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BOX AND COX.
15
Box. | Ah, that may be—but I'm not alive! |
Cox. | [Pushing back his chair.] You'll excuse me, sir—but I don't like joking upon such subjects. |
Box. | I'm perfectly serious, sir. I've been defunct for the last three years! |
Cox. | [Shouting.] Will you be quiet, sir? |
Box. | If you won't believe me, I'll refer you to a very large, numerous, and respectable circle of disconsolate friends. |
Cox. | My dear sir—my very dear sir—if there does exist any ingenious contrivance whereby a man on the eve of committing matrimony can leave this world, and yet stop in it, I shouldn't be sorry to know it. |
Box. | Oh! then I presume I'm not to set you down as being frantically attached to your intended? |
Cox. | Why, not exactly; and yet, at present, I'm only aware of one obstacle to my doating upon her, and that is, that I can't abide her! |
Box. | Then there's nothing more easy. Do as I did. |
Cox. | [Eagerly.] I will! What was it? |
Box. | Drown yourself! |
Cox. | [Shouting again.] Will you be quiet, sir? |
Box. | Listen to me. Three years ago it was my misfortune to captivate the affections of a still blooming, though somewhat middle-aged widow, at Ramsgate. |
Cox. | [Aside.] Singular enough! Just my case three months ago at Margate. |
Box. | Well, sir, to escape her importunities, I came to the determination of enlisting into the Blues, or Life Guards. |
Cox. | [Aside.] So did I. How very odd! |
Box. | But they wouldn't have me—they actually had the effrontery to say that I was too short— |
Cox. | [Aside.] And I wasn't tall enough! |
Box. | So I was obliged to content myself with a marching regiment—I enlisted! |
Cox. | [Aside.] So did I. Singular coincidence! |
Box. | I'd no sooner done so, than I was sorry for it. |
Cox. | [Aside.] So was I. |
Box. | My infatuated widow offered to purchase my discharge, on condition that I'd lead her to the altar. |
Cox. | [Aside.] Just my case! |
Box. | I hesitated—at last I consented. |
Cox. | [Aside.] I consented at once! |