Ori. [Weeping.] There breaks the noblest heart that ever burn'd In flames of love, for ever to be mourn'd. Ama. Lavish to him, you wrong an equal flame; No lover now throughout the world remains, [Carry of the body. [Flourish of all the mufic. The ftage fills with fingers and dancers in the habits of heroes and heroines. Urganda conducts Amadis, Oriana, etc. to a seat during the following entertainment. First voice. Make room for the combat, make room ¿ Sound the trumpet and drum ; The gods of defire take part in the fray, And love fits like Jove, to decide the great day. Make room for the combat, make room; Sound the trumpet and drum. Second voice. Give the word to begin, Let the combatants in, The challenger enters all glorious; But love has decreed Tho' beauty may bleed, Yet beauty fhall still be victorious. Chorus. Make room for the combat, make room; Sound the trumpet and drum. [Here two parties enter from the opposite fides of the theatre, arm'd at all points, marching in warlike order. And then dance feveral Pyrric or martial dances, with fwords and bucklers. Which ended, the fingers again advance. To be fung. Help! help! th' unpractis'd conqu’ror cries ; He faints, he falls; help! help! ah me ! he dies ; And weeps, alas! to think him dead. Sound, found a charge,- -'tis war again; Again he fights, again is flain; Again, again, help! help! She cries, He faints, he falls, help! help! ah me! he dies. Then fingers again come forward. Happy pair, Free from care, Of sweet poffeffing; Happy pair. Love inviting, Souls uniting; Of fweet poffeffing; Free from care, Happy pair. Another dance of heroes and heroines. Then a full Chorus of all the voices and inftruments. Be true, all ye lovers, whate'er you endure ; Tho' cruel the pain is, how fweet is the cure! In the hour of poffeffing, So divine is the bleffing, That one moment's obtaining, Pays an age of complaining. Be true, all ye lovers, whate'er you endure, Tho' cruel the pain is how fweet is the cure! [Here follows variety of dances, with which the entertainment concluding, Amadis, Oriana, etc. rife and come forward. Ama. So Phoebus mounts triumphant in the skies, Urg. Whate'er the virtuous and the just endure, [Atriumphant flourish of all the inftruments, with which the play concludes. The end of the fifth A. EPILOGUE. By the Right Honourable JOSEPH ADDISON, Efq; WHEN ORPHEUS tun'd his pipe with pleasing woe, Rivers forgot to run, and winds to blow ; While liftning forefts cover'd, as he play'd, That this night's ftrains the fame fuccefs may find, The fame dull fights in the fame landskip mixt, But how foe'er to please your wand'ring eyes, amends for loft delight, * we divert your fight. * The ladies. THE END. BOD BOOKS printed and fold by ROBERT URIE. I. The Works of Moliere, Complete in five neat pocket Vo- II. Cato Major: or, A Treatife on Old-Age, By M. Tullius By the honourable Mr. Logan. III. Plays, viz. I. The Tragedy of Julius Caefar. 2. The Tragedy of Brutus. By John Sheffield Duke of Buckingham. IV. The Temple of Tafte, Tranflated from the French of Mr. de Voltaire. V. Plays, viz. Volpone; or the Fox. The Alchemift. Epicoene; or, the Silent Woman. Written by Ben. Jonfon. VI. Mifcellanies, By the most noble George lord Saville, late Marquis and Earl of Halifax; viz. 1. Advice to a Daughter. 2. The Character of a Trimmer. 3. The Anatomy of an Equivalent. 4. A Letter to a Diffenter. 5. Cautions for Choice of Parliament Men. 6. A Rough Draught of a New Model at Sea. 7. Maxims of State. 8. A Character of Bp. Burnet, etc. VII. Perfian Letters, Tranflated from the French of M. de Secondat Baron de Montefquieu, author of the Spirit of Laws. VIII. A Defence of Poetry. By Sir Philip Sidney. IX. Fables, with Cuts, By Mr. Gay. X. The Beggar's Opera, in two parts, written by Mr. Gay. XII. The Memoirs of Sir James Melvil of Halhill: Containing XIV. The Hiftory of the Revolution in Sweden, occafioned by the Changes of Religion, and Alteration of the Govenment in that Kingdom. Tranflated from the French of the Abbot Vertot, Member of the Royal Academy of Infcriptions, and Belles Lettres. XV. Letters upon divers Subjects, concerning Religion and Metaphyfics: Written by the late archbishop of Cambray; Tranflated from the Paris edition in 1718. |