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-
- PRINCESS IDA
-
- OR
-
- CASTLE ADAMANT
-
-
- libretto by William S. Gilbert
- music by Arthur S. Sullivan
-
-
- DRAMATIS PERSONAE
-
- King Hildebrand
- Hilarion (His son)
-
- Hilarion's friends:
- Cyril
- Florian
-
- King Gama
-
- His sons:
- Arac
- Guron
- Scynthius
-
-
- Princess Ida (Gama's daughter)
- Lady Blanche (Professor of Abstract Science)
- Lady Psyche (Professor of Humanities)
- Melissa (Lady Blanche's Daughter)
-
- Girl Graduates:
- Sacharissa
- Chloe
- Ada
-
- Soldiers, Courtiers, "Girl Graduates," "Daughters of the Plough,"
- etc.
-
-
- ACT I
-
- Pavilion in King Hildebrand's Palace
-
- ACT II
-
- Gardens of Castle Adamant
-
- ACT III
-
- Courtyard of Castle Adamant
- ACT I.
-
- SCENE. Pavilion attached to King Hildebrand's Palace.
- Soldiers and courtiers discovered looking out through
- opera-glasses, telescopes, etc., Florian leading.
-
- CHORUS AND SOLO (Florian)
- "Search throughout the panorama"
-
- Chorus: Search throughout the panorama
- For a sign of royal Gama,
- Who to-day should cross the water
- With his fascinating daughter--
- Ida is her name.
-
- Some misfortune evidently
- Has detained them -- consequently
- Search throughout the panorama
- For the daughter of King Gama,
- Prince Hilarion's flame!
- Prince Hilarion's flame!
-
- SOLO - Florian
-
- Florian: Will Prince Hilarion's hopes be sadly blighted?
-
- Chorus: Who can tell? Who can tell?
-
- Florian: Will Ida break the vows that she has plighted?
-
- Chorus: Who can tell? Who can tell?
-
- Florian: Will she back out, and say she did not mean them?
-
- Chorus: Who can tell?
-
- Florian: If so, there'll be the deuce to pay between them!
-
- Chorus: No, no -- we'll not despair, we'll not despair,
- For Gama would not dare
- To make a deadly foe
- Of Hildebrand, and so,
- Search through the panorama
- For a sign of royal Gama,
- Who today should cross the water
- With his fascinating daughter--
- Ida, Ida is her name.
-
- (Enter King Hildebrand
- with Cyril)
-
- Hildebd: See you no sign of Gama?
-
- Florian: None, my liege!
-
- Hildebd: It's very odd indeed. If Gama fail
- To put in an appearance at our Court
- Before the sun has set in yonder west,
- And fail to bring the Princess Ida here
- To whom our son Hilarion was betrothed
- At the extremely early age of one,
- There's war between King Gama and ourselves!
- (aside to Cyril)
- Oh, Cyril, how I dread this interview!
- It's twenty years since he and I have met.
- He was a twisted monster -- all awry----
- As though Dame Nature, angry with her work,
- Had crumpled it in fitful petulance!
-
- Cyril: But, sir, a twisted and ungainly trunk
- Often bears goodly fruit. Perhaps he was
- A kind, well-spoken gentleman?
-
- Hildebd: Oh, no!
- For, adder-like, his sting lay in his tongue.
- (His "sting" is present, though his "stung" is past.)
-
- Florian: (looking through glass)
- But stay, my liege; o'er yonder mountain's brow
- Comes a small body, bearing Gama's arms;
- And now I look more closely at it, sir,
- I see attached to it King Gama's legs;
- From which I gather this corollary
- That that small body must be Gama's own!
-
- Hildebd: Ha! Is the Princess with him?
-
- Florian: Well, my liege,
- Unless her highness is full six feet high,
- And wears mustachios too -- and smokes cigars----
- And rides en cavalier in coat of steel----
- I do not think she is.
-
- Hildebd: One never knows.
- She's a strange girl, I've heard, and does odd
- things!
- Come, bustle there!
- For Gama place the richest robes we own----
- For Gama place the coarsest prison dress----
- For Gama let our best spare bed be aired----
- For Gama let our deepest dungeon yawn----
- For Gama lay the costliest banquet out----
- For Gama place cold water and dry bread!
- For as King Gama brings the Princess here,
- Or brings her not, so shall King Gama have
- Much more than everything -- much less than nothing!
-
- SONG (Hildebrand and Chorus)
- "Now Hearken to my Strict Command"
-
- Hildebd: Now hearken to my strict command
- On every hand, on every hand----
-
- Chorus: To your command,
- On every hand,
- We dutifully bow.
-
- Hildebd: If Gama bring the Princess here,
- Give him good cheer, give him good cheer.
-
- Chorus: If she come here
- We'll give him a cheer,
- And we will show you how.
- Hip, hip, hurrah! hip, hip, hurrah!
- Hip, hip, hurrah! hurrah! hurrah!
- We'll shout and sing
- Long live the King,
- And his daughter, too, I trow!
- Then shout ha! ha! hip, hip, hurrah!
- Hip, hip, hip, hip, hurrah!
- For the fair Princess and her good papa,
- Hurrah, hurrah!
-
- Hildebd: But if he fail to keep his troth,
- Upon our oath, we'll trounce them both!
-
- Chorus: He'll trounce them both,
- Upon his oath,
- As sure as quarter-day!
-
- Hildebd: We'll shut him up in a dungeon cell,
- And toll his knell on a funeral bell.
-
- Chorus: From his dungeon cell,
- His funeral knell
- Shall strike him with dismay!
- Hip, hip, hurrah! hip, hip, hurrah!
- Hip, hip, hurrah! hurrah! hurrah!
- As up we string
- The faithless King,
- In the old familiar way!
- We'll shout ha! ha! hip, hip, hurrah!
- Hip, hip, hip, hip, hurrah!
- As we make an end of her false papa,
- Hurrah, hurrah!
-
- (Exeunt all)
-
- (Enter Hilarion)
-
- RECITATIVE AND SONG (Hilarion)
- "Today we meet"
-
- RECITATIVE - Hilarion
-
- To-day we meet, my baby bride and I--
- But ah, my hopes are balanc'd by my fears!
- What transmutations have been conjur'd by
- The silent alchemy of twenty years!
-
- BALLAD - Hilarion
-
- Ida was a twelve-month old,
- Twenty years ago!
- I was twice her age, I'm told,
- Twenty years ago!
- Husband twice as old as wife
- Argues ill for married life
- Baleful prophecies were rife,
- Twenty years ago,
- Twenty years ago!
-
- Still, I was a tiny prince
- Twenty years ago.
- She has gained upon me, since
- Twenty years ago.
- Though she's twenty-one, it's true,
- I am barely twenty-two--
- False and foolish prophets you
- Twenty years ago,
- Twenty years ago!
-
- (Enter Hildebrand)
-
- Hilarion: Well, father, is there news for me at last?
-
- Hildebd: King Gama is in sight, but much I fear
- With no Princess!
-
- Hilarion: Alas, my liege, I've heard,
- That Princess Ida has forsworn the world,
- And, with a band of women, shut herself
- Within a lonely country house, and there
- Devotes herself to stern philosophies!
-
- Hildebd: Then I should say the loss of such a wife
- Is one to which a reasonable man
- Would easily be reconciled.
-
- Hilarion: Oh, no!
- Or I am not a reasonable man.
- She is my wife -- has been for twenty years!
- (Holding glass) I think I see her now.
-
- Hildebd: Ha! Let me look!
-
- Hilarion: In my mind's eye, I mean -- a blushing bride
- All bib and tucker, frill and furbelow!
- How exquisite she looked as she was borne,
- Recumbent, in her foster-mother's arms!
- How the bride wept -- nor would be comforted
- Until the hireling mother-for-the-nonce
- Administered refreshment in the vestry.
- And I remember feeling much annoyed
- That she should weep at marrying with me.
- But then I thought, "These brides are all alike.
- You cry at marrying me? How much more cause
- You'd have to cry if it were broken off!"
- These were my thoughts; I kept them to myself,
- For at that age I had not learnt to speak.
-
- (Exeunt Hildebrand
- and Hilarion)
-
- (Enter Courtiers)
-
- CHORUS
- "From the distant panorama"
-
- Chorus: From the distant panorama
- Come the sons of royal Gama.
- They are heralds evidently,
- And are sacred consequently,
- Sons of Gama, hail! oh, hail!
-
- (Enter Arac, Guron, and Scynthius)
-
- TRIO (Arac, Guron, Scynthius and Chorus)
- "We are Warriors Three"
-
- SONG - Arac
-
- Arac: We are warriors three,
- Sons of Gama, Rex,
- Like most sons are we,
- Masculine in sex.
-
- All Three: Yes, yes, yes,
- Masculine in sex.
-
- Arac: Politics we bar,
- They are not our bent;
- On the whole we are
- Not intelligent.
-
- All Three: No, no, no,
- Not intelligent.
-
- Arac: But with doughty heart,
- And with trusty blade
- We can play our part--
- Fighting is our trade.
-
- All Three: Yes, yes, yes,
- Fighting is our trade.
-
- Bold and fierce, and strong, ha! ha!
- For a war we burn,
- With its right or wrong, ha! ha!
- We have no concern.
- Order comes to fight, ha! ha!
- Order is obey'd,
- We are men of might, ha! ha!
- Fighting is our trade.
- Yes -- yes, yes,
- Fighting is our trade, ha! ha!
-
- THE THREE PRINCIPALS CHORUS
- Fighting is our trade, ha
- ha! They are men of might, ha! ha!
- Fighting is their trade.
- Order comes to fight, ha! ha!
- Order is obey'd!
- Order comes to fight!
- Ha, Ha!
- Order is obey'd!
- Fighting Fighting
- is. Yes, yes, yes, is
- Fighting is our trade, ha their
- Ha! trade!
-
- (Enter King Gama)
-
- SONG (Gama)
- "If you give me your Attention"
-
- Gama: If you give me your attention, I will tell you what I
- am:
- I'm a genuine philanthropist -- all other kinds are
- sham.
- Each little fault of temper and each social defect
- In my erring fellow-creatures, I endeavour to correct.
- To all their little weaknesses I open people's eyes;
- And little plans to snub the self-sufficient I devise;
- I love my fellow creatures -- I do all the good I
- can--
- Yet ev'rybody says I'm such a disagreeable man!
- And I can't think why!
-
- To compliments inflated I've a withering reply;
- And vanity I always do my best to mortify;
- A charitable action I can skillfully dissect;
- And interested motives I'm delighted to detect;
- I know ev'rybody's income and what ev'rybody earns;
- And I carefully compare it with the income-tax
- returns;
- But to benefit humanity however much I plan,
- Yet ev'rybody says I'm such a disagreeable man!
- And I can't think why!
-
- I'm sure I'm no ascetic; I'm as pleasant as can be;
- You'll always find me ready with a crushing repartee,
- I've an irritating chuckle, I've a celebrated sneer,
- I've an entertaining snigger, I've a fascinating leer.
- To ev'rybody's prejudice I know a thing or two;
- I can tell a woman's age in half a minute -- and I do.
- But although I try to make myself as pleasant as I
- can,
- Yet ev'rybody says I'm such a disagreeable man!
- And I can't think why!
-
- Chorus: He can't think why!
- He can't think why!
-
- (Enter Hildebrand, Hilarion, Cyril and Florian)
-
- Gama: So this is Castle Hildebrand? Well, well!
- Dame Rumour whispered that the place was grand;
- She told me that your taste was exquisite,
- Superb, unparalleled!
-
- Hildebnd: (Gratified) Oh, really, King!
-
- Gama: But she's a liar! Why, how old you've grown!
- Is this Hilarion? Why, you've changed too--
- You were a singularly handsome child!
- (To Florian) Are you a courtier? Come, then ply your trade,
- Tell me some lies. How do you like your King?
- Vile rumour says he's all but imbecile.
- Now, that's not true?
-
- Florian: My lord, we love our King.
- His wise remarks are valued by his court
- As precious stones.
-
- Gama: And for the self-same cause.
- Like precious stones, his sensible remarks
- Derive their value from their scarcity!
- Come now, be honest, tell the truth for once!
- Tell it of me. Come, come, I'll harm you not.
- This leg is crooked -- this foot is ill-designed--
- This shoulder wears a hump! Come, out with it!
- Look, here's my face! Now, am I not the worst
- Of Nature's blunders?
-
- Cyril: Nature never errs.
- To those who know the workings of your mind,
- Your face and figure, sir, suggest a book
- Appropriately bound.
-
- Gama: (Enraged) Why, harkye, sir,
- How dare you bandy words with me?
-
- Cyril: No need
- To bandy aught that appertains to you.
-
- Gama: (Furiously) Do you permit this, King?
-
- Hildebd: We are in doubt
- Whether to treat you as an honoured guest
- Or as a traitor knave who plights his word
- And breaks it.
-
- Gama: (Quickly) If the casting vote's with me,
- I give it for the former!
-
- Hildebd: We shall see.
- By the terms of our contract, signed and sealed,
- You're bound to bring the Princess here to-day:
- Why is she not with you?
-
- Gama: Answer me this:
- What think you of a wealthy purse-proud man,
- Who, when he calls upon a starving friend,
- Pulls out his gold and flourishes his notes,
- And flashes diamonds in the pauper's eyes?
- What name have you for such an one?
-
- Hildebd: A snob.
-
- Gama: Just so. The girl has beauty, virtue, wit,
- Grace, humour, wisdom, charity and pluck.
- Would it be kindly, think you, to parade
- These brilliant qualities before your eyes?
- Oh no, King Hildebrand, I am no snob!
-
- Hildebd: (Furiously) Stop that tongue,
- Or you shall lose the monkey head that holds it!
-
- Gama: Bravo! Your King deprives me of my head,
- That he and I may meet on equal terms!
-
- Hildebd: Where is she now? (Threatening)
-
- Gama: In Castle Adamant,
- One of my many country houses. There
- She rules a woman's University,
- With full a hundred girls, who learn of her.
-
- Cyril: A hundred girls! A hundred ecstasies!
-
- Gama: But no mere girls, my good young gentleman;
- With all the college learning that you boast,
- The youngest there will prove a match for you.
-
- Cyril: With all my heart, if she's the prettiest!
- (To Florian) Fancy, a hundred matches -- all alight!--
- That's if I strike them as I hope to do!
-
- Gama: Despair your hope; their hearts are dead to men.
- He who desires to gain their favour must
- Be qualified to strike their teeming brains,
- And not their hearts. They're safety matches, sir,
- And they light only on the knowledge box--
- So you've no chance!
-
- Florian: And there are no males whatever in those walls?
-
- Gama: None, gentlemen, excepting letter mails--
- And they are driven (as males often are
- In other large communities) by women.
- Why, bless my heart, she's so particular
- She'll hardly suffer Dr. Watts's hymns--
- And all the animals she owns are "hers"!
- The ladies rise at cockcrow every morn--
-
- Cyril: Ah, then they have male poultry?
-
- Gama: Not at all,
- (Confidentially) The crowing's done by an accomplished hen!
-
- FINALE
- (Gama, Hildebrand, Cyril, Hilarion, Florian
- and Chorus of Girls and Men)
-
- DUET (Gama and Hildebrand)
- "P'raps if you Address the Lady"
-
- Gama: P'raps if you address the lady
- Most politely, most politely--
- Flatter and impress the lady,
- Most politely, most politely,--
- Humbly beg and humbly sue--
- She may deign to look on you,
- But your doing you must do
- Most politely, most politely, most
- politely!
-
- All: Humbly beg and humbly sue,
- She may deign to look on you,
- But your doing you must do
- Most politely, most politely, most
- politely!
-
- Hildebd: Go you and inform the lady,
- Most politely, most politely,
- If she don't, we'll storm the lady
- Most politely, most politely!
-
- (To Gama) You'll remain as hostage here;
- Should Hillarion disappear,
- We will hang you, never fear,
- Most politely, most politely, most
- politely!
-
- All: He'll [I'll] [You'll] remain as hostage here.
- Should Hilarion disappear,
- They [We] will hang me [you] never fear,
- Most politely, most politely, most
- politely!
-
- (Gama, Arac, Guron and Scynthius are marched off in custody,
- Hildebrand following)
-
- RECITATIVE -- Hilarion
-
- Come, Cyril, Florian, our course is plain,
- To-morrow morn fair Ida we'll engage;
- But we will use no force her love to gain,
- Nature, nature has arm'd us for the war we
- wage!
-
- TRIO -- Hilarion, Cyril, and Florian
-
- Hilarion: Expressive glances
- Shall be our lances,
- And pops of Sillery
- Our light artillery.
- We'll storm their bowers
- With scented showers
- Of fairest flowers
- That we can buy!
-
- Chorus: Oh, dainty triolet!
- Oh, fragrant violet!
- Oh, gentle heigho-let!
- (Or little sigh).
- On sweet urbanity,
- Through mere inanity,
- To touch their vanity
- We will rely!
-
- Cyril: When day is fading,
- With serenading
- And such frivolity
- We'll prove our quality.
- A sweet profusion
- Of soft allusion
- This bold intrusion
- Shall justify,
- This bold intrusion
- Shall justify.
-
- Chorus: Oh, dainty triolet!
- Oh, fragrant violet!
- Oh, gentle heigho-let!
- (Or little sigh).
- On sweet urbanity,
- Through mere inanity,
- To touch their vanity
- We will rely!
-
- Florian: We'll charm their senses
- With verbal fences,
- With ballads amatory
- And declamatory.
- Little heeding
- Their pretty pleading,
- Our love exceeding
- We'll justify!
- Our love exceeding
- We'll justify!
-
- Chorus: Oh, dainty triolet!
- Oh, fragrant violet!
- Oh, gentle heigho-let!
- (Or little sigh).
- On sweet urbanity,
- Through mere inanity,
- To touch their vanity
- We will rely!
-
- Sops: Oh dainty Altos, Tenors, and
- Basses:
- triolet! Oh fragrant Oh
- violet! Oh dain-
- gentle ty
- heigh-o-let! (Or tri-
- little o-
- sigh). let!
-
- Hilarion & Cyril:
- Oh dainty Chorus:
- triolet! Oh fragrant Oh
- violet (Add Florian) Oh fra-
- gentle grant
- heigh-o-let! (Or vi-
- little o-
- sigh). let!
-
- Sops & Altos: Tenors & Basses:
- Oh dainty Oh dainty
- triolet! Oh tri-
- fragrant o-
- violet let!
-
- All: Oh dainty triolet!
- Oh fragrant violet!
-
- (Re-enter Gama, Arac, Guron, and Scynthius heavily ironed, followed
- by Hildebrand)
-
- RECITATIVE
-
- Gama: Must we, till then, in prison cell be thrust?
-
- Hildebd: You must!
-
- Gama: This seems unnecessarily severe!
- Arac, Guron
- & Scyn: Hear, hear!
-
- TRIO - Arac, Guron and Scynthius
-
- For a month to dwell
- In a dungeon cell:
- Growing thin and wizen
- In a solitary prison,
- Is a poor look out
- For a soldier stout,
- Who is longing for the rattle
- Of a complicated battle--
- For the rum - tum - tum
- Of the military drum
- And the guns that go boom!
- boom!
-
- All: The rum -- tum -- tum
- Of the military drum,
- Rum -- tum -- tum -- tummy tummy tummy tummy tum
- Who is longing for the rattle of a complicated
- battle--
- For the rum tum tum
- Of the military drum!
- Prr, prr, prr, ra -- pum -- pum!
-
- Hildebd: When Hilarion's bride
- Has at length complied
- With the just conditions
- Of our requisitions,
- You may go in haste
- And indulge your taste
- For the fascinating rattle
- Of a complicated battle--
- For the rum - tum - tum,
- Of the military drum,
- And the guns that go boom! boom!
-
- All: The rum -- tum -- tum
- Of the military drum,
- Rum -- tum -- tum -- tummy tummy tummy tummy tum!
- Who is longing for the rattle
- Of a complicated battle
- For the rum -- tum -- tum
- Of the military drum!
- Tum, prr -- prr -- prr ra -- pum, pum!
-
- But til that time you'll [we'll] here remain,
- And bail we [they] will not entertain,
- Should she our [his] mandate disobey,
- Your [Our] lives the penalty will pay!
- But till that time you'll [we'll] here remain,
- And bail we [they] will not entertain.
- Should she our [his] mandate disobey,
- Your [Our] lives the penalty will pay!
- Should she our [his] mandate disobey,
- Your [Our] lives the penalty will pay!
-
- (Gama, Arac, Guron, and Synthius are
- marched off.)
-
- END OF ACT I
-
- ACT II
-
- SCENE Gardens in Castle Adamant. A river runs across the
- back of the stage, crossed by a rustic bridge. Castle
- Adamant in the distance.
-
- Girl Graduates discovered seated at the feet of Lady
- Psyche
-
- CHORUS OF GIRLS & SOLOS (Lady Psyche, Melissa and
- Sacharissa)
- "Towards the empyrean heights"
-
- Chorus: Towards the empyrean heights
- Of ev'ry kind of lore,
- We've taken several easy flights,
- And mean to take some more.
- In trying to achieve success
- No envy racks our heart,
- And all the knowledge we possess,
- We mutually impart.
-
- SOLO -- Melissa
-
- Pray, what authors should she read
- Who in Classics would succeed?
-
- SOLO -- Psyche
-
- If you'd climb the Helicon,
- You should read Anacreon,
- Ovid's Metamorphoses,
- Likewise Aristophanes,
- And the works of Juvenal:
- These are worth attention, all;
- But, if you will be advised,
- You will get them Bowdlerized!
-
- Chorus: Ah! we will get them Bowdlerized!
-
- SOLO -- Sacharissa
-
- Pray you, tell us, if you can,
- What's the thing that's known as Man?
-
- SOLO -- Psyche
-
- Man will swear and man will storm--
- Man is not at all good form--
- Is of no kind of use--
- Man's a donkey -- Man's a goose--
- Man is coarse and Man is plain--
- Man is more or less insane--
- Man's a ribald -- Man's a rake,
- Man is Nature's sole mistake!
-
- Chorus: We'll a memorandum make--
- Man is Nature's sole mistake!
-
- And thus to empyrean height
- Of ev'ry kind of lore,
- In search of wisdom's pure delight,
- Ambitiously we soar.
- In trying to achieve success
- No envy racks our heart,
- For all we know and all we guess
- We mutually impart!
- And all the knowledge we possess,
- We mutually impart,
- We mutually impart, impart.
-
- (Enter Lady Blanche. All stand up demurely)
-
- Blanche: Attention, ladies, while I read to you
- The Princess Ida's list of punishments.
- The first is Sacharissa. She's expelled!
-
- All: Expelled!
-
- Blan.: Expelled, because although she knew
- No man of any kind may pass our walls,
- She dared to bring a set of chessmen here!
-
- Sach.: (Crying) I meant no harm; they're only men of wood!
-
- Blan.: They're men with whom you give each other mate,
- And that's enough! The next is Chloe.
-
- Chloe: Ah!
-
- Blan.: Chloe will lose three terms, for yesterday,
- When looking through her drawing-book, I found
- A sketch of a perambulator!
-
- All: (Horrified) Oh!
-
- Blan.: Double perambulator ...
-
- All: Oh, oh!
-
- Blan.: ...shameless girl!
- That's all at present. Now, attention, pray;
- Your Principal the Princess comes to give
- Her usual inaugural address
- To those young ladies who joined yesterday.
-
- CHORUS OF GIRLS
- "Mighty maiden with a mission"
-
- Girls: Mighty maiden with a mission,
- Paragon of common sense,
- Running fount of erudition,
- Miracle of eloquence,
- Altos: We are blind and we
- would see;
- Sops: We are bound, and would be free;
-
- Girls: We are dumb, and we would talk;
- We are lame, and we would walk.
- (Enter
- the Princess)
- Mighty maiden with a mission--
- Paragon of common sense;
- Running found of erudition--
- Miracle of eloquence, of eloquence!
-
- RECITATIVE & ARIA (Princess)
- "Minerva! Oh, hear Me"
-
- Princess: Minerva! Minerva!
- Oh, hear me:
- Oh, goddess wise
- That lovest light
- Endow with sight
- Their unillumin'd eyes.
-
- At this my call,
- A fervent few
- Have come to woo
- The rays that from thee fall,
- That from thee fall.
- Oh, goddess wise
- That lovest light,
- That lovest light,
-
- Let fervent words and fervent thoughts be mine,
- That I may lead them to thy sacred shrine!
- Let fervent words and fervent thoughts be mine,
- That I may lead them to thy sacred shrine,
- I may lead them to thy sacred shrine, thy sacred
- shrine!
-
- Princess: Women of Adamant, fair Neophytes--
- Who thirst for such instruction as we give,
- Attend, while I unfold a parable.
- The elephant is mightier than Man,
- Yet Man subdues him. Why? The elephant
- Is elephantine everywhere but here (tapping her
- forehead),
- And Man, whose brain is to the elephant's
- As Woman's brain to Man's - (that's rule of three),--
- Conquers the foolish giant of the woods,
- As Woman, in her turn, shall conquer Man.
- In Mathematics, Woman leads the way;
- The narrow-minded pedant still believes
- That two and two make four! Why, we can prove,
- We women -- household drudges as we are--
- That two and two make five -- or three -- or seven;
- Or five and twenty, if the case demands!
- Diplomacy? The wiliest diplomat
- Is absolutely helpless in our hands.
- He wheedles monarchs -- Woman wheedles him!
- Logic? Why, tyrant Man himself admits
- It's a waste of time to argue with a woman!
- Then we excel in social qualities:
- Though man professes that he holds our sex
- In utter scorn, I venture to believe
- He'd rather pass the day with one of you,
- Than with five hundred of his fellow-men!
- In all things we excel. Believing this,
- A hundred maidens here have sworn to place
- Their feet upon his neck. If we succeed,
- We'll treat him better than he treated us:
- But if we fail, why, then let hope fail too!
- Let no one care a penny how she looks--
- Let red be worn with yellow -- blue with green--
- Crimson with scarlet -- violet with blue!
- Let all your things misfit, and you yourselves
- At inconvenient moments come undone!
- Let hair-pins lose their virtue: let the hook
- Disdain the fascination of the eye--
- The bashful button modestly evade
- The soft embraces of the button-hole!
- Let old associations all dissolve,
- Let Swan secede from Edgar -- Gask from Gask,
- Sewell from Cross -- Lewis from Allenby!
- In other words, let Chaos come again!
- (Coming down) Who lectures in the Hall of Arts to-day?
-
- Blanche: I, madam, on Abstract Philosophy.
- There I propose considering, at length,
- Three points -- The Is, the Might Be, and the Must.
- Whether the Is, from being actual fact,
- Is more important than the vague Might Be,
- Or the Might Be, from taking wider scope,
- Is for that reason greater than the Is:
- And lastly, how the Is and Might Be stand
- Compared with the inevitable Must!
-
- Princess: The subject's deep -- how do you treat it, pray?
-
- Blan.: Madam, I take three possibilities,
- And strike a balance then between the three:
- As thus: The Princess Ida Is our head,
- the Lady Psyche Might Be, -- Lady Blanche,
- Neglected Blanche, inevitably Must.
- Given these three hypotheses -- to find
- The actual betting against each of them!
-
- Princess: Your theme's ambitious: pray you bear in mind
- Who highest soar fall farthest. Fare you well,
- You and your pupils! Maidens, follow me.
-
- [Exeunt Princess
- and maidens.
- Manet
- Lady Blanche.
-
- EXEUNT FOR PRINCESS IDA & GIRLS
- "And thus to Empyrean Height"
-
- Chorus: And thus to empyrean height
- Of ev'ry kind of lore,
- In search of wisdom's pure delight,
- Ambitiously we soar.
- In trying to achieve success
- No envy racks our heart,
- For all we know and all we guess
- We mutually impart!
- And all the knowledge we possess,
- We mutually impart,
- We mutually impart, impart.
-
- Blan.: I should command here -- I was born to rule,
- But do I rule? I don't. Why? I don't know.
- I shall some day. Not yet, I bide my time.
- I once was Some One -- and the Was Will Be.
- The Present as we speak becomes the Past,
- The Past repeats itself, and so is Future!
- This sounds involved. It's not. It's right enough.
-
- (Since 1935 the following song has been usually omitted)
- SONG (Lady Blanche)
- "Come, mighty Must!"
-
- Blanche: Come mighty Must!
- Inevitable Shall!
- In thee I trust.
- Time weaves my coronal!
- Go, mocking Is!
- Go, disappointing Was!
- That I am this
- Ye are the cursed cause!
- Ye are the cursed cause!
- Yet humble second shall be first,
- I wean
- And dead and buried be the curst
- Has Been!
-
- Oh, weak Might Be!
- Oh, May, Might, Could, Would, Should!
- How pow'rless ye
- For evil or for good!
- In ev'ry sense
- Your moods I cheerless call.
- Whate'er your tense
- Ye are imperfect all.
- Ye have deceiv'd the trust I've shown
- In ye!
- Ye have deceiv'd the trust I've shown
- In ye!
- I've shown in ye!
- Away! The Mighty Must alone
- Shall be!
- [Exit
- Lady Blanche
-
- [Enter Hilarion, Cyril, and Florian, climbing over wall, and creep-
- ing cautiously among the trees and rocks at the back
- of
- the stage.]
-
- TRIO (Cyril, Hilarion and Florian)
- "Gently, gently"
-
- All: Gently, gently,
- Evidently
- We are safe so far,
- After scaling
- Fence and paling,
- Here, at last, we are!
-
- Florian: In this college,
- Useful knowledge
- Ev'rywhere one finds,
- And already,
- Growing steady,
- We've enlarged our minds
-
- Cyril: We learnt that prickly cactus
- Has power to attract us
- When we fall.
-
- All: When we fall!
-
- Hilarion: That nothing man unsettles
- Like a bed of stinging nettles,
- Short or tall.
-
- All: Short or tall!
-
- Florian: That bull-dogs feed on throttles--
- That we don't like broken bottles
- On a wall.
-
- All: On a wall!
-
- Hilarion: That spring-guns breathe defiance!
- And that burglary's a science
- After all!
-
- All: After all!
-
- Florian: A Woman's college! maddest folly going!
- What can girls learn within its walls worth
- knowing?
- I'll lay a crown (the Princess shall decide it)
- I'll teach them twice as much in half-an-hour
- outside it.
-
- Hilarion: Hush, scoffer; ere you sound your puny thunder,
- List to their aims, and bow your head in wonder!
-
- They intend to send a wire
- To the moon
-
- Cyril &
- Florian: To the moon;
-
- Hilarion: And they'll set the Thames on fire
- Very soon
-
- Cyril &
- Florian: Very soon;
-
- Hilarion: Then they'll learn to make silk purses
- With their rigs
-
- Cyril &
- Florian: With their rigs.
-
- Hilarion: From the ears of Lady Circe's
- Piggy-wigs
-
- Cyril &
- Florian: Piggy-wigs.
-
- Hilarion: And weasels at their slumbers
- They trepan
-
- Cyril &
- Florian: They trepan;
-
- Hilarion: To get sunbeams from cucumbers
- They've a plan
-
- Cyril
- & Florian: They've a plan.
-
- Hilarion: They've a firmly rooted notion
- They can cross the Polar Ocean,
- And they'll find Perpetual Motion,
- If they can
-
- All: If they can.
- These are the phenomena
- That ev'ry pretty domina
- Is hoping at her Universitee we shall see.
-
- These are the phenomena
- That ev'ry pretty domina
- Is hoping at her Universitee we shall see!
-
- Cyril: As for fashion, they forswear it,
- So they say
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: So they say;
-
- Cyril: And the circle -- they will square it
- Some fine day
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: Some fine day;
-
- Cyril: Then the little pigs they're teaching
- For to fly
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: For to fly;
-
- Cyril: And the niggers they'll be bleaching,
- By and by
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: By and by!
-
- Cyril: Each newly joined aspirant
- To the clan
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: To the clan
-
- Cyril: Must repudiate the tyrant
- Known as Man
-
- Hilarion &
- Florian: Known as Man.
-
- Cyril: They'll mock at him and flout him,
- For they do not care about him
- And they're "going to do without him"
- If they can
-
- All: If they can!
-
- These are the phenomena
- That ev'ry pretty domina
- Is hoping at her Universitee we shall see.
-
- These are the phenomena
- That ev'ry pretty domina
- Is hoping at her Universitee we shall see!
-
- Hilarion: So that's the Princess Ida's castle! Well,
- They must be lovely girls, indeed, if it requires
- Such walls as those to keep intruders off!
-
- Cyril: To keep men off is only half their charge,
- And that the easier half. I much suspect
- The object of these walls is not so much
- To keep men off as keep the maidens in!
-
- Florian: But what are these? (Examining some Collegiate robes)
-
- Hilarion: (looking at them) Why, Academic robes,
- Worn by the lady undergraduates
- When they matriculate. Let's try them on. (They do
- so.)
- Why, see -- we're covered to the very toes.
- Three lovely lady undergraduates
- Who, weary of the world and all its wooing -- (pose)
-
- Florian: And penitent for deeds there's no undoing -- (pose)
-
- Cyril: Looked at askance by well-conducted maids -- (pose)
-
- All: Seek sanctuary in these classic shades!
-
- TRIO (Cyril, Hilarion and Florian)
- "I am a maiden"
-
- Hilarion: I am a maiden, cold and stately,
- Heartless I, with face divine.
- What do I want with a heart, innately?
- Every heart I meet is mine!
- Every heart I meet is mine, is mine!
-
- All: Haughty, humble, coy, or free,
- Little care I what maid may be.
- So that a maid is fair to see,
- Ev'ry maid is the maid for me!
-
- (Dance)
-
- Cyril: I am a maiden, frank and simple,
- Brimming with joyous roguery;
- Merriment lurks in ev'ry dimple
- Nobody breaks more hearts than I!
- Nobody breaks more hearts, more hearts than
- I
-
- All: Haughty, humble, coy, or free,
- Little care I what maid may be.
- So that a maid is fair to see,
- Ev'ry maid is the maid for me!
-
- (Dance)
-
- Florian: I am a maiden coyly blushing,
- Timid am I as a startled hind;
- Every suitor sets me flushing,
- Every suitor sets me flushing:
- I am the maid that wins mankind!
-
- All: Haughty, humble, coy, or free,
- Little care I what maid may be.
- So that a maid is fair to see,
- Ev'ry maid is the maid for me!
- Haughty, humble, coy, or free,
- Little care I what maid may be.
- So that a maid is fair to see,
- Ev'ry maid is the maid for me!
-
- [Enter the Princess, reading. She does not
- see them.)
-
- Florian: But who comes here? The Princess, as I live!
- What shall we do?
-
- Hilarion: (Aside) Why, we must brave it out!
- (Aloud) Madam, accept our humblest reverence.
-
- (They bow, then suddenly recollecting
- themselves, curtsey.)
-
- Princess: (Surprised) We greet you, ladies. What would you
- with us?
-
- Hilarion: (Aside to Cyril)
- What shall I say? (Aloud) We are three students,
- ma'am,
- Three well-born maids of liberal estate,
- Who wish to join this University.
-
- (Hilarion and Florian curtsey again. Cyril bows
- extravagantly,
- then, being recalled to himself by Florian,
- curtseys.)
-
- Princess: If, as you say, you wish to join our ranks,
- And will subscribe to all our rules, 'tis well.
-
- Florian: To all your rules we cheerfully subscribe.
-
- Princess: You say you're noblewomen. Well, you'll find
- No sham degrees for noblewomen here.
- You'll find no sizars here, or servitors,
- Or other cruel distinctions, meant to draw
- A line 'twixt rich and poor; you'll find no tufts
- To mark nobility, except such tufts
- As indicate nobility of brain.
- As for your fellow-students, mark me well:
- There are a hundred maids within these walls,
- All good, all learned, and all beautiful:
- They are prepared to love you: will you swear
- To give the fullness of your love to them?
-
- Hilarion: Upon our words and honours, Ma'am, we will!
-
- Princess: But we go further: Will you undertake
- That you will never marry any man?
-
- Florian: Indeed we never will!
-
- Princess: Consider well,
- You must prefer our maids to all mankind!
-
- Hilarion: To all mankind we much prefer your maids!
-
- Cyril: We should be dolts indeed, if we did not, seeing how
- fair --
-
- Hilarion: (Aside to Cyril) Take care -- that's rather strong!
-
- Princess: But have you left no lovers at your home
- Who may pursue you here?
-
- Hilarion: No, madam, none.
- We're homely ladies, as no doubt you see,
- And we have never fished for lover's love.
- We smile at girls who deck themselves with gems,
- False hair and meretricious ornament,
- To chain the fleeting fancy of a man,
- But do not imitate them. What we have
- Of hair, is all our own. Our colour, too,
- Unladylike, but not unwomanly,
- Is Nature's handiwork, and man has learnt
- To reckon Nature an impertinence.
-
- Princess: Well, beauty counts for naught within these walls;
- If all you say is true, you'll pass with us
- A happy, happy time!
-
- Cyril: If, as you say,
- A hundred lovely maidens wait within,
- To welcome us with smiles and open arms,
- I think there's very little doubt we shall!
-
- QUARTET (Princess, Cyril, Hilarion and Florian)
- "The World is But a Broken Toy"
-
- Princess: The world is but a broken toy,
- Its pleasure hollow -- false its joy,
- Unreal its loveliest hue,
- Alas!
- Its pains alone are true,
- Alas!
- Its pains alone are true.
-
- Hilarion: The world is ev'rything you say,
- The world we think has had its day.
- Its merriment is slow.
- Alas!
- We've tried it, and we know,
- Alas!
- We've tried it and we know.
-
- All: Unreal its loveliest hue,
- Its pains alone are true,
-
- Princess: Alas!
-
- All: The world is but a broken toy,
- Its pleasure hollow -- false its joy,
- Unreal its loveliest hue,
- Alas!
- Its pains alone are true,
- Alas!
- Its pains alone are true!
-
- Florian: Unreal its loveliest hue,
-
- 3 Men: Unreal its loveliest hue,
-
- Princess: Cyr. & Flor: A- Hilarion: Un-
- Un- las! real its
- loveliest hue
- real--- Alas! Alas!
- -----
- ---- its loveliest hue
-
- All: Alas!
- Alas!
- Its pains alone are true.
-
- (Exit Princess. The three Gentlemen
- watch her off.
- Lady Psyche enters, and regards them with
- amazement)
-
- Hilarion: I'faith, the plunge is taken, gentlemen!
- For, willy-nilly, we are maidens now,
- And maids against our will we must remain.
- [All laugh
- heartily.]
-
- Psyche: (Aside) These ladies are unseemly in their mirth.
-
- (The gentlemen see her, and, in confusion,
- resume their
- modest
- demeanour.)
-
- Florian: (Aside) Here's a catastrophe, Hilarion!
- This is my sister! She'll remember me,
- Though years have passed since she and I have met!
-
- Hilarion: (Aside to Florian) Then make a virtue of necessity,
- And trust our secret to her gentle care.
-
- Florian: (To Psyche, who has watched Cyril in amazement)
- Psyche! Why, don't you know me? Florian!
-
- Psyche: (Amazed) Why, Florian!
-
- Florian: My sister! (Embraces her)
-
- Psyche: Oh, my dear! What are you doing here -- and who are
- these?
-
- Hilarion: I am that Prince Hilarion to whom
- Your Princess is betrothed. I come to claim
- Her plighted love. Your brother Florian
- And Cyril came to see me safely through.
-
- Psyche: The Prince Hilarion? Cyril too? How strange!
- My earliest playfellows!
-
- Hilarion: Why, let me look!
- Are you that learned little Psyche who
- At school alarmed her mates because she called
- A buttercup "ranunculus bulbosus"?
-
- Cyril: Are you indeed that Lady Psyche, who
- At children's parties, drove the conjuror wild,
- Explaining all his tricks before he did them?
-
- Hilarion: Are you that learned little Psyche, who
- At dinner parties, brought in to dessert,
- Would tackle visitors with "You don't know
- Who first determined longitude -- I do --
- Hipparchus 'twas -- B. C. one sixty-three!"
- Are you indeed that small phenomenon?
-
- Psyche: That small phenomenon indeed am I!
- But gentlemen, 'tis death to enter here:
- We have all promised to renounce mankind!
-
- Florian: Renounce mankind!? On what ground do you base
- This senseless resolution?
-
- Psyche: Senseless? No.
- We are all taught, and, being taught, believe
- That Man, sprung from an Ape, is Ape at heart.
-
- Cyril: That's rather strong.
-
- Psyche: The truth is always strong!
-
- SONG (Lady Psyche, with Cyril, Hilarion and Florian)
- "A Lady Fair, of Lineage High"
-
- Psyche: A Lady fair, of lineage high,
- Was loved by an Ape, in the days gone by.
- The Maid was radiant as the sun,
- The Ape was a most unsightly one,
- The Ape was a most unsightly one--
- So it would not do--
- His scheme fell through,
- For the Maid, when his love took formal shape,
- Express'd such terror
- At his monstrous error,
- That he stammer'd an apology and made his 'scape,
- The picture of a disconcerted Ape.
-
- With a view to rise in the social scale,
- He shaved his bristles and he docked his tail,
- He grew mustachios, and he took his tub,
- And he paid a guinea to a toilet club,
- He paid a guinea to a toilet club--
- But it would not do,
- The scheme fell through--
- For the Maid was Beauty's fairest Queen,
- With golden tresses,
- Like a real princess's,
- While the Ape, despite his razor keen,
- Was the apiest Ape that ever was seen!
- He bought white ties, and he bought dress suits,
- He crammed his feet into bright tight boots--
- And to start in life on a brand-new plan,
- He christen'd himself Darwinian Man!
- But it would not do,
- The scheme fell through--
- For the Maiden fair, whom the monkey crav'd,
- Was a radiant Being,
- With brain far-seeing--
- While Darwinian Man, though well-behav'd,
- At best is only a monkey shav'd!
-
- 3 Men: For the Maiden fair, whom the monkey crav'd,
-
- All: Was a radiant being,
- With a brain far-seeing--
- While Darwinian Man, though well-behav'd,
- At best is only a monkey shav'd!
-
- (During this, Melissa has entered
- unobserved;
- she looks on in
- amazement.)
-
- Melissa: (Coming down) Oh, Lady Psyche!
-
- Psyche: (Terrified) What! You heard us then?
- Oh, all is lost!
-
- Melissa: Not so! I'll breathe no word!
- (Advancing in astonishment to Florian)
- How marvelously strange! and are you then
- Indeed young men?
-
- Florian: Well, yes, just now we are--
- But hope by dint of study to become,
- In course of time, young women.
-
- Melissa: (Eagerly) No, no, no --
- Oh, don't do that! Is this indeed a man?
- I've often heard of them, but, till to-day,
- Never set eyes on one. They told me men
- Were hideous, idiotic, and deformed!
- They are quite as beautiful as women are!
- As beautiful, they're infinitely more so!
- Their cheeks have not that pulpy softness which
- One gets so weary of in womankind:
- Their features are more marked -- and -- oh, their
- chins!
- (Feeling Florian's chin)
- How curious!
-
- Florian: I fear it's rather rough.
-
- Melissa: (Eagerly) Oh, don't apologize -- I like it so!
-
- QUINTET (Psyche, Melissa, Cyril, Hilarion and Florian)
- "The Woman of the Wisest Wit"
-
- Psyche: The woman of the wisest win
- May sometimes be mistaken, O!
- In Ida's views, I must admit,
- My faith is somewhat shaken O!
-
- Cyril: On every other point than this
- Her learning is untainted, O!
- But Man's a theme with which she is
- Entirely unacquainted, O!
- --acquainted, O!
- --acquainted, O!
- Entirely unacquainted, O!
-
- All: Then jump for joy and gaily bound,
- The truth is found -- the truth is found!
- Set bells a-ringing through the air--
- Ring here and there and ev'rywhere--
-
- 3 Men: And echo forth the joyous sound,
-
- All: The truth is found -- the truth is found!
-
- 3 Men: And echo forth the joyous sound,
-
- All: The truth is found -- the truth is found!
- And echo forth the joyous sound,
- The truth is found -- the truth is found!
-
- (Dance)
-
- Melissa: My natural instinct teaches me
- (And instinct is important, O!)
- You're ev'rything you ought to be,
- And nothing that you oughtn't, O!
-
- Hilarion: That fact was seen at once by you
- In casual conversation, O!
- Which is most creditable to
- Your powers of observation, O!
- -servation, O!
- -servation, O!
- Your powers of observation, O!
-
- All: Then jump for joy and gaily bound,
- The truth is found, the truth is found!
- Set bells a-ringing through the air,
- Ring here and there and ev'rywhere.
-
- 3 Men: And echo forth the joyous sound,
-
- All: The truth is found -- the truth is found!
-
- 3 Men: And echo forth the joyous sound,
-
- All: The truth is found -- the truth is found!
- And echo forth the joyous sound,
- The truth is found -- the truth is found!
-
- (Exeunt Psyche, Hilarion, Cyril
- and Florian,
-
- Melissa going.)
-
- (Enter
- Lady Blanche.
-
- Blanche: Melissa!
-
- Melissa: (Returning) Mother!
-
- Blanche: Here -- a word with you.
- Those are the three new students?
-
- Melissa: (Confused) Yes, they are.
- They're charming girls.
-
- Blanche: Particularly so.
- So graceful, and so very womanly!
- So skilled in all a girl's accomplishments!
-
- Melissa: (Confused) Yes -- very skilled.
-
- Blanche: They sing so nicely too!
-
- Melissa: They do sing nicely!
-
- Blanche: Humph! It's very odd.
- Two are tenors, one is a baritone!
-
- Melissa: (Much agitated) They've all got colds!
-
- Blanche: Colds! Bah! D'ye think I'm blind?
- These "girls" are men disguised!
-
- Melissa: Oh no -- indeed!
- You wrong these gentlemen -- I mean -- why, see,
- Here is an etui dropped by one of them (picking up an
- etui).
- Containing scissors, needles, and --
-
- Blanche: (Opening it) Cigars!
- Why, these are men! And you knew this, you minx!
-
- Melissa: Oh, spare them -- they are gentlemen indeed.
- The Prince Hilarion (married years ago
- To Princess Ida) with two trusted friends!
- Consider, mother, he's her husband now,
- And has been, twenty years! Consider, too,
- You're only second here -- you should be first.
- Assist the Prince's plan, and when he gains
- The Princess Ida, why, you will be first.
- You will design the fashions -- think of that--
- And always serve out all the punishments!
- The scheme is harmless, mother -- wink at it!
-
- Blanche: (Aside) The prospect's tempting! Well, well, well,
- I'll try --
- Though I've not winked at anything for years!
- 'Tis but one step towards my destiny--
- The mighty Must! the inevitable Shall!
-
- DUET (Melissa and Lady Blanche)
- "Now Wouldn't you like to Rule the Roast"
-
- Melissa: Now wouldn't you like to rule the roast
- And guide this University?
-
- Blanche: I must agree,
- 'Twould pleasant be,
- (Sing hey, a Proper Pride!)
-
- Melissa: And wouldn't you like to clear the coast,
- Of malice and perversity?
-
- Blanche: Without a doubt,
- I'll bundle 'em out,
- (Sing hey, when I preside!)
-
- Both: Sing hey!
- Sing hoity toity! Sorry for some!
- Sing marry, come up, and (my) her day will come!
- Sing Proper Pride
- Is the horse to ride,
- And Happy-go-lucky, my Lady, O!
-
- Blanche: For years I've writhed beneath her sneers,
- Although a born Plantagenet!
-
- Melissa: You're much too meek,
- Or you would speak
- (Sing hey, I'll say no more!)
-
- Blanche: Her elder I, by several years,
- Although you'd ne'er imagine it.
-
- Melissa: Sing, so I've heard
- But never a word
- Have I e'er believ'd before!
-
- Both: Sing hey!
- Sing hoity toity! Sorry for some!
- Sing marry, come up, and her (my) day will come!
- Sing, she shall learn
- That a worm will turn.
- Sing Happy-go-lucky, my Lady, O!
-
- (Exit
- Lady Blanche)
-
- Melissa: Saved for a time, at least!
-
- (Enter Florian,
- on tiptoe)
-
- Florian: (Whispering) Melissa -- come!
-
- Melissa: Oh, sir! you must away from this at once--
- My mother guessed your sex! It was my fault--
- I blushed and stammered so that she exclaimed,
- "Can these be men?" Then, seeing this, "Why these--"
- "Are men", she would have added, but "are men"
- Stuck in her throat! She keeps your secret, sir,
- For reasons of her own -- but fly from this
- And take me with you -- that is -- no -- not that!
-
- Florian: I'll go, but not without you! (Bell) Why, what's
- that?
-
- Melissa: The luncheon bell.
-
- Florian: I'll wait for luncheon then!
-
- (Enter Hilarion with Princess,
- Cyril with
- Psyche, Lady Blanche and
- ladies. Also
- "Daughters of the Plough" bearing
- luncheon.)
-
- CHORUS OF GIRLS & SOLOS (Blanche and Cyril)
- "Merrily Ring the Luncheon Bell"
-
- Chorus: Merrily ring the luncheon bell!
- Merrily ring the luncheon bell!
- Here in meadow of asphodel,
- Feast we body and mind as well,
- Merrily ring the luncheon
-
- 1st Sops: 2nd Sops:
- bell! - - - --- bell! Oh merrily
- Ring - - - --- ring the luncheon
- oh, --- bell, Oh
- ring, - - - --- merrily, merrily,
- merrily,
- Oh, --- merrily
-
- Chorus: Merrily ring the luncheon bell, the luncheon
- bell!
-
- Blanche: Hunger, I beg to state,
- Is highly indelicate.
- This is a fact profoundly true,
- So learn your appetites to subdue.
-
- All: Yes, yes,
- We'll learn our appetites to subdue!
-
- Cyril: Madam, your words so wise,
- Nobody should despise,
- Curs'd with appetite keen I am
- And I'll subdue it--
- And I'll subdue it--
- I'll subdue it with cold roast lamb!
-
- All: Yes -- yes--
- We'll subdue it with cold roast lamb!
- Merrily ring the luncheon bell!
- Merrily ring the luncheon bell!
- Oh
-
- 1st Sops: ring! - - - --- 2nd Sophs: merrily,
- merrily,
- Oh, merrily,
- merrily
-
- Chorus: Merrily ring the luncheon bell, the luncheon
- bell!
-
- Princess: You say you know the court of Hildebrand?
- There is a Prince there -- I forget his name --
-
- Hilarion: Hilarion?
-
- Princess: Exactly -- is he well?
-
- Hilarion: If it be well to droop and pine and mope,
- To sigh "Oh, Ida! Ida!" all day long,
- "Ida! my love! my life! Oh, come to me!"
- If it be well, I say, to do all this,
- Then Prince Hilarion is very well.
-
- Princess: He breathes our name? Well, it's a common one!
- And is the booby comely?
-
- Hilarion: Pretty well.
- I've heard it said that if I dressed myself
- In Prince Hilarion's clothes (supposing this
- Consisted with my maiden modesty),
- I might be taken for Hilarion's self.
- But what is this to you or me, who think
- Of all mankind with undisguised contempt?
-
- Princess: Contempt? Why, damsel, when I think of man,
- Contempt is not the word.
-
- Cyril: (Getting tipsy) I'm sure of that,
- Or if it is, it surely should not be!
-
- Hilarion: (Aside to Cyril) Be quiet, idiot, or they'll find us
- out.
-
- Cyril: The Prince Hilarion's a goodly lad!
-
- Princess: You know him then?
-
- Cyril: (Tipsily) I rather think I do!
- We are inseparables!
-
- Princess: Why, what's this?
- You love him then?
-
- Cyril: We do indeed -- all
- three!
-
- Hilarion: Madam, she jests! (Aside to Cyril) Remember where
- you
- are!
-
- Cyril: Jests? Not at all! Why, bless my heart alive,
- You and Hilarion, when at the Court,
- Rode the same horse!
-
- Princess: (Horrified) Astride?
-
- Cyril: Of course! Why not?
- Wore the same clothes -- and once or twice, I think,
- Got tipsy in the same good company!
-
- Princess: Well, these are nice young ladies, on my word!
-
- Cyril: (Tipsy) Don't you remember that old kissing-song
- He'd sing to blushing Mistress Lalage,
- The hostess of the Pigeons? Thus it ran:
-
- SONG (Cyril)
- "Would you know the Kind of Maid"
-
- (During symphony Hilarion and
- Florian try to
- stop Cyril. He shakes them
- off angrily.)
-
- Cyril: Would you know the kind of maid
- Sets my heart aflame-a?
- Eyes must be downcast and staid,
- Cheeks must flush for shame-a!
- She may neither dance nor sing,
- But, demure in everything,
- Hang her head in modest way,
- With pouting lips, with pouting lips
- that
- seem to say,
- "Oh kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, kiss me,
- Though I die of shame-a!"
- Please you, that's the kind of maid
- Sets my heart aflame-a!
- "Kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, kiss me,
- Though I die of shame-a!"
- Please you, that's the kind of maid
- Sets my heart aflame-a!
-
- When a maid is bold and gay,
- With a tongue goes clang-a,
- Flaunting it in brave array,
- Maiden may go hang-a
- Sunflow'r gay and holly-hock
- Never shall my garden stock;
- Mine the blushing rose of May,
- With pouting lips, with pouting lips
- that
- seem to say,
- "Oh kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, kiss me,
- Though I die for shame-a!"
- Please you, that's the kind of maid
- Sets my heart aflame-a!
- "Kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, kiss me,
- Though I die of shame-a!"
- Please you, that's the kind of maid
- Sets my heart aflame-a!
-
- Princess: Infamous creature, get you hence away!
-
- (Hilarion, Who has been with difficulty
- restrained by
- Florian during this song, breaks from him
- and strikes
- Cyril furiously on
- the breast.)
-
- Hilarion: Dog! There is something more to sing about!
-
- Cyril: (Sobered) Hilarion, are you mad?
-
- Princess: (Horrified) Hilarion? Help!
- Why, these are men! Lost! lost! betrayed, undone!
- (Running on
- to bridge)
- Girls, get you hence! Man-monsters, if you dare
- Approach one step, I --- Ah!
- (Loses her balance and falls into
- the stream)
-
- Psyche: Oh! Save her, sir!
-
- Blanche: It's useless, sir -- you'll only catch your death!
- (Hilarion
- springs in.)
-
- Sach.: He catches her!
-
- Melissa: And now he lets her go!
- Again she's in his grasp--
-
- Psyche: And now she's not,
- He seizes her back hair!
-
- Blanche: (Not looking) And it comes off!
-
- Psyche: No, no! She's saved!--she's saved! she's
- saved!--she's
- saved!
-
- FINALE, ACT II
- (Princess, Hildebrand, Melissa, Lady Psyche, Blanche,
- Cyril, Hilarion, Florian, Arac, Guron, Scynthius and
- Chorus of Girls and Men )
-
- "Oh Joy! our Chief is Sav'd"
-
- Girls: Oh joy! our chief is sav'd
- And by Hillarion's hand;
- The torrent fierce he brav'd,
- And brought her safe to land!
- For his intrusion we must own
- This doughty deed may well atone!
-
- Princess: Stand forth ye three,
- Who-e'er ye be,
- And hearken to our stern decree!
-
- Cyril, &
- Florian: Have mercy, O Lady Hilarion:
- Have
- disregard your Mer--
- oaths! cy!
-
- Princess: I know no mercy, men in women's clothes!
- The man whose sacrilegious eyes
- Invade our strict seclusion, dies.
- Arrest the coarse intruding spies!
-
- (They are arrested by the "Daughters of
- the Plough")
-
- Girls: Have mercy, O lady -- disregard your oaths.
-
- Princess: I know not mercy, men in women's clothes!
-
- (Cyril & Florian
- are bound)
-
- SONG -- Hilarion
-
- Hilarion: Whom thou has chain'd must wear his chain,
- Thou canst not set him free,
- He wrestles with his bonds in vain
- Who lives by loving thee!
- If heart of stone for heart of fire,
- Be all thou hast to give,
- If dead to my heart's desire,
- Why should I wish to live?
-
- Cyr & Flo: Have Girls: Have
- mercy, O Mer-
- lady! cy!
-
- Hilarion: No word of thine -- no stern command
- Can teach my heart to rove,
- Then rather perish by thy hand,
- Than live without they love!
- A loveless life apart from thee
- Were hopeless slavery,
- Were hopeless slavery,
- If kindly death will set me free,
- Why should I fear to die?
-
- Girls: Have mercy!
-
- Hilarion: If kindly death
-
- Girls: Have mercy!
-
- Hilarion: will set me free,
- If kindly death will set me free,
- Why should I fear,
- Why should I fear to die?
-
- (He is bound by two of the attendants, the three gentlemen are
- marched off.)
-
- (Enter Melissa)
-
- Melissa: Madam, without the castle walls
- An armed band
- Demand admittance to our halls
- For Hildebrand!
-
- All: Oh, horror!
-
- Princess: Defy them!
- We will defy them!
-
- All: Too late -- too late!
- The castle gate
- Is battered by them!
-
- (The gate yields. Soldiers rush in. Arac, Guron, and Scynthius are
- with them, but with their hands handcuffed.
-
- Men: Walls and fences scaling,
- Promptly we appear;
- Walls are unavailing,
- We have enter'd here.
- Female exaceration.
- Stifle if you're wise.
- Stop your lamentations,
- Dry your pretty, pretty
-
- Girls: Rend the air with wailing. Men: eyes!
- Shed the shameful tear!
- Man has enter'd here.
- Walls are unavailing.
-
- Girls: Rend the Men: Walls and
- air fences
- with scaling,
- wail------ Promptly we appear;
- ---------- Walls are unavailing.
- ing. We have enter'd here.
- Shed Female exe-
- the cration.
- shame- Stifle if
- ful tear! you're wise.
- Man Stop your lament-
- has ation,
- en- Dry your pret-
- ter'd ty
- here! eyes. O
- Walls are stop your
- un- lament-
- a- ation,
- vail- Dry your pretty pretty
- ing. eyes! Female exe-
- Man cration. Stifle
- has if you're
- en- wise. Stop your lament-
- ter'd ation, Dry your pretty
- here! eyes.
-
- (Enter Hildebrand)
-
- RECITATIVE
-
- Princess: Audacious tyrant, do you dare
- To beard a maiden in her lair?
-
- Hildebd: Since you inquire,
- We've no desire
- To beard a maiden here, or anywhere!
-
- Soldiers: No, no. We've no desire
- To beard a maiden here or anywhere!
-
- SOLO -- Hildebrand
-
- Hildebd: Some years ago,
- No doubt you know
- (And if you don't I'll tell you so)
- You gave your troth
- Upon your oath
- To Hilarion my son.
- A vow you make
- You must not break,
- (If you think you may, it's a great mistake),
- For a bride's a bride
- Though the knot were tied
- At the early age of one!
- And I'm a peppery kind of King,
- Whose indisposed for parleying
- To fit the wit of a bit of chit,
- And that's the long and the short of
- it!
-
- Soldiers: For he's a peppery kind of King,
- Whose indisposed for parleying
- To fit the wit of a bit of chit,
- And that's the long and the short of it!
-
- Hildebd: If you decide
- To pocket your pride
- And let Hilarion claim his bride,
- Why, well and good,
- It's understood
- We'll let bygones go by--
- But if you choose
- To sulk in the blues
- I'll make the whole of you shake in your shoes.
- I'll storm your walls,
- And level your halls,
- In the winking of an eye!
- For I'm a peppery Potentate,
- Who's little inclined his claim to
- bate,
- To fit the wit of a bit of a chit,
- And thats the long and the short of
- it!
-
- Soldiers: For he's a peppery Potentate,
- Whose indisposed for parleying,
- To fit the wit of a bit of chit,
- And that's the long and the short of it!
-
- TRIO -- Arac, Guron & Scynthius
-
- All 3: We may remark, though nothing can
- Dismay us,
- That if you thwart this gentleman,
- He'll slay us.
- We don't fear death, of course -- we're taught
- To shame it;
- But still upon the whole we thought
- We'd name it.
- (To each other)
- Scynthius: Yes!
-
- Guron: Yes!
-
- Arac: Yes!
-
- All 3: Better p'r'aps to name it.
-
- Our interests we would not press
- With chatter,
- Three hulking brothers more or less
- Don't matter;
- If you'd pooh-pooh this monarch's plan
- Pooh-pooh it,
- But when he says he'll hang a man,
- He'll do it.
- (To each other)
- Scynthius: Yes!
-
- Guron: Yes!
-
- Arac: Yes!
-
- All 3: Devil doubt he'll do it.
-
- Princess: Be reassured, nor fear his anger blind,
- His menaces are idle as the wind.
- He dares not kill you -- vengeance lurks behind!
-
- 3 Knights: We rather think he dares, but never mind!
-
- Hildebd: I 3 Knights:
- rather No!
- think I No!
- dare, but No!
- never, never mind! never never mind!
- Enough of
- No,
- parley no,
- never nev-
- as a er
- spe- mind!
- cial
- No!
- boon. no! never, never mind!
- We give you till tomorrow
- afternoon;
-
-
- Hildebd: Release Hilarion, then,
- And be his bride
- Or you'll incur the guilt of fratricide!
-
- Princess: To yield at once to such a foe
- With shame we're rife;
- So quick! away with him, although
- He sav'd my life!
- That he is fair, and strong, and tall
- Is very evident to all,
- Yet I will die,
- Yet I will die, before I call myself his
-
- Princess: All Others:
- wife! - --- Oh, yield at once, 'twere better
- so,
- - - - --- Than risk a strife!
- And let the Prince Hilarion go.
- He Saved thy life!
- That Hi-
- he is la-rion's
- fair and fair,
- strong and and
- tall, strong and tall,
- tall,
- Is - - - - -
- - - - - - - A
- very worse mis-
- evi- for-
- dent to tune
- all, might befall.
- Yet
- I will It's
- die, will die before I call not so dreadful after all,
- Myself his wife! To be his wife!
- Though I am but a girl
- Defiance thus I hurl
- Our banners all
- On outer wall
- We fearlessly unfurl
-
- (The Princess stands, surrounded by girls kneeling. Hildebrand and
- soldiers stand on built rocks at back and sides of stage.
- Picture.)
-
-
- END OF ACT II ACT III
-
- SCENE -- Outer Walls and Courtyard of Castle Adamant. Melissa,
- SachaRissa, and ladies discovered, armed with
- battleaxes.
-
- CHORUS
- "Death to the Invader!"
-
- Chorus: Death to the invader!
- Strike a deadly blow,
- As an old Crusader
- Struck his Paynim foe!
- Let our martial thunder
- Fill his soul with wonder,
- Tear his ranks asunder,
- Lay the tyrant low!
- Death to the invader!
- Strike a deadly blow,
- As an old Crusader
- Struck his Paynim foe!
-
- Melissa: Thus our courage, all untarnish'd,
- We're instructed to display;
- But to tell the truth unvarnish'd,
- We are more inclined to say,
- "Please you, do not hurt us,"
-
- All: "Do not hurt us, if it please you!"
-
- Melissa: "Please you let us be."
-
- All: "Let us be -- let us be!"
-
- Melissa: "Soldiers disconcert us."
-
- All: "Disconcert us, if it please you!"
-
- Melissa: "Frighten'd maids are we!"
-
- All: "Maids are we, maids are we!"
-
- Melissa: Please you,
-
- All: Do not hurt us;
-
- Melissa: Please you,
-
- All: Let us be.
-
- Mel & Cho: Frighten'd maids are we, frighten'd maids are we!
-
- Melissa: But 'twould be an error
- To confess our terror,
- So in Ida's name,
- Boldly we exclaim:
-
- Mel & Cho: Death to the invader!
- Strike a deadly blow,
- As an old Crusader
- Struck his Paynim foe!
-
- (Flourish. Enter Princess, armed, attended by Blanche and Psyche.)
-
- Princess: I like your spirit, girls! We have to meet
- Stern bearded warriors in fight to-day;
- Wear naught but what is necessary to
- Preserve your dignity before their eyes,
- And give your limbs full play.
-
- Blanche: One moment, ma'am,
- Here is a paradox we should not pass
- Without inquiry. We are prone to say
- "This thing is Needful -- that, Superfluous"--
- Yet they invariably co-exist!
- We find the Needful comprehended in
- The circle of the grand Superfluous,
- Yet the Superfluous cannot be brought
- Unless you're amply furnished with the Needful.
- These singular considerations are--
-
- Princess: Superfluous, yet not Needful -- so you see
- The terms may independently exist.
- (To Ladies) Women of Adamant, we have to show
- That women, educated to the task,
- Can meet Man, face to face, on his own ground,
- And beat him there. Now, let us set to work;
- Where is our lady surgeon?
-
- Sach.: Madam, here!
-
- Princess: We shall require your skill to heal the wounds
- Of those that fall.
-
- Sach.: (Alarmed) What, heal the wounded?
-
- Princess: Yes!
-
- Sach.: And cut off real live legs and arms?
-
- Princess: Of course!
-
- Sach.: I wouldn't do it for a thousand pounds!
-
- Princess: Why, how is this? Are you faint-hearted, girl?
- You've often cut them off in theory!
-
- Sach.: In theory I'll cut them off again
- With pleasure, and as often as you like,
- But not in practice.
-
- Princess: Coward! Get you hence,
- I've craft enough for that, and courage too,
- I'll do your work! My fusiliers, advance!,
- Why, you are armed with axes! Gilded toys!
- Where are your rifles, pray?
-
- Chloe: Why, please you, ma'am,
- We left them in the armoury, for fear
- That in the heat and turmoil of the fight,
- They might go off!
-
- Princess: "They might!" Oh, craven souls!
- Go off yourselves! Thank heaven I have a heart
- That quails not at the thought of meeting men;
- I will discharge your rifles! Off with you!
-
- (Exit Chloe)
- Where's my bandmistress?
-
- Ada: Please you, ma'am, the band
- Do not feel well, and can't come out today!
-
- Princess: Why, this is flat rebellion! I've no time
- To talk to them just now. But, happily,
- I can play several instruments at once,
- And I will drown the shrieks of those that fall
- With trumpet music, such as soldiers love!
- How stand we with respect to gunpowder?
- My Lady Psyche -- you who superintend
- Our lab'ratory -- are you well prepared
- To blow these bearded rascals into shreds?
-
- Psyche: Why, madam--
-
- Princess: Well?
-
- Psyche: Let us try gentler means.
- We can dispense with fulminating grains
- While we have eyes with which to flash our rage!
- We can dispense with villainous saltpetre
- While we have tongues with which to blow them up!
- We can dispense, in short, with all the arts
- That brutalize the practical polemist!
-
- Princess: (Contemptuously) I never knew a more dispensing
- chemist!
- Away, away -- I'll meet these men alone
- Since all my women have deserted me!
-
- (Exeunt all but Princess, singing
- refrain of
- "Please you, do not hurt us",
- pianissimo.)
-
- Princess: So fail my cherished plans -- so fails my faith--
- And with it hope, and all that comes of hope!
-
- Song - Princess
- "I Built upon a Rock"
-
- Princess: I built upon a rock,
- But ere Destruction's hand
- Dealt equal lot
- To Court and cot,
- My rock had turn'd to sand!
- I leant upon an oak,
- But in the hour of need,
- Alack-a-day,
- My trusted stay
- Was but a bruis-ed reed!
- A bruis-ed reed!
- Ah faithless rock,
- My simple faith to mock!
- Ah trait'rous oak,
- Thy worthlessness to cloak,
- Thy worthlessness to cloak!
-
- I drew a sword of steel
- But when to home and hearth
- The battle's breath
- Bore fire and death,
- My sword was but a lath!
- I lit a beacon fire,
- But on a stormy day
- Of frost and rime,
- In wintertime,
- My fire had died away,
- Had died away!
- Ah, coward steel,
- That fear can un-anneal!
- False fire indeed,
- To fail me in my need,
- To fail me in my need!
-
- (Princess Sinks upon a rock. Enter Chloe and all the Ladies)
-
- Chloe: Madam, your father and your brothers claim
- An audience!
-
- Princess: What do they do here?
-
- Chloe: They come
- To fight for you!
-
- Princess: Admit them!
-
- Blanche: Infamous!
- One's brothers, ma'am, are men!
-
- Princess: So I have heard.
- But all my women seem to fail me when
- I need them most. In this emergency,
- Even one's brothers may be turned to use.
-
- Gama: (Entering, pale and unnerved) My daughter!
-
- Princess: Father! Thou art free!
-
- Gama: Aye, free!
- Free as a tethered ass! I come to thee
- With words from Hildebrand. Those duly given
- I must return to blank captivity.
- I'm free so far.
-
- Princess: Your message.
-
- Gama: Hildebrand
- Is loth to war with women. Pit my sons,
- My three brave sons, against these popinjays,
- These tufted jack-a-dandy featherheads,
- And on the issue let thy hand depend!
-
- Princess: Insult on insult's head! Are we a stake
- For fighting men? What fiend possesses thee,
- That thou has come with offers such as these
- From such as he to such an one as I?
-
- Gama: I am possessed
- By the pale devil of a shaking heart!
- My stubborn will is bent. I dare not face
- That devilish monarch's black malignity!
- He tortures me with torments worse than death,
- I haven't anything to grumble at!
- He finds out what particular meats I love,
- And gives me them. The very choicest wines,
- The costliest robes -- the richest rooms are mine.
- He suffers none to thwart my simplest plan,
- And gives strict orders none should contradict me!
- He's made my life a curse! (Weeps)
-
- Princess: My tortured father!
-
- SONG (King GAMA with CHORUS of GIRLS)
- "Whene'er I Spoke"
-
- Gama: Whene'er I poke
- Sarcastic joke
- Replete with malice spiteful,
- This people mild
- Politely smil'd,
- And voted me delightful!
-
- Now, when a wight
- Sits up all night
- Ill-natur'd jokes devising,
- And all his wiles
- Are met with smiles
- It's hard, there's no disguising!
-
- Ah! Oh, don't the days seem lank and long
- When all goes right and nothing goes wrong,
- And isn't your life extremely flat
- With nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- Chorus: Oh, isn't your life extremely flat
- With nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- Gama: When German bands
- From music stands
- Play'd Wagner imperfectly --
- I bade them go--
- They didn't say no,
- But off they went directly!
- The organ boys
- They stopp'd their noise,
- With readiness surprising,
- And grinning herds
- Of hurdy-gurds
- Retired apologising!
- Ah! Oh, don't the days seem lank and long
- When all goes right and nothing goes wrong,
- And isn't your life extremely flat
- With nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- Chorus: Oh, isn't your life extremely flat
- With nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- Gama: I offer'd gold
- In sums untold
- To all who'd contradict me--
- I said I'd pay
- A pound a day
- To any one who kick'd me--
- I've brib'd with toys
- Great vulgar boys
- To utter something spiteful,
- But, bless you, no!
- They would be so
- Confoundedly politeful!
-
- Ah! In short, these aggravating lads,
- They tickle my tastes, they feed my fads,
- They give me this and they give me that,
- And I've nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- Chorus: Oh, isn't your life extremely flat
- With nothing whatever to grumble at!
-
- (Gama Bursts into tears and falls sobbing
- on a seat.)
-
- Princess: My poor old father! How he must have suffered!
- Well, well, I yield!
-
- Gama: (Hysterically) She yields! I'm saved, I'm saved!
- (Exit)
-
- Princess: Open the gates -- admit these warriors,
- Then get you all within the castle walls.
- (Exit)
-
- (The gates are opened and the Girls mount the
- battlements as the
- Soldiers enter. Arac, Guron and Scynthius
- also enter.)
-
- Chorus of Soldiers
- "When anger spreads his wing"
-
- Chorus: When anger spread his wing,
- And all seems dark as night for it,
- There's nothing but to fight for it,
- But ere you pitch your ring,
- Select a pretty site for it,
- (This spot is suited quite for it,)
- And then you gaily sing,
- And then you gaily sing:
-
- "Oh I love the jolly rattle
- Of an orde-al by battle,
- There's an end of tittle-tattle
- When your enemy is dead.
- It's an arrant molly-coddle
- Fears a crack upon his noddle
- And he's only fit to swaddle
- In a downy feather-bed!
-
- Ladies: For a Soldiers: Oh, I
- fight's love the
- a jolly
- kind rattle
- of Of an
- thing orde-al by battle
- That I There's an
- love end of
- to tittle
- look tattle,
- up- When your
- on, enemy is dead.
- So It's an
- let arrant
- us molly-
- sing, coddle
- Long Fears a
- live crack upon
- the his
- King, noddle,
- And his And he's
- son only fit to
- Hi- swaddle, In a
- la- downy fea-
- ri-on! ther bed!
-
- (During this, Hilarion, Florian,
- and Cyril are
- brought out by the "Daughters of
- the Plough".
- They are still bound and wear
- the robes.
-
- Enter GAMA.)
-
- Gama: Hilarion! Cyril! Florian! dressed as women!
- Is this indeed Hilarion?
-
- Hilar.: Yes, it is!
-
- Gama: Why, you look handsome in your women's clothes!
- Stick to 'em! Men's attire becomes you not!
- (To CYRIL and FLORIAN) And you, young ladies, will you please to
- pray
- King Hildebrand to set me free again?
- Hang on his neck and gaze into his eyes,
- He never could resist a pretty face!
-
- Hilar.: You dog, you'll find, though I wear woman's garb,
- My sword is long and sharp!
-
- Gama: Hush, pretty one!
- Here's a virago! Here's a termagant!
- If length and sharpness go for anything,
- You'll want no sword while you can wag your tongue!
-
- Cyril: What need to waste your words on such as he?
- He's old and crippled.
-
- Gama: Aye, but I've three sons,
- Fine fellows, young and muscular, and brave,
- They're well worth talking to! Come, what d'ye say?
-
- Arac: Aye, pretty ones, engage yourselves with us,
- If three rude warriors affright you not!
-
- Hilar.: Old as you are, I'd wring your shrivelled neck
- If you were not the Princess Ida's father.
-
- Gama: If I were not the Princess Ida's father,
- And so had not her brothers for my sons,
- No doubt you'd wring my neck -- in safety too!
- Come, come, Hilarion, begin, begin!
- Give them no quarter -- they will give you none.
- You've this advantage over warriors
- Who kill their country's enemies for pay,--
- You know what you are fighting for -- look there!
- (Pointing to Ladies on the
- battlements)
-
- (Exit Gamma. Hilarion, Florian, and Cyril
- are led off.)
-
- SONG (Arac, Guron, Scynthius and Chorus)
- "This Helmet, I Suppose"
-
- Arac: This helmet, I suppose,
- Was meant to ward off blows,
- It's very hot
- And weighs a lot,
- As many a guardsman knows,
- As many a guardsman knows,
- As many a guardsman knows,
- As many a guardsman knows,
- So off, so off that helmet goes.
-
- Others: Yes, yes, yes,
- So off that helmet goes!
-
- (Giving their helmets to
- attendants)
-
- Arac: This tight-fitting cuirass
- Is but a useless mass,
- It's made of steel,
- And weighs a deal,
- This tight-fitting cuirass
- Is but a useless mass,
- A man is but an ass
- Who fights in a cuirass,
- So off, so off goes that cuirass.
-
- Others: Yes, yes, yes,
- So off goes that cuirass!
- (Removing
- cuirasses)
-
- Arac: These brassets, truth to tell,
- May look uncommon well,
- But in a fight
- They're much too tight,
- They're like a lobster shell,
- They're like a lobster shell!
-
- Others: Yes, yes, yes,
- They're like a lobster shell.
- (Removing
- their brassets)
-
- Arac: These things I treat the same
- (indicating leg pieces)
- (I quite forget their name.)
- They turn one's legs
- To cribbage pegs--
- Their aid I thus disclaim,
- Their aid I thus disclaim,
- Though I forget their name,
- Though I forget their name,
- Their aid, their aid I thus disclaim!
-
- Others: Yes, yes, yes,
- All: Their aid (we/they) thus disclaim!
-
- (They remove their leg pieces and wear close-fitting shape suits.)
-
- Enter Hilarion, Florian, and Cyril
-
- (Desperate fight between the three Princes
- and the three
- Knights, during which the Ladies on the
- battlements and
- the Soldiers on the stage sing the
- following chorus):
-
- CHORUS DURING THE FIGHT
- "This is our Duty"
-
- Chorus: This is our duty plain towards
- Our Princess all immaculate,
- We ought to bless her brothers' swords,
- And piously ejaculate:
- Oh, Hungary!
- Oh, Hungary!
- Oh, doughty sons of Hungary!
- May all success
- Attend and bless
- Your warlike ironmongery!
-
- Hilarion! Hilarion! Hilarion!
-
- (By this time, Arac, Guron, and
- Scynthius are
- on the ground, wounded --
- Hilarion, Cyril and
- Florian stand
- over them.)
-
- Princess: (Entering through gate and followed by Ladies,
- Hildebrand, and Gama.)
- Hold! stay your hands! -- we yield ourselves to you!
- Ladies, my brothers all lie bleeding there!
- Bind up their wounds -- but look the other way.
- (Coming down) Is this the end? (Bitterly to Lady
- Blanche)
- How say you, Lady Blanche--
- Can I with dignity my post resign?
- And if I do, will you then take my place?
-
- Blanche: To answer this, it's meet that we consult
- The great Potential Mysteries; I mean
- The five Subjunctive Possibilities--
- The May, the Might, the Would, the Could, the Should.
- Can you resign? The Prince May claim you; if
- He Might, you Could -- and if you Should, I Would!
-
- Princess: I thought as much! Then to my fate I yield--
- So ends my cherished scheme! Oh, I had hoped
- To band all women with my maiden throng,
- And make them all abjure tyrannic Man!
-
- Hildebd: A noble aim!
-
- Princess: You ridicule it now;
- But if I carried out this glorious scheme,
- At my exalted name Posterity
- Would bow in gratitude!
-
- Hildebd: But pray
- reflect --
- If you enlist all women in your cause,
- And make them all abjure tyrannic Man,
- The obvious question then arises, "How
- Is this Posterity to be provided?"
-
- Princess: I never thought of that! My Lady Blanche,
- How do you solve the riddle?
-
- Blanche: Don't ask me --
- Abstract Philosophy won't answer it.
- Take him -- he is your Shall. Give in to Fate!
-
- Princess: And you desert me. I alone am staunch!
-
- Hilarion: Madam, you placed your trust in Woman -- well,
- Woman has failed you utterly -- try Man,
- Give him one chance, it's only fair -- besides,
- Women are far too precious, too divine,
- To try unproven theories upon.
- Experiments, the proverb says, are made
- On humble subjects -- try our grosser clay,
- And mould it as you will!
-
- Cyril: Remember, too
- Dear Madam, if at any time you feel
- A-weary of the Prince, you can return
- To Castle Adamant, and rule your girls
- As heretofore, you know.
-
- Princess: And shall I find
- The Lady Psyche here?
-
- Psyche: If Cyril, ma'am,
- Does not behave himself, I think you will.
-
- Princess: And you Melissa, shall I find you here?
-
- Melissa: Madam, however Florian turns out,
- Unhesitatingly I answer, No!
-
- Gama: Consider this, my love, if your mama
- Had looked on matters from your point of view
- (I wish she had), why where would you have been?
-
- Blanche: There's an unbounded field of speculation,
- On which I could discourse for hours!
-
- Princess: No doubt!
- We will not trouble you. Hilarion,
- I have been wrong -- I see my error now.
- Take me, Hilarion -- "We will walk this world
- Yoked in all exercise of noble end!
- And so through those dark gates across the wild
- That no one knows!" Indeed, I love thee -- Come!
-
- Finale
- "With joy abiding"
-
- Princess: With joy abiding,
- Together gliding
- Through life's variety,
- In sweet society,
- And thus enthroning
- The love I'm owning,
- On this atoning
- I will rely!
-
- Chorus: It were profanity
- For poor humanity
- To treat as vanity
- The sway of Love.
- In no locality
- Or principality
- Is our mortality
- It's sway above!
-
- Hilarion: When day is fading,
- With serenading
- And such frivolity
- Of tender quality--
- With scented showers
- Of fairest flowers,
- The happy hours
- Will gaily fly!
- The happy hours will gaily fly!
-
- Chorus: It were profanity
- For poor humanity
- To treat as vanity
- The sway of Love.
- In no locality
- Or principality
- Is our mortality
- It's sway above!
-
- 1st Sops: In no lo- Others:
- cality Or princi- Its
- pality Is our mor- sway
- tality It's sway a- a-
- bove! bove!
-
- Princess & With scented Others:
- Hilarion: showers Of fairest Its
- flowers, The happy sway
- hours will gaily a-
- fly! bove!
-
- All: In no locality
- Or principality
- Is our mortality
- Above the sway of love!
-
-
- Curtain
-
-