šŸ“’ The Alchemist (day 1)

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joi, 16 mai, 01:53 (acum 3 zile)
to me
Act I

The Alchemist

day 1 of 5
Ben Jonson
19 minutes read

Act I

Scene I

A room in Lovewitā€™s house.

Face

Believā€™t, I will.

Subtle

Thy worst. I fart at thee.

Dol Common

Have you your wits? Why, gentlemen! For loveā ā€”

Face

Sirrah, Iā€™ll strip youā ā€”

Subtle

What to do? Lick figs
Out at myā ā€”

Face

Rogue, rogue!ā ā€”out of all your sleights.

Dol Common

Nay, look ye, sovereign, general, are you madmen?

Subtle

O, let the wild sheep loose. Iā€™ll gum your silks
With good strong water, an you come.

Dol Common

Will you have
The neighbours hear you? Will you betray all?
Hark! I hear somebody.

Face

Sirrahā ā€”

Subtle

I shall mar
All that the tailor has made, if you approach.

Face

You most notorious whelp, you insolent slave,
Dare you do this?

Subtle

Yes, faith; yes, faith.

Face

Why, who
Am I, my mongrel? Who am I?

Subtle

Iā€™ll tell you,
Since you know not yourself.

Face

Speak lower, rogue.

Subtle

Yes, you were once (timeā€™s not long past) the good,
Honest, plain, livery-three-pound-thrum, that kept
Your masterā€™s worshipā€™s house here in the Friars,
For the vacationsā ā€”

Face

Will you be so loud?

Subtle

Since, by my means, translated Suburb-Captain.

Face

By your means, Doctor Dog!

Subtle

Within manā€™s memory,
All this I speak of.

Face

Why, I pray you, have I
Been countenanced by you, or you by me?
Do but collect, sir, where I met you first.

Subtle

I do not hear well.

Face

Not of this, I think it.
But I shall put you in mind, sir;ā ā€”at Pie-corner,
Taking your meal of steam in, from cooksā€™ stalls,
Where, like the father of hunger, you did walk
Piteously costive, with your pinched-horn-nose,
And your complexion of the Roman wash,
Stuck full of black and melancholic worms,
Like powder corns shot at the artillery-yard.

Subtle

I wish you could advance your voice a little.

Face

When you went pinned up in the several rags
You had raked and picked from dunghills, before day;
Your feet in mouldy slippers, for your kibes;
A felt of rug, and a thin threaden cloak,
That scarce would cover your no buttocksā ā€”

Subtle

So, sir!

Face

When all your alchemy, and your algebra,
Your minerals, vegetals, and animals,
Your conjuring, cozening, and your dozen of trades,
Could not relieve your corps with so much linen
Would make you tinder, but to see a fire;
I gave you countenance, credit for your coals,
Your stills, your glasses, your materials;
Built you a furnace, drew you customers,
Advanced all your black arts; lent you, beside,
A house to practise inā ā€”

Subtle

Your masterā€™s house!

Face

Where you have studied the more thriving skill
Of bawdry since.

Subtle

Yes, in your masterā€™s house.
You and the rats here kept possession.
Make it not strange. I know you were one could keep
The buttery-hatch still locked, and save the chippings,
Sell the dole beer to aqua-vitae men,
The which, together with your Christmas vails
At post-and-pair, your letting out of counters,
Made you a pretty stock, some twenty marks,
And gave you credit to converse with cobwebs,
Here, since your mistressā€™ death hath broke up house.

Face

You might talk softlier, rascal.

Subtle

No, you scarab,
Iā€™ll thunder you in pieces: I will teach you
How to beware to tempt a Fury again,
That carries tempest in his hand and voice.

Face

The place has made you valiant.

Subtle

No, your clothes.ā ā€”
Thou vermin, have I taā€™en thee out of dung,
So poor, so wretched, when no living thing
Would keep thee company, but a spider, or worse?
Raised thee from brooms, and dust, and watering-pots,
Sublimed thee, and exalted thee, and fixed thee
In the third region, called our state of grace?
Wrought thee to spirit, to quintessence, with pains
Would twice have won me the philosopherā€™s work?
Put thee in words and fashion, made thee fit
For more than ordinary fellowships?
Given thee thy oaths, thy quarrelling dimensions,
Thy rules to cheat at horse-race, cock-pit, cards,
Dice, or whatever gallant tincture else?
Made thee a second in mine own great art?
And have I this for thanks! Do you rebel,
Do you fly out in the projection?
Would you be gone now?

Dol Common

Gentlemen, what mean you?
Will you mar all?

Subtle

Slave, thou hadst had no nameā ā€”

Dol Common

Will you undo yourselves with civil war?

Subtle

Never been known, past equi clibanum,
The heat of horse-dung, under ground, in cellars,
Or an alehouse darker than deaf Johnā€™s; been lost
To all mankind, but laundresses and tapsters,
Had not I been.

Dol Common

Do you know who hears you, Sovereign?

Face

Sirrahā ā€”

Dol Common

Nay, General, I thought you were civil.

Face

I shall turn desperate, if you grow thus loud.

Subtle

And hang thyself, I care not.

Face

Hang thee, collier,
And all thy pots, and pans, in picture, I will,
Since thou hast moved meā ā€”

Dol Common

O, this will oā€™erthrow all.

Face

Write thee up bawd in Paulā€™s, have all thy tricks
Of cozening with a hollow coal, dust, scrapings,
Searching for things lost, with a sieve and sheers,
Erecting figures in your rows of houses,
And taking in of shadows with a glass,
Told in red letters; and a face cut for thee,
Worse than Gamaliel Ratseyā€™s.

Dol Common

Are you sound?
Have you your senses, masters?

Face

I will have
A book, but barely reckoning thy impostures,
Shall prove a true philosopherā€™s stone to printers.

Subtle

Away, you trencher-rascal!

Face

Out, you dog-leech!
The vomit of all prisonsā ā€”

Dol Common

Will you be
Your own destructions, gentlemen?

Face

Still spewed out
For lying too heavy on the basket.

Subtle

Cheater!

Face

Bawd!

Subtle

Cowherd!

Face

Conjurer!

Subtle

Cutpurse!

Face

Witch!

Dol Common

O me!
We are ruined, lost! Have you no more regard
To your reputations? Whereā€™s your judgment? ā€™Slight,
Have yet some care of me, of your republicā ā€”

Face

Away, this brach! Iā€™ll bring thee, rogue, within
The statute of sorcery, tricesimo tertio
Of Harry the Eighth: ay, and perhaps thy neck
Within a noose, for laundering gold and barbing it.

Dol Common

Snatches Faceā€™s sword.
Youā€™ll bring your head within a cockscomb, will you?
And you, sir, with your menstrueā ā€”
Dashes Subtleā€™s vial out of his hand.
Gather it up.ā ā€”
ā€™Sdeath, you abominable pair of stinkards,
Leave off your barking, and grow one again,
Or, by the light that shines, Iā€™ll cut your throats.
Iā€™ll not be made a prey unto the marshal,
For neā€™er a snarling dog-bolt of you both.
Have you together cozened all this while,
And all the world, and shall it now be said,
Youā€™ve made most courteous shift to cozen yourselves?
To Face.
You will accuse him! You will ā€œbring him in
Within the statute!ā€ Who shall take your word?
A whoreson, upstart, apocryphal Captain,
Whom not a Puritan in Blackfriars will trust
So much as for a feather:
To Subtle.
and you, too,
Will give the cause, forsooth! You will insult,
And claim a primacy in the divisions!
You must be chief! As if you only had
The powder to project with, and the work
Were not begun out of equality?
The venture tripartite? All things in common?
Without priority? ā€™Sdeath! You perpetual curs,
Fall to your couples again, and cozen kindly,
And heartily, and lovingly, as you should,
And lose not the beginning of a term,
Or, by this hand, I shall grow factious too,
And take my part, and quit you.

Face

ā€™Tis his fault;
He ever murmurs, and objects his pains,
And says, the weight of all lies upon him.

Subtle

Why, so it does.

Dol Common

How does it? Do not we
Sustain our parts?

Subtle

Yes, but they are not equal.

Dol Common

Why, if your part exceed today, I hope
Ours may, tomorrow match it.

Subtle

Ay, they may.

Dol Common

May, murmuring mastiff! Ay, and do. Death on me!
Help me to throttle him.

Seizes Subtle by the throat.
Subtle

Dorothy! Mistress Dorothy!
ā€™Ods precious, Iā€™ll do anything. What do you mean?

Dol Common

Because oā€™ your fermentation and cibation?

Subtle

Not I, by heavenā ā€”

Dol Common

Your Sol and Luna
To Face.
ā€”help me.

Subtle

Would I were hanged then? Iā€™ll conform myself.

Dol Common

Will you, sir? Do so then, and quickly: swear.

Subtle

What should I swear?

Dol Common

To leave your faction, sir,
And labour kindly in the common work.

Subtle

Let me not breathe if I meant aught beside.
I only used those speeches as a spur
To him.

Dol Common

I hope we need no spurs, sir. Do we?

Face

ā€™Slid, prove today, who shall shark best.

Subtle

Agreed.

Dol Common

Yes, and work close and friendly.

Subtle

ā€™Slight, the knot
Shall grow the stronger for this breach, with me.

They shake hands.
Dol Common

Why, so, my good baboons! Shall we go make
A sort of sober, scurvy, precise neighbours,
That scarce have smiled twice since the king came in,
A feast of laughter at our follies? Rascals,
Would run themselves from breath, to see me ride,
Or you tā€™ have but a hole to thrust your heads in,
For which you should pay ear-rent? No, agree.
And may Don Provost ride a feasting long,
In his old velvet jerkin and stained scarfs,
My noble Sovereign, and worthy General,
Ere we contribute a new crewel garter
To his most worsted worship.

Subtle

Royal Dol!
Spoken like Claridiana, and thyself.

Face

For which at supper, thou shalt sit in triumph,
And not be styled Dol Common, but Dol Proper,
Dol Singular: the longest cut at night,
Shall draw thee for his Dol Particular.

Bell rings without.
Subtle

Whoā€™s that? One rings. To the window, Dol:

Exit Dol.

ā€”pray heaven,
The master do not trouble us this quarter.

Face

O, fear not him. While there dies one a week
Oā€™ the plague, heā€™s safe, from thinking toward London.
Beside, heā€™s busy at his hop-yards now;
I had a letter from him. If he do,
Heā€™ll send such word, for airing of the house,
As you shall have sufficient time to quit it:
Though we break up a fortnight, ā€™tis no matter.

Re-enter Dol.
Subtle

Who is it, Dol?

Dol Common

A fine young quodling.

Face

O,
My lawyerā€™s clerk, I lighted on last night,
In Holborn, at the Dagger. He would have
(I told you of him) a familiar,
To rifle with at horses, and win cups.

Dol Common

O, let him in.

Subtle

Stay. Who shall doā€™t?

Face

Get you
Your robes on: I will meet him as going out.

Dol Common

And what shall I do?

Face

Not be seen; away!

Exit Dol.

Seem you very reserved.

Subtle

Enough.

Exit.
Face

Aloud and retiring.
God be wiā€™ you, sir,
I pray you let him know that I was here:
His name is Dapper. I would gladly have stayed, butā ā€”

Dapper

Within. Captain, I am here.

Face

Whoā€™s that?ā ā€”Heā€™s come, I think, Doctor.

Enter Dapper.
Good faith, sir, I was going away.
Dapper

In truth
I am very sorry, Captain.

Face

But I thought
Sure I should meet you.

Dapper

Ay, I am very glad.
I had a scurvy writ or two to make,
And I had lent my watch last night to one
That dines today at the sheriffā€™s, and so was robbed
Of my past-time.

Re-enter Subtle in his velvet cap and gown.

Is this the cunning-man?

Face

This is his worship.

Dapper

Is he a Doctor?

Face

Yes.

Dapper

And have you broke with him, Captain?

Face

Ay.

Dapper

And how?

Face

Faith, he does make the matter, sir, so dainty
I know not what to say.

Dapper

Not so, good Captain.

Face

Would I were fairly rid of it, believe me.

Dapper

Nay, now you grieve me, sir. Why should you wish so?
I dare assure you, Iā€™ll not be ungrateful.

Face

I cannot think you will, sir. But the law
Is such a thingā ā€”and then he says, Readā€™s matter
Falling so lately.

Dapper

Read! He was an ass,
And dealt, sir, with a fool.

Face

It was a clerk, sir.

Dapper

A clerk!

Face

Nay, hear me, sir. You know the law
Better, I thinkā ā€”

Dapper

I should, sir, and the danger:
You know, I showed the statute to you.

Face

You did so.

Dapper

And will I tell then! By this hand of flesh,
Would it might never write good court-hand more,
If I discover. What do you think of me,
That I am a chiaus?

Face

Whatā€™s that?

Dapper

The Turk was here.
As one would say, do you think I am a Turk?

Face

Iā€™ll tell the Doctor so.

Dapper

Do, good sweet Captain.

Face

Come, noble Doctor, pray thee letā€™s prevail;
This is the gentleman, and he is no chiaus.

Subtle

Captain, I have returned you all my answer.
I would do much, sir, for your loveā ā€”But this
I neither may, nor can.

Face

Tut, do not say so.
You deal now with a noble fellow, Doctor,
One that will thank you richly; and he is no chiaus:
Let that, sir, move you.

Subtle

Pray you, forbearā ā€”

Face

He has
Four angels here.

Subtle

You do me wrong, good sir.

Face

Doctor, wherein? To tempt you with these spirits?

Subtle

To tempt my art and love, sir, to my peril.
Fore heaven, I scarce can think you are my friend,
That so would draw me to apparent danger.

Face

I draw you! A horse draw you, and a halter,
You, and your flies togetherā ā€”

Dapper

Nay, good Captain.

Face

That know no difference of men.

Subtle

Good words, sir.

Face

Good deeds, sir, Doctor Dogs-meat. ā€™Slight, I bring you
No cheating Clim oā€™ the Cloughs or Claribels,
That look as big as five-and-fifty, and flush;
And spit out secrets like hot custardā ā€”

Dapper

Captain!

Face

Nor any melancholic under-scribe,
Shall tell the vicar; but a special gentle,
That is the heir to forty marks a year,
Consorts with the small poets of the time,
Is the sole hope of his old grandmother;
That knows the law, and writes you six fair hands,
Is a fine clerk, and has his ciphering perfect.
Will take his oath oā€™ the Greek Testament,
If need be, in his pocket; and can court
His mistress out of Ovid.

Dapper

Nay, dear Captainā ā€”

Face

Did you not tell me so?

Dapper

Yes; but Iā€™d have you
Use master Doctor with some more respect.

Face

Hang him, proud stag, with his broad velvet head!ā ā€”
But for your sake, Iā€™d choke, ere I would change
An article of breath with such a puckfist:
Come, letā€™s be gone.

Going.
Subtle

Pray you let me speak with you.

Dapper

His worship calls you, Captain.

Face

I am sorry
I eā€™er embarked myself in such a business.

Dapper

Nay, good sir; he did call you.

Face

Will he take then?

Subtle

First, hear meā ā€”

Face

Not a syllable, ā€™less you take.

Subtle

Pray you, sirā ā€”

Face

Upon no terms but an assumpsit.

Subtle

Your humour must be law.
He takes the four angels.

Face

Why now, sir, talk.
Now I dare hear you with mine honour. Speak.
So may this gentleman too.

Subtle

Why, sirā ā€”
Offering to whisper Face.

Face

No whispering.

Subtle

Fore heaven, you do not apprehend the loss
You do yourself in this.

Face

Wherein? For what?

Subtle

Marry, to be so importunate for one,
That, when he has it, will undo you all:
Heā€™ll win up all the money in the town.

Face

How!

Subtle

Yes, and blow up gamester after gamester,
As they do crackers in a puppet-play.
If I do give him a familiar,
Give you him all you play for; never set him:
For he will have it.

Face

You are mistaken, Doctor.
Why he does ask one but for cups and horses,
A rifling fly; none of your great familiars.

Dapper

Yes, Captain, I would have it for all games.

Subtle

I told you so.

Face

Taking Dapper aside.
ā€™Slight, that is a new business!
I understood you, a tame bird, to fly
Twice in a term, or so, on Friday nights,
When you had left the office, for a nag
Of forty or fifty shillings.

Dapper

Ay, ā€™tis true, sir;
But I do think now I shall leave the law,
And thereforeā ā€”

Face

Why, this changes quite the case.
Do you think that I dare move him?

Dapper

If you please, sir;
Allā€™s one to him, I see.

Face

What! For that money?
I cannot with my conscience; nor should you
Make the request, methinks.

Dapper

No, sir, I mean
To add consideration.

Face

Why then, sir,
Iā€™ll try.ā ā€”
Goes to Subtle.
Say that it were for all games, Doctor.

Subtle

I say then, not a mouth shall eat for him
At any ordinary, but on the score,
That is a gaming mouth, conceive me.

Face

Indeed!

Subtle

Heā€™ll draw you all the treasure of the realm,
If it be set him.

Face

Speak you this from art?

Subtle

Ay, sir, and reason too, the ground of art.
He is of the only best complexion,
The Queen of Fairy loves.

Face

What! Is he?

Subtle

Peace.
Heā€™ll overhear you. Sir, should she but see himā ā€”

Face

What?

Subtle

Do not you tell him.

Face

Will he win at cards too?

Subtle

The spirits of dead Holland, living Isaac,
Youā€™d swear, were in him; such a vigorous luck
As cannot be resisted. ā€™Slight, heā€™ll put
Six of your gallants to a cloak, indeed.

Face

A strange success, that some man shall be born to.

Subtle

He hears you, manā ā€”

Dapper

Sir, Iā€™ll not be ingrateful.

Face

Faith, I have confidence in his good nature:
You hear, he says he will not be ingrateful.

Subtle

Why, as you please; my venture follows yours.

Face

Troth, do it, Doctor; think him trusty, and make him.
He may make us both happy in an hour;
Win some five thousand pound, and send us two onā€™t.

Dapper

Believe it, and I will, sir.

Face

And you shall, sir.
Takes him aside.
You have heard all?

Dapper

No, what wasā€™t? Nothing, I, sir.

Face

Nothing!

Dapper

A little, sir.

Face

Well, a rare star
Reigned at your birth.

Dapper

At mine, sir! No.

Face

The Doctor
Swears that you areā ā€”

Subtle

Nay, Captain, youā€™ll tell all now.

Face

Allied to the Queen of Fairy.

Dapper

Who! That I am?
Believe it, no such matterā ā€”

Face

Yes, and that
You were born with a cawl on your head.

Dapper

Who says so?

Face

Come,
You know it well enough, though you dissemble it.

Dapper

Iā€™fac, I do not; you are mistaken.

Face

How!
Swear by your fac, and in a thing so known
Unto the Doctor? How shall we, sir, trust you
In the other matter? Can we ever think,
When you have won five or six thousand pound,
Youā€™ll send us shares inā€™t, by this rate?

Dapper

By Jove, sir,
Iā€™ll win ten thousand pound, and send you half.
Iā€™facā€™s no oath.

Subtle

No, no, he did but jest.

Face

Go to. Go thank the Doctor: heā€™s your friend,
To take it so.

Dapper

I thank his worship.

Face

So!
Another angel.

Dapper

Must I?

Face

Must you! ā€™Slight,
What else is thanks? Will you be trivial?ā ā€”Doctor,
Dapper gives him the money.
When must he come for his familiar?

Dapper

Shall I not have it with me?

Subtle

O, good sir!
There must a world of ceremonies pass;
You must be bathed and fumigated first:
Besides the Queen of Fairy does not rise
Till it be noon.

Face

Not, if she danced, tonight.

Subtle

And she must bless it.

Face

Did you never see
Her royal Grace yet?

Dapper

Whom?

Face

Your aunt of Fairy?

Subtle

Not since she kissed him in the cradle, Captain;
I can resolve you that.

Face

Well, see her Grace,
Whateā€™er it cost you, for a thing that I know.
It will be somewhat hard to compass; but
However, see her. You are made, believe it,
If you can see her. Her Grace is a lone woman,
And very rich; and if she take a fancy,
She will do strange things. See her, at any hand.
ā€™Slid, she may hap to leave you all she has:
It is the Doctorā€™s fear.

Dapper

How willā€™t be done, then?

Face

Let me alone, take you no thought. Do you
But say to me, Captain, Iā€™ll see her Grace.

Dapper

ā€œCaptain, Iā€™ll see her Grace.ā€

Face

Enough.

Knocking within.
Subtle

Whoā€™s there?
Anon.
Aside to Face.
ā€”Conduct him forth by the back way.ā ā€”
Sir, against one oā€™clock prepare yourself;
Till when you must be fasting; only take
Three drops of vinegar in at your nose,
Two at your mouth, and one at either ear;
Then bathe your fingersā€™ ends and wash your eyes,
To sharpen your five senses, and cry ā€œhumā€
Thrice, and then ā€œbuzā€ as often; and then come.

Exit.
Face

Can you remember this?

Dapper

I warrant you.

Face

Well then, away. It is but your bestowing
Some twenty nobles ā€™mong her Graceā€™s servants,
And put on a clean shirt: you do not know
What grace her Grace may do you in clean linen.

Exeunt Face and Dapper.
Subtle

Within. Come in! Good wives, I pray you forbear me now;
Troth I can do you no good till afternoonā ā€”

Re-enters, followed by Drugger.

What is your name, say you? Abel Drugger?

Drugger

Yes, sir.

Subtle

A seller of tobacco?

Drugger

Yes, sir.

Subtle

Umph!
Free of the grocers?

Drugger

Ay, andā€™t please you.

Subtle

Wellā ā€”
Your business, Abel?

Drugger

This, andā€™t please your worship;
I am a young beginner, and am building
Of a new shop, andā€™t like your worship, just
At corner of a street:ā ā€”Here is the plot onā€™tā ā€”
And I would know by art, sir, of your worship,
Which way I should make my door, by necromancy,
And where my shelves; and which should be for boxes,
And which for pots. I would be glad to thrive, sir:
And I was wished to your worship by a gentleman,
One Captain Face, that says you know menā€™s planets,
And their good angels, and their bad.

Subtle

I do,
If I do see themā ā€”

Re-enter Face.
Face

What! My honest Abel?
Though art well met here.

Drugger

Troth, sir, I was speaking,
Just as your worship came here, of your worship:
I pray you speak for me to Master Doctor.

Face

He shall do anything.ā ā€”Doctor, do you hear?
This is my friend, Abel, an honest fellow;
He lets me have good tobacco, and he does not
Sophisticate it with sack-lees or oil,
Nor washes it in muscadel and grains,
Nor buries it in gravel, under ground,
Wrapped up in greasy leather, or pissed clouts:
But keeps it in fine lily pots, that, opened,
Smell like conserve of roses, or French beans.
He has his maple block, his silver tongs,
Winchester pipes, and fire of Juniper:
A neat, spruce, honest fellow, and no goldsmith.

Subtle

He is a fortunate fellow, that I am sure on.

Face

Already, sir, have you found it? Lo thee, Abel!

Subtle

And in right way toward richesā ā€”

Face

Sir!

Subtle

This summer
He will be of the clothing of his company,
And next spring called to the scarlet; spend what he can.

Face

What, and so little beard?

Subtle

Sir, you must think,
He may have a receipt to make hair come:
But heā€™ll be wise, preserve his youth, and fine forā€™t;
His fortune looks for him another way.

Face

ā€™Slid, Doctor, how canst thou know this so soon?
I am amused at that!

Subtle

By a rule, Captain,
In metoposcopy, which I do work by;
A certain star in the forehead, which you see not.
Your chestnut or your olive-coloured face
Does never fail: and your long ear doth promise.
I knewā€™t by certain spots, too, in his teeth,
And on the nail of his mercurial finger.

Face

Which fingerā€™s that?

Subtle

His little finger. Look.
You were born upon a Wednesday?

Drugger

Yes, indeed, sir.

Subtle

The thumb, in chiromancy, we give Venus;
The forefinger, to Jove; the midst, to Saturn;
The ring, to Sol; the least, to Mercury,
Who was the lord, sir, of his horoscope,
His house of life being Libra; which foreshowed,
He should be a merchant, and should trade with balance.

Face

Why, this is strange! Is it not, honest Nab?

Subtle

There is a ship now, coming from Ormus,
That shall yield him such a commodity
Of drugs
Pointing to the plan.
ā€”This is the west, and this the south?

Drugger

Yes, sir.

Subtle

And those are your two sides?

Drugger

Ay, sir.

Subtle

Make me your door, then, south; your broad side, west:
And on the east side of your shop, aloft,
Write Mathlai, Tarmiel, and Baraborat;
Upon the north part, Rael, Velel, Thiel.
They are the names of those mercurial spirits,
That do fright flies from boxes.

Drugger

Yes, sir.

Subtle

And
Beneath your threshold, bury me a loadstone
To draw in gallants that wear spurs: the rest,
Theyā€™ll seem to follow.

Face

Thatā€™s a secret, Nab!

Subtle

And, on your stall, a puppet, with a vice
And a court-fucus to call city-dames:
You shall deal much with minerals.

Drugger

Sir, I have.
At home, alreadyā ā€”

Subtle

Ay, I know you have arsenic,
Vitriol, sal-tartar, argaile, alkali,
Cinoper: I know all.ā ā€”This fellow, Captain,
Will come, in time, to be a great distiller,
And give a sayā ā€”I will not say directly,
But very fairā ā€”at the philosopherā€™s stone.

Face

Why, how now, Abel! Is this true?

Drugger

Aside to Face.
Good Captain,
What must I give?

Face

Nay, Iā€™ll not counsel thee.
Thou hearā€™st what wealth (he says, spend what thou canst,)
Thouā€™rt like to come to.

Drugger

I would giā€™ him a crown.

Face

A crown! And toward such a fortune? Heart,
Thou shalt rather giā€™ him thy shop. No gold about thee?

Drugger

Yes, I have a portague, I have kept this half-year.

Face

Out on thee, Nab! ā€™Slight, there was such an offerā ā€”
Shalt keepā€™t no longer, Iā€™ll giveā€™t him for thee. Doctor,
Nab prays your worship to drink this, and swears
He will appear more grateful, as your skill
Does raise him in the world.

Drugger

I would entreat
Another favour of his worship.

Face

What isā€™t, Nab?

Drugger

But to look over, sir, my almanac,
And cross out my ill-days, that I may neither
Bargain, nor trust upon them.

Face

That he shall, Nab:
Leave it, it shall be done, ā€™gainst afternoon.

Subtle

And a direction for his shelves.

Face

Now, Nab,
Art thou well pleased, Nab?

Drugger

ā€™Thank, sir, both your worships.

Face

Away.

Exit Drugger.

Why, now, you smoaky persecutor of nature!
Now do you see, that somethingā€™s to be done,
Beside your beech-coal, and your corsive waters,
Your crosslets, crucibles, and cucurbites?
You must have stuff brought home to you, to work on:
And yet you think, I am at no expense
In searching out these veins, then following them,
Then trying them out. ā€™Fore God, my intelligence
Costs me more money, than my share oft comes to,
In these rare works.

Subtle

You are pleasant, sir.

Re-enter Dol.

ā€”How now!
What says my dainty Dolkin?

Dol Common

Yonder fishwife
Will not away. And thereā€™s your giantess,
The bawd of Lambeth.

Subtle

Heart, I cannot speak with them.

Dol Common

Not afore night, I have told them in a voice,
Thorough the trunk, like one of your familiars.
But I have spied sir Epicure Mammonā ā€”

Subtle

Where?

Dol Common

Coming along, at far end of the lane,
Slow of his feet, but earnest of his tongue
To one thatā€™s with him.

Subtle

Face, go you and shift.

Exit Face.

Dol, you must presently make ready, too.

Dol Common

Why, whatā€™s the matter?

Subtle

O, I did look for him
With the sunā€™s rising: ā€™marvel he could sleep,
This is the day I am to perfect for him
The magisterium, our great work, the stone;
And yield it, made, into his hands: of which
He has, this month, talked as he were possessed.
And now heā€™s dealing pieces onā€™t away.ā ā€”
Methinks I see him entering ordinaries,
Dispensing for the pox, and plaguey houses,
Reaching his dose, walking Moorfields for lepers,
And offering citizensā€™ wives pomander-bracelets,
As his preservative, made of the elixir;
Searching the spittal, to make old bawds young;
And the highways, for beggars, to make rich.
I see no end of his labours. He will make
Nature ashamed of her long sleep: when art,
Whoā€™s but a step-dame, shall do more than she,
In her best love to mankind, ever could:
If his dream lasts, heā€™ll turn the age to gold.

Exeunt.