Comus
A
Masque
Presented
At
Ludlow
Castle,
1634,
Before
The
Earl
Of
Bridgewater,
Then
President
Of
Wales.
The
Persons
The
ATTENDANT
SPIRIT,
afterwards
in
the
habit
of
THYRSIS.
COMUS,
with
his
Crew.
The
LADY.
FIRST
BROTHER.
SECOND
BROTHER.
SABRINA,
the
Nymph.
The
Chief
Persons
which
presented
were:—
The
Lord
Brackley;
Mr.
Thomas
Egerton,
his
Brother;
The
Lady
Alice
Egerton.
The
first
Scene
discovers
a
wild
wood.
The
ATTENDANT
SPIRIT
descends
or
enters.
Before
the
starry
threshold
of
Jove’s
court
My
mansion
is,
where
those
immortal
shapes
Of
bright
aerial
spirits
live
insphered
In
regions
mild
of
calm
and
serene
air,
Above
the
smoke
and
stir
of
this
dim
spot
Which
men
call
Earth,
and,
with
low-thoughted
care,
Confined
and
pestered
in
this
pinfold
here,
Strive
to
keep
up
a
frail
and
feverish
being,
Unmindful
of
the
crown
that
Virtue
gives,
After
this
mortal
change,
to
her
true
servants
Amongst
the
enthroned
gods
on
sainted
seats.
Yet
some
there
be
that
by
due
steps
aspire
To
lay
their
just
hands
on
that
golden
key
That
opes
the
palace
of
eternity.
To
Such
my
errand
is;
and,
but
for
such,
I
would
not
soil
these
pure
ambrosial
weeds
With
the
rank
vapours
of
this
sin-worn
mould.
But
to
my
task.
Neptune,
besides
the
sway
Of
every
salt
flood
and
each
ebbing
stream,
Took
in
by
lot,
‘twixt
high
and
nether
Jove,
Imperial
rule
of
all
the
sea-girt
isles
That,
like
to
rich
and
various
gems,
inlay
The
unadorned
bosom
of
the
deep;
Which
he,
to
grace
his
tributary
gods,
By
course
commits
to
several
government,
And
gives
them
leave
to
wear
their
sapphire
crowns
And
wield
their
little
tridents.
But
this
Isle,
The
greatest
and
the
best
of
all
the
main,
He
quarters
to
his
blue-haired
deities;
And
all
this
tract
that
fronts
the
falling
sun
A
noble
Peer
of
mickle
trust
and
power
Has
in
his
charge,
with
tempered
awe
to
guide
An
old
and
haughty
nation,
proud
in
arms:
Where
his
fair
offspring,
nursed
in
princely
lore,
Are
coming
to
attend
their
father’s
state,
And
new-intrusted
sceptre.
But
their
way
Lies
through
the
perplexed
paths
of
this
drear
wood,
The
nodding
horror
of
whose
shady
brows
Threats
the
forlorn
and
wandering
passenger;
And
here
their
tender
age
might
suffer
peril,
But
that,
by
quick
command
from
sovran
Jove,
I
was
despatched
for
their
defence
and
guard:
And
listen
why;
for
I
will
tell
you
now
What
never
yet
was
heard
in
tale
or
song,
From
old
or
modern
bard,
in
hall
or
bower.
Bacchus,
that
first
from
out
the
purple
grape
Crushed
the
sweet
poison
of
misused
wine,
After
the
Tuscan
mariners
transformed,
Coasting
the
Tyrrhene
shore,
as
the
winds
listed,
On
Circe’s
island
fell.
(Who
knows
not
Circe,
The
daughter
of
the
Sun,
whose
charmed
cup
Whoever
tasted
lost
his
upright
shape,
And
downward
fell
into
a
grovelling
swine?)
This
Nymph,
that
gazed
upon
his
clustering
locks,
With
ivy
berries
wreathed,
and
his
blithe
youth,
Had
by
him,
ere
he
parted
thence,
a
son
Much
like
his
father,
but
his
mother
more,
Whom
therefore
she
brought
up,
and
Comus
named:
Who,
ripe
and
frolic
of
his
full-grown
age,
Roving
the
Celtic
and
Iberian
fields,
At
last
betakes
him
to
this
ominous
wood,
And,
in
thick
shelter
of
black
shades
imbowered,
Excels
his
mother
at
her
mighty
art;
Offering
to
every
weary
traveller
His
orient
liquor
in
a
crystal
glass,
To
quench
the
drouth
of
Phoebus;
which
as
they
taste
(For
most
do
taste
through
fond
intemperate
thirst),
Soon
as
the
potion
works,
their
human
count’nance,
The
express
resemblance
of
the
gods,
is
changed
Into
some
brutish
form
of
wolf
or
bear,
Or
ounce
or
tiger,
hog,
or
bearded
goat,
All
other
parts
remaining
as
they
were.
And
they,
so
perfect
is
their
misery,
Not
once
perceive
their
foul
disfigurement,
But
boast
themselves
more
comely
than
before,
And
all
their
friends
and
native
home
forget,
To
roll
with
pleasure
in
a
sensual
sty.
Therefore,
when
any
favoured
of
high
Jove
Chances
to
pass
through
this
adventurous
glade,
Swift
as
the
sparkle
of
a
glancing
star
I
shoot
from
heaven,
to
give
him
safe
convoy,
As
now
I
do.
But
first
I
must
put
off
These
my
sky-robes,
spun
out
of
Iris’
woof,
And
take
the
weeds
and
likeness
of
a
swain
That
to
the
service
of
this
house
belongs,
Who,
with
his
soft
pipe
and
smooth-dittied
song,
Well
knows
to
still
the
wild
winds
when
they
roar,
And
hush
the
waving
woods;
nor
of
less
faith
And
in
this
office
of
his
mountain
watch
Likeliest,
and
nearest
to
the
present
aid
Of
this
occasion.
But
I
hear
the
tread
Of
hateful
steps;
I
must
be
viewless
now.
COMUS
enters,
with
a
charming-rod
in
one
hand,
his
glass
in
the
other:
with
him
a
rout
of
monsters,
headed
like
sundry
sorts
of
wild
beasts,
but
otherwise
like
men
and
women,
their
apparel
glistering.
They
come
in
making
a
riotous
and
unruly
noise,
with
torches
in
their
hands.
COMUS.
The
star
that
bids
the
shepherd
fold
Now
the
top
of
heaven
doth
hold;
And
the
gilded
car
of
day
His
glowing
axle
doth
allay
In
the
steep
Atlantic
stream;
And
the
slope
sun
his
upward
beam
Shoots
against
the
dusky
pole,
Pacing
toward
the
other
goal
Of
his
chamber
in
the
east.
Meanwhile,
welcome
joy
and
feast,
Midnight
shout
and
revelry,
Tipsy
dance
and
jollity.
Braid
your
locks
with
rosy
twine,
Dropping
odours,
dropping
wine.
Rigour
now
is
gone
to
bed;
And
Advice
with
scrupulous
head,
Strict
Age,
and
sour
Severity,
With
their
grave
saws,
in
slumber
lie.
We,
that
are
of
purer
fire,
Imitate
the
starry
quire,
Who,
in
their
nightly
watchful
spheres,
Lead
in
swift
round
the
months
and
years.
The
sounds
and
seas,
with
all
their
finny
drove,
Now
to
the
moon
in
wavering
morrice
move;
And
on
the
tawny
sands
and
shelves
Trip
the
pert
fairies
and
the
dapper
elves.
By
dimpled
brook
and
fountain-brim,
The
wood-nymphs,
decked
with
daisies
trim,
Their
merry
wakes
and
pastimes
keep:
What
hath
night
to
do
with
sleep?
Night
hath
better
sweets
to
prove;
Venus
now
wakes,
and
wakens
Love.
Come,
let
us
our
rights
begin;
‘T
is
only
daylight
that
makes
sin,
Which
these
dun
shades
will
ne’er
report.
Hail,
goddess
of
nocturnal
sport,
Dark-veiled
Cotytto,
to
whom
the
secret
flame
Of
midnight
torches
burns!
mysterious
dame,
That
ne’er
art
called
but
when
the
dragon
womb
Of
Stygian
darkness
spets
her
thickest
gloom,
And
makes
one
blot
of
all
the
air!
Stay
thy
cloudy
ebon
chair,
Wherein
thou
ridest
with
Hecat’,
and
befriend
Us
thy
vowed
priests,
till
utmost
end
Of
all
thy
dues
be
done,
and
none
left
out,
Ere
the
blabbing
eastern
scout,
The
nice
Morn
on
the
Indian
steep,
From
her
cabined
loop-hole
peep,
And
to
the
tell-tale
Sun
descry
Our
concealed
solemnity.
Come,
knit
hands,
and
beat
the
ground
In
a
light
fantastic
round.
The
Measure.
Break
off,
break
off!
I
feel
the
different
pace
Of
some
chaste
footing
near
about
this
ground.
Run
to
your
shrouds
within
these
brakes
and
trees;
Our
number
may
affright.
Some
virgin
sure
(For
so
I
can
distinguish
by
mine
art)
Benighted
in
these
woods!
Now
to
my
charms,
And
to
my
wily
trains:
I
shall
ere
long
Be
well
stocked
with
as
fair
a
herd
as
grazed
About
my
mother
Circe.
Thus
I
hurl
My
dazzling
spells
into
the
spongy
air,
Of
power
to
cheat
the
eye
with
blear
illusion,
And
give
it
false
presentments,
lest
the
place
And
my
quaint
habits
breed
astonishment,
And
put
the
damsel
to
suspicious
flight;
Which
must
not
be,
for
that’s
against
my
course.
I,
under
fair
pretence
of
friendly
ends,
And
well-placed
words
of
glozing
courtesy,
Baited
with
reasons
not
unplausible,
Wind
me
into
the
easy-hearted
man,
And
hug
him
into
snares.
When
once
her
eye
Hath
met
the
virtue
of
this
magic
dust,
I
shall
appear
some
harmless
villager
Whom
thrift
keeps
up
about
his
country
gear.
But
here
she
comes;
I
fairly
step
aside,
And
hearken,
if
I
may
her
business
hear.
The
LADY
enters.
LADY.
This
way
the
noise
was,
if
mine
ear
be
true,
My
best
guide
now.
Methought
it
was
the
sound
Of
riot
and
ill-managed
merriment,
Such
as
the
jocund
flute
or
gamesome
pipe
Stirs
up
among
the
loose
unlettered
hinds,
When,
for
their
teeming
flocks
and
granges
full,
In
wanton
dance
they
praise
the
bounteous
Pan,
And
thank
the
gods
amiss.
I
should
be
loth
To
meet
the
rudeness
and
swilled
insolence
Of
such
late
wassailers;
yet,
oh!
where
else
Shall
I
inform
my
unacquainted
feet
In
the
blind
mazes
of
this
tangled
wood?
My
brothers,
when
they
saw
me
wearied
out
With
this
long
way,
resolving
here
to
lodge
Under
the
spreading
favour
of
these
pines,
Stepped,
as
they
said,
to
the
next
thicket-side
To
bring
me
berries,
or
such
cooling
fruit
As
the
kind
hospitable
woods
provide.
They
left
me
then
when
the
grey-hooded
Even,
Like
a
sad
votarist
in
palmer’s
weed,
Rose
from
the
hindmost
wheels
of
Phoebus’
wain.
But
where
they
are,
and
why
they
came
not
back,
Is
now
the
labour
of
my
thoughts.
TTis
likeliest
They
had
engaged
their
wandering
steps
too
far;
And
envious
darkness,
ere
they
could
return,
Had
stole
them
from
me.
Else,
O
thievish
Night,
Why
shouldst
thou,
but
for
some
felonious
end,
In
thy
dark
lantern
thus
close
up
the
stars
That
Nature
hung
in
heaven,
and
filled
their
lamps
With
everlasting
oil
to
give
due
light
To
the
misled
and
lonely
traveller?
This
is
the
place,
as
well
as
I
may
guess,
Whence
even
now
the
tumult
of
loud
mirth
Was
rife,
and
perfect
in
my
listening
ear;
Yet
nought
but
single
darkness
do
I
find.
What
might
this
be
?
A
thousand
fantasies
Begin
to
throng
into
my
memory,
Of
calling
shapes,
and
beckoning
shadows
dire,
And
airy
tongues
that
syllable
men’s
names
On
sands
and
shores
and
desert
wildernesses.
These
thoughts
may
startle
well,
but
not
astound
The
virtuous
mind,
that
ever
walks
attended
By
a
strong
siding
champion,
Conscience.
O,
welcome,
pure-eyed
Faith,
white-handed
Hope,
Thou
hovering
angel
girt
with
golden
wings,
And
thou
unblemished
form
of
Chastity!
I
see
ye
visibly,
and
now
believe
That
He,
the
Supreme
Good,
to
whom
all
things
ill
Are
but
as
slavish
officers
of
vengeance,
Would
send
a
glistering
guardian,
if
need
were,
To
keep
my
life
and
honour
unassailed.
.
.
.
Was
I
deceived,
or
did
a
sable
cloud
Turn
forth
her
silver
lining
on
the
night?
I
did
not
err:
there
does
a
sable
cloud
Turn
forth
her
silver
lining
on
the
night,
And
casts
a
gleam
over
this
tufted
grove.
I
cannot
hallo
to
my
brothers,
but
Such
noise
as
I
can
make
to
be
heard
farthest
I’ll
venture;
for
my
new-enlivened
spirits
Prompt
me,
and
they
perhaps
are
not
far
off.
Song.
Sweet
Echo,
sweetest
nymph,
that
liv’st
unseen
Within
thy
airy
shell
By
slow
Meander’s
margent
green,
And
in
the
violet-embroidered
vale
Where
the
love-lorn
nightingale
Nightly
to
thee
her
sad
song
mourneth
well:
Canst
thou
not
tell
me
of
a
gentle
pair
That
likest
thy
Narcissus
are?
O,
if
thou
have
Hid
them
in
some
flowery
cave,
Tell
me
but
where,
Sweet
Queen
of
Parley,
Daughter
of
the
Sphere!
So
may’st
thou
be
translated
to
the
skies,
And
give
resounding
grace
to
all
Heaven’s
harmonies!
COMUS.
Can
any
mortal
mixture
of
earthUs
mould
Breathe
such
divine
enchanting
ravishment?
Sure
something
holy
lodges
in
that
breast,
And
with
these
raptures
moves
the
vocal
air
To
testify
his
hidden
residence.
How
sweetly
did
they
float
upon
the
wings
Of
silence,
through
the
empty-vaulted
night,
At
every
fall
smoothing
the
raven
down
Of
darkness
till
it
smiled!
I
have
oft
heard
My
mother
Circe
with
the
Sirens
three,
Amidst
the
flowery-kirtled
Naiades,
Culling
their
potent
herbs
and
baleful
drugs,
Who,
as
they
sung,
would
take
the
prisoned
soul,
And
lap
it
in
Elysium:
Scylla
wept,
And
chid
her
barking
waves
into
attention,
And
fell
Charybdis
murmured
soft
applause.
Yet
they
in
pleasing
slumber
lulled
the
sense,
And
in
sweet
madness
robbed
it
of
itself;
But
such
a
sacred
and
home-felt
delight,
Such
sober
certainty
of
waking
bliss,
I
never
heard
till
now.
I’ll
speak
to
her,
And
she
shall
be
my
queen.QHail,
foreign
wonder!
Whom
certain
these
rough
shades
did
never
breed,
Unless
the
goddess
that
in
rural
shrine
Dwell’st
here
with
Pan
or
Sylvan,
by
blest
song
Forbidding
every
bleak
unkindly
fog
To
touch
the
prosperous
growth
of
this
tall
wood.
LADY.
Nay,
gentle
shepherd,
ill
is
lost
that
praise
That
is
addressed
to
unattending
ears.
Not
any
boast
of
skill,
but
extreme
shift
How
to
regain
my
severed
company,
Compelled
me
to
awake
the
courteous
Echo
To
give
me
answer
from
her
mossy
couch.
COMUS:
What
chance,
good
lady,
hath
bereft
you
thus?
LADY.
Dim
darkness
and
this
leafy
labyrinth.
COMUS.
Could
that
divide
you
from
near-ushering
guides?
LADY.
They
left
me
weary
on
a
grassy
turf.
COMUS.
By
falsehood,
or
discourtesy,
or
why?
LADY.
To
seek
i’
the
valley
some
cool
friendly
spring.
COMUS.
And
left
your
fair
side
all
unguarded,
Lady?
LADY.
They
were
but
twain,
and
purposed
quick
return.
COMUS.
Perhaps
forestalling
night
prevented
them.
LADY.
How
easy
my
misfortune
is
to
hit!
COMUS.
Imports
their
loss,
beside
the
present
need?
LADY.
No
less
than
if
I
should
my
brothers
lose.
COMUS.
Were
they
of
manly
prime,
or
youthful
bloom?
LADY.
As
smooth
as
Hebe’s
their
unrazored
lips.
COMUS.
Two
such
I
saw,
what
time
the
laboured
ox
In
his
loose
traces
from
the
furrow
came,
And
the
swinked
hedger
at
his
supper
sat.
I
saw
them
under
a
green
mantling
vine,
That
crawls
along
the
side
of
yon
small
hill,
Plucking
ripe
clusters
from
the
tender
shoots;
Their
port
was
more
than
human,
as
they
stood.
I
took
it
for
a
faery
vision
Of
some
gay
creatures
of
the
element,
That
in
the
colours
of
the
rainbow
live,
And
play
i’
the
plighted
clouds.
I
was
awe-strook,
And,
as
I
passed,
I
worshiped.
If
those
you
seek,
It
were
a
journey
like
the
path
to
Heaven
To
help
you
find
them.
LADY.
Gentle
villager,
What
readiest
way
would
bring
me
to
that
place?
COMUS.
Due
west
it
rises
from
this
shrubby
point.
LADY.
To
find
out
that,
good
shepherd,
I
suppose,
In
such
a
scant
allowance
of
star-light,
Would
overtask
the
best
land-pilot’s
art,
Without
the
sure
guess
of
well-practised
feet.
COMUS.
I
know
each
lane,
and
every
alley
green,
Dingle,
or
bushy
dell,
of
this
wild
wood,
And
every
bosky
bourn
from
side
to
side,
My
daily
walks
and
ancient
neighbourhood;
And,
if
your
stray
attendance
be
yet
lodged,
Or
shroud
within
these
limits,
I
shall
know
Ere
morrow
wake,
or
the
low-roosted
lark
From
her
thatched
pallet
rouse.
If
otherwise,
I
can
conduct
you,
Lady,
to
a
low
But
loyal
cottage,
where
you
may
be
safe
Till
further
quest.
LADY.
Shepherd,
I
take
thy
word,
And
trust
thy
honest-offered
courtesy,
Which
oft
is
sooner
found
in
lowly
sheds,
With
smoky
rafters,
than
in
tapestry
halls
And
courts
of
princes,
where
it
first
was
named,
And
yet
is
most
pretended.
In
a
place
Less
warranted
than
this,
or
less
secure,
I
cannot
be,
that
I
should
fear
to
change
it.
Eye
me,
blest
Providence,
and
square
my
trial
To
my
proportioned
strength!
Shepherd,
lead
on.
The
TWO
BROTHERS.
ELD.
BRO.
Unmuffle,
ye
faint
stars;
and
thou,
fair
moon,
That
wont’st
to
love
the
traveller’s
benison,
Stoop
thy
pale
visage
through
an
amber
cloud,
And
disinherit
Chaos,
that
reigns
here
In
double
night
of
darkness
and
of
shades;
Or,
if
your
influence
be
quite
dammed
up
With
black
usurping
mists,
some
gentle
taper,
Though
a
rush-candle
from
the
wicker
hole
Of
some
clay
habitation,
visit
us
With
thy
long
levelled
rule
of
streaming
light,
And
thou
shalt
be
our
star
of
Arcady,
Or
Tyrian
Cynosure.
SEC.
BRO.
Or,
if
our
eyes
Be
barred
that
happiness,
might
we
but
hear
The
folded
flocks,
penned
in
their
wattled
cotes,
Or
sound
of
pastoral
reed
with
oaten
stops,
Or
whistle
from
the
lodge,
or
village
cock
Count
the
night-watches
to
his
feathery
dames,
‘T
would
be
some
solace
yet,
some
little
cheering,
In
this
close
dungeon
of
innumerous
boughs.
But,
oh,
that
hapless
virgin,
our
lost
sister!
Where
may
she
wander
now,
whither
betake
her
From
the
chill
dew,
amongst
rude
burs
and
thistles
Perhaps
some
cold
bank
is
her
bolster
now,
Or
‘gainst
the
rugged
bark
of
some
broad
elm
Leans
her
unpillowed
head,
fraught
with
sad
fears.
What
if
in
wild
amazement
and
affright,
Or,
while
we
speak,
within
the
direful
grasp
Of
savage
hunger,
or
of
savage
heat!
ELD.
BRO.
Peace,
brother:
be
not
over-exquisite
To
cast
the
fashion
of
uncertain
evils;
For,
grant
they
be
so,
while
they
rest
unknown,
What
need
a
man
forestall
his
date
of
grief,
And
run
to
meet
what
he
would
most
avoid?
Or,
if
they
be
but
false
alarms
of
fear,
How
bitter
is
such
self-delusion!
I
do
not
think
my
sister
so
to
seek,
Or
so
unprincipled
in
virtue’s
book,
And
the
sweet
peace
that
goodness
bosoms
ever,
As
that
the
single
want
of
light
and
noise
(Not
being
in
danger,
as
I
trust
she
is
not)
Could
stir
the
constant
mood
of
her
calm
thoughts,
And
put
them
into
misbecoming
plight.
Virtue
could
see
to
do
what
Virtue
would
By
her
own
radiant
light,
though
sun
and
moon
Were
in
the
flat
sea
sunk.
And
Wisdom’s
self
Oft
seeks
to
sweet
retired
solitude,
Where,
with
her
best
nurse,
Contemplation,
She
plumes
her
feathers,
and
lets
grow
her
wings,
That,
in
the
various
bustle
of
resort,
Were
all
to-ruffled,
and
sometimes
impaired.
He
that
has
light
within
his
own
clear
breast
May
sit
i’
the
centre,
and
enjoy
bright
day:
But
he
that
hides
a
dark
soul
and
foul
thoughts
Benighted
walks
under
the
mid-day
sun;
Himself
is
his
own
dungeon.
SEC.
BRO.
’Tis
most
true
That
musing
meditation
most
affects
The
pensive
secrecy
of
desert
cell,
Far
from
the
cheerful
haunt
of
men
and
herds,
And
sits
as
safe
as
in
a
senate
house
For
who
would
rob
a
hermit
of
his
weeds,
His
few
books,
or
his
beads,
or
maple
dish,
Or
do
his
grey
hairs
any
violence?
But
Beauty,
like
the
fair
Hesperian
tree
Laden
with
blooming
gold,
had
need
the
guard
Of
dragon-watch
with
unenchanted
eye
To
save
her
blossoms,
and
defend
her
fruit,
From
the
rash
hand
of
bold
Incontinence.
You
may
as
well
spread
out
the
unsunned
heaps
Of
miser’s
treasure
by
an
outlaw’s
den,
And
tell
me
it
is
safe,
as
bid
me
hope
Danger
will
wink
on
Opportunity,
And
let
a
single
helpless
maiden
pass
Uninjured
in
this
wild
surrounding
waste.
Of
night
or
loneliness
it
recks
me
not;
I
fear
the
dread
events
that
dog
them
both,
Lest
some
ill-greeting
touch
attempt
the
person
Of
our
unowned
sister.
ELD.
BRO.
I
do
not,
brother,
Infer
as
if
I
thought
my
sister’s
state
Secure
without
all
doubt
or
controversy;
Yet,
where
an
equal
poise
of
hope
and
fear
Does
arbitrate
the
event,
my
nature
is
That
I
incline
to
hope
rather
than
fear,
And
gladly
banish
squint
suspicion.
My
sister
is
not
so
defenceless
left
As
you
imagine;
she
has
a
hidden
strength,
Which
you
remember
not.
SEC.
BRO..
What
hidden
strength,
Unless
the
strength
of
Heaven,
if
you
mean
that?
ELD.
BRO.
I
mean
that
too,
but
yet
a
hidden
strength,
Which,
if
Heaven
gave
it,
may
be
termed
her
own.
’Tis
chastity,
my
brother,
chastity:
She
that
has
that
is
clad
in
complete
steel,
And,
like
a
quivered
nymph
with
arrows
keen,
May
trace
huge
forests,
and
unharboured
heaths,
Infamous
hills,
and
sandy
perilous
wilds;
Where,
through
the
sacred
rays
of
chastity,
No
savage
fierce,
bandite,
or
mountaineer,
Will
dare
to
soil
her
virgin
purity.
Yea,
there
where
very
desolation
dwells,
By
grots
and
caverns
shagged
with
horrid
shades,
She
may
pass
on
with
unblenched
majesty,
Be
it
not
done
in
pride,
or
in
presumption.
Some
say
no
evil
thing
that
walks
by
night,
In
fog
or
fire,
by
lake
or
moorish
fen,
Blue
meagre
hag,
or
stubborn
unlaid
ghost,
That
breaks
his
magic
chains
at
curfew
time,
No
goblin
or
swart
faery
of
the
mine,
Hath
hurtful
power
o’er
true
virginity.
Do
ye
believe
me
yet,
or
shall
I
call
Antiquity
from
the
old
schools
of
Greece
To
testify
the
arms
of
chastity?
Hence
had
the
huntress
Dian
her
dread
bow
Fair
silver-shafted
queen
for
ever
chaste,
Wherewith
she
tamed
the
brinded
lioness
And
spotted
mountain-pard,
but
set
at
nought
The
frivolous
bolt
of
Cupid;
gods
and
men
Feared
her
stern
frown,
and
she
was
queen
o’
the
woods.
What
was
that
snaky-headed
Gorgon
shield
That
wise
Minerva
wore,
unconquered
virgin,
Wherewith
she
freezed
her
foes
to
congealed
stone,
But
rigid
looks
of
chaste
austerity,
And
noble
grace
that
dashed
brute
violence
With
sudden
adoration
and
blank
awe?
So
dear
to
Heaven
is
saintly
chastity
That,
when
a
soul
is
found
sincerely
so,
A
thousand
liveried
angels
lackey
her,
Driving
far
off
each
thing
of
sin
and
guilt,
And
in
clear
dream
and
solemn
vision
Tell
her
of
things
that
no
gross
ear
can
hear;
Till
oft
converse
with
heavenly
habitants
Begin
to
cast
a
beam
on
the
outward
shape,
The
unpolluted
temple
of
the
mind,
And
turns
it
by
degrees
to
the
soul’s
essence,
Till
all
be
made
immortal.
But,
when
lust,
By
unchaste
looks,
loose
gestures,
and
foul
talk,
But
most
by
lewd
and
lavish
act
of
sin,
Lets
ill
defilement
to
the
inward
parts,
The
soul
grows
clotted
by
contagion,
Imbodies,
and
imbrutes,
till
she
quite
loose
The
divine
property
of
her
first
being.
Such
are
those
thick
and
gloomy
shadows
damp
Oft
seen
in
charnel-vaults
and
sepulchres,
Lingering
and
sitting
by
a
new-made
grave,
As
loth
to
leave
the
body
that
it
loved,
And
linked
itself
by
carnal
sensualty
To
a
degenerate
and
degraded
state.
SEC.
BRO.
How
charming
is
divine
Philosophy!
Not
harsh
and
crabbed,
as
dull
fools
suppose,
But
musical
as
is
Apollo’s
lute,
And
a
perpetual
feast
of
nectared
sweets,
Where
no
crude
surfeit
reigns.
Eld.
Bro.
List!
list!
I
hear
Some
far-off
hallo
break
the
silent
air.
SEC.
BRO.
Methought
so
too;
what
should
it
be?
ELD.
BRO.
For
certain.
Either
some
one,
like
us,
night-foundered
here,
Or
else
some
neighbour
woodman,
or,
at
worst,
Some
roving
robber
calling
to
his
fellows.
SEC.
BRO.
Heaven
keep
my
sister!
Again,
again,
and
near!
Best
draw,
and
stand
upon
our
guard.
ELD.
BRO.
I’ll
hallo!
If
he
be
friendly,
he
comes
well:
if
not,
Defence
is
a
good
cause,
and
Heaven
be
for
us!
The
ATTENDANT
SPIRIT,
habited
like
a
shepherd.
That
hallo
I
should
know.
What
are
you?
speak.
Come
not
too
near;
you
fall
on
iron
stakes
else.
SPIR.
What
voice
is
that?
my
young
Lord?
speak
again.
SEC.
BRO.
O
brother,
Tt
is
my
father’s
Shepherd,
sure.
ELD.
BRO.
Thyrsis!
whose
artful
strains
have
of
delayed
The
huddling
brook
to
hear
his
madrigal,
And
sweetened
every
musk-rose
of
the
dale.
How
camest
thou
here,
good
swain?
Hath
any
ram
Slipped
from
the
fold,
or
young
kid
lost
his
dam,
Or
straggling
wether
the
pent
flock
forsook?
How
couldst
thou
find
this
dark
sequestered
nook?
SPIR.
O
my
loved
master’s
heir,
and
his
next
joy,
I
came
not
here
on
such
a
trivial
toy
As
a
strayed
ewe,
or
to
pursue
the
stealth
Of
pilfering
wolf;
not
all
the
fleecy
wealth
That
doth
enrich
these
downs
is
worth
a
thought
To
this
my
errand,
and
the
care
it
brought.
But,
oh
!
my
virgin
Lady,
where
is
she?
How
chance
she
is
not
in
your
company?
ELD.
BRO.
To
tell
thee
sadly,
Shepherd,
without
blame
Or
our
neglect,
we
lost
her
as
we
came.
SPIR.
Ay
me
unhappy!
then
my
fears
are
true.
ELD.
BRO.
What
fears,
good
Thyrsis?
Prithee
briefly
shew.
SPIR.
I’ll
tell
ye.
‘T
is
not
vain
or
fabulous
(Though
so
esteemed
by
shallow
igrlorance)
What
the
sage
poets,
taught
by
the
heavenly
Muse,
Storied
of
old
in
high
immortal
verse
Of
dire
Chimeras
and
enchanted
isles,
And
rifted
rocks
whose
entrance
leads
to
Hell;
For
such
there
be,
but
unbelief
is
blind.
Within
the
navel
of
this
hideous
wood,
Immured
in
cypress
shades,
a
sorcerer
dwells,
Of
Bacchus
and
of
Circe
born,
great
Comus,
Deep
skilled
in
all
his
mother’s
witcheries,
And
here
to
every
thirsty
wanderer
By
sly
enticement
gives
his
baneful
cup,
With
many
murmurs
mixed,
whose
pleasing
poison
The
visage
quite
transforms
of
him
that
drinks,
And
the
inglorious
likeness
of
a
beast
Fixes
instead,
unmoulding
reason’s
mintage
Charactered
in
the
face.
This
have
I
learnt
Tending
my
flocks
hard
by
i’
the
hilly
crofts
That
brow
this
bottom
glade;
whence
night
by
night
He
and
his
monstrous
rout
are
heard
to
howl
Like
stabled
wolves,
or
tigers
at
their
prey,
Doing
abhorred
rites
to
Hecate
In
their
obscured
haunts
of
inmost
bowers.
Yet
have
they
many
baits
and
guileful
spells
To
inveigle
and
invite
the
unwary
sense
Of
them
that
pass
unweeting
by
the
way.
This
evening
late,
by
then
the
chewing
flocks
Had
ta’en
their
supper
on
the
savoury
herb
Of
knot-grass
dew-besprent,
and
were
in
fold,
I
sat
me
down
to
watch
upon
a
bank
With
ivy
canopied,
and
interwove
With
flaunting
honeysuckle,
and
began,
Wrapt
in
a
pleasing
fit
of
melancholy,
To
meditate
my
rural
minstrelsy,
Till
fancy
had
her
fill.
But
ere
a
close
The
wonted
roar
was
up
amidst
the
woods,
And
filled
the
air
with
barbarous
dissonance;
At
which
I
ceased,
and
listened
them
awhile,
Till
an
unusual
stop
of
sudden
silence
Gave
respite
to
the
drowsy-flighted
steeds
That
draw
the
litter
of
close-curtained
Sleep.
At
last
a
soft
and
solemn-breathing
sound
Rose
like
a
steam
of
rich
distilled
perfumes,
And
stole
upon
the
air,
that
even
Silence
Was
took
ere
she
was
ware,
and
wished
she
might
Deny
her
nature,
and
be
never
more,
Still
to
be
so
displaced.
I
was
all
ear,
And
took
in
strains
that
might
create
a
soul
Under
the
ribs
of
Death.
But,
oh!
ere
long
Too
well
I
did
perceive
it
was
the
voice
Of
my
most
honoured
Lady,
your
dear
sister.
Amazed
I
stood,
harrowed
with
grief
and
fear;
And
RO
poor
hapless
nightingale,”
thought
I,
How
sweet
thou
sing’st,
how
near
the
deadly
snare!”
Then
down
the
lawns
I
ran
with
headlong
haste,
Through
paths
and
turnings
often
trod
by
day,
Till,
guided
by
mine
ear,
I
found
the
place
Where
that
damned
wizard,
hid
in
sly
disguise
(For
so
by
certain
signs
I
knew),
had
met
Already,
ere
my
best
speed
could
prevent,
The
aidless
innocent
lady,
his
wished
prey;
Who
gently
asked
if
he
had
seen
such
two,
Supposing
him
some
neighbour
villager.
Longer
I
durst
not
stay,
but
soon
I
guessed
Ye
were
the
two
she
meant;
with
that
I
sprung
Into
swift
flight,
till
I
had
found
you
here;
But
further
know
I
not.
SEC.
BRO.
O
night
and
shades,
How
are
ye
joined
with
hell
in
triple
knot
Against
the
unarmed
weakness
of
one
virgin,
Alone
and
helpless!
Is
this
the
confidence
You
gave
me,
brother?
ELD.
BRO.
Yes,
and
keep
it
still;
Lean
on
it
safely;
not
a
period
Shall
be
unsaid
for
me.
Against
the
threats
Of
malice
or
of
sorcery,
or
that
power
Which
erring
men
call
Chance,
this
I
hold
firm:
Virtue
may
be
assailed,
but
never
hurt,
Surprised
by
unjust
force,
but
not
enthralled;
Yea,
even
that
which
Mischief
meant
most
harm
Shall
in
the
happy
trial
prove
most
glory.
But
evil
on
itself
shall
back
recoil,
And
mix
no
more
with
goodness,
when
at
last,
Gathered
like
scum,
and
settled
to
itself,
It
shall
be
in
eternal
restless
change
Self-fed
and
self-consumed.
If
this
fail,
The
pillared
firmament
is
rottenness,
And
earth’s
base
built
on
stubble.
But
come,
let’s
on!
Against
the
opposing
will
and
arm
of
heaven
May
never
this
just
sword
be
lifted
up;
But,
for
that
damned
magician,
let
him
be
girt
With
all
the
griesly
legions
that
troop
Under
the
sooty
flag
of
Acheron,
Harpies
and
Hydras,
or
all
the
monstrous
forms
‘Twixt
Africa
and
Ind,
I’ll
find
him
out,
And
force
him
to
return
his
purchase
back,
Or
drag
him
by
the
curls
to
a
foul
death,
Cursed
as
his
life.
SPIR.
Alas!
good
venturous
youth,
I
love
thy
courage
yet,
and
bold
emprise;
But
here
thy
sword
can
do
thee
little
stead.
Far
other
arms
and
other
weapons
must
Be
those
that
quell
the
might
of
hellish
charms.
He
with
his
bare
wand
can
unthread
thy
joints,
And
crumble
all
thy
sinews.
ELD.
BRO.
Why,
prithee,
Shepherd,
How
durst
thou
then
thyself
approach
so
near
As
to
make
this
relation?
SPIR.
Care
and
utmost
shifts
How
to
secure
the
Lady
from
surprisal
Brought
to
my
mind
a
certain
shepherd
lad,
Of
small
regard
to
see
to,
yet
well
skilled
In
every
virtuous
plant
and
healing
herb
That
spreads
her
verdant
leaf
to
the
morning
ray.
He
loved
me
well,
and
oft
would
beg
me
sing;
Which
when
I
did,
he
on
the
tender
grass
Would
sit,
and
hearken
even
to
ecstasy,
And
in
requital
ope
his
leathern
scrip,
And
show
me
simples
of
a
thousand
names,
Telling
their
strange
and
vigorous
faculties.
Amongst
the
rest
a
small
unsightly
root,
But
of
divine
effect,
he
culled
me
out.
The
leaf
was
darkish,
and
had
prickles
on
it,
But
in
another
country,
as
he
said,
Bore
a
bright
golden
flower,
but
not
in
this
soil:
Unknown,
and
like
esteemed,
and
the
dull
swain
Treads
on
it
daily
with
his
clouted
shoon;
And
yet
more
med’cinal
is
it
than
that
Moly
That
Hermes
once
to
wise
Ulysses
gave.
He
called
it
Haemony,
and
gave
it
me,
And
bade
me
keep
it
as
of
sovran
use
‘Gainst
all
enchantments,
mildew
blast,
or
damp,
Or
ghastly
Furies’
apparition.
I
pursed
it
up,
but
little
reckoning
made,
Till
now
that
this
extremity
compelled.
But
now
I
find
it
true;
for
by
this
means
I
knew
the
foul
enchanter,
though
disguised,
Entered
the
very
lime-twigs
of
his
spells,
And
yet
came
off.
If
you
have
this
about
you
(As
I
will
give
you
when
we
go),
you
may
Boldly
assault
the
necromancer’s
hall;
Where
if
he
be,
with
dauntless
hardihood
And
brandished
blade
rush
on
him:
break
his
glass,
And
shed
the
luscious
liquor
on
the
ground;
But
seize
his
wand.
Though
he
and
his
curst
crew
Fierce
sign
of
battle
make,
and
menace
high,
Or,
like
the
sons
of
Vulcan,
vomit
smoke,
Yet
will
they
soon
retire,
if
he
but
shrink.
ELD.
BRO.
Thyrsis,
lead
on
apace;
I’ll
follow
thee;
And
some
good
angel
bear
a
shield
before
us!
The
Scene
changes
to
a
stately
palace,
set
out
with
all
manner
of
deliciousness:
soft
music,
tables
spread
with
all
dainties.
Comus
appears
with
his
rabble,
and
the
LADY
set
in
an
enchanted
chair;
to
whom
he
offers
his
glass;
which
she
puts
by,
and
goes
about
to
rise.
COMUS.
Nay,
Lady,
sit.
If
I
but
wave
this
wand,
Your
nerves
are
all
chained
up
in
alabaster,
And
you
a
statue,
or
as
Daphne
was,
Root-bound,
that
fled
Apollo.
LADY.
Fool,
do
not
boast.
Thou
canst
not
touch
the
freedom
of
my
mind
With
all
thy
charms,
although
this
corporal
rind
Thou
hast
immanacled
while
Heaven
sees
good.
COMUS.
Why
are
you
vexed,
Lady?
why
do
you
frown?
Here
dwell
no
frowns,
nor
anger;
from
these
gates
Sorrow
flies
far.
See,
here
be
all
the
pleasures
That
fancy
can
beget
on
youthful
thoughts,
When
the
fresh
blood
grows
lively,
and
returns
Brisk
as
the
April
buds
in
primrose
season.
And
first
behold
this
cordial
julep
here,
That
flames
and
dances
in
his
crystal
bounds,
With
spirits
of
balm
and
fragrant
syrups
mixed.
Not
that
Nepenthes
which
the
wife
of
Thone
In
Egypt
gave
to
Jove-born
Helena
Is
of
such
power
to
stir
up
joy
as
this,
To
life
so
friendly,
or
so
cool
to
thirst.
Why
should
you
be
so
cruel
to
yourself,
And
to
those
dainty
limbs,
which
Nature
lent
For
gentle
usage
and
soft
delicacy?
But
you
invert
the
covenants
of
her
trust,
And
harshly
deal,
like
an
ill
borrower,
With
that
which
you
received
on
other
terms,
Scorning
the
unexempt
condition
By
which
all
mortal
frailty
must
subsist,
Refreshment
after
toil,
ease
after
pain,
That
have
been
tired
all
day
without
repast,
And
timely
rest
have
wanted.
But,
fair
virgin,
This
will
restore
all
soon.
LADY.
‘T
will
not,
false
traitor!
‘T
will
not
restore
the
truth
and
honesty
That
thou
hast
banished
from
thy
tongue
with
lies.
Was
this
the
cottage
and
the
safe
abode
Thou
told’st
me
of?
What
grim
aspects
are
these,
These
oughly-headed
monsters?
Mercy
guard
me!
Hence
with
thy
brewed
enchantments,
foul
deceiver!
Hast
thou
betrayed
my
credulous
innocence
With
vizored
falsehood
and
base
forgery?
And
would’st
thou
seek
again
to
trap
me
here
With
liquorish
baits,
fit
to
ensnare
a
brute?
Were
it
a
draught
for
Juno
when
she
banquets,
I
would
not
taste
thy
treasonous
offer.
None
But
such
as
are
good
men
can
give
good
things;
And
that
which
is
not
good
is
not
delicious
To
a
well-governed
and
wise
appetite.
COMUS.
0
foolishness
of
men!
that
lend
their
ears
To
those
budge
doctors
of
the
Stoic
fur,
And
fetch
their
precepts
from
the
Cynic
tub,
Praising
the
lean
and
sallow
Abstinence!
Wherefore
did
Nature
pour
her
bounties
forth
With
such
a
full
and
unwithdrawing
hand,
Covering
the
earth
with
odours,
fruits,
and
flocks,
Thronging
the
seas
with
spawn
innumerable,
But
all
to
please
and
sate
the
curious
taste?
And
set
to
work
millions
of
spinning
worms,
That
in
their
green
shops
weave
the
smooth-haired
silk,
To
deck
her
sons;
and,
that
no
corner
might
Be
vacant
of
her
plenty,
in
her
own
loins
She
hutched
the
all-worshipped
ore
and
precious
gems,
To
store
her
children
with.
If
all
the
world
Should,
in
a
pet
of
temperance,
feed
on
pulse,
Drink
the
clear
stream,
and
nothing
wear
but
frieze,
The
All-giver
would
be
unthanked,
would
be
unpraised,
Not
half
his
riches
known
and
yet
despised;
And
we
should
serve
him
as
a
grudging
master,
As
a
penurious
niggard
of
his
wealth,
And
live
like
Nature’s
bastards,
not
her
sons,
Who
would
be
quite
surcharged
with
her
own
weight,
And
strangled
with
her
waste
fertility:
The
earth
cumbered,
and
the
winged
air
darked
with
plumes,
The
herds
would
over-multitude
their
lords;
The
sea
o’erfraught
would
swell,
and
the
unsought
diamonds
Would
so
emblaze
the
forehead
of
the
deep,
And
so
bestud
with
stars,
that
they
below
Would
grow
inured
to
light,
and
come
at
last
To
gaze
upon
the
sun
with
shameless
brows.
List,
Lady;
be
not
coy,
and
be
not
cozened
With
that
same
vaunted
name,
Virginity.
Beauty
is
Nature’s
coin;
must
not
be
hoarded,
But
must
be
current;
and
the
good
thereof
Consists
in
mutual
and
partaken
bliss,
Unsavoury
in
the
enjoyment
of
itself.
If
you
let
slip
time,
like
a
neglected
rose
It
withers
on
the
stalk
with
languished
head.
Beauty
is
Nature’s
brag,
and
must
be
shown
In
courts,
at
feasts,
and
high
solemnities,
Where
most
may
wonder
at
the
workmanship.
It
is
for
homely
features
to
keep
home;
They
had
their
name
thence:
coarse
complexions
And
cheeks
of
sorry
grain
will
serve
to
ply
The
sampler,
and
to
tease
the
huswife’s
wool.
What
need
a
vermeil-tinctured
lip
for
that,
Love-darting
eyes,
or
tresses
like
the
morn?
There
was
another
meaning
in
these
gifts;
Think
what,
and
be
advised;
you
are
but
young
yet.
LADY.
I
had
not
thought
to
have
unlocked
my
lips
In
this
unhallowed
air,
but
that
this
juggler
Would
think
to
charm
my
judgment,
as
mine
eyes,
Obtruding
false
rules
pranked
in
reason’s
garb.
I
hate
when
vice
can
bolt
her
arguments
And
virtue
has
no
tongue
to
check
her
pride.
Impostor!
do
not
charge
most
innocent
Nature,
As
if
she
would
her
children
should
be
riotous
With
her
abundance.
She,
good
cateress,
Means
her
provision
only
to
the
good,
That
live
according
to
her
sober
laws,
And
holy
dictate
of
spare
Temperance.
If
every
just
man
that
now
pines
with
want
Had
but
a
moderate
and
beseeming
share
Of
that
which
lewdly-pampered
Luxury
Now
heaps
upon
some
few
with
vast
excess,
Nature’s
full
blessings
would
be
well
dispensed
In
unsuperfluous
even
proportion,
And
she
no
whit
encumbered
with
her
store;
And
then
the
Giver
would
be
better
thanked,
His
praise
due
paid:
for
swinish
gluttony
Ne’er
looks
to
Heaven
amidst
his
gorgeous
feast,
But
with
besotted
base
ingratitude
Crams,
and
blasphemes
his
Feeder.
Shall
I
go
on
Or
have
I
said
enow?
To
him
that
dares
Arm
his
profane
tongue
with
contemptuous
words
Against
the
sun-clad
power
of
chastity
Fain
would
I
something
say;—yet
to
what
end?
Thou
hast
nor
ear,
nor
soul,
to
apprehend
The
sublime
notion
and
high
mystery
That
must
be
uttered
to
unfold
the
sage
And
serious
doctrine
of
Virginity;
And
thou
art
worthy
that
thou
shouldst
not
know
More
happiness
than
this
thy
present
lot.
Enjoy
your
dear
wit,
and
gay
rhetoric,
That
hath
so
well
been
taught
her
dazzling
fence;
Thou
art
not
fit
to
hear
thyself
convinced.
Yet,
should
I
try,
the
uncontrolled
worth
Of
this
pure
cause
would
kindle
my
rapt
spirits
To
such
a
flame
of
sacred
vehemence
That
dumb
things
would
be
moved
to
sympathise,
And
the
brute
Earth
would
lend
her
nerves,
and
shake,
Till
all
thy
magic
structures,
reared
so
high,
Were
shattered
into
heaps
o’er
thy
false
head.
COMUS.
She
fables
not.
I
feel
that
I
do
fear
Her
words
set
off
by
some
superior
power;
And,
though
not
mortal,
yet
a
cold
shuddering
dew
Dips
me
all
o’er,
as
when
the
wrath
of
Jove
Speaks
thunder
and
the
chains
of
Erebus
To
some
of
Saturn’s
crew.
I
must
dissemble,
And
try
her
yet
more
strongly.—Come,
no
more
!
This
is
mere
moral
babble,
and
direct
Against
the
canon
laws
of
our
foundation.
I
must
not
suffer
this;
yet
‘t
is
but
the
lees
And
settlings
of
a
melancholy
blood.
But
this
will
cure
all
straight;
one
sip
of
this
Will
bathe
the
drooping
spirits
in
delight
Beyond
the
bliss
of
dreams.
Be
wise,
and
taste.
The
BROTHERS
rush
in
with
swords
drawn,
wrest
his
glass
out
of
his
hand,
and
break
it
against
the
ground:
his
rout
make
sign
of
resistance,
but
are
all
driven
in.
The
ATTENDANT
SPIRIT
comes
in.
SPIR
.
What!
have
you
let
the
false
enchanter
scape?
O
ye
mistook;
ye
should
have
snatched
his
wand,
And
bound
him
fast.
Without
his
rod
reversed,
And
backward
mutters
of
dissevering
power,
We
cannot
free
the
Lady
that
sits
here
In
stony
fetters
fixed
and
motionless.
Yet
stay:
be
not
disturbed;
now
I
bethink
me,
Some
other
means
I
have
which
may
be
used,
Which
once
of
Meliboeus
old
I
learnt,
The
soothest
shepherd
that
e’er
piped
on
plains.
There
is
a
gentle
Nymph
not
far
from
hence,
That
with
moist
curb
sways
the
smooth
Severn
stream:
Sabrina
is
her
name:
a
virgin
pure;
Whilom
she
was
the
daughter
of
Locrine,
That
had
the
sceptre
from
his
father
Brute.
She,
guiltless
damsel,
flying
the
mad
pursuit
Of
her
enraged
stepdame,
Guendolen,
Commended
her
fair
innocence
to
the
flood
That
stayed
her
flight
with
his
cross-flowing
course.
The
water-nymphs,
that
in
the
bottom
played,
Held
up
their
pearled
wrists,
and
took
her
in,
Bearing
her
straight
to
aged
Nereus’
hall;
Who,
piteous
of
her
woes,
reared
her
lank
head,
And
gave
her
to
his
daughters
to
imbathe
In
nectared
lavers
strewed
with
asphodil,
And
through
the
porch
and
inlet
of
each
sense
Dropt
in
ambrosial
oils,
till
she
revived,
And
underwent
a
quick
immortal
change,
Made
Goddess
of
the
river.
Still
she
retains
Her
maiden
gentleness,
and
oft
at
eve
Visits
the
herds
along
the
twilight
meadows,
Helping
all
urchin
blasts,
and
ill-luck
signs
That
the
shrewd
meddling
elf
delights
to
make,
Which
she
with
precious
vialed
liquors
heals:
For
which
the
shepherds,
at
their
festivals,
Carol
her
goodness
loud
in
rustic
lays,
And
throw
sweet
garland
wreaths
into
her
stream
Of
pansies,
pinks,
and
gaudy
daffodils.
And,
as
the
old
swain
said,
she
can
unlock
The
clasping
charm,
and
thaw
the
numbing
spell,
If
she
be
right
invoked
in
warbled
song;
For
maidenhood
she
loves,
and
will
be
swift
To
aid
a
virgin,
such
as
was
herself,
In
hard-besetting
need.
This
will
I
try,
And
add
the
power
of
some
adjuring
verse.
SONG.
Sabrina
fair,
Listen
where
thou
art
sitting
Under
the
glassy,
cool,
translucent
wave,
In
twisted
braids
of
lilies
knitting
The
loose
train
of
thy
amber-dropping
hair;
Listen
for
dear
honour’s
sake,
Goddess
of
the
silver
lake,
Listen
and
save!
Listen,
and
appear
to
us,
In
name
of
great
Oceanus.
By
the
earth-shaking
Neptune’s
mace,
And
Tethys’
grave
majestic
pace;
By
hoary
Nereus’
wrinkled
look,
And
the
Carpathian
wizard’s
hook;
By
scaly
Triton’s
winding
shell,
And
old
soothsaying
Glaucus’
spell;
By
Leucothea’s
lovely
hands,
And
her
son
that
rules
the
strands;
By
Thetis’
tinsel-slippered
feet,
And
the
songs
of
Sirens
sweet;
By
dead
Parthenope’s
dear
tomb,
And
fair
Ligea’s
golden
comb,
Wherewith
she
sits
on
diamond
rocks
Sleeking
her
soft
alluring
locks;
By
all
the
Nymphs
that
nightly
dance
Upon
thy
streams
with
wily
glance;
Rise,
rise,
and
heave
thy
rosy
head
From
thy
coral-paven
bed,
And
bridle
in
thy
headlong
wave,
Till
thou
our
summons
answered
have.
Listen
and
save!
SABRINA
rises,
attended
by
water-nymphs,
and
sings.
By
the
rushy-fringed
bank,
Where
grows
the
willow
and
the
osier
dank,
My
sliding
chariot
stays,
Thick
set
with
agate,
and
the
azurn
sheen
Of
turkis
blue,
and
emerald
green,
That
in
the
channel
strays;
Whilst
from
off
the
waters
fleet
Thus
I
set
my
printless
feet
O’er
the
cowslip’s
velvet
head,
That
bends
not
as
I
tread.
Gentle
swain,
at
thy
request
I
am
here!
SPIR.
Goddess
dear,
We
implore
thy
powerful
hand
To
undo
the
charmed
band
Of
true
virgin
here
distressed
Through
the
force
and
through
the
wile
Of
unblessed
enchanter
vile.
SABR.
Shepherd,
‘t
is
my
office
best
To
help
ensnared
chastity.
Brightest
Lady,
look
on
me.
Thus
I
sprinkle
on
thy
breast
Drops
that
from
my
fountain
pure
I
have
kept
of
precious
cure;
Thrice
upon
thy
finger’s
tip,
Thrice
upon
thy
rubied
lip:
Next
this
marble
venomed
seat,
Smeared
with
gums
of
glutinous
heat,
I
touch
with
chaste
palms
moist
and
cold.
Now
the
spell
hath
lost
his
hold;
And
I
must
haste
ere
morning
hour
To
wait
in
Amphitrite’s
bower.
SABRINA
descends,
and
the
LADY
rises
out
of
her
seat.
SPIR.
Virgin,
daughter
of
Locrine,
Sprung
of
old
Anchises’
line,
May
thy
brimmed
waves
for
this
Their
full
tribute
never
miss
From
a
thousand
petty
rills,
That
tumble
down
the
snowy
hills:
Summer
drouth
or
singed
air
Never
scorch
thy
tresses
fair,
Nor
wet
October’s
torrent
flood
Thy
molten
crystal
fill
with
mud;
May
thy
billows
roll
ashore
The
beryl
and
the
golden
ore;
May
thy
lofty
head
be
crowned
With
many
a
tower
and
terrace
round,
And
here
and
there
thy
banks
Upon
With
groves
of
myrrh
and
cinnamon.
Come,
Lady;
while
Heaven
lends
us
grace,
Let
us
fly
this
cursed
place,
Lest
the
sorcerer
us
entice
With
some
other
new
device.
Not
a
waste
or
needless
sound
Till
we
come
to
holier
ground.
I
shall
be
your
faithful
guide
Through
this
gloomy
covert
wide;
And
not
many
furlongs
thence
Is
your
Father’s
residence,
Where
this
night
are
met
in
state
Many
a
friend
to
gratulate
His
wished
presence,
and
beside
All
the
swains
that
there
abide
With
jigs
and
rural
dance
resort.
We
shall
catch
them
at
their
sport,
And
our
sudden
coming
there
Will
double
all
their
mirth
and
cheer.
Come,
let
us
haste;
the
stars
grow
high,
But
Night
sits
monarch
yet
in
the
mid
sky.
The
Scene
changes,presenting
Ludlow
Town,
and
the
PresidentUs
Castle:
then
come
in
Country
Dancers;
after
them
the
ATTENDANT
SPIRIT,
with
the
two
BROTHERS
and
the
LADY.
SONG.
SPIR.
Back,
shepherds,
back!
Enough
your
play
Till
next
sun-shine
holiday.
Here
be,
without
duck
or
nod,
Other
trippings
to
be
trod
Of
lighter
toes,
and
such
court
guise
As
Mercury
did
first
devise
With
the
mincing
Dryades
On
the
lawns
and
on
the
leas.
The
second
Song
presents
them
to
their
Father
and
Mother.
Noble
Lord
and
Lady
bright,
I
have
brought
ye
new
delight.
Here
behold
so
goodly
grown
Three
fair
branches
of
your
own.
Heaven
hath
timely
tried
their
youth,
Their
faith,
their
patience,
and
their
truth,
And
sent
them
here
through
hard
assays
With
a
crown
of
deathless
praise,
To
triumph
in
victorious
dance
O’er
sensual
folly
and
intemperance.
The
dances
ended,
the
SPIRIT
epiloguizes.
SPIR.
To
the
ocean
now
I
fly,
And
those
happy
climes
that
lie
Where
day
never
shuts
his
eye,
Up
in
the
broad
fields
of
the
sky.
There
I
suck
the
liquid
air,
All
amidst
the
gardens
fair
Of
Hesperus,
and
his
daughters
three
That
sing
about
the
golden
tree.
Along
the
crisped
shades
and
bowers
Revels
the
spruce
and
jocund
Spring;
The
Graces
and
the
rosy-bosomed
Hours
Thither
all
their
bounties
bring.
There
eternal
Summer
dwells;
And
west
winds
with
musky
wing
About
the
cedarn
alleys
fling
Nard
and
cassia’s
balmy
smells.
Iris
there
with
humid
bow
Waters
the
odorous
banks,
that
blow
Flowers
of
more
mingled
hue
Than
her
purfled
scarf
can
shew,
And
drenches
with
Elysian
dew
(List,
mortals,
if
your
ears
be
true)
Beds
of
hyacinth
and
roses,
Where
young
Adonis
oft
reposes,
Waxing
well
of
his
deep
wound,
In
slumber
soft,
and
on
the
ground
Sadly
sits
the
Assyrian
queen.
But
far
above,
in
spangled
sheen,
Celestial
Cupid,
her
famed
son,
advanced
Holds
his
dear
Psyche,
sweet
entranced
After
her
wandering
labours
long,
Till
free
consent
the
gods
among
Make
her
his
eternal
bride,
And
from
her
fair
unspotted
side
Two
blissful
twins
are
to
be
born,
Youth
and
Joy;
so
Jove
hath
sworn.
But
now
my
task
is
smoothly
done:
I
can
fly,
or
I
can
run,
Quickly
to
the
green
earth’s
end,
Where
the
bowed
welkin
slow
doth
bend,
And
from
thence
can
soar
as
soon
To
the
corners
of
the
moon.
Mortals,
that
would
follow
me,
Love
virtue;
she
alone
is
free.
She
can
teach
ye
how
to
climb
Higher
than
the
sphery
chime;
Or,
if
Virtue
feeble
were,
Heaven
itself
would
stoop
to
her.