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On a new life. This gentleman, Benatzi, Disguised as you see, I have re-married.—

I knew you at first sight, and tender constantly Submission for all errors.

Mart. Nay, 'tis true, ir.

Ben. I joy in the discovery, am thankful
Unto the change.

Aur. Let wonder henceforth cease,
For I am partner with Benatzi's counsels,
And in them was director: I have seen
The man do service in the wars late past,
Worthy an ample mention; but of that
At large hereafter, repetitions now

Of good or bad, would straiten time, presented
For other use.

Mart. Welcome, and welcome ever.

Lev. Mine eyes, sir, never shall without a

blush

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THE SUN'S DARLING.

A MORAL MASQUE.

BY JOHN FORD AND THOMAS DECKER.

TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE

THOMAS WRIOTHESLEY,

EARL OF SOUTHAMPTON, LORD WRIOTHESLEY, of Titchfield, etc.

MY LORD,-Herodotus reports, that the Egyptians, by wrapping their dead in glass, present them lively to all posterity; but your lordship will do more, by the vivifying beams of your acceptation revive the parents of this orphan poem, and make them live to eternity. While the stage flourished, the POEM lived by the breath of general applauses, and the virtual fervour of the court; but since hath languished for want of heat, and now, near shrunk up with cold, creeps, with a shivering fear, to extend itself at the flames of your benignity. My lord, though it seems rough and forlorn, it is the issue of worthy parents, and we doubt not but you will find it accomplished with their virtue. Be pleased, then, my lord, to give it entertainment; the more destitute and needy it is, the greater reward may be challenged by your charity; and so, being sheltered under your wings, and comforted by the sunshine of your favour, it will become proof against the injustice of time, and, like one of Demetrius's statues, appear fresher and fresher to all ages. My lord, were we not confident of the excellence of the piece, we should not dare to assume an impudence to prefer it to a person of your honour, and known judgment; whose hearts are ready sacrifices to your name and honour, being, my lord, your lordship's most humble and most obligedly submissive servants,

THEOPHILUS BIRD.
ANDREW PENNEYCUICKE.

READER, It is not here intended to present thee with the perfect analogy between the world and man, which was made for man; nor their co-existence, the world determining with man: this, I presume, hath been by others treated on: but, drawing the curtain of this moral, you shall find him in his progression as followeth :

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Enter the PRIEST of the Sun.

Priest. Pleasures of every sense have been your Whenas you have commanded them.

Ray. To threaten ruin,

Priest. LET your tunes, you sweet voiced spheres, Corrupt the purity of knowledge; wrest

O'ertake him :

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Thou draw'st thy great descent from my grand The Sun, whose priest I am.

Ray. For small advantage.

[patron,

He who is high-born never mounts yon battlements
Of sparkling stars, unless he be in spirit
As humble as the child of one that sweats
To eat the dear-earn'd bread of honest thrift.
Priest. Hast thou not flow'd in honours?
Ray. Honours? I'd not be baited with my fears
Of losing them, to be their monstrous creature
An age together: 'tis besides as comfortable
To die upon the embroidery of the grass,
Unminded, as to set a world at gaze,
Whilst from a pinnacle I tumble down

And break my neck, to be talk'd of and wonder'd at,
Priest. You have worn rich habits.

[Ray.] Fine ass trappings !

A pedlar's heir turn'd gallant, follows fashion,
Can, by a cross-legg'd tailor, be transform'd
Into a jack-an-apes of passing bravery.

'Tis a stout happiness to wear good clothes,
Yet live and die a fool!-mew!

Priest. You have had choice

Of beauties to enrich your marriage-bed.

Ray. Monkies and paraquitoes are as pretty To play withal, though not indeed so gentle. Honesty's indeed a fine jewel, but the Indies Where't grows is hard to be discover'd: 'troth, sir, I care for no long travels with lost labour.

Desires of better life to those of this,

[servants,

This scurvy one, this life scarce worth the keeping! Priest. 'Tis melancholy, and too fond indul

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Misleads your judgment vainly. Sir, in brief,

I am to tell you, how I have received

From your progenitor, my lord, the Sun,
A token, that he visibly will descend
From the celestial orb, to gratify
All your wild longings.

Ray. Very likely when, pray?

The world the while shall be beholding to him
For a long night; new-married men will curse,
Though their brides tickle for't-oh! candle and
Will grow to an excessive rate i' th' city. [lanthorn
Priest. These are but flashes of a brain dis-

order'd.

Contain your float of spleen in seemly bounds; Your eyes shall be your witness.

Ray. He may come.

Enter TIME, whipping FOLLY, in rags, before kim. Time. Hence, hence, thou shame of nature, mankind's foil!

Time whips thee from the world, kicks thee, and

scorns thee.

Fol. Whip me from the world! why whip? am I a dog, a cur, a mongrel? bow wow! do thy [Sings. worst, I defy thee.

I will roar and squander,
Cozen and be drunk too;
I'll maintain my pandar,
Keep my horse and punk too;
Brawl and scuffle,

Shift and shuffle,

Swagger in my potmeals:
Damn-me's rank with;
Do mad prank with
Roaring-boys and Oatmeals.

Pox on time, I care not;

Being past, 'tis nothing. I'll be free and spare not; Sorrows are life's loathing. Melancholy

Is but folly;

Mirth and youth are plotters: Time, go hang thee!

I will bang thee, Though I die in totters.

And what think you of this, you old doating, moth-eaten, bearded rascal! as I am Folly by the mother's side, and a true-bred gentleman, I will sing thee to death, if thou vex me. Cannot a man of fashion, for his pleasure, put on, now and then, his working-day robes of humility, but he must presently be subject to a beadle's rod of correction? Go, mend thyself, cannibal! 'tis not without need; I am sure the times were never more beggarly and proud waiting women flaunt it in cast-suits, and their ladies fall for 'em; knaves over-brave wise men, while wise men stand with cap and knee to fools. Pitiful Time! pitiful Time!

Time. Out, foul, prodigious and abortive birth! Behold, the sand-glass of thy days is broke.

Fol. Bring me another; I'll shatter that too. Time. No, thou'st mis-spent thy hours, lavish['d,] fool-like,

The circuit of thy life, in ceaseless riots;
It is not therefore fit, that thou shouldst live
In such a court, as the Sun's majesty
Vouchsafes to illuminate with his bright beams.

Fol. In any court, father bald-pate, where my grannam the Moon shows her horns, except the Consistory Court; and there she need not appear, cuckolds carry such sharp stilettos in their foreheads. I'll live here and laugh at the bravery of ignorance, maugre thy scurvy and abominable beard.

Time. Priest of the Sun, 'tis near about the

minute

Thy patron will descend; scourge hence this trifle:
Time is ne'er lost, till, in the common schools
Of impudence, time meets with wilful fools. [Exit.

Fol. Farewell 1538! I might have said 5000, but the other's long enough o'conscience, to be honest-condition'd-pox on him! it's a notable railing whipper, of a plain Time-whipper.

Priest. You heard the charge he left.

Fol. Ay, ay, he may give a charge; he has been a petty court-holder ever since he was a minute old; he took you for a foreman of a jury. Ray. Pray, sir, what are you?

Fol. No matter what; what are you?

Ray. Not as you are, I thank my better fates; I am grandchild to the Sun.

Fol. And I am cousin-german, some two or three hundred removes off, to the Moon, and my name is Folly.

Ray. Folly, sir! of what quality?

Fol. Quality! any quality in fashion; drinking, whoring, singing, dancing, dicing, swearing, roaring, foisting, lying, cogging, canting, et cætera. Will you have any more?

Ray. You have a merry heart, if you can guide it. Fol. Yes, 'faith; so, so: I laugh not at those whom I fear; I fear not those whom I love; and I love not any whom I laugh not at: pretty strange humour, is't not?

Ray. To any one, that knows you not, it is.
Priest. You must avoid.

Fol. Away, away! I have no such meaning, indeed, la! [Music of Recorders. Priest. Hark! the fair hour is come; draw to the altar,

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To greet the world.-Ha? there does now appear
A circle in this round, of beams that shine
As if their friendly lights would darken mine:
No, let them shine out still, for these are they,
By whose sweet favours, when our warmths decay,
Even in the storms of winter, daily nourish
Our active motions, which in summer flourish,
By their fair quick'ning dews of noble loves :
Oh, may you all, like stars, whilst swift time moves,
Stand fix'd in firmaments of blest content!
Meanwhile [the] recreations we present,
Shall strive to please :-I have the foremost tract;
Each season else begins and ends an Act.

[The SUN disappears

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