The second part of
17651580her when I am gone, and
she is old and cannot helpe her
selfe,
17681583Feeble By my troth I care not, a man can die but once, we
17691584owe God a death, ile nere beare a ba
se mind, and't bee my
17701585de
stny:
so, and't be not,
so, no man's too good to
serue's prince,
17711586and let it go which way it will, he that dies this yeere is quit for
17731588Bar Well
said, th'art a good fellow.
17741589Feeble Faith ile beare no ba
se mind.
17751591Fal. Come
sir, which men
shall I haue?
17761592Shal. Foure of which you plea
se.
17771593Bar Sir, a word with you, I haue three pound to free Moul
- 17801596Shal. Come
sir Iohn, which foure wil you haue?
17821598Shal. Mary then, Mouldy, Bulcalfe, Feeble, and Sadow.
17841599Fal. Mouldy and Bulcalfe, for you Mouldy
stay at home, til
17851600you are pa
st seruice: and for your part Bulcalfe, grow til you
17861601come vnto it, I will none of you.
17871602Shal. Sir Iohn,
sir Iohn, doe not your
selfe wrong, they are
17881603your likelie
st men, and I would haue you
serude with the
17901605Fal. Wil you tel me (ma
ster Shallow) how to chu
se a man?
17911606care I for the limbe, the thewes, the
stature, bulke and big a
s- 17921607semblance of a man: giue me the
spirit
M. Shalow: heres Wart,
17931608you
see what a ragged apparance it is, a
shall charge you, and
17951609di
scharge you with the motion of a pewterers hammer, come
17961610o
ff and on
swifter then he that gibbets on the brewers bucket:
17971611and this
same halfe facde fellow Shadow, giue me this man, he
17981612pre
sents no marke to the enemy, the fo-man may with as great
17991613aime leuel at the edge of a pen-knife, and for a retraite how
18001614swiftly wil this Feeble the womans Tailer runne o
ff? O giue
18021615mee the
spare men, and
spare me the great ones, putte mee a
caliuer