0.4As it hath beene
sundry times pub
- 0.5lickely acted, by the Right honoura- 0.6ble, the Lord Chamberlaine his
0.8Written by William Shakespeare.
0.9¶ Imprinted at London, for
Thomas Fisher, and are to
0.10be
soulde at his
shoppe, at the Signe of the White Hart,
0.11in Fleete
streete. 1600.
21Enter Theseus, Hippolita, with others. 43NOw faire
Hippolita, our nuptiall hower
54Draws on apa
se: fower happy daies bring in
65An other Moone: but oh, me thinks, how
slow
76This old Moone waues! She lingers my de
sires,
87Like to a Stepdame, or a dowager,
98Long withering out a yong mans reuenewe.
109Hip. Fower daies will quickly
steepe them
selues in night:
1110Fower nights will quickly dreame away the time:
1211And then the Moone, like to a
siluer bowe,
1312Now bent in heauen,
shall beholde the night
1514The. Goe
Philostrate,
1615Stirre vp the
Athenian youth to merriments,
1716Awake the peart and nimble
spirit of mirth,
1817Turne melancholy foorth to funerals:
1918The pale companion is not for our pomp.
2019Hyppolita, I woo'd thee with my
sword,
2120And wonne thy loue, doing thee iniuries:
2221But I will wed thee in another key,
2322With pompe, with triumph, and with reueling.
2423Enter Egeus and his daughter Hermia, and Lysander 2524 and Helena, and Demetrius. 2625Ege. Happy be
Theseus, our renowned duke.
2726The. Thankes good
Egeus. Whats the newes with thee?
2827Ege. Full of vexation, come I, with complaint
2928Again
st my childe, my daughter
Hermia.
3029Stand forth Demetrius. 3231This man hath my con
sent to marry her.
3332Stand forth Lisander. 3433And my gratious Duke,
3534This man hath bewitcht the bo
some of my childe.
3635Thou, thou
Lysander, thou ha
st giuen her rimes,
3736And interchang'd loue tokens with my childe:
3837Thou ha
st, by moone-light, at her windowe
sung,
3938With faining voice, ver
ses of faining loue,
4039And
stolne the impre
ssion of her phanta
sie:
4140With bracelets of thy haire, rings, gawdes, conceites,
4241Knackes, tri
fles, no
segaies,
sweete meates (me
ssengers
4342Of
strong preuailement in vnhardened youth)
4443With cunning ha
st thou
filcht my daughters heart,
4544Turnd her obedience (which is due to mee)
4645To
stubborne har
shne
sse. And, my gratious Duke,
4746Be it
so,
she will not here, before your Grace,
4847Con
sent to marry with
Demetrius,
4948I beg the auncient priuiledge of
Athens: 5049As
she is mine, I may di
spo
se of her:
5150Which
shall be, either to this gentleman,
5251Or to her death; according to our lawe,
5352Immediatly prouided, in that ca
se.
5453The. What
say you,
Hermia? Be aduis'd, faire maid.
5554To you, your father
should be as a God:
5655One that compos'd your beauties: yea and one,
5756To whome you are but as a forme in wax,
5857By him imprinted, and within his power,
5958To leaue the
figure, or di
sfigure it:
6059Demetrius is a worthy gentleman.
6160Her. So is
Lisander.
The. In him
selfe he is:
6361But in this kinde, wanting your fathers voice,
6462The other mu
st be held the worthier.
Her.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
6563Her. I would my father lookt but with my eyes.
6664The. Rather your eyes mu
st, with his iudgement, looke,
6765Her. I doe intreat your grace, to pardon mee.
6866I know not by what power, I am made bould;
6967Nor how it may concerne my mode
sty,
7068In
such a pre
sence, here to plead my thoughts:
7169But I be
seech your Grace, that I may knowe
7270The wor
st that may befall mee in this ca
se,
7371If I refu
se to wed
Demetrius.
7472The. Either to dy the death, or to abiure,
7573For euer, the
society of men.
7674Therefore, faire
Hermia, que
stion your de
sires,
7775Knowe of your youth, examine well your blood,
7876Whether (if you yeelde not to your fathers choyce)
7977You can endure the liuery of a Nunne,
8078For aye to be in
shady cloy
ster, mew'd
8179To liue a barraine
sister all your life,
8280Chaunting faint hymnes, to the colde fruitle
sse Moone.
8381Thri
se ble
ssed they, that ma
ster
so there bloode,
8482To vndergoe
such maiden pilgrimage:
8583But earthlyer happy is the ro
se di
stild,
8684Then that, which, withering on the virgin thorne,
8785Growes, liues, and dies, in
single ble
ssedne
sse.
8886Her. So will I growe,
so liue,
so die my Lord,
8987Ere I will yield my virgin Patent, vp
9088Vnto his Lord
shippe, who
se vnwi
shed yoake
9189My
soule con
sents not to giue
souerainty.
9290The. Take time to paw
se, and by the next newe moone,
9391The
sealing day, betwixt my loue and mee,
9492For euerla
sting bond of fellow
shippe,
9593Vpon that day either prepare to dye,
9694For di
sobedience to your fathers will,
9795Or el
se to wed
Demetrius, as he would,
9896Or on
Dianaes altar to prote
st,
9997For aye, au
steritie and
single life.
Deme.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
10098Deme. Relent,
sweete
Hermia, and,
Lysander, yeeld
10199Thy crazed title to my certaine right.
102100Lys. You haue her fathers loue,
Demetrius: 103101Let me haue
Hermias: doe you marry him.
104102Egeus. Scornefull
Lysander, true, he hath my loue:
105103And what is mine, my loue
shall render him.
106104And
she is mine, and all my right of her
107105I doe e
state vnto
Demetrius.
108106Lysand. I am my Lord, as well deriu'd as hee,
109107As well po
sse
st: my loue is more than his:
110108My fortunes euery way as fairely rankt
111109(If not with vantage) as
Demetrius: 112110And (which is more then all the
se boa
stes can be)
113111I am belou'd of beautious
Hermia.
114112Why
should not I then pro
secute my right?
115113Demetrius, Ile auouch it to his heade,
116114Made loue to
Nedars daughter,
Helena,
117115And won her
soule: and
she (
sweete Ladie) dotes,
118116Deuoutly dotes, dotes in Idolatry,
119117Vpon this
spotted and incon
stant man.
120118The. I mu
st confe
sse, that I haue heard
so much;
121119And, with
Demetrius, thought to haue
spoke thereof:
122120But, being ouer full of
selfe a
ffaires,
123121My minde did loo
se it. But
Demetrius come,
124122And come
Egeus, you
shall goe with mee:
125123I haue
some priuate
schooling for you both.
126124For you, faire
Hermia, looke you arme your
selfe,
127125To
fit your fancies, to your fathers will;
128126Or el
se, the Law of
Athens yeelds you vp
129127(Which by no meanes we may extenuate)
130128To death, or to a vowe of
single life.
131129Come my
Hyppolita: what cheare my loue?
132130Demetrius and
Egeus goe along:
133131I mu
st employ you in
some bu
sine
sse,
134132Again
st our nuptiall, and conferre with you
Of
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
135133Of
some thing, nerely that concernes your
selues.
136134Ege. With duety and de
sire, we follow you.
Exeunt. 138135Lysand. How now my loue? Why is your cheeke
so pale?
139136How chance the ro
ses there doe fade
so fa
st?
140137Her. Belike, for want of raine: which I could well
141138Beteeme them, from the tempe
st of my eyes.
142139Lis. Eigh me: for aught that I could euer reade,
143140Could euer here by tale or hi
story,
144141The cour
se of true loue neuer did runne
smoothe:
145142But either it was di
fferent in bloud;
146143Her. O cro
sse! too high to be inthrald to loue.
147144Lis. Or el
se mi
sgra
ffed, in re
spe
ct of yeares;
148145Her. O
spight! too olde to be ingag'd to young.
149146Lis. Or el
se, it
stoode vpon the choyce of friends;
150147Her. O hell, to choo
se loue by anothers eyes!
151148Lys. Or, if there were a
sympathy in choyce,
152149Warre, death or
sickne
sse, did lay
siege to it;
153150Making it momentany, as a
sound;
154151Swift, as a
shadowe;
short, as any dreame;
155152Briefe, as the lightning in the collied night,
156153That (in a
spleene) vnfolds both heauen and earth;
157154And, ere a man hath power to
say, beholde,
158155The iawes of darkene
sse do deuoure it vp:
159156So quicke bright things come to confu
sion.
160157Her. If then true louers haue bin euer cro
st,
161158It
stands as an edi
ct, in de
stiny:
162159Then let vs teach our triall patience:
163160Becau
se it is a cu
stomary cro
sse,
164161As dewe to loue, as thoughts, and dreames, and
sighes,
165162Wi
shes, and teares; poore Fancies followers.
166163Lys. A good per
swa
sion: therefore heare mee,
Hermia: 167164I haue a widowe aunt, a dowager,
168165Of great reuenew, and
she hath no childe:
169166From
Athens is her hou
se remote,
seauen leagues:
170167And
she re
spe
ctes mee, as her only
sonne:
There,
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
171168There, gentle
Hermia, may I marry thee:
172169And to that place, the
sharpe
Athenian law
173170Can not pur
sue vs. If thou loue
st mee, then
174171Steale forth thy fathers hou
se, to morrow night:
175172And in the wood, a league without the towne
176173(Where I did meete thee once with
Helena 177174To do ob
seruance to a morne of May)
178175There will I
stay for thee.
180177I
sweare to thee, by
Cupids stronge
st bowe,
181178By his be
st arrowe, with the golden heade,
182179By the
simplicitie of
Venus doues,
183180By that which knitteth
soules, and pro
spers loues,
184181And by that
fire, which burnd the
Carthage queene,
185182When the fal
se
Troian vnder
saile was
seene,
186183By all the vowes that euer men haue broke,
187184(In number more then euer women
spoke)
188185In that
same place thou ha
st appointed mee,
189186To morrow truely will I meete with thee.
190187Lys. Keepe promi
se loue: looke, here comes
Helena.
192189Her. God
speede faire
Helena: whither away?
193190Hel. Call you mee faire? That faire againe vn
say.
194191Demetrius loues your faire: o happy faire!
195192Your eyes are load
starres, and your tongues
sweete aire
196193More tunable then larke, to
sheepeheards eare,
197194When wheat is greene, when hauthorne buddes appeare.
198195Sickne
sse is catching: O, were fauour
so,
199196Your words I catch, faire
Hermia, ere I goe,
200197My eare
should catch your voice, my eye, your eye,
201198My tongue
should catch your tongues
sweete melody.
202199Were the world mine,
Demetrius being bated,
203200The re
st ile giue to be to you tran
slated.
204201O, teach mee how you looke, and with what Art,
ion of Demetrius heart.
I
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
206203Her. I frowne vpon him; yet hee loues mee
still.
207204Hel. O that your frowns would teach my
smiles
such
skil.
209205Her. I giue him cur
ses; yet he giues mee loue.
210206Hel. O that my prayers could
such a
ffe
ction mooue.
211207Her. The more I hate, the more he followes mee.
212208Hel. The more I loue, the more he hateth mee.
213209Her. His folly,
Helena, is no fault of mine.
214210Hel. None but your beauty; would that fault were mine.
215211Her. Take comfort: he no more
shall
see my face:
216212Lysander and my
selfe will
fly this place.
217213Before the time I did
Lisander see,
218214Seem'd
Athens as a Paradi
se to mee.
219215O then, what graces in my loue dooe dwell,
220216That hee hath turnd a heauen vnto a hell!
221217Lys. Helen, to you our mindes wee will vnfould:
222218To morrow night, when
Phoebe doth beholde
223219Her
siluer vi
sage, in the watry gla
sse,
224220Decking, with liquid pearle, the bladed gra
sse
225221(A time, that louers
flights doth
still conceale)
226222Through
Athens gates, haue wee deuis'd to
steale.
227223Her. And in the wood, where often you and I,
228224Vpon faint Primro
se beddes, were wont to lye,
229225Emptying our bo
somes, of their coun
sell
sweld,
230226There my
Lysander, and my
selfe
shall meete,
231227And thence, from
Athens, turne away our eyes,
232228To
seeke new friends and
strange companions.
233229Farewell,
sweete playfellow: pray thou for vs:
234230And good lucke graunt thee thy
Demetrius.
235231Keepe word
Lysander: we mu
st starue our
sight,
236232From louers foode, till morrow deepe midnight.
238234Lys. I will my
Hermia.
Helena adieu:
239235As you on him,
Demetrius dote on you.
Exit Lysander. 240236Hele. How happie
some, ore other
some, can be!
241237Through
Athens, I am thought as faire as
shee.
But
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
242238But what of that?
Demetrius thinkes not
so:
243239He will not knowe, what all, but hee doe know.
244240And as hee erres, doting on
Hermias eyes:
245241So I, admiring of his qualities.
246242Things ba
se and vile, holding no quantitie,
247243Loue can tran
spo
se to forme and dignitie.
248244Loue lookes not with the eyes, but with the minde:
249245And therefore is wingd
Cupid painted blinde.
250246Nor hath loues minde of any iudgement ta
ste:
251247Wings, and no eyes,
figure, vnheedy ha
ste.
252248And therefore is loue
said to bee a childe:
253249Becau
se, in choyce, he is
so oft beguil'd.
254250As waggi
sh boyes, in game, them
selues for
sweare:
255251So, the boy, Loue, is periur'd euery where.
256252For, ere
Demetrius lookt on
Hermias eyen,
257253Hee hayld downe othes, that he was onely mine.
258254And when this haile
some heate, from
Hermia, felt,
259255So he di
ssolued, and
showrs of oathes did melt.
260256I will goe tell him of faire
Hermias flight:
261257Then, to the wodde, will he, to morrow night,
262258Pur
sue her: and for this intelligence,
263259If I haue thankes, it is a deare expen
se:
264260But herein meane I to enrich my paine,
265261To haue his
sight thither, and back againe.
Exit. 266262 Enter Quince, the Carpenter; and Snugge, the Ioyner; and 267263 Bottom, the Weauer; and Flute, the Bellowes mender; & 268264 Snout, the Tinker; and Starueling the Tayler. 269265Quin. Is all our company heere?
270266Bot. You were be
st to call them generally, man by
271267man, according to the
scrippe.
272268Quin. Here is the
scrowle of euery mans name, which is
273269thought
fit, through al
Athens, to play in our Enterlude, be
- 274270fore the Duke, & the Dutches, on his wedding day at night.
276271Bott. Fir
st good
Peeter Quince,
say what the Play treats on:
277272then read the names of the A
ctors: &
so grow to a point.
Quin.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
279273Quin. Mary, our Play is the mo
st lamentable comedy,
280274and mo
st cruell death of
Pyramus and
Thisby.
281275Bot. A very good peece of worke, I a
ssure you, & a mer
- 282276ry. Now good
Peeter Quince, call forth your A
ctors, by the
283277scrowle. Ma
sters,
spreade your
selues.
284278Quin. An
swere, as I call you.
Nick Bottom, the Weauer?
286279Bott. Readie: Name what part I am for, and proceede.
288280Quin. You,
Nick Bottom are
set downe for
Pyramus.
290281Bott. What is
Pyramus? A louer, or a tyrant?
291282Quin. A louer that kils him
selfe, mo
st gallant, for loue.
293283Bott. That will a
ske
some teares in the true performing
294284of it. If I doe it, let the Audience looke to their eyes: I wil
295285mooue
stormes: I will condole, in
some mea
sure. To the
296286re
st yet, my chiefe humour is for a tyrant. I could play
Er- 297287cles rarely, or a part to teare a Cat in, to make all
split the
298288raging rocks: and
shiuering
shocks,
shall breake the locks
299289of pri
son gates, and
Phibbus carre
shall
shine from farre,
300290and make & marre the fooli
sh Fates. This was loftie. Now,
301291name the re
st of the Players. This is
Ercles vaine, a tyrants
302292vaine: A louer is more condoling.
304293Quin. Francis Flute, the Bellowes mender?
305294Flu. Here
Peeter Quince.
306295Quin. Flute, you mu
st take
Thisby, on you.
307296Flu. What is
Thisby? A wandring knight?
308297Quin. It is the Lady, that
Pyramus mu
st loue.
309298Fl. Nay faith: let not me play a
womā: I haue a beard cō
-(ming.
311299Quin. Thats all one: you
shall play it in a Ma
ske: and you
312300may
speake as
small as you will.
313301Bott. And I may hide my face, let me play
Thisby to: Ile
314302speake in a mon
strous little voice;
Thisne,
Thisne, ah
Py-,
315303ramus my louer deare, thy
Thysby deare, & Lady deare.
317304Qu. No, no: you mu
st play
Pyramus: &
Flute, you
Thysby.
319305Bot. Well, proceede.
Qui. Robin Starueling, the Tailer?
321306Star. Here
Peeter Quince.
322307Quin. Robin Starueling, you mu
st play
Thysbyes mother:
Tom
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
325309Snowt. Here
Peter Quince.
326310Quin. You,
Pyramus father; my
selfe,
Thisbies father;
327311Snugge, the Ioyner, you the Lyons part: And I hope here
329313Snug. Haue you the Lyons part written? Pray you, if it
330314bee, giue it mee: for I am
slowe of
studie.
331315Quin. You may doe it,
extempore: for it is nothing but
333317Bott. Let mee play the Lyon to. I will roare, that I will
334318doe any mans heart good to heare mee. I will roare, that
335319I will make the Duke
say; Let him roare againe: let him
337321Quin. And you
should do it too terribly, you would fright
338322the Dutche
sse, and the Ladies, that they would
shrike: and
339323that were inough to hang vs all.
340324All. That would hang vs, euery mothers
sonne.
341325Bot. I grant you, friends, if you
should fright the Ladies
342326out of their wits, they would haue no more di
scretion, but
343327to hang vs: but I will aggrauate my voice
so, that I wil
344328roare you as gently, as any
sucking doue: I will roare you,
345329and 'twere any Nightingale.
347330Quin. You can play no part but
Piramus: for
Piramus is a
348331sweete fac't man; a proper man as one
shall
see in a
som
- 349332mers day; a mo
st louely gentlemanlike man: therefore
350333you mu
st needes play
Piramus.
351334Bot. Well: I will vndertake it. What beard were I be
st 353336Quin. Why? what you will.
354337Bot. I wil di
scharge it, in either your
straw colour beard,
355338your Orange tawnie bearde, your purple in graine beard,
356339or your french crowne colour beard, your per
fit yellow.
358340Quin. Some of your french crownes haue no haire at all;
359341and then you will play bare fac't. But mai
sters here are
360342your parts, and I am to intreat you, reque
st you, and de
sire
you
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
361343you, to con them by to morrow night: and meete me in
362344the palace wood, a mile without the towne, by Moone
- 363345light; there will wee rehear
se: for if wee meete in the city,
364346wee
shal be dogd with company, and our deui
ses known.
365347In the meane time, I will draw a bill of properties,
such as
366348our play wants. I pray you faile me not.
367349Bot. Wee will meete, & there we may rehear
se mo
st ob
- 368350scenely and coragiou
sly. Take paines, bee per
fit: adieu.
370351Quin. At the Dukes oke wee meete.
371352Bot. Enough: holde, or cut bow
strings.
Exeunt. 373353Enter a Fairie at one doore, and Robin goodfellow 375355Robin. How now
spirit, whither wander you?
376356Fa. Ouer hill, ouer dale, thorough bu
sh, thorough brier,
377357Ouer parke, ouer pale, thorough
flood, thorough
fire:
378358I do wander euery where;
swifter than the Moons
sphere:
379359And I
serue the Fairy Queene, to dew her orbs vpon the (greene.
380360The cow
slippes tall her Pen
sioners bee,
381361In their gold coats,
spottes you
see:
382362Tho
se be Rubies, Fairie fauours:
383363In tho
se freckles, liue their
sauours.
384364I mu
st goe
seeke
some dew droppes here,
385365And hang a pearle in euery cou
slippes eare.
386366Farewell thou Lobbe of
spirits: Ile be gon.
387367Our Queene, and all her Elues come here anon.
388368Rob. The king doth keepe his Reuels here to night.
389369Take heede the Queene come not within his
sight.
390370For
Oberon is pa
ssing fell and wrath:
391371Becau
se that
she, as her attendant, hath
392372A louely boy
stollen, from an Indian king:
393373She neuer had
so
sweete a changeling.
394374And iealous
Oberon would haue the childe,
395375Knight of his traine, to trace the forre
sts wilde.
396376But
shee, perforce, withhoulds the loued boy,
397377Crownes him with
flowers, and makes him all her ioy.
And
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
398378And now, they neuer meete in groue, or greene,
399379By fountaine cleare, or
spangled
starlight
sheene,
400380But they doe
square, that all their Elues, for feare,
401381Creepe into acorne cups, and hide them there.
402382Fa. Either I mi
stake your
shape, and making, quite,
403383Or els you are that
shrewde and knaui
sh sprite,
404384Call'd
Robin goodfellow. Are not you hee,
405385That frights the maidens of the Villageree,
406386Skim milke, and
sometimes labour in the querne,
407387And bootle
sse make the breathle
sse hu
swife cherne,
408388And
sometime make the drinke to beare no barme,
409389Mi
sselead nightwanderers, laughing at their harme?
410390Tho
se, that Hobgoblin call you, and
sweete Puck,
411391You doe their worke, and they
shall haue good luck.
413393Rob. Thou
speake
st aright; I am that merry wanderer of (the night.
415394I iea
st to
Oberon, and make him
smile,
416395When I a fat and beane-fed hor
se beguile;
417396Neyghing, in likene
sse of a
filly fole,
418397And
sometime lurke I in a go
ssippes bole,
419398In very likene
sse of a ro
sted crabbe,
420399And when
she drinkes, again
st her lips I bob,
421400And on her withered dewlop, poure the ale.
422401The wi
se
st Aunt, telling the
sadde
st tale,
423402Sometime, for three foote
stoole, mi
staketh mee:
424403Then
slippe I from her bumme, downe topples
she,
425404And tailour cryes, and falles into a co
ffe;
426405And then the whole Quire hould their hippes, and lo
ffe,
427406And waxen in their myrth, and neeze, and
sweare
428407A merrier hower was neuer wa
sted there.
429408But roome Faery: here comes
Oberon.
430409Fa. And here, my mi
stre
sse. Would that he were gon.
432410 Enter the King of Fairies, at one doore, with his traine; 433411and the Queene, at another, with hers. 434412Ob. Ill met by moonelight, proud
Tytania.
Qu.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
436413Qu. What, Iealous
Oberon? Fairy
skippe hence.
437414I haue for
sworne his bedde, and company.
438415Ob. Tarry, ra
sh wanton. Am not I thy Lord?
439416Qu. Then I mu
st be thy Lady: but I know
440417When thou ha
st stollen away from Fairy land,
441418And in the
shape of
Corin,
sat all day,
442419Playing on pipes of corne, and ver
sing loue,
443420To amorous
Phillida. Why art thou here
444421Come from the farthe
st steppe of
India?
445422But that, for
sooth, the boun
sing
Amason,
446423Your bu
skind mi
stre
sse, and your warriour loue,
447424To
Theseus mu
st be wedded; and you come,
448425To giue their bedde, ioy and pro
speritie.
449426Ob. How can
st thou thus, for
shame,
Tytania,
450427Glaunce at my credit, with
Hippolita?
451428Knowing, I know thy loue to
Theseus.
452429Did
st not thou lead him through the glimmering night,
453430From
Perigenia, whom he raui
shed?
454431And make him, with faire Eagles, breake his faith
455432With
Ariadne, and
Antiopa?
456433Quee. The
se are the forgeries of iealou
sie:
457434And neuer,
since the middle Sommers
spring,
458435Met we on hill, in dale, forre
st, or meade,
459436By paued fountaine, or by ru
shie brooke,
460437Or in the beached margent of the Sea,
461438To daunce our ringlets to the whi
stling winde,
462439But with thy brawles thou ha
st di
sturbd our
sport.
463440Therefore the windes, pyping to vs in vaine,
464441As in reuenge, haue
suckt vp, from the Sea,
465442Contagious fogges: which, falling in the land,
466443Hath euery pelting riuer made
so proude,
467444That they haue ouerborne their Continents.
468445The Oxe hath therefore
stretcht his yoake in vaine,
469446The Ploughman lo
st his
sweat, and the greene corne
470447Hath rotted, ere his youth attainde a bearde:
The
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
471448The fold
stands empty, in the drowned
field,
472449And crowes are fatted with the murrion
flocke.
473450The nine mens Morris is
fild vp with mudde:
474451And the queint Mazes, in the wanton greene,
475452For lacke of tread, are vndi
stingui
shable.
476453The humane mortals want their winter heere.
477454No night is now with hymne or carroll ble
st.
478455Therefore the Moone (the gouerne
sse of
floods)
479456Pale in her anger, wa
shes all the aire;
480457That Rheumaticke di
sea
ses doe abound.
481458And, thorough this di
stemperature, wee
see
482459The
sea
sons alter: hoary headed fro
sts
483460Fall in the fre
sh lappe of the Crym
son ro
se,
484461And on old
Hyems chinne and Icy crowne,
485462An odorous Chaplet of
sweete Sommer buddes
486463Is, as in mockery,
set. The Spring, the Sommer,
487464The childing Autumne, angry Winter change
488465Their wonted Liueries: and the mazed worlde,
489466By their increa
se, now knowes not which is which:
490467And this
same progeny of euils,
491468Comes from our debate, from our di
ssention:
492469We are their Parents and originall.
493470Oberon. Doe you amend it then: it lyes in you.
494471Why
should
Titania cro
sse her
Oberon?
495472I doe but begge a little Changeling boy,
497474Queene. Set your heart at re
st.
498475The Faiery Land buies not the childe of mee,
499476His mother was a Votre
sse of my order:
500477And in the
spiced
Indian ayer, by night,
501478Full often hath
she go
ssipt, by my
side,
502479And
sat, with me on
Neptunes yellow
sands
503480Marking th'embarked traders on the
flood:
504481When we haue laught to
see the
sailes conceaue,
505482And grow bigge bellied, with the wanton winde:
Which
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
506483Which
she, with prettie, and with
swimming gate,
507484Following (her wombe then rich with my young
squire)
508485Would imitate, and
saile vpon the land,
509486To fetch me tri
fles, and returne againe,
510487As from a voyage, rich with marchandi
se.
511488But
she, being mortall, of that boy did dye,
512489And, for her
sake, doe I reare vp her boy:
513490And, for her
sake, I will not part with him.
514491Ob. How long, within this wood, entend you
stay?
515492Quee. Perchaunce, till after
Theseus wedding day.
516493If you will patiently daunce in our Round,
517494And
see our Moonelight Reuelles, goe with vs:
518495If not,
shunne me, and I will
spare your haunts.
519496Ob. Giue mee that boy, and I will goe with thee.
520497Quee. Not for thy Fairy kingdome. Fairies away.
521498We
shall chide downeright, if I longer
stay.
Exeunt. 522499Ob. Well: goe thy way. Thou
shalt not from this groue,
523500Till I torment thee, for this iniury.
524501My gentle
Pucke come hither: thou remembre
st,
525502Since once I
sat vpon a promontory,
526503And heard a Mearemaide, on a Dolphins backe,
527504Vttering
such dulcet and hermonious breath,
528505That the rude
sea grewe ciuill at her
song,
529506And cettaine
starres
shot madly from their Spheares,
530507To heare the Sea-maids mu
sicke.
532509Ob. That very time, I
saw (but thou could'
st not)
533510Flying betweene the colde Moone and the earth,
534511Cupid, all arm'd: a certaine aime he tooke
535512At a faire Ve
stall, throned by we
st,
536513And loos'd his loue-
shaft
smartly, from his bowe,
537514As it
should pearce a hundred thou
sand hearts:
538515But, I might
see young
Cupids fiery
shaft
539516Quencht in the cha
st beames of the watry Moone:
540517And the imperiall Votre
sse pa
ssed on,
In
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
541518In maiden meditation, fancy free.
542519Yet markt I, where the bolt of
Cupid fell.
543520It fell vpon a little we
sterne
flower;
544521Before, milke white; now purple, with loues wound,
545522And maidens call it, Loue in idlene
sse.
546523Fetch mee that
flowre: the herbe I
shewed thee once.
547524The iewce of it, on
sleeping eyeliddes laide,
548525Will make or man or woman madly dote,
549526Vpon the next liue creature that it
sees.
550527Fetch mee this herbe, and be thou here againe
551528Ere the
Leuiathan can
swimme a league.
552529Pu. Ile put a girdle, roūd about the earth, in forty minutes.
554530Oberon. Hauing once this iuice,
555531Ile watch
Titania, when
she is a
sleepe,
556532And droppe the liquor of it, in her eyes:
557533The next thing then
she, waking, lookes vpon
558534(Be it on Lyon, Beare, or Wolfe, or Bull,
559535On medling Monky, or on bu
sie Ape)
560536She
shall pur
sue it, with the
soule of Loue.
561537And ere I take this charme, from of her
sight
562538(As I can take it with another herbe)
563539Ile make her render vp her Page, to mee.
564540But, who comes here? I am inui
sible,
565541And I will ouerheare their conference.
566542Enter Demetrius, Helena following him. 567543Deme. I loue thee not: therefore pur
sue me not,
568544Where is
Lysander, and faire
Hermia?
569545The one Ile
stay: the other
stayeth me.
570546Thou told
st me, they were
stolne vnto this wood:
571547And here am I, and wodde, within this wood:
572548Becau
se I cannot meete my
Hermia.
573549Hence, get the gone, and follow mee no more.
574550Hel. You draw mee, you hard hearted Adamant:
575551But yet you draw not Iron. For my heart
576552Is true as
steele. Leaue you your power to draw,
And
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
577553And I
shall haue no power to follow you.
578554Deme. Doe I enti
se you? Doe I
speake you faire?
579555Or rather doe I not in plaine
st truthe,
580556Tell you I doe not, not I cannot loue you?
581557Hele. And euen, for that, do I loue you, the more:
582558I am your Spaniell: and,
Demetrius,
583559The more you beat mee, I will fawne on you.
584560V
se me but as your Spaniell:
spurne me,
strike mee,
585561Negle
ct mee, loo
se me: onely giue me leaue
586562(Vnworthie as I am) to follow you.
587563What wor
ser place can I begge, in your loue
588564(And yet, a place of high re
spe
ct with mee)
589565Then to be v
sed as you v
se your dogge.
590566Deme. Tempt not, too much, the hatred of my
spirit.
591567For I am
sick, when I do looke on thee.
592568Hele. And I am
sick, when I looke not on you.
593569Deme. You doe impeach your mode
stie too much,
594570To leaue the citie, and commit your
selfe,
595571Into the hands of one that loues you not,
596572To tru
st the opportunitie of night,
597573And the ill coun
sell of a de
sert place,
598574With the rich worth of your virginitie.
599575Hel. Your vertue is my priuiledge: For that
600576It is not night, when I doe
see your face.
601577Therefore, I thinke, I am not in the night,
602578Nor doth this wood lacke worlds of company.
603579For you, in my re
spe
ct, are all the world.
604580Then, how can it be
saide, I am alone,
605581When all the world is here, to looke on mee?
606582Deme. Ile runne from thee, and hide me in the brakes,
607583And leaue thee to the mercy of wilde bea
stes.
608584Hel. The wilde
st hath not
such a heart as you.
609585Runne when you will: The
story
shall be chaung'd:
610586Apollo flies and
Daphne holds the cha
se:
611587The Doue pur
sues the Gri
ffon: the milde Hinde
Makes
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
612588Makes
speede to catch the Tigre. Bootele
sse
speede,
613589When cowardi
se pur
sues, and valour
flies.
614590Demet. I will not
stay thy que
stions. Let me goe:
615591Or if thou followe mee, do not beleeue,
616592But I
shall doe thee mi
schiefe, in the wood.
617593Hel. I, in the Temple, in the towne, the
fielde,
618594You doe me mi
schiefe. Fy
Demetrius.
619595Your wrongs doe
set a
scandall on my
sex:
620596We cannot
fight for loue, as men may doe:
621597We
should be woo'd, and were not made to wooe.
622598Ile follow thee and make a heauen of hell,
623599To dy vpon the hand I loue
so well.
624600Ob. Fare thee well Nymph. Ere he do leaue this groue,
625601Thou
shalt
fly him, and he
shall
seeke thy loue.
626602Ha
st thou the
flower there? Welcome wanderer.
629605Ob. I pray thee giue it mee.
630606I know a banke where the wilde time blowes,
631607Where Oxlips, and the nodding Violet growes,
632608Quite ouercanopi'd with lu
shious woodbine,
633609With
sweete mu
ske ro
ses, and with Eglantine:
634610There
sleepes
Tytania,
sometime of the night,
635611Luld in the
se
flowers, with daunces and delight:
636612And there the
snake throwes her enammeld
skinne,
637613Weed wide enough to wrappe a Fairy in.
638614And, with the iuyce of this, Ile
streake her eyes,
639615And make her full of hatefull phanta
sies.
640616Take thou
some of it, and
seeke through this groue:
641617A
sweete
Athenian Lady is in loue,
642618With a di
sdainefull youth: annoint his eyes.
643619But doe it, when the next thing he e
spies,
644620May be the Ladie. Thou
shalt know the man,
645621By the
Athenian garments he hath on.
646622E
ffe
ct it with
some care; that he may prooue
More
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
647623More fond on her, then
she vpon her loue:
648624And looke thou meete me ere the
fir
st Cocke crowe.
649625Pu. Feare not my Lord: your
seruant
shall do
so.
Exeunt. 650626Enter Tytania Queene of Fairies, with her traine. 651627Quee. Come, now a Roundell, and a Fairy
song:
652628Then, for the third part of a minute hence,
653629Some to kill cankers in the mu
sk ro
se buds,
654630Some warre with Reremi
se, for their lethren wings,
655631To make my
small Elues coates, and
some keepe backe
656632The clamorous Owle, that nightly hootes and wonders
657633At our queint
spirits: Sing me now a
sleepe:
658634Then to your o
ffices, and let mee re
st.
You spotted Snakes, with double tongue,
661637Thorny Hedgehogges be not
seene,
662638Newts and blindewormes do no wrong,
663639Come not neere our Fairy Queene.
665641Sing in our
sweete Lullaby,
666642Lulla, lulla, lullaby, lulla, lulla, lullaby,
667643Neuer harme, nor
spell, nor charme,
668644Come our louely lady nigh.
669645So good night, with lullaby.
6706461. Fai. Weauing Spiders come not heere:
671647 Hence you long legd Spinners, hence:
672648Beetles blacke approach not neere:
673649Worme nor
snaile doe no o
ffence.
674650Philomele with melody, &c.
6756512. Fai. Hence away: now all is well:
676652 One aloofe,
stand Centinell.
678654Ob. What thou
see
st, when thou doe
st wake,
679655Doe it for thy true loue take:
680656Loue and langui} for his
sake.
681657Be it Ounce, or Catte, or Beare,
Pard,
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
682658Pard, or Boare with bri
stled haire,
683659In thy eye that
shall appeare,
684660When thou wak'
st, it is thy deare:
685661Wake, when
some vile thing is neere.
686662Enter Lysander: and Hermia. 687663Lys. Faire loue, you fainte, with wandring in the wood:
688664And to
speake troth I haue forgot our way.
689665Weele re
st vs
Hermia, if you thinke it good,
690666And tarry for the comfor of the day.
691667Her. Bet it
so
Lysander: finde you out a bedde:
692668For I, vpon this banke, will re
st my head.
693669Lys. One turfe
shall
serue, as pillow, for vs both,
694670One heart, one bedde, two bo
somes, and one troth.
695671Her. Nay god
Lysander: for my
sake, my deere
696672Ly further o
ff, yet; doe not lye
so neere.
697673Lys. O take the
sen
se,
sweete, of my innocence.
698674Loue takes the meaning, in loues conference,
699675I meane that my heart vnto yours it knit;
700676So that but one heart wee can make of it:
701677Two bo
somes interchained with an oath:
702678So then two bo
somes, and a
single troth.
703679Then, by your
side, no bed-roome me deny:
704680For lying
so,
Hermia, I doe not lye.
705681Her. Lysander riddles very prettily.
706682Now much be
shrewe my manners, and my pride,
707683If
Hermia meant to
say,
Lysander lyed.
708684But gentle friend, for loue and curte
sie,
709685Ly further o
ff, in humane mode
sty:
710686Such
separation, as may well be
said
711687Becomes a vertuous batcheler, and a maide,
712688So farre be di
stant, and good night
sweete friend:
713689Thy loue nere alter till thy
sweete life end.
714690Lys. Amen, amen, to that faire prayer,
say I,
715691And then end life, when I end loyalty.
716692Heere is my bed:
sleepe giue thee all his re
st.
VVith
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
717693Her. With halfe that wi
sh, the wi
shers eyes be pre
st.
719695Puck. Through the forre
st haue I gone:
720696But
Athenian found I none,
721697On who
se eyes I might approue
722698This
flowers force in
stirring loue.
723699Night and
silence. Who is heere?
724700Weedes of
Athens he doth weare:
725701This is hee (my ma
ster
saide)
726702De
spi
sed the
Athenian maide:
727703And here the maiden,
sleeping
sound,
728704On the danke and dirty ground.
729705Pretty
sowle,
she dur
st not lye,
730706Neere this lack-loue, this kil-curte
sie
731707Churle, vpon thy eyes I throwe
732708All the power this charme doth owe:
733709When thou wak'
st, let loue forbidde
734710Sleepe, his
seat, on thy eye lidde.
735711So awake, when I am gon:
736712For I mu
st now to
Oberon.
Exit. 737713Enter Demetrius and Helena running. 738714Hel. Stay; though thou kill mee,
sweete
Demetrius.
739715De. I charge thee hence, and doe not haunt mee thus.
740716Hele. O, wilt thou darkling leaue me? doe not
so.
741717De. Stay, on thy perill: I alone will goe.
743718Hel. O, I am out of breath, in this fond cha
se,
744719The more my prayer, the le
sser is my grace.
745720Happie is
Hermia, where
soere
she lies:
746721For
she hath ble
ssed, and attra
ctiue eyes.
747722How came her eyes
so bright? Not with
salt teares.
748723If
so, my eyes are oftner wa
sht then hers.
749724No, no: I am as vgly as a Beare:
750725For bea
stes that meete mee, runne away, for feare.
751726Therefore, no maruaile, though
Demetrius 752727Doe, as a mon
ster,
fly my pre
sence, thus.
What
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
753728What wicked and di
ssembling gla
sse, of mine,
754729Made me compare with
Hermias sphery eyen!
755730But, who is here?
Lysander, on the ground?
756731Dead, or a
sleepe? I
see no blood, no wound.
757732Lysander, if you liue, good
sir awake.
758733Lys. And runne through
fire, I will for thy
sweete
sake.
759734Tran
sparent
Helena, nature
shewes arte,
760735That through thy bo
some, makes me
see thy heart.
761736Where is
Demetrius? Oh how
fit a word
762737Is that vile name, to peri
sh on my
sworde!
763738Hel. Do not
say
so,
Lysander,
say not
so.
764739What though he loue your
Hermia? Lord, what though?
765740Yet
Hermia still loues you: then be content.
766741Lys. Content with
Hermia? No: I doe repent
767742The tedious minutes, I with her haue
spent.
768743Not
Hermia, but
Helena I loue.
769744VVho will not change a Rauen for a doue?
770745The will of man is by his rea
son
swai'd:
771746And rea
son
saies you are the worthier maide.
772747Things growing are not ripe, vntill their
sea
son:
773748So I, being young, till now ripe not to rea
son.
774749And touching now, the point of humane
skill,
775750Rea
son becomes the Mar
shall to my will,
776751And leads mee to your eyes; where I orelooke
777752Loues
stories, written in loues riche
st booke.
778753Hel. Wherefore was I to this keene mockery borne?
779754When, at your hands, did I de
serue this
scorne?
780755I
st not enough, i
st not enough, young man,
781756That I did neuer, no nor neuer can,
782757De
serue a
sweete looke from
Demetrius eye,
783758But you mu
st flout my in
su
fficiency?
784759Good troth you doe mee wrong (good
sooth you doe)
785760In
such di
sdainfull manner, mee to wooe.
786761But, fare you well: perforce, I mu
st confe
sse,
787762I thought you Lord of more true gentlene
sse.
O,
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
788763O, that a Ladie, of one man refus'd,
789764Should, of another, therefore be abus'd!
Exit. 790765Lys. She
sees not
Hermia.
Hermia,
sleepe thou there,
791766And neuer mai
st thou come
Lysander neere.
792767For, as a
surfet of the
sweete
st things
793768The deepe
st loathing, to the
stomacke bringes:
794769Or, as the here
sies, that men doe leaue,
795770Are hated mo
st of tho
se they did deceiue:
796771So thou, my
surfet, and my here
sie,
797772Of all bee hated; but the mo
st, of mee:
798773And all my powers addre
sse your loue and might,
799774To honour
Helen, and to be her knight.
Exit. 800775Her. Helpe mee
Lysander, helpe mee: do thy be
st 801776To pluck this crawling
serpent, from my bre
st.
802777Ay mee, for pittie. What a dreame was here?
803778Lysander looke, how I doe quake with feare.
804779Me thoughr, a
serpent eate my heart away,
805780And you
sate
smiling at his cruell pray.
806781Lysander what, remou'd?
Lysander, Lord,
807782What, out of hearing, gon? No
sound, no word?
808783Alacke where are you? Speake, and if you heare:
809784Speake, of all loues. I
swoune almo
st with feare.
810785No, then I well perceiue, you are not ny:
811786Either death, or you, Ile
finde immediately.
Exit. 815789Quin. Pat, pat: and heres a maruailes conuenient place,
816790for our rehear
sall. This greene plot
shall be our
stage, this
817791hauthorne brake our tyring hou
se, and wee will doe it in
818792a
ction, as wee will doe it before the Duke.
820794Quin. What
saie
st thou, bully,
Bottom?
821795Bot. There are things in this Comedy, of
Pyramus and
822796Thisby, that will neuer plea
se. Fir
st,
Pyramus mu
st draw
823797a
sworde, to kill him
selfe; which the Ladies cannot abide.
How
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
825799Snout. Berlakin, a parlous feare.
826800Star. I beleeue, we mu
st leaue the killing, out, when all
828802Bott. Not a whit: I haue a deui
se to make all well. Write
829803me a Prologue, and let the Prologue
seeme to
say; we wil
830804do no harme, with our
swords, and that
Pyramus is not
831805kild indeede: and for the more better a
ssurance, tel them,
832806that I
Pyramus am not
Pyramus, but
Bottom the weauer:
833807this will put them out of feare.
834808Quin. Well: wee will haue
such a Prologue, and it
shall be
835809written in eight and
six.
836810Bot. No: make it two more: let it be written in eight &
838812Snout. Will not the ladies be afeard of the Lyon?
839813Star. I feare it, I promi
se you.
840814Bot. Ma
sters, you ought to con
sider with your
selfe, to
841815bring in (God
shielde vs) a Lyon among Ladies, is
842816a mo
st dreadfull thing. For there is not a more fearefull
843817wilde foule then your Lyon liuing: & we ought to looke
845819Sno. Therfore, another Prologue mu
st tel, he is not a Lion.
847820Bot. Nay: you mu
st name his name, and halfe his face
848821mu
st be
seene through the Lions necke, and he him
selfe
849822mu
st speake through,
saying thus, or to the
same defe
ct;
850823Ladies, or faire Ladies, I would wi
sh you, or I would re
- 851824que
st you, or I wold intreat you, not to feare, not to trēble:
852825my life for yours. If you thinke I come hither as a Lyon, it
853826were pittie of my life. No: I am no
such thing: I am a man
854827as other men are: & there indeed, let him name his name,
855828and tell them plainely he is
Snugge, the Ioyner.
857829Quin. Well: it
shall be
so: but there is two hard things;
858830that is, to bring the Moone-light into a chamber: for you
859831know,
Pyramus and
Thisby meete by Moone-light.
861832Sn. Doth the Moone
shine, that night, we play our Play?
Bot.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
863833Bo. A Calender, a Calender: looke in the Almanack:
finde
864834out Moone-
shine,
finde out Moone-
shine.
866835Quin. Yes: it doth
shine that night.
867836Cet. Why then, may you leaue a ca
sement of the great
868837chamber window (where we play) open; and the Moone
869838may
shine in at the ca
sement.
870839Quin. I: or els, one mu
st come in, with a bu
sh of thorns,
871840& a
lātern, and
say he comes to di
sfigure, or to pre
sent the
872841per
son of Moone-
shine. Then, there is another thing; we
873842mu
st haue a wal in the great
chāber: for
Pyramus &
This- 874843by (
saies the
story) did talke through the chinke of a wall.
876844Sno. You can neuer bring in a wal. What
say you
Bottom?
878845Bot. Some man or other mu
st pre
sent wall: and let him
879846haue
some pla
ster, or
som lome, or
some rough ca
st, about
880847him, to
signi
fie wall; or let him holde his
fingers thus: and
881848through that crany,
shall
Pyramus and
Thisby whi
s- 883850Quin. If that may be, then all is well. Come,
sit downe e
- 884851uery mothers
sonne, and reher
se your parts.
Pyramus, you
885852beginne: when you haue
spoken your
speech, enter into
886853that Brake, and
so euery one according to his cue.
889855Ro. What hempen home
spunnes haue we
swaggring here,
891856So neere the Cradle of the Fairy Queene?
892857What, a play toward? Ile be an Auditor,
893858An A
ctor to perhappes, If I
see cau
se.
894859Quin. Speake
Pyramus: Thysby stand forth.
895860Pyra. Thisby the
flowers of odious
sauours
sweete.
897862Py. Odours
sauours
sweete.
898863So hath thy breath, my deare
st Thisby deare.
899864But harke, a voice:
stay thou but heere a while,
900865And by and by I will to thee appeare.
Exit. 901866Quin. A
stranger
Pyramus, then ere played heere.
902867Thys. Mu
st I
speake now?
I
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
903868Quin. I marry mu
st you. For you mu
st vnder
stand, he goes
904869but to
see a noy
se, that he heard, and is to come againe.
906870Thys. Mo
st radiant
Pyramus, mo
st lillie white of hewe,
907871Of colour like the red ro
se, on triumphant bryer,
908872Mo
st bri
sky Iuuenall, and eeke mo
st louely Iewe,
909873As true as true
st hor
se, that yet would neuer tyre,
910874Ile meete thee
Pyramus, at
Ninnies toumbe.
911875Quin. Ninus toumbe, man. Why? you mu} not
speake
912876That yet. That you an
swere to
Pyramus. You
speake
913877Al your part at once, cues, and, all.
Pyramus, enter: your cue
914878is pa
st: It is; neuer tire.
915879Thys. O, as true as true
st hor
se, that yet would neuer tyre.
917880Py. If I were faire,
Thysby, I were onely thine.
918881Quin. O mon
strous! O
strange! We are haunted. Pray ma
- 919882sters:
fly ma
sters: helpe.
921883Rob. Ile follow you: Ile leade you about a Round,
922884Through bogge, through bu
sh, through brake, through (bryer:
923885Sometime a hor
se Ile be,
sometime a hound,
924886A hogge, a headele
sse Beare,
sometime a
fier,
925887And neigh, and barke, and grunt, and rore, and burne,
926888Like hor
se, hound, hogge, beare,
fire, at euery turne.
Exit. 928889Bott. Why doe they runne away? This is a knauery of
929890them to make mee afeard.
Enter Snowte. 930891Sn. O
Bottom, thou art chaung'd. What do I
see on thee?
932892Bot. What Doe you
see? You
see an A
sse head of your
935895Quin. Ble
sse thee
Bottom, ble
sse thee. Thou art
trāslated. (
Exit.
937896Bot. I
see their knauery. This is to make an a
sse of mee, to
938897fright me, if they could: but I wil not
stirre from this place,
939898do what they can. I will walke vp and downe heere, and I
940899will
sing, that they
shall heare I am not afraide.
942900The Woo
sell cock,
so blacke of hewe,
The
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
944902The Thro
stle, with his note
so true,
945903The Wren, with little quill.
946904Tytania. What Angell wakes me from my
flowry bed?
947905Bot. The Fynch, the Sparrowe, and the Larke,
948906The plain
song Cuckow gray:
949907Who
se note, full many a man doth marke,
950908And dares not an
swere, nay.
951909For indeede, who would
set his wit to
so fooli
sh a birde?
952910Who would giue a bird the ly, though hee cry Cuckow,
954912Tita. I pray thee, gentle mortall,
sing againe.
955913Myne eare is much enamoured of thy note:
956914So is mine eye enthralled to thy
shape,
957915And thy faire vertues force (perforce) doth mooue mee,
958916On the
fir
st viewe to
say, to
sweare, I loue thee.
959917Bott. Mee thinks mi
stre
sse, you
should haue little rea
son
960918for that. And yet, to
say the truth, rea
son and loue keepe
961919little company together, now a daies. The more the pitty,
962920that
some hone
st neighbours will not make them friends.
963921Nay I can gleeke, vpon occa
sion.
965922Tyta. Thou art as wi
se, as thou art beautifull.
966923Bott. Not
so neither: but if I had wit enough to get out
967924of this wood, I haue enough to
serue mine owe turne.
969925Tyta. Out of this wood, doe not de
sire to goe:
970926Thou
shalt remaine here, whether thou wilt or no.
971927I am a
spirit, of no common rate:
972928The Sommer,
still, doth tend vpon my
state,
973929And I doe loue thee: therefore goe with mee.
974930Ile giue thee Fairies to attend on thee:
975931And they
shall fetch thee Iewels, from the deepe,
976932And
sing, while thou, on pre
ssed
flowers, do
st sleepe:
977933And I will purge thy mortall gro
ssene
sse
so,
978934That thou
shalt, like an ayery
spirit, goe.
979935Pease-
blossome, Cobweb, Moth, and
Mustard-
seede? Fai
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
981937Fairies. Readie: and I, and I, and I. Where
shall we goe?
982938Tita. Be kinde and curteous to this gentleman,
983939Hop in his walkes, and gambole in his eyes,
984940Feede him with Apricocks, and Dewberries,
985941With purple Grapes, greene
figges, and Mulberries,
986942The hony bagges
steale from the humble Bees,
987943And for night tapers, croppe their waxen thighes,
988944And light them at the
fiery Glowe-wormes eyes,
989945To haue my loue to bedde, and to ari
se,
990946And pluck the wings, from painted Butter
flies,
991947To fanne the Moone-beames from his
sleeping eyes,
992948Nod to him Elues, and doe him curte
sies.
9939491. Fai. Haile mortall, haile.
996952Bot. I cry your wor
ships mercy, hartily: I be
seech your
999955Bot. I
shall de
sire you of more acquaintance, good ma
- 1000956ster
Cobweb: if I cut my
finger, I
shall make bolde with
1001957you. Your name hone
st gentleman?
1004959Bot. I pray you commend mee to mi
stre
sse
Squash, your
1005960mother, and to ma
ster
Peascod, your father. Good ma
ster
1006961Pease-blossome, I
shall de
sire you of more acquaintance,
1007962to. Your name I be
seech you
sir?
1010964Bot. Good ma
ster
Mustardseede, I know your patience
1011965woll. That
same cowardly, gyantlike, Ox-beefe hath de
- 1012966uourd many a gentleman of your hou
se. I promi
se you,
1013967your kindred hath made my eyes water, ere now. I de
sire
1014968you more acquaintance, good ma
ster
Mustardseede.
1016969Tita. Come waite vpon him: leade him to my bower.
1017970The Moone, me thinkes, lookes with a watry eye:
1018971And when
shee weepes, weepes euery little
flower,
Lamen-
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
1019972Lamenting
some enforced cha
stitie.
1020973Ty vp my louers tongue, bring him
silently.
Exit. 1021974Enter King of Fairies, and Robin goodfellow. 1022975Ob. I wonder if
Titania be awak't;
1023976Then what it was, that next came in her eye,
1024977Which
she mu
st dote on, in extreamitie.
1026978Here comes my me
ssenger. How now, mad
spirit?
1027979What nightrule now about this haunted groue?
1028980Puck. My mi
stre
sse with a mon
ster is in loue,
1029981Neere to her clo
se and con
secrated bower.
1030982While
she was in her dull, and
sleeping hower,
1031983A crew of patches, rude Mechanicals,
1032984That worke for bread, vpon
Athenian stalles,
1033985Were met together to rehear
se a play,
1034986Intended for great
Theseus nuptiall day:
1035987The
shallowe
st thick
skinne, of that barraine
sort,
1036988Who
Pyramus pre
sented, in their
sport,
1037989For
sooke his Scene, and entred in a brake,
1038990VVhen I did him at this aduantage take:
1039991An A
sses nole I
fixed on his head.
1040992Anon his
Thisbie mu
st be an
swered,
1041993And forth my Minnick comes. When they him
spy;
1042994As wilde gee
se, that the creeping Fouler eye,
1043995Or ru
sset pated choughes, many in
sort
1044996(Ry
sing, and cawing, at the gunnes report)
1045997Seuer them
selues, and madly
sweepe the
sky:
1046998So, at his
sight, away his fellowes
fly,
1047999And at our
stampe, here ore and ore, one falles:
10481000He murther cryes, and helpe from
Athens cals.
10491001Their
sen
se, thus weake, lo
st with their feares, thus
strong,
10501002Made
sen
sele
sse things begin to doe them wrong.
10511003For, briers and thornes, at their apparell,
snatch:
10521004Some
sleeues,
some hats; from yeelders, all things catch.
10531005I led them on, in this di
stra
cted feare,
10541006And left
sweete
Pyramus tran
slated there:
When
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
10551007When in that moment (
so it came to pa
sse)
10561008Tytania wak't, and
straight way lou'd an A
sse.
10571009Ob. This falles out better, then I could deui
se.
10581010But ha
st thou yet latcht the
Athenians eyes,
10591011With the loue iuice, as I did bid thee doe?
10601012Rob. I tooke him
sleeping (that is
fini
sht to)
10611013And the
Athenian woman, by his
side;
10621014That when he wak't, of force
she mu
st be ey'd.
10641016Ob. Stand clo
se: this is the
same
Athenian.
10651017Rob. This is the woman: but not this the man.
10661018Demet. O, Why rebuke you him, that loues you
so?
10671019Lay breath
so bitter, on your bitter foe.
10681020Her. Now I but chide: but I
should v
se thee wor
se.
10691021For thou (I feare) ha
st giuen me cau
se to cur
se.
10701022If thou ha
st slaine
Lysander, in his
sleepe;
10711023Being ore
shooes in blood, plunge in the deepe, & kill mee(to.
10731024The Sunne was not
so true vnto the day,
10741025As hee to mee. Would hee haue
stollen away,
10751026Frow
sleeping
Hermia? Ile beleeue, as
soone,
10761027This whole earth may be bor'd, and that the Moone
10771028May through the Center creepe, and
so di
splea
se
10781029Her brothers noonetide, with th'
Antipodes.
10791030It cannot be, but thou ha
st murdred him.
10801031So
should a murtherer looke;
so dead,
so grimme.
10811032Dem. So
should the murthered looke, and
so
should I,
10821033Pear
st through the heart, with your
sterne cruelty.
10831034Yet you, the murtherer, looke as bright, as cleere,
10841035As yonder
Venus, in her glimmering
spheare.
10851036Her. Whats this to my
Lysander? Where is hee?
10861037Ah good
Demetrius, wilt thou giue him mee?
10871038Deme. I had rather giue his carca
sse to my hounds.
10881039Her. Out dog, out curre: thou driu'
st me pa
st the bounds
10891040Of maidens patience. Ha
st thou
slaine him then?
10901041Henceforth be neuer numbred among men.
O,
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
10911042O, once tell true: tell true, euen for my
sake:
10921043Dur
st thou haue lookt vpon him, being awake?
10931044And ha
st thou kild him,
sleeping? O braue tutch!
10941045Could not a worme, an Adder do
so much?
10951046An Adder did it: For with doubler tongue
10961047Then thyne (thou
serpent) neuer Adder
stung.
10971048Deme. You
spende your pa
ssion, on a mi
spris'd mood:
10981049I am not guilty of
Lysanders bloode:
10991050Nor is he deade, for ought that I can tell.
11001051Her. I pray thee, tell mee then, that he is well.
11011052De. And if I could, what
should I get therefore?
11021053Her. A priuiledge, neuer to
see mee more:
11031054And from thy hated pre
sence part I:
see me no more;
11051056Deme. There is no following her in this
fierce vaine.
11061057Heere therefore, for a while, I will remaine.
11071058So
sorrowes heauine
sse doth heauier growe.
11081059For debt that bankrout
slippe doth
sorrow owe:
11091060Which now in
some
slight mea
sure it will pay;
11101061If for his tender here I make
some
stay.
Ly doune. 11111062Ob. What ha
st thou done? Thou ha
st mi
staken quite,
11121063And laid the loue iuice on
some true loues
sight.
11131064Of thy mi
spri
sion, mu
st perforce en
sue
11141065Some true loue turnd, and not a fal
se turnd true.
11151066Robi. Then fate orerules, that one man holding troth,
11161067A million faile, confounding oath on oath.
11171068Ob. About the wood, goe
swifter then the winde,
11181069And
Helena of
Athens looke thou
finde.
11191070All fancy
sicke
she is and pale of cheere,
11201071With
sighes of loue, that co
sts the fre
sh blood deare.
11211072By
some illu
sion
see thou bring her here:
11221073Ile charme his eyes, again
st she doe appeare.
11231074Robin. I goe, I goe, looke how I goe.
11241075Swifter then arrow, from the
Tartars bowe.
Hit
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
11341085Puck. Captaine of our Fairy band,
11381089Shall wee their fond pageant
see?
11391090Lord, what fooles the
se mortals bee!
11401091Ob. Stand a
side. The noy
se, they make,
11421093Pu. Then will two, at once, wooe one:
11431094That mu
st needes be
sport alone.
11441095And tho
se things do be
st plea
se mee,
11471098Lys. Why
should you think, that I
should wooe in
scorne?
11481099Scorne, and deri
sion, neuer come in teares.
11491100Looke when I vow, I weepe: and vowes
so borne,
11501101In their natiuitie all truth appeares.
11511102How can the
se things, in mee,
seeme
scorne to you?
11521103Bearing the badge of faith to prooue them true.
11531104Hel. You doe aduance your cunning, more, and more.
11541105When trueth killes truth, ? diueli
sh holy fray!
11551106The
se vowes are
Hermias. Will you giue her ore?
11561107Weigh oath, with oath, and you will nothing waigh.
11571108Your vowes to her, and mee (put in two
scales)
11581109Will euen weigh; and both as light as tales.
11591110Lys. I had no iudgement, when to her I
swore.
11601111Hel. Nor none, in my minde, now you giue her ore.
Lys.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
11611112Lys. Demetrius loues her: and he loues not you.
11621113Deme. O
Helen, godde
sse, nymph, perfe
ct diuine,
11631114To what, my loue,
shall I compare thine eyne!
11641115Chri
stall is muddy. O, how ripe, in
showe,
11651116Thy lippes, tho
se ki
ssing cherries, tempting growe!
11661117That pure coniealed white, high
Taurus snow,
11671118Fand with the Ea
sterne winde, turnes to a crowe,
11681119When thou hold
st vp thy hand. O, let me ki
sse
11691120This Prince
sse of pure white, this
seale of bli
sse.
11701121Hel. O
spight! O hell! I
see, you all are bent
11711122To
set again
st mee, for your merriment.
11721123If you were ciuill, and knew curte
sie,
11731124You would not doe mee thus much iniury.
11741125Can you not hate mee, as I know you doe,
11751126But you mu
st ioyne, in
soules, to mocke mee to?
11761127If you were men, as men you are in
showe,
11771128You would not v
se a gentle Lady
so;
11781129To vowe, and
sweare, and
superprai
se my parts,
11791130When I am
sure, you hate mee with your hearts.
11801131You both are Riuals, and loue
Hermia: 11811132And now both Riualles, to mock
Helena.
11821133A trim exploit, a manly enterpri
se,
11831134To coniure teares vp, in a poore maides eyes,
11841135With your deri
sion None, of noble
sort,
11851136Would
so o
ffend a virgine, and extort
11861137A poore
soules patience, all to make you
sport.
11871138Lysand. You are vnkinde,
Demetrius: be not
so.
11881139For you loue
Hermia: this you know I know.
11891140And heare, with all good will, with all my heart,
11901141In
Hermias loue I yeelde you vp my part:
11911142And yours of
Helena, to mee bequeath:
11921143Whom I doe loue, and will do till my death.
11931144Hel. Neuer did mockers wa
ste more idle breath.
11941145Deme. Lysander, keepe thy
Hermia: I will none.
11951146If ere I lou'd her, all that loue is gone.
My
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
11961147My heart to her, but as gue
stwi
se,
soiournd:
11971148And now to
Helen, is it home returnd,
12001151Deme. Di
sparage not the faith, thou do
st not know;
12011152Lea
st to thy perill, thou aby it deare.
12021153Looke where thy loue comes: yonder is thy deare.
12041155Her. Darke night, that from the eye, his fun
ction takes,
12051156The eare more quicke of apprehen
sion makes.
12061157Wherein it doth impaire the
seeing
sen
se,
12071158It payes the hearing double recompence.
12081159Thou art not, by myne eye,
Lysander, found:
12091160Mine eare, I thanke it, brought me to thy
sound.
12101161But why, vnkindly, did
st thou leaue mee
so?
12111162Lys. Why
should he
stay, whom loue doth pre
sse to go?
12121163Her. What loue could pre
sse
Lysander, from my
side?
12131164Lys. Lysanders loue (that would not let him bide)
12141165Faire
Helena: who more engilds the night
12151166Then all yon
fiery oes, and eyes of light.
12161167Why
seek'
st thou me? Could not this make thee know,
12171168The hate I bare thee, made mee leaue thee
so?
12181169Her. You
speake not as you thinke: It cannot bee.
12191170Hel. Lo:
she is one of this confederacy.
12201171Now I perceiue, they haue conioynd all three,
12211172To fa
shion this fal
se
sport, in
spight of mee.
12221173Iniurious
Hermia, mo
st vngratefull maide,
12231174Haue you con
spir'd, haue you with the
se contriu'd
12241175To baite mee, with this foule deri
sion?
12251176Is all the coun
sell that we two haue
shar'd,
12261177The
sisters vowes, the howers that we haue
spent,
12271178When we haue chid the ha
stie footed time,
12281179For parting vs; O, is all forgot?
12291180All
schooldaies friend
shippe, childhood innocence?
12301181VVee,
Hermia, like two arti
ficiall gods,
Haue
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
12311182Haue with our needles, created both one
flower,
12321183Both on one
sampler,
sitting on one cu
shion,
12331184Both warbling of one
song, both in one key;
12341185As if our hands, our
sides, voyces, and mindes
12351186Had bin incorporate. So wee grewe together,
12361187Like to a double cherry,
seeming parted;
12381189Two louely berries moulded on one
stemme:
12391190So with two
seeming bodies, but one heart,
12401191Two of the
fir
st life coats in heraldry,
12411192Due but to one, and crowned with one crea
st.
12421193And will you rent our auncient loue a
sunder,
12431194To ioyne with men, in
scorning your poore friend?
12441195It is not friendly, tis not maidenly.
12451196Our
sex, as well as I, may chide you for it;
12461197Though I alone doe fele the iniury.
12481199I
scorne you not. It
seemes that you
scorne mee.
12491200Hel. Haue you not
set
Lysander, as in
scorne,
12501201To follow mee, and prai
se my eyes and face?
12511202And made your other loue,
Demetrius 12521203(Who euen but now did
spurne mee with his foote)
12531204To call mee godde
sse, nymph, diuine, and rare,
12541205Pretious cele
stiall? VVherefore
speakes he this,
12551206To her he hates? And wherfore doth
Lysander 12561207Deny your loue (
so rich within his
soule)
12571208And tender mee (for
sooth) a
ffe
ction,
12581209But by your
setting on, by your con
sent?
12591210VVhat, though I be not
so in grace as you,
12601211So hung vpon with loue,
so fortunate?
12611212(But mi
serable mo
st, to loue vnlou'd)
12621213This you
should pittie, rather then de
spi
se.
12631214Her. I vnder
stand not, what you meane by this.
12641215Hel. I doe. Per
seuer, counterfait
sad lookes:
12651216Make mouthes vpon mee, when I turne my back:
Winke
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
12661217Winke each at other, holde the
sweeete iea
st vp.
12671218This
sport well carried,
shall bee chronicled.
12681219If you haue any pitty, grace, or manners,
12691220You would not make mee
such an argument.
12701221But fare ye well: tis partly my owne fault:
12711222Which death, or ab
sence
soone
shall remedy.
12721223Lys. Stay, gentle
Helena: heare my excu
se,
12731224My loue, my life, my
soule, faire
Helena.
12751226Herm. Sweete, doe not
scorne her
so.
12761227Dem. If
she cannot entreat, I can compell.
12771228Lys. Thou can
st compell no more, then
she intreat.
12781229Thy threats haue no more
strength then her weake prai
se.
12791230Helen, I loue thee, by my life I doe:
12801231I
sweare by that which I will loo
se for thee;
12811232To prooue him fal
se, that
saies I loue thee not.
12821233Dem. I
say, I loue thee more then he can do.
12831234Lys. If thou
say
so, withdrawe, and prooue it to.
12851236Her. Lysander, whereto tends all this?
12881239Seeme to breake loo
se: take on as you would follow;
12891240But yet come not. You are a tame man, go.
12901241Lys. Hang of thou cat, thou bur: vile thing let loo
se;
12911242Or I will
shake thee from mee, like a
serpent.
12921243Her. Why are you growne
so rude? What change is this,
12941245Lys. Thy loue? Out tawny
Tartar, out:
12951246Out loathed medcine: ? hated potion hence.
12981249Lys. Demetrius, I will keepe my word, with thee.
12991250Dem. I would I had your bond. For I perceiue,
13001251A weake bond holds you. Ile not tru
st your word.
Lys.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
13011252Lys. What?
should I hurt her,
strike her, kill her dead?
13021253Although I hate her, Ile not harme her
so.
13031254Her. What? Can you do me greater harme, then hate?
13041255Hate mee, wherefore? O me, what newes, my loue?
13051256Am not I
Hermia? Are not you
Lysander?
13061257I am as faire now, as I was ere while.
13071258Since night, you lou'd mee; yet
since night, you left mee.
13081259Why then, you left mee (? the gods forbid)
13111262And neuer did de
sire to
see thee more.
13121263Thefore be out of hope, of que
stion, of doubt:
13131264Be certaine: nothing truer: tis no iea
st,
13141265That I doe hate thee, and loue
Helena.
13151266Her. O mee, you iuggler, you canker blo
ssome,
13161267You theefe of loue: what, haue you come by night,
13171268And
stolne my loues heart, from him?
13191270Haue you no mode
sty, no maiden
shame,
13201271No touch of ba
shfulne
sse? What, will you teare
13211272Impatient an
sweres, from my gentle tongue?
13221273Fy, fy, you counterfait, you puppet, you.
13231274Her. Puppet? Why
so? I, that way goes the game.
13241275Now I perceiue that
she hath made compare,
13251276Betweene our
statures,
she hath vrg'd her height,
13261277And with her per
sonage, her tall per
sonage,
13271278Her height (for
sooth)
she hath preuaild with him.
13281279And are you growne
so high in his e
steeme,
13291280Becau
se I am
so dwar
fish and
so lowe?
13301281How lowe am I, thou painted May-pole? Speake:
13311282How lowe am I? I am not yet
so lowe,
13321283But that my nailes can reach vnto thine eyes.
13331284Hel. I pray you, though you mocke me, gentleman,
13341285Let her not hurt me. I was neuer cur
st:
13351286I haue no gift at all in
shrewi
shne
sse:
I
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
13361287I am a right maid, for my cowardize:
13371288Let her not
strike mee. You perhaps, may thinke,
13381289Becau
se
she is
something lower then my
selfe,
13411292Hel. Good
Hermia, do not be
so bitter with mee,
13431294Did euer keepe your coun
sels, neuer wrongd you;
13441295Saue that in loue, vnto
Demetrius,
13451296I tould him of your
stealth vnto this wood.
13461297He followed you: for loue, I followed him.
13471298But he hath chid me hence, and threatned mee
13481299To
strike mee,
spurne mee; nay to kill mee to.
13491300And now,
so you will let me quiet goe,
13501301To
Athens will I beare my folly backe,
13511302And follow you no further. Let me goe.
13521303You
see how
simple, and how fond I am.
13531304Herm. Why? get you gon. Who i
st that hinders you?
13541305Hel. A fooli
sh heart, that I leaue here behind.
13571308Lys. Be not afraid:
she
shall not harme thee
Helena.
13581309Deme. No
sir:
she
shall not, though you take her part.
13591310Hel. O, when
she is angry,
she is keene and
shrewd.
13601311She was a vixen, when
she went to
schoole:
13611312And though
she be but little,
she is
fierce.
13621313Her. Little againe? Nothing hut low and little?
13631314Why will you
su
ffer her to
floute me thus?
13661317You
minimus, of hindring knot gra
sse, made;
13691320In her behalfe, that
scornes your
seruices.
13701321Let her alone:
speake not of
Helena,
Take
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
13711322Take not her part. For if thou do
st intend
13721323Neuer
so little
shewe of loue to her,
13751326Now follow, if thou dar'
st, to try who
se right,
13761327Of thine or mine, is mo
st in
Helena.
13771328Deme. Follow? Nay: Ile go with thee, cheeke by iowle.
13791329Her. You, mi
stre
sse, all this coyle is long of you.
13821332Nor longer
stay in your cur
st company.
13831333Your hands, than mine, are quicker for a fray:
13841334My legges are longer though, to runne away.
13851335Her. I am amaz'd, and know not what to
say.
Exeunt. 13861336Ob. This is thy negligence:
still thou mi
stak'
st,
13871337Or el
se commit
st thy knaueries wilfully.
13881338Puck. Beleeue mee, king of
shadowes, I mi
stooke.
13891339Did not you tell mee, I
shoud know the man,
13901340By the
Athenian garments, he had on?
13911341And,
so farre blamele
sse prooues my enterpri
se,
13921342That I haue nointed an
Athenians eyes:
13931343And
so farre am I glad, it
so did
sort,
13941344As this their iangling I e
steeme a
sport.
13951345Ob. Thou
see
st, the
se louers
seeke a place to
fight:
13961346Hy therefore
Robin, ouerca
st the night,
13971347The
starry welkin couer thou anon,
13981348With drooping fogge as blacke as
Acheron,
13991349And lead the
se tea
sty Riuals
so a
stray,
14001350As one come not within anothers way.
14011351Like to
Lysander,
sometime frame thy tongue:
14021352Then
stirre
Demetrius vp, with bitter wrong:
14031353And
sometime raile thou like
Demetrius: 14041354And from each other, looke thou lead them thus;
14051355Till ore their browes, death-counterfaiting,
sleepe,
14061356With leaden legs, and Batty wings doth creepe:
Then
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
14071357Then cru
sh this hearbe into
Lysanders eye;
14081358Who
se liquor hath this vertuous property,
14091359To take from thence all errour, with his might,
14101360And make his eyebals roule with wonted
sight.
14111361When they next wake, all this deri
sion
14121362Shall
seeme a dreame, and fruitele
sse vi
sion.
14131363And backe to
Athens shall the louers wend,
14141364With league, who
se date, till death
shall neuer end.
14151365Whiles I, in this a
ffaire, doe thee imploy,
14161366Ile to my Queene and beg her
Indian boy:
14171367And then I will her charmed eye relea
se
14181368From mon
sters viewe, and all things
shall be peace.
14191369Puck. My Faiery Lord, this mu
st be done with ha
ste.
14201370For nights
swift Dragons cut the clouds full fa
st,
14211371And yonder
shines
Auroras harbinger:
14221372At who
se approach, Gho
sts, wandring here and there,
14231373Troope home to Churchyards: damned
spirits all,
14241374That in cro
sse waies and
floods haue buriall,
14251375Already to their wormy beds are gone:
14261376For feare lea
st day
should looke their
shames vpon,
14271377They wilfully them
selues exile from light,
14281378And mu
st for aye con
sort with black browed night.
14291379Ober. But we are
spirits of another
sort.
14301380I, with the mornings loue, haue oft made
sport,
14311381And like a forre
ster, the groues may tread
14321382Euen till the Ea
sterne gate all
fiery red,
14331383Opening on
Neptune, with faire ble
ssed beames,
14341384Turnes, into yellow golde, his
salt greene
streames.
14351385But notwith
standing, ha
ste, make no delay:
14361386We may e
ffe
ct this bu
sine
sse, yet ere day.
14371387Pu. Vp & down, vp & down, I will lead them vp & down:
14381388I am feard in
field & town.
Goblin, lead them vp & downe.
14411390Lys Where art thou, proud
Demetrius? Speak thou now.
14431391Rob. Here villaine, drawne & ready. Where art thou?
Lys.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
14441392Lys. I will be with thee
straight.
14451393Rob. Follow me then to plainer ground.
14481396Thou runaway, thou coward, art thou
fled?
14491397Speake in
some bu
sh. Where doe
st thou hide thy head?
14501398Rob. Thou coward art thou bragging, to the
starres,
14511399Telling the bu
shes that thou look'
st for warres,
14521400And wilt not come? Come recreant, come thou childe,
14531401Ile whippe thee with a rodde. He is de
fil'd,
14561404Ro. Follow my voice: weele try no manhood here.
Exeūt. 14571405Lys. He goes before me, and
still dares me on:
14581406When I come where he calles, then he is gon.
14591407The villaine is much lighter heel'd then I;
14601408I followed fa
st: but fa
ster he did
fly;
14611409That fallen am I in darke vneauen way,
14621410And here will re
st me. Come thou gentle day.
14631411For if but once, thou
shewe me thy gray light,
14641412Ile
finde
Demetrius, and reuenge this
spight.
14661414Robi. Ho, ho, ho: Coward, why com
st thou not?
14671415Deme. Abide me, if thou dar'
st. For well I wot,
14681416Thou run
st before mee,
shifting euery place,
14691417And dar'
st not
stand, nor looke me in the face.
14721420De. Nay then thou mock
st me. Thou
shalt buy this dear,
14741421If euer I thy face by day light
see.
14751422Now, goe thy way. Faintne
sse con
straineth mee,
14761423To mea
sure, out my length, on this cold bed:>
14771424By daies approach looke to be vi
sited.
14791426Hele. O weary night, O long and tedious night,
Abate
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
14801427Abate thy houres,
shine comforts, from the ea
st;
14811428That I may backe to
Athens, by day light,
14821429From the
se that my poore company dete
st:
14831430And
sleepe, that
sometimes
shuts vp
sorrowes eye,
14841431Steale mee a while from mine owne companie.
Sleepe. 14851432Rob. Yet but three? Come one more.
14861433Two of both kindes makes vp fower.
14871434Heare
shee comes, cur
st and
sadde.
14901436Thus to make poore females madde.
14911437Her. Neuer
so weary, neuer
so in woe,
14921438Bedabbled with the deaw, and torne with briers:
14931439I can no further crawle, no further goe:
14941440My legges can keepe no pa
se with my de
sires.
14951441Here will I re
st mee, till the breake of day:
14961442Heauens
shielde
Lysander, if they meane a fray.
14971443Rob. On the ground,
sleepe
sound:
14981444Ile apply your eye, gentle louer, remedy.
15001446True delight, in the
sight, of thy former ladies eye:
15011447And the country prouerbe knowne,
15021448That euery man
should take his owne,
15041450Iacke shall haue
Iill: nought
shall goe ill:
15051451The man
shall haue his mare again, & all
shall be well.
15091452 Enter Queene of Faieries, and Clowne, and Faieries: and 15111454Tita. Come
sit thee downe vpon this
flowry bed,
15121455While I thy amiable cheekes doe coy,
15131456And
stick mu
sk ro
ses in thy
sleeke
smooth head,
15141457And ki
sse thy faire large eares, my gentle ioy.
15171460Clow. Scratch my heade,
Pease-blossome. Wher's Moun
- Clo.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
15201462Clo. Moun
sieur
Cobweb, good Moun
sieur, get you your
15211463weapons in your hand, and kill me a red hipt Humble Bee,
15221464on the toppe of a thi
stle: and good Moun
sieur, bring mee
15231465the hony bagge. Doe not fret your
selfe too much, in the
15241466a
ction, Moun
sieur: and good Moun
sieur haue a care, the
15251467honybagge breake not, I wold be loath to haue you ouer
- 15261468flowen with a honibag
signior. Where's Moun
sieur
Must- 15291471Clo. Giue me your neafe, Moun
sieur
Mustardseede. Pray
15301472you, leaue your curt
sie, good Moun
sieur.
15321474Clo. Nothing good Moun
sieur, but to helpe Caualery
15331475Cobwebbe, to
scratch. I mu
st to the Barbers, Moun
sieur.
15341476For me thinkes I am maruailes hairy about the face. And I
15351477am
such a tender A
sse, if my haire doe but tickle mee, I
15371479Tita. What, wilt thou heare
some mu
sique, my
sweete
15391481Clo. I haue a rea
sonable good eare in mu
sique. Lets
15421483Tyta. Or,
say
sweete loue, what thou de
sire
st to eate.
15431484Clo. Truely a pecke of prouander. I could mounch your
15441485good dry Oates. Me thinkes, I haue a great de
sire to a bot
- 15451486tle of hay. Good hay,
sweete hay hath no fellow.
15471487Ty. I haue a venturous Fairy, that
shall
seeke the Squirils(hoord,
15501489Clo. I had rather haue a handfull, or two of dryed pea
se.
15511490But, I pray you, let none of your people
stirre me: I haue an
15521491expo
sition of
sleepe come vpon mee.
15531492Tyta. Sleepe thou, and I will winde thee in my armes.
15541493Faieries be gon, and be alwaies away.
15551494So doth the woodbine, the
sweete Honi
suckle,
15561495Gently entwi
st: the female Iuy
so
15571496Enrings the barky
fingers of the Elme.
O
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
15581497O how I loue thee! how I dote on thee!
15601499Ob. Welcome good
Robin. See
st thou this
sweete
sight?
15621500Her dotage now I doe beginne to pittie.
15631501For meeting her of late, behinde the wood,
15641502Seeking
sweete fauours for this hatefull foole,
15651503I did vpbraid her, and fall out with her.
15661504For
she his hairy temples then had rounded,
15671505With coronet of fre
sh and fragrant
flowers.
15681506And that
same deawe which
sometime on the buddes,
15691507Was wont to
swell, like round and orient pearles;
15701508Stood now within the pretty
flouriets eyes,
15711509Like teares, that did their owne di
sgrace bewaile.
15721510When I had, at my plea
sure, taunted her,
15731511And
she, in milde tearmes, begd my patience,
15741512I then did a
ske of her, her changeling childe:
15751513Which
straight
she gaue mee, and her Fairy
sent
15761514To beare him, to my bower, in Fairie land.
15771515And now I haue the boy, I will vndoe
15781516This hatefull imperfe
ction of her eyes.
15791517And, gentle
Puck, take this tran
sformed
scalpe,
15801518From of the heade of this
Athenian swaine;
15811519That hee, awaking when the other do,
15821520May all to
Athens backe againe repaire,
15831521And thinke no more of this nights accidents,
15841522But as the fearce vexation of a dreame.
15851523But
fir
st I will relea
se the Fairy Queene.
Be, as thou wast wont to bee:
15891527Hath
such force, and ble
ssed power.
15901528Now, my
Titania, wake you, my
sweete Queene.
15911529Tita. My
Oberon, what vi
sions haue I
seene!
15921530Me thought I was enamourd of an A
sse.
Tita.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
15941532Tita. How came the
se things to pa
sse?
15951533O, how mine eyes doe loath his vi
sage now!
15961534Ob. Silence a while.
Robin, take o
ff this head:
15971535Titania, mu
sicke call, and
strike more dead
15981536Then common
sleepe: of all the
se,
fine the
sen
se.
15991537Ti. Mu
sick, howe mu
sick:
such as charmeth
sleepe.
16011538Rob. Now, when thou wak'
st, with thine own fools eyes (peepe.
16031539Ob. Sound Mu
sick: come, my queen, take hands with me,
16041540And rocke the ground whereon the
se
sleepers be.
16051541Now, thou and I are new in amitie,
16061542And will to morrow midnight,
solemnely
16071543Daunce, in Duke
Theseus hou
se triumphantly,
16081544And ble
sse it to all faire pro
speritie.
16091545There
shall the paires of faithfull louers be
16101546Wedded, with
Theseus, all in iollitie.
16111547Rob. Fairy King, attend, and marke:
16131549Ob. Then my Queene, in
silence
sad,
16151551We, the Globe, can compa
sse
soone,
16161552Swifter then the wandring Moone.
16171553Tita. Come my Lord, and in our
flight,
16211556With the
se mortals on the ground.
Exeunt. VVinde horne. 16231557Enter Theseus and all his traine. 16241558The. Goe one of you,
finde out the forre
ster:
16251559For now our ob
seruation is performde.
16261560And
since we haue the vaward of the day,
16271561My loue
shall heare the mu
sicke of my hounds.
16281562Vncouple, in the we
sterne vallie, let them goe:
16291563Di
spatch I
say, and
finde the forre
ster.
16301564Wee will, faire Queene, vp to the mountaines toppe,
16311565And marke the mu
sicall confu
sion
16321566Of hounds and Echo in coniun
ction.
Hippol.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
16331567Hip. I was with
Hercules and
Cadmus, once,
16341568When in a wood of
Creete they bayed the Beare,
16351569With hounds of
Sparta: neuer did I heare
16361570Such gallant chiding. For be
sides the groues,
16371571The
skyes, the fountaines, euery region neare
16381572Seeme all one mutuall cry. I neuer heard
16391573So mu
sicall a di
scord,
such
sweete thunder.
16401574Thes. My hounds are bred out of the
Spartane kinde:
16411575So
flew'd,
so
sanded: and their heads are hung
16421576VVith eares, that
sweepe away the morning deawe,
16431577Crooke kneed, and deawlapt, like
Thessalian Buls:
16441578Slowe in pur
suit; but matcht in mouth like bels,
16451579Each vnder each. A cry more tunable
16461580Was neuer hollowd to, nor cheerd with horne,
16471581In
Creete, in
Sparta, nor in
Thessaly.
16481582Iudge when you heare. But
soft. What nymphes are the
se?
16491583Egeus. My Lord, this is my daughter heere a
sleepe,
16501584And this
Lysander, this
Demetrius is,
16521586I wonder of their being here together.
16531587The. No doubt, they ro
se vp earely, to ob
serue
16541588The right of May: and hearing our intent,
16551589Came heere, in grace of our
solemnitie.
16561590But
speake,
Egeus, is not this the day,
16571591That
Hermia should giue an
swer of her choyce?
16591593These. Goe, bid the hunt
smen wake them with their hornes.
16621594Shoute within: they all start up. Winde hornes. 16631595The. Good morrow, friends. Saint
Valentine is pa
st.
16641596Begin the
se wood birds but to couple, now?
16671599I know, you two are Riuall enemies.
16681600How comes this gentle concord in the worlde,
16691601That hatred is
so farre from iealou
sie,
To
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
16701602To
sleepe by hate, and feare no enmitie,
16711603Lys. My Lord, I
shal reply amazedly,
16721604Halfe
sleepe, halfe waking. But, as yet, I
sweare,
16731605I cannot truely
say how I came here.
16741606But as I thinke (for truely would I
speake)
16751607And now I doe bethinke mee,
so it is;
16761608I came with
Hermia, hither. Our intent
16771609Was to be gon from
Athens: where we might
16781610Without the perill of the
Athenian lawe,
16791611Ege. Enough, enough my Lord: you haue enough.
16801612I begge the law, the law, vpon his head:
16811613They would haue
stolne away, they would,
Demetrius,
16821614Thereby to haue defeated you and me:
16831615You of your wife, and mee, of my con
sent:
16841616Of my con
sent, that
she
should be your wife.
16851617Deme. My Lord, faire
Helen told me of their
stealth,
16861618Of this their purpo
se hither, to this wood,
16871619And I in fury hither followed them;
16881620Faire
Helena, in fancy following mee.
16891621But my good Lord, I wote not by what power
16901622(But by
some power it is) my loue,
16921624Seemes to me now as the remembrance of an idle gaude,
16931625Which in my childehoode I did dote vpon:
16941626And all the faith, the vertue of my heart,
16951627The obie
ct and the plea
sure of mine eye,
16961628Is onely
Helena. To her, my Lord,
16971629Was I betrothed, ere I
see
Hermia: 16981630But, like a
sickne
sse, did I loath this foode.
16991631But, as in health, come to my naturall ta
ste,
17001632Now I doe wi
sh it, loue it, long for it,
17011633And will for euermore be true to it.
17021634The. Faire louers, you are fortunately met.
17031635Of this di
scour
se, we more will here anon.
Egeus,
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
17041636Egeus, I will ouerbeare your will:
17051637For in the Temple, by and by, with vs,
17061638The
se couples
shall eternally be knit.
17071639And, for the morning now is
somthing worne,
17081640Our purpos'd hunting
shall be
set a
side.
17091641Away, with vs, to
Athens. Three and three,
17101642Weele holde a fea
st, in great
solemnitie. Come
Hyppolita.
17121643Deme. The
se things
seeme
small and vndi
stingui
shable,
17131644Like farre o
ff mountaines turned into clouds.
17141645Her. Me thinks I
see the
se things, with parted eye,
17171648And I haue found
Demetrius, like a iewell,
17191651That we are awake? It
seemes to me,
17201652That yet we
sleepe, we dreame. Do not you thinke,
17211653The Duke was here, and bid vs follow him?
17241656Lys. And he did bid vs follow to the Temple.
17251657Dem. Why then, we are awake: lets follow him, and by
17261658the way lets recount our dreames.
17281659Clo. When my cue comes, call mee, and I will an
swere.
17291660My next is, mo
st faire
Pyramus. Hey ho.
Peeter Quince?
17301661Flute, the bellowes mender?
Snout the tinker?
Starueling?
17311662Gods my life! Stolne hence, and left mee a
sleepe? I haue
17321663had a mo
st rare vi
sion. I haue had a dreame, pa
st the wit
17331664of man, to
say; what dreame it was. Man is but an A
sse, if
17341665hee goe about expound this dreame. Me thought I was,
17351666there is no man can tell what. Me thought I was, and me
17361667thought I had. But man is but patcht a foole, If hee will
17371668o
ffer to
say, what mee thought I had. The eye of man
17381669hath not heard, the eare of man hath not
seene, mans
hand
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
17391670hand is not able to ta
ste, his tongue to conceiue, nor his
17401671hearte to report, what my dreame was. I will get
Pet- 17411672ter Quince to write a Ballet of this dreame: it
shall be
17421673call'd
Bottoms Dreame; becau
se it hath no bottome: and
17431674I will
sing it in the latter end of a Play, before the Duke.
17441675Peraduenture, to make it the more gratious, I
shall
sing
17461677Enter Quince, Flute, Thisby and the rabble. 17471678Quin. Haue you
sent to
Bottoms hou
se? Is he come
17491680Flut. Hee cannot be heard of. Out of doubt he is tran
s- 17511682Thys. If hee come not, then the Play is mard. It goes
17531684Quin. It is not po
ssible. You haue not a man, in all
A- 17541685thens, able to di
scharge
Pyramus, but he.
17551686Thys. No, hee hath
simply the be
st wit of any handy
- 17571688Quin. Yea, and the be
st per
son to, and hee is a very
17591690This. You mu
st say, Paragon. A Paramour is (God
17621693Snug. Ma
sters, the Duke is comming from the Tem
- 17631694ple,and there is two or three Lords and Ladies more
17641695married. If our
sport had gon forward, wee had all
17661697Thys. O
sweete bully
Bottome. Thus hath hee lo
st six
17671698pence a day, during his life: hee coulde not haue
scaped
1699sixe pence a day. And the Duke had not giuen him
six
17681700pence a day, for playing
Pyramus, Ile be hanged.
17691701He would haue de
serued it. Six pence a day, in
Pyramus,
or
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
17721704Bot. Where are the
se lads? Where are the
se harts?
17731705Quin. Bottom, ? mo
st couragious day! O mo
st happy
17751707Bott. Ma
sters, I am to di
scour
se wonders: but a
ske me
17761708not what. For if I tell you, I am not true
Athenian. I will
17771709tell you euery thing right as it fell out.
17781710Quin. Let vs heare,
sweete
Bottom.
17791711Bot. Not a word of mee. All that I will tell you, is, that
17801712the Duke hath dined. Get your apparrell together, good
17811713strings to your beardes, new ribands to your pumpes,
17821714meete pre
sently at the palace, euery man looke ore his part.
17831715For, the
short and the long is, our play is preferd. In any
17841716ca
se let
Thisby haue cleane linnen: and let not him, that
17851717plaies the Lyon, pare his nailes: for they
shall hang out
17861718for the Lyons clawes. And mo
st deare A
ctors, eate no O
- 17871719nions nor garlicke: for we are to vtter
sweete breath: and
17881720I do not doubt but to hear them
say, it is a
sweete Comedy.
17921722Enter Theseus, Hyppolita, and Philostrate. 17931723Hip. Tis
strange, my
Theseus, that the
se louers
speake of.
17941724The. More
straunge then true. I neuer may beleeue
17951725The
se antique fables, nor the
se Fairy toyes.
17961726Louers, and mad men haue
such
seething braines,
17971727Such
shaping phanta
sies, that apprehend more,
17981728Then coole rea
son euer comprehends. The lunatick,
17991729The louer, and the Poet are of imagination all compa
ct.
18011730One
sees more diuels, then va
st hell can holde:
18021731That is the mad man. The louer, all as frantick,
18031732Sees
Helens beauty in a brow of
AEgypt.
18041733The Poets eye, in a
fine frenzy, rolling, doth glance
18051734From heauen to earth, from earth to heauen. And as
18061735Imagination bodies forth the formes of things
Vn-
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
18071736Vnknowne: the Poets penne turnes them to
shapes,
18081737And giues to ayery nothing, a locall habitation,
18091738And a name. Such trickes hath
strong imagination,
18101739That if it would but apprehend
some ioy,
18111740It comprehends
some bringer of that ioy.
18121741Or in the night, imagining
some feare,
18131742How ea
sie is a bu
sh suppos'd a Beare?
18141743Hyp. But, all the
story of the night told ouer,
18151744And all their minds tran
sfigur'd
so together,
18161745More witne
sseth than fancies images,
18171746And growes to
something of great con
stancy:
18181747But how
soeuer,
strange and admirable.
18191748Enter Louers; Lysander, Demetrius, Hermia and 18211750The. Here come the louers, full of ioy and mirth.
18221751Ioy, gentle friends, ioy and fre
sh daies
18241753Lys. More then to vs, waite in your royall walkes, your
18261755The. Come now: what ma
skes, what daunces
shall wee (haue,
18281756To weare away this long age of three hours, betweene
18291757Or after
supper, & bed-time? Where is our v
suall manager
18301758Of mirth? What Reuels are in hand? Is there no play,
18321759To ea
se the angui
sh of a torturing hower? Call
Philostrate.
18341760Philostrate. Here mighty
Theseus.
18351761The. Say, what abridgement haue you for this euening?
18371762What ma
ske, what mu
sicke? How
shall we beguile
18381763The lazy tyme, if not with
some delight?
18391764Philost. There is a briefe, how many
sports are ripe.
18401765Make choyce, of which your Highne
sse will
see
fir
st.
18411766The. The battell with the
Centaures to be
sung,
18421767By an
Athenian Eunuche, to the Harpe?
18431768Weele none of that. That haue I tolde my loue,
18441769In glory of my kin
sman
Hercules.
18451770The ryot of the tip
sie
Bachanals,
Tea-
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
18461771Tearing the
Thracian singer, in their rage?
18471772That is an olde deui
se: and it was plaid,
18481773When I from
Thebes came la
st a conquerer.
18491774The thri
se three Mu
ses, mourning for the death
18501775Of learning, late decea
st, in beggery?
18511776That is
some
Satire keene and criticall,
18521777Not
sorting with a nuptiall ceremony.
18531778A tedious briefe Scene of young
Pyramus 18541779And his loue
Thisby; very tragicall mirth?
18551780Merry, and tragicall? Tedious, and briefe? That is hot I
se,
18561781And
wōdrous strange
snow. How
shall we
find the cōcord
18581783Philost. A Play there is, my Lord,
some ten words long;
18591784Which is as briefe, as I haue knowne a play:
18601785But, by ten words, my Lord it is too long:
18611786Which makes it tedious. For in all the Play,
18621787There is not one word apt, one player
fitted.
18631788And tragicall, my noble Lord, it is. For
Pyramus,
18641789Therein, doth kill him
selfe. Which when I
saw
18651790Rehear
st, I mu
st confe
sse, made mine eyes water:
18661791But more merry teares the pa
ssion of loud laughter
18681793These. What are they, that doe play it?
18691794Phil. Hard handed men, that worke in
Athens here,
18701795Which neuer labour'd in their minds till now:
18711796And now haue toyled their vnbreathed memories,
18721797With this
same Play, again
st your nuptiall.
18741799Phi. No, my noble Lord, it is not for you. I haue heard
18751800It ouer, and it is nothing, nothing in the world;
18761801Vnle
sse you can
finde
sport in their entents,
18771802Extreamely
stretcht, and cond with cruell paine,
18791804The. I will heare that play. For neuer any thing
18801805Can be ami
sse, when
simplene
sse and duety tender it.
Goe
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
18811806Goe bring them in, and take your places, Ladies.
18821807Hip. I loue not to
see wretchedne
sse orecharged;
18831808And duery, in his
seruice, peri
shing.
18841809The. Why, gentle
sweete, you
shall
see no
such thing.
18851810Hip. He
sayes, they can doe nothing in this kinde.
18861811The. The kinder we, to giue them thanks, for nothing.
18871812Our
sport
shall be, to take what they mi
stake.
18881813And what poore duty cannot doe, noble re
spe
ct 18901815Where I haue come, great Clerkes haue purpo
sed
18911816To greete me, with premeditated welcomes;
18921817Where I haue
seene them
shiuer and looke pale,
18931818Make periods in the mid
st of
sentences,
18941819Throttle their pra
ctiz'd accent in their feares,
18951820And in conclu
sion dumbly haue broke o
ff,
18961821Not paying mee a welcome. Tru
st me,
sweete,
18971822Out of this
silence, yet, I pickt a welcome:
18981823And in the mode
sty of fearefull duty,
18991824I read as much, as from the rattling tongue
19001825Of
saucy and audacious eloquence.
19011826Loue, therefore, and tong-tide
simplicity,
19021827In lea
st,
speake mo
st, to my capacity.
19031828Philost. So plea
se your Grace, the Prologue is addre
st.
19061831Pro. If wee o
ffend, it is with our good will.
19071832That you
should thinke, we come not to o
ffend,
19081833But with good will. To
shew our
simple
skill,
19091834That is the true beginning of our end.
19101835Con
sider then, we come but in de
spight.
19111836We doe not come, as minding to content you,
19121837Our true intent is. All for your delight,
19131838Wee are not here. That you
should here repent you,
19141839The A
ctors are at hand: and, by their
showe,
19151840You
shall know all, that you are like to knowe,
The.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
19161841The. This fellow doth not
stand vpon points.
19171842Lys. He hath rid his Prologue, like a rough Colte: hee
19181843knowes not the
stoppe. A good morall my Lord. It is not
19191844enough to
speake; but to
speake true.
19201845Hyp. Indeed he hath plaid on this Prologue, like a child
19211846on a Recorder, a
sound; but not in gouernement.
19221847The. His
speach was like a tangled Chaine; nothing im
- 19231848paired, but all di
sordered. Who is next?
19241849 Enter Pyramus, and Thisby, and Wall, and Moone- 19261851Prologue. Gentles, perchance you wonder at this
show.
19271852But, wonder on, till truthe make all things plaine.
19281853This man is
Pyramus, if you would knowe:
19291854This beautious Lady
Thsby is certaine.
19301855This man, with lyme and roughca
st, doth pre
sent
19311856Wall, that vile wall, which did the
se louers
sunder:
19321857And through wals chinke, poore
soules, they are content
19331858To whi
sper. At the which, let no man wonder.
19341859This man, with lanterne, dogge, and bu
sh of thorne,
19351860Pre
senteth moone-
shine. For if you will know,
19361861By moone-
shine did the
se louers thinke no
scorne
19371862To meete at
Ninus tombe, there, there to wooe.
19381863This grizly bea
st (which Lyon hight by name)
19391864The tru
sty
Thysby, comming
fir
st by night,
19401865Did
scarre away, or rather did a
ffright:
19411866And as
she
fled, her mantle
she did fall:
19421867Which Lyon vile with bloody mouth did
staine.
19431868Anon comes
Pyramus,
sweete youth, and tall,
19441869And
findes his tru
sty
Thisbyes mantle
slaine:
19451870Whereat, with blade, with bloody blamefull blade,
19461871He brauely broacht his boyling bloody brea
st.
19471872And
Thisby, tarying in Mulberry
shade,
19481873His dagger drewe, and dyed. For all the re
st,
19491874Let
Lyon, Moone-shine, Wall, and louers twaine,
19501875At large di
scour
se, while here they doe remaine.
The.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
19521876The. I wonder, if the Lyon be to
speake.
19531877Demet. No wonder, my Lord. One Lyon may, when
19551879Exit Lyon, Thysby, and Mooneshine. 19561880Wall. In this
same enterlude it doth befall,
19571881That I, one
Flute (by name) pre
sent a wall:
19581882And
such a wall, as I would haue you thinke
19591883That had in it a cranied hole or chinke:
19601884Through which the louers,
Pyramus, and
Thisby,
19611885Did whi
sper often, very
secretly.
19621886This lome, this roughca
st, and this
stone doth
showe,
19631887That I am that
same wall: the truth is
so.
19641888And this the cranie is, right and
sini
ster,
19651889Through which the fearefull louers are to whi
sper.
19661890The. Would you de
sire lime and haire to
speake better?
19681891Deme. It is the wittie
st partition, that euer I heard di
s- 19701893The. Pyramus drawes neare the wall:
silence.
19721894Py. O grim lookt night, o night, with hue
so blacke,
19731895O night, which euer art, when day is not:
19741896O night, O night, alacke, alacke, alacke,
19751897I feare my
Thisbyes promi
se is forgot.
19761898And thou ? wall, ?
sweete, ? louely wall,
19771899That
stand
st betweene her fathers ground and mine,
19781900Thou wall, ? wall, O
sweete and louely wall,
19791901Showe mee thy chinke, to blink through, with mine eyne.
19801902Thankes curteous wall.
Ioue shield thee well, for this.
19811903But what
see I? No
Thisby doe I
see.
19821904O wicked wall, through whome I
see no bli
sse,
19831905Cur
st be thy
stones, for thus deceiuing mee.
19841906The. The wall mee thinkes, being
sen
sible,
should cur
se
19861908Pyr. No, in truth Sir, he
should not.
Deceiuing mee is
19871909Thisbyes cue:
she is to enter now, and I am to
spy
19881910Her through the wall. You
shall
see it will fall
Pat
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
19901911Pat as I told you: yonder
she comes.
Enter Thisby. 19911912This. O wall, full often ha
st thou heard my mones,
19921913For parting my faire
Pyramus, and mee.
19931914My cherry lips haue often ki
st thy
stones;
19941915Thy
stones, with lime and hayire knit now againe.
19951916Pyra. I
see a voice: now will I to the chinke,
19961917To
spy and I can heare my
Thisbyes face.
Thysby?
19971918This. My loue thou art, my loue I thinke.
19981919Py. Thinke what thou wilt, I am thy louers Grace:
19991920And, like
Limander, am I tru
sty
still.
20001921This. And I, like
Helen, till the fates me kill.
20011922Pyra. Not
Shafalus, to
Procrus, was
so true.
20021923This. As
Shafalus to
Procrus, I to you.
20031924Pyr. O ki
sse mee, through the hole of this vilde wall.
20041925This. I ki
sse the walles hole; not your lips at all.
20051926Pyr. Wilt thou, at
Ninnies tombe, meete me
straight way?
20071927Thy. Tide life, tyde death, I come without delay.
20081928Wal. Thus haue I,
Wall, my part di
scharged
so;
20091929And, being done, thus wall away doth goe.
20101930Duk. Now is the Moon v
sed between the two neighbors.
20121931Deme. No remedy, my Lord, when wals are
so wilfull, to
20141933Dutch. This is the
sillie
st stu
ffe, that euer I heard.
20151934Duke. The be
st, in this kinde, are but
shadowes: and
20161935the wor
st are no wor
se, if imagination amend them.
20171936Dutch. It mu
st be your imagination, then; & not theirs.
20181937Duke. If we imagine no wor
se of them, then they of
thē- 20191938selues, they may pa
sse for excellent men. Here come two
20201939noble bea
sts, in a man and a Lyon.
20221941Lyon. You Ladies, you (who
se gentle hearts do feare
20231942The
smalle
st mon
strous mou
se, that creepes on
floore)
20241943May now, perchance, both quake and tremble here,
20251944When Lyon rough, in wilde
st rage, doth roare.
20261945Then know that I, as
Snug the Ioyner am
A
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
20271946A Lyon fell, nor el
se no Lyons damme.
20281947For, if I
should, as Lyon, come in
strife,
20291948Into this place, 'twere pitty on my life.
20301949Duk. A very gentle bea
st, and of a good con
science.
20311950Deme. The very be
st at a bea
st, my Lord, that ere I
saw.
20321951Lys. This Lyon is a very fox, for his valour.
20331952Duk. True: and a goo
se for his di
scretion.
20341953De. Not
so my Lord. For his valour cannot carry his di
s- 20351954cretion: and the fox carries the goo
se.
20361955Duk. His di
scretion, I am
sure, cannot carry his valour.
20371956For the goo
se carries not the fox. It is well: leaue it to his
20381957di
scretion, and let vs li
sten to the Moone.
20391958Moone. This lanthorne doth the horned moone pre
sent.
20411959Deme. He
should haue worne the hornes, on his head.
20421960Duk. He is no cre
scent, and his hornes are inui
sible, with
- 20441962Moone. This lanthorne doth the horned moone pre
sent,
20451963My
selfe, the man ith Moone, doe
seeme to be.
20461964Duke. This is the greate
st errour of all the re
st; the man
20471965should be put into the lanthorne. How is it el
se the man ith
20491967Deme. He dares not come there, for the candle. For,
20501968you
see, it is already in
snu
ffe.
20511969Dutch. I am aweary of this Moone. Would hee woulde change.
20531970Duke. It appeares, by his
small light of di
scretion, that
20541971hee is in the wane: but yet in curte
sie, in all rea
son, wee
20571974Moon. All that I haue to
say, is to tell you, that the lan
- 1975thorne is the Moone, I the man ith Moone, this thorne bu
sh 20591976my thorne bu
sh, and this dogge my dogge.
20601977Deme. Why? All the
se
should be in the lanthorne: for all
20611978the
se are in the Moone. But
silence: here comes
Thisby.
20621979 Enter Thisby. Th. This is ould
Ninies tumbe. Where is my loue?
Lyon.Oh.
Demetrius
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
20681982Dutchesse. Well
shone
Moone. Truly, the Moone
shines,
20741988Pyr. Sweete Moone, I thanke thee, for thy
sunny beams.
20751989I thanke thee, Moone, for
shining now
so bright.
20761990For by thy gratious, golden, glittering beames,
20771991I tru
st to take of true
st Thisby sight.
20781992But
stay: ?
spight! but marke, poore knight,
20801994Eyes do you
see! How can it bee!
20821996Thy mantle good, what,
staind with blood?
20841998O fates come, come, cut thread and thrumme,
20851999Quaile, cru
sh, conclude, and quell.
20862000Duke. This pa
ssion, & the death of a deare friend would
20872001goe neere to make a man looke
sad.
20882002Dutch. Be
shrewe my heart, but I pitty the man.
20892003Pyr. O, wherefore, Nature, did
st thou Lyons frame?
20902004Since Lyon vilde hath here de
flour'd my deare.
20912005Which is, no, no: which was the faire
st dame
20922006That liu'd, that lou'd, that lik't, that look't with cheere.
20932007Come teares, confound, out
sword, and wound
20952009I, that left pappe, where heart doth hoppe.
20972011Now am I dead, now am I
fled, my
soule is in the
sky.
20982012Tongue loo
se thy light, Moone take thy
flight,
21002014Dem. No Die, but an ace for him. For he is but one.
Lys.
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
21012015Lys. Le
sse then an ace, man. For he is dead, he is nothing.
21032016Duke. With the helpe of a Surgeon, he might yet reco
- 21052018Dut. How chance Moone-
shine is gone before?
Thisby 21062019comes backe, and
findes her louer.
21082020Duk. Shee will
finde him, by
starre-light. Here
shee
21092021comes, and her pa
ssion ends the Play.
21102022Dut. Me thinkes,
she
should not v
se a long one, for
such
21112023a
Pyramus: I hope,
she will be briefe.
21122024Demet. A moth will turne the ballance; which
Pyramus,
21132025which
Thisby is the better: he for a man; God warnd vs:
2026she, for a woman; God ble
sse vs.
21142027Lys. She hath
spied him already, with tho
se
sweete eyes.
21152028Deme. And thus
she meanes,
videlicet;
21162029This. A
sleepe my loue? What, dead my doue?
21182031Speake,
speake. Quite dumbe? Dead, dead? A tumbe
21202033The
se lilly lippes, this cherry no
se,
21222035Are gon, are gon: louers make mone:
21232036His eyes were greene, as leekes.
21242037O
sisters three, come, come, to mee,
21262039Lay them in gore,
since you haue
shore
21272040With
sheeres, his threede of
silke.
21282041Tongue, not a word: come tru
sty
sword,
21302043And farewell friends: thus
Thysby ends:
21322045Duke. Moone-shine and
Lyon are left to bury the dead.
21342047Lyon. No, I a
ssure you, the wall is downe, that parted
21352048their fathers. Will it plea
se you, to
see the Epilogue, or to
21362049heare a Bergoma
ske daunce, between two of our
cōpany?
Duke
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
21382050Duke. No Epilogue, I pray you. For your Play needs no
21392051excu
se. Neuer excu
se: For when the Players are all deade,
21402052there neede none to be blamed. Mary, if hee that writ it,
21412053had played
Pyramus, and hangd him
selfe in
Thisbies gar
- 21422054ter, it would haue beene a
fine tragedy: and
so it is truely,
21432055and very notably di
scharg'd. But come your Burgoma
ske:
21452057The iron tongue of midnight hath tolde twelue.
21462058Louers to bed, tis almo
st Fairy time.
21472059I feare we
shall out
sleepe the comming morne,
21482060As much as wee this night haue ouerwatcht.
21492061This palpable gro
sse Play hath well beguil'd
21502062The heauie gate of night. Sweete friends, to bed.
21512063A fortnight holde we this
solemnitie,
21522064In nightly Reuels, and new iollity.
Exeunt. 21542066Puck. Now the hungry Lyons roares.
21552067And the wolfe beholds the Moone;
21562068Whil
st the heauie ploughman
snores,
21582070Now the wa
sted brands doe glowe,
21592071Whil
st the
scriech-owle,
scrieching lowd,
21602072Puts the wretch, that lyes in woe,
21632075That the graues, all gaping wide,
21642076Euery one lets forth his
spright,
21652077In the Churchway paths to glide.
21662078And wee Fairies, that doe runne,
21692081Following darkene
sse like a dreame,
21712083Shall di
sturbe this hallowed hou
se.
To
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
21732085To
sweepe the du
st, behinde the dore.
21742086Enter King and Queene of Fairies, with all their traine. 21752087Ob. Through the hou
se giue glimmering light,
21782090Hop as light as birde from brier,
21792091And this dittie after mee, Sing, and daunce it trippingly.
21802092Tita. Fir
st rehear
se your
song by rote,
21832095Will we
sing and ble
sse this place.
21852096Ob. Now, vntill the breake of day,
21862097Through this hou
se, each Fairy
stray.
21952106Neuer mole, hare-lippe, nor
scarre,
21962107Nor marke prodigious,
such as are
21992110With this
field deaw con
secrate,
22012112And each
seuerall chamber ble
sse,
22022113Through this palace, with
sweete peace,
22062117Meete me all, by breake of day.
Exeunt. 22072118Robin. If we
shadowes haue o
ffended,
22082119Thinke but this (and all is mended)
That
A Midsommer nightes dreame.
22092120That you haue but
slumbred here,
22102121While the
se vi
sions did appeare.
22172128Now to
scape the Serpents tongue,
22212132Giue me your hands, if we be friends: