SCENE II
The grove.
(Enter Æneas, Dido and Belinda, and their train)
BELINDA, CHORUS
Thanks to these lovesome vales,
these desert hills and dales,
so fair the game, so rich the sport,
Diana’s self might to these woods resort.
(Gitter ground. A dance)
SECOND WOMAN
Oft she visits this lovedXVII mountain,
oft she bathes her in this fountain;
here Acteon met his fate
pursued by his own hounds,
and after mortal wounds
discovered, discovered too late.
(A dance to entertain Æneas by Dido women)
ÆNEAS
Behold, upon my bending spear1
a monsters head stands bleeding,
with tushes far exceeding
these did Venus huntsman tear.
DIDO
The skies are clouded, heark how thunder
rends the mountain oaks asunder.
BELINDA, CHORUS
Hast, hast to town, this open field
no shelter from the storm can yield.
(Exit. The Spirit of the sorceress descends to Æneas
in the likness of Mercury)
SPIRIT
Stay, prince, and hear great Joves command:
he summons thee this night away.
ÆNEAS
To night?
SPIRIT
To night?To night thou must forsake this land,
the angry God will brook no longer stay.
Joves commands thee, wast no more
in loves delights those precious hours,
allowed by the almighty powers
to gain th’ Hesperian shore
and ruined Troy restore.
ÆNEAS
Joves commands shall be obey’d,
to night our anchors shall be weighed.
But ah! what language can I try
my injured queen to pacify?
No sooner she resignes her heart,
but from her armes I’m forc’t to part.
How can so hard a fate be took?
One night enjoy’d, the next forsook.
Your be the blame, ye Gods, for I
obey your will, but with more ease cou’d dye.
([Enter] the sorceress and her inchanteress)
CHORUS
Then since our charmes have sped,
a merry dance be led
by the nymphs of Carthage to please us.
They shall all dance to ease us,
a dance that shall make the Spheres to wonder,
rending those fair groves asunder.
(The groves dance.)