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Vent . What is she? Serv . Sir, I asked her not. Vent . Bid her come in. [ Exit Servant . Enter Mistress MERRYTHOUGHT and MICHAEL. Mist . Mer . Peace be to your worship! I come as a poor suitor to you, sir, in the behalf of this child. Vent . Are you not wife to Merrythought? Mist . Mer . Yes, truly. Would I had neer seen his eyes! he has undone me and himself and his children; and there he lives at home, and sings and hoits and revels among his drunken companions! but, I warrant you, where to get a penny to put bread in his mouth he knows not: and therefore, if it like your worship, I would entreat your letter to the honest host of the Bell in Waltham, that I may place my child under the protection of his tapster, in some settled course of life. Vent . Im glad the heavens have heard my prayers. Thy husband, Mist . Mer . Will you so, sir? how say you by that?Come, [ Exit with Michael . Enter Boy. Boy . Sir, I take it you are the master of this house. Vent . How then, boy! Boy . Then to yourself, sir, comes this letter. [ Gives letter . Vent . From whom, my pretty boy? Boy . From him that was your servant; but no more Vent . [ Reads .] Sir, that I have wronged your love I must confess; in which I have purchased to myself, besides mine own undoing, the ill opinion of my friends. Let not your anger, good sir, outlive me, but suffer me to rest in peace with your forgiveness: let my body (if a dying man may so much prevail with |
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