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Song of a Scholar and His Mistress, Who, Being Crossed by Their Friends, Fell Mad for One Another; and Now First Meet in Bedlam

[Music within.]
 
The Lovers enter at opposite doors, each held by a keeper.
 
Phillis.
Look, look I see’€”­I see my love appear!
‘€™Tis he’€”­'€™Tis he alone;
For, like him, there is none:
‘€™Tis the dear, dear man, '€™tis thee, dear.
 
Amyntas.
Hark! the winds war;
The foamy waves roar;
I see a ship afar:
Tossing and tossing, and making to the shore:
But what’€™s that I view,
So radiant of hue,
St. Hermo, St Hermo, that sits upon the sails?
Ah! No, no, no.
St. Hermo never, never shone so bright;’
’Tis Phillis, only Phillis, can shoot so fair a light;
’Tis Phillis, '€™tis Phillis, that saves the ship alone,
For all the winds are hush’€™d, and the storm is overblown.
 
Phillis.
Let me go, let me run, let me fly to his arms.
 
Amyntas.
If all the fates combine,
And all the furies join,
I’€™ll force my way to Phillis, and break through the charm.
 
[Here they break from their keepers, run to each other, and embrace.]
 
Phillis.
Shall I marry the man I love?
And shall I conclude my pains?
Now bless’€™d be the powers above,
I feel the blood bound in my veins;
With a lively leap it began to move,
And the vapours leave my brains.
 
Amyntas.
Body join’€™d to body, and heart join’€™d to heart,
To make sure of the cure,
Go call the man in black, to mumble o’€™er his part.
 
Phillis.
But suppose he should stay’€”­
 
Amyntas.
At worst if he delay,
’Tis a work must be done,
We’€™ll borrow but a day,
And the better, the sooner begun.
 
[They run out together hand in hand.]
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