Title:   The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

Subject:  

Author:   Thomas Middleton

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



Contents:

Page No 1

Page No 2

Page No 3

Page No 4

Page No 5

Page No 6

Page No 7

Page No 8

Page No 9

Page No 10

Page No 11

Page No 12

Page No 13

Page No 14

Page No 15

Page No 16

Page No 17

Page No 18

Page No 19

Page No 20

Page No 21

Page No 22

Page No 23

Page No 24

Page No 25

Page No 26

Page No 27

Page No 28

Page No 29

Page No 30

Page No 31

Page No 32

Page No 33

Page No 34

Page No 35

Page No 36

Page No 37

Page No 38

Page No 39

Page No 40

Page No 41

Page No 42

Page No 43

Page No 44

Page No 45

Page No 46

Page No 47

Page No 48

Page No 49

Page No 50

Page No 51

Page No 52

Page No 53

Page No 54

Page No 55

Page No 56

Page No 57

Page No 58

Page No 59

Page No 60

Page No 61

Page No 62

Page No 63

Page No 64

Page No 65

Page No 66

Page No 67

Page No 68

Page No 69

Page No 70

Page No 71

Page No 72

Page No 73

Page No 74

Page No 75

Page No 76

Page No 77

Page No 78

Bookmarks





Page No 1


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

Thomas Middleton



Top




Page No 2


Table of Contents

The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman.................................................................................................1

Thomas Middleton ...................................................................................................................................1

I.i. [The palace] ........................................................................................................................................2

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] ..................................................................................................................13

III.i. [The palace]...................................................................................................................................26

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house]...............................42

V.i. [The palace]....................................................................................................................................58


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

i



Top




Page No 3


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

Thomas Middleton

Act I 

Act II 

Act III 

Act IV 

Act V  

[Dramatis Personae (in order of appearance) 

The DUKE 

SHAMONT 

Four GENTLEMEN of the Chamber, the first named LA NOVE 

LAPET 

The LADY, sister to the Duke 

Lapet's WIFE 

The PASSIONATE LORD, kinsman to the Duke 

A SERVANT to Shamont 

A SOLDIER, brother to Shamont 

A Lady disguised as CUPID 

Six women MASQUERS 

Two BROTHERS to the Cupid 

A PRIEST 

A HUNTSMAN 

GALOSHIO, a clown 

Two SERVANTS to the Lady 

A SERVANT to the Duke 

A GALLANT 

A PLAIN FELLOW 

BASE, the Passionate Lord's jester 

A SERVANT to the Passionate Lord 

POLTROT 

MOULBAZON] 

The Prologue at the reviving of this play

It's grown in fashion of late in these days 

To come and beg a sufferance to our plays; 

Faith, gentlemen, our poet ever writ 

Language so good, mix'd with such sprightly wit, 

He made the theatre so sovereign 

With his rare scenes, he scorn'd this crouching vein: 

We stabb'd him with keen daggers when we pray'd 

Him write a preface to a play well made. 

He could not write these toys; 'twas easier far 

To bring a felon to appear at th' bar, 

So much he hated baseness, which this day, 

His scenes will best convince you of in's play. 

The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman 1



Top




Page No 4


I.i. [The palace]

Enter Duke, Shamont, and four Gentlemen [including La Nove]. 

DUKE

Shamont, welcome; we have miss'd thee long, 

Though absent but two days: I hope your sports 

Answer['d] your time and wishes. 

SHAMONT

Very nobly, sir: 

We found game worthy your delight, my lord, 

It was so royal. 

DUKE

I've enough to hear on't; 

Prithee bestow 't upon me in discourse. 

[They walk apart.] 

[LA NOVE]

What is this gentleman, coz? You are a courtier, 

Therefore know all their insides. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

No farther than the taffety goes, good coz, 

For the most part, which is indeed the best part 

Of the most general inside. Marry, thus far 

I can with boldness speak this one's man's character, 

And upon honour pass it for a true one: 

He has that strength of manly merit in him 

That it exceeds his sovereign's power of gracing; 

He's faithfully true to valour, that he hates 

The man from Caesar's time, or farther off, 

That ever took disgrace unreveng'd, 

And if he chance to read his abject story, 

He tears his memory out, and holds it virtuous 

Not to let shame have so much life amongst us. 

There is not such a curious piece of courage 

Amongst man's fellowship, or one so jealous 

Of honour's loss or reputation's glory: 

There's so much perfect of his growing story. 

[LA NOVE]

'Twould make one dote on virtue as you tell it. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 2



Top




Page No 5


I ha' told it to much loss, believe it, coz. 

THIRD GENTLEMAN

How the duke graces him! What is he, brother? 

FOURTH GENTLEMAN

Do you not yet know him? A vainglorious coxcomb, 

As proud as he that fell for't: 

Set but aside his valour, no virtue, 

Which is indeed not fit for any courtier; 

And we his fellows are as good as he, 

Perhaps as capable of favour too, 

For one thing or another, if 'twere look'd into. 

Give me a man, were I a sovereign now, 

Has a good stroke at tennis, and a stiff one, 

Can play at equinoctium with the line, 

As even as the thirteenth of September, 

When day and night lie in a scale together. 

Or may I thrive as I deserve at billiards, 

No otherwise at chess, or at primero? 

These are the parts requir'd, why not advanc'd? 

DUKE

Trust me, it was no less than excellent pleasure, 

And I'm right glad 'twas thine. [To Gentlemen] How fares our kinsman? 

Who can resolve us best? 

[LA NOVE]

I can, my lord. 

DUKE

There if I had a pity without bounds, 

It might be all bestow'd. A man so lost 

In the wild ways of passion, that he's sensible 

Of naught but what torments him! 

[LA NOVE]

True, my lord, 

He runs through all the passions of mankind, 

And shifts 'em strangely too: one while in love, 

And that so violent, that for want of business 

He'll court the very prentice of a laundress, 

Though she have kib'd heels: and in's melancholy again, 

He will not brook an empress, though thrice fairer 

Than ever Maud was, or higher spirited 

Than Cleopatra or your English countess. 

Then on a sudden he's so merry again, 

Outlaughs a waiting woman before her first child; 

And [in the] turning of a hand, so angry 

H'as almost beat the northern fellow blind, 

That is for that use only: if that mood hold, my lord, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 3



Top




Page No 6


H'ad need of a fresh man; I'll undertake 

He shall bruise three a month. 

DUKE

I pity him dearly, 

And let it be your charge, with his kind brother, 

To see his moods observ'd; let every passion 

Be fed ev'n to a surfeit, which in time 

May breed a loathing: let him have enough 

Of every object that his sense is rapt with. 

And being once glutted, then the taste of folly 

Will come into [disrelish]. 

[LA NOVE]

I shall see 

Your charge, my lord, most faithfully effected. 

Exit [Duke with the three other Gentlemen]. 

And how does noble Shamont? 

SHAMONT

Never ill, man, 

Until I hear of baseness, then I sicken; 

I am the healthful'st man i' th' kingdom else. 

Enter Lapet [and stands apart]. 

[LA NOVE]

Be arm'd then for a fit: here comes a fellow 

Will make you sick at heart, if baseness do't. 

SHAMONT

Let me be gone. What is he? 

[LA NOVE]

Let me tell you first 

It can be but a qualm; pray, stay it out, sir: 

Come, y'ave borne more than this. 

SHAMONT

Borne? Never anything 

That was injurious. 

[LA NOVE]

Ha, I am far from that! 

SHAMONT

He looks as like a man as I have seen one. 

What would you speak of him? Speak well, I prithee, 

Even for humanity's cause. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 4



Top




Page No 7


[LA NOVE]

You'd have it truth though? 

SHAMONT

What else, sir? I have no reason to wrong heav'n 

To favour nature; let her bear her own shame 

If she be faulty. 

[LA NOVE]

Monstrous faulty there, sir. 

SHAMONT

I'm ill at ease already. 

[LA NOVE]

Pray bear up, sir. 

SHAMONT

I prithee let me take him down with speed then, 

Like a wild object that I would not look upon. 

[LA NOVE]

Then thus: he's one that will endure as much 

As can be laid upon him. 

SHAMONT

That may be noble: 

I'm kept too long from his acquaintance. 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, sir, 

Take heed of rash repentance; y'are too forward 

To find out virtue where it never settled: 

Take the particulars first of what he endures, 

Videlicet, bastinadoes by the great 

SHAMONT

How! 

[LA NOVE]

Thumps by the dozen, and your kicks by wholesale. 

SHAMONT

No more of him. 

[LA NOVE]

The twinges by the nostril he snuffs up, 

And holds it the best remedy for sneezing. 

SHAMONT


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 5



Top




Page No 8


Away! 

[LA NOVE]

H'as been thrice switz'd from seven a' clock till nine, 

Yet with a carthorse stomach fell to breakfast, 

Forgetful of his smart. 

SHAMONT

Nay, the disgrace on't; 

There is no smart but that: base things are felt 

More by their shames than hurts. [To Lapet] Sir, I know you not, 

But that you live an injury to nature, 

I'm heartily angry with you. 

LAPET

Pray give your blow or kick, and be gone then, 

For I ne'er saw you before, and indeed 

Have nothing to say to you, for I know you not. 

SHAMONT

Why, wouldst thou take a blow? 

LAPET

I would not, sir, 

Unless 'twere offer'd me, and if from an enemy, 

I'd be loath to deny it from a stranger. 

SHAMONT

What, a blow? 

Endure a blow? And shall he live that gives it? 

LAPET

Many a fair year. Why not, sir? 

SHAMONT

Let me wonder! 

As full a man to see too, and as perfect! 

I prithee live not long! 

LAPET

How! 

SHAMONT

Let me entreat it: 

Thou dost not know what wrong thou dost mankind 

To walk so long here, not to die betimes. 

Let me advise thee, while thou hast to live here, 

Ev'n for man's honour['s] sake, take not a blow more. 

LAPET

You should advise them not to strike me then, sir, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 6



Top




Page No 9


For I'll take none, I assure you, 'less they are given. 

SHAMONT

How fain would I preserve man's form from shame 

And cannot get it done! However, sir, 

I charge thee live not long. 

LAPET

This is worse than beating. 

SHAMONT

Of what profession art thou, tell me, sir, 

Besides a tailor, for I'll know the truth. 

LAPET

A tailor! I'm as a good a gentleman, 

Can show my arms and all. 

SHAMONT

How black and blue they are! 

Is that your manifestation? Upon pain 

Of pounding thee to dust, assume not wrongfully 

The name of gentleman, because I am one 

That must not let thee live. 

LAPET

I have done, I have done, sir. 

If there be any harm, beshrew the herald; 

I'm sure I ha' not been so long a gentleman 

To make this anger: I have nothing nowhere 

But what I dearly pay for. 

SHAMONT

Groom, be gone! 

Exit [Lapet]. 

I never was so heartsick yet of man. 

Enter Lady, the Duke's sister, [and] Lapet's Wife. 

[LA NOVE]

Here comes a cordial, sir, from t'other sex, 

Able to make a dying face look cheerful. 

SHAMONT

The blessedness of ladies! 

LADY

Y'are well met, sir. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 7



Top




Page No 10


SHAMONT

The sight of you has put an evil from me 

Whose breath was able to make virtue sicken. 

LADY

I'm glad I came so fortunately. What was't, sir? 

SHAMONT

A thing that takes a blow, lives and eats after it 

In very good health; you ha' not seen the like, madam: 

A monster worth your sixpence, lovely worth. 

[LADY] 

Speak low, sir; by all likelihoods, 'tis her husband 

That now bestow'd a visitation on thee. 

Farewell, sir. 

Exit. 

SHAMONT

Husband! Is't possible that he has a wife? 

Would any creature have him? 'Twas some forc'd match; 

If he were not kick'd to th' church o' th' wedding day, 

I'll never come at court. Can be no otherwise. 

Perhaps he was rich. Speak, Mistress Lapet, 

Was it not so? 

WIFE

Nay, that's without all question. 

SHAMONT

Oh ho, he would not want kickers enow then! 

If you are wise, I much suspect your honesty, 

For wisdom never fastens constantly 

But upon merit. If you incline to fool, 

You are alike unfit for his society; 

Nay, if it were not boldness in the man 

That honours you to advise you, troth, his company 

Should not be frequent with you. 

WIFE

'Tis good counsel, sir. 

SHAMONT

Oh, I am so careful where I reverence, 

So just to goodness and her precious purity, 

I am as equally jealous and as fearful 

That any undeserved stain might fall 

Upon her sanctified whiteness, as of the sin 

That comes by willfulness. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 8



Top




Page No 11


WIFE

Sir, I love your thoughts, 

And honour you for your counsel and your care. 

SHAMONT

We are your servants. 

WIFE

[Aside] He's but a gentleman 

O' th' chamber; he might have kiss'd me. Faith, 

Where shall one find less courtesy than at court? 

Say I have an undeserver to my husband, 

That's ne'er the worse for him: well, strangelipp'd man, 

'Tis but a kiss lost, there'll more come again. 

Exit. Enter the Passionate Lord, the Duke's kinsman, makes a congie or two to nothing. 

[LA NOVE]

Look who comes here, sir; his lovefit's upon him: 

I know it by that set smile and those congies. 

How courteous he's to nothing, which indeed 

Is the next kin to woman; only shadow['s] 

The elder sister of the twain, because 'tis seen too. 

See how it kisses the forefinger still, 

Which is the last edition, and being come 

So near the thumb, every cobbler has got it. 

SHAMONT

What a ridiculous piece humanity 

Here makes itself! 

[LA NOVE]

Nay, good, give leave a little, sir, 

Y'are so precise a manhood. 

SHAMONT

It afflicts me 

When I behold unseemliness in an image 

So near the godhead; 'tis an injury 

To glorious eternity. 

[LA NOVE]

Pray use patience, sir. 

PASSIONATE LORD

[To La Nove] I do confess it freely, precious lady, 

And love's suit is so: the longer it hangs, 

The worse it is; better cut off, sweet madam. 

Oh, that same drawingin your nether lip there 

Foreshows no goodness, lady. Make you question on't? 

Shame on me but I love you. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 9



Top




Page No 12


[LA NOVE]

Who is't, sir, 

You are at all this pains for? May I know her? 

PASSIONATE LORD

For thee, thou fairest yet the falsest woman 

That ever broke man's heartstrings. 

[LA NOVE]

How? How's this, sir? 

PASSIONATE LORD

What, the old trick of ladies? Man's apparel? 

Will 't ne'er be left amongst you? Steal from court in't? 

[LA NOVE]

[Aside to Shamont] I see the fit grows stronger. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Pray let's talk a little. 

SHAMONT

[Aside to La Nove] I can endure no more! 

[LA NOVE]

[Aside to Shamont] Good, let us alone a little. 

You are so exact a work: love light things somewhat, sir. 

SHAMONT

[Aside to La Nove] Th'are all but shames. 

[LA NOVE]

What is't you'd say to me, sir? 

PASSIONATE LORD

Can you be so forgetful to enquire it, lady? 

[LA NOVE]

Yes, truly, sir. 

PASSIONATE LORD

The more I admire your flintiness. 

What cause have I given you, illustrious madam, 

To play this strange part with me? 

[LA NOVE]

Cause enough; 

Do but look back, sir, into your memory, 

Your love to other women. Oh, lewd man, 

'T 'as almost kill'd my heart! You see I'm chang'd with it; 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 10



Top




Page No 13


I ha' lost the fashion of my sex with grief on't. 

When I have seen you courting of a dowdy, 

Compar'd with me, and kissing your forefinger 

To one o' th' blackguards' mistresses: would not this 

Crack a poor lady's heart that believ'd love 

And waited for the comfort? But 'twas said, sir, 

A lady of my hair cannot want pitying. 

The country's coming up; farewell to you, sir. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Whither intend you, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

A long journey, sir: 

The truth is, I'm with child and go to travel. 

PASSIONATE LORD

With child? I never got it. 

[LA NOVE]

I heard you were busy 

At the same time, sir, and was loath to trouble you. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Why, are not you a whore then, excellent madam? 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, by no means: 'twas done, sir, in the state 

Of my belief in you, and that quits me; 

It lies upon your falsehood. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Does it so? 

You shall not carry her though, sir; she's my contract. 

[SHAMONT] 

I prithee, thou four elements illbrew'd, 

Torment none but thyself! Away, I say, 

Thou beast of passion, as the drunkard is 

The beast of wine! Dishonour to thy making, 

Thou man in fragments! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Hear me, precious madam. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] Kneel for thy wits to heaven. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Lady, I'll father it, 

Whoe'er begot it: 'tis the course of greatness. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 11



Top




Page No 14


SHAMONT

[Aside] How virtue groans at this! 

PASSIONATE LORD

I'll raise the court, 

But I'll stay your flight. 

Exit. 

SHAMONT

How wretched is that piece! 

[LA NOVE]

He's the duke's kinsman, sir. 

SHAMONT

That cannot take a passion away, sir, 

Nor cut a fit but one poor hour shorter; 

He must endure as much as the poorest beggar 

That cannot change his money: there's the equality 

In our impartial essence. 

Enter a Servant. 

What's the news now? 

SERVANT

Your worthy brother, sir, has left his charge 

And come to see you. 

Enter Shamont's brother, a Soldier. 

SHAMONT

[Embracing him] Oh, the noblest welcome 

That ever came from man meet thy deservings! 

Methinks I've all joy's treasure in mine arms now. 

SOLDIER

You are so fortunate in prevention, brother, 

You always leave the answerer barren, sir; 

You comprehend in few words so much worth. 

SHAMONT

'Tis all too little for thee; come, th'art welcome, 

So I include all. Take especial knowledge, pray, 

Of this dear gentleman, my absolute friend, 

That loves a soldier far above a mistress, 

Though excellently faithful to 'em both: 

But love to manhood owns the purer troth. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

I.i. [The palace] 12



Top




Page No 15


Exeunt. 

II.i. [A gallery in the palace]

Enter Shamont's brother, a Soldier, and a Lady, the Duke's sister. 

LADY

There should be in this gallery Oh, th'are here. 

Pray sit down; believe me, sir, I'm weary. 

SOLDIER

It well becomes a lady to complain a little 

Of what she never feels. Your walk was short, madam: 

You can be but afraid of weariness, 

Which well [implies] the softness of your sex; 

As for the thing itself, you never came to't. 

LADY

Y'are wondrously well read in ladies, sir. 

SOLDIER

Shall I think such a creature as you, madam, 

Was ever born to feel pain but in travail? 

There's your full portion, besides a little toothache 

In the breeding, which a kind husband too 

Takes from you, madam. 

LADY

But where do ladies, sir, 

Find such kind husbands? Perhaps you have heard 

The rheumatic story of some loving chandler now, 

Or some such melting fellow, that you talk 

So prodigal of men's kindness: I confess, sir, 

Many of those wives are happy; their ambition 

Does reach no higher than to love and ignorance, 

Which makes an excellent husband, and a fond one. 

Now, sir, your great ones aim at height and cunning, 

And so are oft deceiv'd, yet they must venture it, 

For 'tis a lady's contumely, sir, 

To have a lord an ignorant; then the world's voice 

Will deem her for a wanton ere she taste on't: 

But to deceive a wise man, to whose circumspection 

The world resigns itself with all his envy, 

'Tis less dishonour to us then to fall 

Because his believ'd wisdom keeps out all. 

SOLDIER

Would I were the man, lady, that should venture 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 13



Top




Page No 16


His wisdom to your goodness. 

LADY

You might fail 

In the return, as many men have done, sir. 

I dare not justify what is to come of me, 

Because I know it not, though I hope virtuously; 

Marry, what's past or present, I durst put 

Into a good man's hand, which if he take 

Upon my word for good, it shall not cozen him. 

SOLDIER

No, nor hereafter? 

LADY

It may hap so too, sir. 

A woman's goodness, when she is a wife, 

Lies much upon a man's desert, believe it, sir; 

If there be fault in her, I'll pawn my life on't, 

'Tis first in him, if she were ever good, 

That makes one. Knowing not a husband yet, 

Or what he may be, I promise no more virtues 

Than I may well perform, for that were cozenage. 

SOLDIER

Happy were he that had you with all fears, 

That's my opinion, lady. 

Enter Shamont and a Servant list'ning. [They remain hidden and talk apart.] 

SERVANT

What say you now, sir? 

Dare you give confidence to your own eyes? 

SHAMONT

Not yet I dare not. 

SERVANT

No? 

SHAMONT

Scarce yet, or yet, 

Although I see 'tis he. Why can a thing 

That's but myself divided be so false? 

SERVANT

Nay, do but mark how the chair plays his part too: 

How amorously 'tis bent! 

SHAMONT

Hell take thy bad thoughts, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 14



Top




Page No 17


For they are strange ones; never take delight 

To make a torment worse! Look on 'em, heaven, 

For that's a brother: send me a fair enemy 

And take him, for a fouler fiend there breathes not. 

I will not sin to think there's ill in her 

But what's of his producing; 

Yet goodness, whose enclosure is but flesh, 

Holds out oft times but sorrily, but as black, sir, 

As ever kindred was: I hate mine own blood, 

Because it is so near thine. Live without honesty, 

And mayst thou die with an unmoist'ned eye, 

And no tear follow thee. 

Exeunt Shamont, Servant. 

LADY

Y'are wondrous merry, sir; 

I would your brother heard you. 

SOLDIER

[Or] my sister; 

I would not out o' th' way let fall my words, lady, 

For the precisest humour. 

Enter Passionate Lord. 

PASSIONATE LORD

[Aside] Yea, so close? 

SOLDIER

Th'are merry, that's the worst you can report on 'em; 

Th'are neither dangerous nor immodest. 

PASSIONATE LORD

So, sir, 

Shall I believe you, think you? 

SOLDIER

Who's this, lady? 

LADY

Oh, the duke's cousin; he came late from travel, sir. 

SOLDIER

Respect belongs to him. 

PASSIONATE LORD

For as I said, lady, 

Th'are merry, that's the worst you can report of 'em; 

Th'are neither dangerous nor immodest. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 15



Top




Page No 18


SOLDIER

How's this? 

PASSIONATE LORD

And there I think I left. 

SOLDIER

Abuses me! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Now to proceed, lady: perhaps I swore I lov'd you; 

If you believe me not, y'are much the wiser. 

SOLDIER

He speaks still in my person and derides me! 

PASSIONATE LORD

For I can cog with you. 

LADY

You can all do so: 

We make no question of men's promptness that way. 

PASSIONATE LORD

And smile, and wave a chair with comely grace too, 

Play with our tassel gently, and do fine things 

That catch a lady sooner than a virtue. 

SOLDIER

I never us'd to let man live so long 

That wrong'd me! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Talk of battalions, woo you in a skirmish; 

Divine my mind to you, lady, and being sharp set, 

Can court you at halfpike, or name your weapon, 

We cannot fail you, lady. 

Enter First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

SOLDIER

[Drawing his sword] Now he dies! 

Were all succeeding hopes stor'd up within him. 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, fie! I' th' court, sir? 

SOLDIER

I most dearly thank you, sir. 

[He puts up his sword.] 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 16



Top




Page No 19


[LA NOVE]

'Tis rage ill spent upon a passionate madman. 

SOLDIER

That shall not privilege him forever, sir. 

A madman call you him? I have found too much reason 

Sound in his injury to me to believe him so. 

[LA NOVE]

If ever truth from man's lips may be held 

In reputation with you, give this confidence, 

And this his lovefit, which we observe still, 

By's flattering and his fineness: at some other time, 

He'll go as slovenly as heart can wish. 

The love and pity that his highness shows to him 

Makes every man the more respectful of him. 

H'as never a passion but is well provided for; 

As this of love, he is full fed in all, 

His swinge as I may term it. Have but patience, 

And ye shall witness somewhat. 

SOLDIER

Still he mocks me, 

Look you, in action, in behaviour, sir! 

Hold still the chair, with a grand mischief to you, 

Or I'll set so much strength upon your heart, sir! 

PASSIONATE LORD

I feel some power has restrain'd me, lady: 

If it be sent from love, say, I obey it, 

And ever keep a voice to welcome it. 

Song. 

Thou deity, swiftwinged love, 

Sometimes below, sometimes above, 

Little in shape, but great in power, 

Thou that makest a heart thy tower, 

And thy loopholes, ladies' eyes, 

From whence thou strik'st the fond and wise: 

Did all the shafts in thy fair quiver 

Stick fast in my ambitious liver, 

Yet thy power would I adore, 

And call upon thee to shoot more. 

Shoot more, shoot more.

Enter [a lady] like a Cupid off'ring to shoot at him. 

I prithee hold, thou sweet, celestial boy; 

I'm not requited yet with love enough 

For the first arrow that I have within me: 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 17



Top




Page No 20


And if thou be an equal archer, Cupid, 

Shoot this lady and twenty more for me. 

LADY

Me, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

[Aside to her] 'Tis nothing but device, fear it not, lady; 

You may be as good a maid after that shaft, madam, 

As e'er your mother was at twelve and a half: 

'Tis like the boy that draws it, 't 'as no sting yet. 

CUPID

[Aside] 'Tis like the miserable maid that draws it 

That sees no comfort yet, seeing him so passionate. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Strike me the Duchess of Valois in love with me 

With all the speed thou canst, and two of her women. 

CUPID

You shall have more. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Tell 'em I tarry for 'em. 

Exit [Cupid]. 

[LA NOVE]

[Aside to the Soldier] Who would be angry with that walking trouble now 

That hurts none but itself? 

SOLDIER

I am better quieted. 

PASSIONATE LORD

I'll have all womenkind struck in time for me 

After thirteen once: 

I see this Cupid will not let me want, 

And let him spend his forty shafts an hour; 

They shall be all found from the duke's exchequer. 

Enter again the same Cupid, [her] two Brothers, six women masquers, Cupid's bow bent all the way towards

them, the first woman singing and playing, a Priest. 

He's come already. 

The song. 

[FIRST WOMAN] 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 18



Top




Page No 21


Oh, turn thy bow, 

Thy power we feel and know; 

Fair Cupid, turn away thy bow: 

They be those golden arrows 

Bring ladies all their sorrows, 

And till there be more truth in men, 

Never shoot at maid again.

PASSIONATE LORD

What a felicity of whores are here! 

And all my concubines struck bleeding new! 

A man can in his lifetime make but one woman, 

But he may make his fifty queans a month. 

[The Cupid takes her Brothers and the Priest aside.] 

CUPID

Have you rememb'red a priest, honest brothers? 

FIRST BROTHER

Yes, sister, and this is the young gentleman; 

Make you no question of our faithfulness. 

SECOND BROTHER

[This] growing shame, sister, provokes our care. 

PRIEST

He must be taken in this fit of love, gentlemen. 

FIRST BROTHER

What else, sir? He shall do't. 

SECOND BROTHER

Enough. 

FIRST BROTHER

Be cheerful, wench. 

A dance, Cupid leading. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Now by the stroke of pleasure, a deep oath. 

Nimbly hopp'd, ladies all. What height they bear too! 

A story higher than your common statures; 

A little man must go upstairs to kiss 'em. 

What a great space there is 

Betwixt love's dining chamber and his garret! 

I'll try the utmost height. The garret stoops methinks; 

The rooms are made all bending, I see that, 

And not so high as a man takes 'em for. 

CUPID


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 19



Top




Page No 22


Now if you'll follow me, sir, I've that power 

To make them follow you. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Are they all shot? 

CUPID

All, all, sir, every mother's daughter of 'em. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Then there's no fear of following; if they be 

Once shot, they'll follow a man to th' devil. 

As for you, sir 

Exit with the Lady, [the Cupid, the Brothers, the Priest] and the Masquers. 

SOLDIER

Me, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

Nay, sweet sir. 

SOLDIER

A noise, a threat'ning! Did you not hear it, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

Without regard, sir, so would I [have] you. 

SOLDIER

This must come to something: never talk of that, sir; 

You never saw it otherwise. 

[LA NOVE]

Nay, dear merit 

SOLDIER

Me, above all men! 

[LA NOVE]

Troth, you wrong your anger. 

SOLDIER

I will be arm'd, my honourable lecher 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, fie, sweet sir! 

SOLDIER

That devours women's honesties by lumps 

And never chaw'st thy pleasure. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 20



Top




Page No 23


[LA NOVE]

What do you mean, sir? 

SOLDIER

What, does he mean t' engross all to himself? 

There's others love a whore as well as he, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, an' that be part o' th' fury, we have a city 

Is very well provided for that case. 

Let him alone with her, sir; we have women 

Are very charitable to proper men, 

And to a soldier that has all his limbs. 

Marry, the sick and lame gets not a penny: 

Right women's charity, and the husbands 

Follow 't too. 

Enter Duke and lords [the three other Gentlemen]. 

Here comes his highness, sir. 

SOLDIER

I'll walk to cool myself. 

Exit. 

DUKE

Who's that? 

[LA NOVE]

The brother of Shamont. 

DUKE

He's brother then 

To all the court's love, they that love discreetly 

And place their friendliness upon desert; 

As for the rest, that with a double face 

Look upon merit, much like fortune's visage, 

That looks two ways, both to life's calms and storms, 

I'll so provide for him, chiefly for him: 

He shall not wish their loves nor dread their envies. 

Enter Shamont. 

And here comes my Shamont. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] That lady's virtues are my only joys, 

And he to offer to lay siege to them! 

DUKE


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 21



Top




Page No 24


Shamont. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] Her goodness is my pride; in all discourses, 

As often as I hear rashtongued gallants 

Speak rudely of a woman, presently 

I give in but her name and th'are all silent. 

Oh, who would lose this benefit? 

DUKE

Come hither, sir. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] 'Tis like the gift of healing but diviner, 

For that but cures diseases in the body, 

This works a cure on fame, on reputation, 

The noblest piece of surgery upon earth. 

DUKE

Shamont. He minds me not. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] A brother do't? 

DUKE

Shamont I say! 

Gives him a touch with his switch. 

SHAMONT

Ha! 

Draws. 

If he be mortal, by this hand he perishes! 

Unless it be a stroke from heaven, he dies for't! 

DUKE

Why, how now, sir? 'Twas I. 

SHAMONT

The more's my misery. 

DUKE

Why, what's the matter, prithee? 

SHAMONT

Can you ask it, sir? 

No man else should; stood forty lives before him, 

By this I would have op'd my way to him. 

It could not be you, sir; excuse him not, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 22



Top




Page No 25


Whate'er he be, as y'are dear to honour, 

That I may find my peace again. 

DUKE

Forbear, I say. 

Upon my love to truth, 'twas none but I. 

SHAMONT

Still miserable! 

DUKE

Come, come, what ails you, sir? 

SHAMONT

Never sat shame cooling so long upon me 

Without a satisfaction in revenge, 

And heaven has made it here a sin to wish it. 

DUKE

Hark you, sir! 

SHAMONT

Oh, y'ave undone me! 

DUKE

How! 

SHAMONT

Cruelly undone me; 

I have lost my peace, and reputation by you: 

Sir, pardon me, I can never love you more. 

Exit. 

DUKE

What language call you this, sirs? 

[LA NOVE]

Truth, my lord, 

I've seldom heard a stranger. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

He is a man of a most curious valour, 

Wondrous precise, and punctual in that virtue. 

DUKE

But why to me so punctual? My last thought 

Was most entirely fix'd on his advancement: 

Why, I came now to put him in possession 

Of his fair fortunes. What a misconceiver 'tis! 

And from a gentleman of our chamber merely 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 23



Top




Page No 26


[Make] him viceadmiral; I was settled in't. 

I love him next to health. Call him, gentlemen. 

Exit First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

Why, would not you or you ha' taken as much 

And never murmur'd? 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

Troth, I think we should, my lord, 

And there's a fellow walks about the court 

Would take a hundred of 'em. 

DUKE

I hate you all for't, 

And rather praise his highpitch'd fortitude, 

Though in extremes for niceness: now I think on't, 

I would I had never done 't. 

Enter First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

Now, sir, where is he? 

[LA NOVE]

His suit is only, sir, to be excus'd. 

DUKE

He shall not be excus'd, I love him dearlier: 

Say we entreat him; go, he must not leave us. 

[Exeunt La Nove and Second] Gentleman. 

So virtue bless me, I ne'er knew him parallell'd; 

Why, he's more precious to me now than ever. 

Enter [La Nove, Second] Gentleman and Shamont. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

With much fair language, w'ave brought him. 

DUKE

Thanks. 

Where is he? 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

Yonder, sir. 

DUKE

Come forward, man. 

SHAMONT


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 24



Top




Page No 27


Pray pardon me, I'm asham'd to be seen, sir. 

DUKE

Was ever such a touchy man heard of? 

Prithee come nearer. 

SHAMONT

More into the light? 

Put not such cruelty into your requests, my lord, 

First to disgrace me publicly, and then draw me 

Into men's eyesight, with the shame yet hot 

Upon my reputation. 

DUKE

What disgrace, sir? 

SHAMONT

What? 

Such as there can be no forgiveness for 

That I can find in honour. 

DUKE

That's most strange, sir. 

SHAMONT

Yet I have search'd my bosom to find one, 

And wrestled with my inclination, 

But 'twill not be: would you had kill'd me, sir, 

With what an ease had I forgiven you then! 

But to endure a stroke from any hand 

Under a punishing angel's, which is justice, 

Honour disclaim that man, for my part chiefly. 

Had it been yet the malice of your sword, 

Though it had cleft me, 't had been noble to me; 

You should have found my thanks paid in a smile 

If I had fell unworded: but to shame me 

With the correction that your horse should have, 

Were you ten thousand times my royal lord, 

I cannot love you never, nor desire 

To serve you more. 

If your drum call me I am vowed to valour, 

But peace shall never know me yours again, 

Because I've lost mine own; I speak to die, sir. 

Would you were gracious that way to take off shame, 

With the same swiftness as you pour it on: 

And since it is not in the power of monarchs 

To make a gentleman, which is a substance 

Only begot of merit, they should be careful 

Not to destroy the worth of one so rare, 

Which neither they can make nor lost, repair. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

II.i. [A gallery in the palace] 25



Top




Page No 28


Exit. 

DUKE

Y'ave set a fair light, sir, before my judgment, 

Which burns with wondrous clearness; I acknowledge it, 

And your worth with it: but then, sir, my love, 

My love What, gone again? 

[LA NOVE]

And full of scorn, my lord. 

DUKE

That language will undo the man that keeps it 

Who knows no difference 'twixt contempt and manhood. 

Upon your love to goodness, gentlemen, 

Let me not lose him long. 

Enter a Huntsman. 

How now? 

HUNTSMAN

The game's at height, my lord. 

DUKE

Confound both thee and it: hence break it off; 

He hates me brings me news of any pleasure. 

I felt not such a conflict since I could 

Distinguish betwixt worthiness and blood. 

Exeunt. 

III.i. [The palace]

Enter the two Brothers, First Gentleman [La Nove], with those that were the Masquers, and the Cupid. 

[LA NOVE]

I heartily commend your project, gentlemen; 

'Twas wise and virtuous. 

FIRST BROTHER

'Twas for the safety 

Of precious honour, sir, which near blood binds us to: 

He promis'd the poor easy fool there marriage; 

There was a good maidenhead lost i 'th' belief on't, 

Beshrew her hasty confidence. 

[LA NOVE]


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 26



Top




Page No 29


Oh, no more, sir, 

You make her weep again! Alas, poor Cupid. 

Shall she not shift herself? 

FIRST BROTHER

Oh, by no means, sir. 

We dare not have her seen yet; all the while 

She keeps this shape, 'tis but thought device, 

And she may follow him so without suspicion, 

To see if she can draw all his wild passions, 

To one point only, and that's love, the main point: 

So far his highness grants, and gave at first, 

Large approbation to the quick conceit, 

Which then was quick indeed. 

[LA NOVE]

You make her blush, in sooth. 

FIRST BROTHER

I fear 'tis more the flag of shame than grace, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

They both give but one kind of colour, sir: 

If it be bashfulness in that kind taken, 

It is the same with grace; and there she weeps again. 

In truth y'are too hard, much, much too bitter, sir, 

Unless you mean to have her weep her eyes out, 

To play a Cupid truly. 

FIRST BROTHER

Come, ha' done then: 

We should all fear to sin first, for 'tis certain, 

When 'tis once lodg'd, though entertain'd in mirth, 

It must be wept out if it e'er come forth. 

[LA NOVE]

Now 'tis so well, I'll leave you. 

FIRST BROTHER

Faithfully welcome, sir. 

[Exit La Nove.] 

Go, Cupid, to your charge; he's your own now: 

If he want love, none will be blam'd but you. 

CUPID

[Aside] The strangest marriage and unfortunat'st bride 

That ever human memory contain'd; 

I cannot be myself for't. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 27



Top




Page No 30


Exit [with Masquers]. Enter [Galoshio] the clown. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, gentlemen! 

FIRST BROTHER

How now, sir, what's the matter? 

[GALOSHIO]

His melancholy passion is half spent already, then comes his angry fit at the very tail on't, then comes in my

pain, gentlemen; h'as beaten me e'en to a cullis. I am nothing, right worshipful, but very pap and jelly: I have

no bones, my body's all one [burstness]. They talk of ribs and chines most freely abroad i' th' world; why, I

have no such thing: whoever lives to see me dead, gentlemen, shall find me all mummy, good to fill gallipots

and long dildo glasses; I shall not have a bone to throw at a dog. 

[BROTHERS] 

Alas, poor vassal, how he goes! 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, gentlemen, 

I am unjointed, do but think o' that. 

My breast is beat into my maw, that what I eat, 

I am fain to take 't in all at mouth with spoons; 

A lamentable hearing, and 'tis well known 

My belly is driven into my back. 

I earn'd four crowns a month most dearly, gentlemen, 

And one he must have when the fit's upon him; 

The privy purse allows it, and 'tis thriftiness: 

He would break else some forty pounds in casements, 

And in five hundred years undo the kingdom; 

I have cast it up to a quarrel. 

FIRST BROTHER

There's a fellow 

Kick'd about court; I would he had his place, brother, 

But for one fit of his indignation. 

SECOND BROTHER

And suddenly I have thought upon a means for't. 

FIRST BROTHER

I prithee, how? 

SECOND BROTHER

'Tis but preferring, brother, 

This stockfish to his service, with a letter 

Of commendations, the same way he wishes it, 

And then you win his heart, for o' my knowledge 

He has laid wait this halfyear for a fellow 

That will be beaten; and with a safe conscience 

We may commend the carriage of this man in't. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 28



Top




Page No 31


No servants he has keptlusty, tall feeders 

But they have beat him and turn'd themselves away: 

Now one that would endure is like to stay 

And get good wages of him; and the service too 

Is ten times milder, brother, I would not wish it else. 

I see the fellow has a sore crush'd body, 

And the more need he has to be kick'd at ease. 

[GALOSHIO]

Ay, sweet gentlemen, a kick of ease; 

Send me to such a master. 

SECOND BROTHER

No more I say; 

We have one for thee, a softfooted master, 

One that wears wool in's toes. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, gentlemen, 

Soft garments may you wear, soft skins may you wed, 

But as plump as pillows, both for white and red! 

And now will I reveal a secret to you, 

Since you provide for my poor flesh so tenderly: 

H'as hir'd mere rogues out of his chamber window 

To beat the soldier, Monsieur Shamont's brother. 

FIRST BROTHER

That nothing concerns us, sir. 

[GALOSHIO]

For no cause, gentlemen, 

Unless it be for wearing shoulderpoints 

With longer tags than his. 

SECOND BROTHER

Is not that somewhat? 

Birlakin, sir, the difference of long tags 

Has cost many a man's life, and advanc'd other some. 

Come, follow me. 

[GALOSHIO]

[Aside] See what a gull am I! 

Oh, every man in his profession! 

I know a thump now, as judiciously 

As the proudest he that walks, I'll except none. 

Come to a tag, how short I fall! I'm gone. 

Exeunt. 

[III.ii. The palace]


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 29



Top




Page No 32


Enter Lapet. 

LAPET

I have been ruminating with myself 

What honour a man loses by a kick. 

Why, what's a kick? The fury of a foot, 

Whose indignation commonly is stamp'd 

Upon the hinder quarter of a man, 

Which is a place very unfit for honour; 

The world will confess so much. 

Then what disgrace I pray does that part suffer 

Where honour never comes? I'd fain know that! 

This being wellforc'd and urg'd may have the power 

To move most gallants to take kicks in time, 

And spurn out the duelloes out o' th' kingdom, 

For they that stand upon their honour most, 

When they conceive there is no honour lost, 

As by a table that I have invented 

For that purpose alone shall appear plainly, 

Which shows the vanity of all blows at large, 

And with what ease they may be took of all sides, 

Numbering but twice o'er the letters "Patience" 

From P. to E. I doubt not but in small time 

To see a dissolution of all bloodshed 

If the reform'd kick do but once get up, 

For what a lamentable folly 'tis, 

If we observe 't, for every little justle, 

Which is but the ninth part of a sound thump 

In our meek computation. We must fight forsooth, yes: 

If I kill, I'm hang'd; if I be kill'd myself, 

I die for't also. Is not this trim wisdom? 

Now for the con: a man may be wellbeaten, 

Yet pass away his fourscore years smooth after; 

I had a father did it, and to my power 

I will not be behind him. 

Enter Shamont. 

SHAMONT

Oh, well met. 

LAPET

[Aside] Now a fine punch or two, I look for't duly. 

SHAMONT

I've been to seek you. 

LAPET

Let me know your lodging, sir, 

I'll come to you once a day and use your pleasure, sir. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 30



Top




Page No 33


SHAMONT

I'm made the fittest man for thy society; 

I'll live and die with thee. Come, show me a chamber; 

There is no house but thine, but only thine, 

That's fit to cover me: I've took a blow, sirrah. 

LAPET

I would you had indeed; why, you may see, sir, 

You'll all come to't in time when my book's out. 

SHAMONT

Since I did see thee last, I've took a blow. 

LAPET

Fa, sir, that's nothing; I ha' took forty since. 

SHAMONT

What? And I charg'd thee thou shouldst not! 

LAPET

Ay, sir, 

You might charge your pleasure, but they would give 't me, 

Whether I would or no. 

SHAMONT

Oh, I walk 

Without my peace, I've no companion now! 

Prithee resolve me, for I cannot ask 

A man more beaten to experience 

Than thou art in this kind, what manner of blow 

Is held the most disgraceful or distasteful? 

For thou dost only censure 'em by the hurt, 

Not by the shame they do thee: yet having felt 

Abuses of all kinds, thou mayst deliver, 

Though 't be by chance, the most injurious one. 

LAPET

You put me to't, sir; but to tell you truth, 

Th'are all as one with me, little exception. 

SHAMONT

That little may do much; let's have it from you. 

LAPET

With all the speed I may: first then and foremost, 

I hold so reverently of the bastinado, sir, 

That if it were the dearest friend i' th' world 

I'd put it into his hand. 

SHAMONT

Go to, I'll pass 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 31



Top




Page No 34


That then. 

LAPET

Y'are the more happy, sir; would I 

Were past it too, but being accustom'd to't, 

It is the better carried. 

SHAMONT

Will you forward? 

LAPET

Then there's your souse, your wherret, and your doust, 

Tugs on the hair, your bob o' th' lips, a whelp on't: 

I ne'er could find much difference. Now your thump, 

A thing deriv'd first from your hempbeaters, 

Takes a man's wind away most spitefully: 

There's nothing that destroys a colic like it, 

For't leaves no wind i' th' body. 

SHAMONT

On, sir, on. 

LAPET

Pray give me leave; I'm out of breath with thinking on't. 

SHAMONT

This is far off yet. 

LAPET

For the twinge by th' nose, 

'Tis certainly unsightly, so my table says, 

But helps against the headache wondrous strangely. 

SHAMONT

Is't possible? 

LAPET

Oh, your crush'd nostrils slakes your oppilation 

And makes your pent powers flush to wholesome sneezes. 

SHAMONT

I never thought there had been half that virtue 

In a wrung nose before. 

LAPET

Oh, plenitude, sir: 

Now come we lower to our modern kick, 

Which has been mightily in use of late, 

Since our young men drank coltsfoot: and I grant you, 

'Tis a most scornful wrong, 'cause the foot plays it; 

But mark again how we that take 't, requite it 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 32



Top




Page No 35


With the like scorn, for we receive it backward, 

And can there be a worse disgrace retorted? 

SHAMONT

And is this all? 

LAPET

All but a lug by th' ear, 

Or such a trifle. 

SHAMONT

Happy sufferer, 

All this is nothing to the wrong I bear: 

I see the worst disgrace thou never felt'st yet; 

It is so far from thee, thou canst not think on't, 

Nor dare I let thee know, it is so abject. 

LAPET

I would you would though, that I might prepare for't, 

For I shall ha't at one time or another: 

If't be a thwack, I make account of that; 

There's no new fashion'd swap that e'er came up yet 

But I've the first on 'em, I thank 'em for't. 

Enter the Lady and Servants. 

LADY

Hast thou enquir'd? 

FIRST SERVANT

But can hear nothing, madam. 

SHAMONT

[Aside to Lapet] If there be but so much substance in thee 

To make a shelter for a man disgrac'd, 

Hide my departure from that glorious woman 

That comes with all perfection about her, 

So noble that I dare not be seen of her 

Since shame took hold of me. Upon thy life 

No mention of me. 

LAPET

[Aside to Shamont] I'll cut out my tongue first 

Before I'll lose my life, there's more belongs to't. 

[Exit Shamont.] 

LADY

See, there's a gentleman: enquire of him. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 33



Top




Page No 36


SECOND SERVANT

For Monsieur Shamont, madam? 

LADY

For whom else, sir? 

FIRST SERVANT

Why, this fellow dares not see him. 

LADY

How? 

FIRST SERVANT

Shamont, madam? 

His very name's worse than a fever to him, 

And when he cries, there's nothing stills him sooner. 

Madam, your page of thirteen is too hard for him; 

'Twas try'd i' th' woodyard. 

LADY

Alas, poor, grieved merit! 

What is become of him? If he once fail, 

Virtue shall find small friendship. Farewell then 

To ladies' worths for any hope in men: 

He lov'd for goodness, not for wealth or lust, 

After the world's foul dotage; he ne'er courted 

The body but the beauty of the mind, 

A thing which common courtship never thinks on. 

All his affections were so sweet and fair; 

There is no hope for fame if he despair. 

Exeunt Lady and Servants. Enter [Galoshio] the clown. He kicks Lapet [and gives him letter]. 

LAPET

Good morrow to you again most heartily, sir; 

Cry you mercy I heard you not, I was somewhat busy. 

[GALOSHIO]

[Aside] He takes it as familiarly as an ave 

Or precious salutation: I was sick 

Till I had one, because I am so us'd to't. 

LAPET

However you deserve, your friends and mine here 

Give you large commendations i' this letter; 

They say you will endure well. 

[GALOSHIO]

I'd be loath 

To prove 'em liars: I've endur'd as much 

As mortal pen and ink can set me down for. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 34



Top




Page No 37


LAPET

Say you me so? 

[GALOSHIO]

I know and feel it so, sir: 

I have it under black and white already; 

I need no pen to paint me out. 

LAPET

[Aside] He fits me, 

And hits my wishes pat, pat: I was ne'er 

In possibility to be better mann'd, 

For he's half lam'd already; I see 't plain, 

But take no notice on't for fear I make 

The rascal proud and dear to advance his wages. 

First let me grow into particulars with you. 

What have you endur'd of worth? Let me hear. 

[GALOSHIO]

Marry, sir, I'm almost beaten blind. 

LAPET

That's pretty well for a beginning, 

But many a millhorse has endur'd as much. 

[GALOSHIO]

Shame o' the miller's heart for his unkindness then. 

LAPET

Well, sir, what then? 

[GALOSHIO]

I've been twice thrown downstairs just before supper. 

LAPET

Puh, so have I! That's nothing. 

[GALOSHIO]

Ay, but, sir, 

Was yours pray before supper? 

LAPET

There thou posest me. 

[GALOSHIO]

Ay, marry, that's it; 't 'ad been less grief to me 

Had I but fill'd my belly and then tumbled, 

But to be flung down fasting, there's the dolour. 

LAPET


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 35



Top




Page No 38


It would have griev'd me, that indeed. Proceed, sir. 

[GALOSHIO]

I have been pluck'd and tugg'd by th' hair o' th' head 

About a gallery, half an acre long. 

LAPET

Yes, that's a good one, I must needs confess, 

A principal good one that, an absolute good one; 

I have been trod upon, and spurn'd about, 

But never tugg'd by th' hair, I thank my fates. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, 'tis a spiteful pain! 

LAPET

Peace, never speak on't 

For putting me in mind on't. 

[GALOSHIO]

To conclude, 

I'm bursten, sir: my belly will hold no meat. 

LAPET

No? That makes amends for all. 

[GALOSHIO]

Unless 't be puddings 

Or such fast food: any loose thing beguiles me; 

I'm ne'er the better for't. 

LAPET

Sheepsheads will stay 

With thee? 

[GALOSHIO]

Yes, sir, or chaldrons. 

LAPET

Very well, sir. 

Any your bursten fellows must take heed of surfeits. 

Strange things it seems you have endur'd. 

[GALOSHIO]

Too true, sir. 

LAPET

But now the question is, what you will endure 

Hereafter in my service? 

[GALOSHIO]


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 36



Top




Page No 39


Anything 

That shall be reason, sir, for I'm but froth; 

Much like a thing newcalv'd, or come more nearer, sir, 

Y'ave seen a cluster of frogspawns in April: 

E'en such a starch am I, as weak and tender 

As a green woman yet. 

LAPET

Now I know this, 

I will be very gently angry with thee 

And kick thee carefully. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, ay, sweet sir! 

LAPET

Peace, when thou art offer'd well, lest I begin now. 

Your friends and mine have writ here for your truth; 

They'll pass their words themselves and I must meet 'em. 

[GALOSHIO]

Then have you all. 

Exit [Lapet]. 

As for my honesty there is no fear of that, 

For I have ne'er a whole bone about me. 

Exit. 

[III.iii. The Passionate Lord's chambers]

Music. Enter the Passionate [Lord], rudely and carelessly apparell'd, unbrac'd and untruss'd, the Cupid

following. 

CUPID

Think upon love, which makes all creatures handsome, 

Seemly for eyesight; go not so diffusedly: 

There are great ladies purpose, sir, to visit you. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Grand plagues, shut in my casements, that the breaths 

Of their coachmares reek not into my nostrils; 

Those beasts are but a kind of bawdy forerunners. 

CUPID

It is not well with you when you speak ill of fair ladies. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Fair mischiefs! Give me a nest of owls, and take 'em! 

Happy is he, say I, whose window opens 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 37



Top




Page No 40


To a brown baker's chimney: he shall be sure there 

To hear the bird sometimes after twilight. 

What a fine thing 'tis, methinks, to have our garments 

Sit loose upon us thus, thus carelessly; 

It is more manly and more mortifying, 

For w'are so much the readier for our shrouds: 

For how ridiculous were 't to have death come 

And take a fellow pinn'd up like a mistress? 

About his neck a ruff, like a pinch'd lanthorn, 

Which schoolboys make in winter, and his doublet 

So close and pent, as if he fear'd one prison 

Would not be strong enough to keep his soul in, 

But's tailor makes another? 

An' trust me, for I know 't when I lov'd, Cupid, 

He does endure much pain for the poor praise 

Of a neatsitting suit. 

CUPID

One may be handsome, sir, 

And yet not pain'd nor proud. 

PASSIONATE LORD

There you lie, Cupid, 

As bad as Mercury: there is no handsomeness 

But has a wash of pride and luxury, 

And you go there too, Cupid. Away, dissembler, 

Thou tak'st the deed's part which befools us all; 

Thy arrowheads shoot [but] sinners: hence, away, 

And after thee I'll send a powerful charm 

Shall banish thee forever. 

CUPID

Never, never; 

I am too sure thine own. 

Exit. 

PASSIONATE LORD sings 

Hence, all you vain delights, 

As short as are the nights 

Wherein you spend your folly, 

There's naught in this life sweet, 

If men were wise to see 't, 

But only melancholy, 

Oh, sweetest melancholy! 

Welcome, folded arms and fixed eyes, 

A sigh that piercing mortifies, 

A look that's fast'ned to the ground, 

A tongue chain'd up without a sound. 

Fountainheads and pathless groves, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 38



Top




Page No 41


Places which pale passion loves, 

Moonlight walks, when all the fowls 

Are warmly hous'd save bats and owls; 

A midnight bell, a parting groan, 

These are the sounds we feed upon, 

Then stretch our bones in a still gloomy valley: 

Nothing's so dainty sweet as lovely melancholy.

Exit. 

[III.iv. The palace]

Enter Lapet, at another door the Cupid's Brothers watching his coming [and talking apart]. 

FIRST BROTHER

So, so, the W.'s ginn'd; keep this door fast, brother. 

SECOND BROTHER

I'll warrant this. 

FIRST BROTHER

I'll go incense him instantly; 

I know the way to't. 

SECOND BROTHER

Will 't not be too soon, 

Think you, and make two fits break into one? 

FIRST BROTHER

Pah, no, no; the tail of his melancholy 

Is always the head of his anger, and follows as close 

As the report follows the powder. 

[Exeunt the Brothers severally.] 

LAPET

This is the appointed place and the hour struck; 

If I can get security for's truth, 

I'll never mind his honesty. Poor worm, 

I durst lay him by my wife, which is a benefit 

Which many masters ha' not: I shall ha' no maid 

Now got with child but what I get myself, 

And that's no small felicity. In most places 

Th'are got by th' men, and put upon the masters. 

Nor shall I be resisted when I strike, 

For he can hardly stand; these are great blessings. 

PASSIONATE LORD within 

I want my food, deliver me a varlet! 

LAPET


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 39



Top




Page No 42


How now? From whence comes that? 

PASSIONATE LORD

[Within] I am allow'd 

A carcass to insult on. Where's the villain? 

LAPET

He means not me, I hope. 

PASSIONATE LORD

[Within] My maintenance, rascals! 

My bulk, my exhibition! 

LAPET

Bless us all, 

What names are these? Would I were gone again. 

The Passionate [Lord] enters in fury with a truncheon. 

[PASSIONATE LORD] sings 

A curse upon thee for a slave! 

Art thou here and heard'st me rave? 

Fly not sparkles from mine eye 

To show my indignation nigh? 

Am I not all foam and fire, 

With voice as hoarse as a towncrier? 

How my back opes and shuts together 

With fury as old men's with weather! 

Couldst thou not hear my teeth gnash hither?

LAPET

No, truly, sir, I thought 't had been a squirrel, 

Shaving a hazelnut. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Death, hell, fiends, and darkness, 

I will thrash thy mangy carcass! 

[Beats him.] 

LAPET

Oh, sweet sir! 

PASSIONATE LORD

There cannot be too many tortures 

Spent upon those lousy quarters! 

LAPET

Hold, oh! 

Falls down for dead. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 40



Top




Page No 43


PASSIONATE LORD

Thy bones shall rue, thy bones shall rue! 

Sings again. 

Thou nasty, scurvy, mongrel toad, 

Mischief on thee! 

Light upon thee 

All the plagues that can confound thee 

Or did ever reign abroad! 

Better a thousand lives it cost 

Than have brave anger spilt or lost.

Exit. 

LAPET

May I open mine eyes yet and safely peep? 

I'll try a groan first. Oh! Nay, then he's gone. 

There was no other policy but to die, 

He would ha' made me else. Ribs, are you sore? 

I was ne'er beaten to a tune before. 

Enter the two Brothers. 

FIRST BROTHER

Lapet. 

LAPET

Again? 

Falls again. 

FIRST BROTHER

Look, look, he's flat again, 

And stretched out like a corse, a handful longer 

Than he walks, trust me, brother. Why, Lapet! 

I hold my life we shall not get him speak now. 

Monsieur Lapet? It must be a privy token 

If anything fetch him, he's so far gone. 

We come to pass our words for your man's truth. 

LAPET

Oh, gentlemen, y'are welcome! I have been thrash'd, i'faith. 

SECOND BROTHER

How! Thrash'd, sir? 

LAPET

Never was Shrove Tuesday bird 

So cudgell'd, gentlemen. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

III.i. [The palace] 41



Top




Page No 44


FIRST BROTHER

Pray how? By whom, sir? 

LAPET

Nay, that I know not. 

FIRST BROTHER

Not who did this wrong? 

LAPET

Only a thing came like a walking song. 

FIRST BROTHER

What, beaten with a song? 

LAPET

Never more tightly, gentlemen. 

Such crotchets happen now and then; methinks 

He that endures well of all waters drinks. 

Exeunt. 

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's

house]

Enter Shamont's brother the Soldier, [having been beaten,] and First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

SOLDIER

Yes, yes, this was a madman, sir, with you, 

A passionate madman. 

[LA NOVE]

Who would ha' look'd for this, sir? 

SOLDIER

And must be privileg'd? A pox privilege him! 

I was never so drybeaten since I was born, 

And by a litter of rogues, mere rogues, the whole twenty 

Had not above nine elbows amongst 'em all too! 

And the most part of those lefthanded rascals 

The very vomit, sir, of hospitals, 

Bridewells and spitalhouses, such nasty smellers, 

That if they'd been unfurnish'd of clubtruncheons, 

They might have cudgell'd me with their very stinks, 

It was so strong and sturdy. And shall this, 

This filthy injury, be set off with madness? 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 42



Top




Page No 45


[LA NOVE]

Nay, take your own blood's counsel, sir; hereafter 

I'll deal no further in't, if you remember 

It was not come to blows when I advis'd you. 

SOLDIER

No, but I ever said 'twould come to something, 

And 'tis upon me, thank him: were he kin 

To all the mighty emperors upon earth, 

He has not now in life three hours to reckon; 

I watch but a free time. 

Enter Shamont. 

[LA NOVE]

Your noble brother, sir; I'll leave you now. 

Exit. 

SHAMONT

Soldier, I would I could persuade my thoughts 

From thinking thee a brother, as I can 

My tongue from naming on't: thou hast no friend here 

But fortune and thy own strength, trust to them. 

SOLDIER

How? What's the incitement, sir? 

SHAMONT

Treachery to virtue, 

Thy treachery, thy faithless circumvention. 

Has honour so few daughters, never fewer, 

And must thou aim thy treachery at the best, 

The very front of virtue, that bless'd lady, 

The duke's sister? 

Created more for admiration's cause 

Than for love's ends, whose excellency sparkles 

More in divinity than mortal beauty, 

And as much difference 'twixt her mind and body 

As 'twixt this earth's poor centre and the sun. 

And couldst thou be so injurious to fair goodness, 

Once to attempt to court her down to frailty? 

Or put her but in mind that there is weakness, 

Sin and desire, which she should never hear of? 

Wretch, thou'st committed worse than sacrilege 

In the attempting on't, and oughtst to die for't. 

SOLDIER

I rather ought to do my best, to live, sir. 

Provoke me not, for I've a wrong sits on me 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 43



Top




Page No 46


That makes me apt for mischief; I shall lose 

All respects suddenly of friendship, brotherhood, 

Or any sound that way. 

SHAMONT

But 'ware me most, 

For I come with a twoedg'd injury, 

Both my disgrace and thy apparent falsehood, 

Which must be dangerous. 

SOLDIER

I courted her, sir: 

Love starve me with delays when I confess it not. 

SHAMONT

There's nothing then but death 

Can be a penance fit for that confession. 

SOLDIER

But far from any vicious taint. 

SHAMONT

Oh, sir, 

Vice is a mighty stranger grown to courtship. 

SOLDIER

Nay then, the fury of my wrong light on thee. 

[They draw.] Enter First Gentleman [La Nove] and others [the three other Gentlemen]. 

[LA NOVE]

Forbear, the duke's at hand, 

Here, hard at hand, upon my reputation. 

SOLDIER

I must do something now. 

Exit Soldier. 

SHAMONT

I'll follow you close, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

We must entreat you must not, for the duke 

Desires some conference with you. 

SHAMONT

Let me go, 

As y'are gentlemen. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 44



Top




Page No 47


Faith, we dare not, sir. 

SHAMONT

Dare ye be false to honour, and yet dare not 

Do a man justice? Give me leave. 

[LA NOVE]

Good, sweet sir, 

H'as sent twice for you. 

SHAMONT

Is this brave or manly? 

[LA NOVE]

I prithee be conform'd. 

SHAMONT

Death! 

Enter Duke. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

Peace, he's come, in troth. 

SHAMONT

Oh, have you betray'd me to my shame afresh? 

How am I bound to loathe you! 

DUKE

Shamont, welcome; 

I sent twice. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

But, my lord, he never heard on't. 

SHAMONT

Pray pardon him for his falseness. I did, sir, 

Both times; I'd rather be found rude than faithless. 

DUKE

I love that bluntness dearly: h'as no vice 

But is more manly than some other's virtue, 

That sets it out only for show or profit. 

[Exeunt La Nove and the three other Gentlemen.] 

SHAMONT

Will't please you quit me, sir? I've urgent business. 

DUKE

Come, you're so hasty now: I sent for you 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 45



Top




Page No 48


To a better end. 

SHAMONT

And if it be an end, 

Better or worse, I thank your goodness for't. 

DUKE

I've ever kept that bounty in condition 

And thankfulness in blood, which well becomes 

Both prince and subject, that where any wrong 

Bears my impression, or the hasty figure 

Of my repented anger, I'm a law 

Ev'n to myself, and doom myself most strictly 

To justice and a noble satisfaction: 

So that, what you in tenderness of honour 

Conceive to be loss to you, which is nothing 

But curious opinion, I'll restore again, 

Although I give you the best part of Genoa, 

And take to boot but thanks for your amends. 

SHAMONT

Oh, miserable satisfaction, 

Ten times more wretched than the wrong itself! 

Never was ill better made good with worse. 

Shall it be said that my posterity 

Shall live the sole heirs of their father's shame, 

And raise their wealth and glory from my stripes? 

You have provided nobly bounteous, sir, 

For my disgrace, to make it live forever, 

Outlasting brass or marble; 

This is my fear's construction, and a deep one, 

Which neither argument nor time can alter: 

Yet I durst swear I wrong your goodness in't, sir, 

And the most fair intent on't, which I reverence 

With admiration, that in you a prince 

Should be so sweet and temperate a condition 

To offer to restore where you may ruin, 

And do't with justice, and in me a servant, 

So harsh a disposition, that I cannot 

Forgive where I should honour, and am bound to't. 

But I have ever had that curiosity 

In blood and tenderness of reputation, 

Such an antipathy against a blow 

I cannot speak the rest. Good sir, discharge me; 

It is not fit that I should serve you more, 

Nor come so near you. I'm made now for privacy 

And a retir'd condition; that's my suit, 

To part from court forever, my last suit, 

And as you profess bounty, grant me that, sir. 

DUKE


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 46



Top




Page No 49


I would deny thee nothing. 

SHAMONT

Health reward you, sir. 

Exit. 

DUKE

He's gone again already, and takes hold 

Of any opportunity; not riches 

Can purchase him, nor honours, peaceably, 

And force were brutish: what a great worth's gone with him, 

And but a gentleman! Well, for his sake 

I'll ne'er offend more those I cannot make: 

They were his words, and shall be dear to memory. 

Say I desire to see him once again 

Yet stay, he's so well forward of his peace, 

'Twere pity to disturb him: he would groan 

Like a soul fetch'd again, and that were injury, 

And I've wrong'd his degree too much already. 

Call forth the gentlemen of our chamber instantly. 

SERVANT within 

I shall, my lord. 

DUKE

I may forget again, 

And therefore will prevent: the strain of this 

Troubles me so; one would not hazard more. 

Enter First Gentleman [La Nove] and diverse others [the three other Gentlemen]. 

GENTLEMEN

Your will, my lord? 

DUKE

Yes; I discharge you all. 

SECOND GENTLEMAN

My lord! 

DUKE

Your places shall be otherwise dispos'd of. 

FOURTH GENTLEMAN

Why, sir? 

DUKE

Reply not, I dismiss you all. 

Y'are gentlemen, your worths will find you fortunes; 

Nor shall your farewell tax me of ingratitude: 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 47



Top




Page No 50


I'll give you all noble remembrances, 

As testimonies 'gainst reproach and malice, 

That you departed lov'd. 

THIRD GENTLEMAN

This is most strange, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

But how is your grace furnish'd, these dismiss'd? 

DUKE

Seek me out grooms, 

Men more insensible of reputation, 

Less curious and precise in terms of honour, 

That if my anger chance let fall a stroke, 

As we are all subject to impetuous passions, 

Yet it may pass unmurmur'd, undisputed, 

And not with braver fury prosecuted. 

[LA NOVE]

It shall be done, my lord. 

Exit [Duke]. 

THIRD GENTLEMAN

Know you the cause, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

Not I, kind gentlemen, but by conjectures, 

And so much shall be yours when you please. 

FOURTH GENTLEMAN

Thanks, sir. 

THIRD GENTLEMAN

We shall i' th' meantime think ourselves guilty 

Of some foul fault, through ignorance committed. 

[LA NOVE]

No, 'tis not that, nor that way. 

FOURTH GENTLEMAN

For my part, 

I shall be disinherited, I know so much. 

[LA NOVE]

Why, sir, for what? 

FOURTH GENTLEMAN

My sire's of a strange humour; 

He'll form faults for me, and then swear 'em mine, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 48



Top




Page No 51


And commonly the first begins with lechery. 

He knows his own youth's trespass. 

[LA NOVE]

Before you go, 

I'll come and take my leave, and tell you all, sirs. 

THIRD GENTLEMAN

Thou wert ever just and kind. 

[LA NOVE]

That's my poor virtue, sir, 

And parcel valiant, but it's hard to be perfect. 

[Exeunt the three other Gentlemen.] 

The choosing of these fellows now will puzzle me, 

Horribly puzzle me, and there's no judgment 

Goes true upon man's outside, there's the mischief: 

He must be touch'd and try'd for gold or dross. 

There is no other way for't, and that's dangerous too; 

But since I'm put in trust, I will attempt it: 

The duke shall keep one daring man about him. 

Enter a Gallant. 

[Aside] Soft, who comes here? A pretty bravery this: 

Everyone goes so like a gentleman, 

'Tis hard to find a difference but by th' touch. 

I'll try your mettle sure. 

[Boxes his ear.] 

GALLANT

Why, what do you mean, sir? 

[LA NOVE]

Nay, and you understand it not, I do not. 

GALLANT

Yes, would you should well know; 

I understand it for a box o' th' ear, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

And o' my troth, that's all I gave it for. 

GALLANT

'Twere best it be so. 

[LA NOVE]

[Aside] This is a brave coward, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 49



Top




Page No 52


A jolly threat'ning coward; he shall be captain. 

Sir, let me meet you an hour hence i' th' lobby. 

GALLANT

Meet you? The world might laugh at me then, i'faith. 

[LA NOVE]

Lay by your scorn and pride, they're scurvy qualities, 

And meet me, or I'll box you while I have you, 

And carry you gambrell'd thither like a mutton. 

GALLANT

Nay, an' you be in earnest, here's my hand 

I will not fail you. 

[LA NOVE]

'Tis for your own good. 

GALLANT

Away. 

[LA NOVE]

Too much for your own good, sir, a pox on you. 

GALLANT

I prithee curse me all day long so. 

[LA NOVE]

Hang you! 

GALLANT

[Aside] I'll make him mad; he's loath to curse too much to me. 

Indeed I never yet took box o' th' ear 

But it redounded, I must needs say so. 

[LA NOVE]

Will you be gone? 

GALLANT

Curse, curse, and then I go. 

[Aside] Look how he grins; I've anger'd him to th' kidneys. 

Exit. 

[LA NOVE]

Was ever such a prigging coxcomb seen? 

One might have beat him dumb now in this humour, 

And he'd ha' grinn'd it out still. 

Enter a Plain Fellow. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 50



Top




Page No 53


Oh, here's one 

Made to my hand, methinks looks like a craven; 

Less pains will serve his trial: some slight justle. 

[Justles him.] 

PLAIN FELLOW

How! [Striking him] Take you that, sir, and if that content you not 

[LA NOVE]

Yes, very well, sir, I desire no more. 

PLAIN FELLOW

I think you need not, for you have not lost by't. 

Exit. 

[LA NOVE]

Who would ha' thought this would have prov'd a gentleman? 

I'll never trust long chins and little legs again; 

I'll know 'em sure for gentlemen hereafter: 

A gristle but in show, but gave his cuff 

With such a fetch and reach of gentry, 

As if h' had had his arms before the flood. 

I have took a villainous hard task upon me; 

Now I begin to have a feeling on't. 

Enter Lapet [carrying a printers' proof] and [Galoshio the] clown his servant, and so habited. 

[Aside] Oh, here comes a try'd piece now, the reformed kick. 

The millions of punches, spurns, and nips 

That he has endur'd! His buttock's all black lead, 

He's half a negro backward; he was past a Spaniard 

In eightyeight, and more Egyptianlike. 

His table and his book come both out shortly, 

And all the cowards in the town expect it, 

So if I fail of my full number now, 

I shall be sure to find 'em at church corners, 

Where Dives and the suff'ring ballads hang. 

LAPET

[To Galoshio] Well, since thou art of so mild a temper, 

Of so meek a spirit, thou mayst live with me 

Till better times do smile on thy deserts. 

I am glad I am got home again. 

[GALOSHIO]

I am happy 

In your service, sir; you'll keep me from the hospital. 

LAPET


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 51



Top




Page No 54


So, bring me the last proof; this is corrected. 

[GALOSHIO]

Ay, y'are too full of your correction, sir. 

LAPET

Look, I have perfect books within this half hour. 

[GALOSHIO]

Yes, sir. 

LAPET

Bid him put all the thumps in pica Roman, 

And with great T's, you vermin, as thumps should be. 

[GALOSHIO]

Then in what letter will you have your kicks? 

LAPET

All in Italica, your backward blows 

All in Italica, you hermaphrodite! 

When shall I teach you wit? 

[GALOSHIO]

[Aside] Oh, let it alone 

Till you have some yourself, sir. 

LAPET

You mumble? 

[GALOSHIO]

The victuals are lock'd up; I'm kept from mumbling. 

Exit. 

LAPET

He prints my blows upon potpaper too, the rogue, 

Which had been proper for some drunken pamphlet. 

[LA NOVE]

Monsieur Lapet? How the world rings of you, sir! 

Your name sounds far and near. 

LAPET

A good report 

It bears for an enduring name. 

[LA NOVE]

What luck have you, sir! 

LAPET


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 52



Top




Page No 55


Why, what's the matter? 

[LA NOVE]

I'm but thinking on't. 

I've heard you wish this five year for a place: 

Now there's one fall'n, and freely without money too; 

And empty yet, and yet you cannot have 't. 

LAPET

No? What's the reason? I'll give money for't 

Rather than go without, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

That's not it, sir; 

The troth is, there's no gentleman must have it 

Either for love or money: 'tis decreed so; 

I was heartily sorry when I thought upon you. 

Had you not been a gentleman I had fitted you. 

LAPET

Who, I a gentleman? A pox, I'm none, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

How! 

LAPET

How? Why, did you ever think I was? 

[LA NOVE]

What? Not a gentleman? 

LAPET

I would thou'd'st put it upon me, i'faith. 

Did not my grandfather cry coneyskins, 

My father aqua vitae? A hot gentleman: 

All this I speak on i' your time and memory too; 

Only a rich uncle died and left me chattels, 

You know all this so well too. 

[LA NOVE]

Pray excuse me, sir, 

Ha' not you arms? 

LAPET

Yes, a poor couple here 

That serve to thrust in wild fowl. 

[LA NOVE]

Herald's arms, 

Symbols of gentry, sir: you know my meaning; 

They've been shown and seen. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 53



Top




Page No 56


LAPET

They have. 

[LA NOVE]

I'fecks, have they! 

LAPET

Why, I confess, at my wife's instigation once, 

As women love these heralds' kickshaws naturally, 

I bought 'em, but what are they, think you? Puffs. 

[LA NOVE]

Why, that's proper to your name being Lapet, 

Which is La Fart, after the English letter. 

LAPET

The herald, sir, had much ado to find it. 

[LA NOVE]

And can you blame him? 

Why, 'tis the only thing that puzzles the devil. 

LAPET

At last he look'd upon my name again, 

And having well compar'd it, this he gave me: 

The two colics playing upon a wind instrument. 

[LA NOVE]

An excellent proper one. But I pray tell me, 

How does he express the colics? They are hard things. 

LAPET

The colics? With hot trenchers at their bellies; 

There's nothing better, sir, to blaze a colic. 

[LA NOVE]

And are not you a gentleman by this, sir? 

LAPET

No, I disclaim 't: 

No bellyache upon earth shall make me one; 

He shall not think to put his gripes upon me 

And wring out gentry so, and ten pound first. 

If the wind instrument will make my wife one, 

Let her enjoy 't, for she was a harper's grandchild, 

But, sir, for my particular, I renounce it. 

[LA NOVE]

Or to be call'd so? 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 54



Top




Page No 57


LAPET

Ay, sir, or imagin'd. 

[LA NOVE]

None fitter for the place: give me thy hand. 

LAPET

A hundred thousand thanks, beside a bribe, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

You must take heed of thinking toward a gentleman now. 

LAPET

Pish, I am not mad, I warrant you. Nay, more, sir, 

If one should twit me i' th' teeth that I'm a gentleman, 

Twit me their worst, I am but one since Lammas, 

That I can prove, if they would see my heart out. 

[LA NOVE]

Marry, in any case keep me that evidence. 

Enter [Galoshio the] clown [with printers' proofs]. 

LAPET

Here comes my servant, sir, Galoshio. 

H'as not his name for naught, he will be trod upon. 

What says my printer now? 

[GALOSHIO]

Here's your last proof, sir. 

You shall have perfect books now in a twinkling. 

LAPET

These marks are ugly. 

[GALOSHIO]

He says, sir, they're proper: 

Blows should have marks, or else they are nothing worth. 

LAPET

But why a peelcrow here? 

[GALOSHIO]

I told ['im] so, sir: 

A scarecrow had been better. 

LAPET

How, slave! Look you, sir, 

Did not I say this wherret and this bob 

Should be both pica Roman? 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 55



Top




Page No 58


[GALOSHIO]

So said I, sir, 

Both picked Romans, and he has made 'em Welsh bills; 

Indeed I know not what to make on 'em. 

LAPET

Heyday! A souse Italica? 

[GALOSHIO]

Yes, that may hold, sir, 

Souse is a bona roba, so is flops too. 

LAPET

But why stands bastinado so far off here? 

[GALOSHIO]

Alas, you must allow him room to lay about him, sir. 

LAPET

Why lies this spurn lower than that spurn, sir? 

[GALOSHIO]

Marry, this signifies one kick'd downstairs, sir, 

The other in a gallery. I ask'd him all these questions. 

[LA NOVE]

Your book's name? Prithee, Lapet, mind me, 

You never told me yet. 

LAPET

Marry, but shall, sir: 

'Tis call'd The Uprising of the Kick, 

And the Downfall of the Duello. 

[LA NOVE]

Bring that to pass you'll prove a happy member 

And do your country service: your young bloods 

Will thank you then when they see fourscore. 

LAPET

I hope 

To save my hundred gentlemen a month by't, 

Which will be very good for the private house. 

[GALOSHIO]

Look you, your table's finish'd, sir, already. 

LAPET

Why then, behold my masterpiece: see, see, sir, 

Here's all your blows and blowmen whatsoever, 

Set in their lively colours, givers and takers. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 56



Top




Page No 59


[LA NOVE]

Troth, wondrous fine, sir. 

LAPET

Nay, but mark the postures: 

The standing of the takers I admire 

More than the givers; they stand scornfully, 

Most contumeliously, I like not them. 

Oh, here's one cast into a comely figure. 

[GALOSHIO]

My master means him there that's cast down headlong. 

LAPET

How sweetly does this fellow take his doust, 

Stoops like a camel, that heroic beast, 

At a great load of nutmegs! And how meekly 

This other fellow here receives his wherret! 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, master, here's a fellow stands most gallantly, 

Taking his kick in private behind the hangings, 

And raising up his hips to't! But oh, sir, 

How daintily this man lies trampled on! 

Would I were in thy place, whate'er thou art. 

How lovely he endures it! 

[LA NOVE]

But will not 

These things, sir, be hard to practise, think you? 

LAPET

Oh, easy, sir: I'll teach 'em in a dance. 

[LA NOVE]

How! In a dance? 

LAPET

I'll lose my new place else, 

Whate'er it be; I know not what 'tis yet. 

[LA NOVE]

And now you put me in mind, I could employ it well 

For your grace specially, for the duke's cousin 

Is by this time in's violent fit of mirth, 

And a device must be sought out for suddenly 

To overcloy the passion. 

LAPET

Say no more, sir; 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house] 57



Top




Page No 60


I'll fit you with my scholars, new practitioners, 

Endurers of the time. 

[GALOSHIO]

Whereof I am one, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

You carry it away smooth; give me thy hand, sir. 

Exeunt. 

V.i. [The palace]

Enter the two Brothers. 

PASSIONATE LORD within 

Ha, ha, ha! 

SECOND BROTHER

Hark, hark, how loud his fit's grown. 

PASSIONATE LORD

[Within] Ha, ha, ha! 

FIRST BROTHER

Now let our sister lose no time, but ply it 

With all the power she has. 

SECOND BROTHER

Her shame grows big, brother; 

The Cupid's shape will hardly hold it longer: 

'Twould take up half an ell of China damask more, 

And all too little, it struts per'lously. 

There is no tamp'ring with these Cupids long; 

The mere conceit with womankind works strong. 

PASSIONATE LORD

[Within] Ha, ha, ha! 

SECOND BROTHER

The laugh comes nearer now; 

'Twere good we were not seen yet. 

Exeunt Brothers. Enter Passionate Lord and Base his jester. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, ha! 

And was he bastinado'd to the life? 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 58



Top




Page No 61


Ha, ha, ha! I prithee say, lord general, 

How did the rascals entrench themselves? 

BASE

Most deeply, politicly, all in ditches. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

'Tis thought he'll ne'er bear arms i' th' field again; 

H'as much ado to lift 'em to his head, sir. 

PASSIONATE LORD

I would he had. 

BASE

On either side round truncheons 

Play'd so thick that shoulders, chines, nay, flanks 

Were paid to th' quick. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Well said, lord general! Ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

But pray how grew the difference first betwixt you? 

PASSIONATE LORD

There was never any, sir; there lies the jest, man: 

Only because he was taller than his brother, 

There's all my quarrel to him, and methought 

He should be beaten for't; my mind so gave me, sir, 

I could not sleep for't. Ha, ha, ha, ha! 

Another good jest quickly, while 'tis hot now; 

Let me not laugh in vain: ply me, oh, ply me, 

As you will answer 't to my cousin duke. 

BASE

Alas, who has a good jest? 

PASSIONATE LORD

I fall, I dwindle in't. 

BASE

Ten crowns for a good jest! 

Enter Servant. 

Ha' you a good jest, sir? 

SERVANT


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 59



Top




Page No 62


A pretty moral one. 

BASE

Let's ha't, whate'er it be. 

SERVANT

There comes a Cupid 

Drawn by six fools. 

[Exit Servant.] 

BASE

That's nothing. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Help it, help it then. 

BASE

I ha' known six hundred fools drawn by a Cupid. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ay, that, that, that's the smarter moral! Ha, ha, ha! 

Now I begin to be songripe, methinks. 

BASE

I'll sing you a pleasant air, sir, before you ebb. 

Song. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Oh, how my lungs do tickle! Ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

Oh, how my lungs do tickle! [Ho], ho, ho! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Set a sharp jest 

Against my breast, 

Then how my lungs do tickle 

As nightingales 

And things in cambric rails 

Sing best against a prickle! 

Ha, ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

Ho, ho, ho, ho, ha! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Laugh! 

BASE


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 60



Top




Page No 63


Laugh! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Laugh! 

BASE

Laugh! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Wide! 

BASE

Loud! 

PASSIONATE LORD

And vary! 

BASE

A smile is for a simpering novice. 

PASSIONATE LORD

One that ne'er tasted caviar. 

BASE

Nor knows the smack of dear anchovies. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho! 

PASSIONATE LORD

A giggling waitingwench for me, 

That shows her teeth how white they be. 

BASE

A thing not fit for gravity, 

For theirs are foul and hardly three. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

Ho, ho, ho! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Democritus, thou ancient fleerer, 

Now I miss thy laugh, and ha' since. 

BASE


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 61



Top




Page No 64


There you nam'd the famous jeerer, 

That ever jeer'd in Rome or Athens. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, ha! 

BASE

Ho, ho, ho! 

PASSIONATE LORD

How brave lives he that keeps a fool, 

Although the rate be deeper! 

[BASE]

But he that is his own fool, sir, 

Does live a great deal cheaper. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Sure I shall burst, burst, quite break, thou art so witty. 

BASE

'Tis rare to break at court, for that belongs to th' city. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Ha, ha, my spleen is almost worn to the last laughter! 

BASE

Oh, keep a corner for a friend, a jest may come hereafter! 

Enter Lapet and [Galoshio the] clown and four other like fools, dancing, the Cupid leading and bearing his

table, and holding it up to Lapet at every strain and acting the postures. [First strain.] 

LAPET

Twinge all now, twinge, I say! 

Second strain. 

Souse upon souse! 

Third strain. 

Douses single! 

Fourth strain. 

Justle sides! 

Fifth strain. 

Knee belly! 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 62



Top




Page No 65


Sixth strain. 

Kickseybuttock! 

Seventh strain. 

Downderry.

Enter Soldier, Shamont's brother, his sword drawn. 

SOLDIER

Not angry law nor doors of brass shall keep me 

From my wrong's expiation; to thy bowels 

I return my disgrace, and after turn 

My face to any death that can be sentenc'd. 

[Stabs the Passionate Lord, throws down and tramples Lapet and Galoshio, and exits.] 

BASE

Murder, oh, murder! Stop the murderer there! 

LAPET

I am glad he's gone; h'as almost trod my guts out: 

Follow him who list for me, I'll ha' no hand in't. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, 'twas your luck and mine to be squelch'd, master. 

H'as stamp'd my very puddings into pancakes. 

CUPID

Oh, brothers, oh, I fear 'tis mortal! Help, oh, help! 

I'm made the wretched'st woman by this accident 

That ever love beguil'd. 

Enter [her] two Brothers. 

SECOND BROTHER

We are undone, brother, 

Our shames are too apparent. Away, receptacle 

Of luxury and dishonour! Most unfortunate, 

To make thyself but lucky to thy spoil, 

After thy sex's manner! Lift him up, brother; 

He breathes not to our comfort, he's too wasted 

Ever to cheer us more. A chirurgeon, speedily! 

Hence, the unhappiest that e'er stepp'd aside! 

She'll be a mother before she's known a bride. 

CUPID

Thou hadst a most unfortunate conception, 

Whate'er thou prov'st to be; in midst of mirth 

Comes ruin for a welcome to thy birth. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 63



Top




Page No 66


Exeunt. 

V.ii. [A field in the country]

Enter Shamont. 

SHAMONT

This is a beautiful life now, privacy 

The sweetness and the benefit of essence. 

I see there is no man but may make his paradise, 

And it is nothing but his love and dotage 

Upon the world's foul joys that keeps him out on't, 

For he that lives retir'd in mind and spirit 

Is still in paradise, and has his innocence, 

Partly allow'd for his companion too, 

As much as stands with justice. Here no eyes 

Shoot their sharp pointed scorns upon my shame; 

They know no terms of reputation here, 

No punctual limits, or precise dimensions: 

Plain downright honesty is all the beauty 

And elegancy of life found amongst shepherds, 

For knowing nothing nicely or desiring it 

Quits many a vexation from the mind, 

With which our quainter knowledge does abuse us. 

The name of envy is a stranger here, 

That dries men's bloods abroad, robs health and rest; 

Why, here's no such fury thought on, no, nor falsehood, 

That brotherly disease, fellowlike devil, 

That plays within our bosom and betrays us. 

Enter First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

[LA NOVE]

Oh, are you here? 

SHAMONT

La Nove, 'tis strange to see thee. 

[LA NOVE]

I ha' rid one horse to death to find you out, sir. 

SHAMONT

I am not to be found of any man 

That saw my shame, nor seen long. 

[LA NOVE]

Good, your attention: 

You ought to be seen now and found out, sir, 

If ever you desire before your ending 

To perform one good office, nay, a dear one; 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 64



Top




Page No 67


Man's time can hardly match it. 

SHAMONT

Be't as precious 

As reputation, if it come from court 

I will not hear on't. 

[LA NOVE]

You must hear of this, sir. 

SHAMONT

Must? 

[LA NOVE]

You shall hear it. 

SHAMONT

I love thee, that thou'lt die. 

[LA NOVE]

'Twere nobler in me 

Than in you living: you will live a murderer 

If you deny this office. 

SHAMONT

Ev'n to death, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

Why, then you'll kill your brother. 

SHAMONT

How! 

[LA NOVE]

Your brother, sir: 

Bear witness, heaven, this man destroys his brother 

When he may save him, his least breath may save him. 

Can there be wilfuller destruction? 

He was forc'd to take a most unmanly wrong, 

Above the suff'ring virtue of a soldier, 

Has kill'd his injurer, a work of honour, 

For which, unless you save him, he dies speedily. 

My conscience is discharg'd; I'm but a friend: 

A brother should go forward where I end. 

Exit. 

SHAMONT

Dies? 

Say he be naught, that's nothing to my goodness, 

Which ought to shine through use, or else it loses 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 65



Top




Page No 68


The glorious name 'tis known by: he's my brother; 

Yet peace is above blood. Let him go, ay. 

But where's the nobleness of affection then? 

That must be car'd for too, or I'm imperfect: 

The same blood that stood up in wrath against him 

Now in his misery runs all to pity. 

I'd rather die than speak one syllable 

To save myself, but living as I am, 

There's no avoiding on't: the world's humanity 

Expects it hourly from me. Curse of fortune, 

I took my leave so well too. Let him die, 

'Tis but a brother lost; so pleasingly 

And swiftly I came off, 'twere more than irksomeness 

To tread that path again, and I shall never 

Depart so handsomely. But then where's posterity? 

The consummation of our house and name? 

I'm torn in pieces betwixt love and shame. 

Exit. 

V.iii. [The palace]

Enter Lapet, Clown, Poltrot, Moulbazon, and others, the new court officers. 

LAPET

Good morrow, fellow Poltrot, and Moulbazon, 

Good morrow fellows all. 

POLTROT

Monsieur Lapet? 

LAPET

[Giving them books] Look, I've rememb'red you; here's books apiece for you. 

MOULBAZON

Oh, sir, we dearly thank you. 

LAPET

So you may; 

There's two impressions gone already, sirs. 

POLTROT

What? No! In so short a time? 

LAPET

'Tis as I tell you, sir; 

My Kick sells gallantly, I thank my stars. 

[GALOSHIO]

So does your table; you may thank the moon too. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 66



Top




Page No 69


LAPET

'Tis the book sells the table. 

[GALOSHIO]

But 'tis the bookseller 

That has the money for 'em, I'm sure o' that. 

LAPET

'Twill much enrich the company of stationers; 

'Tis thought 'twill prove a lasting benefit, 

Like The Wise Masters, and the almanacs, 

The Hundred Novels, and The Book of Cookery, 

For they begin already to engross it 

And make it a stockbook, thinking indeed 

'Twill prove too great a benefit and help 

For one that's new set up: they know their way 

And make him warden ere his beard be gray. 

MOULBAZON

Is't possible such virtue should lie hid, 

And in so little paper? 

LAPET

How? Why, there was The Carpenter, 

An unknown thing, an odoriferous pamphlet, 

Yet no more paper, by all computation, 

Than Ajax Telamon would use at once; 

Your Herring prov'd the like, able to buy 

Another Fisher's Folly, and your Pasquill 

Went not below the MadCaps of that time. 

And shall my elaborate Kick come behind, think you? 

[GALOSHIO]

Yes, it must come behind: 'tis in Italica too, 

According to your humour. 

LAPET

Not in sale, varlet. 

[GALOSHIO]

In sale, sir? It shall sail beyond 'em all, I trow. 

LAPET

What have you there now? Oh, page twentyone. 

[GALOSHIO]

That page is come to his years; he should be a servingman. 

LAPET

Mark how I snap up The Duello there: 

One would not use a dog so, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 67



Top




Page No 70


I must needs say, but's for the common good. 

[GALOSHIO]

Nay, sir, your commons seldom fight at sharp, 

But buffet in a warehouse. 

LAPET

This will save 

Many a gentleman of good blood from bleeding, sirs. 

I have a curse from many a barbersurgeon; 

They'd give but too much money to call 't in. 

Turn to page fortyfive, see what you find there. 

[GALOSHIO]

Oh, out upon him! Page fortyfive: that's an old thief indeed. 

Enter Duke, the Lady his sister, First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

LAPET

The duke! Clap down your books! Away, Galoshio. 

[GALOSHIO]

Indeed I am too foul to be i' th' presence; 

They use to shake me off at the chamber door still. 

Exit. 

LADY

Good my lord, grant my suit; let me not rise 

Without the comfort on't: I have not often 

Been tedious in this kind. 

DUKE

Sister, you wrong yourself 

And those great virtues that your fame is made of 

To waste so much breath for a murderer's life. 

LADY

You cannot hate th' offense more than I do, sir, 

Nor the offender: the respect I owe 

Unto his absent brother makes me a [suitor], 

A most importunate [suitor]; make me worthy 

But of this one request. 

DUKE

I am deaf 

To any importunacy, and sorry 

For your forgetfulness; you never injur'd 

Your worth so much, you ought to be rebuk'd for't: 

Pursue good ways, end as you did begin; 

'Tis half the guilt to speak for such a sin. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 68



Top




Page No 71


LADY

This is love's beggary right that now is ours, 

When ladies love and cannot show their powers. 

Exit. 

DUKE

La Nove? 

[LA NOVE]

My lord. 

DUKE

Are these our new attendants? 

LAPET

We are, my lord, and will endure as much 

As better men, my lord, and more I trust. 

DUKE

What's he? 

[LA NOVE]

My lord, a decay'd gentleman 

That will do any service. 

DUKE

A decay'd one? 

[LA NOVE]

A renounc'd one indeed, for this place only. 

DUKE

We renounce him then; go, discharge him instantly. 

He that disclaims his gentry for mere gains, 

That man's too base to make a vassal on. 

LAPET

What says the duke? 

[LA NOVE]

Faith, little to your comfort, sir: 

You must be a gentleman again. 

LAPET

How! 

[LA NOVE]

There's no remedy. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 69



Top




Page No 72


LAPET

Marry, the fates forfend! Ne'er while I breathe, sir. 

[LA NOVE]

The duke will have it so, there's no resisting. 

He spy'd it i' your forehead. 

LAPET

My wife's doing. 

She thought she should be put below her betters now, 

And sued to ha' me a gentleman again. 

[LA NOVE]

And very likely, sir. 

Marry, I'll give you this comfort: when all's done, 

You'll never pass but for a scurvy one; 

That's all the help you have. Come, show your pace. 

LAPET

The heaviest gentleman that e'er lost place; 

Bear witness I am forc'd to't. 

Exit [with La Nove]. 

DUKE

Though you have a coarser title yet upon you 

Than those that left your places without blame, 

'Tis in your power to make yourselves the same. 

I cannot make you gentlemen: that's a work 

Rais'd from your own deservings; merit, manners, 

And inborn virtue does it. Let your own goodness 

Make you so great, my power shall make you greater; 

And more t' encourage you, this I add again, 

There's many grooms now exact gentlemen. 

Enter Shamont [and stands apart]. 

SHAMONT

Methinks 'tis strange to me to enter here. 

Is there in nature such an awful power 

To force me to this place and make me do this? 

Is man's affections stronger than his will, 

His resolution? Was I not resolv'd 

Never to see this place more? Do I bear 

Within my breast one blood that confounds th'other, 

The blood of love and will, and the last weakest? 

Had I ten millions, I would give it all now 

I were but past it, or 'twould never come, 

For I shall never do't, or not do't well, 

But spoil it utterly betwixt two passions. 

Yonder's the duke himself; I will not do't now, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 70



Top




Page No 73


Had twenty lives their several sufferings in him. 

Exit. 

DUKE

Who's that went out now? 

POLTROT

I saw none, my lord. 

DUKE

Nor you? 

MOULBAZON

I saw the glimpse of one, my lord. 

DUKE

Whate'er it was, methought it pleas'd me strangely, 

And suddenly my joy was ready for't. 

Did you not mark it better? 

POLTROT and MOULBAZON 

Troth, my lord, 

We gave no great heed to't. 

Enter Shamont. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] 'Twill not be answer'd; 

It brings me hither still, by main force hither. 

Either I must give over to profess humanity 

Or I must speak for him. 

DUKE

'Tis here again: 

No marvel 'twas so pleasing, 'tis delight 

And worth itself, now it appears unclouded. 

SHAMONT

My lord 

[Aside] He turns away from me. By this hand, 

I am illus'd of all sides: 'tis a fault 

That fortune ever had t' abuse a goodness. 

DUKE

Methought you were saying somewhat. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] Mark the language, 

As coy as fate; I see 'twill ne'er be granted. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 71



Top




Page No 74


DUKE

We little look'd in troth to see you here yet. 

SHAMONT

[Aside] Not till the day after my brother's death, I think. 

DUKE

Sure some great business drew you. 

SHAMONT

No, in sooth, sir, 

Only to come to see a brother die, sir, 

That I may learn to go too; and if he deceive me not, 

I think he will do well in't of a soldier, 

Manly and honestly: and if he weep then, 

I shall not think the worse on's manhood for't, 

Because he's leaving of that part that has it. 

DUKE

H'as slain a noble gentleman, think on't, sir! 

SHAMONT

I would I could not, sir. 

DUKE

Our kinsman too. 

SHAMONT

All this is but worse, sir. 

DUKE

When 'tis at worst, 

Yet seeing thee, he lives. 

SHAMONT

My lord! 

DUKE

He lives; 

Believe it as thy bliss, he dies not for't. 

Will this make satisfaction for things past? 

SHAMONT

[Kneeling] Oh, my lord! 

DUKE

Will it? Speak. 

SHAMONT

With greater shame to my unworthiness. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 72



Top




Page No 75


DUKE

Rise then, we're ev'n. I never found it harder 

To keep just with a man; my great work's ended. 

I knew your brother's pardon was your suit, sir, 

However your nice modesty held it back. 

SHAMONT

I take a joy now to confess it, sir. 

Enter First Gentleman [La Nove]. 

[LA NOVE]

My lord 

DUKE

Hear me first, sir, whate'er your news be: 

Set free the soldier instantly. 

[LA NOVE]

'Tis done, my lord. 

DUKE

How! 

[LA NOVE]

In effect: 'twas part of my news too; 

There's fair hope of your noble kinsman's life, sir. 

DUKE

What sayst thou? 

[LA NOVE]

And the most admired change 

That living flesh e'er had. He's not the man, my lord; 

Death cannot be more free from passions, sir, 

Than he is at this instant: he's so meek now, 

He makes those seem passionate [were] never thought of, 

And for he fears his moods have oft disturb'd you, sir, 

He's only hasty now for his forgiveness; 

And here behold him, sir. 

Enter Passionate Lord, the Cupid, and [her] two Brothers. 

DUKE

Let me give thanks first. 

Our worthy cousin. 

PASSIONATE LORD

Your unworthy trouble, sir, 

For which, with all acknowledg'd reverence, 

I ask your pardon; and for injury 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 73



Top




Page No 76


More known and willful, I have chose a wife 

Without your counsel or consent, my lord. 

DUKE

A wife? Where is she, sir? 

PASSIONATE LORD

This noble gentlewoman. 

DUKE

How! 

PASSIONATE LORD

Whose honour my forgetful times much wrong'd. 

DUKE

He's madder than he was. 

[LA NOVE]

I would ha' sworn for him. 

DUKE

The Cupid, cousin? 

PASSIONATE LORD

Yes, this worthy lady, sir. 

DUKE

Still worse and worse. 

FIRST BROTHER

Our sister, under pardon, my lord. 

DUKE

What? 

SECOND BROTHER

Which shape love taught her to assume. 

DUKE

Is't truth then? 

[LA NOVE]

It appears plainly now below the waist, my lord. 

DUKE

Shamont, didst ever read of a sheCupid? 

SHAMONT

Never in fiction yet, but it might hold, sir, 

For desire is of both genders.


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 74



Top




Page No 77


Enter [the Lady,] the Duke's sister. 

DUKE

Make that good here: 

I take thee at thy word, sir. 

He joins Shamont's hand and his sister's. 

SHAMONT

Oh, my lord, 

Love would appear too bold and rude from me: 

Honour and admiration are her rights; 

Her goodness is my saint, my lord. 

DUKE

I see 

Y'are both too modest to bestow yourselves: 

I'll save that virtue still; 'tis but my pains. 

Come, it shall be so. 

SHAMONT

This gift does but set forth my poverty. 

LADY

Sir, that which you complain of is my riches. 

Enter Shamont's brother the Soldier. 

DUKE

Soldier, now every noise sounds peace, th'art welcome. 

SOLDIER

[Kneeling] Sir, my repentance sues for your bless'd favour, 

Which once obtain'd no injury shall lose it; 

I'll suffer mightier wrongs. 

DUKE

Rise, lov'd and pardon'd, 

For where hope fail'd, nay, art itself resign'd; 

Thou'st wrought that cure, which skill could never find, 

Nor did there cease, but to our peace extend: 

Never could wrongs boast of a nobler end. 

Exeunt. 

The Epilogue

Our poet bid us say, for his own part, 

He cannot lay too much forth of his art, 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 75



Top




Page No 78


But fears our overacting passions may, 

As not adorn, deface his labour'd play: 

Yet still he is resolute for what is writ 

Of nicer valour, and assumes the wit. 

But for the lovescenes, which he ever meant 

Cupid in's petticoat should represent, 

He'll stand no shock of censure; the play's good, 

He says he knows it, if well understood. 

But we, blind god, beg, if thou art divine, 

Thou'lt shoot thy arrows round, this play was thine. 


The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

V.i. [The palace] 76



Top





Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman, page = 4

   3. Thomas Middleton, page = 4

   4. I.i. [The palace], page = 5

   5. II.i. [A gallery in the palace], page = 16

   6. III.i. [The palace], page = 29

   7. IV.i. [A chamber in the palace, outside the palace, and in front of Lapet's house], page = 45

   8. V.i. [The palace], page = 61