8 HALF-HOURS WITH THE BEST AUTHORS. shewed them wherefore he sent for them, as how he had found his son in this default, for the which he said his intent was to put him to death, as he had well deserved. Then all the people answered to that case with one voice, and said, 'Sir, have ye saving your grace, we will not that Gaston should die; he is your heir, and no more.' And when the count heard the people, how they desired for his son, he Then he thought to chastise him in prison a month or somewhat refrained his ire. two, and then to send him on some voyage for two or three years, till he might somewhat forget his evil will, and that the child might be of greater age and of more knowledge. “Then he gave leave to all the people to depart; but they of Foix would not depart from Orthes till the count should assure them that Gaston should not die; they loved the child so well. Then the count promised them, but he said he would keep him in prison a certain time to chastise him; and so upon this promise every man departed, and Gaston abode still in prison. "These tidings spread abroad into divers places, and at that time Pope Gregory the Eleventh was at Avignon. Then he sent the Cardinal of Amiens in legation into And by that time he Bierne, to have come to the Count of Foix for that business. came to Beziers, he heard such tidings that he needed not to go any further for that matter; for there he heard how Gaston, son of the Count of Foix, was dead. Since I have showed you so much, now I shall show you how he died. "The Count of Foix caused his son to be kept in a dark chamber, in the town of And some Orthes, a ten days; little did he eat or drink, yet he had enough brought him every day, but when he saw it he would go therefrom, and set little thereby. said that all the meat that had been brought him stood whole and entire the day of either his death, wherefore it was great marvel that he lived so long, for divers reasons. The count caused him to be kept in the chamber alone, without any company, to counsel or comfort him; and all that season the child lay in his clothes as he came in, and he argued in himself, and was full of melancholy, and cursed the time that ever he was born and engendered, to come to such an end. I "The same day that he died, they that served him of meat and drink, when they came to him, they said, 'Gaston, here is meat for you;' he made no care thereof and said, 'Set it down there.' He that served him regarded and saw in the prison all the meat stand whole as it had been brought him before, and so departed and closed the chamber-door, and went to the count and said, 'Sir, for God's sake have mercy on your son, Gaston, for he is near famished in prison; there he lieth. think he never did eat any thing since he came into prison, for I have seen there this day all that ever I brought him before, lying together in a corner.' Of these words the count was sore displeased; and without any word speaking, went out of his chamber, and came to the prison where his son was, and in an evil hour. He had He opened the the same time a little knife in his hand to pare withal his nails. prison door and came to his son, and had the little knife in his hand, and in great displeasure he thrust his hand to his son's throat, and the point of the knife a little entered into his throat, into a certain vein, and said, 'Ah, traitor! why dost not And therewith the count departed without any more doing or thou eat thy meat?' saying, and went into his own chamber. The child was abashed, and afraid of the coming of his father, and also was feeble of fasting, and the point of the knife a little entered into a vein of his throat, and so he fell down suddenly and died. The count was scarcely in his chamber, but the keeper of the child came to him, and said, 'Sir, Gaston, your son, is dead!' 'Dead?' quoth the count. 'Yea, truly, Sir,' answered he. The count would not believe it, but sent thither a squire that was by him, and he went, and came again, and said, 'Sir, surely he is dead.' Then the count was sore displeased and made great complaint for his son, and said, 'Ah, Gaston! what a poor adventure is this for thee, and for me! In an evil hour thou wentest to Navarre to see thy mother; I shall never have the joy that I had before!' Then the count caused his barber to shave him, and clothed himself in black, and all his house, and with much sore weeping the child was borne to the Friars in Orthes, and there buried. 66 Thus, as I have showed you, the Count of Foix slew Gaston, his son; but the King of Navarre gave the occasion of his death." 3.-OLD DRAMATIC POETS. SCENES FROM THE CITY MADAM. MASSINGER. [PHILIP MASSINGER, one of the most illustrious of the successors of Shakspere, was born at Salisbury, in 1584. His father was in the household of the Earl of Pembroke. He was probably sent to college by the earl: but the favour of the great man appears to have been withdrawn from him in his mature years. He became a writer for the stage, and there is distinct evidence that his genius scarcely gave him bread. His dramas, which have been collected by Gifford, in four volumes, are of unequal merit; but of some the dramatic power, the characterization, the poetry, and the exhibition of manners, are of the very highest order. Massinger died in 1640. In selecting a few scenes from 'The City Madam,' we endeavour to connect them with the plot, and with each other, by very slight links.] SCENE I. Sir John Frugal is a city merchant; his wife and two daughters of extravagant habits and boundless pride. Luke is brother to Sir John Frugal-a dependant on his bounty, having spent all his own substance. Lady Frugal and her daughters are first shown as treating Luke with unmitigated scorn and tyranny: Lady Frugal. Very good, Sir, Were you drunk last night, that you could rise no sooner, And women did command you? Luke. Drunk, an't please you! L. Frugal. Drunk, I said, sirrah! dar'st thou, in a look, Did our charity redeem thee out of prison, (Thy patrimony spent,) ragged, and lousy, Luke. I confess I am Your creature, madam. L. Frugal. And good reason why You should continue so. Anne. Who did new clothe you? Mary. Admitted you to the dining-room? Milliscent (Lady Frugal's maid). Allow'd you L. Frugal. Or from whom Luke. I owe all this To your goodness, madam; for it you have my prayers, I ask your pardon; though you may consider, I could not come much sooner. SCENE II. Lord Lacy is a nobleman who is desirous that his son should marry one of the rich merchant's daughters. His deportment to Luke is a contrast to the vulgar insolence of Lady Frugal and her daughters :- Lord Lacy. Your hand, Master Luke: the world's much changed with you Within these few months; then you were the gallant: No meeting at the horse-race, cocking, hunting, Shooting, or bowling, at which Master Luke Was not a principal gamester, and companion Luke. I have paid dear For those follies, my good lord; and 'tis but justice Your honour, in your charity, may do well Not to upbraid me with those weaknesses, L. Lacy. I nor do, nor will; And you shall find I'll lend a helping hand To raise your fortunes: how deals your brother with you Luke. Beyond my merit, I thank his goodness for 't. I am a free man; all my debts discharged; Nor does one creditor, undone by me, Curse my loose riots. I have meat and clothes, Time to ask Heaven remission for what's past; Cares of the world by me are laid aside, My present poverty's a blessing to me; I ever lived till now. SCENE III. ? The extravagance and pride of The City Madam' and her daughters, who have rejected the suit of two honourable men in the wantonness of their ambition, determine Sir John Frugal, in concert with Lord Lacy, to give out that he has retired into a monastery, and has left all his riches to his brother. Luke soliloquises upon his greatness:— Luke. 'Twas no fantastic object, but a truth, And could wake over with a brooding eye Thou dumb magician-[Taking out a key]—that without a charm What wise men wish, and toil for! Hermes' moly, Sibylla's golden bough the great elixir, Imagined only by the alchymist, Compared with thee are shadows-thou the substance, And guardian of felicity! No marvel My brother made thy place of rest his bosom, To draw in more. I am sublimed! gross earth SCENE IV. Luke, who, in his abasement, was all gentleness and humility, treats his brother's debtors with the most wanton harshness; and degrades his sister-in-law and nieces to the condition of menials. The ladies appear before him, clothed in the coarsest weeds : Luke. Save you, sister! I now dare style you so: you were before Too glorious to be look'd on, now you appear Such things as were born and bred there. Why should you ape The fashions of court-ladies, whose high titles And pedigrees of long descent, give warrant L. Frugal. Is this spoken In scorn? Luke. Fie no; with judgment. I make good My promise, and now show you like yourselves, In your own natural shapes; and stand resolved You shall continue so. L. Frugal. It is confess'd, sir. Luke. Sir! sirrah: use your old phrase, I can bear it. L. Frugal. That, if you please, forgotten, we acknowledge Though we are at your disposure, you'll maintain us And your sweet mistress-ship ladyfied, you wore Satin on solemn days, a chain of gold, A velvet hood, rich borders, and sometimes A dainty miniver-cap, a silver pin, Headed with a pearl worth three-pence, and thus far You were privileged, and no man envied it; It being for the city's honour that There should be a distinction between The wife of a patrician, and plebeian. Milliscent. Pray you, leave preaching, or choose some other text; Your rhetoric is too moving, for it makes Your auditory weep. Luke. Peace, chattering magpie! I'll treat of you anon:- but when the height And dignity of London's blessings grew |