The Yeomen of the Guard

Operetta

Writers: Arthur Sullivan W.S. Gilbert

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

Sir Richard Cholmondeley (Lieutenant of the Tower)

Colonel Fairfax (under sentence of death)

Sergeant Meryll (of the Yeomen of the Guard)

Leonard Meryll (his son)

Jack Point (a Strolling Jester)

Wilfred Shadbolt. (Head Jailer and Assistant Tormentor)

The Headsman

First Yeoman

Second Yeoman

First Citizen

Second Citizen

Elsie Maynard (a Strolling Singer)

Phœbe Meryll (Sergeant Meryll's Daughter)

Dame Carruthers (Housekeeper to the Tower)

Kate (her Niece)

Chorus of Yeomen of the Guard*,* Gentlemen, Citizens*, etc.*

Scene: Tower Green

Time: 16th Century

ACT I

Scene. -- Tower Green. Phœbe discovered spinning.

SONG -- Phœbe

When maiden loves, she sits and sighs,

She wanders to and fro;

Unbidden tear-drops fill her eyes,

And to all questions she replies,

With a sad 'heighho!'

'Tis but a little word -- 'heighho!'

So soft, 'tis scarcely heard -- 'heighho!'

An idle breath --

Yet life and death

May hang upon a maid's 'heighho!'

When maiden loves, she mopes apart,

As owl mopes on a tree;

Although she keenly feels the smart,

She cannot tell what ails her heart,

With its sad 'Ah, me!'

'Tis but a foolish sigh -- 'Ah, me!'

Born but to droop and die -- 'Ah, me!'

Yet all the sense

Of eloquence

Lies hidden in a maid's 'Ah, me!' (weeps)

Enter Wilfred.

Wilfred. Mistress Meryll!

Phœbe. (looking up) Eh! Oh! It's you, is it? You may go away, if you like. Because I don't want you, you know.

Wilfred. Haven't you anything to say to me?

Phœbe. Oh yes! Are the birds all caged? The wild beasts all littered down? All the locks, chains, bolts, and bars in good order? Is the Little Ease sufficiently uncomfortable? The racks, pincers, and thumbscrews all ready for work? Ugh! you brute!

Wilfred. These allusions to my professional duties are in doubtful taste. I didn't become a head-jailer because I like head-jailing. I didn't become an assistant-tormentor because I like assistant-tormenting. We can't all be sorcerers, you know. (Phœbe is annoyed) Ah! you brought that upon yourself.

Phœbe. Colonel Fairfax is not a sorcerer. He's a man of science and an alchemist.

Wilfred. Well, whatever he is, he won't be one for long, for he's to be beheaded to-day for dealings with the devil. His master nearly had him last night, when the fire broke out in the Beauchamp Tower.

Phœbe. Oh! how I wish he had escaped in the confusion! But take care; there's still time for a reply to his petition for mercy.

Wilfred. Ah! I'm content to chance that. This evening at half-past seven -- ah!

Phœbe. You're a cruel monster to speak so unfeelingly of the death of a young and handsome soldier.

Wilfred. Young and handsome! How do you know he's young and handsome?

Phœbe. Because I've seen him every day for weeks past taking his exercise on the Beauchamp Tower.

Wilfred. Curse him!

Phœbe. There, I believe you're jealous of him, now. Jealous of a man I've never spoken to! Jealous of a poor soul who's to die in an hour!

Wilfred. I am! I'm jealous of everybody and everything. I'm jealous of the very words I speak to you -- because they reach your ears -- and I mustn't go near 'em!

Phœbe. How unjust you are! Jealous of the words you speak to me! Why, you know as well as I do that I don't even like them.

Wilfred. You used to like 'em.

Phœbe. I used to pretend I liked them. It was mere politeness to comparative strangers. (Exit Phœbe, with spinning wheel.)

Wilfred. I don't believe you know what jealousy is! I don't believe you know how it eats into a man's heart -- and disorders his digestion -- and turns his interior into boiling lead. Oh, you are a heartless jade to trifle with the delicate organization of the human interior.

SONG -- Wilfred.1

When jealous torments rack my soul,

My agonies I can't control,

Oh, better sit on red hot coal

Than love a heartless jade.

The red hot coal will hurt no doubt,

But red hot coals in time die out,

But jealousy you can not rout,

Its fires will never fade.

It's much less painful on the whole

To go and sit on red hot coal

Till you're completely flayed,

Or ask a kindly friend to crack 

Your wretched bones upon the rack

Than love a heartless jade.

The kerchief on your neck of snow

I look on as a deadly foe,

It goeth where I dare not go

And stops there all day long.

The belt that holds you in its grasp

Is to my peace of mind a rasp,

It claspeth what I can not clasp,

Correct me if I'm wrong.

It's much less painful on the whole, etc.

The bird that breakfasts on your lip,

I would I had him in my grip,

He sippeth where I dare not sip,

I can't get over that.

The cat you fondle soft and sly,

He layeth where I dare not lie.

We're not on terms, that cat and I.

I do not like that cat.

It's much less painful on the whole, etc.

Exit Wilfred. Enter people excitedly, followed by Yeomen of the Guard*.*

CHORUS (as Yeomen march on).

Tower warders, 

Under orders,

Gallant pikemen, valiant sworders!

Brave in bearing, 

Foemen scaring,

In their bygone days of daring!

Ne'er a stranger

There to danger -- 

Each was o'er the world a ranger;

To the story

Of our glory

Each a bold, a bold contributory!

Chorus of Yeomen.

In the autumn of our life,

Here at rest in ample clover,

We rejoice in telling over

Our impetuous May and June.

In the evening of our day,

With the sun of life declining,

We recall without repining

All the heat of bygone noon,

SOLO -- 2nd Yeoman.

This the autumn of our life,

This the evening of our day;

Weary we of battle strife,

Weary we of mortal fray.

But our year is not so spent,

And our days are not so faded,

But that we with one consent,

Were our loved land invaded,

Still would face a foreign foe,

As in days of long ago.

Chorus. Still would face a foreign foe,

As in days of long ago.

People. Yeomen.

Tower warders, This the autumn of our life, etc. Under orders, etc.

Exeunt Crowd. Manent Yeomen. Enter Dame Carruthers.

Dame. A good day to you!

2nd Yeoman. Good day, Dame Carruthers. Busy today?

Dame. Busy, aye! The fire in the Beauchamp last night has given me work enough. A dozen poor prisoners -- Richard Colfax, Sir Martin Byfleet, Colonel Fairfax, Warren the preacher-poet, and half-a-score others -- all packed into one small cell, not six feet square. Poor Colonel Fairfax, who's to die today, is to be removed to No. 14 in the Cold Harbour that he may have his last hour alone with his confessor; and I've to see to that.

2nd Yeoman. Poor gentleman! He'll die bravely. I fought under him two years since, and he valued his life as it were a feather!

Phœbe. He's the bravest, the handsomest, and the best young gentleman in England! He twice saved my father's life; and it's a cruel thing, a wicked thing, and a barbarous thing that so gallant a hero should lose his head -- for it's the handsomest head in England!

Dame. For dealings with the devil. Aye! if all were beheaded who dealt with him, there'd be busy doings on Tower Green.

Phœbe. You know very well that Colonel Fairfax is a student of alchemy -- nothing more, and nothing less; but this wicked Tower, like a cruel giant in a fairy-tale, must be fed with blood, and that blood must be the best and bravest in England, or it's not good enough for the old Blunderbore. Ugh!

Dame. Silence, you silly girl; you know not what you say. I was born in the old keep, and I've grown grey in it, and, please God, I shall die and be buried in it; and there's not a stone in its walls that is not as dear to me as my right hand.

SONG WITH CHORUS -- Dame Carruthers and Yeomen

When our gallant Norman foes

Made our merry land their own,

And the Saxons from the Conqueror were flying,

At his bidding it arose,

In its panoply of stone,

A sentinel unliving and undying.

Insensible, I trow,

As a sentinel should be,

Though a queen to save her head should come a-suing,

There's a legend on its brow

That is eloquent to me,

And it tells of duty done and duty doing.

The screw may twist and the rack may turn,

And men may bleed and men may burn,

O'er London town and its golden hoard

I keep my silent watch and ward!

Chorus. The screw may twist, etc.

Within its wall of rock

The flower of the brave

Have perished with a constancy unshaken.

From the dungeon to the block,

From the scaffold to the grave,

Is a journey many gallant hearts have taken.

And the wicked flames may hiss

Round the heroes who have fought

For conscience and for home in all its beauty,

But the grim old fortalice

Takes little heed of aught

That comes not in the measure of its duty.

The screw may twist and the rack may turn,

And men may bleed and men may burn,

O'er London town and its golden hoard

I keep my silent watch and ward!

Chorus. The screw may twist, etc.

Exeunt all but Phœbe. Enter Sergeant Meryll.

Phœbe. Father! Has no reprieve arrived for the poor gentleman?

Meryll. No, my lass; but there's one hope yet. Thy brother Leonard, who, as a reward for his valour in saving his standard and cutting his way through fifty foes who would have hanged him, has been appointed a Yeoman of the Guard, will arrive today; and as he comes straight from Windsor, where the Court is, it may be -- it may be -- that he will bring the expected reprieve with him.

Phœbe. Oh, that he may!

Meryll. Amen to that! For the Colonel twice saved my life, and I'd give the rest of my life to save his! And wilt thou not be glad to welcome thy brave brother, with the fame of whose exploits all England is a-ringing?

Phœbe. Aye, truly, if he brings the reprieve.

Meryll. And not otherwise?

Phœbe. Well, he's a brave fellow indeed, and I love brave men.

Meryll. All brave men?

Phœbe. Most of them, I verily believe! But I hope Leonard will not be too strict with me -- they say he is a very dragon of virtue and circumspection! Now, my dear old father is kindness itself, and --

Meryll. And leaves thee pretty well to thine own ways, eh? Well, I've no fears for thee; thou hast a feather-brain, but thou'rt a good lass.

Phœbe. Yes, that's all very well, but if Leonard is going to tell me that I may not do this and I may not do that, and I must not talk to this one, or walk with that one, but go through the world with my lips pursed up and my eyes cast down, like a poor nun who has renounced mankind -- why, as I have not renounced mankind, and don't mean to renounce mankind, I won't have it -- there!

Meryll. Nay, he'll not check thee more than is good for thee, Phœbe! He's a brave fellow, and bravest among brave fellows, and yet it seems but yesterday that he robbed the Lieutenant's orchard.

SONG -- Sergeant Meryll.2

A laughing boy but yesterday,

A merry urchin blithe and gay,

Whose joyous shout

Came ringing out

Unchecked by care or sorrow.

Today a warrior all sunbrown,

When deeds of soldierly renown

Are all the boast of London town,

A veteran tomorrow!

When at my Leonard's deeds sublime,

A soldier's pulse beats double time,

And grave hearts thrill

As brave hearts will

At tales of martial glory.

I burn with flush of pride and joy,

A pride unbittered by alloy,

To find my boy -- my darling boy --

The theme of song and story!

Enter Leonard Meryll.

Leonard. Father!

Meryll. Leonard! my brave boy! I'm right glad to see thee, and so is Phœbe!

Phœbe. Aye -- hast thou brought Colonel Fairfax's reprieve?

Leonard. Nay, I have here a despatch for the Lieutenant, but no reprieve for the Colonel!

Phœbe. Poor gentleman! poor gentleman!

Leonard. Aye, I would I had brought better news. I'd give my right hand -- nay, my body -- my life, to save his!

Meryll. Dost thou speak in earnest, my lad?

Leonard. Aye, father -- I'm no braggart. Did he not save thy life? and am I not his foster-brother?

Meryll. Then hearken to me. Thou hast come to join the Yeomen of the Guard!

Leonard. Well?

Meryll. None has seen thee but ourselves?

Leonard. And a sentry, who took scant notice of me.

Meryll. Now to prove thy words. Give me the despatch and get thee hence at once! Here is money, and I'll send thee more. Lie hidden for a space, and let no one know. I'll convey a suit of Yeoman's uniform to the Colonel's cell -- he shall shave off his beard, so that none shall know him, and I'll own him as my son, the brave Leonard Meryll, who saved his flag and cut his way through fifty foes who thirsted for his life. He will be welcomed without question by my brother Yeomen, I'll warrant that. Now, how to get access to the Colonel's cell? (To Phœbe.) The key is with they sour-faced admirer, Wilfred Shadbolt.

Phœbe. (demurely) I think -- I say, I think -- I can get anything I want from Wilfred. I think -- mind I say, I think -- you may leave that to me.

Meryll. Then get thee hence at once, lad -- and bless thee for this sacrifice.

Phœbe. And take my blessing, too, dear, dear Leonard!

Leonard. And thine. eh? Humph! Thy love is new-born; wrap it up carefully, lest it take cold and die.

TRIO -- Phœbe, Leonard, and Meryll

Phœbe. Alas! I waver to and fro!

Dark danger hangs upon the deed!

All. Dark danger hangs upon the deed!

Leonard. The scheme is rash and well may fail;

But ours are not the hearts that quail,

The hands that shrink, the cheeks that pale

In hours of need!

All. No, ours are not the hearts that quail,

The hands that shrink, the cheeks that pale

In hours of need!

Meryll. The air I breathe to him I owe:

My life is his -- I count it naught!

Phœ. & Leon. That life is his -- so count it naught!

Meryll. And shall I reckon risks I run

When services are to be done

To save the life of such an one?

Unworthy thought!

Phœ. & Leon. And shall we reckon risks we run

To save the life of such an one?

All. Unworthy thought!

We may succeed -- who can foretell?

May heaven help our hope -- farewell!

Leonard embraces Meryll and Phœbe, and exit. Phœbe weeping.

Meryll. Nay, lass, be of good cheer, we may save him yet.

Phœbe. Oh! see, father -- they bring the poor gentleman from the Beauchamp! Oh, father! his hour is not yet come?

Meryll. No, no -- they lead him to the Cold Harbour Tower to await his end in solitude. But softly -- the Lieutenant approaches! He should not see thee weep.

Enter Fairfax*, guarded. The* Lieutenant enters, meeting him.

Lieut. Halt! Colonel Fairfax, my old friend, we meet but sadly.

Fairfax. Sir, I greet you with all good-will; and I thank you for the zealous care with which you have guarded me from the pestilent dangers which threaten human life outside. In this happy little community, Death, when he comes, doth so in punctual and business-like fashion; and, like a courtly gentleman, giveth due notice of his advent, that one may not be taken unawares.

Lieut. Sir, you bear this bravely, as a brave man should.

Fairfax. Why, sir, it is no light boon to die swiftly and surely at a given hour and in a given fashion! Truth to tell, I would gladly have my life; but if that may not be, I have the next best thing to it, which is death. Believe me, sir, my lot is not so much amiss!

Phœbe. (aside to Meryll) Oh, father, father, I cannot bear it!

Meryll. My poor lass!

Fairfax. Nay, pretty one, why weepest thou? Come, be comforted. Such a life as mine is not worth weeping for. (Sees Meryll.) Sergeant Meryll, is it not? (to Lieutenant.) May I greet my old friend? (Shakes Meryll's hand.) Why, man, what's all this? Thou and I have faced the grim old king a dozen times, and never has his majesty come to me in such goodly fashion. Keep a stout heart, good fellow -- we are soldiers, and we know how to die, thou and I. Take my word for it, it is easier to die well than to live well -- for, in sooth, I have tried both.

BALLAD -- Fairfax.

Is life a boon?

If so, it must befall

That Death, whene'er he call,

Must call too soon.

Though fourscore years he give,

Yet one would pray to live

Another moon!

What kind of plaint have I,

Who perish in July?

I might have had to die,

Perchance, in June!

Is life a thorn?

Then count it not a whit!

Man is well done with it;

Soon as he's born

He should all means essay

To put the plague away;

And I, war-worn,

Poor captured fugitive,

My life most gladly give -- 

I might have had to live,

Another morn!

At the end, Phœbe is led off, weeping, by Meryll*.*

Fairfax. And now, Sir Richard, I have a boon to beg. I am in this strait for no better reason than because my kinsman, Sir Clarence Poltwhistle, one of the Secretaries of State, has charged me with sorcery, in order that he may succeed in my estate, which devolves to him provided I die unmarried.

Lieut. As thou wilt most surely do.

Fairfax. Nay, as I will most surely not do, by your worship's grace! I have a mind to thwart this good cousin of mine.

Lieut. How?

Fairfax. By marrying forthwith, to be sure!

Lieut. But heaven ha' mercy, whom wouldst thou marry?

Fairfax. Nay, I am indifferent on that score. Coming Death hath made of me a true and chivalrous knight, who holds all womankind in such esteem that the oldest, and the meanest, and the worst-favoured of them is good enough for him. So, my good Lieutenant, if thou wouldst serve a poor soldier who has but an hour to live, find me the first that comes -- my confessor shall marry us, and her dower shall be my dishonoured name and a hundred crowns to boot. No such poor dower for an hour of matrimony!

Lieut. A strange request. I doubt that I should be warranted in granting it.

Fairfax. There never was a marriage fraught with so little of evil to the contracting parties. In an hour she'll be a widow, and I -- a bachelor again for aught I know!

Lieut. Well, I will see what can be done, for I hold thy kinsman in abhorrence for the scurvy trick he has played thee.

Fairfax. A thousand thanks, good sir; we meet again on this spot in an hour or so. I shall be a bridegroom then, and your worship will wish me joy. Till then, farewell. (to Guard) I am ready, good fellows. (Exit with Guard into Cold Harbour Tower.)

Lieut. He is a brave fellow, and it is a pity that he should die. Now, how to find him a bride at such short notice? Well, the task should be easy! (Exit.)

Enter Jack Point*. and* Elsie Maynard*, pursued by a crowd of men and women.* Point and Elsie are much terrified; Point*, however, assuming an appearance of self-possession.*

Chorus.

Here's a man of jollity,

Jibe, joke, jollify!

Give us of your quality,

Come, fool, follify!

If you vapour vapidly,

River runneth rapidly,

Into it we fling

Bird who doesn't sing!

Give us an experiment

In the art of merriment;

Into it we throw

Cock who doesn't crow!

Banish your timidity,

And with all rapidity

Give us quip and quiddity -- 

Willy-nilly, O!

River none can mollify;

Into it we throw

Fool who doesn't follify,

Cock who doesn't crow!

Banish your timidity, etc.

Point. (alarmed) My masters, I pray you bear with us, and we will satisfy you, for we are merry folk who would make all merry as ourselves. For, look you, there is humour in all things, and the truest philosophy is that which teaches us to find it and to make the most of it.

Elsie. (struggling with one of the crowd) Hands off, I say, unmannerly fellow! 

Point. (to 1st Citizen) Ha! Didst thou hear her say, 'Hands off'?

1st Citizen. Aye, I heard her say it, and I felt her do it! What then?

Point. Thou dost not see the humour of that?

1st Citizen. Nay, if I do, hang me!

Point. Thou dost not? Now, observe. She said, 'Hands off!' Whose hands? Thine. Off whom? Off her. Why? Because she is a woman. Now, had she not been a woman, thine hands had not been set upon her at all. So the reason for the laying on of hands is the reason for the taking off of hands, and herein is contradiction contradicted! It is the very marriage of pro with con; and no such lopsided union either, as times go, for pro is not more unlike con than man is unlike woman -- yet men and women marry every day with none to say, 'Oh, the pity of it!' but I and fools like me! Now wherewithal shall we please you? We can rhyme you couplet, triolet, quatrain, sonnet, rondolet, ballade, what you will. Or we can dance you saraband, gondolet, carole, Pimpernel, or Jumping Joan.

Elsie. Let us give them the singing farce of the Merryman and his Maid -- therein is song and dance too.

All. Aye, the Merryman and his Maid!

DUET -- Elsie and Point.

Point. I have a song to sing, O!

Elsie. Sing me your song, O!

Point. It is sung to the moon

By a love-lorn loon,

Who fled from the mocking throng, O!

It's a song of a merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye.

Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lackadaydee!

He sipped no sup, and he craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

Elsie. I have a song to sing, O!

Point. What is your song, O!

Elsie. It is sung with the ring

Of the songs maids sing

Who love with a love life-long, O!

It's the song of a merrymaid, peerly proud,

Who loved a lord, and who laughed aloud

At the moan of the merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lackadaydee!

He sipped no sup, etc.

Point. I have a song to sing, O!

Elsie. Sing me your song, O!

Point. It is sung to the knell

Of a churchyard bell,

And a doleful dirge, ding dong, O!

It's a song of a popinjay, bravely born,

Who turned up his noble nose with scorn

At the humble merrymaid, peerly proud,

Who loved a lord, and who laughed aloud

At the moan of the merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lackadaydee!

He sipped no sup, etc.

Elsie. I have a song to sing, O!

Point. Sing me your song, O!

Elsie. It is sung with a sigh

And a tear in the eye,

For it tells of a righted wrong, O!

It's a song of the merrymaid, once so gay,

Who turned on her heel and tripped away

From the peacock popinjay, bravely born,

Who turned up his noble nose with scorn

At the humble heart that he did not prize:

So she begged on her knees, with downcast eyes,

For the love of the merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

All. Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lackadaydee!

His pains were o'er, and he sighed no more,

For he lived in the love of a ladye!

1st Citizen. Well sung and well danced!

2nd Citizen. A kiss for that, pretty maid!

All. Aye, a kiss all round. 

Elsie. (drawing dagger) Best beware! I am armed!

Point. Back, sirs -- back! This is going too far.

2nd Citizen. Thou dost not see the humour of it, eh? Yet there is humour in all things -- even in this. (Trying to kiss her.)

Elsie. Help! Help!

Enter Lieutenant*. with Guard. Crowd falls back.*

Lieut. What is this pother?

Elsie. Sir, we sang to these folk, and they would have repaid us with gross courtesy, but for your honour's coming.

Lieut. (to Mob) Away with ye! Clear the rabble. (Guards push Crowd off, and go off with them) Now, my girl, who are you, and what do you here?

Elsie. May it please you, sir, we are two strolling players, Jack Point and I, Elsie Maynard, at your worship's service. We go from fair to fair, singing, and dancing, and playing brief interludes; and so we make a poor living.  

Lieut. You two, eh? Are ye man and wife?

Point. No, sir; for though I'm a fool, there is a limit to my folly. Her mother, old Bridget Maynard, travels with us (for Elsie is a good girl), but the old woman is a-bed with fever, and we have come here to pick up some silver to buy an electuary for her.

Lieut. Hark ye, my girl! Your mother is ill?

Elsie. Sorely ill, sir.

Lieut. And needs good food, and many things that thou canst not buy?

Elsie. Alas! sir, it is too true.

Lieut. Wouldst thou earn an hundred crowns? 

Elsie. An hundred crowns! They might save her life!

Lieut. Then listen! A worthy but unhappy gentleman is to be beheaded in an hour on this very spot. For sufficient reasons, he desires to marry before he dies, and he hath asked me to find him a wife. Wilt thou be that wife?

Elsie. The wife of a man I have never seen!

Point. Why, sir, look you, I am concerned in this; for though I am not yet wedded to Elsie Maynard, time works wonders, and there's no knowing what may be in store for us. Have we your worship's word for it that this gentleman will die today?

Lieut. Nothing is more certain, I grieve to say.

Point. And that the maiden will be allowed to depart the very instant the ceremony is at an end?

Lieut. The very instant. I pledge my honour that it shall be so.

Point. An hundred crowns?

Lieut. An hundred crowns!

Point. For my part, I consent. It is for Elsie to speak.

TRIO -- Elsie, Point, and Lieutenant.

Lieut. How say you, maiden, will you wed

A man about to lose his head?

For half an hour

You'll be his wife,

And then the dower

Is your for life.

A headless bridegroom why refuse?

If truth the poets tell,

Most bridegrooms, 'ere they marry, 

Lose both head and heart as well!

Elsie. A strange proposal you reveal,

It almost makes my senses reel.

Alas! I'm very poor indeed,

And such a sum I sorely need.

My mother, sir, is like to die,

This money life may bring.

Bear this in mind, I pray, if I

Consent to do this thing!

Point. Though as a general rule of life

I don't allow my promised wife,

My lovely bride that is to be,

To marry anyone but me,

Yet if the fee is promptly paid,

And he, in well-earned grave,

Within the hour is duly laid,

Objection I will waive!

Yes, objection I will waive!

All. Temptation, oh, temptation,

Were we, I pray, intended

To shun, whate'er our station,

Your fascinations splendid;

Or fall, whene'er we view you,

Head over heels into you?

Temptation, oh, temptation, etc.

During this, the Lieutenant has whispered to Wilfred (who has entered). Wilfred binds Elsie*'s eyes with a kerchief, and leads her into the Cold Harbour Tower.*

Lieut. And so, good fellow, you are a jester?

Point. Aye, sir, and like some of my jests, out of place.

Lieut. I have a vacancy for such an one. Tell me, what are your qualifications for such a post?

Point. Marry, sir, I have a pretty wit. I can rhyme you extempore; I can convulse you with quip and conundrum; I have the lighter philosophies at my tongue's tip; I can be merry, wise, quaint, grim, and sardonic, one by one, or all at once; I have a pretty turn for anecdote; I know all the jests -- ancient and modern -- past, present, and to come; I can riddle you from dawn of day to set of sun, and, if that content you not, well on to midnight and the small hours. Oh, sir, a pretty wit, I warrant you -- a pretty, pretty wit!

RECITATIVE & SONG -- Point.

I've jibe and joke

And quip and crank

For lowly folk

And men of rank.

I ply my craft

And know no fear.

But aim my shaft

At prince or peer.

At peer or prince -- at prince or peer,

I aim my shaft and know no fear!

I've wisdom from the East and from the West,

That's subject to no academic rule;

You may find it in the jeering of a jest,

Or distil it from the folly of a fool.

I can teach you with a quip, if I've a mind;

I can trick you into learning with a laugh;

Oh, winnow all my folly, folly, folly, and you'll find

A grain or two of truth among the chaff!

Oh, winnow all my folly, and you'll find

A grain or two of truth among the chaff!

I can set a braggart quailing with a quip,

The upstart I can wither with a whim;

He may wear a merry laugh upon his lip,

But his laughter has an echo that is grim!

When they're offered to the world in merry guise, 

Unpleasant truths are swallowed with a will --

For he who'd make his fellow-creatures wise 

Should always gild the philosophic pill!

Lieut. And how came you to leave your last employ?

Point. Why, sir, it was in this wise. My Lord was the Archbishop of Canterbury, and it was considered that one of my jokes was unsuited to His Grace's family circle. In truth, I ventured to ask a poor riddle, sir -- Wherein lay the difference between His Grace and poor Jack Point? His Grace was pleased to give it up, sir. And thereupon I told him that whereas His Grace was paid £10,000 a year for being good, poor Jack Point was good -- for nothing. 'Twas but a harmless jest, but it offended His Grace, who whipped me and set me in the stocks for a scurril rogue, and so we parted. I had as lief not take post again with the dignified clergy.

Lieut. But I trust you are very careful not to give offence. I have daughters.

Point. Sir, my jests are most carefully selected, and anything objectionable is expunged. If your honour pleases, I will try them first on your honour's chaplain.

Lieut. Can you give me an example? Say that I had sat me down hurriedly on something sharp?

Point. Sir, I should say that you had sat down on the spur of the moment.

Lieut. Humph! I don't think much of that. Is that the best you can do?

Point. It has always been much admired, sir, but we will try again.

Lieut. Well, then, I am at dinner, and the joint of meat is but half cooked.

Point. Why then, sir, I should say that what is underdone cannot be helped.

Lieut. I see. I think that manner of thing would be somewhat irritating.

Point. At first, sir, perhaps; but use is everything, and you would come in time to like it.

Lieut. We will suppose that I caught you kissing the kitchen wench under my very nose.

Point. Under her very nose, good sir -- not under yours! That is where I would kiss her. Do you take me? Oh, sir, a pretty wit -- a pretty, pretty wit!

Lieut. The maiden comes. Follow me, friend, and we will discuss this matter at length in my library.

Point. I am your worship's servant. That is to say, I trust I soon shall be. But, before proceeding to a more serious topic, can you tell me, sir, why a cook's brain-pan is like an overwound clock?

Lieut. A truce to this fooling -- follow me.

Point. Just my luck; my best conundrum wasted!

Exeunt. Enter Elsie from Tower, led by Wilfred*, who removes the bandage from her eyes, and exit.*

RECITATIVE & SONG -- Elsie.

'Tis done! I am a bride! Oh, little ring,

That bearest in thy circlet all the gladness

That lovers hope for, and that poets sing,

What bringest thou to me but gold and sadness?

A bridegroom all unknown, save in this wise,

Today he dies! Today, alas, he dies!

Though tear and long-drawn sigh

Ill fit a bride,

No sadder wife than I

The whole world wide!

Ah me! Ah me!

Yet maids there be

Who would consent to lose

The very rose of youth,

The flow'r of life,

To be, in honest truth,

A wedded wife,

No matter whose!

Ah me! what profit we,

O maids that sigh,

Though gold should live

If wedded love must die?

Ere half an hour has rung,

A widow I!

Ah, heaven, he is too young,

Too brave to die!

Ah me! Ah me!

Yet wives there be

So weary worn, I trow,

That they would scarce complain,

So that they could

In half an hour attain

To widowhood,

No matter how!

O weary wives

Who widowhood would win,

Rejoice that ye have time

To weary in.

Exit Elsie*. as* Wilfred re-enters.

Wilfred. (looking after Elsie) 'Tis an odd freak for a dying man and his confessor to be closeted alone with a strange singing girl. I would fain have espied them, but they stopped up the keyhole. My keyhole!

Enter Phœbe with Meryll*.* Meryll remains in the background, unobserved by Wilfred*.*

Phœbe. (aside) Wilfred -- and alone!

Wilfred. Now what could he have wanted with her? That's what puzzles me!

Phœbe. (aside) Now to get the keys from him. (aloud) Wilfred -- has no reprieve arrived?

Wilfred. None. Thine adored Fairfax is to die.

Phœbe. Nay, thou knowest that I have naught but pity for the poor condemned gentleman.

Wilfred. I know that he who is about to die is more to thee than I, who am alive and well.

Phœbe. Why, that were out of reason, dear Wilfred. Do they not say that a live ass is better than a dead lion? No, I didn't mean that!

Wilfred. Oh, they say that, do they?

Phœbe. It's unpardonably rude of them, but I believe they put it in that way. Not that it applies to thee, who art clever beyond all telling!

Wilfred. Oh yes, as an assistant-tormentor.

Phœbe. Nay, as a wit, as a humorist, as a most philosophic commentator on the vanity of human resolution.

Phœbe slyly takes bunch of keys from Wilfred's waistband and hands them to Meryll*, who enters the Tower, unnoticed by* Wilfred*.*

Wilfred. Truly, I have seen great resolution give way under my persuasive methods (working a small thumbscrew). In the nice regulation of a thumbscrew -- in the hundredth part of a single revolution lieth all the difference between stony reticence and a torrent of impulsive unbosoming that the pen can scarcely follow. Ha! ha! I am a mad wag.

Phœbe. (with a grimace) Thou art a most light-hearted and delightful companion, Master Wilfred. Thine anecdotes of the torture-chamber are the prettiest hearing.

Wilfred. I'm a pleasant fellow an I choose. I believe I am the merriest dog that barks. Ah, we might be passing happy together -- 

Phœbe. Perhaps. I do not know.

Wilfred. For thou wouldst make a most tender and loving wife.

Phœbe. Aye, to one whom I really loved. For there is a wealth of love within this little heart -- saving up for --I wonder whom? Now, of all the world of men, I wonder whom? To think that he whom I am to wed is now alive and somewhere! Perhaps far away, perhaps close at hand! And I know him not! It seemeth that I am wasting time in not knowing him.

Wilfred. Now say that it is I -- nay! suppose it for the nonce. Say that we are wed -- suppose it only -- say that thou art my very bride, and I thy cheery, joyous, bright, frolicsome husband -- and that, the day's work being done, and the prisoners stored away for the night, thou and I are alone together -- with a long, long evening before us!

Phœbe. (with a grimace) It is a pretty picture -- but I scarcely know. It cometh so unexpectedly -- and yet -- and yet -- were I thy bride -- 

Wilfred. Aye! -- wert thou my bride --?

Phœbe. Oh, how I would love thee!

SONG -- Phœbe.

Were I thy bride,

Then all the world beside

Were not too wide

To hold my wealth of love --

Were I thy bride!

Upon thy breast

My loving head would rest,

As on her nest

The tender turtle dove --

Were I thy bride!

This heart of mine

Would be one heart with thine,

And in that shrine

Our happiness would dwell --

Were I thy bride!

And all day long

Our lives should be a song:

No grief, no wrong

Should make my heart rebel --

Were I thy bride!

The silvery flute,

The melancholy lute,

Were night-owl's hoot

To my low-whispered coo --

Were I thy bride!

The skylark's trill

Were but discordance shrill

To the soft thrill

Of wooing as I'd woo --

Were I thy bride!

Meryll re-enters; gives keys to Phœbe*, who replaces them at* Wilfred's girdle, unnoticed by him. Exit Meryll*.*

The rose's sigh

Were as a carrion's cry

To lullaby

Such as I'd sing to thee,

Were I thy bride!

A feather's press

Were leaden heaviness

To my caress.

But then, of course, you see,

I'm not thy bride.

Exit Phœbe.

Wilfred. No, thou'rt not -- not yet! But, Lord, how she woo'd; I should be no mean judge of wooing, seeing that I have been more hotly woo'd than most men. I have been woo'd by maid, widow, and wife. I have been woo'd boldly, timidly, tearfully, shyly -- by direct assault, by suggestion, by implication, by inference, and by innuendo. But this wooing is not of the common order: it is the wooing of one who must needs woo me, if she die for it!

Exit Wilfred*. Enter* Meryll*, cautiously, from Tower.*

Meryll. (looking after them) The deed is, so far, safely accomplished. The slyboots, how she wheedled him! What a helpless ninny is a love-sick man! He is but as a lute in a woman's hands -- she plays upon him whatever tune she will. But the Colonel comes. I' faith, he's just in time, for the Yeomen parade here for his execution in two minutes!

Enter Fairfax*, without beard and moustache, and dressed in Yeoman's uniform.*

Fairfax. My good and kind friend, thou runnest a grave risk for me!

Meryll. Tut, sir, no risk. I'll warrant none here will recognize you. You make a brave Yeoman, sir! So -- this ruff is too high; so -- and the sword should hang thus. Here is your halbert, sir; carry it thus. The Yeomen come. Now, remember, you are my brave son, Leonard Meryll.

Fairfax. If I may not bear mine own name, there is none other I would bear so readily.

Meryll. Now, sir, put a bold face on it, for they come.

FINALE -- ACT I

Enter Yeomen of the Guard.

Chorus. Oh, Sergeant Meryll, is it true -- 

The welcome news we read in orders?

Thy son, whose deeds of derring-do

Are echoed all the country through,

Has come to join the Tower Warders?

If so, we come to meet him,

That we may fitly greet him,

And welcome his arrival here

With shout on shout and cheer on cheer --

Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!

RECITATIVE -- Sergeant Meryll.

Ye Tower Warders, nursed in war's alarms,

Suckled on gunpowder, and weaned on glory,

Behold my son, whose all-subduing arms

Have formed the theme of many a song and story!

Forgive his aged father's pride; nor jeer

His aged father's sympathetic tear! (Pretending to weep.)

Chorus. Leonard Meryll!

Leonard Meryll!

Dauntless he in time of peril!

Man of power,

Knighthood's flower,

Welcome to the grim old Tower,

To the Tower, welcome thou!

RECITATIVE -- Fairfax.

Forbear, my friends, and spare me this ovation,

I have small claim to such consideration;

The tales that of my prowess are narrated

Have been prodigiously exaggerated!

Chorus. 'Tis ever thus!

Wherever valour true is found,

True modesty will there abound.

COUPLETS.

1st Yeoman. Didst thou not, oh, Leonard Meryll!

Standard lost in last campaign,

Rescue it at deadly peril --

Bear it safely back again?

Chorus. Leonard Meryll, at his peril,

Bore it safely back again!

2nd Yeoman. Didst thou not, when prisoner taken,

And debarred from all escape,

Face, with gallant heart unshaken,

Death in most appalling shape?

Chorus. Leonard Meryll, faced his peril,

Death in most appalling shape!

Fairfax. (aside) Truly I was to be pitied,

Having but an hour to live,

I reluctantly submitted,

I had no alternative!

(aloud) Oh! the tales that are narrated

Of my deeds of derring-do

Have been much exaggerated,

Very much exaggerated,

Scarce a word of them is true!

Chorus. They are not exaggerated, 

Not at all exaggerated,

Could not be exaggerated,

Ev'ry word of them is true!

[3rd Yeoman.3 You, when brought to execution

Like a demigod of yore,

With heroic resolution

Snatched a sword and killed a score.

Chorus. Leonard Meryll, Leonard Meryll

Snatched a sword and killed a score!

4th Yeoman. Then escaping from the foemen,

Bolstered with the blood you shed,

You, defiant, fearing no men,

Saved your honour and your head!

Chorus. Leonard Meryll, Leonard Meryll

Saved his honour and his head.

Fairfax. (aside) True, my course with judgement shaping,

Favoured, too, by lucky star,

I succeeded in escaping

Prison-bolt and prison bar!

(aloud) Oh! the tales that are narrated

Of my deeds of derring-do

Have been much exaggerated,

Scarce a word of them is true!

Chorus. They are not exaggerated, etc.]

Enter Phœbe*. She rushes to* Fairfax*. Enter* Wilfred*.*

Phœbe. Leonard!

Fairfax. (puzzled) I beg your pardon?

Phœbe. Don't you know me?

I'm little Phœbe!

Fairfax. (still puzzled) Phœbe? Is this Phœbe?

What! little Phœbe? (aside)

Who the deuce may she be?

It can't be Phœbe, surely?

Wilfred. Yes, 'tis Phœbe --

Your sister Phœbe! Your own little sister!

All. Aye, he speaks the truth;

'Tis Phœbe!

Fairfax. (pretending to recognize her) Sister Phœbe!

Phœbe. Oh, my brother!

Fairfax. Why, how you've grown! I did not recognize you!

Phœbe. So many years! Oh, brother!

Fairfax. Oh, my sister!

Wilfred. Aye, hug him, girl! There are three thou mayst hug --

Thy father and thy brother and -- myself!

Fairfax. Thyself, forsooth? And who art thou thyself?

Wilfred. Good sir, we are betrothed.

Fairfax turns inquiringly to Phœbe*.*

Phœbe. Or more or less -- 

But rather less than more!

Wilfred. To thy fond care

I do commend thy sister. Be to her

An ever-watchful guardian -- eagle-eyed!

And when she feels (as sometimes she does feel)

Disposed to indiscriminate caress,

Be thou at hand to take those favours from her!

Chorus. Be thou at hand to take those favours from her!

Phœbe. Yes, yes.

Be thou at hand to take those favours from me!

TRIO -- Wilfred, Fairfax and Phœbe.

Wilfred. To thy fraternal care

Thy sister I commend;

From every lurking snare

Thy lovely charge defend:

And to achieve this end,

Oh! grant, I pray, this boon --

She shall not quit my sight;

From morn to afternoon --

From afternoon to night --

From seven o'clock to two --

From two to eventide --

From dim twilight to 'lev'n at night,

She shall not quit thy side!

Chorus. From morn to afternoon, etc.

Phœbe. So amiable I've grown,

So innocent as well,

That if I'm left alone

The consequences fell

No mortal can foretell.

So grant, I pray, this boon --

I shall not quit thy sight:

From morn to afternoon --

From afternoon to night --

From seven o'clock to two --

From two to eventide --

From dim twilight to 'lev'n at night

I shall not quit thy side!

Chorus. From morn to afternoon, etc.

Fairfax. With brotherly readiness,

For my fair sister's sake,

At once I answer 'Yes' --

That task I undertake -- 

My word I never break.

I freely grant that boon,

And I'll repeat my plight.

From morn to afternoon -- (kiss)

From afternoon to night -- (kiss)

From seven o'clock to two -- (kiss)

From two to evening meal -- (kiss)

From dim twilight to 'leven at night,

That compact I will seal. (kiss)

Chorus. From morn to afternoon, etc.

The bell of St. Peter's begins to toll. The Crowd enters; the block is brought on to the stage, and the Headsman takes his place. The Yeomen of the Guard form up. The Lieutenant*. enters and takes his place, and tells off* Fairfax and two others to bring the prisoner to execution. Wilfred, Fairfax*., and two Yeomen exeunt to Tower.*

Chorus (to tolling accompaniment)

The prisoner comes to meet his doom;

The block, the headsman, and the tomb.

The funeral bell begins to toll --

May Heaven have mercy on his soul!

SOLO -- Elsie, with Chorus.

Oh, Mercy, thou whose smile has shone

So many a captive heart upon;

Of all immured within these walls,

Today the very worthiest falls!

Chorus. Oh, Mercy, etc

Enter Fairfax and two Yeomen from Tower in great excitement.

Fairfax. My lord! I know not how to tell

The news I bear!

I and my comrades sought the prisoner's cell --

He is not there!

Chorus. He is not there!

They sought the prisoner's cell -- he is not there!

TRIO -- Fairfax and two Yeomen.

As escort for the prisoner

We sought his cell, in duty bound;

The double gratings open were,

No prisoner at all we found!

We hunted high, we hunted low,

We hunted here, we hunted there --

The man we sought with anxious care

Had vanished into empty air!

Exit Lieutenant.

Women. Now, by my troth, the news is fair,

The man has vanished into air!

All. As escort for the prisoner

We/they sought his cell in duty bound, etc.

Enter Wilfred*, followed by* Lieutenant*.*

Lieut. Astounding news! The pris'ner fled!

(To Wilfred) Thy life shall forfeit be instead!

Wilfred is arrested.

Wilfred. My lord, I did not set him free,

I hate the man -- my rival he!

Wilfred is taken away.

Meryll. The prisoner gone -- I'm all agape!

Who could have helped him to escape?

Phœbe. Indeed I can't imagine who!

I've no idea at all, have you?

Enter Jack Point.

Dame. Of his escape no traces lurk,

Enchantment must have been at work!

Elsie. (aside to Point)

What have I done? Oh, woe is me!

I am his wife, and he is free!

Point. Oh, woe is you? Your anguish sink!

Oh, woe is me, I rather think!

Oh, woe is me, I rather think!

Yes, woe is me, I rather think!

Whate'er betide

You are his bride,

And I am left

Alone -- bereft!

Yes, woe is me, I rather think!

Yes, woe is me, I rather think!

ENSEMBLE -- Lieutenant, Principals, and Chorus.4

All frenzied with despair I/they rave,

The grave is cheated of its due.

Who is, who is the misbegotten knave

Who hath contrived this deed to do?

Let search, be made throughout the land,

Or his/my vindictive anger dread --

A thousand marks he'll/I'll hand

Who brings him here, alive or dead.

At the end, Elsie faints in Fairfax's arms; all the Yeomen and populace rush off the stage in different directions, to hunt for the fugitive, leaving only the Headsman on the stage, and Elsie insensible in Fairfax's arms.

End of Act I

ACT II

Scene. -- The same -- Moonlight. Two days have elapsed. Women and Yeomen of the Guard discovered.

Chorus of Women.

Night has spread her pall once more,

And the prisoner still is free:

Open is his dungeon door,

Useless now his dungeon key!

He has shaken off his yoke --

How, no mortal man can tell!

Shame on loutish jailor-folk --

Shame on sleepy sentinel!

Enter Dame Carruthers and Kate*.*

SOLO -- Dame Carruthers.

Warders are ye?

Whom do ye ward?

Bolt, bar, and key,

Shackle and cord,

Fetter and chain,

Dungeon and stone,

All are in vain --

Prisoner's flown!

Spite of ye all, he is free -- he is free!

Whom do ye ward? Pretty warders are ye!

Women. Pretty warders are ye, etc.

Yeomen. Up and down, and in and out,

Here and there, and round about;

Every chamber, every house,

Every chink that holds a mouse,

Every crevice in the keep,

Where a beetle black could creep,

Every outlet, every drain,

Have we searched, but all in vain.

Ensemble. Warders are ye/we,

Whom do ye/we ward? etc.

Exeunt all.

Enter Jack Point*, in low spirits, reading from a huge volume.*

Point. (reads) 'The Merrie Jestes of Hugh Ambrose, No. 7863. The Poor Wit and the Rich Councillor. A certayne poor wit, being an-hungered, did meet a well-fed councillor. "Marry, fool," quothe the councillor, "whither away?" "In truth," said the poor wag, "in that I have eaten naught these two dayes, I do wither away, and that right rapidly!" The Councillor laughed hugely, and gave him a sausage.' Humph! The councillor was easier to please than my new master the Lieutenant. I would like to take post under that councillor. Ah! 'tis but melancholy mumming when poor heart-broken, jilted Jack Point must needs turn to Hugh Ambrose for original light humour!

Enter Wilfred*, also in low spirits.*

Wilfred. (sighing) Ah, Master Point!

Point. (changing his manner) Ha! friend jailer! Jailer that wast -- jailer that never shalt be more! Jailer that jailed not, or that jailed, if jail he did, so unjailery that 'twas but jerry-jailing, or jailing in joke -- though no joke to him who, by unjailerlike jailing, did so jeopardize his jailership. Come, take heart, smile, laugh, wink, twinkle, thou tormentor that tormentest none -- thou racker that rackest not -- thou pincher out of place -- come, take heart, and be merry, as I am! -- (aside, dolefully) -- as I am!

Wilfred. Aye, it's well for thee to laugh. Thou hast a good post, and hast cause to be merry.

Point. (bitterly) Cause? Have we not all cause? Is not the world a big butt of humour, into which all who will may drive a gimlet? See, I am a salaried wit; and is there aught in nature more ridiculous? A poor, dull, heart-broken man, who must needs be merry, or he will be whipped; who must rejoice, lest he starve; who must jest you, jibe you, quip you, crank you, wrack you, riddle you, from hour to hour, from day to day, from year to year, lest he dwindle, perish, starve, pine, and die! Why, when there's naught else to laugh at, I laugh at myself till I ache for it!

Wilfred. Yet I have often thought that a jester's calling would suit me to a hair.

Point. Thee? Would suit thee, thou death's head and cross-bones?

Wilfred. Aye, I have a pretty wit -- a light, airy, joysome wit, spiced with anecdotes of prison cells and the torture chamber. Oh, a very delicate wit! I have tried it on many a prisoner, and there have been some who smiled. Now it is not easy to make a prisoner smile. And it should not be difficult to be a good jester, seeing that thou are one.

Point. Difficult? Nothing easier. Nothing easier. Attend, and I will prove it to thee!

SONG -- Point.

Oh! a private buffoon is a light-hearted loon,

If you listen to popular rumour;

From the morn to the night he's so joyous and bright,

And he bubbles with wit and good humour!

He's so quaint and so terse, both in prose and in verse;

Yet though people forgive his transgression,

There are one or two rules that all family fools

Must observe, if they love their profession.

There are one or two rules,

Half-a-dozen, maybe,

That all family fools,

Of whatever degree,

Must observe if they love their profession.

If you wish to succeed as a jester, you'll need

To consider each person's auricular:

What is all right for B would quite scandalize C

(For C is so very particular);

And D may be dull, and E's very thick skull

Is as empty of brains as a ladle;

While F is F sharp, and will cry with a carp,

That he's known your best joke from his cradle!

When your humour they flout,

You can't let yourself go;

And it does put you out

When a person says, 'Oh!

I have known that old joke from my cradle!'

If your master is surly, from getting up early

(And tempers are short in the morning),

An inopportune joke is enough to provoke

Him to give you, at once, a month's warning.

Then if you refrain, he is at you again,

For he likes to get value for money:

He'll ask then and there, with an insolent stare,

'If you know that you're paid to be funny?'

It adds to the tasks

Of a merryman's place,

When your principal asks,

With a scowl on his face,

If you know that you're paid to be funny?

Comes a Bishop, maybe, or a solemn D.D. -- 

Oh, beware of his anger provoking!

Better not pull his hair -- don't stick pins in his chair;

He don't understand practical joking.

If the jests that you crack have an orthodox smack,

You may get a bland smile from these sages;

But should they, by chance, be imported from France,

Half-a-crown is stopped out of your wages!

It's a general rule,

Though your zeal it may quench,

If the family fool

Tells a joke that's too French,

Half-a-crown is stopped out of his wages!

Though your head it may rack with a bilious attack,

And your senses with toothache you're losing,

Don't be mopy and flat -- they don't fine you for that

If you're properly quaint and amusing!

Though your wife ran away with a soldier that day,

And took with her your trifle of money;

Bless your heart, they don't mind -- they're exceedingly kind --

They don't blame you -- as long as you're funny!

It's a comfort to feel

If your partner should flit,

Though you suffer a deal,

They don't mind it a bit -- 

They don't blame you -- so long as you're funny!

Point. And so thou wouldst be a jester eh?

Wilfred. Aye!

Point. Now, listen! My sweetheart, Elsie Maynard, was secretly wed to this Fairfax half an hour ere he escaped.

Wilfred. She did well.

Point. She did nothing of the kind, so hold thy peace and perpend. Now, while he liveth she is dead to me and I to her, and so, my jibes and jokes notwithstanding, I am the saddest and the sorriest dog in England!

Wilfred. Thou art a very dull dog indeed.

Point. Now, if thou wilt swear that thou didst shoot this Fairfax while he was trying to swim across the river -- it needs but the discharge of an arquebus on a dark night -- and that he sank and was seen no more, I'll make thee the very Archbishop of jesters, and that in two days' time! Now, what sayest thou?

Wilfred. I am to lie?

Point. Heartily. But thy lie must be a lie of circumstance, which I will support with the testimony of eyes, ears, and tongue.

Wilfred. And thou wilt qualify me as a jester?

Point. As a jester among jesters. I will teach thee all my original songs, my self-constructed riddles, my own ingenious paradoxes; nay, more, I will reveal to thee the source whence I get them. Now, what sayest thou?

Wilfred. Why, if it be but a lie thou wantest of me, I hold it cheap enough, and I say yes, it is a bargain!

DUET -- Point and Wilfred.

Both. Hereupon we're both agreed,

All that we two

Do agree to

We'll secure by solemn deed,

To prevent all

Error mental.

Point. You on Elsie are to call

With a story

Grim and gory;

Wilfred. How this Fairfax died, and all

I declare to

You're to swear to.

Point. I to swear to!

Wilfred. I declare to!

Point. I to swear to!

Wilfred. I declare to,

Both. Tell a tale of cock and bull,

Of convincing detail full

Tale tremendous,

Heaven defend us!

What a tale of cock and bull!

Both. In return for my own part

You are/I am making

Undertaking,

To instruct me/you in the art

(Art amazing,

Wonder raising)

Point. Of a jester, jesting free.

Proud position -- 

High ambition!

Wilfred. And a lively one I'll be,

Wag-a-wagging,

Never flagging!

Point. Wag-a-wagging!

Wilfred. Never flagging,

Point. Wag-a-wagging,

Wilfred. Never flagging,

Both. Tell a tale of cock and bull, etc.

Exeunt together. Enter Fairfax.

Fairfax. Two days gone, and no news of poor Fairfax. The dolts! They seek him everywhere save within a dozen yards of his dungeon. So I am free! Free, but for the cursed haste with which I hurried headlong into the bonds of matrimony with -- Heaven knows whom! As far as I remember, she should have been young; but even had not her face been concealed by her kerchief, I doubt whether, in my then plight, I should have taken much note of her. Free? Bah! The Tower bonds were but a thread of silk compared with these conjugal fetters which I, fool that I was, placed upon mine own hands. From the one I broke readily enough -- how to break the other!

BALLAD -- Fairfax.

Free from his fetters grim -- 

Free to depart;

Free both in life and limb -- 

In all but heart!

Bound to an unknown bride

For good and ill;

Ah, is not one so tied

A prisoner still?

Free, yet in fetters held

Till his last hour,

Gyves that no smith can weld,

No rust devour!

Although a monarch's hand

Had set him free,

Of all the captive band

The saddest he!

Enter Meryll.

Fairfax. Well, Sergeant Meryll, and how fares thy pretty charge, Elsie Maynard?

Meryll. Well enough, sir. She is quite strong again, and leaves us tonight.

Fairfax. Thanks to Dame Carruthers' kind nursing, eh?

Meryll. Aye, deuce take the old witch! Ah, 'twas but a sorry trick you played me, sir, to bring the fainting girl to me. It gave the old lady an excuse for taking up her quarters in my house, and for the last two years I've shunned her like the plague. Another day of it and she would have married me! (Enter Dame Carruthers and Kate.) Good Lord, here she is again! I'll e'en go. (going)

Dame. Nay, Sergeant Meryll, don't go. I have something of grave import to say to thee.

Meryll. (aside) It's coming.

Fairfax. (laughing) I'faith, I think I'm, not wanted here. (going)

Dame. Nay, Master Leonard, I've naught to say to thy father that his son may not hear.

Fairfax. (aside) True. I'm one of the family; I had forgotten!

Dame. 'Tis about this Elsie Maynard. A pretty girl, Master Leonard.

Fairfax. Aye, fair as a peach blossom -- what then?

Dame. She hath a liking for thee, or I mistake not.

Fairfax.  With all my heart. She's as dainty a little maid as you'll find in a midsummer day's march.

Dame. Then be warned in time, and give not thy heart to her. Oh, I know what it is to give my heart to one who will have none of it!

Meryll. (aside) Aye, she knows all about that. (aloud) And why is my boy to take heed of her? She's a good girl, Dame Carruthers.

Dame. Good enough, for aught I know. But she's no girl. She's a married woman.

Meryll. A married woman! Tush, old lady -- she's promised to Jack Point, the Lieutenant's new jester.

Dame. Tush in thy teeth, old man! As my niece Kate sat by her bedside today, this Elsie slept, and as she slept she moaned and groaned, and turned this way and that way -- and, 'How shall I marry one I have never seen?' quoth she -- then, 'An hundred crowns!' quoth she -- then, 'Is it certain he will die in an hour?' quoth she -- then, 'I love him not, and yet I am his wife,' quoth she! Is it not so, Kate?

Kate. Aye, aunt, 'tis even so.

Fairfax. Art thou sure of all this?

Kate. Aye, sir, for I wrote it all down on my tablets.

Dame. Now, mark my words: it was of this Fairfax she spake, and he is her husband, or I'll swallow my kirtle!

Meryll. (aside) Is it true, sir?

Fairfax. (aside to Meryll) True? Why, the girl was raving! (aloud) Why should she marry a man who had but an hour to live?

Dame. Marry? There be those who would marry but for a minute, rather than die old maids.

Meryll. (aside) Aye, I know one of them!

QUARTET -- Kate, DameCarruthers, Fairfax and Sergeant Meryll.

All. Strange adventure! Maiden wedded

To a groom she's never seen -- 

Never, never, never seen!

Groom about to be beheaded,

In an hour on Tower Green!

Tower, Tower, Tower Green!

Groom in dreary dungeon lying,

Groom as good as dead, or dying,

For a pretty maiden sighing -- 

Pretty maid of seventeen!

Seven -- seven -- seventeen!

Strange adventure that we're trolling:

Modest maid and gallant groom -- 

Gallant, gallant, gallant groom! -- 

While the funeral bell is tolling,

Tolling, tolling, Bim-a-boom!

Bim-a, Bim-a, Bim-a-boom!

Modest maiden will not tarry;

Though but sixteen year she carry,

She must marry, she must marry,

Though the altar be a tomb -- 

Tower -- Tower -- Tower tomb!

Exeunt Dame Carruthers, Meryll, and Kate.

Fairfax. So my mysterious bride is no other than this winsome Elsie! By my hand, 'tis no such ill plunge in Fortune's lucky bag! I might have fared worse with my eyes open! But she comes. Now to test her principles. 'Tis not every husband who has a chance of wooing his own wife!

Enter Elsie.

Fairfax. Mistress Elsie!

Elsie. Master Leonard!

Fairfax. So thou leavest us tonight?

Elsie. Yes, Master Leonard. I have been kindly tended, and I almost fear I am loth to go.

Fairfax. And this Fairfax. Wast thou glad when he escaped?

Elsie. Why, truly, Master Leonard, it is a sad thing that a young and gallant gentleman should die in the very fullness of his life.

Fairfax. Then when thou didst faint in my arms, it was for joy at his safety?

Elsie. It may be so. I was highly wrought, Master Leonard, and I am but a girl, and so, when I am highly wrought, I faint.

Fairfax. Now, dost thou know, I am consumed with a parlous jealousy?

Elsie. Thou? And of whom?

Fairfax. Why, of this Fairfax, surely!

Elsie. Of Colonel Fairfax?

Fairfax. Aye. Shall I be frank with thee? Elsie -- I love thee, ardently, passionately! (Elsie alarmed and surprised.) Elsie, I have loved thee these two days -- which is a long time -- and I would fain join my life to thine!

Elsie. Master Leonard! Thou art jesting!

Fairfax. Jesting? May I shrivel into raisins if I jest! I love thee with a love that is a fever -- with a love that is a frenzy -- with a love that eateth up my heart! What sayest thou? Thou wilt not let my heart be eaten up?

Elsie. (aside) Oh, mercy! What am I to say?

Fairfax. Dost thou love me, or hast thou been insensible these two days?

Elsie. I love all brave men.

Fairfax. Nay, there is love in excess. I thank heaven there are many brave men in England; but if thou lovest them all, I withdraw my thanks.

Elsie. I love the bravest best. But, sir, I may not listen -- I am not free -- I -- I am a wife!

Fairfax. Thou a wife? Whose? His name? His hours are numbered -- nay, his grave is dug and his epitaph set up! Come, his name?

Elsie. Oh, sir! keep my secret -- it is the only barrier that Fate could set up between us. My husband is none other than Colonel Fairfax!

Fairfax. The greatest villain unhung! The most ill-favoured, ill-mannered, ill-natured, ill-omened, ill-tempered dog in Christendom!

Elsie. It is very like. He is naught to me -- for I never saw him. I was blindfolded, and he was to have died within the hour; and he did not die -- and I am wedded to him, and my heart is broken!

Fairfax. He was to have died, and he did not die? The scoundrel! The perjured, traitorous villain! Thou shouldst have insisted on his dying first, to make sure. 'Tis the only way with these Fairfaxes.

Elsie. I now wish I had!

Fairfax. (aside) Bloodthirsty little maiden! (aloud) A fig for this Fairfax! Be mine -- he will never know -- he dares not show himself; and if he dare, what art thou to him? Fly with me, Elsie -- we will be married tomorrow, and thou shalt be the happiest wife in England!

Elsie. Master Leonard! I am amazed! Is it thus that brave soldiers speak to poor girls? Oh! for shame, for shame! I am wed -- not the less because I love not my husband. I am a wife, sir, and I have a duty. and -- oh, sir! -- thy words terrify me -- they are not honest -- they are wicked words, and unworthy thy great and brave heart! Oh, shame upon thee! shame upon thee!

Fairfax. Nay, Elsie, I did but jest. I spake but to try thee -- (Shot heard.)

Enter Sergeant Meryll hastily.

Meryll. (recitative) Hark! What was that, sir?

Fairfax. Why, an arquebus -- 

Fired from the wharf, unless I much mistake.

Meryll. Strange -- and at such an hour! What can it mean!

Enter Chorus.

Chorus. Now what can that have been -- 

A shot so late at night,

Enough to cause a fright!

What can the portent mean?

Are foeman in the land?

Is London to be wrecked?

What are we to expect?

What danger is at hand?

Let us understand

What danger is at hand!

Lieutenant enters, also Point. and Wilfred.

RECITATIVE.

Lieut. Who fired that shot? At once the truth declare?

Wilfred. My lord, 'twas I -- to rashly judge forebear!

Point. My lord, 'twas he -- to rashly judge forebear!

DUET & CHORUS -- Wilfred and Point.

Wilfred. Like a ghost his vigil keeping --

Point. Or a spectre all-appalling --

Wilfred. I beheld a figure creeping --

Point. I should rather call it crawling --

Wilfred. He was creeping --

Point. He was crawling --

Wilfred. He was creeping, creeping --

Point. Crawling!

Wilfred. He was creeping --

Point. He was crawling --

Wilfred. He was creeping, creeping --

Point. Crawling!

Wilfred. Not a moment's hesitation -- 

I myself upon him flung,

With a hurried exclamation

To his draperies I hung;

Then we closed with one another

In a rough-and-tumble smother;

Colonel Fairfax and no other

Was the man to whom I clung!

All. Colonel Fairfax and no other,

Was the man to whom he clung!

Wilfred. After mighty tug and tussle --

Point. It resembled more a struggle --

Wilfred. He, by dint of stronger muscle --

Point. Or by some infernal juggle --

Wilfred. From my clutches quickly sliding --

Point. I should rather call it slipping --

Wilfred. With a view, no doubt, of hiding --

Point. Or escaping to the shipping --

Wilfred. With a gasp, and with a quiver --

Point. I'd describe it as a shiver --

Wilfred. Down he dived into the river,

And, alas, I cannot swim.

All. It's enough to make one shiver,

With a gasp, and with a quiver,

Down he dived into the river;

It was very brave of him!

Wilfred. Ingenuity is catching;

With the view my King of pleasing,

Arquebus from sentry snatching --

Point. I should rather call it seizing --

Wilfred. With an ounce or two of lead

I dispatched him through the head!

All. With an ounce or two of lead

He dispatched him through the head!

Wilfred. I discharged it without winking,

Little time I lost in thinking,

Like a stone I saw him sinking --

Point. I should say a lump of lead.

All. He discharged it without winking,

Little time he lost in thinking.

Wilfred. Like a stone I saw him sinking --

Point. I should say a lump of lead.

Wilfred. Like a stone, my boy, I said --

Point. Like a heavy lump of lead.

Wilfred. Anyhow, the man is dead,

Whether stone or lump of lead!

All. Anyhow, the man is dead,

Whether stone or lump of lead!

Arquebus from sentry seizing,

With the view his King of pleasing,

Wilfred shot him through the head,

And he's very, very dead!

And it matters very little whether stone or lump of lead,

It is very, very certain that he's very, very dead!

RECITATIVE -- Lieutenant.

The river must be dragged -- no time be lost;

The body must be found, at any cost.

To this attend without undue delay;

So set to work with what dispatch ye may!

Exit Lieutenant.

All. Yes, yes,

We'll set to work with what dispatch we may!

Four men raise Wilfred*, and carry him off on their shoulders.*

CHORUS.

Hail the valiant fellow who

Did this deed of derring-do!

Honours wait on such an one;

By my head, 'twas bravely done,

Now, by my head, 'twas bravely done!

Exeunt all but Elsie*,* Point*,* Fairfax*, and* Phœbe*.*

Point. (to Elsie*, who is weeping*) Nay, sweetheart, be comforted. This Fairfax was but a pestilent fellow, and, as he had to die, he might as well die thus as any other way. 'Twas a good death.

Elsie. Still, he was my husband, and had he not been, he was nevertheless a living man, and now he is dead; and so, by your leave, my tears may flow unchidden, Master Point.

Fairfax. And thou didst see all this?

Point. Aye, with both eyes at once -- this and that. The testimony of one eye is naught -- he may lie. But when it is corroborated by the other, it is good evidence that none may gainsay. Here are both present in court, ready to swear to him!

Phœbe. But art thou sure it was Colonel Fairfax? Saw you his face?

Point. Aye, and a plaguey ill-favoured face too. A very hang-dog face -- a felon face -- a face to fright the headsman himself, and make him strike awry. Oh, a plaguey, bad face, take my word for it. (Phœbe and Fairfax laugh.) How they laugh! 'Tis ever thus with simple folk -- an accepted wit has but to say 'Pass the mustard,' and they roar their ribs out! 

Fairfax. (aside) If ever I come to life again, thou shalt pay for this, Master Point!

Point. Now, Elsie, thou art free to choose again, so behold me: I am young and well-favoured. I have a pretty wit. I can jest you, jibe you, quip you, crank you, wrack you, riddle you -- 

Fairfax. Tush, man, thou knowest not how to woo. 'Tis not to be done with time-worn jests and thread-bare sophistries; with quips, conundrums, rhymes, and paradoxes. 'Tis an art in itself, and must be studied gravely and conscientiously.

TRIO -- Elsie, Phœbe, and Fairfax.

Fairfax. A man who would woo a fair maid,

Should 'prentice himself to the trade;

And study all day,

In methodical way,

How to flatter, cajole, and persuade.

He should 'prentice himself at fourteen,

And practise from morning to e'en;

And when he's of age,

If he will, I'll engage,

He may capture the heart of a queen!

All. It is purely a matter of skill,

Which all may attain if they will.

But every Jack

He must study the knack

If he wants to make sure of his Jill!

Elsie. If he's made the best use of his time,

His twig he'll so carefully lime

That every bird

Will come down at his word,

Whatever its plumage and clime.

He must learn that the thrill of a touch

May mean little, or nothing, or much;

It's an instrument rare,

To be handled with care,

And ought to be treated as such.

All. It is purely a matter of skill, etc.

Phœbe. Then a glance may be timid or free;

It will vary in mighty degree,

From an impudent stare

To a look of despair

That no maid without pity can see!

And a glance of despair is no guide -- 

It may have its ridiculous side;

It may draw you a tear

Or a box on the ear;

You can never be sure till you've tried!

Never be sure till you've tried!

All. It is purely a matter of skill, etc.

Fairfax. (aside to Point.) Now, listen to me -- 'tis done thus -- (aloud) -- Mistress Elsie, there is one here who, as thou knowest, loves thee right well!

Point. (aside) That he does -- right well!

Fairfax. He is but a man of poor estate, but he hath a loving, honest heart. He will be a true and trusty husband to thee, and if thou wilt be his wife, thou shalt lie curled up in his heart, like a little squirrel in its nest!

Point. (aside) 'Tis a pretty figure. A maggot in a nut lies closer, but a squirrel will do.

Fairfax. He knoweth that thou wast a wife -- an unloved and unloving wife, and his poor heart was near to breaking. But now that thine unloving husband is dead, and thou art free, he would fain pray that thou wouldst hearken unto him, and give him hope that thou wouldst one day be his!

Phœbe. (alarmed) He presses her hands -- and whispers in her ear! Ods bodikins, what does it mean?

Fairfax. Now, sweetheart, tell me -- wilt thou be this poor good fellow's wife?

Elsie. If the good, brave man -- is he a brave man?

Fairfax. So men say.

Point. (aside) That's not true, but let it pass.

Elsie. If the brave man will be content with a poor, penniless, untaught maid -- 

Point. (aside) Widow -- but let that pass.

Elsie. I will be his true and loving wife, and that with my heart of hearts!

Fairfax. My own dear love! (Embracing her.)

Phœbe. (in great agitation) Why, what's all this? Brother -- brother -- it is not seemly!

Point. (also alarmed, aside) Oh, I can't let that pass! (aloud) Hold, enough, Master Leonard! An advocate should have his fee, but methinks thou art over-paying thyself!

Fairfax. Nay, that is for Elsie to say. I promised thee I would show thee how to woo, and herein lies the proof of the virtue of my teaching. Go thou, and apply it elsewhere! (Phœbe bursts into tears.)

QUARTET -- Elsie, Phœbe, Fairfax, and Point.

Elsie. When a wooer 

Goes a-wooing,

Naught is truer

Than his joy.

Fairfax. Maiden hushing

All his suing -- 

Boldly blushing,

Bravely coy!

All. Oh, the happy days of doing!

Oh, the sighing and the suing!

When a wooer goes a-wooing,

Oh the sweets that never cloy!

Phœbe (weeping) When a brother 

Leaves his sister

For another,

Sister weeps,

Tears that trickle,

Tears that blister -- 

'Tis but mickle

Sister reaps!

All. Oh, the doing and undoing,

Oh, the sighing and the suing,

When a brother goes a-wooing,

And a sobbing sister weeps!

Point. When a jester

Is outwitted,

Feelings fester,

Heart is lead!

Food for fishes

Only fitted,

Jester wishes

He was dead!

All. Oh, the doing and undoing,

Oh, the sighing and the suing,

When a jester goes a-wooing,

And he wishes he was dead!

Exeunt all but Phœbe, who remains weeping.

Phœbe. And I helped that man to escape, and I've kept his secret, and pretended that I was his dearly loving sister, and done everything I could think of to make folk believe I was his loving sister, and this is his gratitude! Before I pretend to be sister to anybody again, I'll turn nun, and be sister to everybody -- one as much as another!

Enter Wilfred.

Wilfred. In tears, eh? What a plague art thou grizzling for now?

Phœbe. Why am I grizzling? Thou hast often wept for jealousy -- well, 'tis for jealousy I weep now. Aye, yellow, bilious, jaundiced jealousy. So make the most of that, Master Wilfred.

Wilfred. But I have never given thee cause for jealousy. The Lieutenant's cook-maid and I are but the merest gossips!

Phœbe. Jealous of thee! Bah! I'm jealous of no craven cock-on-a-hill, who crows about what he'd do an he dared! I am jealous of another and a better man than thou -- set that down, Master Wilfred. And he is to marry Elsie Maynard, the pale little fool -- set that down Master Wilfred -- and my heart is wellnigh broken! There, thou hast it all! Make the most of it!

Wilfred. The man thou lovest is to marry Elsie Maynard? Why, that is no other than thy brother, Leonard Meryll!

Phœbe. (aside)\ Oh, mercy! what have I said?

Wilfred. Why, what manner of brother is this, thou lying little jade? Speak! Who is this man whom thou hast called brother, and fondled, and coddled, and kissed! -- with my connivance, too! Oh Lord! with my connivance! Ha! should it be this Fairfax! (Phœbe starts.) It is! It is this accursed Fairfax! It's Fairfax! Fairfax, who -- 

Phœbe. Whom thou hast just shot through the head, and who lies at the bottom of the river!

Wilfred. A -- I -- I may have been mistaken. We are but fallible mortals, the best of us. But I'll make sure -- I'll make sure. (Going.)

Phœbe. Stay -- one word. I think it cannot be Fairfax -- mind, I say I think -- because thou hast just slain Fairfax. But whether he be Fairfax or no Fairfax, he is to marry Elsie -- and -- and -- as thou hast shot him through the head, and he is dead, be content with that, and I will be thy wife!

Wilfred. Is that sure?

Phœbe. Aye, sure enough, for there's no help for it! Thou art a very brute -- but even brutes must marry, I suppose.

Wilfred. My beloved. (Embraces her.)

Phœbe. (aside) Ugh!

Enter Leonard Meryll, hastily.

Leonard. Phœbe, rejoice, for I bring glad tidings. Colonel Fairfax's reprieve was signed two days since, but it was foully and maliciously kept back by Secretary Poltwhistle, who designed that it should arrive after the Colonel's death. It hath just come to hand, and it is now in the Lieutenant's possession!

Phœbe. Then the Colonel is free? Oh, kiss me, kiss me, my dear! Kiss me, again, and again!

Wilfred. (dancing with fury) Ods bobs, death o' my life! Art thou mad? Am I mad? Are we all mad?

Phœbe. Oh, my dear -- my dear, I'm wellnigh crazed with joy! (Kissing Leonard.)

Wilfred. Come away from him, thou hussy -- thou jade -- thou kissing, clinging cockatrice! And as for thee, sir, devil take thee, I'll rip thee like a herring for this! I'll skin thee for it! I'll cleave thee to the chine! I'll -- oh! Phœbe! Phœbe! Who is this man?

Phœbe. Peace, fool. He is my brother!

Wilfred. Another brother! Are there any more of them? Produce them all at once, and let me know the worst!

Phœbe. This is the real Leonard, dolt; the other was but his substitute. The real Leonard, I say -- my father's own son.

Wilfred. How do I know this? Has he "brother" writ large on his brow? I mistrust thy brothers! Thou art but a false jade!

Exit Leonard.

Phœbe. Now, Wilfred, be just. Truly I did deceive thee before -- but it was to save a precious life -- and to save it, not for me, but for another. They are to be wed this very day. Is not this enough for thee? Come -- I am thy Phœbe -- thy very own -- and we will be wed in a year -- or two -- or three, at the most. Is not that enough for thee?

Enter Sergeant Meryll, excitedly, followed by Dame Carruthers, who listens, unobserved.

Meryll. Phœbe, hast thou heard the brave news?

Phœbe. (still in Wilfred's arms) Aye, father.

Meryll. I'm nigh mad with joy! (Seeing Wilfred.) Why, what's all this?

Phœbe. Oh, father, he discovered our secret thorough my folly, and the price of his silence is -- 

Wilfred. Phœbe's heart.

Phœbe. Oh, dear, no -- Phœbe's hand.

Wilfred. It's the same thing!

Phœbe. Is it?

Exeunt Wilfred and Phœbe.

Meryll. (looking after them) 'Tis pity, but the Colonel had to be saved at any cost, and as thy folly revealed our secret, thy folly must e'en suffer for it! (Dame Carruthers comes down) Dame Carruthers!

Dame. So this is a plot to shield this arch-fiend, and I have detected it. A word from me, and three heads besides his would roll from their shoulders!

Meryll. Nay, Colonel Fairfax is reprieved. (aside) Yet, if my complicity in his escape were known! Plague on the old meddler! There's nothing for it -- (aloud) -- Hush, pretty one! Such bloodthirsty words ill become those cherry lips! (aside) Ugh!

Dame. (bashfully) Sergeant Meryll!

Meryll. Why, look ye, chuck -- for many a month I've -- I've thought to myself -- 'There's snug love saving up in that middle-aged bosom for some one, and why not for thee -- that's me -- so take heart and tell her -- that's thee -- that thou -- that's me -- lovest her -- thee -- and -- and --well, I'm a miserable old man, and I've done it -- and that's me!' But not a word about Fairfax! The price of thy silence is -- 

Dame. Meryll's heart?

Meryll. No, Meryll's hand.

Dame. It's the same thing!

Meryll. Is it?

DUET -- Dame Carruthers and Sergeant Meryll.

Dame. Rapture, rapture

When love's votary,

Flushed with capture,

Seeks the notary,

Joy and jollity

Then is polity;

Reigns frivolity!

Rapture, rapture!

Meryll. Doleful, doleful!

When humanity

With its soul full

Of satanity,

Courting privity,

Down declivity

Seeks captivity!

Doleful, doleful!

Dame. Joyful, joyful!

When virginity

Seeks, all coyful,

Man's affinity;

Fate all flowery,

Bright and bowery,

Is her dowery!

Joyful, joyful!

Meryll. Ghastly, ghastly!

When man, sorrowful,

Firstly, lastly,

Of to-morrow full,

After tarrying,

Yields to harrying -- 

Goes a-marrying.

Ghastly, ghastly!

Both. Rapture, rapture,etc.,

Exeunt Dame Carruthers and Sergeant Meryll.

FINALE.

Enter Yeomen and Women.

Chorus of Women.

(Elegiacs.)

Comes the pretty young bride, a-blushing, timidly shrinking -- 

Set all thy fears aside -- cheerily, pretty young bride!

Brave is the youth to whom thy lot thou art willingly linking!

Flower of valour he -- loving as loving can be!

Brightly thy summer is shining,

Fair as the dawn of the day;

Take him, be true to him -- 

Tender his due to him -- 

Honour him, love and obey!

Enter Dame, Phœbe*, and* Elsie as Bride

TRIO -- Phœbe, Elsie, and Dame Carruthers.

'Tis said that joy in full perfection

Comes only once to womankind -- 

That, other times, on close inspection,

Some lurking bitter we shall find.

If this be so, and men say truly,

My day of joy has broken duly

With happiness my/her soul is cloyed -- 

This is my/her joy-day unalloyed!

All. Yes, yes, with happiness her soul is cloyed!

This is her joy-day unalloyed!

Flourish. Enter Lieutenant.

Lieut. Hold, pretty one! I bring to thee

News -- good or ill, it is for thee to say.

Thy husband lives -- and he is free,

And comes to claim his bride this very day!

Elsie. No! No! recall those words -- it cannot be!

ENSEMBLE.

Kate and Chorus. Dame Carruthers and Phœbe.

Oh, day of terror! Day of tears! Oh, day of terror! Day of tears!

Who is the man who, in his pride, The man to whom thou art allied

Claims thee as his bride? Appears to claim thee as his bride.

Day of terror! Day of tears! Day of terror! Day of tears!

Lieut., Meryll, and Wilfred. Elsie.

Come, dry these unbecoming tears, Oh, Leonard, come thou to my side,

Most joyful tidings greet thine ears, And claim me as thy loving bride!

The man to whom thou art allied Day of terror! Day of tears!

Appears to claim thee as his bride.

Flourish. Enter Colonel Fairfax, handsomely dressed, and attended by other Gentlemen.

Fairfax. (sternly) All thought of Leonard Meryll set aside.

Thou art mine own! I claim thee as my bride.

All. Thou art his own! Alas! he claims thee as his bride.

Elsie. A suppliant at thy feet I fall;

Thine heart will yield to pity's call!

Fairfax. Mine is a heart of massive rock,

Unmoved by sentimental shock!

All. Thy husband he!

Elsie. (aside) Leonard, my loved one -- come to me.

They bear me hence away!

But though they take me far from thee,

My heart is thine for aye!

My bruisèd heart,

My broken heart,

Is thine, my own, for aye!

Is thine, my own, for aye!

(To Fairfax.) Sir, I obey!

I am thy bride;

But ere the fatal hour

I said the say

That placed me in thy pow'r

Would I had died!

Sir, I obey!

I am thy bride!

(Looks up and recognizes Fairfax.) Leonard!

Fairfax. My own!

Elsie. Ah! (Embrace.)

Elsie and Fairfax. With happiness my soul is cloyed,

This is our joy-day unalloyed!

All. Yes, yes!

With happiness their souls are cloyed,

This is their joy-day unalloyed!

Enter Jack Point.

Point. Oh, thoughtless crew!

Ye know not what ye do!

Attend to me, and shed a tear or two -- 

For I have a song to sing, O!

All. Sing me your song, O!

Point. It is sung to the moon

By a love-lorn loon,

Who fled from the mocking throng, O!

It's a song of a merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye.

All. Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lack-a-day-dee!

He sipped no sup, and he craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

Elsie. I have a song to sing, O!

All. What is your song, O!

Elsie. It is sung with the ring

Of the songs maids sing

Who love with a love life-long, O!

It's the song of a merrymaid, nestling near,

Who loved her lord -- but dropped a tear5

At the moan of the merryman, moping mum,

Whose soul was sad, and whose glance was glum,

Who sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

ALL Heighdy! heighdy!

Misery me -- lack-a-day-dee!

He sipped no sup, and he craved no crumb,

As he sighed for the love of a ladye!

Heighdy! heighdy! heighdy!

Fairfax embraces Elsie as Point falls insensible at their feet.

CURTAIN

1 This song was cut before the first night, but some modern productions reinstate it.

2 This song was cut after the first night, but some modern productions reinstate it.

3 The couplets for 3rd and 4th Yeomen and the subsequent lines for Fairfax and the Chorus [enclosed in square brackets] were cut just prior to the first performance although they can be found in early editions of the Vocal Score. They are sometimes reinstated in modern performances.

4 Point and Elsie originally had their own lyrics for this ensemble:

POINT. All frenzied with despair I rave,

My anguish rends my heart in two.

Your hand to him you freely gave;

It's woe to me, not woe to you!

My laugh is dead, my heart unmanned,

A jester with a heart of lead!

A lover, loverless I stand,

To womankind, for ever dead!

ELSIE. All frenzied with despair I rave,

My anguish rends my heart in two.

Unlov'd to him my hand I gave;

To him, unlov'd, bound to be true!

Unlov'd, unseen, unknown -- the brand

Of infamy upon his head;

A bride that's husbandless I stand,

To all mankind for ever dead!

5 This line and the next were originally written:

It's the song of a merrymaid, peerly proud,

Who loved her lord, and who laughed aloud