The second part of
16801508and the whole frame
stands vpon pins, pricke him no more.
16821509Shal. Ha, ha, ha, you can do it
sir, you can do it, I commend
16861512Shal. What trade art thou Feeble?
16891515Fal. You may, but if he had bin a mans tailer hee'd a prickt
16911516you: wilt thou make as manie holes in an enemies battaile, as
16921517thou ha
st done in a womans peticoate.
16931518Feeble I will do my good will
sir, you can haue no more.
16951519Fal. Well
saide good womans tailer, well
saide couragious
16961520Feeble, thou wilt be as valiant as the wrathfull doue, or mo
st 16971521magnanimous mou
se, pricke the womans tailer: wel
M. Shal
- 17001523Feeble I would Wart might haue gone
sir.
17011524Fal. I would thou wert a mans tailer, that thou might
st 17021525mend him and make him
fit to goe, I cannot put him to a pri
- 17031526uate
souldier, that is the leader of
so many thou
sands, let that
17061529Fal. I am bound to thee reuerend Feeble, who is next?
17081530Shal. Peter Bul-calfe o'th greene.
17091531Fal. Yea mary, lets
see Bul-calfe.
17111533Eal. Fore God a likely fellow, come pricke Bul-calfe til hee
(roare againe. 17131534Bul. O Lord, good my lord captaine.
17141535Falst. What, do
st thou roare before thou art prickt?
17151536Bul. O Lord
sir, I am a di
sea
sed man.
17171538Bul. A hor
son cold
sir, a cough
sir, which I cought with
17181539ringing in the Kings a
ffaires vpon his coronation day
sir.
17201540Fal. Come, thou
shalt go to the warres in a gowne, we wil
17211541haue away thy cold, and I wil take
such order that thy friendes
17221542shal ring for thee. Is here all?
17231543Shal. Here is two more cald then your number, you mu
st haue