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But now, to please the fairy king,

Full every deal they laugh and sing,
And antic feats devise;

Some wind and tumble like an ape,

And other some transmute their shape
In EDWIN'S wond'ring eyes.

Till one at last, that ROBIN hight,

Renown'd for pinching maids by night,

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And full against the beam he flung,

Where by the back the youth he hung

To spraul unneath the roof.

From thence, "Reverse my charm," he cries,

"And let it fairly now suffice

"The gambol has been shown." But OBERON answers with a smile, "Content thee, EDWIN, for a while, "The 'vantage is thine own."

Here ended all the phantom-play;

They smelt the fresh approach of day,

And heard a cock to crow;

The whirling wind that bore the crowd

Has clapp'd the door, and whistled loud, To warn them all to go.

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And all at once the tapers dye;

Poor EDWIN falls to floor:

Forlorn his state, and dark the place,

Was never wight in such a case

Through all the land before.

But soon as Dan APOLLO rose,
Full jolly creature home he goes,
He feels his back the less;

His honest tongue and steady mind
Had rid him of the lump behind,

Which made him want success.

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With lusty livelyhed he talks,

He seems a dauncing as he walks,

His story soon took wind;

And beauteous EDITH sees the youth,
Endow'd with courage, sense, and truth,

Without a bunch behind.

The story told, Sir TOPAZ mov'd,
The youth of EDITH erst approv'd,
To see the revel scene:

At close of eve he leaves his home,
And wends to find the ruin'd dome

All on the gloomy plain.

As there he bides, it so befell,

The wind came rustling down a dell,
A shaking seiz'd the wall;

Up spring the tapers as before,
The fairies bragly foot the floor,

And music fills the hall.

But certes sorely sunk with woe

Sir TOPAZ sees the Elphin show,

His spirits in him dye:

When OBERON cries, "A man is near,

"A mortal passion, cleeped fear,

"Hangs flagging in the sky."

With that Sir TOPAZ, hapless youth!
In accents faultering, ay for ruth,

Intreats them pity graunt;

For als he been a mister wight
Betray'd by wand'ring in the night
To tread the circled haunt;

"Ah losell vile, at once they roar : "And little skill'd of fairie lore,

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Thy cause to come, we know:

"Now has thy kestrell courage fell; "And fairies, since a lye you tell,

"Are free to work thee woe."

Then WILL, who bears the wispy fire To trail the swains amongst the mire, The caitiff upward flung;

There, like a tortoise in a shop,

He dangled from the chamber-top,
Where whilome EDWIN hung.

The revel now proceeds apace,
Deftly they frisk it o'er the place,
They sit, they drink, and eat;

The time with frolic mirth beguile,
And poor Sir TOPAZ hangs the while,

Till all the rout retreat.

By this the stars began to wink,

They shriek, they fly, the tapers sink,

And down y-drops the knight:

For never spell by fairie laid

With strong enchantment bound a glade

Beyond the length of night.

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