Beggars Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Beggars Bush.

Beggars Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 84 pages of information about Beggars Bush.
Whips, Hangmen, and Tormentors a bad man
Do’s ever bear about him:  let the good
That you this day have done, be ever number’d
The first of your best actions;
Can you think,
Where Goswin is or Gerrard, or your love,
Or any else, or all that are proscrib’d? 
I will resign, what I usurp, or have
Unjustly forc’d; the dayes I have to live
Are too too few to make them satisfaction
With any penitence:  yet I vow to practise
All of a man.

Hub.  O that your heart and tongue Did not now differ!

Wol.  By my griefs they do not. 
Take the good pains to search them out:  ’tis worth it,
You have made clean a Leper:  trust me you have,
And made me once more fit for the society,
I hope of good men.

Hub.  Sir, do not abuse My aptness to believe.

Wol.  Suspect not you
A faith that’s built upon so true a sorrow,
Make your own safetys:  ask them all the ties
Humanity can give, Hemskirk too shall
Along with you to this so wish’d discovery,
And in my name profess all that you promise;
And I will give you this help to’t:  I have
Of late receiv’d certain intelligence,
That some of them are in or about Bruges
To be found out:  which I did then interpret,
The cause of that Towns standing out against me;
But now am glad, it may direct your purpose
Of giving them their safety, and me peace.

Hub.  Be constant to your goodness, and you have it. [Exeunt.

SCENA II.

Enter 3.  Merchants.

1 Mer.  ’Tis much that you deliver of this Goswin.

2 Mer.  But short of what I could, yet have the Country
Confirm’d it true, and by a general oath,
And not a man hazard his credit in it: 
He bears himself with such a confidence
As if he were the Master of the Sea,
And not a wind upon the Sailers compass,
But from one part or other was his factor,
To bring him in the best commodities,
Merchant e’re ventur’d for.

1.  ’Tis strange.

2.  And yet
This do’s in him deserve the least of wonder,
Compared with other his peculiar fashions,
Which all admire:  he’s young, and rich, at least
Thus far reputed so, that since he liv’d
In Bruges, there was never brought to harbour
So rich a Bottom, but his bill would pass
Unquestion’d for her lading.

3 Mer. Yet he still Continues a good man.

2 Mer. So good, that but
To doubt him, would be held an injury
Or rather malice, with the best that traffique;
But this is nothing, a great stock, and fortune,
Crowning his judgement in his undertakings
May keep him upright that way:  But that wealth
Should want the power to make him dote on it,
Or youth teach him to wrong it, best commends

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Beggars Bush from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.