The Alchemist by Ben Jonson (best way to read an ebook txt) 📕
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First performed in 1610, The Alchemist is one of Ben Jonson’s greatest comedies. Written for the King’s Men—the acting company to which Shakespeare belonged—it was first performed in Oxford because the playhouses in London were closed due to the plague. It was an immediate success and has remained a popular staple ever since.
The play centers around a con man, his female accomplice, and a roguish butler who uses his master’s house to gull a series of victims out of their money and goods. Jonson uses the play to satirize as many people as he can—pompous lords, greedy commoners, and self-righteous Anabaptists alike—as his three con artists proceed to bilk everyone who comes to their door. They don multiple roles and weave elaborate tales to exploit their victims’ greed and amass a small fortune. But it all comes to a sudden, raucous end when the master unexpectedly returns to London and all the victims gather to try and reclaim their property.
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- Author: Ben Jonson
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Alas!
FaceMy brain is quite undone with the fume, sir,
I ne’er must hope to be mine own man again.
Is all lost, Lungs? Will nothing be preserved
Of all our cost?
Faith, very little, sir;
A peck of coals or so, which is cold comfort, sir.
O, my voluptuous mind! I am justly punished.
FaceAnd so am I, sir.
Sir Epicure MammonCast from all my hopes—
FaceNay, certainties, sir.
Sir Epicure MammonBy mine own base affections.
SubtleSeeming to come to himself.
O, the curst fruits of vice and lust!
Good Father,
It was my sin. Forgive it.
Hangs my roof
Over us still, and will not fall, O justice,
Upon us, for this wicked man!
Nay, look, sir,
You grieve him now with staying in his sight:
Good sir, the nobleman will come too, and take you,
And that may breed a tragedy.
I’ll go.
FaceAy, and repent at home, sir. It may be,
For some good penance you may have it yet;
A hundred pound to the box at Bedlam—
Yes.
FaceFor the restoring such as—have their wits.
Sir Epicure MammonI’ll do’t.
FaceI’ll send one to you to receive it.
Sir Epicure MammonDo.
Is no projection left?
All flown, or stinks, sir.
Sir Epicure MammonWill nought be saved that’s good for medicine, think’st thou?
FaceI cannot tell, sir. There will be perhaps,
Something about the scraping of the shards,
Will cure the itch—though not your itch of mind, sir.
Aside.
It shall be saved for you, and sent home. Good sir,
This way, for fear the lord should meet you.
Raising his head. Face!
FaceAy.
SubtleIs he gone?
FaceYes, and as heavily
As all the gold he hoped for were in’s blood.
Let us be light though.
Leaping up. Ay, as balls, and bound
And hit our heads against the roof for joy:
There’s so much of our care now cast away.
Now to our Don.
SubtleYes, your young widow by this time
Is made a countess, Face; she has been in travail
Of a young heir for you.
Good sir.
SubtleOff with your case,
And greet her kindly, as a bridegroom should,
After these common hazards.
Very well, sir.
Will you go fetch Don Diego off, the while?
And fetch him over too, if you’ll be pleased, sir:
Would Dol were in her place, to pick his pockets now!
Why, you can do’t as well, if you would set to’t.
I pray you prove your virtue.
For your sake sir.
Exeunt. Scene IVAnother room in the same.
Enter Surly and Dame Pliant. Pertinax SurlyLady, you see into what hands you are fallen;
’Mongst what a nest of villains! And how near
Your honour was t’ have catched a certain clap,
Through your credulity, had I but been
So punctually forward, as place, time,
And other circumstances would have made a man;
For you’re a handsome woman: would you were wise too!
I am a gentleman come here disguised,
Only to find the knaveries of this citadel;
And where I might have wronged your honour, and have not,
I claim some interest in your love. You are,
They say, a widow, rich: and I’m a bachelor,
Worth nought: your fortunes may make me a man,
As mine have preserved you a woman. Think upon it,
And whether I have deserved you or no.
I will, sir.
Pertinax SurlyAnd for these household-rogues, let me alone
To treat with them.
How doth my noble Diego,
And my dear madam Countess? Hath the Count
Been courteous, lady? Liberal, and open?
Donzel, methinks you look melancholic,
After your coitum, and scurvy: truly,
I do not like the dullness of your eye;
It hath a heavy cast, ’tis upsee Dutch,
And says you are a lumpish whoremaster.
Be lighter, and I will make your pockets so.
Attempts to pick them.
Throws open his cloak. Will you, don bawd and pickpurse?
Strikes him down.
How now! Reel you?
Stand up, sir, you shall find, since I am so heavy,
I’ll give you equal weight.
Help! Murder!
Pertinax SurlyNo, sir,
There’s no such thing intended: a good cart,
And a clean whip shall ease you of that fear.
I am the Spanish Don “that should be cozened,
Do you see, cozened?” Where’s your Captain Face,
That parcel broker, and whole-bawd, all rascal!
How, Surly!
Pertinax SurlyO, make your approach, good Captain.
I have found from whence your copper rings and spoons
Come, now, wherewith you cheat abroad in taverns.
’Twas here you learned t’ anoint your boot with brimstone,
Then rub men’s gold on’t for a kind of touch,
And say ’twas naught, when you had changed the colour,
That you might have’t for nothing. And this Doctor,
Your sooty, smoky-bearded compeer, he
Will close you so much gold, in a bolt’s head,
And, on a turn, convey in the stead another
With sublimed mercury, that shall burst in the heat,
And fly out all in fumo! Then weeps Mammon;
Then swoons his worship.
Or, he is the Faustus,
That casteth figures and can conjure, cures
Plagues, piles, and pox, by the ephemerides,
And holds intelligence with all the bawds
And midwives of three shires: while you send in—
Captain!—what! Is he gone?—damsels with child,
Wives that are barren, or the waiting-maid
With the green sickness.
Seizes Subtle as he is retiring.
—Nay, sir, you must tarry,
Though he be ’scaped; and answer by the ears, sir.
Why, now’s the time, if ever you will quarrel
Well, as they say, and be a true-born child:
The Doctor and your sister both are abused.
Where is he? Which is he? He is a slave,
Whate’er he is, and the son of a whore.—Are you
The man, sir, I would know?
I should be loath, sir,
To confess so much.
Then you lie in your throat.
Pertinax SurlyHow!
FaceTo Kastril. A very errant rogue, sir, and a cheater,
Employed here by another conjurer
That does not love the Doctor, and would cross him,
If he knew
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