your match, and you'll certainly win,I'll teach you to take the knowing ones in.DAIRYMAID.To prove the market be'nt afraid,In me you'll find a Dairymaid,Whate'er you can expect her;I've often had the place before,And always gave content, and more,Can have a good charackter.CARTER.If you want a young man, with a true honest heart,Who knows how to manage a plough and a cart,Here's one for your purpose, come take me and try;You'll say you ne'er met with a better nor I,Ge ho Dobbin, &c.CHORUS.My masters and mistresses hither repair,What servants you want you will find in our fair;Men and maids fit for all sorts of stations there
be;And, as for the wages, we shan't disagree.END OF THE FIRST ACT.ACT II. SCENE I.A parlour in justice WOODCOCK's house.Enter LUCINDA followed by EUSTACE in a riding dress.Lucin.WELL, am not I a bold adventurer, to bring you into my father's
house at noon∣day? though, to say the truth, we are safer here than in
the garden; for there is not a human creature under the roof beside
ourselves.Eust.Then why not put our scheme into execution this moment? I have
a post-chaise ready—Lucin.Fie! how can you talk so lightly? I protest I am afraid to
have any thing to do with you; your passion seems too much founded on
appetite; and my aunt Deborah says—Eust.What! by all the rapture my heart now feels—Luc.Oh to be sure, promise and vow; it sounds prettily, and
never fails to impose upon a fond female.AIR XVI.We women like weak indians trade,Whose judgment, tinsel shew decoys:Dupes to our folly we are made,While artful man the gain enjoys:We give our treasure to be paid;A paltry, poor return in toys.Eust.Well, I see you have a mind to divert yourself with me; but
I wish I could prevail on you to be a little serious.Lucin.Seriously then, what would you desire me to say? I have
promised to run away with you; which is as great a concession, as any
reasonable lover can ex∣pect from his mistress.Eust.Yes, but you dear provoking angel, you have not told me, when
you will run away with me.Lucin.Why, that I confess requires some considera∣tion.Eust.Yet remember, while you are deliberating, the season, now
so favourable to us, may elapse, never to return.AIR. XVII.Think my fairest how delay,Danger ev'ry moment brings;Time flies swift, and will away;Time that's ever on it's wings:Doubting, and suspence, at best,Lover's late repentance cost;Let us, eager to be blest,Sieze occasion e'er 'tis lost.SCENE. II.LUCINDA, EUSTACE, Justice WOODCOCK, Mrs. DEBORAH
WOODCOCK.J. Woodcock.Why, here is nothing in the world in this house but
catter-wawling from morning till night, nothing but catter-wawling. Hoity
toity! who have we here?Lucin.My father and my aunt!Eust.The Devil, what shall we do?Lucin.Take no notice of them, only observe me,
(speaks aloud to Eustace) upon my word sir,
I don't know what to say to it, unless the justice was at home; he is
just stepped into the village with some company, but if you will sit
down a moment, I dare sware he will re∣turn,
(pretends to see the justice) Oh! sir, here
is my papa!J. Woodcock.Here is your papa hussey! who's this you have got with you?
hark you sirrah, who are you, ye dog? and what's your business here?Eust.Sir, this a language I am not used to.J. Woodcock.Don't answer me you rascal—I am a justice of peace,
and if I hear a word out of your mouth, I'll send you to jail, for all your
laced hat.Mrs. Deb.Send him to jail brother, that's right.J. Woodcock.And how do you know it's right? how should you know any
thing's right? Sister Deborah you are never in the right.Mrs. Deb.Brother this is the man I have been tell∣ing you about so
long.J. Woodcock.What man, goody wiseacre?Mrs. Deb.Why, the man your daughter has an in∣trigue with, but I hope you
will not believe it now, though you see it with your own eyes.—Come
hussey confess, and don't let your father make a fool of himself any
longer.Lucin.Confess what aunt? this gentleman is a music master, he
goes about the country teaching ladies to play and sing; and has been
recommended to instruct me; I could not turn him out when he came to offer
his service, and did not know what answer to give him 'till I saw my
papa.J. Woodcock.A music master?Eust.Yes Sir, that's my profession.Mrs. Deb.It's a lye young man, it's a lye; brother, he is no more a
music master, than I am a music master.J. Woodcock.What then you know better than the fellow himself, do you? and
you will be wiser than all the world?Mrs. Deb.Brother, he does not look like a music master.J. Woodcock.He does not look ha, ha, ha, was ever such a poor stupe,
well, and what does he look like then? but I suppose you mean, he is not
dressed like a music master, because of his ruffles, and this bit of
gar∣nishing about his coat, which seems to be copper too; why you silly
wretch, these whippersnappers set up for gentlemen now a-days, and give
themselves as many airs, as if they were people of quality.—Hark you
friend, I suppose you don't come within the vagrant act, you have some
settled habitation;—Where do you live?Mrs. Deb.It's an easy matter for him to tell you a wrong place.J. Woodcock.Sister Deborah don't provoke me.Mrs. Deb.I wish brother you would let me examine him a little.J. Woodcock.You shan't say a word to him, you shan't say a word to
him.Mrs. Deb.She says he was recommended here bro∣ther, ask him by
whom?J. Woodcock.No I won't now, because you desire it.Lucin.If my papa did ask the question aunt, it would be very
easily resolved—Mrs. Deb.Who bid you speak Mrs. Nimble Chops, I suppose the man has
a tongue in his head to answer for himself.J. Woodcock.Will no body stop that prating old woman's mouth for me, get
out of the room.Mrs. Deb.Well, so I can brother, I don't want to stay, but remember I
tell you; you will make yourself ridiculous in this affair, for through your
own obstinacy, you will have your daughter run away with before your
face.J. Woodcock.My daughter! who will run away with my daughter?Mrs. Deb.That fellow will.J. Woodcock.Go, go, you are a wicked censorious woman.Lucin.Why, sure madam you must think me very coming indeed.J. Woodcock.Ay, she judges of others by herself; I remember when she
was a girl, her mother dare not trust her the length of her apron string,
she was clam∣bering upon every fellows back.Mrs. Deb.I was not.J. Woodcock.You were.Lucin.Well, but why so violent.AIR. XVII.Believe me dear aunt,If you rave thus and rant,You'll never a lover persuade;The men will all fly,And leave you to die,Oh, terrible chance! an old maid—How happy the lass,Must she come to this pass,Who antient virginity scapes:'Twere better on earth,Have five brats at a birthThen in hell be a leader of apes.Mrs. Deb.You are an impudent slut.SCENE III.Justice WOODCOCK, LUCINDA, EUSTACE.J. Woodcock.Well done Lucy, send her about her business, a
troublesome foolish creature; does she think I want to be directed by
her;—Come hither my lad, you look tolerably honest—Eust.I hope sir, I shall never give you cause to alter your
opinionJ. Woodcock.No, no, I am not easily deceived, I am generally pretty right
in my conjectures;—You must know, I had once a little notion of music
myself, and learned upon the fiddle; I could play the trumpet minuet and
buttered pease, and two or three tunes. I remember when
I was in London, about thirty years ago, there was a song, a great favourite
at our club at Nando's coffee-house; Jack Pickle used to sing it for us:
a droll fish! but 'tis an old thing, I dare swear you have heard it
often.AIR XVIII.When I followed a lass that was forward and shy,Oh! I stuck to her stuff, 'till I made her comply;Oh! I took her so lovingly round the waist.And I smack'd her lips, and I held her fast:When hugged and hall'dShe squealed and squall'd;But though she vow'd all I did was in vain,Yet I pleas'd her so well, that she bore it again.Than hoity toity,Wisking, firisking,Green was her gown upon the grass:Oh! such were the joys of our dancing days.Eust.Very well sir, upon my word.J. Woodcock.No no, I forget all those things now, but I could do a little
at them once;—Well stay and eat your dinner, and we'll talk about your
teaching the girl:—Lucy, take your master to your spinnet,
and shew him what you can do—I must go and give some orders;
"then hoity, toity, &c.SCENE. IV.LUCINDA, EUSTACE.Lucin.My sweet, pretty papa, your most obedient humble servant,
hah, hah, hah! was ever so whimsical an accident! well sir, what do you
think of this?Eust.Think of it! I am in a maze.Lucin.O your aukwardness! I was frightened out of my wits, lest
you should not take the hint! and if I had not turned matters so cleverly,
we should have been utterly undone.Eust.'Sdeath! why would you bring me into the house? we could
expect nothing else: besides, since they did surprize us, it would have
been better to have dis∣covered the truth.Lucin.Yes, and never have seen one another after∣wards. I know my
father better than you do; he has taken it into his head, I have no inclination
for a husband, and let me tell you, that is our best security; for if
once he has said a thing, he will not be easily per∣suaded to the
contrary.Eust.And pray, what am I to do now?Lucin.Why, as I think all danger is pretty well over, since he has
invited you to dinner with him, stay, only be cautious of your behaviour; and
in the mean time, I will consider what is next to be done.Eust.Had not I better go to your father?Lucin.Do so, while I endeavour to recover myself a little, out of
the flurry this affair has put me in.Eust.Well, but what sort of a parting is this, with∣out so much
as your servant, or good by to you; No ceremony at all?
can you afford me no token to keep up my spirits 'till I see you again.Lucin.Ah childish!Eust.My angel!AIR. XIX.Eust.Let rakes and libertines resign'd,To sensual pleasures range;Here all the sexes charms I find,And ne'er can cool, or change.Lucin.Let vain coquets, and prudes conceal,What most their hearts desire;With pride my passion I reveal,Oh! may it ne'er expire.Both.The sun shall cease to spread it's light,The stars their orbits leave;And fair creation, sink in night,When I my dear deceive.SCENE. VI.Changes to the garden.Enter ROSSETTA musing.Ross.If ever poor creature was in a pitiable condition, surely I
am. The devil take this fellow, I cannot get him out of my head, and yet I
would fain persuade myself I don't care for him: well, but surely I am
not in love, let me examine my heart a little: I saw him kissing one of
the maids the other day; I could have boxed his ears for it, and have done
nothing but find fault and quarrel with the girl ever since. Why was I
uneasy at his toying with another woman? what was it to
me? Then I dream of him almost every night—but that may proceed from
his being generally uppermost in my thoughts all day;—Oh! worse and
worse!—Well, he is certainly a pretty lad, he has something uncom∣mon
about him, considering his rank: and now let me only put the case, if he
was not a servant, would I, or would I not, prefer him to all the men I ever
saw? Why, to be sure, if he was not a servant.—In short, I'll
ask myself no more questions, for, the farther I examine, the less
reason, I shall have to be satisfied.AIR. XX.How bless'd the maid, whose bosom,No head-strong passion knows;Her days in joys she passes,Her nights in calm repose.Where e'er her fancy leads her,No pain, no fear invades her,But pleasure,Without measure,From ev'ry object flows.SCENE VII.YOUNG MEADOWS and ROSSETTA.Y. Meadows.Do you come into the garden, Mrs. Rossetta, to put
my lilies and roses out of countenance; or to save me the trouble of
watering my flowers, by reviving them? The sun seems to have hid himself
a lit∣tle, to give you an opportunity of supplying his place.Ross.Where could he get that now? he never read it in the academy of
compliments.Y. Meadows.Come don't affect to treat me with contempt; I can suffer any
thing better than that: in short I love you; there is no more to be said; I
am an∣gry with myself for it, and strive all I can against it; but in
spite of myself I love you.AIR. XXI.In vain I ev'ry art assay,To pluck the venom'd shaft away,That wrankles in my heart;Deep in the centre fix'd, and bound,My efforts but enlarge the wound,And fiercer make the smart.Ross.Really Mr. Thomas, this is very improper lan∣guage, it
is what I don't understand; I can't suffer it, and in short, I don't like
it.Y. Meadows.Perhaps you don't like me.Ross.Well, perhaps I don't.Y. Meadows.Nay, but 'tis not so: come, confess you love me.Ross.Confess! indeed I shall confess no such thing;
besides, to what purpose should I confess it.Y. Meadows.Why as you say I don't know to what purpose, only it would
be a satisfaction to me to hear you say so; that's all.Ross.Why if I did love you, I can assure you, you wou'd never be
the better for it—Women are apt enough to be weak, we cannot always
an∣swer for our inclinations but it is in our power not to give way to them;
and if I was so silly; I say, if I was so
indiscreet, which I hope I am not, as to enter∣tain an improper regard, when
people's circumstances are quite unsuitable, and there are obstacles in
the way that cannot be surmounted—Y. Meadows.Oh! to be sure, Mrs. Rossetta, to be sure, you
are entirely in the right of it—I—know very well, you and I can
never come together.Ross.Well then, since that is the case, as I assure you it
is, I think we had better behave accordingly.Y. Meadows.Suppose we make a bargain then, never to speak to one
another any more?Ross.With all my heart.Y. Meadows.Nor look at, nor, if possible, think of one another.Ross.I am very willing.Y. Meadows.And as long as we stay in the house together, after this
day, never to take any notice.Ross.It is the best way.Y. Mead.Why, I believe it is—Well, Mrs. Rossetta.AIR. XXII.Ross.Be gone—I agree,From this moment we're free,Already the matter I've sworn;Y. Mead.Yet let me complain.Of the sates that ordain,A tryal so hard to be born.Ross.When things are but fit,We should calmly submit,No cure in reluctance we find;Y. Mead.Then thus I obey,Tear your image away,And banish you quite from my mind.Ross.Well, now I think I am somewhat easier; I am glad I have
come to this explanation with him, be∣cause it puts an end to things at
once.Y. Meadows.Hold Mrs Rossetta, pray stay a mo∣ment—the
airs this girl gives herself are intolerable: I find now the cause of her
behaviour, she despises the meanness of my condition, thinking a
gardener, below the notice of a lady's waiting woman: Sdeath! I have a good
mind to discover myself to her.Ross.He seems in a brown study, poor wretch! I believe he is
heartily mortified, but I must not pity him.Y. Meadows.It shall be so, I will discover myself to her, and leave
the house directly—Mrs. Rossetta.(starting back)—Pox on it, yonder's the
justice come into the garden—Ross.Oh lord he will walk round this way, pray go about your
business, I would not for the world he shou'd see us together.Y. Meadows.The devil take him, he's gone across the parterre, and can't
hobble here this half-hour, I must and will have a little conversation with
you.Ross.Some other time.Y. MeadowsThis evening, in the green-house at the lower end of the
canal, I have some thing to communi∣cate to you of importance. Will, you meet
me there.Ross.Meet you!Y. Meadows.Ay, I have a secret to tell you, and I swear from that
moment, there shall be an end of every thing betwixt us.Ross.Well, well, pray leave me now.Y. Meadows.You'll come then.Ross.I don't know, perhaps I may,Y. Meadows.Nay but promise.Ross.What signifies promising, I may break my
pro∣mise,—but I tell you I will.Y. Meadows.Enough—Yet before I leave you, let me desire you to
believe I love you more than ever man loved woman, and that when I relinquish
you, I give up all that can make my life supportable.AIR. XXIII.Oh! how shall I in language weak,My ardent passion tell;Or form my falt'ring tongue to speak,That cruel word, farewell!Farewell—but know tho' thus we part,My thoughts can never stray:Go where I will, my constant heart,Must with my charmer stay.SCENE VIII.ROSSETTA, Justice WOODCOCK.Ross.What can this be that he wants to tell me, I have a strange
curiosity to hear it me thinks—well—J. Woodcock.Hem: hem: Rossetta!Ross.So, I thought the devil would throw him in my way, now for a
courtship of a different kind, but I'll give him a surfeit—did you
call me Sir?J. Woodcock.Ay, where are you running so fast?Ross.I was only going into the house Sir.J. Woodcock.Well but come here; come here I say
(looking about) how do you do
Rossetta?Ross.Thank you Sir, pretty well.J. Woodcock.Why, you look as fresh and bloomy to day—Adad you little
slut I believe you are painted.Ross.Oh! Sir, you are pleased to compliment.J. Woodcock.Adad I believe you are—let me try—Ross.Lord Sir!J. Woodcock.What brings you into this garden so often
Rossetta? I hope you don't get eating green fruit and trash; or
have you a hankering after some lover in dowlas, who spoils my trees by
engraving truelovers knots on them, with your horn, and buck-handled knives? I
see your name written upon the cieling of the servants hall, with the
smoak of a candle; and I suspect—Ross.Not me I hope Sir—No Sir, I am of ano∣ther guess mind I
assure you; for I have heard say, men are so false and
fickle—J. Woodcock.Ay, that's your flanting idle young fel∣lows; so they are; and
they are so damm'd impudent, I wonder a woman will have any thing to say to
them; besides, all that they want, is something to brag of, and tell
again.Ross.Why, I own Sir, if ever I was to make a slip, it should be
with an elderly gentleman—about seventy or seventy-five years of
age.J. Woodcock.No, child, that's out of reason; tho' I have known many a man
turned of threescore with a hale constitution—Ross.Then, sir, he should be troubled with the gout, have a good
strong, substantial winter cough—and I should not like him the
worse—if he had a small of the rheumatism.J. Woodcock.Pho, pho, Rossetta, this is jesting.Ross.No, sir, every body has their taste, and I have mine.J. Woodcock.Well, but Rossetta, have you thought of what I was
saying to you?Ross.What was it, sir?J. Woodcock.Ah! you know, you know, well enough, hussey.Ross.Dear sir, consider my soul, would you have me endanger my
soul?J. Woodcock.No, no—Repent.Ross.Besides, sir, consider, what has a poor servant to
depend on but her character? And I have heard you gentlemen will talk one thing
before, and another after.J. Woodcock.I tell you again, these are the idle, flashy young dogs; but
when you have to do with a staid, sober man—Ross.And a magistrate! sir.J. Woodcock.Right, it's quite a different thing.—Well, shall we
Rosseta, shall we?Ross.Really, sir, I don't know what to say to it.AIR XXIV.Young I am, and sore afraid:Wou'd you hurt a harmless maid?Lead an innocent astray?Tempt me not, kind sir, I pray.Men too often we believe,And shou'd you my faith deceive.Ruin first, and then forsake,Sure my tender heart would break,J. Woodcock.Why you silly girl, I won't do you any harm.Ross.Won't you, sir?J. Woodcock.Not I.Ross.But won't you, indeed, sir?J. Woodcock.Why I tell you I won't.Ross.Ha, ha, ha.J. Woodcock.Hussey, hussey.Ross.Ha, ha, ha!—Your servant, sir, your servant.J. Woodcock.Why you impudent, audacious—SCENE. IX.Justice WOODCOCK, HAWTHORN.Hawth.So, so, justice, at odds with gravity! his worship playing
a game at romps!—Your servant, sir.J. Woodcock.Hah: friend Hawthorn!Hawth.I hope I don't spoil sport, neighbour: I thought I had the
glympse of a petticoat as I came in here.J. Woodcock.Oh! the maid. Ay, she has been ga∣thering a
sallad.—But come hither, master Hawthorn, and I'll shew
you some alterations I intend to make in my garden; how do you like my haha,
have not I brought the country finely in?Hawth.Pho, pho, I am no judge of it:—besides, I want to talk
to you a little more about this—Tell me, sir justice, were you
helping your maid to gather a sallad here, or consulting her taste in
your improve∣ments, eh?—Ha, ha, ha!—Let me see; all among the
roses! egad, I like your notion: but you look a little blank upon it: you are
ashamed of the business, then, are you?AIR XXV.Oons! neighbour, ne'er blush for a trifle like this;What harm with a fair one to toy and to kiss?The greatest and gravest—a truce with
grimace—Would do the same thing, were they in the same place.No age, no profession, no station is free;To sovereign beauty mankind bend the knee:That power, resistless, no strength can oppose:We all love a pretty girl—under the rose.J. Woodcock.I profess, master Hawthorn, this is all Indian, all
Cherokee language to me; I don't under∣stand a word of it.Hawth.No, may be not: well, sir, will you read this letter, and try
whether you can understand that: it is just brought by a servant, who
stays for an answer.J. Woodcock.A letter, and to me!
(taking the letter) Yes, it is to me; and yet I am
sure it comes from no correspondent. Where are my spectacles? not but I
can see very well without them, master Hawthorn; but this seems
to be a sort of a crabbed hand
(reads the letter).SIR,I am ashamed of giving you this trouble, partly; but I am
informed there is an unthinking boy, a son of mine, now disguised, and in
your service, in the capacity of a gardener: Tom is a little wild,
but an honest lad, and no fool either, tho' I am his father that say
it.Tom,—oh, this is Thomas, our gardener; I
always thought that he was a better man's child than he appeared to be, though
I never mentioned it.Hawth.Well, well, sir; pray let's hear the rest of the letter.J. Woodcock.Stay, where is the place?
I am come in quest of my runaway, and write this at an inn
in your village, while I am swallowing a morsel of dinner: because, not
having the pleasure of your acquaintance, I did not care to intrude, without
giving you notice(whoever this person is, he understands good
manners).I beg leave to wait on you, sir; but desire you would
keep my arrival a secret particularly from the young man.WILLIAM MEADOWS. I'll assure you, a very well worded, civil letter.
Do you know any thing of the person who writes it, neigh∣bour?Hawth.Let me consider—Meadows—By dad I be∣lieve
it is sir William Meadows, of Northamptonshire; and, now
I remember, I heard, some time ago, that the heir of that family had
absconded, on account of a marriage that was disagreeable to him. It is a
good many years since I have seen sir William, but we were once well
acquainted; and, if you please, sir, I will go and conduct him up to the
house.J. Woodcock.Do so, master Hawthorn, do so.—But, pray
what sort of a man is this sir William Mea∣dows, is he a wise
man?Hawth.There is no occasion for a man that has five thousand pounds
a year to be a conjurer; but I suppose you ask that question because
of this story about his son; taking it for granted, that wise parents
make wise chil∣dren?J. Woodcock.No doubt of it, master Hawthorn, no doubt of
it.—I warrant we shall find, now, that this young rascal has fallen
in love with some minx, against his father's consent.—Why, sir,
if I had as many children as king Priam had, that we read of at school in the
destruction of Troy, not one of them would serve me so.Hawth.Well, well, neighbour, perhaps not; but we should remember
when we were young ourselves; and I was as likely to play an old don such a
trick in my day, as e'er a spark in the hundred; nay, between you and me, I
had done it once, had the wench been as willing as I.AIR XXVI.My Dolly was the fairest thing!Her breath disclos'd the sweets of spring;And if for summer you wou'd seek,'Twas painted in her eye, her cheek.Her swelling bosom, tempting ripe,Of fruitful autumn was the type:But, when my tender tale I told,I found her heart was winter cold.J. Woodcock.Ah, you were always a scape-grace, rattle-cap.Hawth.Odds heart, neighbour Woodcock, don't tell me, young
fellows will be young fellows, though we preach 'till we're hoarse again; and
so there's an end on't.SCENE X.Changes to justice Woodcock's hall.Enter LUCINDA, followed by HODGE.Hodge.Mercy on us.—I wish I may be hanged if I had not like to
drop down with the fright, when I saw the gentleman in the parlour with my
master: I thought all the fat was in the fire, and I should have lost my
place, that's for certain.Lucin.Well, but Hodge, things have fallen out more luckily;
and my papa is very well reconciled to the gentleman, but does not suspect
who he is; so take care you don't blab it.Hodge.Blab it, did I ever?—Lucin.I don't accuse you—And, as I have often put confidence
in you before, I am now going to give you a fresh instance of my dependance
on your fidelity.—I have just come to a resolution to leave the
house, with Mr. Eustace, this night.Hodge.What! and his worship know nothing of the matter?Lucin.Not a syllable; nor would I have him, till we are out of his
reach, which we shall be by to-morrow morning, for the world.Hodge.Why, then you are going to run away, miss!Lucin.I dare swear I shall return soon again, Hodge.—When my father finds that we are married, and what's done cannot be
undone, you know.—Hodge.Nay, ecod, you'll be of the sure side of the hedge, then;
but have you any thing for me to do?Lucin.That you shall be told, if you come into my chamber after
dinner; Mr. Eustace will be there—And, in the mean time, as a
reward for the services you have done us already, there's somewhat
(gives money).Hodge.Five guineas!—Mayhap you think it's for the value of this,
now—Why I'd go through fire and water for you, by day or by night,
without ever a penny—But if his worship should come to know that I
have meddled or made—Lucin.Depend upon it, Hodge, I will insure you from all
damages.—But where shall I find Rossetta, to tell her of
this?—Well, I am going to do a strange bold thing, but I hope we
shall be happy.AIR. XXVII.Oh Hymen, propitious, receive in thy train,A pair unseduc'd by the selfish and vain;Whom neither ambition, nor int'rest, draws,But love cordial subjects, submits to thy laws:Our souls for the sweets of thy union prepare,And grant us thy blisses unblended with care:Let mutual compliance endear all our days,And friendship grow stronger, as passion decays.SCENE. XI.HODGE, MARGERY.Hodge.So mistress, who let you in?Marg.Why, I let myself in.Hodge.Indeed! Marry come up! why, then pray let yourself out again.
Times are come to a pretty pass; I think you might have had the manners to
knock at the door first.—What does the wench stand for?Marg.I want to know if his worship's at home.Hodge.Well, what's your business with his worship!Marg.Perhaps you will hear that.—Look ye, Hodge, it
does not signify talking, I am come, once for all, to know what you intends
to do; for I won't be made a fool of any longer.Hodge.You won't!Marg.No, that's what I won't, by the best man that ever wore a
head; I am the make-game of the whole village upon your account; and I'll try
whether your master gives you toleration in your doings.Hodge.You will?Marg.Yes, that's what I will, his worship shall be acquainted
with all your pranks, and see how you will like to be sent for a
soldier.Hodge.There's the door, take a friend's advice and go about your
business.Marg.My business is with his worship.Hodge.Look you Madge, if you make any of your orations here,
never stir if I don't set the dogs at you:—Will you be gone?Marg.I won't.Hodge.Here towzer,
(whistling) whu, whu, whu.AIR. XXVIII.Was ever poor fellow so plaug'd with a vixen?Zawns! Madge don't provoke me, but mind what I say;You've chose a wrong parson for playing your tricks
on,So pack up your alls and be trudging away:You'd better be quiet,And not breed a riot;S'blood must I stand prating with you here all day?I've got other matters to mind;May hap you may think me an ass;But to the contrary you'll find:A fine piece of a work by the mass!SCENE. XII.ROSSETTA, HODGE, MARGERY.Ross.Sure I heard the voice of discord here,—as I live an
admirer of mine, and if I mistake not, a rival—I'll have some sport
with them—how now fellow servant what's the matter?Hodge.Nothing Mrs. Rossetta, only this young woman wants
to speak with his worship;—Madge follow me.Marg.No Hodge, this is your fine madam! but I am as good
flesh and blood as she, and have as clean a skin too, tho'f I mayn't go
so gay; and now she's here I'll tell her a piece of my mind.Hodge.Hold your tongue will you.Marg.No, I'll speak if I dye for it.Ross.What is the matter I say.Hodge.Why nothing I tell you;—Madge—Marg.Yes, but it is something, it's all along of she, and she
may be ashamed of herself.Ross.Bless me child, do you direct your discourse to me?Marg.Yes, I do, and to nobody else; there was not a kinder soul
breathing than he was 'till of late; I had never a cross word from him till
he kept you company; but all the girls about say, there's no such thing as
keep∣ing a sweetheart for you.Ross.Do you hear this, friend Hodge?Hodge.Why, you don't mind she I hope; but if that vexes her, I do
like you, I do; my mind runs upon nothing else; and if so be as you was
agreeable to it, I would marry you to night, before to morrow.Marg.Oh you base rogue, you deceitful fellow, you are parjur'd, you
know you are, and you deserve to have your eyes tore out.Hodge.Let me come at her,—I'll teach you to call names, and
abuse folk.Marg.Do, strike me; you a man!Ross.Hold, hold,—we shall have a battle, here pre∣sently,
and I may chance to get my cap tore off.—Never exasperate a jealous
woman, 'tis taking a mad bull by the horns;—Leave me to manage her.Hodge.You manage her! I'll kick her.Ross.No, no, it will be more for my credit, to get the better of her
by fair means;—I warrant I'll bring her to reason.Hodge.Well, do so then;—But may I depend upon you? when
shall I speak to the Parson?Ross.We'll talk of that another time;—Go.Hodge.Madge, good by.Ross.The brutality of this fellow shocks me!—Oh man,
man,—you are all alike.—A bumkin here, bred at the barn-door! had
he been brought up in a court, could he have been more fashionably vicious?
shew me the lord, 'squire, colonel, or captain of them all, that can out-do
him.AIR. XXIX.Cease gay seducers pride to take,In triumphs o'er the fair;Since clowns as well can act the rake,As those in higher sphere.Where then to shun a shameful fate,Shall hapless beauty go;In ev'ry rank, in ev'ry state,Poor Woman finds a foe!SCENE XIII.ROSSETTA, MARGERY.Marg.I am ready to burst, I can't stay in the place any
longer.Ross.Hold child, come hither.Marg.Don't speak to me, don't you.Ross.Well, but I have something to say to you of consequence,
and that will be for your good; I suppose this fellow promised you
marriage.Marg.Ay, or he should never have prevail'd upon me.Ross.Well, now you see the ill consequence of trust∣ing to
such promises: when once a man hath cheated a of her
virtue, she has no longer hold of him; he despises her for wanting that
which he hath robb'd her of; and like a lawless conqueror, triumphs in the
ruin he hath occasioned.Marg.—Nan!Ross.However, I hope the experience you have got, though somewhat
dearly purchased, will be of use to you for the future; and as to any
designs I have upon the heart of your lover, you may make yourself easy,
for I assure you, I shall be no dangerous rival, so go your ways and be
a good girl.Marg.Yes,—I don't very well understand her talk, but I
suppose that's as much as to say she'll keep him herself; well let
her, who cares, I don't fear getting better nor he is any day of the year, for
the matter of that; and I have a thought come into my head that may be will be
more to my advantage.AIR XXX.Since Hodge proves ungrateful, no farther I'll seek,But go up to town in the waggon next week;A service in London is no such disgrace,And register's office will get me a place:Bet Blossom went there, and soon met with a friend,Folks say in her silks, she's now standing an end!Then why should not I the same maxim pursue?And better my fortune as other girls do.SCENE XIV.Enter ROSSETTA, and LUCINDA.Ross.Ha! ha! ha! Oh admirable, most delectibly rediculous. And so
your father is content he should be a music master, and will have him
such, in spite of all your aunt can say to the contrary?Lucin.My father and he child, are the best com∣panions you ever
saw: they have been singing together the most hideous duets! bobbing
joan, and old sir simon the king; heaven knows where Eustace
could pick them up; but he has gone through half the contents of pills to purge
melancholy with him.Ross.And have you resolved to take wing to-night?Lucin.This very night, my dear; my swain will go from hence this
evening, but no farther than the inn, where he has left his horses; and at
twelve precisely, he will be with a post-chaise at the little gate that
opens from the lawn, into the road, where I have promised to meet him.Ross.Then depend upon it, I'll bear you company.Lucin.We shall easily slip out when the family is a sleep, and
I have prepared Hodge already.Ross.Nay, for that matter, you need not have a more expert pilot than
myself upon such an expedition, but hark you—SCENE XV.ROSSETTA, LUCINDA, HAWTHORN.Hawth.Lucy, where are you.Lucin.Your pleasure, Sir.Ross.Mr. Hawthorn, your servant.Hawth.What my little water wagtail, the very cou∣ple I wished to
meet, come hither both of you.Ross.Now Sir, what would you say to both of us.Hawth.Why let me look at you a little—have you got on your
best gowns, and your best faces? If not, go and trick yourselves out
directly, for I'll tell you a secret—there will be a young batchelor in
the house within these three hours, that may fall to the share of one of
you, if you look sharp,—but whether mistress or maid—Ross.Ay, marry this is something, but how do you know, whether
either mistress or maid, will think him worth acceptance.Hawth.Follow me, follow me, I warrant you.Lucin.I can assure you, Mr. Hawthorn, I am very difficult
to please.Ross.And so am I Sir.Hawth.Indeed!AIR. XXXI.Well, come, let us hear, what the swain must
possessWho may hope at your feet to implore with success?Lucin.Ross.He must be first of all,Straight, comely, and tall:Lucin.Neither aukward,Ross.Nor foolish;Lucin.Nor apish,Ross.Nor mulish.Lucin.Ross.Nor yet shou'd his fortune be small.Hawth.What think'st of a captain?Lucin.All bluster and wounds!Hawth.What think'st of a squire?Ross.To be left for his hounds.Lucin.Ross.The youth that is form'd to my mind,Must be gentle, obliging, and kind;Of all things in Nature love me,Have sense both to speak, and to see,Yet sometimes be silent and blind.Hawth.'Fore George a most rare matrimonial receipt,Ross,Lucin.Observe it ye fair in the choice of a mate;Remember 'tis wedlock determines your fate.END OF THE SECOND ACT.ACT III. SCENE I.A parlour in Justice WOODCOCK's house. Enter Sir William
MEADOWS, followed by HAW∣THORN.Sir Will.WELL this is excellent, this is mighty good, this is mighty
merry faith, ha, ha, ha; was ever the like heard of? that my boy Tom
should run away from me, for fear of being forced to marry a girl he never
saw; that she should scamper from her father, for fear of being forced
to marry him; and that they should run into one another's arms this way in
disguise; by mere aocident; against their con∣sents, and without
knowing it as a body may say: may I never do an ill turn master
Hawthorn, if it is not one of the oddest adventures
partly—Hawth.Why Sir William it is romance, a novel, a pleasanter
history by half, than the loves of Dorastus and Faunia;
we shall have ballads made of it within these two months, setting forth,
how a young 'squire became a serving man of low degree: and it will be
stuck up with Margret's ghost, and the Spanish lady, against
the walls of every cottage in the country.Sir Will.But what pleases me best of all master Hawthorn,
is the ingenuity of the girl. May I never do an ill turn, when I was called out
of the room, and the servant said she wanted to speak to me, if I knew
what to make on't: but when the little gypsey took me
aside, and told me her name, and how matters stood, I was quite
astonish'd as a body may say; and could not believe it partly; till her
young friend, that she is with here, assu∣red me of the truth on't.
Indeed at last I began to recol∣lect her face, though I have not set eyes
on her before, since she was the height of a full grown greyhound.Hawth.Well Sir William, your son as yet knows no∣thing of
what has happen'd, nor of your being come hi∣ther; and if you'll follow my
council, we'll have some sport with him—He and his mistress were
to meet in the garden this evening by appointment, she's gone to dress
herself in all her airs; will you let me direct your proceedings in this
affair.Sir Will.With all my heart master Hawthorn, with all my heart,
do what you will with me, say what you please for me; I am so overjoy'd
and so happy—And may I never do an ill turn, but I am very glad to
see you too, ay, and partly as much pleased at that as any thing else,
for we have been merry together before now, when we were some years younger:
Well and how has the world gone with you master Hawthorn since we
saw one another last.Hawth.Why, pretty well Sir William, I have no reason to
complain; every one has a mixture of four with his sweets; but in the main I
believe I have done in a degree as tollerably as my neighbours.AIR XXXII.The world is a well furnish'd table,Where guests are promisc'ously set;We all fare as well as we're able,And scramble for what we can get.My simile bolds to a tittle,Some gorge, while some scarce have a taste;But if I am content with a little,Enough is as good as a feast.SCENE. II.Sir WILLIAM MEADOWS, HAWTHORN, ROSSETTA.Ross.Sir William I beg pardon for detaining you, but I have
had so much difficulty in adjusting my bor∣rowed plumes.—Sir Will.May I never do an ill turn but they fit you to a T, and you look
very well so you do; cockbones how your father will chuckle when he comes to
hear this—Her father master Hawthorn is as worthy a man as
lives by bread, and has been almost out of his senses for the loss of
her—But tell me hussey, has not this been all a scheme, a piece of
conjuration between you and my son; faith I am half persuaded it has, it
looks so like hocus pocus as a body may say.Ross.Upon my honour Sir William what has happen∣ed has been
the mere effect of chance; I came hither unknown to your son, and he unknown
to me: I ne∣ver in the least suspected that Thomas the gardener
was other than his appearance spoke him, and least of all, that he was a
person with whom I had so close a connec∣tion. Mr.
Hawthorn can testify the astonishment I was in when he first
informed me of it: but I thought it was my duty to come to an immediate
explanation with you.Sir Will.Is not she a neat wench master Hawthorn? May I
never do an ill turn but she is—But you little plaguy devil, how came
this love affair between you?Ross.I have told you the whole truth very ingenuously Sir; since
your son and I have been fellow servants, as I may call it, in this
house, I have had more than reason to suspect he had taken a liking to
me; and I will own with equal frankness, had I not look'd upon him as a
person so much below me, I should have had no objec∣tion to receiving his
courtship.Hawth.Well said by the lord Harry, all above board, fair and
open.Ross.Perhaps I may be censured by some for this can∣did
declaration; but I love to speak my sentiments, and I assure you Sir
William, in my own opinion, I should prefer a gardener, with your
son's good qualities, to a knight of the shire without them.AIR XXXIII.'Tis not wealth, it is not birth,Can value to the soul convey;Minds possess superior worth,Which chance nor gives, nor takes away.Like the sun true merit shows,By nature warm by nature bright;With inbred flames, he nobly glows,Nor needs the aid of borrow'd light.Hawth.Well, but Sir, we lose time—is not this about the hour
you appointed to meet in the garden?Ross.Pretty near it.Hawth.Oons then, what do we stay for? come my old friend come along,
and by the way we will consult how to manage your interview.Sir Will.Ay, but I must speak a word or two to my man about the
horses first.SCENE III.ROSSETTA, HODGE.Ross.Well,—What's the business?Hodge.Madam,—Mercy on us, I crave pardon!Ross.Why Hodge, don't you know me?Hadge.Mrs. Rossetta!Ross.Ay.Hodge.Know you, ecod I don't know whether I do or not: never stir,
if I did not think it was some lady belonging to the strange gentlefolks:
why you ben't dizen'd this way, to go to the statute dance presently, be
you?Ross.Have patience and you'll see:—But is there any thing
amiss, that you came in so abrutly?Hodge.Amiss! why there's ruination.Ross.How, where?Hodge.Why with miss Lucinda: her aunt has catch'd, she,
and the gentleman above stairs, and over-heard all their love
discourse.Ross.You don't say so.Hodge.Ecod, I had like to have pop'd in among them this instant, but
by good luck, I heard Mrs. Debo∣rah's voice, and ran down again, as
fast as ever my legs could carry me.Ross.Is your master in the house?Hodge.What his worship? no, no, he is gone into the fields to talk
with the reapers and people.Ross.Poor Lucinda, I wish I could go up to her, but I am
so engaged with my own affairs—Hodge.Mrs. Rossetta.Ross.Well.Hodge.Odds bobs, I must have one smack of your sweet lips.Ross.Oh stand off, you know I never allow liberties.Hodge.Nay, but why so coy, there's reason in roast∣ing of eggs;
I would not deny you such a thing.Ross.That's kind, ha, ha, ha!—but what will be∣come of
Lucinda? Sir William waits for me, I must be gone.—Friendship a moment by your leave, yet as our sufferings have been mutual,
so shall our joys; I already lose the remembrance of all former pains and
anxieties.AIR. XXXIV.The traveller benighted,And led thro' weary ways;The lamp of day new lighted,With joy the dawn surveys.The rising prospects viewing,Each look is forward cast;He smiles, his course pursuing,Nor thinks of what is past.SCENE. IV.HODGE, Mrs. DEBORAH WOODCOCK, LUCINDA.Hodge.Hist, stay! don't I hear a noise?Lucin.(within) Well, but dear, dear aunt.Mrs. Deb.(within) You need not speak to me, for it does
not signify.Hodge.Adwawns they are coming here, ecod I'll get out of the way;—Murrain take it this door is bolted now—So so.Mrs. Deb.Get along, get along;
(driving in Lucinda before her) you are a
scandal to the name of Woodcock! but I was resolved to find you
out, for I have suspect∣ed you a great while, though your father silly
man, will have you such a poor innocent.Lucin.What shall I do.Mrs. Deb.I was determined to discover what you, and your pretended
music matter were about; and lay in wait on purpose: I believe he thought
to escape me, by slipping into the closet when I knocked at the door; but
I was even with him, for now I have him under lock and key, and please the
fates, there he shall remain till your father comes in: I will convince him
of his error, whether he will or not.Lucin.You won't be so cruel, I am sure you won't; I thought I had
made you my friend, by telling you the truth.Mrs. Del.Telling me the truth quotha? did I not over∣hear your scheme
of running away to night, through the partition; did not I find the very
bundles packed up in the room with you ready for going off? No brazen∣face, I
found out the truth by my own sagacity, though your
father says, I am a fool; but now we'll be judged who is the
greatest.—And you Mr. rascal, my bro∣ther shall know what an
honest servant he has got.Hodge.Madam!Mrs. Deb.You were to have been aiding and assisting them in their
escape, and have been the go be∣tween it seems, the letter carrier!Hodge.Who me madam!Mrs. Deb.Yes, you sirrah!Hodge.Miss Lucinda, did I ever carry a letter for you? I'll
make my affidavy before his worship—Mrs. Deb,Go, go, you are a villain, hold your tongue.Lucin.I own aunt I have been very faulty in this affair; I don't
pretend to excuse myself; but we are all subject to frailties, consider
that, and judge of me by yourself, who were once young, and inexperienced as
I am.AIR XXXV.If ever a fond inclination,Rose in your bosom, to rob you of rest;Reflect with a little compassion,On the soft pangs, which prevail'd in my breast.Oh where, where would you fly me,Can you deny me, thus torn, and distrest;Think when my lover was by me,Would I, how cou'd I, refuse his request?Kneeling before you, let me implore you;Look on me sighing, crying, dying;Ah! is there no language can move?If I have been too complying!Hard was the conflict 'twixt duty, and love.Mrs. Deb.This is mighty pretty romantick stuff! but you learn it out of
your play books, and novels. Girls in my time, had other employments, we work'd
at our needles, and kept ourselves from idle thoughts: before I was your age,
I had finished with my own fingers, a compleat set of chairs, and a fire
screen in tent stitch; four counterpanes, in Marsailles quilting; and the
creed, and the ten commandments, in the hair of our family: it was framed, and
glazed, and hung over the parlour chimney piece, and your grandfather was
prouder of it, than of e'er a picture in his house. I never looked into a
book, but when I said my prayers, except it was the compleat housewife, or
the great family receipt book: whereas you are always at your studies: Ah! I
never knew a woman come to good, that was fond of reading.Lucin.Well, pray madam, let me prevail on you to give me the key to
let Mr. Eustace out, and I promise, I never will proceed a step
farther in this business, with∣out your advice and approbation.Mrs. Deb.Have not I told you already my resolution?—Where are my
clogs and my bonnet? I'll go out to my brother in the fields; I'm a fool you
know child, now let's see what the wits will think of themselves,—Don't hold me—Lucin.I'm not going;—I have thought of a way to be even with
you, so you may do as you please.SCENE V.HODGE.Well, I thought it would come to this, I'll be shot if I
didn't;—So here's a fine jobb—But what can they do to me;—They can't send me to jail for carrying a letter, seeing there was
no treason in it; and how was I obligated to know my master did not allow
of their meetings:—The worst they can do, is to turn me off, and I am
sure the place is no such great pur∣chase;—indeed, I shall be
sorry to leave Mrs. Rossetta, seeing as how matters are so
near being brought to an end, betwixt us; but she and I may keep company all
as one: and I finds Madge has been speaking with gaffer Broadwheels,
the waggoner, about her carriage up to London; so that I have got rid of
she, and I am sure I have reason to be main glad of it, for she led me
a wearysome life;—But that's the way of them all.AIR. XXXVI.A plague of those wenches, they make such a pother,When once they have let'n a man have his will;They're always a whining for something or other,And cry he's unkind in his carriage:What tho'f he speaks them ne'er so fairlyStill they keep teazing, teazing on:You cannot persuade 'em:'Till promise you've made 'em.And after they've got it,They tell you—add rot it!Their character's blasted, they're ruin'd, undone;And then, to be sure, sir,There is but one cure, sir,And all the discourse is of marriage.SCENE VI.Changes to a Green-house.Enter Young MEADOWS.Y. Meadows.I am glad I had the precaution to bring this suit of cloaths
in my bundle, though I hardly know myself in them again, they appear so
strange, and feel so unwieldy. However, my gardener's jacket goes on no
more.—I wonder this girl does not come
(looking at his watch); perhaps she won't
come—Why, then I'll go into the village, take a post- chaise, and
depart with∣out any farther ceremony.AIR XXXVII.How much superior beauty awes,The coldest bosoms find;But with resistless force it draws,To sense and sweetness join'd.The casket, where, to outward show,The workman's art is seen,Is doubly valu'd, when we knowIt holds a gem within.Hark! she comes.SCENE VII.Enter Sir WILLIAM MEADOWS and HAWTHORN.Y. Meadows.Confusion! my father! What can this mean?Sir Will.Tom, are not you a sad boy, Tom, to bring me a
hundred and forty miles, here.—May I never do an ill
turn, but you deserve to have your head broke; and I have a good mind,
partly.—What, sirrah, don't you think it worth your while to speak to
me?Y. Meadows.Forgive me, sir, I own I have been in a fault.Sir Will.In a fault! to run away from me because I was going to do you
good.—May I never do an ill turn, master Hawthorn, if I did
not pick out as fine a girl for him, partly, as any in England; and the
rascal run away from me, and came here and turn'd gardener.—And pray
what did you propose to yourself, Tom? I know you were always fond
of Bottany, as they call it; did you intend to keep the trade going, and
advertise fruit-trees and flowering-shrubs, to be had at Meadows's
nursery?Hawth.No, sir William, I apprehend the young gentleman designed to
lay by the profession; for he has quitted the habit already.Y. Meadows.I am so astonished to see you here, sir, that I don't
know what to say; but, I assure you, if you had not come, I should have
returned home to you directly. Pray, sir, how did you find me out?Sir Will.No matter, Tom, no matter; it was partly by accident,
as a body may say; but what does that sig∣nify—tell me, boy, how
stands your stomach towards matrimony? Do you think you could digest a
wife now?Y. Meadows.Pray, sir, don't mention it; I shall always behave myself
as a dutiful son ought: I will never marry without your consent, and I hope
you won't force me to do it against my own.Sir Will.Is not this mighty provoking, master Haw∣thorn? Why,
sirrah, did you ever see the lady I de∣signed for you?Y. Meadows.Sir, I don't doubt the lady's merit; but, at present, I am not
disposed.Hawth.Nay, but young gentleman, fair and softly, you should pay
some respect to your father in this matter.Sir Will.Respect, master Hawthorn! may I never do an ill
turn, but he shall marry her, or I'll disinherit him! there's once. Look
you, Tom, not to make any more words of the matter, I have brought the
lady here with me, and I'll see you contracted before we part; or you shall
delve and plant cucumbers as long as you live.Y. Meadows.Have you brought the lady here, sir? I am sorry for it.Sir Will.Why sorry? what, then you won't marry her? we'll see that;
pray, master Hawthorn, conduct the fair one in.—Ay, sir, you
may fret, and dance about, trot at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, if you
please; but may I never do an ill turn, but I am resolved.SCENE VIII.Sir WILLIAM MEADOWS, HAWTHORN, Young MEA∣DOWS,
ROSSETTA.Hawth.Here is the lady, sir William.Sir Will.Come in, madam, but turn your face from him—he would not
marry you because he had not seen you; but I'll let him know my choice
shall be his, and he shall consent to marry you before he sees you, or
not an acre of estate.—Pray, sir, walk this way.Y. Meadows.Sir, I cannot help thinking your con∣duct a little
extraordinary; but, since you urge me so closely, I must tell you my
affections are engaged.Sir Will.How, Tom! how!Y. Meadows.I was determined, sir, to have got the better of my
inclination, and never have done a thing which I knew would be disagreeable
to you.—Sir Will.And pray, sir, who are your affections en∣gaged to? let me
know that.Y. Meadows.To a person, sir, whose rank and for∣tune may be no
recommendations to her; but whose charms and accomplishments entitle her to
a monarch. I am sorry, sir, it's impossible for me to comply with your
commands, and I hope you will not be offended if I quit your presence.Sir Will.Not I, not in the least; go about your business.Y. Meadows.Sir, I obey.Hawth.Now is your time, madam.AIR XXXVIII.Ross.When we see a lover languish,And his truth and honour prove,Ah! how sweet to heal his anguish,And repay him love for love.Sir Will.Well, Tom, will you go away from me now?Hawth.Perhaps, sir William, your son does not like the
lady; and, if so, pray don't put a force upon his inclination.Y. Meadows.You need not have taken this method, sir, to let me see you
were acquainted with my folly, whatever my inclinations are—.Sir Will.Well, but Tom, suppose I give my consent to your
marrying this young woman?Y. Meadows.Your consent, sir!Ross.Come, sir William, we have carried the jest far
enough; I see your son is in a kind of embarrassment, and I don't
wonder at it; but this letter, which I re∣ceived from him a few days before I
left my father's house, will, I apprehend, expound the riddle.—He
cannot be surprized that I ran away from a gentleman who expressed so
much dislike to me; and what has happened since chance brought us together
in masque∣rade, there is no occasion for me to inform him of.Y. Meadows.What is all this? pray don't make a jest of me.Sir Will.May I never do an ill turn, Tom, if it is not truth;
this is my friend's daughter.Y. Meadows.Sir!Ross.Even so; 'tis very true indeed. In short, you have not been
a more whimsical gentleman, than I have a gentlewoman; but you see we were
designed for one another, 'tis plain.Y. Meadows.I know not, madam, what I either hear or see, a thousand
things are crowding on my imagina∣tion; while, like one just wakened from a
dream, I doubt which is reality, which delusion.Sir Will.Well then, Tom, come into the air a bit, and recover
yourself.Y. Meadows.Nay, dear sir, have a little patience; do yon give her to
me?Sir Will.Give her to you! ay, that I do, and my blessing into the
bargain.Y. Meadows.Then, sir, I am the happiest man in the world. I enquire no
farther; here I fix the utmost limits of my hopes and happiness.AIR XXXIX.Y. Mead.All I wish in her obtaining,Fortune can no more impart;Ross.Let my eyes, my thoughts explaining,Speak the feelings of my heart.Y. Mead.Joy and pleasure never ceasing,Ross.Love with length of years increasing.Together.Thus my heart and hand surrender,Here my faith and truth I plight;Constant still, and kind and tender,May our flames burn ever bright.Hawth.Give you joy, sir; and you fair lady.—And, under favour,
I'll salute you, too, if there's no fear of jealousy.Y. Meadows.But may I believe this?—Pr'ythee tell me, dear
Rossetta.Ross.Step into the house and I'll tell you every thing.—I
must intreat the good offices of Sir William, and Mr.
Hawthorn, immediately; for I am in the utmost uneasiness about
my poor friend Lucinda.Hawth.Why, what's the matter?Ross.I don't know, but I have reason to fear, I left her just now
in very disagreeable circumstances, how∣ever, I hope, if there is any
mischief fallen out between her father and her lover—Hawth.The music master, I thought so.Sir Will.What is there a lover in the case, may I never do an ill turn,
but I am glad, so I am; for we'll make a double wedding; and, by way of
celebrating it, take a trip to London, to shew the brides some of
the pleasures of the town. And, master
Hawthorn, you shall be of the party.—Come, children, go before
us.Hawth.Thank you, sir William, I'll go into the house with
you, and to church, to see the young folks married; but, as to
London, I beg to be excused.AIR XL.If ever I'm catch'd in those regions of smoak,That seat of confusion and noise,May I ne'er know the sweets of a slumber unbroke,Nor the pleasures the country enjoys.Nay, more, let them take me, to punish my sin,Where, gaping, the Cockneys they fleece,Clap me up with their monsters, cry, masters, walk in,And shew me for two-pence a-piece.SCENE IX.Changes to Justice Woodcock's hall.Enter Justice WOODCOCK, Mrs. DEBORAH WOOD∣COCK, LUCINDA,
EUSTACE, HODGE.Mrs. Deb.Why, brother, do you think I can hear or see, or make use of
my senses? I tell you, I left that fellow locked up in her closet; and,
while I have been with you, they have broke open the door, and got him out
again.J. Woodcock.Well, you hear what they say.Mrs. Deb.I care not what they say; it's you encou∣rage them in their
impudence.—Hark'e, hussey, will you face me down that I did not lock
the fellow up?Lucin.Really, aunt, I don't know what you mean; when you talk
intelligibly, I'll answer you.Eust.Seriously madam, this is carrying the jest a little too
far.Mrs. Deb.What then, I did not catch you together in her chamber, nor
over-hear your design of going off to night, nor find the bundles packt
up—Eust.Ha, ha, ha!Lucin.Why aunt you rave.Mrs. Deb.Brother, as I am a christian woman, she confessed the
whole affair to me from first to last: and in this very place was down upon
her marrow-bones, for half an hour together, to beg I would conceal it from
you.Hodge.Oh Lord! Oh Lord!Mrs. Deb.What sirrah, would you brazen me too, take that
(boxes him)Hodge.I wish you would keep your hands to your∣self, you strike
me, because you have been telling his worship stories.J. Woodcock.Why sister you are tipsey!Mrs. Deb.I tipsey brother!—I—that never touch a drop of any
thing strong from year's end to year's end; but now and then a little
Annyseed water, when I have got the cholic.Lucin.Well, aunt, you have been complaining of the stomach-ach all
day; and may have taken too powerful a doze of your cordial.J. Woodcock.Come, come, I see well enough how it is, this is a lye of her
own invention, to make herself appear wise: but you simpleton, did not
you know I must find you out?SCENE. X.Enter Sir WILLIAM MEADOWS, HAWTHORN, ROS∣SETTA Young,
MEADOWS.Y. Meadows.Bless me Sir! look who is yonder.Sir Will.Cocksbones, Jack, honest Jack, are you there.Eust.Plague on't, this rencounter is unlucky—Sir
William your servant.Sir Will.Your servant again, and again, heartily your servant; may I
never do an ill turn, but I am glad to meet you.J. Woodcock.Pray Sir William, are you acquainted with this
person?Sir Will.What, with Jack Eustace? why he's my kinsman; his
mother and I are cousin-germans once removed, and Jack's a very worthy young
fellow; may I never do an ill turn if I tell you a word of a lye.J. Woodcock.Well, but Sir William, let me tell you, you know
nothing of the matter; this man is a music master; a thrummer of wire, and
scraper of cat-gut, and teaches my daughter to sing.Sir Will.What Jack Eustace a music master! no, no, I know
him better.Eust.S'death, why should I attempt to carry on this absurd farce
any longer?—What that gentleman tells you is very true, Sir; I am
music master indeed.J. Woodcock.You are not, you own it then?Eust.Nay, more Sir, I am as this lady has represented me,
(pointing to Mrs. Deborah) your daughter's lover;
whom with her own consent, I did intend to have carri∣ed off this night; but
now that Sir William Meadows is here, to tell you
who, and what I am; I throw my∣self upon your generosity, from which I
expect greater advantages, than I could reap from any imposition on your
unsuspicious nature.Mrs. Deb.Well brother, what have you to say for yourself now? you
have made a precious day's work of it! had my advice been taken: Oh I am
ashamed of you, but you are a weak man and it can't be helpt; however you
should let wiser heads direct you.Lucin.Dear papa, pardon me.Sir Will.Ay, do Sir forgive her; my cousin Jack, will make her a good
husband, I'll answer for it.Ross.Stand out of the way, and let me speak two or three words to
his worship;—Come my dear Sir, though you refuse all the world, I am
sure you can deny me nothing: love is a venial fault—You know what I
mean.—Be reconciled to your daughter, I conjure you, by the memory of our
past affections—What not a word!AIR XLI.Go naughty man, I can't abide you;Are then your vows so soon forgot?Ah! now I see if I had tryed you;What would have been my hopeful lot.But hear I charge you—Make them happy;Bless the fond pair, and crown their bliss:Come be a dear good-natured pappy;And I'll reward you with a kiss.Mrs. Deb.Come turn out of the house; and be thankful my brother does
not hang you, for he could do it, he's a justice of
peace;—turn out of the house I say:—J. Woodcock.Who gave you authority to turn him out of the house—he
shall stay where he is,Mrs. Deb.He shan't marry my niece.J. Woodcock.Shan't he? but I'll shew you the diffe∣rence now, I say he
shall marry her, and what will you do about it.Mrs. Deb.And you will give him your estate too, will you?J. Woodcock.Yes I will.Mrs. Deb.Why I am sure he's a vagabond.J. Woodcock.I like him the better, I would have him a vagabond.Mrs. Deb.Brother brother!Hawthorn.Come, come, madam all's very well, and I see my neighbour is
what I always thought him, a man of sense and prudence.Sir Will.May I never do an ill turn, but I say so too.J. Woodcock.Here young fellow, take my daughter; and bless you both
together; but hark you, no money till I dye; observe that.Eust.Sir in giving me your daughter, you bestow upon me more than
the whole world would be without her.AIR. XLII.Eust.The merchant whose vessel, the winds made their
sportAt last thus arrives with his treasure in port;His labour requited, his duty he pays;His dangers are past, and his heart is at ease.Lucin.Were monarchs contending to make me a bride,Undazzled I'd look on their splendour and pride;Refused should their crowns, and their palaces be,Contented to live in a cottage with thee.Both.On Earth, if there's ought of substantial delight,'Tis sure when like us a fond couple unite;When blessed in each other their struggles are
o'er,And pleasures are heighten'd by pains gone before.Ross.Dear Lucinda, if words could convey the trans∣ports
of my heart upon this occasion—Lucin.Words are the tools of hypocrites, the preten∣ders to
friendship; only let us resolve to preserve our esteem for each
other.Y. Meadows.Dear Jack, I little thought we should ever meet in
such odd circumstances—but here has been the strangest
business between this lady and me—Hodge.What then Mrs. Rossetta, are you turned
false-hearted after all; will you marry Thomas the gar∣dener, and
did I forsake Madge for this?Ross.Oh lord Hodge! I beg your pardon; I protest I forgot;
but I must reconcile you and Madge I think; and give you a wedding
dinner to make you amends.Hodge.N—ah.Hawth.Adds me Sir, here are some of your neigh∣bours
come to visit you, and I suppose, to make up the
company of your statute ball; yonder's music too I see, shall we enjoy
ourselves; if so give me your hand—J. Woodcock.Why here's my hand, and we will en∣joy ourselves, heaven
bless you both children I say,—sister Deborah, you are a
fool.Mrs. Deb.You are a fool brother, and mark my words—But I'll give
myself no more trouble about you.Hawth.Fidlers strike up.AIR. XLIII.Hence with cares complaints and frowning,Welcome jollity and joy;Ev'ry grief in pleasure drowning,Mirth this happy night employ:Let's to friendship do our duty;Laugh and sing some good old strain,Drink a health to love and beauty,May they long in triumph reign.THE END.A Table of the Songs, with the names of the several
composers.N B. Those mar∣ked thus * were composed on purpose for
this Opera.A New Overture by Mr. Abel.ACT I.1 Hope thou nurse of young desireMr. Weldon2 Whence can you inheritAbos3 My heart's my own my will is freeArne4 When once love's subtle poison gainsArne5* Oh had I been by fate decreedHoward6 Gentle youth ah tell me whyArne7* Still in hopes to get the betterArne8 There was a jolly miller once 9 Let gay ones and greatBaildon10 The honest heart whose thoughts are freeFesting11 Well well say no more 12 Cupid God of soft persuasionGardini13 How happy were my days till nowArne14 The court and the city fine folks may extolArne15 A Medley ACT II.16 We women like weak Indians tradeParadie17 Think my fairest how delayArne18* Believe me dear auntArne19 When I followed a lass that was froward and
shy 20 Let rakes and libertines resign'dHandel21 How blest the maid whose bosomGallupi22 In vain I every art assayArne23 Begone I agreeArne24 Oh how shall I in language weakCary25 Young I am and sore afraidGallupi26 Zooks neighbour ne'er blush for a trifle like
thisArne27 My Dolly was the fairest thingHandel28 Oh Hymen propitious receive in thy trainArne29 Was ever poor fellow so plagued with a
vixenAgu30 Cease seducers pride to takeArne31 Since Hodge proves ungrateful, no farther I'll
seekArne32* Well come let us hear what the swain must
possess.ArneACT III.33 The world is a well furnished tableArne34 It is not wealth, it is not birthGuardini35* The traveller benightedArne36 If ever a fond inclinationGeminiani37 Plague o'these wenches they make such a
po∣ther 38* How much superior beauty awsHoward39 When we see a lover languishArne40 All I wish in her obtainingArne41 If ever I am catched in those regions of
smokeBoyce42*Go naughty man I can't abide youArne43 The merchant whose vessel the winds make their
sportArne44 Hence with cares complaints and frowingBoyce