Bacchides
Plautus, Titus Maccius
Plautus. The Comedies of Plautus, Volume 1. Riley, H. T., translator. London: G. Bell and Sons, Ltd., 1912.
Enter LYDUS and PHILOXENUS.[*](Thornton suggests that Molière had in his eye this Scene when he wrote "Les Fourberies de Scapin," which Otway translated under the title of "The Cheats of Scapin.")LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS MNESILOCHUS LYS. PHILOXENUS MNESILOCHUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS PHILOXENUS LYDUS
MNESILOCUHS, alone.MNESILOCHUS
Enter PISTOCLERUS from the house of BACCHIS.PISTOCLERUS
Enter MNESILOCHUS from his father's house.MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS PISTOCLERUS MNESILOCHUS