The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-Night's Dream'/Nymphidia
Nymphidia: The Court of Fairy
[edit]- Old Chaucer doth of Topas tell,
- Mad Rab'lais of Pantagruel,
- A later third of Dowsabel,
- With such poor trifles playing;
- Others the like have laboured at,
- Some of this thing and some of that,
- And many of they know not what,
- But that they must be saying.
- Another sort there be, that will
- Be talking of the Fairies still,
- Nor never can they have their fill,
- As they were wedded to them;
- No tales of them their thirst can slake,
- So much delight therein they take,
- And some strange thing they fain would make,
- Knew they the way to do them.
- Then since no Muse hath been so bold,
- Or of the later, or the old,
- Those elvish secrets to unfold,
- Which lie from others' reading,
- My active Muse to light shall bring
- The Court of that proud Fairy King,
- And tell there of the revelling:
- Jove prosper my proceeding!
- And thou, Nymphidia, gentle Fay,
- Which, meeting me upon the way,
- These secrets didst to me bewray,
- Which now I am in telling;
- My pretty, light, fantastic maid,
- I here invoke thee to my aid,
- That I may speak what thou hast said,
- In numbers smoothly swelling.
- This palace standeth in the air,
- By necromancy placed there,
- That it no tempests needs to fear,
- Which way soe'er it blow it;
- And somewhat southward toward the noon,
- Whence lies a way up to the moon,
- And thence the Fairy can as soon
- Pass to the earth below it.
- The walls of spiders' legs are made
- Well mortised and finely laid;
- He was the master of his trade
- It curiously that builded;
- The windows of the eyes of cats,
- And for the roof, instead of slats,
- Is covered with the skins of bats,
- With moonshine that are gilded.
- Hence Oberon him sport to make,
- Their rest when weary mortals take,
- And none but only fairies wake,
- Descendeth for his pleasure;
- And Mab, his merry Queen, by night
- Bestrides young folks that lie upright[1]
- (In elder times, the mare that hight),
- Which plagues them out of measure.
- Hence shadows, seeming idle shapes,
- Of little frisking elves and apes
- To earth do make their wanton scapes,
- As hope of pastime hastes them:
- Which maids think on the hearth they see
- When fires well-near consumed be,
- There dancing hays[2] by two and three,
- Just as their fancy casts them.
- These make our girls their sluttery rue,
- By pinching them both black and blue,
- And put a penny in their shoe
- The house for cleanly sweeping;
- And in their courses make that round
- In meadows and in marshes found,
- Of them so called the Fairy Ground,
- Of which they have the keeping.
- These when a child haps to be got
- Which after proves an idiot
- When folk perceive it thriveth not,
- The fault therein to smother,
- Some silly, doating brainless calf
- That understands things by the half,
- Say that the Fairy left this aulfe[3]
- And took away the other.
- But listen, and I shall you tell
- A chance in Fairy that befell,
- Which certainly may please some well
- In love and arms delighting,
- Of Oberon that jealous grew
- Of one of his own Fairy crew,
- Too well, he feared, his Queen that knew
- His love but ill requiting.
- Pigwiggen[4] was this Fairy Knight,
- One wondrous gracious in the sight
- Of fair Queen Mab, which day and night
- He amorously observed;
- Which made King Oberon suspect
- His service took too good effect,
- His sauciness and often checkt,
- And could have wished him starved[5].
- Pigwiggen gladly would commend
- Some token to Queen Mab to send,
- If sea or land him aught could lend
- Were worthy of her wearing;
- At length this lover doth devise
- A bracelet made of emmets' eyes,
- A thing he thought that she would prize,
- No whit her state impairing.
- And to the Queen a letter writes,
- Which he most curiously indites,
- Conjuring her by all the rites
- Of love, she would be pleased
- To meet him, her true servant, where
- They might, without suspect or fear,
- Themselves to one another clear
- And have their poor hearts eased.
- "At midnight the appointed hour,
- And for the Queen a fitting bower,"
- Quoth he, "is that fair cowslip flower
- On Hipcut hill that bloweth;
- In all your train there's not a fay
- That ever went to gather may
- But she hath made it, in her way;
- The tallest there that groweth."
- When by Tom Thumb, a Fairy Page,
- He sent it, and doth him engage
- By promise of a mighty wage
- It secretly to carry;
- Which done, the Queen her maids doth call,
- And bids them to be ready all:
- She would go see her summer hall,
- She could no longer tarry.
- Her chariot ready straight is made,
- Each thing therein is fitting laid,
- That she by nothing might be stayed,
- For naught must be her letting;
- Four nimble gnats the horses were,
- Their harnesses of gossamere,
- Fly Cranion her charioteer
- Upon the coach-box getting.
- Her chariot of a snail's fine shell,
- Which for the colours did excel,
- The fair Queen Mab becoming well,
- So lively was the limning;
- The seat the soft wool of the bee,
- The cover, gallantly to see,
- The wing of a pied butterflee;
- I trow 'twas simple trimming.
- The wheels composed of crickets' bones,
- And daintily made for the nonce;
- For fear of rattling on the stones
- With thistle-down they shod it;
- For all her maidens much did fear
- If Oberon had chanced to hear
- That Mab his Queen should have been there,
- He would not have abode it.
- She mounts her chariot with a trice,
- Nor would she stay for no advice,
- Until her maids that were so nice
- To wait on her were fitted;
- But ran herself away alone,
- Which when they heard, there was not one
- But hasted after to be gone,
- As she had been diswitted.
- Hop and Mop and Drop so clear,
- Pip and Trip and Skip that were
- To Mab, their sovereign, ever dear,
- Her special maids of honour;
- Fib and Tib and Pink and Pin,
- Tick and Quick and Jill and Jin,
- Tit and Nit and Wap and Win,
- The train that wait upon her.
- Upon a grasshopper they got
- And, what with amble and with trot,
- For hedge nor ditch they spared not,
- But after her they hie them;
- A cobweb over them they throw,
- To shield the wind if it should blow;
- Themselves they wisely could bestow
- Lest any should espy them.
- But let us leave Queen Mab awhile
- (Through many a gate, o'er many a stile,
- That now had gotten by this wile),
- Her dear Pigwiggen kissing;
- And tell how Oberon doth fare,
- Who grew as mad as any hare
- When he had sought each place with care
- And found his Queen was missing.
- By grisly Pluto he doth swear,
- He rent his clothes and tore his hair,
- And as he runneth here and there
- An acorn cup he greeteth,
- Which soon he taketh by the stalk,
- About his head he lets it walk,
- Nor doth he any creature balk,
- But lays on all he meeteth.
- The Tuscan poet doth advance
- The frantic Paladin of France,[6]
- And those more ancient do enhance
- Alcides in his fury,
- And others Ajax Telamon,
- But to this time there hath been none
- So bedlam as our Oberon,
- Of which I dare assure ye.
- And first encount'ring with a Wasp,
- He in his arms the fly doth clasp
- As though his breath he forth would grasp
- Him for Pigwiggen taking:
- "Where is ny wife, thou rogue?" quoth he;
- "Pigwiggen, she is come to thee;
- Restore her, or thou diest by me!"
- Whereat the poor Wasp quaking,
- Cries, "Oberon, great Fairy King,
- Content thee, I am no such thing:
- I am a Wasp, behold my sting!"
- At which the Fairy started;
- When soon away the Wasp doth go,
- Poor wretch was never frighted so;
- He thought his wings were much too slow,
- O'erjoyed they so were parted.
- He next upon a Glow-worm light
- (You must suppose it now was night),
- Which, for her hinder part was bright,
- He took to be a devil,
- And furiously doth her assail
- For carrying fire in her tail;
- He thrasht her rough coat with his flail;
- The mad King feared no evil.
- "Oh!" quoth the Glow-worm, "hold thy hand,
- Thou puissant King of Fairy-land!
- Thy mighty strokes who may withstand?
- Hold, or of life despair I!"
- Together then herself doth roll,
- And tumbling down into a hole,
- She seemed as black as any coal;
- Which vext away the Fairy.
- From thence he ran into a hive:
- Amongst the bees he letteth drive,
- And down their combs begins to rive,
- All likely to have spoiled,
- Which with their wax his face besmeared,
- And with their honey daubed his beard:
- It would have made a man afeared
- To see how he was moiled.
- A new adventure him betides;
- He met an Ant, which he bestrides,
- And post thereon away he rides,
- Which with his haste doth stumble,
- And came full over on her snout;
- Her heels so threw the dirt about,
- For she by no means could get out,
- But over him doth tumble.
- And being in this piteous case,
- And all be-slurried head and face,
- On runs he in this wild-goose chase,
- As here and there he rambles;
- Half blind, against a molehill hit,
- And for a mountain taking it,
- For all he was out of his wit
- Yet to the top he scrambles.
- And being gotten to the top,
- Yet there himself he could not stop,
- But down on th' other side doth chop,
- And to the foot came rumbling;
- So that the grubs, therein that bred,
- Hearing such turmoil overhead,
- Thought surely they had all been dead;
- So fearful was the jumbling.
- And falling down into a lake,
- Which him up to the neck doth take.
- His fury somewhat it doth slake;
- He calleth for a ferry;
- Where you may some recovery note,
- What was his club he made his boat,
- And in his oaken cup doth float,
- As safe as in a wherry.
- Men talk of the adventures strange
- Of Don Quishott, and of their change,
- Through which he armed oft did range,
- Of Sancha Pancha's travel;
- But should a man tell everything
- Done by this frantic Fairy King,
- And them in lofty numbers sing,
- It well his wits might gravel.
- Scarce set on shore, but therewithal
- He meeteth Puck, which most men call
- Hobgoblin, and on him doth fall
- With words from frenzy spoken:
- "Ho, ho,"[7] quoth Hob, "God save thy grace!
- Who drest thee in this piteous case?
- He thus that spoiled my sovereign's face,
- I would his neck were broken!"
- This Puck seems but a dreaming dolt,
- Still walking like a ragged colt,
- And oft out of a bush doth bolt,
- Of purpose to deceive us;
- And leading us makes us to stray,
- Long winter's nights, out of the way;
- And when we stick in mire and clay,
- Hob doth with laughter leave us.
- "Dear Puck," quoth he, "my wife is gone:
- As e'er thou lov'st King Oberon,
- Let everything but this alone,
- With vengeance and pursue her;
- Bring her to me alive or dead,
- Or that vild[8] thief Pigwiggen's head;
- That villain hath defiled my bed,
- He to this folly drew her."
- Quoth Puck, "My liege, I'll never lin[9],
- But I will thorough thick and thin,
- Until at length I bring her in;
- My dearest lord, ne'er doubt it.
- Thorough brake, thorough briar,
- Thorough muck, thorough mire,
- Thorough water, thorough fire;
- And thus goes Puck about it."
- This thing Nymphidia overheard,
- That on this mad King had a guard,
- Not doubting of a great reward
- For first this business broaching;
- And through the air away doth go,
- Swift as an arrow from the bow,
- To let her sovereign Mab to know
- What peril was approaching.
- The Queen, bound with Love's powerful'st charm,
- Sate with Pigwiggen arm in arm;
- Her merry maids that thought no harm,
- About the room were skipping;
- A humble bee, their minstrel, played
- Upon his hautboy; every maid
- Fit for this Revels was arrayed,
- The hornpipe neatly tripping.
- In comes Nymphidia, and doth cry,
- "My sovereign, for your safety fly,
- For there is danger but too nigh;
- I posted to forewarn you:
- The King hath sent Hobgoblin out,
- To seek you all the fields about,
- And of your safety you may doubt
- If he but once discern you."
- When, like an uproar in a town,
- Before them everything went down;
- Some tore a ruff, and some a gown,
- 'Gainst one another justling;
- They flew about like chaff i' th' wind;
- For haste some left their masks behind;
- Some could not stay their gloves to find;
- There never was such bustling.
- Forth ran they, by a secret way,
- Into a brake that near them lay;
- Yet much they doubted there to stay,
- Lest Hob should hap to find them;
- He had a sharp and piercing sight,
- All one to him the day and night;
- And therefore were resolved by flight
- To leave this place behind them.
- At length one chanced to find a nut,
- In th' end of which a hole was cut,
- Which lay upon a hazel root,
- There scattered by a squirrel
- Which out the kernel gotten had;
- When quoth this Fay, "Dear Queen, be glad;
- Let Oberon be ne'er so mad,
- I'll set you safe from peril.
- "Come all into this nut," quoth she,
- "Come closely in; be ruled by me;
- Each one may here a chooser be,
- For room ye need not wrastle:
- Nor need ye be together heapt";
- So one by one therein they crept,
- And lying down they soundly slept,
- And safe as in a castle.
- Nymphidia, that this while doth watch,
- Perceived if Puck the Queen should catch
- That he should be her over-match,
- Of which she well bethought her;
- Found it must be some powerful charm,
- The Queen against him that must arm,
- Or surely he would do her harm,
- For throughly he had sought her.
- And list'ning if she aught could hear,
- That her might hinder, or might fear,
- But finding still the coast was clear,
- Nor creature had descried her;
- Each circumstance and having scanned,
- She came thereby to understand
- Puck would be with them out of hand;
- When to her charms she hied her.
- And first her fern-seed[10] doth bestow,
- The kernel of the mistletoe;
- And here and there as Puck should go,
- With terror to affright him,
- She nightshade straws to work him ill,
- Therewith her vervain and her dill,
- That hindreth witches of their will,
- Of purpose to despite him.
- Then sprinkles she the juice of rue,
- That groweth underneath the yew;
- With nine drops of the midnight dew,
- From lunary[11] distilling:
- The molewarp's brain mixed therewithal;
- And with the same the pismire's gall:
- For she in nothing short would fall,
- The Fairy was so willing.
- Then thrice under a briar doth creep,
- Which at both ends was rooted deep,
- And over it three times she leap,
- Her magic much availing;
- Then on Proserpina doth call,
- And so upon her spell doth fall,
- Which here to you repeat I shall,
- Not in one tittle failing.
- "By the croaking of the frog,
- By the howling of the dog,
- By the crying of the hog
- Against the storm arising;
- By the evening curfew bell,
- By the doleful dying knell,
- O let this my direful spell,
- Hob, hinder thy surprising!
- "By the mandrake's dreadful groans,
- By the lubrican's[12] sad moans,
- By the noise of dead men's bones
- In charnel-houses rattling;
- By the hissing of the snake,
- The rustling of the fire-drake[13],
- I charge thee thou this place forsake,
- Nor of Queen Mab be prattling!
- "By the whirlwind's hollow sound,
- By the thunder's dreadful stound,
- Yells of spirits underground,
- I charge thee not to fear us;
- By the screech-owl's dismal note,
- By the black night-raven's throat,
- I charge thee, Hob, to tear thy coat
- With thorns, if thou come near us!"
- Her spell thus spoke, she stept aside,
- And in a chink herself doth hide,
- To see thereof what would betide,
- For she doth only mind him:
- When presently she Puck espies,
- And well she marked his gloating eyes,
- How under every leaf he pries,
- In seeking still to find them.
- But once the circle got within,
- The charms to work do straight begin,
- And he was caught as in a gin;
- For as he thus was busy,
- A pain he in his head-piece feels,
- Against a stubbed tree he reels,
- And up went poor Hobgoblin's heels;
- Alas! his brain was dizzy!
- At length upon his feet he gets,
- Hobgoblin fumes, Hobgoblin frets;
- And as again he forward sets,
- And through the bushes scrambles,
- A stump doth trip him in his pace;
- Down comes poor Hob upon his face,
- And lamentably tore his case,
- Amongst the briars and brambles.
- "A plague upon Queen Mab!" quoth he,
- "And all her maids where'er they be:
- I think the devil guided me,
- To seek her so provoked!"
- Where stumbling at a piece of wood,
- He fell into a ditch of mud,
- Where to the very chin he stood,
- In danger to be choked.
- Now worse than e'er he was before,
- Poor Puck doth yell, poor Puck doth roar,
- That waked Queen Mab, who doubted sore
- Some treason had been wrought her:
- Until Nymphidia told the Queen,
- What she had done, what she had seen,
- Who then had well-near cracked her spleen
- With very extreme laughter.
- But leave we Hob to clamber out,
- Queen Mab and all her Fairy rout,
- And come again to have a bout
- With Oberon yet madding:
- And with Pigwiggen now distraught,
- Who much was troubled in his thought,
- That he so long the Queen had sought,
- And through the fields was gadding.
- And as he runs he still doth cry,
- "King Oberon, I thee defy,
- And dare thee here in arms to try,
- For my dear lady's honour:
- For that she is a Queen right good,
- In whose defence I'll shed my blood,
- And that thou in this jealous mood
- Hast laid this slander on her."
- And quickly arms him for the field,
- A little cockle-shell his shield,
- Which he could very bravely wield,
- Yet could it not be pierced:
- His spear a bent[14] both stiff and strong,
- And well-near of two inches long:
- The pile was of a horse-fly's tongue,
- Whose sharpness nought reversed.
- And puts him on a coat of mail,
- Which was of a fish's scale,
- That when his foe should him assail,
- No point should be prevailing:
- His rapier was a hornet's sting:
- It was a very dangerous thing,
- For if he chanced to hurt the King,
- It would be long in healing.
- His helmet was a beetle's head,
- Most horrible and full of dread,
- That able was to strike one dead,
- Yet did it well become him;
- And for a plume a horse's hair
- Which, being tossed with the air,
- Had force to strike his foe with fear,
- And turn his weapon from him.
- Himself he on an earwig set,
- Yet scarce he on his back could get,
- So oft and high he did curvet,
- Ere he himself could settle:
- He made him turn, and stop, and bound,
- To gallop, and to trot the round,
- He scarce could stand on any ground,
- He was so full of mettle.
- When soon he met with Tomalin,
- One that a valiant knight had bin,
- And to King Oberon of kin;
- Quoth he, "Thou manly Fairy,
- Tell Oberon I come prepared,
- Then bid him stand upon his guard;
- This hand his baseness shall reward,
- Let him be ne'er so wary.
- "Say to him thus, that I defy
- His slanders and his infamy,
- And as a mortal enemy
- Do publicly proclaim him.
- Withal that if I had mine own,
- He should not wear the Fairy crown,
- But with a vengeance should come down,
- Nor we a king should name him."
- This Tomalin could not abide
- To hear his sovereign vilified;
- But to the Fairy Court him hied
- (Full furiously he posted),
- With everything Pigwiggen said:
- How title to the crown he laid,
- And in what arms he was arrayed,
- As how himself he boasted.
- 'Twixt head and foot, from point to point,
- He told the arming of each joint,
- In every piece how neat and quaint,
- For Tomalin could do it:
- How fair he sat, how sure he rid,
- As of the courser he bestrid,
- How managed, and how well he did;
- The King which listened to it,
- Quoth he, "Go, Tomalin, with speed,
- Provide me arms, provide my steed,
- And everything that I shall need;
- By thee I will be guided;
- To strait account call thou thy wit;
- See there be wanting not a whit,
- In everything see thou me fit,
- Just as my foe's provided."
- Soon flew this news through Fairy-land,
- Which gave Queen Mab to understand
- The combat that was then in hand
- Betwixt those men so mighty:
- Which greatly she began to rue,
- Perceiving that all Fairy knew,
- The first occasion from her grew
- Of these affairs so weighty.
- Wherefore attended with her maids,
- Through fogs, and mists, and damps she wades,
- To Proserpine the Queen of Shades,
- To treat that it would please her
- The cause into her hands to take,
- For ancient love and friendship's sake,
- And soon thereof an end to make,
- Which of much care would ease her.
- A while there let we Mab alone,
- And come we to King Oberon,
- Who, armed to meet his foe, is gone,
- For proud Pigwiggen crying:
- Who sought the Fairy King as fast
- And had so well his journeys cast,
- That he arrived at the last,
- His puissant foe espying.
- Stout Tomalin came with the King,
- Tom Thumb doth on Pigwiggen bring,
- That perfect were in everything
- To single fights belonging:
- And therefore they themselves engage
- To see them exercise their rage
- With fair and comely equipage,
- Not one the other wronging.
- So like in arms these champions were,
- As they had been a very pair,
- So that a man would almost swear
- That either had been either;
- Their furious steeds began to neigh,
- That they were heard a mighty way;
- Their staves upon their rests they lay;
- Yet, ere they flew together,
- Their seconds minister an oath,
- Which was indifferent to them both,
- That on their knightly faith and troth
- No magic them supplied;
- And sought them that they had no charms
- Wherewith to work each other's harms,
- But came with simple open arms
- To have their causes tried.
- Together furiously they ran,
- That to the ground came horse and man,
- The blood out of their helmets span,
- So sharp were their encounters;
- And though they to the earth were thrown,
- Yet quickly they regained their own,
- Such nimbleness was never shown,
- They were two gallant mounters.
- When in a second course again,
- They forward came with might and main,
- Yet which had better of the twain,
- The seconds could not judge yet;
- Their shields were into pieces cleft,
- Their helmets from their heads were reft,
- And to defend them nothing left,
- These champions would not budge yet.
- Away from them their staves they threw,
- Their cruel swords they quickly drew,
- And freshly they the fight renew,
- They every stroke redoubled;
- Which made Proserpina take heed,
- And make to them the greater speed,
- For fear lest they too much should bleed,
- Which wondrously her troubled.
- When to th' infernal Styx she goes,
- She takes the fogs from thence that rose,
- And in a bag doth them enclose,
- When well she had them blended.
- She hies her then to Lethe spring,
- A bottle and thereof doth bring,
- Wherewith she meant to work the thing
- Which only she intended.
- Now Proserpine with Mab is gone
- Unto the place where Oberon
- And proud Pigwiggen, one to one,
- Both to be slain were likely:
- And there themselves they closely hide,
- Because they would not be espied;
- For Proserpine meant to decide
- The matter very quickly.
- And suddenly unties the poke,
- Which out of it sent such a smoke,
- As ready was them all to choke,
- So grievous was the pother;
- So that the knights each other lost,
- And stood as still as any post;
- Tom Thumb nor Tomalin could boast
- Themselves of any other.
- But when the mist 'gan somewhat cease
- Proserpina commandeth peace;
- And that a while they should release
- Each other of their peril;
- "Which here," quoth she, "I do proclaim
- To all in dreadful Pluto's name,
- That as ye will eschew his blame,
- You let me hear the quarrel:
- "But here yourselves you must engage
- (Somewhat to cool your spleenish rage.
- Your grievous thirst and to assuage)
- That first you drink this liquor,
- Which shall your understanding clear,
- As plainly shall to you appear;
- Those things from me that you shall hear,
- Conceiving much the quicker."
- This Lethe water, you must know,
- The memory destroyeth so,
- That of our weal, or of our woe,
- Is all remembrance blotted;
- Of it nor can you ever think;
- For they no sooner took this drink,
- But naught into their brains could sink
- Of what had them besotted.
- King Oberon forgotten had
- That he for jealousy ran mad,
- But of his Queen was wondrous glad,
- And asked how they came thither:
- Pigwiggen likewise doth forget
- That he Queen Mab had ever met,
- Or that they were so hard beset,
- When they were found together.
- Nor neither of them both had thought
- That e'er they had each other sought,
- Much less that they a combat fought,
- But such a dream were loathing:
- Tom Thumb had got a little sup,
- And Tomalin scarce kissed the cup,
- Yet had their brains so sure locked up,
- That they remembered nothing.
- Queen Mab and her light maids, the while,
- Amongst themselves do closely smile,
- To see the King caught with this wile,
- With one another jesting:
- And to the Fairy Court they went
- With mickle joy and merriment,
- Which thing was done with good intent:
- And thus I left them feasting.
Endnotes
[edit]Michael Drayton's fairy-poem was first published in 1627, and perhaps owes a little of its charm to Shakespeare's play, though not so much as Drayton's sonnets to those of the elder poet.
1 ↑ upright, flat on the back. This is the older meaning, which Drayton would find in Chaucer.
2 ↑ hays, dances. Cf. heydeguys, p. 148.
3 ↑ aulfe. Cf. "ouphs," Merry Wives of Windsor, V. v.
4 ↑ Pigwiggen. "Piggy-widden" is a west-country dialect term, meaning a little white pig, used as an endearment for the youngest of a family.
5 ↑ starved, i.e. killed.
6 ↑ The Tuscan poet, Ariosto; the frantic Paladin, Orlando Furioso.
7 ↑ "Ho, ho." See note 4 on Robin Goodfellow.
8 ↑ vild, an old form of "vile."
9 ↑ lin, stop.
10 ↑ fern-seed. A very common superstition, which still survives, is that the seeds of the fern have power to confer invisibility.
11 ↑ lunary, a name given to several plants, here probably moonwort. It was supposed to open locks.
12 ↑ lubrican, the name of an Irish pigmy sprite, otherwise called leprechaun.
13 ↑ fire-drake, a fiery dragon. The word also meant a meteor.
14 ↑ bent, grass-stalk.