Arthur Sullivan

The Complete Plays of Gilbert and Sullivan


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CHORUS and DANCE.

       Dance a cachucha, fandango, bolero,

       Xeres we'll drink—Manzanilla, Montero—

       Wine, when it runs in abundance, enhances

       The reckless delight of that wildest of dances!

       To the pretty pitter-pitter-patter,

       And the clitter-clitter-clitter-clatter—

       Clitter—clitter—clatter,

       Pitter—pitter—patter,

       Patter, patter, patter, patter, we'll dance.

       Old Xeres we'll drink—Manzanilla, Montero;

       For wine, when it runs in abundance, enhances

       The reckless delight of that wildest of dances!

       (Cachucha.)

       (The dance is interrupted by the unexpected appearance of Don

       Alhambra, who looks on with astonishment. Marco and Giuseppe

       appear embarrassed. The others run off, except Drummer Boy, who

       is driven off by Don Alhambra.)

       DON AL. Good evening. Fancy ball?

       GIU. No, not exactly. A little friendly dance. That's

       all. Sorry you're late.

       DON AL. But I saw a groom dancing, and a footman!

       MAR. Yes. That's the Lord High Footman.

       DON AL. And, dear me, a common little drummer boy!

       GIU. Oh no! That's the Lord High Drummer Boy.

       DON AL. But surely, surely the servants'-hall is the place

       for these gentry?

       GIU. Oh dear no! We have appropriated the servants'-hall.

       It's the Royal Apartment, and accessible only by tickets

       obtainable at the Lord Chamberlain's office.

       MAR. We really must have some place that we can call our

       own.

       DON AL. (puzzled). I'm afraid I'm not quite equal to the

       intellectual pressure of the conversation.

       GIU. You see, the Monarchy has been re-modelled on

       Republican principles.

       DON AL. What!

       GIU. All departments rank equally, and everybody is at the

       head of his department.

       DON AL. I see.

       MAR. I'm afraid you're annoyed.

       DON AL. No. I won't say that. It's not quite what I

       expected.

       GIU. I'm awfully sorry.

       MAR. So am I.

       GIU. By the by, can I offer you anything after your voyage?

       A plate of macaroni and a rusk?

       DON AL. (preoccupied). No, no—nothing—nothing.

       GIU. Obliged to be careful?

       DON AL. Yes—gout. You see, in every Court there are

       distinctions that must be observed.

       GIU. (puzzled). There are, are there?

       DON AL. Why, of course. For instance, you wouldn't have a

       Lord High Chancellor play leapfrog with his own cook.

       MAR. Why not?

       DON AL. Why not! Because a Lord High Chancellor is a

       personage of great dignity, who should never, under any

       circumstances, place himself in the position of being told to

       tuck in his tuppenny, except by noblemen of his own rank. A Lord

       High Archbishop, for instance, might tell a Lord High Chancellor

       to tuck in his tuppenny, but certainly not a cook, gentlemen,

       certainly not a cook.

       GIU. Not even a Lord High Cook?

       DON AL. My good friend, that is a rank that is not

       recognized at the Lord Chamberlain's office. No, no, it won't

       do. I'll give you an instance in which the experiment was tried.

       SONG—DON ALHAMBRA, with MARCO and GIUSEPPE.

       DON AL. There lived a King, as I've been told,

       In the wonder-working days of old,

       When hearts were twice as good as gold,

       And twenty times as mellow.

       Good-temper triumphed in his face,

       And in his heart he found a place

       For all the erring human race

       And every wretched fellow.

       When he had Rhenish wine to drink

       It made him very sad to think

       That some, at junket or at jink,

       Must be content with toddy.

       MAR. and GIU. With toddy, must be content with toddy.

       DON AL. He wished all men as rich as he

       (And he was rich as rich could be),

       So to the top of every tree

       Promoted everybody.

       MAR. and GIU. Now, that's the kind of King for me.

       He wished all men as rich as he,

       So to the top of every tree

       Promoted everybody!

       DON AL. Lord Chancellors were cheap as sprats,

       And Bishops in their shovel hats

       Were plentiful as tabby cats—

       In point of fact, too many.

       Ambassadors cropped up like hay,

       Prime Ministers and such as they

       Grew like asparagus in May,

       And Dukes were three a penny.

       On every side Field-Marshals gleamed,

       Small beer were Lords-Lieutenant deemed,

       With Admirals the ocean teemed

       All round his wide dominions.

       MAR. and GIU. With Admirals all round his wide dominions.

       DON AL. And Party Leaders you might meet

       In twos and threes in every street

       Maintaining, with no little heat,

       Their various opinions.

       MAR. and GIU. Now that's a sight you couldn't beat—

       Two Party Leaders in each street

       Maintaining, with no little heat,

       Their various opinions.

       DON AL. That King, although no one denies

       His heart was of abnormal size,

       Yet he'd have acted otherwise

       If he had been acuter.

       The end is easily foretold,

       When every blessed thing you hold

       Is made of silver, or of gold,

       You long for simple pewter.

       When you have nothing else to wear

       But cloth of gold and satins rare,

       For cloth of gold you cease to care—

       Up goes the price of shoddy.

       MAR. and