The Works of John Marston. Volume 3

SCENE II.

Chapter 12908 wordsPublic domain

_Goldsmiths' Row._

_Enter_ TOUCHSTONE, GOLDING, WOLF.

_To._ I will receive no letters, Master Wolf; you shall pardon me.

_Go._ Good father, let me entreat you.

_To._ Son Golding, I will not be tempted; I find mine own easy nature, and I know not what a well-penned subtle letter may work upon it; there may be tricks, packing, do you see? Return with your packet, sir.

_Wo._ Believe it, sir, you need fear no packing here; these are but letters of submission all.

_To._ Sir, I do look for no submission. I will bear myself in this like blind Justice. Work upon that now. When the sessions come they shall hear from me. 12

_Go._ From whom come your letters, Master Wolf?

_Wo._ And't please you, sir, one from Sir Petronel, another from Francis Quicksilver, and a third from old Security, who is almost mad in prison. There are two to your worship; one from Master Francis, sir, another from the knight.

_To._ I do wonder, Master Wolf, why you should travail thus, in a business so contrary to kind, or the nature o' your place: that you, being the keeper of a prison, should labour the release of your prisoners; whereas, methinks, it were far more natural and kindly in you to be ranging about for more, and not let these 'scape you have already under the tooth. But they say you Wolves, when you ha' sucked the blood, once that they are dry, you ha' done. 27

_Wo._ Sir, your worship may descant as you please o' my name; but I protest I was never so mortified with any men's discourse or behaviour in prison; yet I have had of all sorts of men i' the kingdom under my keys; and almost of all religions i' the land, as Papist, Protestant, Puritan, Brownist, Anabaptist, Millenary, Family-o'-Love, Jew, Turk, Infidel, Atheist, Good-Fellow, &c.

_Go._ And which of all these, thinks Master Wolf, was the best religion? 37

_Wo._ Troth, Master Deputy, they that pay fees best: we never examine their consciences farther.

_Go._ I believe you, Master Wolf. Good faith, sir, here's a great deal of humility i' these letters.

_Wo._ Humility, sir? Ay, were your worship an eyewitness of it you would say so. The knight will i' the Knight's Ward,[111] do what we can, sir; and Master Quicksilver would be i' the Hole if we would let him. I never knew or saw prisoners more penitent, or more devout. They will sit you up all night singing of psalms and edifying the whole prison; only Security sings a note too high sometimes, because he lies i' the Twopenny Ward, far off, and cannot take his tune. The neighbours cannot rest for him, but come every morning to ask what godly prisoners we have. 52

_To._ Which on 'hem is't is so devout--the knight or the t'other?

_Wo._ Both, sir; but the young man especially. I never heard his like. He has cut his hair too. He is so well given, and has such good gifts, he can tell you almost all the stories of the _Book of Martyrs_, and speak you all the _Sick Man's Salve_[112] without book.

_To._ Ay, if he had had grace--he was brought up where it grew, I wis. On, Master Wolf. 61

_Wo._ And he has converted one Fangs, a sergeant, a fellow could neither write nor read; he was called the Bandog o' the Counter; and he has brought him already to pare his nails and say his prayers; and 'tis hoped he will sell his place shortly, and become an intelligencer.

_To._ No more; I am coming already. If I should give any farther care I were taken. Adieu, good Master Wolf. Son, I do feel mine own weaknesses; do not importune me. Pity is a rheum that I am subject to; but I will resist it. Master Wolf, fish is cast away that is cast in dry pools. Tell hypocrisy it will not do; I have touched and tried too often; I am yet proof, and I will remain so; when the sessions come they shall hear from me. In the meantime, to all suits, to all entreaties, to all letters, to all tricks, I will be deaf as an adder, and blind as a beetle, lay mine ear to the ground, and lock mine eyes i' my hand, against all temptations. 78

[_Exit._

_Go._ You see, Master Wolf, how inexorable he is. There is no hope to recover him. Pray you commend me to my brother knight, and to my fellow Francis; present 'hem with this small token of my love; tell 'hem, I wish I could do 'hem any worthier office; but in this, 'tis desperate: yet I will not fail to try the uttermost of my power for 'hem. And, sir, as far as I have any credit with you, pray you let 'hem want nothing; though I am not ambitious they should know so much. 87

_Wo._ Sir, both your actions and words speak you to be a true gentleman. They shall know only what is fit, and no more.

[_Exeunt._

[111] The _Knight's Ward_, the _Twopenny Ward_, and the _Hole_ were different divisions of a prison: see Fenner's _Compter's Commonwealth_, 1617. Sir Petronel showed his humility by choosing the inferior accommodation of the _Knight's Ward_ when it was open to him to _lie of the Master's side_. Cf. _Westward Ho_, iii. 2:--

"_Monopoly._ Which is the dearest ward in prison, Sergeant? the Knight's Ward?

_Ambush._ No, sir, the Master's side."

[112] A treatise by Thomas Becon, originally published in 1561. It was very popular, and is frequently mentioned by the dramatists.