A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 9 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 508 pages of information about A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 9.

A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 9 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 508 pages of information about A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 9.

ROBIN GOODFELLOW. 
Ay, and of those that are scarce able to pay, take the one half, and
forgive them the other, rather than sit out at all.

CHURMS.
Tush! let me alone for that; but, sirrah, I have brought the scholar
into a fool’s paradise.  Why, he has made me his spokesman to Mistress
Lelia, and, God’s my judge, I never so much as name him to her.

ROBIN GOODFELLOW. 
O, by the mass, well-remembered. 
I’ll tell you what I mean to do: 
I’ll attire myself fit for the same purpose,
Like to some hellish hag or damned fiend,
And meet with Sophos wandering in the woods. 
O, I shall fray him terribly.

CHURMS.
I would thou couldst scare him out of his wits, then should I ha’ the
wench, cocksure.  I doubt nobody but him.

ROBIN GOODFELLOW. 
Well, let’s go drink together,
And then I’ll go put on my devilish robes—­
I mean, my Christmas calf-skin suit,
And then walk to the woods. 
O, I’ll terrify him, I warrant ye.

[Exeunt.

A Wood.

Enter SOPHOS solus.

SOPHOS. 
Will heavens still smile at Sophos’ miseries,
And give no end to my incessant moans? 
These cypress shades are witness of my woes;
The senseless trees do grieve at my laments;
The leafy branches drop sweet Myrrha’s tears: 
For love did scorn me in my mother’s womb,
And sullen Saturn, pregnant at my birth,
With all the fatal stars conspir’d in one
To frame a hapless constellation,
Presaging Sophos’ luckless destiny. 
Here, here doth Sophos turn Ixion’s restless wheel,
And here lies wrapp’d in labyrinths of love—­
Of his sweet Lelia’s love, whose sole idea still
Prolongs the hapless date of Sophos’ hopeless life. 
Ah! said I life? a life far worse than death—­
Than death? ay, than ten thousand deaths. 
I daily die, in that I live love’s thrall;
They die thrice happy that once die for all. 
Here will I stay my weary wand’ring steps,
And lay me down upon this solid earth, [He lies down
The mother of despair and baleful thoughts. 
Ay, this befits my melancholy moods. 
Now, now, methinks I hear the pretty birds
With warbling tunes record Fair Lelia’s name,
Whose absence makes warm blood drop from my heart,
And forceth wat’ry tears from these my weeping eyes. 
Methinks I hear the silver-sounding stream
With gentle murmur summon me to sleep,
Singing a sweet, melodious lullaby. 
Here will I take a nap, and drown my hapless hopes
In the ocean seas of Never like to speed.
        [He falls in a slumber, and music sounds.

    Enter SYLVANUS.

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Project Gutenberg
A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 9 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.