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Act 3
The Merry Wives of Windsor

William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare

Script of Act 3 The Merry Wives of Windsor

Introduction
This section contains the script of Act 3 of The Merry Wives of Windsor the play by William Shakespeare. Please click The Merry Wives of Windsor Script to access further Acts.

ACT III
SCENE I. A field near Frogmore.

Enter SIR HUGH EVANS and SIMPLE SIR HUGH EVANS 
I pray you now, good master Slender's serving-man, and friend Simple by your name, which way have you looked for Master Caius, that calls himself doctor of physic?

SIMPLE 
Marry, sir, the pittie-ward, the park-ward, every
way; old Windsor way, and every way but the town
way.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
I most fehemently desire you you will also look that
way.

SIMPLE 
I will, sir.

Exit

SIR HUGH EVANS 
'Pless my soul, how full of chollors I am, and
trempling of mind! I shall be glad if he have
deceived me. How melancholies I am! I will knog
his urinals about his knave's costard when I have
good opportunities for the ork. 'Pless my soul!

Sings

To shallow rivers, to whose falls
Melodious birds sings madrigals;
There will we make our peds of roses,
And a thousand fragrant posies.
To shallow--
Mercy on me! I have a great dispositions to cry.

Sings

Melodious birds sing madrigals--
When as I sat in Pabylon--
And a thousand vagram posies.
To shallow & c.

Re-enter SIMPLE

SIMPLE 
Yonder he is coming, this way, Sir Hugh.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
He's welcome.

Sings

To shallow rivers, to whose falls-
Heaven prosper the right! What weapons is he?

SIMPLE 
No weapons, sir. There comes my master, Master
Shallow, and another gentleman, from Frogmore, over
the stile, this way.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
Pray you, give me my gown; or else keep it in your arms.

Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER

SHALLOW 
How now, master Parson! Good morrow, good Sir Hugh.
Keep a gamester from the dice, and a good student
from his book, and it is wonderful.

SLENDER 
[Aside] Ah, sweet Anne Page!

PAGE 
'Save you, good Sir Hugh!

SIR HUGH EVANS 
'Pless you from his mercy sake, all of you!

SHALLOW 
What, the sword and the word! do you study them
both, master parson?

PAGE 
And youthful still! in your doublet and hose this
raw rheumatic day!

SIR HUGH EVANS 
There is reasons and causes for it.

PAGE 
We are come to you to do a good office, master parson.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
Fery well: what is it?

PAGE 
Yonder is a most reverend gentleman, who, belike
having received wrong by some person, is at most
odds with his own gravity and patience that ever you
saw.

SHALLOW 
I have lived fourscore years and upward; I never
heard a man of his place, gravity and learning, so
wide of his own respect.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
What is he?

PAGE 
I think you know him; Master Doctor Caius, the
renowned French physician.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
Got's will, and his passion of my heart! I had as
lief you would tell me of a mess of porridge.

PAGE 
Why?

SIR HUGH EVANS 
He has no more knowledge in Hibocrates and Galen,
--and he is a knave besides; a cowardly knave as you
would desires to be acquainted withal.

PAGE 
I warrant you, he's the man should fight with him.

SHALLOW 
[Aside] O sweet Anne Page!

SHALLOW 
It appears so by his weapons. Keep them asunder:
here comes Doctor Caius.

Enter Host, DOCTOR CAIUS, and RUGBY

PAGE 
Nay, good master parson, keep in your weapon.

SHALLOW 
So do you, good master doctor.

Host 
Disarm them, and let them question: let them keep
their limbs whole and hack our English.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
I pray you, let-a me speak a word with your ear.
Vherefore vill you not meet-a me?

SIR HUGH EVANS 
[Aside to DOCTOR CAIUS] Pray you, use your patience:
in good time.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
By gar, you are de coward, de Jack dog, John ape.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
[Aside to DOCTOR CAIUS] Pray you let us not be
laughing-stocks to other men's humours; I desire you
in friendship, and I will one way or other make you amends.

Aloud

I will knog your urinals about your knave's cockscomb
for missing your meetings and appointments.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Diable! Jack Rugby,--mine host de Jarteer,--have I
not stay for him to kill him? have I not, at de place
I did appoint?

SIR HUGH EVANS 
As I am a Christians soul now, look you, this is the
place appointed: I'll be judgement by mine host of
the Garter.

Host 
Peace, I say, Gallia and Gaul, French and Welsh,
soul-curer and body-curer!

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Ay, dat is very good; excellent.

Host 
Peace, I say! hear mine host of the Garter. Am I
politic? am I subtle? am I a Machiavel? Shall I
lose my doctor? no; he gives me the potions and the
motions. Shall I lose my parson, my priest, my Sir
Hugh? no; he gives me the proverbs and the
no-verbs. Give me thy hand, terrestrial; so. Give me
thy hand, celestial; so. Boys of art, I have
deceived you both; I have directed you to wrong
places: your hearts are mighty, your skins are
whole, and let burnt sack be the issue. Come, lay
their swords to pawn. Follow me, lads of peace;
follow, follow, follow.

SHALLOW 
Trust me, a mad host. Follow, gentlemen, follow.

SLENDER 
[Aside] O sweet Anne Page!

Exeunt SHALLOW, SLENDER, PAGE, and Host

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Ha, do I perceive dat? have you make-a de sot of
us, ha, ha?

SIR HUGH EVANS 
This is well; he has made us his vlouting-stog. I
desire you that we may be friends; and let us knog
our prains together to be revenge on this same
scall, scurvy cogging companion, the host of the Garter.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
By gar, with all my heart. He promise to bring me
where is Anne Page; by gar, he deceive me too.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
Well, I will smite his noddles. Pray you, follow.

Exeunt

SCENE II. A street.

Enter MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN 
MISTRESS PAGE 
Nay, keep your way, little gallant; you were wont to
be a follower, but now you are a leader. Whether
had you rather lead mine eyes, or eye your master's heels?

ROBIN 
I had rather, forsooth, go before you like a man
than follow him like a dwarf.

MISTRESS PAGE 
O, you are a flattering boy: now I see you'll be a courtier.

Enter FORD

FORD 
Well met, Mistress Page. Whither go you?

MISTRESS PAGE 
Truly, sir, to see your wife. Is she at home?

FORD 
Ay; and as idle as she may hang together, for want
of company. I think, if your husbands were dead,
you two would marry.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Be sure of that,--two other husbands.

FORD 
Where had you this pretty weather-cock?

MISTRESS PAGE 
I cannot tell what the dickens his name is my
husband had him of. What do you call your knight's
name, sirrah?

ROBIN 
Sir John Falstaff.

FORD 
Sir John Falstaff!

MISTRESS PAGE 
He, he; I can never hit on's name. There is such a
league between my good man and he! Is your wife at
home indeed?

FORD 
Indeed she is.

MISTRESS PAGE 
By your leave, sir: I am sick till I see her.

Exeunt MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN

FORD 
Has Page any brains? hath he any eyes? hath he any
thinking? Sure, they sleep; he hath no use of them.
Why, this boy will carry a letter twenty mile, as
easy as a cannon will shoot point-blank twelve
score. He pieces out his wife's inclination; he
gives her folly motion and advantage: and now she's
going to my wife, and Falstaff's boy with her. A
man may hear this shower sing in the wind. And
Falstaff's boy with her! Good plots, they are laid;
and our revolted wives share damnation together.
Well; I will take him, then torture my wife, pluck
the borrowed veil of modesty from the so seeming
Mistress Page, divulge Page himself for a secure and
wilful Actaeon; and to these violent proceedings all
my neighbours shall cry aim.

Clock heard

The clock gives me my cue, and my assurance bids me
search: there I shall find Falstaff: I shall be
rather praised for this than mocked; for it is as
positive as the earth is firm that Falstaff is
there: I will go.

Enter PAGE, SHALLOW, SLENDER, Host, SIR HUGH EVANS, DOCTOR CAIUS, and RUGBY

SHALLOW PAGE & C 
Well met, Master Ford.

FORD 
Trust me, a good knot: I have good cheer at home;
and I pray you all go with me.

SHALLOW 
I must excuse myself, Master Ford.

SLENDER 
And so must I, sir: we have appointed to dine with
Mistress Anne, and I would not break with her for
more money than I'll speak of.

SHALLOW 
We have lingered about a match between Anne Page and
my cousin Slender, and this day we shall have our answer.

SLENDER 
I hope I have your good will, father Page.

PAGE 
You have, Master Slender; I stand wholly for you:
but my wife, master doctor, is for you altogether.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Ay, be-gar; and de maid is love-a me: my nursh-a
Quickly tell me so mush.

Host 
What say you to young Master Fenton? he capers, he
dances, he has eyes of youth, he writes verses, he
speaks holiday, he smells April and May: he will
carry't, he will carry't; 'tis in his buttons; he
will carry't.

PAGE 
Not by my consent, I promise you. The gentleman is
of no having: he kept company with the wild prince
and Poins; he is of too high a region; he knows too
much. No, he shall not knit a knot in his fortunes
with the finger of my substance: if he take her,
let him take her simply; the wealth I have waits on
my consent, and my consent goes not that way.

FORD 
I beseech you heartily, some of you go home with me
to dinner: besides your cheer, you shall have
sport; I will show you a monster. Master doctor,
you shall go; so shall you, Master Page; and you, Sir Hugh.

SHALLOW 
Well, fare you well: we shall have the freer wooing
at Master Page's.

Exeunt SHALLOW, and SLENDER

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Go home, John Rugby; I come anon.

Exit RUGBY

Host 
Farewell, my hearts: I will to my honest knight
Falstaff, and drink canary with him.

Exit

FORD 
[Aside] I think I shall drink in pipe wine first
with him; I'll make him dance. Will you go, gentles?

All 
Have with you to see this monster.

Exeunt

SCENE III. A room in FORD'S house.

Enter MISTRESS FORD and MISTRESS PAGE 
MISTRESS FORD 
What, John! What, Robert!

MISTRESS PAGE 
Quickly, quickly! is the buck-basket--

MISTRESS FORD 
I warrant. What, Robin, I say!

Enter Servants with a basket

MISTRESS PAGE 
Come, come, come.

MISTRESS FORD 
Here, set it down.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Give your men the charge; we must be brief.

MISTRESS FORD 
Marry, as I told you before, John and Robert, be
ready here hard by in the brew-house: and when I
suddenly call you, come forth, and without any pause
or staggering take this basket on your shoulders:
that done, trudge with it in all haste, and carry
it among the whitsters in Datchet-mead, and there
empty it in the muddy ditch close by the Thames side.

MISTRESS PAGE 
You will do it?

MISTRESS FORD 
I ha' told them over and over; they lack no
direction. Be gone, and come when you are called.

Exeunt Servants

MISTRESS PAGE 
Here comes little Robin.

Enter ROBIN

MISTRESS FORD 
How now, my eyas-musket! what news with you?

ROBIN 
My master, Sir John, is come in at your back-door,
Mistress Ford, and requests your company.

MISTRESS PAGE 
You little Jack-a-Lent, have you been true to us?

ROBIN 
Ay, I'll be sworn. My master knows not of your
being here and hath threatened to put me into
everlasting liberty if I tell you of it; for he
swears he'll turn me away.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Thou'rt a good boy: this secrecy of thine shall be
a tailor to thee and shall make thee a new doublet
and hose. I'll go hide me.

MISTRESS FORD 
Do so. Go tell thy master I am alone.

Exit ROBIN

Mistress Page, remember you your cue.

MISTRESS PAGE 
I warrant thee; if I do not act it, hiss me.

Exit

MISTRESS FORD 
Go to, then: we'll use this unwholesome humidity,
this gross watery pumpion; we'll teach him to know
turtles from jays.

Enter FALSTAFF

FALSTAFF 
Have I caught thee, my heavenly jewel? Why, now let
me die, for I have lived long enough: this is the
period of my ambition: O this blessed hour!

MISTRESS FORD 
O sweet Sir John!

FALSTAFF 
Mistress Ford, I cannot cog, I cannot prate,
Mistress Ford. Now shall I sin in my wish: I would
thy husband were dead: I'll speak it before the
best lord; I would make thee my lady.

MISTRESS FORD 
I your lady, Sir John! alas, I should be a pitiful lady!

FALSTAFF 
Let the court of France show me such another. I see
how thine eye would emulate the diamond: thou hast
the right arched beauty of the brow that becomes the
ship-tire, the tire-valiant, or any tire of
Venetian admittance.

MISTRESS FORD 
A plain kerchief, Sir John: my brows become nothing
else; nor that well neither.

FALSTAFF 
By the Lord, thou art a traitor to say so: thou
wouldst make an absolute courtier; and the firm
fixture of thy foot would give an excellent motion
to thy gait in a semi-circled farthingale. I see
what thou wert, if Fortune thy foe were not, Nature
thy friend. Come, thou canst not hide it.

MISTRESS FORD 
Believe me, there is no such thing in me.

FALSTAFF 
What made me love thee? let that persuade thee
there's something extraordinary in thee. Come, I
cannot cog and say thou art this and that, like a
many of these lisping hawthorn-buds, that come like
women in men's apparel, and smell like Bucklersbury
in simple time; I cannot: but I love thee; none
but thee; and thou deservest it.

MISTRESS FORD 
Do not betray me, sir. I fear you love Mistress Page.

FALSTAFF 
Thou mightst as well say I love to walk by the
Counter-gate, which is as hateful to me as the reek
of a lime-kiln.

MISTRESS FORD 
Well, heaven knows how I love you; and you shall one
day find it.

FALSTAFF 
Keep in that mind; I'll deserve it.

MISTRESS FORD 
Nay, I must tell you, so you do; or else I could not
be in that mind.

ROBIN 
[Within] Mistress Ford, Mistress Ford! here's
Mistress Page at the door, sweating and blowing and
looking wildly, and would needs speak with you presently.

FALSTAFF 
She shall not see me: I will ensconce me behind the arras.

MISTRESS FORD 
Pray you, do so: she's a very tattling woman.

FALSTAFF hides himself

Re-enter MISTRESS PAGE and ROBIN

What's the matter? how now!

MISTRESS PAGE 
O Mistress Ford, what have you done? You're shamed,
you're overthrown, you're undone for ever!

MISTRESS FORD 
What's the matter, good Mistress Page?

MISTRESS PAGE 
O well-a-day, Mistress Ford! having an honest man
to your husband, to give him such cause of suspicion!

MISTRESS FORD 
What cause of suspicion?

MISTRESS PAGE 
What cause of suspicion! Out pon you! how am I
mistook in you!

MISTRESS FORD 
Why, alas, what's the matter?

MISTRESS PAGE 
Your husband's coming hither, woman, with all the
officers in Windsor, to search for a gentleman that
he says is here now in the house by your consent, to
take an ill advantage of his assence: you are undone.

MISTRESS FORD 
'Tis not so, I hope.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Pray heaven it be not so, that you have such a man
here! but 'tis most certain your husband's coming,
with half Windsor at his heels, to search for such a
one. I come before to tell you. If you know
yourself clear, why, I am glad of it; but if you
have a friend here convey, convey him out. Be not
amazed; call all your senses to you; defend your
reputation, or bid farewell to your good life for ever.

MISTRESS FORD 
What shall I do? There is a gentleman my dear
friend; and I fear not mine own shame so much as his
peril: I had rather than a thousand pound he were
out of the house.

MISTRESS PAGE 
For shame! never stand 'you had rather' and 'you
had rather:' your husband's here at hand, bethink
you of some conveyance: in the house you cannot
hide him. O, how have you deceived me! Look, here
is a basket: if he be of any reasonable stature, he
may creep in here; and throw foul linen upon him, as
if it were going to bucking: or--it is whiting-time
--send him by your two men to Datchet-mead.

MISTRESS FORD 
He's too big to go in there. What shall I do?

FALSTAFF 
[Coming forward] Let me see't, let me see't, O, let
me see't! I'll in, I'll in. Follow your friend's
counsel. I'll in.

MISTRESS PAGE 
What, Sir John Falstaff! Are these your letters, knight?

FALSTAFF 
I love thee. Help me away. Let me creep in here.
I'll never--

Gets into the basket; they cover him with foul linen

MISTRESS PAGE 
Help to cover your master, boy. Call your men,
Mistress Ford. You dissembling knight!

MISTRESS FORD 
What, John! Robert! John!

Exit ROBIN

Re-enter Servants

Go take up these clothes here quickly. Where's the
cowl-staff? look, how you drumble! Carry them to
the laundress in Datchet-meat; quickly, come.

Enter FORD, PAGE, DOCTOR CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS

FORD 
Pray you, come near: if I suspect without cause,
why then make sport at me; then let me be your jest;
I deserve it. How now! whither bear you this?

Servant 
To the laundress, forsooth.

MISTRESS FORD 
Why, what have you to do whither they bear it? You
were best meddle with buck-washing.

FORD 
Buck! I would I could wash myself of the buck!
Buck, buck, buck! Ay, buck; I warrant you, buck;
and of the season too, it shall appear.

Exeunt Servants with the basket

Gentlemen, I have dreamed to-night; I'll tell you my
dream. Here, here, here be my keys: ascend my
chambers; search, seek, find out: I'll warrant
we'll unkennel the fox. Let me stop this way first.

Locking the door

So, now uncape.

PAGE 
Good Master Ford, be contented: you wrong yourself too much.

FORD 
True, Master Page. Up, gentlemen: you shall see
sport anon: follow me, gentlemen.

Exit

SIR HUGH EVANS 
This is fery fantastical humours and jealousies.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
By gar, 'tis no the fashion of France; it is not
jealous in France.

PAGE 
Nay, follow him, gentlemen; see the issue of his search.

Exeunt PAGE, DOCTOR CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS

MISTRESS PAGE 
Is there not a double excellency in this?

MISTRESS FORD 
I know not which pleases me better, that my husband
is deceived, or Sir John.

MISTRESS PAGE 
What a taking was he in when your husband asked who
was in the basket!

MISTRESS FORD 
I am half afraid he will have need of washing; so
throwing him into the water will do him a benefit.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Hang him, dishonest rascal! I would all of the same
strain were in the same distress.

MISTRESS FORD 
I think my husband hath some special suspicion of
Falstaff's being here; for I never saw him so gross
in his jealousy till now.

MISTRESS PAGE 
I will lay a plot to try that; and we will yet have
more tricks with Falstaff: his dissolute disease will
scarce obey this medicine.

MISTRESS FORD 
Shall we send that foolish carrion, Mistress
Quickly, to him, and excuse his throwing into the
water; and give him another hope, to betray him to
another punishment?

MISTRESS PAGE 
We will do it: let him be sent for to-morrow,
eight o'clock, to have amends.

Re-enter FORD, PAGE, DOCTOR CAIUS, and SIR HUGH EVANS

FORD 
I cannot find him: may be the knave bragged of that
he could not compass.

MISTRESS PAGE 
[Aside to MISTRESS FORD] Heard you that?

MISTRESS FORD 
You use me well, Master Ford, do you?

FORD 
Ay, I do so.

MISTRESS FORD 
Heaven make you better than your thoughts!

FORD 
Amen!

MISTRESS PAGE 
You do yourself mighty wrong, Master Ford.

FORD 
Ay, ay; I must bear it.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
If there be any pody in the house, and in the
chambers, and in the coffers, and in the presses,
heaven forgive my sins at the day of judgment!

DOCTOR CAIUS 
By gar, nor I too: there is no bodies.

PAGE 
Fie, fie, Master Ford! are you not ashamed? What
spirit, what devil suggests this imagination? I
would not ha' your distemper in this kind for the
wealth of Windsor Castle.

FORD 
'Tis my fault, Master Page: I suffer for it.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
You suffer for a pad conscience: your wife is as
honest a 'omans as I will desires among five
thousand, and five hundred too.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
By gar, I see 'tis an honest woman.

FORD 
Well, I promised you a dinner. Come, come, walk in
the Park: I pray you, pardon me; I will hereafter
make known to you why I have done this. Come,
wife; come, Mistress Page. I pray you, pardon me;
pray heartily, pardon me.

PAGE 
Let's go in, gentlemen; but, trust me, we'll mock
him. I do invite you to-morrow morning to my house
to breakfast: after, we'll a-birding together; I
have a fine hawk for the bush. Shall it be so?

FORD 
Any thing.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
If there is one, I shall make two in the company.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
If dere be one or two, I shall make-a the turd.

FORD 
Pray you, go, Master Page.

SIR HUGH EVANS 
I pray you now, remembrance tomorrow on the lousy
knave, mine host.

DOCTOR CAIUS 
Dat is good; by gar, with all my heart!

SIR HUGH EVANS 
A lousy knave, to have his gibes and his mockeries!

Exeunt

SCENE IV. A room in PAGE'S house.

Enter FENTON and ANNE PAGE 
FENTON 
I see I cannot get thy father's love;
Therefore no more turn me to him, sweet Nan.

ANNE PAGE 
Alas, how then?

FENTON 
Why, thou must be thyself.
He doth object I am too great of birth--,
And that, my state being gall'd with my expense,
I seek to heal it only by his wealth:
Besides these, other bars he lays before me,
My riots past, my wild societies;
And tells me 'tis a thing impossible
I should love thee but as a property.

ANNE PAGE 
May be he tells you true.

FENTON 
No, heaven so speed me in my time to come!
Albeit I will confess thy father's wealth
Was the first motive that I woo'd thee, Anne:
Yet, wooing thee, I found thee of more value
Than stamps in gold or sums in sealed bags;
And 'tis the very riches of thyself
That now I aim at.

ANNE PAGE 
Gentle Master Fenton,
Yet seek my father's love; still seek it, sir:
If opportunity and humblest suit
Cannot attain it, why, then,--hark you hither!

They converse apart

Enter SHALLOW, SLENDER, and MISTRESS QUICKLY

SHALLOW 
Break their talk, Mistress Quickly: my kinsman shall
speak for himself.

SLENDER 
I'll make a shaft or a bolt on't: 'slid, 'tis but
venturing.

SHALLOW 
Be not dismayed.

SLENDER 
No, she shall not dismay me: I care not for that,
but that I am afeard.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Hark ye; Master Slender would speak a word with you.

ANNE PAGE 
I come to him.

Aside

This is my father's choice.
O, what a world of vile ill-favor'd faults
Looks handsome in three hundred pounds a-year!

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
And how does good Master Fenton? Pray you, a word with you.

SHALLOW 
She's coming; to her, coz. O boy, thou hadst a father!

SLENDER 
I had a father, Mistress Anne; my uncle can tell you
good jests of him. Pray you, uncle, tell Mistress
Anne the jest, how my father stole two geese out of
a pen, good uncle.

SHALLOW 
Mistress Anne, my cousin loves you.

SLENDER 
Ay, that I do; as well as I love any woman in
Gloucestershire.

SHALLOW 
He will maintain you like a gentlewoman.

SLENDER 
Ay, that I will, come cut and long-tail, under the
degree of a squire.

SHALLOW 
He will make you a hundred and fifty pounds jointure.

ANNE PAGE 
Good Master Shallow, let him woo for himself.

SHALLOW 
Marry, I thank you for it; I thank you for that good
comfort. She calls you, coz: I'll leave you.

ANNE PAGE 
Now, Master Slender,--

SLENDER 
Now, good Mistress Anne,--

ANNE PAGE 
What is your will?

SLENDER 
My will! 'od's heartlings, that's a pretty jest
indeed! I ne'er made my will yet, I thank heaven; I
am not such a sickly creature, I give heaven praise.

ANNE PAGE 
I mean, Master Slender, what would you with me?

SLENDER 
Truly, for mine own part, I would little or nothing
with you. Your father and my uncle hath made
motions: if it be my luck, so; if not, happy man be
his dole! They can tell you how things go better
than I can: you may ask your father; here he comes.

Enter PAGE and MISTRESS PAGE

PAGE 
Now, Master Slender: love him, daughter Anne.
Why, how now! what does Master Fenton here?
You wrong me, sir, thus still to haunt my house:
I told you, sir, my daughter is disposed of.

FENTON 
Nay, Master Page, be not impatient.

MISTRESS PAGE 
Good Master Fenton, come not to my child.

PAGE 
She is no match for you.

FENTON 
Sir, will you hear me?

PAGE 
No, good Master Fenton.
Come, Master Shallow; come, son Slender, in.
Knowing my mind, you wrong me, Master Fenton.

Exeunt PAGE, SHALLOW, and SLENDER

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Speak to Mistress Page.

FENTON 
Good Mistress Page, for that I love your daughter
In such a righteous fashion as I do,
Perforce, against all cheques, rebukes and manners,
I must advance the colours of my love
And not retire: let me have your good will.

ANNE PAGE 
Good mother, do not marry me to yond fool.

MISTRESS PAGE 
I mean it not; I seek you a better husband.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
That's my master, master doctor.

ANNE PAGE 
Alas, I had rather be set quick i' the earth
And bowl'd to death with turnips!

MISTRESS PAGE 
Come, trouble not yourself. Good Master Fenton,
I will not be your friend nor enemy:
My daughter will I question how she loves you,
And as I find her, so am I affected.
Till then farewell, sir: she must needs go in;
Her father will be angry.

FENTON 
Farewell, gentle mistress: farewell, Nan.

Exeunt MISTRESS PAGE and ANNE PAGE

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
This is my doing, now: 'Nay,' said I, 'will you cast
away your child on a fool, and a physician? Look on
Master Fenton:' this is my doing.

FENTON 
I thank thee; and I pray thee, once to-night
Give my sweet Nan this ring: there's for thy pains.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Now heaven send thee good fortune!

Exit FENTON

A kind heart he hath: a woman would run through
fire and water for such a kind heart. But yet I
would my master had Mistress Anne; or I would
Master Slender had her; or, in sooth, I would Master
Fenton had her; I will do what I can for them all
three; for so I have promised, and I'll be as good
as my word; but speciously for Master Fenton. Well,
I must of another errand to Sir John Falstaff from
my two mistresses: what a beast am I to slack it!

Exit

SCENE V. A room in the Garter Inn.

Enter FALSTAFF and BARDOLPH 
FALSTAFF 
Bardolph, I say,--

BARDOLPH 
Here, sir.

FALSTAFF 
Go fetch me a quart of sack; put a toast in't.

Exit BARDOLPH

Have I lived to be carried in a basket, like a
barrow of butcher's offal, and to be thrown in the
Thames? Well, if I be served such another trick,
I'll have my brains ta'en out and buttered, and give
them to a dog for a new-year's gift. The rogues
slighted me into the river with as little remorse as
they would have drowned a blind bitch's puppies,
fifteen i' the litter: and you may know by my size
that I have a kind of alacrity in sinking; if the
bottom were as deep as hell, I should down. I had
been drowned, but that the shore was shelvy and
shallow,--a death that I abhor; for the water swells
a man; and what a thing should I have been when I
had been swelled! I should have been a mountain of mummy.

Re-enter BARDOLPH with sack

BARDOLPH 
Here's Mistress Quickly, sir, to speak with you.

FALSTAFF 
Let me pour in some sack to the Thames water; for my
belly's as cold as if I had swallowed snowballs for
pills to cool the reins. Call her in.

BARDOLPH 
Come in, woman!

Enter MISTRESS QUICKLY

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
By your leave; I cry you mercy: give your worship
good morrow.

FALSTAFF 
Take away these chalices. Go brew me a pottle of
sack finely.

BARDOLPH 
With eggs, sir?

FALSTAFF 
Simple of itself; I'll no pullet-sperm in my brewage.

Exit BARDOLPH

How now!

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Marry, sir, I come to your worship from Mistress Ford.

FALSTAFF 
Mistress Ford! I have had ford enough; I was thrown
into the ford; I have my belly full of ford.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Alas the day! good heart, that was not her fault:
she does so take on with her men; they mistook their erection.

FALSTAFF 
So did I mine, to build upon a foolish woman's promise.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Well, she laments, sir, for it, that it would yearn
your heart to see it. Her husband goes this morning
a-birding; she desires you once more to come to her
between eight and nine: I must carry her word
quickly: she'll make you amends, I warrant you.

FALSTAFF 
Well, I will visit her: tell her so; and bid her
think what a man is: let her consider his frailty,
and then judge of my merit.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
I will tell her.

FALSTAFF 
Do so. Between nine and ten, sayest thou?

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Eight and nine, sir.

FALSTAFF 
Well, be gone: I will not miss her.

MISTRESS QUICKLY 
Peace be with you, sir.

Exit

FALSTAFF 
I marvel I hear not of Master Brook; he sent me word
to stay within: I like his money well. O, here he comes.

Enter FORD

FORD 
Bless you, sir!

FALSTAFF 
Now, master Brook, you come to know what hath passed
between me and Ford's wife?

FORD 
That, indeed, Sir John, is my business.

FALSTAFF 
Master Brook, I will not lie to you: I was at her
house the hour she appointed me.

FORD 
And sped you, sir?

FALSTAFF 
Very ill-favoredly, Master Brook.

FORD 
How so, sir? Did she change her determination?

FALSTAFF 
No, Master Brook; but the peaking Cornuto her
husband, Master Brook, dwelling in a continual
'larum of jealousy, comes me in the instant of our
encounter, after we had embraced, kissed, protested,
and, as it were, spoke the prologue of our comedy;
and at his heels a rabble of his companions, thither
provoked and instigated by his distemper, and,
forsooth, to search his house for his wife's love.

FORD 
What, while you were there?

FALSTAFF 
While I was there.

FORD 
And did he search for you, and could not find you?

FALSTAFF 
You shall hear. As good luck would have it, comes
in one Mistress Page; gives intelligence of Ford's
approach; and, in her invention and Ford's wife's
distraction, they conveyed me into a buck-basket.

FORD 
A buck-basket!

FALSTAFF 
By the Lord, a buck-basket! rammed me in with foul
shirts and smocks, socks, foul stockings, greasy
napkins; that, Master Brook, there was the rankest
compound of villanous smell that ever offended nostril.

FORD 
And how long lay you there?

FALSTAFF 
Nay, you shall hear, Master Brook, what I have
suffered to bring this woman to evil for your good.
Being thus crammed in the basket, a couple of Ford's
knaves, his hinds, were called forth by their
mistress to carry me in the name of foul clothes to
Datchet-lane: they took me on their shoulders; met
the jealous knave their master in the door, who
asked them once or twice what they had in their
basket: I quaked for fear, lest the lunatic knave
would have searched it; but fate, ordaining he
should be a cuckold, held his hand. Well: on went he
for a search, and away went I for foul clothes. But
mark the sequel, Master Brook: I suffered the pangs
of three several deaths; first, an intolerable
fright, to be detected with a jealous rotten
bell-wether; next, to be compassed, like a good
bilbo, in the circumference of a peck, hilt to
point, heel to head; and then, to be stopped in,
like a strong distillation, with stinking clothes
that fretted in their own grease: think of that,--a
man of my kidney,--think of that,--that am as subject
to heat as butter; a man of continual dissolution
and thaw: it was a miracle to scape suffocation.
And in the height of this bath, when I was more than
half stewed in grease, like a Dutch dish, to be
thrown into the Thames, and cooled, glowing hot,
in that surge, like a horse-shoe; think of
that,--hissing hot,--think of that, Master Brook.

FORD 
In good sadness, I am sorry that for my sake you
have sufferd all this. My suit then is desperate;
you'll undertake her no more?

FALSTAFF 
Master Brook, I will be thrown into Etna, as I have
been into Thames, ere I will leave her thus. Her
husband is this morning gone a-birding: I have
received from her another embassy of meeting; 'twixt
eight and nine is the hour, Master Brook.

FORD 
'Tis past eight already, sir.

FALSTAFF 
Is it? I will then address me to my appointment.
Come to me at your convenient leisure, and you shall
know how I speed; and the conclusion shall be
crowned with your enjoying her. Adieu. You shall
have her, Master Brook; Master Brook, you shall
cuckold Ford.

Exit

FORD 
Hum! ha! is this a vision? is this a dream? do I
sleep? Master Ford awake! awake, Master Ford!
there's a hole made in your best coat, Master Ford.
This 'tis to be married! this 'tis to have linen
and buck-baskets! Well, I will proclaim myself
what I am: I will now take the lecher; he is at my
house; he cannot 'scape me; 'tis impossible he
should; he cannot creep into a halfpenny purse,
nor into a pepper-box: but, lest the devil that
guides him should aid him, I will search
impossible places. Though what I am I cannot avoid,
yet to be what I would not shall not make me tame:
if I have horns to make one mad, let the proverb go
with me: I'll be horn-mad.

Exit

Script of Act 3 The Merry Wives of Windsor by William Shakespeare 

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