The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-Night's Dream'/The Fairy Queen
Appearance
The Fairy Queen
[edit]- Come, follow, follow me,
- You fairy elves that be,
- Which circle on the green,
- Come follow me your queen;
- Hand in hand let's dance around,
- For this place is fairy ground.
- When mortals are at rest,
- And snorting in their nest,
- Unheard and unespied
- Through keyholes we do glide:
- Over tables, stools, and shelves.
- We trip it with our fairy elves.
- And if the house be foul,
- Or platter, dish, or bowl,
- Upstairs we nimbly creep
- And find the sluts asleep;
- There we pinch their arms and thighs;
- None escapes nor none espies.
- But if the house be swept,
- And from uncleanness kept,
- We praise the household maid
- And surely she is paid;
- For we do use, before we go,
- To drop a tester in her shoe.
- Upon a mushroom's head
- Our table we do spread;
- A corn of rye or wheat
- Is manchet which we eat,
- Pearly drops of dew we drink
- In acorn cups filled to the brink.
- The brains of nightingales
- With unctuous dew of snails
- Between two nutshells stewed
- Is meat that's easily chewed;
- And the beards of little mice
- Do make a feast of wondrous price.
- On tops of dewy grass
- So nimbly do we pass,
- The young and tender stalk
- Ne'er bends when we do walk;
- Yet in the morning may be seen
- Where we the night before have been.
- The grasshopper and fly
- Serve for our minstrelsy.
- Grace said, we dance awhile,
- And so the time beguile;
- And when the moon doth hide her head,
- The glow-worm lights us home to bed.
- From The Mysteries of Love and
- Eloquence (1658); with a preface
- signed E[dward] P[hillips].
The poem was given by Percy in his Reliques from The Mysteries of Love and Eloquence, a curious book of which the preface is signed E.P.; the British Museum Catalogue attributes these initials to Edward Phillips, the nephew of John Milton. But Rimbault pointed out that this song occurs in a tract of 1635, A Description of the King and Queen of the Fairies, attributed to Robert Herrick; a single copy of this pamphlet is known, and is in the Bodleian Library.