11811181Would haue you likewi
se troubled with a blinde wife,
11821182Hauing the bene
fit of your eyes,
11831183But neither follow him
so much in follie,
11841184But loue one, in whom you may better delight.
11851185Valingford. Father Miller, thy daughter
shall haue honour
11871187I am a Gentleman of king
Williams Court,
11881188And no meane man in king
Williams fauour.
11891189Em. If you be a Lord
sir, as you
say:
11901190You o
ffer both your
selfe and mee great wrong:
11911191Yours, as apparant in limiting your loue
so vnorderly,
11921192For which you ra
shly endure reprochement:
11941194When being
shut from the vanities of this world,
11951195you would haue me as an open gazing
stock to all the world:
11961196For lu
st, not loue leades you into this error:
11971197But from the one I will keepe me as well as I can,
11981198And yeeld the other to none but to my father,
12001200Valingford. Why faire
Em,
Manuile hath for
saken thee,
12011201And mu
st at Che
ster be married, which,
12021202If I
speake otherwi
se than true,
12031203Let thy father
speake what credibly he hath heard.
12041204Em. But can it be
Manuile will deale
so vnkindly,
12051205To reward my iu
stice with
such mon
strous vngentlenes.
12071207And doe
st thou now thus requite it?
12081208Indeed the
se many daies I haue not
seen him,
12091209Which hath made me maruell at his long ab
sence.
12101210But father, are you a
ssured of the wordes he
spake,
12121212Miller. In
sooth daughter, now it is forth,
12141214Ma
ster
Manuile hath for
saken thee,
12161216To a mans daughter of no little wealth.
His