The Beggar's Opera Part 18
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_Polly._ --My Dear, with you.
_Macheath._ O leave me to Thought! I fear! I doubt!
I tremble! I droop! --See, my Courage is out.
[Turns up the empty Bottle.
_Polly._ No Token of Love?
_Macheath._ --See, my Courage is out.
[Turns up the empty Pot.
_Lucy._ No Token of Love?
_Polly._ --Adieu.
_Lucy._ --Farewell.
_Macheath._ But hark! I hear the Toll of the Bell.
_Chorus._ Tol de rol lol, &c.
_Jailor._ Four Women more, Captain, with a Child apiece! See, here they come.
[Enter Women and Children.
_Macheath._ What-- four Wives more! --This is too much-- Here-- tell the Sheriff's Officers I am ready. [Exit _Macheath_ guarded.
_To them, Enter _Player_ and _Beggar_._
_Player._ But, honest Friend, I hope you don't intend that _Macheath_ shall be really executed.
_Beggar._ Most certainly, Sir. --To make the Piece perfect, I was for doing strict poetical Justice. --_Macheath_ is to be hang'd; and for the other Personages of the Drama, the Audience must have suppos'd they were all either hang'd or transported.
_Player._ Why then, Friend, this is a downright deep Tragedy. The Catastrophe is manifestly wrong, for an Opera must end happily.
_Beggar._ Your Objection, Sir, is very just, and is easily remov'd. For you must allow, that in this kind of Drama, 'tis no matter how absurdly things are brought about-- So-- you Rabble there-- run and cry, A Reprieve! --let the Prisoner be brought back to his Wives in Triumph.
_Player._ All this we must do, to comply with the Taste of the Town.
_Beggar._ Through the whole Piece you may observe such a Similitude of Manners in high and low Life, that it is difficult to determine whether (in the fas.h.i.+onable Vices) the fine Gentlemen imitate the Gentlemen of the Road, or the Gentlemen of the Road the fine Gentlemen. --Had the Play remained, as I at first intended, it would have carried a most excellent Moral. 'Twould have shewn that the lower Sort of People have their Vices in a degree as well as the Rich: And that they are punish'd for them.
_To them, _Macheath_ with _Rabble_, &c._
_Macheath._ So, it seems, I am not left to my Choice, but must have a Wife at last. --Look ye, my Dears, we will have no Controversy now. Let us give this Day to Mirth, and I am sure she who thinks herself my Wife will testify her Joy by a Dance.
_All._ Come, a Dance-- a Dance.
_Macheath._ Ladies, I hope you will give me leave to present a Partner to each of you. And (if I may without Offence) for this time, I take _Polly_ for mine. --And for Life, you s.l.u.t,-- for we were really marry'd. --As for the rest. --But at present keep your own Secret.
[To _Polly_.
A DANCE.
AIR LXVIII. Lumps of Pudding, &c.
[Music]
Thus I stand like the _Turk_, with his Doxies around; From all Sides their Glances his Pa.s.sion confound; For Black, Brown, and Fair, his Inconstancy burns, And the different Beauties subdue him by turns: Each calls forth her Charms to provoke his Desires: Though willing to all, with but one he retires.
But think of this Maxim, and put off your Sorrow, The Wretch of To-day, may be happy To-morrow.
_Chorus._ But think of this Maxim, &c.
FINIS.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
Printed in Great Britain by Richard Clay & Sons, Limited, Bungay, Suffolk.
Errata Noted by Transcriber:
Inconsistencies: Dramatis Personae: "Mat of the Mint"
[_The name is spelled "Mat" here and on the character's first entrance, "Matt" everywhere else._]
The place name "Mary-bone" is spelled randomly with and without a hyphen.
There is no ill.u.s.tration at the end of Act II, Scene II.
Spelling Unchanged: Air X. ... Whose Treasure is contreband.
the hypocrytical Strumpet
Punctuation or Capitalization Unchanged:
Dear Wife, be a little pacified, Don't let your Pa.s.sion of rich Brocade. --that, I see, is dispos'd of.
you had a handsom Gold Watch of us 'tother Day --But are you sure it is Captain _Macheath_.
but to see thee / thus distracts me?
Air LXI. The stronger Liquor we'er drinking;
The Beggar's Opera Part 18
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The Beggar's Opera Part 18 summary
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