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_ ACT II - SCENE III
SCENE III.----The Princess Huncamunca's Apartment.
Huncamunca, Cleora, Mustacha.
Hunc.
[1] Give me some music--see that it be sad.
[Footnote 1:
Anthony gave the same command in the same words.]
CLEORA
sings.
Cupid, ease a love-sick maid,
Bring thy quiver to her aid;
With equal ardour wound the swain,
Beauty should never sigh in vain.
Let him feel the pleasing smart,
Drive the arrow through his heart:
When one you wound, you then destroy;
When both you kill, you kill with joy.
Hunc.
[1]O Tom Thumb! Tom Thumb! wherefore art thou Tom Thumb?
Why hadst thou not been born of royal race?
Why had not mighty Bantam been thy father?
Or else the king of Brentford, Old or New?
[Footnote 1:
Oh! Marius, Marius, wherefore art thou Marius?
---_Olway's Marius_.]
Must.
I am surprised that your highness can give yourself
a moment's uneasiness about that little insignificant
fellow,[1] Tom Thumb the Great--one properer for a
plaything than a husband. Were he my husband his
horns should be as long as his body. If you had fallen
in love with a grenadier, I should not have wondered
at it. If you had fallen in love with something;
but to fall in love with nothing!
[Footnote 1:
Nothing is more common than these seeming
contradictions; such as,
Haughty weakness.--_Victim_
Great small world.--_Noah's Flood_]
Hunc.
Cease, my Mustacha, on thy duty cease.
The zephyr, when in flowery vales it plays,
Is not so soft, so sweet as Thummy's breath.
The dove is not so gentle to its mate.
Must.
The dove is every bit as proper for a husband. --Alas!
Madam, there's not a beau about the court looks so little
like a man. He is a perfect butterfly, a thing without
substance, and almost without shadow too.
Hunc.
This rudeness is unseasonable: desist;
Or I shall think this railing comes from love.
Tom Thumb's a creature of that charming form,
That no one can abuse, unless they love him.
Must.
Madam, the king. _
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