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Iolanthe; Or, The Peer And The Peri, a play by W. S. Gilbert

Act 1

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_ ACT I

SCENE.--An Arcadian Landscape. A river runs around
the back of the stage. A rustic bridge crosses the river.

Enter Fairies, led by Leila, Celia, and Fleta.
They trip around the stage, singing as they dance
.

CHORUS.
Tripping hither, tripping thither,
Nobody knows why or whither;
We must dance and we must sing
Round about our fairy ring!


SOLO--CELIA.
We are dainty little fairies,
Ever singing, ever dancing;
We indulge in our vagaries
In a fashion most entrancing.
If you ask the special function
Of our never-ceasing motion,
We reply, without compunction,
That we haven't any notion!


CHORUS.
No, we haven't any notion!
Tripping hither, etc.


SOLO--LEILA.
If you ask us how we live,
Lovers all essentials give--
We can ride on lovers' sighs,
Warm ourselves in lovers' eyes,
Bathe ourselves in lovers' tears,
Clothe ourselves with lovers' fears,
Arm ourselves with lovers' darts,
Hide ourselves in lovers' hearts.
When you know us, you'll discover
That we almost live on lover!

CHORUS.

Yes, we live on lover!
Tripping hither, etc.
(At the end of Chorus, all sigh wearily.)

CELIA.
Ah, it's all very well, but since our Queen banished
Iolanthe, fairy revels have not been what they were!

LEILA.
Iolanthe was the life and soul of Fairyland. Why, she
wrote all our songs and arranged all our dances!
We sing her songs and we trip her measures, but we
don't enjoy ourselves!

FLETA.
To think that five-and-twenty years have elapsed since
she was banished! What could she have done to have
deserved so terrible a punishment?

LEILA.
Something awful! She married a mortal!

FLETA.
Oh! Is it injudicious to marry a mortal?

LEILA.
Injudicious? It strikes at the root of the whole
fairy system! By our laws, the fairy who marries
a mortal dies!

CELIA.
But Iolanthe didn't die!

(Enter Fairy Queen.)

QUEEN.
No, because your Queen, who loved her with a
surpassing love, commuted her sentence to penal
servitude for life, on condition that she left
her husband and never communicated with
him again!

LEILA.
That sentence of penal servitude she is now working
out, on her head, at the bottom of that stream!

QUEEN.
Yes, but when I banished her, I gave her all the
pleasant places of the earth to dwell in. I'm sure I never
intended that she should go and live at the bottom of a stream!
It makes me perfectly wretched to think of the discomfort
she must have undergone!

LEILA.
Think of the damp! And her chest was always delicate.

QUEEN.
And the frogs! Ugh! I never shall enjoy any peace of
mind until I know why Iolanthe went to live among the frogs!

FLETA.
Then why not summon her and ask her?

QUEEN.
Why? Because if I set eyes on her I should forgive
her at once!

CELIA.
Then why not forgive her? Twenty-five years--it's a
long time!

LEILA.
Think how we loved her!

QUEEN.
Loved her? What was your love to mine? Why, she was
invaluable to me! Who taught me to curl myself inside a buttercup?
Iolanthe! Who taught me to swing upon a cobweb? Iolanthe! Who
taught me to dive into a dewdrop--to nestle in a nutshell--to
gambol upon gossamer? Iolanthe!

LEILA.
She certainly did surprising things!

FLETA.
Oh, give her back to us, great Queen, for your sake if
not for ours!

(All kneel in supplication.)

QUEEN
(irresolute).

Oh, I should be strong, but I am weak!
I should be marble, but I am clay! Her punishment has
been heavier than I intended. I did not mean that she
should live among the frogs--and--well, well, it shall
be as you wish--it shall be as you wish!

INVOCATION--QUEEN.
Iolanthe!
From thy dark exile thou art summoned!
Come to our call--
Come, come, Iolanthe!

CELIA.
Iolanthe!

LEILA.
Iolanthe!

ALL.
Come to our call, Iolanthe!
Iolanthe, come!

(Iolanthe rises from the water. She is clad in water-weeds.
She approaches the Queen with head bent and arms crossed.
)

IOLANTHE.
With humbled breast
And every hope laid low,
To thy behest,
Offended Queen, I bow!

QUEEN.
For a dark sin against our fairy laws
We sent thee into life-long banishment;
But mercy holds her sway within our hearts--
Rise--thou art pardoned!

IOL.
Pardoned!

ALL.
Pardoned!

(Her weeds fall from her, and she appears clothed as a
fairy. The Queen places a diamond coronet on her head,
and embraces her. The others also embrace her.
)

CHORUS.

Welcome to our hearts again,
Iolanthe! Iolanthe!
We have shared thy bitter pain,
Iolanthe! Iolanthe!

Every heart and every hand
In our loving little band
Welcomes thee to Fairyland,
Iolanthe!

QUEEN.
And now, tell me, with all the world to choose from,
why on earth did you decide to live at the bottom of that stream?

IOL.
To be near my son, Strephon.

QUEEN.
Bless my heart, I didn't know you had a son.

IOL.
He was born soon after I left my husband by your royal
command--but he does not even know of his father's existence.

FLETA.
How old is he?

IOL.
Twenty-four.

LEILA.
Twenty-four! No one, to look at you, would think you
had a son of twenty-four! But that's one of the advantages
of being immortal. We never grow old! Is he pretty?

IOL.
He's extremely pretty, but he's inclined to be stout.

ALL
(disappointed). Oh!

QUEEN.
I see no objection to stoutness, in moderation.


CELIA.
And what is he?

IOL.
He's an Arcadian shepherd--and he loves Phyllis, a Ward
in Chancery.

CELIA.
A mere shepherd! and he half a fairy!

IOL.
He's a fairy down to the waist--but his legs are mortal.

ALL.
Dear me!

QUEEN.
I have no reason to suppose that I am more curious
than other people, but I confess I should like to see a
person who is a fairy down to the waist, but whose legs
are mortal.

IOL.
Nothing easier, for here he comes!

(Enter Strephon, singing and dancing and playing on a flageolet.
He does not see the Fairies, who retire up stage as he enters.
)


SONG--STREPHON.

Good morrow, good mother!
Good mother, good morrow!
By some means or other,
Pray banish your sorrow!
With joy beyond telling
My bosom is swelling,
So join in a measure
Expressive of pleasure,
For I'm to be married to-day--to-day--
Yes, I'm to be married to-day!

CHORUS
(aside).

Yes, he's to be married to-day--to-day--
Yes, he's to be married to-day!

IOL.
Then the Lord Chancellor has at last given his consent
to your marriage with his beautiful ward, Phyllis?

STREPH.
Not he, indeed. To all my tearful prayers he answers
me, "A shepherd lad is no fit helpmate for a Ward of Chancery." I
stood in court, and there I sang him songs of Arcadee, with
flageolet accompaniment--in vain. At first he seemed amused, so
did the Bar; but quickly wearying of my song and pipe, bade me get
out. A servile usher then, in crumpled bands and rusty bombazine,
led me, still singing, into Chancery Lane! I'll go no more; I'll
marry her to-day, and brave the upshot, be it what it may! (Sees
Fairies.
) But who are these?

IOL.
Oh, Strephon! rejoice with me, my Queen has pardoned
me!

STREPH.
Pardoned you, mother? This is good news indeed.

IOL.
And these ladies are my beloved sisters.

STREPH.
Your sisters! Then they are--my aunts!

QUEEN.
A pleasant piece of news for your bride on her wedding
day!

STREPH.
Hush! My bride knows nothing of my fairyhood. I
dare not tell her, le
st it frighten her. She thinks me mortal, and
prefers me so.

LEILA.
Your fairyhood doesn't seem to have done you much
good.

STREPH.
Much good! My dear aunt! it's the curse of my
existence! What's the use of being half a fairy? My body can
creep through a keyhole, but what's the good of that when my legs
are left kicking behind? I can make myself invisible down to the
waist, but that's of no use when my legs remain exposed to view!
My brain is a fairy brain, but from the waist downwards I'm a
gibbering idiot. My upper half is immortal, but my lower half
grows older every day, and some day or other must die of old age.
What's to become of my upper half when I've buried my lower half
I really don't know!

FAIRIES.
Poor fellow!

QUEEN.
I see your difficulty, but with a fairy brain you
should seek an intellectual sphere of action. Let me see.
I've a borough or two at my disposal. Would you like to
go into Parliament?

IOL.
A fairy Member! That would be delightful!

STREPH.
I'm afraid I should do no good there--you see, down
to the waist, I'm a Tory of the most determined description,
but my legs are a couple of confounded Radicals, and, on a
division, they'd be sure to take me into the wrong lobby.
You see, they're two to one, which is a strong working
majority.

QUEEN.
Don't let that distress you; you shall be returned as
a Liberal-Conservative, and your legs shall be our
peculiar care.

STREPH.
(bowing).
I see your Majesty does not do things by halves.

QUEEN.
No, we are fairies down to the feet.

ENSEMBLE.

QUEEN.
Fare thee well, attractive stranger.

FAIRIES.
Fare thee well, attractive stranger.

QUEEN.
Shouldst thou be in doubt or danger,
Peril or perplexitee,
Call us, and we'll come to thee!

FAIRIES.
Aye! Call us, and we'll come to thee!
Tripping hither, tripping thither,
Nobody knows why or whither;
We must now be taking wing
To another fairy ring!

(Fairies and Queen trip off, Iolanthe, who takes an
affectionate farewell of her son, going off last.
)

(Enter Phyllis, singing and dancing, and
accompanying herself on a flageolet.
)

SONG--PHYLLIS.

Good morrow, good lover!
Good lover, good morrow!
I prithee discover,
Steal, purchase, or borrow
Some means of concealing
The care you are feeling,
And join in a measure
Expressive of pleasure,
For we're to be married to-day--to-day!
Yes, we're to be married to-day!

BOTH.
Yes, we're to be married, etc.

STREPH.
(embracing her).

My Phyllis! And to-day we are to be
made happy for ever.

PHYL.
Well, we're to be married.

STREPH.
It's the same thing.

PHYL.
I suppose it is. But oh, Strephon, I tremble at the
step I'm taking! I believe it's penal servitude for life
to marry a Ward of Court without the Lord Chancellor's consent!
I shall be of age in two years. Don't you think you could
wait two years?

STREPH.
Two years. Have you ever looked in the glass?

PHYL.
No, never.

STREPH.
Here, look at that (showing her a pocket mirror), and
tell me if you think it rational to expect me to wait two years?

PHYL.
(looking at herself).

No. You're quite right--it's
asking too much. One must be reasonable.

STREPH.
Besides, who knows what will happen in two years?
Why, you might fall in love with the Lord Chancellor
himself by that time!

PHYL.
Yes. He's a clean old gentleman.

STREPH.
As it is, half the House of Lords are sighing at your
feet.

PHYL.
The House of Lords are certainly extremely attentive.

STREPH.
Attentive? I should think they were! Why did
five-and-twenty Liberal Peers come down to shoot over your
grass-plot last autumn? It couldn't have been the sparrows.
Why did five-and-twenty Conservative Peers come down to
fish your pond? Don't tell me it was the gold-fish!
No, no--delays are dangerous, and if we are to marry,
the sooner the better.

DUET--STREPHON and PHYLLIS.

PHYLLIS.
None shall part us from each other,
One in life and death are we:
All in all to one another--
I to thee and thou to me!

BOTH.
Thou the tree and I the flower--
Thou the idol; I the throng--
Thou the day and I the hour--
Thou the singer; I the song!

STREPH.
All in all since that fond meeting
When, in joy, I woke to find
Mine the heart within thee beating,
Mine the love that heart enshrined!

BOTH.
Thou the stream and I the willow--
Thou the sculptor; I the clay--
Thou the Ocean; I the billow--
Thou the sunrise; I the day!

(Exeunt Strephon and Phyllis together.)

(March. Enter Procession of Peers.)


CHORUS.
Loudly let the trumpet bray!
Tantantara!
Proudly bang the sounding brasses!
Tzing! Boom!
As upon its lordly way
This unique procession passes,
Tantantara! Tzing! Boom!
Bow, bow, ye lower middle classes!
Bow, bow, ye tradesmen, bow, ye masses!
Blow the trumpets, bang the brasses!
Tantantara! Tzing! Boom!
We are peers of highest station,
Paragons of legislation,
Pillars of the British nation!
Tantantara! Tzing! Boom!

(Enter the Lord Chancellor, followed by his train-bearer.)

SONG--LORD CHANCELLOR.

The Law is the true embodiment
Of everything that's excellent.
It has no kind of fault or flaw,
And I, my Lords, embody the Law.
The constitutional guardian I
Of pretty young Wards in Chancery,
All very agreeable girls--and none
Are over the age of twenty-one.
A pleasant occupation for
A rather susceptible Chancellor!

ALL.
A pleasant, etc.

But though the compliment implied
Inflates me with legitimate pride,
It nevertheless can't be denied
That it has its inconvenient side.
For I'm not so old, and not so plain,
And I'm quite prepared to marry again,
But there'd be the deuce to pay in the Lords
If I fell in love with one of my Wards!
Which rather tries my temper, for
I'm such a susceptible Chancellor!

ALL.
Which rather, etc.

And every one who'd marry a Ward
Must come to me for my accord,
And in my court I sit all day,
Giving agreeable girls away,
With one for him--and one for he--
And one for you--and one for ye--
And one for thou--and one for thee--
But never, oh, never a one for me!
Which is exasperating for
A highly susceptible Chancellor!

ALL.
Which is, etc.

(Enter Lord Tolloller.)

LORD TOLL.
And now, my Lords, to the business of the day.

LORD CH.
By all means. Phyllis, who is a Ward of Court, has
so powerfully affected your Lordships, that you have appealed to me
in a body to give her to whichever one of you she may think proper
to select, and a noble Lord has just gone to her cottage to request
her immediate attendance. It would be idle to deny that I, myself,
have the misfortune to be singularly attracted by this young
person. My regard for her is rapidly undermining my constitution.
Three months ago I was a stout man. I need say no more. If I
could reconcile it with my duty, I should unhesitatingly award her
to myself, for I can conscientiously say that I know no man who is
so well fitted to render her exceptionally happy. (Peers: Hear,
hear!
) But such an award would be open to misconstruction, and
therefore, at whatever personal inconvenience, I waive my claim.

LORD TOLL.
My Lord, I desire, on the part of this House, to
express its sincere sympathy with your Lordship's most painful
position.

LORD CH.
I thank your Lordships. The feelings of a Lord
Chancellor who is in love with a Ward of Court are not to be
envied. What is his position? Can he give his own consent to his
own marriage with his own Ward? Can he marry his own Ward without
his own consent? And if he marries his own Ward without his own
consent, can he commit himself for contempt of his own Court? And
if he commit himself for contempt of his own Court, can he appear
by counsel before himself, to move for arrest of his own judgement?
Ah, my Lords, it is indeed painful to have to sit upon a woolsack
which is stuffed with such thorns as these!

(Enter Lord Mountararat.)

LORD MOUNT.
My Lord, I have much pleasure in announcing that
I have succeeded in inducing the young person to
present herself at the Bar of this House.

(Enter Phyllis.)

RECITATIVE--PHYLLIS.
My well-loved Lord and Guardian dear,
You summoned me, and I am here!

CHORUS OF PEERS.
Oh, rapture, how beautiful!
How gentle--how dutiful!

SOLO--LORD TOLLOLLER.
Of all the young ladies I know
This pretty young lady's the fairest;
Her lips have the rosiest show,
Her eyes are the richest and rarest.
Her origin's lowly, it's true,
But of birth and position I've plenty;
I've grammar and spelling for two,
And blood and behaviour for twenty!
Her origin's lowly, it's true,
I've grammar and spelling for two;

CHORUS.
Of birth and position he's plenty,
With blood and behaviour for twenty!


SOLO--LORD MOUNTARARAT.
Though the views of the House have diverged
On every conceivable motion,
All questions of Party are merged
In a frenzy of love and devotion;
If you ask us distinctly to say
What Party we claim to belong to,
We reply, without doubt or delay,
The Party I'm singing this song to!

SOLO--PHYLLIS.
I'm very much pained to refuse,
But I'll stick to my pipes and my tabors;
I can spell all the words that I use,
And my grammar's as good as my neighbours'.
As for birth--I was born like the rest,
My behaviour is rustic but hearty,
And I know where to turn for the best,
When I want a particular Party!

PHYLLIS, LORD TOLL, and LORD MOUNT.
Though her station is none of the best,
I suppose she was born like the rest;
And she knows where to look for her hearty,
When she wants a particular Party!


RECITATIVE--PHYLLIS.
Nay, tempt me not.
To rank I'll not be bound;
In lowly cot
Alone is virtue found!

CHORUS.
No, no; indeed high rank will never hurt you,
The Peerage is not destitute of virtue.


BALLAD--LORD TOLLOLLER.
Spurn not the nobly born
With love affected,
Nor treat with virtuous scorn
The well-connected.
High rank involves no shame--
We boast an equal claim
With him of humble name
To be respected!
Blue blood! blue blood!
When virtuous love is sought
Thy power is naught,
Though dating from the Flood,
Blue blood! Ah, blue blood!

CHORUS.
When virtuous love is sought, etc.

Spare us the bitter pain
Of stern denials,
Nor with low-born disdain
Augment our trials.
Hearts just as pure and fair
May beat in Belgrave Square
As in the lowly air
Of Seven Dials!
Blue blood! blue blood!
Of what avail art thou
To serve us now?
Though dating from the Flood,
Blue blood! Ah, blue blood!

CHORUS.
Of what avail art thou, etc.

RECITATIVE--PHYLLIS.

My Lords, it may not be.
With grief my heart is riven!
You waste your time on me,
For ah! my heart is given!

ALL.
Given!

PHYL.
Yes, given!


ALL.
Oh, horror!!!

RECITATIVE--LORD CHANCELLOR.

And who has dared to brave our high displeasure,
And thus defy our definite command?

(Enter Strephon.)

STREPH.
'Tis I--young Strephon! mine this priceless treasure!
Against the world I claim my darling's hand!

(Phyllis rushes to his arms.)

A shepherd I--

ALL.
A shepherd he!

STREPH.
Of Arcady-

ALL.
Of Arcadee!

STREPH.
Betrothed are we!

ALL.
Betrothed are they--

STREPH.
And mean to be-

ALL.
Espoused to-day!


ENSEMBLE.

STREPH. THE OTHERS.

A shepherd I A shepherd he
Of Arcady, Of Arcadee,
Betrothed are we, Betrothed is he,
And mean to be And means to be
Espoused to-day! Espoused to-day!


DUET--LORD MOUNTARARAT and LORD TOLLOLLER
(aside to each other).

'Neath this blow,
Worse than stab of dagger--
Though we mo-
Mentarily stagger,
In each heart
Proud are we innately--
Let's depart,
Dignified and stately!

ALL.
Let's depart,
Dignified and stately!

CHORUS OF PEERS.

Though our hearts she's badly bruising,
In another suitor choosing,
Let's pretend it's most amusing.
Ha! ha! ha! Tan-ta-ra!

(Exeunt all the Peers, marching round stage with much dignity.
Lord Chancellor separates Phyllis from Strephon and orders her off.
She follows Peers. Manent Lord Chancellor and Strephon.
)

LORD CH.
Now, sir, what excuse have you to offer for having
disobeyed an order of the Court of Chancery?

STREPH.
My Lord, I know no Courts of Chancery; I go by
Nature's Acts of Parliament. The bees--the breeze--the seas--the
rooks--the brooks--the gales--the vales--the fountains and the
mountains cry, "You love this maiden--take her, we command you!"
'Tis writ in heaven by the bright barbed dart that leaps forth into
lurid light from each grim thundercloud. The very rain pours forth
her sad and sodden sympathy! When chorused Nature bids me take my
love, shall I reply, "Nay, but a certain Chancellor forbids it"?
Sir, you are England's Lord High Chancellor, but are you Chancellor
of birds and trees, King of the winds and Prince of thunderclouds?

LORD CH.
No. It's a nice point. I don't know that I ever
met it before. But my difficulty is that at present there's no
evidence before the Court that chorused Nature has interested
herself in the matter.

STREPH.
No evidence! You have my word for it. I tell you
that she bade me take my love.

LORD CH.
Ah! but, my good sir, you mustn't tell us what she
told you--it's not evidence. Now an affidavit from a
thunderstorm, or a few words on oath from a heavy shower,
would meet with all the attention they deserve.

STREPH.
And have you the heart to apply the prosaic rules of
evidence to a case which bubbles over with poetical emotion?

LORD CH.
Distinctly. I have always kept my duty strictly
before my eyes, and it is to that fact that I owe my
advancement to my present distinguished position.


SONG--LORD CHANCELLOR.

When I went to the Bar as a very young man,
(Said I to myself--said I),
I'll work on a new and original plan,
(Said I to myself--said I),
I'll never assume that a rogue or a thief
Is a gentleman worthy implicit belief,
Because his attorney has sent me a brief,
(Said I to myself--said I!).

Ere I go into court I will read my brief through
(Said I to myself--said I),
And I'll never take work I'm unable to do
(Said I to myself-said I),
My learned profession I'll never disgrace
By taking a fee with a grin on my face,
When I haven't been there to attend to the case
(Said I to myself--said I!).

I'll never throw dust in a juryman's eyes
(Said I to myself--said I),
Or hoodwink a judge who is not over-wise
(Said I to myself--said I),
Or assume that the witnesses summoned in force
In Exchequer, Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, or Divorce,
Have perjured themselves as a matter of course
(Said I to myself--said I!).

In other professions in which men engage
(Said I to myself said I),
The Army, the Navy, the Church, and the Stage
(Said I to myself--said I),
Professional licence, if carried too far,
Your chance of promotion will certainly mar--
And I fancy the rule might apply to the Bar
(Said I to myself--said I!).

(Exit Lord Chancellor.)

(Enter Iolanthe)

STREPH.
Oh, Phyllis, Phyllis! To be taken from you just as
I was on the point of making you my own! Oh, it's
too much--it's too much!

IOL.
(to Strephon, who is in tears).

My son in tears--and on
his wedding day!

STREPH.
My wedding day! Oh, mother, weep with me, for the
Law has interposed between us, and the Lord Chancellor
has separated us for ever!

IOL.
The Lord Chancellor!

(Aside.)
Oh, if he did but know!

STREPH.
(overhearing her).

If he did but know what?

IOL.
No matter! The Lord Chancellor has no power over you.
Remember you are half a fairy. You can defy him--down
to the waist.

STREPH.
Yes, but from the waist downwards he can commit me to
prison for years! Of what avail is it that my body is free,
if my legs are working out seven years' penal servitude?

IOL.
True. But take heart--our Queen has promised you her
special protection. I'll go to her and lay your peculiar
case before her.

STREPH.
My beloved mother! how can I repay the debt I owe
you?

FINALE--QUARTET.

(As it commences, the Peers appear at the back, advancing
unseen and on tiptoe. Lord Mountararat and Lord Tolloller
lead Phyllis between them, who listens in horror to what
she hears.
)

STREPH.
(to Iolanthe).

When darkly looms the day,
And all is dull and grey,
To chase the gloom away,
On thee I'll call!

PHYL.
(speaking aside to Lord Mountararat).

What was that?

LORD MOUNT.
(aside to Phyllis).

I think I heard him say,
That on a rainy day,
To while the time away,
On her he'd call!

CHORUS.
We think we heard him say, etc.

(Phyllis much agitated at her lover's supposed faithlessness.)

IOL.
(to Strephon).

When tempests wreck thy bark,
And all is drear and dark,
If thou shouldst need an Ark,
I'll give thee one!

PHYL.
(speaking aside to Lord Tolloller).

What was that?

LORD TOLL.
(aside to Phyllis).

I heard the minx remark,
She'd meet him after dark,
Inside St James's Park,
And give him one!

CHORUS.
We heard the minx remark, etc.

PHYL.
The prospect's very bad.
My heart so sore and sad
Will never more be glad
As summer's sun.

PHYL., IOL., LORD TOLL., STREPH.
The prospect's not so bad,
My/Thy heart so sore and sad
May very soon be glad
As summer's sun;

PHYL., IOL., LORD TOLL., STEPH., LORD MOUNT.
For when the sky is dark
And tempests wreck his/thy/my bark,
he should
If thou shouldst need an Ark,
I should
She'll him
I'll give thee one!
me

PHYL.
(revealing herself).

Ah!

(Iolanthe and Strephon much confused.)

PHYL.
Oh, shameless one, tremble!
Nay, do not endeavour
Thy fault to dissemble,
We part--and for ever!
I worshipped him blindly,
He worships another--

STREPH.
Attend to me kindly,
This lady's my mother!

TOLL.
This lady's his what?

STREPH.
This lady's my mother!

TENORS.
This lady's his what?

BASSES.
He says she's his mother!

(They point derisively to Iolanthe, laughing heartily
at her. She goes for protection to Strephon.
)

(Enter Lord Chancellor. Iolanthe veils herself.)

LORD CH.
What means this mirth unseemly,
That shakes the listening earth?

LORD TOLL.
The joke is good extremely,
And justifies our mirth.

LORD MOUNT.
This gentleman is seen,
With a maid of seventeen,
A-taking of his dolce far niente;
And wonders he'd achieve,
For he asks us to believe
She's his mother--and he's nearly five-and-twenty!

LORD CH.
(sternly).

Recollect yourself, I pray,
And be careful what you say--
As the ancient Romans said, festina lente.
For I really do not see
How so young a girl could be
The mother of a man of five-and-twenty.

ALL.
Ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

STREPH.
My Lord, of evidence I have no dearth--
She is--has been--my mother from my birth!


BALLAD.

In babyhood
Upon her lap I lay,
With infant food
She moistened my clay;
Had she withheld
The succour she supplied,
By hunger quelled,
Your Strephon might have died!

LORD CH.
(much moved).

Had that refreshment been denied,
Indeed our Strephon might have died!

ALL
(much affected).

Had that refreshment been denied,
Indeed our Strephon might have died!

LORD MOUNT.
But as she's not
His mother, it appears,
Why weep these hot
Unnecessary tears?
And by what laws
Should we so joyously
Rejoice, because
Our Strephon did not die?
Oh rather let us pipe our eye
Because our Strephon did not die!

ALL.
That's very true--let's pipe our eye
Because our Strephon did not die!

(All weep. Iolanthe, who has succeeded in hiding
her face from Lord Chancellor, escapes unnoticed.
)

PHYL.
Go, traitorous one--for ever we must part:
To one of you, my Lords, I give my heart!

ALL.
Oh, rapture!

STREPH.
Hear me, Phyllis, ere you leave me.

PHYL.
Not a word--you did deceive me.

ALL.
Not a word--you did deceive her.

(Exit Strephon.)


BALLAD--PHYLLIS.
For riches and rank I do not long--
Their pleasures are false and vain;
I gave up the love of a lordly throng
For the love of a simple swain.
But now that simple swain's untrue,
With sorrowful heart I turn to you--
A heart that's aching,
Quaking, breaking,
As sorrowful hearts are wont to do!

The riches and rank that you befall
Are the only baits you use,
So the richest and rankiest of you all
My sorrowful heart shall choose.
As none are so noble--none so rich
As this couple of lords, I'll find a niche
In my heart that's aching,
Quaking, breaking,
For one of you two-and I don't care which!

ENSEMBLE.

PHYL.
(to Lord Mountararat and Lord Tolloller).
To you I give my heart so rich!

ALL
(puzzled).

To which?

PHYL.
I do not care!
To you I yield--it is my doom!

ALL.
To whom?

PHYL.
I'm not aware!
I'm yours for life if you but choose.

ALL.
She's whose?

PHYL.
That's your affair!
I'll be a countess, shall I not?

ALL.
Of what?

PHYL.
I do not care!

ALL.
Lucky little lady!
Strephon's lot is shady;
Rank, it seems, is vital,
"Countess" is the title,
But of what I'm not aware!

(Enter Strephon.)

STREPH.
Can I inactive see my fortune fade?
No, no!

PEERS.
Ho, ho!

STREPH.
Mighty protectress, hasten to my aid!

(Enter Fairies, tripping, headed by
Celia, Leila, and Fleta, and followed by Queen.
)

CHORUS.
Tripping hither, tripping thither.
Nobody knows why or whither;

FAIRIES.
Why you want us we don't know,
But you've summoned us, and so
Enter all the little fairies
To their usual tripping measure!
To oblige you all our care is--
Tell us, pray, what is your pleasure!

STREPH.
The lady of my love has caught me talking to another--

PEERS.
Oh, fie! young Strephon is a rogue!

STREPH.
I tell her very plainly that the lady is my mother--

PEERS.
Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

STREPH.
She won't believe my statement, and declares we must be parted,
Because on a career of double-dealing I have started,
Then gives her hand to one of these, and leaves me
broken-hearted--

PEERS.
Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

QUEEN.
Ah, cruel ones, to separate two lovers from each other!

FAIRIES.
Oh, fie! our Strephon's not a rogue!

QUEEN.
You've done him an injustice, for the lady is his mother!

FAIRIES.
Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

LORD CH.
That fable perhaps may serve his turn as well as any other.

(Aside.)
I didn't see her face, but if they fondled one another,
And she's but seventeen--I don't believe it was his mother!
Taradiddle, taradiddle.

ALL.
Tol lol lay!

LORD TOLL.
I have often had a use
For a thorough-bred excuse
Of a sudden (which is English for "repente"),
But of all I ever heard
This is much the most absurd,
For she's seventeen, and he is five-and-twenty!

ALL.
Though she is seventeen, and he is four or
five-and-twenty!
Oh, fie! our Strephon is a rogue!

LORD MOUNT.
Now, listen, pray to me,
For this paradox will be
Carried, nobody at all contradicente.
Her age, upon the date
Of his birth, was minus eight,
If she's seventeen, and he is five-and-twenty!

PEERS and FAIRIES.
If she is seventeen, and he is only
five-and-twenty.

ALL.
To say she is his mother is an utter bit of folly!
Oh, fie! our Strephon is a rogue!
Perhaps his brain is addled, and it's very melancholy!
Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!
I wouldn't say a word that could be reckoned as injurious,
But to find a mother younger than her son is very curious,
And that's a kind of mother that is usually spurious.
Taradiddle, taradiddle, tol lol lay!

LORD CH.
Go away, madam;
I should say, madam,
You display, madam,
Shocking taste.

It is rude, madam,
To intrude, madam,
With your brood, madam,
Brazen-faced!

You come here, madam,
Interfere, madam,
With a peer, madam.
(I am one.)

You're aware, madam,
What you dare, madam,
So take care, madam,
And begone!


ENSEMBLE

FAIRIES (to QUEEN). PEERS
Let us stay, madam; Go away, madam;
I should say, madam, I should say, madam,
They display, madam, You display, madam,
Shocking taste. Shocking taste.

It is rude, madam, It is rude, madam,
To allude, madam, To intrude, madam,
To your brood, madam, With your brood, madam,
Brazen-faced! Brazen-faced!

We don't fear, madam, You come here, madam,
Any peer, madam, Interfere, madam,
Though, my dear madam, With a peer, madam,
This is one. (I am one.)

They will stare, madam, You're aware, madam,
When aware, madam, What you dare, madam,
What they dare, madam-- So take care, madam,
What they've done! And begone!


QUEEN.
Bearded by these puny mortals!

(furious).
I will launch from fairy portals
All the most terrific thunders
In my armoury of wonders!

PHYL.
(aside).

Should they launch terrific wonders,
All would then repent their blunders.
Surely these must be immortals.

(Exit Phyllis.)

QUEEN.
Oh! Chancellor unwary
It's highly necessary
Your tongue to teach
Respectful speech--
Your attitude to vary!

Your badinage so airy,
Your manner arbitrary,
Are out of place
When face to face
With an influential Fairy.

ALL THE PEERS
We never knew

(aside).
We were talking to
An influential Fairy!

LORD CH.
A plague on this vagary,
I'm in a nice quandary!
Of hasty tone
With dames unknown
I ought to be more chary;
It seems that she's a fairy
From Andersen's library,
And I took her for
The proprietor
Of a Ladies' Seminary!

PEERS.
We took her for
The proprietor
Of a Ladies' Seminary!

QUEEN.
When next your Houses do assemble,
You may tremble!

CELIA.
Our wrath, when gentlemen offend us,
Is tremendous!

LEILA.
They meet, who underrate our calling,
Doom appalling!

QUEEN.
Take down our sentence as we speak it,
And he shall wreak it!


(Indicating Strephon.)

PEERS.
Oh, spare us!

QUEEN.
Henceforth, Strephon, cast away
Crooks and pipes and ribbons so gay--
Flocks and herds that bleat and low;
Into Parliament you shall go!

ALL.
Into Parliament he shall go!
Backed by our supreme authority,
He'll command a large majority!
Into Parliament he shall go!

QUEEN.
In the Parliamentary hive,
Liberal or Conservative--
Whig or Tory--I don't know--
But into Parliament you shall go!

ALL.
Into Parliament, etc.

QUEEN
(speaking through music).

Every bill and every measure
That may gratify his pleasure,
Though your fury it arouses,
Shall be passed by both your Houses!

PEERS.
Oh!

QUEEN.
You shall sit, if he sees reason,
Through the grouse and salmon season;

PEERS.
No!

QUEEN.
He shall end the cherished rights
You enjoy on Friday nights:

PEERS.
No!

QUEEN.
He shall prick that annual blister,
Marriage with deceased wife's sister:

PEERS.
Mercy!

QUEEN.
Titles shall ennoble, then,
All the Common Councilmen:

PEERS.
Spare us!

QUEEN.
Peers shall teem in Christendom,
And a Duke's exalted station
Be attainable by Com-
Petitive Examination!

PEERS. FAIRIES and PHYLLIS.

Oh, horror! Their horror
They can't dissemble
Nor hide the fear that makes them
tremble!


ENSEMBLE.

PEERS FAIRIES, PHYLLIS, and STREPHON.

Young Strephon is the kind of lout With Strephon for
your foe, no doubt,
We do not care a fig about! A fearful prospect opens out,
We cannot say And who shall say
What evils may What evils may
Result in consequence. Result in consequence?

But lordly vengeance will A hideous vengeance will
pursue pursue
All kinds of common people All noblemen who venture to
who
Oppose our views, Opppose his views,
Or boldly choose Or boldly choose
To offer us offence. To offer him offence.

He'd better fly at humbler 'Twill plunge them
game, and shame; into grief

Or our forbearance he must, His kind forbearance they
claim must claim,
If he'd escape If they'd escape
In any shape In any shape
A very painful wrench! A very painful wrench.

Your powers we dauntlessly pooh-pooh. Although our
threats you now pooh-pooh,

A dire revenge will fall A dire revenge will fall
on you. on you,
If you besiege Should he besiege
Our high prestige-- Your high prestige--
(The word "prestige" The word "prestige"
is French
). is French).


PEERS.
Our lordly style
You shall not quench
With base canaille!

FAIRIES.
(That word is French.)

PEERS.
Distinction ebbs
Before a herd
Of vulgar plebs!

FAIRIES.
(A Latin word.)

PEERS.
'Twould fill with joy,
And madness stark
The hoi polloi!

FAIRIES.
(A Greek remark.)

PEERS.
One Latin word, one Greek remark,
And one that's French.

FAIRIES.
Your lordly style
We'll quickly quench
With base canaille!

PEERS.
(That word is French.)

FAIRIES.
Distinction ebbs
Before a herd
Of vulgar plebs!

PEERS.
(A Latin word.)

FAIRIES.
'Twill fill with joy
And madness stark
The hoi polloi!

PEERS.
(A Greek remark.)

FAIRIES.
One Latin word, one Greek remark,
And one that's French.


PEERS. FAIRIES.

You needn't wait: We will not wait:
Away you fly! We go sky-high!
Your threatened hate Our threatened hate
We won't defy! You won't defy!


(Fairies threaten Peers with their wands. Peers kneel
as begging for merry. Phyllis implores Strephon to
relent. He casts her from him, and she falls fainting
into the arms of Lord Mountararat and Lord Tolloller.
) _

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