PROLOGUE,
SPOKEN BY MR BETTERTON.
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.
Veramond, King of Arragon.
Alphonso, his supposed Son.
Garcia, King of Navarre.
Ramirez, King of Castile.
Sancho, }
Carlos, } Two Colonels.
Lopez, an old Courtier.
Ximena, Queen of Arragon.
Victoria, eldest daughter to the King and Queen,
Celidea, her Sister.
Dalinda, Daughter to Lopez.
A Nurse with two Children.
SCENE,—Saragossa in Spain.
LOVE TRIUMPHANT;
OR,
NATURE WILL PREVAIL.
ACT I.
SCENE I.—A Presence-chamber.
At the drawing up of the Curtain, Veramond, King of Arragon, appears; Ximena, the Queen, by him; Victoria, their eldest Daughter, on the right Hand; and Celidea, their younger Daughter, on the left; Courtiers stand attending in File on each Side of the stage; The Men on the one Hand, the Ladies on the other. Amongst the Men, Don Lopez; amongst the Women, Dalinda, his Daughter.
Enter Alphonso and Garcia, hand in hand. After them, the Prisoner, King Ramirez, alone; then the two Colonels, Sancho and Carlos; after them, other Officers of the Army. Veramond advances to meet them; the Queen and the two Princesses follow him. Alphonso first kneels to his Father and Mother, and immediately runs to salute his Sister Victoria tenderly; then slightly salutes Celidea, and returns to Victoria. In the mean time Veramond embraces Don Garcia, who afterwards kisses the Queen's hand.
[Here Garcia, after bowing to the King and Queen, goes to the two Princesses, and salutes them. After a little dumb courtship, he leads out Victoria and Celidea; the Ladies follow; Alphonso observes it with discontent, and then turns to his Father.
[Exeunt Ver. Xim. Cel. Gar. Vict. and all the Courtiers, Men and Women. The Guards follow: San. Carl. remain.
San. Good news; Carlos, the old Jew, is dead.
Carl. What Jew?
San. Why, the rich Jew, my father. He's gone to the bosom of Abraham his father, and I, his Christian son, am left sole heir. Now do I intend to be monstrously in love.
Carl. With whom, colonel?
San. That's not yet resolved, colonel; but with one of the court ladies. You may stand a man's friend, Carlos, in such a business.
Carl. You may depend on me, Sancho, because my dependance is on you. You got plunder in the battle; while I was hacked and hewed, and almost laid asleep in the damned bed of honour.
San. Nay, I confess I am a lucky rogue, for I was born with a caul upon my head.
Carl. I'm sure I came bare enough into the world, and live as barely in it.
San. Make me but lustily in love, and I'll adopt thee into my fortune; but thou standest—shall I, shall I, till all the ladies are out of sight. Here, take that billet-doux, which I have pulled out by chance from amongst twenty, that I always wear about me for such occasions.
Carl. But to which of them shall I deliver it?
San. Even to her thou canst first overtake.—Nay, do not lose thy time in looking on't, there's no particular direction, man. Fortune ever superscribes my letters to the fair sex: I let her alone to find me out a handsome mistress; and let me alone to make her kind afterwards.
Carl. But suppose I should happen to deliver it to my own mistress, for she was in the presence with her father.
San. Then I suppose thou wilt be the first that shall repent it; for she will certainly fall in love with me.
Lopez and Dalinda re-enter, and walk softly over the Stage.
Look, there's one of them already; my heart beats at the very sight of her. This must and shall be she, by Cupid.
Carl. And, by Venus, the very she I love!
San. Pr'ythee no more words then, for fate will have it so.
Carl. [Aside.] I know it's impossible for her father to receive him, or her to love him; and yet his good fortune, and my rascally, three-penny planet[56], make me suspicious without reason. But hang superstition! I'll draw such a picture of him as shall do his business.
San. Now will I stand incognito, like some mighty potentate, and see my own embassy delivered.
[Carlos overtakes Lopez and Dalinda, just going off, and salutes them.
Lop. Cousin Carlos, you are welcome from the wars; I think I saw you in the show to day.
Carl. The ceremony hindered me from paying my respects; but I made haste, you see——
Lop. I hope you'll no more be a stranger to my house, than you have been formerly. Your mistress here will be proud to entertain you; and then you shall tell me the whole expedition. I love battles wonderfully, when a man may hear them without peril of his person.
San. [Aside.] Nothing of my letter all this while!—why when Carlos?
[Whispering aloud to him.
Carl. [Aside.] Now I dare not but deliver it, because he sees me.—Don Lopez, I have a foolish kind of petition to you. [To Lop.
Lop. Why do you call it a foolish petition?
Carl. Because I bring it from a fool. There's a friend of mine, of a plentiful fortune, that's desperately in love with your fair daughter, Dalinda; and has commanded me, by your permission, to deliver this letter to her.
Lop. A rich man's letter may be delivered. [Carlos gives her the Letter.
Dal. What's here? A note without a superscription [She seems to read.] As I live, a bill of exchange for two hundred pistoles, charged upon a banker, and payable to the bearer! An accomplished cavalier I warrant him; he writes finely, and in the best manner.
Carl. [Aside.] There's the covetous sex, at the first syllable! The fool's good planet begins to work already; but I shall stop its influence.
Lop. Good cousin colonel, what manner of man is my son-in-law that may be?
Carl. D'ye see that sneaking fellow yonder?
Lop. Who, that gallant cavalier?
Dal. I wish it were no worse.
Carl. Plague, ye make me mad betwixt ye. His outside's tawdry, and his inside's fool. He's an usurer's son, and his father was a Jew.
Dal. No matter for all that, he's rich.
Carl. He was begot upon the wife of a desperate debtor, out of pure good husbandry, to save something. He's covetous by the father's side, a blockhead by the mother's, and a knave by both.
Lop. I see nothing like your description of him, at this distance. Call him hither, I would fain speak with him.
Carl. Come hither, Don Sancho, and make good the character I have given of you.
[Sancho comes up, and salutes them awkwardly.
Lop. Cavalier, I shall be glad to be better known to you.
San. [To Carl.] You see I have luck in a bag, Carlos.
Carl. [Aside.] Ay, in a bag of money; I see it to my sorrow.—Try his wit, signior, you'll find it as heavy as lead. [Aside to Lopez.
Lop. [To Sancho.] So his money be silver, I care not.—Come, cavalier, what say you to my daughter?
San. Why, I say, I was resolved to love the first fair lady that I met.
Dal. Oh lord, sir!
Carl. [To Lop.] Do but mark his breeding.
Lop. I like him never the worse for his plain dealing.
Dal. Bluntness, methinks, becomes a soldier.
Carl. [Aside.] How naturally old men take to riches, and women to fools!
Lop. [To San.] You have made a noble declaration of your love, sir, with a handsome present of two hundred pistoles.
San. What, I hope I have not mistaken papers, and sent you my letter of exchange for two hundred pistoles, charged upon the banker Porto Carrero? Pray return that letter, madam, and I'll look out for another, that shall treat only of dry love, without those terrible appendixes.
Dal. Why, did not you intend this for me, cavalier?
San. No; you shall hear me rap out all the oaths in Christendom, that I am wholly innocent of this accusation.
Dal. Come, you bely your noble nature. Look upon me again, cavalier, [She makes the doux yeux to him.] and then examine your own heart, if you meant it not to me.
San. Nay, I confess my heart beats a charge towards you;—and yet two hundred pistoles is a swinging sum for one kind look, Carlos!
Carl. A damnable hard penny-worth! hold you there, Don Sancho.
[Dalinda looks upon him again more sweetly.
San. She has two devils in her eyes; that last ogle was a lick-penny.—Well, madam, I dedicate those fair two hundred pistoles to your more fair hand; and, now you have received them, I meant them for you.
Dal. And, in requital, I receive you for my servant, cavalier.
Carl. [Aside.] Damn him for his awkward liberality; he's always covetous, but when 'tis to do me a mischief.
Lop. [To Dal.] He's come on again; my heart was almost at my mouth.—Now, Mrs Minion, let me take you to task in private. [Draws her aside a little.] What hope have you of the Conde Don Alonzo de Cardona?
Dal. Little or none; a bare possibility. You know what has passed betwixt us.
Lop. But suppose he should renew his love, had you rather marry that rich old Conde, or this poor young rogue, Don Carlos?
Dal. This poor young rogue, if you please, father.
Lop. I thought as much, good madam. But, to come closer to the present business, betwixt Don Carlos and Don Sancho, that is to say, a poor young wit, and a rich young fool; put the case, gentlewoman, which of them would you chuse?
Dal. If it were not for mere necessity, I have a kind of a loathing to a fool.
Lop. The more fool you, madam.
Dal. Would you have a race of booby grandsons?
Lop. That's as your conscience serves you. I say only, that your husband shall be a fool; I say not, your children's father shall be one.
San. [To Car.] This is a plaguy long whisper, I do not like it. And yet, now I think on't, my left eye itches, some good luck is coming towards me.
Lop. [To them.] I'll be short and pithy with you. Don Sancho,—I think they call ye,—if out of my abundant love I should bestow my dutiful daughter on you, what kind of husband would you make?
San. Husband, sennor? Why, none at all. None of my predecessors were ever married; my father and my mother never were, and I will not be the first of my family that shall degenerate. I thought my two hundred pistoles would have done my business with Dalinda, and a little winking money with you.
Lop. What, would you make me a pimp to my own daughter?
Dal. And imagine my chastity could be corrupted with a petty bribe?
San. Nay, I am not so obstinate neither against marriage. Carlos gave me this wicked counsel, on purpose to banish me; and, in revenge to him, I will marry.
Lop. I hope you'll ask her leave first?
San. Pho! I take that for granted; no woman has the power to resist my courtship.
Lop. Suppose then, as before supposed; what kind of husband would you make?
San. Then, to deal roundly with you, I would run a rambling myself, and leave the drudgery of my house to her management; all things should go at sixes and sevens for Sancho. In short, sennor, I will be as absolute as the Great Turk, and take as little care of my people as a heathen god.
Lop. Now, Don Carlos, what say you?
Carl. [Aside.] I'll fit them for a husband.—[To Lop.] Why, sennor, I would be the most careful creature of her business; I would inspect every thing, would manage the whole estate, to save her the trouble; I would be careful of her health, by keeping her within doors; she should neither give nor receive visits; nor kneel at church among the fops, that look one way, and pray another.
Dal. Oh abominable!
Lop. Why, thou ungrateful fellow! wouldst thou make a slave of my daughter? And leave her no business, that is to say, no authority in her own house?
Dal. Ay, and to call fine young gentlemen fops too? To lock me up from visitants, which are the only comfort of a disconsolate, miserable, married woman!
Lop. An' 'twere not for fear thou shouldst beat me, I could find in my heart to beat thee.—Don Sancho, I have an olla at home, and you shall be welcome to it.—Farewell, kinsman. [To Carl.
[Exeunt Lop. and San. leading out Dal.
Carl. Now, if I had another head, I could find in my heart to run this head against that wall. Nature has given me my portion in sense, with a pox to her, and turned me out into the wide world to starve upon it. She has given Sancho an empty noddle; but fortune, in revenge, has filled his pockets: just a lord's estate in land and wit. Well, I have lost Dalinda; and something must be done to undermine Sancho in her good opinion. Some pernicious counsel must be given him. He is my prince, and I am his statesman; and when our two interests come to clash, I hope to make a mere monarch of him[57]: and my hunger is somewhat in my way to quicken my invention.