<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h2> THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ACT I </h2>
<p>(Scene.-A rocky seashore on the coast of Cornwall. In the<br/>
distance is a calm sea, on which a schooner is lying at anchor.<br/>
Rock L. sloping down to L.C. of stage. Under these rocks is a<br/>
cavern, the entrance to which is seen at first entrance L. A<br/>
natural arch of rock occupies the R.C. of the stage. As the<br/>
curtain rises groups of pirates are discovered — some drinking,<br/>
some playing cards. SAMUEL, the Pirate Lieutenant, is going from<br/>
one group to another, filling the cups from a flask. FREDERIC is<br/>
seated in a despondent attitude at the back of the scene. RUTH<br/>
kneels at his feet.)<br/>
<br/>
OPENING CHORUS<br/>
<br/>
ALL: Pour, O pour the pirate sherry;<br/>
Fill, O fill the pirate glass;<br/>
And, to make us more than merry<br/>
Let the pirate bumper pass.<br/>
<br/>
SAMUEL: For today our pirate 'prentice<br/>
Rises from indentures freed;<br/>
Strong his arm, and keen his scent is<br/>
He's a pirate now indeed!<br/>
<br/>
ALL: Here's good luck to Fred'ric's ventures!<br/>
Fred'ric's out of his indentures.<br/>
<br/>
SAMUEL: Two and twenty, now he's rising,<br/>
And alone he's fit to fly,<br/>
Which we're bent on signalizing<br/>
With unusual revelry.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: Here's good luck to Fred'ric's ventures!<br/>
Fred'ric's out of his indentures.<br/>
Pour, O pour the pirate sherry;<br/>
Fill, O fill the pirate glass;<br/>
And, to make us more than merry<br/>
Let the pirate bumper pass.<br/>
<br/>
(FREDERIC rises and comes forward with PIRATE KING, who enters)<br/>
<br/>
KING: Yes, Frederic, from to-day you rank as a full-blown<br/>
member of our band.<br/>
ALL: Hurrah!<br/>
FREDERIC: My friends, I thank you all, from my heart, for your<br/>
kindly wishes. Would that I could repay them as they<br/>
deserve!<br/>
KING: What do you mean?<br/>
FREDERIC: To-day I am out of my indentures, and to-day I leave<br/>
you for ever.<br/>
KING: But this is quite unaccountable; a keener hand at<br/>
scuttling a Cunarder or cutting out a White Star never<br/>
shipped a handspike.<br/>
FREDERIC: Yes, I have done my best for you. And why? It was my<br/>
duty under my indentures, and I am the slave of duty.<br/>
As a child I was regularly apprenticed to your band.<br/>
It was through an error — no matter, the mistake was<br/>
ours, not yours, and I was in honour bound by it.<br/>
SAMUEL: An error? What error? (RUTH rises and comes forward)<br/>
FREDERIC: I may not tell you; it would reflect upon my well-loved<br/>
Ruth.<br/>
RUTH: Nay, dear master, my mind has long been gnawed by the<br/>
cankering tooth of mystery. Better have it out at<br/>
once.<br/>
<br/>
SONG — RUTH<br/>
<br/>
RUTH: When Frederic was a little lad he proved so brave and<br/>
daring,<br/>
His father thought he'd 'prentice him to some career<br/>
seafaring.<br/>
I was, alas! his nurs'rymaid, and so it fell to my lot<br/>
To take and bind the promising boy apprentice to a<br/>
pilot —<br/>
A life not bad for a hardy lad, though surely not a<br/>
high lot,<br/>
Though I'm a nurse, you might do worse than make your<br/>
boy a pilot.<br/>
I was a stupid nurs'rymaid, on breakers always<br/>
steering,<br/>
And I did not catch the word aright, through being hard<br/>
of hearing;<br/>
Mistaking my instructions, which within my brain did<br/>
gyrate,<br/>
I took and bound this promising boy apprentice to a<br/>
pirate.<br/>
A sad mistake it was to make and doom him to a vile<br/>
lot.<br/>
I bound him to a pirate — you! — instead of to a<br/>
pilot.<br/>
I soon found out, beyond all doubt, the scope of this<br/>
disaster,<br/>
But I hadn't the face to return to my place, and break<br/>
it to my master.<br/>
A nurs'rymaid is not afraid of what you people call<br/>
work,<br/>
So I made up my mind to go as a kind of piratical maid-<br/>
of-all-work.<br/>
And that is how you find me now, a member of your shy<br/>
lot,<br/>
Which you wouldn't have found, had he been bound<br/>
apprentice to a pilot.<br/>
RUTH: Oh, pardon! Frederic, pardon! (Kneels)<br/>
FREDERIC: Rise, sweet one, I have long pardoned you. (Ruth<br/>
rises)<br/>
RUTH: The two words were so much alike!<br/>
FREDERIC: They were. They still are, though years have rolled<br/>
over their heads. But this afternoon my obligation<br/>
ceases. Individually, I love you all with affection<br/>
unspeakable; but, collectively, I look upon you with a<br/>
disgust that amounts to absolute detestation. Oh! pity<br/>
me, my beloved friends, for such is my sense of duty<br/>
that, once out of my indentures, I shall feel myself<br/>
bound to devote myself heart and soul to your<br/>
extermination!<br/>
ALL: Poor lad — poor lad! (All weep)<br/>
KING: Well, Frederic, if you conscientiously feel that it is<br/>
your duty to destroy us, we cannot blame you for acting<br/>
on that conviction. Always act in accordance with the<br/>
dictates of your conscience, my boy, and chance the<br/>
consequences.<br/>
SAMUEL: Besides, we can offer you but little temptation to<br/>
remain with us. We don't seem to make piracy pay. I'm<br/>
sure I don't know why, but we don't.<br/>
FREDERIC: I know why, but, alas! I mustn't tell you; it wouldn't<br/>
be right.<br/>
KING: Why not, my boy? It's only half-past eleven, and you<br/>
are one of us until the clock strikes twelve.<br/>
SAMUEL: True, and until then you are bound to protect our<br/>
interests.<br/>
ALL: Hear, hear!<br/>
FREDERIC: Well, then, it is my duty, as a pirate, to tell you<br/>
that you are too tender-hearted. For instance, you<br/>
make a point of never attacking a weaker party than<br/>
yourselves, and when you attack a stronger party you<br/>
invariably get thrashed.<br/>
KING: There is some truth in that.<br/>
FREDERIC: Then, again, you make a point of never molesting an<br/>
orphan!<br/>
SAMUEL: Of course: we are orphans ourselves, and know what it<br/>
is.<br/>
FREDERIC: Yes, but it has got about, and what is the consequence?<br/>
Every one we capture says he's an orphan. The last<br/>
three ships we took proved to be manned entirely by<br/>
orphans, and so we had to let them go. One would think<br/>
that Great Britain's mercantile navy was recruited<br/>
solely from her orphan asylums — which we know is not<br/>
the case.<br/>
SAMUEL: But, hang it all! you wouldn't have us absolutely<br/>
merciless?<br/>
FREDERIC: There's my difficulty; until twelve o'clock I would,<br/>
after twelve I wouldn't. Was ever a man placed in so<br/>
delicate a situation?<br/>
RUTH: And Ruth, your own Ruth, whom you love so well, and who<br/>
has won her middle-aged way into your boyish heart,<br/>
what is to become of her?<br/>
KING: Oh, he will take you with him.<br/>
FREDERIC: Well, Ruth, I feel some difficulty about you. It is<br/>
true that I admire you very much, but I have been<br/>
constantly at sea since I was eight years old, and<br/>
yours is the only woman's face I have seen during that<br/>
time. I think it is a sweet face.<br/>
RUTH: It is — oh, it is!<br/>
FREDERIC: I say I think it is; that is my impression. But as I<br/>
have never had an opportunity of comparing you with<br/>
other women, it is just possible I may be mistaken.<br/>
KING: True.<br/>
FREDERIC: What a terrible thing it would be if I were to marry<br/>
this innocent person, and then find out that she is, on<br/>
the whole, plain!<br/>
KING: Oh, Ruth is very well, very well indeed.<br/>
SAMUEL: Yes, there are the remains of a fine woman about Ruth.<br/>
FREDERIC: Do you really think so?<br/>
SAMUEL: I do.<br/>
FREDERIC: Then I will not be so selfish as to take her from you.<br/>
In justice to her, and in consideration for you, I will<br/>
leave her behind. (Hands RUTH to KING)<br/>
KING: No, Frederic, this must not be. We are rough men, who<br/>
lead a rough life, but we are not so utterly heartless<br/>
as to deprive thee of thy love. I think I am right in<br/>
saying that there is not one here who would rob thee of<br/>
this inestimable treasure for all the world holds dear.<br/>
ALL: (loudly) Not one!<br/>
KING: No, I thought there wasn't. Keep thy love, Frederic,<br/>
keep thy love. (Hands her back to FREDERIC)<br/>
FREDERIC: You're very good, I'm sure. (Exit RUTH)<br/>
KING: Well, it's the top of the tide, and we must be off.<br/>
Farewell, Frederic. When your process of extermination<br/>
begins, let our deaths be as swift and painless as you<br/>
can conveniently make them.<br/>
FREDERIC: I will! By the love I have for you, I swear it! Would<br/>
that you could render this extermination unnecessary by<br/>
accompanying me back to civilization!<br/>
KING: No, Frederic, it cannot be. I don't think much of our<br/>
profession, but, contrasted with respectability, it is<br/>
comparatively honest. No, Frederic, I shall live and<br/>
die a Pirate King.<br/>
<br/>
SONG — PIRATE KING<br/>
<br/>
KING: Oh, better far to live and die<br/>
Under the brave black flag I fly,<br/>
Than play a sanctimonious part<br/>
With a pirate head and a pirate heart.<br/>
Away to the cheating world go you,<br/>
Where pirates all are well-to-do;<br/>
But I'll be true to the song I sing,<br/>
And live and die a Pirate King.<br/>
For I am a Pirate King!<br/>
And it is, it is a glorious thing<br/>
To be a Pirate King!<br/>
For I am a Pirate King!<br/>
ALL: You are!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
KING: And it is, it is a glorious thing<br/>
To be a Pirate King.<br/>
ALL: It is!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
KING: When I sally forth to seek my prey<br/>
I help myself in a royal way.<br/>
I sink a few more ships, it's true,<br/>
Than a well-bred monarch ought to do;<br/>
But many a king on a first-class throne,<br/>
If he wants to call his crown his own,<br/>
Must manage somehow to get through<br/>
More dirty work than e'er I do,<br/>
For I am a Pirate King!<br/>
And it is, it is a glorious thing<br/>
To be a Pirate King!<br/>
For I am a Pirate King!<br/>
ALL: You are!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
KING: And it is, it is a glorious thing<br/>
To be a Pirate King.<br/>
ALL: It is!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
Hurrah for the Pirate King!<br/>
<br/>
(Exeunt all except FREDERIC. Enter RUTH.)<br/>
<br/>
RUTH: Oh, take me with you! I cannot live if I am left<br/>
behind.<br/>
FREDERIC: Ruth, I will be quite candid with you. You are very<br/>
dear to me, as you know, but I must be circumspect.<br/>
You see, you are considerably older than I. A lad of<br/>
twenty-one usually looks for a wife of seventeen.<br/>
RUTH: A wife of seventeen! You will find me a wife of a<br/>
thousand!<br/>
FREDERIC: No, but I shall find you a wife of forty-seven, and<br/>
that is quite enough. Ruth, tell me candidly and<br/>
without reserve: compared with other women, how are<br/>
you?<br/>
RUTH: I will answer you truthfully, master: I have a slight<br/>
cold, but otherwise I am quite well.<br/>
FREDERIC: I am sorry for your cold, but I was referring rather to<br/>
your personal appearance. Compared with other women,<br/>
are you beautiful?<br/>
RUTH: (bashfully) I have been told so, dear master.<br/>
FREDERIC: Ah, but lately?<br/>
RUTH: Oh, no; years and years ago.<br/>
FREDERIC: What do you think of yourself?<br/>
RUTH: It is a delicate question to answer, but I think I am a<br/>
fine woman.<br/>
FREDERIC: That is your candid opinion?<br/>
RUTH: Yes, I should be deceiving you if I told you otherwise.<br/>
FREDERIC: Thank you, Ruth. I believe you, for I am sure you<br/>
would not practice on my inexperience. I wish to do<br/>
the right thing, and if- I say if- you are really a<br/>
fine woman, your age shall be no obstacle to our union!<br/>
(Shakes hands with her. Chorus of girls heard in the<br/>
distance, "climbing over rocky mountain," etc.) Hark!<br/>
Surely I hear voices! Who has ventured to approach our<br/>
all but inaccessible lair? Can it be Custom House? No,<br/>
it does not sound like Custom House.<br/>
RUTH: (aside) Confusion! it is the voices of young girls!<br/>
If he should see them I am lost.<br/>
FREDERIC: (looking off) By all that's marvellous, a bevy of<br/>
beautiful maidens!<br/>
RUTH: (aside) Lost! lost! lost!<br/>
FREDERIC: How lovely, how surpassingly lovely is the plainest of<br/>
them! What grace- what delicacy- what refinement! And<br/>
Ruth— Ruth told me she was beautiful!<br/>
<br/>
RECITATIVE<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC: Oh, false one, you have deceived me!<br/>
RUTH: I have deceived you?<br/>
FREDERIC: Yes, deceived me!<br/>
(Denouncing her.)<br/>
FREDERIC: You told me you were fair as gold!<br/>
RUTH: (wildly) And, master, am I not so?<br/>
FREDERIC: And now I see you're plain and old.<br/>
RUTH: I'm sure I'm not a jot so.<br/>
FREDERIC: Upon my innocence you play.<br/>
RUTH: I'm not the one to plot so.<br/>
FREDERIC: Your face is lined, your hair is grey.<br/>
RUTH: It's gradually got so.<br/>
FREDERIC: Faithless woman, to deceive me,<br/>
I who trusted so!<br/>
RUTH: Master, master, do not leave me!<br/>
Hear me, ere you go!<br/>
My love without reflecting,<br/>
Oh, do not be rejecting!<br/>
Take a maiden tender, her affection raw and green,<br/>
At very highest rating,<br/>
Has been accumulating<br/>
Summers seventeen, summers seventeen.<br/>
Don't, beloved master,<br/>
Crush me with disaster.<br/>
What is such a dower to the dower I have here?<br/>
My love unabating<br/>
Has been accumulating<br/>
Forty-seven year—forty-seven year!<br/>
<br/>
ENSEMBLE<br/>
<br/>
RUTH FREDERIC<br/>
<br/>
Don't, beloved master, Yes, your former master<br/>
Crush me with disaster. Saves you from disaster.<br/>
What is such a dower to the Your love would be uncomfortably<br/>
dower I have here fervid, it is clear<br/>
My love unabating If, as you are stating<br/>
Has been accumulating It's been accumulating<br/>
Forty-seven year, forty-seven Forty-seven year—forty-seven year!<br/>
year! Faithless woman to deceive me, I<br/>
who trusted so!<br/>
Master, master, do not leave Faithless woman to deceive me, I<br/>
me, hear me, ere I go! who trusted so!<br/>
<br/>
RECIT—FREDERIC<br/>
<br/>
What shall I do? Before these gentle maidens<br/>
I dare not show in this alarming costume!<br/>
No, no, I must remain in close concealment<br/>
Until I can appear in decent clothing!<br/>
<br/>
(Hides in cave as they enter climbing over the rocks and through<br/>
arched rock)<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Climbing over rocky mountain,<br/>
Skipping rivulet and fountain,<br/>
Passing where the willows quiver,<br/>
Passing where the willows quiver<br/>
By the ever-rolling river,<br/>
Swollen with the summer rain, the summer rain<br/>
Threading long and leafy mazes<br/>
Dotted with unnumbered daisies,<br/>
Dotted, dotted with unnumbered daisies,<br/>
Scaling rough and rugged passes,<br/>
Climb the hardy little lasses,<br/>
Till the bright sea-shore they gain;<br/>
Scaling rough and rugged passes,<br/>
Climb the hardy little lasses,<br/>
Till the bright sea-shore they gain!<br/>
<br/>
EDITH: Let us gaily tread the measure,<br/>
Make the most of fleeting leisure,<br/>
Hail it as a true ally,<br/>
Though it perish by-and-by.<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Hail it as a true ally,<br/>
Though it perish by-and-by.<br/>
<br/>
EDITH: Every moment brings a treasure<br/>
Of its own especial pleasure;<br/>
Though the moments quickly die,<br/>
Greet them gaily as they fly,<br/>
Greet them gaily as they fly.<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Though the moments quickly die,<br/>
Greet them gaily as they fly.<br/>
<br/>
KATE: Far away from toil and care,<br/>
Revelling in fresh sea-air,<br/>
Here we live and reign alone<br/>
In a world that's all our own.<br/>
Here, in this our rocky den,<br/>
Far away from mortal men,<br/>
We'll be queens, and make decrees—<br/>
They may honour them who please.<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: We'll be queens, and make decrees—<br/>
They may honour them who please.<br/>
Let us gaily tread the measure, etc.<br/>
<br/>
KATE: What a picturesque spot! I wonder where we are!<br/>
EDITH: And I wonder where Papa is. We have left him ever so<br/>
far behind.<br/>
ISABEL: Oh, he will be here presently! Remember poor Papa is<br/>
not as young as we are, and we came over a rather<br/>
difficult country.<br/>
KATE: But how thoroughly delightful it is to be so entirely<br/>
alone! Why, in all probability we are the first human<br/>
beings who ever set foot on this enchanting spot.<br/>
ISABEL: Except the mermaids—it's the very place for mermaids.<br/>
KATE: Who are only human beings down to the waist—<br/>
EDITH: And who can't be said strictly to set foot anywhere.<br/>
Tails they may, but feet they cannot.<br/>
KATE: But what shall we do until Papa and the servants arrive<br/>
with the luncheon?<br/>
EDITH: We are quite alone, and the sea is as smooth as glass.<br/>
Suppose we take off our shoes and stockings and paddle?<br/>
ALL: Yes, yes! The very thing! (They prepare to carry, out<br/>
the suggestion. They have all taken off one shoe, when<br/>
FREDERIC comes forward from cave.)<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC: (recitative). Stop, ladies, pray!<br/>
GIRLS: (Hopping on one foot) A man!<br/>
FREDERIC: I had intended<br/>
Not to intrude myself upon your notice<br/>
In this effective but alarming costume;<br/>
But under these peculiar circumstances,<br/>
It is my bounden duty to inform you<br/>
That your proceedings will not be unwitnessed!<br/>
EDITH: But who are you, sir? Speak! (All hopping)<br/>
FREDERIC: I am a pirate!<br/>
GIRLS: (recoiling, hopping) A pirate! Horror!<br/>
FREDERIC: Ladies, do not shun me!<br/>
This evening I renounce my vile profession;<br/>
And, to that end, O pure and peerless maidens!<br/>
Oh, blushing buds of ever-blooming beauty!<br/>
I, sore at heart, implore your kind assistance.<br/>
EDITH: How pitiful his tale!<br/>
KATE: How rare his beauty<br/>
GIRLS: How pitiful his tale! How rare his beauty!<br/>
<br/>
SONG—FREDERIC<br/>
<br/>
Oh, is there not one maiden breast<br/>
Which does not feel the moral beauty<br/>
Of making worldly interest<br/>
Subordinate to sense of duty?<br/>
<br/>
Who would not give up willingly<br/>
All matrimonial ambition,<br/>
To rescue such a one as I<br/>
From his unfortunate position?<br/>
From his position,<br/>
To rescue such an one as I<br/>
From his unfortunate position?<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Alas! there's not one maiden breast<br/>
Which seems to feel the moral beauty<br/>
Of making worldly interest<br/>
Subordinate to sense of duty!<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC: Oh, is there not one maiden here<br/>
Whose homely face and bad complexion<br/>
Have caused all hope to disappear<br/>
Of ever winning man's affection?<br/>
Of such a one, if such there be,<br/>
I swear by Heaven's arch above you,<br/>
If you will cast your eyes on me,<br/>
However plain you be, I'll love you,<br/>
However plain you be,<br/>
If you will cast your eyes on me,<br/>
However plain you be I'll love you,<br/>
I'll love you, I'll love, I'll love you!<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Alas! there's not one maiden here<br/>
Whose homely face and bad complexion<br/>
Have caused all hope to disappear<br/>
Of ever winning man's affection!<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC: (in despair) Not one?<br/>
GIRLS: No, no— not one!<br/>
FREDERIC: Not one?<br/>
GIRLS: No, no!<br/>
MABEL: (enters through arch) Yes, one!<br/>
Yes, one!<br/>
GIRLS: 'Tis Mabel!<br/>
MABEL: Yes, 'tis Mabel!<br/>
<br/>
RECIT—MABEL<br/>
<br/>
Oh, sisters, deaf to pity's name,<br/>
For shame!<br/>
It's true that he has gone astray,<br/>
But pray<br/>
Is that a reason good and true<br/>
Why you<br/>
Should all be deaf to pity's name?<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: (aside): The question is, had he not been<br/>
A thing of beauty,<br/>
Would she be swayed by quite as keen<br/>
A sense of duty?<br/>
<br/>
MABEL: For shame, for shame, for shame!<br/>
<br/>
SONG—MABEL<br/>
<br/>
MABEL: Poor wand'ring one!<br/>
Though thou hast surely strayed,<br/>
Take heart of grace,<br/>
Thy steps retrace,<br/>
Poor wand'ring one!<br/>
Poor wand'ring one!<br/>
If such poor love as mine<br/>
Can help thee find<br/>
True peace of mind-<br/>
Why, take it, it is thine!<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Take heart, no danger low'rs;<br/>
Take any heart but ours!<br/>
<br/>
MABEL: Take heart, fair days will shine;<br/>
Take any heart—take mine!<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Take heart; no danger low'rs;<br/>
Take any heart-but ours!<br/>
<br/>
MABEL: Take heart, fair days will shine;<br/>
Take any heart—take mine!<br/>
Poor wand'ring one!, etc.<br/>
<br/>
(MABEL and FREDERIC go to mouth of cave and converse. EDITH<br/>
beckons her sisters, who form a semicircle around her.)<br/>
<br/>
EDITH<br/>
<br/>
What ought we to do,<br/>
Gentle sisters, say?<br/>
Propriety, we know,<br/>
Says we ought to stay;<br/>
While sympathy exclaims,<br/>
"Free them from your tether—<br/>
Play at other games—<br/>
Leave them here together."<br/>
<br/>
KATE<br/>
<br/>
Her case may, any day,<br/>
Be yours, my dear, or mine.<br/>
Let her make her hay<br/>
While the sun doth shine.<br/>
Let us compromise<br/>
(Our hearts are not of leather):<br/>
Let us shut our eyes<br/>
And talk about the weather.<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Yes, yes, let's talk about the weather.<br/>
<br/>
Chattering chorus<br/>
<br/>
How beautifully blue the sky,<br/>
The glass is rising very high,<br/>
Continue fine I hope it may,<br/>
And yet it rained but yesterday.<br/>
To-morrow it may pour again<br/>
(I hear the country wants some rain),<br/>
Yet people say, I know not why,<br/>
That we shall have a warm July.<br/>
To-morrow it may pour again<br/>
(I hear the country wants some rain),<br/>
Yet people say, I know not why,<br/>
That we shall have a warm July.<br/>
<br/>
Enter MABEL and FREDERIC<br/></p>
<p>.During MABEL's solo the GIRLS continue chatter pianissimo, but<br/>
listening eagerly all the time.<br/>
<br/>
SOLO—MABEL<br/>
<br/>
Did ever maiden wake<br/>
From dream of homely duty,<br/>
To find her daylight break<br/>
With such exceeding beauty?<br/>
Did ever maiden close<br/>
Her eyes on waking sadness,<br/>
To dream of such exceeding gladness?<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC: Ah, yes! ah, yes! this is exceeding gladness<br/>
GIRLS: How beautifully blue the sky, etc.<br/>
<br/>
SOLO—FREDERIC<br/></p>
<p>.During this, GIRLS continue their chatter pianissimo as before,<br/>
but listening intently all the time.<br/>
<br/>
Did ever pirate roll<br/>
His soul in guilty dreaming,<br/>
And wake to find that soul<br/>
With peace and virtue beaming?<br/>
<br/>
ENSEMBLE<br/>
<br/>
FREDERIC MABEL GIRLS<br/>
<br/>
Did ever pirate Did ever maiden wake How beautifully blue<br/>
loathed From dream of homely the sky, etc.<br/>
Forsake his hideous duty,<br/>
mission To find her daylight<br/>
To find himself break<br/>
betrothed With such exceeding<br/>
To lady of position? beauty?<br/>
<br/>
RECIT—FREDERIC<br/>
<br/>
Stay, we must not lose our senses;<br/>
Men who stick at no offences<br/>
Will anon be here!<br/>
Piracy their dreadful trade is;<br/>
Pray you, get you hence, young ladies,<br/>
While the coast is clear<br/>
(FREDERIC and MABEL retire)<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: No, we must not lose our senses,<br/>
If they stick at no offences<br/>
We should not be here!<br/>
Piracy their dreadful trade is—<br/>
Nice companions for young ladies!<br/>
Let us disap—.<br/>
<br/>
(During this chorus the PIRATES have entered stealthily, and<br/>
formed in a semicircle behind the GIRLS. As the GIRLS move<br/>
to go off, each PIRATE seizes a GIRL. KING seizes EDITH and<br/>
ISABEL, SAMUEL seizes KATE.)<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Too late!<br/>
PIRATES: Ha, ha!<br/>
GIRLS: Too late!<br/>
PIRATES: Ho, ho!<br/>
Ha, ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho, ho!<br/>
<br/>
ENSEMBLE<br/>
<br/>
(Pirates pass in front of (Girls pass in front of<br/>
Girls.) Pirates.)<br/>
<br/>
PIRATES GIRLS<br/>
<br/>
Here's a first-rate opportunity We have missed our opportunity<br/>
To get married with impunity, Of escaping with impunity;<br/>
And indulge in the felicity So farewell to the felicity<br/>
Of unbounded domesticity. Of our maiden domesticity!<br/>
You shall quickly be We shall quickly be<br/>
parsonified, parsonified,<br/>
Conjugally matrimonified, Conjugally matrimonified,<br/>
By a doctor of divinity By a doctor of divinity,<br/>
Who is located in this Who is located in this<br/>
vicinity. vicinity.<br/>
By a doctor of divinity, By a doctor of divinity,<br/>
Who resides in this vicinity, Who resides in this vicinity,<br/>
By a doctor, a doctor, a doctor By a doctor, a doctor, a doctor<br/>
of divinity, of divinity. of divinity, of divinity.<br/></p>
<p>RECIT<br/>
<br/>
MABEL: (coming forward) Hold, monsters! Ere your pirate<br/>
caravanserai<br/>
Proceed, against our will, to wed us all,<br/>
Just bear in mind that we are Wards in Chancery,<br/>
And father is a Major-General!<br/>
<br/>
SAMUEL: (cowed) We'd better pause, or danger may befall,<br/>
Their father is a Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
GIRLS: Yes, yes; he is a Major-General!<br/>
<br/>
(The MAJOR-GENERAL has entered unnoticed, on the rock)<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: Yes, yes, I am a Major-General!<br/>
SAMUEL: For he is a Major-General!<br/>
ALL: He is! Hurrah for the Major-General!<br/>
GENERAL: And it is, it is a glorious thing<br/>
To be a Major-General!<br/>
ALL: It is! Hurrah for the Major-General!<br/>
Hurrah for the Major-General!<br/>
<br/>
SONG—MAJOR-GENERAL<br/>
<br/>
I am the very model of a modern Major-General,<br/>
I've information vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
I know the kings of England, and I quote the fights<br/>
historical<br/>
From Marathon to Waterloo, in order categorical;<br/>
I'm very well acquainted, too, with matters<br/>
mathematical,<br/>
I understand equations, both the simple and<br/>
quadratical,<br/>
About binomial theorem I'm teeming with a lot o' news,<br/>
With many cheerful facts about the square of the<br/>
hypotenuse.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: With many cheerful facts, etc.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: I'm very good at integral and differential calculus;<br/>
I know the scientific names of beings animalculous:<br/>
In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
I am the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
He is the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: I know our mythic history, King Arthur's and Sir<br/>
Caradoc's;<br/>
I answer hard acrostics, I've a pretty taste for<br/>
paradox,<br/>
I quote in elegiacs all the crimes of Heliogabalus,<br/>
In conics I can floor peculiarities parabolous;<br/>
I can tell undoubted Raphaels from Gerard Dows and<br/>
Zoffanies,<br/>
I know the croaking chorus from the Frogs of<br/>
Aristophanes!<br/>
Then I can hum a fugue of which I've heard the music's<br/>
din afore,<br/>
And whistle all the airs from that infernal nonsense<br/>
Pinafore.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: And whistle all the airs, etc.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: Then I can write a washing bill in<br/>
Babylonic cuneiform,<br/>
And tell you ev'ry detail of Caractacus's uniform:<br/>
In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
I am the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: In short, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
He is the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: In fact, when I know what is meant by "mamelon" and<br/>
"ravelin",<br/>
When I can tell at sight a Mauser rifle from a javelin,<br/>
When such affairs as sorties and surprises I'm more<br/>
wary at,<br/>
And when I know precisely what is meant by<br/>
"commissariat",<br/>
When I have learnt what progress has been made in<br/>
modern gunnery,<br/>
When I know more of tactics than a novice in a nunnery-<br/>
-<br/>
In short, when I've a smattering of elemental strategy,<br/>
You'll say a better Major-General has never sat a gee.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: You'll say a better Major-General, etc.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: For my military knowledge, though I'm plucky and<br/>
adventury,<br/>
Has only been brought down to the beginning of the<br/>
century;<br/>
But still, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
I am the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
ALL: But still, in matters vegetable, animal, and mineral,<br/>
He is the very model of a modern Major-General.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: And now that I've introduced myself, I should like to<br/>
have some idea of what's going on.<br/>
KATE: Oh, Papa— we—-<br/>
SAMUEL: Permit me, I'll explain in two words: we propose to<br/>
marry your daughters.<br/>
GENERAL: Dear me!<br/>
GIRLS: Against our wills, Papa—against our wills!<br/>
GENERAL: Oh, but you mustn't do that! May I ask— this is a<br/>
picturesque uniform, but I'm not familiar with it.<br/>
What are you?<br/>
KING: We are all single gentlemen.<br/>
GENERAL: Yes, I gathered that. Anything else?<br/>
KING: No, nothing else.<br/>
EDITH: Papa, don't believe them; they are pirates— the<br/>
famous Pirates of Penzance!<br/>
GENERAL: The Pirates of Penzance! I have often heard of them.<br/>
MABEL: All except this gentleman (indicating FREDERIC), who<br/>
was a pirate once, but who is out of his indentures to-<br/>
day, and who means to lead a blameless life evermore.<br/>
GENERAL: But wait a bit. I object to pirates as sons-in-law.<br/>
KING: We object to major-generals as fathers-in-law. But we<br/>
waive that point. We do not press it. We look over it.<br/>
GENERAL: (aside) Hah! an idea! (aloud) And do you mean to say<br/>
that you would deliberately rob me of these, the sole<br/>
remaining props of my old age, and leave me to go<br/>
through the remainder of my life unfriended,<br/>
unprotected, and alone?<br/>
KING: Well, yes, that's the idea.<br/>
GENERAL: Tell me, have you ever known what it is to be an<br/>
orphan?<br/>
PIRATES: (disgusted) Oh, dash it all!<br/>
KING: Here we are again!<br/>
GENERAL: I ask you, have you ever known what it is to be an<br/>
orphan?<br/>
KING: Often!<br/>
GENERAL: Yes, orphan. Have you ever known what it is to be one?<br/>
KING: I say, often.<br/>
ALL: (disgusted) Often, often, often. (Turning away)<br/>
GENERAL: I don't think we quite understand one another. I ask<br/>
you, have you ever known what it is to be an orphan,<br/>
and you say "orphan". As I understand you, you are<br/>
merely repeating the word "orphan" to show that you<br/>
understand me.<br/>
KING: I didn't repeat the word often.<br/>
GENERAL: Pardon me, you did indeed.<br/>
KING: I only repeated it once.<br/>
GENERAL: True, but you repeated it.<br/>
KING: But not often.<br/>
GENERAL: Stop! I think I see where we are getting confused.<br/>
When you said "orphan", did you mean "orphan",a person<br/>
who has lost his parents, or "often", frequently?<br/>
KING: Ah! I beg pardon— I see what you mean — frequently.<br/>
GENERAL: Ah! you said "often", frequently.<br/>
KING: No, only once.<br/>
GENERAL: (irritated) Exactly— you said "often", frequently,<br/>
only once.<br/>
<br/>
FINALE OF ACT I<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: Oh, men of dark and dismal fate,<br/>
Forgo your cruel employ,<br/>
Have pity on my lonely state,<br/>
I am an orphan boy!<br/>
KING/SAMUEL: An orphan boy?<br/>
GENERAL: An orphan boy!<br/>
PIRATES: How sad, an orphan boy.<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL: These children whom you see<br/>
Are all that I can call my own!<br/>
PIRATES: Poor fellow!<br/>
GENERAL: Take them away from me,<br/>
And I shall be indeed alone.<br/>
PIRATES: Poor fellow!<br/>
GENERAL: If pity you can feel,<br/>
Leave me my sole remaining joy—<br/>
See, at your feet they kneel;<br/>
Your hearts you cannot steel<br/>
Against the sad, sad tale of the lonely orphan boy!<br/>
PIRATES: (sobbing) Poor fellow!<br/>
See at our feet they kneel;<br/>
Our hearts we cannot steel<br/>
Against the sad, sad tale of the lonely orphan boy!<br/>
SAMUEL: The orphan boy!<br/>
add KING: The orphan boy!<br/>
See at our feet they kneel;<br/>
Our hearts we cannot steel<br/>
Against the tale of the lonely orphan boy!<br/>
PIRATES: Poor fellow!<br/>
<br/>
ENSEMBLE<br/>
<br/>
GENERAL (aside) GIRLS (aside) PIRATES<br/>
(aside)<br/>
<br/>
I'm telling a terrible He is telling a terrible If he's telling<br/>
a<br/>
story story, terrible<br/>
story<br/>
But it doesn't diminish Which will tend to He shall die by<br/>
a death<br/>
my glory; diminish his that is gory<br/>
For they would have glory; Yes, one of the<br/>
taken my daughters Though they would have cruellest<br/>
Over the billowy waters, taken his slaughters<br/>
daughters That ever were<br/>
known in<br/>
Over the billowy waters, these<br/>
waters;<br/>
If I hadn't, in elegant It is easy, in elegant It is easy, in<br/>
elegant<br/>
diction, diction. diction,<br/>
Indulged in an innocent To call it an innocent To call it an<br/>
innocent<br/>
fiction, fiction, fiction<br/>
Which is not in the same But it comes in the same But it comes in<br/>
the same<br/>
category category category<br/>
As a regular terrible As telling a regular As telling a<br/>
regular<br/>
story. terrible story. terrible<br/>
story.<br/>
<br/>
KING: Although our dark career<br/>
Sometimes involves the crime of stealing,<br/>
We rather think that we're<br/>
Not altogether void of feeling.<br/>
Although we live by strife,<br/>
We're always sorry to begin it,<br/>
For what, we ask, is life<br/>
Without a touch of Poetry in it?<br/>
(all kneel)<br/>
<br/>
ALL: Hail, Poetry, thou heav'n-born maid!<br/>
Thou gildest e'en the pirate's trade.<br/>
Hail, flowing fount of sentiment!<br/>
All hail, all hail, divine emollient!<br/>
(all rise)<br/>
<br/>
KING: You may go, for you're at liberty, our pirate rules<br/>
protect you,<br/>
And honorary members of our band we do elect you!<br/>
SAMUEL: For he is an orphan boy!<br/>
CHORUS: He is! Hurrah for the orphan boy!<br/>
GENERAL: And it sometimes is a useful thing<br/>
To be an orphan boy.<br/>
CHORUS: It is! Hurrah for the orphan boy!<br/>
Hurrah for the orphan boy!<br/>
ENSEMBLE: Oh, happy day, with joyous glee<br/>
They will away and married be!<br/>
Should it befall auspiciously,<br/>
Her (Our) sisters all will bridesmaids be!<br/>
<br/>
(RUTH enters and comes down to FREDERIC)<br/>
<br/>
RUTH: Oh, master, hear one word, I do implore you!<br/>
Remember Ruth, your Ruth, who kneels before you!<br/>
PIRATES: Yes, yes, remember Ruth, who kneels before you!<br/>
FREDERIC: Away, you did deceive me!<br/>
PIRATES: (Threatening RUTH) Away, you did deceive him!<br/>
RUTH: Oh, do not leave me!<br/>
PIRATES: Oh, do not leave her!<br/>
FREDERIC: Away, you grieve me!<br/>
PIRATES: Away, you grieve him!<br/>
FREDERIC: I wish you'd leave me! (FREDERIC casts RUTH from him)<br/>
PIRATES: We wish you'd leave him!<br/>
<br/>
ENSEMBLE<br/>
<br/>
MEN WOMEN<br/>
<br/>
Pray observe the magnanimity Pray observe the magnanimity<br/>
We display to lace and dimity! They display to lace and<br/>
dimity!<br/>
Never was such opportunity Never was such opportunity<br/>
To get married with impunity, To get married with impunity,<br/>
But we give up the felicity But they give up the felicity<br/>
Of unbounded domesticity, Of unbounded domesticity,<br/>
Though a doctor of divinity Though a doctor of divinity<br/>
Is located in this vicinity. Is located in this vicinity.<br/>
<br/>
(GIRLS and MAJOR-GENERAL go up rocks, while PIRATES indulge in a<br/>
wild dance of delight on stage. The MAJOR-GENERAL produces<br/>
a British flag, and the PIRATE KING, in arched rock,<br/>
produces a black flag with skull and crossbones. Enter<br/>
RUTH, who makes a final appeal to FREDERIC, who casts her<br/>
from him.)<br/>
<br/>
END OF ACT I<br/></p>
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