Arthur Sullivan

The Complete Plays of Gilbert and Sullivan


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And a shower with their dresses must have played the very

       deuce,

       And it must have been unpleasing when they caught a fit of

       sneezing,

       For, it seems, of pocket-handkerchiefs they didn't know the

       use.

       They wore little underclothing—scarcely anything—or nothing—

       And their dress of Coan silk was quite transparent in

       design—

       Well, in fact, in summer weather, something like the "altogether"

       And it's there, I rather fancy, I shall have to draw the

       line!

       (Confidentially to audience.)

       And again I wish to mention

       That this erudition sham

       Is but classical pretension,

       The result of steady "cram."

       Yet my classic lore aggressive

       (If you'll pardon the possessive)

       Is exceedingly impressive

       When you're passing an exam.

       CHORUS. Yet his classic lore, etc.

       [Exeunt Chorus. Manent LUDWIG, JULIA, and LISA.

       LUD. (recit.).

       Yes, Ludwig and his Julia are mated!

       For when an obscure comedian, whom the law backs,

       To sovereign rank is promptly elevated,

       He takes it with its incidental drawbacks!

       So Julia and I are duly mated!

       (LISA, through this, has expressed intense distress at

       having to surrender LUDWIG.)

       SONG—LISA.

       Take care of him—he's much too good to live,

       With him you must be very gentle:

       Poor fellow, he's so highly sensitive,

       And O, so sentimental!

       Be sure you never let him sit up late

       In chilly open air conversing—

       Poor darling, he's extremely delicate,

       And wants a deal of nursing!

       LUD. I want a deal of nursing!

       LISA. And O, remember this—

       When he is cross with pain,

       A flower and a kiss—

       A simple flower—a tender kiss

       Will bring him round again!

       His moods you must assiduously watch:

       When he succumbs to sorrow tragic,

       Some hardbake or a bit of butter-scotch

       Will work on him like magic.

       To contradict a character so rich

       In trusting love were simple blindness—

       He's one of those exalted natures which

       Will only yield to kindness!

       LUD. I only yield to kindness!

       LISA. And O, the bygone bliss!

       And O, the present pain!

       That flower and that kiss—

       That simple flower—that tender kiss

       I ne'er shall give again!

       [Exit,

       weeping.

       JULIA. And now that everybody has gone, and we're happily

       and comfortably married, I want to have a few words with my

       new-born husband.

       LUD. (aside). Yes, I expect you'll often have a few words

       with your new-born husband! (Aloud.) Well, what is it?

       JULIA. Why, I've been thinking that as you and I have to

       play our parts for life, it is most essential that we should come

       to a definite understanding as to how they shall be rendered.

       Now, I've been considering how I can make the most of the Grand

       Duchess.

       LUD. Have you? Well, if you'll take my advice, you'll

       make

       a very fine part of it.

       JULIA. Why, that's quite my idea.

       LUD. I shouldn't make it one of your hoity-toity vixenish

       viragoes.

       JULIA. You think not?

       LUD. Oh, I'm quite clear about that. I should make her a

       tender, gentle, submissive, affectionate (but not too

       affectionate) child-wife—timidly anxious to coil herself into

       her husband's heart, but kept in check by an awestruck reverence

       for his exalted intellectual qualities and his majestic personal

       appearance.

       JULIA. Oh, that is your idea of a good part?

       LUD. Yes—a wife who regards her husband's slightest wish

       as an inflexible law, and who ventures but rarely into his august

       presence, unless (which would happen seldom) he should summon her

       to appear before him. A crushed, despairing violet, whose

       blighted existence would culminate (all too soon) in a lonely and

       pathetic death-scene! A fine part, my dear.

       JULIA. Yes. There's a good deal to be said for your view

       of it. Now there are some actresses whom it would fit like a

       glove.

       LUD. (aside). I wish I'd married one of 'em!

       JULIA. But, you see, I must consider my temperament. For

       instance, my temperament would demand some strong scenes of

       justifiable jealousy.

       LUD. Oh, there's no difficulty about that. You shall have

       them.

       JULIA. With a lovely but detested rival—

       LUD. Oh, I'll provide the rival.

       JULIA. Whom I should stab—stab—stab!

       LUD. Oh, I wouldn't stab her. It's been done to death. I

       should treat her with a silent and contemptuous disdain, and

       delicately withdraw from a position which, to one of your

       sensitive nature, would be absolutely untenable. Dear me, I can

       see you delicately withdrawing, up centre and off!

       JULIA. Can you?

       LUD. Yes. It's a fine situation—and in your hands, full

       of quiet pathos!

       DUET—LUDWIG and JULIA.

       LUD. Now Julia, come,

       Consider it from

       This dainty point of view—

       A timid tender

       Feminine gender,

       Prompt to coyly coo—

       Yet silence seeking,

       Seldom speaking

       Till she's spoken to—

       A comfy, cosy,