The Merchant of Venice — Act 1, Scene 2: Belmont. A room in PORTIA'S house.

In Belmont, Portia tells Nerissa she is tired of her life, and Nerissa replies that people with too much fortune can suffer as much as those with too little. Portia complains that she cannot choose her own husband because her dead father’s will controls the marriage lottery of three caskets. The two women then review the suitors who have already come, and Portia mocks each one for his faults, from the Neapolitan’s horse talk to the German’s drunkenness. Nerissa reminds her of Bassanio, whom Portia remembers fondly. A servant then reports that the first four suitors are leaving and that the Prince of Morocco is arriving that night.