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ACT I. SCENE I.
WHat's the matter, Madam? What has happen'd to you? What has any body done to you?
An Affront? ... Ah! I die: An affront! ... I faint: I cannot speak. A Chair quickly.
But too true, my poor Betty. Oh! I shall dye. To disrespect me in the open Street! What Insolence!
How, Madam! Not to show respect to such a person as you? Madam Rich; the Widow of an honest Banker, who got Two Hundred Thousand Pounds in the King's service? Pray, Madam, who has been thus insolent?
A Dutchess; who had the confidence to thrust my Coac•• from the Wall, and make it run back above twenty yards.
A very impertinent Dutchess. What! Madam, your person shining all o're with Jewels, your new gilt Coach, your dappl'd Flanders with long Tails, your Coachman with cocking Whiskers like a Swiss Guard, your six Footman co∣ver'd with Lace more than any on a Lord-Mayor's day? I say, could not all this imprint some respect in the Dutchess?
Not at all. And this beggarly Dutchess, at the end of an old Coach, drawn by two miserable starv'd Jades, made her tatter'd Footmen insult me.
S'life! where was Betty. I'd have told her what she was.
I spoke to her with a meen and tone proportionable to my Equi∣page; but she, with a scornful smile, cry'd, hold thy peace, Citizen, struck me quite dumb.
Citizen! Citizen! To a Lady in a gilt Coach, lin'd with crimson Velvet, and hung round with a gold Fringe.
I swear to thee, that I had not the force to answer to this deadly Injury; but order'd my Coachman to turn, and drive me home a full gallop.
But, Madam, pray consider things rightly, and take this as it was inten∣ded; for, I conceive, it was not against your Person, but your Name, that this Af∣front was design'd; and why do you not make haste to change it?
That I have resolv'd; but I quarrel daily with my Destiny, that I was not at first a Woman of Quality.
Well, well, Madam, you have no great reason to complain; and tho' you are not as yet a Woman of Quality, you are at least very rich; and you know, that with money you may buy Quality, but Birth very often brings no Estate.
That's nothing; there is something very charming in Quality, and a great Name.
Yet sure you'd think your self in a worse condition, Madam, were you, as many great Ladies in the World are, who want every thing; and, in spight of