The Works of Christopher Marlowe

Dr. Faustus (B Text)


Act: 4 Scene: 6
Ay, a plague take him. Here's some on's have cause
to know him. Did he conjure thee too?
O monstrous! Eat a whole load of hay?
Now, sirs, you shall hear how villainously he served
me. I went to him yesterday to buy a horse of him, and he
would by no means sell him under forty dollars. So, sir, because
I knew him to be such a horse as would run over hedge and
ditch and never tire, I gave him his money. So when I had
my horse, Doctor Faustus bad me ride him night and day, and
spare him no time. But, quoth he, in any case ride him not in-
to the water. Now, sir, I thinking the horse had had some
quality that he would not have me know of, what did I but
rid him into a great river, and when I came just in the midst
my horse vanished away, and I sat straddling upon a bottle
of hay.
O, brave Doctor!
But you shall hear how bravely I served him for
it; I went me home to his house, and there I found him
asleep. I kept a hallowing and whooping in his ears, but
all could not wake him. I, seeing that, took him by the leg
and never rested pulling till I had pulled me his leg quite off,
and now 'tis at home in mine hostry.