PLEASURE RECONCILED TO VIRTUE.] From the second fol. If the scenery answered the poet's description, the opening of this Masque must have had a very striking effect. The entrance of Comus is picturesque and full of voluptuous gaiety. The commentators on Milton, after spending twenty or thirty pages in conjectures on the origin of Milton's Comus, without the slightest reference to Jonson, condescend, in the course of their subsequent annotations, to observe that " Jonson's Masque of Pleasure might, perhaps, afford some hint to Milton !” Perhaps it might : and so, ! t PLEASURE, ETC. The Scene was the Mountain ATLAS, his head and beard all hoary, and frost, as if his Kupees HYMN. Full Chorus. ing Belly, wit, That found out the excellent engine the spit ; The hearth, and the range, the dog and the wheel ; Bowl bearer. Do you hear, my friends ? to whom did you sing all this now ? Pardon me only that I ask you, for I do not look for an answer; I'll answer myself: I know it is now such a time as the Saturnals for all the world, that every man stands under the eves of his own hat, and sings what pleases him; that's the right and the liberty of it. Now you sing of god Comus, here, the belly-god; I say it is well , and I say it is not well; it is well as it is a ballad, and the belly worthy of it, I must needs say, an ’twere forty yards of ballad more, as much ballad as tripe. But when the belly is not edified by it, it is not well; for where did you ever read or hear that the belly had any ears ? Come, never pump for an answer, for you are defeated : our fellow Hunger there, that was as ancient a retainer to the Belly as any of us, was turn’d away for being unseasonable ; not unreasonable, but unseasonable ; and now is he, poor thin-gut, fain to get his living with teaching of a ナ |