Let's take the chance to learn the word "frolic" if it looks new to you: (the following taken from Wiktionary.org and re-formatted to fit your screen)
Adjective[edit]
- (now rare) Merry, joyous; later especially, frolicsome, sportive, full of playful mischief. [quotations ▼]
- Milton
- The frolic wind that breathes the spring.
- Waller
- The gay, the frolic, and the loud.
- 1897, Henry James, What Maisie Knew:
- Beale, under this frolic menace, took nothing back at all; he was indeed apparently on the point of repeating his extravagence, but Miss Overmore instructed her little charge that she was not to listen to his bad jokes [...].
- (obsolete, rare) Free; liberal; bountiful; generous.
- Gaiety; merriment. [quotations ▼]
- 1832-1888, Louisa May Alcott
- the annual jubilee […] filled the souls of old and young with visions of splendour, frolic and fun.
- A playful antic. [quotations ▼]
- Roscommon
- He would be at his frolic once again.
- (intransitive) To romp; to behave playfully and uninhibitedly.
- (transitive, archaic) To cause to be merry.