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- Edition: A Midsummer Night's Dream
A Midsummer Night's Dream (Folio 1, 1623)
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1508 Actus Quartus.
1509 Enter Queene of Fairies, and Clowne, and Fairies, and the
1510 King behinde them.
1512While I thy amiable cheekes doe coy,
1514And kisse thy faire large eares, my gentle ioy.
1516Peas. Ready.
1518sieuer Cobweb.
1519Cob. Ready.
1521weapons in your hand, & kill me a red hipt humble-Bee,
1523the hony bag. Doe not fret your selfe too much in the
1525hony bag breake not, I would be loth to haue yon ouer-
1528Mus. Ready.
1531Mus. What's your will?
1534me-thinkes I am maruellous hairy about the face. And I
1536scratch.
1538loue.
1540vs haue the tongs and the bones.
1541Musicke Tongs, Rurall Musicke.
1543Clowne. Truly a pecke of Prouender; I could munch
1544your good dry Oates. Me-thinkes I haue a great desire
1546low.
1547Tita. I haue a venturous Fairy,
1549And fetch thee new Nuts.
1550Clown. I had rather haue a handfull or two of dried
1553Tyta. Sleepe thou, and I will winde thee in my arms,
1554Fairies be gone, and be alwaies away.
1557Enrings the barky fingers of the Elme.
1558O how I loue thee! how I dote on thee!
1559Enter Robin goodfellow and Oberon.
1560Ob. Welcome good Robin:
1562Her dotage now I doe begin to pitty.
1563For meeting her of late behinde the wood,
1565I did vpbraid her, and fall out with her.
1566For she his hairy temples then had rounded,
1569Was wont to swell like round and orient pearles;
1570Stood now within the pretty flouriets eyes,
1571Like teares that did their owne disgrace bewaile.
1572When I had at my pleasure taunted her,
1573And she in milde termes beg'd my patience,
1574I then did aske of her, her changeling childe,
1576To beare him to my Bower in Fairy Land.
1577And now I haue the Boy, I will vndoe
1578This hatefull imperfection of her eyes.
1581That he awaking when the other doe,
1582May all to Athens backe againe repaire,
1583And thinke no more of this nights accidents,
1584But as the fierce vexation of a dreame.
1588Dians bud, or Cupids flower,
1590Now my Titania wake you my sweet Queene.
1592Me-thought I was enamoured of an Asse.
1593Ob. There lies your loue.
1595Oh, how mine eyes doth loath this visage now!
1600 Musick still.
1602 peepe
1605Now thou and I new in amity,
1606And will to morrow midnight, solemnly
1609There shall the paires of faithfull Louers be
1610Wedded, with Theseus, all in iollity.
1611Rob. Faire King attend, and marke,
1612I doe heare the morning Larke.
1614Trip we after the nights shade;
1616Swifter then the wandering Moone.
1618Tell me how it came this night,
1619That I sleeping heere was found,
1620 Sleepers Lye still.
O With
158A Midsommernights Dreame.
1622 Winde Hornes.
1623Enter Theseus, Egeus, Hippolita and all his traine.
1625For now our obseruation is perform'd;
1626And since we haue the vaward of the day,
1628Vncouple in the Westerne valley, let them goe;
1630We will faire Queene, vp to the Mountaines top,
1632Of hounds and eccho in coniunction.
1633Hip. I was with Hercules and Cadmus once.
1634When in a wood of Creete they bayed the Beare
1635With hounds of Sparta; neuer did I heare
1636Such gallant chiding. For besides the groues,
1637The skies, the fountaines, euery region neere,
1638Seeme all one mutuall cry. I neuer heard
1640Thes. My hounds are bred out of the Spartan kinde,
1642With eares that sweepe away the morning dew,
1643Crooke kneed, and dew-lapt, like Thessalian Buls,
1644Slow in pursuit, but match'd in mouth like bels,
1645Each vnder each. A cry more tuneable
1646Was neuer hallowed to, nor cheer'd with horne,
1647In Creete, in Sparta, nor in Thessaly;
1650And this Lysander, this Demetrius is,
1651This Helena, olde Nedars Helena,
1652I wonder of this being heere together.
1654The right of May; and hearing our intent,
1655Came heere in grace of our solemnity.
1656But speake Egeus, is not this the day
1658Egeus. It is, my Lord.
1659Thes. Goe bid the hunts-men wake them with their
1660hornes.
1661 Hornes and they wake.
1662Shout within, they all start vp.
1664Begin these wood birds but to couple now?
1665Lys. Pardon my Lord.
1667I know you two are Riuall enemies.
1668How comes this gentle concord in the world,
1670To sleepe by hate, and feare no enmity.
1673I cannot truly say how I came heere.
1674But as I thinke (for truly would I speake)
1675And now I doe bethinke me, so it is;
1676I came with Hermia hither. Our intent
1677Was to be gone from Athens, where we might be
1678Without the perill of the Athenian Law.
1679Ege. Enough, enough, my Lord: you haue enough;
1680I beg the Law, the Law, vpon his head:
1681They would have stolne away, they would Demetrius,
1682Thereby to haue defeated you and me:
1683You of your wife, and me of my consent;
1686Of this their purpose hither, to this wood,
1687And I in furie hither followed them;
1688Faire Helena, in fancy followed me.
1689But my good Lord, I wot not by what power,
1690(But by some power it is) my loue
1691To Hermia (melted as the snow)
1692Seems to me now as the remembrance of an idle gaude,
1693Which in my childehood I did doat vpon:
1694And all the faith, the vertue of my heart,
1696Is onely Helena. To her, my Lord,
1697Was I betroth'd, ere I see Hermia,
1699But as in health, come to my naturall taste,
1700Now doe I wish it, loue it, long for it,
1701And will for euermore be true to it.
1702Thes. Faire Louers, you are fortunately met;
1704Egeus, I will ouer-beare your will;
1705For in the Temple, by and by with vs,
1707And for the morning now is something worne,
1709Away, with vs to Athens; three and three,
1711Come Hippolita. Exit Duke and Lords.
1713Like farre off mountaines turned into Clouds.
1715When euery things seemes double.
1716Hel. So me-thinkes:
1717And I haue found Demetrius, like a iewell,
1718Mine owne, and not mine owne.
1720That yet we sleepe, we dreame. Do not you thinke,
1721The Duke was heere, and bid vs follow him?
1722Her. Yea, and my Father.
1723Hel. And Hippolita.
1724Lys. And he bid vs follow to the Temple.
1725Dem. Why then we are awake; lets follow him, and
1726by the way let vs recount our dreames.
1727Bottome wakes. Exit Louers.
1729My next is, most faire Piramus. Hey ho. Peter Quince?
1730Flute the bellowes-mender? Snout the tinker? Starue-
1731ling? Gods my life! Stolne hence, and left me asleepe: I
1734if he goe about to expound this dreame. Me-thought I
1735was, there is no man can tell what. Me-thought I was,
1736and me-thought I had. But man is but a patch'd foole,
1738man hath not heard, the eare of man hath not seen, mans
1739hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceiue, nor his
1740heart to report, what my dreame was. I will get Peter
1741Quince to write a ballet of this dreame, it shall be called
1742Bottomes Dreame, because it hath no bottome; and I will
1745at her death. Exit.