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SERV. Let me see now, the sign of the Last in Tower Street. Mass, yonders the house. What, haw! Whos within? | |
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Enter RALPH RALPH. Who calls there? What want you, sir? | |
| SERV. Marry, I would have a pair of shoes made for a gentlewoman against to-morrow morning. What, can you do them? | |
| RALPH. Yes, sir, you shall have them. But what lengths her foot? | 4 |
| SERV. Why, you must make them in all parts like this shoe; but, at any hand, fail not to do them, for the gentlewoman is to be married very early in the morning. | |
| RALPH. How? by this shoe must it be made? By this? Are you sure, sir, by this? | |
| SERV. How, by this? Am I sure, by this? Art thou in thy wits? I tell thee, I must have a pair of shoes, dost thou mark me? A pair of shoes, two shoes, made by this very shoe, this same shoe, against to-morrow morning by four a clock. Dost understand me? Canst thou dot? | |
| RALPH. Yes, sir, yesIII can dot. By this shoe, you say? I should know this shoe. Yes, sir, yes, by this shoe, I can dot. Four a clock, well. Whither shall I bring them? | 8 |
| SERV. To the sign of the Golden Ball in Watling Street; enquire for one Master Hammon, a gentleman, my master. | |
| RALPH. Yea, sir; by this shoe, you say? | |
| SERV. I say, Master Hammon at the Golden Ball; hes the bridegroom, and those shoes are for his bride. | |
| RALPH. They shall be done by this shoe. Well, well, Master Hammon at the Golden ShoeI would say, the Golden Ball; very well, very well. But I pray you, sir, where must Master Hammon be married? | 12 |
| SERV. At Saint Faiths Church, under Pauls. But whats that to thee? Prithee, dispatch those shoes, and so farewell. Exit. | |
| RALPH. By this shoe, said he. How am I amazd | |
| At this strange accident! Upon my life, | |
| This was the very shoe I gave my wife, | 16 |
| When I was pressd for France; since when, alas! | |
| I never could hear of her. It is the same, | |
| And Hammons bride no other but my Jane. | |
| |
Enter FIRK FIRK. Snails 2 Ralph, thou hast lost thy part of three pots, a countryman of mine gave me to breakfast. | 20 |
| RALPH. I care not; I have found a better thing. | |
| FIRK. A thing? Away! Is it a mans thing, or a womans thing? | |
| RALPH. Firk, dost thou know this shoe? | |
| FIRK. No, by my troth; neither doth that know me! I have no acquaintance with it, tis a mere stranger to me. | 24 |
| RALPH. Why, then I do; this shoe, I durst be sworn, | |
| Once covered the instep of my Jane. | |
| This is her size, her breadth, thus trod my love; | |
| These true-love knots I pricked. I hold my life, | 28 |
| By this old shoe I shall find out my wife. | |
| FIRK. Ha, ha! Old shoe, that wert new! How a murrain came this ague-fit of foolishness upon thee? | |
| RALPH. Thus, Firk: even now here came a serving-man; | |
| By this shoe would he have a new pair made | 32 |
| Against to-morrow morning for his mistress, | |
| Thats to be married to a gentleman. | |
| And why may not this be my sweet Jane? | |
| FIRK. And why mayst not thou be my sweet ass? Ha, ha! | 36 |
| RALPH. Well, laugh and spare not! But the truth is this: | |
| Against to-morrow morning Ill provide | |
| A lusty crew of honest shoemakers, | |
| To watch the going of the bride to church. | 40 |
| If she prove Jane, Ill take her in despite | |
| From Hammon and the devil, were he by. | |
| If it be not my Jane, what remedy? | |
| Hereof I am sure, I shall live till I die, | 44 |
| Although I never with a woman lie. Exit. | |
| FIRK. Thou lie with a woman to build nothing but Cripple-gates! Well, God sends fools fortune, and it may be, he may light upon his matrimony by such a device; for wedding and hanging goes by destiny. Exit. | |