In doing so, you glad my soul, But what say'st thou, my youngest girl, My love (quoth young Cordelia then) Shall be the duty of a child, And that is all I'll show. And wilt thou show no more, quoth he, Henceforth I banish thee my court, Thy eldest sisters' loves are more Than well I can demand, To whom I equally bestow My kingdome and my land, My pompal state and all my goods, With those thy sisters be maintain'd Thus flattering speeches won renown The third had causeless banishment, For poor Cordelia patiently Went wand'ring up and down, Unhelp'd, unpity'd, gentle maid, Through many an English town: Until at last in famous France She gentler fortunes found; Though poor and bare, yet she was deem' With full consent of all his court Her father, old king Leir, this while And living in queen Ragan's court, She took from him his chiefest means, For whereas twenty men were wont And after scarce to three: Nay, one she thought too much for him : In hope that in her court, good king, Am I rewarded thus, quoth he, Unto my children, and to beg Full fast he hies then to her court; Within her kitchen, he should have What scullions gave away. When he had heard with bitter tears, In what I did let me be made I will return again, quoth he, Unto my Ragan's court; She will not use me thus, I hope, But in a kinder sort. Where when he came, she gave command To drive him thence away: When he was well within her court, (She said) he would not stay. Then back again to Gonorell That in her kitchen he might have What scullion boys set by. But there of that he was deny'd, Thus 'twixt his daughters, for relief And calling to remembrance then He bore the wounds of woe: Which made him rend his milk-white locks, And tresses from his head, And all with blood bestain his cheeks, To hills and woods, and watry founts, Till hills and woods, and senseless things, Even thus possest with discontents, In hopes from fair Cordelia there To find some gentler chance: Most virtuous dame! which when she heard Of this her father's grief, As duty bound, she quickly sent Him comfort and relief: And by a train of noble peers, In brave and gallant sort, She gave in charge he should be brought To Aganippus' court; Whose royal king, with noble mind, So freely gave consent, To muster up his knights at arms, And so to England came with speed, To repossess king Leir, And drive his daughters from their thrones By his Cordelia dear: *This ballad, which by no means deserves a place in any edition of Shakspeare, is evidently a most servile pursuit,-not, indeed, of our author's play, which the writer does not appear to have read, but-of Holinshed's Chronicle, where, as in Geoffrey of Monmouth, the King of France is called Aganippus. I suppose, however, that the performance and celebrity of the play might have set the balladmaker at work, and furnished him with the circumstance of Lear's madness, of which there is no hint either in the historian or the old play. The omission of any other striking incident may be fairly imputed to his want of either genius or information. All he had to do was to spin out a sort of narrative in a sort of verse, to be sung about the streets, and make advantage of the publick curiosity. I much doubt whether any common ballad can be produced anterior to a play upon the same subject, unless in the case of some very recent event. Ritson. A |