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Plays
← Back to browse All’s Well That Ends Well
- 1 Enter Countess and Clown.
- 2 COUNTESS.
- 3 Come on, sir; I shall now put you to the height of your breeding.
- 4 CLOWN.
- 5 I will show myself highly fed and lowly taught. I know my business is
- 6 but to the court.
- 7 COUNTESS.
- 8 To the court! Why, what place make you special, when you put off that
- 9 with such contempt? But to the court!
- 10 CLOWN.
- 11 Truly, madam, if God have lent a man any manners, he may easily put it
- 12 off at court: he that cannot make a leg, put off’s cap, kiss his hand,
- 13 and say nothing, has neither leg, hands, lip, nor cap; and indeed such
- 14 a fellow, to say precisely, were not for the court; but for me, I have
- 15 an answer will serve all men.
- 16 COUNTESS.
- 17 Marry, that’s a bountiful answer that fits all questions.
- 18 CLOWN.
- 19 It is like a barber’s chair, that fits all buttocks—the pin-buttock,
- 20 the quatch-buttock, the brawn-buttock, or any buttock.
- 21 COUNTESS.
- 22 Will your answer serve fit to all questions?
- 23 CLOWN.
- 24 As fit as ten groats is for the hand of an attorney, as your French
- 25 crown for your taffety punk, as Tib’s rush for Tom’s forefinger, as a
- 26 pancake for Shrove-Tuesday, a morris for May-day, as the nail to his
- 27 hole, the cuckold to his horn, as a scolding quean to a wrangling
- 28 knave, as the nun’s lip to the friar’s mouth; nay, as the pudding to
- 29 his skin.
- 30 COUNTESS.
- 31 Have you, I say, an answer of such fitness for all questions?
- 32 CLOWN.
- 33 From below your duke to beneath your constable, it will fit any
- 34 question.
- 35 COUNTESS.
- 36 It must be an answer of most monstrous size that must fit all demands.
- 37 CLOWN.
- 38 But a trifle neither, in good faith, if the learned should speak truth
- 39 of it. Here it is, and all that belongs to’t. Ask me if I am a
- 40 courtier; it shall do you no harm to learn.
- 41 COUNTESS.
- 42 To be young again, if we could: I will be a fool in question, hoping to
- 43 be the wiser by your answer. I pray you, sir, are you a courtier?
- 44 CLOWN.
- 45 O Lord, sir! There’s a simple putting off. More, more, a hundred of
- 46 them.
- 47 COUNTESS.
- 48 Sir, I am a poor friend of yours, that loves you.
- 49 CLOWN.
- 50 O Lord, sir! Thick, thick; spare not me.
- 51 COUNTESS.
- 52 I think, sir, you can eat none of this homely meat.
- 53 CLOWN.
- 54 O Lord, sir! Nay, put me to’t, I warrant you.
- 55 COUNTESS.
- 56 You were lately whipp’d, sir, as I think.
- 57 CLOWN.
- 58 O Lord, sir! Spare not me.
- 59 COUNTESS.
- 60 Do you cry ‘O Lord, sir!’ at your whipping, and ‘spare not me’? Indeed
- 61 your ‘O Lord, sir!’ is very sequent to your whipping. You would answer
- 62 very well to a whipping, if you were but bound to’t.
- 63 CLOWN.
- 64 I ne’er had worse luck in my life in my ‘O Lord, sir!’ I see things may
- 65 serve long, but not serve ever.
- 66 COUNTESS.
- 67 I play the noble housewife with the time, to entertain it so merrily
- 68 with a fool.
- 69 CLOWN.
- 70 O Lord, sir! Why, there’t serves well again.
- 71 COUNTESS.
- 72 An end, sir! To your business. Give Helen this,
- 73 And urge her to a present answer back.
- 74 Commend me to my kinsmen and my son.
- 75 This is not much.
- 76 CLOWN.
- 77 Not much commendation to them?
- 78 COUNTESS.
- 79 Not much employment for you. You understand me?
- 80 CLOWN.
- 81 Most fruitfully. I am there before my legs.
- 82 COUNTESS.
- 83 Haste you again.
- 84 [_Exeunt severally._]