The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-Night's Dream'/Queen Mab
Appearance
Queen Mab
[edit]- Satyr
- This is Mab, the mistress fairy,
- That doth nightly rob the dairy,
- And can hunt or help the churning
- As she please without discerning.
- ........................
- She that pinches country wenches
- If they rub not clean their benches,
- And with sharper nails remembers
- When they rake not up their embers;
- But if so they chance to feast her,
- In a shoe she drops a tester.
- ........................
- This is she that empties cradles,
- Takes out children, puts in ladles;
- Trains forth midwives in their slumber,
- With a sieve the holes to number,
- And then leads them from her boroughs
- Home through ponds and water-furrows.
- ........................
- She can start our franklins' daughters,
- In her sleep, with shrieks and laughters,
- And on sweet St. Anna's night
- Feed them with a promised sight—
- Some of husbands, some of lovers,
- Which an empty dream discovers.
- BEN JONSON, masque of A Satyr (1603).