The History of Sir John Oldcastle (Folio 3, 1664)
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the good Lord Cobham.
52
¶
Exit.
2315
Enter Priest and Doll.
¶Priest. Come Doll, come, be merry wench.
¶Farewell Kent, we are not for thee.
¶the other day.
¶the Devil, drink, and dice, has devoured all.
¶Doll. You might have left me in Kent till you had
2325been better provided.
¶Priest. No, Doll, no, Kent's too hot, Doll, Kent's
¶too hot: the weathercock of Wrotham will crow no lon-
¶ger, we have pluckt him, he has lost his feathers, I have
¶prun'd him bare, left him thrice, is moulted, is moulted
2330wench.
¶pool told me he would provide me a Mistris.
¶Priest. Peace, Doll, peace; come mad wench, I'le
2335our friends, the troth is, I'le marry thee, we want but a
¶little money, and money we will have I warrant thee:
¶Doll, we'll see the end.
2340
Enter the Irishman with his dead Master,
¶and rifles him.
¶is rob and cut thy trote, for de shain, and dy mony, and
¶dy gold ring, be me truly is love de well, but now dow
2345be kill de, be shitten kanave.
¶leufter.
2350kill'd a man here, and rifled him of all that he has:
¶
Robs him.
2355shain and his ring, and now's be rob of all, me's undo.
¶Doll, the devil laughs when one thief robs another: come
¶wench, we'll to S. Albans, and revel in our bower, my
¶brave girle.
2360Doll. O thou art old Sir John when all's done ifaith.
¶
Enter the host of the house with the Irishman.
2365Host. Faith fellow I have no lodging, but what I keep
¶there is, and if thou wilt lie in the barn, there's fair straw,
¶and room enough.
2370Host. Ho, Robin.
¶Rob. Who calls?
¶
Enter Carrier and Kate.
2375Uds hat, here's fine work, the Hens in the manger, and
¶the Hogs in the litter, a bots found you all, here's a house
¶well lookt too ifaith.
¶Club. Get in Kate, get into fire and warme thee.
2380John Ostler?
¶Host. What, Gaffer Club, welcome to S. Albans,
¶How do's all our friends in Lancashire?
¶Club. Well, God a mercy John, how do's Tom?
¶where is he?
¶loves at stony-Stratford: how do's old Dick Dun.
¶Brick hill-lane: a plague found it, yonders such abomi-
¶nation weather as was never seen.
¶oats more for that, as I am John Ostler, he has bin ever
¶as good a jade as ever travelled.
¶Ost. Come Gaffer Club, unload, unload, and get to
2395supper.
¶
Enter Cobham and his Lady disguised.
¶This place is far remote from any path,
¶And here a while our weary limbs may rest,
¶Of envious Rochester.
¶disquiet minds?
¶There dwell untamed thoughts that hardly stoop
¶We were not wont to travel thus by night,
¶Especially on foot.
¶Cob. No matter, love, extremities admit no better choice:
¶And were it not for thee, say froward time
¶As lightly as the wind that blows upon us,
2415Thy chamber to be the wide Horizon.
¶A partner with me, in the worst I feel?
2420
Here's bread and cheese and a bottle.
¶Behold what my fore-sight hath undertane
¶For fear we faint, they are but homely Cates,
¶As greater dainties we were wont to taste.
¶And all things else our mortal bodies need:
¶We now are in, for what is it on earth,
¶Nay under heaven, continues at a stay?
2430Ebbs not the Sea, when it hath overflown?
¶Dim'd with ore-flying clouds? There's not that work
¶Of carefull Nature, or of cunning Art,
2435(How strong, how beauteous, or how rich it be)
¶But falls in time to ruine: here, gentle Madam,
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In
