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A36959 The campaigners, or, The pleasant adventures at Brussels a comedy : with a familiar preface upon a late reformer of the stage : ending with a satyrical fable of the dog and the ottor / written by Mr. D'Urfey. D'Urfey, Thomas, 1653-1723.; Collier, Jeremy, 1650-1726. Short view of the immorality and profaneness of the English stage. 1698 (1698) Wing D2705; ESTC R2651 97,422 106

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and Bars when Iove did wooe Almighty Gold ne're fail'd to shower him through Exeunt Act III. Scene I. Angellica ' s Chamber Enter Bertran and Madam La Marquise Mad. COme prithee my dear let me have this money 't is but a hundred Pistoles and I may chance to win five hundred Bert. Ma Chere in van word den I will let no mor money go upon shance shance is de Teefe de Sheat de Pickpocket shance morbleau vill empty min purse if I give you any mor money for Play min Deare Mad. Because I had a little ill luck last night which was look'd upon as a Miracle too by all the Bassett-Table the most skilful of all the Punts bless'd himself to see 't for during the time of play I had once from an Alpiew or Paroli Sept et la va Quinze et le va Trent en le va Nay once Soissant et le va and yet lost all at last but 't was a thousand to one my Dear Bert. 'T is one towsan to one but min Purse get de dam Consumption wid your Trent and Soissant if I give you mor money Mad. What for an Accident Child No no I shall have luck to night I 'm sure for Mr Shuffle-tallies and I'm to be Croupiere Ill follow the winning Knaves and get Sept and Quince et le va before another shall make an Alpeiw but I confess this last time I had the Devil of ill fortune such indeed that t is almost incredible I lost a Sept et le va upon an Eighth King Bert. Morbleau and voud lose de Kings Revenue if you play play on dat is most veritable dis game is fit for none but de King and Queen to play at derefore I speak once more ver true I have no more Money ver de Bassett Mad. But I 'm ingag'd in honour to meet my Lady Fatly and take my revenge for 't was that hideous Punt that won most of my Money I 'll tell thee how 't was Child she fass'd me every Card I set or when I drew a lucky one it did not go she 'd make Paroli and Sept e le va upon the same Card and when ● lost my King four times in one deal she upon an odious filthy Knave every time wone Sonica Did you ever hear the like Sonica Oh prodigious Every time Sonica Bert. De divla tak my Lady and Sonica too vat care I vor heare dis come come be advise and play no more Mad. What not have my revenge shall such a huge Tun-belly'd nasty Thump-cushion as my Lady Fatly make her brags she has stripp'd me No I 'll sell my Skin but I 'll have my revenge Besides does this consist with your French Honour Sir to have me stripp'd and made a jest to the Lords Gentlemen and the rest of the Company 't would be a very pretty sight would it not for them to see me stripp'd Bert. Yes Morbleau dat would be de ver pretty sight indeed Mad. I mean made uncapable of another night's play Bert. Gazoon I mean so too I should be ver loth to find dat Mad. Pish. Pray Sir no more of your jests if you will grant my request and save my credit I shall think my self oblig'd but pray spare your wantton conceits my virtuous inclinations don't admire ' em Bert. Nay nay Madam I hope I may jest without affronting of your virtue and I hope I may love you ver well widout more squeezing min Purse vor de Bassett Mad. Will you deny me then Bert. You set your heart too much upon dis ting Madam Your love of de Play mak you covetous and love Money too well And dat Wife dat love Money too well assurement ver often love her Virtue too little Mad. 'T is basely said if you reflect on me Sir whose virtue has been of so pure a nature it ne're was tainted yet with one bad thought Virtue as white as Down of Swans or Ermin Bert. I don't know dat but to be sure I have tak de care to wash you a little Mad. You will deny me then Bert. No no no deny I will only keep a my Money dat is all Mad. I shall be horribly out of humour I shall scold confoundedly Bert. I shall sing and laugh den ver mush Mad. Indeed you had better save my credit Sir Bert. Indeed I had betra save my Money Madam Mad. Phoo you shall do it for your little Dear this once what hang a hundred Pistoles I 'll oblige you my dear dear precious a hundred times as much Come you shall hear a pretty new Scotch Song I made Bert. Ay with all my heart A Dance Scotch SONG I. I. JOckey was a dowdy Lad And Jemmy swarth and tawny They my heart no Captive made For that was prize to Sawny Jockey wooes and sighs and sues And Jemmy offers Money Wee l I see they both love me But I love only Sawny II. Jockey high his voice can raise And Jemmy Tunes the Vyol But when Sawny Pipes sweet Layes My heart kens no denyal Yen he sings and t' other strings Tho sweet yet only teize me Sawny's Flute can only do 't And Pipe a Tune to please me Mad. There 's for ye my Life my Heart my Vitals and now you shall do 't for me I 'll do any thing to divert my dear Honey Bert. Aw you are de dam cunning Gipsey Here is de Honey and de Honey but Gazoon is only for my Money Aw but dis shall no do for all dat Aside Mad. And this now my own heart shall command every day if he pleases and every night I 'll sing my own dear asleep Bert. Aw pure wheadle morbleau dis is plain dis is de meer sheate ve good den I vill trye now vor put de sheate upon her Mad. Come Sweet shall I be oblig'd to thee p●ithee say Ay. Bert. Vell vell put off your meeting vor one two day you know I go to morr to receive Money and sall stay out de whole night ven I come home I vill tell you more but no more to dat purpose Morbleau Aside So go go and make your Visit and present my service to de Lady Exit Mad. Pish this is only a sham this niggardly wretch won't do it I see by his sleering Well Monsieur since you dare deny your Wife necessaries for Money is the chief of necessaries she shall try what her Merit can do without ye and whether her Beauty will pawn for a hundred Pistoles for the truth is I do love Money so well and Play for the sake of Money that I 'm resolv'd to keep up my Credit abroad with the Gamesters of Qualtiy tho his Cuckoldom purchase the means of doing it and I think I have a Chapman ready too which I made sure of for fear he should prove thus hide-bound Enter Mascarillo How now Mascarillo what news of the Collonel Mase Why Madam I hear there 's a Letter left at
affectation than most of 'em and tho he talks a little more perhaps than comes to his share yet 't is commonly good matter which makes some amends Dor. And so civilly address'd too that a man is not so weary as one us'd to be with some of the rest of his eternally tattling Countrymen King I intend to oyl his Tongue if I can with a good Bottle Powerful Champaign will discover what imperfections he has infallibly as well as what wit Dor. Nay I don't look upon him as a Solon neither for I hear he 's marry'd but odly King To old Lafroon's Daughter a sordid rich Hunks of Blois I have seen her but have no acquaintance Dor. Is she pretty King Yes faith and I 'm told witty airy and musical but coquettish as a little Devil a great Bassett-player and like the Jew her Father the most insatiable Lover of Money And you know friend when ever a woman too well loves that she will soon be brought to do another thing that we love for that Dor. Ay that 's most certain And yet I could wish a pretty Charming Creature that I had a Letter from this morning had that covetous quality tho I were a hundred Pistoles the worse for 't to morrow Come Frank thou' rt my friend and shalt give me thy judgment of it I 'll tell thee a pretty adventure King Come on all yours us'd to be pleasant especially that of the Merchants Neice you enjoy'd at London and in search of whom you now come hither Collonel but pray take care d' ee hear the Plot of it be'nt too knotty for if you are for Riddling you may search an O Edipus for me faith Dor. Oh this is plain ' enough for the Meridian of thy understanding I warrant it know then Frank that standing this morning at the Shop door of a certain Goldsmith where I sometimes have exchange of Money for my Expences as I was putting up a hundred Pistoles into my Purse which I had receiv'd there just over against me stopp'd a Coach in mourning with a Lacqueys behind it in which was a Lady of a most incomparable Beauty and Feature she stood talking to a Shop-keeper about some of her affairs and at the same instant tho she turned away her Face yet so pretty a hand lay upon the Glass on the other side that it discovered the most delicate sample of the whitest Skin that ever cas'd a Beauty of Fifteen King Rhime i'gad and Rapture very well Collonel go on Dor. Charm'd with the sight and in an extasy I could not cease from crying out aloud and in a Tone she miget be sure to hear me I 'd give these hundred Pistoles in my hand to enjoy her but one night King A hundred Pistoles enough for a hundred Princesses i'gad well well when 's the Assignation where 's to be the Bower of Bliss there was a Coronet behind the Coach I know Collonel it must be quality at least a hundred Pistoles she took ye at your word I 'm sure Dor. Quite contrary for that time faith for presently away rowl'd the Coach and my poor panting heart trundled after it as fast till distance kept my Eyes from guiding it farther Ah Frank 't is a pain to me even to tell thee what pangs of disquies I felt for two long hours after but then as if the God of Love had seen and pittied the posture I was in of down-cast Eyes and Arms across walking alone on the Parrade I saw on the sudden standing just before me and offering this Letter one of the Footmen of my ador'd Goddess King So then I hope you had justice done however And dear Collonel I beg thy pardon for lessning the Merit of thy office What a plague did I talk of Quality for when I might know like a sot as I was a hundred Pistoles is a price sit for none but a Goddess Iove himself who was the first Whoremaster we read of that ever gave money for all his shower of Gold so talk'd of gave his Mistress Danaae not a farthing more Dor. Well prithee hear the Letter which is penn'd so cunningly between threatning and encouragement that gad I think I want an O Edipus indeed to salve it Prithee observe LETTER Sir Be assur'd that I think my self very much affronted at the word I heard you speak this morning How dare you insolently set price upon a person of my Rank Render your self to the justice of my Resentments therefore and come to morrow night at nine to the House with the little Gate next to the Ch●quer'd Posts in the High Street to answer your accusation or expect all that can be fear'd from a Woman wrong'd and Angry 〈◊〉 What thinkst thou is she in earnest or in jest King In earnest by Heaven Collonel but 't is the right way the hundred Pistoles have made a breach in her heart wider than a Cannon Ball at a hundred yards distance would in a plank of three inches Dor. Hugh I think she means fairly and won't take the Money sure for all her jesting However gad I 'm resolv'd to venture but not without being well arm'd tho I 'll carry a pair of pocket Friends with me and a good Sword and then Love be my guide I defy treachery King Here comes Monsieur don't trust his Tongue however with the secret for all your good opinion of him Oh Enter Bertran Monsieur Marqui the warmth the soul of good Company ye are welcome you have been too long from us we freeze without ye Dor. The Campaign tho never so good would seem pall'd to us Sir unless your pleasant conversation gives it a rellish Bert. Sir I am your most ver humble serviture Compliments Dor. And yours MonCher Monsieur To Kinglove Mafoy you alway do me too much d honour wid your Gentilesse your grand grand Courtesy I am oblig'd to your generosity Eterne●ement ver much for your good ward and civility but much more dat you have bring me into de Company and bon Grace of dis noble Sentleman here To Dorange Dor. I dare not vie with ye in Compliment of Courtly Expressions Sir therefore only can say that my heart and inclinations are faithfully at your service King Sir both the Collonel and my self set a greater value upon the blessings the Peace brings us having by it been obliged with the knowledge of you Embrace Dor. Hey Waiter Fill Glasses and give me a brimmer Come to the great Monarch of France Vivat Bert. Along Messires I will do ye de reason wid all min heart and tanke you vor your great goodness brave brave Collonel ● Morbleau Sir vat wonder have I hear of this Shentleman how● beyond expression Valliant he behav'd himself at Stenikirk after vish the next Campaign in de most fameux Battle of Landen he had his Arse shot beside have receave two tre wound at the grand Siege of Namur Ah I have no breath enough to speak Dor. Oh no more no
I ask Dor. Believe dear Sir I●ll study to make satisfaction Knock within Bert. How● now vat is dat knock hah Looks out Morbleau 〈…〉 friend the Embassador newly return'd from Paris Run Ra●e●● an● open de Gate Masc A● g●d and glad I 'm got off so but I must hide my self from my Mi●●ress for whi●● she 's in the house I've ne'r a member safe about me that 's c●●tain Exit Dor. So here 's the Embassador coming up the Brother to Angellica whom I ●afely wrong'd and instead of rig●ting her have been spending my time here in another lewd frolick without any honour justice or consideration humh what can be the end of this Why we must fight he knows me and I am sure is brave enough to right his Sister and for my own part I am so angry now at my own mischiefs I 'll give him all the means I can ●o punish em and so revenge my self upon my self Enter Bertran and Don Leon. Bert. Monsieur beside my cordial tank vor dis grand honeur of your visit I am ver glad de S●entelman is here dat you voud have speak wid Dere Sire de●e is de wordy Collonel hims●lf D. Leon. You extremely oblige me Sir I have spent some time in seeking ye and have a business for your private ear To Dorange Dor. I●m ready to attend ye Sir D. Leon. Shall I desire my good friend your Garden for us to discourse in a little the affair shall not be long Bert. Wid ●ll min heart Sir I beseech you command any ting Exeunt SCENE III. A Garden Enter Kinglove Ki●g I hope my intre●g●ing Collonel has got no mischie● by his ●old un●erta●ing I h●ve b●●n watching about the house all this morning to a●s●●t if 't were ●ece●sary but I ●ind all still as if t were midnight However I 'll take another turn or two by Angellica's Lodging and then if he does not b●●● he●s gone another way and we shall meet at our old Rendezvous Exit Enter Don Leon and Dorange D. Leon. Since then you own Sir you have wrong'd my Sister w●a● way do you propose to do her Justice Dor. Sir as I fear the case now stands with her the question p●zzles me D. Leon. Does it so Sir what reason can you give Dor. Faith Sir no great one and yet I think sufficient to stop proceedings in the affair you drive at D. Leon. Sir that affair as much exceeds your hopes nay or your merit when compar●d with hers that it wou'd leave you friendless in the world if you durst put it to Comparison Dor. You have not yet Sir try'd how much I dare but for your Sister I have value for her and therefore shall make no Comparison D. Leon. Furies A value for her Sir you talk as if you had only heard her touch her Lute or known her mistress of some trivial quality but I must tell ye Sir your value for her shou'd be Adoration and for her sake neglect all the world Dor. Sir for her sake I might do much indeed but there 's another since I went that shares her the Riddle is I know obscure to many but 't is to me expounded there has been a Child I hear D. Leon. Shame to my honour darst thou urge my Blood from my warm Heart to paint my face with blushes by hearing thee sp●ak this and not fear vengeance and severe chastisement from a wrong'd Brother by day and night I 've heard her hourly vow when first she hid the secret in my bosom that of that Child thou wert the cursed Father and as I know her full of truth and honour therefore thy vice is still more black and odious to soyl a second time her Reputation Draw then I had some thought at first to bless thee with happy means of Reconcilement to her and given thee by Marriage title to a Fortune exceeding even the bounds of thy Ambition but this last baseness has revok'd it all and nothing but thy blood shall calm my fury Give me thy heart Dor. Much freer than my Sword Sir Fight Dorange is wounded D. Leon. That 's something yet I see thou' rt not Case-harden'd Pause Dor. No Sir y 'ave found me penetrable Come on D. Leon. I 'll try if I can hit the place agen Fight again D. Leon loses his Sword and Dorange takes it up Dor. You see the advantage fortune throws upon me D. Leon. Make use of it for I shall scorn a life that e're was in thy power Dor. Spoke too hastily yet by my lewd life past I must confess I have deserv'd w●rse words there noble Sir there is your Sword again And once more use it in your just revenge you have not yet Sir drawn out the wild blood that wrong'd your Sister try your skill again Gives him his Sword D. Leon. No were she dear as my Soul as she 's my Sister I wou'd not fight again thou brave young man this honour has regain'd her honour lost and fix'd me for thy Brother They embrace Dor. Thus thus for ever I ●●al to that And now dear Sir assure ye my late neglectful words of your fair Sister were not intended basely as I spoke 'em but from a conscious sense of my own mischiefs and to provoke you to a severe Justice which you have done too slightly for a fault of such uncommon nature D. Leon. You bleed pray take this Scarf which my dear Sister gave me as a kind-present when I went to Travel and as it binds the wound up in your Arm may mine yours and my Sisters heart be ty●d in lasting union Embrace agen Dor. I long to see her to throw at her feet a true repentant heart and beg to be receiv'd without advantage for her Estate shall still be settled on her and on her pardon rest my whole contentment D. Leon. Here she comes fear of our meeting I know has led her to find us out Enter Angellica Prince Kinglove and Bertran Ang. Oh heaven 't is as I fear'd here has been mischief D. Leon. A little Sister but none that long shall keep the paleness on your Cheek to prove it look on the Man whom I embrace and then receive him as your long secret Love has given ye cause I have prov'd him found him brave kind and repentant the secret is lock'd closely up with us and so your honour clear to all the world Apart to Angel Dor. Thus low I first thank heaven for my blessing Kneels to Angel then beg your pardon and leave to love for ever Ang. My heart●s too full to let me speak my Joy let then my eyes and blushes do that office Prince Well my intentions were good to share with ye tho' I chanc'd to be out of the business King Faith Collonel we have been watching for ye all this morning right or wrong I came to make one of your side Dor. My good Lord and my dear Kinglove I ever was your Debtor Bert. Morbleau I tought it had
Satellites and to find the Longitude by them 3. A nice way to correct Pendulum Watches 4. M. Flamsteed's Equation Tables 5. To find a Meridian-Line for the Governing of Watches and other Uses 6. To make a Telescope to keep a Watch by the Fixed Stars By W. D. M. A. A short View of the Principal Duties of the Christian Religion With Plain Arguments to persuade to the sincere and speedy Practice of them To which is added a Prayer suited to the whole to be used Morning and Evening By a Divine of the Church of England for the Use of his Parishioners Price 3 d. or 20 s. per Hundred Arcana Imperii Detecta or Divers select Cases in Government more particularly Of the Obeying the unjust C●mmands of a Prince Of the Renunciation of a Right to a Crown Of the Proscription of a limited Prince and his Heirs Of the Trying Condemning and Execution of a Crowned Head Of the Marriage of a Prince and Princess Of the Detecting of Conspiracies against a Government Of Subjects Revolting from a Tyrannical Prince Of Excluding Foreigners from Publick Employments Constituting Extraordinary Magistrates up●n Extraordinary Occasions Of Subjects Anticipating the Execution of Laws Of Tolerati●n of Religion Of Peace and War c. With the Debates Arguments and Resolutions of the greatest Stasemen in several Ages and Governments there upon A View of the Posture of Affairs in Europe both in Church and State I. The Ancient Pretensions of the two Families of Austria and Bourbon to the Spanish Monarchy Historically stated II. The Balance of the Power of Europe settled by Charles V. and how it came to be broke III. A View of the Courts of Europe and their present Disposition and State relating to War IV. Of the State of the Church of Rome and the Decay of the Protestant Interest in Europe Written by a Gentleman by way of Letter Devotions Viz. Confessions Petitions Intercessions and Thanksgivings for every Day of the Week and also Before At and After the Sacrament With occasional Prayers for all Persons whatsover By Thomas Bennet M. A. Rector of St. Iames's in Colchester and Fellow of St. Iohn's College in Cambridge Confesso five Declaratio Sententiae Pastorum qui in Foederato Belgio remonstrantes vocantur super praecipuis Articulis Religionis Christianae 12 o. Mr. Boyer's French and English Dictionary 4 o. Idem in 8 o. Tillotson's Sermons in Folio Idem in 8 o. Cambridge Concordance Folio Cambridge Phrases 8 o. Seneca's Morals 8 o. Plutarch's Lives 5 Vol. 8 o. Patrick on Genesis Exodus c. 4 o. Temple's Essays c. 8 o. Miscellanys 3 Vol. Cowley's Works Folio History of England 8 o. Life of King Iames II. 8 o. Salmon's Dispensatory Sherlock's Sermons Sharp's Sermons Scot's Christian Life compleat Latin Common Prayer 12 o. Baker's Chronicle Folio L'Estrange's AEsop Folio Dryden's Virgil Folio Iuvenal 8 o. Miscellany Poems Folio Fables Folio Plays in Fol. and 4 o. Blackmore on Iob. Folio Oldham's Works 8 o. Duty of Man's Works Folio Collier's Essays 8 o. View of the Stage 8 o. South's Sermons 3 Vol. 8 o. Stilling fleet 's Sermons 3 Vol. 8 o. Origines sacrae Folio Quevedo's Visions Cave's Primitive Christianity Iustin Delph 8 o. Terrence Delph 8 o. Bennet's Cases against the Dissenters 8 o. his Confutation of Popery 8 o. Comber's Works Folio Taylor on the Sacrament Stanley's Lives of the Philosophers Horace Delph 8 o. Limborch Theolog. Christian. Folio Cambrid Greek Test. 12 o. Schrevelii Lexicon 8 o. Sinopsis Commun Locorum 8 o. Virgil Delph 8 o. Kilbourn's Presidents 8 o. The Governor of Cyprus a Novel There is in the Press and will be speedily publish'd Somatopolitia or the City of the Human Body artificially defended from the Tyranny of Cancers and Gangrens In the first is shewn how the Human Body may be called a City in respect of its Parts and Fabrick how it may be compared to a political City in Relation to the various Offices of its Parts and their natural dependence upon and subserviency to each other the state thereof analogically considered whether aristocratic or oligartic together with the proper Remedies both for reducing it to and preserving it in a due State In the second is explain'd the various Processes of the Blood how it nourisheth the Parts how infected and what Diseases are contagious As also a compleat Treatise of Cancers and Gangrens and an Inquiry whether they have any Relation to contagious Diseases with the Nature Causes and Signs of the different Species of Cancers and Gangrens with the Methods of Cure by the most approved Medicines By Iohn Brown Chirurgeon in Ordinary to his Majesty and late Senior Chirurgeon of Saint Tho. Hospital in Southwark Mr. Shadwell's Plays bound or single viz. 1 Sullen Lovers 2 Humorist 3 Royal Shepherdess 4 Virtuoso 5 Psyche 6 Libertine 7 Epsom Wells 8 Timon of Athens 9 Miser 10 True Widow 11 Lancashire Witches 12 Woman Captain 13 Squire of Alsatia 14 Bury Fair. 15 Amorous Biggot 16 Scowrers 17 Volunteers Also these and all other Modern Plays Mr. Anthony Abdelazer Alphonso K. of Naples ' Anthony and Cleopatra Aurengzebe Amphitrion Alcibiades Altemira Bellamira Black Prince and Tryphon Country Wit Country Wife Chances Circe Cheats City Politicks Cambyses Conquest of Granada Caesar Borgia Sir Charles Sidley's Plays Congreve's Plays Destruction of Ierusalem Duke and no Duke Devil of a Wife Distressed Innocence Dame Dobson Dryden's Plays in 4 Vol. 4 o. Dutch Lover D●n Quixot 3 parts Double Dealer Don Carlos Empress of Morocco Earl of Essex English Monarch English Fryer Edward the Third Emperor of the Moon English Lawyer Etherege's Plays Fond Husband Feign'd Courtezans False Friend Fortune Hunters Friendship in Fashion Greenwich Park Generous Conqueror Gloriana Henry V. and Mustapha Heir of Morocco Hamlet Sir Harry Wildair Herod the Great Humorous Lieutenant Ibrahim Indian Emperor London Cuckolds Mr. Lee's Plays bound or single Love for Love Love in a Wood. Loves last Shift Ladies Visiting-day Love in a Tub. Lucius Iunius Brutus Modish Husband Mourning Bride Sir Martin Mar-all Mithridates Nero. Otway's Plays bound or single Oedipus Othello Orphan Provok'd Wife Rival Sisters Siege of Babylon Shee Gallants State of Innocence Spanish Fryar Soldiers Fortune Sophonisba Tempest Tyrannick Love Theodosius Tamerlan Venice preserved Wicherley's Plays Way of the World Windsor Castle Widow Ranter